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A29699 Paradice opened, or, The secreets, mysteries, and rarities of divine love, of infinite wisdom, and of wonderful counsel laid open to publick view also, the covenant of grace, and the high and glorious transactions of the Father and the Son in the covenant of redemption opened and improved at large, with the resolution of divers important questions and cases concerning both covenants ... : being the second and last part of The golden key / by Thomas Brooks ...; Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2 Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing B4953; ESTC R11759 249,733 284

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understand it of the whole time of his manifestation in the world when he was sent forth as a Prophet to teach them and was declared evidently to be the son of God both by his miracles and ministry Jo● 1. 14. and by that voice that was heard from heaven This is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased Others do understand it of the day of Christ's Resurrection and with them I close for this seems to be chiefly intended partly because it seems to be spoken of some solemn time of Christ's manifestation to be the son of God and he was declared to be the son of God with power according to the Rom. 1. 4. spirit of holiness by the resurrection from the dead that is by the power and force of the Deity sanctifying and quickening the flesh he was raised from the dead and so declared mightily to be the son of God but mainly because the Apostle doth clearly affirm that this was in Christ's Resurrection He hath raised up Jesus again as it is also written in the second Psalm Thou art my son this Act. 13. 32 33. day have I begotten thee In the day of Christ's Resurrection he seems to tell all the world that though from the beginning he had been hid in the bosom of his father J●h 1. 18. and that though in the Law he had been but darkly shadowed out yet in the day of his Resurrection they might plainly see that he had fully satisfied Divine Justice finished his s●fferings and compleated the Redemption of his Elect and that accordingly his father had arrayed him with that glory that was sutable to him Before the Resurrection the Godhead was veiled under the infirmity of the flesh but in the Resurrection and after the Resurrection the Godhead did sparkle and shine forth 2 Cor. 13. 4. very gloriously and wonderfully least the humane nature of Christ upon its assumption should shrink at the approach of sufferings God the father engages himself to give Jesus Christ a full and ample reward And to exalt him far above all principality and power and to put all things Eph. 1. 21 22. ●●il 2. 9. Name is put for person and bowing of the knee a bodily ceremony to express inward subjection Estius 〈◊〉 under his feet and to make him head over all things to the Church And to give him a name above every name that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow and all because to give satisfaction to his father he made himself of no reputation and became obedient unto death even the death of the cross that is to his dying day He went thorough many a little death all his life long and at length underwent that cursed and painful death of the Cross upon which account the father rewards him highly by exalting him to singular glory and transcendent honour Look that as the assumption of the humane nature is the highest instance of free mercy so is the rewarding thereof in its state of exaltation the highest instance of remunerative justice Oh how highly is the humane nature of Christ honoured by being exalted to a personal union with the Godhead though vain men may dishonour Christ yet the father hath conferred honour upon him as Mediator that it may be a Testimony to us that he is infinitely pleased with the Redemption of lost man Although Christ be in himself God all-sufficient God blessed for ever and so is not capable of any access of glory yet it pleased him to condescend so far as to obscure his own glory under the veil of his flesh and state of humiliation till he had perfected the work of Redemption and to account of his office of Mediator and the dignity accompanying it as great honour conferred upon him by the father J●l 8. 54. And it is observable that Christ having finished our Redemption on earth he petitions his father to advance him to the possession of that glory that he enjoyed from all eternity And now O father glorifie thou me Joh. 17. ● with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was Now for the clearing up of this Text we are to consider that as Christ was from all Eternity the glorious God the God of glory so we are not to conceive of any real change in this glory of his Jesus Christ is true God and was infinitely glorious from all eternity for he had glory with his father before the world was and therefore he was no upstart God and of a later standing as the Arians and Maho●etans make of him Godhead as if by his estate of humiliation he had suffered any diminution or by his state of exaltation any real accession were made to his glory as God But the meaning is this That Christ having according to the paction past betwixt the father and him obscured the glory of his Godhead for a time under the veil of the form of a servant and our sinless infirmities doth now expect according to the tenour of the same paction that after he hath done his work as Mediator he be highly exalted and glorified in his whole person that his humane nature be exalted to what glory finite nature is capable of and that the glory of his Godhead might shine in the person of Christ God-man and in the man Christ Jesus Thus you see the promises the encouragements and rewards that God the father sets before Jesus Christ And let thus much suffice concerning the Articles of the Covenant on God's part In the last place let us seriously consider of the Articles of the Covenant on Christ's part and let us weigh well the promises that Jesus Christ has made to the father for the bringing about the great work of our Redemption that so we may see what infinite cause we have to love the son as we love the father and to honour the son as we honour the father and to trust in the son as we trust in the father and to glorifie the son as we glorifie the father c. Now there are six observable things on Christ's part on Christ's side that we are to take special notice of c. First Christ having consented and agreed with the father about our Redemption accordingly he applies himself to the discharge of that great and glorious work by taking a body by assuming our nature Heb. 2. 14. For as much then as the children are partakers of flesh and blood he also himself likewise took part of the same He who was equal with God did so far abase himself as to take on him the nature of man and subjected himself to all manner of humane frailties so far as they are freed from sin even such as accompany flesh and blood and this is one of the wonders of mercy and love that Christ our head should stoop so low who was himself full of glory as to take part of flesh and blood that he might suffer for flesh
