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A28344 VindiciƦ foederis, or, A treatise of the covenant of God enterd with man-kinde in the several kindes and degrees of it, in which the agreement and respective differences of the covenant of works and the covenant of grace, of the old and new covenant are discust ... / [by] Thomas Blake ... ; whereunto is annexed a sermon preached at his funeral by Mr. Anthony Burgesse, and a funeral oration made at his death by Mr. Samuel Shaw. Blake, Thomas, 1597?-1657.; Burgess, Anthony, d. 1664.; Shaw, Samuel, 1635-1696. 1658 (1658) Wing B3150; ESTC R31595 453,190 558

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inflicts the Lord 4. His way of dealing as a Father in love and not in vengeance Now turne to Heb. 12. 5 6 7. and there we shall see the Apostle 1. Quoting this Scripture 2. Checking them for not heeding it 3. Commenting upon it Ye have forgotten the exhortation which speaketh unto you as unto children My sonne despise not thou the chastening of the Lord nor faint when thou art rebuked of him For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth If ye endure chastening God dealeth with you as with sonnes for what sonne is he whom the Father chasteneth not These words of the Apostle confirm all the Old Testament proofs before mentioned give a shrewd check to all those that would cast them off and are a full New Testament-proof of the point in hand our aversaries tell us that the children of God in New Testament-times have that great and happy priviledge to be free from all chastisements for sinne The Apostle on the other hand sayes that it is their happinesse to be chastised and would be their sorrow if they were without chastisement For this cause saith the Apostle many are weak and sickly among you and many sleep 1 Cor. 11. 30. There we see judgements inflicted the persons suffering and the cause of suffering assigned The judgements are set out 1. By the quality or kinde such as were visible on the outward man as their sinne was open so was their suffering 2. By their several degrees in which they suffered some weak languishing under infirmities some sick taken with diseases some fallen asleep surprised with death The persons suffering are set out 1. By their multitude many 2. By the application of the stroke Corinthians had sinned and Corinthians suffered The cause is implyed in the illative particle For and exprest in the foregoing words their unworthy addresses unto the Lords Table sinfully eating and drinking they eat and drink their own judgement and though it cannot be said that all were in grace that thus suffered yet there were some at least in grace among them in that the Lord chastened them in the world that they might not be condemned with the world The Lord Christ speaks fully to this in his letter from heaven to Laodicea the Church of Rev. 3. 19. As many as I love I rebuke and chasten As Scripture expresly holds out this truth so it is also clear in reason if God should not hold up his Sovereignty in this way of exercise of discipline upon his children his love could not be continued to them but would be withdrawn from them as we see in Christs words but now mentioned Rev. 3. 19. as also in those words of Solomon and the Apostle Pro. 3. 11. Heb. 12. 5 6 7. The love of God is such to his children and such a league of friendship is past between them say our adversaries that it will not suffer him to strike them We say his love is such that he cannot forbear to strike and will not suffer that they should sinne and carry it with impunity There are indeed some such parents that are so indulgent that children must neither have check nor stroke from them what course soever they take they scarce hear words much lesse do they suffer stripes These call this love but a wiser then they calls it by the name of hatred Prov. 13. 24. He that spareth the rod hateth his sonne but he that loveth him chasteneth him betimes Pity will not suffer to make children smart But it is greater pity that the want of smart should bring them to the condemnation of hell Prov. 23. 13 14. With-hold not correction from the childe for if thou beatest him with the rod he shall not die Thou shalt beat him with the rod and shalt deliver his soul from hell A childe in sinne must either be beaten or spared Beating will not be his death but sparing tends to his condemnation The similitude is not ours but the Holy Ghosts One of the most terrible texts in all the Bible may be found as one sayes Hoses 4. 14. I will not punish your daughters when they commit whoredome nor your spouses when they commit adultery He spares not some that he may for ever spare them chastening them in the world that he may not condemn them with the world He spares some and everlastingly destroys them 2. Otherwise God would be reconciled to the sinne of his people and in league not only with their persons but with their wickednesse which is most abhorrent to his holinesse We read of Gods reconciliation to the world but never to the wickednesse of the world God may be at peace with those that have sinned not imputing their trespasses but he will never be at peace with sin 3. It will not stand with his honour to suffer his to go on in impunity in these ways Their wickednesse will be said to be by his allowance Men in sin are ready to say as the Psalmist observe that God is such a one as themselves Psalme 50. 21. and that because they sinne and he keeps silence And men of the world will say the same if his people go on in sinne and prosper This the Lord sees and takes care this way to prevent Ezek. 39. 23. And the heathen shall know that the house of Israel went into captivity for their iniquity because they trespassed against me therefore hid I my face from them He will make it appear that he is no patron to them in that which is evil 4. God hath given in charge to Magistrates his vice-gerents for to punish They are revengers to execute wrath upon them that do evil Rom. 13. 