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A54589 The difference between the old and new covenant stated and explained with an exposition of the covenant of grace in the principal concernments of it / by Samuel Petto ... Petto, Samuel, 1624?-1711. 1674 (1674) Wing P1896; ESTC R31110 148,845 372

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thus reasoneth That cannot be a justifying righteousness in our present fallen estate 1. Which is not perfect for the least sin is enough to condemn Rom. 3. 20. Gal. 3. 10. Nor 2. which is our own of our own working out Rom. 10. 3 5. Nor 3. Which leaves any place for boasting Ephes 2. 9. Rom. 4. 2. Nor 4. which is opposite unto grace Rom. 4. 4. And upon these accounts all Evangelical Works are excluded out of Justification for they are imperfect they are our own subjectively they would leave room for some boasting if acceptance to life were upon these seeing it should be by our giving unto God also the way were opposite to grace for if the condition were never so small yet being performed the reward might be claimed upon our act and so would be of debt not of Gospel-grace Rom. 4. 4. The works of Abraham and David after conversion are excluded out of justification vers 2 3 6. which argueth that although Evangelical obedience kept in its due place doth not derogate from the grace of God yet it doth and is opposite to it if introduced into justification So that Gospel-grace doth not consist in a bare abatement of the rigor of the Law nor in making a bargain with us for the sake of Christ to accept of our faith repentance and sincere obedience instead of that which is perfect but it standeth in excusing us from a personal performance of that righteousness which is the condition of life and admitting Jesus Christ to answer the Law in our stead For the grand difference between the Law and the Gospel is the one justifieth by our own the other by anothers righteousness If man himself be the Doer for life that is the righteousness of the Law which saith Rom. 10. 5. the man that doth them shall live in them In opposition to it that of the Gospel is called the righteousness of faith vers 6. and of God vers 3. because it is to be sought out of our selves in another in the free promise and that which we are the subjects of is to be disclaimed here Phil. 3. 9. Rom. 10. 3. The asserting it to be by any of our personal performances giveth them the very place of works in the Covenant of Works which is anti-evangelical and introduceth some merits as well as perfect works would have done The being enabled by grace to them doth not hinder meriting any more than as one saith my furnishing a man with my tools to work with hinders his deserving a reward All ability that Adam had in innocency was from the favour of God and what he was to do was duty Faith it self is not the least of that righteousness it is an act of obedience but as such it is not said to justifie nor as it worketh by love although it doth so work Gal. 5. 6. Nor as a condition of life as I have elsewhere manifested but only as a means for the applying Christ and his righteousness much less can any works of ours be a part thereof The new creature availeth to being crucified to the world Gal. 6. 14 15. i. e. as a means but it is not said that it availeth to justification To justifie is to declare a person to be righteous the true God cannot pass a false sentence therefore we cannot have justification without having a righteousness this cannot consist in any act of ours as faith repentance or obedience as is already manifested therefore it must be of anothers working out the very righteousness of Jesus Christ Rom. 5. 18 19. 1 Cor. 1. 30. And if his obedience being to the Law may be called a legal righteousness yet as the same is applied by faith it is to us an evangelical righteousness All the question then is whether evangelical works are not of the same use in justification that faith is of have they not the same place and office there that faith hath I answer negatively they have not for often we read of the righteousness of faith never of the righteousness of love in that business We are said to be justified by faith not in the same sense to be justified by love or works It 's true there is a necessity of Evangelical works to testifie our faith obedience and thankfulness to God but they are required not as conditions but as effects and declarations of our justification Things are said to be done when they are manifested as Rom. 3. 7. 4. 15. A tree is known by the fruits And thus not only open acts but those that are secret when regular have an aptitude to evidence faith and that a person is justified even when they are not actually seen Paul speaketh of being justified before God by receiving or applying the righteousness of Jesus Christ in the free promise this is only by faith James speaketh of being justified by manifesting to a mans self or others that it is applied this is by Evangelical works and not by faith only Thus by offering up Isaac the person of Abraham was declaratively justified as it did shew his faith to be true vers 18. Gen. 22. 12. and not his working but his believing is said to be imputed to righteousness Jam. 2. 