and blood vers 16. For verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but he took on him the seed of Abraham Christ assumed the common nature of man and not of any particular person The Apostle doth here purposely use this word seed to shew that Christ came out of the Gen. 46. 26. Exod. 1. 5. Heb. 7. 5. 1 King 8. 19. loins of man as Jacob's children and their children are said to come out of his loins and as all the Jews are said to come out of the loins of Abraham and as Solomon is said to come out of the loins of David in a man's loins his seed is and it is a part of his substance Thus it sheweth that Christ's humane nature was of the very substance of man and that Christ was the very same that was promised to be the Redeemer of man for of old he was foretold under this word seed as The seed of the woman Gen. 3. 15. Gen. 12. 18. Rom. 9. 7. Heb. 11. 18. 2 Ram. 7. 12. Joh. 8. 58. the seed of Abraham the seed of Isaac the seed of David This word he took on him as it setteth out the humane nature of Christ so it gives us a hint of his Divine Nature for it presupposeth that Christ was before he took on him the seed of Abraham He that taketh any thing on him must needs be before he do so is it possible for him that is not to take any thing on him Now Christ in regard of his humane nature was not before he assumed that nature therefore that former being must needs be in regard of his divine nature in that respect he ever was even the eternal God being God he took on him an humane nature Christ's Eternal Deity shines in this 16. verse and so does his true humanity in that he took upon him the seed of man it is most evident that he was a true man Seed is the matter of man's nature and the very substance thereof The seed of man is the root out Isa 11. 1. Luk. 1. 35. of which Christ assumed his humane nature The humane nature was not created of nothing nor was it brought from heaven but assumed out of the seed of man The humane nature of Christ never had a subsistence in it self At or in the very first framing or making it it was united to the Divine nature and at or in the first uniting it it Crean●●● fundi●ur in●und●ndo creatu● was framed or made Philosophers say of the uniting of the soul to the body in creating it it is infused and in infusing it it is created Much more is this true concerning the Humane nature of Christ united to his Divine Fitly therefore is it here said that he took on him the seed of Abraham So Joh. 1. 14. The word was made flesh and dwelt among us The Evangelist having proved the Divinity of Jesus Christ comes now to speak of his humanity incarnation and manifestation in the flesh whereby he became God and Man in one person Flesh here signifies the whole man in Scripture ye all know that man consisteth of two parts which are sometimes called flesh and spirit and sometimes called soul and body Now by a Synecdoche either of these p●rts may b● put for the whole And so sometimes the soul is put for the whole man and sometimes the body is put for the whole man as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Margin A●l. 27. 37. Gen. ●6 27. R●m 12. 1. cap. 3. 20. Christ put himself into a low si● leprous suit of ours to expiate our pride and robbery in reaching after the D●ity and to heal ●● of our spiritual Leprosie for if ●● had n●t assumed our flesh he had not saved us N●zianz together Christ did assume the whole man he did assume the soul as well as the body and both under the term Flesh And indeed unless he had assumed the whole man the whole man could not have been saved if Christ had not taken the whole man he could not have saved the whole man Christ took the nature of man that he might be a fit Mediator if he had not been man he could not have died and if he had not been God he could not have satisfied So great was the difficulty of restoring the Image of God in lost man and of restoring him to God's favour and the dignity of sonship that no less could do it than the natural son of God his becomeing the son of man to suffer in our nature and so great was the Father's love and the Son's love to fallen man as to lay a foundation of reconciliation betwixt God and man in the personal union of the Divine and Humane nature of Christ so much is imported in those words the word was made flesh The person of the Godhead that was incarnate was neither the Father nor the Holy Ghost but the Son the second Person for the Word was made Flesh There being a real distinction of the Persons that one of them is is not another and each of them having their proper manner of subsistence the one of them might be incarnate and not the other and it is the Godhead not simply considered but the Person of the Son subsisting in that Godhead that was incarnate And it was very convenient that the second or middle Person in order of subsistence of the blessed Trinity should be the Reconciler of God and man and that he by whom all things Celes 1. 16 17. Heb. 1. 2 3. were made should be the Restorer and Maker of the new World and that he who was the express Image of his Father should be the Repairer of the Image of God in us Oh the admirable love and wisdom of God that shines in this that the second Person in the Trinity is set on work to procure our Redemption Though reason could never have found out such a way yet when God hath revealed it reason though but shallow can see a fitness in it because there being a necessity that the Saviour of man should be man and an impossibility that any but God should save him and one Person in the Trinity being to be incarnate it agrees to reason that the first Person in the Trinity should not be the Mediator for who should send him he is of none and therefore could not be sent There must be one sent to reconcile the enmity and another to give gifts to friends two proceeding Persons the Son from the Father and the Holy Ghost from the Father and the Son Accordingly the second Person which is the Son he is sent upon the first errand to reconcile man to God and the third person the Holy Ghost he is sent to give gifts to men so reconciled so as to reason it is suitable and a very great congruity that God having made all things by his Son should now repair all things by his Son that he that was the middle Person
