Selected quad for the lemma: lord_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
lord_n blood_n body_n jesus_n 12,126 5 6.1739 4 false
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A44497 Essays about general and special grace y way of distinction between; or distinct consideration of 1. The object of divine faith, or the truth to be preached to, and believed by men. And, 2. Gods purposes for dispensing. And, 3. His dispensations of the said truth, and the knowledge of it to men. And, 4. The operations of God with it in men in the dispensation of it. By Jo. Horne, late of Lin-Allhallows.; Essayes about general and special grace. Horn, John, 1614-1676. 1685 (1685) Wing H2802; ESTC R216477 249,720 501

There are 7 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

observed the Passover in remembrance of their deliverance out of Egypt and as a type of his own suffering presently to follow and of the Redemption of mankind thereby The matter and outward rites of it namely the taking blessing breaking and giving Bread to his Disciples bidding them to take and eat it and telling them it was his Body broken for them as likewise his taking and blessing the Cup or Wine and bidding them drink it telling them that Cup was the New Testament in his Blood being also dear significations of his Body broken for 〈◊〉 and his Blood shed for us as he also himself informeth us and the end of it being by himself expressed to be the remembrance of him what more clear than that our Lord and Saviour hereby sets before us that he Christ as come in ●he flesh and his Body as broken with sorrows and sufferings for our sins to the Death is the true Bread of Life and that the believing mindfulness thereof and of the love testified therein is the way for us to be nourished up in the hope of Eternal Life and to be strengthned to serve God by him and suffer with and for him And also that his blood as shed his Sufferings and Sacrifice as indured and presented unto God for us and hath obtained for us the remission of our sins and confirmed the promises of God for giving us forgiveness the Holy Spirit and Eternal Life and the love and grace of God and Christ therein testified towards us is Drink indeed fit to exhilerate and chear the heart more than the choisest Wine and to fill it with Spiritual Consolations As also that he would hereby instrict us to love one another as Brethren and as he hath loved us walking together as partakers of the same grace and laying down our selves for the good of one another as he hath given us example Neither doth this Ordinance witness to any goodness in us though we in eating and drinking together in remembrance of Christ do therein profess our belief of those things therein set before us and oblige our selves to cleave to him and one another but rather of our want and sitter inability to live in the favour and service of God but by the faith of Jesus and so by him as yielding therein con●●●al nourishment and strength to us And therefore also though it behoves men to come and Eat and Drink worthily meetly and so as becomes the grace in the Ordinance set before us even Communion with the Body and Blood of Christ that is to say to have our hearts minding the grace set before us and to consider and owne our own vileness and unworthiness as therein discovered to us that we may neither be puft up in our selves or Eat by virtue of any goodness or worthiness found in us or be puft up one against another yet it is to be exposed to and pertook of by all that profess the Name of Christ and that seek salvation by him being capable of discerning the Lords Body and the grace therein set before them in some measure and so of examining themselves according thereunto Yea the Baptised and Professors of Christs Name are to be instructed and called upon to remember the grace of God in Christ towards them and not because of weakness to be kept there from for which we have no president to warrant us only in case any after profession of Christ and desire to seek him do walk scandalously such are to be withdrawn from and may be secluded for a time till they be ashamed and confess their fault and at least profess repentance of the same as well for their amendmendment as also to vindicate the Society of Worshippers from the scandal of alowing and tolerating evil doers in their prophaness and evil living This Ordinance also instituted but the night before Christs suffering is to be continued till his coming again even till he come in the Clouds of Heaven to raise the Dead and to take his Servants into fellowship with himself in his Glorious Kingdom in which they shall be ever with him and eat and drink of his Consolations with him for ever Till then his Death never to be forgotten nor then neither because of the great Testimony of His and his Fathers Love and the great Procurer of all our good and happiness but till then it is in this Ordinance to be remembred and shewed forth by us And these two Ordinances Baptism and the Supper are what he hath appointed to us since his coming in the flesh to be generally observed and practised by us his Death and Resurrection having put a period at least as to us Gentiles to all the rest before observed by the Jews As for prayer and thanksgiving and the like they were in force at all times and so will be at least till Christs coming again if not after also its sure thanksgiving will And its clear they have as now to be performed their foundation in Christ and what he hath done and is become for us and are to be offered up through him unto God in and by his Spirit but because these are not instituted with any visible Rites to signifie the Grace of Christ to us except kneeling and lifting up our hands