4. they are sent of God for the punishment of evil doers 1. Pet. 2. 14. They have no commission to spare upon supposal of any interest in God or grace when they are found in any acts that are wicked What they do God does they acting by his command and by vertue of his commission For further clearing of this point and if it may be to work a right understanding I shall lay down severall Positions 1. God considered in his absolute Sovereignty may inflict sufferings without injustice on his innocent creatures there is no absolute necessity that sinne should go before all manner of trouble Punishment cannot be without a fault that alwayes implies guilt where justice is followed Yet such is Gods Sovereignty that he may lay affliction where there is no transgression We do it upon our fellow-creatures we tread upon wormes that never did offend us God may much more do it upon his creatures yea God does it How much do bruit creatures suffer in the world and unwillingly suffer as the Apostle speaks Rom. 8. 20. and that from Gods hand that hath made them subject to these suffering that which God doth unto one creature he may do unto any creature that which he doth to the meanest he may do to the most noble creature As a potter may
continued That such a one is established appears First By the work that they have to do given them in commission by Christ Jesus Matth. 28. 19 20. Go Disciple all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father the Sonne and the Holy Ghost teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you Here is commission given for the dispensation of the Word and Sacraments That of the Word is either for laying the first foundation or for the superstruction either for their work of planting preaching where Christ was never known by name or else for watering to carry on that happy beginning Their first work in laying the first foundation is given in charge in these words Disciple all Nations which was not the work of one age Though Egesippus as he is quoted by Doctor Andrews Preface to the Decalogue page 7. saith That there was no known Common-wealth in any part of the world inhabited but within fourty years after Christs passion received a great shaking off of Heathenish Religion yet the whole work after so many Centuries of yeeres is not yet done Those that are learned in Geography say that there is not above the nineteenth part of the inhabited world that beares the name of Christian and a great part of those so over-runne with Barbarisme that they have little more than a name that they live when yet we beleeve the work shall be more universal that as God was once knowne in Jury his Name great in Israel So it shall be from the rising of the Sunne to the going down thereof Mal. 1. 11. And that the Kingdomes of the world shall become the Kingdomes of our Lord and of his Christ Revel 11. 15. Their work of superstruction or building up of Disciples is given them in charge in these words teaching them to observe all whatsoever I have commanded you As long as homage is due to Christ so long a Ministery is to be continued to call for it and give directions in it which we finde farther held out Ephes 4. 11 13 14 15. There is an enumeration of Ministerial functions extraordinary and ordinary as there is an appointment of Apostles Prophets Evangelists So also of Pastors and Teachers their work is there pointed out for the perfecting of the Saints for the work of the Ministery for the edifying of the body of Christ as also their duration and continuance till we all come in the unity of faith and of the knowledge of the Sonne of God unto a perfect man unto the measure of the stature of the fulnesse of Christ. When in the world all are Saints and no imperfection can be found in these Saints nor any thing wanting in the Mystical body of Christ when there is not an errour to be found either in judgement or practice nor a seducer or false teacher feared then and not before a Ministery may be spared This will not be as long as there is a Devil in Hell and a man with corruption upon earth There is not a man that opposeth a Ministery but the being of that man is an unanswerable argument for the establishment of it Their work for dispensation of the Sacraments is given in charge explicitely in those words Baptizing them c. as implicitely in that charge Teaching them to observe all that I have commanded This of Baptisme answers in duration to that other Sacrament of the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11. 26. As oft as you eat of this bread and drink of this cup you shew forth the Lords death till he come Secondly It appears in the promise of Christ Jesus annext by way of encouragement in this work verse 20. Lo I am with you alwayes even unto the end of the world This is we see to the uttermost extent of time alwayes even all dayes to the worlds end And howsoever some quarrel may be raised about the phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Saeculi being taken in so various an acception in the holy Scriptures yet the subject matter whereon it is spoken is a work of more lasting as hath been observed than one age together with the phrase annext The consummation or finishing plainly signifies that this promise is for perpetuity till Christs coming at the end of ages That which puts a period to the Lords Supper must alone put a period to this work And for any to make a promise to a dying man ready to yeeld up the ghost for help for many years who is but to live few yeares were a strange promise And to settle a function of the Ministery with a promise of assistance through all ages when it must be extinct in that age were as strange a promise A promise to a Non-entity or meere Chimara Ministers then are in the Church as Starres not as Meteors they grow as Plants not as Mushromes their duration is not for a yeare for an age but through all ages Thirdly this appeares by the Apostles care for a succession Being not suffered to continue by reason of death they took care for others to fill up their places in the Churches which they had planted Therefore Paul called not by man but by a vision and voice from heaven gives order for a Ministerial call by Ordination Giving charge to Titus Tit. 1. 