in the Trinity should become the Mediator between God and man that he that was the express Image of the Father's Person should restore the Image of God defaced in man by his sins Ah Christians how well does it become you to lose your selves in the admiration of the wisdom of God in the contrivance of the work of our Redemption For the Son of God to take on him the nature of man with all the essential properties thereof and all the sinless infirmities and frailties thereof is a wonder that may well take up our thoughts to all Eternity And Christ took the infirmities of our nature as well as the nature it self To shew the truth of his Humanity he had a nature that could hunger and thirst even as ours do and to sanctifie them to us and that so he might sympathize with us as a merciful and faithful High Priest and that we might Heb. 2. 16 17 18. cap. 4. 15 16. confide the more in him and have acce●s to him with boldness By reason of the personal union of the two natures in Christ he is a fit Mediator betwixt God and man Act. 20. 28. his sufferings are of infinite value being the sufferings of one who is God and who is mighty to carry on the work Isa 63 1. He● 7. 25. of Redemption and to apply his own purchase and repair all our losses Oh what an honour has Jesus Christ put upon fallen man by taking the nature of man on him What is so near and dear to us as our own nature and lo our nature is highly preferred by Jesus Christ to a Union in the Godhead Christ now sits in heaven with Act. 1. 9 10 11. our nature and the same flesh that we have upon us only glorified It is that which all the world cannot give a sufficient reason why the same word in the Hebrew Bashar should signifie both Flesh and Good Tidings Divinity will give you a reason though Grammar cannot Christ's taking of flesh upon him was good tidings to all the whole world therefore no wonder if one word signifie both Abundance of comfort may be taken from hence to poor souls when they think God hath forgotten them to consider is it likely that Christ who is Man should forget man now he is at the right hand of the Father cloathed in that nature that we have when we are troubled to think it is impossible God and man should ever be reconciled let us consider that God and man did meet in Christ therefore it is possible we may meet what hath been may be again the two natures met in Christ therefore God may be reconciled to man yea they therefore met that God might be reconciled to man he was made Immanuel God with us that he might bring God and us together when a man is troubled to think of the corruptious of his nature that is so full of ●efilements that it cannot be sanctified perfectly let him withal think that his nature is capable of Sanctification to the full Christ received Humane nature which was not polluted his nature is the same therefore that nature is capable of sanctification to the uttermost Oh sirs if Christ the second Person in the Trinity did put on man how careful should men be to put on Christ Put you on the Lord Jesus saith Re● 13. 14. the Apostle If Christ assumed our Humane nature how should we wrestle with God to be made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious promises that by these we may be made partakers of the Divine Nature If Christ became thus one flesh with us how zealous should we be to become one spirit with Christ 1 Cor. 6. 17. Even as man and wife is one flesh so he that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit Was the word made flesh did Christ take our nature yea did he take our nature at the worst after the fall what high cause have we to bless his name for ever for this condescention of his Should all the Princes of the world have come from their Thrones and have gone a begging from door to door it would not amount to so much as for Christ to become Man for our sakes ●hrist took our nature not in the the integrity of it as in Adam before his fall but in the infirmities of it which came to it by the fall What a mazing love was this For Christ to have taken our nature as it was in Adam while he stood clothed in his integrity and stood right in the sight of God had not been so much as when Adam was fallen and proclaimed Traytor As Bernard saith Quo pro me vilior eò mihi charior Domine Lord thou shalt be so much the more dear to me by how much the more thou hast been vile for me Here is condescention indeed that Christ should stoop so low to take Flesh and Flesh with Infirmities But Secondly Jesus Christ promiseth to God the Father that he will freely readily and chearfully accept undertake and faithfully discharge his Mediatory office to which he was designed by him in order to the Redemption and Salvation of all his chosen ones Consult the Scriptures Compare Psal 40. 6. to the 11. with Heb. 10. 5. to the 11. and Isa ●1 1 2 3. Lu● 4. 18 19. 20. A●● 13. 23. cap. 7. 22. Heb. 10. 1● 14. in the Margin they having been formerly opened and in them you will find that Christ did not take the office of Mediatorship upon himself but first the Father calls him to it and then the Son accepts it Christ glorified not himself to be made an High Priest but he that said unto him thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee He called him and then the Son answered him Lo I come God the Father promiseth that upon the payment of such a price by his Son such and such souls should be ransomed and set free from the curse from wrath from hell c. Jesus Christ readily consents to the price and pays it down upon the nail at once and so makes good his Mediatory office It pleased the glorious Son of God in obedience to the Father to humble himself and obscure the glory of his Godhead that he might be like his brethren and a fit Mediator for sympathy and suffering and that he might engage his life and glory for the redeeming of the Elect and lay by his Robes of Majesty and not be re-assumed till he gave a good account of that work till he was able to say I have finished the work that thou gavest me to do Christ very freely and chearfully undertakes to do and suffer whatever was the will of his Father that he should do or suffer for the bringing about the Redemption of Mankind Christ willingly undertakes to be his Father's Servant in this great work and accordingly he looks upon his Father as his Lord Thou
