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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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fulnesse of time came And hence the Covenant of Grace is distributed into the Covenant of Promise or the New Covenant so called by way of excellency For the Foundation and Mediatour of the Covenant of Grace is our Lord Jesus Christ but either to be incarnate crucified and raised from the dead or as already Act. 4 12. Heb. 13. 8. incarnate crucified and truly raised from the dead and ascended into Heaven For there was never sin forgiven but in him alone who is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Therefore although before the Incarnation Christ was only God he was our Mediatour yet not simply as God but as the divine person who should take our flesh and in it should finish all the Mysterie of our Redemption and therefore he is called the Lambe of God slaine from the beginning of the world and the Fathers by his grace were saved even as we In the acts of Mediation three things may be considered Reconciliation by which we are accepted of God Patronage by which we have accesse unto the Father Doctrine whereby God hath made himselfe knowne unto men by a Mediatour This third act might be done before he assumed our flesh and indeed was done but the two first did require his comming in the flesh although the fruit of them was communicated to the Fathers under the Old Testament by force of the divine Promise and certainty of the thing to come with God If it be objected that the cause is before the effect and therefore the incarnation and death of Christ must goe before the communication of the fruit and benefit thereof unto the Fathers The answer is That in naturall causes the Proposition holds true but in morall causes the effect may be before the cause and so the fruit and vertue of Christs death was communicated to the Fathers before his Incarnation But although the Sonne of God before he was manifested in the flesh was our Mediatour with God to whom future things are present because he should be and therfore for his sake sinnes were remitted men did teach and learne by his Spirit the Church was governed by him yet the manner and reason of that Mediation was proposed more obscurely the force and efficacy of it was lesse and did redound to few●r The Covenant of Promise then was that Covenant which God made with Adam the Fathers and all Israel in Jesus Christ to be incarnate crucified and raised from the dead And it may be described the Covenant wherby God of his meere grace and mercy in Jesus Christ to be exhibited in the fulnesse of time did promise forgivenesse of sinnes spirituall adoption and eternall life unto man in himselfe considered a most wretched and miserable sinner if he should embrace and accept this mercy promised and walke before God in sincere obedience God the Father of his meere and free grace and mercy looking upon man in Jesus Deut. 9. 5. Gal. 3. 18. Luk. 1. 54 55. Christ in whom he is reconciled is the Author and cause of this Covenant He hath h●lpen his servant Israel in remembance of his mercy as he spake to our Fathers to Abraham and to his seed for ever Thus saith the Lord God of Israel your Fathers dwelt on Josh 24 ● the other side of the floud in old time even Terah the Father of Abraham and the Father of Nahor and they served other gods And I took your Father Abraham from the other side of the floud and led him throughout all the Land of Canaan and multiplied his seed and gave him Isaac The condition required in this contract is the obedience of faith Remission of sinnes gratious adoption in Christ and the Inheritance of eternall life is promised to beleevers and eternall condemnation peremptorily threatned against unbeleevers Christ whom God hath exhibited in the Gospell as he was promised to the Fathers in the Scriptures of the Prophets is the object of this Covenant The end thereof is the praise of the glorious grace and mercy of God in Christ to come In this Covenant there is a mutuall compact betwixt God and man God in mercy promising and man in duty binding himself unto the Lord. It was made with man a sinner and reacheth to the faithfull and their seed as God hath promised to accept the children of beleeving parents upon due and religious tender of them made unto his Highnesse according as he hath prescribed but saving effectually it was made with them only who beleeve in him that justifieth the ungodly be the heires of salvation and walke in the steps of our Father Abraham This Covenant doth beget children to liberty doth administer the righteousnesse of faith and the inheritance by faith hope peace of conscience life in Christ and spirituall joy is the effect thereof Internally the Spirit doth seale up the truth of this Covenant in 2 Cor. 4 13. Rom. ● 4 5. Gal. 3. 18. Rom. 8. 15. Gal. 3. 14. Gen 22. 16. Luk. 1. 73. the hearts of the faithfull For when the adoption and the inheritance pertained to the Fathers under the Covenant of promise the spirit of adoption and earnest of the inheritance pertained unto them likewise Externally it was delivered and confirmed by word and oath and sealed by the Sacraments For substance also this Covenant was everlasting and unchangeable The New Testament did not abolish the former but the former was fulfilled by the latter And in all these things it doth Psal 105. 10. agree with the new Covenant which here only are but briefly named because the confirmation of them must be sought in the Chapters following And if the Covenant of Promise and the New Covenant doe thus agree in substance then it must necessarily follow That there Eph. 2. 18 19 20. and 4. 4 5. is but one Church of the Elect the same Communion of Saints one Faith one Salvation and one way of obtaining the same viz. by Faith in Christ Secondly that the Word of God was no lesse incorruptible seed Rom. 11. 17. to the Fathers and the Israelites then to us That the Fathers did eat the true flesh of Christ by faith as well as we in the times of 1 Cor. 10. 2 3. 2 Cor. 4. 13. the Gospell That they and we are partakers of the same Spirit and that the Sacraments of the Jewes did signifie and seale to them the same promises of eternall life which our Sacraments doe to us The Sacraments of the Old Testament were not types of our Sacraments as sometimes they are called by Divines but they typified the same things that ours doe For as the Covenants under which they and we lived were one for substance so are the Sacraments one in their common nature and signification Thirdly that the faithfull before Christ were saved by the free mercy of God in Christ did know God and Christ had the Heb. 11. 9. Psal 105. 15. Isai 51. 6. spirituall promise of life eternall and were
grace and love of God is the sole cause of what the Lord hath promised in this new Covenant and doth give according to promise And though the old and new Covenant be of the same nature and from the same fountaine yet the new Covenant is preferred above the old as farre as Sunne-light before Torch light in this that God who makes the Covenant hath more fully manifested the riches of his grace and superaboundant love in Jesus Christ the brightnesse of his glory and engraven forme of his person to the federates of the new Testament In the old Covenant the Lord had made it knowne that he was mercifull and gracious slow to anger aboundant in goodnesse But in the new Covenant he doth most familiarly reveale himself to be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus and in him the Father of the faithfull which most sweet and pleasant name doth breathe out unspeakable love and tendernesse Again though the ancient federates had some knowledge of Gods Attributes as an introduction to the Covenant of Grace yet they never knew that transcendency of Gods love which is brought to light in the new mentioned in these and such like passages of Scripture Behold what manner of love the Father hath 1 Joh. ● 1. bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sonnes of God God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever Joh. 3. 16. beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life He spared Rom. 8. 