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A10659 Three treatises of the vanity of the creature. The sinfulnesse of sinne. The life of Christ. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne: by Edward Reynoldes, preacher to that honourable society, and late fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1631 (1631) STC 20934; ESTC S115807 428,651 573

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sinne Aberration from Gods Image obnoxiousnesse to his wrath and rejection from his presence Staine Guilt and miserie which is the product or issue of the two former Now as wee say Rectum est sui index obliqui The Law is such a Rule as can measure and set forth all this evill Ir is Holy Iust and Good Rom. 7. 12. Holy fit to conforme us to the image of God Iust fit to arme vs against the wrath of God and Good fit to present us unto the presence and fruition of God According unto this blessed and complete patterne was man created An universall rectitude in his nature all parts in tune all members in joynt light and beauty in his minde conformity in his will subordination and subjection in his appetites serviceablenesse in his body peace and happinesse in his whole being But man being exactly sensible of the excellency of his estate gave an easie ●…are to that first temptation which layd before him a hope and project of improving it and so beleeving Satans lye and embracing a shadow he fell from the substance which before he had and contracted the hellish and horrid image of that Tempter which had thus deceiv'd him Having thus consider'd in the generall how the Law may be said to quicken or revive sinne by the obligation Irritation and Conviction of it Wee will in the next place looke into the life of those particular species or ●…ankes of sinne which the spirit in the Commandement doth convince men of Wherein I shall insist at large onely upon that sinne which is the subject of this whole Chapter and if not solely yet principally aim'd at by the Apostle in my Text namely those evils which lye folded up in our originall concupiscence Here then first the Spirit by the Law entiseth vs to Adams Sinne as a derivation from the root to the branches As poison is carried from the fountaine to the Cisterne as the children of traytors have their blood ●…ainted with their Fathers treason and the children of bondslaves are under their parents condition We were all one in Adam and with him In him legally in regard of the stipulation and covenant between God and him we were in him parties in that covenāt had interest in the mercy were liable to the curse which belonged to the breach of that Covenant and in him naturally and therefore unavoidably subject to all that bondage and burden which the humane nature contracted in his fall And though there be risen up a sect of men who deny the sinne of Adam to be our sinne or any way so by God accounted and to us imputed yet certaine it is that before that arch-heretick Pelagius and his disciple Caelestius did vex the Churches never any man denied the guilt of Adams sinne and guilt is inseparable from the sinne it selfe being a proper passion of it to belong to all his posterity This then is the first charge of the spirit upon us participation with Adam in his sinne And in as much as that Commandement unto Adam was the primitive Law so justly required so easily observed therefore exceeding great must needs be the Transgression of it Pride Ambition Rebellion Infidelity Ingratitude Idolatry Concupissence ●…heft Apostacy unnaturall Affection Violation of covenant and an universall renunciation of Gods mercy promised these the like were those wofull ingredients which compounded that sinne in the committing wherof wee all were sharers because Adams person was the Fountaine of ours and Adams Will the Representative of ours The second charge is touching universall corruption which hath in it Two great evils First A generall defect of all righteousnesse and holinesse in which wee were at first created and secondly an inherent Deordination pravitie evill disposition disease propension to all mischiefe Antipathy and aversation from all good which the Scripture calls the flesh the wisdome of the flesh the body of sinne earthly members the Law of the members the workes of the Divell the lusts of the Divell the Hell that sets the whole course of nature on fire And this is an evill of the through malignity whereof no man can be so sensibly and distinctly convinc'd as in the evidence of that conviction to cry out against it with such strange strong and bitter complaints as Saint Paul doth till his understanding be by Christ opened to understand the Spiritualnesse penetration and compasse of that holy Law which measureth the very bottome of every action and condemneth as well the originals as the acts of sinne And hence it is that many men pleade for this sinne as onely an evill of nature rather troublesome then sinnefull That concupiscence was not contracted by nature de novo in the fall but that it is annexed to nature by the Law of Creation that it belongeth to the constitution and condition of a sensitive Creature and that the bridle of originall and supernaturall Ri●…hteousnesse being remou'd the Rebellion of the fleshly against the spirituall that is as these men most ignorantly affirme of the sensuall against the reasonable part which was by that before suspended did discover it selfe It will not bee therefore a misse to open unto you what it is to be in the State of originall sinn●… and what evils they are which the Commandement doth so discover in that sinne as thereby to make a man feele the burden of his owne nature smell the sinke and stinch of his owne bosome and so as the Prophet speakes abhorre himselfe and never open his mouth any more either proudly to justifie himselfe or foolishly to charge God but to admire and adore that mercy which is pleas'd to save and that power which is able to cure so leprous and uncleane a thing First consider the universalitie of this sinne and that manifold Vnivers●…litie of Times from Adam to Mos●…s even when the Law of Creation was much defaced and they that sinned did not sinne after the similitude of Adam against the cleare Revelation of Gods pure and holy will For that I take to be the meaning of the Apostle in those words Untill the Law sinne was in the world but sinne is not imputed where there is no Law Though the Law seemed quite extinct betweene Adam and Moses in the wicked of the world and with it sinne because sinne hath no strength where there is no Law though men had not any such legible Characters of Gods will in their nature as Adam had at first and therefore did not sinne after the similitude of his prevarication yet even from Adam to Moses did sinne reigne over all them even the sinne of Adam and that lust which that sinne contracted And if sinne reigned from Adam to Moses in that time of ignorance when the Law of not lusting was quite extinct out of the minds of men much more from Moses after for the Law
and therefore hee bringeth them unto these extremities that when their mouth is stopp'd and their guilt made evident they may with the more humilitie and abhorrencie of their former lewdnesse acknowledge the Iustnesse of the Law which would condemne them and the great mercy of the Prince who hath given them liberty to plead his pardon The same is the case betweene God and us First to Abraham he made promise of mercy and blessednesse to all that would pleade interest in it for the remission of their sinnes But men were secure and heedlesse of their estate and though sinne was in them and death raigned over them yet being without a Law to evidence this sinne and death unto their consciences therefore they imputed it not to themselves they would not owne them nor charge themselves with them and by consequence found no necessity of pleading that promise Hereupon the Lord published by Moses a severe and terrible Law so terrible that Moses himselfe did exceedingly feare and quake A Law which fill'd the Ayre with Thunder and the Mount with fire A Law full of blacknesse darknesse and Tempest A Law which they who heard it could not endure but intreated that it might not be sp●…ken to them any more yet in all this God doth but pursue his first purpose of mercie and take a course to make his Gospell accounted worthy of all acceptation that when by this Law men shall bee roused from their security shut up under the guilt of infinite transgressions affrighted with the fire and tempest the blacknesse and darknesse the darts and curses of this Law against sinne they may then runne from Sina unto Sion even to Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and by Faith plead that pardon and remission which in him was promised Thus we see the point in the generall ●…leered That God in the publication of the Law by Moses on mount Sina had none but mercifull and Evangelicall intentions I shall further draw downe the doctrine of the use of the Law into a few conclusions First The Law is not given ex primaria intentione to condemne men There was condemnation enough in the World betweene Adam and Moses before the Law was new published It is true the Law shall prove a condemning and judging Law unto impenitent and unbeleeving sinners But to condemne or judge men by it was no more Gods intention in the publishing of it by the ministery of Moses I speake of condemnation not pronounced but executed then it was his purpose to condemne men by the Gospell which yet de facto will be a savor of death unto death to all that despise it It is said that Christ should be as well for the fa●… as for the ri●…ing of many in Israel and that hee should be a stone of stumbling and a rocke of off●…nce yet hee faith of himselfe I came not to condemne the World but that the World by me might bee save●… The meaning is the condemnation of the World was no motive no●… impulsiue cause of my comming though it were an accident●…ll event con●…quent and emergencie thereupon Even so the condemnation which by the Law will be aggravated upon 〈◊〉 sinners the powring forth of more wrath and vengeance then raigned in the World betweene Adam and Moses was no motive in Gods intention to publish the Law by his ministery but onely the furtherance and advancement of the Covenant of Grace Secondly The Law was not published by Moses on mount Sina as it was given to Adam in Paradise to iusti fie or to save men God never appoints any thing to an end to which it is utterly unsurable and improper Now the Law by sinne is become weake and unprofitable to the purpose of righteousnesse or salvation nay it was in that regard Against us as Saint Paul saith and therefore we are delivered from it as a Rule of justification though not as a rule of service and obedience Thirdly The uses of the Law are severall according to divers considerations of it For we may consider it either Per se in it selfe according to the primarie intention thereof in its being and new publication or Per accidens according to those secondary and inferior effects thereof By accident or secondarily The Law doth first irritate enrage exasperate lust by reason of the venomous and malitious quality which is in sinne And this the Law doth not by ingenerating or implanting lust in the heart but by exciting calling out and occasioning that which was there before as a chaine doth not beget any furie in a wolfe nor a bridge infuse any strength into the water nor the presence of an enemie instill or create de novo any malice in a man but onely occasionally reduce unto Act and call forth that rage which though lesse discerned was yet habitually there before Secondly the Law by accident doth punish and curse sinne I say by accident because punishment is in no law the maine intention of the Lawgiver but something added thereunto to backe strengthen and enforce the obedience which is principally intended Neither could the Law have cursed man at all if his disobedience had not thereunto made way which shewes that the curse was not the primary intention of the Law but onely a secondary and subsequent act upon the failing of the principall For I doubt not but the Lord accounteth himselfe more gloryfied by the Active and voluntary services then by the Passive and enforced sufferings of the Creature Herein saith our Saviour is my Father glorified that you bring forth much fruite Secondly consider the Law by it selfe and in its primary intention and so there are two principall uses for which it serves First It hath rationem speculi It is as a glasse to manifest and discover sinne and death and thereupon to compell men to fly for sanctuary unto Christ and when they see their miserie to sue out their pardon And this the Law doth first by convincing the Conscience of its owne widenes as the Prophet David speakes I have seene an end of all perfection but thy Law is exceeding broad By revealing the compasse of sinne in proportion to the widenesse and the filthynesse of sin in proportion to the purity of that Holy Law by discovering the depth and foulenesse the deceitfulnesse and desperate mischiefe of the heart by nature and giving some evidences to the soule of that horrid endlesse and insupportable vengeance which is due to sinne We know saith the Apostle that whatsoever things the Law saith it saith to those that are under the Law That every mouth may be stopped and all the World may become guilty before God Secondly By judging sentencing applying wrath to the Soule in particular For when it hath stopped a mans mouth evidenced his guiltinesse concluded him under sinne it then pronounceth him to bee a cursed and condemned Creature exposed without any strength or possibility to evade or overcome unto all the
