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A61847 A discourse of the two covenants wherein the nature, differences, and effects of the covenant of works and of grace are distinctly, rationally, spiritually and practically discussed : together with a considerable quantity of practical cases dependent thereon / by William Strong. Strong, William, d. 1654.; Gale, Theophilus, 1628-1678. 1678 (1678) Wing S6002; ESTC R10428 996,223 490

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to perform the promise is Gods part and to press God with his promise is our part I will do it for you says tne Lord yet I will be inquired of by you that I may do it for you ask and you shall receive knock and it shall be opened and there is no way that ever any creature could attain any thing of God but this way Upon this very ground Christ himself if he will attain from God he must ask and so 't is with the Angels and so 't is with the Saints in Heaven Dan. 4.17 they cry How long Lord How much more is it to be with dust and ashes 3. That the Lord may honour his own Ordinance and testifie how much he doth delight in the worship of a creature and that thereby he might make it a double mercy For ungodly men to receive blessings as a fruit of Providence unto them it comes always single that is in the thing only but unto a godly man that has it as a fruit of the promise it 's always a double mercy mercy in the thing and mercy to the man not only an accomplishment of Gods promises but the return of the mans prayers the exercise of Gods faithfulness unto us and of our graces towards God and there are no mercies so sweet as those that come in with the exercise of grace in the attaining of them Deum orationibus ambiamus coelum tundimus misericordiam extorquemus as Tertullian says of the power of the Saints prayers because of his delight in the exercise of their graces And there is no duty wherein the graces of the Saints do act with more life and power than they do in prayer there is magna conjunctio a great concurrence of grace in them as we see it in Abraham in his prayer what strong acts of grace he puts forth Gen. 18. The nearer the soul draws to God the fountain of its life the more lively it works and moves the swifter the nearer the centre and there is no duty in which the soul draws nearer to God than it doth in prayer and hath more immediate communion with him than when he is upon his knees before the Throne of grace 4. And lastly the way to attain promises is a patient waiting for them till the Lords time come for it 's true of promises as it is of prophecies though the vision be for an appointed time Hab. 2.3 yet wait for it for it will come and will not tarry It 's a speech like unto that in Luk. 18.7 8. though he bear long with them yet he will avenge them speedily it may tarry long in respect of the time prefixed by us and may seem long to us but it shall not be long when the time comes that is appointed by God The Lord commonly does in the answering of prayers as he does in the fulfilling of Prophecies it 's a great while before the Prophecy seems to speak or to give any hope of its accomplishment as it was in the deliverance out of Egypt and Babylon but yet when once it begins but to dawn its day immediately in a manner it strangely and suddenly breaks forth that the Saints of God can scarce believe their own eyes they are like unto them that dream And so it is in the return of their prayers also as in the calling of the Jews they are as dry bones and they are scattered here and there all the world over but the bones shall come together and it shall be so suddenly done that the Lord saith A Nation shall be born at once and before Sion travelled she brought forth and so it is in the answer of Prayers as it was with Elijah he prayed seven times and his servant looked and there was nothing and yet he continued praying at last there appeared a Cloud like unto a mans hand and by and by the Heavens were covered over with Clouds and then the rain fell when it begins once to appear that the Clouds do break away a little the Lord doth strangely hasten the work and there is a glorious concurrence and falling in of all causes to its accomplishment there is a time of the Promise's accomplishment Acts 7 1● and a great part of the Mercy is in the season of it the Lord doth not delay because he is unwilling to bestow it or because the Mercy comes hardly off for he knows that to our hasty Nature bis dat qui citò but the Lord doth defer it that he may improve the Mercy by the season of it for Gods time is best and not ours my time is not yet come though your time be alwayes ready all Christs Miracles were so much the more glorious by the seasons of their putting forth and so are Gods Mercies also the more magnified in coming to us in the fittest time he does wait to be gracious that is that he may bestow the Mercy when we are fittest to receive it and our hearts are best prepared for it As in judgement to a wicked man the Lord does watch over him for evil and he shall be ensnared in an evil time as a Bird in an evil snare judgement shall come upon him when he least expects it and is least prepared for it he shall be cut off as the foam upon the waters Hos 10.7 sicut aquae superiores ferventis ollae Jerome for the word spuma doth signifie a bubble that does arise from heat c. when they are swelled up and hold up their heads on high and be lifted up above the rest of the waters then they shall suddenly be cut off As I say there is a time for judgment that Justice doth watch over men for evil so there is also a time for Mercy that Grace does watch over men for good there is a time for the Promise to bring forth as well as the threatning and therefore it 's said That by Faith and Patience the Saints have inherited the Promises and there is as well a Patience in waiting as in Suffering Zeph. 2.1 2. let Patience have its perfect work in you in this respect also that you may be intire and perfect wanting nothing Hebr. 10.36 But the Soul will be ready to say I could be willing to wait Gods time if I could be sure to attain the Promise at the last but what grounds are there to support and underprop my heart that I shall receive the Promise and not miss of it in the end Now the grounds to assure the Soul thereof are these 1. The faithfulness of God the Promises are therefore confirmed by an Oath Heb. 6.17 that by two immutable things wherein it 's impossible for God to lye we might have strong Consolation Quid est Dei juratio nisi promissi confirmatio Aust. infidelium quaedam increpatio An Oath amongst Men puts an end to Controversie much more should the Oath of God put an end to all Controversie and Disputes in the Soul and
might cause his power to be acknowledged 2. God hath made over his attributes to his people that they may take from them all grounds of faith with an assurance that they shall be all exercised for them according unto their necessities Psal 13.5 so the Mercy of God I have trusted in thy mercy my heart shall rejoyce in thy salvation Here is mercy the object of faith and an assurance that this attribute shall shew forth it self in a work of salvation and deliverance for him I have trusted in the mercy of God for the bringing me out of this and another affliction and I have been delivered Psal 52.8 therefore I will always exalt the mercy of God So for the Power of God the soul can argue from thence Dan. 3. when men threaten and Devils rage and the fiery furnace may be heated seven times hotter to consume the soul that has no help amongst creatures yet says Daniel and the three Children the God whom we serve is able to deliver us And the Lord encourages the soul from the assurance of his power Is my arm shortned that I cannot save is any thing too hard for the Lord is there any restraint to omnipotence And so also Christ puts them upon it in this With man it 's impossible but with God all things are possible it 's spoken in reference to a work of Sanctification when the Disciples said Who then can be saved Esay 26.4 Esay 27.5 So for the Eternity of God Trust in the Lord for ever for the Lord Jehovah is a Rock of Ages and so men are said to take hold of the strength of God And so of the Holiness of God I have sworn by my holiness that I will not lye unto David and therefore Psal 23.6 Surely goodness and mercy shall follow me all the days of my life And so Abraham believed God was able to raise him up again from the dead if it might stand with his glory he did not question his will but that his power should be put forth for the accomplishment of his promise We know that the ultimate object of faith is God through Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.21 our faith and hope is in God now the highest object of faith in God is the attributes of God that he has discovered for we can believe in him no otherwise than we know him and as he has revealed himself and the way of Gods revealing himself unto his people in this life is only by his back parts which are his attributes and therefore this is the way of the acting of faith in this life and all the promises of God and the precepts and the threatnings of God are all of them founded on his attributes and in these doth the strength and stability of them lye because the Lord Jehovah is a rock of ages As it is in ends all intermediate ends work in the strength and the power of the utmost end so it is in objects also Objectum mediatum fidei movet in virtute objecti ultimati ab eo perfectionem accipit The mediate object of faith moves in the virtue of the ultimate object and receives perfection from it Eph. 4.18.23.24 3. That from these the soul may receive all principles of grace grace is called the Life of God and the Divine Nature the Image of God created in the soul it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according unto God Now in an image there are two things required 1 Proportion or similitude and resemblance 2 There is a deduction or a derivation it must be taken from it As there is a resemblance of the nature of God so there is a derivation of it from God Now though the incommunicable attributes of God are so called because there are in the creatures no footsteps or resemblances yet there are of the attributes that are communicable from them the image of God is derived unto us and we are made partakers of his holiness holy as he is holy Heb. 12.10 Jam. 1.5 and merciful as he is merciful and wise as he is wise If any man want wisdom let him ask it of God as all of them shall be employed for man without him so all of them shall work in man an image or a resemblance of himself within him that a man beholding the glory of the Lord is transformed thereby into the same image And this is to be made the rule to judge the measure of our graces by for primum est mensura reliquorum c. The first is the measure of the rest in that kind So far as they do come short of bearing a resemblance with the communicable attributes of God I say of bearing a resemblance for they are in God by nature but in us by grace and by new creation they are nature in him they are not so in us so far we are to bewail the defects of our graces and so far grace is the image of God in us but in part a good work begun and no more and it is a discovery of his attributes which are the original pattern that doth perfect his image in us which is but the counterpane and therefore we shall be perfectly like him when we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.3 4. God hath in Covenant made over his Attributes that from these the soul may take all rules of duty and as the highest objects of faith are in God so from him are the highest rules of duty and therefore Eph. 5.1 the exhortation is Be ye imitators of God 1 Pet. 1.15 and be you holy in all manner of conversation because he is holy and so from the Soveraignty of God it 's the ordinary argument thou shalt do thus and thus for I am Jehovah thy God And David takes his rule from this in the preparation he made for the Temple the house must be exceeding magnificent and therefore all his preparation though the wealth of a Kingdom was but an act of his poverty for it is for the Lord who is a great God and dwells not in Temples made with hands c. And it 's the argument that he himself useth as the rule unto them in their performances Mal. 1.13 I am a great King and my name is dreadful amongst the Heathen As the soul is never rightly bottomed upon a promise till it is carried out into that attribute upon which the promise doth depend so the soul is never grounded in duty till it looks beyond the precept and sees the attributes in God which are the foundation of the duty and this is properly to walk worthy of God Col. 1.10 That ye may walk worthy c. It doth not note exactam proportionem Daven sed quandam decentiam convenientiam not an exact proportion but a certain decence and convenience when a mans duties are done by rules taken from so great a God and proportionable unto the nature holiness and excellency of that God God is a Spirit
their own had not they neglected it by observing lying vanities it might have been truly their own whereas none of the things that they so observe could be for it is but this worlds goods if we are not faithful in that which is another mans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who shall give you that which is your own goods Now God may be a mans own but it cannot be said of any creature-comfort without God and therefore here is your folly to be observing these lying vanities and forsake your own mercies 4. God will set himself against all these things in which you do place your happiness apart from him and there is no such way to engage God against the choicest contentments as this is that thou shouldst place thy portion in them for thou makest that creature an Idol and the Lord will set himself against them in a special manner Esay 2.18 The Prophet Isaiah speaks of a Judgment that the Lord would bring against that people and the daughter of Sion should be left as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers and as a besieged city and what is that great inquisition that God makes at such a time it's only for the Idols and upon these he will suddenly stretch forth his hand the Idols he will utterly * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abolish he will utterly divide them or cut them in pieces The Lord said he would search Jerusalem with candles Zeph. 1.12 the meaning is that the Lord would make a diligent and a very exact search and therefore accensa lucerna quaerere is a Phrase for exactness in this kind and it notes not only things open that are discovered in the face of the Sun and may be seen by its light but the most secret things that are hid in the dark abstrusissima in tenebris latentia the Lord will in this manner search Jerusalem with candles and the great things that the Lord doth search for and discover are the Idols as appears in Ezech. 8. he doth shew the Prophet the things which are done in the dark in the chambers of their imagery and be sure if it become an Idol the Lord is engaged against it to destroy it for he will not give his glory to another nor his praise unto graven images 5. It 's a folly in this because there is no need of it for there is a sufficiency in Go● you may be happy in him though you have nothing else for he is all-sufficient to himself and his happiness lies in himself he is God blessed for evermore and shall he not be sufficient unto thee He useth this as an argument to Abraham he will need no other Gen. 17.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 21.6 I am the All-sufficient God walk before me and be thou perfect He will need no other he shall inherit all things I will be his God If a man can be happy that has all things then surely he may be whose God is the Lord he is the happiness of the Angels and of Christ himself and of all the Saints after this life when all the comforts of the creatures shall be no more and therefore can you seek happiness in any other As I may reason it with you concerning Christ have not you need of a Saviour and is there salvation in any other has the Lord any more sons in his bosom to bestow and is there any defect in this Christ can you look for a better do you expect one that shall be able to save you more perfectly than he who is able to save you to the uttermost will you go away whither will you go if you depart from Christ So I say also concerning God as your happiness have you n● need of happiness You are neither the fountain of your own being or well being can it be had in any other but in God who is Lord of all and is there any defect in him that he cannot make thee happy in himself as well as he has done the Lord Jesus Christ who says Psal 16. ult With thee is the fountain of life and in thy light we shall see light It 's a great folly for a man to go far and labour hard for that which may be had near home and at an easie rate it 's the folly that the Lord did reprove in Judah Esay 30. They went down to Egypt for help and they sent their Ambassadors and they were at Zonan and Hanes and they were at great cost they sent their gold and silver on the back of Asses and the bunches of Camels c. and they did trim their way turn themselves into every fashion and every shape abased themselves unto the dust and all to attain the favour of man whereas it might have been had from Gods protection at an easier rate for your strength or security is to sit still and rest upon the Lord for ever for he is a Rock of Ages so it is in point of provision as well as of protection we knock at every door of the creature and with great weariness and pains labour in the fire * Hab. 1.13 To labour in the fire is cùm operis nullus sit fructus c. sed igne statim ut confectum est absumpto and so by labouring in the creatures in this manner a man doth sustain duplicem jacturam a double loss 1 Operae 2 Materiae both of labour and matter a man doth lose the creatures and his labour about them also for the Lord of Hosts doth in judgment make them labour in the fire and weary themselves for very vanity whereas all might be had in God easily and at a far better rate surely Nimis avarus est cui non sufficit Deus He is too avaritious whom God doth not suffice 6. There will come a time when you will have need of God who did offer himself unto you to be your portion and you have refused him and then you can expect no other but as you have rejected him so he should also reject you Israel would none of me Psal 81. so I gave them up c. There will be a time when the chanels of all the creatures shall be stopped and your portion in them shall be no more but it shall be said Son remember that in thy life time thou receivedst thy good things they were given thee but they were only for thy life-time and in them thou didst place thy happiness and thy portion and therefore they are called thy good things for that which a man doth chuse to himself to place his happiness in that is his good things and then the soul must return to God that gave it and at this time will the Lord send thee unto those things wherein thou placedst thy happiness and thy portion Go now unto the Gods that you have chosen and let them deliver you When we come unto God in the day of our distress he will say Go to the
the heart and nothing else it sets a strong guard upon the whole inward man this wall is as well that none should break out as that none should break in it defends from all enemies it 's this that makes the souls of the glorified Saints impeccable visio beatifica reddit impeccabiles Now what is there in the beatifical vision so advantageous to a soul 1 Cognition a man doth perfectly know all the glory of God and the Saints that know most of him here he will hereafter come to be admired of them 2 Thess 1.10 and we know that admiration is the overplus of expectation they will say when they come to Heaven the one half was not told them Oh how little a portion is known of him 2 Application there shall be a perfect application unto a mans soul that he shall know his own interest in him that all this is his right that it is his fathers pleasure to make it to be his portion which doth here much abate all the joy of the Saints in this life that many times the soul is not able to apply the portion he hath in God to himself 3 There is Fruition which implies both actual possession and glorious satisfaction And he that finds this in the Lord and his alsufficiency he cannot go out unto any thing else for his soul is filled with it In thy presence is fulness of joy Psal 16. ult and that which is full can receive no addition as it needs none and so far as the soul is made partaker of this vision in a fiducial way so far it is impeccable also and what was the true reason why the Devil did fall what was his condemnation 1 Tim. 3.6 it was this that he did not look upon God as alsufficient he would have taken in some created excellency something of himself to have made up his sufficiency and so he departed from the Lord and as often as men do turn aside to any thing else it 's because the thoughts of the alsufficiency of God are not kept up in a man and this is the way for a man to fall into the condemnation of the Devil And this we ought so much the more to seek because a great part of the happiness of the Lord doth consist in the contemplation of himself and surely that which makes the Lord himself happy will make us happy also the satisfaction that God takes in his own excellency and sufficiency And truly there are two things in which mainly our godliness should consist 1 in a constant contemplation of God and 2 a perfect obedience unto him walking before him and walking with him and seeing him that is invisible this is the great work and guard of a Saint But wherein doth the happiness of a Saint by reason of his interest in Gods alsufficiency consist There are these particulars in which it makes a man very happy 1. It supplies all a mans wants the Lord is my shepherd he hath undertaken both to feed and defend me and he will surely do his office and therefore I shall want nothing that is necessary either for my provision or my protection The lyons do lack but they that fear the Lord shall want no manner of thing that is good if they have it not formaliter formally in kind they have it eminenter eminently as the Sun hath light in it in a far more glorious way than any other light if they have it not in silver yet they have it in gold and therefore the Apostle 2 Cor. 6.10 puts it in with a quasi as if sorrowful as if poor 2 Cor. 6.10 as if having nothing afflictio nostra habet quasi sed gaudium nostrum non habet our affliction has an AS IF but our joy none Austin there is but an appearance and a resemblance of the one but there is a truth and a reality in the other we are as those that have nothing and yet it is but in appearance so for in truth he that hath his interest in the alsufficiency of God he doth possess all things The alsufficiency of God runs through all Gods Attributes as the sincerity of a man doth through all his graces and is to be observed in them all the soul saith I am in a great strait in my business and I want direction but in God there is alsufficient wisdom I am a sinner and a fresh sense of guilt is upon me and I want remission but there is in God alsufficient mercy and I am under the power of a lust and of a temptation and I want strength to overcome it there is in God alsufficient grace his grace is sufficient for thee I am poor and want wealth it 's the Lord that makes rich and I am despised not honoured it 's the Lord that honours them that honour him and I want friends he doth many times give unto his own the hearts of men and turns their hearts to love you or to hate you he puts a mans acquaintance far from him or brings them near to him upon all occasions yea even the issues from death belong unto him and it is very much sweeter to the Saints to see it and to rely upon it as it is in him than if they had the mercy in their own hands because as the promise leads a man unto Christ and so though it be but small yet it is a pledge of union with Christ so though the supply be but small yet it brings a man to the alsufficiency of God and thereby discovers a mans propriety in God 2. It enables a man for all the works he hath to do in the world the Lord sent Moses in a great service to Pharaoh and he tells him I will be with thee and when Moses did object he had a stammering tongue saith God I will be with thy tongue and the alsufficiency of God was his sufficiency for his work so he sends Joshua and tells him He will never leave him nor forsake him and nothing shall be able to stand before him all his days and so the Apostles were sent forth as sheep c. but he bids them Go for behold I am with you unto the end of the world A man needs nothing else to enable him for any service but this God is alsufficient for me and were it not for that there are many of Gods people would sink under the apprehension of their own weaknesses and the burdensom callings that lye upon them from day to day Christus tunc regnat in nobis quando nos ab operibus nostris feriatos inhabitat cùm ipsè in nobis facit opera nostra Luther Christ then reigns in us when he works in us c. and so a mans soul keeps a Sabbath unto Christ as in point of Justification a man saith My good works are the Righteousness of Christ so in point of ability a man saith My ability is his alsufficiency for I am of my self able to do nothing and therefore when
