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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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clearly implies there were that did say so 3. A third principle he layes down is the doctrine of original corruption even in the regenerate themselves (c) Pelagiani negant originate peccatum Aug. cont Mendac Against those that taught the * Pelagiani Aug. contr Mend. total abolition of original sin in and by Baptisme or that denied the being or at least the damnable nature of it Verse 8. If we say we have no sin c. 4. The necessity of confession of sin not only against them (d) Epiphanius calls the Novatians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 murderers of repentance Basil de poenit that decried repentance for sin and confession of sin but against them that denied pardon to them (e) Montanistae Novatiani Jerom. Ep. ad Marcel de erroribus Montani that repent If we confesse our sinnes he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins c. 5. He asserts the doctrine of actual sinne in the regenerate against them that affirmed that (f) The Simonians Gnosticks and other hereticks of that age taught that there was no sin but unbelief that to the justified all things were clean however they live vid. Aug. de perfectione justi c. 21 Clem. Alex. c. conceived the Apostles after the coming down of the Holy Ghost upon them nullis esse peccatis aut passionibus ohnoxii Joviniani docebant justum nec leviter peccare a justified person could not sin or which is the same that God sees no sin in his children If we say that we have not sinned we make him a lyar c. If we say we have no sin there 's the denial of original sin if we say we have not sinned there 's the denial of actual sin both make up the great heresie of the (g) Catharists in the third Centurie after Christ Catharists who held perfection in this life 6. The Apostle vindicates the preceptive obligation of the moral Law even over justified persons Against the Antinomian (h) The Simonians Carpocratians Marcionites Maniches did not only deny the moral law but curse and blaspheme it as given not by God but by some unlucky nature heresie which presumptuously breaketh even that yoke also from the neck of the Disciples Chap. 2. verse 3 4 5. Hereby we know that we love him if we keep his Commandments So early were these poysonous weeds sprung up in the Church of God The other Module which the Apostle layeth down is a Catalogue of Gospel-evidences certain marks and signs of an interest in Christ A Catalogue of Scripture-evidences and of a right and title to life eternal such as these 1. Obedience to Gods Commandments ut sup 2. Contempt of the world Ch. 2.15 3. Stedfastnesse in the doctrine of the Gospel verse 8 19 20 24. 4. Conformity to Jesus Christ in holinesse ch 3. ver 3. 5. Mortification 6 7 8 10. 6. Love to the Saints verse 14. and chapter 5.2 10 11. 7. A believing confession * Most blasphemously denied by the Simonians Chrystolites P●o●t●es c. Aug. de haeres of Gods sending Jesus Christ into the world as the promised Messias with love to him and thankfulnesse for him chap. 4. In the four first verses of the fifth chapter we have no lesse than seven evidences each lincking in with the other and bearing witnesse to the other As 1. You have faith in Christ bearing witnesse to Regeneration Whosoever believeth c. is born of God 2. Love to God bearing witnesse to faith He that loveth him that begat c. 3. Love to the Saints bearing witnesse to our love of God He loveth him also that is begotten Augustine understands it of our love to Christ but the Context expounds it of our love to the Saints for so it followeth ver 2. where we have 4. Love to God reciprocally witnessing our love to the Saints Hereby we know we love the children of God when we love God 5. Obedience to Gods Commandments bearing witnesse again to our love And keep his Commandments 6. Delight testifying the truth of our obedience His Commandments are not grievous 7. And lastly Victory over the world bearing witnesse to Regeneration For whosoever is born of God overcometh the world Verse 4. It were easie out of this and the other two subsequent Epistles to compleat the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Gospel EVIDENCES which are not thus expresly delineated that by them only the Church might describe her members as some loose and vaine spirits fancy but for the members of the Church to try and examine themselves by whither they be real and living members yea or no. It were easie I say to adde to the Catalogue but I have insisted too long upon the first demonstration sc Scripture Pattern I come now to the second demonstration namely The advantages of such Modules 1. For the Ornament of the truth The excellency and advantage of such Forms and Collections of Evangelical truths And In the first place it addes much to the beauty and ornament of the truth whither it be delivered from the Pulpit or from the Press in such Systemes and Platforms the Hearer or Reader may as in a Map or Table sometimes of one sort sometimes of another behold divine truths standing one by another in their Method and Connexion mutually casting light and lustre upon each other Every truth single is very precious and indeed of infinite value as purchased with and ratified in the blood of Christ but to see the truths of the Gospel linked together in their proper union facing one another like the Cherubims Exod. 25.20 is very glorious As the stones of the Temple when they were squared and polished in the Forrest were very costly for both matter and workmanship but when they were layd into the building and formed up into a Temple what a beautiful and magnificent structure did they make The Disciples beholding it Luk. 21.5 were filled with delight and wonder The Curtains of the Sanctuary each by themselves were very rich both for their materials and curious Embroyderies but had you seen them in their Connecture each Curtain fastned to the other with taches of gold and so making up one entire perfect Tabernacle sparkling and shining in all its native spendour it would have been a ravishing sight The very representation of many Countries in one Nation of many Nations in one of the divisions or quarters of the world and of all the quarters described in one Globe or Map it is very delightful to the eye of an intelligent beholder at once discovering the scite and cognation the Longitude and Latitude the distance and degree of every Kingdome and County such globes and tables are full of delight and profit It is in a most eminent manner observable in the Creation of the world of every single days work it is said God saw that it was good but when the whole Compages of heaven and earth was set together into
As for that part of the service of God which is moral all of that neither is not discoverable by natural light For 1. If you consult the seventh to the Romans you shall find that there were some secret moral wickednesses which Paul did not see which Paul could not have seen by the light of nature no although a Pharisee and by that means very expert in the letter of the Law Rom. 7.7 Rom. 7.7 I had not known lust except the Law had said Thou shalt not covet 2. If the light of nature be imperfect in us since the fall which I suppose you will grant then there may be many things moral now imperceptible by the light of nature which it might and did see in its state of perfection and therefore it must needs be of dangerous import to make the Law of nature a weak faint shadowing imperfect light the perfect rule and only measure of moral duties to cry up the Law written in our hearts is in this case to cry down the Law written in the Scriptures this is as it were to pull the Sun in its noon-day brightnesse in its greatest lustre and glory out of the firmament and to walk by the light of a Candle a stinking snuffe in the socket almost gone out this is to make the Primmer the Horn-book the A. b. c. of natural light the highest piece of learning in morality The Law of nature to our shame and grief we may speak it is so obliterated and darkened that it cannot show a man the least part of his wickednesse Pelagius was a man of great learning and by his studies and diligence had snuffed the Candle of the Lord and made it burn with a clearer shine yet how little could he see into this matter It was his affection that we are borne as well without vice as vertue tam sine vitio quam sine virtute nascimur and we see all Popery to this very day hold motions to sinne not consented unto to be no sinnes but necessary conditions arising from our constitution and such as Adam had in innocency But I forbeare the issue of this particular is thus much if that which concerns the worship and service of God cannot be found out by the light of nature much lesse that which concerns his essence and subsistence 2. The doctrine of the Gospel is called by the Apostle a mystery and a mystery without controversie great is the mystery of godliness and what greater Gospel-mystery is there than the Trinity which neither men nor Angels can comprehend and both men and Angels must adore Now if this doctrine be discoverable by natural light it is no more a mystery The works of the flesh are manifest Gal. 5.19 20. saith the Apostle Gal. 5.19 20. Now why are they said to be manifest because they stink in the nostrils of nature and are discernable by the dimme eye of conscience Object 1. Possibly some may say man hath as it were the image or likenesse of a Trinity within himself there are three prime faculties understanding will and memory in one and the same reasonable soul Resol 1. A similitude doth not prove a thing to be but only represent a thing to our fancy which at present hath or at least had a being one way or other for instance it is impossible that any Sonne should know his fathers picture unlesse first he hath seen or heard that his father was such a person as the picture doth represent and by that means hath before hand his fathers idea and image presented in his own soul 2. 'T is denyed that these faculties in mans soul bear the image or likenesse of a Trinity neither can any man by a reflex act upon his own soul attain to the knowledge of this great mystery but such notions as these are the luxuriant extravagancies of some curious braines that would advance earth as high as heaven and do indeed rather darken then illustrate this truth as he who would adde any colour unto light doth rather blemish it than adorn it what a piece of folly would it be to undertake to emblazon a sun-beam Object 2. The doctrine of the Trinity was known to several of the Heathens which had not the Scriptures and therefore is discoverable by the light of nature Resol 1. If the Heathen had any notions of the Trinity they might receive them either by tradition from those who had read the Scriptures or out of the Scriptures themselves and not by the improvement of natural light 2. 'T is very probable that these notions of a Trinity which are found in Plato and Trismegistus were not writ by them but foisted into their works by some that lived in after ages my Reasons are these 1. Those writings which go under the name of the Ancient Fathers are not all truly such but a great part of them supposititious and forged as Mr. Dally proves largely in that learned piece of his called A Treatise of the right use of the Fathers where he gives you an account of whole books that were published under the names of the Apostles as Saint Peter Saint Barnabas and others which were not such Now if men durst be thus bold with the Apostles no wonder if they did not stick to deal thus with Heathens This imposture in the Primitive times was very ordinary yea the fathers themselves have used this Artifice to promote their own opinions as you may read largely in the third Chapter of that book 2. Some are apt to believe that there are clearer notions of a Trinity in some of the books of the Heathens than in the books of Moses and so by consequence the Heathens should know more of the Trinity than the Israel of God which is flat contrary to the Scriptures Psal 76.1 Psal 76.1 In Judah is God known his Name is great in Israel He hath not dealt so with any Nation and as for his judgements thy have not known them praise ye the Lord. And thus I have done with the first Assertion in answer to this question whither the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature viz. that the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it 2. The light of nature after divine Revelation cannot oppose it For 1. As the judgement of sense ought not to be urged against the judgement of reason so the judgement of reason ought not to be urged against the judgement of faith The judgement of sense ought not to be urged against the judgement of reason for instance sense tells us that some of the Stars are as small as spangles I am apt to believe that some Country men think the Sunne to be no bigger than their Cartwheele here reason interposes corrects sense tells us that there being a vast distance between us and them they must needs be very great bodies or else they could not be visible There are thousands of Stars that cause the white streak in the
shewed the expiation of sin and therefore their Sacrifices were killed and the blood shed and sprinkled Heb. 9.22 23. 2. The Covenant at Mount Sinai was not made with all without exception as Adams was but only with a select people even with Israel 3. Because the Lord still puts them in minde of his promise to Abraham which included Christ and faith in him Gal. 3.16 17. and was not null by the Law Quest 5. The last question is how long this Covenant lasted and whither any be under a Covenant of Works Answ Most strictly it was but to the giving of the first promise for then the Covenant of Grace began but was more largely and clearly revealed till the coming of Christ by the Law and the Prophets but was most perspicuously and fully by Christ himself in his doctrine and death and by the abundant pouring out of his Spirit Howbeit all along and to this day every natural man is under a Covenant of Works because out of Christ therefore under the Law and the curse of it for which cause the Covenant of Works is by some called the Covenant of nature Faedus naturae Again all they which look for righteousnesse and salvation by the power of their wills by the strength of nature and by performance of duties as Jews Turks Philosophers Papists Socinians Gal. 4.24 25. Pelagians these are all under a Covenant of Works they are not under grace they are of Hagar the Bond-woman of Mount Sinai which answers to Jerusalem which now is which is in bondage with her children as the Apostle speaks in his elegant Allegory I come now to draw some Corollaries from this doctrine of the Covenant of Works thus propounded in a practical way of application and that briefly Corol. 1. It serves for admiration to wonder with a holy astonishment at the Lords infinite condescending love in making a Covenant with poor man 1. Because it was a free act in him to do it he lay under no compulsion to it Rom. 9.15 16. nothing of merit or profit in a despicable worme appears as a motive to it it was a royal act of glorious grace from the King of heaven to vile creatures O wonderful 2. Because as it was free for him to do it so he bound his hands by it and as it were lost his freedome by it for his truth holds him fast to it Hebr. 6.18 by which its impossible for him to change O wonderful 3. He made the first offer he prevented us by his grace he loved us first 1 John 4.10 19. all this appeared in the first Covenant with us Bullinger de f●●dere Dei unios aeterno in vouchsafing us to make any at all with him Ineffabilis misericordiae Divinae Argumentum quod ipsum numen ipse inquam Deus Aeternus faedus ipsum primus offert nullis ad hoc hominum meritis adactus sed merâ nativâ bonitate impulsus nec scio an humanum ingenium hoc mysterium vel plenè toncipere vel dignis laudibus evehere possit Unspeakable mercy that the eternal God should first offer to league with us moved to it by no merit in us but by his own native goodnesse only a mystery which the minde of man cannot conceive nor his tongue praise to the worth of it thus a grave Authour which will the more inhance the love of God if we 4. Consider that he makes Covenant upon Covenant after breaches and forfeitures renews them again and ratifies them stronger than ever as he did the new Covenant after the old was broken by our high and hainous provocation in the fall and which he doth to every elect soul in the Sacraments and after grosse and grievous Apostasies See Jerem. 3.1 Ezek. 16.60 61 62 63. Hos 2. O admire and adore this love Corol. 2. Seeing there are two Covenants on foot one of Works another of grace and very many yea the farre greatest part of the world are under a Covenant of Works which is a most sad and doleful estate because a state of wrath and death a most wretched and accursed condition O try under what Covenant thou art for if thou art in the state of sinful nature a sprowt of old Adam never yet cut off from his root of bitternesse nor graffed into Christ thou art undone to be under such a Covenant is to be an enemy to God and to be lyable to all his plagues O make haste then and flee as a Post and as the young Roe into Christs Armes For consider how thou canst stand before the Bar of God in thy sins in thy nakednesse Adam fled away from the presence of God afraid and ashamed hiding himself in the Thicket because he was naked but where wilt thou hide thy nakednesse in that dreadful day of the Lord there will be no shelter in that day for a sinner Corol. 3. Labour to understand and discern aright the nature tenour and termes of both Covenants 1. Because they are easiiy mistaken and many do mistake them Rom. 10.2 3. 2. Because the mistake is dangerous like a man in the dark as he travels findes two wayes one way is wrong Prov. 14.12 yet it seems as good and safe as the other he goes on in the wrong which leads him to a Rock where he falls down headlong and breaks his neck so many a poor soul imagines he is under a Covenant of Grace and in a safe way to heaven when alas he is yet under a Covenant of Works and in the high-way to hell Labour then to discern the difference search Scriptures and thy own heart go to the Lord by prayer Job 33.23 and to his M nisters that they may shew thee thy way lest thou go on to thy destruction And therefore Corol. 4. Improve the Covenant of works for the conviction of sin righteousness and judgement for till the Lord lets thee see what it is to be under such a state thou wilt never see the evil of it nor ever desire to change it Corol. 5. Renounce thy Covenants with sin Satan and creatures or else thou wilt never be admitted into Covenant with God if thou break not with them God will never close with thee if thou be a Covenant-servant to them thou art no Covenant-servant of the Lords for how canst thou serve those two Masters Matth. 6.24 1 Joh. 2.15 16. God and Mammon both which crave thy whole man and thy whole work and which are utterly inconsistent with each other Corol. 6. Labour to relieve thy self under thy greatest straits and sears by Covenant promises I mean the promises of the new Covenant which are called better promises Hebr. 8.6 10 11 12. Joh. 15. because absolute pr●mises because they work that in us and for us which God requires of us when of our selves we can do nothing As the new Covenant is the best Covenant and the promises of it the best promises Isa 55.3 Acts
1. The term from which this commences viz. the very first receiving of our natures and beings from our Parents from the first original and moment of our being we received with all a liliablenesse to the wrath and curse of God Psalme 51.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in sin did my mother conceive me 2. The ground for which this wrath impends and hovers viz. nature not first created for that was upright after God but the corrupted nature which is conveyed and derived with our beings Eccles 7.29 Gen. 1.27 This very nature leads to deserves and will lodge under eternal wrath every mothers child in whom regeneration and transplantation into Christ are not found The Doctrine then comprising the summe of the Text is this Doctr. Every man and woman from their very first conception through a corrupted nature are under the Lords wrath and continuing such not new-born and engraffed into Christ that wrath shall abide upon them for ever We may not mince and extenuate here with the Pelagian as if this only were by imitation Flatterers of nature may lessen the wound but Heires of grace should and will rather magnifie their Physitian Nor may we limit and confine this truth as if it concern'd native Turks Mat. 23.15 canker'd Papists and the Proselytes of the Pharisees only to be children of hell when it knocks at every of our doors Jew and Gentile promiscuously Neither people nor Ministers not Apostles can exempt themselves great and small rich and poor those which the Lord hath not appointed unto wrath but to obtain salvation by their Lord Jesus Christ 1 Thes 5.9 yet by nature are children of wrath even as others This wrath in the Scriptures hath several Names respectively to the Law-giver it is called wrath respectively to the Law it self the curse respectively to the effects of both it is translated vengeance Rom. 3.5 Man by nature is exposed unto all these 1. He is exposed to the wrath of the Law-giver Here 1. Take some Cautions that we may duly conceive of wrath the root of all penal afflictions on Gods part as sin is the meritori●us root on mans part All wars with men begin in wrath Animosities first boyle within and then wars break out James 4.1 From whence come wars and fightings among you Come they not hence from your lusts which war in your memb rs and in special this of wrath so there is somewhat proportionable in God if understood sutably to his glorious Being namely wrath perfectly clean from all dregs of 1. Folly the fool never more peeps out than in passion Prov. 14.29 He that is hasty of spirit exalteth folly that is sets it aloft that every body may discern and take notice of it but the Lord is 1 Sam. 2.3 A God of knowledge by whom actions are weighed 2. Injustice Gods wrath is a clear fire without any smoke of unrighteousnesse Rom. 3.5 Is God unrighteous that inferreth wrath he cannot be We plough with an Oxe and an Asse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mingle drosse with our zeal c. 3. Perturbation the wrath of men is the rage of men who disjoint and discompose themselves as well as others but the Lord acts and suffers not in his wrath Prov. 11.17 he strikes wounds destroys from the infinite holinesse and justice of his nature declaring it self against all sin with the exactest serenity and oneness of minde and frame within himself from everlasting to everlasting This is the root of all wars with sinful men Moses saw the plague growing up out of this root Num. 16.46 Wrath is gone out from the Lord and the plague is begun Job 21.17 He distributeth sorrows in his anger 2. Consider what this wrath implies two things 1. That the Lord is highly displeased with men and women in their natural estate though never so goodly a vernish of Religion be above yet if nothing but nature be underneath Isa 10.6 an hypocritical Nation are the people of the Lords wrath No created understanding can conceive exactly what this displeasure is Psal 90.11 Who knoweth the power of thy anger even according to thy fear so is thy wrath Take some short ladders that our thoughts may a little climbe up by and consider seriously and deeply 1. What a Kings wrath is Prov. 20.2 The fear of a King is as the roaring of a Lyon who so provoketh him to anger sinneth against his own soul that is acteth as an enemy to his own life and Prov. 16.14 The wrath of a King is as the Messengers of death but the wise man will pacifie it as that which he cannot resist Eccles 8.4 Where the Word of a King is there is power and who may say to him What do thou that is where not only the name but the reality of a King is he sustains the person of the Common-wealth and hath the strength and power of all put into his hand and hath power to execute his wrath and will not be controlled nor expostulated with And what can a Branch do against the whole Tree The King is wroth and Hamans face is covered Prov. 27.3 A stone is heavy and sand is weighty but a fools wrath that is that hath power is heavier than them both to crush a weak person that standeth in his way All these are but toyes to the power and weight of Gods wrath 2. What an incensed brothers wrath is that hath a little more power Rebecca understanding Esau his wrath against Jacob packs him away till that wrath be over Gen. 27.43 44. If a mother dare not venture a childe into an angry sons presence nor a brother himself into an angry brothers presence how insufferable will the angry presence of the Lord be 3. What Gods Fatherly refining wrath is against the drosse that mingleth it self with his Worship and Ordinances and what dreadful Furnaces he hath put the Vessels of mercy into to take away their tin from them Mal. 3.2 Who may abide the day of his coming and who shall stand when he appeareth for he is like a Refiners fire If men cannot bear Christs coming with a refining fire to purge out drosse much lesse not his coming with flaming fire 2 Thes 1.8 to consume and burn up persons and drosse together We have need of grace to serve him acceptably with reverence and godly fear for our God that is related to us in Christ is a consuming fire Hebr. 12.28 29. 4. What afflictions are how very bitter yet separated from wrath they may be born with comfort The mingling of fire with the haile in Egypt made it so very dreadful Exod. 9.24 The fire of the Lords wrath mingled with stormes renders them so grievous to be stood unde Hell it self would not be so dreadful did not the breath of the Lord that is the wrath of the Lord like a streame of brimstone kindle it Isa 30.33 The Prophet submits to any stroaks only deprecates wrath as worse than any stroaks