entred by Moses that sin might abound that is That that concupiscence which reigned without conviction before during the ignorance of the originall implanted Law might by the new edition and publication of that Law be knowne to be sinfull and thereby become more exceeding sinful to those who should be thus convinced of it that so the exceeding sinfulnesse of sinne might serve both the sooner to compell men to come to Christ and the Grace of Christ might thereby appeare to be more exceeding gratious for the Law was reviv'd and promulgated anew meerely with relation to Christ and the Gospell and therefore the Apostle saith It was added and ordained by Angels in the Hand of a Mediator or by the ministery of a Mediator Where there are three reasons to shew Gods Evangelicall purpose in the publication of the Law anew First it was not published alone but as an Additament with relation to the Evangelicall promise which was before made Secondly the service of Angels or Messengers which shewes that in the Law God did send from Heaven anew to instruct men and therein to take care of them and prepare them for salvation for Angels minister for this purpose that men might be heires of salvation Thirdly the ministry of a Mediator namely Moses who was Mediator in the Law with reference whereunto Christ is cald Mediator of a better Covenant and was faithfull as Moses Now where there is a Mediator appointed therein God declares his purpose to enter anew into a treaty with men and to bring them to termes of agreement and reconciliation with him Men were rebels against God held under the sentence of death and vengeance they are in darkenesse know not whither they goe are well pleasde with their owne estate give no heed to any that would call them out For this reason because God is willing to pull mē out of the fire he sends first Moses armed with thunder and brightnesse which can not be endur'd for the shining of Moses his face which the people could not abide denotes the exceeding purity and brightnesse of the Law which no sinner is able with peace to looke on and he shews them whither they are hastning namely to eternall death and like the Angell that met Balaam in a narrow roome shuts them in that either they must turne backe againe or else bee destroyed and in this fright and anguish Christ the mediator of a better covenant presents himselfe as a Sanctuary and refuge from the condemnation of the Law Secondly there is universalitie of men and in men universality of parts All men and every part of man shut up under the guilt and power of this sinne Both these the Apostle proves at large Iewes Gentiles all under sinne none righteous no not one all gone out of the way altogether become unprofitable none that doth good no not one Every mouth must be stopped all the world must be guilty before God all have sinned and come short or are destitute of his glory God hath concluded all in unbeliefe the Scripture hath shut up all under sinne this shewes the universality of persons The Apostle adds Their throate is an open sep●…lcher with their tongues they have used deceit the poyson of aspes is under their lips their mouth full of cursing and bitternesse their feete swift to shed bloud destruction and unhappinesse are in their wayes and the way of peace they have not knowne there is no feare of God before their eyes these particulars are enough to make up an Induction and so to inferre a universalitie of Parts Every purpose desire Imagination incomplete and inchoate notion every figment so the word properly signifies with reference whereunto the Apostle as I conceive cals sinne The creature of the Heart and our Saviour the Issue of the Heart is evill onely evill continually evill Originall sinne is an entire body an old man which word noteth not the impotencie or defects but the maturity wisedome cunning covetousnesse full growth of that sinne in us and in this man every member is earthly sensuall and divelish As there is chaffe about every corne in a field saltnesse in every drop of the sea bitternesse in every branch of wormewood so is ehere sinne in every faculty of man First looke into the minde you shall finde it full of vanitie wasting and wearying it selfe in childish impertinent unprofitable notions Full of ignorance and darknesse no man knoweth nay no man hath so much knowledge as to enquire or seeke after God in that way where he will bee found nay more when God breakes in upon the minde by some notable testimonie from his Creatures Iudgements or providence yet they like it not they hold it downe they reduce themselves backe againe to foolish hearts to reprobate and undiscerning mindes as naturally as hot water returnes to its former coldnesse Full of Curiositie Rash unprofitable enquiries foolish and unlearned questions profane bablings strife of words perverse disputes all the fruits of corrupt and rotten mindes Full of Pride and contradiction against the Truth oppositions of science that is setting up of philosophy and vaine deceit Imaginations thoughts fleshly reasonings against the spirit and truth which is in Iesus Full of domesticall Principles fleshlie wisedome humane Inventions contrivances super-inducements upon the pretious foundation of rules and methods of its owne to serve God and come to happinesse Full of Inconsistency and roving swarmes of empty and foolish thoughts slipperinesse and unstablenesse in all good motions Secondly looke into the Conscience you shall finde it full of Insensiblenesse the Apostle saith of the Gentiles That they were past feeling and of the Apostates in the latter times that they had their consciences seared with a hot iron which things though they be spoken of an Habituall and acqui●…'d hardnesse which growes upon men by a custome of sinne yet wee are to note that it is originally in the Conscience at first and doth not so much come unto it as grow out of it As that branch which at first shooting out is flexible and tender growes at last even by it owne disposition into a hard and stubbo●…e bow as those parts of the naile next the flesh which are at first softer then the rest yet doe of themselves grow to that hardnesse which is in the rest so the consciences of children have the seedes of that insensibility in them which makes them at last dea●…e to every charme and secure against all the thunder that is threatned against them Full of Impurity and disobedience dead rotten unsavorie workes Full of false and absurd excusations and accusations fearing where there is no cause of feare and acquitting where there is great cause of feare as Saint Pauls here did Looke into the Heart and you shall finde a very He●… of uncleannesse Full of deepe and unsearchable deceit and wickednesse Full of hardnesse no sinnes no judgements no mercies no
men change their glory for that which doth not profit forsake the Fountaine and h●…w outbroken Cisternes which will hold no water ●…owe nothing but winde and reape nothing but shame and reproach Our Saviour assures us that it is no valuable price to get the whole World by sione and Saint Austen hath assur'd us that the salvation of the World if possible ought●…ot to be procurd by but an officious lie But now how many times doe we sinne even for base and dishonourable end●… lie for a farthing sweare for a complement swagger for a fashion flatter for a preferment murder for a rev●…ge pawne our soules which are more worth then the whole frame of nature for a very trifle Seventhly all this evill hitherto staies at home but the great scandall that comes of sinne addes much to the life of it the perniciousnesse and offence of the example to others Scandall to the weake and that twofold an active scandall to mis-guide them Gal. 2. 14. 1. Cor. 8. 10. or a passive scandall to grieve them Rom. 14. 15. and beget in them jealousies and suspitions against our persons and professions Scandall to the wicked and that twofold also the one giving them occasion to blaspheme that holy Name and profession which we beare 2. Sam. 12. 14. 2. Cor. 6. 3. 4. 1. Pet. 2. 13. The other hardning and encouraging comforting and justifying them by our evill example Ezek. 16. 51 54. Eighthly the evill doth not reach to men onely but the scandall and indignity over-spreads the Gospell a great part of the life of sinne is drawne from the severall respects it hath to Gods will acknowledged When we s●…e not onely against the Law of Nature in our hearts but against the written Law nor onely against the truth but against the mercy and Spirit of God too this must be a heavy aggravation O what a hell must it bee to a soule in hell to recount so many Sabbaths God reached f●…rth his Word unto me so many Sermons he knock'd at my doore and beseeched me to be reconciled he wo●…d me in his Word allured me by his promises expected me in much patience enriched me with the liberty of his owne p●…etious Oracles reached forth his blood to wash me poured forth his teares over me but against all this I have stopped the ●…are and pulled away the shoulder and hardned the heart and received all this grace in ●…ine and not withstanding all the raine which fell upon me continued barren still God might have cut me off in the wombe and made me there a brand of hell as I was by nature a Childe of wrath he might have brought me forth into the world out of the pale of his visible Church 〈◊〉 into a corrupted Synagogue or into a place full of ignorance atheisme and profanenesse but he hath cast my lot in a beautifull place and given me a goodly heritage and now hee requires nothing of me but to doe justly and worke righteousnesse and walke humbly before God and I requite evill for good to the hurt of mine owne soule Ninthly the manner of committing these sinnesis is full of life too Peradventure they are Kings have a court and regiment in my heart at best they will be Tyrants in mee they have been committed with much strength power service attendance with obstinacy frowardnesse perseverance without such sense sorrow or apprehension as things of so great a guiltinesse did require Lastly in good duties whereas grace should bee ever quick and operative make us conformable to our head walke worthy of our high calling and as becommeth godlinesse as men that have learned and received Christ how much unprofitablenesse unspiritualnesse distractions formality want of rellish failings intermissions deadnesse uncomfortablenesse do shew themselves How much flesh with spirit how much wantonnesse with grace how much of the world with the word how much of the weeke in the Sabbath how much of the bag or barne in the Temple how much superstition with the worship how wuch security with the feare how much vaine-glory in the honour of God in one word How much of my selfe and therefore how much of my sinne in all my services and duties which I performe These and a world the like aggravations serve to lay open the life of actuall sinnes Thus have I at large opened the first of the three things proposed namely that the spirit by opening the Rule doth convince men that they are in the state of sin both originall and actuall The next thing proposed was to shew what kinde of condition or estate the state of sinne is And here are two things principally remarkeable first it is an estate of most extreme impotency and disability unto any good Secondly of most extreme enmity against the holinesse and wayes of God First it is an estate of impotency and Disability to any good Paul in his pharisaicall condition thought himselfe able to live without blame Phil. 3. 