3● not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things Who will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth For there is one God 1 Tim. ● 4 5. and one Mediatour betweene God and man the man Christ Jesus They that seek to stretch this speech of the Apostle to the furthest doe yet confesse it is spoken of the times of the Gospell and that appeareth evidently by the reason of the Apostle confirming that saying that God will that all men be saved from this that God is the God of all men by Covenant and Christ the Mediatour of all men in Covenant and by the Gospell the Word of truth the saving truth of God was brought unto all in Covenant Besides in the old Testament the Doctrine of the Trinity of persons in the unity of the God head was more obscurely taught but in the new Testament we are clearely and most comfortably assured that the Father Son and holy Ghost do sweetly conspire to perfect the Salvation of the Faithfull and confirme unto them the promises of the Covenant There be three that beare record in 1 Joh. 5. 7. Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one Goe ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them into the Matth. ●8 19. Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost If in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word must stand why should a Christian question or doubt of the promises of mercy made in the Covenant assured unto him by the Father Sonne and holy Ghost God the Father promiseth that in his only begotten Sonne he will be a mercifull Father to all Believers that he will give him to them for a Redeemer accept his satisfaction for them give them his Spirit and bestow upon them righteousnesse and salvation The Sonne doth promise that he will be Redeemer of the faithfull by doctrine merit and efficacy that he will deliver them from the power of Satan bring them into perpetuall favour with God wash them from all the filthinesse of their sins and be unto them as he is made of the Father Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption The holy Ghost doth promise that being redeemed by the bloud of Christ by the presence of his grace he will cleanse them from all inherent sinne and repaire the Image of God in them leade them into all truth and holinesse inable them to cry Abba Father seale them for the Lords and abide with them by his grace and comfort as an earnest of the inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession This Covenant was stricken with all Nations or the world in opposition to the Jewish Nation for now the promise made Gal. 3. 8. to Abraham was fulfilled In thee shall all Nations of the earth be blessed now the prophecies touching the calling of the Gentiles Isai 44. 6 and bringing them to the Sheep-fold of Christ were accomplished now the Apostles were sent forth to preach the Gospell to Matth. 28. 19. Mar. 16. 13. Rom. 1. 16. Col. 1. 6 23. Act 10. 45. every creature and God gave such a blessing unto the Word that by their preaching a great part of the habitable world was converted unto the faith Now upon the Gentiles was powred out also the gift of the holy Ghost Christ having broken down the partition wall betwixt Jew and Gentile and abolished in his flesh the enmity even the Eph. 2. 14 15. law of Commandements contained in Ordinances for to make in himselfe of twaine one new man so making peace The Covenant of promise was first made with Adam and his posterity not with him as the common parent of all mankind and so with every man that should come of his loines howsoever in all generations but with Adam as a beleever and his posterity untill by wilfull departure from the faith they should discovenant themselves and those that did proceed from them In like manner it was made with the Patriarchs with Noah and his posterity then with Abraham and his family afterwards with one selected Nation but under the Gospell all Nations are brought into the bond of the Covenant All nations I say but not every one in every nation nor every nation in all periods of that time For many nations have lived we know for a long time in infidelity without the Gospell without God in the world aliens from the Common-wealth of Is●ael and strangers from the Covenant of Grace And we find the Apostles to make a manifest 2 Cor. 6. 14 17. difference betwixt the people of God and unbelievers so that all in their dayes were not admitted into Covenant though the Gospell was preached unto them For they that be in Covenant are in phrase of Scripture the people of God that is such with whom God hath contracted Covenant and who in like manner have sworne unto the words of the Covenant God stipulating and they accepting the condition God as an absolute Soveraigne hath right and authority over all men but in a certaine and peculiar reason they are called his people who receive his Commandement and acknowledge him to be their Lord and Saviour And these be of two sorts for God doth make his Covenant with some externally calling them by his Word and sealing them by his Sacraments and they by profession of faith
fall by whom not only the Elect but the whole frame of nature received benefit In the Creation God raised up a great Family wherein he made Adam the head and all his posterity inhabitors the frame of Heaven and Earth his domicile the creatures his servants this Family upon the fall was broken up the present Master turned out of his imployments the children beggered the servants returning to God their Soveraigne and the whole frame of the creature under attainder God thus defeated if I may so speake sets up a second Family called the Family of Heaven and Earth wherein Jesus Christ the womans seed Gen. 3. 19. is the Head Matth. 28. 18. Ephes 1. 22. Col. 1. 19 20. stiled the second Adam Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth and that with more soveraignty and amplitude of injoyment then ever the first Adam had the whole creature being put under his feet The children of this Family are the faithfull who be the adopted Brethren Rom. 8. 15. sometimes called the seed The servants be the wicked and those of two sorts either such as attend in the Church neerer about Christs person or further off as in farme-houses for baser offices The creatures by a second ordinance from their former Master free are stated upon Christ though they beare some brands of evill from the sinne of their former Master the domicile though not so beautifull returnes to Christ So the Covenant of Grace entring upon the breaking up of the former Family investeth Christ with all as purchaser of the lost creature from revenging justice and as Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth who freely conferreth the heavenly inheritance upon the adopted sonnes and brethren and vouchsafeth earthly blessings and some spirituall common gifts to the wicked which may be called servants both those that more neerly attend his person and those that be further off But of this more hereafter CHAP. III. Of the Covenant of Grace in generall THe Covenant of Grace is that free and gracious Covenant which God of his meere mercy in Jesus Christ made with man a miserable and wretched sinner promising unto him pardon of sinne and eternall happinesse if he will return from his iniquity embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfained and walke before God in sincere faithfull and willing obedience as becomes such a creature lifted up unto such injoyment and partaker of such pretious promises This Covenant is opposite to the former in kind so that at one and the same time man cannot be under the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of grace For he cannot hope to be justified by his perfect and exact obedience that acknowledging himselfe to be a miserable and lost sinner doth expect pardon of the free mercy of God in Iesus Christ embraced by faith The condition of the Law as it was given to Adam excludes the necessity of mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne and the necessity of making a new Covenant argues the former could not give life Heb. 8. 