a place for them to which * Luk. 13.28.29 they shall come from the East and from the West from the North and f●om the South and sit down with Abraham Isaac and Jacob in the Kingd●me of God and this to raise the appetites of their faith and hopes when a Supper of so many thousand years preparation is the entertainment they are invited to And so I come to the second Part of the Text and that is the admission into this prepared Possession Come ye blessed of my Father c. When a Kingdome is proposed every man is ready to be catching at a Crown but therefore our Saviour tells us it must be had by inheritance that is the title by which we must be admitted * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inherit as the Jews had Canaan divided and apportioned to the several Tribes by * Numb 26.55 lot so some too curiously and boldly adventure to assign to every Saint a Mansion bigger than the whole earth which is true indeed in this sense in regard immensity and God himself is the * Psal 16.5 lot of their inheritance but it is an inheritance in regard 1. There is a claim made to it only by the new-born and first-born of God and so by right of birth except * John 3.3 a man be b●rn again cannot see the Kingdome of God the spirit of a slave cannot manage the Scepter of a Prince nay they that look to sit on Thrones of glory with Christ * Mat. 19.28 must follow him in the regeneration of the body * 1 Cor. 15.36 that must dye ere it be quickned * 1 Cor. 15.50 for flesh and blood in corruption moral or * Exod. 33.20 natural cannot inherit the Kingdome of God which made the * Moriar ne moriar ut te videam Aug. confessii Father cry out Oh then Lord let me dye lest I dye that so I may see thee Now if an unregenerate body cannot enter much lesse an unregenerate soul An infamous person * Turpis persona Myns in instit in the Civil Law may be excepted against as not fit to be an heir and shall the Laws of men be purer than the Laws of God If the pure in heart * Mat. 5.8 only can see God here in reflections and * 1 Cor. 13.12 through a glasse darkly then surely they must be without * 2 Pet. 3.14 spot or wrinkle who must see him face to face Heaven is entailed upon holy souls 't is their birth-right for no other but * Rev. 22.14 they that keep the Commandments of God have right to eat of the Tree of life or enter in through the Gates into that Jerusalem and vision of peace 2. They inherit by right of Adoption for Christ is heir and we heirs of his righteousnesse and so co-heirs of his glory and * Rom. 8.17 h●irs of God if sons then heirs now we are the sons of God by Adoption Regeneration makes us not perfectly holy and so not perfectly sons and so not heirs and therefore we * Gal. 4.5 1 Joh. 3.1 2. receive the Adoption of sons and being called to be we are sons and if sons then heirs for if a son be passed by in his Fathers Will and not named and a reason of the passing of him by the Testament is invalid in Civil Law when ano●her is made he●r and God his nature and love transcends all the compassions of men and is a greater obligation than any Laws among them so that if thou canst make it out that thou hast the spirit of Adoption thou art as sure to inherit this Kingdome as thou mayst be sure thou art not by name excepted from the inheritance in the Gospel of Christ which is his Will and Testament 3. 'T is inherited by right of Donation and Gift * Luke 12.32 Fear not l●ttle fl●ck it is your Fathers will to give you a Kingdome and though the wages of sin be death and men are but justly rewarded therein for their demerit yet * Rom. 6.23 eternal life is the gift of God and it is not such a gift as is a salary or stipend for our work * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pay for our service for * Luke 17.10 when we have done all that we can we are but unprofitable servants and deserve nothing unlesse it be to be * Luke 12.47 beaten with many stripes It is not an honorary gift as he that had lost an Arme in Battel his Commander General gave him an Arme of gold as an honourable reward of his service but alas * Matth. 5.47 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What singular thing can we do to emerit any thing at Gods hands when the more we do we are the further from merit in regard we are the more indebted to our Master who gave us the opportunity and grace to performe it Nor is it an Eleemosynary gift of charity such as we extend to poor fellow creatures for that is but a piece of justice and self-love if we have that in abundance which others want to relieve them Every act of charity is but a piece of equity a paying of our debts for we are to * Rom. 13.8 owe every man love but God ows us nothing nor is he bound to pity our poverty which we have by our own default contracted on our selves but this gift of God is a meer * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 gratuitous act of bounty and grace but when it is promised and given then it is but an act of justice to grant possession and so the title is inheritance but by way of free Donation 4. By right of Redemption they may be said to inherit for under the Law the next of Kin was to redeem a sold or morgaged possession accordingly Christ took our nature upon him Ruth 4.5 that he might be of our consanguin●ty he became * Gal. 3 13. a curse for us * 2 Cor. 5.22 was made sin that he might ransome penitent believers from the curse and * Hebr. 7.25 having satisfied to the utmost and * 1 Cor. 6.20 bought us with a responsible price he hath right to give his sheep * John 10.28 eternal life and therefore it is cal●ed * Ephes 1.14 the purchased possession In Law he that buys a slave may dispose of him as he please by his will accordingly Christ hath made h●s will to dispose of all those he hath bought * John 17.24 Father I will that where I am these may be also And so they are heirs by Will and Testament of him that took upon him the right of Redemption Now I come to the second thing in the second general and that is the heirs of this inheritance described in these words Ye blessed * Patris est benedicere of my Father 't is the Fathers work to blesse his Son and when Isaac blessed
of since the Gospel was restored and all other helps both in publick and private should be cut off which God forbid yet this one Book next to your Bible would be a stock of Divinity which might furnish you with the knowledge of the Essentials of Religion and be like Manna to you in the Wildernesse till you come to Canaan To that end therefore that which I would with greatest seriousnesse urge upon you is to get the substance and power of the truths contained in them into your hearts and so to inculcate them especially the general heads of them upon your children and servants that they may be trained up in the knowledge of these vital principles which are of such use for the begetting and increasing of the life and power of godlinesse It will be sad if what was chiefly intended for your use should finde least fruit amongst you and that which is a common good should be not a Monument only but the aggravation of your unfruitfulnesse But I hope better things of you my dearly Beloved and things which accompany salvation though I thus speak The good Lord who hath put this price into your hand give you an heart to prize it and to improve it that you may not receive this grace of God in vain In this hope I commend you to God and to the Word of his grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctified I am Yours in the service of the Gospel THOMAS CASE The Preface to the Reader NOt to increase the number of Books already grown into a burden and more apt to distract minds with their variety than to edifie them with their Contents but for a publick testimony to the truth of the Gospel and to inform the ignorant doth this Piece crowd into the World Had many of the Brethren adhered to their own private inclination and first aime in this work these Sermons had only been published by word of mouth to the Auditory that then attended on them To write to the World is apprehended by them as a thing very distinct from preaching to a company of a few broken-hearted Christians who were willing to take this help along with them in their way to heaven and to need more exactnesse of care and preparation But upon the strong importunity of the Auditors some of them persons of great worth and honour carrying with it the face of a Call from God as valid as that which first invited them to the work they were contented against their own private inclination to yield to this way of publication for the profit of others but with these CAUTIONS First That it be signified that it was not intended to make up a Map or Compleat Body of Divine Truths but only to handle some more necessary points till Providence shall give opportunity to consider the rest Secondly That it was not designed to discusse these points in a Polemical but positive way and sutable to a popular Auditory Thirdly That it be understood that the Brethren that preached were not acquainted with one anothers studies but did every one expresse his own sense in the point recommended to him Fourthly That this be not interpreted to be the work of the whole Body of the London-Ministers but of some of them which they represent with the more tenderness Partly that the other very Reverend Brethren who were not employed in this Turn and Course of the Morning Exercise may not be charged with their weaknesses Partly because they have not without some regret observed that the larger English Annotations in which but some few only of the late Assembly together with some others had an hand are generally ascribed to the whole Assembly and usually carry the name of the Assemblies Annotations as if done by the joynt advice of that grave and learned convention Fifthly That since the preaching of these Sermons there hath been no general review but every one took care of transcribing his own Discourse and sending me the Copy accordingly I sent it to the Presse Sixthly That if any of these points seem not to be discussed according to the full latitude and worthiness of the subject it be remembred that each Exercise was to be punctually confined within the straits of an houre in which time there was no room for larger excursions Under the severity of these terms my Brethren have consented that I should if I saw fit expose their labours to publick view which I do with all chearfulnesse Partly that the world may be conscious to our Unity soundnesse in the faith and sobriety af judgement And partly expecting from thence I will say it notwithstanding the restraints their modesty hath laid upon me no small increase and return of fruit The Lord by his good Spirit guide you into all truth Yours in our Lord Jesus THOMAS CASE The particular heads in Divinity discussed in these several Sermons are these SErm I. Introduct Methodical systems of the special points of Christian Religion useful and profitable for Ministers and people Page 1. Serm. II. That there is a God p. 29. Serm. III. The Trinity proved by Scripture p. 65. Serm. IV. The Divine Authority of the Scriptures p. 85. Serm. V. Man created in an holy but mutable state p. 105. Serm. VI. The Covenant of Works p. 120. Serm. VII The fall of man or peccatum originale originans p. 134. Serm. VIII Original sin inhering or peccatum originale originatum p. 149. Serm. IX The misery of mans estate by nature p. 173. Serm. X. Mans impotency to help himself out of misery p. 202. Serm. XI The Covenant of Redemption p. 216. Serm. XII The Covenant of Grace p. 233. Serm. XIII The Mediator of the Covenant described in his Person Natures and Offices p. 261. Serm. XIV Christs Humiliation p. 258. alias 278. Serm. XV. Christs state of Exaltation p. 305. Serm. XVI The Satisfaction of Christ p. 337. Serm. XVII Of Effectual Calling p. 353. Serm. XVIII The true Believers union with Christ p. 377. Serm. XIX The nature of Justification p. 403. Serm. XX. The Believers Dignity and Duty or High Birth and Honourable Employment p. 433. Serm. XXI Saving Faith p. 455. Serm. XXII Repentance not to be repented p. 485. Serm. XXIII Of Holinesse its nature and necessity p. 554. Serm. XXIV Of the Resurrection p. 577. Serm. XXV The Day of Judgement asserted p. 605. Serm. XXVI Of Hell p. 621. Serm. XXVII Of Heaven p. 647. Serm. XXVIII The Conclusion p. 677. The INTRODUCTION 2 TIM 1.13 Hold fast the forme of sound words which thou hast heard of me in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus IT was the Character which our Lord gave of Iohn the Baptist He was a burning and a shining light Such should every Minister of the Gospel be shining with light and burning with zeal Joh. 5.25 he should have an head full of truth that he may disseminate and scatter beams of
Gospel-knowledge into the dark world and an heart full of love to that truth which he holds forth to others that what he publisheth with his lips he may be ready to witnesse with his life and to seale up the testimony of Jesus with his dearest blood Both these our Apostle in this Chapter after a passionate salutation in the five first verses commendeth to Timothy scil 1. To look to his light by stirring up the gift of God that was in him Timothy must not suffer his gifts to lie sleeping under the ashes but must blow them up as the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ignem sopitum suscitare word signifieth into a fire by study prayer and execrise 2. He calls upon Timothy to look to his zeal that that may not be extinguished but that his heat may be equal with his light And this he doth two ways 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively Ver. 8. 1. Negatively Be not ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor of me his Prisoner Ministers of the Gospel must neither be a shame to the Gospel nor ashamed of the Gospel no although attended with disgrace and persecution from the reprobate world And what herein he commends to Timothy he first practised in his own person ver 11. Though he was a prisoner for the Gospel yet he was not ashamed of the Gospel I suffer c. neverthelesse I am not ashamed Rom. 1.16 2. Affirmatively The Apostle exhorteth Timothy to prepare for persecution Ver. 8. Be thou partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel The Ministers of the Gospel should be so farre from being scandalized at the sufferings of their leaders that they should be always disciplining themselves for the same warfare to preach the Cross of Christ and to be ready also to bear the Crosse makes a compleat Minister of the Gospel This the Apostle urgeth upon a three-fold account 1. A good Cause 2. Good Company 3. A good Captain Timothy and other Evangelists they have no reason to be afraid or asham'd of their sufferings for 1. They have a good Cause ver 12. For the which cause I suffer what Cause is that why the Gospel ver 10. And this he presents under a twofold commendation 1. The glory of the Gospel 2. The manifestation of that glory Ephes 3.8 1. The glory of the Gospel As having wrapt up in it the unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ grace and glory holinesse and happinesse He hath saved us and called us with an holy calling Believers have begun their everlasting salvation on this side heaven 2. The manifestation of that glory It was given from eternity but it is revealed by the appearance of our Lord and Saviour in the flesh it lay hid in Gods purpose but it is brought to light in the Gospel ver 9.10 Such a glorious gift and so gloriously unveiled is worth not only our sweat but our blood not pains only but persecution yea to suffer in such a cause is not more our duty than it is our dignity 2. They have good company Saint Paul himself is in the Van of them who though an Apostle by extraordinary missi n and commission ver 11. yet was not only a Preacher of the Gospel but a Sufferer for the Gospel ver 12. For which cause I suffer these things what things scil Imprisonment and affliction ver 8. A sufferer and yet not ashamed of his sufferings Neverthelesse I am not ashamed They may be ashamed of their sufferings Causa facit Martyrem non poena 1 Pet. 4.15 that suffer for sinne but sufferings for Christ and his Gospel are matter of triumph and rejoycing 1 Pet. 4.13 16. Here is encouragement for Gospel-sufferers And Thirdly They have a good Captain Iesus Christ the Captain of our salvation Who that he might intender his own heart towards his suffering-followers by his own experience was made perfect through sufferings and accordingly he is very tender of and faithful to all that endure persecution for his sake Heb. 2.10 this was a ground of the Apostle his confidence I am not ashamed for I know whom I have believed I know him by report and I know him by experience I know his faithfulnesse and I know his All-sufficiency I have deposited my liberty my life my body my soul my all in his custody and I am perswaded as he is able so he is willing to keep all safe to his glorious appearance I may be a loser for Christ I shall be no loser by him whatever I lay down now I shall take up again one day with the advantage of immortality he will keep the trust I have committed to him it is but equity that I should keep the trust which he hath committed to me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 14. 1 Tim. 1.11 even the glorious Gospel of the blessed God committed to my trust committed to me upon those very termes that I should not only publish it with my lips but attest it with my blood Thus in his own person the Apostle sets Timothy and his Successors a Copy and an Encouragement which he windeth up in the words of my Text the sum of the Precahers duty Hold fast the forme of sound words c. q. d. The premises considered let neither pleasures nor persecution the love of life nor the fear of death take thee off from a faithful and vigorous discharge of thy Ministerial office but whatsoever it may cost thee Hold fast the form of sound doctrine c. Briefly for the opening of the words The form 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek it signifies a Module or Platforme a Frame of words or things methodically disposed as Printers set and compose their Characters or Letters in a Table Types Words By words we are to understand doctrine evangelical truths the principles of Christian Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sound And they are called Sound words either from the intrinsecal nature when they are purely taught and delivered Evangelical truths without mixture the principles of Religion in their native purity and simplicity Truth and nothing else but truth Or else sound words from their effect and operation because they be of an healing vertue and influence like the waters in Ezekiels vision that issued out from under the * Ezek. 47.1 threshold of the Sanctuary which * Ver. 9. healed wherever they came Which thou hast heard of me It may be understood of the whole Platforme of Gospel-doctrine in general Or Else very probably of a Collection of some principal points of Religion which the Apostle had methodically digested and either preached in Timothy his hearing or drawn up in writing and committed to Timothy as a trust and treasure not only for his own help and direction in preaching but to transmit over to others for the use and benefit of succeeding generations in the Church of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 6.20 so called
a determinate object Religion will fail and vanish this belief is general and speculative Secondly An assent to his bounty that he will blesse those who diligently seek him this is particular and applicative and it follows from the other for the notion of a Benefactour is included in that of a God take away his rewards you ungod him Now the stedfast acknowledgement of this can only draw the soul to perform ingenuous and acceptable service for the naked contemplation of those amiable excellencies which are in the Deity can never conquer our natural feare nor quench our enmity against him the reflection upon his righteousnesse and our guilt fills us with terrour and causes a dreadful flight from him but the hope of his remunerating goodnesse is a motive agreeable and congruous to the brest of a man and sweetly leads him to God Religion is the submission of our selves to God with an expectation of reward I shall Treat of the first Branch of the argument He that comes to God must believe that he is The firm belief of Gods being is the foundation of all Religious worship in the discussing of which my design is to evince that Supreme Truth that God is The ev●dence of this will appear to the light of reason and fai●h by an appeal to nature and Scriptures I shall produce three Arguments from nature which may convince an Infidel there is a God The first is drawn from the visible world The second from natural conscience The third from the consent of Nations First in the Creation his essence and Attributes are clearly revealed his absolute power unerring wisdome and infinite goodnesse are discovered to every capacity therefore the Apostle urges this as the most proper Argument to convince the Heathens Acts 14.15 that they should urn from their vanities to the living God which made heaven and earth and sea and all things that are therein to this they must naturally assent as shadows represent the figure of those bodyes from whence they are derived so in the world there are such traces of the Divine perfections that it is easie to inferre there is a Soveraign being which is the cause of it all the creatures and their various excellencies are as so many beams which reflect upon this Sun or lines which direct to this Centre nay the meanest being carries some impression of the first cause as the image of a Prince is stampt upon a penny as well as upon greater mony the beasts will instruct and the mute fishes teach the Atheist there is a God and though he is not discerned by the outward sight yet the understanding will as certainly discover him as it doth an invisible spirit in a living body and that 1. From the being of the world and its parts it is apparent to sense and acknowledged by all that some things are of a late beginning but those things could not proceed from themselves for then they should work before they were and the same things should exist and not exist at the same instant and in the same respect but this implies a contradiction it follows then they had their Original from without we finde the experience of this in our selves the number of our dayes declares there was a time in which we had no being and therefore we could not produce our selves Now if man which is the most perfect of visible creatures presuppose a Maker then may we sufficiently inferre a Creation where we finde far lesse perfection and this is true not only of things which are visible but of all other beings till at last we arrive at the Supreme cause whose being is necessary and independent Besides if we consider that from nothing he hath produced their beings and so united those two distant extreams of being and not being we may infer his power to be infinite the greatest difference imaginable between two finite beings admits of some proportion and measure but between that which is and that which is not the distance exceeds all apprehension so that from the meer existence of things it is evident that there is a first cause which is independent and infinite and this is God 2. We may certainly argue the being of God from the consent of parts in the world and their perpetual confederations to support the whole Confusion is the effect of chance but order is the product of Art and industry when we consider in a Watch how the different wheels by their unequal motions agree in distinguishing the houres and with that exactnesse as if they were inspired by the same intelligence we presently conclude it to be the work of an Artificer for certainly pieces of Brass could never have formed and united themselves in that method proportionably when we view the Harmony of all things in the world and how disagreeing natures conspire together for the advantage of the whole we may collect there is a Divine Spirit which hath thus disposed all things we will not make a curious enquiry into this an eminent decree of knowledge in several faculties would but imperfectly discover the proportion and measures which the eternal minde hath observed in the frame of nature it will suffice to glance at those which are exposed to the view of all The Sun which is the eye and soul of the world in its situation and motion is a sign to us there is wisdome and counsel in its Authour it 's fixt in the midst of the Planets that it may dispense its light and heat for the advantage of the lower world Quid potest esse tam apertum tamque perspicuum cum coelum suspeximus caelestiaque contemplati sumus quam aliquod esse numen praestantissimae mentis quo haec regantur Tull. in secundo de natura deorum c. lib 2. de divinatione esse praestantem aliquam aeternamque naturam eam suspiciendam adorandam que hominum generi pulchritudo mundi o●doque rerum coelestium cogit confiteri if it were plac't in a higher or lower Orb the jarring Elements which by its influence are kept in an equal poise and proportion would break forth into disorders and those invisible chaines and connexions which fasten the parts of nature would presently be broken the regularity and constancy of its motion discovers a Deity by its course from East to West it causes the agreeable vicissitude of day and night and maintains the amiable war of light and darkness this distinction of time is necessary for the pleasure and profit of the world the Sun by its rising chases away the shades of the night to delight us with the beauties of the Creation 't is Gods Herald which calls us forth to the discharge of our work Psa 104.22 23. this governes our labours and conducts our industry this animates nature and conveys a pleasure even to these beings which are insensible without the day the world would be a fatal and disconsolate grave to all creatures a Chaos without order action or