5. to ordaine Elders in every City and this by laying on of the hands of the Presbytery 1 Tim. 4. 14. to whom the care of Church-inspection was by him committed Acts 20. 17. compared with verse 28. And Paul and Barnabas in their journal Acts 14. 23. Ordained Elders in every Church and recommended them to God with prayer and fasting of which more afterwards Fourthly this appears in the setled Pastors which were found in constituted established Churches Epaphroditus in Philippi Philip. 2. 25. Archippus in Colesses Col. 4. 17. Those of Ephesus which gave the Apostles meeting at Miletum Acts 20. 17. John who lived longest of the Apostles and wrote his Revelation towards the ending of his dayes in the Issle of Pathmos Rev. 1. 9. in his banishment there for the testimony of Jesus Christ writes several Epistles to the Angels of the several respective Churches in Asia which Angels were to be his survivors and are not denied by any to be Ministers of those several City-churches there mentioned Whether these Churches were such as have been called Diocesan Presbyterial or Congregational is not here to be questioned but that they were Ministers appointed over their several charges is out of question Fifthly This appeares by the charge given for respect and esteeme to be given to those who thus stood up in succession in such established Churches 1 Thes 5. 12 13. We beseech you brethren to know them which labour among you and are over you in the Lord and admonish you and to esteeme them very highly in love for their works sake Phil. 2 29. Receive him therefore in the Lord with all gladnesse and hold such in reputation Obey them that have the rule over you
this covenant between God and his people which is to be spoken to elsewhere As the being of a covenant is thus plentifully proved by Scripture-testimony so we might as amply prove it by arguments drawn from thence The Churches of Christ are espoused unto Christ Hos 2. 19 20. And I will betroth thee unto me for ever yea I will betroth thee unto me in righteousnesse and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies I will even betroth thee unto me in faithfulnesse and thou shalt know the Lord. 2 Cor. 11. 2. I have espoused you to one husband that I may present you to Christ and Spouses are in covenant with their Bridegroom The Churches of Christ are married to Christ Isa 54. 5. Thy Maker is thine Husband the Lord of hosts is his Name and thy Redeemer the holy One of Israel the God of the whole earth shall he be called And wives are in covenant with their husbands Their sinnes against God are branded with the names of Adulteries Whoredomes and these are not barely dis-obedience of a Command or neglect of a favour but breaches of covenant The Churches of Christ are servants of Christ Levit. 25. houshold servants Ephes 2. 19. and servants are their Masters by covenant Their sinnes in this relation are not barely obstinacy stubbornness or ingratitude but they are charged with treachery falsehood dealing falsely in covenant and their hearts being not stedfast in covenant It is above me to conceive how man can be a covenant-breaker not alone respective to man but God as he is frequently charged when there hath past no covenant between God and him They may question whether there were ever any such thing as a covenant in the world that deny this to be a covenant in the proper nature of it some objections raised in their due place will be answered CHAP. IV. The Covenant of Grace is between God and man and not between God and Christ. HAving asserted a covenant in the proper nature of it it is necessary before I proceed further on to give differences between this covenant of Works and the covenant of Grace to speak something by way of Explication covenant being taken in so various and ambiguous senses or at least so many senses put upon it which I take to be a misunderstanding of the Scripture-covenant I shall lay down certaine Explicatory Propositions for clearing of the thing in question And the leading on shall be this The Covenant of grace is between God and man between God and those of fallen mankinde that he pleases to take into covenant God and man are the two parties in the covenant It is not made between God and Christ. This is so plain that a man might think there needed no words about it but that there are some that will have man to be no party in it and that it is entred onely with Christ on behalf of those that God hath chosen in Christ to himself To this I shall speak first by way of concession yeelding to them of this opinion these three things that follow 1. That there is such a covenant of which they speak which was entred between God and Christ containing the transactions which passe between the Father and the Sonne the tenor of which covenant we find laid down by the Prophet Esay 53. 10 c. and commented upon by the Apostle Phil. 2. 6. There we see first the work that Christ by covenant was to undergo To make his soul an offering for sinne that is as elsewhere is exprest to give his life a ransome for many and as he covenanted so he did He became obedient to death even the death of the crosse Phil. 2. 8. and that upon account of this covenant entred Christ himself speaking to it and of his work in it saith John 10. 