23. if this be justification in the sense of Paul yet it is by faith and he was called the friend of God there is justification declared by works as God acted kindly towards him so he acted in a friendly way towards God He is a vain man that contenteth himself with a faith that standeth in a bare assent to some propositions of truth without the power of them upon his heart vers 14 19 20. That is a dead faith which doth not profit is not attended with salvation which remaineth without works vers 17 20 26. therefore it is not the same true faith which any are justified by but another thing That unfruitful faith which is blamed here certainly was as far from justifying them as it was from saving them and so is not the faith which Paul insisteth upon for by that men were justified and that in order before works for they cannot be performed in an instant though they certainly follow but the justification and faith which they are put upon and called to declare by works these are of a Gospel stamp The Lord Jesus having fully performed the Law as the condition of the New-Testament hence it becometh absolute to us If improperly a duty a way or means to the enjoyment of some blessings of it be called a Condition I contend not But a Condition properly is more than a causa sine qua non it is a cause that hath a moral efficiency in it for the fulfilling of it is that which giveth right and upon which a man hath a title to what is promised and without it none and so it is a moral efficient cause of the enjoyment of the good promised in a Covenant Faith and repentance are great duties but nothing performed by us can be such
are parallel'd Rom. 5. 6. to the end The day that the first Adam sinned the Law passed a Sentence of Death upon all his Seed ver 12. virtually they all sinned and died there but not actually till they exist or have a being and as none are the Seed of the first Adam actually under his sin and condemnation till they be naturally born of him into the world of sinners so none are the Seed of Jesus Christ the second Adam actually under his righteousness to Justification of Life till they be spiritually born of him into the World of Saints ver 16 18 19. Joh. 1. 12. Gal. 3. 16. the one Seed Christ to whom the Promise is made is not exclusive of infant Seed as to Ordinances but of an adult Seed which fought Justification and Eternal Life by the Works of the Law thus the one seed is that of Faith ver 26. For ye are the Children of God by Faith in Jesus Christ Indeed Representatively we were not only justified but also sanctified and glorified at the Death Resurrection and Ascension of Jesus Christ Ephes 2. 5 6. He hath quickened us together with Christ and hath raised us up together and made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus Not that we were the principal actors by him and he meerly our delegate For then we were Self Redeemers Self-Saviours it were more properly our act than his Jesus Christ so represented us as he was the principal actor and owner of all still the Redeeming act was his not ours Gal. 3. 13. Revel 5. 9. Gal. 4. 5. Rom 3. 24 25. the righteousness his Rom. 5. 18 19 21. It is his subjectively he is the S●bject of it objectively ours we the Objects yea he so represented us as all was federally ours in him it was agreed that afterward we should have it all was for us in the Covenant but we are not actually his Seed one moment of time before Faith Rom. 5. 1. To say therefore that we are justified not in our persons but to our persons in Christ is to grant what is desired For men cannot be actually justified but in their own Persons and that cannot be till they actually exist and have personality and seeing after their Nativity their persons are unjustified they cannot at the same time be said to be justified Indeed the persons were determined Jesus Christ had full assurance that he should not die at uncertainties Isa 53. 11. But that doth not argue the immediateness of their Justification that is in the appointed season We must therefore carefully distinguish between Justification it self in the abstract consisting in remission of sins and righteousness prepared and our being justified as Mr. Norton saith Orthod Evang. p. 314. Or distinguish between Justification actually procured and it actually applyed the former is before Faith the latter not so As to the former see Rom. 5. 8 9 10. Our being reconciled was at the death of his Son not at the time of our Conversion Justification in this sense is the Object of Faith and may be before the act thus Heb. 1. 3. When he had by himself purged our sins sate down on the right hand of the Majesty on high so Heb. 2. 17. Remission of sin then purging and reconciliation it self were compleat at the death of Jesus Christ then prepared for us but not conferred upon us till union with Jesus Christ and Faith 4. All are in a state of condemnation till union with Jesus Christ by Faith and so have no actual Justification till then for these are opposite Rom. 8. 33 34. It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth The same persons then cannot at the same time be both justified and condemned for he proveth immunity from condemnation by their being justified and they are persons in Christ Jesus that only have this immunity ver 1. None out of Christ actually injoy it and no union with him one moment of time before regeneration and Faith for if any man be in Christ be in a new Creature 2 Cor. 5. 17. All unbelievers are condemned already Joh. 3. 