7. He that is under grace cannot at the same time be under the law and he that waites for Salvation of meere and rich grace to be vouchsafed cannot expect it as the deserved wages of his good worke from justice and not of mercy What then may some say is the Law abolished or is it lawfull for Christians to live as they list because they be not under the Law Not so but the Law hath a double respect one as the unchangeable rule of life and manners according to which persons in Covenant ought to walke before and with the Lord and in this sense it belongs to the Covenant of grace The other as it is propounded in forme of a Covenant as if he must necessarily perish who doth neglect or breake it in the least jot or tittle and in this sense the Covenant of grace and workes are opposite The matter of Evangelicall precepts and of the Morall Law is the same but the forme of promulgation is not the same the rule is one but the Covenants differ Materialy the Law that is the matter and argument of the Law as a rule stands in force but if formally it did continue as a Covenant there could be no place for repentance nor for the promise of forgivenesse or mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne or the quickning of them that be dead in trespasses The Covenant of workes is of justice the Covenant of grace is of grace and mercy which cannot agree and take place in one and the same subject for he that try●th justice perceiveth not the force of mercy è contra This might be common to both Covenants that God doth freely give reward because he was not bound unto it by any Law and that is done of grace which we are not tied unto by Law but in the Covenant of Grace he gives the reward of meere and rich grace and that to the creature which hath deserved Hell This Covenant entered immediately upon the fall and so may be called a Covenant of Reconciliation not of friendship At the very instant when God holy and true was pronouncing judgements upon the severall delinquents in the fall setting downe his sentence against the Tempter both in his instrument the Serpent and the maine Author Sathan he brings in the party who should execute the same in which execution is unfolded the Covenant of grace for the Salvation of the creature that the Serpent had destroyed that God might be knowne in wrath to remember mercy At the very fall and before judgement was pronounced upon the delinquents that were tempted the Covenant of mercy was proclaimed that by vertue of this Covenant God might prevent further waste of his creature which Sathan might haue wrought upon his new advantage in following his good successe and that the tempted might have some comfort before their judgement least they might have been swallowed up of wrath The Authour of this Covenant is God considered as a mercifull and loving Father in Iesus Christ as a Creator he strooke Covenant with Adam in his integrity as a Saviour he looked upon the poore creature plunged into sinne and misery by reason of sin The cause that moved the Lord to make this Covenant was not any worth dignity or merit in man for man never had ought which he had not received and now by his disobedience had deserved to be cast off for ever neither was the present misery into which he had cast himselfe the cause that moved the Lord to receive man into favour for the Angels more excellent by creation as miserable by their fall he hath reserved in chaines of darknesse The sole moving cause why God made this Covenant Bonitatis Dei donumest quod liberare nos voluit quod verò aliter quam tali modo liberare nos noluit p●ccatorum nostrorum est meritum was the love favour and mercy of the Lord. Deut. 7. 7 8. Only the Lord had a delight in thy fathers
an Oath to walke in Gods Law which was given by Moses the Servant of God and to observe and doe all the Commandements of the Lord our God and his Iudgements and his Statutes Neh. 10. 29. And thus runneth the exhortation of Joshua to the two tribes and halfe when he sent them home Take diligent heed to doe the Commandements of the Law which Moses the servant of the Lord charged you to love the Lord your God and to walke in all his wayes and to keepe his Commandements and to cleave unto him and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soule Iosh 22. 5. Which must not so be understood as if he that did of frailty and infirmity offend in any one jot or tittle should be held a Covenant breaker for then no man should be innocent but the promise must be interpreted according as the Law or rule of obedience is given which calleth for perfection but accepteth sincerity In the Covenant of mercy we bind our selves to believe and rest upon God with the whole heart so as doubting or distrust of weaknesse and infirmity must be acknowledged a sinne but every such frailty doth not argue the person to be a transgressour of the Covenant And the same holds true of obedience But of this more largely in the particular manner how God hath been pleased to administer this Covenant Man then doth promise to serve the Lord and to cleave unto him alone which is both a debt of duty and speciall prerogative and he doth restipulate or humbly intreat that God would be mindfull of his holy Covenant or testimony that he would be his God his Portion his Protectour and rich reward These things be so linked together in the Covenant as that we must conceive the Promise of God in order of nature to goe before the Promise and obedience of man and to be the ground of faith whereby mercy promised is received The offer of mercy is made to man an unbeleever that he might come home and the promise must be conceived before we can beleeve else we should beleeve we know not what and faith should hang in the aire without any foundation but mercy offered is embraced by faith and vouchsafed to him that beleeveth Also the duty which God calleth for and man promiseth is mans duty but given of God By grace man is enabled and effectually drawne to doe what God commandeth The Covenant could not be of grace nor the good things covenanted if man by his own strength did or could performe what God requireth This Covenant was first published and made knowne by lively voice afterwards it was committed to writing the tables thereof being the holy Scripture It was made both by word and Psal 85. 4 35. Deut. 29. 12 14. Isai 54. 9. Heb. 6. 17 18. Gen. 22. 16. Luke 1. 72. Oath to demonstrate the certainty and constancy thereof and sealed by the Sacraments which on Gods part doe confirme the Promise made by him and on mans part are bils obligatory or hand-writings whereby they testifie and bind themselves to the performance of their duty For manner of administration this Covenant is divers as it pleased God in sundry manners to dispense it but for substance it is one the last unchangeable and everlasting One For Jesus Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for ever The last for it Heb. 13. 8. succeeded the Covenant of works but none shall succeed it In it God hath revealed his whole pleasure touching the Salvation of man and hath manifested his principall properties the riches of his grace wherein he delighteth to be magnified He that is not saved by the Covenant of Grace must and shall perish everlastingly Unchangeable and everlasting for therein God hath revealed himselfe in respect of the things he willeth concerning mans Salvation to be one and the same for ever There is none other relation and respect that might give occasion to another Covenant It was the pleasure of God to shew mercy to man miserable but he will not extend compassion to him that obstinately and wilfully shall contemne the riches of his grace The Covenant made with Adam in the state of Innocency is altered for our great good and comfort but this Covenant is like the Covenant of the day Isai 24. 5. Psal 111 9. and of the night it stands fast for ever and ever Though men be unfaithfull God continueth faithfull he waiteth for the conversion 1 Sam. 7. 3. Deut. 4. 31. Jer. 3. 1 2. Rom. ● 6. and 11. 1 ●9 of them that goe astray and if they returne he will receive them into favour The Lord will not utterly cast off that people whom he hath once chosen and received unto mercy And in respect of the life to come the Covenant is eternall for after this life the people effectually in Covenant shall live with the Lord Hos 13. 14. Matth. 22. 