23 26. can never be happy here nor blessed hereafter and yet it is possible for a man with Herod to reform many things Mark ●● 2● Mat. 26. 20 21. 22 1 The●s 5. 23. and yet be a lost and undone man for ever as he was Judas was a very reformed man but he was never inwardly changed nor throughout sanctified The Scribes and Pharisees were outwardly reformed but they were not inwardly renewed A man may be another man than what once he was and yet not be a new man a new creature When a sinner is sermon-sick O! then he will 2 Cor. 5. 17. 2 P●t 2. 20 22. D●st 5. 5 6 7 8. leave his sins but when that sickness is off he returns with the dog to his vomit and with the sow to her wallowing in the mire Sometimes conscience is like the hand-writing upon the wall it makes the sinners countenance to change and his thoughts to be troubled and the joints of his loins to be loosed and his knees to smite one against another and now the sinner is all for reforming and turning over a new leaf but when these agonies of conscience are over the sinner returns to his old courses again and often times is twofold more a Child of Hell than before There was a Matth. 23. 15. man in this City who was given up to the highest wickednesses on his sick bed conscience made an Arrest of him and he was filled with such wonderful horrour and terrour that he cryed out day and night that he was damned he was damned he was damned and when he had some small intervals O what large promises did he make what a new man a reformed man he would be but when in time his terrors and sickness wrought off he was seven-fold worse than before Sometimes the awakened Sinner parts with some sins to make room for others and sometimes the Sinner seems to give a Bill of divorce to this sin and that but it is only because his bodily strength fails him or because he wants an opportunity or because there is a more strict eye and watch upon him or because the sword of the Magistrate is more sharpned against him or because James 4. 3. he wants fuel he wants a purse to bear it out or because some Company or some Relations or some Friends lye between him and his sins so that he must either tread over them or else keep from his sins or because he has deeply smarted for this sin and that his name has been blotted his credit and reputation stained Prov. 6. 32 33 34 35. his Trade decayed his health empaired his body wasted c. By these short hints it is evident that men may attain to some outward reformation whose states and hearts were never changed and who were never taken into marriage union with Christ But Tenthly and lastly many take up in a party as of old some cryed up Paul as the only deep Preacher and others cryed up Apollos as the only eloquent Preacher and 1 Cor. 1. 10 11 12 13. many cryed up Cephas as the most zealous Preacher We are for the Church of England say some we are for the baptized People say others we are for the Presbyterian government cry some we are for the congregational way cry others I have so much ingenuity and charity as to judge that some of all these several parties and perswasions are really holy and will be eternally happy are gracious and will be glorious are sanctified and will be saved are now governed by Christ and will be hereafter glorified with Christ Judas was one of Christs party Mat. 26. 20. to the 26. if I may so speak and yet he had no part nor portion in Christ Demas was one of Paul's party and yet he 2 Tim. 4. 10. plaid the Apostat and turn'd an idolatrous Priest at 2 Tim. 1. 15. Thessalonica as Dorotheus saith And Phygellus and Hermogenes were of Paul's party but were only famous for 1 Tim. 1. 19 20. their recidivation and Apostasie Hymeneus and Alexander were of Paul's party but they made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience The five foolish Virgins Mat. 25. 1 2 12. were in society with the wise and were accounted as members of their association and yet the door of Heaven was shut against them Many light slight and vain persons went with the Children of Israel out of the Land Exod. 1● 38. Num. 11. 4. of Egypt even a mixt multitude that imbarkt in the same bottom with them and yet never arrived at the Land of promise O my Friends it is not a mans being of this party or that this Church or that this way or that this society or that that will bring him to Heaven without 1 Pet. 1. 4. He● 1. 2. 1 John 5. 12. a spiritual conjunction with Christ he that would enjoy the Heavenly inheritance must be espoused to Christ the heir of all things For he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life This marriage union between Christ and the soul is set forth to the life throughout that Book of Solomon's Song● though the marriage-union between Christ and the soul Cant. ● 16. 1 Cor. 6. 17. Eccl. 11. 6. be imperceptible to the eye of reason yet it is real things in nature work often insensibly yet really we do not see the hand move on the dial yet it moves the Sun exhales and drawes up the vapours of the Earth insensibly yet really Now this marriage-marriage-union between Christ and the soul includes and takes in these following particulars First This marriage-union between Christ and the soul does include and take in the souls giving a present bill of Divorce to all other lovers Sin the world and Consult these Scriptures Hosea 14. 8. Isa 2. 20. Cap. 30. 22. Psalm 45. 10. Exod. 12. 33. Isa 59. ●o C. 3. 3. Satan Are you seriously and sincerely willing for ever to renounce these and be divorced from these there is no compounding betwixt Christ and them sin and your souls must part or Christ and your souls can never meet sin and your souls must be two or Christ and your souls can never be one you must in good earnest fall out with sins or else you can never in good earnest fall in with a Saviour the heart must be separated from all other lovers before Christ will take the soul into his bed of loves Christ takes none into marriage-union with himself but such as are cordially willing that all old former leagues with sin and the world shall be for ever broken and dissolved your cordial willingness to part with sin is your parting with sin in Divine account you may as soon bring East and West together light and darkness together Heaven and Hell together as bring Christ to ●spouse himself to such a soul as has no mind no will no heart to be divorced from his former lovers 'T
