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A77775 The Gospel-covenant; or The covenant of grace opened. Wherein are explained; 1. The differences betwixt the covenant of grace and covenant of workes. 2. The different administration of the covenant before and since Christ. 3. The benefits and blessings of it. 4. The condition. 5. The properties of it. / Preached in Concord in Nevv-England by Peter Bulkeley, sometimes fellow of Johns Colledge in Cambridge. Published according to order. Bulkeley, Peter, 1583-1659. 1646 (1646) Wing B5403; Thomason E331_1; ESTC R200735 319,203 371

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taken away from us Thirdly it is sin which brings all sorrowes and miseries upon us this is that which brings sword famine pestilence nakednesse and all such outward calamities sin i●●he true cause of all these These spring not out of the dust nor come by chance but are the fruit which growes upon the forbidden tree of sin but let sin once be forgiven then are these things which are in themselves evill turned unto good unto us Affliction is good when the sin which causeth it is gone and done away one that hath his sin forgiven may rejoyce in affliction Rom. 5. Romans 5. yea hee may be exceeding joyous in all tribulations 2 Cor. 7.4 2 Cor. 7.4 When sin which is the sting of every crosse is removed is pulled out then may we take up that crosse which before we fled from as from a serpent and put it in our bosome and not be hurt by it Fourthly it turns good things into evill unto us sometimes God gives good things even to wicked and evill men making his Sunne to shine and rain to fall upon the wicked and unjust Matth. 5.45 Matth 5.45 But so long as sinne is unpardoned though the things be good in themselves yet they are not good unto them sin corrupts the good things they enjoy it turns blessings into curses as the Lord saith in Malachi 2.2 Malachi 2.2 I will curse their blessings th●ir health wealth peace and prosperity are as snares unto them to work their ruine Psal 69 22. Psalm 69.22 But where sin is pardoned there is no more curse Apoc. 22. Apocal 22. Then the blessing returnes to the creature and is in the creature the rain is a rain of blessing Ezek. 34.26 Ezek. 34.26 our meat and our talk a blessing our prosperity a blessing we are then blessed in all we enjoy in all we put our hands unto Fifthly what an evill sin is and what a benefit forgivenesse is we may conceive if we doe but look on such men as have felt the sting of sin in their own consciences and have felt the burthen of it ●ying on them Look upon Cain crying out in the horror of his conscience My sin is greater then can bee forgiven Gen. 4. Genesis 4. Look upon Saul complaining that God was departed from him I am saith he in great distresse 2 Sam. 28.15 Look upon Judas when his sin pressed upon his conscience how unable he was to beare it very anguish of conscience on earth makes him cast himselfe into the gulfe of hell Prov. 18.14 The spirit of a man will beare his infirmity all outward sorrowes so long as his conscience is at peace free from the trouble of sin but when sin comes and burdeneth the conscience of a man this none can beare This David found to bee a burthen beyond his strength he was not able to beare it Psal 38.3 Psalm 38.3 A stone is weighty and the sand is heavie but sin upon the conscience is heavier then them both Pro. 27.3 Prov. 27.3 This burthen makes the whole creation to groan under it Rom. 8. Romans 8. And whosoever hath felt the guilt of his own sin lying upon him such an one wil easily conceive what a blessing this is to have sinne forgiven By forgivenesse the burden is lightned the wound is healed the soule is eased of that anguish and bitternesse which it was in before While our sin was unpardoned we looked at God as an enemy to condemne us but now we have peace towards God we are reconciled the cause of the enmity being taken away All this considered well might D●vid say as he did Blessed is the man whose sin is forgiven and iniquity covered Psal 32. Psalm 32. Now this great blessing God hath promised in his covenant he will forgive the sin of his people which give up themselves to walk in covenant with him Hee will not remember against them their former iniquities their sins shall be as if they had never been hee will see no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel he will passe by the sin of the remnant of his heritage he will remember their sins no more yea though their sins be great yet hee will forgive them though they abound yet his grace shall abound much more in the forgivenesse of them Rom. 5.20 See Isai 43.25 And this the Lord will doe First because mercy pleaseth him Micah 7. It is a pleasure to him to shew mercy to his covenanted people Never did we take more pleasure nor so much in the acting and committing of our sins as he doth in the pardoning of them Hee is the Father of mercy 2 Cor. 1. 