God grounded upon the perswasion of his glorious being and the goodnesse of his nature which is not terrible to them but when they consider his mercy is a holy mercy and that it is never dispenc't to the prejudice of his justice though they cannot hate God for his goodnesse directly yet they hate him with it for although he is the perfection of beauty and goodnesse it self yet they being evil there is no congruity or conveniency between God and them they love sin and hate punishment Now God as Author legis by the most strict Laws forbids sin and as ultor peccati inflicts severe punishments from hence it proceeds the most lovely and sweet Attributes of God cannot endear him to them no more than the natural or moral excellencies of a Judge the comelinesse of his person or his wisdome and knowledge can draw forth the love of a Malefactor when he is condemned by him Moreover since the general nature of sin is an eternal contrariety to the nature and will of God the love of it must needs argue the hatred of God for as the Lord Jesus requires an universal chearful and constant obedience as the most clear evidence of love to him if you love me keep my Commandments So the Argument will be as strong to conclude backward If you keep not Gods Commandments you hate him to live in the practice of known sinnes is a vertual and interpretative hatred of God 2. The benefits which God bestows upon us deserve our love How great an endearment did he passe upon us in our Creation we might have been admitted into the lowest form of Creatures and have only enjoyed the life of flies or worms but he made us little lower than the Angels and Crowned us with glory and honour and gave us dominion over all the works of his hands Psal 8.5 Whereas the rest of the Creatures were the acts of his power the Creation of man was an act of power and wisdome in all the rest there was nothing but he spake the word and they were made Psal 148.5 But in the making of man there was a consultation about it Gen. 1. Let us make man he framed our bodies so that all the parts conspire for the ornament and service of the whole Psal 139.15 Thine eye did see my substance being yet imperfect and in thy book were all my members written and therefore Lactantius said truly hominem non patrem esse sed generandi Ministrum man is only the instrument which the Lord doth use for the effecting of his purpose to raise the beautiful Fabrick of mans body Now if we are obliged to expresse the dearest love to our Parents with how much greater reason should we love God who is the fountain of all our beings He hath breathed into man a spiritual immortal rational soul which is more worth than the whole World this is in some sort a spark and ray of Divine brightnesse 't is capable of Gods Image 't is a fit Companion for Angels to joyne with them in the praises of God and enjoy a blessed eternity with them 'T is capable of communion with God himself who is the fountain of life and happinesse The soul is endowed with those faculties which being terminated upon God it enjoys an infinite and everlasting blessednesse The understanding by knowledge rests in God as the first and highest in genere veri the will by love embraces him as the last and greatest in genere boni and so receives perfection and satisfaction which is the incommunicable priviledge of the rational soul Beasts can only converse with drossy and material objects they are confined to earthly things but the soul of man may enjoy the possession and fruition of God who is the Supreme and Soveraign good Now this should inflame our love to God he formed our bodies he inspired our souls Moreover if we consider our lives we shall finde a chain of mercy which reaches from one end to the other of them How many Miracles of Providence do we enjoy in our preservation how many unseen dangers do we escape how great are our daily supplies The provisions we receive do serve not only for necessity but for delight every day we have the provisions of meat and drink not only to cure hunger and all our thirst but to refresh the heart and to make us chearful in our work every houre is filled up with the bounties of God Now what shall we render to the Lord for all his benefits he desires our love this is the most proper return we can make for love is of an opening and expansive quality calling forth the heart our love within should break forth to close with Gods love without the love of obedience in us with the love of favour and bounty in him 'T is a principle of nature deeply implanted in the hearts of men to return love for love nay the very Beasts are not deficient in this Esay 1.3 The Oxe knows his Owner and the Asse his Masters Crib Those Creatures which are of all the most stupid and heavy respect their Feeders and expresse dumb signs of love unto them How much more should we love God who spreads our Table fills our Cup and causes his Sun to shine and his Rain to fall on us 'T is an Argument of Secret Atheisme in the heart that in the confluence of mercies we enjoy we do not look up to the Author of them as if common mercies were the effects of Chance and not of Providence if a man constantly relieves our wants we judge it the most barbarous disingenuity not to repay love to him but God loads us with his benefits every day his wisdome is always busied to serve his mercy and his mercy to serve our necessities but we are insensible and unaffected and yet the meanest mercy as it comes from God hath an excellency stamp't upon it We should upbraid our souls for our coldnesse to God everywhere we encounter sensible demonstrations of his love to us in every moment of our lives we have some pledges of his goodnesse Let us light our Torch at this Mountain of fire let the renewed act of his bounty constrain us to love him we should love him for his excellency though we had no benefit by him nay though he hated us we are bound to love him as he is truly amiable in himself how much more when he draws us with the cords of a man with bands of love whosoever requites the love of God with hatred as every impenitent sinner doth puts off the nature of man and degenerates into a Divel 2. Fear this is that eternal respect which is due to our Creator an humble reverence we owe to him as he is infinitely above us the holy Angels cover their faces when they have the clearest views of his glory Esay 6.1 2 3. The Lord is represented as sitting on a Throne and the Seraphims stood about each having six wings with twain he covered his
Secondly his Omnipotency can secure us from dangers The Creation is a standing Monument of his Almighty Power for what but Omnipotency could out of nothing produce the beautiful Fabrick of heaven and earth man cannot work without materials but God doth and that which exalts his power is that he made it by his Word he spake the Word and they were made saith the Psalmist Psal 33.9 There went no greater pains to the Worlds Creation than Gods command Moreover the World is preserved from perishing by the power of its Maker Certainly without the support of his mighty hand the World had long before this time relapfed to its primitive nothing Many instances we have of his power in those miraculous deliverances which he hath shewn to his people in their extremity sometimes by suspension of the Works of Nature his dividing the Red Sea and making it as a solid Wall that the Israelites might have a secure passage his stopping the Sun in its course that Joshua might have time to destroy his enemies his suspending the nature of the fire that it might not so much as singe the garments of the three Hebrews his shutting the mouth of the devouring Lyons and r turning Daniel in safety from that dreadful Den And are not all these and many others of this kind not only the pregnant testimonies of his love but the everlasting Characters of his Omnipotency Moreover that which expresses the power of God with as great a lustre is the turning of the hearts of many cruel enemies from their intended rage to favour his people thus did he change the heart of Esau who had resolved the death of his brother that instead of killing him he exprest the greatest tendernesse and the most endearing affections to him thus did he so sway the hearts of the Egyptians towards the oppressed Israelites that instead of securing them under bondage they encouraged their departure by enriching them with jewels of silver and of gold Exod. 12.35 Now our duty is to glorifie this power of God by placing our trust on him Psal 121.2 3. My help comes from the Lord who made the heavens and the earth he will not suffer thy foot to be moved by dependance on God the soul is composed in the midst of the most apparent dangers as the upper Region of the Aire is calme and serene whatever stormes are here below thus David expresses the same courage in all Estates when he was retired into a Cave to shelter himself from the fury of Saul he sung the 57. Psal which he then composed My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed Psal 57.7 I will sing and give praise and afterwards when he triumphed over Hadadezer the King of Zebah he composed the hundred and eighth Psalme and sung the same words O God Psal 108.1 my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise i● faith taught him the same song in the Cave and on the Throne in all our exigencies we should apply the power of God the cause of our perplexing fears is our low apprehension of Gods power and therefore when we are surrounded with difficulties and dangers then we are surprised with terror and dispondency whereas when there are visible means to rescue us we lift up our heads but our duty is in the greatest extremities to glorifie his power and to refer our selves to his goodnesse and though we cannot be certain that God will by miracles rescue us from dangers as he did many of his people in former Ages yet we are sure he will so abate the power and force of the most injurious enemies as they shall not conquer the patience nor break the hope of his people 4. We owe perfect obedience to Gods will vid. Subjection to his Commands and submission to his Providence 1. Subjection to his Commands As he is the first cause so he is the Supreme Lord he that gave us life must give us law God hath an absolute title to our service as Creator this made the Psalmist desire the knowledge of Gods Commandments in order to his obedience Psal 119.73 Thy hands have made me and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandments he may learn this from the universal obedience of all creatures those which are without reason sense or life inviolably observe his commands Esay 48.13 Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath span'd the heavens when I call to them they stand up together as prepared to execute his commands The insensible parts of the World are so compliant with his will as to contradict their proper natures to serve his glory fire descends from heaven at his command the fluid Sea stands up as a solid wall in obedience to him this upbraids our Degeneration and Apostasie that we who are most indebted to the goodnesse of our Creator should prove disloyal and rebellious when the inferiour creatures with one consent serve and glorifie him Lastly we owe submission to the will of his Providence there is no shadow of exception can be formed ag●i●●t his Sovereignty he may do by right whatever he can do by power therefore we should acquiesce in his dispensations this consideration silenc't David Psal 39.9 I held my tongue and said nothing because thou didst it as the presence of a grave person in authority quiets a disordered multitude so the apprehension of Gods supremacy composes our riotous thoughts and passions unquietnesse of spirit in troubles springs from the ignorance of God and of our selves by impatience we cite God before our Tribunal and do as it were usurp his Throne we set up an antiprovidence as if his wisdome should be taught by our folly and sometimes in afflictions we eye the next cause but do not look upward to the Soveraign Disposer of all things l ke Balaam who struck the Asse but did not see the Angel which opposed him thus from a brutish imagination we regard the visible instrument of our trouble but consider not the Providence of God in all from hence it is that our spirits are full of unquiet agitations we live continually upon self-created Racks Now the humble acknowledgement of Gods hand and the submitting of our selves to his will as it glorifies God so it gives ease to us as there is the greatest equity so policy in our willing stooping to him Rom. 14.11 As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God he engages his life and honor for this if there is not a voluntary there must be a violent subjection to him the wilful man never wants woe the spring of our daily misery as well as our sins is opposition to Gods will but the chearful resignation to his Providence what a blessed pill of rest is this to the soul what a Sabbath from all those sinful and penal disturbances which discompose our spirits 't is a lower heaven for as in the state of glory
giving of the Law on Mount Sinai and yet there he speaks in the singular number Exod. 20.2 Exod. 20.2 I am the Lord thy God which have brought thee out of the Land of Egypt out of the house of bondage 3. 'T is likely the Princes did at first speak in the plural number not to note their power and greatnesse but their modesty and warinesse that it was not their design to rule according to will but according to counsel that they were willing to advise with others and to be guided by others The wisest Kings on earth will have their counsel and it is no more than needs plus vident oculi quam oculus many eyes see more than one eye Eph. 1.11 but Gods Counsel is his Will Who worketh all things after the counsel of his own Will Nor indeed is it safe or fit for any to govern arbitrarily or purely by will but he whose Will is his counsel it is so far from needing a rule that it is the only Rule Isa 63.7 8 9 10. 2. As a plurality of persons so a Trinity of persons may be proved out of the old Testament I shall mention and only mention for brievity sake one place in the Prophecy of Isaiah in the seventh verse you have mention made of Jehovah or the Lord in the ninth verse of Jesus Christ called the Angel of his presence in the tenth verse of the holy Spirit but they rebelled and vexed his holy Spirit 2. You have this doctrine more clearly delivered in the new Testament as will appear by several instances Mat. 3.16 17. 1. At the Baptisme of Christ the Trinity of persons were clearly discovered you may read the history And Jesus when he was baptized went up strait way out of the water and lo the heavens were opened unto him and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting upon him and lo a voyce from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased Consider here 1. We have three names given severally and particularly to three persons 1. He who spake with a voice from heaven was the Father 2. He who was Baptized in Jordan is called the Son 3. He who descended in the shape of a Dove is called the Spirit of God 2. There were three outward signes or symboles by which those three persons did manifest themselves 1. The Father by an audible voice the Word in heaven is borne witnesse to by a word from heaven 2. The Son in the humane nature 3. The holy Ghost in the shape of a Dove 3. They are described by three distinct actions 1. The one cries by a voice from heaven This is my well-beloved Sonne heare him this could not be the voice of the Sonne for then he would be Sonne to himself nor can this be attributed unto the Spirit for then Jesus would have been the son of the Spirit 2. The second after his Baptisme prayes Luke 3.21 It came to pass that Jesus being baptized and praying the heaven was opened 3. The third descended in the shape of a dove and rested upon Jesus Christ Now to close this particular why might it not be said that the Father was baptized in Jordan as well as the Sonne or that the Father descended in the shape of a dove as well as the Spirit or that the Sonne did all this speak with a voice from heaven and was baptized in Jordan and descended in the shape of a dove if this were not a truth that there are three persons in the divine essence hence the primitive Christians used to say unto any one that doubted of the Trinity abi ad Jordanem videbis go to Jordan and you will see a Trinity 2. This doctrine may be proved from the institution of the Ordinance of Baptisme Go ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them in the Name of the Father and of the Sonne Mat. 28.19 and of the Holy Ghost and indeed no wonder if God discovered himself to be three persons and one God at Christs Baptisme when the name of the blessed Trinity is as it were in faire and legible Characters writ upon the forehead of the Ordinance of Baptisme its self Baptisme its self is as it were baptized in the Name of the Father Sonne and holy Ghost now these I call the words of institution for although you have not here the first institution of Baptisme John the Baptist who was called so from this very Ordinance administring this Sacrament and the Disciples questionlesse from the Command of Christ himself the Evangelist John tells us that Jesus himself baptized not Joh. 4.2 but his Disciples yet here you have a solemn command for baptisme and the forme of the administration thereof unto all generations And here consider 1. Christ commands them to baptize not in the names but in the Name of the Father Son and holy Ghost if you consider them personally so they have three names Father Son and holy Ghost if essentially then but one name unum nomen una deitas one God one deity and I observe farther that which way soever we expound this phrase in the name either calling upon the name of the Father Son and holy Ghost as some or in the name by the authority or at the appointment of God the Father Son and holy Ghost as others or in the name viz. for the service honour and glory of God the Father Son and holy Ghost as a third sort you must either make these to be three Gods or else three persons in the Godhead for who is the object of our prayers but God who hath authority to appoint Ordinances for his Church but God whom are we to serve and worship but God alone Thou shalt worship the Lord thy God Mat. 4.10 and him only shalt thou serve 2. They were to baptize not in the name of the Father by the Son or by the Spirit but in the name of the Father Sonne and Spirit which notes the equality of the three persons 3. Father Son and holy Ghost are so joyned together that we are no lesse baptized in the name of the Sonne and of the Spirit than of the Father and therefore their deity is the same their power and authority the same 4. An Article is thrice prefixed and added to every one baptizate in nomine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Father that Son that holy Ghost that Father whose voice you have heard from heaven that Sonne whom as yet you see in the humane nature that holy Ghost whom you have seen descending upon me in the shape of a Dove Surely the repetition of this Article doth not want its singular Emphasis that Father that Sonne and that holy Ghost 3. This doctrine may yet further be cleared from that saying of our Saviour John 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter hence is plainly proved the personality of the Holy Ghost he is