32. for ever Externally this Covenant is made with every member of the Church even with the Parents and their children so many as heare and embrace the Promises of Salvation and give and dedicate their children unto God according unto his direction for the Sacraments what are they but seales of the Covenant But savingly effectually and in speciall manner it is made only with them who are partakers of the benefits promised And as the Covenant is made outwardly or effectually so some are the people of God externally others internally and in truth For they are th● people of God with whom God hath contracted a Covenant and who in like manner have sworne to the words of the Covenant God stipulating and the people receiving the condition which is done two wayes for either the Covenant is made extrinsecally God by some sensible token gathering the people and the people embracing the condition in the same manner and so an externall consociation of God and the people is made or the Covenant is en●red after an invisible manner by the intervention of the Spirit and that with so great efficacy that the condition of the Covenant is received after an invisible manner and so an internall consociation of God and the people is made up Here it may suffice briefly to mention these things because in the sundry manners of dispensation they will come to be discussed more at large From that which hath been said two things may be gathered 1. How the Covenant made with Adam called by some Divines the Covenant of Nature agreeth and differeth from the Covenant of Grace They agree in a generall consideration of 1. The Author which is God only wise most holy our supreme and absolute Soveraigne 2. The matter of the Covenant which is a Commandement and Promise of reward 3. The persons contracting or covenanting which are God and man 4. The Subject not differenced by speciall respects for the Law was given and Gospell revealed to man 5. The forme of administration because to both Covenants is annexed
these groūds it may be concluded That though the Fathers being delivered from the Tabernacle of the body were made Heb. 8. 6. 10 20. partakers of life eternall in Heaven yet they had not before Christ that perfect state in Heaven which now we and they are presently possessed of for they were not to be perfected without us as neither shall we be perfected before that blessed day of the second Heb. 11. 39 40. comming of Christ wherein the body of Christ that is the Church shall be absolute and perfect every way Not to insist upon this that the former Tabernacle standing the way to the Holiest was not fully manifested and that there must be some proportion betwixt the manifestation of the way unto and sense of the future life in this life in them that be of ripe age and the fruition of it in the life to come This is certaine the Fathers who died before Christ did expect in Heaven their Redeemer on whom they had beleeved for forgivenesse of sinne and life everlasting even as soules now expect the Resurrection of the body the second appearance of Christ to Judgement in regard of which things they are not perfected Now hence followed a want of much light and joy which on the sight of Christ God man entring the Heavens did redound unto them as we in earth now have not the fulnesse of joy which then we shall have when we shall see the accomplishment of what we expect CHAP. V. Of the Covenant of Promise made with Adam immediately upon his fall THe Covenant of Promise began immediately upon the fall and reached unto the comming of Christ in the flesh which is obscure in comparison of the new Covenant but in it selfe receiveth distinction of degrees according to the severall breakings out of it to the darke world and the growth from severall manifestations of God as was proportionable to the number and qualities of those who in succeeding ages should take benefit so that at first being like a young sapling it grew to be firme alwayes a fruitfull tree In Scripture it is delivered unto us under these degrees of growth both in respect of fuller and more cleare manifestation and as we may suppose of numbers that received benefit by it First from Adam untill Abraham Secondly from Abraham untill the Covenant made with Israel upon the Mount Thirdly from Moses to Christ which must be subdistinguished for the Covenant which God did promise to make with Israel and Judah upon the delivery from the North Countrey was to exceed the former Covenant which he had made with their Fathers when he brought them out of Egypt Jer. 23. 5 6 7 8. The first breaking forth of this gratious and free Promise and Covenant was immediately upon the fall and is expressed in these words I will put Gen. 3. 15. enmity between thee and the woman and between thy seed and her seed He shall bruise thy head and thou shalt bruise his heele Herein God setting downe the irrevocable judgement and finall overthrow and destruction of Satan the arch-enemy of his glory and mans Salvation Gods fearefull doomes-man into whose power man was now fallen he proclaimeth his rich grace and mercy towards mankind in Jesus Christ the womans seed who should breake the Serpents head In the malediction of the Serpent is included the greatest blessing of God most mercifull towards miserable and wretched sinners In reference to this gratious antient Proclamation of mercy the Gospel is called everlasting 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Apoc. 14. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isai 58. 12. 61. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jer. 6. 16. 18. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deut. 33. 15. Gen. 49. 26. Isai 54. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jer. 5. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 14. 6. I saw another Angel flying through the middest of Heaven having the everlasting Gospell not in respect of the future but of the time past scil which was promised from the beginning of the world For as the hils paths and desolations are said to be everlasting or antient so the Gospell that is from the beginning This first Promise of grace and life was published by the Lord himselfe to mankind now dead in sinne and enemies to God that as they had heard from him the curse against sinne and saw and felt the same in part executed upon them so they should heare from him the promise of absolution lest they should be swallowed up in despaire When they should heare peace proclaimed by the Author of Peace and Judgement both by him that was immediately provoked and offended by sinne and came now to sentence the transgressours when they should heare peace proclaimed by him in his owne person by his owne voyce it must needs put more life and encouragement into them then if the glad tidings had been brought by some Messenger or divulged by some Herauld only The party upon whom the Promises of mercy are setled is here propounded as the seed of the woman and under the next degree as the seed of Abraham called the Angel of the Covenant The Mal. 3. 1. Eph. 1. 22. Joh. 3. 18. Gal. 4. 4. head of all things to the Church even Jesus Christ the only begotten Sonne of God who being God over all blessed for ever Rom. 9. 5. should come of David and Abraham and so of Eve Rom. 1. 3. according to the flesh for she was the mother of all living Christ God and man is made of God an Adam often opposed to the first Adam 1 Cor. 15. 21 22 23 45. Head root common receptacle and store-house in whom are treasured all good things which from him are communicated to the faithfull As in Adam our being naturall our hopes of life and death and in event our condemnation was received before ever they came to be applyed and received actually in us So in Christ as in a common store-house every thing is first placed which afterward is to be imparted to any beleever The first Adam created after the Image of God but a meere creature only was intrusted with the Promise of life for his posterity and betrayed all the body But now God of Matth. 28. 19. his infinite mercy ordaineth a second Adam even the seed of the woman that is Christ-man but lifted up above the condition of a creature by union unto the Divine Person that so as man he might be fit to receive that trust for men as God he It is cleare that this battle pertain●d to the woman and her seed on the one party and to this Devill that spake by the Serpent and all the wicked on the other party Dow. But then it cannot in speciall be applyed to the Virgin Mary If the Virgin Mary may be said to bruise the Serpents head because Christ was borne of her by the same reason we may say she was crucified and died for us c. might undergoe the burden