18. This Commandment have I received of my Father Secondly the reward that he was to receive which is laid down by the Prophet in many words 1. He shall see his seed ver 10. As Isaac being received from the dead in a figure saw a seed had an innumerable posterity so the Lord Christ who was received from the dead in truth hath his seed in like manner beleevers innumerable which are called his seed in resemblance to the seed of man 2. He shall prolong his dayes not the dayes of his seed as some would have it making this one with the former and rendring the words videbit semen longaevum being delivered from death he shall live and reign eternally Revel 1. 18. 3. The pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand he shall irresistibly do whatsoever is the Fathers pleasure to be done in the work of mans salvation 4. He shall see the travel of his soul and shall be satisfied upon this work done he fully enjoys the whole of all his desires 5. Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoile with the strong He obtains a perfect victory hath a plenary and full conquest over every adversary 2. We yeeld that the whole of these covenant-transactions between God and Christ was on our behalf Making his soul an offering for sinne he offers it for those that are fallen by iniquity All is as is there said for the justification of many Whatsoeve it is that upon the work done redounds to himself yet the reason of undertaking was for us Vnto us he was borne unto us he was given He was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities he was delivered for our offences and raised again for our justification He endured the mulct and we reap the benefit 3. We confesse that it is the work of Christ that we enjoy a being in covenant as it is his gift that we enjoy the blessing of Ordinances But when all these are yeelded the truth must be asserted that there is a covenant to which Scripture constantly speaks which is entred of God with man and not with Christ which me thinks with much ease might be made to appear 1. There are frequent testimonies of Gods entry of covenant with his people 1. With the leading persons in the covenant which stand as the root of many thousand branches which are their off-spring in covenant He entred covenant with Abraham Gen. 15. 18. Gen. 17. 2. The like he enters with Isaac Gen. 26. 3. with Jacob Gen. 35. 11. and therefore he is so frequently called the God of Abraham Isaac and Jacob. And the covenant of God is alike known by the name of the covenant with Abraham Isaac and Jacob. 2. He enters covenant with the whole body of the people of Israel Deut. 5. 1 2. Hear O Israel the statutes and judgements which I speak in your ears this day that ye may learn them and keep them and do them The Lord our God made a covenant with us in Horeb the Lord made not this covenant with our fathers but with us even us who are all of us alive
Spirit This conviction unto change is hardly without compunction remorse and terrours in the soul It was not the single case of the Corinthians but common with other Christians as the natural work of godly sorrow that it worketh repentance not to be repented of 2 Cor. 7. 10. I will not stand to di●●●● whether any ever are exempted from this preparatory work I question not Gods prerogative I am upon enquiry after his usual method I know some instance in Matthew who being called suddenly followed Christ and we heare nothing of any work upon his spirit to trouble But who knows whether Matthew a Jew were not called by grace before this call to an Apostleship and if not in grace whether it necessarily followed in that instant The like is objected of Lydia The Lord opened her heart that she attended to the things that were spoken of Paul Acts 16. 14. without any sorrow or trouble in spirit is mentioned Neither is there mention of any joy or rejoycing in spirit and she by many is believed also to have been a Proselyte Yet this of godly sorrow must be understood with some limit 1. An equal degree of sorrow and preparative work is not necessary in all One mans terrours and heart-breakings are no necessary precedent for all others to reach 2. An high degree is not necessarily required of any God can come sooner in with Gospel-cordials after Law-convictions unto one than another 3. No man hath reason to quarrel his conversion because his sorrow hath not been like some others each man hath not like paine in cure of a like malady 4. None should beg of God overwhelming and amazing shakings and humiliations of Spirit God better knows their frame than they understand themselves 5. None can judge of the truth of their repentance by the greatnesse of their trouble It may possibly end in horrour and work nothing better than it self It may only have its present work to cast hell in the face and then the person returne to his old byasse to his sinful pleasures his worldly advantages as Saul to his Musick Cain to his building of Cities yet when God thus plowes it is a hopeful signe he intends sowing and men in this case must not reason themselves to be such soyle on whom no good can be done as though they were past all husbandry of the Lord He can take away a heart of stone and turne a rock into a fruitful field This is Gods method do not dispute but believe 6. Then it is in a degree sufficient when it effects the work for which it serves when it brings the soul out of love with sin takes it out of the paths of sinne when it so works to an apprehension of dangers that it works the soul to cast it self on Christ Jesus When horrours work desires not of ease but of grace of Christ and of whole Christ of pardon of sin and power against sin there is a true work For the essential parts of this grace which I make a Gospel-engagement and condition of the covenant they are privative or positive Privative is the destruction of what hath been Positive is the introduction of what is not Every change hath two termes The one is terminus ad quem which is endeavoured The other is terminus à quo which is left and so in this change which grace works and to which the covenant of grace doth engage The privative part which we are to leave is sin the work of Satan The positive part which we are to endeavour is that which stands in full opposition Forsaking of sin we must follow after righteousnesse and turning from Satan we must turne to God and therefore the Ministery which findes men out of covenant and works them into it is to bring them from darknesse to light from the power of Satan to God Acts 26. 