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A77515 Two treatises the one, handling the doctrine of Christ's mediatorship : wherein the great Gospel-mystery of reconciliation betwixt God and man is opened, vindicated, and applyed. The other, of mystical implantation : wherein the Christian's union and communion with, and conformity to Jesus Christ, both in his death and resurrection, is opened, and applyed. / As they were lately delivered to the church of God at Great Yarmouth, by John Brinsley, minister of the Gospel, and preacher to that incorporation. Brinsley, John, 1600-1665.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1652 (1652) Wing B4737; Thomason E1223_1; ESTC R22919 314,532 569

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to let and hinder the exceeding of somewhat which is betwixt them Others Conciliator a Reconciler one that procureth Love or Agreement betwixt two or more who were strangers or Enemies each to other Not to trouble you with these triviall differences The word properly signifieth as our translation renders it Mediatour A Mediatour a Middler a Middle person that dealeth betwixt two others This for the Word 2. For the Thing 2. Of the Thing How and in what respect is Christ said to be a Mediatour To this I answer in the generall He is a middle person dealing betwixt God and man More particularly and fully Christ a Mediatour in a twofold respect He may be said to be a Mediatour in a twofold respect 1. In respect of his Person 2. In respect of his office In respect of his Person he is a middle person betwixt God and man In respect of his office Tileni Syntagma de Officio Chricti §. 39. Corn. à Lap. ad Textum he is a middle person dealing betwixt God and man The former of these Bellarmine first and after him some others call Mediatio substantialis a substantiall Mediation The later Mediatio 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an operative Mediation Which Distinction Chamier Panstratia de Christo Mediatore however as Chamier noteth upon it it be a new-coined one not to be found among the Ancients and possibly may be abused by the mis-application of it as it is by Bellarmine himselfe yet in it selfe it is Orthodox serving not unfitly to explain unto us this great and usefull Doctrine I shall deal with these branches severally 1. In respect of his Person God-Man 1. He is a Mediatour in respect of his Person A middle Person betwixt God and Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So may he well be called in as much as he participates of both Natures being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God and Man God-man Such a Mediatour ought to be one that hath interest in both parties And such is the Lord Jesus One that hath interest in both Natures the God-head and the Man-hood Evinced by Scripture For this Scripture is expresse and cleare to those that will not shut their eyes against the light What else can we make of that known place of our Apostle in the 3d chapter of this Epistle Magnum est pietatis mysterium quod manifestatum est in carne V. Lat. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grot. ad loc Qui ipse alibi aliter locum citat sc Jo. 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 16. God was manifested in the flesh Not the Mystery of Godlinesse So indeed the Vulgar Latine rendereth it and so Grotius would have it leaving out the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God which saith he Hincmarus informs him was added by the Nestorians and Erasmus conjectures was put in against the Arians Great is the mystery of Godlinesse which was manifested in the flesh viz. by Christ and his Apostles weak mortall men But God was manifested in the flesh which word God Beza more rightly conceives was in some Copies expunged by those who denyed the Divinity of Christ Vide Bezam in Graec. Annot. ad locum fusè or the Vnion of the two Natures As for the former reading and exposition as Beza rightly observes upon it it is inconsistent with that which followeth in the verse To let passe other passages How can it be said of the Mystery of Godlinesse what we find in the close of that verse that it was received up into Glory Certainely this cannot be applied unto any other thing but the Person of Christ even God manifested in the flesh I am not ignorant how Grotius goeth about to elude that Allegation The Mystery of Godlinesse Gloriosè admodùm exaltatum est nempè quià multo majorem attulit sanctitatem quàm ulla antehac dogmata Grot. Annot ad loc the Gospel saith he may be said to be Exalted in Glory in as much as it brought in greater sanctity into the world then any other Doctrine before it had done But the word in the Originall is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which properly signifieth as Beza renders it Sursum receptus est Received or taken up Which the Evangelist Saint Luke applieth unto Christ Acts 1.2 and ver 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he was taken up The evidence is cleare to those that will not Festucam quaerere as he spake seek strawes to put out their owne eyes withall That passage of the Apostle is a description of the Messiah God manifested in the flesh God i. e. the eternall Son of God the second Person in the blessed Trinity being God coessentiall and coequall with his Father He was manifested in the flesh by assuming the humane nature into a personall union with the divine To the same purpose is that other obvious Text of St John Joh. 1.14 The Word was made flesh The Word of which he saith in the first verse that it was with God and was God The increated essential Word the second Person in the blessed Trinity it was made flesh viz. by taking the nature of a man into such a personal union with his Godhead Thus was the Messiah both God and Man two natures in one Person Truly God and truly Man Christ truly Man Truly Man For that were there no other Text in Scripture to assert it this one which we have now in hand would put it out of doubt There is one Mediatour betwixt God and men the Man Christ Jesus As truly God If there be any question it must be about his Godhead That the Arians of former and the Socinians of later times have not onely questioned but denied And for countenance of that their damnable Heresie amongst other Texts of Scripture they take hold of this we have now in hand There is one Mediatour betwixt God and men the Man Christ Jesus The Godhead of Christ evinced by Scripture Testimony But for this also Scripture speaketh as fully as expresly as for the former Testimonies are obvious In the old Testament Isa 9.6 The Prophet speaking of the Messiah he calleth him the mighty God El Gibbor El being one of the names of God More clearly the Prophet Jeremie Jer. 23.6 This is the name whereby he shall be called The Lord our Righteousnesse Jehovah Tzidkeu Jehovah our Righteousnesse A name proper unto God as the Jewes acknowledge not so communicable to any creature In the New Testament Acts 20.28 Paul chargeth the Elders at Ephesus that they should feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his blood The Church of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Lord. So indeed Grotius would evade it telling us of some Greek Copies that so read it True Beza instanceth in five of them In quinque Exemplaribus logitur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza ad loc Hunc locum eludere frustrà conati sunt Ariani Bez. Gr.
man which is in heaven Not that Christ in his man-hood came down from heaven or that according to his Godhead he ascended up into heaven but the same Person did both according to divers natures He was said to come down from heaven in respect of his Godhead which assumed the humane nature into personall union And he was said to ascend up into heaven and to be in heaven in respect of his manhood which being united to his Godhead came to be of God's Counsell to be acquainted with his secrets And after the like manner are we to understand the word here in the Text The Man Christ Jesus that Person who being God before time was also made man in time he was Mediatour betwixt God and men Quest Question But why then doth the Apostle here add this The Man Christ Why the word Man is mentioned if it be not for that end to point out that nature according to which he is Mediatour Answer Ans For this some other and better Reasons may be assigned A threefold Reason assigned for it as 1. This he addeth to intimate that common interest which all the Sons of men have in this Mediatour In as much as he also is the Son of man their Brother partaking in the same common nature of their flesh and blood as the Apostle inlargeth it Heb 2.11 14. 2. This he adds to incourage men so much the rather to come unto God by Christ and to make use of his Mediation in as much as they have not an High Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of their infirmities but was in all points tempted like as they are as the same Apostle hath it Heb. 4.15 being a man like unto themselves onely without sin 3. Again he maketh mention here of Christ's humane Nature Quià de traditione erat dicturus ideò Hominem solummodo nominavit Sedulius ad loc in as much as in this nature he paid the Ransome spoken of in the verse following He gave himselfe a Ransom for all This he did by offering up his humane nature as a Sacrifice unto God Through his eternall Spirit he offered up himselfe unto God as the Apostle hath it Heb. 9.14 By the power of his Godhead he offered up his manhood which because it was the Sacrifice offered up the Nature wherein Christ suffered and so paid that price therefore the Apostle here maketh mention only of it stiling this Mediatour The Man Christ Jesus And thus you see that first Arg. 2 Allegation cleared More briefly of the second Arg. 2. Paul here distinguisheth betwixt God and this Mediatour God and Mediatour distinguished And therefore Christ is not Mediatour as God but onely as man Ans To this it is answered 1. That the Answer 1 naming of God in the first place Chamier de Mediatore cap. 5. sec 6. doth not hinder but that it may also be understood in the second As in that John 14.1 Our Saviour saith to his Disciples Ye believe in God believe also in me Not but that he himselfe also was God and to be believed in as God And so John 17.13 This is life eternall that they may know thee the only true God and him whom thou hast sent Jesus Christ Not that Christ is thereby denyed to be truely God as the Arians of old and the Socinians at this day would conclude from that Text. So here There is one God and one Mediatour c. The mentioning of God in the first place doth not exclude it in the second For by this reason this Mediatour should as well be denyed to be God at all as to be Mediatour as God 2. But secondly and more plainly the Answer 2 word God there is to be taken Chamier ibid. sec 7. Dr. Prideaux Fasciculus Controvers de Redemptione q. 3. The word God taken personally not Essentially but Personally as denoting and pointing out the first Person in the Trinity God the Father So we find it often used else-where John 3.16 2 Cor. 5.19 Ephes 1.3 And so is it most properly to be understood here There is one God and one Mediatour betwixt God and men id est God the Father betwixt whom and mankind Christ the Son is said to be a Mediatour We have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 John 2.1 And being so understood it doth not exclude Christ from being God or from being Mediatour as God viz. as the second person in the Trinity Thus is the Text briefly vindicated from giving any countenance to this Doctrine of theirs As for their Reasons I will not trouble you Reason 1 with many of them the chief and principall of them is that which Bellarmine Argument from Reason and others of that way borrow from their Aquinas A Mediator saith he must be a Middle person differing from both the Extremes Aquinas p. 3. q. 26. art 2. both from the party offending and offended Now such a Mediator is Christ saith he considered as a Righteous Man As Man he differs from God as Righteous he differs from other men Christ as God the same with God who are all sinners and so in that respect he is a fitting Mediator betwixt God and Men. But as God he is the same with God not differing from him whether in nature or quality Answer Ans To this I find divers Answers returned To let others passe 1. Such a Mediator is Jesus Christ a middle person differing from both Extreames 1. Christ as God-man a middle person differing from God and man both from the person offending and offended So he doth viz. as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as God-Man True indeed in respect of his Natures he agreeth with both but in respect of his Person he differeth from both 2. Chamier de Mediatore c. 7. sec 2. being not onely God or onely Man but God and Man 2. But 2dly consider him as God yet doth he therein also differ from God his Father I find a threefold difference Christ as God differeth from his Father A threefold difference assigned betwixt them 1. In respect of his Person which being the second Person in the Trinity is distinct from the first The Son is a distinct Person from his Father 1 Joh. 5.8 2. In regard of his Incarnation It was not the Father that took upon him our flesh but the Son The Word was made flesh Joh. 1.14 And 3dly in regard of his Humiliation It was not the Father but the Son which tooke upon him the form of a servant c. Which Humbled himselfe and became obedient unto the death c. Phil. 2.6 7 8. Therein did he differ from God his Father as we may learn from the words following Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him viz. God his Father Thus then Christ according to his divine nature is not every waies the same with God God his Father So as in this respect there is
the other his Divinity his Humanity upon Earth his Divinity in Heaven yet both united together in one Christ by an Hypostaticall Personall Union And here is the foundation and ground-work of Christ's Operative Mediation which was laid in this Substantiall Mediation as they call it in the union of these two natures God and man being at variance this our Mediatour that he might make way to the reconciling of their Persons he first uniteth their Natures being the Son of God by nature he taketh the Manhood into a personall Union with his Godhead Even as one desiring to mediate peace betwixt two dissenting families which are at deadly feude the one with the other he being first clearly allyed unto the one he marrieth into the other that so being related and allyed unto both to the one by consanguinity to the other by affinity he may have the greater advantage for reconciling each to other Thus did our Mediatour the Lord Jesus Being the Son of God by nature he marrieth the nature of man taketh it into a personall and indissoluble union with his Godhead that so being nearly allyed unto both he might be fit to deale betwixt them and might with better successe manage this Work of Reconciliation Here are the two Extremes in this Ladder the Bottom and the Top. 2. Now betwixt these two there were many intermediate staves The intermediate Staves five or steps So there is in a Ladder and so there were in that Ladder how else should the Angels ascend and descend by it as they are said to do And in like manner in this great Negotiation of our Mediatour betwixt God and man we shall find divers steps and degrees whereby he managed and carried on this Work of Reconciliation Of these steps Bellarmine Bellarminus de Christo Mediatore lib. 5. c. 1. reckons up foure Christ in his work of Mediation Five steps in Christ's Mediation is 1. Arbiter an Arbitratour an Vmpire 2. Interpres an Interpreter or Messenger 3. Advocatus an Advocate an Intercessour 4. Sponsor a Surety an Vndertaker And to these to make the enumeration compleat and full Junius Junius Animadvers in Bellarm. ibid. lib. 5. cap. 1. §. 