thy grace I will keepe thy precepts all the dayes of my life unto thee therfore do I flie for strength support acceptance Create in me O God a cleane heart renew a right constant spirit Ps 119. 68. Ps 51. 10. 1 Kin. 8. 58. Ps 119. 8. within me Establish me with thy grace that I never fall from my integrity I will keepe thy statutes O forsake me not utterly In the former overture of the Covenant by Gods appointment they offered sacrifice which was a type of Christ and seale of remission and propitiation by the bloud of Christ under this expression the same continued for so we reade that Abraham built Gen. 12. 7. and 22. 9. Altars unto the Lord and offered sacrifice But unto this it pleased God to adde other assurances whereby he bound himselfe to performe the promises which he freely made of his grace and did establish the faith of Abraham and his posterity This Covenant God confirmed by federall signes in the segments and fiery lamp Gen. 15. and then by sacramentall signes as by Circumcision Gen. 17. which was a seale of promise on Gods part and an homage or fealtie in Abraham and his seed binding them unto the service which God required under the Covenant of grace and Gal. 5. 3. In as much as Circumcision was the signe or solemne ceremony of this mutuall league between God and Abraham and Abrahams seed it is necessarily implyed by the tenour of the same mutuall Covenant that God should subscribe or seale the league after the same manner and to receive the fame signe of Circumcision in his flesh which Abraham and his seed had done Rom. 4. 11. Rom. 2. 28 29. therefore the Apostle put this upon them that will use Circumcision after Christ that they are bound to keep the whole Law not because Circumcision for the outward act was commanded in the Law but because it was that homage penny which tyed them to punctuall obedience We may conceive that God by this Commandement might now prove Abrahams obedience therein imposing a thing abhorrent to nature which could not be before sinne because it doth presuppose sinne and punishment And it was a notable pledge of his faith for if he could believe God in so dangerous and fearefull an execution they might beleeve him in any other command or promise under the Covenant Circumcision was not without the shedding of bloud because the Covenant was not yet established in the bloud of the Messiah and that might leade the faithfull to the bloud of Christ as assuring the purging away of sinne by the same God could have instituted ● Sacrament which might have agreed to both sexes but of his infinite wisdome he made choice of that which could have being i● the males only but the female was accounted as circumcised in the male and therefore faithfull women were the daughters of Abraham Luke 13. 16. and the common promise that God would be the God of Abraham and his seed did pertaine to each sex of his posterity Circumcision was a seale of the righteousnesse which is by faith that which is purchased by Christ and embraced by faith It was also a signe of the Circumcision of the heart by the Spirit of Christ without which the rite did commend no man to God Deut. 10. 16. which Circumcision of the heart is promised of God as his grace Deut. 30. 6. and is fulfilled in Christ Jer. 4. 4. C●l 2. 10 11. Phil. 3. 3. And it was a seale of the Covenant and so of all the promises made therein concerning things temporall to the seed and posterity of Abraham as they stood in reference to the Covenant of Grace All that were outwardly circumcised were not partakers of the spirituall blessings promised yet was not Circumcision altogether unprofitable unto them but as they were within the Covenant so did Circumcision seale unto them the blessings of the Covenant If they were externally in Covenant only and by profession it confirmed the promises of the earthly Canaan and some other outward things whereof they were partakers If they were internally and effectually in Covenant it confirmed the highest blessings unto them which they obtained by faith It appeares then that all are not in Covenant after one manner nor doe all that be in Covenant equally partake of the same blessings they that be outwardly in Covenant partake the outward and basest part of the Covenant they that be truly in Covenant obtaine the bighest but what blessings soever they enjoy they are given according to the Covenant of Grace and not of workes given of free bounty to them that yeeld but partiall and fained obedience and not merited by their works But of this more at large in the next Chapter From all this it followeth First that all the faithfull are of the same faith with Abraham The Father and the Sonnes spirituall be of the same beliefe as they doe partake of the same spirituall priviledges It is one God that justifieth the circumcision and the uncircumcision and it is the same faith whereby the Promises of mercy are embraced Zaccheus is called the son of Abraham and he beleeved in Christ as did Abraham 2. Not only Promises of temporall good things but of spirituall and eternall were made to the Patriarks in the Covenant of Grace and sought and obtained by them They looked for a City whose builder and maker the Lord is Remission of sinnes and Heb. 11. 11 12. life everlasting was preached in the Covenant sealed in the Sacrament and typified by the Land of Canaan To conceit the Fathers to be an assembly of bruite beasts which looked to be fed with earthly blessings alone is highly to dishonour them and lessen the grace and mercy of God towards them 3. Sacramentall phrases wherein the name of the thing signified is given to the signe are ancient and familiar as Circumcision is called the Covenant and the rocke Christ Why then should our Adversaries stumble at this that in the Sacrament of the Supper The Bread is called the body of Christ 4. In this expression of the Covenant the spirituall good things promised therein are limited to Abraham and to his seed But all Infants whatsoever are not comprehended under the seed of Abraham To say many thousand thousands are excluded from the seales and outward administration of the Covenant when yet every one is partaker of the good promised in the Covenant is to speake of our selves and not according to the Word of God We will not tie the grace of God to outward meanes but ordinarily we cannot affirme they pertaine to the Covenant of Grace and obtaine the highest blessings promised therein whom God doth not vouchsafe so much as outwardly to receive into Covenant CHAP. VII Of the Covenant of Grace under Moses till the returne of Israel from the Babylonish Captivity NOw we are drawing downe to Moses his time and that manifestation of the Covenant of Grace which was revealed to
people and languages are taken to be federates Eighthly The Law was weake unable to give life to purge Gal 3. 21. 4. 9. Heb. 8. 7. 9. 13. the conscience to pacifie the wrath of God and therefore to be abrogated when Christ was come whereunto it pointed and the new ordinances were set up and established but the Gospel containeth the unsearchable riches of God is the power of God Eph. 3. 8. Rom. 1. 16. Mat. 26. 28. ● Heb. 9. 14 15. 12. 24. to Salvation to continue for ever and the blood of the new Testament doth expiate sin purge the conscience and speak better things then the bloud of Abel Ninthly The federates under the old Covenant are compared unto an heire under age needing a Guardian Tutour or Schoolemaster little differing from a servant subject to the bondage of Gal. 4. 1 2 3 4. Gal. 4. 