should be rewardable and punishable accordingly in a state that should be everlasting and unchangeable The liberty therefore of the Viators and the Comprehensors Gibieuf well distinguishes into inchoata or consummabilis Gibieuf de libertate Dei creatur ae and perfecta or consummata the former such as Adams was at his Creation the latter such as is the state of Angels and Saints in glory and as his would have been had he held out and persisted innocent through the intended time of tryal It was therefore no strange thing that man should be created defectible 't was as little strange that a defectible creature should deficere For the manner of that defection whether errour of the understanding preceded or inconsideration only and a neglect of its office with the great difficulties some imagine herein I wave discourse about them judging that advice good and sober for to consider how sinne may be gotten out of the world then how it came in Though 't is most probable there was in the instant of temptation a meere suspension of the understandings act not as previous to the sinne but as a part of it and thereupon a sudden precipitation of will Estius in scil as Estius doth well determine 6. Man being created mutable as to his holinesse must needs be so as to his happinesse too And that both upon a legal account for the Law had determined that if he did sinne he must dye and also upon a natural for it was not possible that his soul being once depraved by sinne the powers of it vitiated their order each to other and towards their objects broken and interrupted there should remaine a disposition and aptitude to converse with the highest good The Use follows which shall be only in certain practical Inferences that will issue from these truths partly considered singly and severally partly together and in conjunction From the first 1. Did God create man upright as hath been shewn then how little reason had man to sinne how little reason had he to desert God to be weary of his first estate Could Gods making him his making him upright be a reason why he should sinne against him was his directing his heart and the natural course of his affections towards himself a reason why he should forsake him what was there in his state that should make it grievous to him was his duty too much for him God made him upright so that every part of it was connatural to him was his priviledge too little he knew and loved and enjoyed the highest and infinite good O think then how unreasonable and disingenuous a thing sin was that a creature that was nothing but a few houres ago now a reasonable being capable of God! yet sin Urge your hearts with this we are too apt to think our selves unconcerned in Adams sin we look upon our selves too abstractly we should remember we are Members of a Community and it should be grievous to us to think that our species hath dealt so unkindly and unworthily with God and besides do not we sinne daily after the similitude of Adams transgression and is not sin as unreasonable and unjust a thing as ever 2. Was our primitive state so good and happy how justly may we reflect and look back towards our first state how fitly might we take up Jobs words Job 29.2 4 5 14 20. O that I were as in months past As in the dayes of my youth When the Almighty was yet with me When I put on righteousnesse and it cloathed me When my glory was fresh in me c. With what sadnesse may we call to minde the things that are past and the beginnings of Ancient time when there was no stain upon our natures no cloud upon our minds no pollution upon our hearts when with pure and undefiled souls we could embrace and rest and rejoyce in the eternal and incomprehensible good when we remember these things do not our bowels turn are not our souls poured out within us From the second 1. Did man so voluntarily ruine himself how unlikely is he now to be his own saviour he that was a self-destroyer from the beginning that ruined himself as soon as God had made him is he likely now to save himself is it easier for him to recover his station than to have kept it or hath he improved himself by sinning and gain'd strength by his fall for a more difficult undertaking is he grown better natur'd towards himself and his God than he was at first 2. How little reason hath he to blame God though he finally perish what would he have had God to have done more to prevent it he gave his Law to direct him his threatning to warn him his promise for his encouragement was evidently implyed his nature was sufficiently disposed to improve and comport with all these yet he sins is God to be charg'd with this sins upon no necessity with no pretence but that he must be seeking out inventions trying experiments assaying to better his state as plainly despising the Law suspecting the truth envying the greatnesse asserting and aspiring to the Soveraignty and Godhead of his Maker Had we any of us a minde to contend with God about this matter how would we order our cause how would we state our quarrel if we complain that we should be condemn'd and ruin'd all in one man that is to complain that we are Adams children A childe might as well complain that he is the sonne of a Beggar or a Traytor and charge it as injustice upon the Prince or Law of the Land that he is not born to a Patrimony this is a misery to him but no man will say it is a wrong And can it be said we are wrong'd by the common Ruler of the world that we do not inherit from our father the righteousnesse and felicity we had wilfully lost long before we were his children If we think it hard we should be tyed to termes we never consented to Might not an heire as well quarrel with the Magistrate that he suffers him to become liable to his fathers debts and to lie in prison if he have not to pay But besides who can imagine but we should have consented had all man-kind been at that time existent in innocency together i. e. Let the case be stated thus suppose Adam our common Parent to have had all his children together with him before the Lord while the Covenant of Works was not as yet made and while as yet God was not under any engagment to the children of men Let it be supposed that he did propound it to the whole race of man-kind together that he would capitulate with their common Parent on their behalf according to the termes of that first Covenant if he stood they should stand if he fall they must all fall with him Let it be considered that if this had not been consented to God might without the least colour of exception being
thereof thou shalt surely dye 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hebr. Dying thou shalt dye THe next head in the body of our Religion which falls this Morning to be spoken to in Course is Gods Covenant made with Adam before the fall which we call a Covenant of Works and we ground our Discourse upon the Text read to you When God would communicate his goodnesse to the creatures he made the world out of nothing for his own glory but especially man after his Image this inferiour world he provided for mans house and habitation but he dresseth and trimmeth one part for him especially and calls it Paradise In the Paradise or pleasant Garden he was not to live idly but must dresse and keep it In the midst of all mans enjoyments which the Lord allows him with a liberal hand yet he lets him know withall he was under subjection though Lord of all and therefore gives him a command obsequii examen obedientiae quoddam rudimentum Calvin a test and tryal of his obedience to which God trains him up As Lords when they let out their Lands to Husbandmen reserve somewhat to themselves which the Tenants are not to meddle with that they may have some check upon them Muscul so God here That which the Lord commands Adam was no hard matter he grants him a vast latitude to eat of all freely Oecol only one sort excepted in which exception as God was not envious to him as the Envious One suggested so was not this Commandment grievous to him Object It may be objected from 1 Tim. 1.9 The Law is not made for a righteous man why then for Adam in his righteousnesse Resol Paul means good men do not so need the Law as bad men do for good Laws rose from evil manners yet in a sense the Law is given for righteous men not to justifie them for it finds them justified already and past the condemnation of the Law it finding them also sanctified Beza it treats them not as enemies but leads them and delights them consenting to it This serves to explode the errour of Antinomians and Libertines so then God to declare his Soveraignty and mans subjection gave Adam though innocent a Law Mark how God bound mans obedience with a double fence first he fenced him with a free indulgence to eat of all but one this was an Argument to his ingenuity secondly by a severe prohibition upon pain of death by the first the Lord wooes him by love by the second he frights him by the terrour of his justice and bids him touch it if he durst Observe among all the Trees of the Garden there are two here mentioned in a more peculiar manner the Tree of life and the Tree of knowledge which are called by Divines two Sacraments in a large sense in which sense also the Ark of Noah the fire which descended and burn't the Sacrifice Polanius the Baptisme of the Red Sea and Cloud the Manna the water out of the Rock the pouring out of the blood of the Sacrifices the Land of Canaan the Tabernacle Temple Ark of the Testimony the propitiatory the golden Candlestick the twelve stones taken out of Jordan with the pool of Bethesda all these I say in a large sense are Sacramental Symbols of the Covenant of Grace or extraordinary Sacraments but the Tree of knowledge and Tree of life are called Sacraments of the Covenant of works By these the Lord did signifie and seal to our first Parents that they should alwayes enjoy that happy state of life in which they were made upon condition of obedience to his Commandments i. e. in eating of the Tree of life and not eating of the Tree of knowledge For it was called the Tree of life not because of any native property and peculiar vertue it had in it self to convey life but Symbolically Morally and Sacramentally it was a sign and obsignation to them of life natural and spiritual to be continued to them as long as they continued in obedience unto God Aug. In like manner the Tree of knowledge of good and evil was spoken from the sad event and experience they had of it as Sampson had of God departed from him when he left his Nazaritish haire by Dalilah Now that a Covenant of Works lay in this Commandment is clear 1. Because that was the condition of mans standing and life as it is expresly declared 2. Because in the breach of that Commandment given him he lost all This obedience as it was Characteristical to Adams Covenant and Contradistinguished to the Covenant of Grace was perfect personal and perpetual In a sense though different from the other those three things are required in our obedience under the Covenant of Grace not in reference to the Covenant nor to justification neither is our personal righteousnesse perfect I mean legally yet is it perfect though not in us but in our surety neither was the Covenant made primarily with us but with him and with us in him and on his account even as God made the Covenant of Works primarily with Adam and with us in him as our head inclusively Now for our better opening this doctrine to you I shall propound and answer some questions 1. What is meant by Covenant 2. What ground we have to call it Adams Covenant or a Covenant of Works 3. Wherein doth the Nature and Tenour of it consist 4. Whether the Covenant of Works was revived and repeated to Israel 5. How long it lasted whither till now unto any Quest 1. What is meant by Covenant name and thing Answ The word in the Hebrew is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith which hath a threefold derivation very fit to be taken notice of for clearing of the nature of the Covenant 1. From Barah to choose because the persons are chosen between whom the Covenant or Agreement is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Indeed Gods Covenant with man is not only with his elect and chosen ones but a fruit and effect of our election yea the Lord doth encline our wills to make choice of him and of his terms I have made a Covenant with my chosen so again Choose you whom ye will serve ye are witnesses against your selves this day Psal 89.3 Josh 24.15 22 that you have chosen the Lord. 2. Or else this word Berith Covenant may be taken from Barah to eat Illyricus because they were wont to eat together of the Sacrifice slain and provided at the making of the Covenant at which time they had a Feast hence the Apostle speaking of the Eucharist the signe and seal of the Covenant and which is a spiritual Food and Feast upon a Covenant account saith This Cup is the New Testament or New Covenant in my blood 1 Cor. 11.25 3. Or from Bathar to cut and divide asunder 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by transposing a letter for so the sacrifice was divided and the Covenanting parties were to passe
Demon. 1 1. Ratione faederis by the reason of the Covenant of Works which God made with Adam we were in him all of us legally when God first made a Covenant with man it was not with Adam ratione individui as an individual person sed ratione ●aturae as he bore our nature with him as the representative of man-kind God makes his Covenant with Christ as Head and Mediatour of his Church with Abraham as the father of the faithful with Adam as the stock of man-kind Isa 53.11 Psal 40.8 we were in him parties in the Covenant and had interest in the mercy which should accompany the keeping of it and were liable to the curse which should follow the breach of it Now Adam violating the Covenant the guilt of that violation descends upon all his posterity Rom. 5.19 Constituti sunt peccatores 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chry. they were constituted sinners It is to be noted that God never makes a Covenant with a single person personally and individually that all others are unconcerned in it but with whomsoever God enters into Covenant that person is a representative of others and is to be looked upon as a publick person otherwise God should make as many Covenants as there are persons which is the greatest absurdity to assert and so in Covenanting with Adam he looked on him as the stock and root of mankind Arg. 2 2. Ratione Collationis The Apostle in two places makes a remarkable comparison between Adam and Christ the first and second Adam comparing the good of the last with the evil of the first the grace of the one with the sin of the other the life conveyed by the one with the death transmitted by the other Rom. 5.12 c. 1 Cor. 15.45 c. Now the righteousnesse of Christ redounds to believers to justification so the sin of Adam redounds to his posterity to condemnation by Adam we are cast by Christ we are cleared by Adam guilty by Christ innocent the comparison would else be wholly insignificant as by Christ we are made really righteous so by Adam we are made really sinners we are Princes in Christ Prisoners in Adam Crowned in Christ cursed in Adam this is is one great drift of the comparison Particle 2 2. The sin of Adam is derived to us not only by way of imputation but by way of inhaesion we receive from offending Adam Adamus genus nostrum tabificavit Aug. vitiositatem libidinem morbidum affectum a vitiosity lusting and a contagious distemper we receive not only a defect of holiness but deordination pravity evil disposition propension to mischief Ephes 4.22 John 3.6 Jam. 3.15 Col. 3.5 aversion to all good this sometimes the Scripture calls the Old man the flesh divelish wisdome the hell that sets the whole course of nature on fire earthly members And that Adams sin is propagated to us by way of inhaesion is likewise demonstrable by a double evidence Arg. 1 1. From the confession of some of the best of Gods Saints Psal 51.5 The soul of David was no sooner united to his body than sin was united to both he had not only a Crown of gold but grace he was not only a King after mans desire but a Saint after Gods heart 1 Sam. 13.24 yet this sinful leprosie he drew from Adam this Original staine clave to him he was a sinner in the womb though a Prince in the Throne and a Saint in the Sanctuary And so Paul that excellent Apostle how doth he moan this inward spot which he drew from Adam how doth he complain of indwelling sin Rom. 7.17 of an evil within him verse 19. of a law of his members verse 23. These groans of such eminent Saints are too pregnant an argument that the sin of Adam transmitted to us doth not only cast guilt on our persons but filth on our natures lay a charge to us but throw a stain upon us Arg. 2 2. As Christ doth not only vouchsafe believers imputed but infused righteousnesse the merit of his obedience but the graces of his Spirit to justifie but to renew and sanctifie us 1 Cor. 1.30 so the first Adam not only conveighs guilt to condemn but filth to defile us else the work of sanctification would be wholly unnecessary and the comparison between the first and second Adam would be maimed and imperfect Christ makes us heavenly as well as pronounceth us heavenly and Adam makes us earthly as well as leaves us to the punishment of those that are so The full comparison between the first and second Adam speaks this clearly Adam had sin to defile Rev. 1.5 Christus valnera sanarit quae Adamus portavit Cypr. and therefore Christ had blood to wash Here may that observable passage of Austin come in Vidi ego zelantem puerum c. I have seen saith Augustin a child with his eye full of envy venting his malice c. Whence comes this incurvation and waywardness of nature but from Adam happily the parents of this child were true and eminent believers so that there must be a tabes a disaffectednesse transmitted from Adam to his posterity against the opinion of Peter Lumbard and the Schoolmen 2. The second thing to be opened for the dispatching of the doctrinal part of the Text it is this To vindicate the righteousnesse of God in this transmission and conveyance And the justice of God is most glorious in this propagation of Adams sinne and this may be cleared in a double Demonstration Demon. 1 Adams sin is ours as well as his as a Learned man most elegantly Si quis peste laborans alios inficiat hi moriuntur Pet. Martyr dicitur illorum quisque non alienâ sed sua peste mortuus esse Now there is a double Argument to prove Ad●ms sin ours 1. Else God did punish us for anothers sin that fault which is not our own which is against divine justice God doth not usually strike the son for the fathers crime and make the son feel the bruise of the fathers fall that the father should merit the stroak and the posterity feel it this is against his own protestation Ezek. 18.2 2. The Antithesis between Christ and Adam would not hold if Adams was not to be reputed ours for as the righteousnesse of Christ ita communicatur membris ut quisque fidelis dicere possit illam esse suam c. as Bucan well observes is so communicated to us that every believer may say This righteousnesse is mine so the iniquity of Adam is so communicated to all his posterity that every child of Adam may sadly say This iniquity is mine and I am righteously punished for it And now therefore I say if Adams sin be ours in the guilt and stain of it let us acknowledge Gods justice in the transmission of it Demon. 2 2. Had Adam stood we expected the entaile of perfection and happinesse that the Crown should have descended to us as his issue
19. The temper or rather distemper of the body enclining often sometimes to one sometimes to another sinne which the Divel who is best seen in our constitutions makes much use of in suiting his temptations hence he frequently tempts those that are melancholy to despair and the sanguine he tempts to presume with no small disadvantage to their souls from the several inclinations of their bodies To be sure whil'st a man is or should be providing for his soul the body too often interrupts him with What shall I eat what shall I drink wherewith shall I be cloathed And if there be any fear of suffering though for Christ and his Gospel the body cryes Spare thy self this may not come unto thee c. So that with Adam by reason of sinne we need a cloathing for and may be asham'd of our very bodies Even they also should be the Temples of the Holy Ghost but are now become Cages for these unclean Birds 1 Cor. 6.19 Put but these things together and 't is too sadly apparent that this original sinne is as extensive as any thing in meer man can be A short draft of Adams image in us Aug. de Ger. ad lit cap. 24. So that in every one methinks I see another Adam if you consider the parallel you shall finde Adams image and likenesse in each of his unhappy off-spring Take it with some enlargement out of Austin 1. Adam after his fall had his understanding darkned he thought to hide himself from that God from whom nothing can be hid Gen. 3.8 And are we not thus blinde does not man promise himself more security for a secret than for an open impiety The Adulterer the Oppressor the Proud and the Envious person saith None seeth me Isa 47.10 Durst men undertake that wickednesse under the sense of Gods seeing of them which they would be asham'd of if men look'd upon them were they not thus blind 2. We finde Adam flying from Gods presence his will and affections were defiled or he could not have been averse from communion with God Being now stain'd with sin he trembles to heare him whom before it was his chiefest delight to be with all And this also sin hath brought upon the posterity of Adam they do not delight in communion with God in their hearts and lives too they forsake God We do not read that Adam after the commission of his sin did so much as once think of God till he heard the voice of the Lord walking in the garden in the cool of the day in order to the calling of him to an account for his sin and then he is afraid and flies c. So his wretched children 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seldome think of God at least seriously and as they ought till towards the end of their lives when God by the voice of some extraordinary sicknesse is a calling of them to judgement and then no wonder if they be afraid 3. I might observe a similitude we have in our bodies unto Adams sinful body but that our very cloathes as I hinted but now sufficiently evince it We have the same use and necessity of them which he by sin fell into The best apparel being but as playsters which this soare calls for howsoever too too often man makes himself proud of them Now whither these faculties of soul and body being so nearly conjoyned do corrupt and infect one another as Ivy while cleaving to the Oak draws away the sap from it and destroyes it I shall not here contend I confesse there are many difficulties concerning this subject of which we may say as of other depths in Religion with the Woman of Samaria John 4.25 When the Messias comes he will teach us all things I have been too long upon this first consideration in explaining why Original sin is called Man I must be the shorter in what follows why it is call'd Old man 1. Because it is derived from the eldest or first Adam 2. Why Original sin is called Old man for though Christ as God was from eternity yet as an Adam or common head he was the latest Man must be fallen in the one before he can be raised in the other Willet in locum 1 Cor. 15.46 2. Original sin is the Old man because corruption is first in every one Esau comes out first first that which is natural then that which is spiritual Heb. 8.13 2 Cor. 5.17 3. 'T is call'd Old because it is to be done away This old man all old things are to be done away Compare it to the new man or the work of grace and then you will say indeed There is no lovelinesse in it for which you should retain it were there not an eternity of happinesse or misery to put into the ballance vertue would out-weigh vice 4. It may be call'd Old because of its cunning and craft as old men by reason of their abundant experience are more wise and subtle than others This old man this corruption is cunning to deceive Oh what excuses does it bring for sin what pretences you have heard it hath much of Adam but know it hath somewhat of the wise and old Serpent too for it was begot betwixt them both I shall passe this first particular only with this note instead of further Application viz. Observe with Paraeus that when the Apostle calls Original sinne our old man he distinguishes it from our selves It is ours too nearly cleaving to us but it is not our selves Whence we must learn to put a difference betwixt the corruption of nature and nature it self Mans nature is from God but the corruption of mans nature is from himself And this original sinne is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 7.20 21. any substantial part of man but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle sayes of it Heb. 12.1 The sin that so easily besets us Thus at length we are come to the second particular which the Apostle uses to expresse original sinne by The second particular expressing Original sin the body of sin 't is the body of sinne And herein I have only to shew how this Original sin is a body for the other how it may be call'd sin or a body of sin will be consider'd in the third Appellation which is here bestowed upon it Now Original corruption is a body of sin Why called a body 1. In that a body though it seems never so beautiful and fair yet 't is in it self but a stinking carcasse made of base loathsome matter c. So sin and wickednesse though it may seem specious and alluring yet 't is but an abomination as Scripture in a hundred places calls it adultery covetousnesse excesse and all the parts of this body are not as they seem to be when varnished or painted over They say there is no stench comparable to that of a humane body when not salted or animated with the soul I am sure nothing so noysome as