6. But when the commandement came he found all his former moralities to have been but dung Our naturall estate is without any strength Rom. 5. 6. so weake that it makes the Law it selfe weake Rom. 8. 3. as unable to doe the workes of a spirituall as a dead man of a naturall life for wee are by nature Dead in sinne Eph. 2. 1. and held under by it Rom. 7. 6. And this is a wofull aggravation of the state of sinne that a man lies in mischiefe 1. Ioh. 5. 19. as a carkasse in rottennesse and dishonour without any power to deliver himselfe He that raised up Lazarus out of his grave must by his owne voyce raise up us from sinne The dead shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of man and they that heare shall live Ioh. 5. 25. All men are by nature strangers to the life of God Eph. 4. 18. and sorreiners from his household Eph. 2. 19. Able without him to doe Nothing no more then a branch is to beare any fruit when it is cut of from the fellowship of the roote which should quicken it Ioh. 15. 4. 5. In me saith the Apostle that is in my flesh there dwelleth no good thing Rom. 7. 18. a man is as unable to breake through the debt of the Law or his subjection to death and bondage as a beast to shake of his yoke Act. 15. 10. or a dead man his funerall clothes Ioh. 11. 44. In one word so great is this impotencie which is in us by sinne that we are not sufficient to thinke a good thing 2. Cor. 3. 5. not able to understand a good thing nor to comprehend the light when it shines upon us 1. Cor. 2. 14. Ioh. 1. 5. Our tongues unable to speake a good word How can yee being evill speake good things Matth. 12. 34. Our eares unable to heare a good word To whom shall I speake and give warning that they may heare behold their eare is uncircumcised and they cannot hearken Ier. 6. 10. our whole man
much set forward by the Word because therein is made more apparant to the Soule the Glory and the Power of God therefore the Two Prophets are said to Torment the inhabitants of the Earth and the Law is said to make men guilty and to kill to hew smite and destroy those whom it deales with all Secondly such a faith as the Divels have begotten by the Word and assented unto by the secret suggestions of the heart witnessing to it selfe that it hath deserved more then yet it feeles and this begets a fearefull expectation of being devoured surpriseth the heart with horrid tremblings and presumptions of the vengeance to come which the Apostle calls the Spirit of bondage and feare But all this being an Assent perforce extorted for wicked men confesse their sinnes as the Divels confessed Christ more out of Torment then out of Love to God or humiliation under his mighty hand amounts to no more then a Naturall Conviction Secondly there is a Spirituall and Evangelicall Conviction of the Guilt of sinne and the damnation due thereunto arising from the Law written in the heart and tempered with the apprehension of mercie in the new Covenant which begets such a paine under the Guilt of sin as a plaister doth to the impostumation which withall it cures such a Conviction as is a manuduction unto righteousnesse And that is when the Conscience doth not onely perforce feele it selfe dead but hath wrought in it by the Spirit the same affection towards it selfe for sinne which the word hath is willing to charge it selfe and acquit God to endite accuse arraigne testifie condemne it selfe meete the Lord in the way of his Iudgements and cast downe it selfe under his mighty hand That man who can in secret and truth of heart willingly and uncompulsorily thus stand on Gods side against sinne and against himselfe for it giving God the Glo●ie of his righteousnesse if he should condemne him and of his u●searchable and rich mercie that hee doth offer to forgive him I dare pronounce that man to haue the Spirit of Christ. For no man by nature can willingly and uprightly Owne damnation and charge himselfe with it as his due portion and most just inheritance This can never arise but from a deepe sense and hate of sinne from a most ardent zeale for the Glory and Righteousnesse of God Now then since the Conviction of sinne and of the death and Guilt thereof are not to drive men to despaire or blasphemie but that they may beleeve and lay hold on the righteousnesse of Christ which they are then most likely to doe when sinne is made exceeding sinfull and by consequence death exceeding deadly give mee leave to set forth in two words what this Guilt of sinne is that the necessitie of righteousnesse from Christ may appeare the greater and his mercie therein bee the more glorified Guilt is the Demerit of sinne binding and subjecting the person in whom it is to undergoe all the punishments legally due the reunto This Demerit is founded not only in the Constitution Will and Power of God over his owne Creatures of whom hee may justly require whatsoever obedience hee giveth power to performe but in the nature of his owne Holinesse and Iustice which in sinne is violated and turned from and this Guilt is after a sort Infinite because it springeth out of the aversion from an Infinite Good the violation of an infinite Holynesse and Iustice and the Conversion to the Creatures infinitely if men could live ever to commit adultery with them And as the Consequence and reward of obedience was the favour of God conferring life and blessednesse to the Creature so the wages of sinne which this Guilt assureth a sinner of is the wrath of God which the Scripture calleth Death and the Curse This Guilt being an Obligation unto punishment leadeth us to consider what the nature of that curse and death is unto which it bindeth us over Punishment bearing necessarie relation to a command the trangression whereof is therein recompenced taketh in these considerations First on the part of the Commander a will to which the Actions of the subject must conforme reveal'd and signified under the nature of a Law Secondly a justice which will and thirdly a power which can punish the transgressors of that Law Secondly on the part of the subject commanded there is requir'd first Reason and free-will originally without which there can be no sinne for though man by his brutishnesse and impotency which he doth cōtract cannot make void the commands of God but that they now binde men who have put out their light and lost their libertie yet originally God made no law to binde under paine of sinne but that unto the obedience whereof hee gave reason and free-will Secondly a debt and obligation either by voluntarie subjection as man to man or naturall as the creature to God or both sealed and acknowledged in the covenants betweene God and man whereby man is bound to fulfill that law which it was originally enabled to observe Thirdly a forfeiture guilt and demerit upon the violation of that Law Thirdly and lastly the evill it selfe inflicted wherein we consider first the nature and qualitie of it which is to have a destructive power to oppresse and dis quiet the offender and to violate the integritie of his well being For as sinne is a violation offered by man to the Law so punishment is a violation retorted from the Law to man Secondly the Proportion of it to the offence the greatnesse whereof is manifested in the majestie of God offended and those severall relations of goodnesse patience creation redemption which he hath to man in the quality of the creature offending being the chiefe and lord of all the rest below him in the easinesse of the primitive obedience in the unprofitablenesse of the wayes of sinne and a world of the like aggravations Thirdly the end of it which is not the destruction of the creature whom as a creature God loveth but the satisfaction of justice the declaration of divine displeasure against sinne and the manifestation of the glory of his power and terrour So then Punishment is an evill or pressure of the Creature proceeding from a Law giver just and powerfull inflicted on a reasonable Creature for and proportionable unto the breach of such a Law unto the performance and obedience whereof the Creature was originally enabled wherein is intended the glory of Gods just displeasure and great power against sinne which hee naturally hateth Now these punishments are Temporall Spirituall and Eternall Temporall and those first without a man The vanitie of the Creatures which were at first made full of goodnesse and beautie but doe now mourne and grone under the bondage of our sinnes The wrath of God revealing it selfe from heaven and the curse of God over-growing the earth Secondly within him All the Harbingers and Fore-runners of death sicknesse paine povertie reproach feare and
malefactors suffering his justice to condemne and his mercy to spare just so many as might preserve his Attributes i●…aequilibrio that the one might not over-weigh the other Certainely in this case there would be more mercy in saving tenne out of favour then in punishing and condemning all the rest for their Iust demerit Fifthly and lastly let me problematically and by way of 〈◊〉 onely propose this question Why may it not be justly said that there shall bee in Heaven as much Glorie distributed amongst those few which shall be saved as wrath in Hell amongst those many which perish I dare not speake where the Scripture is silent yet this by way of argument may bee said The proportion of wrath is measured by the finite sinnes of men the proportion of Glory from the infinite merits of Christ. There is more excellencie and vertue in the merit of Christ to procure life for his few then vilenesse or demerit in sinne to procure death for many As there may bee as much liquor in tenne great vessels as in a thousand smaller so there may bee as much Glory by the merit of Christ in a few that are saved as wrath from the merit of sinne in multitudes that perish But to returne to that from whence I have digressed Manifest it is that God will doe more for the magnifying of his mercie then ●…or the multiplying of his wrath because to be mercifull he will new publish the Law which for enlarging his judgements hee would not have done but would have left men unto that raigne of sin death which was in the world betweene Adam and Moses Notabl●… to this purpose is that place which I have before 〈◊〉 touched and shall now 〈◊〉 againe more particularly to unfold with submission of my judgement therein unto the better learned It i●… Gal. 3. beginning at the 15. vers Brethren I speak-after the mann●…r of men though it be but a mans covenant yet if it b●… c●…firmed no man dis●…ulleth or addeth thereto The Apostle before mentioned the covenant of Promise and Grace made to Abraham and in him as well to the Gentil●…s as to the ●…ewes unto which the consideration of the Lawes insufficiencie to justifie and by consequence to Blesse had led him In these words hee doth by an Allusion unto humane contracts prove the fixednesse and stability of the Covenant of mercy even from the courses of mutable men If one man make a grant and covenant to another doe ●…grosse signe seale take witnesses and deliver it to the o●…her for his benefit and behoof●… it becomes altogether irreversible and uncancellable by the man which did it If a man make a Testament and then die even amongst weake and mutable men it is counted sacred and impiety it is for any man to adde diminish or alter it But now saith the Apostle God is infinite in wisedome to foresee all inconveniences and evill consequences which would follow upon any covenant of his and so if neede be to prevent the making of it Things future in their execution and issuing out of second causes are yet all present to the intuition of God and so any thing which might after happen to disa●…ull or voyde the covenant was p●…esent and evident to his Omniscience before and therefore would then have prevented the making of it If then men whose wills are mutable whose wisedomes may miscarry who may repent and be willing to revoke their owne covenants againe doe by their hand seale and delivery disable themselves to disanull their owne act when it is once past much more God who is not like man that hee should repent when hee makes a covenant doth make it sure and stable constant and irreversible especially since it is a Covenant established by an oath as the Apostle elsewhere shewes a●…d