2 Cor. 1. And therefore delights in mercy as a father delighteth in his children It doth him good to see the fruit of his own mercy in the taking away of the sins of his people Secondly it is the purpose which he hath everlastingly purposed within himselfe to make his grace glorious in those whom he hath by covenant given unto Christ to be saved by him he will have the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 1.6 Ephes 1 6. Hee will not lose this glory he will be admired in the Saints 2 Thess 1.10 2 Thess 1.10 Hee will make the world to wonder when it shall bee known what sin hath been committed by them and pardoned by him Gods people are called vessels of mercy Rom. 9. Rom. 9. As those therefore which are vessels of wrath shall be full of the wrath and indignation of the Almighty to make his wrath known in them so the vessels of mercy shall be filled with mercy filled up to the brim God will have no empty vessels all shall be full one sort filled with wrath the other with mercy Thirdly The Lord hath received a satisfaction to his Justice in Christ what ever Justice could require at our hand Christ hath satisfied for us to the utmost farthing So that now Justice cannot complaine though that sin be forgiven unto us because it was fully punished in Christ Fourthly If the Lord should not forgive the sinnes of his people which believe on Christ Christ his sufferings should be in vaine To what end was it for him to suffer the just for the unjust Why was the chastisement of our peace laid upon him if wee should also suffer for our owne sinnes God would never have laid our iniquities upon him but that he intended to forgive them unto us Fifthly There is no other way to have sinne done away no other meanes to get free from sin but by forgivenes Either God must forgive sin or all the world must be condemned and lie under his curse for ever But there are a remnant that God will save from perishing in the condemnation of the world c. Sixthly The Lord hath not onely promised forgivenes and spoken it with his mouth but his act and deed gives us assurance that he will
condemnation but the gift is of many offences unto justification c. Adams one sin brought guilt upon him and all his posteritie because he was under the covenant of workes and therefore justification can be had by that Covenant no more But it is not so in the Covenant of grace neither one sin nor many sinnes doe exclude from life in this covenant But this gift is of many offences c. And this holds true not onely of such sinnes as are committed before our entrance into a covenant of grace with God but of such sins as are committed afterward as is evident Psal 89.31.34 God having made a Covenant with them though he chastise them yet his Covenant will be not breake c. The reason of this difference is from the summe and scope of the Covenant of workes which is to bind us to a totall full perfect and constant obedience of the Law in all things unto the end Gal. 3.10 so that one or once fayling breakes that Covenant But in the Covenant of grace God promiseth not onely to forgive but to multiply forgivenesses Isa 55.7 Isai 55.7 Hence though in many things we sin all as James 3.2 yet 1 Joh. 2.2 1 Joh. 2.2 wee have an Advocate with the Father And 1 Joh. 1.7 The bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin No number of sinnes doth exclude from salvation till they be accompanied with finall Apostasie impenitency and unbeliefe till as Heb. 3.12 wee doe by an evill heart depart away from the living God Hence also saith the Apostle Rom. 5.19 Where sin abounds there grace abounds much more God will glorifie his grace by our sinne As sin takes occasion by the Law Rom. 7.10 so grace takes occasion by our sin God will glorifie his grace thereby and make it marvellous in the eyes of the world so that men shall wonder that such grace should be shewed in pardoning such sinnes that they shall say as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passest by the transgression of the remnant of thy people Consolation to the weake Saints of God Vse who are often cast downe in themselves through sense of their own infirmities and the many falls they are subject unto by reason of which they are cast into sad feares and doubts concerning themselves yea so farre as to make conclusions against themselves that they cannot belong unto God because as they thinke if they were the Lords people and his grace were effectuall in them they should not be so often overcome But such must know that so long as the sinnes that are in us be repented of and mourned for it is not one nor many infirmities which can make voyd the Covenant of grace which wee are entred into or hinder us of the blessing that comes thereby Wee must remember that we are not under the Law but under Grace wee must not be too severe against our selves like Novatians denying pardon to second falls In so doing we set such limits to the grace of God as he himselfe hath not set God hath not said He will pardon once and no more or that he will pardon sinnes before grace received but not those committed after God never so stinted his grace but his gift of grace is against many offences unto justification of life In denying therefore of pardon to our selves for sins iterated and for our often infirmities so long as there is a spirit of repentance working in us and we are humbled for them before God we doe not onely wrong our selves and deprive our soules of the peace we might enjoy but we do wrong to the grace of God as if that grace were not sufficient for us as if that God could not or would not renew his gracious pardon to us as wee renew our repentance towards him Let such consider what the Lord hath commanded us to doe we must not onely forgive seven times but seventy times seven times if our brother turne againe and say it repenteth me And can wee thinke that God lookes