with the strong because he had poured out his soule unto death c. This very briefly to clear up the Coherence of the words I pass over the various readings of them and also what might be spoke for the explication of them that will come in afterwards because I hasten to that which is my businesse this morning namely the opening of the Covenant of Redemption You have heard of the misery of man by Nature of the inability of man to help himself in this lost condition c. I am now to speak something to his recovery or restauration or rather to that which indeed is the foundation of his recovery and that is the Covenant here called The Covenant of Redemption By which Covenant I mean that faederal transaction that was betwixt God the Father and the Son from everlasting about the Redemption of lost and fallen man Understand me here aright I am not to speak to the Covenant of grace but to the Covenant of Redemption We make a difference betwixt these two 'T is true the Covenant of Redemption is a Covenant of grace but 't is not strictly and properly that Covenant of grace which the Scripture holds out in opposition to the Covenant of works but rather the means to it or foundation of it Amongst other things wherein these two Covenants do differ this is one they differ in the faederati for in the Covenant of Redemption the faederati are God and Christ but in the Covenant of grace the confederates are God and Believers I lay down this as my judgement with much submission because I know herein I differ from some of great repute Masculus c. Dr. Preston Mr. Rutherford Assemblyes greater Catech. whom I very much honour in the Lord. The Lord Jesus I grant is the very kernel and marrow of the Covenant of grace the Mediator of this better Covenant Heb. 12.24 the surety of this Covenant Heb. 7.22 the Testator of this Covenant Hebr. 9.16 17. The Messenger of this Covenant Mal. 3.1 All this is very clear all that I say is this that Christ is not the per●ona foederata but believers The Covenant of Grace was not made with God and Christ as a common head but 't is made with God and believers and therefore whereas the promise is said to be made to the seed and that seed is Christ Gal. 3.16 you are to take Christ there not personally but mystically as you have it taken 1 Cor. 12.12 So also is Christ I only say this to clear up my way Bulkely on the Cov. pag. 28 c. Bl●ke on the Cov. ch 6. p. 24. Baxter his Append to his Aphor p. 35 c. and therefore shall not lay down any Arguments for the confirmation of this opinion he that desires satisfaction in th is point let him peruse the Authours cited in the Margent To the Businesse in hand The Covenant of Redemption I say is that foederal transaction or mutual stipulation that was betwixt God and Christ in the great work of mans Redemption I call it a foederal transaction or mutual stipulation because therein lies the nature of a Covenant 't is as Civilians define it a mutual stipulation or agreement betwixt Party and Party upon such and such Termes with Reciprocal Obligations each of the other That the businesse of Mans Redemption was transacted betwixt the Father and the Son is very clear Zech. 6.13 The Counsel of peace shall be betwixt them both the Counsel of Reconciliation How man that is now an enemy to God may be reconciled to God and God to him for whatever the Socinians say the Reconciliation is not only on the sinners part but on Gods also this Counsel or Consultation shall be betwixt them both that is Father and Son I know some interpret it of Christs offices the Priestly and the Kingly office of Christ both conspire to make peace betwixt God and man but I rather take it in the other sense That this transaction betwixt these two glorious persons was also foederal or in the way of a Covenant and that too from everlasting is to me a very great truth though I am not ignorant that some learned men are not so well satisfied about it For the Explication and Confirmation of this great mystery I will lay down these seven Propositions Prop. 1 The first is this God the Father in ord●r to mans Redemption stands upon Satisfaction the sinner shall be justified but first God will be satisfied Man is now fallen from that happy state wherein at first God made him and by this fall he hath offered an affront to God and wronged God so far forth as he was capable of such a thing in this case therefore God will have satisfaction in the Reparation of his Honour in the Manifestation of his Truth in the Vindication of his Holin●sse and Justice 'T is true He being the Personal laesa he might freely have remitted the offence and done what he pleased but supposito decreto some go higher even to Gods nature which necessarily puts him upon the punishment of sin I say supposing Gods decree he having decreed thus and thus and also threatned thus and thus he will have satisfaction and therefore though he doth in Election give such and such freely unto Christ yet for the carrying on and execution of his purpose herein he stands upon terms for the satisfying of his justice which Attribute God will advance as well as his Mercy for all are alike dear to God he will have an offering for sin in an expiatory and propiatory way a price and ransome shall be paid him down Isa 33.10 ● Tim. 2.6 or the Captive shall never be released And in order unto this or for the manifestation of this you do not only read in Scripture of Election as to believers but also as to Christ whom God calls his Elect Isa 42.1 The Father chooses him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and sets forth or ●ore-ordains him as 't is Rom. 3.25 To make satisfaction without which fallen man shall not be taken into his favour again who shall be redeemed and justified but in such a way that God may declare his righteousnesse The Apostle doubles his Expression as to this To declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sins To declare I say his righteousnesse that he might be just and the justifier of h●m which bel●eveth in Jesus Rom. 3.25 26. You will have this great truth more fully insisted upon by another in the carrying on of this exercise I will here say no more to it Prop. 2 Secondly The Father you see demands satisfaction well To this he annexes many excellent great and preci●us promises that if Christ would engage in this work and undertake thus to satisfie for he alone could do it he would do thus and thus for him as that he would fit him for the work own him and strengthen him in the work succeed and prosper him in the work and then
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
is proper to each nature by reason of the hypostatical union is ascribed to the whole person 4. This union of two natures in one person is without confusion or transmutation the natures remaining distinct and the properties and operations of both natures distinct notwithstanding this union Some things are proper to the Godhead of which the Manhood is uncapable and some things proper to the Manhood of which the Godhead is uncapable We cannot say the Godhead was athirst weary dyed neither can we say the Manhood was the Fountain of all being the Creator and Preserver of all things or that it is ubiquitary or omnipresent though we may say all of the same person 'T is observed by learned Writers that the dividing of the person which is but one Hooker Eccles Pol. p. 299. and the confounding of the natures which are two hath occasioned those grand Errors in this Article of faith by which the peace of the Church hath been so much disturbed And sutably to these foure heads that have been spoken to there have arisen foure several heresies 1. The Arrians denying the Deity of Christ against whom the Council of Nice Determined that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly God Hooker ibid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. The Apollinarians who maimed and misinterpreted his humane nature against whom the Council of Constantinople Determined that he was compleat and perfect Man 3. The Nestorians who divided Christ into two persons because of his two natures 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against whom the Council of Ephesus Determined that he was God-man in one person 4. The Eutichians who confounded these two natures in one person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 against whom the Council of Chalcedon Determined that he was God-man in one person without confusion or mutation of natures But in the foure above-named heads enough hath been said by way of Antidote against those dangerous mistakes And all being duly considered we cannot but see great reason why he should be called wonderful Isa 9.6 Well might the Apostle cry out by way of admiration Without controversie great is the mystery of godlinesse God was manifest in the flesh 1 Tim. 3.16 5. The singular fitnesse of Christ for this work of Mediation arises from his being God-man in two natures united in one person without Confusion or Transmutation 1. Had he not been truly God he had been too mean a person for so high an employment it was God that had been offended an infinite Majesty that had been despised The person therefore interposing must have some equality with him to whom he interposes Had the whole society of persevering Angels interposed on mans behalf it had been to little purpose one Christ was infinitely more than all and that because he was truly God 2. Had he not been compleatly man he had been no way capable of performing that indispensibly necessary condition upon which God was willing to be reconciled viz. The satisfying of that righteous sentence God had pronounced Gen. 2.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye That therefore he might be capable of dying which as God he could not and that the justice of God might be satisfied in the same nature by which it had been offended 't was necessary he should be man 3. Had he not been God and man in one person the sufferings of his humane nature could not have derived that infinite value from the Divine nature Mediat●o Christi est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We could not have called his blood the blood of God as 't is called Acts 20.28 it would have been no more than the blood of a creature and consequently as unavailable as the blood of Bulls c. Hebr. 9.12 Hebr. 10.4 4. Had he not been God-man without confusion of natures his Deity might either have advanced his humanity above the capacity of suffering or his humanity might have debased his Deity below the capability of meriting which is no lesse than blasphemy to ima●ine And this is the first reason the singular fitnesse of Christ for this work because of the Dignity of his person Reason 2. The singular fitnesse of Christ for this employment in respect of the sutablenesse of his Offices There is a threefold misery upon all men or a threefold bar to communion with God 1. The guilt of their sins which themselves are never able to expiate or satisfie for 2. The blindnesse of their minds the cure whereof is too difficult for any creature Physician 3. Their bondage and captivity to sin and Satan which are enemies too strong for man to deal with Sutably to these three great necessities Jesus Christ is anointed of God to a threefold Office of a Priest a Prophet a King the former of which Offices he exercises on our behalf to God and the two last from God to us 1. The Priestly Office of Christ is the great the only relief we have against the guilt of sin the work of the Priesthood consisted under the Law chiefly of these two parts 1. Satisfaction for the sins of the people Lev. 4.16 17 18 19 c. 2. Intercession unto God on their behalf Levit. 16.12 13. Both which were verified in Christ our great high Priest Hebr. 4.14 And hence it is that the Apostle encourages us to come with boldness unto the Throne of Grace Hebr. 4.16 What was done by others Typically was done by Christ Really 1. His satisfaction in discharging those debts which his people had run into with Divine justice to the utmost farthing and this he did by offering up that one single sacrifice which was infinitely more worth than all those multitudes of sacrifices offered up of old and from which all former sacrifices had their vertue and efficacy Ephes 5.2 The Priests of old offered up creatures but this high Priest offers up himself they offered the blood of Bullocks c. Hebr. 9.13 14. but Christ the blood of God Acts 20.28 They offered many sacrifices and Christ but one but such a one as infinitely exceeded all their many such a one as perfected for ever them that are sanctified Hebr. 10.14 One Sun is worth more than thousands of Stars and one Jewel than millions of ordinary stones and so one Christ is more effectual than all Lebanon or the cattel on a thousand hills 2. His intercession this is the other part of his Priestly Office his satisfaction that was performed on earth his Intercession is performed chiefly in heaven by the former he purchased pardon and Reconciliation 2 Cor. 5.19 compared with Verse 21. by the latter he applies the benefits he hath purchased his sufferings though they were but while he was on earth yet the benefit of them extends to all ages of the Church both before and since his passion and his Intercession is that which sues out these blessings for his people and therefore that great Apostle joynes both together as the foundation of all his comfort Rom.
passion of God-man Man being every other way finite must have suffered infinitely in regard of duration even to eternity And none but Christ who was infinite in regard of the subject and dignity of his person as he was God could have so speedily and effectually delivered us from this punishment by suffering it himself whereby Gods justice was satisfied his hatred against the sinner removed and his mercy at liberty to act in the pardon of the sinner Sixthly This passion of Jesus Christ God was graciously pleased to accept for us and impute to us as if we had suffered in our persons and so he receives us into mercy And this is the substance of the Doctrine of the Gospel about mans salvation So much for the first thing the Explication of the point 2. I now come to the Assertion or Demonstration of it that you may receive this Doctrine as a Truth not built upon the traditions of men but revealed in the Word of God Now to prove this point viz. That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans Justification and Salvation I may use two sorts of Arguments First Some from the consideration of Christs death Secondly Some from the consideration of mans Justification and Salvation 1. From the consideration of Christs death I shall offer six Arguments 1. It s Possibility 2. Necessity 3. Nature 4. Cause 5. Vicegerency 6. Peculiarity First From the possibility Let me be bold to assert had it not been for this purpose it had not been possible for Christ to dye as it was not possible for Christ to be holden of death Acts 2.24 the price being paid and so the Prisoner of course to be released so it had not been possible because not just Id tantum possumus quod jure possumus to put him into a prison if it had not been to pay a debt And a debt of his own he had none he was a Lamb without blemish and without spot 1 Pet. 1.19 Holy blameless undefiled separate from sinners Hebr. 7.26 He knew no sin 2 Cor. 5.21 which I the rather mention because S●cinus hath the impudence to lay down this blasphemous Assertion That Christ like the Jewish High Priest did offer for himself as well as for the people You have seen he had no debt no sin of his own he professeth of himself that he did alwayes those things which pleased his Father John 8.29 and therefore he must needs dye for our debts it is plain that Adam had he continued in integrity should not have dyed death is not the effect of nature then the Saints in glory must dye again for they have the same nature but the fruit of sin death entred into the world by sin Rom. 5.12 And the Apostle proves the sin of Infants expressed by that Periphrasis such as have not sinned after the similitude of Adams transgression from the death of Infants and in Adam all dyed i. e. by his sin 1 Cor. 15.22 Therefore Jesus Christ being purified from the guilt of Adams sin by his holy birth and no lesse perfect than Adam should have been could never have dyed if not for our sakes Secondly From the necessity of Christs death it was necessary for our Salvation and Justification without which end it had been in vain The Socinians mention two other reasons and ends of Christs death the one to be an example of obedience but such we have many others upon far less charge the other to be a ground of hope for the remission of sin and the fulfilling of Gods promises but properly it is not the death but resurrection of Christ which is the ground of our hope 1 Cor. 15.14 If Christ be not risen your faith is vain so that those ends are improper and insufficient And to strike it dead I urge but one place Gal. 2.21 If righteousnesse come by the Law Christ is dead in vain What can be more plain if righteousnesse be not by Christ that the death of Christ be not the procuring cause of our Justification Christ is dead in vain to no end or as Grotius and others rather understand without any meritorious cause i. e. our sins however all comes to one Thirdly From the nature of Christs death it is a Sacrifice this consists of two Branches 1. Sacrifices did expiate sin 2. Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice 1. I say Sacrifices did expiate sin Levit. 1.4 He shall put his hands upon the head of the burnt-offering and it shall be accepted for him and many such places And this they did typically which strengthens the cause we have in hand as representing and fore-signifying Christ without which it was not possible for the blood of Buls and Goats to take away sins Hebr. 10.4 And the sins pardoned under the Old Testament were pardoned thorough Christ and not through any vertue of their Sacrifices Christ being a Mediatour for the Redemption of the Transgressions that were under the first Testament Hebrewes 9.15 2. And this brings in the second Head that Christs death is a Sacrifice and a sin-expiating Sacrifice if either the names or nature of it may be regarded for the names and titles proper to Sacrifices they are attributed to it and God doth not give flattering titles nor false names but such as discover the nature of things it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Oblation or offering up of himself Ephes 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.25 to omit others and for the nature by vertue hereof sin is atoned he is our High Priest for this end to make reconciliation for the sins of the people Heb. 2.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being by an Enallage put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pacifie God reconcile God turn away his wrath You meet with all things in Christ which concurre to the making of a Sacrifice The Priest he is our High Priest the Sacrifice himself Christ was once offered the shedding of blood and destroying of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being the essential part of a Sacrifice Add to these 1 Cor. 5.7 Christ our Passeover is Sacrificed for us where is a double Argument 1. That Christ is expresly said to be Sacrificed 2. That he is called a Passeover which at the best seems to have been both a Sacrifice and a Sacrament Now then Christs death being a Sacrifice it appeares that it appeased Gods wrath procured his favour Fourthly From the cause of Christs death I might urge a double cause 1. The inflicting cause it was Gods displeasure Nothing more plaine than that he had a very deep sense of and sharp conflict with Gods wrath from those dreadful horrours in the Garden where his soul was exceeding sorrowful unto death not certainly at the approach of an ordinary death which many Martyrs have undergone with undaunted courage but at the apprehension of his Fathers anger and upon the Cross where he roared out that direful complaint My
natural men minde something else than God would have them Phil. 3.19 they minde earthly things Herod mindeth the dancing of a lewd Strumpet more than the preaching of the holy Baptist the young man mindeth his great possessions the Epicure his belly the Farmer his barn Judas his bag the Silversmith his Shrines the Gadarenes their Swine Pila e the favour and applause of the people Let the best men speak ingenuously and they must needs confesse that there were many things if I may call them things rather nothings which they minded more than God or Christ or Heaven more than the highest concernments of their immortal souls the weightiest businesse of Eternal salvation they were all Gallios in respect of these things they cared for none of them till they were rouzed out of their waking dreams by the Effectual Call of the most gracious God This is the condition of every natural man 2. It presupposeth That it is an easie thing with God to bring us home to himself though we be never so far distant from him to awaken us to his service though in a dead sleep of sin to raise our minds to higher objects though they be never so deeply immersed in the things of this present world Is any thing hard to the Almighty with a word he made us with a word he can renew us When darknesse covered the face of the deep he did but ay Let there be light and there was light with the like facility can he shine in our hearts giving us the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus He uttereth his voice saith David and the earth melteth Let but God utter his voice and the Rocks and Mountains of our corruptions will melt away like wax Come we now closer to the Point Toward the opening of which I shall entreat your Attention to the resolution of sundry Questions Question 1. What is this Calling It is the real separation of the soul unto God and a cloathing it with such gracious abilities whereby it may be enabled to repent of its sinnes and to believe in his Son It is our Translation from the state of Nature which is a state of sinne wrath death and damnation to a state of Grace which is a state of Holiness Life Peace and Eternal Salvation This Translation is wrought 1. By strong convictions of the minde First Of the guilt and filth of sin of the danger and defilement of sin of the malignity of sin and the misery that attends it Once saith the soul that is under this dispensation of Gods Grace Once I lookt upon sin as my wisdome now it is madness and folly Once I accounted it my meat and drink to fulfill the wills of the flesh sinne was a sweet morsel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I drank iniquity like water now 't is a cup of trembling to me and I fear it may prove a cup of Condemnation Once I hugged embrac't and delighted in sin as the Wife of my bosome now I clearly see that the fruit and issue of the impure copulation of my soul with her is nothing else but the shame of my face the stain of my reputation the Rack and horrour of my conscience and which is more than all these the provocation of the Almighty and therefore I begin to think within my self of an eternal divorce from her I slept securely in the lap of this Dalilah she robb'd me of my strength she delivered me up to Philistines that dealt unworthily with me that put me upon base and low employments what now should I think of but if it please the Lord to give new strength the death and destruction of them all Secondly Of the vanity and emptiness of the creature which we have Idolized confiding in it as the staff of our hopes breathing and pursuing after it as the perfection of our happiness Thirdly Of the absolute need of Christ that if he do not save vs we must perish Fourthly Of the absolute fulnesse of Christ and that in him we may be compleat if we be guilty he can justifie us if we be filthy he can purge us if we be weak he can strengthen us if we be poor he can enrich us if we be base he can ennoble us if we be deformed and ugly he can make us beautiful and lovely if we be miserable he can bless us and that with all Blessings in Heavenly places Fifthly Of the clemency goodness meekness sweetness graciousness of his disposition that if any man come to him he will in no wise reject him John 6.37 These things the minde is strongly convinc't of yet if there be not a farther work a man may carry these Convictions to Hell with him Therefore 2. In the second place this Translation is wrought by a powerful inclination and conversion of the will to close with Christ upon his own termes to embrace him as Soveraign as well as Saviour to take him as men use to do their Wives for better for worse for richer for poorer to stick to him on Mount Calvary as well as Mount Tabor to welcome him into thy bosome by bidding an everlasting farewell to thy sinnes In a word to make a voluntary tender and resignation of thy self unto him solemnly avouching that from this time forward thou wilt count thy self more his than thou art thine own and the more thy own because thou art his This work is carried on with a most efficacious sweetness so that the liberry of the will is not infringed whilst the obstinacy of the will is mastered and over-ruled If you ask me How can these things be I never studied to satisfie curiosity but if you can tell me how the bones do grow in the womb of her that is with child I also will tell you how the parts of the new man are formed in the heart but I suppose silence and humble admiration will be best on both sides if there be so great a mystery in our natural generation surely there is a far greater in our spiritual Regeneration if David could say of the former I am fearfully and wonderfully made much more might he say of the latter I am fearfully and wonderfully renewed Question 2. Who are the Called First Among creatures none but men are of the number of the called The Angels that kept not thei● first estate but left their own habitation are never recalled Jude ver 6. but reserved in everlasting chaines under darknesse to the judgement of the great day Lord what is man that thou art mindful of him Psal 8.4 or the son of man that thou so regardest him Secondly Among men none but the Elect are capable of this grace the call is limited by the purpose Whom he hath predestinated them he also called Rom. 8. Touching these Elect Persons divers things fall under our Observation As 1. In regard of their internal condition before this call they are dead in sins and trespasses