9. adds a 5th Gubernator A Ruler a Governour These are the steps of this Ladder the several operations whereby the Lord Christ manageth this his work of Mediation The first and second whereof belong unto his Propheticall Office the third and fourth to his Priestly Office the fifth and last to his Kingly Office All together rendring him a compleat Mediatour I shall take a view of these particulars severally speaking of them as plainly as clearly as I can Let me crave your best attentions to go along with me 1. The first step Arbiter Christ an Arbitratour or Umpire betwixt God and men Begin with the first of them which is 1. Arbiter an Arbitratour an Vmpire a Judge Such a one may properly be called a Mediatour who layeth his hand upon both parties as Job speaks Job 9.33 judging betwixt them Who made thee a Judge over us saith one of the contending Hebrews unto Moses when he interposed himselfe as a Mediatour betwixt them Exod. 2.14 One that taketh cognizance of the difference what is the ground of it who hath done the wrong then judgeth betwixt them propounding and setting down the tearms of Reconciliation and agreement Such a one may fitly be called a Mediatour And such a Mediatour is the Lord Jesus betwixt God and men One whom God his Father hath constituted and appointed to be an Arbitratour an Vmpire a Judge betwixt him and them committing Judgement unto him The Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement unto the Son John 5.22 All Judgement as of Absolution and Condemnation so of Arbitration As to judg men so to judg betwixt God and men This doth the Lord Christ And being the Wisdome of his Father as the Apostle calleth him 1 Cor. 1.24 Christ the Wisdome of God He hath also determined and set down the terms of Reconciliation and Agreement betwixt them as it were drawing up a Covenant betwixt them In which respect amongst others he may be said to be the Mediatour of the Covenant as he is called Heb. 8.6 9.15 12.24 In as much as Conditions of the Covenant were set down by him Missus enim à Patre factus Arbiter reconciliavit Deum Homines c. Ambrosad Textum Thus Ambrose cited to this purpose by Bellarmine conceives of it expounding the word in the Text in this sense Thus saith he is Christ said to be a Mediator betwixt God and men In as much as being constituted by God his Father an Arbitratour he set down in what way and upon what terms Reconciliation should be made betwixt them viz. upon God's accepting the satisfaction which should be made in their behalf Ut Deus ignosceret Homo de caetero in Dei fide maneret Ambros ibid. and of pardoning their sins and their complying with God in the way of Faith and Obedience But to let this passe come we to the second which is 2 Step. Interpres Christ an Interpreter or Intermessenger 2. Interpres or Internuncius An Interpreter an Inter-messenger Such a one may fitly be called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Mediatour one that in this nature goeth betwixt two parties at variance imparting the mind of the one to the other so to breed a right understanding and thereby to work a complyance betwixt them And in this sense Jesus Christ may truly and fitly be said to be a Mediator betwixt God and men Though not only in this so indeed the Heretick Socinus would have it Vide Grotium de satisfactione Christi cap. 8. affirming this word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which we render Mediatour whereever we meet with it in Scripture to import and signifie no more but Dei Interpres God's Interpreter And so his followers treading in his steps stil expound the word in the same sense For Christ to be a Mediatour of the Covenant saith one of them Dr. Lusshington Comment in Heb. 8.6 writing upon that Heb. 8.6 is nothing else but to be the Interpreter of God or the Intercessour passing betwixt God and men with mutuall messages to make and finish up the Covenant on both parties By which Inter-messenger God declares and testifies his will unto men and they again being informed in the knowledge of God's will do comply with God and contract with him are reconciled with him and enjoy their peace afterwards But that this is not the whole truth I shall have occasion God willing to shew you hereafter For the present take we up what is truth in it viz. that as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will fitly bear this sense so it may in this sense as fitly be applied unto Christ Such a Meditour is he an Interpreter an Inter-messenger going betwixt God and man imparting the mind of the one to the
Religion I a corner stone in that Foundation and a Truth principally aimed at by the Apostle in the Text I have now in hand as I have shewn you from the verse following as also because among other Truths of God I find it of late called in question nay utterly exploded and that by some who to use Paul's words Gal. 2.9 seemed to be Pillars men of no mean note in the Church of God Now passe we on to that which remains wherin I shall be as concise and briefe as conveniently I may finding the work to swell in my hand far beyond my expectation when I first took it up Secondly As Christ is a Surety in way of Satisfaction so of Caution II. Christ a Surety in way of Caution In the former he is a Surety de praeterito for what is past In this later he is a Surety de futuro for what is to come A Surety in way of Caution undertaking for those whom he hath so reconciled unto God viz. for the performance of the stipulation of the conditiōs of the covenant required on their part This Jesus Christ our Mediatour undertaketh and effecteth wherein he being the Truth again out-strips the Type Moses that Typicall Legall Mediatour he could go betwixt God and the people declaring his mind unto them receiving and returning their answer unto him Both these we find Exod. 19.7 8. Moses called for the Elders of the people and laid before their faces all these words which the Lord had commanded him And all the people answered together and said All that the Lord hath spoken we will do And Moses returned the words of the people unto the Lord. Thus he went betwixt them as an Internuncius an Intermessenger reporting the mind of each to other But he durst not ingage for them As for God he durst and did ingage for performance of the Covenant on his part And hee laid an ingagement upon the people Both these he did in and by that one Ceremonie which we meet with Exod. 24.8 Having first read the Booke of the Covenant in the audience of the people and received their Answer to the purport aforesaid Then he tooke the blood of the Sacrifice and sprinkled it on the people By that Ceremonie confirming and ratifying the Covenant Assuring it on Gods part and ingaging the people to fidelitie and constancie on their part as God willing I shall shew you more fully anon in moralizing of that Ceremonie But engage for them he durst not Which if he had done he had not been able to performe it But this doth our Mediator the Lord Jesus He having by his death reconciled his people unto God Undertaking for performance of the conditions on the behalfe of his Elect viz. Faith and Obedience now he undertaketh for them for their performance of the Stipulation the conditions of the Covenant on their part What the Stipulation is you have heard already Even the Obedience of Faith so the Apostle calleth it Rom. 1.5 and 16.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The obedience of Faith or if you will divide them Faith and Obedience These without any just offence I may call the conditions of this Covenant Faith whereby the Covenant is accepted upon the tearms on which it is tendred and Christ the Mediator of it received Obedience wherby it is kept viz. in an Evangelicall way in respect of desire and indeavour This it is which the Psalmist calleth Keeping of the Covenant Psalm 25.10 and 103.18 Not a Legall but an Evangelicall keeping when the promises of grace being beleeved there is a serious desire and indeavour of yeilding obedience to all God's Commandements Now for this Christ undertaketh on the behalfe of his Elect that they shall thus keep the Covenant that they shall thus Consent and Obey as the former Translation rendreth it Isaiah 1.19 And undertaking it he effecteth it working in them what the Covenant requires This he doth by his Spirit which is to them in whom it dwels first a Spirit of Faith So you find it expresly called 2 Cor. 4.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of Faith So called not only because it is not given but to beleevers as Grot. glosseth upon it but also because it worketh Faith in the soul inclining it to receive Christ the offer of grace by and through him And then a Spirit of Holinesse So the Spirit of Christ is called Rom. 1.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of Sanctity or Sanctification Because being Holy in it selfe it sanctifieth the person in whom it dwelleth Thus it sanctified the Humane nature of Christ wherein it dwelled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle phraseth it Col. 2.9 Really Substantially Essentially Bodily And thus it sanctifieth all true beleevers in whom it dwelleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after a Spirituall manner being communicated from Christ unto them as from the Head to the Members Thus doth Jesus Christ this our Mediator come unto all his Elect people as by his merit so by his Spirit So may wee most fitly understand that of Saint John 1 John 5.6 This is hee that came by water and blood Both these issued out of the side of our Saviour upon the crosse surely not without a mystery Betokening a double benefit redounding to all believers by and through him The one of Justification the other of Sanctification Thus Christ is said to come to them first by Blood taking away the guilt of sin Then by water cleansing them from the filth and pollution of sin Both which were shadowed out by the like Types under the Law There in the Service of the Tabernacle was Blood and water Blood in the Sacrifices water in the Legall ablutions Both Types of Christ who thus cometh unto his people as by Blood Justifying so by water Sanctifying them This is that which the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 1.31 where speaking of the Benefits which beleevers have by Christ he saith hee is made unto them of God Righteousness Sanctification i. e. The cause and procurer of both Of Righteousnesse through his merit Of Sanctification by his Spirit Thus doth Jesus Christ worke in the heart of his Elect both these Conditions of the Covenant Faith and Holinesse And as he beginneth this worke in them With perseverance so he maintaineth and continues it Causing those whom he hath thus reconciled unto God to persevere in Faith and Obedience In faith I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not saith our Saviour to Peter Luk. 22.32 The like he doth for all that are given to him taking order for their persevering in faith So as though it may fail in the mouth as Peter did yet it shall never fail in the Heart And as in faith so in Holinesse this he also maintaines which he doth by the continuall Supply of his Spirit mortifying and keeping under corruption nourishing and exciting of grace putting them on in the course of their Obedience guiding their feet into the
in heaven or things in earth Where granting what generally is not and I think well cannot be denyed that by things in Heaven are to be understood the Angels the Question is How they are said to be reconciled unto God To this it is answered Properly they are not Where there was no breach Cuicunque creaturae hoc convenit ut peccare non possit hoc habet ex dono gratiae non ex conditione naturae Aquin. Sum. par 1. quaest 63. Art 1. Christi gratiá effectum est ut Angeli Deo 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adhaerentes à lapsu immunes perstarens Tilen Syntag pars 2. cap. 10. sec 34. there can be no proper Reconciliation This is peculiar unto man but improperly and analogically they may be said so to be and that by confirming and establishing them in the grace and favour of God taking away all possibility of Defection from him and Enmity with him This benefit the elect Angels may be conceived to have by Christ through his Mediation thereby they are brought to a more perfect adhesion unto God to an inseparable union with him Their peace and amity with him by this means is continued and strengthened And thus you see the former of these two Questions briefly resolved The latter followeth Quest 2. Is Jesus Christ Mediatour onely according to his Humane Nature Or if you will inlarge the question a little Jesus Christ being both God and man partaking of both Question 2 Natures the question now is According to what nature Christ is Mediatour according to which of these his Natures he is said to be the Mediatour betwixt God and men Whether only according to his Divine Nature as God or whether onely according to his Humane Nature as man or according to both as God and man Here are three wayes Which shall we take Answer Ans Take which we will we shall fall with some company A threefold opinion And therefore it behooveth us here to take that counsell which the Lord giveth unto his people Jer. 6.16 to stand in these wayes and see and ask for the old path where is the right way that we may walk therein 1. Christ is Mediatour only as God confuted from the Text. 1. In the first of these we shall find Osiander alone Christ is Mediatour saith he onely according to his Divine Nature as God But this opinion needeth no other refutation then that which it meeteth with in the Text which tels us expresly that the Mediatour betwixt God and man is the Man Christ Jesus so clearly interesting the Manhood of Christ in this Office and Work of Mediatorship Upon this account we leave him 2. Onely as man the opinion of Papists 2. The second path is more trodden Here we find not only Stancarus whom Bellarmine seemeth to undertake as being somewhat too grosse in his opinion this way But even Bellarmine himselfe and most of the Doctours of the Church of Rome who however they acknowledge that that person who was and is Mediatour is both God and Man Deus Humanatus to use Bellarmine's words God made man Bellarminus de Christo Mediatore cap. 1. yet say they he performeth and executeth that office of his Mediatorship not according to his Divine but Humane Nature onely as man So the Master of the Sentences so Bonaventure Nullo pacto convenit Christo esse Mediatorem in quantum Deus est sed in quantum Homo Thom. 3. p. q. 26. Art 2. Concl. so Aquinas have determined it And therein they are followed by the generality of the Romish Perswasion Jesus Christ is Mediatour onely according to his humane Nature not at all as God but onely as man This is their Tenent which they endeavour to make good both by Scripture and Reason For Scripture They have but one Text The Text cleared from countenancing this opinion which they can find that seemeth to speak any thing for them in this cause And that is this we have now in hand There is one God and one Mediatour betwixt God and men the Man Christ Jesus In this bulrush they find two knots From hence they take up a double Argument First The Apostle he recalleth this Mediatour the Man Christ Jesus And wherefore so but to expresse and notifie that Nature according to which he is Mediatour And Secondly He plainly distinguisheth here betwixt God and this Mediatour There is one God and one Mediatour And therefore Christ cannot be Mediatour as God but only as man Thus they argue from this Text. But how weakly will soon appear if we come to joyne issue with them Which I shall do with all convenient brevity as not taking delight in controversies or willingly medling with them but where I am necessarily ingaged to it Arg. 1 Arg. 1. For the former The Mediatour betwixt God and man is the Man Christ Jesus The man Christ Jesus Answer Ans True he is so but not onely as man Not onely as man there is a broad difference betwixt these two The Man Christ is Mediatour and He is Mediatour onely as man The Apostle here asserteth the one not so the other He doth not say Jesus Christus Homo Jesus Christ the Man that might have seemed to imply what they contend for But Homo Jesus Christus the Man Christ Jesus id est not any other man not any meer man but that man who was more then man the Man Christ Jesus that Person who was both God man Thus are we here to construe the word Man Chamier de Mediatore cap. 5. sect 5. Non naturaliter sed Personaliter not in the Abstract but in the Concrete not as pointing out unto us only the humane nature of Christ but the whole Person denominated and set forth unto us by and under that nature Like phrases we meet withall elsewhere 1 Cor. 2.8 It is said that the Lord of Glory was crucified not that Christ was crucified in that nature according to which he is most properly said to be the Lord of Glory viz. his divine Nature that was impossible But that Person who being God as well as man was the Lord and God of Glory as he is stiled Acts 7.2 he was crucified So in that obvious place Acts 20.28 it is said that God nourished the Church with his blood Not that the Godhead suffered and died that had no blood of it own to shed but that Person who was truly God as well as man In both places there is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Divines call it a Communication of Properties wherein that which is proper to one nature in Christ is attributed not to the other nature as it is by some misconceived but to the person denominated and set forth by the other nature And thus are we to understand that somewhat obscure Text John 3.13 No man saith our Saviour hath ascended up to heaven but he that came down from heaven even the Son of