when God sweares he cannot repent Thus the Apostle prooveth the Covenant of mercy and grace to be Perpetuall from the Immutability and wisedome of him that made i●… and if it be perpetuall then all other subsequent acts of God doe referre some way or other unto it It followeth vers 16. Now to Abraham and his seede were the Promises made he saith not and to seedes as of many but as of one and to thy seede which is Christ. Where by One we understand one mystically and in aggregato not personally or individually and by Christ the whole Church consisting of the Head and Members as he is elsewhere taken 1 Cor. 12 12. Now these words doe further ratifie the stabilitie of the Covenant for though a Covenant bee in it selfe never so constant and irreversible yet if all the parties which have interest in or by it should cease the Covenant would of it selfe by consequence expire and grow voyde but here as the covenant is most constant in regard of the wisedome and unvariablenesse of him that made it so it can never expire for want of a ●…eede to whom it is made for as long as Christ hath a Church and Members upon earth so long shall the Promise be of force Vers. 17. And this I say that the Covenant which was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was foure hundred and thirty yeeres after cannot disanull that it should make the Promise of none effect These words are a Prolepsis or prevention of an objection which might be made A man might thus argue when two lawes are made whereof the one is expresly contradictory to the other the later doth in common presumption abrogate and disanull the former else men should be bound to contraries and so punishments would bee unavoydable But here wee finde that foure hundred and thirty yeeres after the promise to Abraham there was a Law published extremely contrary unto the promise A law without mercy or compassion a law both impossible and inexorable which can neither be obeyed nor endured therefore it should seeme that some cause or other had hapned to make God repent and revoke his former covenant The Apostle retorts this Objection And his meaning I thus apprehend If there bee a covenant made by a Lawgiver in wisedome infinite to foresee before hand and to prevent any inconveniences which might follow upon it any reasons which might fall out to abrogate it A Lawgiver in all his wayes constant and immutable as being by no improvidence disappointments or unexpected emergencies ever put to repent and this covenant made to a man and his seede for ever and that without dependance upon any condition being all of Grace and Promise save onely that Abraham have a seede and Christ a Body Then if it happen that another law be after made which primâ facie and in strict construction doth implie a contradiction to the termes and nature of the former Law for Abrogation notwithstanding whereof there have no other reasons at all de novo intercurr'd then only such as were actually in being when it was made namely the sinnes of the world and yet were not then valid
or holinesse so that the meaning is The spirit shall convince men that they are unrighteous and unholie men held under by the guilt condemnation and power of sinne shut vp in fast chaines unto the wrath and iudgement of the great Day unauoidably cast and condemned in the Court of Law because they fled not by faith unto that office of mercie and reconciliation which the Father hath erected in his beloved Sonne All sinnes do of themselues deserve damnation but none doe de facto inferre damnation without infidelitie This was that great provocation in the Wildernesse which kept the people out of the Land of Promise and for which God is said to have beene grieved fortie yeeres together How long will this people provoke mee How long will it bee ere they beleeve in me they despised the holy Land they beleeved not his word they drew backward and turned againe in their hearts into Egypt The Apostle summes vp all their murmurings and provocations for which they were excluded that type of heauen in this one word They entred not in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 because of their vnbeliefe If there bee but one onely medicine against a deadly disease and when that is offered to the sicke person he refuse it and throw it vnder his feete the state of that man is infallibly desperate and remedilesse There is but one name but one sacrifice but one blood by which we can be saved perfected and purged for ever and without which God can have no pleasure in us how can wee then escape if we neglect so great salvation and trample under foote the blood of the Covenant It is a fruitlesse labour and an endlesse folly for men to use any other courses be they in appearance never so specious probable rigorous mortified Pharisaicall nay angelicall for extricating themselues out of the maze of sinne or exonerating their consciences of the guilt or power thereof without faith Though a man could scourge out of his owne bodie rivers of blood and in a neglect of himselfe could outfast Moses or Elias though he could weare out his knees with prayer and had his eyes nail'd vnto heaven though he could build hospitals for all the poore on the earth and exhaust the Mines of India into almes though hee could walke like an Angell of light and with the glittering of an outward holinesse dazle the eyes of all beholders nay if it were possible to be conceiv'd though he should live for a thousand yeeres in a perfect and perpetuall observation of the whole Law of God his originall corruption or any one though the least digression and deviation from that Law alone excepted yet such a man as this could no more appeare before the tribunall of Gods Iustice then stubble before a consuming fire It is onely Christ in the bush that can keepe the fire from burning It is onely Christ in the heart that can keepe sinne from condemning 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without mee that is separated from mee yee can doe nothing towards the iustification of your persons or salvation of your soules or sanctification of your lives or natures No burden can a man shake off no obstacle can hee breake through no temptation can hee overcome without faith shake off every thing that presseth downe and the sinne which hangeth so fast on and runne with patience namely through all oppositions and contradictions the race that is set before you saith the Apostle But how shall we do such unfeasible works Hee shewes that in the next words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 looking of from our selves unto Iesus the Author and finisher of our faith When a man lookes inward upon his owne strength hee may as justly despaire of moving sinne from his soule as of casting downe Mountaines with one of his fingers but he who is able to give vs faith is by that able to make all things possible unto vs. The world tempts with promises wages pleasures of sinne with frownes threats and persecutions for righteousnesse If a man have not faith to see in Christ more pretious promises more sure mercies more full rewards more aboundant and everlasting pleasures to see in the frownes of God more terror in the wrath of God more bitternes in the threats of God more certainty in the Law of God more curses then all the world can load him withall impossible it is that he should stand under such assaults for this is the victory which overcommeth the world even our faith Satan dischargeth his fierie darts upon the soule darts pointed and poysoned with the venome of Serpents which set the heart on fire from one lust unto another if a man have not put on Christ do not make use of the shield of faith to hold up his heart with the promises of victory to hold out the triumph of Christ over the powers of death and darkenesse to see himselfe under the protection of him who hath already throwne downe the Dragon from Heaven who hath Satan in a chaine and the keyes of the bottomlesse Pit in his owne command to say unto him The Lord rebuke thee Satan even the Lord that hath chosen Ierusalem rebuke thee impossible it is to quench any of his temptations or to stand before the rage and fury of so roaring a Lion Whom resist saith S. Peter stedfast in the faith Our corruptions set upon us with our own strength with high imaginations with strong reasonings with lustfull dalliances with treacherous solicitations with plausible pretences with violent importunities with deceitfull promises with fearefull prejudices with profound unsearchable points and traines on all sides lust stirs workes within us like sparkles in a dried leafe sets every faculty against it self The mind tempts it self unto vanity the understanding tempts it selfe unto error and curiosity the will tempts it selfe unto frowardnesse and contuinacie the heart tempts it selfe unto hardnesse and security If a man have not faith impossible it is either to make any requests to God against himselfe or to denie the requests of sinne which himselfe maketh It is faith alone which must purifie the heart and trust his power and fidelity who is both willing and able to subdue corruptions In vaine it is to strive except a man strive lawfully In prayer it is faith which must make us successefull in the word it is faith which must make us profitable In obedience it is faith which must make us cheerefull in afflictions it is faith which must make vs patient in trials it is faith which must make vs resolute in desertions it is faith which must make us comfortable in life it is faith which must make vs fruitfull and in death it is faith which must make us victorious So that as he said of water 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so may I of faith It is of all things the most soveraigne and pretious because it is of universall use in the
his favour reconciled unto us nor reunited by his Blessing unto the Creature but onely in and through Christ. So then the minde of a man is fully and onely satisfied with the Creature when it findes God and Christ together in it God making the Creature suteable to our inferior desires and Christ making both God and the Creature Ours God giving Proportion and Christ giving Propriety These things thus explained let us now consider the Insufficiencie of the Creature to conferre and the Vnsatisfiablenesse of the flesh to receive any solid or reall satisfaction from any of the workes which are done under the Sunne Man is naturally a proud Creature of high projects of unbounded desires ever framing to himselfe I know not what imaginarie and phantasticall felicities which have no more proportion unto reall and true contentment then a king on a stage to a king on a throne then the houses which children make of cards unto a princes palace Ever since the fall of Adam he hath an itch in him to be a god within himselfe the fountaine of his owne goodnesse the contriver of his owne sufficiencie loth hee is to goe beyond himselfe or what hee thinkes properly his owne for that in which hee resolveth to place his rest But alas after hee hath toil'd out his heart and wasted his spirits in the most exact inuentions that the Creature could minister unto him Salomon here the most experienc'd for enquirie the most wise for contrivance the most wealthy for compassing such earthly delights hath after many yeeres sitting out the finest flowre and torturing nature to extract the most exquisite spirits and purest quintessence which the varieties of the Creatures could afford at last pronounced of them all That they are Vanitie and vexation of spirit Like Thornes in their gathering they pricke that is their Uexation and in their burning they suddenly blaze and waste away that is their Uanitie Vanitie in their duration fraile and perishable things and Vexation in their enjoyment they nothing but molest and disquiet the heart The eye saith Salomon is not satisfied with seeing nor the eare with hearing Notwithstanding they be the widest of all the senses can take in more abundance with lesse satiety and serue more immediately for the supplies of the reasonable Soule yet a mans eye-strings may even cracke with vehemencie of poring his eares may be filled with all the varietie of the most exquisite sounds and harmonies and lectures in the world and yet still his Soule within him be as greedy to see and heare more as it was at first Who would have thought that the favour of a prince the adoration of the people the most conspicuous honours of the court the liberty of utterly destroying his most bitter