and eyes to Heaven be judged such which yet are not commanded though commendably practised implying our ●●se of our own vileness and our humbling of our selves before God and hope in his mercy but rather are exercises that the sense of our own wants and belief of Gods goodness and grace leads us as it were naturally to I shall not say any thing more to them but after I have a little digressed to take notice of the rabuses of these Ordinances too generally through mistake observable in all ages I shall speak a little of the other way of Gods witnessing to his truth and so conclude this Chapter also SECT 9. Of the too General mistake of the mind of God in his Ordinances and mens abuse of them in all Ages ZEal is good if it be ordered with discretion and guided by right judgement and understanding otherwise it is very hurtful it being like fire which kept within its bounds and discreetly ordered is very useful but out of its due place is often very damageable kept within the Hearth it 's serviceable but in the Thatch destructive Now zeal is then right and profitable when it springs from and is ordered by the knowledge of God 〈◊〉 and Christ and so is mainly for and 〈◊〉 bout the great matters of his Law Jud●ment and the Love of God as Luke 11. 〈◊〉 but when those things are not known regarded but the eagerness of the Spi● is exercised and spends it self about th● superstructures and matters of lesser m●ment it produces no good Fruit but ten● to much Confusion onely And yet he● generally hath this been and yet is th● way of the World even of those that w● be or seem to be some bodies
slain for us he is become the Righteousness of God to and for men and so is set forth in the Gospel of God as he is therein declared to be the forgiver of sins and justifier of them that believe in him upon the account of the Righteousness wrought and compleated in and by him And so he is or in him is held forth to us men the Righteousness of Faith or the Righteousness which is of God by Faith as it 's diversly tearmed that is to say through and by vertue of Christ and the Righteousness performed by him whosoever gives credit to his Testimony and believeth looketh to and stayeth upon him are accepted for righteous in the presence of God though in themselves and with respect to the Righteousness given them in Adam they be sinful and defiled creatures and shall be dealt with as righteous persons in abiding in him and shall have the grace and spirit of God administred to them also both to justifie them in their Consciences and effect in them righteous frames and affections conforming them to God and fitting them for his Kingdom All which also depend upon the Righteousness of Christ to be performed to and in them But this Righteousness comes not to and upon men as the righteousness of the first man should have done had he stood for that should have been by Propagation Rom. 5.17 but this by Spiritual Regeneration free Gift and Imputation and is received by men in coming in to him and being born to and of him of the faith and knowledge of him and of God as manifested in and by him The Righteousness wrought by Christ ●om 3.22 23 24 25. 5.17 18 19 20 21. and that is in Christ is indeed for and to all men to justification of life both so as to justifie exempt or free them from being held under the first judgement or condemnation so as to perish therein and so as to give them life and righteousness in Christ as a thing prepared for them and ready to be in their closing with him imparted to them But it come upon cloaths and makes righteous so as to gracious acceptation and title to the Kingdom and Inheritance promised only those who receive and believe in him SECT 4. Of two kinds of Sin 4. THere is also a twofold consideration of Sin with reference to these two men and the Covenants made with men in and by them The one is natural to us the root and original of which was voluntary to Adam and this stood in the breaking the Law he was under and it is transmitted to us as his righteousness had he stood should have been by propagation so as we come sinners into the world and under the sentence of Death Rom. 5.13 14 Rom. 3.9 10 19 23. as is evident in Children that sin not after the similitude of Adams transgression and so not by imitation and yet do dye And this sin also brings forth and necessitates men naturally to innumerable sins actual sins that stand in the breach of Gods law according to which all have sinned and as they grow up do sin continually till and further then by grace they be prevented and inabled to do better The second kind of sin was not found in the second man the Lord Jesus 1 Pet. 2.22 2 Cor. 5.21 for he had no sin in him nor on him but other mens he never did sin nor was guile found in his mouth but it is found in particular men against the second man and against God in him and the law of grace held forth by him not in him against the law given to him and imposed upon him for making attonement for and ransoming men from under the judgment of the former kind of sin which law he fulfilled to perfection And it is a sinning after the similitude of Adams transgression Rom. 5.14 Hos 6.7 though not simply against the first Covenant but against the second too viz. that in Christ for men hating the light when it comes John 3.19 20. 