applicable to the person of Christ He that by his office is to be Emmanuel God with us he must in regard of his person be Emanuel also that is God-man in one person He that by office is to make peace between God and man he must be God-man he that by office is to stand and minister between God and men he must be God and Heb. 2. 17 18. cap. 4. 15 16. man that so he might not be only zealously faithful towards God's justice but also tenderly merciful towards men's errours Look as he must be more than man that he may be able so to suffer that his sufferings may be meritorious that he may go through-stitch with the work of Redemption and triumph over death Devils difficulties discouragements curse hell wrath c. All which Christ could never have done had he been but a mere man So it was requisite that he should be man that he might be in a capacity to suffer die and obey for these are not works for one who is only God A God only cannot suffer a man only cannot merit God cannot obey man is bound to obey wherefore Christ that he might obey and suffer he was man and that he might merit by his obedience and suffering he was God-man now such a person and only such a person did the work of Redemption call for That is a mighty Scripture Phil. 2. 6 7. Who being in the form of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God here 's Christ's pre-existing in the nature of the Godhead and then after comes his manhood But made hi●self of no reputation Greek he emptied Isa 53. 6. 9. himself as it were of his divine dignity and majesty he did disrobe himself of his glory and became a sinner both by imputation and reputation for our sakes for our salvation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the likeness of men All this Christ did upon his father's prescription and in pursuit of the great work of Redemption The blessed spirit fitted the man Christ Jesus to be a meet Mediatour and Redeemer for poor sinners The spirit formed the nature of man Luk. 1. 35. Gal. 4. 4. of the substance of the Virgin after an extraordinary manner for the service of the Lord Christ he sanctined the humane nature which Christ assumed after such a perfect manner that it was free from all sin in the very Luk. 1. 35. moment of conception he united this pure humane nature with the divine in the same person the person of the Heb. 10. 5. son of God that he might be a fit head Mediatour and Redeemer for us But The Eighth Proposition is this viz. That there were commandments from the father to the son which he must obey and submit to God the father did put forth his paternal authority and lay his commands upon his son to engage in this great work of redeeming and saving poor sinners souls he had a command from the father what to teach his people as the Prophet of the Church For I have not spoken of my self saith Christ but the father which sent me he gave me a commandment what I should say and Joh. 12. 49. what I should speak Christ declares that he had received a Commission from the father who sent him concerning his Doctrine and what to say and speak and that he was perswaded that this Doctrine delivered to him by the father points out the true way to eternal life and that he had exactly followed this Commission in preaching both for matter and mannor The two words of saying Between saying and speaking there is this difference saith à Lapide that to say is to teach and publish a thing gravely to speak is familiararly to utter a thing and speaking may be taken comprehensively pointing out all the ways of delivering his commission by set and solemn preaching or occasional conferences and the whole subject matter of his preaching in precepts promises and threatnings and so it will 〈…〉 port that his commission from the father was full both for matter and manner and his discharge thereof answerable Christ is a true Prophet who speaks neither more or less in the Doctrine of the Gospel than what was the father's will should be delivered to us For whatsoever I speak even as the father said unto me so I speak Christ keeps close to his Commission without adding or diminishing and herein Christ's practice should be every faithful minister's pattern● Again Christ had a command to lay down his life for those that were giu 〈…〉 No man taketh it from Jo● 1● 18. me but I lay it down of my self I have power to lay it down and I have power to take it again this commundment have I received of my father The father is so well pleased with the reconciliation of lost sinners that he loveth Christ for the undertaking thereof and is fully satisfied with his suffering for attaining that end in both these respects it holds good Therefore doth my father love me because I lay down my life vers 17. The father is pleased with him that he undertook this service and is content with his death as a sufficient ransom Christ having laid down his life for the Redemption of lost man did take it again as a testimony that the father was satisfied with his sufferings Now the way of the accomplishment of our Redemption was agreed on betwixt the father and the son before the accomplishment thereof Therefore saith he this commandment have I received of my father which Psal 40. 6 7. with Heb. 10. 6 7 8. makes it clear that he came into the world fully instructed about carrying on the work of Redemption It pleased Christ to suffer death not only voluntarily but in a way of subjection to his father's command that so the merit thereof might every way be full and acceptable to the father for this commandment have I received he was content to be a servant by paction that so his sufferings might be accepted for his people And so when Christ was going to die he saith That the world may know that I love the Joh. 14. 31. father and as the father gave me commandment even so I do arise let us go hence As if he had said power is permitted to Satan and his accomplices to persecute me to death that dying for man's Redemption the world may see the obedience and love I bear to the father who hath thus determined All that Christ suffered for the Redemption of sinners was by the order and at the command of the father who did covenant with him concerning this work For as the father gave me a commandment even so do I In this Scripture as in a crystal-glass you may see that Christ did enter the lists in his sufferings with much willingness and alacrity with much courage and resolution that so he might commend his love to us and encourage