adversaries the sway of the sterne and universall negotiations of state the concurrency of all the happinesse that wealth or honour or intimatenesse with the prince or Deity with the people or extremitie of luxurie could afford would possibly have left any roome or nooke in the heart of Haman for discontent and yet doe but observe how the want of one Iewes knee who dares not give divine worship to any but his Lord blasts all his other glories brings a damp upon all his other delights makes his head hang downe and his mirth wither so little leaven was able to sowre all the Queenes banquet and the Kings favour Ahab was a king in whom therefore wee may justly expect a confluence of all the happinesse which his dominions could afford a man that built whole cities and dwelt in Ivorie palaces and yet the want of one poore Vineyard of Naboth brings such a heavinesse of heart such a deadnesse of countenance on so great a person as seemed in the judgement of Iezabel farre unbeseeming the honour and distance of a prince Nay Salomon a man every way more a king both in the minde and in the state of a king then Ahab a man that did not use the Creature with a sensuall but with a criticall fruition To finde out that good which God had given men under the sunne and that in such abundance of all things learning honour pleasure peace plenty magnificence fortaine supplies roiall visits noble confederacies as that in him was the patterne of a compleat prince beyond all the plat-formes and Ideas of Plato and Zenophon and yet even he was never able to repose his heart upon any or all these things together till he brings in the feare of the Lord for the close of all Lastly looke on the people of Israel God had delivered them from a bitter thraldome had divided the sea before them and destroied their enemies behind them had given them bread from heaven and fed them with angels foode had commanded the rocke to satisfie their thirst and made the Cananites to melt before them his mercies were magnified with the power of his miracles and his miracles crowned with the sweetenesse of his mercies besides the assurance of great promises to bee performed in the holy land and yet in the midst of all this wee finde nothing but murmuring and repining God had given them meat for their faith but they must have meate for their lust too it was not enough that God shewed them mercies unlesse his mercies were dressed up and fitted to their palate They tempted God and limited the holy one of Israel saith the Prophet So infinitely unsatisfiable is the fleshly heart of man either with mercies or miracles that bring nothing but the Creatures to it The ground whereof is the Vast disproportion which is betweene the Creature and the soule of man whereby it comes to passe that it is absolutely impossible for one to fill up the other The soule of man is a substance of unbounded desires and that will easily appeare if wee consider him in any estate either Created or Corrupted In his Created estate he was made with a Soule capable of more glory then the whole earth or all the frame of nature though changed into one Paradise could haue afforded him for he was fitted unto so much honour as an infinite and everlasting Communion with God could bring along with it And now God never in the Creation gave unto any Creature a propercapacitie of a thing unto which hee did not withall implant such motions and desires in that Creature as should be some what suteable to that capacitie and which might if they had beene preserved intire haue brought man to the fruition of that Good which he desired For notwithstanding it be true That the glory of God cannot be attain'd unto by the vertue of any action which man either can or ever could haue performed yet God was pleased out of Mercie for the magnifying of his name for the Communicating of his glory for the advancement of his Creature to enter into Covenant with man and for his naturall obedience to promise him a supernaturall reward And this I say was even then out of Mercie in
as much as Adams legall obedience of workes could no more in any vertue of its owne but onely in Gods mercifull contract and acceptance merit everlasting life then our Evangelicall Obedience of faith can now Only the difference betweene the mercie of the first and second Covenant and it is a great difference is this God did out of mercie propose Salvation unto Adam as an Infinite Reward of such a finite Obedience as Adam was able by his owne created abilities to have performed As if a man should give a Day-laborer a hundred pound for his daies worke which performe indeed hee did by his owne strength but yet did not merit the thousandth part of that wages which he receives But Gods mercy untous is this That he is pleased to bestow upon us not onely the reward but the worke and merit which procured the reward that he is pleased in vs to reward another mans worke even the worke of Christ our head as if when one onely Captaine had by his wisedome discomfited and defeated an enemie the prince notwithstanding should reward his alone seruice with the advancement of the whole armie which he led But this by the way Certaine in the meane time it is that God created man with such capacities and desires as could not be limited with any or all the excellencies of his fellow and finite Creatures Nay looke even upon Corruptednature and yet there we shall still discover this restlesnesse of the minde of man though in an evill way to promote it selfe whence arise distractions of heart thoughts for to morrow rovings and inquisitions of the soule after infinite varieties of earthly things swarmes of lusts sparkles of endlesse thoughts those secret flowings and ebbes and tempests and Estuations of that sea of corruption in the heart of man but because it can never finde any thing on which to rest or that hath roome enough to entertaine so ample and so endlesse a guest Let us then looke a little into the particulars of that great disproportion and Insufficiencie of any or all the Creatures under the sun to make up an adequate and suteable Happinesse for the soule of man Salomon here expresseth it in Two words Vanitie and Uexation From the first of these wee may observe a threefold disproportion betweene the Soule and the Creatures First in regard of their nature and worth they are base in comparison of the Soule of man When David would shew the infinite distance betweene God and man in power and strength he expresseth the basenesse of man by his vanitie To be laid in the ballance they are altogether lighter then vanitie Psal. 62. 9. And surely if we waigh the Soule of man and all the Creatures under the Sunne together we shall finde them lighter then Vanitie it selfe All the Goodnesse and honour of the Creature ariseth from one of these Two grounds Either from mans coining or from Gods either from Opinion imposed upon them by men or from some Reall qualities which they have in their nature Many things there are which have all that worth and estimation which they carry amongst men not from their owne qualities but from humane institution or from some difficulties that attend them or from some other outward Imposition When a man gives monie for meate we must not thinke there is any naturall proportion of worth betweene a piece of silver and a piece of flesh for that worth which is in the meate is its owne whereas that which is in the monie is by humane appointment The like we may say for great titles of honour and secular degrees though they bring authoritie distance reverence with them from other men yet notwithstanding they doe not of themselves by any proper vertue of their owne put any solid and fundamentall merit into the man himselfe Honour is but the raising of the rate and value of a man it carrie nothing of substance necessarily along with it as in raising the valuations of gold from twenty shillings to twenty two the matter is the same only the estimation different It is in the Power of the king to raise a man out of the prison like Ioseph and give him the ●●xt place unto himselfe Now this then is a plaine argument of the great basenesse of any of these things incomparison of the Soule of man and by consequence of their great disability to satisfie the same for can a man make any thing equall to himselfe can a man advance a piece of gold or silver into a reasonable a spirituall an eternall substance A man may make himselfe like these things he may debase himselfe into the vilenesse of an Idoll They that make them are like unto them hee may under-value and uncoyne himselfe blot out Gods Image and Inscription and write in the image and inscription of earth and Satan he may turne himselfe into brasse and iron and reprobate silver as the Prophet speakes but never can any man raise the Creatures by all his estimations to the worth of a man we cannot so much as change the color of a haire or adde a cubite to our stature much lesse can we make any thing of equall worth with our whole selves We read indeed of some which have sold the righteous and that at no great rate neither for a paire of shooes Ioel 3. 6. Amos 2. 6. but we see there how much the Lord abhorr'd that detestable fact and recompenc'd it upon the necke of the oppressors How many men are there still that set greater rates upon their owne profits or libertie or preferments or secular accommodations then on the Soules of men whose perdition is oftentimes the price of their advancements but yet still Saint Pauls rule must hold For meat● destroy not the worke of God for money betray not the bloud of Christ destroy not him with thy meate with thy dignities with thy preferments for whom Christ died We were not redeemed with silver and gold from our vaine Conversation saith the Apostle 1. Pet. 1. 18. and therefore these things are of too base a nature to be put into the ballance with the soules of men and that man infinitely undervalues the worke of God the Image of God the bloud of God who for so base a purchase as monie or preferment any earthly and vaine-glorious respect doth either hazard his owne or betray the Soules of others commended to him And therefore this should reach all those upon whom the Lord hath bestow'd a greater portion of this Opinionative felicitie I meane of money honour reputation or the like First not to Trust in uncertaine Riches not to relie upon a foundation of their owne laying for matter of Satisfaction to their Soule nor to boast in the multitude of their riches as the Prophet speakes Psal. 49. 6. for that is certainely one great effect of the Deceitfulnesse of Riches spoken of Matth. 13. 22. to perswade the Soule that there is more in them then indeed there is and the Psalmist