18. The wrath of God abideth on them ver 36. Are Children of wrath Ephes 2 3. Even Elect vessels before Faith are here said to be in that state under a Sentence of wrath and condemnation not only naturally de jure quoad meritum as to desent for so are all the sinful actings of Saints deserve wrath whereas here such wrath is intended as differenced their state in time past from what it was since they believed it was inconsistent with present Justification unto Life Though Jesus Christ alone made satisfaction to justice for their sin and was made a Curse for them so as not the least Atome of the Curse formally that is of vindictive wrath shall fall upon them in execution yet not only materially they are under it but the Laws Sentence of condemnation is against them and they are obnoxious to many tokens of wrath not only in their bodies in many sicknesses infirmities and painful diseases but in their Souls by ignorance darkness with many other sinful dispositions and inclinations and in their whole man by subjection and thraldom to Satan Col. 1. 13. Act. 26. 18. 2 Tim. 2. 26. and deprivation of fellowship and communion with God and liability to the terrour of such a state and all these not in the least to make satisfaction but for other ends as that Grace may be the more admired in Salvation out of such a miserable state Ephes 2. 11 12. to humble them c. If it be Objected That our obligation being transferred upon Jesus Christ and he having born our sin and Curse justice and equity requireth that the Elect should upon his death be ipso facto actually discharged their debt being paid it cannot afterward be charged upon principal or Surety It may be Answered More is to be considered in this case than a meer debt for here the person was firstly and principally under the obligation as Dr. O. observeth satisfaction by a Surety being accepted the father might put in what terms he pleased without any shew of injustice and so there is no necessity that the discharge be ipso facto upon his death Also a debt may be charged upon the principal debtor till he obtaineth an actual interest in the satisfaction of the Surety till then though no further satisfaction will ever be exacted from Jesus Christ or the Elect yet the Laws obligation unto wrath may lie against them for other ends as to quicken them to seek deliverance out of that deplorable condition they are in The want of an immediate freedom is not from the defectiveness of the satisfaction made by Jesus Christ but from a present incapacity in those who are to be the subjects of the freedom as a full ransom may be paid for Slaves yet by reason of the distance an after-day may be set for their release So the Elect whilst unborn are uncapable of
obedience in the Life or bringing up a self-resignation to the Lord as Isa 44. 5. in tho Covenant it is expresly promised they shall be my people These things are insisted upon elsewhere yea frequently by others therefore I shall pass them over at present and mention only one evidence Answ By the operations and actings of precious Faith a Soul may have a clear knowledge of its actual interest in the New and better Covenant That noble Grace of Faith hath such a special relation to the Covenant which is made up of promises that the Gospel is called the Word of Faith Rom. 10. 8. It is so expressive of the great matters of it that Faith often and the Law or Old Covenant are the opposite terms of a distinction Gal. 3. ver 2 5 12 23. Yea ver 9. they that are of Faith are blessed with faithful Abraham they are sharers with him in the same Covenant and blessed therein the very blessings of Abraham come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ ver 14. That we might receive the Promise of the Spirit through Faith Much is to be drawn out of the free Promise for our relief and succour in any condition yea for the influenceing of any other Graces by Faith By that our entercouse with God here is kept up Not that the Promise is made to beliving as a Grace in us or as a gracious Act put forth by us but to the Believer as in Christ Faith is not magnified as a quality but as in the Office of receiving the Promise and of excellent use therein Vers 22. That the Promise through the Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe Faith is not then properly the condition of the Covenant upon the performance of which they have a right and title to it but a choice effect of it and a singular means for the application of the promises and fetching in of Covenant blessings to the Soul by that the Promise or what is in the Promise is given to it and Faith having thus to do with the Promises it must needs have an aptitude above other Graces above Sanctification and Evangelical obedience to witness a Souls interest in the everlasting Covenant Heb. 11. 1. It is an evidence of things not seen and therefore it self is not as inevident as those other things There are various acts of Faith that by the concurrence of the Divine Spirit may evidence interest in the Covenant 1. By Faith in the Free Promise such glorious discoveries of the Grace and Lov● of God in Jesus Christ unto sinners ar● afforded as their hearts consent to th● offer thereof it is by the shining of Gospel light through the Free Promise into the hearts of men that they are turned from darkness to light Act. 26. 18. The highest natural light will leave them short of a discovery of sin in its exceeding sinfulness and of the riches of Grace in Jesus Christ for the recovery of lost sinners they cannot see these aright till they be revealed by the Divine Spirit Matth. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 2. 10 14. Tit. 2. 