23 24 25. the Ceremoniall Law and servitude of spirit because the curse of the Law was more severely pressed and the bloud of Christ whereby freedome was purchased more covertly and sparingly revealed but the federates under the new are growne up unto a ripe age in Jesus Christ freed from the bondage of Ceremoniall ordinances endued with holy liberty partakers of the spirit of adoption whereby they cry Abba Father But of the priviledges of the federates under the new Covenant and the excellency of that Covenant in the Chapters following CHAP. XI Of Truth and Vprightnesse IT hath often been said that God accepteth true unfained and upright obedience and when the servants of God intreat mercy we find they alleadge the truth uprightnesse and integrity of their hearts to shew they were rightly qualified to make a faithfull plea for mercy therefore I conceive it will not be out of place here to shew what Truth and Uprightnesse is and then proceed to the doctrine of the new Covenant Truth the Septuagint renders righteousnesse for uprightnesse Gen. 24. 49. Isa 38. 19. 39 8. Josh 24. 14. Isa 45. ●9 Pro. 28 6. Pro. 8. 20. and integrity they put truth and for the paths of judgement they have it the paths of truth And in this sence to doe truth Joh. 3. 21. is not to doe perversly to doe right justice integrity as to deale perversly or unjustly Isa 26. 10. they translate not to doe truth In like manner lies or false-hood deceit and fraud they translate injustice as a false-witnesse is in them Job 27. 4. Deu. 19. 18. Levit. 5. 22. Psal 44. 17. Jer. 5. 31. Amos 8. 5. Hos 12. 7. Luk. 16. 9 11. Mal. 2. 6. 1 Pet. 2. 22. a witnesse of injustice or an unjust witnesse they sweare falsely is they sweare unjustly the Prophets prophecy false things unjust things they render it a false ballance is a deceitfull ballance or unjust ballance or ballance of injustice And injustice is opposed to truth and iniquity or unrighteousnesse put for falshood or deceit the Mammon of iniquity that is deceitfull riches is set against the true treasure which will not deceive Iniquity was not found in his mouth saith the Prophet that is guile or deceit The deceitfull the Septuagint translates the unrighteous and guilefull man Psal 43. 1. So that these foure Truth Uprightnesse Righteousnesse and Integrity doe signifie the same thing for substance 1 King 3. 6. and most certaine it is they be so conjoyned that where one is the other cannot be wanting But though the thing be one for substance that is signified by all these and they be sometimes used indifferently yet they note formall and distinct conceits and so may be considered Truth implieth or presupposeth these things 1. Knowledge of Gods will Truth of judgement goeth before Mat. 16. 12. truth of heart for corrupt doctrine is as sowre leaven that leaveneth the whole masse maketh the whole to savour of it 2. Soundnesse or solidity in grace opposite to those superficiall and shallow-planted graces that may be found in temporary Christians enduring but for a time This is truth in the reines or Psal 51. 6. inward parts which seasoneth the heart throughout and makes it true whereas the heart of the temporary is false and unsound because his graces are superficially or sleightly rooted 3. Sincerity or godly simplicity without fraud craft or guile where the in-side and out-side are one the heart and mouth equall and well consenting Truth is an ingenuous life without deceit and dissimulation Ephes 4. 15. Holinesse of truth is true or sincere holinesse Ephes 4. 24. To keepe the truth Isa 26. 2. is to imbrace true piety and true vertue without hypocrisie without lying or perfidiousnesse To serve God in truth Josh 24. 14. 1 Sam. 12. 24. is to serve God unfainedly from the heart according to his 1 King 2. 4. will To walke in the truth Joh. 3. 3 4. is to walke sincerely or in godly simplicity For truth is ingenuous void of simulation And in this sence some understand that of the Apostle Love rejoyceth in the truth that is love sincerely or in truth rejoyceth 1 Cor. 13. 6. with them that rejoyce Truth is opposed to lying and falshood and to empty shadows and rites and thus it may be applied to Eph. 4. 25. Joh. 4. 23 24. this purpose as noting a plaine simplicity contrary to lying and emptie shews To stay upon God in truth Isa 10. 20. is unfainedly and not in word to stay upon him To preach Christ in truth Phil. 1. 18. is sincerely to preach him A true heart is single Act. 2. 46. resolved not in some things but in all to walk with God or as the Lord hath appointed Thus a true Christian hath but one mind one intention one delight one face one tongue he is all but one man all the powers of the soule goe but one way 4. Purity or cleare shining innocency in all things free from the mixture of leaven in manners or doctrine The Apostle Peter writeth to the dispersed Jewes to stirre up their pure minds 2 Pet. 3. 1. what is that but minds furnished and seasoned with an holy perspicuity of truth Paul prayeth for the Philippians that they Phil. 1. 9. 10. might abound in all knowledge and in all judgement that they might be able to discerne things that differ that they might be sincere And the same Apostle testifieth to the Corinthians he was afraid of them lest their mind should be corrupted from the ● Cor. 11. 3. simplicity that is in Christ The word used by the Apostle in all three places signifieth properly something tried by the light of the Sunne And it is a Metaphor as some suppose taken from the custome of the Eagle whose manner is if we may beleeve those that write the naturall story to bring her young out of the nest before they be full fledge and to hold them forth against the full sight of the Sun the sight whereof those of them that can with open
them the people of God sonnes or children of God the sonnes of the living God a peculiar people reconciled unto God justified unto life the daughters of Zion and of Jerusalem who have the Jerusalem that is above for their spirituall mother the seed of Abraham who is the Father of us all And as Jerusalem which is above is the mother of us all so is Christ said to die for us all and God to have mercy upon all Rom. 8. 32. He that spared not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all Rom. 11. 32. God hath concluded them all in unbeliefe that he might have mercy upon all Rom. 5. 18. By the righteousnesse of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life that is of all them which pertaine to the posterity of Christ by spirituall regeneration It may well be that all to whom Paul wrote that Epistle did not unfainedly believe but as they professed the Doctrine of Salvation and in some measure walked according to the policie of the new Jerusalem and as they enjoyed the Ordinances of grace whereby Christ was applied so the Apostle speakes of them as Saints and beloved and faithfull And in the same sense in other places they are reckoned amongst the faithfull beloved and elect who believe for a time and professe the doctrine of Salvation and partāke the seales of the Covenant though afterwards they fall away and as they are called beleevers converts disciples members of Christ temples and sonnes of God as they are said to be justified sanctified and redeemed so is Christ to have died for them as he is applyed in the Ordinances of grace and they partake of the benefits of his death But as for them that be not in Covenant we shall never reade that their sinnes are pardoned Act. 10. 43. Joh. 5. 24. Joh. 15. 2. Act. 15. 9. Rom. 5. 1. Rom. 9. 25 26. Col. 1. 21. Joh. 3. 36. 2 Cor. 6. 15 16 17. that they are delivered from death purged from their sinnes reconciled unto God received into favour nay the contrary is plainly affirmed of them that they are not the people of God that they have no communion with Christ that they are enemies in their minds by wicked works alienated from God that the wrath of God abideth on them that they are without God in the world which is never said of them for whom Christ died The Scripture speaketh expressely that Christ died for his Church his sheep his children his people the people or children of God those that are given unto him of the Father his brethren As the Father knoweth me even so know I the Father and I lay downe my life for my sheep Joh. 10. 15. Take heed unto your selves and to all the flocke to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own bloud Act. 20. 28. Christ is the head of the Church and he is the Saviour of the body Eph. 5. 23. Christ loved the Church and gave himselfe for it ver 25. He shall save his people from their sinnes Matth. 1. 21. Who gave himselfe for us that he might redeeme us from all iniquity and purifie unto himself a peculiar people Tit. 2. 