3. As a Priest to his Priestly Office Here to let passe other which I formerly named there are two main and principall Acts His Oblation and his Intercession And in both these shall we find the Godhead of Christ interested 1. In his Oblation In his Oblation In the offering up of that Sacrifice upon the Crosse Here indeed the manhood seemed to have the main stroak That paid the Ransome but yet even here we shall find a concurrence of the Godhead However the Godhead could not properly suffer with the Manhood yet it concurred with it in that suffering The Godhead concurred with the Man-hood in suffering four wayes Which concurrence because it is a point of speciall concernment I shall briefly show you wherein it consisted Take it in four words Voluit Quievit Sustentavit Efficatiam dedit The Godhead First willed that the manhood should suffer Secondly It Rested that it might suffer Thirdly It Supported it in suffering Fourthly It gave efficacy and vertue to those sufferings A word of each 1. Voluit The Godhead of Christ willed that the Manhood should suffer 1. Willing that it should suffer So much we may learn from the words of our Saviour John 10.17 18. I lay downe my life No man taketh it from mee but I lay it downe of my selfe I have power to lay it downe c. So he had And that not only a Passive power which all men have but an Active Such a Power hee there speaketh of as the next words make it out I have power to lay downe my life and I have power to take it up againe Men may have the the former not so the latter They may have power to lay downe their lives but not to take them up againe Christ had both a Passive power as Man and an Active power as God a divine power And by this power it was that he layd downe his life His Godhead willed that his Manhood should suffer 2. And Secondly Quievit It rested that it might suffer 2. Resting that it might suffer Which otherwise it could never have done Wee see how it was in the Garden when the Godhead of Christ did but a little put forth it selfe presently all that were sent to apprehend him fell to the ground John 18.6 Had not that rested it had not been in the power of men and divels to have brought him to the Crosse The Godhead rested whilest the Manhood suffered Even as it was with the first Adam he slept while his side was opened Gen. 2.21 So was it with the second Adam the Lord Jesus whilest his side was opened pierced upon the Crosse his Godhead as it were slept not putting forth that efflux of power which before it had done which made him to cry out My God my my God why hast thou forsaken me Yet 3ly Sustentavit Though it rested that it might suffer yet it secretly supported and sustained it in suffering 3. Sustaining it in suffering so as he did not sinke under that otherwise insupportable burthen Such were the sins of the world charged upon him and the wrath of God due unto those sins powred out upon him One sin having in it an infinite guilt is more then a finite creature can stand under What were a world of sinnes layed upon one man Had not the Manhood of Christ been supported by his Godhead in those his sufferings it must needs have sunk under them 4 Giving efficacy to that suffering 4ly And lastly Efficaciam dedit The Godhead gave vertue and efficacie to the sufferings of the manhood Which had they been the sufferings of the manhood alone they could have been but like the Manhood it self finite The stream riseth no higher then the fountain The Humane nature of Christ being it self finite the merit thereof could not have been infinite But such must that Merit be which maketh satisfaction to an infinite Justice It must be an infinite merit an Infinite price Bellarm. de Mediatore lib. 5. c. 7. So much Bellarmine cannot deny And thereupon he is inforced to acknowledge that here the concurrence of the God-head was requisite and necessary Thus doth the Godhead concurr with the Manhood of Christ all these severall wayes in that grand act of his Mediatorship his Oblation All which we may conceive comprehended by the Apostle in that one passage Heb. 9.14 where he informs us how Christ through the Eternall spirit offered himself without spot unto God the Godhead offered up the Manhood Willing that it should suffer resting that it might suffer sustaining it in suffering and giving it the value and vertue to satisfie and sanctifie The other act of Christs Priesthood the 4th act of his Mediatorship is his Intercession 4. In his Intercession Now how can this be the work of Christs manhood alone To hear and offer up to receive present the prayers and other spirituall Sacrifices of all beleevers in the world to negotiate for them all at one and the same time according to the variety and multiplicity of their severall occasions this is and must be the work not of a finite but an infinite Agent Not to be effected without the concurrence of the Divine Nature with the Humane The last and highest step of the Ladder is the Kingly office In his Kingly office of Jesus Christ Now how should he execute that without the concurrence of his divine nature Certainly to Gather and Governe the Church to protect and defend it against all assailants open and secret to give the Holy Spirit to enlighten the minds of men to Circumcise their hearts to subdue their Corruptions to vanquish Sathan and all adverse powers c. all which are Acts of Christs Kingly Office it transcends the power of any finite creature and so cannot be attributed unto Christ onely according to his humane nature as man but as God and man Such is the worke of Christs Mediatorship the worke of the whole Person This concurrence of both natures explained and illustrated wherein both Natures are ingaged And thence is it that some of the Ancients speaking of it Dionis Areopag epist 4. ad Caium Damascenus lib. 3. cap. 19. call it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Deivira seu Deivirilis Operatio a divine-Divine-humane Operation the worke of God-man In which worke each Nature acts its part acting distinctly yet jointly Agit utraque quidem distinctè sed tamen unitè Leo Ep. 10. A mystery which Damascen illustrates very aptly by a familiar similitude of a fiery sword which both cuts and burnes at one and the same time Cutting it burneth Quemadmodùm unam incisam combustionem unam combustam incisionem igniti gladii dicimus sed aliam actionem dicimus incisionem aliam ustulationem c. sic Christi junam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicentes c. Dionis ibid. and burning it cutteth both together But this it doth according to two distinct principles and properties It
Proclamation runs Isai 55.1 Ho every one that thirsteth come unto the waters and he that hath no money come Buy wine and milk without money or without price A gracious invitation wherein Christ proclaimeth a free-Mart to all those that feel themselves to stand in need of true grace and sound comfort and desire a supply thereof let them come unto him but come emptie-handed without money or monies worth bringing nothing of their own with them nothing but hungring and thirsting souls So shall they be supplyed with wine and milk all things needfull to their spirituall refreshment and nourishment 5. And thus coming to him now cast our selves upon him 5. Cast our selves upon him depend upon him So did Joseph's brethren at their last coming now they cast themselves upon Joseph depending upon him for provision for them and theirs The like do we not knowing where else to have our wants supplyed Master John 6.68 whither shall we go saith Peter thou hast the words of eternall life come we unto Jesus Christ and cast our selves upon him in a confident assurance of being nourished by him As David saith of temporall food Psal 37.3 Trust in the Lord c and verily thou shalt be fed So say I of spirituall Trust in the Lord rest upon Jesus Christ and verily thou shalt be fed So doth the graft upon the stock it resteth upon it and depends upon it for nourishment which by an attractive vertue being hungry as it were it sucks and draweth from it And the like do we from Jesus Christ coming unto him in the sense of our wants set faith awork which is an attractive grace thereby as it were sucking and drawing this nutritive vertue from him 6. Give glory and honour unto Jesus Christ 6. Which being in our measure made partakers of now give praise honour and glory to Jesus Christ offering unto him the best that we have So Jacob directeth his sons at their return into Egypt In as much as they had received such speciall and undeserved favour from the Governour of the Land to furnish them with corn without money he orders them to take the best fruits in the land in their vessels and carry down the man a present a little balm and a little honey c. Gen. 43.11 The like do we having tasted of this so undeserved a favour this speciall grace of Jesus Christ in the communication of his saving sanctifying Spirit unto us in any measure now present him with such as we have Praise Honour Glory Service Obedience Bringing forth fru t answerable Above all endeavouring to bring forth fruits answerable to what we have received This is the greatest honour that the graft can do to the stock to bring forth fruit in it answerable to that nourishment which it hath received from it And this is the greatest honour that we can do to Jesus Christ when we shew forth his vertues his praises as Saint Peter hath it 1 Pet. 2.9 And this do we not onely in word speaking well of the Name of Christ extolling and magnifying his power his vertue put forth in and upon us But also and chiefly in deed by expressing that power those vertues in the course of our lives and conversations bringing forth fruits in measure worthy of sutable to such a Stock But of this God willing more hereafter Here is the first of these subordinate benefits which accrew unto the believer from his communion with Jesus Christ being ingrafted into him he receiveth nourishment from him A second followes viz. Augmentation The Graft being put into the Stock and receiving nourishment from it 7. Resembl A second Benefit Augmentation now it groweth up in it And the like doth the Believer in the Lord Jesus Christ being ingrafted into him and receiving spirituall nourishment from him now he groweth up in him Ex iisdem nutrimur crescimus Nutrition and Augmentation are both from the same cause That which plants are nourished by that they grow by Christians receiving nourishment from Christ they grow and increase in him So it followeth in that fore-cited Text of the Apostle Col. 2.19 Where speaking of the mysticall Body of Christ the Church he saith that having nourishment ministred to it from the Head it increaseth with the increase ef God Thus doth the mysticall Body of Christ grow not only Extensively in regard of the daily addition of new members to it there being daily added to the Church such as shall be saved Acts 2.47 In which respect the Apostle saith that it groweth unto an holy Temple Ephes 2.21 But also Intensively in regard of the growth of every member This is true Augmentation when it is secundùm omnes partes when every member of the body every branch of the tree groweth and increaseth in the severall dimensions thereof And thus groweth the Body of Christ the Church Every member of it groweth increaseth with the Increase of God that is a spirituall Increase which is both from God and to God From God as the principall Efficient Cause of it Paul planteth Apollos watereth but God giveth the increase 1 Cor. 3.6 And it tends to God to his Glory as the ultimate end of it And besides for the kind of it it is a divine Increase not in the things of this world but in the things of God In all which respects it is called the Increase of God Whereof all living Branches are made partakers Christ himself And with this Increase do all the true members of this mysticall Body all the living Branches ingrafted into this Stock grow and increase Thus did Christ himselfe who in respect of his Manhood was a Branch grow and increase So it was fore-told that he should do Isai 53.2 He shall grow up before him as a tender plant Which is to be understood both of his Person and Kingdome Both which were of small beginnings but growing So did Christ in his Person according to his humane nature he grew and increased and that as in the outward so in the inward man as in stature so in Grace So you have it attested Luke 2.40 And the child grew and waxed strong in spirit filled with wisdome and the Grace of God was upon him and again ver last And Jesus increased in wisdom and stature and in favour with God and man Thus did he grow the Graces of the Divinity breaking forth and shewing themselves by little and little through the lanthorn of the Humanity according to the maturity of the faculties thereof Herein was Christ a Pattern and sampler to the Believer who being in Christ is in his measure made conformable to him growing up in him It is one of the properties which the Psalmist giveth of the righteous man Every righteous person Psal 92.12 He shal grow like a Cedar in Lebanon Cedars are growing trees every year putting forth a new set of shoots till they come to their full perfection And thus is it or
where he telleth beleevers that they were chosen in Christ before the foundation of the world Chosen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Christ or for Musculus Loc. Com. de Electione Cap. 6. by and through Christ In him as Members in their Head For by and through him as Mediator He being the Head of the Election the first born amongst many Brethren as the Apostle upon another account calls him Rom. 8.29 the first that opened the womb others were Elected in by and through him Thus was he a Mediator before his Incarnation yea before the worlds Creation Then was he a Mediator in the business of Election yea and then was he predestinated to be a Mediator of Reconciliation I was set up from Everlasting saith Wisdome Prov. 8.23 It is spoken of Christ the Wisedome of the Father who was designed and appointed to be a Mediator from Eternity Thus was he called to be a Mediator before time 2. In time 2. In time Then was he invested in this office put upon the undertaking and executing of it Which he did first virtually then actually 1. Virtually 1. Virtually and Inchoately So was he a Mediator even from the fall of Adam When God and Man were fallen at variance by reason of sin so as the First Covenant the Covenant of works was disolved and broken and an enmity through Satans artifice introduced Now did the Lord Christ for the disolving of that work of the Divell and the repayring in measure that breach which sin had made enter upon the exercise of this office of Mediatorship to which he was before designed Now did he undertake that great negotiation of Reconciling God to man and Man to God Now did that promise made unto our first parents being yet in Paradise take place Gen. 3.15 Now did the seed of the woman begin to break the serpents head So as from thenceforth he was a Mediator virtually How ever he was not of many ages after incarnate yet was he an Effectuall Mediator The vertue and efficacie of his Mediation extending it self even unto the first Ages of the world In which respect as also in the former Christ is said to be the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world as that passage is commonly read Revelation 13.8 So he was as in respect of Gods destination being designed before time to be offered up in time so in respect of the Efficacy of that his Sacrifice which extended to the first age of the world as far as Adams fall Even as it was with the Incense offering in the Tabernacle or Temple however it was burnt only in one place viz. upon the golden Altar before the Arke of the Testimony Exod. 11.5 yet the perfume of it extended to every corner of the house Thus the Sacrifice of Christ however it was offered up onely at one time in one age in the End of the world as the Apostle hath it Heb. 9.26 and only in one place upon the Altar of the Crosse yet the vertue and efficacy thereof extended to all places and all ages as well to those who lived before his Incarnation as those who lived after Thus did Christ enter upon the exercise of this office immediately upon the fall of man so soone as there was need of a Mediatour From thence doth this his Mediatourship Commence From that time he was a Mediator vertually 2. Actually 2. Actually Thus was he a Mediator after his Incarnation When he had taken the nature of man upon him and was made man Then was he an Actuall and Compleat Mediator Marke the Text There is one Mediator betwixt God and men the Man Christ Jesus The eternall Son of God being made Man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God-Man now was he an Actuall and compleat Mediator Being thus manifested in the flesh now he was manifested to be what before he was Now did he act that part visibly upon earth which before he had acted secretly and invisibly in heaven Now was he every way furnished for the office of a Mediator Now was a Body prepared for him so the Apostle Heb. 10.6 following the Translation of the Septuagint citeth that of the Psalmist Psal 40.6 applying it unto Christ A Body hast thou prepared or fitted for me Thereby meaning the humane nature of Christ which was prepared fitted for the work of the Mediatorship Fitted through Sanctification of the Spirit Thus are all believers fitted for their worke of obedience as Saint Peter telleth them 1 Pet. 1.2 Elect according to the foreknowledge of God through sanctification of the Spirit unto obedience And thus was the Lord Christ fitted for his great work of obedience which as Mediator he was to perform here upon Earth viz. through Sanctification of the Spirit the large effusion of the Spirit upon his humane nature And being thus fitted for it now he entred upon it upon the worke of his Active and Passive obedience discharging his Propheticall and Priestly office here upon earth which having done then he entred upon his Kingly administration in heaven But this I shall have occasion to cleare up unto you more fully in resolving of the next Question which now falleth in fitly And that is Question How and in what waies the Question 4 Lord Christ manageth and carrieth on this work of mediation for the effecting of this Reconciliation The Work of Mediation how managed and carried on Answer By divers steps typified by Jacob's Ladder Where Ans A Question of great use high concernment unto all those who desire to be acquainted with the mystery of Christ For the Resolution of it we must know that this work of Mediation it was begun and carried on by divers steps and and degrees not unlike that ladder which the Patriarch Jacob saw in his nightly vision Gen. 28.12 which I look upon as a Type carrying with it a lively representation of this our Mediatour and his blessed Mediation So our Saviour himselfe applieth it John 1.51 That ladder reached from Earth to Heaven uniting the one to the other So doth the Lord Jesus by his Mediation he uniteth Heaven and Earth God and man by the means whereof they come to have a sweet and blessed union and communion each with other So as all graces descend from God unto men upon earth and men come to ascend unto God in Heaven Now in this Ladder there are two things to be taken notice of viz. First The two Extremes or Ends of it the Bottome and the Top. Secondly The intermediate steps or staves betwixt them And the like may we observe in this our Mediatour and his Mediation 1. The two Extremes representing the two Natures in Christ 1. Here may we first take notice of the two Extremes viz. the two Natures of Christ his Humanity his Divinity fitly represented as some conceive it by the two ends of that Ladder the foot whereof was upon Earth and the top in Heaven the one aptly representing the Humanity of Christ