he lays up that as a choice receipt all his life time and when he sees other men cast the materials of it away as a thing of no value he saith O! there is an excellency in it did men know it they would set a high price upon it I was in such an extremity and it relieved me so it is with all the Attributes of God they are exalted in the soul suitable to the use and experience that a man hath had of them as he that doth undervalue duties doth it because he hath not found the spiritual good that is in them so he that doth undervalue the Attributes of God doth it from want of experience which makes spiritual things great in our eyes and therefore Paul having an interest in the mercy of God we see how it was exalted in him 1 Tim. 1.14 the grace of God was exceeding abundant God who was rich in mercy out of his abundant love and pardoning mercy c. Mic. 7.18 Who is a God like to our God that pardons iniquity transgression and sin And the Saints that have perfection of holiness from him they give him the glory of his holiness from day to day saying Holy holy holy for the highest glory that we can give unto God here is that we honour those Attributes in our hearts which he doth honour in his dispensation towards us whether it be wisdom or holiness or faithfulness or patience c. as he doth honour the word that he doth accomplish so we are to honour the Attributes that he doth put forth Jah is the same name with Jehovah and is a name of Being denoting that God is he that hath his Being of himself and gives being unto all things else he that is the Fountain of Being whence a soul having had experience of him to be such a one lets his glory in that respect arise and be exalted in his soul if you would have any Attribute work for you then exalt that Attribute by trusting in it and when it hath wrought for you then exalt it also by glorifying of it and as you have exalted God by his name Jah so by his name Elshaddi a God alsufficient also for there is no name of God but it will be exalted in the soul suitable to the interest that we have in it and the taste that the soul hath of it For there is a double putting forth of every Attribute of God savingly upon his Elect not only a putting of it forth in his works and administrations towards them but there is also a putting of it forth by exalting it in a man and therein the main sweetness of the discovering of it doth lye He therefore that hath not had the price of this Attribute raised in his soul nor tasted the sweetness of it nor rejoyced in it nor adored and admired it and God as such a one under the apprehension of such an attribute truly that man hath no interest in it If a Saint cannot say that attribute is mine and this attribute I have an interest in yet he can admire the attribute and give God the glory of it as an excellency in himself and he doth not only praise God for his goodness towards him but as it is in himself for the glorious excellencies that are in the Divine nature as we may see it in Hannah 1 Sam. 2.1 2. My heart rejoyceth in the Lord and my horn is exalted in the Lord my mouth is enlarged over my enemies I will rejoyce in thy salvation there is none holy as the Lord c. And as it is exceeding sweet unto the people of God and a Paradise to walk from one Tree to another in the Paradise of God and to say such a truth the Lord fulfilled unto me in such a case and in such an extremity and such a promise at such a time so much more for a man to be able to look over all the attributes of God and to say such a time the Lord did glorifie such an attribute towards me and such a time such a one and to see all the attributes of God as well as all the works of God to work together for a mans good every one in their proper places as the stars in their courses fought against Sisera and the threatnings of God fight against wicked men so to have the word of God the works of God and the attributes of God work for a man is their happiness and their joy 4. He that hath an interest in the alsufficiency of God will be raised up in his soul to an holy self-sufficiency as there is no grace that is in Christ but it will have a resemblance in us so there is no attribute of God but it hath its resemblance therefore 1 Pet. 2.9 we are said to shew forth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the vertues of him that hath called us and in this doth properly our conformity unto God in this world lye there is something in us that doth hold a resemblance with the attributes of God that are manifested and put forth for us And in this is the greatest exercise of the attributes of God for our good when the patience of God works patience in us and we be merciful as our heavenly Father is merciful and holy as he is holy when the wisdom of God works wisdom in us and there is a resemblance of the power of God in us that we are able to do all things through Christ that strengthens us when the greatness of God works in us a holy greatness of mind and when the alsufficiency of God works in us a gracious self-sufficiency for there is a self-sufficiency that is a duty as there is a self-sufficiency that is a sin 1 Tim. 6.6 Godliness is great gain 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 9.8 Every where and in all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. and it is that which the Apostle had learned Phil. 4.11 so Prov. 14.14 A good man is satisfied from himself There is self as divided from God which is a sin but self as united unto God is a great duty Self-sufficiency in opposition to the creatures is a duty for a man can be happy without them but self-sufficiency in opposition to God is a sin for if a man be one with God then a mans self-sufficiency is Gods alsufficiency for having God and that sufficiency that is in him he hath all though amongst the creatures he hath no portion no inheritance when a man hath the Moon under his feet and he can say when he sees all the world destroyed Se nihil habere bonum tantâ mole perdendum c. and can look upon the general conflagration of the world as Lot did upon Sodom in the burning without a relenting thought because his portion is not in them this man hath a self-sufficiency grounded upon his interest in the alsufficiency of God for as the Apostle saith of the Fathers Heb. 11.13 That chusing to be pilgrims they did declare
to convey the same nature and having transgressed his will being wicked it is a guilty cursed and forsaken nature that is conveyed unto all mankind from him they all sinning in him else corruption of nature might be their punishment but their sin it could never be 2. All Adams posterity comes under the Curse even they that never sinned themselves ●ctually and knowingly as Adam did after the similitude of Adams transgression even Children of a span-long Now the Curse is a Curse of the Covenant Death is a part of Ju●tice and that must suppose sin upon the person upon whom it is inflicted and no man can ●ome under the curse of the Covenant who is not himself under the Covenant Now ●ad Adam stood Life should have been conveyed unto them and holiness but he falling ●in and death takes hold of them and the Scripture doth speak not only of death entring ●pon all but sin upon all and guilt Rom. 5.12 17 By one man sin entred into the world ●nd death by sin poena mediante reatu Thus if God will deal with a man in a Covenant-way it was necessary if they grow out ●f one common root that a Covenant be made with the first man for all his posterity and 〈◊〉 by Union they become guilty of this sin and come under the curse of the Covenant Now the Lord will have the grace and righteousness of the second Covenant conveyed the ●ame way by a second Adam a publick person Isa 9.6 that should stand in the stead of all his po●terity and become an everlasting Father and he will have Adam in all this to become ●he type of him that was to come Rom. 5.14 That as by one man sin entered into the world ●nd death by sin so by one man righteousness and life might enter by one Christ Jesus Reas 2 § 2. Herein our happiness lyes under the second Covenant that it is not made with us im●ediately but made with him who is the common head the second Adam and with us in ●●e second place as we are one with him and no otherwise 1 Herein consists the chief ●●nour and glory of this Covenant beyond the first because it is made with a more glori●● head and therefore though the first Covenant had much glory in it yet the second ●●h far exceed in glory for the first man was but of the earth earthly and the second 〈◊〉 was the Lord from Heaven heavenly 2. And hence it is that the Covenant is sure and everlasting and an unchangeable Covenant because made with an unchangeable head and grounded upon an everlasting righteousness and therefore Rom. 4 it is of Faith that it might be sure 2 Sam. 23. because that makes us one with him with whom the Covenant is established and in whom all the promi●es of it are yea and Amen So that it being made with him and he being the surety of it ●nd we one with him it can never fail 3. Hence it is also an Ordered Covenant Heb. 9.12 Lu. 9.24 and therein David takes a great deal of com●ort that the mercies of it were the sure mercies of David How Because his Covenant was ordered in all things and sure That as the first Adam in the Covenant of works entred ●nto a Covenant in an order not only for himself but for all his posterity also but so as he himself was primus faederatus and all mankind in him So is Jesus Christ also and the Covenant made first with him and then with all his posterity in him so that it is in the mercies of the Covenant as it is said of the resurrection of the dead all shall rise but every man in his own order first Christ then they that are Christs at his coming c. So it is here all the people of God are in Covenant with him and they are all his Covenant people for all that are in Christ are Abrahams seed but yet every man in his own order first Christ and then they that are in Christ by reason of their Union and no small part of our happiness and comfort comes in this way from the order of the Covenant as will appear afterward if ever we come to handle this property of the Covenant of Grace Reas 3 § 3. Supposing man to be a sinner God cannot enter into Covenant with him immediately any more unless we do suppose that the Lord should forfeit the truth of his threatning and so deny himself for he said Gen. 2.17 The day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye Now while this stands in force against a man God cannot deal with him in any way but to destroy him therefore if he will bring in a second Covenant that must be a Covenant of mercy and reconciliation and in that there must be satisfaction to God as well as sanctification of man the sin must be sent to Hell as well as the sinner to Heaven Now this satisfaction man of himself can never give it cost more to redeem his Soul than if he had offered thousands of Rams and ten thousands of Rivers of Oyl or his first-born for his transgression and the fruit of his Body for the sin of his Soul as Mich. 6.6 7. But we cannot be redeemed by corruptible things and therefore if God will have satisfaction answerable unto the wrong the creature has done him it cannot be had from any creature wherefore he finds out one that is able to bear it one that is mighty the man of his right-hand that he should be made sin and become a curse And how doth the satisfaction that Christ gives to the Lord become ours It can be no other way but by Union and this union must be 1 Natural he must take upon him our nature for our debt was a debt of body and soul to be offered as a sacrifice unto the wrath of God And therefore it is said Heb. 2.1 He that sanctifies and they that are sanctified are both of one He must take our nature and in that nature suffer as being one with us for without shedding of blood there is no remission 2 Voluntary and by consent he becoming our surety and so under our Covenant putting his name into our bond Gal. 4.4 and voluntary on our part accepting of him as our surety and consenting to his Covenant and the terms of the agreement and the consent of the Judge to whom the debt was due and against whom the offence was committed Sin must be condemned by the ordination of the Judge and the Surety must accept and submit to what was required of him in order to a satisfaction and the consent and approbation of the delinquent also and by this is the Union made up and all that Christ hath done becomes ours And thus as man is a sinner God cannot enter into Covenant with him immediately but it must be a Covenant in the hand of a Mediator which can be no otherwise but as we are one with him and consent
people prepared for the Lord. This Union is wrought by the Spirit of the ●ord Jesus by cutting off the soul from his old root for there is at least in order of nature a cutting off before a grafting in Rom. 11.24 1 Pet. 2.5 We as living stones are built upon him a spiritual house a holy temple Therefore Isa 28.16 Thus saith the Lord God Behold I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone a tried stone c. A foundation that is a sure ●nd a firm foundation for the repetition does signifie excellency and certainty Isa 26.3 He shall keep him in perfect peace whose mind is stayed on thee Matt. 7.24 Now there are but two foundations the Rock and the Sand a man must be removed and taken off the one before he can be built upon the other Rom. 13.14 Union with Christ is compared to putting him on as a garment a man must put off his old garment before he can put on the new and the wedding-garment which every man by nature is without It is a Matrimonial Vnion and a man must be dead to his former husband that he may be married to another says the Apostle I through the law am dead to the law Rom. 7.4 Gal. 2.19 Rom. 7.9 that I may be married to another Again I through the law am dead to the law that I may live unto God Paul in his state of unregeneracy was alive to the Law that is in the performance of it he thought he could keep the whole Law and expected by it that righteousness that should save him but now the Commandment came in a lively and effectual manner by the mighty working of the Spirit upon his soul convincing him of his guilt and his inability that for the curse of the Law he lay under it and the condemning power thereof by reason of his guilt and that he was able to perform no duty that the Law required through the inability that was in him and so he became dead unto it that is he expected life thereby no more and trusted upon his own strength no more for he knew he was able to do nothing and he that knows he is able to perform no duty of the Law and can expect no reward of the Law he is dead unto it Joh. 16.8 And this is done 1 by a work of Conviction convincing the world of sin that is that a man is in a state of sin under the guilt and power of it under the guilt of it that he is in his own person lyable to the wrath of God for it and that all the curses of the Law are his portion and that by nature Hell is his proper place and he is so under the power of it that he can perform no duty nor resist any temptation cannot subject himself unto the Righteousness of God nor to the Law of God he is in a state of impotency and of enmity and if the Lord do offer him Grace and come to convert him he cannot but resist and there is some special and darling lust in the cords of which he is held that will prove his destruction 2 And by a work of Humiliation the pleasure of all a mans former sins are dampt and taken away and the man is dead to them all and he cannot taste them as in times past and making a man to look upon himself as a miserable and undone man to loath himself to lye under the fear and expectation of wrath that the Law has threatned Acts 2.37 Rom. 7.9 and his guilty condition has deserved which is the proper work of the spirit of bondage to be pricked in his heart for a man to die to look upon himself as a dead man and to be dead in his own apprehension full of confession of his own sin and condemnation of himself as the Prodigal son Father I am unworthy to be called thy Son 3. There is a mighty and a glorious work of revelation discovering to a soul the good will of God the Father and of Christ which is called the spirit of revelation in the knowledge of him Ephes 1.18 revealing his son in a man Gal. 1. And convincing a man of righteousness in Christ Joh. 6. for the salvation of sinners that there is a holiness in the Person of Christ and a sufficiency in his Righteousness for the salvation of sinners This is called seeing the Son Joh. 6.40 which is not barely a notional knowledge which a man had before of Christ but a knowledge and apprehension of Christ and his Glory let into the soul such a knowledge as a man never had before seeing Christ to be a proportionable good to the Saints one that is able to save to the uttermost and one that he may have an interest in and he may become his for ever Joh. 12.44 Which when the Prophet saw he wondered all men did not believe in him his Glory did so ravish him and if a man that slighted Christ before once discern this presently he has an high esteem of this excellent person To them that believe he is precious 1 Pet. 2.7 And they look upon him with another eye than ever they did in time past and this was the plot that God the Father delighted in before the World was and that Christ was but the Father's servant in all this that he did and that God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself and that God was not averse to the work as an angry Judge but that Christ would bring souls to God and the Father did love to have it so and that all was the fruit of his own everlasting love to sinners before the world was 1 Joh. 3.16 That God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son And then all the offers of Christ the calls and the invitations of God and his compassionate intreaties that are in his Word all these begin to take place upon the soul Ho every one that thirsteth come to the waters come and buy whosoever will let him come and take of the waters of life freely That the price is already paid and that the blood of Christ was shed to cleanse sinners the Angels need it not the Devils can have no benefit by it it was given only for poor lapsed man and therefore it is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners This is the drawing and the teaching of the Father Joh. 6.44 not but that it is done by the Spirit also but it is said to be the work of the Father because the offer of Christ being Gods gift is presented unto the soul in the Fathers name with a command from him to accept of him and to believe in him For this is his Commandment that we believe in him whom he hath sent because him has God the Father sealed And this took Luther so much when he understood the righteousness of God that
sprinkled upon the Book and upon all the people and all things under the Law were cleansed and sanctified by blood Exod. 24.23 therefore the Law in the administration of it unto them was never intended by God to set forth a Covenant of Works but it was a Covenant of Grace and is usually called a Covenant Deut. 29.10 11. They stood to enter into Covenant with God that he might establish them to be a people to himself and that he might be unto them a God Deut. 26.17 18 Thou hast avouched the Lord this day to be thy God and he hath avouched thee to be his people So that the Law was given by Moses in Gods intention plainly as a Covenant of Grace unto all those that were able to look upon the intent of God therein 2 But yet the Lords intention was also that it should be a copy of the Covenant of Works that God made with Adam before his fall which was never wholly blotted out of the mind of man because God would not have that wholly to perish and be forgotten and therefore it was delivered after a sort in the form of the Covenant of Works and in this respect the Lord has made it a handmaid to the Gospel not that the Lord did intend it for a Covenant of Works as if men should attain righteousness and life thereby but as faedus subserviens a subservient Covenant as that which in this manner God would make use of to advance the ends of the Gospel and the new Covenant By all this you see that the Covenant of which Circumcision was a sign and a seal was not the Covenant of Works but was the same that was made with Abraham because the Covenant was the same Circumcision was the seal of the righteousness of Faith and continued amongst the Jews in this Covenant and that Covenant that binds to the observation of the Ceremonial as well as the Moral Law is not a Covenant of Works but the Covenant made upon Mount Sinai did bind to the Ceremonial Law also nor was the Covenant that God made with Moses a Covenant of Works for Moses was Heb. 11.23 a Believer but Exod. 34.27 it is called the Covenant which I made with thee and with all Israel when I stood before the Lord forty days and he wrote the words of the Covenant the ten Commandments But more particularly the Lord did intend to make the Law given upon Mount Sinai a copy of the Covenant of Works and to be materially and for substance the same that he did make with Adam and with all mankind in him in the state of his integrity 1. Death reigned from Adam till Moses Rom. 5. Gen. 4. ult and therefore sin came in and we see that murder was a sin in Cain and publick worship was a duty Men did begin to call upon the name of the Lord so that the Law was in the World before Moses and it was not only written in the hearts of men 2 Pet. 2.5 So Beza Gen. 6.5 but it was taught in the publick Ministery before Moses for Noah was the Preacher of Righteousness and in the Ministry of the Word we know that the Spirit of God did strive with men Gen. 6.3 The word in the Hebrew is to strive in judgment and by way of argument for conviction so that the Law was given to Adam and Noah and Abraham as well as unto Moses and was for substance the same 2. It is given in the form of a Covenant of Works with a this do and thou shalt live and so it was afterwards by Christ and by the Prophets also preached it was to the carnal Jews plainly a Covenant of Works not in Gods intention but by their own corruption they going about to establish their own righteousness Rom. 10.3 and not subjecting themselves to the righteousness of God it is set forth to them as a Covenant of Works Now if the Lord will not give it as a Covenant why does he not propound it as a rule and lay down the precepts without any such terms of a Covenant as if men should attain life by it when he did never intend to deliver it as a Covenant in which men should attain life by doing but by believing Thus the Lord did that the terms of the first Covenant might be promulgated to the World and that they that did still desire to be under the Law might not plead ignorance of the terms that God required in the Law if they did expect life and happiness thereby 3. Though I say it be for substance and materially the same yet in many circumstances it differs from Adams Covenant for this was a Covenant of such promises and sanctions annexed to it as were not in the Covenant made with Adam and a Covenant confirmed by blood and thereby sanctified which Adams Covenant never had and therefore though it did for substance agree yet in many things there was a difference This Covenant given unto Adam in a state of Innocency and for substance renewed upon Mount Sinai when it was by sin wholly obliterated and blotted out God has made a handmaid or foedus subserviens a Covenant subservient to the Gospel it is Hagar Gal. 4.23 but the Covenant of Grace is Sarah and it is given in the hand of a Mediator not only by Moses but by Christ also for Christ delivered the Law to them Act. 7.38 Moses was in the Wilderness with the Angel who spake to him in Mount Sinai and with our fathers and what Angel was it but Christ he that saith I am the God of Abraham and he that was also tempted in the Wilderness and the Apostle says We are come to Jesus whose voice then shook the earth in the giving of the Law 1 Cor. 10.4 Heb. 12.25 26. it was his voice and then by an enumeration of particulars how the Lord has made every part of the Law as it is materially the first Covenant a servant to the Gospel for the discovery of sin the Law entred that the offence might abound and the Apostle says Rom. 5.20 I had not known sin but by the Law and also for the conviction of Conscience and the imputation of sin Rom. 5.13 sin is not imputed where there is no Law and for the condemnation of sin that it may be a Schoolmaster to bring the sinner unto Christ the avenger of blood Gal. 3.10 a killing letter and the ministration of death to kill them and hew them and it restrains sin and puts a bridle upon a man and is a means of conversion the curse of the Law is sanctified and the threatnings sweet when the curse is taken out death has no sting the grave has no victory and it is to all under the second Covenant a rule a companion and a counsellor The Law is to be considered as I told you two ways 1 Largely as containing all the Doctrine delivered upon Mount Sinai and all things that may
conceive it was a body that was given him by the Father 2 There was Union from the Father and therefore there is a grace of Union as to us in Mystical Union it is the Father made up the match between us and Christ and we are united unto him for ever so in the Personal and Hypostatical Union it is the Father that made up the match and made the two Natures to become one Person and therefore it is said Luk. 1.35 That holy thing that is born shall be called the Son of God for it was in obedience to the Father that he did come to take this body into Union it is true he did take the seed of Abraham but it was by the Fathers command Heb. 2.16 Heb. 10.7 and in obedience to him and therefore he says A body hast thou prepared me and therefore he did take it upon himself as he did his sufferings The cup that his Father gave him he did drink and so in him dwelt the fulness of the Godhead bodily 3. There is also the grace of Unction God gave not the Spirit by measure unto him Joh. 3.34 Jesus of Nazareth whom God has anointed with the Holy Ghost and with power As it pleased the Father in him should all fulness dwell as the Sun of Righteousness and as the fountain of life and this is not in him only as God but as Mediator but all this is still as it pleased the Father acts of his free-grace 4. Assistance in this great work it is true that Christ was God and able to raise himself 1 Joh. 5.11 and did quicken himself and did overcome death and spoiled Principalities and Powers and triumphed over them openly but yet he doth ascribe all this to the gracious assistance of God the Father it is the Lord that made him a promise that he should go through with his work and Christ doth strengthen himself by exercising faith upon the Promises of God the Father who promised Isa 42.4 He shall not fail nor be discouraged till he hath set judgement in the earth I the Lord have called thee in righteousness I will hold thee by the hand that is by a mighty assistance and support and I will keep thee c. and with these Christ helps himself by exercising faith upon them I will trust in thee he is near that justifies me Isa 50.8 Who will contend with me the Lord is at my right hand I shall not be moved Psal 16.8 9 10. therefore my heart is glad and my flesh shall rest in hope for thou will not leave my soul in Hell i. e. in the grave under the power and condemnation of that sin and wrath that now is upon me nor suffer my body to see corruption but thou wilt shew me the path of life c. And Psal 22. he strengthens his faith by experience of his forefathers Our Fathers trusted in thee and thou deliveredst them So that Christs assistance in all his managing of the work of the Covenant is wholly from the free-grace of God the Father and therefore in all the business of it Christ had recourse unto his Father by prayer continually 5. Acceptance It is true that Christ as his Person was in worth and value answerable unto all the Elect of God and beyond them so there was a worth and price in all that he did in his suffering answerable unto whatever the Law and Justice of God did require God did abate him nothing he payed the uttermost farthing else there could not have been satisfaction Isa 63.6 for it must be redditio aequivalentis pro aequivalenti it was a full satisfaction God did abate him nothing in this but God made our sins to meet upon him he did not abate him one sin and being made sin he did not abate him any part of the curse And what mercies soever the Lord doth bestow upon us Christ hath paid a valuable price for them because his obedience did deserve and did truly merit at the hand of God whatever the Lord shall bestow upon us to eternity either in Grace here or Glory hereafter it is indeed free unto us and a gift but yet it is unto Christ a purchase and therefore here indeed there is nothing of grace as it were but all is of debt that is Christ did lay down something answerable unto whatever God did either give or forgive But yet here is Grace in the Lords acceptance of all that Christ hath done and suffered for us and the imputation thereof unto us and that the Lord should account this by a Soveraign imputation to be as done in our stead and for us for the Law did say the soul that sins shall die it is Grace only that brings in the commutation of the Person though there be no commutation of the righteousness that was required of us Heb. 10.10 it is meerly of Grace that the Lord has accepted of Christ for us all the benefits of the Death of Christ as Pardon of Sin Reconciliation with God Justification and Adoption they do all depend upon this will of the Father for had he not appointed this work and thereby declared his acceptation had not he accepted it who was the Judge we could never have had any benefit by it and therefore it is by his will alone that all this is made over unto us there was free-grace abundantly in his acceptation By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many Isa 53.11 Joh. 6.38 by the knowledge of him and faith in him for of such a knowledge it is meant I came not to do my own will but the will of him that sent me the meaning is not as if Christ came unwillingly but that his Fathers will was first in this work and so much in it that the thing that Christ did principally aim at was to please his Father and to do his will therein Now because Christs great aim was to do his Fathers will and to please his Father doing all by appointment from him he knew he hath acceptance with him for though Christ had paid the price it was free with God to accept it or no. 6. There is a reward that is given unto Christ for all the services that he does perform He hath a name above every name Phil. 2.9 10. and a seed Isa 53. and a glory He being set on the right hand of the Majesty on high 1 Pet. 1. ult Angels and Principalities and Powers being made subject unto him and this the Lord hath given him as a reward of his service I will not now speak unto that Question put by some Divines Whether Christ did merit for himself which our Divines do deny in this sense as being the great end why he did come into the world to merit for his Elect-ones because the Scripture saith God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son Joh. 3.16 And to us a Child is born to us a son is