14. As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him Joh. 17. 2. He prophesied that Jesus should die for that Nation and not for that Nation only but also that he should gather together in one the children of God that were scattered abroad Joh. 11. 51 52. For both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all one for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren saying I will declare thy Name to my brethren Heb. 2. 11 12. The Church and people of God in themselves considered were sinners ungodly enemies alienated from God and Christ died for them not that he found them friends or brethren or children but that Rom. 5. 6 10. he might make them such as by the participation of the benefits of his death they are made such indeed The faithfull are the seed or children of Christ which he hath brought forth with pain and travell Isai 53. 10 11. The inheritance of Christ which he hath purchased by his death given unto him of the Father that they might be redeemed from death and possessed of him for their Salvation Psal 2. 8. as the Psalmist elsewhere expounds it All the ends of the world shall remember and turne unto the Lord and all Psal 22. 27. Psal 72. 11. and 86. 9. the kinreds of the Nations shall worship before thee And if Christ died thus for his people seed inheritance sheep and Church he died not equally for all and every man for then in his death he considered none to be made his sheep or brethren before others nor did he purchase grace that one should be made the child of God rather then another For though grace be distributed in different degrees yet that being so common to them that beleeve and them that beleeve not that sometimes the greater measure is given to them that reject and cast it off it cannot be the cause why one man differs from another Many things are answered to this argument As first that it is Synodal circ Art 2. pa● 3 17. Vorst amica collat cum Piscat s●ct 26. Gal. 2. 20. not said Christ died for his sheep or brethren only and that his dying for them doth not exclude others as Paul saith Christ died for him applying the death of Christ to himself but not excluding others But the instance is not like for these words for me are not disjunctive to distinguish Paul from the rest of the faithfull but from unbeleevers or them that were not in the same state or kind This is a priviledge common to Paul with all beleevers that Christ died for him in respect of them then it is not disjunctive but in respect of them who be not partners in that prerogative it is disjunctive Therefore the example doth rather prove the speech to be restrictive then otherwise for as these words of Paul Who loved me and gave himself for me distinguish Paul from the company of unbeleevers and so are exclusive in like manner are these words of our Saviour I lay down my life for my sheep restrictive and exclusive In those Texts there is no exclusive particle expressed but the proposition for sense is restrictive For when difference or distinction is contained in some terme the Proposition is for sense exclusive no lesse then if it was expressely noted Thou shalt feare the Lord thy God him shalt thou Deut. 10. 20. serve and to him shalt thou cleave here is no restriction or exclusion expressed but in sense it is exclusive Call upon me in the time of Psal 50. 15. trouble and I will heare thee only is not added and yet for the sense the words are exclusive In thy seed shall all
died the Just for the unjust that is being just he was substituted for us unjust and suffered not only for our good as the Martyrs may be said to doe Isa 53 9 10. Rom. 5. 5 6 7 8. 1 Pet. 3. 18. 1 Cor. 1. 13. The same is demonstrated by this that Christ is said to be the Mediatour who gave himselfe a ransome for all men 1 Tim. 2. 5 6. that by redemption of transgressions which were under the former Covenant they that are called might receive the inheritance Heb. 9 15. and the mediation it selfe is joyned to the sprinkling of blood Heb 12. 24. so that none other mediation is to be understood then that whereby parties disagreeing are set at one Hitherto it is to be referred that we are said to be reconciled to God by the blood of Christ Rom 5. 10 11. 2 Cor. 5. 18. Ephes 2. 16. Col. 1. 20. whereby our conversion to God is not understood as if we who hated God before had now departed there from and did set our love upon him but that we which formerly were under wrath are restored into favour that which caused that seperation being taken away by the satisfaction of Christ and free condonation of grace Therefore Christ is called our Heb. 2. 17. sig ibi expiati●nem sedeam quae fit plac●nd● propitiatorie Rom. 3. 25. and propitiation 1 Joh. 2. 2. 4. 10. not a testimony of placation because God in Christ is made propitious unto us and not we propitious to God In Scripture God is said to reconcile the world unto himselfe according to the usuall manner of speaking wherein he that offendeth is therefore said to be reconciled because as he gave occasion to hatred so he hath need of reconciliation and the pacifying of him whom he hath Sophocles in Ajace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dijs conciliari i. ips●s reddere prop●tios Punitio omnis qua talis sive impersonaliter spectata causam habet justitiam Dei. Procata●ctica ver● causa sunt peccata itidem impersonaliter in genere spectata sine determinatione punitio verò quae pro alio est plane miseri●ordiae divinae opus est procatarctica vero caus● sunt peccara nostra satisf●ctionem exigentia Voss resp cap. 12. offended although the reconciliation of them that be offended be not excluded The deliverance which we obtaine by Christ is called redemption which was made by the paiment of a price Rom 3. 24. Gal. 3. 13. Ephes 1. 7. Heb. 9 12. 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. Matth. 20. 28. Mar. 10. 45. 1 Cor. 6. 20. 7. 23. and redemption made by a price can be no other then by satisfaction or substitution as the Apostle saith Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. 1 Tim. 26. Faith and repentance and preaching of the Gospell come betwixt that we might obtaine spirituall deliverance from the captivity of sinne but no man will say that we are redeemed by them as by a price whereby we obtaine deliverance In the legall sacrifices sinnes were expiated no other way but by substitution how much more was Christ who is the bodie of those shadowes substituted for the sinnes of the faithfull Wherefore the Apostle saith Christ was appointed to make reconciliation for the sinnes of the people Heb. 2. 17. that is that by expiating the sinnes of the people he might pacifie God in the same sence wherein the blood of Christ is said to purge the conscience Heb. 9. 13 14. Therefore the Scripture useth those words in this businesse which note recompence and subrogation as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifieth both to pacifie and reconcile Gen 3. 20 Prov. 16 14. and to recompence or satisfie 2 Sam. 21. 3. Exod. 21 30. Psal 49. 8. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to recompence or pay Gen. 31. 39. In the legall sacrifices there was a typicall expiation but the conscience was not purged nor sinne taken away or heavenly Heb. 9. 9 10. 4. 9. 23● things sanctified by such sacrifices but the sacrifice of Christ was necessary by which things of so grea● moment were effected which was tipified by the legall sacrifices and was effectuall as a morall cause of Salvation before Christ was exhibited in the flesh And if the Fathers of the ●l● Testament were saved by Christ of necessity the satisfaction of Christ was true and reall for when it was not distinctly understood it could not profit them as an example or confirmation of doctrine but as a reall satisfaction only If Christ by his death had confirme● his doctrine only and not Heb. 5. ● made satisfaction be had not died as a Priest whose office it is to offer sacrifice and make attonement but the Scripture sheweth plainly that Christ is our high Priest according to the order of Melchizedech Psal 110. 4. Heb. 7. 14 15. who hath offered up himselfe a sweet smelling sacrifice Ephes 5. 2. and sanctified us by one offering up of himselfe once for all Heb. 10. 11 12. And because the sacrifice of Christ may be considered either as he offered Heb. 9. 