11 12. Unbelievers may have a notion of these things but when they are seen by an eye of Faith they appear in another manner Rom. 1 16 17. The Gospel is the power of God to Salvation to every one that believeth The heart stood immediately before at an infinite distance from the Lord Jesus and was full of opposition against him but when there is a work of Faith upon it then Di●ine power is exerted by the Word or Promise of the Gospel for the drawing it off from all other objects to ●itch upon Jesus Christ alone for Salvation in a way of Free Grace then it ●ccepteth of the blessed offer when all ●rguments in the World before would not prevail with it The heart that stood off from him is then brought over to him by the Gospel and why For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from Faith to Faith It is in a Gospel-Glass that a Soul gaineth a right discovery of the excellency of Jesus Christ and that righteousness of his without which no Salvation It is by Faith that there is a learning of the Father so as effectually to be drawn unto the Son This cordial consenting to the offer of the Gospel in submitting to the obediential righteousness of Jesus Christ alone for acceptation unto Life this is Faith unto Justification Rom. 10. ver 3 4 6 10. as the like consent to have him for our Lord to rule over us by his Spirit dwelling in us is Faith unto Sanctification Act. 15. 9. Rom. 8. ver 9 to 16. Thus the Soul maketh out to the blood of Jesus Christ for cleansing from all sin and the first act of closing with Jesus Christ is by Faith in a Free Promise that is the first Grace that lives in it the first breathings of Spiritual Life are thereby such powerful and admirable alterations are found at first acquaintance with Jesus Christ by discoveries above sense fetching in the heart unto him beyond all other means that they must needs be evidencing of interest in the Promise or Covenant from whence all these come Such first things have a mark upon them and often are most discernable the state thereupon being so vastly different from what it was how refined so ever the nature was before Thus some have had their interest cleared up in such a word as that 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief By the eye of Faith a Soul gaineth such a prospect of matchless Love and Free Grace as it is won over to Jesus Christ thereby through a powerful application of the Promise to it self 1 Joh. 5. 10 11. He that believeth on the Son hath the witness in himself he being inabled by Grace to entertain and cordially subscribe to the blessed record upon a Divine Testimony viz. that God hath given to us Eternal Life and this Life is in his Son thereby he setteth to his Seal that God is true in the Word of his Grace that hath a witnessing power and the person hath the witness within himself even when he sometimes doth not discern it 2. By Faith the Soul maketh out to Jesus Christ in the Free Promise as he alone that giveth it subsistence in spiritual Life Oneness with Jesus Christ cannot be without interest in the Covenant 2 Pet. 1. 4. In whom are given to us exceeding great and precious Promises c. Ephes 3. 6. Partakers of the Promise in Christ Ver. 17. That Christ may dwell in your heart by Faith It is a promise-hold that we have of Jesus Christ here his in-being and indwelling is by Faith so he even animateth the Souls of Saints Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me how I live by the Faith of the Son of God Others live by sense they
Cor. 3. Israels obedience is required for its due and proper end but yet under that the perfect obedience of Jesus Christ is principally intended for a higher end viz. Eternal Life for it is applyed unto Christ and the fulfilling of the Law and delivering us from it is ascribed unto him 6. The great difficulties about this Sinai Covenant vanish if we understand it primarily of the legal condition of the Covenant of Grace to be performed by Jesus Christ and any other way they will hardly be removed The tenour of it plainly is Do and Live and Cursed is he that doth not here lieth the difficult of it Hence on the one hand some account that at Sinai a Covenant of Works to Israel and deny it to be a Covenant of Grace or to belong to that it requiring perfect obedience and not dispensing with one offence Gal. 3. vers 10. There being a Curse annexed to the breaking of it as a blessing to the keeping of it even to doing vers 10. The Seed of it being out-casts Gal. 4. the latter end Now all such Objections melt away if we understand it of the Covenant of Grace as to its legal condition to be fulfilled by our Surely immediately it was thus Covenanted by Israel but terminatively it looked at a performance by Jesus Christ that he should be the only doer for Life and thus a perfect doing was aimed at in the Sinai Covenant and thus it was perfectly fulfilled by Jesus Christ no offence dispenced with the Curse fully undergone by him and they that crowd into the place of Jesus Christ in it and would fulfill it for that end he did even for Eternal Life they are the Seed which are the out-casts On the other hand some assert the Sinai dispensation to be an admistration of the Covenant of Grace only gradually or accidentally and in some circumstances differing from other federal expressures even from the New Covenant Whereas all the blessings of the New are promised as precious Fruits and effects of a pre-supposed accomplishment of the Old by Jesus Christ It is easie to discover the invalidity of other interpretations of Do and Live in the Sinai Covenant which confine the Doing to Israel and do not extend it primarily to Jesus Christ As Say some it is not spoken of the Law abstractly and separately considered but of the Law and the Promise joyntly or as including the Promise But this doth not satisfie for the Apostle saith the Law is not of Faith Gal. 3. vers 12. and addeth but the man that doth them shall live in them Therefore the Law speaketh of such a doing for Life as doth not include the Promise for then it should be of Faith Nay plainly it is a doing directly opposite to believing in the matter of Justification and Life Levit. 