5.40 8.44 Prov. 1.24 25. Psal 81.11 12. and loving darkness rather not coming to Christ for life when called in a word the rejecting Christ and putting him away that 's the original and bottom of it preferring Satan sin and the world before him and refusing to be healed and saved by him And this is the condemning kind of sin the retaining natural corruption against the light and grace of Christ coming to save men from it and the chusing to do Satans will rather than Christs And though this kind of sin comes not to men from any publick root of mankind as the first doth but is received from Satan and committed by men in their particular persons to which through original corruption may apt yet in the seasons of Gods grace it necessitates not yea and though Christ did not primarily and directly in his first stepping in to ransome us come to take away this kind of sin as the former it being consequential to his coming to ransom us and to his bringing grace and salvation to us yet from this sin also he hath by the superabundancy of his Merit Rom. 5.16 and the worth of his Obedience and righteousness received power and authority to justifie and save us and doth forgive it to men and save them from it if upon convincement of it during the day of Gods grace they be prevailed with to own or confess it and repent of it turning in to him with whom there is plenteousness of Redemption for that purpose as was before shewed SECT 5. Of two General Judgements besides Particular ones 5. NOw answerable to those two kinds of sin we find mentioned too in the Gospel Doctrine two General Judgements passing upon all men the first passing upon all men in one man before any man was born to him of which the Apostle saith Rom. 5.16 18. the judgement was of one offence to condemnation and was upon all men to condemnation And this was for sin of the first kind Adams sin and the sin of all men as in him and as made sinners and so necessitated to sin by him and this was the judgement threatned before his sin separation and banishment from the presence of God and there through death in soul and body though after the fall pronounced mitigatedly through the interposure of the second man and it was upon all men the same not to some one way to some another way but to all alike and to condemnation as in the Scriptures above quoted Now the weight of this judgement was executed upon Christ John 12.31 the judgement of this world was upon him when he was sorrowful unto death What is through Christ ordered to men 〈◊〉 is for testimony of Gods displeasure against sin indeed but in such a way as none shall perish everlastingly therein being for nurturing men to look to Christ and God in Christ and so to lay hold of the everlasting life
whom he herein preferred in Honour and Dignity above the rest Some he was pleased to inclose and dress as his Garden from the rest Isa 5.1 2 6. 32.15 16. 35.1 2 6. Act. 14.16 17. Deut. 32. who comparatively were left as the open F●ild and to make them as his Vineyard when the rest were comparatively but like the Wilderness when he left other People to walk after their own ways though not without continual witnesses of himself vouchsafed them generally in his Works in which was his goodness leading them to Repentance He took Israel as a more choise People and Portion for himself he made known his ways to Moses his Acts to the Children of Israel Psal 103.7 He shewed his Word unto Jacob his Statutes and his Judgements to Israel He dealt not so with any Nation and as for his Judgements Ordinances and Government in his Church they did not know them as is said Psal 147.19 20. though yet wisdom in the mean time even the Wisdom of God ceased not to cry to them without even to them without the House she had builded the Church or City of God and to utter her Voice in the Streets to call men to Repentance as Prov. 1 20 21. 8.1 2 3 4. though in respect of such outward verbal and written Instructions as the Jews Had the Gentiles were a People distinguished from them the Jews a People under Law or that had the Law and the Gentiles a People without the Law Eph. 2.11 12 71. Act. 2.38 39. as Rom. 2.12 14. yet they were not wholy without Law they were a Law to themselves The Jews were a People nearer to God in that respect the Gentiles a People far off that had not God and his Covenant and Promises Lodged and Tabernacled amongst them if we may so say as the Jews had Eph. 2.19 20. The Jews were as Gods Houshould and houshold Servants to whom he opened his mind more expresly and plainly Psal 145.9 148.11 12 13. when the Gentiles were as Tenants dwelling at a distance from him though he a good gracious Lord to them all and his tender mercies upon or over all his Works but they stood not so hear him nor had such advantages of hearing his more glorious Discoveries of his mind as the other had Only as we shewed above they the Jews were not so priviledged meerly for themselves but to be means of making known Gods mind to others Exod. 19.5 6. Ezek. 5.5 6 7 8. as a Royal Priesthood before him which because they did not in their Prosperity as they ought but rather turned aside to the ways of the Heathen than endeavoured to turn in the Heathen to him therefore he dispersed and scattered them and their Books and Doctrine amongst the Heathen Matth. 10.1 2. 21.43 44. 