18. The privative part is frequently enjoyned as that which bindes at all times and to all times A man in covenant with God is to have no more to do with sin Cease to do evil put away the evil of your doings from before mine eyes Isa 1. 16. Be ye separate touch no unclean thing 2 Cor. 6. 17. Mortifie therefore your members which are upon the earth fornication uncleannesse inordinate affection evil concupiscence and covetousnesse which is idolatry for which things sake the wrath of God cometh on the children of disobedience In the which ye also walked sometimes when ye lived in them But now you also put off all these anger wrath malice blasphemy filthy communication out of your mouth lie not one to another seeing ye have put off the old man with his deeds Col. 3. 5 6 7 8 9. Old things with Christians are to be done away This is the duty of all those that pretend to Christ Let every one that nameth the Name of Christ depart from iniquity 2 Tim. 2. 19. All that is in Christ is wholly against it His Prophetick office leads us from it and gives us light to avoid it In his Kingly office his Law is against it and his Priestly office is to redeem from it They that are in Christ and learn him as the truth is in Christ Jesus attaine to it Ephes 4. 22. That ye put off concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitful lusts It is the character of a man in Christ Gal. 5. 24. They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts And this upon peril of bearing their sinne Ezek. 18. 30 31. Repent and turne your selves from all your transgressions so iniquity shall not be your ruine Cast away from you all your transgressions whereby you have transgressed and make you a new heart and a new spirit for why will ye die O house of Israel No man in sinne is for glory 1 Cor. 6. 9. Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God The works of the flesh are manifest which are these adultery fornication uncleannesse lasciviousnesse idolatry witchcraft hatred varience emulation wrath strife seditions heresies envyings murders drunkennesse revellings and such like of the which I tell you before as I have also told you in time past that they which do such things shall not inherit the Kingdome of God Gal. 5. 19 20 21. Upon these termes it is that they obtaine pardon of sinne Isa 55. 7. Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him returne unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon Grace is no where more freely tendred than there Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters and he that hath no money come ye buy and eat yea come buy wine and milk without money and without price Wherefore do ye spend money for that which is not bread and your labour for that which satisfieth not hearken diligently unto me and eat you that
it is not a prophecie but a Gospel 2. In the Old covenant all was held out to the people under types figures shadows All about the Tabernacle and Temple Persons U●ensils Sacrifices did lead to Christ all of these darkly holding him forth They had a shadow of good things to come and not the image of the things themselves Heb. 10. 1. a little of reality in a great bulk of ceremony In the New Testament the truth of it is clearly and manifestly without figure or type held forth unto us 3. In the Old Testament knowledge was dim and obscure It could be no other when it was wrapt up in prophecies and types A prophecie is a riddle till it be unfolden and little is known of a man by his shadow comparative to that which is seen in the man himselfe Therefore though the state of the Jewes in Old Testament times was a state of light comparative to the darknesse that was with other people and their land was called a valley of visions Isa. 22. 1. yet it was little more than darknesse comparative to that light which in Gospel times is revealed Christ was a Minister of circumcision and when he began his Ministery in the land of Zebulon and Nepthali the Text says The people that sate in darknesse saw a great light Mat. 4. 16. Circumcision therfore in different respects was both a Priviledge and a Bondage A Priviledge Rom. 3. 1. It was a great mercy to have light let in at any crevice promises any way sealed and ratified to us A Bondage Acts 15. 10. To live in so dim a light and to be laden in so burdensome a way was a heavy yoke So that as the Apostle putting the question What advantage the Jew had and what priviledge there was of circumcision above and before the Gentile Rom. 3. 1. answers Much every way and gives in his reason of the preheminence So in case the question should be put What advantage hath the Christian and what priviledge there is of Baptisme above and before the Jew Answer may be made Much every way and the reason given of the preheminence in Gospel-times in the particulars above mentioned So that the New covenant is a better covenant established upon better promises Heb. 8. 6. Promises are more full and clear Though it must be confest that a Christians preheminence above the Iewes doth not equal a Iewes preheminence above the Gentile The Iew was in covenant with God and was heire of the Promise The Gentiles were aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel strangers from the covenant of Promise having no hope and without God in the world Ephes 2. 