for more mercy from us towards our brethren then he will shew towards his owne children He hath bidden us daily to pray for the forgivenesse of our sinnes as knowing that we are subject to daily infirmities and doe stand in need of daily mercy and forgivenesse And therefore to limit Gods grace as we are apt to doe is in effect to turne the Covenant of grace into a Covenant of workes as if there were no more grace under the one then under the other Know therefore that whiles there is in us an holy watchfulnesse against the sin that dwells within us whiles it is our desire and care to please the Lord whiles we feele in our selves the spirit of grace causing us to mourne over him whom we have pierced by our sinnes though we be overtaken again and again through the infirmity of the flesh that is in us yet know that it is not one nor many offences that can deprive us of the blessing of this covenant of grace in which God hath promised to multiply forgivenesses according to the multitude of his great mercies Yet let no man abuse this doctrine unto carnall liberty this is childrens bread impure dogges and carnall livers that make no conscience of sinning have nothing to doe with this consolation it is onely to support the weak to comfort the feeble minded not to encourage the wicked and impenitent in their sin Let such know that though God abound in mercy and do multiply forgivenesses unto such as are humbled for their sins yet he will multiply plagues also upon impenitent wretches that goe on in their evill way To such neither many nor any one of all their sins shall be forgiven but being under the law they shall make an account to God for every transgression God will repay them all their wickednesses not one shall be forgotten or forgiven He is indeed abundant in goodnesse reserving mercy for his people and so he is also abundant in wrath against rebellious sinners and will abundantly reward the proud doer That the covenant of works if it be accomplished and fulfilled Differ 8 leaves in man matter of glorying and boasting in himselfe but the covenant of grace excludes all glorying in a mans selfe and leaves him nothing of his own to boast of but in the grace of God If Adam who was under the covenant of works had fulfilled that covenant he might have come before the Lord and said Behold Lord I have fulfilled the commandment which thou gavest me and done thy will now therefore justifie me and give me the life which thou hast promised here Adam had had something in himselfe to glory in Thus the Apostle speaks of Abraham that if he had had the righteousnesse of works by his fulfilling of the Law he should have had whereof to glory before God Rom. 4.1 Rom. 4.1 he might have said as the elder son did in Luk. 15.29 Luke 15.29
know the difference between the service of the Lord and of the God whom you have obeyed Come in therefore and seeke the Lord and give up your selves to be his people that he may raigne over you come within the kingdome of his grace here and he will prepare a kingdome of glory for you hereafter Thus much of the first and greatest blessing of the Covenant of grace I will be your God The second blessing of the Covenant followes which is that the Lord promiseth to his people the pardon and forgivenes of sinnes as is expressed Jer. 31.34 Jer. 31.34 I will forgive their iniquitie and remember their sin no more By this promise the Lord takes away that great scruple and feare that might fill the hearts of his people as thinking that the greatnesse of their sinnes would exclude them from ever having benefit by the former promise for if the soule hearing such a promise revealed I will be your God should now reply and say Yea he will be the God of the just as of Abraham and such as have not sinned against him but I have sinned and my transgressions are exceeding many and they stand up as a partition wall between God and me how can he then be a God to me or communicate himselfe and his goodnesse unto me so vile and sinfull Now the Lord in this promise taketh away this objection and saith I know you have sinned I have seene your rebellions against mee yet this shall not hinder but yet I will be your God and what ever sinnes you have committed I will doe them away and put them out of my sight and will be your God and thus the Lord seemes to answer his people Isai 48.4.9 compared together The Lord having promised deliverance to his people they might say Wee are unworthy I know it saith the Lord that thou art obstinate and yet verse ninth For my Names sake I will deferre my anger c. As if he should say In regard of thy selfe and thy own stubbornnesse thou deservest to be cut off and left in thy misery yet for my praise I will doe thee good The sinnes therefore of Gods people shall not breake off their interest in God they may serve to magnifie the grace of God toward them but shall not lessen nor hinder it Well therefore may this promise be reckoned amongst the blessings of the Covenant of Grace and be set in the next place to the former promise I will be your God This promise of pardon and forgivenesse of sinne is one of the great blessings of the Covenant of grace as sounding forth nothing but Grace and blessing Grace from God and blessing to us Grace from God according to that Exod. 34.6 7. Exod. 34.6 7. The Lord gracious and mercifull pardoning sin forgiving iniquitie and transgression c. So it also imports