28.19 20 Psal 72.16 And at length chose out a handful of them whom he made and found faithful before him and ordered them to do that great Work of making known his Mind among the Nations taking in his remoter Tenants into his House and Houshold Rom. 11.20 21 22. Mat. 8.12 to be a People near to him and turning his former Houshold Servants and Children born in his House out of doors beca● or their pride and stubborness aga● him Nor did he only take and use this ●berty in revealing his Words and Judgements to one People and not to other though to that one that they might spread the knowledge of God among● others Rom. 16.25 26. Col. 1.25 26 27 Eph. 3.4 5 6. Psal 17 67. but also to reveal 〈◊〉 Words more fully to some persons and more immediately than to others yea in some Ages more fully than in others He more immediate Discoveries of his mind were not given to all men no nor to all Israel nor to all that feared God in Israel as to the immediateness of their Discovery Psal 25.8 9 12 13 14. Mat. 13.11 12. Prov. 22.23 2.1 2.6 though they that fear him have and had in all Ages an understanding given them into the mysteries of God and secrets of his Kingdom above any that fear him not as to the manner efficatiousness and usefulness of their perception but to some certain select persons from amongst those that feared him whom he was pleased at his pleasure to make use of for the meadiate revealing and making him known to the rest both fearers and not fearers of God as was meet for them As to Enoch and Noah before the Flood in the separation of the family of Seth from the rest afterward to Abraham Isaac Jacob Moses and the following Prophets and Apostles and above all to his only Son our Lord Jesus Christ who immediately in the Manhood received the knowledge of God from the Word or God himself and diffused it abroad into his Apostles and Disciples to divulge it to others Now as we may not from that election of them with respect to whom and the committing of the faith to them it is called the faith of Gods Elect Tit. 1.1 conclude that all others of Israel were rejected of God or left without sufficient means of Salvation because not so Elected of God to that honour of so immediate Revelation as they no more may we conclude from Gods Electing Jacob and his Posterity to have the more full means of Grace and clearer knowledge of God manifested and committed to them and not so chusing the other Nations but passing them by as to that Rom. 2.7 8 9 10 11 25 26 27. that therefore the other Nations were rejected of God from any possibility to and left without sufficient means of their Salvation This liberty and exercise of the Soverainty of God in honouring some above others and that with reference too to the good of others nothing prejudiceth the good of all but rather proclaims God the prosecutor and promoter of it though such vouchsafements of choise priviledges were choise favours to those they were vouchsafed to and put the greater ingagements of thankfulness and service to God upon them The like may be said about his different Dispensations in and unto former Ages hiding comparatively from them what he was pleased to reserve for and reveal to and in these last Ages as is said Rom. 16.25 26. Col. 1.26 Ephes 3.5 viz. that his hiding the mistery from those forme● Ages doth not imply his rejection of them to destruction it being but a comparative hiding thereof it was not so made known then as now says Ephes 3.5 For as we said in the beginning of this Section it was made known more or less in every Age of the World as to the substance of it as holding forth the way of mans salvation as may be made evident by Induction 1. In the Ages before the Flood 2. And from the Flood to Moses And 3. From Moses to David 4. From David to the Captivity of Israel 5. From Israel's Captivity to the coming of
and for release and liberty to Servants and Bondmen as it were a year of rest Levit. 25.3 4 5 6. Exod. 21.2 3 4 5 6. so it Typed out the Rest and release from Labour and Sorrow to be brought in by Christ as before But as it was a year of Release for Servants so it Typed out the Liberty to be brought in by Christ from Sin Satan and the Paedagogy of the Law procured by his Death and offered in the preaching of the Gospel and to be effected by the Spirit of God in the belief thereof But as there he that accepted of it had and enjoyed it but he that said Nay he loved his old Master better and so would not go out from him he was to be brought to the door and his Master was to bore his Ear through with an Awl and he was to serve him for ever So here he that embraces the Grace of God in Christ in the accepted time and day of Salvation he shall be set free but he that refusing it prefers the service of Sin Satan and Mosaical Law above it shall be given over to serve and perish in his corruptions and legal bondage 4. The like was Typified but more fully in the great Sabbatical Year or Year of Jubile when on the day of Atonement the Trumpet of the Jubile was to be sounded through all the Land and they were to proclaim liberty through all the land to all the Inhabitants thereof and every man was to return to his possession and every man to his Family Le● 25.8 9 10 11 c. for therein was prefigured 1. The general Release of Men from Thraldom to Curse and Wrath to which in Adam they were sold and by their own actual sins were further imbondaged many of them procured 〈◊〉 the Sacrifice of Christ and the Ato●ment thereby made and proclaimed 〈◊〉 the Gospel which like the Jubilee Trumpet Isa 61.1 2. being founded proclaims the acceptable year of the Lord the day of the vengeance of our God even the vengeance executed upon Christ or upon out enemies by Christ to comfort all that mourn Blessed are the people that know mind own and so take hold of and prove that joyfull sound they shall walk in the light of God's countenance c. Psal 89.15 16. 