allurements no hopes no feares no promises no instructions able to startle to awaken to melt or shape it to a better image without the immediate omnipotency of that God which melts the mountaines and turnes stones into sonnes of Abraham Full of Impenitencie not led by the very patience and long-suffering of God no●… allured by the Invitations and entea●…ies of God to returne to him not perswaded by the fruitlesnesse and emptinesse of all sinnefull lusts to forsake them Full of ●…llr it is bound up riveted fast into the heart of a 〈◊〉 and there from childish folly growes up to wise and sober folly as I may so speake till the heart bee changed into a cell of darknesse Full of madnesse and ●…age in ●…dnen is in the hearts of men while they lieu all the creatures in the world are not able to cure it Full of Infidelity A Heart that departs from God undervalews his pretious promises mistrusts his power In one word ful of all pollution and uncleannesse that Forge where all sins are framed in secret intents desires purposes lusts and from whence it springeth forth into the life the flames of it breaking out into the tongue and into every other member in adulteries murthers thefts blasphemies and every wicked word and worke Looke into the will and you shall finde it First full of Disability unto any good It cannot hearken nor be subject unto the law of God But there may be weaknesse where yet there is a good will and affection not so here it is Secondly full of loathing and aversation It cannot endure to heare or see any thing that is good casts it behind the back and turnes away the shoulder from it But there may be a particular nausea or lothing of a thing out of some distemper and not out of antipathy a man may loath the sight of that in a disease which at another time he loves But the will doth not sometimes loath and sometimes love but Thirdly it is full of enmity against that which is good It lookes upon it as a base thing and so it scornes it and it lookes on it as an adverse thing and so sets up resolutions to withstand it and it looks upon it as an unprofitable thing and so slights and neglects it But enmity is seldome so rooted but that it may bee overcome and a reconciliation wrought not so here the fleshly will may be crucified it will never be reconcil'd for Fourthly it is full of 〈◊〉 and contrariety which is a Twisted enmity as I may so speake which cannot be broken One contrarie may expell another but it can never reconcile it The flesh will never give over the combate nor forbeare its owne contumacie and resolutions to persist in evill Looke into the memorie and you shall finde it very unfaithfull to retaine good very tenacious to hold anyevill It is like a leaking vessell le ts out all that is pure and retaines nothing but mud and dregs The Lord made great promises to the people of Israel to bring them into the holy land began to fulfill them in wonders in terrible wonders in mercies in multitudes of mercies and nothing fo fit to make impressions on the memorie as promises miracles and multiplied deliverances and yet as if they meant to contend with God which should be the greatest the wonder of his goodnesse or the wonder of their unthankfulnes all this was not long a wearing out for it is said They did soone forget it all Look into the whole man and you shall finde him full of perturbation and disorder A man cannot trust any member he hath alone without Iobs covenant without Davids bradle to keepe it in If thou hast occasion to use thine eye take heed unto it It is full of the seeds of adultery pride envie wrath covetousnesse there are Lusts of the eye If to use thy tongue Trust it not alone set a dore before thy lips there is a Hell within thee that can set it all on fire that can fill it with rotten and stinking communication there is blasphemy persecution theft murther adultery curses revilings clamors bitternesse crimson and hellish fierie and brimstone abominations in that little member able to set the whole frame of nature on fire about the eares of ungodly men If to use thy hands or feete looke unto them there are seeds of more sins theft bribery murther adultery what not then there are joynts or sinewes in those members If to use thine eare be slow to hear take heed how you heare it is easily open to vanitie lies slanders calumniations false doctrines trashie and emptie doctrines Thus all over we finde a Body of sinne And which is yet more strange this sinnefulnesse cleaves not to our members onely but runnes over with a prodigious exuberancie into our very excrements and adjacents Absolom proud of his haire Iezabel proud of her paint Herod proud of his robes and though the word be●… a sword and a fire yet it cannot cut of no●… melt away any of this pride till Absoloms haire become his halter till Iezabels paint be washed of with her owne blood and vermin make the robes of Herod baser then a menstruous cloath or a beggers rags Thus we see how universala corruption originall sinne is Therefore in Scripture the whole man is called flesh because in carnall works we worke secundum hominem when wee are carnall wee walke as men as our Saviour saith of the Divell when hee speaketh a lie hee speaketh De suo of his owne according to his owne nature so when men walke after the flesh they worke of their owne they walke according to themselves For of our selves we can doe nothing as the Apostle speakes but onely sinne when wee doe any good it is by the grace of God but lusts which are the fountaine of evill are all our owne God gave the Heathen over to the lusts of their own hearts and every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his owne lust and enticed So then wee are all over flesh The minde a fleshly minde the will a fleshly will the affections and lust all fleshly So that as the Aposile saith of the Body many members but one ' Body so we of originall sinne many lusts but one body therefore the Apostle ca●…s it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the singular number sinne upon which excellent is the observation of the Author of the booke De Duplici Martyrio among Saint Cyprians workes plus est tollere peccatum quam peccata It is more difficult to root out this sinning sinne then to overcome many actuall Secondly consider the closenesse and adherency of this sinne It cleaves as fast to our nature as Blacknesse to the skinme of an Ethiopian that cannot possibly bee washt off As fast as Ivie to a wall it is the similitude of Epiphanius though a man may lop and shorten
this place dehorteth us Having in the former Chapter set forth the doctrine of Iustification with those many comfortable fruites and effects that flow from it he here passeth over to another head of Christian Doctrine namely Sanctification and Conformitie to the holinesse of Christ the ground wherof he maketh to be our Fellowship with him in his death and Resurrection for Christ carried our sinnes upon the Tree with him and therefore we ought with him to die daily unto sin and to live unto God This is the whole argument of the precedent parts of the Chapter and frequently elsewhere used by the Apostle and others 2. Cor. 5. 14 15. Gal. 2. 20. 3. 27. 5. 24. Ephes. 2. 6. Phil. 3. 10. Col. 2. 12. 13. 26. 3. 1. 4. Heb. 9. 14 1. Pet. 4. 1. 2. Now the words of the Text are as I conceive a Prolepsis or answer to a tacite objection which might be made A weake Christian might thus alledge If our fellowship in the death of Christ doe bring along with it a death of sinne in us then surely I have little to doe with his death For alas sinne is still alive in me and daily bringeth forth the workes of life To this the Apostle answeres Though sinne dwell in you yet let it not raigne in you nor have its wonted hold and power over you Impossible it is while you carry about these tabernacles of flesh these mortall bodies that sinne should not lodge within you yet your care must be to give the kingdome unto Christ to let him have the honour in you which his father hath given him in the Church to Rule in the midst of his enemies those fleshly lusts which fight against him By Mortall bodie we here understand the whole man in this present estate wherein he is obnoxious to death which is an usuall figure to take the part for the whole especially since the body is a weapon and instrument to reduce into act and to execute the will of sinne Before I speake of the power of sinne here are Two points offer themselves from the connexion of the words to those preceding which I will but only name First Sinne will abide for the time of this mortall life in the most regenerate who can say I have made my heart cleane I am free from my sinne David had his secret sinnes which made him pray and Paul his thorne in his flesh which made him cry out against it To the reasons of this point before produc'd wee may adde that God suffers our sinnes to dwell in us first to magnifie the glory of his mercy that notwithstanding he be provoked every day yet he doth still spare us It is said in one place that when God saw that every Imagination of the thoughts of mans heart was continually evill he said I will destroy man whom I have created from off the face of the earth yet afterwards God said I will not againe curse the ground any more for mans sake for the imagination of mans heart is evill from his youth The places seeme at first view to be contradictory to one another But we are thus to reconcile them After there had been a propitiatory offering made by Noah unto God upon an Altar which was the type of Christ it is said that God smelt a sweete savour and resolved I will no more curse the earth not Because but Although the imagination of mans heart be evill from his youth that is though men are so wicked that if I would Iure meo uti take advantage to powre out againe my displeasure upon them I might doe it every day yet I will spare them notwithstanding their lusts continue in them For we are not to understand the place as if it tended to the extenuation of originall sinne as some doe I will take pitty upon them Because of their naturall infirmities but onely as tending to the magnifying of Gods mercy and patience I will take pitty upon them though I might destroy them For so the originall word is elsewhere taken Thou shalt drive out the Cananites Though they have iron chariots c. Secondly to magnifie the Glory of his powerfull patience that being daily provoked yet he hath power to be patient still In ordinary esteeme when an enemie is daily irritated and yet comes not to revenge his quarrell we accompt it impotency and unprovision but in God his patience is his power When the people of Israel murmured upon the report of giants in the land and would have made a Captaine to returne into Egypt and have stoned Ioshua and Caleb so that Gods wrath was ready to breake out upon them and to disinherite them this was the argument that Moses used to mediate for them Let the Power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken The Lord is long-suffering and of great mercy Thou hast shewed the Power of thy mercy from Egypt untill now even so pardon them still If we could conceive God to have his owne justice joyned with the impotency and impatiency of man wee could not conceive how the world should all this while have subsisted in the midst of such mighty provocations This is the only reason why he doth not execute the fiercenesse of his wrath and consume men because he is God and not man not subject to the same passions changes impotencies as men are If a house be very weake and ruinous clogg'd with a sore waight of heavy materials which presse it downe too there must be strength in the props that doe hold it up even so that patience of God which upholds these ruinous tabernacles of ours that are pressed downe with such a waight of sinne a waight that lies heavie even upon Gods mercy it selfe must needs have much strength and power in it The second point from the Connexion is That our Death with Christ unto sinne is a strong argument against the raigne and power of sinne in us Else wee make the death of Christ in vaine for in his death hee came with water and bloud not onely with bloud to justifie our persons but with water to wash away our sinnes The Reasons hereof are first Deadnesse argues disability to any such workes as did pertaine to that life unto which a man is dead Such then as is the measure of our death to sinne such is our disability to fulfill the lusts of it Now though sinne be not quite expir'd yet it is with Christ nail'd upon a crosse They that are Christs have crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts so that in a regenerate man it is no more able to doe all its owne will then a crucified man is to walke up and downe and to do those businesses which he was wont to delight in He that is borne of God sinneth not neither can sinne because he is borne of God and his seede abideth in him Secondly Deadnesse argues disaffection A condemned man