God interceding for his people in as much as there is one continually interceding against them even that Accuser of the Brethren of whom I made mention even now who accuseth them before God night and day Satan is a Lidger ever at hand to make Intercession against us Great need that Jesus Christ whose designe it is to dissolve and destroy the works of the Divell 1 John 3.8 should be a Lidger also ever at hand at the right hand of God his Father to make Intercession for us Such is Christ's Agency in Heaven a Continuall Intercession which should it cease but for a moment Millenaries confuted what should become of all his people here upon Earth Should Christ cease to appear in Heaven for us as he must do if he shall come and abide here upon earth for a thousand years together as some imagine for he cannot in his Humane Nature appear both in Heaven and Earth at the same time all that time Heaven must be without an Agent without an Intercessour Which of what consequence it would be let it be considerd by those who are wedded to that opinion To go on Christ performeth the offices of a Lidger Ambassador in Heaven for his people on earth Christ appeareth in the presence of God interceding for us as an Agent as a Lidger-Ambassadour And very fitly may he be so called in as much as he performeth the like offices for us in Heaven that a Lidger-Ambassadour doth for those whom he represents upon Earth Of those offices I might reckon up divers I shall only single out three or four of them and those of the most obvious ones The chiefe worke and service of a State-Agent or Lidger-Ambassadour is as I apprehend it 1. To continue Peace and Unity 2dly To maintain Intercourse and Correspondency 3dly To reconcile and compose Emergent Differences And 4thly To procure the welfare of the State which he negotiates for And all these doth Jesus Christ our Mediatour performe on the behalfe of those for whom he appeareth in Heaven 1. Maintaining their peace 1. He continueth their Peace This do Lidgers So long as they continue and keep residence in a Kingdom and appear as Agents in the presence of the Prince with whom they negotiate so long the Confederation the League standeth firm and sure Like benefit have all beleevers by Christs appearing in the presence of God for them Thereby the League and Covenant betwixt God and them is continued and their Peace maintained So much the Apostle insinuateth Ephes 2.14 where speaking of Christ he saith he is our Peace id est the Authour of it of our Peace with God and that as the Purchaser and procurer so the Maintainer of it The one by his Death the other by his Intercession To the same purpose is that of the same Apostle Rom. 5.1 where he saith that Being justified by Faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ Christ sitting at the right hand of God his Father as God and Man he maintaineth the Union betwixt God and Man So long as Christ appeareth in heaven there shall be peace for all beleevers upon Earth 2. As he preserveth Peace so he maintaineth intercourse betwixt God and them 2 Maintaining intercourse betwixt God and them This doth a State Agent so long as he resides in a Kingdome and appeareth before the Prince he keepeth Trade and Traffick open and free Like benefit have beleevers upon the Earth by Christs residing and appearing in heaven Hereby they have Intercourse and Communion with God So the Apostle setteth it down Romans 5.2 By whom also we have accesse in to this grace wherein we stand So againe Ephes 2.18 By him we both Jewes and Gentiles have an accesse unto the Father And again Ephes 3.12 In whom we have boldnesse or Liberty and Accesse with confidence by the faith of him In all which three places the word rendred Accesse is one and the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And it properly signifieth a Manuduction or leading by the hand Alluding saith Estius to the Custome in Princes Courts where none may come into the Presence Chamber unlesse they be led and brought in by some Favorite or Courtier Thus none have accesse into the presence of God unlesse they be brought in by this Favorite of Heaven the Lord Jesus whose office it is to bring men unto God as S. Peter hath it 1. Pet. 3.18 where stil the word is the same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he might lead or conduct us to God This benefit have all beleevers by and through Christ They have a free intercourse in Heaven so as they may come into the presence of God upon all occasions They come unto God by him Heb. 7.25 They have liberty or Boldnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to enter into the Holiest by the Blood of Jesus By that new and living way which he hath consecrated for them Hebrews 10.19 20. Hither may they come and that boldly Seeing then that we have an High-Priest that is passed into the Heavens Jesus the Son of God c. Let us therfore come with boldnesse to the throne of Grace that we may obtaine Mercy and finde Grace to help in time of need Hebrews 4.14 16. Thus Jesus Christ appearing in the presence of God for us not only continueth our peace but maintaines our intercourse and Communion with God 3. And 3ly he reconcileth and taketh up Emergent differences 3 Taking up emergent differences Such differences frequently arise betwixt confederate Princes and States In which case the Agents interpose for the composing of them that so they may not tend to a breach of the League betwixt them And the like office doth Jesus Christ our Agent in Heaven performe for his people upon Earth They through weaknesse and infirmity are subject to manifold failings and Errours which render them obnoxious to Gods just displeasure Which if not looked to might tend to the breach of the Covenant betwixt him and them But here Jesus Christ interposeth making intercessions for the Transgressours as you have it in that place forealledged Isaiah 53. last This did the High-Priest under the Law as the Apostle informes us Heb. 9.7 He went into the second tabernacle the Holy of Holies once every year not without blood which he offered for himself and for the Errours of the people A type of Christ and his Intercession He being entred into the Holy of Holies the Heaven of Heavens there presenting his blood the merit of his death unto God his Father he maketh Intercession for those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Errours of his people Those sins which they are daily subject to fall into through the infirmity of the Flesh so taking up the difference which they make betwixt God and them so as they do not proceed to a Breach of Covenant Fourthly and lastly He procureth their welfare 4. Procuring their welfare So doth a faithfull Agent of the people of
given Grace according to the measure of the gift of Christ saith the Apostle Eph. 4.7 Grace both Common and saving Common Graces Common grace gifts inabling men for speciall services Of these speaketh the Apostle there When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive and gave gifts unto men ver 8. Meaning therby those extraordinary gifts the gifts of the Holy Ghost bestowed upon the Apostles and others in the infancy of the Church The like office he still performeth unto his Church giving gifts unto men inabling his Ministers and others for the performance of those offices and services which he calleth them to in his Church and private Christians for the managing of those states and conditions which he sets them in Every one hath his own proper gift one after this manner and another that 1 Cor. 7.7 And as common so Saving Grace Saving grace That hath Christ for the dispencer of it Being himselfe the fountain of Grace full of Grace It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 fulnesse of Grace Hee dwelt among us full of Grace John 1.14 He conveyeth of that his fulnesse unto others even to all the subjects of his kingdome Of his fulnesse we have all received and grace for grace Joh. 1.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace upon Grace one Grace after another Even as Josephs brethren and kindred received a first and a second supply from his store So do Gods Elect receive from their Joseph the Lord Jesus a first and a second grace First the Grace of Justification then of Sanctification First prevenient then subsequent Grace First converting then confirming grace One grace after another and one degree and measure after another Thus is Christ the dispencer of gifts 2. As of Gifts so of Honours 2. Honours To as many as received him he gave power 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dignity priviledge to become the sons of God John 1.12 He hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father Rev. 1.6 3. And 3ly As gifts and Honours so Rewards 3. Rewards Behold his reward is with him and his work before him saith the Prophet speaking of the Messiah Isa 40.10 and 62.11 Behold I come quickly and my reward is with me Rev. 22.12 He is that Steward spoken of in the Gospell who by the appointment of the Lord of the Vineyard giveth to every one of the labourers their peny Mat. 20.8 9. What ever services any shall here do unto God his Father Jesus Christ will see they shall not go un-rewarded What lesser service then a Cup of cold water the least act of charity that may be yet even this given unto a Disciple in the name of a Disciple for God's sake it shall not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in no wise lose his reward Mat. 10. last This Christ hath undertaken and this he will performe if not here yet hereafter at that great day of Retributions The Son of man shall come in the glory of his Father with his Angels and then shall he reward every man according to his works Mat. 16.27 Every man both good and bad Then shall be that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of which the Apostle speaketh Rom 2.6 The Revelation of the righteous Judicature of God when the Lord Jesus being constituted and appointed of God to be the Judge of quick and dead Acts 10.42 shall render unto every man according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for Glory Honour and Immortality Eternall Life Rom. 2.7 8. This is the reward which God the Father hath put into the hands of his Son Christ as Mediatour to bestow upon all his Elect Thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him saith our Saviour to his Father John 17.2 And this he will performe I give unto them eternall life saith he speaking of his sheep John 10.28 Thus will he crown his own grace with glory giving to every one of his Subjects whom here he hath made Kings unto God his Father a Crown When the chiefe Shepherd shall appear ye shall receive a crown of glory that fadeth not away 1 Pet. 5.4 Henceforth is laid up for me the crown of righteousnesse which the Lord the righteous Judge shall give unto me at that day and not to me onely but to all that love his appearing 2 Tim. 4.8 This shall Jesus Christ then do as Mediatour betwixt God and men And this is the last Act of his Mediatorship this act of Judicature which having performed then shal he surrender up the Kingdom unto God his Father as the Apostle tels us 1 Cor. 15.24 viz. his Oeconomicall Kingdom as it is called As for his Naturall or Essentiall Kingdom which he hath as God this he shall enjoy in common with his Father and Spirit unto all Eternity But his Oeconomicall Kingdom which he hath as Mediatour this as he received it from God his Father so having finished that last Act he shall resigne it up unto him again And thus have I now at the length brought you to the top of this mysticall Ladder leading you by the hand from staffe to staffe shewing you the severall acts of Christ's Mediatourship his severall transactions betwixt God and men That which now remains is that I should look back again reflecting upon what hath been spoken touching this so excellent a Subject by way of Application But before I come at that there are yet two Questions Two Questions resolved which meeting me in the way call for Resolution each taking its rise from the Text the one about the Object and the other about the Subject of this Mediation 1. Whereas it is here said that Christ is Mediatour betwixt God and men it is demanded whether onely betwixt them 2. Whereas it is said that this Mediatour betwixt God and men is the Man Christ Jesus it is questioned whether he be his Mediatour onely according to his humane nature as man Take the Answer to both with as much brevity and clearnesse as may be Question 1 Quest 1. Is Christ Mediatour onely betwixt God and men Is Christ Mediatour onely betwixt God and men what say we to the Angels Have they no snare in no benefit by this his Mediation Answer Ans To this it is answered variously Divines not being agreed about it Some wholly exclude them appropriating the benefit of this Mediation Whether Angels have no benefit by this Mediation only to mankind they shut out the Angels from having any thing to do with it In favour of which opinion they bring in this of the Apostle in the Text which setteth forth the Object of this Mediation to be mankind men not Angels And to this they add that to the Hebrews cap. 2.16 where it is said that Christ took upon him not the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham Intimating that he took upon him
noe mpediment but that hee may bee a fitting Mediator betwixt God and men Reply But they reply Reply Christ as God was a party offended Christ as God a party offended And therefore in that respect he could not bee a proper Mediator Ans To this it is answered that Answer these two may well stand together A party offended may yet be a Mediator A party offended may be a Mediator Thus stories tell us of Menenius Agrippa how he being himselfe a Senatour of Rome Voloterranus was yet imployed by the Senate as an Agent to deal with some revolters who had made a defection from the State and therein had wron ged him as well as the rest But wee shall not need to go abroad Scripture will furnish us with an instance Those Husbandmen in the Gospel which indeavoured to keep their Land-lord out of his vineyard denying him the fruits thereof therein they wronged not onely him but his son also whose Inheritance it was Yet the father imployeth the son as a Mediator to deal betwixt him and them Mat. 21.37 Thus however Jesus Christ being the Son of God was a party offended as wel as his Father yet hee is imployed by his Father as a Mediator to reconcile the persons offending unto himselfe and this without any absurdity at all Thus have you briefly seene what our adversaries of Rome have to say for this their Opinion which bearing no weight wee shall also desert them and this their way 3. 3d Opinion orthodox There is yet a third and a last way and that shall wee find to be the old and the right way Wherin the true Catholicks the Orthodox professours of all ages have walked And that is not to divide the natures of Christ in the office and work of his Mediatorship but to put them together attributing it to his whole person Jesus Christ is Mediator betwixt God and Men and executes the office of his Mediatorship Christ Mediatour as God-man not onely as God nor only as Man but as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God Man So Augustine long since clearly and soundly determined it August de Ovibus Homil. 