2. The general actual Release of all from under the first Death and Judgment to be presented before the Tribunal sear of Christ to be judged anew and the full and total release of all the Israel of God that have here believed in Christ from all their terrours sufferings and thraldoms to Sin and Death into the quiet and full possession of all the Kingdom and Glory promised and this to be effected at the great Day of the Lord When the Lord Jesus shall descend again from heaven with the voice of a Trumpet and of the the Arch-Angel of God when the seventh Angel sounding the mystery of God shall be fulfilled 1 Thess 4.16 Rev. 10.7 3. The general restitution of all things spoken of by the Prophets Acts 3.20 21. Rom. 8.19 20 21 22. when the Creature it self shall be delivered from the bondage of Corruption into the liberty of the Glory of the Sons of God at the ●d Great day of Christ's appearing all which are signified to be the effects of the Atoning Sacrifice of Christ in that that Jubilee Trumpet was to be sounded and the said Liberty Release and Restitution proclaimed on the day of Expiation or Atonement 2. They had also divers Feasts appointed them Monthly and Yearly as 1. They had Monthly New Moons which appear to have been Festivals 1 Sam. 20.5 times appointed for Sacrificing and gladness and for the blowing of Trumpets over their Sacrifices Numb 10.10 Psal 81.1 2 3. 2 Cor. 5.17 Typifying the renovation of the creature in and by Christ through his vertuous Sacrifice He that is in Christ is a new creature old things are passed away behold all things are become new as also the Reformation and change of Worship to be brought in by him in the faith of which they were to blow their Trumpets and sing aloud to him with Thanksgiving thereby also figuring the joy and gladness the renovation made by Christ should bring in Psal 40.1 2 3 4. Rev. 14.1 2 3. Heb. 9 9 10 11 12. Yearly Festivals were their Feast of Passover First-fruits and Tabernacles in which besides the Rests required in them by vertue of which they were also Sabbaths some days be●nging to them and the abundance of ●crifices then to be offered which appertained to the Ordinance of Sacrificing they did solemnly appear and feast before the Lord rejoycing in the abundance of his goodness Prov. 9.12.3 4 5 6. Matth. 22.12 3 4. Isa 25.6 Joh. 4.14 6.35 48 51 55 c. and in the remembrance of the great things he had done for them providing for and feasting their poor Brethren also with them Neh. 8.10 11. Exod. 23.14 15 16. Levit. 23. which in general led them to behold by Faith the abundance of the Grace to be procured and brought in by Christ the Feast of Fat things full of Marrow to be made in Christ for all People For Christ is himself the Feast or matter of it the meat indeed and the drink indeed which whosoever eateth shall find satisfaction in so as not to hunger after other dainties and whoso drinks of shall not thirst for ever after other Waters Yea they might mind them of the great joy and delight to be brought in by his Incarnation or making his Tabernacle amongst us his sufferings for us and pouring down of his Spirit upon us but more fully at the harvest and full income of all the promises when the Tabernacle of God shall be with men for ever Rev. 21.4.5 so that these also had their foundation in Christ and poined at Christ to come 3. Besides which they had also other Ordinances yet under the Tabernacle and Temple and pertaining thereto pointing out Christ Levit. 12. 13. 14. 15. in which they were to exercise themselves till his actual appe●ting as diverse Washings and Puri●●ons cleansings from uncleanness Heb. 9.12 13 14. as issues Leprosies c. all Typing out the cleansing away of our Sins by the Bloud and Spirit of Christ especially that Num. 10. of the ashes of the red Heifer is most significant For there God appointed that a red Heifer should be burnt and the ashes of it preserved and laid up in a clean place and then to be mixed with clean Water and by a clean Person with Hyssop to be sprinkled upon the unclean for the cleansing of him c. which Water and way of Purification was prepared for all the Congregation yet so as he that refused to be cleansed thereby was to remain in his unclearness and to be cut off from the Congregation vers 9.20 21. and evident Type and instruction that in and by Christ his sufferings and
God Self Sin or the like And 4. A causing the Mind or Spirit of a man to view or reflect upon the Objects discovered as upon the sinfulness weakness worthlesness discovered in themselves in and by that light or truth discerned the sinfulness of their ways and works the bootlesness or unprofitableness of their righteousness the unsafety of their conditions c. which are more properly his judgings and reprovings of them in and by that Light The Light at once both representing or discovering the Nature of things and passing judgment or causing the Mind to pass judgment the judgment of Truth upon them either by way of approving what is commendable and excellent or of reproving what it discovers as empty and evil whence it 's said The Gentiles not having the law are a law to themselves which shew the work of the Law written in their hearts their conscience also bearing witness and their thoughts the mean while accusing or excusing one another Rom. 2.14 15. 2. In and by the same light truth and spirit judging and reproving or convincing men God is also affording his ●erting operations yea those con●cements tend to Conversion and are ●ered to that end that men might be ●verted from the Evils they are con●ced of and reproved for to God 〈◊〉 those good things they are convinced 〈◊〉 and that are evidenced and commend● to them as may be seen in what our ●iour and the Apostle Paul say of men 〈◊〉 smother those convincements They 〈◊〉 closed or winked with their Eyes Matth. 13.15 Act. 28.27 〈◊〉 they should see with their eyes and hear 〈◊〉 their ears and be converted c. ●plying That the things presented to ●m in those convincements and re●oss the Grace set before them which 〈◊〉 had some capacity afforded them to ●re seen and heard and to have under 〈◊〉 would have converted them it 〈◊〉 to such ends and Purposes and they ●d some perception of it and fearing ●h a thing least it should draw them 〈◊〉 from their Lusts and Idols they sup●st it turned from it and refused to See 〈◊〉 and Understand it which also is ●plyed in that wisdome in her reprov● adds Turn ye in or at my reproofs 〈◊〉 1.23 The goodness of God there● evidenced leading to Repentance 〈◊〉 2.4 And this is joyned in Act. 26. 