then of the nature of Repentance and in opening it I shall not trouble you with the curious and critical considerations of the word or the various descriptions of the thing set down by many sound and pious * Ambrose de poenit Aretii problem tom 1. l. 3. Dani. Dike Stock with many others Repen de fin Authours but briefly propound unto you this general description as that which comprizeth in it the nature and particular parts of true Repentance viz. Repentance is a grace sup●rnatural whereby the believing sinner sensibly affected with and afflicted for his sin as committed against God freely confessing and fervently begging pardon turneth from all sin to God Instead of a logical division and discussion of this description I shall distribute it into these Theological conclusions as most proper for your capacities and profitable for your instruction 1. Repentance is a grace supernatural 2. The believing sinner is the subject of true Gospel-Repentance whereby the believing sinner c. 3. Sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are the precursive acts of true Repentance sensibly affected with and afflicted for his c. 4. A turning from all sin to God is the formality of true Repentance 5. Confession of guilt and supplication for pardon are constant concomi●ants of Gospel-Repentance These several Conclusions I shall briefly and distinctly explain whereby I hope you will well understand the nature of Repentance and first of the first viz. Conclusion 1 Repentance is a grace supernatural It is a grace in its nature supernatural in its Authour Original quality and operation Repentance is a grace in its nature not only as it is freely given us of God without the least merit of ours but also as it is a gift animating and enabling unto action That which I intend you especially to note when we say Repentance is a grace is this viz. that it is an habit power principle spring root and disposition not a bare single and transient action as the Papists and some ignorant souls do imagine Repentance is different and distinct from all penitential acts sighing self-castigation and abstinence from all sinful actions are fruits and expressions of repentance but not the grace it self for that diffuseth it self into the heart and disposeth habituateth and enableth to all acts of sorrow for and cessation from sin The repentance which is given of God is not an action but power principle and frame of spirit The power and principle is divine but act and exercise of repentance is humane God plants the root whereby man brings forth fruit worthy repentance Matth. 3.8 Repentance is no other but a spirit of grace animating men to mourn Zech. 12.10 Repentance is not the work of an houre or a day but a constant frame course and bent of the soul on all renewed guilt flowing afresh and bringing forth renewed acts When the mighty hand of God doth smite the flinty heart of man it loseth its stone and hardinesse becomes pliable to divine pleasure is inclined to relent and prone to distill its heavenly dew and therefore it is called a grace as in its nature Repentance is a grace so in its Original and operation it is supernatural a grace freely given from above not acquired by any means or merit of our own but springing into the soule by the meer good Will of God and immediate power of the holy Ghost however Repentance must be acted it cannot be acquired by man it lieth out of the reach of humane arme and must be the effect of an Almighty hand even the influence of God himself there is not in man the least merit of condignity or congruity that can engage divine justice to bestow it No it is a good and perfect gift James 1.17 and cometh down from above and is given by the Father of lights In vain do men seek Repentance in any natural meanes for birth breeding education instruction art knowledge moral swasion friendly advice 1 Cor. 3.6 7. and Gospel Ministry it self cannot work it without the immediate operation of an omnipotent Spirit that will and that indeed only can work above and contrary to the course of Nature God only can take away the stony heart and give an heart of flesh Ezek. 36.26 It is the sole and singular prerogative of Christ Jesus exalted to give Repentanc all means and Ministry are but a Moses Rod a meer passive instrument only the might of Gods hand can make mans Rocky heart relent Ministers must indeed preach in season and out of season yet it is but a peradventure that God will give repentance 2 Tim. 2.25 In vain do men dally with and delay repentance when God calleth determining to themselves time wherein to repent as if it were within the reach of their own arme or at the command of corrupt nature whil'st God knoweth they may see their set time though that it self is doubtful and yet find no place for repentance though they seek it with teares Repentance is not the result of purest nature nor yet the effect of the Law but a pure Gospel grace preached by the Gospel Dykes Treat of Rep. p 3 4. promised in the Covenant sealed in Baptisme produced by the Spirit properly flowing from the blood of Christ a●d so is every way supernatural so that every returning sinner must pray to God Je● 31.18 19. Turn thou me and I shall be ●urned and the praise of Repentance obtained must be returned to God alone 1 Pet. 1.3 as him from whom it hath been derived for 't is a grace supernatural But secondly Conclusion 2 The believing sinner is the subject of Gospel-repentance Whosoever repenteth chargeth himself with guilt and must needs be a sinner Adam in innocency had no repentance because no sin and the Lord Jesus saith he came not to call the righteous but the sinner to repentance Matth. 9.12 Returns do follow upon deviations remorse upon disobedience and repentance is the work of a transgressor But the Subject of Gospel-Repentance must be a believ●ng sinner a sinner not only of sense but also of hope not only of conviction but also of confidence seeing a pardon procured for sin committed Faith must be the formal qualification of a Gospel-penitent as the very foundation and fountain of true repentance unbelief is the very ground of impenitency and lock of obduracy Gods common complaint of impenitent Israel is they believed not Psal 78. Then faith must needs unlock and release the soule unto its returne to God for contrariorum eadem est ratio the reason is the same to contraries Saint Ambrose calls faith incendium poenitentiae the spur of repentance and the Scripture doth suggest to be the pumpe of repentance Psal 130.4 There is mercy with thee that thou shouldest be feared Hence it is that the objects of faith become arguments and the promises of grace perswasions to repentance Jer. 3.13 The approach of the Kingdome of God is the
only argument urged by John the Baptist and our Saviour Mat. 3.2 4 17. to enforce Repentance mercy apprehended animateth the miserable sinner to returne to God Israel mourned but made no returne untill Shecaniah cryed There is yet hope in Israel concerning this thing Ezra 10.2 The Assyrians put halters on their necks knowing that the Kings of Israel are merciful The Law shutting the door of hope may stir up grief and horrour but it staveth off Repentance sin seeming unpardonable sets the soule at a distance from God and sinks it in despaire whil'st the pardon proclaimed provoketh Rebells submission Nemo possit poenitentiam agere nisi qui speraverit indulgen iam no hope no help to repentance saith Saint Ambrose Repentance is argued from Gerhard meditat secund Exercitium poenitentiae ex dominica passione and effected by the death of Christ Mount Calvary is the proper Bochim the sufferings of a Saviour the sad comments upon sin the sighs and groanes of a Redeemer most rending to r●gardlesse hearts and the sweat and blood of the Lord most soaking and suppling to an Adamantine soul but faith only apprehendeth and applyeth a crucified Christ Repentance the souls Pump is drie and distills no water untill faith poure in the blood of Christ and water of Gospel-promises so that Faith must precede Repentance as the cause to the effect the mother before the daughter for it must qualifie the true Penitent It is a mystery beyond the reach of nature that a Son should coexist in time with the Father but neither reason nor faith can allow a priority of the daughter before the mother I well know many Divines assert the precedency of Repentance unto faith but to my judgment it is more than probable yea positively clear that in order of time Faith and Repentance are infused together into the soul in order of sense and mans feeling Repentance is indeed before faith but in Divine method and the order of nature Faith is before Repentance as the Fountaine is before the Stream But it is objected that the order of Scripture doth set Repentance before faith so in preaching Mark 1.15 Mat. 3.2 Luke 3.3 Acts 2.38 3.19 And Repentance is required as the qualification which must entitle to the promises remission of sinne is onely offered to the penitent so that Repentance is the reason of faith and ground on which we believe sin is pardoned In Answer to this Objection I shall propound unto your Observation three Rules which make a full and ready resolution to it Rule 1 1. Order of Scripture doth not alwayes conclude order of nature in 2 Pet. 1.10 Calling is mentioned before Election yet who will deny Election to be first in nature for whom God predestinated them he also called Rom. 8.30 Again in 1 Tim. 1.5 Acts 15.9 The pure heart and good conscience is mentioned before faith yet none can deny them to be the effects of faith which purifieth the heart for to the unbelieving nothing is pure but their very minde and conscience is defiled Tit. 1.15 Rule 2 2. Humane sense is in many things the Dictator of Scripture order The Holy Ghost speaketh of things as they are obvious to our sense and capacity rather than as they are in themselves and their own order Hence it is that the promises of peace pardon and the like priviledges are propounded unto Repentance as a qualification obvious to our sense and evidencing our faith Faith and Election must be known à posteriori by their effects Repentance and Vocation and therefore are mentioned after them For though we Believe before we Repent we Repent before we know that we do Believe Rule 3 3. Misappreh●nsion of the nature of Grace doth easily lead into a mistake of the order of Grace Such as deem common illumination and conviction to be Repentance and Assurance of pardon joy and peace to be the formality of faith may very well place Repentance before Faith but such as understand the acceptance of Christ in order to pardon to be true and saving faith and a ceasing from sin and serious application of our selves to piety to be the formality of Repentance will plainly see that faith uniting us to Christ and deriving to us the efficacy of his death and sufferings that we may be holy doth Precede and must needs be the cause of true Repentance Let me then dismisse this Rule with this Note or Observation Note Faith in its existence and essential acts but without its reflexion fruits and effects is the foundation and fountain of true Repentance Such therefore on the one hand as apprehend and assent unto the History of the Gospel and are sometimes affected with and afflicted for their sin but do not accept of Jesus Christ as tendred to be Lord and Saviour do fix their Engine too low to force the waters of Repentance into the soul yet this Divels faith may produce a Judas Repentance for an Hypocritical Repentance is the result of an Historical faith And on the other hand he that seeks assurance of his sin pardoned as an argument of Repentance maketh the effect both cause and effect and concludeth himself into a condition not needing Repentance whilst he pretendeth to enforce it but the true frame of a Gospel Penitent is by saving faith to see salvation through the satisfaction of Christ our Saviour extended to sinners himself not excluded and so closing with accepting of and appropriating to himself the general tenders of grace and terms of the Covenant to prostrate himself at the feet of mercy and pursue his pardon untill by acts of sincere Repentance he assure himself his aimed at happinesse is attained and shall with certainty be possessed and so he experienceth in himself and evidenceth unto all others that the believing sinner is the subject of Gospel Repentance and now I passe to the third Conclusion considerable in the nature of Repentance Conclusion 3 Sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God are the procursive acts of true Repentance True Repentance as most Divines determine doth consist in two parts viz. Humiliation and Conversion the casting down the heart for sin 2 Cor. 12.21 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Revel 9.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the casting off sin A Repenting for uncleannesse and sin with grief shame and anguish and Repenting from iniquity Acts 8.22 and from dead works Hebr. 6.1 This distinction or rather distribution of Repentance is not only dictated by the denominations of Repentance which in the Hebrew is called Nacham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 An irking of the soul and Teshubba A t rning from iniquity so in the Greek Metamelia After-grief and Metanoia After-wit and in the Latine Paenitentia and Resipiscentia the one expressing the sense and sorrow of the soul the other the retrogradations and returns of it from sin but the Scripture also doth clearly suggest nay speak out these distinct parts of Repentance Humiliation and Conversion
conscience are constrained to repent of their miscarriage like Shimei his repentance for cursing David occasioned only by the change of Davids condition 2 Sam. 19.20 1 King 2.39 40. and crosse of his own expectation which yet at length leads him to sin against his soul and break his bounds unto his own ruine and like Judas in a dogged humour deploring his sin unto self-destruction many men turn out of sin because it turns Wife and children out of doors deprives them of expected preferment disposeth them into distresse and anguish of soul or body or both these men have no natural enmity to sinne but are like a Bowle turned out of its Biasse by some more than ordinary rub to their desires Give me leave to adde one more and that is the Quakers Repentance 7. False Repentance not fit to be mentioned nor worthy the least refutation it is so notoriously prophane and ridiculous were it not too much successeful in these sad times in which God hath given us up to a spirit of delusion so as that the most palpable of errours finde entertainment this is the Repentance whereby men following the pretended light within them are suddenly converted from extreame loosenesse to extreame strictnesse of behaviour it is to be wondred at to see what a sudden leap the lewdest men make by this rude spirit from the most horrid lewdnesse to the most strange solitary and self-affected way of behaviour these men we must not deny to be changed unlesse we will deny our senses nor own to be Gospel-penitents unlesse we deny our Religion and very reason for themselves professe it to be from no other principle than the light within th●m which they say also is common to all men and so is at the best but natural though in them plainly visible to be diaboli al whilst it carrieth not so far as the light of nature but is contrary to the dictates thereof in natural and civil society darkening nay declaiming against those very notes of distinction which God and nature hath in all Nations made between man and man being violent sudden and precipitate by some absession or enthusiastique impulse as from the Devil not by any moral swasion or intellectual conviction which is proper to a reasonable soule and therefore acts wilfully with rage and rabid expressions not able and so refusing to render a reason of their actions or perswasions but with obduracy persisting in their own self-affected profession without the least possibility of conviction or capacity of discourse reducing them into a direct Bedlam temper fit for nothing but Bedlam Discipline so that in the very forme thereof men of reason and the least measure of Religion must needs conclude their conversion Devilish not Divine yet in the effect of it their repentance must needs appear not to be true Gospel and saving repentance as being dissonant to the nature in the very formality thereof for however it turns them from sin yet not with due contrition and confession or on due conviction not from sin as sin they retain pride railing disrespect to men are void of natural affection despise dominion speak evil of dignities whilst they damne drunkennesse swearing and other the like abominations but it never turnes them unto God nay it keeps them at an equal nay a greater distance from God than from the Devil from heaven than hell whilst they deny civility and the common reverence children owe to Parents Servants to Masters and all Inferiours to Superiours decline God disown and declaime against holinesse praying hearing Sabbath and Sacraments are to them as the vices they do detest Gospel-Ministers and Ministrations are to them an abomination whilst they refuse to sweare they refuse to pray drunkennesse and devotion are equal in their account if with Jehu they drive furiously against Baal and Ahab yet they mind not to walk with God but follow the way of Jeroboam both for Rebellion towards men and confusion in the Church so that they appeare farre from Gospel-penitents I have done with the first general part considerable viz. the nature of repentance and shall now proceed to the second and that is The NECESSITY of Repentance Repentance in the very nature of it which hath been explained doth appeare useful and necessary It is not a thing base and vile to be despised neglected and contemned but admirably excellent and to be prized and pursued by every soul that is studious of true excellency for however proud men prophanely deem and damne it as a puling property and pusillanimous temper of spirit below a man on every ordinary action to sit drooping and pensive and not dare to do as nature dictates and good company requires yet the children of wisdome well pondering what hath already been spoken of it cannot but see it sparkle with such splendid notes as engage them to esteem it and employ themselves in it night and day making it their work and businesse saying as Tertullian Nulli rei natus nisi poenitentiae I am born for nothing but to repentance For from what hath already been spoken it is apparantly excellent in its First Nature being a remorse for guilt and return from sin which who even among the Heathen did not esteem remorse for guilt is the rejoycing of heaven returns are the delights of God in Luke 15.7 10. rhe teares of sinners is the wine of Angels saith Bernard Secondly Authour and Original a grace supernatural grows not in natures Garden cannot be acquired by the most accurate industry or endowments of nature it is from heaven by the immediate operation of the holy Spirit Christ himself is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance Shall divine works celestial influences lose their esteem Thirdly Ground and principle ●t flowes from faith and is the result of hope it is not the lamentation of despaire but complaint of candor and confidence affording comfort streami g with pleasure from the soule the priviledge of the Gospel and Covenant of grace it flowes from the fountaine of Divine favour 4. Concomitants Confession and Supplication accesse to God with assurance of acceptance Confession is the souls physick saith Nazianzen and Supplication is the Childs portion And indeed what is there in the Nature of Repentance which rendreth it not desirable by every gracious heart or good nature so that to men that seek excellent endowments and are for high and honourable atchievements I must say Repent Repen● This is Alexanders honour this is the only ornament of nature the way to highest preferment is to be humbled under the hand of God But not only is it in it self excellent and to be esteemed by such as can and do obtain it but also necessary not of indifferency but of absolute and indispensable necessity men may not choose whether or no they will repent but must do it with all care and diligence with all speed and alacrity and amongst the many Demonstrations which might be urged I