comprehending the head and the members in the unitie of one body So then every Promise carrying us to that Vnitie which we have with Christ by his spirit who is therefore call'd a spirit of Adoption because he vesteth us with the sonneship of Christ and a spirit of holinesse and renovation because he sanctifieth us by the resurrection of Christ doth thereby purifie us from dead workes and conforme the members to the Head building them up in an holy Temple and into an habitation of God through that spirit by whom we are in Christ. In one word Our interest in the Promises is grounded upon our being in Christ and being one with him and our being in him is the ground of our purification Every branch in me that bringeth forth fruite my father purgeth that it may bring forth more fruite And in this respect the promises may be said to purifie as still carrying us to our interest in Christ in whom they are founded Fifthly and lastly the Promises are causes of our purification as Exemplars patterns and seeds of purity unto us For the Promises are in themselves Exceeding great and pretious Every Word of God is pure and tryed like gold seven times in the fire it is right and cleane and true and altogether righteous and therefore very lovely and attractive apt to sanctifie and cleanse the soule Sanctifie them by thy truth saith Christ thy Word is truth and againe Now ye are cleane through the Word which I have spoken unto you For the Word is Seed and seede a similates earth and dirt into its owne pure and cleane nature So by the Word there is a trans-elementation as it were and conforming of our foule and earthie nature to the spiritualnesse of it selfe Therefore the Apostle useth this for an argument why the regenerate cannot si● namely in that universall and complete manner as others doe because they have the seed of God abiding in them that is his Word Spirit and Promises abating the strength of lust and swaying them to a contrary point For thus the Word of promise makes a mans heart to argue Hath God of meere Grace made assurance of so pretious things to me who by nature am a filthy and uncleane Creature obnoxious to all the curses and vengeance in his booke Hath he wrought so great deliverance and laid up such unsearchable riches for my soule and should I againe breake his Commandements and joyne in the abominations of other men Would he not be angry till he had consumed me so that there should be no escaping Should I not rather labour to feele the comforts and power of these Promises encouraging mee to walke worthy of so great meroy and so high a calling to walke meete for the participation of the Inheritance of the Saints in light Shall I that am reserv'd to such honour live in the meane time after the lusts of the Gentiles who have no hope Hath God distinguished me by his Spirit and Promises from the world and shall I confound my selfe againe Shall I requite evill for good to the hurt of mine owne soule These and the like are the reasonings of the heart from the beauty and purity of the Promises Thirdly and lastly Promises are Arguments to inferre our Purification because in many of them that is the very Matter of which they consist and so the power and fidelity of God is engag'd for our Purification I will clense them from all their iniquity whereby they haue sinned against me saith the Lord. And againe I will sprinkle cleane water vpon you and you shall be cleane from all your filthinesse and from all your idoles will I clense you c. And againe They shall not defile themselues any more with their idoles nor with their detestable things nor with any of their transgressions but I will save them and I will cleanse them And againe I will heale their backeslidings I will Love them freely The Lord will wash away the filth of the daughters of Sion purge the bloud of Ierusalem from the midst thereof by the Spirit of Iudgement and by the spirit of burning Which Promises bringing along the fidelity and power of God to our faith doe settle our hearts amidst all the corruptions and impotencies of our nature When the conscience is once throughly acquainted with the sight of its owne foulnesse with the sense of that life and power which is in concupiscence it findes it then a great difficultie to rest in any hope of having lusts either subdued or forgiuen The Psalmist when his sore ranne and ceased not refused to be comforted thought himselfe cast out of Gods fauour as if his mercies were exhausted and his promises come to an end and his compassions were shut up and would shew themselves no more Therefore in this case the Lord carries our Faith to the consideration of his Power Grace and Fidelity which surpasseth not onely the knowledge but the very coniectures and contrivances of the hearts of men The Apostle saith That Christ was declared to be the Sonne of God with power according to the Spirit of holinesse by the resurrection from the dead That Spirit which raised Him from the dead is therefore called a spirit of Holinesse because the sanctifying of a sinner is a resurrection and requires the same power to effect it which raised Christ from the dead When Saint Paul had such a bitter conflict with the thorne in his flesh the vigor and stirrings of concupiscence within him he had no refuge nor comfort but onely in the sufficiencie of Gods grace which was able in due time to worke away and purge out his lusts And the prophet makes this an argument of Gods great power above all other Gods that he subdueth iniquities and blotteth out transgressions Though wee know not how this can be done that such dead bones soules that are even rotten in their sinnes should be cleansed from their filthinesse and live againe yet he knowes and therefore when wee are at a stand and know not what to doe to Cure our lusts then wee may by faith fix our Eyes upon him whose grace power wisedome fidelity is all in these his promises put to gage for our purification Thus wee see how promises in generall doe worke to the Cleansing of us from filthinesse of flesh and spirit The same might at large be shewed in many particulars I will but name those in the words before the Text to which it referres The Lord promiseth to Dwell in us as in spirituall Temples and this proves that wee ought to keepe our selues Cleane that wee may be fit habitations for so Dovelike and pure a spirit Flee for●…ication saith the Apostle why know you not that your bodie is the Temple of the holy Ghost which is in you therefore glorifie God in your bodies and spirits for they are Gods And againe If any man defile the Temple of God
inheritance by the Right of Christs purchase and by Covenant in him Not onely things present but things to come are theirs they have the Truth of God pawn'd for their preservation and supplyes so long as they continue in his way A way of Piety industrie and honestie And they have them for themselves and their seede The promises were to Abraham and his seede I never saw the righteous forsaken nor his seede begging their bread The wicked have earthly things onely as d●…ensations and employments nay as vexations and toyles of life as idols snares and thornes things that e●…tangle their hearts and take them of from God As a cloud exhal'd by the Sunne hides the light of the Sunne which drew it up as a Worme eates out the wood and rust consumes the Iron which breeds it as water in a vessell raised by the fire puts out the fire which raised it so the great estates and temporall blessings of God unto evill men serve but to intercept the thoughts and to blot out the notions and remembrance of him that gave them I spake unto thee in thy prosperitie but thou sata'st I will not heare And this hath beene thy manner from thy youth saith the Lord Ier. 22. 21. But the faithfull have earthly things as rewards of their righteousnesse as an accession advantage and overplus unto the Kingdome of God as testimonies of Gods Love and care of them as exercises of their thankefulnesse charitie mercie c. But it may be obiected why then have not the faithfull more aboundance of these things then worldly men I answere first A little that the righteous hath is better then greate poss●…ssions of the ungodly For first they have the maine substance of these things as well as the other they live and eate and are cloathed as well as they and secondly they have the comforts more lesse anguish of heart vexation and contention of minde then the others have And to them it is all one whether they goe into heauen through the gate or through the wicket As a Bird with a little eye and the advantage of a wing to soare up withall may see farre wider then an Oxe with a greater so the righteous with a little estate ioyned with faith tranquillity and devotion may have more pleasure feele more comfort see more of Gods bounty and mercie then a man of vast possessions whose heart cannot lift it selfe aboue the earth Secondly As nature when shee intendeth a farther and more noble perfection is lesse curious and elaborate in inferior faculties As man is exceeded by the Eagle for sight and the Hound for sent and the hare for swiftnesse because nature intending in him a more spirituall and divine Soule chose to be lesse delicate and exact in the senses so God intending to bestow upon the faithfull a farre more exceeding and aboundant weight of heavenly glory doth not alway so fully enlarge his hand towards them in these earthly things as to those who have no other portion but in this life We see then how much it concernes us to looke unto the ground of our Tenure to observe in what service wee hold our estate whether as appurtenances to Gods kingdome or as meerely the pastures of a beast which doe only fatten against the day of slaughter Seventhly and lastly Gods Promises to us must be the grounds of our prayers to him When ever God makes a promise wee must make a prayer And there are two things in this Rule to be observed First that wee can make no prayer in boldnesse faith or comfort but for things promised For if we will have God heare us wee must pray according to his will we must aske in faith we must see the things we aske made Ours in some promise and engagement before we must presume to aske them This as we have before observed encouraged David Iehoshaphat and Daniel to pray unto God because hee had made promises of the things they desired and therefore they were certaine that they prayed according to his will This was Nehemiahs ground in his prayer for the reparation of Ierusalem Remember I beseech thee the word which thou commandedst thy servant Moses saying if ye trangresse I will scatter you abroad But 〈◊〉 you turne unto me and keepe my commandements and do them though there were of you c●…st out unto the uttermost part of the heaven yet will I gather them from thence c. Now these are thy servants and thy people whom thou h●…st redeemed by thy great power and by thy strong band O Lord I beseech thee let now thine ●…are be attentive to the prayer of thy servant and to the prayer of thy servants who desire to feare thy name c. Secondly that God will not performe promises till by prayer they be sought for from him till in our humble desires we declare that we accompt his promises exceeding great and pre●…ous things The Lord had promised deliverance unto Israel yet saith the Lord For this I will be enquired of by the house of Israel to doe it for them Thus saith the Lord After seventie yeeres be accomplish●…d at Babylon I will visit you and performe my good word towards you in causing you to returne to th●…●…lace For I know the thoughts that I thinke towards you thoughts of peace and not of evill to give you an expected end But how shall this excellent promise of God be effected It followes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon me and ye shall goe and pray unto m●… ●…nd I will hearken unto you c. So againe The Lord maketh a promise of forgivenesse of sinnes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 blotteth out thy transgression for mine owne 〈◊〉 and will not remember th●… sinnes But for the execution of this promise God will be sought unto Put mem remembrance saith he and let us plead together for when we pray unto God to fulfill his promises we testifie first that they are promises of Mercie and not of dutie or debt because God is not bound to tender them unto us but we to beg them of him Secondly we declare our need and by consequence estimation of them and dependance upon them And lastly we subscribe to the truth and acknowledge the wisedome power fidelity and wayes that God hath to make good all his owne words unto us We have no reason therefore to esteeme any thing a blessing or fruit of Gods Promise which we doe not receive from him upon our knees and by the hand of prayer As promises are the Rule of what wee may pray for in faith so prayer is the ground of what wee may expect with comfort Th●…s we see what use we are to make of the promises to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 f●…om all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and the 〈◊〉 we may make of them likewise to perfect our 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the ●…eare of God For as the exceeding great ●…d pretious promises of God doe cleanse our natures and make us ●…scape the corruption●…