12. Divinitas sine Humanitate Humanitas sine Divinitate non est Mediatrix Neither the Divinity without the Humanity nor the Humanity without the Divinity is Mediator betwixt God and men How then Sed inter Divinitatem solam Humanitatem solam Mediatrix est Humana Divinitas Divina Humanitas But betwixt the Divinitie alone and the Humanity alone is Mediatour the Humane Divinity and the Divine Humanity that is Jesus Christ as God and man is Mediatour betwixt God and men not according to one but both Natures So runs that ancient and approved Rule Appellationes officii competunt Christo secundùm utrámque naturam Names of office which are given unto Christ they agree unto him according to both natures Thus is he said to be a Prophet a Priest a King all as God and man And thus is he said to be a Mediatour betwixt God and man Claudius Espencaeus de Mediatore cap. 5. Christus est Mediator non quà Deus nec quà Homo sed quà Deus Homo C. Lap. ad Textum So much some of the Doctours of the Church of Rome have freely and ingenuously acknowledged By name Claudius Espencaeus most fully After him Cornelius à Lapide who in expresse terms grants what we desire though afterward he would seem to detract and call it in again And even Bellarmine himselfe is inforced to yeild little lesse whilest he confesseth that in some Acts of Christ's Mediatorship there was a concurrence of his Divinity with his Humanity So then Bellarm. de Christo lib. 5. cap. 7. by his confession he was not a Mediatour only as man but as God and man His Godhead concurred with his manhood in some acts of his Mediatorship The Godhead concurred with the Manhood in all the Acts of Mediatorship Nay more say we not in some onely but in all This we contend for and this may easily be made good True indeed some Acts we shall find wherein the Humanity of Christ did not concurre with his Divinity as viz. those which he wrought before his Incarnation But none wherein his Humanity acted without the concurrence of his Divinity In tantam unitatem ab ipso conceptu virginis Deitas Humanitas connexa sunt ut nec sine homine divina nec sine Deo humana agerentur Leo Epist 81. So one of the Ancients and a Bishop of Rome too hath determined it The Godhead and manhood of Christ saith he were so nearly united from the very conception of the Virgine as that thenceforth the one did not act without the other Still we find the Godhead interested in every Act which Christ did or doth as Mediatour To make this good look wee back a little upon that mysticall Ladder which I presented unto you and see if we do not find the Son of God upon every staffe of it I will passe them over briefly begining at the bottome 1. Who was it that was an Arbitratour 1. As Arbitratour betwixt God and man not Christ as man no this is not a work for man to undertake to be an Vmpire betwixt God and man So much we may learn from that passionat Saint Job 9.33 Neither is there any Dayes-man or Vmpire betwixt us saith he meaning God and himselfe that might lay his hand upon us both No he that should undertake this work must be more then man no lesse then God the Son of God He it was who found out that way and means of Reconciliation betwixt God and man which neither men nor Angels could ever have done even the second Person in the Blessed Trinity the Wisdome of the Father 2. Who was it that was the Interpreter 2. As Interpreter betwixt God and man the Messenger of the Covenat that declared and made known unto man the mind and will of God touching a Reconciliation and the way and means of this Reconciliation who was this or who could it be but the Son of God No man hath seen God at any time the onely begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him John 1.18 No man hath ascended up into heaven i. e. to be acquainted with God's secrets but he that came down from heaven i. e. the Son of God John 3.13 The gracious purpose of God towards lost mankind it was a Secret lock'd up in the breast of the Father And so it had been even unto this day had not Christ the eternall Son of God who being in the bosome of the Father near and dear to him was à secretoribus Consiliis one of his Privy Counsell revealed it which he did to our first Parents in Paradise in that first born Promise Gen. 3.15 and afterwards to the Fathers in succeeding ages Acts 7.38 3. Again 3dly come from his Propheticall
as they alienate the soul from God And therefore lay them aside This is the Condition of the Covenant on our parts for which this our blessed Mediatour as our surety hath undertaken viz. that we shall deny ungodlinesse and worldly lusts c As ever we desire then to be made partakers of the benefit of this his Mediation see that we performe this Condition Non-performance of the Condition nullifies the Covenant The non-performance of this Condition will make the death of Christ to be of none-effect to us So long as a Rebell continues in actuall Rebellion against his Prince whatever Treaties or overtures of Reconciliation there have been it maketh them all voide rendring him uncapable of his Soveraignes grace and favour So long as a poor sinner standeth it out against God and will not be reconciled with him he cannot expect that God should be reconciled to him No Men must first be turned from the power of Sathan unto God before they can receive remission of sinnes Acts 26.18 See then that in this way we be all of us reconciled unto God that our hearts be reconciled to him so as not willingly to offend or provoke him but to love him and to cleave unto him with full purpose of heart desiring to walke before him in all well pleasing This is that as I said which this our Mediatour in order to our Reconciliation with God hath undertaken that we shall do Let not us offer that wrong to our Surety as to violate the Covenant for performance whereof he stands ingaged Thus be we reconciled unto God 2. And being thus Reconciled 2. Come unto God by and through this Mediator who is now Come we unto him Seeing then we have such an High-Priest let us come boldly to the throne of grace Hebrews 4.14 16. Seeing that we have such a Mediatour make use of his Mediation coming unto God by him Such a Mediator I say What can be required in a Mediatour that is not to be found in him 1. He is a faithfull Mediatour 1 A faithfull Mediatour Hee that sate upon the white horse Revelations 19.11 was called faithfull and true Such is Jesus Christ the righteous Judge and triumphant Conquerour in all his Relations A faithfull witnesse Revelations 1 5. and 3.14 A faithfull High-Priest Hebrews 2.17 And so a faithfull Mediator dealing faithfully betwixt both parties God and Man Being faithfull in things pertaining to God as the Apostle there hath it Hebrews 2.17 viz. in executing his will and satisfying his Justice And faithfull in things pertaining to men dealing effectually with his Father on their behalf not seeking himself This do false and faithlesse Mediatours sometimes being betrusted to intercede for others they speak one word for them and two for themselves seeking themselves in their Mediations But so did not so doth not this our Mediatour In this his Mediation emptying himselfe and laying aside his own interest he sought the good and benefit of his Elect. As Paul saith of himself that in his Ministeriall transactions amongst the Churches he sought not theirs but them 2 Corinthians 12.14 a true patterne for all the Ministers of the Gospel who are not to seek the goods but the good of the people committed to them So did the Lord Jesus In all his transactions as Mediator he seeketh not ours but us not any benefit to himselfe Papists whil'st they contend so eagerly for Christs meriting for himself they do therein seem not a little to disparage this work of his Mediatorship but our Reconciliation and salvation 2 A Mercifull Mediatour 2. And 2ly a Mercifull Mediatour So the Apostle putteth them together in the place forenamed Hebrews 2.17 A mercifull and faithfull High-Priest A mercifull and pitifull Mediatour One that having in his humane nature had experience of our Afflictions our Tentations is ready to succour those which are tempted One that is soon touched with the feeling of our infirmities Such a Mercifull Mediatour he shewed himselfe in the days of his flesh when he wept over Jerusalem upon which he had bestowed so much fruitlesse paines in attempting to gather the inhabitants thereof under the wings of his gracious government and mercifull protection Luk. 19.41 And such a Mediator he stil is having carried the same bowels to heaven with him A Mercifull Mediatour 3ly A potent and prevalent Mediatour 3 A potent and prevalent Mediatour Able to do much with his Father for his people With his Father Being gracious with him so he is This is my beloved Sonne in whom I am well pleased he can impetrate any thing at his hand Father I know that thou hearest me alwayes John 11.42 For his People He is able perfectly to save them which come unto God by him as the former Translation reads that Text Hebrews 7.25 To save them from the wrath of God to save them from their sinnes from the Guilt Terrour Power of them to supply all their wants to do for them above what they are able to ask or think A potent Mediatour able to performe what ever he hath undertaken whether for Man to God or for God to Man Thus hath the Lord herein laid help upon one that is Mighty as the Psalmist speaketh Psalme 89.19 putting this office of Mediatorship upon one that was able to go through with it A potent Mediatour being El Gibbor the mighty God Isa 9.6 4. And 4th a Perpetuall Mediatour 4 A perpetuall Mediatour This Man the Man Christ Jesus continueth ever Heb. 7.24 Ever a Mediatour And so continuing now he is able to save them to the uttermost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ever that come unto God by him seeing he ever liveth to make Intercession for them ver 25. It is not with this our Mediator as with that Typicall Mediatour Joseph So long as he lived to intercede for his kindred it went well with them but when he was dead and there arose a new king which knew not Joseph then they went to wreck in their liberties estates lives It is otherwise with our Joseph our Jesus Hee liveth ever sitting continually at the right hand of God making Intercession for his people Hee is a permanent Mediator 5. And lastly a Present Mediator always at hand Absolom when he had a desire to be brought into his fathers presence his Mediator Joab was to seek and though sent for would not come at him 2 Sam. 14.29 It is not so with our Mediator the Lord Jesus he is ever at hand at the right hand of God so as they who would make use of him may know where to find him An Agent who lyeth Lidger in heaven ready to receive and present the suites the Petitions which his people shall at any time put into his hand So as by his means they may obtaine mercy and find grace to help in time of need Heb. 4.16 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Seasonable Succour sutable to their present necessities Now put all these together Such is this
to the duty of Prayer suggesting prompting dictating unto them what to pray directing them how to pray so as their prayers may be acceptable and prevalent stirring up secret and unexpressable grones affectionate desires in their hearts So the Apostle there explaineth himself The Spirit also helpeth our Infirmities for we know not what to pray as we ought but the Spirit maketh intercession or Request for us This doth the spirit not properly by Interceding for us but in us Because ye are Sonnes God hath sent forth the Spirit of his Son into your hearts crying Abba Father Gal. 4.6 This is the work of the Spirit thus as it were to form the prayers of the faithful for them and in them Which are Spiritual Conceptions conceived in the hearts of Chistians after a sort as the humane nature of Christ was in the womb of the Virgin by a supernaturall Operation of the Holy ghost Thus it as it were prayeth in them In the mean time Christ is the alone Mediator to whom the Spirit directeth them that so by and through him their prayers may find audience and acceptance These are obvious familiar truths and therfore I shal not any longer insist upon them That which now remains is only a word of Application which I shall direct only two wayes by way of Confutation Exhortation Vse 1. Confutation Of Primitive Angel-Worshippers By way of Confutation Censured and condemned be that Doctrine by whomsoever held forth which setteth up any other Mediatours besides Christ whether in stead of him or with him so as to make them either Corrivals or partners in this office This did some in the Apostles time In the very infancy of the Church they brought in Angels to be Mediatours So much we may take notice of from the Apostle who gives his Colossians an express Caveat concerning it that they should beware of them and their Doctrine Col. 2.18 Let no man beguile you of your reward in a voluntary humility and worshipping of Angels or consisting in Angel worship for so that later clause is fitly looked upon as being only exegiticall to the former added by way of explanation So it was Under a colour and pretext of Humility awful modesty as deeming it too high presumption for any to make their immediate addresses unto God they made use of Angels for their Mediatours presenting their prayers and services unto them that they might present them unto God Thus did they intrude into those things which they had not seen as it there followeth rashly undertaking to set up establish new Doctrines Laws concerning the Service of God beyond what is revealed in the Word And as is most probable adventuring upon curious speculations bold assertions touching the Orders Offices of Angels designing some to one imployment others to another giving them names accordingly Thus did they set up nother Mediators in stead of Christ so not holding the Head as the Apostle there goeth on not holding themselves unto Christ this one and only Mediator And the like hath the Church of Rome in succeeding ages done Of the Church of Rome which setteth up Saints Angels for Mediators bringing in a numberlesse number of Mediators So many Saints or Angels as there are in heaven so many Mediators say they True indeed thus far Christ is beholding to them they will allow him to be the head of that order Vide Calvin ad Textum Observa quod sicut unum Deum intelligit cum exclusione plurium fic unum Mediatorem Dei Hominum qui est Christus Jesus Estius Com. ad Text. The distinct ō of Mediators of Redemption and Intercession the chief and principall Mediator but not the onely So some of them go about to elude this of the Apostle in the text There is one Mediator True say they Vnus sed non solus One but not only one An ill glosse corrupting a good text So it will soon appear to be shall we but apply it to the former part of the verse There is one God What One but not Only one This they themselves will be ashamed of and may as well bee of the other Others of them and that the greatest part not daring to own so grosse an error think to salve the matter by a distinction There is one and but one Mediator say they viz. of Redemtion but others may bee and are Mediators of Intercession But neither will this subterfuge ought avail them as will appear from this text which if we look about it duly considering the circumstances will be found to speak of Christ in both these respects as a Mediatot both of Redemption and Intercession The former is made good from the verse next following where the Apostle maketh mention of Christs giving himselfe a Ransome for all men In that a Mediator of Redemption And the later from the verses preceding where the Apostle exhorting Christians to the duty of prayer to pray for all men he presseth it upon this ground For there is one Mediator one who is ready to receive and present the prayers of those who make their addresses unto God by him One Mediator of Intercession So as in both respects he is said to be one and but one But one Mediator the Man Christ Jesus who is Mediator both of Redemption and Intercession Other Romish distinctions Estius ad loc Cor à Lapide ad Text. Vide Cham. Panstrat de Mediatore lib. 8. cap. 6. sec 9. Others who would be thought more acute they seek relief from other distinctions Christ is Mediator say they Excellenti ratione by way of eminency after a more excellent manner Others are so only Participatione imperfectâ ratione by way of participation in a more imperfect way He the principal Mediator they ministeriall he primarie they secondary he Immediate they Mediate He as an Advocate they only as soliciters He onely cometh unto the Father Immediately by himself Interceding for all and impetrating grace by vertue of his own merits As for Saints they intercede for us not by any right or merit of their own as claiming ought in their own names but in the name through the merit and mediation of Christ To this purpose they bring in their devout Bernard Bernard Serm. de B. Maria citat per C. Lap. ad Text. who in one of his Sermons insinuates that Saints are not to be called Mediators betwixt God and men but rather Mediators to the Mediator viz. unto Christ This saith he do we stand in need of Opus est Mediatore ad Mediatorem We have need of a Mediator to make way for us to our Mediator viz. Christ Upon which account it is saith Lapide that some of their own Doctours have been so scrupulously cautious Atque hâc de causâ Catholici nonnulli satio scrupulose cavent ne Mediatoris nomen alteri tribuant quàm Christo C. Lap. ad Text. as that they would not have the