to be strangers to the Covenant of promise as it is in justification though there be a justification in capite when Christ rose from the dead because he rose as a publick person yet there is not a personal justification in a man till he do believe and be made one with Christ and hath thereby an interest in his righteousness 4 All the promises of the second Covenant belong unto Christ as his purchase and unto us of promise to him of debt and unto us of grace the making of the Covenant indeed was an act of free grace with Christ but the performance and all the benefits thereof is an act of purchase Ephes 1.14 it is all the inheritance of Christ purchased by his merits but to us it comes of grace and meerly for Christs sake 5 Christ as to his Covenant hath no surety God took his word and his faithfulness he did rely upon and therefore calls him faithful and true and said he had laid help on one that is mighty Psal 89. but we have a surety of our Covenant to pay the debt and perform the duty SECT II. The Covenant as made with Believers applied Vse 1 § 1. NOw therefore if the Lord do enter into Covenant with his Saints and they are all a Covenant people and not only made a Covenant with our head for us but with every particular man in his own person then 1. Let every one of us know that it 's our duty to enter our Covenant with the Lord and this is the great end of publishing the Gospel to bring men into the bond of the Covenant Dan. 9.27 Dan. 9.27 He shall confirm the Covenant with many c. here is a Provinical Kalender and that Dan. 7. is an Oecumenical which is the time from the going forth of the Commandment of Cyrus to rebuild the City and the Temple he names the time of the final destruction of the Temple and the utter desolation of the City after the end of sixty two weeks before the Messiah be cut off but not for himself and then he shall confirm the Covenant with many for one week and in the middle of the week he shall cause the daily sacrifice to cease c. and this is commonly interpreted of preaching the Gospel to the Gentiles and bringing them unto the knowledge of Christ Calvin A tacite antithesis between the old Church and the new which does extend through the whole world c. And this Preaching the Gospel and declaring the new Covenant unto the Gentiles and bringing them into the fellowship of the Mysterie is called confirming the Covenant with them but the word in the original signifies praevaluit superavit therefore it doth signifie that the second Covenant shall prevail over men and bring them in by the power thereof and therefore when the Lord sends forth his Gospel Psal 110. it is called the day of his power not that of armies to force men by constraint but subdue their wills unto the obedience thereof and that there should be willingness in the day of this his power so far should the Covenant prevail for the Lord hath strengthned it that it should prevail upon many and bring them into the bonds thereof so that the great end of the Gospel and all the glorious power put forth therein is but that the Covenant may prevail and men submit thereunto Now if a man would enter into Covenant with God what is required of him O that the Lord would bring his word at this time upon any soul and that I might be but instrumental therein to bring you under this Covenant that your hearts may take hold of it The arguments to perswade you and to plead with you are very many and forcible in the spirit of grace and power accompanying them I may take enough from ●he misery of the former Covenant under which you must needs stand unless you enter ●nto this new Covenant for it is no more possible for the same man to be under both Covenants than it is possible to be born of two mothers as has been manifested to you ●lready out of Gal. 4.21 23 c. But for the present I would pitch upon these 1. If you come not under this Covenant you have no interest in God for the former Covenant being broken God is become your enemy and he is now no more your God than he is the Devils God and the damned Spirits God unless you enter into Covenant with him anew for there is no way for you to have an interest in God but by Covenant with him Psal 144. they are a happy people whose God is Jehovah and they on the contrary are a miserable people that have not the Lord for their God but for their enemy Now as the Lord came to be Christs God so he must be your God and Christ takes a new Covenant-right unto God to this every end he hath a double right unto all things 1 As he is haeres natus as it was his natural inheritance as he had a right to whatever his Father had for he thinks it no robbery to be equal with him and yet he takes a new Covenant-right unto all things 2 As he is Haeres constitutus an Heir appointed by God that he might be able to communicate the same unto us so he takes a new covenant-right unto God that we entring into the same Covenant the Lord might become our God as he is Christs God and how is God made over unto a man in this Covenant It is in his all-sufficiency Gen. 17.1 so that look whatever sufficiency there is in God all this is thine and thou mayest claim an interest in it Now if a man had all things else in the world this very consideration would imbitter all to him that he has no interest in God as on the contrary if a man were deprived of all things else this would sweeten all that God is his God as it was said of Job he lost all that God had given him but he had him who gave him all and as Bernard saies all meat is unsavoury that has not this salt And so on the contrary thou hast all these good things but thou hast no interest in him who is the God of them all and whose Love is infinitely in sweetness beyond them all for his loving kindness is better than life and all the revenews of life which appears because perfection of Happiness in Heaven lies in God alone when a man shall be taken off from all the comforts of the creatures and though while men taste the sweetness of the creatures and the pleasures of them they seem not to find that want of God but can be content to be without him to all eternity yet there will come a time when men shall know what it is to live without God in the world as all they do that have no interest in the Covenant of grace 2. It is only in the Covenant
obedience the condition foederis praestiti Jer. 7.12 Jer. 11.5 They must obey that God may perform Esay 54.9 10. Jer. 32.40 and how many temporal afflictions were inflicted on them And so I may say to any soul that keeps Covenant with God thy sufferings will say to thee cavendae tempestates flenda naufragia Austin de Nat. Grat. cap. 35. And thus we should take heed of keeping the Covenant or else though the Lord continue faithful in reference to the promises of eternity because Christ is the surety yet in regard of temporal promises you may go without them and many of them never be performed unto you But you will say may a man that is in the Covenant of Grace break the Covenant may the Covenant of Grace be broken as the Covenant of Works was If it may not be broken to what end do you exhort us to keep it It 's true that the Covenant of Grace cannot be broken a man that is once in Covenant is ever in Covenant and the grounds of it are these 1. The Love of God that made the Covenant is an everlasting Love and therefore the Covenant it self is every where called an everlasting Covenant and the Lord saith If you can bring another flood upon the Earth and if you can stop the Sun in his course and change the Ordinances of Heaven then the Covenant might be broken that he had made with his people Therefore Rom. 8. the Apostle saies that nothing shall separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord for the Lord loves us with an everlasting Love 2. It is a Covenant made with the persons of men mens persons are first taken into Covenant and there is this difference between the Covenant of Grace and the Covenant of Works in the later Covenant the works were taken into Covenant first and then the person for the works sake and so long as their works continued holy so long their persons were to be accepted and find favour and honour with the Lord Gen. 4.7 If thou doest well there is an elevation and a lifting up of the face but if thou dost evil cursed is thy person for thy works sake and there is an ira redundans in personam wrath falling on the person that doth immediately follow thereupon but now in the Covenant of Grace it is quite contrary mens persons are first taken into Covenant and accepted and then their works for their persons sake the Lord had respect unto Abel and unto his offering and therefore till the person be in Covenant the works are abominable before God Now the works of the Saints may not always be accepted of God he may be and is often displeased with the acts of his covenant-people but yet their persons alwayes find acceptance with him their persons are the same I will visit their offences with a rod and their sins with scourges but my loving kindness I will not take from their persons my Covenant I will not break Psal 89. there is an ira simplex simple anger that doth reach to the sin but not to the person he is never a child of wrath more after his person is taken into a state of adoption with the Lord. 3. Their union with Christ is that which puts them into the second Covenant Gal. 3.29 as this union gives them interest in Christs righteousness and Sonship so it doth first state them in the Covenant which is the ground of all the rest the intendment of God was that the union between Christ and them should be the means to convey all this to their souls all comes in by Union Now so long as the Union between Christ and a soul continues so long the Covenant cannot be broken but this Union is indissoluble sin cannot nay death cannot separate between God and a soul in Covenant with him and therefore as they live so they dye in the Lord and sleep in Jesus 4. The righteousness of this Covenant is an everlasting righteousness Dan. 9. The Lord hath finished transgression and made an end of sin in the great condemning power of it and brought in everlasting righteousness such as sin could never spend for he is the son of righteousness the Lord of righteousness and therefore his Covenant can never be broken seeing the righteousness of the Covenant can never be expended 5. Christ is the surety of this better Covenant and therefore though we pay not the debt that we owe he hath undertaken it and the Lord will expect all of him and thence he is said to lay help on one that is mighty Psal 89. he will take your words no more but Christ is able to pay it as he did the debt of the first Covenant so he is able to perform the duty of the second the Lord hath ingaged him in it and he expects all from him as from the surety of the Covenant which he hath undertaken 6. Lastly This Covenant can never be broken because there is an everlasting principle of Grace begun in the Soul that doth always lay hold of the Covenant and cleave to it and consent to it and work towards it for it is incorruptible and immortal seed and therefore Jer. 32.40 This is the Covenant I will make with you I will write my law in your heart c. that you shall never depart from me In a Married condition there may be many failings in a Wife or a Husband as neglect disobedience c. but the Marriage Covenant is never broken till she take another Husband and the Covenant of Grace is a Marriage Covenant Now though there be many errors and failings in a Wife yet unless thou chuse another Husband and subject thy self to another Lord the Covenant between God and thee is not broken It is a matter of wonderful consolation that the Covenant between us and the Lord is a Covenant of salt that the sins of the people of God though they be many yet they cannot break the Covenant How should the consideration of this rich Grace and Mercy make the Saints triumph over Death and Hell O death where is thy sting O Grave where is thy victory blessed be God we are more than Conquerors through Christ Jesus our Lord. But yet you had need be exhorted not to break this Covenant 1. By reason of the falseness of our own hearts Jer. 2.24 for we are like a wild Asse in the wilderness that doth traverse her paths that no hedges or fetters can hold her in so much that the Lord speaks it with admiration How weak is thy heart Ezek. 16.30 That it 's not able to hold out against any temptation not able to bear any one affliction but immediately it 's ready to depart from God Gen. 49.4 unstable as water there is a treachery and a perfidiousness of spirit in the best of us and therefore we had need be often called upon Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall and let us take
Covenant with the Lord knowing the falseness and instability of my spirit the duties are many and it is impossible for me to observe them all Take these directions 1. Get a true heart Heb. 10.22 Let us draw near with true heart a true heart is a heart perfect with God that 's the condition of the Covenant though your ways be party-coloured yet if you have the answer of a good Conscience i. e. when your heart doth inwardly answer to what you do profess and there is not a root of bitterness left in you that draws you back from the Lord this is a true heart It is called the Girdle of truth Ephes 6.14 Ephes 6.14 and that is as I should understand it not doctrinally but morally practically full of stedfastness and stability of soul in the discharge of all the ingagements wherein we stand bound unto God without shrinking or tergiversation as it is the sin in the practice of too many professors both to God and man there is a vein of dissimulation runs through their conversation they will dissemble love to persons behind whose backs they will accuse and represent them as persons blame-worthy and through the self-flattery that is in their spirits they will strive to lessen the excellencies and vertues that are in others that they may shine the more in the esteem of men and hereby they manifest they love the praise of men more than the praise of God and herein they may have their reward though it will bring in but little comfort when they come to dye or when they r●flect upon this great condition of the Covenant which is to draw near to God with a true heart Isa 11.5 For this faithfulness is a noble girdle it was Christs and therefore it should be ours it is this truth in the inward parts that will keep the Covenant that it shall not be broken notwithstanding thy daily failings Heb. 13.9 Act. 11.23 Psal 86.11 2. Desire of God a stablished and a fixed heart To have the heart stablished with grace is a good thing and with full purpose of heart to cleave to the Lord. And the Psalmists prayer is Vnite my heart to fear thy name my heart is fixed O God c. And there is not a greater spiritual judgment in this life than to be given up to a light vain and unstable soul that is moved with every wind of Doctrine or with every wind of temptation when a man is carried to and fro to have the heart still fluctuating and be sometimes fixt upon one thing and sometimes upon another and unsetled in the principles of Grace such as are unstable shall not excel 3. Exercise faith upon the Grace of God in this Covenant which is eternal love and have an eye unto the surety of the Covenant in whom only it remains sure for it is an ordered Covenant and therefore sure and for this cause Christ is called the Covenant it self Isa 49.6 he is given as a Covenant to the Nations to establish the earth because in him only all the stability of the Covenant is to be found Consider in the time of affliction what a sweet thing it will be and what boldness it will give a man before God when he is able to say Though thou hast smitten us in the place of Dragons and covered us with the shadow of death Psal 44.17 yet have we not gone back from thee nor behaved our selves falsly in thy Covenant and when at death a man shall look over to the common-wealth of another World and shall be able to say Lord remember that I have walked before thee all my days with a perfect heart my heart hath stood to the Covenant and I have not chosen any other Lord though in many things my ways have not been answerable unto the rule of the Covenant Vse 3 § 3. Now having entered in this manner into Covenant with God it is our duty to have respect unto our Covenant and to improve our interest in it in all our ways The Covenant is to run through our whole life for it 's a Covenant for a mans life it being a Marriage Covenant and In matrimonio est perpetua quaedam servitus In matrimony there is a perpetual kind of servitude a Woman which hath an husband is bound by the law to her husband as long as he liveth Rom. 7.2 and David puts all his hope in the Covenant 2 Sam. 23.5 his happiness consisted in it and all his joy and delight his soul did run out upon this Covenant and from hence all his joy came in There are in Scripture several ways of sinning against this Covenant 1 There is transgressing the Covenant like Adam Hos 6.7 Hos 6.7 There have they dealt treacherously against me c. which is taken Two ways either as Adam they have broken the Covenant in which they bound themselves or else as Tremelius hath it they have broken the Covenant as if it were the Covenant of a man and as if they had to do with man in it and not with God 2 It is rejecting the Covenant 2 King 17.15 to despise it as a poor and unworthy thing not to be regarded by them 3 There is forsaking the Covenant as a thing that they are not bound by neither will they be bound by any longer Deut. 29.25 Mal. 2.8 10. And then 4 there is corrupting the Covenant and profaning it They have corrupted the Covenant of Levi that is the Covenant of life and peace which God made with him they have corrupted the Law and they have profaned the Covenant as if it were a common and ordinary thing for to profane is to make a thing common 5 There is a dealing falsly in the Covenant Psal 44.17 which signifies to lye to a man and deal treacherously with him in a Covenant made when a man pretends fair and doth the quite contrary there is no trust to him no hold upon him 6 There is Deut. 4.23 Deut. 4.23 forgeting the Covenant Take heed says Moses lest you forget the Covenant of the Lord your God which he made with you Now when a man in Scripture is said to forget a thing Verba sensus significant cum affectu effectu The words of sense signifie affects and effects God is said to forget men when he doth not appear for their help Psal 13.1 How long wilt thou forget me O Lord and hide thy face from my troubles We are said to forget God when we do not honour him as God and are not affected towards him as becomes a God and so men are said to forget the Covenant of God when they have not those affections as so great an ingagement doth require do not know and improve their interest in it as they ought to do do not make it as David did all their salvation and all their delight and therefore 't is said Psal 10.5 he is always mindful of his Covenant that is
be as voluntary as it was in the making of it to make fair promises while men are under the rod as many do in sickness they promise to lead new lives but yet return to their old ways with the Dog and start aside from these purposes in their prosperity like a broken bow as when the Goths invaded Rome the Christians having some mercy granted them all the Pagans would then become Christians and after proved persecutors of them 5. A man must be willing to bind himself in the highest way unto obedience thereunto When the people did make a Covenant they did stand up to the Covenant and said Amen Amen and they swore to it and that in a publick way with a loud voice Duet 25. v. last Nehem. 9 v. last Neh. 10.29 with shoutings and Trumpets and they did write it down in a Book and it 's a further ingagement to have a mans own hand against him that is a great witness and lays him under more guilt than any witness can fasten upon him and he sets not only his hand but his seal to and binds himself with a curse and by fearful imprecations of vengeance upon himself if he did not perform it as they did Nehem. 10.29 desi●e God to avenge upon themselves their falshood in breaking of the Covenant and are content the threatning should take place upon them if they break it as well as the promise if they keep it and thereby they shew that they desire the Covenant should abide firm Jer. 50 5. as they say Jer. 50.5 Let us joyn our selves to the Lord in a perpetual Covenant never to be forgot 6. It must be with an earnest desire to God for grace to keep it and an acknowledgment of our own weakness and inability to perform anyone of the duties of the Covenant for Covenants that are made upon any self-dependance do not long continue as Peters did not when he said Though all men forsake thee yet will not I and though I dye with thee yet will I not deny thee Our promises of duty must be supported by Gods promises of grace or else we shall soon fail in them for God must perform the promises of grace before we can perform our promise of service for without him we can do nothing upon him is all our fruit found Hos 14.8 and therefore in all our Covenants we should have an eye unto the promise that gives grace as well as requires service and say with David I will run the way of thy Commnadments when thou shalt inlarge my heart Isa 38.14 and with Hezekiah Lord I am weak undertake for me The word in the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and signifies to become a surety and so should we consider the new Covenant is in the hand of a surety and to him we should look for strength for the grace of the Covenant is laid up in him so that there is in our Covenant with God a double bond laid upon us not only an obligation unto the duty injoyned but to have recourse unto God for grace to perform it 4. What are the times and seasons that the people of God have specially observed in renewing of their Covenant with the Lord that so a man may be able to say now God calls me unto this duty For there is a season for every duty and a godly man is to bring forth his fruit in the season Psal 1.3 I find in Scripture that the seasons of renewing their Covenant were commonly these 1. When a man hath eminently fallen into any great sin or hath relapsed into former sins that were repented of and that we have humbled our souls for and if being washed we have again defiled our selves and turned again to folly then is a season in which the Lord calls you to renew your Covenant Peter committed a very great sin it being that sin also which he was warned of and took up great purposes and resolutions against M tt 26 74. it was not a bare denial but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he denies with an Oath nay with cursings and damnings of himself as the word imports imprecating of the wrath of God and eternal separation from his presence if he knew the man Now how must Peter come from this fall It 's called a conversion Luk. 22.31 When thou art converted strengthen thy brethren Recovery out of sin committed is called a conversion There is a two-fold conversion 1 from a general state of sin 2 from a particular way of sin for the first of these Peter had past he was converted before and Christ had given testimony to his faith that it was true and that it should not fail but yet there is a conversion from this particular fall a renewing of his repentance and as it were turning unto God again a-new and that is seen in these two things 1 In renewed humiliation and godly sorrow 2 In a renewed Covenant and a solemn ingagement of reformation for the time to come and this is required in the renewing of a mans repentance after any great and eminent fall The same course doth Paul take Rom. 7.16 after his conflict he doth then renew his Covenant and saith I do break the Law yet my heart doth still cleave to the rule thereof and acknowledge the goodness of it and this consent of speaking the same thing that the Law doth is properly and formally the renewing of a mans Covenant and ingagement and so doth the Church after her great fall and backsliding Cant. 6.3 I am my beloveds and my beloved is mine he feedeth among the lillies which I conceive to be the words of one rejoycing and triumphing in the assurance of his interest in God but also they are the words of one covenanting and renewing the reconciliation of himself unto the Lord as when the Lord hath departed from us through our provocation when he doth return to his people he is said to elect them anew Zach. 1.17 The Lord shall yet comfort Sion and shall yet chuse Jerusalem his returning is as it were a second election So when we return to God after a special fall it is as it were a new conversion and this is a special testimony of the truth of a mans sorrow that it is according to God 2. In time of publick humiliation when men would divert and turn away judgement either from a nation or a person then is the time for them to renew their Covenant and this was the ground of the Covenant the Hezekiah made 2 Chron. 29.8 Our fathers have transgressed and done that which was evil in the sight of the Lord wherefore the wrath of the Lord came upon Judah and Jerusalem to destroy them and he hath delivered them to trouble to astonishment and to hissing as you see with your eyes our fathers have fallen by the sword and our sons and our daughters and our wives are in captivity for this now it is in my heart to make