5.3 Well may the Prophet conclude They are poor and foolish and know not the Lord o● the judgment of their God ver 4. For even iron and steel is soft whil'st in the fire and impenitency under the Rod exposeth unto inevitable ruine they are reprobate from Gods favour who repent not in the time of his fury the saddest symptom of displeasure is to hear God determine You shall be smitten no more Isa 1.5 for ye will revolt still more and more God sealeth up to everlasting vengeance by a spirit of impenitency My people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me so I gave them up to their own hearts lusts and they walked in their own cuonsels Psal 81.11 12. The proud Pharaoh that is not melted by and repents not under Gods many judgments is raised for this very purpose that God might shew his power and make known his minde unto the ends of the earth by their certain and severe destruction Rom. 9. Whil'st then the sons of men are by nature the children of wrath subjects of sin and liable to sorrows obnoxious to Gods chastising hand and land-destroying judgments provoking Divine displeasure and Repentance the only means to divert or remove the same must they not call one upon another Come let us return unto the Lord though he have wounded he will heal us Hos 6.1 2 3. And for us in this Land and Nation Are we not the subjects of sin and most horrid God-provoking sins which God cannot but punish pride and perfidiousnesse profanesse and perjury blasphemy and base contempt of his Ordinances and what not iniquity unto the very despising the Word of the Lord and mocking his Messengers that his wrath could no longer forbear but hath made us the subjects of shame and sorrow The furious footsteps of an angry God are to be found among us God hath smitten us with pest●lence after the manner of Egypt our young men have been slain with the edge of the Sword and yet his wrath is not turned away Our Fou●dations are removed Laws violated and Liberties invaded his Name and Truth blasphemed his Church laid waste and his People sadly subjected to a spirit of delusion And what Confusions Commotions sad because sinful Revolutions compasse us about making us a shame among the Nations and a burden to our selves And yet his wrath is not turned away but his anger is stretched out still because we have not returned unto the Lord. How many and heavy judgments hang over our heads threatning the extirpation of the Church eradication of the Gospel and desolation of our Nations And what is our remedy to remove what we feel or prevent what we fear is it not Repentance is not this ENGLANDS Unum Necessarium One thing necessary Should not all the Ministers of God cry Repent ENGLAND Repent Repent Must not all conclude in this respect Repentance is a grace of absolute necessity but Secondly Repentance is necessary to answer the call of the Gospel We are called Christians and do professe subjection to the Gospel of Jesus Christ our care must be in all things to walk as becometh the Gospel Hippocrates took an oath of his followers Phil. 1.27 to keep their profession unstained and their lives unblameable Sure I am that in our Baptisme we are dedicated and engaged to yield obedience to the Gospel and shew forth its holinesse and power by due acts of Repentance renouncing the flesh the world and the Divel for indeed Repentance is the great duty imposed by the Gospel and all such as will conform unto the commands of the Gospel must repent Acts 17.30 Now God commandeth all men everywhere to repent The light of Nature and of the Law did direct men unto Repentance but the light of the Gospel is a loud call unto all men to repent times of past ignorance were times of Divine Indulgence but these Gospel-days are seasons of imperious injunction God now c●mmandeth all men not pity or patience must now be expected without serious pennance there are many things considerable in the Gospel whereby it calls to Repentance which doth evidence the indispensable necessity thereof and binds all men to answer viz. 1. The positive duty directed in and required by the Gospel is Repentance This is the main matter prescribed in it and preached by it John the Baptist the harbinger of the Messiah and first publisher of the Gospel came preaching Repentance and therefore his whole Doctrine and Administration is called the Baptisme of Repentance Mark 1.4 And the Lord Jesus the great Prophet and Apostle of the Gospel made his first appearance in the world at the imprisonment of John preaching Repentance for that th● Kingdome of God was at hand and the great disrespect he chargeth on the Jews was that they repented not either at the preach●ng of John or himself though both differently administred to anticipate their caption so that the great work of both appeareth to have been to bring men to Repentance The first Sermon that ever Peter preached after Christ his Ascension was to perswade Repentance this was and is the matter of all Preaching and the main end of all Ministry for the sole errand of the Gospel is to open the blinde eyes Acts 26.18 to turn men from darknesse to light and from the power of Satan unto God and hence Repentance from dead works is reckoned as one of the first and foundation principles of the Gospel Hebr. 6.1 And certainly principles are positively necessary undeniable and indispensable truths Contra principia negantem non est disputandum he is to be declined as mad that denieth principles so that Repentance is the first chief and main lesson taught by the Gospel and its call thereunto then must needs be great 2. The prime priviledge of the Gospel is Repentance This is the royal gift of our Redeemer Jesus Christ he is exalted and made a Prince and a Saviour to give Repentance the prime grace conveyed unto us by the Covenant of grace contained in the Gospel is Re entance he taking away the st●ny heart and giving us hearts of flesh making us to see the evil of our ways and doings The great Errand for which the Gospel is se●t into the world is Repentance they that receive the Gospel and not Repentance by it shall be upbraided as were Bethsaida Matth. 11. Chorazin and Capernaum as unworthy so high a favour nay they shall have their torments aggravated by the enjoyment but non-improvement of so high a favour It shall be more tolerable for Tyre and Sidon Sodom and Gomorrah they never enjoyed a Gospel to call to Repentance this is the end of all the promises of God to make us partakers of the Divine nature escaping the corruptions that ar● in the world through lust 2 Pet. 7.4 The proposals of glory and happinesse are the principles of purity and holinesse we have these great and precious promises that we may cleanse
3.9 out-facing vengeance out-daring heaven out-vying hell Isa 28.15 deriding judgements denounced because deferred w●th O Watchman What of the night Isa 21.11 Where is the promise of his coming 2 Pet. 3. nay blasphemously saying God is such an one as our selves Psal 50.21 and because sentence against an evil work is not speedily executed their heart is fully set in them to work wickednesse Eccles 8.11 so that they do every way demonstrate a contempt of repentance and are so farre from owning a necessity of it that they deem it vaine and vile and so witnesse themselves to be desperately wicked wedded to their lusts and sold to work wickednesse who wi l not heare of parting from impiety though on hope of pardon or feare of hell and so justly called a stubborne people deeply disingenuous despising all dictates of self-preservation and escape of everlasting woe the deepest discoveries of divine wisdome which prescribeth repentance as mans remedy the displayings of divine affection soliciting repentance to prevent their ruine and so are foolish dolefully self-destructive denying the way of their safety and defying a God of power and jealousie to arise in his wrath against them and so aggravating their sorrow with an I would have healed thee but thou wouldst not be healed thy destruction is of thy self O Israel 2. Note of insensibility of repentance But the second sinful carriage of men evidencing their insensibility of the necessity thereof is the neglect of Repentance these men own it as a duty to be done and remedy to be used and dare not admit any contemptible thoughts of it yet they are slack unto and sleighty in the performance of it And of these there be three sorts 1. Sort of neglectors of repentance 1. Self-justitiaries men that are right in their own eyes see Repentance a needful grace but not needful unto them they are honest among men pay all their own live civilly among their Neighbours nay holy towards God they Pharisee like fast twice aweek pay tithes give almes heare Sermons read Scripture pray and the like these pity their prophane Neighbours and apply every reproof to them but as for themselves Bellarmine-like they have no sin to confesse they must straine conscience for some venial sins that they may passe the forme of absolution these are the whole who need no Physician and the righteous whom Christ calls not to repentance Untill convinced that this and more than this is consistent with Reprobation and is not enough to keep a soul from hell certainly these are 1. Ignorant of natures pollution Ezek. 16.2 Rom. 11.24 2. Vnobservant of the Law its exaction which concludeth all under guilt Rom. 3.17 3. Vnaffected with the prescribed way of salvation Repentance and Remission 4. Insensible of Divine scrutiny and judgement which they must passe Prov. 16.2.21 2. Matth. 9.13 5. Unacquainted with and unaccustomed to or indirect in the work of self-examination altogether strangers at home or seeing their faces in the false glasse of comparison with their vilest Neighbours for otherwise they could not but see Repentance absolutely necessary for themselves more than others for Publicans and Harlots will enter into heaven before them 2. Superficial penitents these see Repentance a duty 2 Sort of neglectors of repentance but deem it needs not much ado there is no such necessity of it as that a man should be taken up with it as his serious businesse therefore they regard not the quality of the act but passe themselves as penitentials with some formal carelesse performances some short sighs or sobs for sin trembling with Foelix at Pauls Preaching or quivering with Belshazzar on sight of Gods hand-writing and casting off some grosse prophane acts with Alexander or Polemon but never strike at the root of sin and mortifie lust or make a serious returne to God but shew themselves voide of the grace and ignorant of the nature of true repentance and fall under fallacious hopes of heaven which like the hope of an Hypocrite will faile them in the evil day when they shall be too late convinced that such is the necessity of Repentance that the matter there cannot be separated from the manner of performance 3. Such as set Repentance at a distance 3. Sort of neglectors of repentance and post it off from time to time these men are and indeed by dayly subjection to the Gospel cannot but be convinced Repentance is indeed a duty and exceeding necessary unto the remission of sins and sitting under the Word these men meet with many strong heart-shaking convictions which they bid welcome and unto the truth and goodnesse of what is required they assent and their affections work within them they cannot but sigh on sense of their sad condition and confesse it hath been bad with them but it shall now be better they conceive and declare good purposes but alas they prove abortive like Ephraims righteousnesse an early dew soon gone like the Son in the Gospel when called into Christ his Vineyard they answer I go Sir ●ut go not like lingring Austin pray but feare God will too soon say Amen to their prayer they protract time persist in sin and many times quench the motions of the Spirit within them suggesting to themselves though repentance be necessary it requires no haste these men do sinfully 1. Determine their own time not considering the uncertainty thereof that they are Tenants at the will of another in the hand of the God of time who may not give them another time sense of repentance should make us say Multis annis crastinum non habeo I have no to morrow 2. Deem grace to be within the reach of mans arme they think they can repent when they list not considering it is Gods gift so that they may enjoy their time but not repent were it at mens Command what disingenuity is it to deferre Repentance but in this case it is Grand presumption 3. Do what in them lieth to quench the Spirit stifling convictions disobeying perswasions deadning affection the Spirit will not move for ever Gen. 6.3 4. Disesteem grace and holinesse accounting it the shame of strength and burden of youth thinking repentance the work of old age and weaknesse and the quality of fools 5. Deaden the hopes of their friends who know not how to deertmine their eternal estate are indeed cheered in their pensive posture in sicknesse and at death if it be not too late to be true on which account they are constrained to check their hopes and dare make no conclusion but say as Austin in the like case Non dico damnabitur non dico salvabitur sed tu dum sanus es poenitentiam age Repent in health 6. Make difficult repentance undertaking that in infirm age which requireth the utmost of strength nay rendering sin by its custome natural and obdurate Can the Ethiopian change his colour Jer. 13.23 then they that are accustomed to sin may repent sicknesse employeth
and never sheweth the strength that is in these godly streams till stopped by some temptation but then it roareth and swelleth and overfloweth its banks that all men may see the penitent is full of the Holy Ghost and this is alwayes a Note of Repentance Be zealous and repent is Christ his own Call sorrow must not be for sin as if we minded not to part with it but must manifest our fulnesse of resolution to be rid of it whatever it costs us Seventhly Revenge the due result of zeal by zeal we are carried with that vigor that the world concludes us mad for God 7. Concomitant of godly sorrow and for Religion especially when our indignation boiles into revenge upon our selves for our sins by self-castigations Acts 26.24 not of our body with whips and scourges as do the Papists but by the abatement of lust which stirreth in us buffetting the flesh and bringing it into subjection giving it the blew eye a blot in the face as the Greek word signifieth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 withdrawing those lawful comforts which make it to wax wanton as Hilarion when he felt his lusts wax big and strong and wanton provoking to filthinesse Ego faciam Aselle ut non calcitres I will by abstinence keep this Asse for kicking and our Henry the second being inclined to incontinency prayed to God that he might rather have a constant weak body than so s●rong lusts this is that which carrieth the penitent to wreak his quarrel on the occasion and instruments of their impiety Exod. 38.8 as the daughters of Israel in dedicating their looking glasses by which they had offended unto the service of the Temple and as did the Ephesians burn their books before all men Act. 19.19 as holy Cranmer thrust his right hand which subscribed his recantation first into the fire revengefully crying out This unworthy right hand as long as he could speak and this revenge leads them to satisfaction for offences done either by publick confession unto open shame or ready restitution as Zacheus threefold to the injury done as penitent Bradford that parted with his whole estate to satisfie the wrong done by one dash of his pen when a servant so that revenge worketh all the disgrace dishonour disadvantage and destruction that is possible against sin thus then you have here the Notes and Characters of Repentance laid down by the Apostle the best looking glasse that can be by which to dresse your penitent souls Let it be to every of us a Use of Examination and clearly convince us that if we be strangers to sorrow or our sorrow be to the world not towards God godly sorrow we have not repented never let us think of celebrating a celestial Passeover without these soure herbs Again if under our sorrow we continue carelesse of required duty clamorous by continued guilt on the conscience fearless of common danger and dese●ved misery by the increase of sin foolishly pitiful towards our lusts to be rebuked with rage faint in our desires to be rid of sin luke-warme in our work of mortification or indulgent to our lusts not str king home whilst we smite at sinne we are not the Subjects of true Gospel-Repentance for these must alwayes accompany it Having laid before you the Characters of true Repentance I shall proceed very briefly to propound the fourth and last General head to be considered viz. The Next way and meanes to gain Repentance And herein I shall not insist on the method and order of procuring repentance which is hinted to you before or the lets and hinderances of repentance which are to be removed this would tire your patience on which I have already too much trespassed but I shall only give you some special directions which you must observe and carefully practice if ever you will obtain Repentance As 1. Help to repentance First Sit with care constancy and conscience under the Word of truth and Gospel of Grace Repentance you have already heard is the great work of the Word and loud call of the Gospel This was the voice of John the Baptist nay of Jesus Christ himself and his Apostles the Ministers of the Word are the Embassadours of Reconciliation and so Preachers of repentance hearing is prescribed of God the way to happinesse Isa 55.2 Heare and your soul shall live The Preaching of the Word is the power of God to salvation so long as God continueth the Word to a people they are in a possibility of repentance but where the vision failes the people perish Prov. 29.19 If ever God bring the Jews to Repentance it will be by the Preaching of the Gospel the lifting up of the root of Jesse as an ensign Isa 11.11 God sealeth up under impenitency by the withdrawing of his Word the removing of the Candlestick of the Gospel is the saddest doom can be denounced Rev. 2.5 Refusing to heare is the great reason of impenitency Psal 81.11 my people would not hearken is Gods complaint and We will not heare the language of the obstinate Jer. 6.17 Rejection of the Word pulling away the shoulder and stopping the eare the property of an hard heart Zach. 7.12 never did Foelix faile so much as when trembling at Pauls Preaching he sends him away and would heare no more of that matter nor did the Jews fall under final Apostacy untill they put the Gospel away from them the very Heathen concludes Repentance to be the result of audience and attention Invidus Iracundus iners vinosus amator Horace in Epist 2. Nemo adeo ferus est qui non mitescere possit Si modò culturae patientem accommodat aurem There is no prophanesse but it is curable by patient audience As ever you will repent hear the Word attend unto instruction abide the heart-shaking convictions of the word if you sleight the Ministry of the Word the sound of the Trumpet the call of the Gospel you are sealed up under impenitency the very cry of the Gospel-call to Repentance is Let him that hath eares hear Secondly Study the nature of God 2. Help to repentance God must be the object of Repentance we must sorrow towards God return to God it is a great inducement therefore to know God ignorance of God is the mother of impenitency the times of impenitency are denominated times of ignorance Acts 17.30 This is observed to be the very cause of obduracy the Gentiles walk in the vanity of their minds having their understanding darkened being alienated from the life of God by the ignorance which is in them because of the blindnesse of their heart Ephes 4.17 18. Ignorance of God was the very principle of Israels persistence and progresse in sin They proceed from evil to evil but know not me saith the Lord Jer. 9.3 6. The devil labours to keep all light out of mans soul that so he may sleep in sin and be locked up in impenitency he hinders the
whose smell is fragrant odoriferous and so full of seeds as no fruit more such is peace of all outward blessings the chief and full of the seed of all blessings it is therefore call'd the bond of peace Ephes 4.4 as if other blessings were the bundle but peace the bond that did comprehend them all Yet holinesse is that which beareth the Bell and maketh the musick in the ears of God and if the sound thereof be not heard before the Lord we shall surely dye Therefore it is observed that the Relative which is not plural as referring to peace and holinesse both nor is it feminine as referring to peace at all but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as referring only to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 holinesse Here are two great points contained in this Text. Doct. 1. P ace is a high duty rich blessing and singular benefit that a Christian is bound to follow pursue presse after and labour for and that with all men The duty is pressed strictly in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred here with the softest follow and in other places it is rendered to follow after 1 Cor. 14.1 Phil. 3.12 to pursu● 1 Pet. 3.11 to presse unto Phil. 3.14 And we have a full proof for all Rom. 12.18 If it be possible as much as in you lieth live peaceably with all men We must see there be no default on our part that all the world is not in peace but that we follow pursue presse hard after peace as far as possibly we may and to the utmost that lies in us and that with all men so saith the Text also But I must leave this small Pomegranate peace that I may ring out the Saints Bell of holinesse the sound and force whereof I heartily pray may reach all your hearts not ears or rather that the sound thereof in all your hearts may be heard in the Lords ears not ours that ye dye not yea that Religion dye not otherwise I may fear that Englands passing Bell is tolling at the departure of our glory and we may call the next generation Iohabod But the other and present point is this viz. That true and real holiness is the grace the duty the state the trade which every Christian is bound to follow pursue press after with might and main as he ever thinks to look God in the face 2 Cor. 7.1 Having these promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthiness of flesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the fear of God perfecting holinesse what is that but to follow it follow after pursue presse hard to it so 1 Pet. 1.15 Be ye holy as God is holy there is as much or more pursue follow it still that you take up with no scant measure no low degree of it I call it 1. A grace and so it is yet more it is not one single grace alone but the conjunction of all graces To say it is a star is too little it is a constellation or the way of holinesse is as the lactea via altogether starry so holinesse is all grace 2. I call it a duty and so it is but much more it is the sum and Epitome of all duty All duties of the first Table are referred to holiness as all of the second Table to righteou ness Luke 1.75 Yea duties of the second Table are call'd holinesse 1 Thes 4.3 7. 3. I call it a state it is not an act or habit but a state nor a state of a Christian but the state of Christianity the state of consistency and continuance or growth there are some states we passe through as the man through Infancy childehood youth but abides in the state of Manhood we passe through the New birth to be born no more of mortification Rom. 6.9 11. Rom. 8.15 to dye no more of bondage to fear no more but in this state once we must persist persevere live dye in it 4. I call it our trade and so it is our noblest profession and course of life 1 Pet. 1.15 Be holy in all manner of conversation 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought we to be in all holy conversation This is the trade and businesse we should ply in the whole course of our lives Now it may be asked what this holinesse is And I would answer and if the time would bear it open the definition which is this True holinesse is that inward through and real change wrought in the whole man of a formerly vile sinner by the Spirit of God What holiness is whereby his heart is purged from the love and his life from the dominion and practice of fo●mer sins and whereby he is in heart and life carried out after every g●od 1. I call it a change and so it is it is not from nature custome education it is not an habit form but a change Christiani fiunt non nascuntur creantur non generantur and a mighty and manifest change it makes it is therefore call'd a new birth new creation a new creature resurrection c. Is there not a change when a childe is born when a dead person raised a blinde man receiveth sight Yea whatsoever is call'd holy is eo nomine changed from its common use when a person or a garment or a place or a vessel or a day were called holy all such were changed as to their use serving now for sacred and Religious Services such is Soul-holinesse a Soul-change There are three great changes wrought in a Christian at times First One in Justification 1. Ne imputetur when a guilty sinner hath sin taken away that it is not imputed The second in Sanctification when a sinner living and wallowing in sin hath sin taken away 2. Ne regnet the power of it that it doth not raign The third is in Glorification 3. Ne restet aut omnino sit when the sanctified person hath sin taken away all remainders of it that it hath no being left Now though the first and last of these are both perfect changes and Sanctification is not perfect here yet upon some account some have called that change wrought in Sanctification the greatest change of the three for compare it with Justification Justification is a change of the state not of the person a change without not within the man In Sanctification there is a real change and that within the man In Glorification also is a perfect change it being the highest state of the three but the change is not so great as in Sanctification glory and grace differ but gradually there being no opposition between them as between grace and sin The change is not so different between the Morning light and the Noon-day brightnesse as between the Morning light and the Midnight darknesse 2. I call it an inward change to distinguish it from civil hon●sty 3. A through change to distinguish it from restraining or conforming