First Resurrection from Christ 86. First Resurrection imperfect 149. 248. Resurrection spirituall resembling the Corporall in six particulars 151. Resurrection spirituall a Difficult work 157. Resurrection spiritual a work to which man naturally is indisposed and averse 160. 161. Resurrection of Christ a patterne of the first Resurrection 164. Resurrection of Christ a pattern of the Christians second Resurrection 180 Resurrection to life proper to beleevers 183 Christ the Efficient cause of the Beleevers first and second Resurrection 189. First Resurrection common to all beleevers 195. Evidences of the first Resurrection 196. Motives to the first Resurrection 215. First Resurrection how attained 227. First Resurrection a mercy to be acknowledged 233. First Resurrection to be evidenced by the actions of a spirituall life 24. Beleevers how to Rise more and more 241 S Sanctification a benefit flowing from union with Christ 38 Stability of a Regenerate mans estate 48 Strivings of sin in a regenerate person comforts against them 121. The two Adams two Stocks 23 The Mysticall Stock Christ 14 Christ a generous Stock 46. 20. Christ a living and quickning Stock 21 Christ a Stock changing the nature of the graft ibid. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word explained 5 Sustentation a benefit flowing from Christ 9 82 T. TRanslation to be waited for 245 Translation to be prepared for 247 V. VErtues imitable in Christ 210 Unity among Christians 4 Union with Christ desirable and necessary 8 26 Union between Christ and the beleever inseparable 10 82 Union mysticall a neer union 32 Union with Christ an honour to Beleevers 34 Voyce of Christ raising dead soule 196 W. WAiting for glory the Beleevers property 179 Weakness of Christians in themselves 6 Wildings such are all men by nature 19 Christians have their Winters 60 Good works Gospel fruits 71 World how to be used by Christians 172 ERRATA Pag. 24. li. 31. for in r. to p. 37. l. 23. r. in ingrafting p. 54. l. 19. dele and. p. 93. l. 1. r. discovers l. 2. dele make p. 133. l. 20. for that r. of p. 142. l. 31. r. from p. 161. l. 9. r. wholly p. 136. l. 11. r. was white l. 31. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 204. l. 7. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 224. l. 1. r. not Mysticall IMPLANTATION OR The great Gospel Mystery of the Christians Union and Communion with and Conformity to Jesus Christ both in his Death and Resurrection ROM 6. VER 5. For if wee have been planted together in the likenesse of his death wee shall bee also in the likenesse of his Resurrection IN the verse foregoing Context the Apostle fetteth forth the Christians Communion with and Conformity to Jesus Christ Communion and Conformity both in his Death and Resurrection both Represented sealed and conveyed unto the beleever in by and through the Sacrament of Baptism Therefore we are buried with him by Baptism into Death that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father even so we also should walk in newnesse of life What he there plainly and simply propounds in this 5th verse he prosecutes and illustrates which he doth by an apt and elegant Similitude or Comparison A Similitude taken from planting or grafting where the Graft and the Stock being made one partake in Life and Death dying together in the Winter seeming so to do Reviving and living together in the Spring Even thus saith the Apostle fareth it with Christ and the Beleever The Beleever being implanted and ingrafted into Christ made one with him from that union floweth the like Communion and that both in his Death and Resurrection For if we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection Division A Supposition A Position In which passage we may take notice of two things a Supposition and a Position The Supposition or Ground-work in the former words If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his Death The Position or Inference deduced from and built upon that ground in the later we shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection Begin with the former the Supposition If we have been c. This the Apostle here supposeth laying it down for a ground-work that All Beleevers are planted together with Christ in the likenesse of his Death which we may for the better handling of it breake or resolve into two distinct Propositions or Conclusions The Supposition resolved into two Propositions 1. Beleevers are planted together with Christ 2. They are planted together with Christ in the likenesse of his Death The former more generall the later more particular I shal insist upon them severally beginning with the former Proposit 1. All beleevers are planted together with Christ A double reference of the word together 1. To beleevers themselves All Beleevers are planted together with Christ Planted together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Originall where the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 together may admit of a twofold reference Either it may be referred to Christians themseselves or to Christ and them 1. To Beleevers themselves We have been planted together i. e. saith Erasmus wee Jews and Gentiles both which are now planted together in the same stock or wee viz. Paul himself and all other beleevers even the whole company of the faithfull who are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 planted together like so many branches growing upon the same stock making up one mysticall body A truth which the Apostle elsewhere setteth forth under another Allegory of a Building Ephes 2.20 21. where resembling Christ unto a Foundation-stone hee compares other beleevers to so many stones laid upon that foundation all fitly framed together and builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit Thus some conceive the Apostle here to speake the same thing under another Metaphor Applic. Being planted together let them agree together A truth and an usefull one did I list to improve it Usefull as to other ends so especially to minde Christians of that holy concord unity and agreement which ought to be betwixt and amongst them They are planted together like branches of the same tree Now how do we see such branches growing up together quietly peaceably Happily in a storm there may be some clashing but that being over they agree again imbracing each other with mutuall complications Thus in stormes of Satans raising there may and will bee sometimes animosities and unbrotherly contentions amongst Christians as there was betwixt Paul and Barnabas but the violence of the Tentation being over now they ought to affect a holy agreement being knit together and growing up together in Love But I shall not dwell upon this 2 The second Reference more proper with Christ The later Reference I look upon as more proper and geinune Planted together viz. with Christ. So it will appear to bee if we paralell and compare the phrase here with
others of like nature Elsewhere we read of Christians suffering together 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vide Bezam Gr Annot. C. A. Lapide ad Textum and living together and reigning together 2 Tim. 2.11 12. In this chapter this 6th of the Romans wee read of being buried together verse before the text and Crucified together in the verse after it and living together ver 8. In all which places the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Together must be looked upon as relating to Jesus Christ So here in the Text 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If we have been planted together i. e. together with Christ. So are all true beleevers All true Beleevers are planted together with Christ they are planted together with Christ Planted together The word in the Originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is very Emphaticall having no one word either in the English or Latine tongue that will fully answer and expresse it It is a Metaphor as I said taken from plants which doe in unum concrescere or coalescere The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explained grow up together so as they become one body and partake of the same common juice these are properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now to follow the Metaphor of these there are two sorts or kinds Two sorts of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 viz. by Adhesion by Insition Some plants grow together by Adhesion others by Insition 1. By Adhesion the one only cleaving and clinging to the other Thus doth the Ivie grow up by and with the Oake or some other tree 2. By Insition by ingrafting inoculating the one in to the other as grafts and cions which are put into a stock and so made one with it beeing nourished by the juice of it Both these are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plants Planted together Two very apt and elegant similitudes Two apt and elegant similitudes most lively and clearly representing unto us the nature of that spirituall Vnion and Communion which is betwixt Christ and all true beleevers Even thus are they planted together with Christ both by way of Adhesion and Insition I shall take liberty to prosecute them severally More briefly of the former Simil. 1. Believers planted with Christ by way of adhesion As the Ivie and the Oake The five Resemblances Resembl 1. Of themselves weak and feeble Beleevers are planted together with Christ by way of Adhesion as the Ivie and the Oake Follow we the similitude a little it wil lead us to divers particulars of a very useful consideration I shall name but three or four of them 1. The Ivie is of it selfe weak and feeble creeping along upon the ground not able to raise it self above the Earth without the help of some tree or wall which it groweth by And even such is the condition of every man by nature All weak and impotent When wee were yet without strength Christ died for us saith the Apostle Romans 5.6 Not able to do any thing in their own strength Not able to raise themselves above the Earth We know what the Apostle saith of the first Adam 1 Cor. 15.17 The first man is of the Earth Earthy And such are all the branches of that Stock all men by nature all of the Earth Earthy Having their Originall from the Earth they as it were creep along upon the Earth savouring of nothing but the Earth Joh. 3.31 He that cometh from the Earth saith our Saviour speaking of the naturall man he is earthly and speaketh of the Earth Minding nothing but Earthly things as the Apostle hath it Philip. 3.19 Their best wisdome is no better then that which Saint James speaks of Jam. 3.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Earthly Of themselves higher they cannot rise Applic. A prick to let out the wind of spiritual pride Which by the way may serve as a prick to let out that wind of spirituall Pride wherewith the hearts of many are blown up The selfe-conceited Romanist he setteth up a Ladder of his own works as the Father bad Ascesius do and hopes to climb to heaven by it And little lesse do many ignorant poor and proud souls amongst our selves who presume much upon their own naturall abilities Even Gods own people are not wholly free from this spirituall Pride Peter dreamed he could stand upon his own bottom and that made him take up that Resolution in his own strength Mat. 26.33 Though all should be offended at his Master yet so would not be Proud spirits Goe to the Ivie of the field and let that read us a lecture of our no strength no ability to do ought of our selves The Ivie of it self riseth not above the Earth no more can the naturall man by the power of nature If we be raised up the least degree heaven-ward thanks to the Oake thanks to Jesus Christ by and with whom it is that we are raised as God willing I shall show you hereafter I passe to a second Resemblance 2. The Ivie being so feeble of it selfe Resembl 2. by a kinde of naturall instinct it reacheth forth to Closing with Jesus Christ and taketh hold upon the Oake clasping and grasping that twisting about it and clinging to it And the like doth the true beleever unto Jesus Christ Being convinced of his own weaknesse inability to do ought in his owne strength he betaketh himselfe unto Christ reaching forth unto him in the earnest desires of his soul after Union and Communion with him then clasping imbracing him in the Armes of his faith Luk. 2.28 Even as Simeon imbraced him in the Armes of his body so doth the beleever in the armes of his faith Gen. 32.26 As Jacob did the Angel whom he took hold of and would not let go till he had blessed him Thus the spouse took hold of her welbeloved Cant. 3.4 I found him whom my soul loved I held him and would not let him go Learn how to claspe Jesus Christ Applic. Like course let all of us take being conscious of our own impotency let us lay hold upon Jesus Christ clasping him adhering to him resting upon him as our alone all-sufficient Saviour resolving not to let him go How closely how tenaciously doth the Ivie cleave to the Oake No wind can part them No small matter can sever them Thus should the Christian hold the hold which he hath of Jesus Christ Whatever winds or stormes of Tentations or Persecutions come down upon us yet let not him go No though God himselfe should seeme to write bitter things against us as Job speaks Job 13.15 yet let not that hold go Though he kill me yet will I trust in him From this second ariseth a third and fourth Resemblances The Beleever receiving a double benefit from Christ by closing with him The Ivie thus clasping the Oake it receiveth a double benefit from it viz. Sustentation and Nutrition Support and Nourishment And the like double benefit doth the beleever receive by
and main designe be to get into Christ Renouncing our own righteousnesse flie unto him lay hold upon him close with him receiving him as our Saviour as our Lord. And then abide in him So our Saviour presseth it upon his Disciples John 15.4 Abide in me The Branch cannot bear fruit of it selfe except it abide in the Vine no more can ye except ye abide in me So he goeth on By all means therefore let it be our care to maintain this blessed union and communion with Jesus Christ To that end not neglecting any means appointed for that purpose Amongst which none more proper then that Ordinance which is so much slighted and neglected by too many among us the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper An Ordinance instituted by Jesus Christ for the confirming and assuring unto believers their abiding and continuing in him Even as Baptisme is a Sacrament of our ingrafting into Christ so is the Lord's Supper a Sacrament of our continuance in him abiding and growing up in him not onely sealing but furthering that continuance and growth And therefore as many of us as would have the comfort of this our in-being in Christ neglect not this Ordinance but make use of it to that end Passe we on to a third Resemblance 3. Resemb The Graft can do nothing towards its own Insition In the third place As the graft cannot bring forth fruit of it selfe so neither can it do any thing to the engrafting of it self Herein it is a meer Patient And such is the believer in the first Act of Conversion a meer Patient The Believer a meer Patient in the first act of Conversion who may be wrought upon but cannot work cannot contribute any thing towards his own Conversion towards the changing of his own estate True being wrought upon now he worketh Even as the graft being put into the stock now it concurreth and co-operateth with the stock in bringing forth fruit Thus is it with believers being wrought upon by the Spirit of God now Acti agunt moved they move wrought upon the work But in the first act they are meerly passive Onely receiving of Jesus Christ To as many as received him John 1.12 Neither can they do this of themselves this being a work of the Spirit of God in them which is to them a Spirit of Revelation Ephes 1.17 2 Cor. 4.13 and a Spirit of Faith Revealing Christ to them and in them inclining and perswading their hearts to close with Jesus Christ Even as the Planter fitteth his graft and disposeth it to an Insition an ingrafting and then putteth it into the stock thus doth God by his Spirit prepare and dispose the soule to the receiving of Christ and then worketh actuall faith in it All which is his work Applic. 1 Applic. 1. From whence we may by the way take notice of the erroneousnesse of those Popish Pelagian Popish and Pelagian Doctrin confuted or Arminian Tenents which tell us of what man of himself is able to do in order to his own conversion and salvation Man is not say some of them totally dead or destitute of all power but rather like the traveller in the Gospel who falling among theeves was sore wounded Luke 10.30 half-dead but not quite dead Though it be not much he can do yet something he can Though he cannot change and renew himself yet say they he may so prepare and dispose himselfe to the receiving of the grace of God as that grace shall not nay in equity cannot be denied him And thus say they grace and free-will they concurre together as co-partners in the work of Conversion the one not preventing the other in order of causality But how unsound this Doctrine is we may not obscurely learn as from divers expresse Texts in Paul's Epistles so even from this Metaphor which here he maketh use of where he saith that beleevers are planted engrafted with and into Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word hath a passive signification intimating that men in the first act of conversion they are meer Patients They cannot prepare or dispose themselves to the receiving of the grace of God by any power of their own no more then the Graft can dispose it selfe to its own ingrafting Vse 2. Being convinced hereof what remains but that they who would be made partakers of this grace Wait upon God in the use of means specially the word wait upon God in the use of such means as he hath appointed for the effecting of this blessed Insition the chief whereof is the publick Ministery of the word Attend upon this This they may do Even as that poor impotent person in the Gospel though he could not put himselfe into the waters yet he could lye at the Pool Meer naturall men though they cannot repent and believe of themselves yet they may wait upon God in the use of such means as he hath sanctified for that end And this let them do not pleading as some desperate wretches do They cannot convert themselves it must be God's work and therefore they are carelesse and regardlesse about it Nay wait upon God in his own way and then though the well using of nature or common grace or attendance upon means cannot so much as by way of Congruity merit any such thing at the hands of God yet God will not deny his grace to a soul that so waits upon him for it Vse 3. Vse 3. Give the glory of this work wholly to God And being made partakers of this grace now give we the glory of it wholly to the God of all grace If the graft be transplanted and engrafted thanks to the Husbandman Is it so that we are changed translated from the state of nature to the state of grace taken out of the Old Adam and put into the New brought to have union and communion with Jesus Christ lo this is God's work the work of his grace his free-grace Free-grace Mysticall Implantation a work of free-grace I say There being nothing in us that might incline him to do this for us rather then others In grafting there may be and commonly are some reasons inducing the Planter to make choice of one Branch rather then another It may be it is straighter more liking better thriven then another Not so here In this spirituall engrafting God maketh choice sometimes oft times of the most unlikely Branches it may be the meanest Such was Israel as the Lord tels them Deut. 7.7 The Lord did not set his love upon you nor choose you because ye were more in number then any other people for ye are the fewest of all people But because the Lord loved you And such are many most when the grace of God first meeteth with them Ye see your calling brethren saith Paul to his Corinthians how that not many wise men after the flesh not many mighty not many noble are called 1 Cor. 1.26 The meanest Branches perhaps the crookedest Such was Paul
