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A96993 Elisij Campi. A paradise of delights: or an Elixier of comforts Offered to believers, in two short discourses of I. The confirmation of the Covenant from Heb. 6. 17. 18. II. The donation of Christ from Romans. 8. 32. By R.W. minister of the Gospel and sometime preacher at Tamerton-Foliot, in the county of Devon. Wyne, Robert. 1672 (1672) Wing W3774A; ESTC R231977 98,406 309

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his Elect People Christ gave himself for his Children his seed Heb. 2.13 14 15. And whereas it ●s said ver 9. That he tasted Death for every man It is to be understood of every sort of men Gentiles as well as Jews for this is afterward limited to Sons Brethren and children of Christ The Spiritual seed are those many and all those for whom Christ suffered Death Christ died only for those that were given him of his Father Thou hast given him power over all ●lesh Jo. 17.2 that he should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him How doth Christ give them eternal life by dying for them thus purchasing by his death and ●hen applying to them the purchased redemption Surely Christ did not dye for all ●e would not dye for those for whom he would not pray Jo. 17.9 now see what he himself saith of this I pray 〈◊〉 for the world but for those whom 〈◊〉 hast given me out of the world He who delivered by his own ●on for us all saith the Apostle in ●he Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 how ●all he not freely give give of grace and with gracious thoughts ●nd purposes This word stands 〈◊〉 opposition to ●an's merits and ●o Gods common bounty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with him viz. with ●hrist All the good of souls is ●easured up in Christ and all the ●●joyments of Christians are ●●etened and become valuable ●●d profitable to them by their enjoyment of Christ He that hath not Christ hath nothing that is truly good to him or that will prove comfortable in the end there is no more than a shadow of good things without him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all things Some expound this of all things that God hath made others interpret it thus all things that are good and necessary others all things that may be furtherances of our salvation The two latter senses hold very clearly and the other may be admitted if we distinguish between the right of God's children and their possession God hath given them a right in and through Christ to all things for their good 1 Cor. 3.22 all things are yours and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods and as for possession of earthly things it 〈◊〉 given or witheld according to the most wise and gracious dispensation of God as he sees to be for the good of his children Well thus understand the Apostle God who hath given his Son will with him freely graciously and in good will give all things that may further our salvation and that are good and necessary for us Now there are two general parts of the Text. Parts of the Text. 1. An argument of God his surpassing love toward the elect that he gave his own Son to dye for them 2. A most comfortable inference thereupon that having given his Son he will give all things with him The words being opened the Text gives us many doctrines Doctrines deducted 1. That Jesus Christ who is here called Gods own Son is very God 2. That this Son of God was given by God for the ransome of souls 3. That God did not give his Son nor did Jesus Christ give himself to dye for all but only for the Elect. 4. That the love of God is wonderfully made out to souls in giving his Son to dye for them These four observations lye very clear in the antecedent viz. that God spared not his own Son but delivered him up to death for the Elect. Now in the consequent or inference that God will surely together with Christ give all other things we have these notes 1. That even all earthly things are given and dispensed by God Doctrines 2. That Jesus Christ is the great gift of God 3. That where God giveth Christ he will give all other needful good things 4. That all the enjoyments of believers are gifts of grace where Christ is given there is a gracious gifts of other things with him 5. Where Christ is not given nothing is given with a purpose of grace 6. That where the love of God in giving Christ is apprehended and particularly applied there faith hath sure footing to stand and bear up the soul in expectation of all other needful good things This comes up to the scope of the Text. Thus you see this 32th verse of this 8th Chapter of the Epistle to the Romanes is like a special branch of a fruitful tree singularly well loaden with precious fruit yielding us many useful observations But now I shall pluck and give you to eat only two of those choise Apples which grow upon this most fruitful bough Two doctrines handled opening and improving two of those Doctrines which the Text gives The points are these 1. God the Father delivered his own Son Jesus Christ unto death for the redemption of souls 2. Jesus Christ is the principal gift of God God the Father delivered his own Son Jesus Christ unto death Doct. 1 for the redemption of souls B●fore I take into consideration the express terms of this proposition Explication I shall premise something that here is supposed and implied 1. It is supposed that this Son of God was made Man here is a necessary supposition of the incarnation of the Son of God for as God he could not dye the divine nature is impassible The Word therefore must be made flesh the Son of God must become Man that he might be capable of suffering for sinners who were to be redeemed by his death 2. Here is necessarily implied the union of two natures in the person of Christ he was both God and Man therefore he is called Immanuel God with us and hence it is said Acts 20.28 that God purchased his Church with his owe bloud Christ as God had no bloud to shed and considered as a mear man his bloud could not be a valuable price for the redemption of souls he must be man therefore that he might be in a capacity to dye and he must be God that his death might be satisfactory and meritorious Now to the point as it is expressed herein we are to consider the Agent the Action the Object and the End 1. The Agent God that is his name the Father that is his relation to the Son who is the Object here 2. The Act delivered to death Obj. But the Evangelists tells us that Judas delivered him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the same word that is here used though there it is englished betrayed him Ans The same action may very well be ascribed both to the principal Sol. and the instrumental cause God the Father was the principal cause of the delivery of his Son to death appointing and by his providence ordering the actions of Judas and the Jews and of Pilate in this business God by the teachery of Judas and by the malice and cruelty of the rest of the actors of that Tragedy delivered his Son to death He was smitten of God