〈◊〉 With the opening of the eyes of 〈◊〉 blind viz. the turning them from dark● to light and from the power of Satan 〈◊〉 God And it hath in it over and 〈◊〉 what is mentioned in his convincings though in them this always too 〈◊〉 vouchsafed viz. 1. A more intimate or express hintin● or discovering some better Object tha● what our hearts are set upon and posse● with some better good to be sought o● imbraced than we are imbracing or seeking after as God or Christ some righter way to walk in for seeking them then that in which men walk Prov. 1 2● Joh. 15.26 27. with 16.7 12 13 14 15. 2. An exerting some Divine Power or stretching forth the hand thereby drawing the Heart and Soul off from those ●nities discovered and reproved to or ●ter that better Object represented and 〈◊〉 the representation whereof the other va● and evil things are reproved Prov. 1 2● Hos 11.3 Yea and often a kind 〈◊〉 driving men off from what is reprove● to what is ●ommended even from the Idols to the living and true God by hed●ing up as it were the way of the So● with Thornes so as not to suffer it to fi● any thing but rentings and prickings a● pains convincements and horrors in 〈◊〉 following after Prov. 23.29 33. Luk. 15.16 pursuing or retaining own thoughts ways and enterprises in Hos 2.6 7. and 6.5 and therewith al● 3. A bending bowing and inclin● the heart to let go the vanities discov● and reproved Hos 5.15 and 6.1 Act. 26.18 28. Matth. 21.30 and to turn to God Christ exalted and commended Psal 1● 36 Though oftentimes the heart 〈◊〉 sulting with flesh and blood recoyls ag● and withdraws like him that said I go Sir and yet went not thence that complaint of Ephraim that was brought to ●ay Come let us return to the Lord c. 〈◊〉 Ephraim what shall I do to thee thy goodness is as the morning cloud and as the ●arly dew it goeth away Hos 6.1 2 3 4. And I drew them with the cords of a man with the bands of love but they refused 〈◊〉 return Hos 11.3 4 5. But then 4. In the bowing and inclining of the ●art God-ward there is also a strengthing helping incouraging and furthering of it as in the Father of the Prodigal being him afar off and running and meeting him and bringing him home to himself even to his House Luk. 15.20 25. And as is asserted 2 Cor. 6.1 2. In the excepted time I have heard In the day of ●ation I have helped thee Of which ●ore in Sect. 5. Such his Converting perations 3. Then there are Renewing Rege●rating Operations which though they 〈◊〉 initially in the converting operations ●nd the convincing operations tend to ●em too yet are more properly found 〈◊〉 the Converted Soul though it may be ●uly said too That the Soul is further ●onverted in them and they may be im●ed in that sanctifying by Faith in ●rist mentioned in Act. 26.18 As a ●nsequent of the being turned unto God 〈◊〉 very effecting the Faith in Christ and 〈◊〉 sanctifying therethrough may be as I conceive included therein for the Soul wrought upon in the Converting Operations to look toward God and Christ as presented to the Soul in that beholding him to which in the Converting Operations also it is moved and begotten by the power of the same grace it is strengthned begot and framed to close with believe in and depend on God in Christ in which it s made a New Creature as to its State with God and as to its receipt of new Principles of Spiritual Life in which it lives and acts from to and for God being acted by the Grace and Spirit of God that takes Possession of it Indeed Regeneration fully is the begetting and bringing forth the whole Man to God by the Spirit and Power of God and so is a continued work in which men go on gradatim step by step and is not compleated till the Adoption be in the Redemption of the Body in the Resurrection of the Dead As appears in Matth. 19.28 Ye that have followed me in the Regeneration when the Son of Man shall sit upon the throne of his glory shall sit on twelve thrones c. Where those words in the Regeneration are so placed as they may either be referred to the words before Ye that have followed me in the Regeneration and so it signifies That Regeneration is a progressive work as the following of Christ also is a thing as daily in doing a thing in which Christ is to be followed that it may be don● more and more in us even as also seeing and
general ordinary way or Medium in and with which the power of God is put forth and operates both for bringing in men to himself and keeping them with himself unto eternal life is the discovery or maki●●own of his Name Power goodne● 〈◊〉 And this in the more clear mean● 〈◊〉 making known his Son distinctly 〈◊〉 love in him to mankind or to the w● and so to those souls that he works up● 〈◊〉 To which the Law convincing of sin 〈◊〉 ●ching the knowledg of it with all rep●●s and chastisements and judgments are but subordinate and superadded means to drive the Soul to take a more ready view of his foresaid Love Goodness Name c. And all the ordinances and commands of duties but either appointments of and injunctions to ways in which his Name and Son are to be sought and soon that being brought in to him he might justify us and be our righteousness or else to witness to and glorify his Name in word or conversation 1 John 4.19 Rom. 1.16 17. and 2.4 5. Psal 9 10. and 36.7 8 9. Rom. 10.17 and 15.9 10 11 12. John 3.3.5.14 15 16 17. and 1.12 13. Tit. 2.11 12 13 14. Philip 1.27 And therefore they that darken and render doubtfull to men the love pity and good will of God in Christ towards them and readiness to save them through him and put men to seek to find it out by their endeavours after works and frames serve not God therein nor do they profit men but are instruments rather in the hand of Sathan to hurt and hinder them Nor are such rightly begotten to or born of God who not believing but neglecting the name of God and his ●ve and good will in Christ to mankin● 〈◊〉 so towards themselves have their h●●wards God begot and Sprung up and ●ed in them from the conceit and ●deration of any frames changes act● 〈◊〉 and endeavours of their own but are ●dren of the Bondwoman Acts 2 8. 