everlasting life for it is explained that not to lose them vers 39. is that they may have everlasting life for the further assurance of believers of their eternal happiness it is also covenanted that they shall have this life in present possession in the earnest and first fruits thereof for they have everlasting life even here and before their raising up They have everlasting life 1. in pr●misso 2. in pretio 3. in primltiis he stands already on the battlements of heaven he hath one foot in the porch of Paradise Again Christ having given an earnest-penny of salvation will not suffer it to be lost by any difficulty or impediment in the way but will carry believers through all difficulties till he destroy death and the grave and raise up their very dust that in body and soul they may partake of that bliss and that he may make it manifest that death and rotting in the grave doth not make void his interest nor cause his affection to cease Therefore it is added And I will raise him up at the last day Thus you see that God the father did lay his commands upon his son to engage in this great work of redeeming and saving poor sinners souls c. In the third place I shall shew you that the manner or quality of the transaction between God the father and Jesus Christ was by mutual engagements and stipulations each person undertaking to perform his part in order to our recovery and eternal felicity we find each person undertaking for himself by solemn promise The father promiseth that he will hold Christ's hand and keep him Isa 42. 6. God the father engages himself to direct and assist Christ and to keep him from miscarrying and that he will give him all necessary strength and ability for the execution of his mediatory office and work wonders by him and with him according to that word My father hitherto worketh and I work and the son engages Joh. 5. 17. himself that he will obey the fathers call and not be rebellious Isa 50. 5. I was not rebellious neither turned away Exod. 3. 11 13. cap. 4. 1 10 13. back that is I did not hang back as Moses once and again did nor refuse to go when God sent me as once Jon. 1. 3. Jon. ●s did but I offered my self freely and readily to my father's call there was no affliction no opposition no persecution no evil usage that I met with in carrying on the work of Redemption that did ever startle me or discourage me or make me flinch or shrink back from that great and blessed work that I had undertaken I was dutiful and obedient to the calls commands of my father in all things that he required of me or set me about Now the father the son being thus mutually engaged by promise one to another in honour and faithfulness it highly concerned them to keep one another close to the terms of the Covenant that was made between them and accordingly they did for God the father peremptorily stands upon that compleat and full satisfaction that Christ had promised to give to his justice and therefore when the day of payment came he would not abate Jesus Christ one penny one farthing of the many ten thousand Talents that he Mat. 18. 24. was to pay down upon the nail for us Rom. 8. 32. God spared not his own son that is he abated nothing of that full price that by agreement with his father he was to lay down for us other fathers give their all to spare and redeem their children but the heart of God the father is so fully and strongly set upon satisfaction that he will not spare his son his own son his only son but give him up to death yea to an accursed death that we might be Mauritius who died most miserably spared and saved for ever I have read of a Roman Emperour who chose rather to spare his money than to redeem his souldiers being taken prisoners But to redeem us God would not spare no not his own son because no money nor treasure would serve the turn but only the blood yea the heart-blood of his dear son 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. And as God the father keeps Christ close to the terms of the Covenant so Jesus Christ keeps his father close to the terms of the Covenant also Joh. 17. 4 5. I have glorified thee on the earth saith Christ to his father I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was O my father I have finished the work of Redemption but where 's the wages where 's the glory where 's the reward that thou hast promised me There was nothing committed to Christ by the father to be done on earth for the purchasing of our Redemption but he did finish it so that the debt is paid justice satisfied and sin Satan and death spoiled so that nothing remains but that Christ be glorified according to the promise of the father to him The summ of Christ's petition is this that since he had finished the work of Redemption that therefore the father according to his engagement would advance him to the possession of that glory that he enjoyed from all eternity Now for the clearing of this we must consider that as Christ was from Eternity the glorious God so we are not to conceive of any real change in this glory of his Godhead as if by his estate of humiliation he had suffered any diminution or by his state of exaltation any real accession were made to his glory as God But the true meaning is this That Christ having according to the paction past betwixt the father and him obscured the glory of his Godhead for a time under the veil of the Phil. 2. 5 6 7 8. form of a servant and our sinless infirmities doth now expect according to the tenour of the same paction after he had done his work to be exalted and glorified and openly declared to be the son of God the veil of his estate Rom. 1. 4. of humiliation though not of our nature being taken away It is further to be considered that however this eternal glory be proper to him as God yet he prays to be glorified in his whole person Glorifie me because not only his humane nature was to be exalted to what glory finite nature was capable of but the glory of his Godhead was to shine in the person of Christ God-man and in the man Christ though without confusion of his natures and properties Christ did so faithfully discharge his trust and perfect the work of Redemption as that the father was engaged by paction to glorifie him and accordingly Christ God incarnate is exalted with the father in glory and majesty so that believers may be as sure that all things necessary for their Redemption are done as