first married unto Christ before they can bring forth fruits unto God Rom. 7.4 2. Being in Christ abide in him Direction 2. Abide in him Abide in me and I in you As the branch cannot bear fruit of it selfe except it abide in the vine no more can ye except ye abide in me John 15.4 Abide in Christ and that not onely according to Grotius his Socinian Glosse H. Grotius ad loc Obediendi Imitandíque proposito by a constant purpose of obeying and imitating him This is a truth but not the whole truth Abide in him scil per fidem by persevering in a true and lively faith Piscator Diodat ad loc continually resting upon him for whatever it is we stand in need of So doth the Branch abide in the Stock and so abide we in Jesus Christ 3. Direction Imitate him 3. And thus abiding in him now imitate him Now propound him as a pattern for our Imitation He that saith he abideth in him saith Saint John ought himselfe also so to walk even as he walked 1 John 2.6 In this the Spirituall engrafting as I once before told you differs from the naturall There the Graft brings forth fruit after its own kind Not so here Here the Graft must follow the genius of the Stock The Christian must shew forth the vertues of Christ 1 Pet. 2.9 bringing forth such fruit as Christ himselfe brought forth What Saint Peter saith of the passive Obedience of Christ 1 Pet. 2.21 He suffered for us leaving us an Example that we should follow his steps may as truely be said of his Active He was made under the Law yeilding obedience to it for our sakes that we should follow his steps Thus having washed his Disciples feet John 13.13 15. he tels them I have given you an Example that ye should do as I have done unto you viz. Be ready to serve one another in love Thus propound we Jesus Christ as a Pattern for our Imitation 4. And thus abiding in him 4. Direction Bring forth fruit in him imitating him now bring forth fruit in him Every Branch that beareth not fruit in me my Father taketh away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 15.2 So the former Translation not without warrant from the Originall readeth that 2d verse of the 15th of John It is not enough for a man to be in Christ and to bear fruit but he must bear fruit in him fetching power and vertue from him acting what he doth in his strength even as the Graft beareth fruit in the Stock by a power derived from the Stock 5. And this fruit bring we forth unto God 5. Direction Bring forth fruit unto God To this end it is that we are married unto Christ as the Apostle tels us viz. That we should bring forth fruit unto God Rom. 7.4 Vunto God with an eye 1. To his Command making that both the Spring and Rule of our obedience 2. To his Glory making that our end our ultimate and last end 3. To his Reward expecting from him the fruit of our fruit that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle phraseth it Heb. 11.26 that Recompence of Reward that Crown of Glory wherewith God will crown this his own grace in those who so glorifie him by rendring to every one though not propter yet secundùm though not for yet according to his deeds To them who by patient continuance in well doing seek for glory honour and immortality eternall life Rom. 2.6 7. Those who have their fruit unto Holinesse here their end shall be everlasting life Rom 6.22 And thus have I done with this third Benefit The fourth is yet behind which I shall but lightly touch upon having occasionally glanced at it before And that is 9. Resemb A fourth Benefit Sustentation 4. Sustentation This benefit the Graft receiveth from the Stock being weak and tender of it selfe it is supported and upheld by it The like benefit doth the Christian receive from Christ being engrafted into him he receiveth sustentation supportation from him This is that which the Apostle tels the Gentiles Rom. 11.18 They being engrafted into the Stock of Abraham Now saith he thou bearest not the root but the root thee So it did in as much as their salvation depended upon the Covenant of God made with Abraham And thus doth Jesus Christ bear all those who are truely engrafted into him In which respects he is called sometimes by the name of a Foundation Other Foundation can no man lay saith Paul then that is laid which is Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 3.11 Christ a Foundation Christ a Foundation How Christi historia pracepta promissa Grotius ad loc and that not only in respect of his Doctrine Precepts Promises as Grotius carrieth it but most properly in respect of his Person and Office In the former way the Apostles are called a Foundation Ye are built upon the Foundation of the Prophets and Apostles Ephes 2.20 viz. In respect of their Doctrine So they were a secondary and subordinate Foundation laying the Elect upon Christ upon whom also themselves were laid Christ is a Foundation in the later way viz. In respect of his Person and Office the Foundation of foundations bearing up his Church and every member of it as the Foundation doth the stones and timbers which are laid upon it Or to hold to the Metaphor in the Text As the Stock supporteth and beareth up the Graft which it doth against all wind and weather Applic. Consolation to all that are in Christ A ground of strong consolation to all that are in Christ Jesus thus truely engrafted into him being thus made one with him they shall be supported by him so as nothing shall be able to separate them from him or from the love of God in him They shall be supported by him So doth the Stock support the Graft The Graft being put into it and incorporated in it embodied with it now it is safe in the Stock So as however the leaves may be stripped off the top broken off yet there is no severing it from the Stock The union betwixt Christ and the believer inseparable Such is the inseparable union betwixt Christ and the believer even like that personall union betwixt the two natures in Christ himself The Humanity being once engrafted into the Stock of the Divinity thenceforth they were no more to be severed Death separated the soul from the body but neither from the Godhead Even such is the mysticall union betwixt Christ and the believer being once ingrafted incorporated into Christ now he standeth sure By him we have accesse by faith into this grace wherein we stand saith the Apostle Rom. 5.2 However he may suffer in the outward man be stripped of his leaves of his estate deprived of outward accommodations and comforts and in the end be cut down by death And suffer in the inward man by the buffetings of Satan yet nothing shall be
far from mortifying of them When men shall leave sin being enforced so to do through the sense of some present inconvenience or through the clamorousnesse of an accusing conscience or meerly through fear of punishment temporall or eternall this is but a counterfeit Mortification True Mortification must be a voluntary action not Involuntary nor yet Mixt. I call that a mixt action which is partly voluntary and partly involuntary As in that fore-named instance of the Seaman casting his goods over-board Mortification altogether voluntary which he doth partly with his will and partly against it This must be altogether voluntary Not but that there may be some reluctancy betwixt the flesh and spirit about this work Such a reluctancy we find in the humane nature of Christ about his naturall death When he saw that bitter cup coming towards him he passionately deprecates it in that thrice repeated Petition Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me Mat. 26.39 yet was his death a true voluntary death So in the Christian's death unto sin there may be a reluctancy betwixt the flesh and the spirit Notwithstanding some reluctancy in the flesh and yet the action a voluntary action An action is said to be voluntary or involuntary according to the superiour faculties of the soul not the inferiour If the reasonable part be consenting the action may be called voluntary though there be some reluctancy in the sensitive appetite Thus in the Christian in whom there is nature and grace flesh and spirit an unregenerate and a regenerate part if the superiour and better part be willing and that will not a velleitas but a volitio not a wishing but a willing an advised deliberate will with full consent of the inward man now though there be some reluctancy in the flesh in the unregenerate part yet may this be said a true voluntary act And is our Mortification such Can we say with the blessed Apostle Rom. 7. ult that However with our flesh we serve the law of sin yet with our mind we serve the Law of God Delighting in it after the inward man ver 22. So that we are dead to sin according to the inward man the regenerate part If so now though we find a Law in our members rebelling against the Law of our minds yet be not discouraged this in God's acceptation shall go for true Mortification a true death unto sin In as much as it carrieth with it this resemblance of the death of Christ which was a voluntary death Thirdly 3. Resemb A violent Death The Death of Christ was a violent death though voluntary yet violent Violent because not naturall He did not die alone but was put to death So saith Saint Peter 1 Pet. 3.18 He was put to death in the flesh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In course of nature Christ might have lived many a year upon the earth when he was crucified being then but about the three and thirtieth year of his age His death was a violent death He was brought as a lamb to the slaughter Isai 53.7 The materiall Temple did not fall down alone it was pulled down And so was the mysticall Temple of Christ's Body Destroy this Body John 2.19 And herein again was his death a true pattern of the Christian's Mortification his dying unto sin which is both voluntary and violent Voluntary in respect of the Person but violent in respect of the Sin Not when sin dieth alone but when it is put to death and that whilest it might yet live longer It is nothing to die to sin when sin dieth to us in us Herein lieth as I may say the life of this death herein is the truth of Mortification when a man as it were layeth violent hands upon his sins cutteth them off being yet in their flower strength vigour not when they die for age When he pulleth up these weeds not when they wither of themselves So much is insinuated in these fore-named expressions of mortifying of crucifying the flesh the body of sin c each importing a violent death Such is the death of sin in the Christian a violent death Another touchstone for Mortification Applic. And is it so Here then we have another touch-stone whereby we may discover a great deal of false and counterfeit mortification in the world Many have left their sins who have not mortified them No if their sins be dead they died a naturall death they died alone As for them they were so far from offering violence to their lusts from putting them to death that they would willingly have saved their lives if it had lyen in their power And being dead they follow them to their graves as they do their dear friends mourning and lamenting over them that they must part Thus doth the aged Adulterer part with his inordinate lust Rom. 4.19 being now gray-headed and his body dead as it is said of Abraham's he leaveth the tricks of his youth as he counts and calls them But no thanks to him they have left him His sin dieth according to the course of nature dieth for age And thus a man that was intemperate in his youth which yet is not ordinary sometimes he becometh sober and abstemious in his age But what is the cause of it why the reason inducing him to it is no other then that which old Barzillai gave unto David why he was not willing to follow the Court 2 Sam. 19.34 He was now grown old so as he could not discern betwixt good and evill he had no taste in that he eat or in that he drunk Upon the like ground the aged sinner leaveth his intemperance Time having snowed upon his head and plowed upon his forehead he cannot now find that sweetnesse that delight in his sin which formerly he did And upon this account they two part Sin dying to him not he to his sin Now here give me leave Applied to aged sinners I beseech you to make bold with every hoary head every wrinckled face that heareth me that looketh upon me this day and put you upon the triall a little whether you be truely dead to sin or no. It may be your sins the sins of your youth and you are parted but let me ask you the question Vpon what terms did ye part Whether did you forsake them or they you Which is it that standeth chargeable with this desertion Which was it that gave the bill of divorce to the other you to your lusts or your lusts to you Your sins are dead but what death died they A naturall or a violent death If the former that is no true Mortification For all this you may yet be alive to your sins though they be dead to you Hence is it that late repentance in an aged sinner is alwayes looked upon as suspicious and seldome found to be true because that sins then die alone without any violence offered to them Enquire how our sins died whether a