13 23. up himselfe for all the faithfull in generall his sheep and Church or as every particular faithfull man is comprehended under that universality and the good things purchased for all tend to the salvation of every singular beleever God would have the first should be shadowed forth by the anniversary sacrifice and some others which were offered for all the people the latter by the private sacrifices of every sinner Lev. 5. Exod. 29. 30. Christ then as Mediatour by his death hath made satisfaction for us and that true full reall satisfaction and not by a certaine fiction of Law or divine acceptilation as they call it For why did God exact the bloody death of his Sonne if it had pleased him to rest in any light satisfaction The Apostle concludes the sacrifice of Christ to be necessary because it is impossible the blood of Bulls and Goats should doe away sinnes Heb. 10. 4. which argument concludes not if Christ hath satisfied only as it pleased the Father to accept of his imperfect satisfaction as if it had been perfect The satisfaction of Christ was free because he was freely given to satisfie but the decree of God presupposed to shew his mercy and justice full satisfaction was necessary because sinne must be punished as the Law requireth or God is not true as in his promises so in his threatnings None other wages is appointed for sinne but death Rom. 6. 23. hence he that is dead is justified from sinne Rom. 6 7. But Christ suffered death and by death made recompence to justice for our debt and in that he died for sinne he died once Rom. 6. 9 10. He tasted death that by death he might destroy him that had the Heb. 2. 9 14 15. power of death that is the devill and deliver them who through feare of death
those faults which are remitted to the guilty 2 King 8. 9 10. 1 King 21. 21. For it is essentiall to punishment that it should be inflicted for sinne but not that it should be inflicted upon him that hath offended Thirdly that an innocent person may thus in justice and equity suffer for a nocent there is required besides the acts of ordination in the supreme of submission in the suretie and of consent in Actus cui poena inest est actus nocivus qui nec omnibus nec in omnes concessus Quare ut poena sit justa requiritur ut actus ipse poenalis sit in potestate punientis quod ter contingit aut antecedenti jure ipsius punientis aut justo valido consensu ejus de cujus poena agitur aut ejusdem delicto the delinquent first an intimate and neere conjunction in him that suffereth with those that should have suffered Severall unions and conjunctions there are as Politicke between the members and subjects in a state and thus the people were punished for Davids sin 2 Sam. 24. 14 17. and in a common-wealth universally sinfull a few righteous men may as parts of that sinfull society be justly subject to those temporary evils which the sins of that society have contracted See 1 Sam. 12. 25. Naturall as between parents and children so the Lord visited the sins of Dathan upon his little ones Numb 16. 27 33. Valer. Max. de Dion Siculo Plutarch de sera Num. vindict Mysticall as between man and wife so the Lord punished the sins of Amazia● the Priest of Bethel by giving over his wife unto whoredome Amos 7. 17. And we see in many cases the Husband is liable to be charged and censured for the exorbitancies of his wife Stipulatorie and by consent as in the case of fide jussores obsides who are punished for the sins of others whom they represent and in whose place they stand as a caution and muniment against injuries which might be feared as we see in the Parable of a Prisoner committed to the custody of another person 1 King 20. 39 42. So the surety is punished for the debtor Possessorie as between a man and his goods and so we find that a man was to offer no beast for a sin-offering but that which was his own Lev. 5. 6 7. Besides there is required in the innocent person suffering that he have a free and full dominion over that from which he parteth in his suffering for another As in suretiship a man hath free dominion over his money and therfore in that respect he may engage himself to pay another mans debt but he hath not a free dominion over himself or his own life and therefore he may not part with a member of his own in commutation for anothers as Zaleucus did for his sonne nor be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lay down his own life for the delivering of another from death except in such cases as the Word of God limiteth and alloweth Now all these things hold in Christ in a speciall manner There is a most neere conjunction between him and us He conversed amongst men and was a member of that Tribe and Society amongst whom he lived and therefore was together with them under that Romane yoke which was then upon the people and in that relation paid tribute unto Cesar He had the nature of man and was subject to all humane and naturall infirmities without sinne He was mystically married unto his Church and therefore was answerable for the debts and misdemeanours of his Church He entred into Covenant and became surety for man and therefore was liable to mans engagements He became the possession in some sort of his Church whence it is that we are said to have him 1 Joh. 5. 12. not by way of dominion for so we are his 1 Cor. 6. 19. but by way of communion and propriety He was Lord of his own life and had therefore power to lay it down and to take it up And this power he had though he were in all points subject to the Law as we are not solely by vertue of the hypostaticall union which did not for the time exempt him from any obligations of the Law but by vertue of a particular command constitution and designation to that service of laying down his life This commandement have I received of my Father Joh. 10. 18. Moreover he had power ample enough to breake thorough the sufferings he undertooke and to assume his life and former condition again I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it up And therefore it was most just and righteous that Christ in himself innocent should suffer for us in our selves guilty which doth more plainly appeare in that all parties are glorified and all parties are willing and well-pleased All parties are glorified The Father is glorified in the obedience of his Sonne Joh. 12. 27 28. John 17. 4. The Sonne is glorified by the Father Joh. 17. 5. Heb. 2. 7. crowned with glory and the sinner glorified being received into favour Ioh. 17. 24. All parties are willing the Father is willing for by his Ordination he appointed Christ unto it Act. 4. 27 28. and in his love and compassion bestowed Christ upon us Ioh. 3. 16. by his divine acceptation he rested well pleased in it Matth. 17. 5. and by his wonderfull wisdome fitted it to the manifestation of his glory and mercy to the reconciliation of him and his creature and to the exaltation of his Sonne The Sonne is willing he chearefully submitted unto it Heb. 10. 9. and freely loved us and gave himself unto us Gal. 2. 20. The sinner is willing and accepteth and relieth upon it The summe of all is this By the most wise just and mercifull will of God by his owne most obedient and voluntary susception Christ Jesus being one with us in a manifold and most secret union and having full power to lay downe and to take up his life again by speciall command and allowance of his Father given him did most justly without injury to himself or dishonour to or injustice in his Father suffer the punishment of their sins with whom he had so neere an union and who could not themselves have suffered them with obedience in their own persons or with so much glory to Gods justice mercy and wisdome And though the will of God being ever just is to us a sufficient cause of what God willeth and the reason thereof be to us unsearchable yet in this matter we can assigne just and weighty reasons of this will of God out of the Scriptures God will not execute the severity of his Law because he is mercifull slow to anger and ready to forgive His free and everlasting love and infinite delight which he hath in mercy disposeth him aboundantly to pardon and exercise loving kindnesse in the earth Exod. 34. 7. Micha 7. 18. Ionah 4. 2. 2 Chron. 30. 9. Psal 86.