come into the world assume our nature be made under the Law tread the Wine-press of the Father's wrath bear the Curse and give satisfaction to his Justice Now upon the credit of this promise upon this undertaking of Christ God the Father takes up the Patriarchs and all the Old Testament-believers to Glory God the Father resting upon the promise and engagement of his Son admits many thousands into those 〈…〉 on s above before Joh. 14. 2 3. Christ took Flesh upon him Now as t●● Father of old hath rested and relyed on the promise and engagement of Christ so Jesus Christ doth to this very day ●●st and stay himself upon the promise of his Father that he shall in Isa ●3 10. due time see all his seed and reap the full benefit of that full Ransom that he has paid down upon the nail for all that have believed on him that do believe on him and that shall believe on him Christ knew God's infinite Love his tender Compassions and his matchless Bowels to all those for whom he died And he knew very well the Covenant the Compact the Agreement that past between the Father and himself and so trusted the Father fully in the great business of their everlasting happiness and blessedness relying upon the love and faithfulness of God his love to the Elect and his faithfulness to keep Covenant with him As the Elect are committed to Christ's charge to give an account of them so also is the Father engaged for their conversion and for their preservation being converted As being not only his own Joh. 6. 37. Isa 53. 11. given to Christ out of his love to them but as being engaged to Christ that he shall not be frustrate of the reward of his Sufferings but have a Seed to glorifie him for ever Therefore doth Christ not only constantly preserve them by his Spirit but doth leave also that burden on the Father Father keep those whom thou hast given me Joh. 17. 11. But Fourthly Jesus Christ promises and engages himself to his Father that he would bear all and suffer all that should be laid upon him and that he would ransom poor sinners and fully satisfie Divine Justice by his blood and death as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the Isa 5● 5 6. Joh. 10. 17. 18. cap. 15. 10. Luk. 24. 46. Heb. 10. 5 6 7 10. I have opened these Scriptures already Margin together The work of Redemption could never have been effected by silver or gold or by prayers or tears or by the blood of Bulls or Goats but by the second Adam's obedience even to the death of the Cross Remission of sin the favour of God the heavenly Inheritance could never have been obtained but by the procious blood of the Son of God The innocent Lamb of God was slain in typical prefigurations from the beginning of the world and slain in real performance in the fulness of time or else fallen man had layen under guilt and wrath for ever The heart of Jesus Christ was strongly set upon all those that his Father had given him and he was fully resolved to secure them from Hell and the Curse whatever it cost him and seeing no price would satisfie his Father's Justice below his Blood he lays down his life at his Father's feet according to the Covenant and Agreement of old that had past between his Father and himself But Fifthly The Lord Jesus Christ was very free ready willing and careful to make good all the Articles of the Covenant on his side and to discharge all the works agreed Joh. 12. 49 50. cap. 17. 6. on for the Redemption and Salvation of the Elect Joh. 17. 4. I have finished the work that thou gavest me to do There was nothing committed to Christ by the Father to be done on earth for the purchasing of our Redemption but he did finish it so that the Debt is paid Colos 2. 14 15. Heb. 2. 14. Justice satisfied and sin Satan and death spoiled of all their hurting and destroying power By the Covenant of Redemption Christ was under an obligation to die to Dan. 9. 24. satisfie to Divine Justice to pay our debts to bring in an everlasting Righteousness to purchase our Pardon and Heb. 9. 12. to obtain eternal Redemption for us all which he compleated and finished before he ascended up to glory And Act. 1. 9 10 11. without a peradventure had not Jesus Christ kept touch with his Father had not he made good the Covenant the Compact the Agreement on his part his Father would never have given him such a welcome to heaven as he did nor he would never have admitted him to have sat down Heb. 1. 3. Rom. 8 34. Col●s ● 1. H●b 8. 1. cap. 10. 12. 1 ●et 3. 22. on the right hand of the Majesty on high as he did The right hand is a place of the greatest honour dignity and safety that any can be advanced to But had not Jesus Christ first purged away our sins he had never sat down on the right hand of his Father Christ's advancement is properly Mat. 26. 64. Act. 7. 56. of his Humane Nature That Nature wherein Christ was crucified was exalted for God being the Most High needs not be exalted yet the Humane Nature in this exaltation is not singly and simply considered in it self but as united to the Deity so that it is the Person consisting of two Natures even God-man which is thus dignified For as the Humane Nature of Christ is inferiour to God and is capable of advancement so also is the person consisting of a Divine and Humane Nature Christ as the Son of God the second Person of the sacred Trinity is in regard of his Deity no whit inferiour to his Father but every way equal yet he assumed our nature and became a Mediator betwixt God man he humbled himself and made himself inferiour to his Father his Father therefore hath highly exalted him Phil. 2. 8 9. and set him down on his right hand If Christ had not Eph. 1. 20. expiated our sins and compleated the work of our Redemption he could never have sat down on the right hand of God Heb. 10. 12. But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sins for ever sat down on the right hand of God This verse is added in opposition to the former as is evident by the first Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But in the former verse it was proved that the Sacrifices which were offered under the Law could not take away sins This verse proveth that there is a Sacrifice which hath done that that they could not do The Argument is taken from that Priest's ceasing to offer any more Sacrifices after he had offered one whereby is implyed that there needed no other because that one had done it to the full sin was taken away by Christ's Sacrifice for thereby a Ransom was paid