12. The Iew was in the same covenant in his time as Christians are in Gospel-times There is not a promise in the New covenant whether it be for priviledges conferred upon us or graces wrought in us but by the help of that light we may finde in the Old covenant the same held out as after will be more clearly manifested The betternesse is in the greater ease being freed from that bondage of the ceremonial yoke and in their more distinct clearnesse The glory of all that the covenant doth tender being in so clear and full a way held out in Gospel-times that he that is least in the Kingdom of God under the glory of the New Testament-revelation is greater in the way of Gospel-Mysteries then John Baptist who was the greatest of Prophets greater than a Prophet Those Prophets that did foresee and foreshew the Birth Life Death Resurrection Ascension of Christ the triumphant conquest of his enemies his glory at the right hand of his Father the spreading of the Gospel the call of the Gentiles did not themselves see it as now the meanest that are in Christ do understand it no more than they who now preach through Christ the Resurrection of the dead the everlasting blisse of glorified Saints in their eternal fruition of Gods presence are able to understand it in that measure as the meanest that then shall have the happinesse to enjoy it 6. They differ in the Seales annext for either of their ratification and confirmation for howsoever they are of the same use leading to one and the same thing signified the Jewes had Christ in their Sacraments 1 Cor. 10. 4 1 Cor. 5. 7. and we have no more in ours yet they differ in the outward stamp or effigies as I may so speak as well that of initiation as that of corroboration The initiating Sacrament of the Jewes which gave them the denomination of the people of God was that painful circumcision in the flesh signum vile incivile yet those that would be the Lords did and must submit unto it All of Abrahams seed with him received that signe And all of those that with him would joyne unto the Lord. This was to be the leading Sacrament He that was not circumcised in the flesh might not eat of the Passeover Exod 12. 48. And when a stranger shall sojourne with thee and will keep the Passeover unto the Lord let all his males be circumcised and then let him come neer and keep it and he shall be as one that is borne in the land for no uncircumcised person shall eat thereof A full Text against all that plead for unbaptized persons admission to the Lords Table God will not suffer that disorder that the leading Sacrament should come after The initiating Sacrament with Christians is that of Baptisme no sooner was a man brought into covenant but he was streight baptized assoon as he made profession he had this sealing engaging signe the application of water which is of an abstersive cleansing nature implying our staine and guilt and leading us thither where purification and freedome is found the Spirit and blood of Jesus Christ The following Sacrament in the Old covenant was that of the Passeover a Lamp without blemish to be eaten in the place and way that God prescribed That in the New Testament is the Supper of the Lord in ordinary common useful and necessary elements Bread and Wine which are of a strengthning cheering nature Ps 104. 15. Implying our fainting feeble estate our disconsolate and sad condition and leading us where we may find both strength and consolation CHAP. XXXIII Positions tending to clear the first covenant under Old Testament-dispensations BEfore I proceed to the examination of those supposed differences which some have brought in to the prejudice of both covenants I shall lay down certain positions to give some light for the more clear understanding especially of the Old covenant and to help us if it may be in our judgements of them both as well in their agreement as their severall differences First Position God delivered unto Adam in Paradise not only a Law or Rule of life but also a Covenant as was before shewed So Moses in Mount Sinai delivered unto the people of the Jews not a Law or rule only but a covenant likewise This might be
as it can reach yet they shall never wipe it off That all out of Covenant with God being no Church-Members having no title to Church-Membership are in a perishing condition is a Scripture-Position above all exceptions In case they will subscribe as they do to the Popish Tenent that Infants in their first birth state are out of covenant and in no better condition than the children of Heathens except the hope of better education then they must agree in Infants condemnation 3. Antipaedobaptists hence finde a way to keep Infants from Baptisme Being out of Covenant they have no right to any seale of the Covenant These several interests make them all to joyne in one to conclude that the first was a Covenant carnal and raising the men in Covenant no higher than earthly expectations But if truth may be heard none of these interests will hold certain it is that those that were in the Old Covenant had better thoughts of it The Apostle speaking of the Patriarchs confession that they were strangers and pilgrims on earth makes his observation upon it They that say these things plainly declare that they seek a Countrey A stranger or pilgrim is a man not at his home but seeks a countrey Now this countrey must either be Earthly or Heavenly there is not a third which men could have in desire That it was not an earthly countrey that they sought he makes good in that they had opportunity of return they might have gone back to Ur of the Chaldees at pleasure Then it follows as he inferres that they sought a better countrey that is an Heavenly Heb. 11. 