the will of man but of God why will the Lord have the same conveyance still continue for the externals and the priviledges of it when for the graces of it the intail is cut off for ever 9 How far the administration of the old Covenant should as a rule determine the administration of God under the new that we may be able to reason from one to the other he did so with Abraham and his posterity therefore he will do so with the Saints now and whether in Abraham there were not something personal and peculiar to him and his seed according to the flesh that they only that come in by a claim to the faith of Abraham cannot take unto themselves For Abraham in reference to the covenant is set forth two ways either as a begetting Abraham Rom. 4. or as a believing Abraham and whether the priviledges of both the children of Abraham according to the flesh or by promise be the same 10 How far the Jews by virtue of Abrahams Covenant as being his seed and as being taken into a Church-covenant in their parents being the only visible Church unto God on Earth could pretend to a right unto the ordinances and priviledges of the Church of God under the New Testament For if the parents were in covenant so were their children taken in at least into the externals of the covenant 11 How children can be said to be taken into Covenant when they cannot restipulate nor be said to be obliged by their Covenant 12 Seeing there is so much dispute about it were it not much better to leave children out of this claim For if they be elected we may rest quietly in that state and leave them in the arms of Gods electing love and resting upon that foundation for their eternal salvation the Lord knows who are his and to defer their claim to the covenant till they themselves are able to take hold of the covenant and to give their consent thereunto to give the hand unto the Lord and then they may claim it with comfort children from their parents right and parents for their children and then we may with comfort seal up that which we have good ground upon judgment to conclude to be a mans title and interest and then the parents covenant-interest will come in at second hand and a man having himself first taken hold and consented to the covenant in his own person it will be a good argument for a man to plead with God for the mercies and blessings of the covenant Lord thou art my God and my fathers God as Moses did Lord I am thy servant and the son of thy handmaid and so the Church For thy servant Davids sake turn not away c. Remember the covenant that thou hast made with Abraham and Isaac c. And so did Austin after his conversion take a great deal of comfort in his mothers covenant-interest and in all the prayers that she did put up to God for him Confess l. 3.11 Salutem meam sempiternam chariùs parturibat corde casto c. till the Lord in a dream gave her great hopes concerning his salvation but till then a man can have little comfort in it Quest 1 Are all the children of parents in covenant taken into covenant with their parents or only some selected by God himself as he did in the children of Abraham when he said in Isaac shall thy seed be called Answ The parents covenant takes in all their seed and they are all in covenant with God till they be ejected Cain was in covenant as well as Abel till cast out of the presence of the Lord and Ismael as well as Isaac till the sentence upon his mocking cast out the bond-woman and her son and the Jews not only for their children immediately but those for many ages to come Deut. 29.13 14. Joh. 8. 1. If we look into Abrahams posterity we read that they were of two sorts a seed according to the flesh a carnal generation which the Jews stood so much upon and gloried in Mat. 3.9 We have Abraham to our father and there is a seed of Abraham that walk in the steps of the faith of Abraham and in this respect Abraham is called the father of us all here is a double paternity from begetting Abraham and believing Abraham and here is a double sonship children according to the flesh and the heirs of promise Rom. 9.6 7 8. They are not all Israel who are of Israel neither because they are the seed of Abraham are they all children but in Isaac shall thy seed be called that is they that are the children of the flesh are not the children of God but the children of the promise are counted for his seed and because they are the seed of Abraham they are not therefore all children and this is more fully set forth in that Allegory of the Apostle Gal. 4.22 23. where we have Abrahams family set forth as a pattern and a resemblance of the visible Church of God in which there are two sorts of sons and two sorts of mothers there is the bond and the free woman and so the Apostle says it was then and so it should continue in the Church of God while its militant state did last and yet both these seeds are taken into their parents covenant and therefore all the posterity of Seth are called the sons of God Gen. 6.1 and all without the Church the daughters of men all the Israelites were Jews outwardly Ye are the children of the Lord your God says Moses Deut. 14.1 his peculiar people and treasure called also the children of the Kingdom and the children of the Covenant Act. 3.25 Mat. 8.12 And this is not only so of the Jews but the Gentiles also Gal. 3.26 Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus and yet I suppose no man will say that all in the Church of the Galatians were truly really and savingly so therefore all their children were taken into the same covenant with their parents faith and holiness 2. The sentence of Excommunication hath passed upon such and they have been ejected and cast out of the Church and from all the visible Communion and Priviledges of it Now Church-censures are to extend to none but Church-members 1 Cor. 5.12 13. 1 Cor. 5.12 13. We judge them that be within what have we to do to judge those that are without We see 1 That Church-government is an authoritative thing a power of judgment and so the Authority of Christ is called Joh. 5.25 2 There is a distinction of men some are without and some within and this is a rule Differentia divisiva est etiam constitutiva there is something therefore that makes them to be without and something that makes them to be within and this can be nothing but their own personal consent or their coming in by their fathers covenant 3 This authority is not exercised upon them without they are
to be one in Covenant with God is all one for it is the grafting of a branch into the Stock and growing of it upon the root of the Covenant that makes it a visible member I will be thy God and the God of thy seed 3. As the children are brought into Covenant by a parental right and not a personal so to the being in Covenant the consent of the Parents is in Gods account accepted and a personal consent is not required but as when the Parent doth dissent he doth thereby keep the child out of Covenant as all the Heathens do who do not consent to the Gospel and the Jews did that cast off and rejected the Word of Life so when Parents do consent they bring their children within the Covenant which runs unto them and their seed as confederates it 's therefore the consent of the Parents that is in God's account taken for the consent of the child As God did under the first Covenant include all the consent of Adams Posterity in the first man and they all consented in his consent and therefore all sinn'd in him and violated the Covenant so the Lord binds up the consent of the child in reference to the Covenant in the consent of the Parents he consents for himself and his seed also Gell. Succanus in his book de baptismo lays down two Rules that are of excellent use unto the present Question that the Covenant of Grace is to take in the seed together with the Parents 1 It is a special over-flowing of Grace to the Parents which they are to believe and consent unto for though the benefit of it does come upon the children yet it is the Parents priviledge and it is a part of the Gospel of Grace that he is to give consent unto and his faith takes hold of that God will be the God of his seed as well as of himself he is to take hold of the Covenant in all the parts of it that is not for himself only but for his seed also 2 All Infants P. 23.8 imputative fideles dici possunt may be imputatively called Believers that is in Gods account and esteem they are also persons in Covenant with God and the consent of their parents is imputed or counted by God as their consent Now we know that Imputation is an act of Sovereignty and of Gods own free will as it appears in that God will account Adam and his posterity one and that he will account Christ and the Saints to be one and so impute the Sin of the one and the Righteousness of the other And if the Lord will impute the consent of Parents to their children so as to own them as his in Covenant with him according to the Word till they do themselves manifest their dissent and cast off the Covenant of their God he may justly do it and yet God according to the Rules of his Word does count them though they belong not to the Election of Grace as confederates and in Covenant with himself it 's no wonder if the Church also do while they so remain own them for members and those that are in a visible Covenant the consent of the ●arents being by Grace imputed unto them as theirs Neither need this seem strange if we consider that common rule that the whole Doctrine of the Gospel is built upon Vnitas prostantis est fundamentum proprietatis the ground of all Imputation is Union Adams sin is imputed because there was an union between him and us we were all in him as in a root and therefore totum genus humanum in Adamo velut in radice computruit Greg. This is also the true ground of the Imputation of the Righteousness of Christ because we are made one with him we must be found in him if ever we have Righteousness from him Phil. 3.9 Phil. 3.9 and 1 Joh. 5.12 He must have the Son first that will have Life through him and this Union is twofold 1 There is a natural Vnion which is between the Parents and the Children and 2 There is a voluntary Vnion now the Union with the first Adam was the first and the ground of the imputation of Christs Righteousness or Union with the second Adam was the last therefore if the children and the parents have a natural Union in Gods account and the act of the parents be counted the act of the child in all legal considerations as it is so amongst men and if the children and parent be looked upon as one person it 's no wonder if they be in Gods account judged to have but one will and therefore the consents of the parents may be well counted the childrens by reason of the natural Union that is between them Quest 12 § 12. But seeing it is so great a dispute were it not better to leave Children out of this claim and Covenant If they belong unto the Election of Grace let us leave them in the arms of Gods electing Love which if they dye will take care of their Salvation and if they live of their Conversion and then when they come to years and be able to take hold of the Covenant for themselves they may boldly claim their interest in it the children from the parents and the parents for their children specially considering that the Lord Jesus Christ himself when he was baptized did defer it till he came to a ripeness of years and why were it not better for us to do it also by his example Answ Mic. 6.8 1. We see vain man would be wise though he be born as a wild Asses Colt sometimes men dispute what is best and were it not better thus He hath shewed thee O man what is good and what the Lord thy God requires of thee and thou mayst as well dispute the electing will of God Tert. as the commanding will Deo serviendum est non ex arbitrio sed ex imperio Audaciam existimo de bono divini praecepti disputare nec quàm bonum est auscultare debemus sed quàm Deus praecepit Tertullian de poenis Shall God say I will take thee and thy seed into Covenant and shall men say Were it not better leave the seed out till they can actually understand and give consent unto the Covenant into which they are taken truly it 's abominable presumption and unthankfulness 2. It 's not better that it be deferred for 1 Hereby they that have the power of the Keys do their dutyes that is they do admit those and let them partake of the root and fatness of the true Olive-tree to whom it does belong for as it is their sin to take in any that by the rules of the Word ought to be left out so it 's their sin also to keep out any who by the rules of the Word are to be within 2 Hereby infantes dignitatis insignia gerunt Infants bear the Ensigns of their dignity that they are taken out of the world have
Esau who did despise the birth-bright Heb. 12. and partly that the soul understanding it may receive satisfaction and see an all-sufficiency in it Aristotle for godliness hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-sufficience going with it as it is 1 Tim. 4.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Perfect good seems to be self-sufficient and for this cause the Apostle prays for a spirit of illumination Eph. 1.18 That the eyes of their understanding being opened they might know what is the hope of their calling and the riches of this inheritance which God has prepared for the Saints that God whose are all things and of whom are all things yet his portion is his people they are of all people his peculiar treasure and what a glorious inheritance the Lord has chosen to himself in them making up one glorious body with the Lord Jesus Christ Now if it be necessary the eyes of our understanding should be enlightned to know the glory of Gods inheritance in us how much more the glory of our inheritance in Gods attributes that the soul may be able to rejoyce in the goodness of the Lord and say Thou art my portion says my soul that as Calvin observes upon that place Zac. 9.12 Satis praesidii in uno Deo There 's safeguard enough in one God so it may be said of all things else there is wisdom enough and holiness enough and all to be had in him and it is enough if it be in him alone There is a threefold inheritance that Christ hath stated upon his people for Christ is heir of all things 1 by Nature and Generation 2 by Donation as he was man now the first belongs unto him alone and he cannot communicate it and the other he doth impart unto us as we are one body with him and as we partake with him in the same Sonship so we do also in his inheritance Eph. 1.14 and this inheritance of Christ the Saints have a treble benefit by 1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as he is the Heir of all things we have by him an inheritance of creatures as Christ is God he comes not under an act of Gods will and therefore it 's spoken of him as he was Mediator 2 He has an inheritance of promises for they are all made first unto him Gal. 3.16 2 Cor. 1.20 to him were the promises made not of seeds as of many but as of one who is Christ and therefore it 's in him that all the promises are Yea and Amen as we were chosen in him he was first elected and we in him so the promises were first Yea and then Amen in him and by virtue of our union with him unto us 3 There is a higher inheritance and that is Psal 16.5 that the Lord is the portion of Christ The Lord is the portion of my inheritance and of my cup Psal 45.7 c. Answerable unto this is the inheritance that Christ has made over unto the Saints who as they are fellows with him in his Unction so they are Coheirs with him in his Inheritance Rom. 8.17 as they have an inheritance in creatures for all all things are yours whether life or death and also in promises 1 Cor. 3.22 which is beyond what they have in any of the creatures so they have an inheritance that is far beyond both these and that is in God himself Rev. 21.7 He shall inherit all things I will be his God Heb. 6.12 Now if we consider it we shall see that there are great riches in this to have all the attributes of God theirs is greater than to have all the creatures and the promises of God made over to them 1. The Attributes of God are nothing else but the transcendent perfections that are in God the Divine Nature shadowed forth to us according to the capacity of the creatures in which the Lord as in his back parts that is pro nostro modulo according to our capacity makes known himself unto us and causes his goodness to pass before us and if the Lord would take any soul of us as he did Moses and in this manner discover himself there is nothing in the world would affect the soul like unto it for if these be the perfections of God how infinitely must they needs exceed all things that are in the creatures for they are all in him after the manner of a God and therefore all the attributes may be predicated of God in abstracto he is Wisdom and Holiness and Mercy c. because they are all of them the Divine Nature all the excellencies that are in the creature are received from him and therefore surely there is infinite more in himself Thence the Saints have been more taken with the Divine Excellencies that are in the Nature of God immediately than in all the blessings and benefits that come from him 1 Sam. 2.2 as Hanna after the blessing she had received from him she admires his goodness and the excellency that is in him there is none holy as the Lord and who is a Rock save our God and if the Saints did not do so their love were not of a right kind Austin plus diligere attractum quàm sponsum meretricius amor to love the token more than the bridegroom is adulterous love 2. This is the foundation of all our interest and all the comfort of it either in creatures or in promises How comes it to pass that all things are yours and promises yours c. but because the Lord is our God and therefore it 's brought in as the foundation of all blessedness having spoken of all creature-comforts in the highest he adds this Psal 144. Blessed are the people that are in such a case yea blessed are the people whose God is the Lord. There is a blessedness therein without the creatures and the only foundation of blessedness in the creatures lyes in this 1 In creatures consider this is the difference between the portions of godly men and wicked men they may both possess the same thing but with a different temper and the one has only a title unto creatures as a gift of God but the other as he has a title unto God the one has them by a single and the other by a double title and so a little that the righteous has is better than great riches of many wicked because he has all that he has conveyed unto him from his interest in God as the Original thereof 2 In promises it 's true that their inheritance in them is very glorious far beyond that of Adam in Paradise but yet the foundation of all the promises is an attribute and they must all lead the soul unto God and his interest in him that did promise for Faithful is he that has promised and he will also do it There is a promise of pardon of sin but still it is to be resolved into an attribute 1 Joh. 2.1 He is faithful
earth 5. Creatures and promises could never make a man happy if a mans interest in them were never so clearly discovered to him for it could never put his soul into a fruition of the chiefest good it would only make all to be faith and we should rejoyce in the hope of the glory of God 1 Pet. 1.9 and it is true that this is a joy unspeakable and glorious Fruitio est actus voluntatis circa finem importat quietationem delectationem anima in amato Fruition is an act of the will about the end and it imports the quietation and delectation of the soul in its beloved Medin But the soul would be for ever unquiet and always full of restlesness still tending towards God Heb. 12.23 therefore it enjoys him as the end of faith and hope and thence souls in Heaven are made perfect not only because their image is perfected by the beatifical vision but also because they are put into a fruition of that which was the highest and ultimate object of their faith and love and fruitio est nobilissima actio voluntatis the most noble act of the will and it 's this act upon the highest object that doth perfect the will and the perfection of the will is the perfection of the man as the act of the will is the act of the man Vse 1 § 4. From hence see the misery of all those that are out of Covenant with God they have all the Attributes of God against them and they have no inheritance in him thou mayst have large revenues amongst the creatures for God doth give Kingdoms unto the basest of men but it is but mica canibus projecta a crum thrown to a dog as Luther speaks of the Turkish Empire and in them all thou shalt but inherit the wind Prov. 11.29 for thou hast no inheritance in the Lord he is no God to thee tolle meum tolle Deum take away my and take away God it is unto thee as if there were no God And here it 's good to consider 1. If a man had all the creatures armed against him for his destruction as all men out of Covenant have for the Creation groans under their service that is the bondage of corruption spoken of Rom. 8.21 but also they are very ready to make war upon thee for when a man is taken into Covenant with God there is a league made with the beasts of the earth the stones of the field and the creeping things of the ground And God will hear the Heavens and the Heavens shall hear the Earth Hos 2.21 and the Earth shall hear the corn and the wine and the oyl and they shall hear Jezreel and I will sow her unto me in the earth and will have mercy upon her that had not obtained mercy c. All the creatures shall work together for their good and yet if God arm the meanest of the creatures against a man they shall destroy him Pharaoh the great King of Egypt that durst presume to war against God cannot contend with Flyes nor with the Lice and the Frogs he cannot fight a pitcht battel with the waves Now if a man cannot stand out a battel with the smallest of the creatures how can he fight against God Therefore I would a little reason with you as God doth with his people if thou hast run with the footmen Jer. 12.5 and they have wearied thee how wilt thou contend with horses and if in a land of peace they have wearied thee what wilt thou do in the swellings of Jordan if thou canst not stand it out against creatures how wilt thou be able to endure when the Lord shall rise up and all his Attributes shall be armed against thee For as this is the great comfort of the Saints and their last refuge so it 's the great terrour unto wicked men and their last destruction 2. Consider if it were but a threatning what a miserable thing it is to lye under any evil aspect thereof the Lord has spread out the Expansum of his Word over the rational world and the Lord rules all by it and according to it he will judge them all Zac. 1.6 Did not my word overtake your fathers for the Decree will surely bring forth it will not always carry the judgment in the womb of it and if it be so terrible a thing to be under the power of any one threatning of God Zeph. 2.2 what is it to lye under the evil aspect of all the threatnings of God that there is not a word in this book but speaks terrour unto the man much more under the evil aspects of all the Attributes of God 3. This is the happiness of the Saints that they have something in God to plead for them they have as it were a threefold Advocate 1 within themselves and so the Spirit pleads the causes of the soul 2 without them and so Jesus Christ is an Advocate with the Father 3 they have something in God himself I say not that I will pray the Father for you for the Father himself loves you c. So here is the misery of wicked men not only the Spirit pleads against them and will strive with them no more but becomes unto them a spirit of bondage in themselves and binds them over unto wrath and Christ pleads against them as Luther tells a story of one Doctor Krans in a Tract of his De Fascina spirituali in Gal. 3. Ego Christum negavi ideo stat coram Patre accusat me illam cogitationem tam fortiter conceperat ut nullâ adhortatione aut consolatione sibi pateretur excuti atque ita desperavit seipsum miserrimè occîdit c. I denied Christ and therefore he stands before the Father and accuseth me c. The learned do for our understanding frame a holy kind of conflict between the Attributes of God according to the liberty allowed them in Scripture speaking of God after the manner of men in the work of our Redemption as if the Lord were reduced into some straights by the cross demands of several Attributes Justice calling for vengeance upon sinful and cursed creatures and with Justice the Truth of God doth joyn to make good his threatning the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt dye and mercy on the other side pleads for compassion towards miserable and seduced man and this sets infinite wisdom on work to reconcile the different pleas of the Attributes of God in mans redemption but what a misery will that man be in that shall have no Attribute of God to plead for him but they shall all joyn in their pleas and demands against him not only those terrible Attributes that the soul is afraid of as Justice and Truth and Holiness but also the Attributes in which a mans hope is Men cry out God is merciful Oh but mercy is set against thee O sinner and thou hast no interest in his mercy