glory which thou hast given me ●hus I have glanced at Christ's solemn demand on earth for the full accomplishment of that blessed Compact Covenant Agreement and Promises that were made to him when he undertook the office of a Mediator and now is in heaven he appears in the presence of God for us as a 〈…〉 9. ●4 Lawyer appears in open Court for his Client opens the case pleads the cause and carries the day The Verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated to appear signifieth conspicuously to manifest It is sometimes taken in a good sense viz. to appear for one as a Favourite before a Prince or as an Advocate or an Attourney before a Judge or as the High Priests appeared once a year in the Holy of Holiest to Exod. 30. 10. make atonement for the people Christ is the great Favourite in the Court of glory and is always at God's Rom. 8. 34. right hand ready on all occasions to present our petitions to his Father to pacifie his anger and to obtain all 1 Jo● 2. 1. noble and needful favours for us And Christ is our great Advocate to plead our cause effectually for us Look as in Humane Courts there is the Guilty the Accuser the Court the Judge and the Advocate so it is here Heaven is the Court Man is the guilty Person Satan is the Accuser God is the Judge and Christ is the Advovocate Now look as the Advocate appeareth in the Court before the Judge to plead for the guilty against the accuser so doth Christ appear before God in heaven to answer all Satan's objections and accusations that he may make in the Court of heaven against us He ever lives to make intercession for us Heb. 7. 25. The verb 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 translated intercession is a compound and signi●ies to call upon one it is a judicial word and importeth a calling upon a Judge to be heard in this or that against A●● 25. ●● R●m 11. 2. c●p 8. 34. another or for another so here Christ maketh intercession for them The Metaphor is taken from Attorneys or Advocates who appear for men in Courts of Justice from Counsellers who plead their Clients cause answer the Adversary supplicate the Judge and procure sentence to pass on their Clients side This Act of making Intercession may also be taken from Kings Favourites who are much in the King's presence and ever ready to make request for their friends But remember though this be thus attributed to Christ yet we may not think that in heaven Christ prostrateth himself before him or maketh actual prayers that was a part of his humiliation which he did in the days of his flesh but it implyeth ●eb 5 7. a presenting of himself a Sacrifice a Surety and one that hath made satisfaction for all our sins together with manifesting of his will and desires that such and such should partake of the vertue and benefit of his Sacrifice so as Christ's intercession consisteth rather in the perpetual vigour of his Sacrifice and continual application thereof than in any actual supplication The intendment of this Phrase applyed to Christ to make intercession is to shew that Christ being God's Favourite and our Advocate continually appeareth before God to make application of that Sacrifice which once he offered up for our sins Christ appears in the presence of God for us 1. To present unto his Father himself who is the price of our Redemption 2 To make application of his Sacrifice to his Church time after time according to the need of the several members thereof 3. To make our persons prayers services and all good things acceptable to God But Seventhly and lastly The whole Compact and Agreement between God the Father and our Lord Jesus Christ about the Redemption of poor sinner's souls was really and solemnly transacted in open Court or as I may say in the High Court of Justice above in the presence of the great publick Notary of heaven viz. the Holy Ghost who being a third Person of the glorious Trinity of the same Divine Essence and of equal power and glory makes up a third Legal Witness with the Father and the Son They being a●ter the manner of Kings their own Witnesses So the King write● 〈◊〉 me●●● This 1 Joh. 5. 7. is a very clea● Proof and Testimony of the Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Divine ●ssence they are ●ll one in ●ssence and Will As if three lamps were lighted in o●● chamber albeit the lamps be di●ers yet the lights ●annot be s● 〈◊〉 so in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there is a distruction of Perso●s 〈◊〉 ● 〈…〉 phei●y of nature also 1 Joh. 5. 7. For there be three that ●ear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one Three 1. In the true and real distinction of their Persons 2. In their inward Properties as to beget to be begotten and to proceed 3. In their several offices one to another as to send and to be sent And these three are one one in Nature and Essence one in Power and Will one in the act of producing all such actions as without themselves any of them is said to act and one in their Testimony concerning the Covenant of Redemption that was agreed on between the Father and the Son Consent of all parties the Allowance of the Judge and publick Record is as much as can be desi●ed to make all publick Contracts authentick in Courts of Justice and what can we desire more to settle satisfie and assure our own souls that all the Article of the Covenant of Redemption shall on all hands be 〈…〉 inly made good than this that these three heave●ly Witnesse● God the Father God the Son and God the Holy G●●st do all agree to the Articles of the Covenant and 〈◊〉 Witnesses to the same Covenant Thus you see that there was a Covenant of Redemption made with Christ upon the terms whereof he is constituted to be a 〈◊〉 to say to the prisoners go forth to bring delivera●●e to the captives and to proclaim the year of release or Jubile the acceptable year of the Lord as it is Isa 61. 1 2. I have been the longer in opening the ●ovenant of Redemption partly because of its grand importance to all our souls and partly because others have spoken so little to it to the best of my observation and partly because I have never before handled this Subject either in the Pulpit or the Press c. Now from the serious consideration of this Compact Covenant and Agreement that was solemnly made between God and Christ touching the whole business of man's Salvation or Redemption I may form up this tenth Plea as to the ten Scriptures that are in the Margin that Eccles 11. 9. cap. 12. 14. Mat. 12. 14. cap. 18. 23. Luk. 16. 2. Rom. ●4 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. Heb. 9. 27. cap. 13. 17. 1 Pet. 4. 5. Isa 53. 6.