16. Men of this opinion have not only the Apostles authority against them but putting himself on in a Logical dispute with them his reasons likewise yea those that were most carnal and earthly-minded among them were taught to judge better of the Promises that they lived under Christ gives that testimony of the Jewes with whom he had contest that in the Scriptures they thought to have everlasting life John 5. 39. They had no Scriptures but Old Covenant-Scriptures and of them they had this opinion which was no errour of theirs corrected by Christ but were by him confirmed in it Christ justifies them in their opinion that in Scripture they thought to have everlasting life and rectifies them in the way of finding everlasting life in it A great part of the dispute is about those words of God to Abraham in which the foundation of the Covenant stands I will be thy God and the God of thy seed whether in them there be promises only of earth or of heaven likewise And this Christ himself determines in his answer to the Sadduces about the Resurrection where he applies that speech of God to Moses at the bush I am the God of Abraham the God of Isaac and the God of Jacob for proof that Abraham Isaac and Jacob live for ever Mat. 22. 33. How injurious are they to the Covenant of God with his people that put such unworthy limits upon it Other people that were without Covenant had temporal mercies from God they were protected and provided for by him Leave thy fatherlesse children unto me and let thy widows trust in me saith the Lord to the people of Edom I will keep them alive Jer. 49. 11. The woman of Canaan thought it a priviledge for dogs to eat of the crumbs that fall from the childrens table for Gentiles who were without Covenant to partake of any little of the mercy that the people of God in Covenant did enjoy But if this glosse of the Covenant may stand the dogs crumbs are beyond all the childrens provision They will not leave their crumbs for all that is set on the childrens table It may seem a high speech of Luther after his manner that the Turkish Empire how great soever is but a crumb that the great Master of the family casts to the dogs yet this is above all that Israel had in Canaan if we look at no more than a temporal possession Ishmael the son of the bond-woman must be cast out not to be heire with the son of the free-woman Gen. 21. 10. he and his posterity must be cast out of Covenant and in Isaac the seed must be called But if there were no more in Isaacs grant than the possession of Canaan the son of the bond-woman had had the better of the bargain Ishmaelites in earthly possessions exceeded Israelites And Esau had not need to have complained so much of the losse of his birth right and his brothers supplantation of him if Jacob had gained no more than a possession for his posterity in Canaan having that blessing both promised and performed That his dwelling should be the fatnesse of the earth and the dew of Heaven from above Gen. 27. 39. he had small cause of envie of his brothers felicity How did the Saints of those times boast of God exult and triumph in him proclaiming his goodnesse That there was no Rock 〈◊〉 their God If their portion did reach with the men of this world only to this life none can be able to give a reason of such triumphant exultations And the Psalmist had never spoken of it as the worlds portion in case himself had looked for no better an inheritance Providence was indeed singularly eminent over that people yet considering their great afflictions which they still bore and heavy chastisements wherewith they were exercised if that special care of God had not had an influence upon eternity that blasphemous conclusion of the Oratour that a man might see how much the gods esteemed the Nation of the Iewes in that they were so often carried into captivity would hardly receive a satisfying refutation Certainly their sufferings were above any other Nation Amos 3. 2. You only have I known of all the families of the earth therefore I will punish you for all your iniquities if then they had their hope only in this life and were not chastened in the world that they might not be condemned with the world as the Apostle speaks of Christians so we might say of the Nation of the Jewes Of all Nations in the world they were the most miserable See Chamier lib. 5. de Baptism cap. 11. sect 11. Whitakers praelectiones de Sacramentis contra Bellar. pag. 125. Rivet in Gen. 17. Exercitat 87. CHAP. XXXV The Old Covenant was a pure Gospel-Covenant and not mixt 2ly OThers that rise not so high against the first covenant as to make it a covenant meerly carnal yet loth to yield to so much truth as to confesse it to be a covenant Evangelical have found out a middle way which yet they think may carry on their interests and say It is not a pure Gospel-covenant but mixt and therein differs from the second covenant which is wholly Evangelical In which they seem to go but one half of the way with their old friends the Jesuites from whom in this controversie
is not unfitly called in instrument of God p. 128 See Faith Justification Ishmael In Covenant when circumcised p. 296 Not to be branded with bastardy ibid. He and his seed cast out of Covenant p. 298 Justification Mans concurrence in it necessarily required in it as an acceptant not as agent p. 127 It is a transient act of God not an immanent p. 132 It is not from eternity p. 131 c. A justified man an an fitted for every duty to which God calls p. 135. See Faith Instrument K. Kingdome of Heaven IN what sense taken Matth. 19. 