man to ingage the Attributes of God against himself as to ingage against those that have an interest in the Attributes of God for the Covenant that God hath made with his people is offensive and defensive and the Lord will surely appear for them it 's therefore a design that did never prosper in the hand of any that did undertake it nay be sure thou wilt perish under the power of those attributes there is no such way to turn the edge of them all against thee as this is as it was said of Canaan It 's a land that eats up the inhabitants so we may say of this it 's a work that devours the workers the Lord will rebuke Kings for their sakes if they touch his anointed and there is no vengeance like unto that of the Temple thou wilt surely perish in thy own opposition for it doth arm all the Attributes of God against thee and they do arm the Church against thee and therefore the worm Jacob must thresh the mountain Isa 41. and when the strength of the Churches enemies is greatest and their hopes highest when they are folded up as thorns and while they are drunken as drunkards Nah. 1.10 they shall be devoured as stubble fully dry and in the same place where they did expect the destruction of the Church they shall be sure to find their own Mic. 4.11 Now also many nations are gathered against thee that say Let her be defiled and let our eye look upon Sion but they know not the thoughts of the Lord neither understand they his counsel for he shall gather them as the sheaves in the floor Arise and thresh O daughter of Sion for I will make thy horn iron and I will make thy hoofs brass and thou shall beat in pieces many people c. They are to the world as a burdensom stone all men will be lifting at them till they be broken in pieces by them it 's their own folly to dash and fall upon them percussum è pectore ferrum 2. It 's a Use of direction to the Saints that have an interest in God as their God in Covenant and so are intitled unto all the Attributes of God 1 Exercise faith upon every attribute and thereby make it to be your own in the use and improvement thereof Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might that is let your faith take hold of the strength of God and thereby let it rise unto such a height of confidence as if you had almighty power in your own hand to exercise if thou be in any streight and dost want wisdom to direct thee in thy way be thou wise by the wisdom of God and let thy faith raise thee up unto that height of confidence that it is as impossible for Satan to out-wit thee as it is to go beyond infinite Wisdom and so if thou sin at any time question thy pardon no more than if thou hadst infinite mercy in thy own hand and wert able to pardon thy self for it 's all made over to thee in this one promise I will be thy God for that which is originally and essentially in God that by our dependency becomes ours as truly as if we were the subjects in which it doth reside 2 It should raise up in a man a holy greatness of mind suitable unto such a priviledge and it 's a thing of no small concernment that the people of God should be raised up to such a holy greatness for it would free them from those vain hopes and fears and those low imployments that now they are busied about for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is nothing great here below a man should look upon all things with the eye of God to have all the Attributes of God made over to him if dangers offer themselves the soul is not surprized for as God sits in Heaven and laughs them to scorn when the workers of Babel did build a Tower to their own confusion so do the Saints also the virgin the daughter of Sion doth laugh thee to scorn c. If wisdom shew it self and a man hath to do with the policy of an Achitophel he fears it no more than folly and believes it shall be as he prays Lord turn it into folly and he laughs at the plot And if the guilt of sin rise up in his conscience he can say Though I have sinned and am a sinner yet God is in Christ reconciling the world unto himself and grace is free Jesus Christ is ascended up into Heaven and sits at the right hand of God for it 's a fault in the Saints they think when they sin it 's their duty to question their estates their interest in God and it 's good to question it for tryal and examination but not by way of diffidence unto a mans dejection for the way to increase a mans sanctification is not to weaken his faith in the point of justification and if the power of sin do prevail yet a man goes forth against it in the strength of the Lord and he saith Though it be to 〈◊〉 impossible yet it is possible with God and his power is ingaged for my perfection and this were to live the life of God as grace is called Eph. 4.18 3 Sing unto God the praises of every Attribute for as we should look through all that is in Christ that our hearts might take in whole Christ and the Church doth so Cant. Psal 21.13 5 and Paul Phil. 3.7 8 9. so should we of all the Attributes of God also Be thou exalted in thy own strength O Lord so will we sing and praise thy power and I will sing aloud of thy mercy in the morning for thou hast been my defence and refuge in the day of trouble Observe the attributes that at any time God discovers to thee in thy straits specially and unto those sing praises it 's all that the Lord expects as a return for all that his attributes work for you that you should give them glory and the way to ingage any Attribute of God for you again is to give it the glory of any of the former discoveries thereof and the way to disingage an attribute is to neglect to give that attribute its glory when it has been put forth Cessat gratiarum decursus ubi cessat recursus c. Where the recurse or return of graces ceaseth the decurse or flowing forth of fresh graces ceaseth For the Lords aim under the new Covenant is the glory of the attributes of his nature as well as the glory of the persons that they all of them may have their due place and order in our hearts and as the Lord doth distinctly put them forth in their order for a man as his necessity does require so he does expect that we should take them as our portion and rejoycing in the Lord therein give unto them in our hearts their particular and distinct honour for the Lord
to Christ he carries him through all his service for protection doth properly belong to a Prince in the duties of subjection which are required of him and therefore Kings have those names given them in Scripture they are called Latibulum a hiding place from the wind Esay 32.2 and the shields of the earth and they are for defence Psal 47.9 and the Angels of God 2 Sam. 14.15 And they are for protection also to a man in his way Psal 91.11 12. so the Father doth promise Christ Esay 42.4 6. I have called thee in righteousness I will hold thee by the hand and I will keep thee c. and in this Christ comforts himself that his Father was at his right hand Psal 16.5 9. Here also is the happiness of the Saints that the same God that protected Christ that girt his loyns and strengthened him for his work the same God has also undertaken their protection in all the services that he calls them unto Joh. 10.28 29. he saith I will give unto my sheep eternal life and none shall pluck them out of my hand for the Father who gave them me is greater than all and no man is able to pluck them out of my Fathers hand Is there any service that can be so hazardous as that which Christ was called unto to conflict with even the curse of the Law the powers of darkness and the wrath of God immediately yet Christ did strengthen his faith in this that he had the power of the Father engaged therein as he was his Lord we have assurance of the same protection in all our services that Christ had in his therefore let not your hearts be troubled 3 God the Father doth destroy Christs enemies and as his King doth fight his battels and doth engage himself mightily therein Psal 110.1 The Lord said unto my Lord Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies my footstool God the Father is engaged in all the victories of Christ that he shall conquer and there is none shall be able to stand before him and as he doth destroy Christs enemies in the worst season for them that so it may be with an utter destruction so shall he do yours also for the Lord doth but wait for an evil time Zeph. 2.4 that they may be insnared as Zeph. 2.4 They shall drive out Ashdod at noon day In those hot countries they did keep their houses in the heat of the day it was the worst season to travel I but then shall they be cast out Christ has assured you of a victory Rev. 19.14 Rev. 19.14 the Armies in Heaven followed him upon white horses as an emblem of joy and victory and therefore they are said to be cloathed in white Robes with palms in their hands Rev. 7.9 and they are said to have gotten the victory over the beast his image the mark and the number of his name Rev. 15. There are many great promises unto them that do overcome To him that overcomes I will give to eat of the hidden Manna and he that overcomes shall inherit all things I will be his God And the Apostle insults upon this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and says Rom. 8. We are more than conquerors through him that loved us And here is the ground of a Christians comfort that the power of his Father is as truly engaged for his conquest as it was for Christs and we may as well expect victory as Christ himself did Rom. 16.20 The God of peace shall tread Satan under your feet shortly 4 Christ is to give an account unto the Father as he is his Lord and we find that he doth so as the creatures give an account of their services unto Christ so he does give an account of all his services unto the Father Zac. 3.11 The Angels had been sent in messages throughout the Earth and they return unto Christ an account of their service they answered the Angel of the Lord that stood amongst the Mirtle-trees and said We have walked to and fro through the earth c. but Christ gives his account to the Father Ezech. 9. ult the man cloathed with linen reported the matter saying I have done as thou hast commanded me and at the last day he shall give up the Kingdom to the Father with an account of all the service that he has been engaged in 1 Cor. 15.24 All the accounts of the creatures are passed with Christ We must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ 2 Cor. 5.10 but having received them Christ does as the Fathers servant present them all unto him as a part of the service that he himself has undertaken so that here is the happiness of the Saints your accounts shall pass before the same Father that Christs accounts do and he that doth now present your persons and your services unto the Father he will then also unto the same God and Father present your accounts and give you your discharge and your sentence Come you blessed of my Father 5 As the Father is the King so from him does Christ receive his reward Psal 16. ult Thou shalt shew me the path of life in thy presence is fulness of joy and at thy right hand are pleasures for evermore and the comfort and happiness of the Saints lyes in this that they shall have glory from the same hand that Christ had his glory Mat. 25. Luk. 12.32 Come you blessed of my Father it 's your Fathers pleasure to give you a kingdom There is a double Throne that we read of Rev. 3.21 He that overcomes shall sit with me upon my Throne as I overcame and am sat down with my Father upon his Throne The Throne that Christ now sits upon is the Throne of the Father for so Heaven is called and so all the Saints when they come to glory do sit upon the Throne of the Father that Throne that he has prepared for them from the foundation of the world but Christ has also his own Throne which shall be at the day of Judgment when he shall sit upon his Throne and all Nations shall be gathered together before him and the Saints shall sit upon that Throne also for so he saith They shall also sit upon twelve Thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel at the day of Judgment therefore they shall sit with Christ upon his Throne and in Heaven they shall sit with him also upon the Fathers Throne And the ground of all is this because when God the Father did make Christ his King he did not put the power out of his own hand and he did not divest himself but the Kingdom of the Father is carried on in the Kingdom of Christ through the whole administration thereof and therefore in the work of grace 2 Cor. 5.19 God is in Christ reconciling the world it 's the Father that doth put all things under Christ 1 Cor. 15.27 And the Saints have not only Christs name written upon them Rev. 3.12
is called and compared to a Vine And it 's of this Vine that Christ is the root for it 's not spoken of Christ as he is a Head in Heaven so he has no dead members there are membra praesumptiva quae ad columbam non pertinent Austin but it 's spoken of Christ spreading himself into a visible Church here upon earth and his being the root notes two things 1 Their union with him as the branches have with the root and therefore they are said to be in him even those that bear no fruit some are in him only by profession and some by a real coalition 2 They may suck sap from him for the foolish Virgins have the oyl in their lamps from him as well as the wise that have oyl in their vessels the one have the oyl of gifts from whence their greenness comes though they afterward wither and the other have the oyl of their graces the one has it from the Spirit of Christ assisting and the other from the same Spirit inhabiting or informing for there are two sorts of branches in this Vine as the Text makes manifest 2. Why is he called the true Vine He may be fitly resembled to a Vine as he is called the true light Joh. 1.9 and the true bread Joh. 6.32 because he has the excellency of the Vine in a spiritual sense he is a spiritual Root that has spiritual branches and they bear spiritual fruit for omnia corporalia sunt imagines quaedam rerum spiritualium all corporals are images of things spiritual and as Christ did condescend unto the lowest condition for our salvation he became a worm and no man Psal 22. so he doth compare himself unto the lowest of creatures for our instruction but yet so as the creatures are but shadows and weak resemblances in respect of those spiritual excellencies that are in him so he is the true bread and so his flesh is meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed Joh. 6. that is it is spiritual nourishment and is to the soul that which all earthly food is to the body for as the creatures are but shadows of God so Christ and spiritual things have the truth of all excellency of which the creatures are but resemblances 3. How is the Father said to be the Husbandman There are six main acts of the Husbandman and all of them are in the Scripture attributed to God the Father 1 The husbandman doth plant the Vine it 's true here both in the root and branches both are the plantation of God the Father 1 It is true of Christ the Root who though in some respect he be called a Branch as he did grow out of the dead and withered stock of the house of David as a branch out of a dry tree and yet so the Father brings him forth Zac. 3.8 Behold I will bring forth my servant the branch yet as all the other branches do grow upon him being one with him so he is in a more special manner termed a Root the root of David as he is called Rev. 5.5 and it is the Father that did cause this branch to grow Est radix Davidis quia portat non portatur Bernard Jer. 33.16 and it 's the Father that planted this Root for he bids you look unto him Zac. 6.12 The man whose name is The Branch he shall build the Temple of the Lord and he is made unto us of God wisdom righteousness sanctification and redemption It 's by the Fathers appointment that he is become the Churches Root he had never had a Church built upon him had not the Lord laid him in Sion as the chief corner-stone 1 Pet. 2.6 and a Church had never grown out of him as the root had it not been of God the Fathers planting for he has given us the rule Mat. 15.13 Every plant that grows alone in the Church and is not planted by the Father shall surely by the Father be rooted up 2 He it is also that doth plant or ingraft all the branches into this root Esay 60.21 Thy people shall be all righteous branches of my planting that I may be glorified and therefore Rom. 6.5 we are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 planted together into the likeness of his death and his resurrection created in Christ unto good works for we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 things made by him Eph. 2.10 Now if we do consider Christ not only as a Head in Heaven in reference unto the Church mystical and invisible but as he is a root on earth spreading himself into a Church visible and the great benefits that we have thereby as the incomes of Ordinances the labours of Officers and the fellowship of Members we owe these all unto God the Father he is the Husbandman that planted them all 2 The Father as Husbandman fenceth the Vine he that plants the Vine he it is also that makes the fence for the invisible Church of God has spiritual enemies in heavenly things but the visible Church that has variety of outward enemies as the lily amongst thorns sometimes the Foxes by their subtilty seek to spoil the vines and sometimes the wild Boar out of the wood doth endeavour to root it up and yet it is preserved the bush is in the fire and yet it 's not consumed it is because there is a hedge about it Joh. 10.29 says Christ My Father that gave them me is greater than all and no man can pluck them out of my Fathers hand Job 1.10 Thou hast made a hedge about him and all that he has round about and this hedge of protection is sometimes made by Gods own immediate hand Zac. 2.5 God himself is a wall of fire about Jerusalem he doth himself become their hedge and their defence upon all the glory he doth stretch forth a covering and sometimes he doth make others to be a hedge sometimes his own Angels and they pitch their Tents round about them that fear the Lord Rev. 5.11 they were round about the Throne and sometimes he does make Rulers which are the shields of the Earth to become the shields of the Church but their protection and defence is the work of the husbandman Now when the Lord doth pluck up the hedge and break down the wall of the visible Church we then see what terrible inroads all the enemies do make and how they come in and spoil her The Boar of the wood doth waste it and the beasts of the field devour it Psal 80.13 so that it 's God the Father only that makes the hedge and he it is that doth remove the fence and he it is that has the hand in making it up again 3 He as the Husbandman doth hire labourers into his Vineyard for it is the work of God the Father Mat. 20.1 as he is the Lord of the harvest so he doth thrust forth labourers into his harvest as he is the husbandman so he doth hire labourers into his vineyard which
thoughts of his own heart do Now there are comforts in God that do delight the soul even then when there are multitude of thoughts that disquiet it We are to consider the delight of the glorious persons one in another Prov. 8.30 I was his delight daily so it is with the Saints in God he is their delight daily for their portion and their happiness is laid up in him alone all pleasure of the creature is but madness out of him I have said of laughter Thou art mad there is more sweetness in the comforts that come into the soul by him than there is in all the creatures in Heaven and Psal 4. Thou hast put more gladness into my heart than when their corn and wine and oyl increased For as there is no comparison between the strokes of the creatures and of God when he smites immediately he will be a consuming fire to the creature so there is no comparison between the comforts of the creatures and those which God gives in immediately and therefore the more it is mixed with any creature comfort the less it influences the soul with consolation it is like unto Physick given in the drug it has the less vigour and strength how much difference is there between the Spirit 's comforting and the comforts that do come in by meat and drink c what though they that love God have no pleasure in the world yet they have joy in God and it 's such a joy as no man can take from them it is such a joy as a stranger cannot meddle withal 4 For Glory and Honour In this world they need none else they say to God Psal 3.3 Jer. 2.31 Thou art my glory and the lifter up of my head can a maid forget her ornaments or a bride her attire but my people have forgotten me days without number the Lord was their ornament and their glory not only their praise is of God but their glory is in God and therefore they are called The Glory Vpon all the glory there shall be a covering that as Mount Sion is the glory of the Earth so are the children of Sion the glory of the sons of men the only glorious ones the only excellent ones and because the Lord is their glory in the midst of them the glory of the Lord is risen upon them Isa 4.5 therefore they are the people that glory in God and they are a people in whom the Lord doth glory 5 They need no Companions but God for matter of communion Isa 60.19 1 Joh. 1.3 their fellowship is with the Father and with the Son Jesus Christ They are many times despised in the world as Christ was rejected of men and cast out of their society as hateful when they have cast out their names as evil but yet if Abraham go out of his own country he must leave all his own friends Isa 43.2 3. and go alone I will be thy God I will be with thee when thou goest through the fire I will be with thee yet sometimes thou must go in untrodden paths and alone but I will be with thee so says Christ Ye shall be scattered every one to his own and leave me alone yet I am not alone but the Father that sent me is with me so the Saints they may be scattered from their friends and forsaken by them but they are not alone God is with them and his Son and Spirit to entertain them The three Children in the fiery Furnace needed no other Comforter than the fourth man who was like unto the Son of God When they were in the Mount with Christ they say It is good to be here when a man hath been with Moses in the Mount and for some time conversed with God he would never chuse to come down to converse with men any more for he knows not how to converse with them again their society is not set by but the wisest company in the world is to him unsavory and unprofitable a man that hath tasted old wine he desires not new but says the old is better 6 He needs no other Pattern or Example Eph. 5.1 Be you imitators of God as dear children be you holy as he is holy and merciful as he is merciful It 's true there are other patterns that he takes notice of even the Saints of God that make it their business to walk as God would have them walk as the Apostle says Be ye followers of us and walk so as you have us for an example We are to look upon Christ as the pattern of Holiness as having left us a copy for us to write after but all these are but to lead us to the Original of all Holiness and that is in God that in these glasses we beholding the glory of the Lord may be thereby both in heart and ways transformed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 as by the Spirit of the Lord and the truth is the more immediately a man reads in God the rules of duty the more immediately he fetches from God his motives unto duty and the more perfectly any lays up his comforts in God the more self-sufficient that soul is and the more he doth partake of the alsufficiency of God and that man is the happy man that hath his Heaven so far begun in this life that as far as may be all his comforts concenter in the Lord. 7 He looks for the reward of all his labours from God who hath promised him to be his exceeding great reward and this is the great gift that God bestows upon his precious ones his reward is himself and the soul says it is in God alone that he reaps all his wages and he desires none other none other will satisfie him he will not be put off with a Kingdom for a reward let the Nebuchadnezzars of the world take that for their hire he hath more high and noble aims than the enjoyment of this worlds goods which is what Satan who is the god of this world often tempts them with as he did their Lord and Master Jesus Christ but he can despise it that hath taken imployment under God who he knows hath laid up for him an immortal crown and an inheritance amongst them that are sanctified though he may be poor in this world and without many of the comforts of it yet he hath Treasure in Heaven laid up for him 8 It is God alone that satisfies his desires he shall never thirst it 's true there will be always thirsting for more of the same kind My soul thirsts after God even for the living God and so Blessed are they that hunger and thirst for him but for any thing of any other kind he desires not there is that satisfaction in God that there is no room left for desires which is not so with any thing here if a man have never so much of the creature never so full satisfaction now yet he will thirst