kindnes and blessing to us as Psal 32.1 Psal 32.1 Here is Grace yea rich Grace in this promise of forgivenesse of sin as Eph. 1.7 Ephes 1.7 It is grace because nothing but grace and mercy can forgive God is just but it is not justice that doth pardon sin Justice taketh vengeance for sin it will not spare our misdeeds but grace taketh pitie and forgiveth Againe it is grace because we have nothing to satisfie withall for the evills which wee have done and therefore there is the more grace to us in pardoning Againe there is grace in it because God hath power in his hand to take vengeance He doth not passe by sin as men doe offences when they dissemble forgivenes because they cannot tell how to be avenged and yet carry rancor and malice in their hearts but God forgives though he hath power to destroy and take vengeance as Deut. 32.35 Deut. 32.35 He is able to destroy Mat. 10.28 Mat. 10.28 and yet chooseth to forgive Hence Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 the Lord joyns these together strong and gracious c. This shews him to be gracious that he is strong and yet pardoneth There is infinite grace shines forth in forgiving the sinnes of men And this will appeare if wee consider these things First consider the nature of sin which is a kind of wrong doing unto God there is injurious provocation in it provoking the jealousie of the mighty God As if a wise should wrong her husband by forsaking him and joyning her self to another man how could such a wrong be recompenced Yet such wrong we doe unto God for in every sin wee commit there is a turning unto the creature and forsaking the Creator Here is grace therefore in forgiving such injuries as Jer. 3.1 If a man put away his wife and she become another mans will he return to her again c. But thou hast plaid the harlot with many lovers yet return unto me saith the Lord. Wherein doth grace and kindnesse appeare more then in p●ssing by wrongs It is an easier thing to shew many courtesies and benefits to one that never wronged us then to forgive one petry injury yet here is the grace of God unto us c. Secondly consider against whom our sins have been committed and that will set forth grace more They are not committed against man alone but against the Lord. Now a Prince will sometime forgive a trespasse against a common ordinary subject but that which is against their own person they seldome spare Our sins are against God 1 Sam. 2.25 1 Sam. 2.25 and yet he pass●th by such transgressions This is abundant grace Thirdly consider to whom sin is forgiven and to whom it is not forgiven it is forgiven to us that were enemies but not to his own deare Sonne when hee came to be a mediator between God and us Hee could not have one sinne forgiven him God would not spare him Rom. 8.32 Rom. 8.32 but took the full satisfaction of sin from him but yet hee spareth us that were enemies Here is grace indeed Fourthly consider the quality of the Lords forgivenesse both in the freenesse and fulnesse of it he forgiveth freely as Rom. 3.24 25. Rom. 3.24.25 Being justified freely by his grace c. Hence saith the Lord Isai 48.9 11. Isai 48.9.11 For my Names sake will I deferre my anger c. For my own sake will I doe it for how should my Name bee polluted and I will not give my glory to another I will doe it freely for if I should take any satisfaction from thee I should pollute my Name and darken the glory of my grace and give it to thee that thou wouldest think that thou wert pardoned for thy sacrifices and thy goodnesse The sin that God pardoneth he doth it freely for his praise sake Papists may talk of their satisfaction to God for their sinnes but these are but the words of men and they cloud over the glory of Gods grace and take the glory of God to themselves But upon such termes God will never forgive Amongst men though one
have offended another yet the consid●ration of former or after courtesie may deserve to have such an offence passed by but it is not so with God Nothing that we can doe can plead any such worth his forgivenesse is free as Isai 43.25 26. Isaiah 43.25 26. I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for my own sake Put me in remembrance saith the Lord let us plead together whereas we are ready to think that it is not onely for his own sake but also for our sakes for something which we have done that hee forgives our sins The Lord taketh this away and saith Come and remember me now and tell me what it is that I should pardon thee for the Lord looketh at nothing in that soule which hee pardoneth but onely at his own praise he doth it freely Again as God doth it freely so he doth it fully his forgivenesse is a full forgivenesse hee putteth away all our sinnes old new great small guilt and punishment so that the sinnes of Gods people are before God as though they had never been committed never to be required at their hand The expressions the Scripture us●th here are very excellent it is called a taking away our iniquities H●sea 14.2 Hosea 14.2 The blotting out of sinnes Psalm 51.9 taken from debt-books that when the debt is paid then they blot it out of their book so God when he pardoneth he blots out our transgressions that hee never means to call us to account for them Sometimes it is called the putting them away as a mist or as a cloud which is made to vanish by the Sunne and is no more seen Isai 14. Isaiah 14. It is also called a casting of them