His sin is entailed on all his seed 137 138. transmitted by imputation p. 139 and 140. made ours without any impeachment of Gods justice p. 141. by generation not imitation p. 142 143. hurt received by him must quicken the acceptance of the second Adam p. 145. his sin will not be our acquittance p. 148. Advantage great by systems and modules of Religion p. 16 17 18 19. Adoption its kinds p. 436. its name explained 437. Divine differs from humane Adoption p. 438. Adoption presupposeth Vocation Regeneration and Justification p. 438. it entitles to God Christ and Heaven ibid. Adoption the properties p. 439. and priviledges of it p. 440. Adoption is different from Regeneration yet not divided from it p. 446. Adoption an effect of faith p 469. Affections unruly cashier'd when we come to heaven p. 650. Angels their service to the Lord Jesus Christ p. 323 324. not confirmed not reconciled by Jesus Christ as Mediator p. 338 339. Antinomians refuted p. 423 424. Apparel of Saints in heaven p. 652. 653. Atheisme three sorts Vita pag. 51 52. Voto pag. 51 52. Judicio pag. 51 52. Assent to Gods being and bounty ground of Addresses to him p. 30. Assurance an effect of faith p. 472. B. Bars to communion with God three and how removed p. 272. Barring sinne imports punishment p. 346. Belief of Gods being the foundation of Religion p 30. fountain of obedience p. 54. Belief of Christ to be the Son of God is not easie p. 66. Believing sinner the subject of Gospel-repentance p. 489. Believers their dignity and duty pag. 433. Believers united to Christ. p. 278. Believers whom p. 379. Believers persons graces and duties relate to Christ. p. 395 396. Birth-right despised is dreadful p. 448. Blessedness of mans-natural rectitude p. 111. Blessed estate of the New Covenant p. 254 259. Blessed how said of the Saints p. 664 665. Bodies of Saints re-united to souls p. 657. Bodies of Saints and sinners differ at Resurrection p. 591 592. Body of man subject to Gods wrath p. 184. Body it s very self-same substance shall be raised p. 591 592 593. It s prime endowments at Resurrection p. 593 594. Bodily infirmities shaken off in heaven p. 651. Blood of sin to be shed for the blood of Christ p. 296. Bowing at the Name of Jesus what it means p. 321. by whom to be done p. 322 323. C. Cause encourageth to suffer p. 2 3. Captain encourageth contest ibid. Calling effectual p. 353. what it is and how wrought p. 357 358. Called who p. 359. few p. 360. by what ib. from what causes p. 361 362 363. by what means p. 365. to what end p. 366. when p. 367. Call is holy ib. heavenly p. 368. without noise p. 370. immutable p. 371. Care accompanieth true r pentance 541. Case of man fallen helpless by nature 207. Catechismes commended 21. Children of God by Regeneration and Adoption 435. Children of God their carriage directed 448 449 450. Christ is Lord how 330 331. a good Captaine 2 3. Christ is truly God 266 267. and truly man 268. God and man 269. Christ and promises not God the immediate object of saving faith 460. Christians changes three 557. Christian Religion reasonable 483. Come ye blessed what kinde of speech 666 667. Command to Adam and Covenant of works 122. Complaints against God charmed 267. Compassion to brethren sheweth a sense of our own natural weakness 215. Communion an evidence of union with Christ 385. Conditions in order to mans Redemption between God the Father and God the Son p. 222 223. Conquest of enemies an effect of Faith 470. Conscience proveth that there is a God 43 44. Conscience engendreth fear 46 47. Consent of Nations universal and perpetual proves that there is a God 48. Confession of sin a part of Repentance 509 510. How to be made 511 512 513 514. Conviction wherein it consists and how it acts 493 494. Contrition wherein it consists 496 497. Conversion its parts 502. Crown of Saints in heaven what 654. It s threefold wreath 655 656. Covenant what it means 123 124 235. Covenants in Scripture 235. Covenant Natural what it is 236. Legal what it is 237 238. Evangelical what it is 239. Covenant an act of condescention in God 130. Imports Gods promise and mans duty 239. Gods dealing with Adam in Paradise how and why called a Covenant 125. Covenant of Works wherein it consists p. 126 127. How and why given by Moses 128 129. Israel was not under it ibid. Men out of Christ yet under it 130. Covenant of Redemption what it is and between whom 216 217 218 219. It is to be particularly improved by Believers 230 231 232. It confirms the Covenant of Grace its blessings 228 229. Covenant what 233. Gospel Covenant the best of Covenants 235 239. Covenant of Works and Grace are to be differenced by men 131. Covenant of Redemption different from Covenant of Grace 218. Creation the work of God 31. Man created holy and mutable 105. Creatures execute Gods wrath on man 189. Themselves liable to Gods wrath 190. Creeds Apostles Athanasii Nicene c. justified 20. Curse of the Law due to man by nature 181. Cure of faln man Omnipotent 208. D Death of Christ its kinde manner and grounds p. 283. The Reasons thereof 290 291 292. Death of Christ a sacrifice and only so possible 342. Deserving cause of Christ his death 345. Death of Christ was in our place and stead 347. Diligence in duty and readinesse to dye for Christ but a reasonable recompence for his death for us 297 299. Christ dyed willingly obediently and humbly 287 288 289. Death of Christ a pregnant Argument to Repentance 528 529 530. Death destroyed by the death of Christ 303. Desire accompanieth Repentance 544. Dependence on God the duty of such as believe God is 60 61. Divel an enemy to Faith 481. Divels subject to Jesus Christ 326 327. Divel limited by Christ 328. Doctrine of Trinity to be prized 82. Dominion of Saints 442. E Elect dead in sin before called and poor in the world p. 359. Entrance of sin into the world what and how 136. Enemies of man foiled by the death of Christ 301. Entertainment of Christ 434. Epistle to the Romans a Module of Religion 8. to the Hebrews 9. to Galathians ibid. Ephesians 10. Timothy and Titus ibid. Errors are obviated by a Module of Religion 12 14. Errors about Repentance 55. Error in fundamentals inconsistent with Faith 480. Morning Exercise when it begun and how profitable it hath been 23 24. Duties towards it 25. Extremity of hell torments by their inflammation fire and preparation and association with Divels 628 629 630 631. Eternity the property of hell torments 632 633. Evidences of eternal life laid down in a Module 15. Exaltation of Christ opposed to his Humiliation 306 307. It s priority to his humiliation as a merit or meer antecedent discussed 308 309. it was exceeding high 311. Exaltation of Christ by three
in dignity offices and dominion the priviledge of Adoption 441. Love of God Father and Son manifest in the Covenant of Redemption 227. Love of Christ in his death 293. and union with Sinners 386. Love to God the evidence of Faith concerning his being 55 56 59. Losse of all good the paine of Hell Natural 625 626. Spiritual 625 626. Eternal 625 626. M Mans composure of body and powers of soul prove that there is a God 41. Man comprehends the whole species of such a creature 106. Man made mutable though holy and why 113. Man is depraved 〈◊〉 sinful 111. Mans misery by sin 173 174 175 p. 176. Man not Angels subjects of Faith 455. Mediator needful 263 264 265. Mediator of the Covenant of Grace who 241 261. Mediator one named man and why named Christ Jesus and why ib. Mediator is Christ and none but Christ 265 266 c. Mediator comfortable in all conditions giving man confidence of accesse to God 254 255. Misery inevitable to such as despise the Mediator ib. Merit of Christ the ground of Adoption and Regeneration 447. Method in Sermons necessary and profitable 22. Means of Repentance 546. Ministry needful unto Faith 483. Ministers must be burning and shining lights 1 2. Ministers must suffer affliction ib. Mixture of grace and sin is in the best men 167. Mutability the meer cause of mans sin 112. Mutability of mans created estate was just and necessary 113. Mutability attended mans Happinesse as well as Holinesse p. 114. Mutability and its sequel must lead us to God for confirmation 119. N Name of Christ part of his Exaltation 315 what it is 316. how it is above every Name 317 318 319 320. how Christs Name was given by God 320 321. Nature by three Arguments proveth that there is a God 30 31. Natural Agents by their operation proveth a God 42. Natural conscience proveth a God 43. Nature stained with Adams sin 151. Nature without Divine revelation discovereth not a Trinity nor yet opposeth it when revealed 77 78 79 80 81. Nature of God well studied a special help to repentance 547. New Covenant better than the old 243. Nobility no cause of boasting 145. Notes of repentance 539 540. O Object External could not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Object of New better than of the Old Covenant 251. Obedience in Subjection to Commands Submission to Providence The duty of such who believe God is 63 64. Offence at preaching Gods anger against sin is groundless 192 193. Offices of Christ fit him to be the only Mediator 271 272. Offices of Christ communicated to the Saints 441. Old Covenant abrogated 252. Opposition of Christ consistent with subjection to Christ how 327 328. Sin Originale originans discussed 135 c. Originale originatum discussed 150 151 c. Original sin is a defection 112. Original how said of mans pravity 155 156. Original sin is hard to be understood 134. Original sin confirmed by counsel 144. Acknowledged by Heathens ib. Original sin is called man and old man in what sense p. 157 158 159 160 161 162. a body and a body of sin 162 163 164. Original sin hath polluted mans nature 151 152 153. Original sin is to be subdued 170. Original sin to be conf ssed and bewailed 165. Original sin imbitters all worldly comforts 171. Ordinances argue original sin in mans nature 153. Ordinances means of union with Christ 383. P Pain in Christ his death 285 286. Pardon of sin freely given how 425 426. Parents beget their children in their own image 151. Parents good yet children by nature evil 152. Parents care for posterity quickned by the miscarriage of the first Parent of us all 147. Parents childrens looking glasses by which they dresse their lives ib. Penitent must be humbled and why 498 499 450. Peace a duty and blessing to be pursued 556. Peace an effect of Faith 47. Pelagius the first opposer of original sin p. 144. Person in the Godhead what it is 69. Persons in the Godhead three 70. Plurality of persons in the Godhead proved 71 72 73. Persons in the Godhead distinguished not divided 75. their order declared 76. Person promises properties and providences of Christ all belong to believers 393 394. Persecution of Saints a crimson sin 386. Perseverance of Saints certain 387. Pleading at Gods bar necessary to justification 404. Plea of not guilty can never procure justification at Gods bar 405. Popish Repentance false 515. Pravity and inbred corruption what it is 155. the parts of it 156. Pravity and a naughty nature is in every man 150. Pravity of the nature of man evidenced by Scripture 151 152 153. Salvation of Christ 151 152 153. Sacraments 151 152 153. Sad effects 151 152 153. Prayer an help to repentance 552. Prayer answered an effect of Faith 469. Prayer its extent and encouragement p. 262. Preparations of heaven how from the foundation of the world 660 661. Preparation to last Judgement characterised 617 618. Priestly office of Christ and its parts 272 273. Price of the soul of Christ his death 298. Price paid for man was not idem but tantundem 425. Principle and cause two distinct things 69. Principles good and bad two distinct blasphemous to assert 112. Promises were made to Christ on the account of his satisfaction for mans sin 209 300. Promises of Justification Sanctification Resurrection Eternal life The Promises of the better Covenant 240 241. Promises of temporal mercy better under the New than under the Old Covenant 248. Protestant doctrine of the imputation of Christs righteousness defended 387. Profane repentance what it is p. 516. Prosperity of profane no plea against Deity 50 51. Q Quakers repentance vile false and wicked 518 519. R Reason and sensation evince the Divine authority of the Scriptures 90. Revelation from God admitted by all and reason it should 88 89. Revelation not to be received untill cleared to be of God ibid. Rectitude is conformity to a Rule 107. Rectitude of Adam by Creation was of the whole man understanding will and sensitive appetite 109. Rectitude natural and not natural to man how 111. Regeneration explained 442. it s Synonimas 443. it is defined ib. Regeneration compared with natural generation 443 444. they agree in cause subject and manner of production ib. 445. disagree in properties 446. Religion making known Christs satisfaction most excellent 350. Relations of men subject to Gods wrath p. 187. Relation to God reason of comfort and duty 436. Repentance not to be repented explained 485. In its Nature 487. Necessity 520. Notes 539. Next way to it 546. Repentance defined 487. Repentance is a recession from sin and return to God 502 503 504 505. Return to God the second part of Conversion 506 507 508. Repentance seven false kinds 515 516 517 518. Repentance contemned when 334 335 336. Repentance neglected when and with what issue 537 538. Resurrection possible and credible 579 582 583 584 585. what it means ib. who to be
raised 480. to be believed 581. reasons of it 586 587 588 589. Resurrection the effect of the New Covenant and union with Christ 388. Resurrection after what manner and with what difference 591. how effected p. 593. it is to be believed 595. a ground of comfort ib. 596 597 598 599. a ground of terror 560. how made happy to our selves 603 604. Revenge accompanieth repentance 545. S Sacraments in the Old Testament were various and many 122. Tree of life a Sacrament in Paradise ibid. Sacraments prove corruption of nature 153. Saints are good company 3. Salvation by Christ an Argument of original pravity 153. Salvation the end of Faith 473. Salvation difficult 482. Sanctification Covenant priviledge 14. Satisfaction of Christ explained 337 339 340 341. its Matter 408 Form 412. Terms 417. Satisfaction not made by man himself 407. but by Christ 408 409 410. and how done 402. Satisfaction of Christ the only plea to procure justification at Gods bar ib. Scripture the Word explained 86. Scripture proves a God 48. Scripture similitudes shew the union between Christ and Believers 384. Scripture only discovers mans natural pravity 151. Sea its course and confinement proved a God 35 36. Secret sins discovered by natural conscience 44. Sense of Scriptures power on the soul prove them Divine 98. Sense of sin and sorrow for it are precursive parts of true Repentance 492. Sense of a short life helps to Repentance 349. Self sinful to be studied 168. Self examination an help to Repentance 548. Severity of Gods justice 295. Sense its pain in hell 626. Constituted by Real presence of all evil Impression of justice Personal Feeling 627 628. Sentence of last day 614. Sight of things invisible an effect of Faith 471. Sin to be feared and fled from 643 644. Sin a defect nothing positive 112 113. it is most unreasonable p. 114. subjects man to an impotency of saving himself 115. justifieth God in punishing man 116 117. should rather be gotten out than inquired how it came into the world 113. Sins evil seen in Christ his death 294. Sin better discovered by the New than Old Covenant 250. Sin abolished by Christ his death 302 303. Sin is imputed inherent extensive diffusive 165. Sin may exist and prevaile in a true Saint 505. Sin mortified by the Spirit 389. Sinner elect and called the subjects of Faith 460. Shame was in Christs death 206. Sensible sinner subject of true repentance 489. Society in heaven what 658 659. Sons of God partakers of the whole essence of the Father is the same numerical nature 66. 67. Sonship to God is by Creation 435. Generation 435. Marriage 435. Adoption 435. Sonship by Adoption Honourable 437 440. Free 437 440. Permanent 437 440. Sonship to God marks of it p. 453 454. Sorrow and humility usher faith 476. Soul of Christ suffered 410. Souls in heaven subject to Jesus Christ 324 325. Spirit of God in man a signe of union with Christ 389. Spirit of God justifieth how 422. Spirits evil shall be chained when Saints go to heaven 652. Speed facilitates repentance 452. Sting of conscience a note of Deity 45. Sting in Christ his death 286 287. Study of Scriptures a duty 99 100. Suns scituation and motion proveth a God 33 34. Sullen repentance what 518. Systems of Religion profitable for Ministers and people 5. they instruct in the faith antidote error 7 12. Adorn the truth 16. help the understanding 17. the memory 18. affections 19. such are found in Scripture 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. to be studied by young Divines 21. T Temptation of Satan did not necessitate man to sin p. 112. Things in heaven subject to Christ what 323 324. Things on earth subject to Christ what they are 325. Things under the earth 326. Every Tongue what it means 329. Terms of Covenant between God the Father and his Son 225. Torments of Hell Exquisite Intolerable Easelesse Remediless Universal and various 629 630 631. Tryal of last day shall be 1. Universal 2. Formal 3. Impartial 4. Exact 5. Perspicuous 6. Supreme 610 611 612. its consequence 613. Trinity proved by Old Testament text 72. New Testament 74 75. Turning from all sin to God is the formality of true repentance 50. U Union of two natures in Christ without confusion or transmutation 270. Union of believers and Christ necessary p. 377. what kind it is not 379. what kind it is 381 382. its causes 383. grounds 385. its marks 389 390 391 392. it is to be sought by sinners and improved by Saints 396 397 398 399 400. Unbelievers miserable 48. not Gods sons 447. Vocation its twofold estate 437. Vocation a Resurrection a new Creation 361. W Will of God signified in a rule of rectitude 107. Witness from heaven differs in six particulars from witnesse on earth 67 68. we have both to prove Christ the Son of God 66. Word of God declareth his wrath 181 182 183. World visible its being and parts 31 32. World an enemy to faith 481. to be slighted by ●aints 549. Works their use in point of Covenant 126 127. how they justifie 422. Wrath of God what and how aggravated 177 178 179 180. falleth on man here 184. fully at the day of judgement ibid. sheweth his justice and wisdome p. 193 194 195 196. it is to be avoided 197 198. Y Yoak of the Law borne by Jesus Christ 280 281. Z Zeal Negative p. 2. Affirmative p. 2. Zeal accompanieth true Repentance 544. FINIS
called another Comforter now he who is distinguished from the Father and the Sonne in the manner as to be called another comforter is either distinguished in regard of his essence or in regard of his personal subsistence not in regard of his essence for then he would be another God and therefore he is another in regard of his personal subsistence 4. You have a clear proof for this doctrine in the words of the Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one and to that purpose consider 1. You have mention here of three witnesses now three witnesses are three persons 2. The Word and holy Ghost are conjoyned in their Testimony with the Father which is not competible to any creature and lest we should doubt of this it is expresly said even by Saint John himself to be the witnesse of God Verse 9. If we receive the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater for this is the witnesse of God which he hath testified of his Son and concerning Christ it is said that he is the true God ver 20. This is the true God and eternal life let the Socinian shew me where any creature is called the true God Concerning the Spirit also in this Chapter it is said ver 6. that he is truth it self It is the Spirit that beareth Witnesse because the Spirit is Truth 3. If there be three witnesses whereof every one of them is God the one not the other and yet not many Gods but one true God the point is clear there are three distinct persons subsisting in one divine essence or which is all one there are three persons and one God 3. I am to speak something to the distinction of these three persons though they cannot be divided yet they may be they are distinguished many things in nature may be distinguished which cannot be divided for instance the cold and the moisture which is in the water may be distinguished but they cannot be divided Now that those three persons are distinguished appears 1. By what hath been already said the Father is not the Son nor the Son the Father nor the holy Ghost the Father or the Son 2. By the words of the Text here are three heavenly witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Son of God namely the Father the Word and the holy Ghost now one and the same person although he hath a thousand names cannot passe for three witnesses upon any faire or reasonable account whatever you may be sure that God reckons right and he sayes John 8.13 Father Sonne and holy Ghost to be three witnesses there are three that bear record in heaven so in Saint Johns Gospel the Pharisees charge our Saviour that he bare record of himself say they thou bearest record of thy self thy record is not true now mark what Christ replies ver 17 18. It is written in your Law Ver. 17 18. that the Testimony of two men is true I am one that bear witnesse of my self and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me where you have our Saviour citing the Law concerning the validity of a Testimony given by two witnesses and then he reckons his Father for one witnesse and himself for another 4. I shall speak a few words to the order of these divine persons in order of subsistence the Father is before the Son and the Son before the holy Ghost The Father the first person in the Trinity hath foundation of personal subsistence in himself the Sonne the second person the foundation of personal subsistence from the Father the holy Ghost the third person hath foundation of personal subsistence from the Father and the Sonne Now although one person be before the other in regard of order yet they are all equal in regard of time Majesty glory essence this I conceive to be the reason why in the Scripture sometimes you have the Sonne placed before the Father as 2 Cor. 13.14 2 Cor. 13.14 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Gal. 1.1 So Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by men but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead Sometimes the holy Ghost is placed before the Father as Eph. 2.18 Through him we have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father Eph. 2.18 Rev. 1.4 5. Sometimes before Jesus Christ Rev. 1.4 5. John to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before the Throne by the seven Spirits there is meant the holy Ghost and from Jesus Christ who is the faithful witnesse c. The consideration of this caused that rule amongst our Divines ab ordine verborum nulla est argumentatio there is no argument to be urged from the order of words Now this shews that although one person be before another in regard of relation and order of subsistence yet all are equal one with another in regard of essence And therefore beware lest you derogate the least jota or tittle of glory or Majesty from any of the three persons As in nature a small matter as to the body may be a great matter as to the beauty of the body cut but the haire from the eye brow how disfigured will all the face look If you take away never so little of that honour and glory which is due to any of the divine Persons you do what in you lies to blot to stain to disfigure the faire and beautiful face of the blessed Trinity 5. I am to enquire whether the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature Resol There are two things in the general that I would say in answer to this question 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it 2. That the light of nature after divine Revelation cannot oppose it 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it and for that purpose take into your thoughts these following considerations 1. If that which concerns the worship of God cannot be found out by the light of nature much lesse that which concerns Gods nature essence or subsistence but the Antecedent is certainly true For 1. As for the part of the worship and service of God which is instituted and ceremonial it is impossible that it should be found out by the light of nature for instance what man could divine that the Tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise How comes the Church to understand what creatures were clean what were unclean that the Priesthood was setled in the Tribe of Levi and not in the Tribe of Simeon or the Trible of Judah certainly these lessons were not learned by the candle-light of nature 2.