It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the similitude of his resurrection That it is so will appear in four or five particulars The Principals whereof we shall find hinted unto us in the verse before the Text in the later part of it where the Apostle saith that We are buried with Christ by baptisme into death That like as he was raised from the dead to the Glory of the Father so we also should walk in newnesse of life In which passage we may take notice of two things touching the Resurrection of Christ Two generall Resemblances taken from the verse fore-going both usefull to our present purpose 1. That he was raised to a new life 2. That he was raised up to the Glory of God the Father The former of these is insinuated Like as Christ was raised from the dead so we also should walk in newnesse of life intimating that Christ was raised up to a new life The other expressed Christ was raised from the dead to the Glory of the Father So Beza and others read it To the Glory conceiving the Preposition 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 By for To. The like we find 2 Pet. 1.3 Him that hath called us to glory and vertue The Originall hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by glory put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to glory as our Translation renders it So here Christ was raised from the dead by the Glory i. e. to the Glory of the Father And in both these we shall find the Christian 's spirituall Resurrection resembling his corporall Resurrection Generall 1. In the newness of his life 1. In the newnesse of life whereunto he is raised Christ was raised to a new life a life different from that which before he lived Herein did his Resurrection differ from the Resurrection of those others whom we read to have been raised again from the dead Such was the the life of Christ after his Resurrection In the Old Testament the son of the widow of Zarephath 1 King 17.22 the Shunamites son 2 King 35.36 the man that was cast into Elisha's Sepulchre and touched his bones 2 King 13.21 In the New Testament the son of the widow of Naim Luke 7.15 Jairus his daughter Mat. 9.25 Lazarus John 11.43 Tabitha or Dorcas Acts 9.40 All these were raised from the dead but they were raised to the same life which formerly they lived But so was not the Lord Jesus He was raised up to a new life new both for kind and continuance For kind he was raised from a naturall to a spirituall life for continuance he was raised from a mortall Such is the Christian's life to an immortall life And herein the Christian's first Resurrection carries with it a resemblance of his Resurrection Being 1. In the Generall 1. In the generall a new life a raising up of the soul to a new life That we should walk in newnesse of life 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Newnesse of life for a new life Such is the Christian's life to which he is raised in and by his spiritual Regeneration A new life That it is so and in what respects it may be said so to be I shewed you at large in opening of the former verse I shall now only remind you of the heads It is a new life having a new principle a new rule a new end ordered after a new manner 1. Having a new Principle 1. Having a new Principle Before regeneration what was the principle of his life why the Flesh The unregenerate person is one that walketh after the flesh Rom. 8.1 that is sinfull corruption whereunto all meer naturall men are servants as Peter describeth those pernicious seducers 2 Pet. 2.19 Out of this principle it is that they act being themselves acted by the spirit of Satan as Paul saith of his Ephesians Ephes 2.3 In times past ye walked after the Prince of the air the spirit that worketh in the children of disobedience This was the old Principle But now behold a new Principle even the Spirit of God that Spirit of Holinesse or Sanctification as Paul calleth it Rom. 1.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that Spirit which dwelt in the humane nature of Christ and raised him that also dwelleth in every true believer So saith the Apostle Rom. 8.11 2 Tim. 1.14 where speaking of the Spirit of God he calleth it an indwelling Spirit Even as the soul dwelleth in the body so doth this spirit dwell in the soul of a regenerate person animating and actuating it Whence it is that the believer is said to live in the spirit Gal. 5.25 and to walk in the spirit ver 16. and to walk after the spirit Rom. 8.1 and to be led by the spirit ver 14. and to serve in newnesse of spirit Rom. 7.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 newnesse of spirit for a new spirit even the Spirit of God by which believers are acted and according to the dictates directions motions whereof they now order the course of their lives and conversations Thus is the regenerate man's life a new life having a new Principle 2. A new Rule 2. And secondly a new Rule What is the unregenerate man's rule which he walketh by Why at the best carnall reason It may be the precepts of men humane Laws and Constitutions which he dare not transgresse for fear of the penalty It may be example Vivitur exemplo the custom of the times the course of the world In times past ye walked according to the course of the world Ephes 2.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mundane itatem mundi as the Syrian Interpreter and Tremelius render it the worldlinesse of the world It may be his rule is to walk without rule Such is the course of licentious persons who walk as Paul saith of some of his Thessalonians 2 Thes 3.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 irregularly disorderly making their will their rule But so doth not the regenerate person His life is a regular life his conversation is an orderly conversation So David describeth the righteous man Psal 50.23 He is one that disposeth his way as the Hebrew hath it that ordereth his conversation walking by rule And what rule Why the rule of the new creature As many as walk according to this rule peace shall be upon them and mercy Gal. 6.16 which is the rule of the word the rule of faith and obedience According to this rule doth the regenerate person walk It is David's prayer unto God for himself Psal 119.133 Order my steps in or according to thy word And in the 9th verse of that Psalm propounding the question Wherewith shall a young man cleanse his way he answers By taking heed thereunto according to thy word Here is a new rule 3. A new End 3. A new End What is the unregenerate man's end In living he liveth to himselfe to his own honour profit pleasure
part to make use of in the working of this first Resurrection Not that hee is tyed to an uniformity in his way of working alwaies to work after the same manner No his dispensations as in other of his works so in this are various But ordinarily so it is Before dead soules arise and come out of the grave of sin there is a shaking and an Earthquake and a rending of the Rocks God prepares the hearts of his people for this blessed work by some degree of a Legall contrition and compunction giving the soul to feel somewhat of the spirit of Bondage letting into it some sense and apprehension of sin and the wrath of God due unto sin After this cometh the still voice In the Gospel As it was in Eliahs vision at Mount Horeb 1 Kin. 19.11 12. After the whirlewind and the Earthquake and the fire came the still small voyce Thus fareth it ordinarily in the work of Conversion After the Whirlewind and the Earthquake and the fire of the Law cometh the still voyce of the Gospell quieting the soul with the offers of grace and mercy letting into it some comfortable apprehension of Reconciliation with God through Christ withall exciting it to lay hold upon that mercy and to indeavour to walk answerably to it in newnesse of life Now have we heard this voice of the Son of God Have we heard Christ thus speaking to our souls making his word effectuall unto us in this way If so here is an hopefull evidence that this blessed change is begun and that we have a part in this first Resurrection Whereas otherwise are we strangers to this voice never felt any such power in the word We may justly conclude our selves strangers to this blessed work surely we are as yet in our graves under the power of a spirituall death Enquiry 2. Have we received the spirit of Christ 2. Let a second enquiry be Have we received the spirit of Christ we know by what meanes it is that the dead body is raised by putting a spirit into it Thus we read of Jairus his daughter Luk. 8.55 After that Christ had called upon her saying Maid arise her spirit came again saith the Text and shee arose straightway By a like meanes doth Jeses Christ effect this Resurrection of the soule by putting his spirit into it By this meanes was his own Body raised Hee was put to death in the flesh but quickned by the spirit 1 Pet. 3.18 viz. that divine and eternall spirit which dwelt in his humane nature And by the same meanes are dead soules quickned By this means were those dry bones made to live again Ezek. 37.5 Behold saith the Lord I will cause breath to enter into you and you shall live Now what were those dry bones and what was this Breath you may see the Interpretation of both in the sequels These bones are the whole house of Israel ver 11. And yee shall know that I am the Lord when I have opened your graves O my people and brought you up out of your graves and shall put my spirit in you and yee shall live ver 13 14. This is the Breath put into these dry bones even the spirit of God put upon his people being then in Babylon causing them to live again restoring them to a flourishing condition By the same meanes doth Christ cause dead soules being Captives unto sin to live by putting his Spirit into them Hence is it that he is called a Quickning spirit 1 Corin. 15.45 Because by this meanes hee shal quicken the dead Bodies of his Saints at the last day Hee shall quicken your mortall Bodies by his spirit which dwelleth in you Rom. 8.11 And by the same meanes hee now quickneth dead soules by communicating his Spirit unto them Which in this respect the Apostle calleth The Spirit of life Rom. 8.2 Now then have we received this Spirit It was Pauls question to those new Converts Act. 19.2 Have ye received the Holy Ghost This he spake concerning the Extraordinary gifts of the Spirit which flourished in the Church at that time Let me propound the same question in a more ordinary sense Have we received the Holy Ghost Have we received the Spirit of Christ As it was Pauls question to his Galatians Gal. 3.2 Received ye the Spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of faith Taking it for granted that they had received the Spirit And so have all those who have any true union with Jesus Christ If any man have not the spirit of Christ he is none of his Rom. 8.9 Now have wee received this spirit by the hearing of faith Have we so heard the voice of Christ in the doctrine of faith the Gospell as that wee have received the spirit of Christ If so questionlesse this Spirit will have the same operation and effect in our soules that it had in the Body of Christ As it raised up the one so it will raise up the other Whereas otherwise being voyd and destitute of this Spirit of Christ we may like dreaming men fancy and imagine our selves to be risen but we are yet in the grave This Quickning spirit how discerned Question But the Question here will run on How shall we know whether we have received this Quickning Spirit or no. A Question that will be very usefull in the resolution of it The rather because there are so many who pretend to this spirit never more then at this day who yet are meere strangers to it By the fruits and effects of it Answer For your satisfaction know that this Quickning spirit where it is discovers it selfe by the fruits and effects of it Of these fruits and effects I might name many I shall only single out three of the Principall which will be properly usefull to our present purpose This Quickning Spirit where it dwelleth in the soul Which in working this Resurrection are three it is to it a Spirit of Illumination a Spirit of Faith a Spirit of sanctification A threefold work whereby the Spirit effecteth this first Resurrection in the soul being to it first a Spirit of Illumination secondly of Faith thirdly Of Holinesse 1. A Spirit of Illumination 1. It is a Spirit of Illumination Here is the beginning of this work it beginneth in Light Even as in the first Creation the first born of Gods works was Light God said Let there be Light Gen. 1.3 So is it in this new Creation the first work is Light The Light shineth in darknesse John 1.4 a new light shining into the soul of man which since the fall is become a dungeon of darkenesse As it was with Peter when God sent his Angell to fetch him out of Prison Acts 12.7 he caused a light to shine in the prison So is it with dead souls when God sendeth his Angells his Ministers to fetch them out of the prison the dungeon of the grave he causeth a light to shine forth unto them
A supernaturall light the light of divine and heavenly knowledg to shine forth into their Hearts God who commanded the light to shine out of darknes hath shined into our hearts saith the Apostle to give the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ 2. Cor. 4.6 Gods Ministers being his Instruments in the work of Conversion they communicate that light of knowledg unto others which themselves have received making known the glorious grace of God shining in the face of Jesus Christ revealed and manifested in and by him without which Illumination there is no Regeneration Baptisme anciently called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illumination and why Hence was it that the Greek Fathers anciently called Baptisme which is the Sacrament of Regeneration by the name of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Illumination taking the ground of it as is conceived from that of the Apostle Leigh Critic sacra Heb. 6.4 where he speaks of those that were once enlightned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which the Syriack renders Grotius Beza ad loc qui ad baptismum descenderunt such as had been baptized And not unfitly may it be so called in as much as all those who are baptized with the Holy Ghost they have their minds illustrated with the beams of this divine and heavenly light Without such illumination no regeneration Hence is it that the twofold state of man the state of nature and the state of grace are called the one darknesse and the other light Ye were sometimes darknesse but now ye are light in the Lord Ephes 5.8 And the work of Conversion is described to be a turning from darknesse to light Acts 26.18 and a calling out of darknesse into a marvellous light 1 Pet. 2.9 Now have we received this Spirit of Illumination Hath this light shined forth unto us shined into our minds and shined into our hearts Into our minds enlightning our understandings with some measure of speculative knowledge in spiritual heavenly mysteries Certainly without this there can be no true work of Conversion no spirituall Resurrection God doth not bring men out of their graves blindfold He first openeth their eyes Paul was sent to the Gentiles to open their eyes Acts 26.18 to turn them from darknesse to light from the darknesse of ignorance to the light of knowledge which shineth into the mind And into the heart He hath shined in our hearts saith the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And so he doth in the hearts of his people giving them not onely a speculative but an affective knowledge not onely to know the truth but to be affected with it to love it believe it embrace it to receive a love of the truth for the want of which those Apostates fell away 2 Thes 2.10 Now hath this light thus shined not onely into our minds but into our hearts then may we conclude that we have received the Spirit of Christ even this quickning spirit beginning this work of a spirituall resurrection in our souls Whereas otherwise Do we stil sit in darknesse surely we are as yet in the shadow of death 2. This Quickning Spirit 2. A Spirit of Faith is a Spirit of Faith So it is to all who have any part in this first Resurrection We having the spirit of faith saith Paul to his Corinthians 2 Cor. 4.13 that is the Spirit of God working faith in the soul This it doth in all whom it quickneth first revealing Christ unto them then it inclineth their hearts to close with him upon those Gospel terms upon which he is offered to receive him as a Saviour and as a Lord. And so it uniteth them unto him ingrafting them into this Stock from whence they receive this quickning vertue and are made conformable to Christ in his resurrection This is conveyed unto believers through faith That we might receive the promise of the spirit through faith saith the Apostle Gal. 3.14 The Promise he there speaketh of is the promise of the Spirit of Regeneration as Diodate expounds it This is the promise which the Prophets make such frequent mention of Isai 44.3 Jer. 31.33 c. Now this promise of the spirit is received by faith faith on Jesus Christ which is the purifying grace Putrifying their hearts by faith Acts 15.9 The sanctifying grace Them which are sanctified by faith in me Acts 26.18 and the quickning grace by and through which this spirituall life is conveyed from Christ into the soul Expresse is that of our Saviour John 11.25 I am the resurrection and the life He that believeth on me though he were dead yet shall he live Though he be dead in sin yet shall he live a spirituall life upon his believing Which life is therefore called the life of faith because faith is both the beginning and the principall Act of this life The just shal live by his faith Rom. 3.11 The life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 He that liveth and believeth on me saith our Saviour ver 26. of that 11th of John speaking of this spirituall life whereof saith is both the first and principall Act. Now have we received this Spirit of Faith Have we felt this work of the spirit upon our hearts drawing and inclining them thus to receive Jesus Christ thus to close with him thus to rest upon him thus to give up our selves unto him If so surely we are in the number of those that have part in this first Resurrection Otherwise being yet in a state of unbeliefe we are also in a state of death 3. 3. A Spirit of Holinesse This Quickning Spirit is also a sanctifying spirit a spirit of sanctification Such was the spirit whereby Jesus Cbrist was raised He was declared mightily to be the Son of God according to the spirit of sanctification by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 That Spirit which raised up Jesus Christ was the same divine spirit which sanctified his humane nature wherein it dwelt And such is this quickning Spirit to all in whom it dwelleth Being to them a Spirit of Faith it is also to them a Spirit of Sanctification purifying their hearts through faith Hence is it that the Apostle puts these two together Sanctification of the spirit and beliefe of the truth 2 Thes 2.13 Faith and Holinesse never go asunder Where the Spirit of Christ is a Spirit of faith it is also a Spirit of holinesse changing the heart putting into it a new quality of holinesse turning the bent of it from and against all sin unto holinesse and righteousnesse working in it an unfeigned hatred of the one and love to the other Now have we received this Spirit also Do we find such an inward change wrought in our hearts Do we find the Law of God a Law of Holinesse written upon them A law contrary to the law of sin so the Apostle calleth that sinfull corruption which dwelleth and reigneth