is something wanting in him that must be supplied by the creature and so as Salvian saith of the Name of Christ Dicimur Christiani in opprobrium Christi We are called Christians to the reproach of Christ it is true that the name of God is called upon us but it is unto Gods dishonour the Lord takes it as a high dishonour done unto him when his people dig to themselves broken cisterns and forsake him that is the Fountain of living water when they shall do suit and service to another god and stretch out their hands unto a strange god the Lord will search it out it 's a dishonour and will be a great provocation to him whereas they that have an eye to him alone they do honour him Daniel who said Psal 18.31 The God whom I serve is able to deliver me from the den of lyons and David who says There is no god save the Lord and there is no rock save our God these honoured God in advancing him above all things it 's true that men do fancy to themselves other Rocks to flye unto but it is but in vain for there is no other Rock these are but the imaginations of men but in truth and reality there is no such thing there is no Rock but our God and Paul having nothing but yet possessing all things and so did Habakkuk 3.17 For it was a true way of reasoning that Elkanah used when Hannah was sad and discontented for the want of a son he took it to be as a disparagement to him that she thought not her self so happy in him and in his love as sometimes she had professed and he conceived it was her duty to do she should have counted him beyond ten sons so doth the Lord reason with you when your hearts go out to the creatures and you are troubled in the getting of them and disquieted in the losing of them it is because you do not think him better than a world for if you did you would not go out so unto these things with such intenseness of spirit and affection We read Gen. 20.16 the husband is said to be unto the woman the covering of her eyes not only that she lift them not up wantonly unto another man but also that she should look upon no other for protection and for provision if a woman should wait upon another and apply her self wholly to another man and neglect to please her husband and to be a help unto him might he not look upon it as a dishonour and say to her Is it not because there is something in me wanting towards you that I cannot protect you and provide for you and therefore you go out in your heart affection and observance to another man he looks upon it as the greatest dishonour that his wife could do him Mat. 22.32 Mat. 22.32 Christ proves the living of the souls of the Saints in statu separato after death and a resurrection from that place I am the God of Abraham and the God of Isaac it 's a great question wherein lies the fulness of the argument I conceive it to amount unto thus much If God be of infinite power and goodness then they that have an interest in him and stand in a peculiar relation to him they must have from him whatever is necessary to their happiness it were else every way unworthy of God and that upon which ground no man would seek or prize an interest in him but happiness without life there can be none and therefore if he will be the God of his people he must be happiness to them and if so he must give life to them also for he cannot be the God of the dead but of the living To make a people to have a special interest in him and to say that they are dead for all their interest in God and that he is the God of the dead is a thing every way unworthy of him and dishonourable to him 2. As it dishonours God so it doth dishonour us also for all the creatures were given unto man in his creation as servants and he had dominion over them they were all put under his feet Gen. 1. therefore God brought them all unto man in their creation as the lord of them he gave them their names now for a man to put his neck under the yoke of a servant and to lay down his soul on the ground unto them that went over it doth argue a great baseness in a man and is a great dishonour to him it 's true the creature will invite a man as the bramble Judg. 9.13 Come and put your trust under my shadow place your confidence in me now would it not be a dishonour for a man to go and put his trust in the shadow of the bramble And so are all the creatures in reference unto shelter and defence if a Senator of Rome did marry a servant and not a free woman he did subire maculam infamiae incur infamy so it is when the soul will be married unto the creature which is but the servant there is a blemish that lights upon that man And much more when it is done from a low spirit and the soul doth chuse it that shews that he is ad mancipium natus as when a servant amongst the Jews would not go free his ear was bored Exod. 21.6 not only as a token of perpetual servitude which as Cajetan observes was not only done in perpetuam servitudinem sed in poenam ignominiam neglectâ libertate When the Lord has set mens spirits at liberty from the creatures and if they will not go free but they will be in bondage to their own servants still it 's a great reproach to them and a sign of great baseness of mind whereas the Spirit of Christ in his people is a princely Spirit and that saith 1 Cor. 6. I will not be brought under the power of any thing and therein properly doth a mans liberty consist when he looks upon God only as necessary and all things in the world tanquam adiaphora as things indifferent that he can enjoy them or go without them for his happiness is not in them 3. Consider the creatures unto whom thou flyest for sufficiency they can do neither good nor evil it 's spoken of Idols and all creatures in which we look for a sufficiency they are but Idols and we are exhorted Jer. 10.5 6 7. Be not afraid of them for they can do no evil neither is it in them to do them good for as much as there is none like unto thee O Lord for thou art great and thy name is great in might who will not fear thee If the creatures could do us good they might be sought unto and they might be feared if they could do us hurt but it is not in the creature to do either if they do us evil it is because the Lord has bid them as it 's said of Shimei The Lord
has bid Shimei curse and if Job lose all that he has though by the hand of creatures yet he saith The Lord has given and the Lord has taken away there is no evil in the city that the Lord has not done and therefore Christ saith Thou couldst have no power over me unless it were given thee from above Now as you look upon them as vain that worship an Idol and stand in fear of it though you know they do but bow down to the stock of a Tree yet a deceived heart has turned him aside c. that he cannot discern the deceit and say Is there not a lye in my right hand Esa 44.20 so when men fear creatures it is but as if a man feared an Idol that can do him no hurt and they can do you no good though every man seeks the face of the Ruler and they think that he is able to shew them much favour in judgment yet let him do what he can Prov. 29.26 Psal 33.15 and intend never so much good to you all that is good to you is from the Lord in his judgment He doth fashion the hearts of men and he considers all their ways c. they have the same apprehensions that he gives them and the same affections and intentions if they do thee any good it is because the Lord has assisted and touched their hearts for they have but such a fashion as he gives them therefore he is said to ascend and descend Prov. 30.2 3 4. it 's conceived by some to be an expression taken from Jacobs Ladder in which there were Angels ascending and descending as it is Joh. 1. ult but yet in all the administrations of the best of creatures it is he that ascends and descends for all the good of the creature is at his dispose and he must give the creature a commission to do good as well as to do us evil and will you flye unto that for sufficiency that can neither do good nor evil 4. Will you place your sufficiency in the creature when it cannot reach unto that which is best in the man Every holy man doth take a measure of all things as they relate unto his soul and that which doth his soul most good that he judges best for him and that which doth the soul most hurt that he judges worst for him for Saints measure all prosperity by that of the soul but all creature-comforts are but food that perishes and therefore we are exhorted not to labour for them for they will all die unto us Joh. 6.27 and therefore that men might not dote upon carrying them with them into another world consider we brought nothing into this world 1 Tim. 6.7 neither shall we carry any thing out of this world as soon as we have put off this Tabernacle all the necessary supports thereof will be of use to us no more for they are all in reference to the Tabernacle it self 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He only can cure the heart that formed it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrys de poenit hom 4. when God establishes the heart in peace no creature can move it 5. The creatures have no good in them but what is borrowed All the good that is in the creatures is either real or apparent 1 If there be any real good in any creature it is derived unto it from God they are all cyphers and they have no good in them of themselves but what is put into them if God will put much of his Spirit into a Magistrate as he did into Moses the abilities of many men shall be in that one man he shall rule his people with great success and if the Lord will afterward take it away and divide it amongst men it is as he will dispose of it whether to fill the vessel or empty it and if the Lord will create the fruit of the lips peace a Minister shall be able to speak peace and administer a word that shall be in season unto him that is weary but else though he speak with never so much eloquence it will be to no purpose there is no more in it than God puts into it 2 There is appearing good and that is put into the creatures by the subtilty of Satan and by the lusts of men 1 By the subtilty of Satan for he intending to make use of the creature to betray the soul of a man doth put a fair gloss upon it and a varnish as we see he did to Christ when he represented to him the Kingdoms of the world and the glory of them in a moment of time so doth Satan represent the creatures to us in his own glass and deceives us with the apparent good that is in them 2 There is also something that the lusts of men do add and that is a conceit that there is some such excellency in it Prov. 18.11 it is a strong hold and a high wall it 's desirable for food and pleasant to the taste but it is but in his own conceit and all the pomp of the world is but fancy and all the great things of the world are not great in reality but only that great affection and the high apprehension that men have of them makes them seem so to be Psal 36.9 but with God only is the fountain of life by life is meant all good and it is in God originally as in a fountain it is in the creatures but derivatively as in a stream and therefore it 's the greatest folly for a man to leave the fountain to go to the streams and to forsake the Sun to take our light from the Moon and the Stars which shine only by a borrowed light and upon this ground the Saints are not much troubled at the miscarriages in creatures when they promise fair but by and by their hopes are nipt and it brings not the work to perfection therefore they regard it not and say it is but a bucket broken and a stream dried up a pipe stopped but there is as much water in the fountain still as ever and unto that he has immediate recourse 6. A man's retiring unto creatures in any of his straits is that which doth cause God to leave him for no man is to have a double dependence because that argues a double heart God will be all in all for supports and supplies as well as Christ will be all in all for righteousness and salvation 2 Chron. 26.15 and therefore it is said That Vzziah was helped till he was strong he was marvellously helped but then his heart withdrew from God unto his own supports and then the Lord left him to them which proved his overthrow for with him only the fatherless find mercy they that are truly so in their own esteem and account and have none to look to or make provision for them any more than fatherless children have it is in him that they shall find mercy but they that say unto
a life that is maintained by union and therefore though Paul saith I live yet he looks off from himself immediately upon the fountain of his life and the manner of the conveyance of it and that is by union continually Phil. 1.19 and therefore Phil. 1.19 we read of a supply of the Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est dux chori or as some say quòd ornamenta suppeditat sacras choreas agentibus and so is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jul. Pol. pag. 145. publicum subire munus or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gymnasiis praeesse and therefore he says 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pag. 147. and for the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 some render it by subministrare and so it notes a sweet but yet hidden and secret supply some insuper suppedito to supply aid and all to add something to what a man had before and some make use of that rule 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in compositione intendit significationem and so they read it abundè suppeditare from all which there are these particulars in the words 1 That the Spirit is not communicated unto the Saints as a Spirit of Grace all at once but by degrees and this in a secret and an unobserved way 2 That the Spirit hath undertaken this work as a publick office and administration in the Church of Christ 3 That the supplies of the Spirit come in by the teaching of the Spirit 4 That the Spirits supplies are rich and abundant supplies in all things necessary unto the salvation of the Saints Now the more any sin is against nature as we say murder is and unthankfulness is and disobedience to parents is the more hateful it is and there is a principle in nature that is against all such sins in a special manner and so is this also an unnatural sin for grace to be set up in a man by God the Author of it and yet for a man to deal so unnaturally with God as to make the grace he hath received from him his own sufficiency and neglect the God who alone is alsufficient 3. No man is able to act the grace that he hath received Christ tells his Disciples plainly Joh. 15.5 Without me you can do nothing not only by virtue of our union with Christ is our grace acted but there must be a daily and a continual influence from Christ also 2 Cor. 3.5 and the Apostle says We are not sufficient of our selves to think any thing as of our selves but our sufficiency is of God c. As there is an immediate dependence of all creatures upon the first cause so there is of grace also upon its first cause now Deus agit immediatè cum omni agente creato God acts immediately in all so it 's here also and if the Lord will suspend but his own actings no creature can act or do any thing as we see it in the fiery Furnace in which the King of Babylon put the three Children the fire remained true fire still for it immediately consumed the men that were thrown in but yet the Lord suspended the actum secundum the second act of the creature and it could not burn the three Children as it is in the creature so it is in grace much more but the one is a natural and the other is a supernatural concurrence and therefore hath a more special and supernatural dependence and influence now the Spirit is a free Agent he works where and when and in what manner he pleaseth sometimes God doth as it were withdraw himself from us and then all our grace is becalmed for it is as wind to the sails and therefore we read of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the plerophory of faith it is taken from the wind filling of the sails for the Spirit of God is compared to wind when he will fill the sail a man is carried on with a full gale or else he cannot move he can but lye in the harbour so that though the man hath grace yet he can never be able to perform one good duty either inward or outward without further assistance It is true that the Lord doth commonly concur with grace according to the measure given to the soul as he doth with the rest of the creatures according to their kind but yet the Lord will sometimes withdraw to let them see where their strength lyes and where the fountain of all their grace is he will use his Prerogative and leave a soul to it self and then resolve a Christian into his principles and one would think having such a good foundation laid such a stock laid in a man he can think well or speak well or do well when he pleases and he may begin to rouze up himself as at other times as Samson did no he hath not so much as a sufficiency to think a good thought all the grace that he hath cannot procure it to him 4. All the grace that a man hath cannot free him from temptations nor secure him from falling into the greatest and the foulest evil that a godly man is capable of 1 It preserves a man from no temptation grace could not preserve Adam in Paradise or Christ himself from being tempted whose grace was perfect Prosper Viatoris gratia neminem intentabilem facit The grace of a viator makes no man intentable and therefore we see what dangerous temptations the Saints have had Satan stood against David as he did against Joshua Zac. 3. but it was against the one for temptation and the other for accusation and grace could preserve from neither 2 It cannot preserve a man from the greatest and the foulest falls as we see how David fell into adultery and murder and numbering the people and Samson also to the same sin of uncleanness again and again and Peter denied his Master and began to curse and to swear that he never knew him he wisht upon himself the most terrible and dreadful curses if he knew the man There are only two sins that a godly man is secure from by the state of grace and that is the sin against the Holy Ghost and final impenitency but it is not the grace that is in a man that doth secure him from falling into sin but the state of grace by reason of his Head Christ Jesus to whom he is united and by reason of the Covenant under which he stands therefore there is no sufficiency in that grace that will not preserve a man from the greatest sins and foulest falls and indeed how is it possible that it should preserve us that cannot preserve it self as Austin did deride and mock the gods of the Heathen They that cannot keep themselves but are stoln away much less could they keep others so it is of grace also c. 5. This will certainly provoke God against thy grace though it be his own work yet he will let it decay as he doth his own Ordinances of the Law which are called
of persons they may as Eli did misreprove a Hannah in the Church of God and as David believe a Zibi against the son of his friend for commonly the best deserving Christians are clouded by the glaring light of the lamps of Hypocrites who make it their business to raise false reports against such as outshine them in true grace and holiness but at last God will discover them and cast them out of the Churches prayers and affection they shall not always abide with them 1 Joh. 2.18 that they may be made manifest not to be of them and they that are approved shall be made manifest and so shall they that are corrupted also they shall be found lyars and they shall be cast out the Lord will cut them off that they may deceive the expectations of the Saints no more the Lord doth delight to do it and we should wait his leisure in it who will certainly shew himself a God that judges in the earth 3 That thereby the Saints may be awakened and admonished when Hymeneus fell then 2 Tim. 2.7 is that exhortation most seasonable Let him that names the name of the Lord depart from iniquity and let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall when a man observes horrendas tempestates flenda naufragia horrid tempests it is a hint to the Saints look to your standing see that you be built upon a Rock that storms and tempests may not overthrow you 5. In their judgments for they are terrible judgments that the Lord doth execute upon unregenerate men in the Church there are no mercies like those out of Sion and there are no judgments like them no men are so eminently under the curse as they are Out of the Throne came thundering and lightning and voices Rev. 4.5 for the Churches sake and by their prayers And this is 1 that the Saints may be thankful how great a mercy is it that I had not fallen away as well as he Joh. 14.22 2 That they may take heed of the same sins lest they be overtaken by the same plagues Remember Lots wife the natural branches are broken off thou standest by faith be not high-minded but fear they entred not through unbelief let us fear lest we also come short c. Heb. 4.1 § 3. There belongs also unto the spiritual Kingdom reductivè all the works and the dispensations of God amongst the creatures for though only men that live in the Church be the proper subjects of the spiritual Kingdom and in respect of the spiritual part of it only the Saints yet as the Mediator undertook the government of all other things for the Churches sake so in the government of all things he has a special respect unto their good Eph. 1. ult Joh. 17.2 so that all the creatures and the government of them all comes under the spiritual Kingdom two ways 1 As they tend to perfect the graces of the Saints 2 As they belong unto the priviledges of the Saints so reductivè they belong to the spiritual Kingdom 1. Christ in the spiritual Kingdom doth so order and dispose of all the creatures that they do all tend to perfect and increase the graces of the Saints Rom. 8.28 Rom. 8.28 All things shall work together for good to them that love God the Apostle speaks it in reference unto affliction but yet because there was a general doctrine in it he would not restrain it and therefore he saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is all creatures and all events 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. e. 1 they shall not work so of themselves but by a blessed and gracious concurrence of God with them all as it is said That Ministers are workers togethers with God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 6.1 Alas it is not any thing we can do or by any power that is in us but only there is a concurrence of the principal with the instrumental cause for instrumentum agit dispositivè in virtute principalis agentis 2 Some refer it unto the creatures themselves that they do not do this apart as if any one action or any one dispensation meerly did it but they do it as it were in a conspiracy or concatenation they all joyn together in the work that if we take any one particular we may seem to go backward and it may tend to the disadvantage of the spiritual Kingdom but we must take them all together as we are not to judge of the works of God ante quintum actum so neither are we to judge of the fruits of his works but by laying of them all together and see how they work in a due order and subordination one to another c. and unto what is it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is ad aeternam piorum salutem for sine summo bono nil bonum As there is nothing good without the chiefest good so there is nothing good that doth not lead a man unto the chief good and therefore when it 's said That all things work together for good the meaning is they shall all make for the increase of their grace here and their glory hereafter all of them shall work for the eternal good of their souls whereas unto all wicked men all the creatures and all the dispensations of God in the ordering of the creatures cedunt in perniciem tend to their perdition they are unto the one in praemium for a reward unto the other in supplicium for punishment as Prosper has it Or as Cyprian saith of the Sacrament it was Petro in remedium Judae in venenum a remedy to Peter but poyson to Judas so it is here all the creatures that the wicked do enjoy they are indeed seemingly blessings but really curses outwardly bread but in verity a stone a fish in shew but in truth a scorpion for they do all of them tend to the ripening of their sins and the hastning of their ruine but to the Saints 1 Cor. 3.21 22. All things are yours he was speaking of glorying in men they should not boast of their Teachers though it is true indeed that the Primitive Church had their Crown of twelve Stars yet they were all the servants of the Churches debent tam corpori quàm capiti servire they ought to serve the body as well as the head and therefore some will have it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but the Apostle doth speak here as in the fore-quoted places as I conceive where though speaking of one particular yet there being a general truth in it he doth propound it generally for it is not to be restrained to persons as the after-enumeration shews for he speaks of life and death things present and things to come now how doth he mean that all is ours that is aedificationi saluti destinata as ordained for our edification and salvation there is a special design of grace in ordering and disposing of them all so as
Gospel are committed unto them and the Lord doth lay them up in them as in a common Treasury 2 Cor. 4.7 We have this treasure in earthen vessels c. It is not committed to them for their own sakes or for their own use but it is for the good of the family and so Christ speaks unto his Disciples Mat. 13.52 they should be as a Scribe instructed unto the kingdom of God it was the office of the Scribes to teach the people the mysteries of the Word of God and to give the sense as Ezra the Scribe did and therefore Christ makes use of the word and applies it unto the Ministers of the Gospel and he must be endued with all sorts of knowledge he must have variety he must have old things which he has treasured up long for he is to be a Treasury of it the Priests lips are to preserve knowledge and also he must not be content with old things but he must seek after new discoveries new degrees of light he must grow in knowledge daily and therefore he must have new affections also and this he must not hide and reserve there but he must bring it forth it is what a godly man that is called by God to teach others should be affected with and afflicted for if he come short in any grace or gifts that some of his flock are eminent for Non quod ferre potes sed quod profers Cajet Esa 50.4 and all those that the Lord does call to this work he doth in some measure qualifie for God doth not send a Messenger and cut off his feet now all this is for the Churches for the Saints sake and for their good 1 Cor. 3.21 22. Let no man glory in man for all things are yours all for your sakes the highest offices and the greatest gifts and the greatest variety Paul Apollo and Cephas all is for your sake for your edification and salvation We preach not our selves but Jesus the Lord and our selves your servants for Jesus sake we are not Lords of your faith but helpers of your joy c. Eph 4.11 12. he gave gifts unto men to qualifie them for their offices and all is for the perfecting of the Saints 3. He puts into them suitable affections and inward dispositions of heart towards them Paul says I was amongst you as a Nurse with much pains and unweariedness 1 Thess 2.7 and with much patience and forbearance bearing with your frowardness and the crookedness of your spirits and dispositions Phil. 1.8 I long for you all in the bowels of Christ Phil. 1.8 bowels you know do signifie the tenderest affections 1 such as are not natural but wrought in me by Christ for I had them not of my self and so it notes causam efficientem 2 With great affections such as Christ their Saviour did bear to them having their names written in his heart even to lay down his life for them with such bowels do I long for you being willing to be sacrificed unto the service of your faith and so it notes causam exemplarem 2 Cor. 8.16 he put the same care into the heart of Titus Phil. 2.20 it is said of Timothy Phil. 2.20 he doth naturally care for your things ad animi sinceritatem refert Theodor. it is not from any outward respect or fleshly end but from a natural principle wrought in him by the Lord that he doth it naturally from an inward principle in nature as the natural affection of the father and mother is put into them for the good of the child so there is a natural principle put into them for the good of the Saints c. 4. He doth set them in their places stars they are and he doth appoint them their orbs where they shall shine for the seven Stars are the Angels of the Churches and are in the right hand of Christ are at his dispose who sends them to a people where they shall be fishers men do not know where the sholes of fish go for we fish under water but the Lord saith Go and speak to them for I have much people in this city and when he has gathered in the number of his Elect in any place then he takes away the Ministry from thence and when there are any to be gathered in then he doth bring them again This is the reason why he doth cause it to rain upon one city and not upon another also As he sets them in their stations so quoad protectionem he it is that doth preserve them from the rage of men which truly we know not how soon we may be exposed to for I fear the time draws near yet the witnesses shall not be killed till they have finished their testimony and it is not all the power of the enemy shall be able to remove them 5. He doth over-rule and order them in their Ministry for the good of his people sometimes the Spirit of the Lord comes upon them and they speak beyond their intentions or meditations Heb. 1.1 he speaks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he orders their hearts and he doth over-rule their tongues he doth make discoveries unto them for the good of his people as sometimes he doth pour a darkness upon them for the sins of his people and sometimes God in judgment hides his truths from a Teacher because the people are not fitted to receive them It 's true not only of the Magistrates that the Lord gives them up to commit follies as he did David because he was provoked against Israel therefore he tempted David to number the people but also it is true of the Ministers Mic. 3.6 Pro divinatione erit caligo ye shall have darkness and the Lord will give no Visions unto the Prophets and though they seek it Esa 29.10 yet they shall have no answer from God he will pour out upon the Prophets and the seers the spirit of a deep sleep Now as the Lord doth sometimes hide his word from his Prophets and his Messengers of purpose in judgment unto the people that they that say to their Ministers Prophesie not the Lord says They shall not prophesie so he doth also give light unto them and answerable unto the good that he doth mean to do unto a people such is his presence and assistance with the Prophets that he doth imploy and all the discoveries of God in the Word shall be to them to whom he intends evil as the words of a sealed book that they shall say I cannot read it because it is sealed as the Lord opens the book in mercy to his people and to his Prophets so he doth seal it in judgment to other men that seeing they shall see and not perceive and hearing they shall hear and not understand Acts 18.5 Paul was pressed in spirit and testified unto the Jews pro violento impulsu ad solitum instinctum plus accessit fervoris Calv. There is sometimes a greater impulse upon the Ministers of