18. vers 5. with Rom. 10. vers 5 6. Gal. 3. vers 12. viz. if any men undertake to be the Doers Say others it is not Do and Live by Doing but in Doing Christians live in obedience though not by obedience But this doth not satisfie For it is such a doing as maketh up a righteousness unto Life and is contradistinguished from the righteousness of Faith Rom. 10. vers 5 6. and hence it cannot be meant only of sincere or Evangelical obedience to be performed by Christians at all times but vastly differeth therefrom Say others This Do and Live hath not reference to the Moral Law only but to the Ceremonial also Neither doth this satisfie for there is no ground to exclude the Moral Law it was such a Law as concluded all under sin Gal. 3. 22. Besides the difficulty is the same whether it be by one or the other If in Do and Live a ceremonial doing were intended for Israel that would speak as much for its being a Covenant of Works as if it were a Moral doing even that with Adam in innocency did run upon a Positive Precept concerning Eating or not Eating that Fruit Gen. 2. vers 17. Neither doth the Lord here make a repetition of the Covenant of Works to put them upon their choice whether they would be saved by Working or Believing For they were already within the Covenant of Grace and had the Lord for their God Exod. 20. 1. And doubtless the Lord would not leave them to a liberty to go back from that Grace much less would he enter into such a solemn Covenant as that at Sinai was with them for that end to open a door for their crossing his grand design of free Grace Say others If we look upon the Law separately so it standeth upon opposite terms but if you look upon it relatively as it hath respect to the Promise so those opposite terms have their subservient ends to the Promise and Grace convincing of our sin and impotency c. The Law considered absolutely in it self as Gal. 4. vers 21 to the end so it is nothing else but a Covenant of Works but considered respectively and rerelatively as Gal. 3. vers 17. to Gal. 4. vers 21. and so it is not a Covenant of Works Now it is true that the Sinai Covenant was designed for the ends of the Covenant of Grace or of the Gospel for the Apostle putting the Question Is the Law against the Promise Gal. 3. vers 21. He Answereth God forbid we must then so understand the Sinai Law as in respect of its design and end it may not be against the Promise vers 24. The Law was our Schoolmaster until Christ yet it was for a Gospel end not that we might be justified by the Law but that we might be justified by Faith But still the difficulty remaineth in that separately and absolutely considered it is the Sinai Covenant and runneth upon Do and Live Yea it gendreth to bondage Gal. 4. vers 24. Even as it is the Sinai Covenant It would not conduce to those ends the convincing of sin humbling for it exciting to believing c. But by its own inability for the getting of Life and the avoiding of the Curse as Arguments that way it is therefore presupposed as such a Covenant before its usefulness to these ends Neither can we imagine that the great God would trifle with men in entring into such a solemn Covenant with them on those terms Do and live if there must not be this very doing here intended by some or other or else no life to be attained and it is perfect doing that is called for as I have proved which could not be fulfilled by Israel they were utterly unable for it Gal. 3. vers 21. and therefore it is a doing by Jesus Christ for them that is there intended Say others The Law is taken largely for the whole Doctr ine and Administration of the Sinai Covenant and so it holdeth forth life upon believing in Christ Rom. 10. vers 4. Gal. 3. vers 23 24. and is a Covenant of faith or it is taken strictly as it is an abstracted rule of
righteousness consisting in Precepts Threatnings and Promises holding forth life upon an impossible condition to lapsed man perfect doing in this sense Moses gave it not nor is it a Covenant of faith but of works But this doth not satisfie for I see no ground for that large acceptation of the Law Rom. 10. vers 4. speaketh of the Law for righteousness and so is taken as strictly as vers 5. only it is said to be performed by Jesus Christ and then by believing souls are interessed in his performance and Gal. 3. vers 12 23 24. he speaketh of the Law as a Schoolmaster to Christ which we are not under Besides the Law in that strict sense wherein this Objection granteth it to be a Covenant of Works is that in which it was given at Sinai Rom. 10. vers 5. Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law he that doth them shall live in them Therefore the Law was given in that restrained sense by Moses Further in that large acception it cannot be proved to be cloathed with the nature of a Covenant whatever in that is of a foederal nature or can belong to it as a Covenan trunneth upon the terms of that perfect Obedience in that strict sense Do and Live and so apparently it putteth on the Nature even of a Covenant of Works though not intended to be performed by Israel for life but by Jesus Christ for them SECT VII Prop. 2. THat the Sinai Covenant under a typical servile administration of the Covenant of grace promised temporal mercies to Israel upon the condition of their Obedience It s servile and typical nature is clearly holden forth Gal. 4. vers 3. 24. Heb. 8. vers 9. and will be more fully manifested elsewhere It s Conditional form is obvious it promiseth nothing but upon the condition of obedience and that not only to be performed by Jesus Christ but also by Israel Exod. 19. vers 5 6. If ye Israel will obey my voice and keep my Covenant c. Deut. 4. vers 13. He declared unto you his Covenant which he commanded you to perform even ten commandments you i. e. Israel as v. 1. is required to yield obedience or commanded to perform it and he speaketh of the same Covenant made in Horeb or at Sinai when the Lord spake to them out of the midst of the fire vers 10 11 12. yea Israel is blamed for violating that Covenant Jer. 31. vers 32. Which Covenant they brake c. therefore it was their duty to keep it That it promised Temporal mercies to Israel upon the condition of their obedience is manifest Levit. 26. vers 3 4 c. If ye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments and do them what then then will I give you rain in due season and the Land shall yield her increase c. these are outward mercies vers 6. I will give you peace in the Land c. there is another temporal mercy And not only obedience to the judicial commands which respecteth them as a Commonwealth but to all moral and ceremonial precepts is required to these ends The Ten Commandments are rehearsed Deut. 5. and then Statutes and Judgements mentioned and observing all is urged to this end that they may live and enjoy the land of Canaan and length of dayes therein V. 31 32 33. Deut. 6. vers 1 2 3 17 18 24. and Deut. 11. vers 8. Therefore shall you keep all the commandments which I command you this day here a universal obedience is injoyned they were to keep not only some but all the Commands and what will follow Vers 9. I will give you the rain of your land in his due season c. by all which it appeareth that Israels obedience to the whole Sinai Covenant was required in order to their fruition of temporal blessings Yea not only external viz. that of the outward man but cordial obedience is required to this end Deut. 11. vers 13. If ye will hearken diligently to my commandments which I command you this day to love the Lord your God and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul Then vers 14. I will give you the rain of your land c. send grass c. outward mercies So Deut. 6. 5. Conscience then was concerned even about these things and disobedience to moral precepts which did bind their Conscience was given as a reason of their being excluded from their temporal mercies Jer. 11. vers 8 10 c. Jer. 44. vers 21 22 23. It resteth then to be proved that the Sinai Covenant as to be performed by Israel did belong to the administration of the Covenant of grace or had grace in it to them It is true it required of them not only sincere but perfect obedience even in order to temporal mercies it must be to all commands with all the heart as I have proved their coming short of that was sinful for in that very Covenant some Sacrifices were appointed where sincere obedience was performed for sins of infirmity as of ignorance c. as well as for others Lev. 4. vers 26 29 31 35. and 5. vers 10 13 16 18. and alsewhere This providing a relief a remedy doth imply that Israel would fail would sin and stand in need of that forgiveness which in many cases was here promised yet in pursuance of these directions which are punctually given by the Lord in offering sacrifices exactly according to appointment they should be forgiven that is so far as temporal judgements threatned should be averted and temporal mercies promised should be afforded these sins should not be any hindrance in the way of them thus far it was a real forgiveness for if there had been no real expiation by those sacrifices and something forgiven how could they have been typical of that forgiveness which Believers have of their sins by the true sacrifice Jesus Christ It was not real spiritual forgiveness as to the Conscience that was promised there so the Law could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the Conscience Heb. 9. 9. And let it be observed when the Apostle speaketh not in relation to temporals but to eternals then he mentioneth the tenor of the same Sinai Law to be Do and live and cursed is he that continueth not in all things Gal. 3. vers 10. Rom. 10. verf. 5. We are not to think that the righteousness whereby we are justified is to be performed by our selves as if the sacrifice of Jesus Christ were intended only to expiate and obtain the pardon of our sins in coming short thereof No such a righteousness is exacted unto justification and eternal life as is absolutely perfect hath no flaws or sinful imperfections in it no forgiveness is needed there it is such as could not be performed by any but Jesus Christ alone vers 4. Rom. 5. latter end hence if the Romans and Galatians would so much as attempt the seeking it by any works of their own