upon so just and gratious a God as may safely bring into suspicion and disgrace any doctrine which admits of so just an exception Now to this likewise the Apostle answeres God forbid The Law is not given to condemne or clogge men not to bring sinne or death into the world It was not promulgated with any intention to kill or destroy the Creature It is not sin in it selfe It is not death unto us in that sense as we preach it namely as subordinated to Christ and his Gospell Tnough as the rule of righ●…eousnesse we preach deliverance from it because unto that purpose it is made impotent and invalid by the sinne of man which now it cannot prevent or remove but onely discover and condemne Both these Conclusions that the Law is neither sinne nor death I finde the Apostle before in this Epistle excellently provi●…g Vntill the Law sinne was in the world but sinne is not imputed where there is no Law neverthelesse death ●…atgned from Adam to Moses even over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression That is as I conceive over those who did not sin●…e against so notable and evident Characters of the Law of nature written in their hearts as Adam in Paradise did for sinne had betweene Adam and Moses so obliterated and defaced the impressions of the morall Law that man stood in need of a new edition and publication of it by the hand of Moses That place serves thus to make good the purpose of the Apostle in this Sinne was in the world before the publication of the Law therefore the Law is not sinne But sinne was not imputed where there is no Law men were secure and did flatter themselves in their way were not apt to charge or condemne themselves for sin without a Law to force them unto it And therefore the Law did not come a new to beget sinne but to reveale and discover sinne Death likewise not onely was in the world but raigned even over all men therein before the publication of the Law Therefore the Law is not death neither There was Death enough in the world before the Law there was wickednesse enough to make condemnation raigne over all men therefore neither one nor other are naturall or essentiall consequences of the Law It came not to beget more sinne it came not to multiply and double condemnation there was enough of both in the world before Sinne enough to displease and provoke God death enough to devoure and torment men Therefore if the Law had beene usefull to no other purposes then to enrage sinne and condemne men if Gods wisedome and power had not made it appliable to more wholsome and saving ends he would never have new published it by the hand of Moses Here then the observation which from these words we are to make and it is a point of singular and speciall consequence to understand the use of the Law is this That the Law was revived and promulgated a new on Mount Sina by the ministery of Moses with no other then Evangelicall and mercifull purposes It is said in one place That the Lord hath no pleasure in the death of him that dyeth but it is said in another place That the Lord delighteth in mercie Which notes that God will doe more for the Salvation then he will for the damnation of men He will doe more for the magnifying of his mercy then for the multiplying of his wrath for if that require it he will revive and new publish the Law which to have aggravated the sinnes and so doubled the condemnation of men He would never have done Before I further evidence the truth of this doctrine It will be needefull to remove one Objection which doth at first proposall thereof offer it selfe If God will doe more for his mercie then for his wrath and vengeance why then are not more men saved then condemned If Hell shall bee more fill'd then Heaven is it not more then probable that wrath prevaileth against Grace and that there is more done for furie then there is for favour To wave the solution given by some That God will intentionally and effectually have every man to bee saved but few of that every will have themselves to be saved An explication purpos●…ly contradicted by Saint Austin and his followers whose most profound and inestimable Iudgement the Orthodoxe Churches have with much admiration and assent followed in these points I rather choose thus to resolve that case It will appeare at the last great day that the saving of a few is a more admirable and glorious worke then the condemning of all the rest The Apostle saith That God shall bee gloryfied in his Saints and admired in those that beleeve For first God sheweth more mercie in saving some when He might have judged all then Iustice in Iudging many when he might have saved none For there is not all the Iustice which there might have beene when any are saved and there is more mercy then was necessary to haue beene when all are not condemned Secondly the Mercie and Grace of God in saving any is absolute and all from within himselfe out of the unsearchable riches of his owne will But the Iustice of God though not as essentiall in him yet as operati●…e towards us is not Absolute but Conditionall and grounded upon the supposition of mans sinne Thirdly his Mercie is unsearchable in the price which procured it Hee himselfe wa●… to humble and empty himselfe that he might shew mercie His mercie was to be purchased by his owne merit but his Iustice was provoked by the merit of sinne onely Fourthly Glory which is the fruite of Mercie is more excellent in a few then wrath and vengeance is in many as one bagge full of gold may bee more valuable then tenne of silver If a man should suppose that Gods mercy and Iustice being equally infinite and glorious in himselfe should therefore have the same equall proportion observed in the dispensation and revealing of them to the world wee might not therehence conclude that that proportion should be Arithmeticall that mercy should be extended to as many as severitie But rather as in the payment of a summe of mony in two equal portions whereof one is in gol●… the other in silver though there bee an equalitie in the summes yet not in the pieces by which they are paide so in as much as Glory being the communicating of Gods owne blessed Vision Presence Love and everlasting Societie is farre more honourable and excellent then wrath therefore the dispensation of his Mercie in that amongst a few may bee exactly proportionable to the revelation of his Iustice amongst very many more in the other Suppose wee a Prince upon the just condemnation of a hundred malefactors should professe that as in his owne royall brest mercy and Iustice were equally poised and temper'd so he would observe an equall proportion of them both towards that number of
secret for your pride to note that pride is the principle of disobedience They and our fathers saith ●…ehemiah in his confession deal●… proudly and hardned their neckes and hearkered not unto thy Commandements and refused to obey And therefore Ez kiah used this perswasion to the ten tribes to come up to Ierusalem unto the Lords Passeover Be ye not stiffenecked as your fathers but yeeld your selves unto the Lord. To note that humiliation is the way unto obedience when once the heart is humbled it will bee glad to walke with God Humble thyselfe saith the Prophet to walke with thy God Receiv●… the ingraffed Word with meeknesse saith the Apostle When the Heart is first made meeke and lowly it will then bee ready to receive the Word and the Word ready to incorporate in it as seede in torne and harrowed ground When Paul was dis●…ounted and cast downe upon the Earth terrified and astonished at the Heavenly vision immediately hee is qualyfied for obedience Lord what wilt thou have mee to doe When the Soule is convinc'd by the Law that of it selfe it comes short of the Glory o●… God walkes in darkenesse and can go no way but to Hell It will then with ioy and thankfulnesse fo●…ow the Lambe wheresoever hee goes as being well assured that though the way of the Lambe be a way of blood yet the End is a Throne of Glory and a Crowne of Life FINIS THE LIFE OF CHRIST OR THE FELLOWSHIP OF THE SAINTS WITH HIM IN HIS LIFE Sufferings and Resurrection By EDWARD REYNOLDS Preacher to the Honourable Societie of Lincolns Inne PAX OPVLENTIAM SAPIENTIA PACEM FK LONDON Imprinted by Felix Kyngston for Robert Bostocke 1631. THE LIFE OF CHRIST 1. IOHN 5. 12. He that hath the Sonne hath Life HAving shewed the Insufficiencie of the Creature to make man happie as being full of vanitie and the Insufficiencie of Man to make himselfe Happie as being full of sinne we now proceede in the last place to discover first the Fountaine of Life and Happinesse Christ and secondly the Channell by which it is from him unto us conveyed the Instrument whereby wee draw it from him namely the knowledge of him and fellowship with him in his resurrection and sufferings These words we see containe a Doctrine of the greatest consequence to the Soule of Man in the whole Scriptures and that which is indeede the summe of them all They containe the summe of mans desires Life and the summe of Gods mercies Christ and the summe of mans dutie Faith Christ the Fountaine Life the Derivation and Faith the Conveyance Whatsoever things are excellent and desireable are in the Scripture comprised under the name of Life as the lesser under the greater for Life is better then meate and the body then ray ment And whatsoever Excellencies can bee named wee have them all from Christ. In Him saith the Apostle are bid the treasures of wisdome and knowledge H●…d not to the purpose that they may not be found but to the purpose that they may bee sought And we may note from the expression that Christ is a Treasurer of his Fathers Wisedome He hath Wisedome as the Kings treasurer hath wealth as an Officer a Depositarie a Dispenser of it to the friends and servants of his father He is made unto vs Wisedome The Apostle saith that in him there are unsearchable riches an inexhausted treasurie of Grace and Wisedome And there had neede bee a treasure of riches in him for there is a treasure of sinne in us so our Saviour cals it the treasure of an evill heart He was full of Grace and Truth Not as a vessell but as a Fountaine and as a Sunne to note that Hee was not onely full of Grace but that the fulnesse of Grace was in Him It pleased the Father that in him should all f●…lnesse dwell God gave not the Spirit in measure unto Him And as there is a fulnesse in Him so there is a Communion in us Of his fulnesse wee receive Grace for Grace that is as a Childe in generation receiveth from his Parents member for member or the paper from the Presse letter for letter or the glasse from the face image for image so in regeneration Christ is fully formed 〈◊〉 a man and he receiveth in some measure and proportion Grace for Grace there is no Grace in Christ appertaining to generall sanctification which is not in some weake degree fashioned i●… Him Thus there is to Christ a fulnesse of Grace answerable to a fulnesse o●… sinne which is in us The Prophet cals him a Prince of Peace not as Moses onely was a man of peace but a Prince of peace If Moses had beene a Prince of peace how easily might he have instill'd peaceable and calme affections into the mutinous and murmuring people But though hee had it in himselfe yet hee had it not to distribute But Christ hath Peace as a King hath Honours to dispense and dispose of it to whom hee will Peace I leaue with you my Peace I giue unto you If I should runne over all the particulars of Grace or Mercy we should finde them all proceede from him He is our Passeover saith the Apostle As in Egypt wheresoever there was the blood of the Passeover there was life and where it was not there was death so where this our Passeover is there is life and where hee is not there is death To me to live is Christ saith the Apostle and againe now I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me and the life that I live I live by the Faith of the Sonne of God who loved me and gvae himselfe for me To consider more particular this Life which we have from Christ. First It is a Life of Righteousnesse for Life and Righteousnes are in the Scripture taken for the same because sin doth immediatly make a man dead in law He that beleeveth not is condemned already and in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death And this Life being a Resurrection from a preceeding death hath two things belonging unto it First there is a Libertie and Deliverance wrought for us from that under which we were before held Secondly there is an Inheritance purchased for us the Priviledge and Honour of being called the Sonnes of God conferr'd upon us There are three Offices or Parts of the Mediation of Christ. First his Satisfaction as hee is our Suretie whereby hee paid our debt underwent the curse of our sinnes bare them all in his body upon the Tree became subject to the Law for us in our nature and representatively in our stead fulfill all righteousnesse in the Law required both Active and Passive for us For we must note that there are two things in the Law intended One principall obedience and another secondary malediction upon supposition of disobedience