God to sin against God See thou do it not c. 5. The Angels do sweetly comfort and chear the souls of the Saints in their dejections when Daniel was troubled an Angel bids him not to fear thou art a man of desires they delight as well in your consolation as in your conversion and so they did with Christ in his agony the Angels comforted him and so to Paul Be of good chear says the Angel Acts 27. Discamus optimos constantissimos amicos nostros esse Angelos qui fide benevolentiâ omnibus amicitiae officiis visibiles amicos longè superant sicut diaboli omnes hostes visibiles The Angels are our best and most constant friends c. Luth. Lastly At death they carry the souls of the people of God into Abrahams bosom and they do rejoyce in such a conveyance that they may be imployed to bring another into society and communion with themselves in that glory which they by Christ attain unto for they delight in the filling up of the body of Christ and when a soul is converted there is much joy not only to the Angels but even to God himself how much more therefore when a soul is glorified c. as the Devil from a principle of enmity is ready as an Executioner to conduct souls to be tormented in hell to carry them from the presence of the Lord so are the blessed Angels from a principle of love as Officers for our conduct to enter into our Masters joy and sweet shall the converse of the soul and the Angels be in that pleasant passage but as terrible in the passage will the converse of the soul and the Devil be there shall be nothing but weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth c. SECT III. What Interest the Saints have in Christs Providential Kingdom as to the greatest and least things § 1. WE have spoken of the Spiritual and come now unto the Providential Kingdom which is a further manifestation and exercise of the Soveraignty of God and this also have the Saints an interest in and it is in the second Covenant made over to them for their good that it shall be wholly administred for them and this will appear in these particulars 1. There is a special Providence over them above all the rest of the Creation it is true that there is a general Providence of God that doth reach unto every thing even the meanest and the vilest creatures Mat. 10.29 a sparrow a hair He doth whatever it pleases him in heaven and earth and in the sea c. there is a Divine manuduction c. and there is a concourse God has not set up a world to act of it self but there is and must be a concurrence that is 1 with all second causes or else they cannot act this appears in the Furnace of Babylon if the Lord do but suspend his act the creatures immediately work not and therefore there is an immediate acting that is with all second causes causa prima concurrit immediatè cum omni agente creato c. But 2 in a special manner over the Saints for that 's the scope of Christs reasoning Mat. 10.29 c. Ye are of more value than many sparrows he that feeds the ravens and cloaths the lilies will he not much more you O ye of little faith and not one of them is forgotten by your heavenly Father vocula Pater tanta est in corde eloquentia quam Demosthenes Cicero non possunt exprimere c. Luther all the rest are but his servants but he will much more take care for his sons to the rest of the world he is but a Master but he is unto you a Father and his affection answers his relation c. and therefore Deut. 33.3 All thy Saints are in thy hand that is under thy power for their preservation as Joh. 10.28 29. None can pluck them out of my Fathers hand and they are also under his care for their direction Num. 4.28 Vnder the hand of Ithamar and by the hand of Moses and Aaron and of David he rules them with the skilfulness of his hand c. they are as the apple of his eye Zac. 2.8 tactum pro injuria ponit so Jerome and 't is that which is the dearest to him and therefore it 's that which he has the more tender care of Psal 83.3 they are his Jewels and his hidden ones Psal 83.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those that are kept as in chambers that are never exposed unto open view as it 's spoken of the chambers of the South of the stars that are under the Southern Pole which are not seen in our Horizon but are as it were locked up in their chambers and so it is with these Saints they are shut up in the secret of the Tabernacle and as it were kept in the Holy of holies where no man may come c. Now wherein doth this special Providence over the Saints consist It is 1 in ordering ruling and over-ruling all things for their good that nothing shall touch them or do them hurt for he could not preserve them if he did not rule and order all things for their good he doth so order all things that nothing shall do them hurt let there be the most cross turnings among the creatures that can be Psal 46.1 2. let the earth be moved and let the mountains shake let the Sea roar yet they will not fear how is it that they are so fearless Truly it is when they are not faithless and the ground of it is because there is a Providence that watches over them that none of these things shall do them any hurt Luke 10.19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 There is nothing shall by any means hurt them It is true that they have enemies they have one great enemy who is called the Envious man and all the means that he can use is to turn every thing to their hurt but they shall tread down all the power of the enemy that none shall be able to hurt them as it is said of the Patriarchs He suffered no man to do them wrong but he reproved Kings for their sakes there were many that had a mind to do them wrong but he suffered them not and any that did attempt it the Lord turned it into their good and they did it not impunè it was unto their own destruction Esa 49.17 There is no weapon that is formed against thee shall prosper and this is the inheritance of the servants of the Lord it is that which belongs to them only and that which they have a glorious title to it is jure haereditario theirs it descends unto them by their interest in God as their Father and they that have God for their Father have the secret Providence of God as their inheritance so that there is nothing shall work against them when God is for them 2 Every thing shall work for their good and their
do the Saints that are of the same body with themselves for they do none of them live barely as private men though they are not all publick persons in respect of office and function yet they are in respect of their relation and they have all of them reference unto the body and they do pray as members of the body and have in all things respect unto the good of the body for as the Spirit that doth interpret the Scripture is not a private Spirit so the Spirit that doth act the Saints is not a private Spirit therefore as in the good of every member the body is interessed so also in the prayers of every one the body is interessed therefore as we are to look upon all the prayers of Christ not as the prayers of a private man but as put up by him who is the Churches Head so we are also to look upon the prayers of all the Saints not as of private men but also as under the relation of membership under which they stand in the body of Christ and as we are to look upon their sufferings as being of the body so are we also to look upon their services as being done by the members of the same body and all of them for the good and benefit of the body Moses obtained great benefits to the people of Israel by his prayers their blessings depended much upon his prayers Pardon them as thou hast done it from Egypt till now and the Lord answers I have pardoned them according to thy word and again Moses prays Go before them or carry us not from hence the Lord answers My presence shall go with you and I will give you rest The blessings that godly men attain are not barely the fruit of their own prayers and yet they that are godly do pray also but they are a concurrence of prayers and by them we do attain mercy yea sometimes when we are little able to pray for our selves when the spirit of prayer is low in its actings in us yet then the souls of some of the Saints are upon the wing and the Lord will have respect unto them for they are of the body As we rejoice not in the gifts of others because we look upon them as given unto other men and do not look upon them as a part of the body and so see our interest in them that they are given them for our good and therefore they are to us rather matter of envy than of rejoicing so we take no comfort in the prayers of the Saints upon this ground because we look not upon them as praying upon the same common interest with us and as praying for us as fellow-members who have with them an equal interest in the good of the body and its prosperity And as they obtain mercy so they keep off judgment if Noah Daniel and Job stood before me he speaks it as the most effectual way of prevailing with him and as that which he would least of all deny and yet the Decree being gone forth his heart could not be towards them The Saints have in their ages attained great mercy for the body and therefore Elijah is called the chariot of Israel and the horse-men thereof their main defence lay in him under Heaven they had not so great a one and therefore godly men in all ages have looked upon it as a great misery for the godly of the age to be removed as having their party and their interest upon earth weakned as if an eminent man of any party be taken away it 's looked upon as a great weakning to them and he is thereupon gre●●y bewailed by them Wherefore it is reproved as their sin Esa 57.1 That the righteous perish and no man layeth it to heart c. and Mic. 7.1 it is expressed by the Prophet as a duty and so it was with Austins mother he saies of her Orationibus vivebat and it was in answer to her prayers that he was new-born unto God Parturivit me carne ut in hanc temporalem corde ut in aeternam lucem renascerer Tom. 9. cap. 8. She travailed with me as in her flesh to bring me forth to a temporal life so in her heart to an eternal life he was an eminent instrument in the Church in the age in which he lived and mightily confuted the false Teachers of the time and did gloriously defend the truth and appeared for it and all this he did attain by the benefit of his mothers prayers And they do bring upon the Churches enemies very great and terrible judgments by their prayers there is a fire that comes out of their mouths and consumes their enemies and that not as they are theirs but as they are the Churches enemies And not only the prayers of the present age shall have power against Antichrist but the prayers of the former ages as to instance in the prayers of David taking place against Judas Act. 1. so there have been prayers for many years that have been going for the Reformation of England from Popery which have been answered eminently in our daies and will be more and more answered in succeeding generations the people of God pray continually for more degrees of grace and light Now it 's true that when men strike an Oak with many blows yet it doth not fall till the last blow and yet we say that it is not the last blow that fells the Oak but all that went before so 't is here as it was in the death of Christ his last act was the full payment but yet all his former obedience and sufferings did concur thereunto to all that full satisfaction that was given by him to the Father and it 's dreadful when the prayers of all the people of God do fall upon a man surely vengeance will overtake him as an armed man Look as all the prayers of the Saints do at the last day meet together in the Devils destruction so it shall be in the destruction of any great and eminent instrument of his as in attaining special deliverances the Lord stands upon number so it is in bringing in eminent judgments also and therefore Hezekiah sends for Isaiah and tells him That the children were come to the birth the promises did travail with deliverance but there was no strength to bring forth unless he would add his prayers also and so it is with the people of God it is much more to lose one praying man than a plotting or a fighting man and that is the meaning that great Babylon came into remembrance before God how was it it was from the Lords remembrancers for the Vials did come out of the Temple Rev. 16.1 all their prayers met together Rev. 16.1 and there is a full cry that the Lord is put in remembrance which by his long delay and forbearance he had seemed to neglect and forget 8. By their Faith the people of God attain much mercy to others as well as by their
prayers for as by their prayers they do not only attain mercy for themselves so they do not only by their faith attain mercy for themselves it is said of the men that came to Christ Jesus That when he saw their faith he said to the sick of the palsie Son thy sins are forgiven thee c. Mark 2.5 There is a question put by Interpreters whether any man be saved by another mans faith or what benefit a man may have by the faith of another to which they commonly give this answer That the faith of others may be very useful unto men though they be sinful in reference unto temporal mercies and deliverance as the Saints are said by faith to subdue kingdoms attain promises stop the mouths of lyons out of weakness were made strong Heb. 11.33 waxed valiant in fight and turned to flight the armies of the aliens c. in which works there were many others had the benefit of them besides themselves and yet all is attributed to their faith And therefore if by the faith of one many even ungodly men may fare the better how much more may all the Saints who are one body and live not only for their own good but also for the good one of another by their faith attain very many temporal blessings one from another and by the faith one of another Yea they go further though it 's true that no man can be saved but by his own faith and it was by this mans faith also laying hold upon pardon that his sins were forgiven him yet ubi est mutuus fidei consensus ab aliis juvari aliorum salutem Calv. The Lord even in granting spiritual blessings to his people hath as well respect unto the faith of others as unto the prayers of others as when we pray and others pray for us the mercy is granted as a return unto both prayers so when we believe and others also do believe the mercy is given with respect to the faith of both parties and this is the blessed condition of Saints that they do not only attain temporal mercies one for another and are the better in temporal things but even in spiritual and eternal things they do attain mercy as by their prayers so by the faith one of another as they may pray one for another so they may also believe one for another and the mercies be granted to them so there be a concurrence also of the faith of the person that receives the mercy It was a great mercy that the people of Israel should enter into ●anaan by the faith of Abraham and Jacob and Joseph they only believing and embracing those promises which they never lived to see fulfilled and accomplished But if it be so great a mercy to enter into the earthly Canaan and yet some entred not because of their unbelief for a mans own proper unbelief may deprive him of those temporal blessings which a man might else attain how much more a mercy is it to enter into the spiritual Canaan that of the Gospel even the promised Land the spiritual Priviledges of the Gospel and those that are eternal and that with the assistance of another mans faith It is ordinary with us to desire the prayers one of another and by the same reason that we have an interest in the prayers of the faithful we have an interest in the faith of the faithful also and we may as well desire them to improve and exercise their faith for us as their prayers and so did Monica for her son and parents should do it for their children as well as for their own souls and so for our friends also Austin speaking of the former experiences that his mother had in the answer and return of her prayers saies of her Semper orans tanquam chirographa tua ingerebat tibi c. And truly the returns of the faith of the faithful would be as great though they be not so commonly known as the return of their prayers and yet their prayers will avail nothing if they be not the prayers of faith § 4. Thus we have spoken something of the providential Kingdom in over-ruling all things for the good of the Saints in reference unto Good men now follows that we speak something also in reference unto Evil men for there is a Government and Soveraignty that the Lord doth also exercise towards them and all for the good of his own people Now the Lord Jesus hath a rule and dominion not only over his own house but also over the world and he doth rule them with a rod of iron Psal 2.9 and it is in this only that the people of God when they look upon wicked men in the world can comfort themselves that the Lord reigns and the power and the government of themselves is not in their own hand even the vessels of dishonour in his great house whether we understand it of the Church or of the world are for the masters use and at the masters command even wicked men as well as Devils are not at their own dispose there is a government that he doth exercise over them for he hath undertaken the government of all things for the good of his people and for their sake and if he do administer all for their good he must rule their enemies in all things as well as the Saints that the people of God may say That neither Angels nor principalities nor powers nor any creature shall be able to separate them from the love of God in Christ Rom. 8.38 he orders all the motions of enemies as well as the motions of his people as the Captain of the Lords Host and he orders all things so as it shall be for the destruction of the enemy at the last for all things are put under his feet the last enemy that is destroyed is death therefore all is put under his government and he doth rule them so as that in their own actings they do find their own destruction his government over them is that they might be destroyed and in their own way find their destruction but yet so as they shall be wholly ruled and ordered for the good of his people and that will appear in these particulars 1. That they have a being and standing in the world is for the good of the Saints caeteri mortales qui ex isto numero non sunt ad utilitatem nascuntur istorum August They had never been born if God had not had some use to make of them for the good of the Saints non enim quenquam istorum Deus temerè aut fortuito creat God creates none of them in vain as if he knew not what use to make of them it is for the Saints sake that they have their standing in the world for it is for them that the world stands it is but that the number of the Elect may be gathered and perfected and when that is done the stage of this world shall be taken down
coming from Italy meeting with him and they instructing him in the way of the Lord more perfectly this was happy for him to meet with such company hoc providentiae meritò tribuendum est insomuch that the people of God bless God unto Eternity one for another as the Martyr acknowledged it as a wonderful glorious providence unto him that he was cast into prison for there he became acquainted with that Angel of God John Bradford so Austin doth acknowledge much of the goodness of God to him in the society of Nebridius But there is an excellent story of Junius in this kind he being in Leyden for his studies sake there arose a great stir and tumult in the City insomuch that many of the inhabitants fled away for safety and he amongst the rest fled to save his life and being in the country thereabouts he came to a country-mans house to beg some victuals the country-man received him and very courteously entertained him and he began to talk with him about matters of Religion which the country-man performed with so much zeal and affection ego malus Christianus siquidem Christianus c. una eadem hora gratiam suam in utroque explicavit Deus à me scientiam rusticus ego ab eo zelum c. And he saith it did abide upon him mente fixâ that he was not able to put the impression out of his mind and the Lord made it useful to him all his life after c. 5. In their preservation in service and their dismissions from service 1 There is a preservation in service that they shall be continued to do the work for which the Lord has appointed them and they shall not be cut off till they have finished their work so it was with the Lord Jesus Christ Luke 13.32 Go tell that Fox It 's true Luk. 13.32 that he was a subtle enemy and one that did want no skill to bring those bloody designs he had to pass but yet there was a time set for Christs work to day and to morrow and the third day and during that time all his enemies were not able by power or policy to reach him and then afterwards I shall be perfected 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is I shall have perfected the work of my ministry and the perfection of a mans work is the perfection of the man he is never perfected till then and so it is with the two Witnesses they shall not be killed till they have fulfilled their Prophecy there is no putting any man out of imployment till the Lord discharge him a man that has any work to do for God no man can stop him in it before it is finished 2 When their work is done they shall have a very gracious dismission and they shall lie down with honour the best of the Saints have but their time of service and they shall receive their discharge but they shall come to their grave in a full age as a shock of corn in the season thereof Job 5.26 Some men have a longer and some have a shorter time of service but all have but their time As sinning is a warfare and wicked men in that do receive their discharge and it is in providence ordered so that they dye when it is in judgment to them when they least expect it and are least prepared for it so godly men dye when their graces are perfected and their work is finished and never till then and therefore when they sought Luthers life so much yet he could write this upon the wall of his Study I shall not dye but live and declare the works of the Lord c. And there are some men upon this account can laugh at dangers in a way of service and deride threatnings as the crackling of thorns under a pot because they say My time is not in your hands neither the time of my life nor of my service and he that imploys me will uphold me and will maintain me till the time of my dismission shall come and then I shall go off the stage of this world in mercy and lye down in peace and rest upon my bed after the time of my labour is ended 6. There is a special Providence in blessing and providing for their posterity God has a special providence over those that come out of the loyns of his own for indeed he has so ordered all his Decrees as that the greatest part of the Elect comes out of the loyns of the Saints Prov. 20.7 His children are blessed after him there is grace in a special manner that is promised unto them but 't is a blessedness that doth descend upon them by virtue of their parents Covenant Esa 59.21 My words which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seeds seed saith the Lord from henceforth and for ever and Esa 44.3 I will pour my Spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thy off-spring c. as Austin was filius lacrymarum the son of his mothers prayers and tears and the Lord did give an answer by giving the soul of her son unto her that he was graciously converted unto the Lord and proved an eminent instrument for service in the Church of the Lord. The Saints can with Jacob pronounce upon them a blessing when they dye and that out of faith in the promise and the Lord willsurely make it good unto them but we are begotten not of blood Joh. 1.13 And therefore though many times ungodly men may and do come out of the loyns of the Saints and the spiritual part of the Covenant is not made good unto many of the posterity of his own people yet the outward part of the Covenant surely is though the Covenant for matter of grace be unto Isaac yet there is another part of it that is made good to Ismael Twelve Princes shall he beget he hath the dew of heaven and the fatness of the earth God doth in outward things strangely supply them and provide for them when the children of the wicked are vagabonds and beg their bread Psal 37.25 Yet I never saw the righteous forsaken nor his seed begging bread Psal 37.25 Not that a godly man may not be brought to beggery or to live upon the charity of another Jesus Christ himself was so he was poor and so poor that the women Luke 8.3 his followers did minister unto him of their substance to supply his necessity in this life but there is a fourfold interpretation of that place of Scripture 1 Begging of bread is taken for extremity of poverty the seed of the righteous are never so poor but the Lord doth find out a way of support and supply for them he has said That the just shall inherit the earth 2 It is not meant that it was never so that they were never poor but in Davids experience he had never found it so 3 There is another interpretation of Muis