14 c. p. 399 The Hinge of the contraversie concerning infants interest in Covenant hangs not on the interpretation of those words ibid. Anabaptists reasons not sufficient to prove it to be meant of the Kingdome of Glory p. 400 Though understood of the Kingdome of Glory it serves not to discovenant or dischurch infants p. 401 L. Law COnsidered as a Covenant to give life is inconsistent with the Gospel p. 55 Moral-Law hath a commanding power over Beleevers ibid. By Arguments asserted ibid. Objections answered p. 58 In what sense a dead husband p. 59 See Moses A rule of our duty not of our strength p. 151. Life What in Scripture it implies p. 100 The same in substance in the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace ibid. A Medium may be concieved and is by some assigned between life and death in Scripture acceptation p. 123 Lord. The acceptation of Christ as Lord doth not justifie p. 125 Love To do a thing out of obedience to the Law and by love not opposite p. 61 Love cleaves to Christ for communion but recieves him not for justification p. 125 M. Master Marshal VIndicated p. 435 Mediatour A foure-fold work respective to the Covenant incumbent on the Mediatour p. 93 c. See Christ Moses Metaphor God's entring Covenant with man no Metaphor p. 10. 37 Ministers Must bring their people up to the termes of the Covenant in pressing the necessity of Faith and Repentance p. 188 c. They must not sever the promise from the duty p. 189 Ministry The necessity of a Ministry to bring me into Covenant and to bring them up to the termes of the Covenant p. 160. Reasons evincing that God hath appointed such a Ministry to be perpetuated through all ages p. 162 c. Reasons evincing the necessity of such an established Ministry p. 165 c. Objections answered p. 168 169 An orderly call from God into the Ministerial function necessary p. 180 Reasons assigned p. 181 182 Several wayes of calling to the work of The Ministry p. 182 See Ordination Ministry-maintenance p. 442 Moses The Law as delivered by Moses bindes Christians p. 73 74 75 He delivered a Covenant to the Jewes p. 210 He delivered a Covenant of Grace to the Jewes p. 210 211 In his time commands were frequent and full the directive and maledictive part for discovery of sin were open and clear but promises for eternity little known p. 213 He was a Mediatour in type N. Nature TAken for Birth-priviledge or descent from Ancestors p. 307 Taken for qualifications of nature ibid. Jewes by nature had priviledges above Gentiles p. 307 308 O. Obedience See Righteousnesse Olive THe whole universal Church visible Rom. 11. p. 325 Fatnesse of the Olive glory of Ordinances p. 326 Ordination An orderly call by way of Ordination into the Ministerial function necessary in all not gifted by immediate revelation p. 182 Ordination described ibid. Men in Ministerial function are to act in Ordination p. 182 183 They are to set men apart as Presbyters and Elders p. 184 Ordination not to be passed but upon examination and tryal p. 140 To be solemnized with fasting and prayer p. 185 186 Imposition of hands to be used p. 187 Objections answered ibid. P. Pardon NAtional and personal p. 343 My People That phrase applied in New Testament-Scriptures to those that stand invisible relation to God p. 258 Places for worship In New Testament-times have their warranty In what sense holy p. 441 Places holy by divine institution by divine approbation p. 439 Positions concerning places for worship in Gospel-times p. 441 Not in equipage with the Temple and Tabernacle ibid. Temple and Tabernacle had the pre-eminence in four Particulars ibid. Our places of meeting by good warranty called Churches p. 441 c. Position This Position that the Moral Law hath no commanding power over Believers examined p. 58 That position concerning the Old Covenant to be both a Covenant of Works and a Covenant of Grace examined p. 210 Power Necessary in the call of Nations to a visible Church-state p. 330 Priviledge See Birth Professors Who to be accounted so before men p. 450 Promises Made to the wiked made good to the believing and penitent p. 190 Absolute promises yield not peace to him that is wanting in the conditions of God required ibid. p. 47 Objections answered p. 190 Spiritual promises rare and obscure under Moses his administration p. 213 Scriptures evincing the spirituality of Old Testament-Promises p. 222 Temporal promises annexed as appendants to spiritual in the Old Covenant p. 226 Children of Promise All the seed of Abraham by Isaac born by vertue of that miraculous promise p. 298 Q. Quaeries PVt to those that restraine the New Covenant to the Elect regenerate p. 234 c. Put to those that put a limit to the New Covenant respective to the issue p. 317 R. Reconciliation GRadual or total of persons of Nations p. 331 Repentance A distinct grace from faith p. 136 A condition of the Covenant of grace ib. Considered in the prae-requisites p. 137 In the essential parts of it ibid. Privative part which is cessation from sin is required in Covenant p. 140 Positive part which is a returne to God and an holy walk with God is required in Covenant p. 142 See Righteousnesse Objections answered p. 144 c. Reprobation No cause of unbelief or sin p. 341 It leads not to condemnation without merit of sin as Election leads to Salvation without merits of works ibid. Righteousnesse What degree of righteousnesse is required in the Covenant of Grace p. 148 Perfection of degrees is not so required that upon the defection of it the penalty is incurred p. 149 Perfection of degrees is not required and sincerity accepted p. 151 Reasons assigned ibid. c. Objections answered p. 153 Our Evangelical righteousnesse is imperfect p. 155 c Sincerity is required and accepted p. 112 c. Root and Branch Denote parent and childe Rom. 11. 16. p. 325 Root Abraham Isaac and Jacob. ibid. Every natural parent a Root p. 338 Every natural believing Parent an holy Root ibid. Abraham a Root by communication not by example p. 399 S. Sacraments ARe Gospel mysteries p. 446 Sacriledge Defined p. 440 With-holding infants of believing parents from Baptism is Sacriledg p. 437 c. Saints Vnregenerate persons have the name and outward priviledge of Saints p.