behind the backe Isai 38. Isaiah 38.17 A casting of them into the bottome of the sea Micah 7.18 M●cah 7.18 that they shall be buried never to rise again It is called a covering of our sinnes that they cannot appeare in his presence nor bee seen of him any more Psal 32.1 Psalm 32.1 and the 85.2 Yea they are so hid and covered as that the Lord sees no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel Numb 23.21 85.1 Numb 23.21 Not meaning as the Familists dote That there is no sinne which the Lord can take notice of in hi●●●o●l●● but that though God doe see sinne in them by the eye of his knowledge yet he doth not see them by the eye of his judgement to lay them to their charge Nay the Lord will so farre put away the sinnes of his people that if hee should after come and make inquisition for sinne in them yet there shall not be one found as Jer. 50.20 Jer. 50.20 they are past and gone as the waters of Noah never to return again If wee consider all these the provocation that is in sinne and how many they are and against whom they are committed to whom they are forgiven and how freely and fully they are pardoned we must needs say Here is grace yea riches of grace in the forgivenesse of sin It is therefore a blessing of grace Secondly as there is grace shewn from God in the pardon of sinne so infinite benefit and blessing commeth to us thereby Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose iniquity is forgiven c. This is not a promise of no value but is one of the most great and pretious promises of the Covenant of more worth then thousands of gold and silver How great a benefit this is will appeare if we consider how great an evill sinne is which by forgivenesse is taken away The greatnesse of the one will set forth the greatnesse of the other Now sin is the greatest evill in the world and that both in it selfe and to us First in it selfe it is the greatest whether we consider it simply in its own nature and being or causally making evill the subject that it dwels in In the former respect it is the greatest evill because it is contrary to the greatest good God is good he is goodnesse it selfe his will also is holy just and good Now nothing is so contrary to God and to the goodnesse of his holy will as sin is this crosseth the holinesse of his will And as for the other if we consider fin causally what is it which makes the creature evill as we read of evill Angels Psalm 78.49 Psal 78.49 and of evill men 2 Tim. 3.13 2 Tim. 3.13 Whence is it that they are become evill It is onely by sinne they were created good but sin hath corrupted them and made them evill And that which makes other things evill must needs of it selfe be much more evill Take away the sin from Devils and they are good they are evill onely by sin Secondly but that which more neerly concerns the point in hand is to consider how sin is the greatest evill unto us and that appears First because it is sin and sin onely which excludes us from God and makes a separation between God and us Poverty reproach sicknesse c. these are evils but they are not such evils as are able to separate us from God Rom. 8. Rom. 8. God was with Joseph in prison with Jeremiah in the dungeon with those that wandred up and down in wildernesses in sheep-skins and goat-skins Heb. 11.37 38. being afflicted destitute and tormented But sin is as a partition-wall betwixt God and us it separates betwixt us and our God Isai 59.1 2. Isai 59.1 2. Sin breeds an alienation and strangenesse betwixt us so as till sin be taken away there can be no communion betwixt God and us But now by the forgivenesse of sin this partition-wall is pulled down so as we have free accesse unto God and may come into his presence and behold his face and stand before him being accepted in his beloved Now by the forgivenesse of sin we return again unto our former estate in which wee stood before our fall before that sin had broken us off from God Now as the Apostle saith 1 John 1.3 We have fellowship with the Father and with his Sonne Jesus Christ In our fall sin brake off our communion with God but by the forgivenesse of sin wee have liberty to recover this our communion with him again Secondly sin is that which hinders all other good things from us Jer. 5.25 Jer. 5.25 If we want any thing that is good for us thank our sin for it God is good and ready to doe good free to communicate his goodnesse to all his creatures why then are good things restrained from us It is our sin which intercepts them and cuts us short But now when sin is done away by forgivenesse then is the former hinderance removed this doth as it were turn the cock which stops the course of the blessing from comming unto us and now we recover an interest in all the good things of the world so as all things are ours when sinne is not ours but is