whole man therefore it is called the old man and when we sin we are carnal and walk as men 1 Cor. 3.3 now the whole man is not defiled with it in the rising of sin it is kept within bounds till it overflow into the members also the inward man is defiled but sin will come upon the outward man also and there is in the members in reference unto the act of sin 1 A fitness to be imployed in it Rom. 6.13 Weapons of unrighteousness the members have distinct forms according to the imployment for which they were created there is a fitness in the foot to walk and in the hand to work so there is a different fitness answerable unto the several acts of sin that the soul can put them upon or imploy them in and they are weapons there is a fitness in them to be used and imployed in the service of sin it 's said of David Psal 45.1 My tongue is the pen of a ready writer it is fit to be imployed in the works of grace so because Doegs tongue did cut like a sharp rasor he is fit to accuse others and to wound them in their good name 2 There is also a readiness as well as a fitness fitness may be passive but a readiness is active You have given your members weapons of unrighteousness Rom. 6.13 14. Acts 13.10 and therefore Acts 13.10 Full of all mischief 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad peccandum facilitas ad quodvis scelus propensio so Beza their feet are swift to shed blood whereas there is a deadness and a backwardness unto every thing else that is good there is a weariness their feet are not ready to walk nor their hands to work c. 3 There is also a greediness and an unweariedness the one in the soul and the other in the members Deut. 29.19 it is a drunkenness and they are for taking of their fill of drink as if they could never have enough to morrow shall be as this day and much more abundant and so in a lust of the flesh how unsatiable is it and in the lust of the eye the eye is never satisfied with seeing though presently weary unto any thing that is good and there is no such greediness towards it but towards sin it is so and in this doth sin in the body lye Now that it may appear what an overspreading evil is in sin and that the Saints may know in themselves the power of it in the breaking forth therefore the Lord doth give them up to acts of sin 2 That a Saint may see that if he be deserted of God he shall be drawn into sin in all the kinds and degrees of it I cannot saith he resist the rising of it and if the Lord leave me I shall not be able in the least to resist the actings of it according unto the measure of a mans desertion such is the degree of his sin that we may see how great an evil and how dangerous a thing it is to be deserted by the Lord in any degree in any measure of it Damascene in his Orthodox Fidei cap. 29. mentions three sorts of desertions 1 Temporary for tryal such was that of Job which was a desertion only for a present dispensation that thereby the Lord might shew forth and draw out the grace of Job which else had not been so clearly seen 2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 castigatory which is for correction of some former neglect and to teach the people of God to keep closer unto him and to fear his departure more than formerly 3 Vindictive and that 's a final desertion and so he doth never forsake his own people the Lord left Hezekiah that he might see what was in his heart and so he doth the Saints that they may see if they are left to themselves what they are and what a terrible thing it is to be deserted of God and what a fearful creature the best men would quickly appear to be then Elias Cretens made four sorts 1 Explorationis to try their graces as we see in Job 2 Correctionis as in David and Solomon and Samson 3 Rejectionis and so the Lord deserted the Jews and so he doth wicked men 4 Satisfactionis and so he did desert the Lord Jesus Christ but there was a satisfaction of Justice in that desertion for it was the payment of a debt 3 That they may see how weak all means are if sin in the power of it be so set against them that they cannot keep it in but it will break out and that unto the highest degree men would think that reason and fear and shame would suppress it and indeed by these the Lord doth many times restrain sin as they did the Jews they would have taken hold of John but they feared the people but now let but the Lord withdraw his hand and all means and arguments and reasonings will not prevail at all with them they are like unto the wild Ass in the wilderness and as the swift Dromedary there is no restraint nothing will be withheld from them of any thing that they have a mind to do they run into it as the horse into the battel Jer. 8.6 so Christ says of Judas it had been good for that man that he had not been born but there is a prevailing injunction he goes on to act nothing can stay him 4 That the pople of God may fear to be delivered up unto the power of Satan There is a kind of spiritual Excommunication which the Lord doth exercise towards men many times What thou dost do quickly and Satan entred into Judas there is a restraint upon the Devil that he cannot always carry men to acts of sin the Devil is bound wicked men shall have the same persecuting hearts but they shall not be able to draw forth those lusts into act Rev. 20.8 but Satan shall be let loose and will hurry men to acts of sin with violence he tempted David to number the people 1 Chron. 21.1 and God was angry with him and Satan stirred him up and it was in vain for Joab to speak to him and shew him his folly he was set upon it and it must be done the Kings word prevailed and so it is still with many of the children of God Satan will carry men on unto horrid actions and they shall act with violence 5 That godly men may exercise repentance of all kinds the object of repentance is all sin not only this or that sin but all sin original sin actual sin sins in the heart That the body may be afflicted by fasting and prayer c. and being famula in culpa it may be socia in poenitentia and sins in the life sins of commission and sins of omission as God will have our faith take in all the objects of faith and be exercised about them all so should our repent●●●e take in all the object of repentance and the Lord makes us sensible
not how comes it to pass that it doth not excutere It is not so much from a Principle of Grace within for that is in its own nature defective but by vertue of the Covenant and the Prayer of Christ without and it is this Prayer that doth uphold all the Grace that is in us or else it would 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deficere c. This Intercession doth not only present their Duties but it preserves their Graces also the one would be rejected and the other extinguished were it not for this The Saints have a double Advocate as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifies the Spirit of Prayer as an Advocate within us which as a witness doth many times fail us and we by our own sins lose the benefit and the comfort of it but then we are to have recourse unto the Advocate without us as the Soul is sometimes to make use of the witness of Blood when he cannot see the witness of Water 3 It brings a man unto the great duty of Confession to become publick examples of Repentance which hath been a great honour unto the Saints who have risen out of their falls and we cannot say that the records of their falls have been so dishonourable unto them as their publick Repentance and abasement before God has been honourable with this the Lord honour'd David and his Repentance stands upon Record Psal 51. and with this also he honour'd Solomon which is Recorded in the Book of Ecclesiastes which is therefore entituled Coheleth which Cocceius observes to note receptionem suam ad ecclesiam per poenitentiam his reception into the Church by Repentance and is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man gathered unto the Congregation of the Lord and so did Paul Act. 22.4 I persecuted this way and I was mad against them and so doth Luther he left it upon record tantus eram sanctus ut paratissimus fueram unumquemque occidere c. and this Tertull. de poeniten chap. 9. observes to be in use in his time .......... Presbyteris advolvi charis Dei adgeniculari as the example of Eccetalicus c. Thus as they were eminent examples in sinning so they were desirous to be of Repentance 4 Hereby they are no more confident of their own strength and so exalt not themselves above their Brethren so Christ ask'd Peter Now lovest thou me more than these Joh. 21.15 he was before for making comparisons with all other men though all men should forsake thee yet not I but now here is no Comparison and if there be any strength in that Christ ask'd by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and he answers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a less degree of Love it was good advice to him But he said well Hîc quaerendae non sunt subtilitates the words are commonly in the Gospel promiscuously used and it is a signal instance of Gods power to bring good out of evil when a man by reflecting upon some great sin that he hath committed can say that his carnal confidence in himself and his own strength is healed thereby 5 This makes a Saint to walk in fear ever after and blessed is the man that fears always a fearless spirit doth bring sin 1 A godly man fears sin as the only Evil fears an Oath and he doth say with Chrysostome 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 this only is matter of fear but specially when he has had experience of the breaking forth of it eminently a man fears a disease that he hath felt and so David will not trust his tongue without a bridle and his Eyes without a Prayer turn away my Eyes from beholding vanity and thereby the bank is made up against that sin all their dayes and it may be a sin that a man feared least shall get the greatest hand upon him if temptation get the wind and the hill of him 2 He fears lest the Lord may therefore leave a note of dishonour upon him Revel 7.6 7. when the Tribes were sealed Dan was left out Rev. 7.6 7. and so is Ephraim tanquam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 antesignani Mic. 1.13 this Tribe was the beginning of the sin to the daughter of Sion they of Dan did it for the transgressions of Israel were found in thee it was a scandalous sin the Lord may leave a note of sin upon a man and his posterity afterwards for it and he may not be honoured as the rest of his Brethren but may have a brand stick upon him for committing folly in Israel c. 6 That a man may be fitted for service by it Luk. 22.32 Christ says when thou art converted strengthen thy brethren a mans own comfort doth fit a man to comfort others 2 Pet. 2.2 and so do a mans own falls also 2 Cor. 1.4 who comforts us in all our tribulation that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble 1 By the Experience of the power of sin he may be the better able to admonish others 2 Pet. 2.2 they denyed the Lord that bought them and he can best speak of the danger of such a way himself that hath found it and had experience of it in himself Austin having been himself a Manichee when he disputed with Felix the great Manichee he could shew him the vanity of it by experience and so frustrata vanitate errore illius sectae ad nostram fidem conversus est c. Possidon in vita August 2 He will be able to comfort others against the guilt of that sin having himself sound favour he can shew others the way unto it and so could Peter having found mercy himself and David for this shall every one that is godly pray unto thee and so Luther did publish unto all the way of Mercy that God had vouchsafed him that all men might see that mercy is to be had for them Peter velocissimè veniam consecutus c. Bern. 7 That it may be unto a man matter of Humiliation all his days sins before Conversion be grievous as they were to Paul I was a Persecutor and a Blasphemer 1 Tim. 1.13 and such were some of you but now you are washed A man should not so look upon what he is but he should also look back what he was Behold thou art made whole remember that thou wast a sick man and the keeping it in view will be usefull unto a man all his dayes to make him exalt mercy and to cause him to abhor himself So Austin after he had made his Confession he saith Spes mihi valida est in illo qui sedet ad dextram tuam interpellat pro nobis alioquin desperarem magni enim multi sunt languores animae meae magni multi sed major est medicina tua amplior And so a man doth exalt Grace and by this means abase himself all his days Oh I was a Blasphemer I was an Adulterer a Persecutor and yet I have obtained
order of Gods as we see in David the Lord was provoked against him that he smote Vzzah with death because they sought not God according to the due order and if matters of order be so great what is it for men to vary in matters of faith Col. 2. and to change the covenant of God it's made a great offence Esa 24.5 To change the ordinances of God much more that which is the foundation of all Ordinances the everlasting Covenant A man could not act upon a more dangerous way of sinning than to change the covenant of God that he hath made with his people 2 By this means there is a great injury done unto children which are the Embryo's of the Church of God and Christ saith It 's dangerous to offend one of these little ones they shall be sure of a rebuke from Christ for of such is the kingdom of God to admit any into the Church of God that the Lord would have secluded is a high provocation and a great unfaithfulness in them that have the power of the Keys but to seclude any that the Lord would have admitted is a greater provocation The covenant of grace is not only a covenant Gal. 3.15 but a testament and that is amongst men accounted so sacred that no man disanulleth it or addeth thereunto and if we could say that children were secluded from the covenant because they cannot restipulate then to blot their names out of the last Will and Testament of Christ is a horrible injury to the persons and a very great presumption in the man But there are two special places that I would name to you for this one in 1 Cor. 10.1 2. Our fathers all passed under the cloud and through the sea were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea The scope I conceive to be this where there are the like priviledges of grace there will be the like punishments but we have the like priviledges of grace that they had therefore we may expect altogether with them the like punishments Estius so Estius says of the benefits that they received they were eorum praefigurativa prefigurative of those which we now receive by Christ and therefore he pitches upon two extraordinary Sacraments of the Jews in which if in any thing they might seem to be priviledged but he says that they were also as types and examples unto us and that the Apostle had such an intention is plain to me and that he intended them as sacramental types 1 else he would never have called them spiritual meats and drinks 2 Else he would never have singled out barely these two giving to one the name of Baptism and to the other the name of spiritual Meats The first noted protection for them and their children passing under the cloud and direction also for the cloud did not only go before them as a guide but it was spread also over them as a covering it 's said Num. 9.15 16 19. That the cloud covered the Tabernacle and so it was always that the cloud covered it by day and this was a type of that special protection that the Lord seals unto parents and their children in their Baptism for they are baptized in the cloud and their passage through the red Sea and their preservation from Pharaoh doth signifie properly our deliverance from all our spiritual enemies and is commonly made a type of it in the Scripture and this was a mercy that was vouchsafed unto them and unto their children Now if the Apostles reason shall be of force we must have the same priviledges in Baptism that they had in these or else the Apostles reason doth nor can not conclude Again Baptism is typified by the salvation of Noah and of his family in the Ark and the resemblance seems to lye in this that as the Ark was the Ordinance of God appointed for the safety of the Church in the general Deluge and a family-salvation the father with the child so Baptism is the Ordinance that the Lord has appointed for the salvation of the Church from the general destruction that shall befal the world of ungodly and it doth run by families also Now by this means all these incouragements are denied unto the infants and the families of the Saints which are the great priviledges in the Scripture given unto them as they were unto Israel and happened unto them but for types only and therefore have their accomplishment in their antitypes under the Gospel 3 Hereby the practice and prayers of the Churches of Christ and all the ancient Saints of God are without any Scripture-ground causlesly condemned and rejected as profanations of the Ordinances of God Consuetudo Ecclesiae matris in baptizandis infantibus nequaquam spernenda est nec divina credenda nisi Apostolica esset traditio Aug. de Genes ad literam Tom. 3. p. 464. And it is a dangerous thing for men to blaspheme the Tabernacle of God and them that dwell in Heaven Rev. 13.6 it 's an expression of the true Church of God and to have a mouth given to a man for that end is not the least spiritual judgment as vers 5. there was a mouth given him so to speak and he opened his mouth this way 2. Hereby we may be informed of the cruelty of unbelieving parents men that do not only exclude themselves from the grace of the Covenant but as much as in them lies their posterity also Non parentes sed peremptores Bern. as far as concerns the ordinary way and means of bringing them into Covenant with the Lord. And these are of two sorts 1 Some that are actually without the Church of God 2 Some that are not cast out through the neglect of the Church but yet they ought so to be 1. Unto them that are actually cast out from being a Church unto God and of this number I look upon the Papists to be Abest ut eos baptizemus qui corporis integri membra conseri negarunt Quum in hoc ordine sint Papistarum liberi quomodo baptismum illis administrare liceat non videmus Calv. epist p. 175. whose children are to be secluded from Baptism themselves being not in Covenant nor owned as a Church of God for I cannot but assert with Doctor Whitaker and many others of the Worthies of this Nation Ecclesiam Romanam non esse Catholicam imò ne veram quidem Ecclesiam particularem sed deserendam esse dicimus ab omnibus qui servari volunt tanquam Antichristi Satanae Synagogam De Eccles q. 6. 1 That Church which the Lord has cast off as a Harlot and as the greatest enemy to the Church of God that ever was that he does not owne unto himself as a Church but so has the Lord cast off the Churches of Rome therefore he does not owne them as Churches unto himself it 's Babylon the great the mother of Harlots and she is set every where in opposition to
Sion and her Adherents are those that shall make war with the Saints and they shall be joyned unto this Church whose names are not written in the Lambs book of life the Lord has thus cast out these Antichristian Churches and given them a bill of divorce for ever 2 That Church from which the Lord calls to his people for a separation that the Lord does not owne as a true Church but the Lord calls upon his people for a separation from the Church of Rome Come out of her my people And here I conceive with * Oper. Camer p. 520. Camero A dislike and an abhorrency of their idolatry and superstitions is not sufficient for that should be even in a true Church from which yet a man may not depart so as to hold no communion with them though Churches be very corrupt and 't is a mans duty to separate from the corruptions of them to touch no unclean thing with them as Christ did in the Church of the Jews yet he did hold Church-communion with them all in the Ordinances of God and did not separate from them because they remained a true Church to God and the Lord had not yet called them Loammi and put them away from him therefore the Lords calling out a people to separate from the Church of Rome doth plainly give unto them a bill of divorce and the Lord does thereby manifest that he does owne them for a Church unto himself no longer for if they were a true Church though ye were to separate from the corruptions of it yet not from communion with it 3 Where there is no salvation to be had that is not a Church unto God for extra Ecclesiam nulla salus but in the Church of Rome by the rules of their own Religion there can be no salvation because they make a man to forsake the Lord Jesus Christ the only foundation in point of Justification which whosoever misseth must build upon the sand and not upon the Rock as our own Mr. Perkins c. has long since manifested and where no salvation is to be had surely there is no Church in Gods account They therefore that embrace the Doctrine of Popery and do fully close with it they and their seed are cast out they are no more a Church to God neither to be looked upon as in Covenant with him and to have any right to the seals of the Covenant 2. There are another sort that are not actually cast out through the negligence of the Church being able to bear them that be evil and it 's true while such are owned as members the priviledges of members cannot be denied to them who ought to be as a Heathen man and a Publican and though men do neglect their duty therein yet there is a kind of spiritual Excommunication goes out from God all the while Vse 2 § 2. It serves for Exhortation and that unto three sorts 1. Unto parents it does necessarily inforce upon them to take hold of the Covenant not only for themselves but for their posterity also for 1 he that will embrace the Covenant of God let him accept of the whole Covenant not only that he will be thy God but the God of thy seed also There is no part of the Gospel that should be neglected or any of the grace of the second Covenant that should be received in vain 2 Else thy faith will be defective therein the Apostle speaks 1 Thess 3.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Thess 3.10 of a defect of faith and that lies in two things 1 When it does not take in the object of faith in its extent but there is something held forth to be believed that faith is not exercised about 2 When it does not act in the highest degree there is a defect in reference to the object and in reference unto the act also 3 The people of God have exercised faith upon the Covenant for their children and Christ Jesus himself for his children Psal 102.28 Heb. 1.10 11 12. for he shall see his seed and in them he shall prolong his days upon earth and therefore we read of his children There was a Covenant made with Christ personal and a Covenant made with Christ mystical with him as Mediator in regard of what he was to perform and with him as head for us and Christ takes hold of the Covenant in both these respects and all promises made unto a posterity Christ has an eye to the accomplishing of them in the behalf of his posterity as well as himself as being part of the promise and covenant that the Lord made unto him for himself and his seed and so should all the Faithful do look upon all the promises that are made unto the seed of the Faithful in the Scripture and put them in suit before the Lord for thy seed also as being part of the Covenant that the Lord has made with you we might by this means leave and entail very great blessings upon our posterity and live to see the Covenant accomplished unto them unto the great consolation of our souls Psal 128.3 4. Thy children shall be like olive-plants round about thy table Behold thus shall the man be blessed that feareth the Lord the Church is called the Olive-tree as we have seen Rom. 11.16 17. and they as Church-members are as Olive-plants those that are of use and excellency profiting Church and Common-wealth Esa 59.21 This is my covenant says the Lord my Spirit that is upon thee and my words that I have put in thy mouth shall not depart out of thy mouth nor out of the mouth of thy seed or seeds seed henceforth and for ever Whilst we straiten the Covenant and our Covenant-interest unto our selves we are enemies to our own consolation the great flourishing of the soul lies in the inlargement of the faculties and they are vast objects that do cause large faculties it 's of admirable use unto a mans own spirit to look unto the Covenant in the extent of it to you and to your seed 2. It is matter of exhortation unto children that they would walk worthy of this mercy this inheritance that God has entailed upon them and not despise the grace of God in their parents Covenant but actually take hold of the Covenant also in their own persons 1 Consider grace hath prevented you and you are taken in by God into a familiar Covenant with himself meerly out of preventing mercy whereas thou mightest have been born among the uncircumcised it 's no small priviledge to be born of those that are themselves in Covenant with God 2 It will be a great aggravation to thy sin and judgment when thou shalt with Esau despise thy birth-right the contempt of a spiritual priviledge is a great sin and dishonour to God and it will surely add to thy judgment Mat. 8.11 The children of the kingdom shall be cast out into utter darkness Mat. 8.11 and how will that