〈◊〉 Rom. 9.8 Jam. 1.18 19. Gal. 4.22 23 24. c. Luke 18.10 11 12. Math. 23.13 Isa 28.12 13 14 15 16 17. and 29. 9 10 11 12 13. Psal 118.22 2 Cor. 4.4 1 Thes 2.16 with 2.4 5 6 7. Rom. 9.30 31. and 10.1 2 3. 12. That those who are begotten and born to God in and by the discoveries of himself his Name and goodness in Christ to mankind so as that through his love to them while sinners and ungodly their hearts are overcome to hope in him and love him and so to yield up themselves to him to be his and to live to him they are the Children of God and of the promise the called according to his purpose the Elect and fore known ones whom he hath praedestinated or fore-ordained in Christ and through him to be conformed to him and his image in sufferings and in glory And accordingly such he hath used to call forth to service and sufferings for him and in their faithfulness therein hath justifyed and approved them and afterwards glorifyed them and so he will yet do which may animate such lovers of him for his love to hold them fast by him in all their sufferings either from o● 〈◊〉 him as knowing they are ordained o● 〈◊〉 thereto for their conforming to him 〈◊〉 1.12 13. and 3.3.5.14 15 16. 〈◊〉 3.7 8.9.26 27 28 29. Rom. 9. 〈◊〉 8.28 29 30 31 32. c. 1 Thes 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 2.21 Isa 50.8.9 Jam. 5. 〈…〉 Heb. 11.39 40. and 12.1 2 〈◊〉 Thus for the positions SECT 3. Some brief hints of uses of the foregoing Treatise and first of the first branch thereof WHat we have hitherto say'd in this treatise may be diversly usefull And first that which we have noted ●bout the Gospel doctrine as to the faith hope obedience and terrours of it may serve Vse 1 1. First to inform us of and instruct us into 1. The great love mercy pity and good will of God to us and to all men both as men made by him and more abundantly as and notwithstanding fallen from him in Adam and so become in our selves miserable corrupt loathsom and the great grace of our Lord Jesus towards us in so abasing himself at the will and appointment of the Father for us the great price he hath set upon us and provision made for us for our Salvation and happiness In this was manifested the love of God to us that he sent his only begotten Son into the ●wo● that we might live through him In 〈◊〉 do men waving this demonstration 〈◊〉 seek to know it some other way by ●ing into themselves and indeavour● 〈◊〉 to frame themselves to love him 〈◊〉 is love not that we loved him 〈◊〉 ●he loved us and sent his only bego● Son to be the propitiation for our sins 1 John 4.9 10. And ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that he being rich became poor that we through his poverty might be made rich 2 Cor. 8.9 So that therein also is discovered to us good ground given us in him of looking to and hoping in him and of loving of and living to him that hath done prepared and set before us so grea● things as the word of truth speaks of having not spared his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things Rom. 8.32 He dyed for all that they that live should not henceforth live to themselves but to him that dyed for them and rose again 2 Cor. 5.15 God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself not imputing their trespasses to them we pray you in Christs stead therefore be ye reconciled unto God ver 19 20. See also Rom. 12.1 2. The wretchedness and misery of our condition by nature who needed such a remedy to be made and provided for us and so the odiousness of our sins both of that sin of Adam and of us all in him and the sinfulness thence contracted and much more yet of continuing in sin against him after and notwithstanding such mercy and kindness shewed us for our redemption and so also the deadness of us through sin both as to the sentence of the law pronouncing us dead and condemned men and the utter deadness of our selves in our powers to help and remedy our selves and one another yea such deadness as no creature power in our selves or in Heaven or Earth could raise us out of it which is clearly seen in the cross of Christ in that he dyed for us all to save and revive us The love of Christ constraineth us because we thus judge that if one dyed for all then were all dead That we were all sentenced to death appears in this that he that came to succour us was fain to dye for us And that we were so wholly lost and dead in our selves as to our helping our selves from under that sentence is seen in this that such a one as Christ was fain to undertake it and perform the Redemption of us
even by his own Death and sufferings which concludes against all flesh yea against the ability of all creatures to have helpt us much more against our own sufficiency to have helped our selves for if there had been a law that could have given life then doubtless God would have spared his Son and righteousness should have been by that Law if either our sins had not been infinitely displeasing unto God but that he could have passed them by without any great satisfaction to his truth and holiness and to his righteous law Or if we or any other creature for us could have helpt us or given the satisfaction requisite he would not have taken such a course for our deliverance But in this glass i● seen at once both sins hainousness and mans helplesness yea Gods infinite power love and goodness toward us yea and further our deadness in our selves to help or animate our selves and so the falseness of that conception that man hath free will by nature to any Spiritual good or that such a conceit or opinion springeth from the bowels of such a doctrine as makes Gods good will to be towards all men and Christs Death for all is hereby plainly discovered also for if we by nature had or have any such sparks or principes of life and liberty to what purpose was it that Christ dyed for us to procure into himself for us in the nature of man the power and Spirit of God that living therein he might call and quicken us and cause the dead to hear his voyce that in hearing they might live John 5 25. So that no doctrine so clearly bears witness against man that he is dead in sins and trespasses by nature and hath no sufficiency of himself as of himself so much as to think a good thought as that doth upon which the odium of the contrary conception is usually but falsely fastened we thus judge not as the denyers of those truths infer that if one dyed for all then all must needs be eternally saved but with the Apostles that if one dyed for all then were all de●d 2 Cor. 5.14 3. The unspeakableness and certainty both of the happiness of all those that accept of this Grace of God Submit to him and seek their Righteousness and Salvation in and through Christ seeing he hath done so much for all while Sinners that men through him might be Saved And his Son is such a Mighty Merciful and Compleat Saviour as hath been shewed set up on purpose that whosoever Believes in him might assuredly be saved and have everlasting Life John 3.14 15 16 17. and 6.40 Rom. 5.9 10. and 8.32 33 34 c. And also of the Misery and Destruction of all that after all this done for them reject and rebel against him and persist so doing till the day of Grace be out with them In as much as they despise the riches of God's goodness and forbearance that is leading men to repentance and after their impenitent hearts treasure up to themselves wrath against the day of wrath c. Yea are guilty of treading under foot the Son of God counting the Blood of the Covenant shed for their sanctifying an unholy thing and do despite to the Spirit of Grace And therefore as on the one hand if being enemies he hath reconciled us to himself by the death of his Son Faith leads us to reason or infer how shall we not much more be saved by his life so on the other hand it leads to say How shall we escape if we neglect so great salvation And of how much forer punishment than Death without mercy as the Law inflicted on the despisers of it shall he be counted worthy of who hath trampled under foot Christ and done such indignities to God and to his Grace as were before mentioned Rom. 2.4 5. and 5.9 10. Psal 68.19 20 21. Heb. 2.3 4. and 10.26 27 28 29. and 12.25 c. Vse 2 2. Again It may move provoke and incourage us to many things As 1. With thankfulness and gladness of heart to receive the tydings of so great Grace and acknowledge it and bless God for it and for all procured for us and streamed forth to us Acts 8.8 Psal 100. and 117. 1 Tim. 1.15 2. To betake our selves to him in Christ to seek him wait upon him hope in him yeild up our selves to him in the obedience of faith and love required of us by him Be reconciled to him Deny ungodliness and worldly lusts living soberly righteously godly in this present evil World living to him that dyed for us and rose again both in our bodies and spirits which are his being bought with so great a price as the Death and Blood of his Son to glorifie and serve him with all chearfulness and faithfulness pressing after the hope set before us in him and taking heed that we incur not those terrors or terrible judgments of the Lord prepared for scorners that that Doctrin presents us with to warn us of sin and arm us against and deter us from sin Isa 55.1 to the 7th Psal 100. 2 Cor. 5.10 11 15 19 20 21. and 6.1 2. Tit. 2.11 12 13 14. Heb. 12.15 16 17 25 28 29. 3. To exercise Love and Charity to others both as it evidenceth such love and goodness in God towards our selves more unworthy of it from him than any others can be of love from us and as it evidences them loved and pitied of him even when yet sinners and unconverted and in a possibility of salvation So it leads us to be followers of God pitying the ignorant and those out of the way and indeavouring their helpfulness as he hath and doth pity help us and hath provided help for them and is graciously extending means of it unto them also embracing and owning those that embrace and own him as we our selves and they are embraced by him doing good to all but chiefly to those of the houshold of Faith and not to retain such a selfish and Cainish disposition as to say Am I my Brothers keeper So be it I know Christ dyed for me what need I care for knowing whether he dyed for my neighbour as if my neighbours welfare pertained nothing to me yea and furnisheth us with matter of truth and goodness to propound to them in all cases both for instructing them in knowledge what to believe and how to walk and for incouraging them in the way of faith and obedience by minding them what they may expect and shall meet with therein and for comforting them in distress and admonishing and warning them of and reproving them for sin and wickedness propounding Gospel Terrours to them without turning them to the Law of Works 1 Joh. 4.9 10 11 12. Eph. 5.1 2. 2 Cor. 5.10 11 14 15 16 19 20 21. Prov. 22.17 18 19 20. And so Vse 3 3. It is also a good Directory to Preachers what to hold forth to the People both for matter of and motive to Faith