faithfully performe unto us that which he hath promised his dealing with us doth evidently declare his gracious inclination towards us and his readinesse to forgive First His great patience in waiting for our repentance and turning unto him he waits for this very end that he might be gracious Isai 30.18 Isai 30.18 Secondly His proclaiming of his Name as he doth in Exod. 34.6 The Lord the Lord gracious mercifull forgiving iniquities why doth the Lord thus proclaime his Name and tell us openly that he is a God forgiving iniquities c. but that we might take notice of his graciousnesse towards us and might be encouraged to looke unto him for forgivenesse Even as Kings proclaime their pardon that they might be acknowledged to be gracious Lords Thirdly His gracious invitation also assures us that he will forgive Come unto me saith Christ Mat. 11.28 If sin burthen you I will ease you Yea he entreats us to accept of reconciliation and to be reconciled unto God 2 Cor. 5.20 Fourthly Consider his commanding of us to forgive one another he commands other men to forgive us which is an argument that himselfe will forgive For first herein he shewes his love towards us that he would not have the hatred of any creature to lye against us no not so much as the displeasure of a weake man but would have us to enjoy their love how much lesse then will he let his owne wrath lye upon us which is infinitely more heavie then the displeasure of all the creatures in the whole world and secondly If he would have us to forgive one another which have so littl● love and compassion in us how much more will he forgive us his compassion being so tender and pitifull towards the worke of his own hands These acts of his goodnesse doe confirme this unto us that he is a gracious God ready to forgive This lets us see the onely way to get free from the guilt of our Vse 1 sinne which lyes upon us here is the way and there is no other but to fly to grace and mercy to obtain free forgivenes The wicked hypocrite thinkes to escape by denying his sin as Saul did 1 Sam. 15. 1 Sam. 15. or by hiding it from the eyes of the Almightie as they doe Psal 94.7 Psal 94.7 Others thinke that God cannot know them as Job 22.13 14. Job 22.13 14. or that he will not regard them as Psal 94.7 But marke what the Lord himselfe saith Hos 5.3 Hos 5.3 I know Ephraim and Israel is not hid from me And in Amos 5.12 Amos 5.12 I know your manifold transgressions and your mightie sinnes And in Hos 7.2 Hos 7.2 I remember all their wickednesse saith the Lord yea he hath Our sinnes laid up as amongst his treasures Deut. 32.34 Deut. 32.34 and sealed up as in a bag Job 14.17 Job 14.17 to bring them forth against such Atheisticall hypocrites in the day of his visitation Others thinke to make amends for their sinnes that they will appease God with thousands of Rammes and ten thousand rivers of oyle as Micah 6.7 but the Lord will be appeased by none of these Our onely way is to fly to grace and to free forgivenesse all other meanes whether pardons from men or satisfactions from our selves will not free us from the guilt of the least sin the taking away of our sinnes must either be by free forgivenesse or they must lye upon us for ever Is forgivenesse of sinnes one of the blessings of the Covenant then Vse 2 surely it reacheth no further nor to no more then to such as doe give up themselves to God to walke in Covenant with him such therefore as walke contrary to the Covenant which is between God and his people such as will be bound in no bonds but cast away all bonds from them and will walke at libertie and will not be restrained let such know that the bond of the Covenant as the Prophet speakes in Ezek. 20.37 and the blessing of the Covenant goe together so as those that will not come within the bond of it shall never partake of the blessing When God drawes his people into the bond of his Covenant then he is about the forgiving them their sinnes Consider that of the Apostle Rom. 11.26 27. Rom 11.26 27. when God doth take away the sin of a people then doth he also make a Covenant with them and takes away ungodlinesse from them A loose ungodly walking contrary to the Covenant which God makes with his people is an evident demonstration that our sinnes are still bound fast upon us and they will be as fetters and snares to bind us hand and foot to cast us into utter darknesse This benefit of forgivenesse of sinnes is proper onely unto those that are a people in Covenant with God and doe by Covenant bind themselves unto him to walke before him as becoming his people Vse 3 For incouragement unto all such as doe desire to renew their communion with the blessed God and to returne into acquaintance and fellowship with him you desire to have God to be your God you would faine draw near and get into Covenant with him that he may be a God unto you and you a people unto him but this dismayes you this puts you back you have so much guilt lying upon you so many sinnes standing up betwixt God and you that you thinke it impossible that the holy God should ever take such a sinfull wretch by the hand and enter into Covenant with him to become his God But let such consider this sweet promise of grace I will be mercifull to their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more When he had before said that he would be their God now lest any should be beaten off from drawing neare unto him to renew their communion with him he subjoynes this promise I will forgive their iniquities As if he should say though you thinke I will not be a God unto you any more because of your sinnes yet these shall not hinder for I will forgive them they shall stand in my sight no more Vse 4 Hath God thus promised forgivenes of sin in his new Testament and Covenant then let us for our parts labour to partake of this rich blessing lye no longer under the guilt of our sinnes but seeke to have them forgiven Say not there is no hope we have a promise and we may be the children of the Covenant to whom the promise is made Thinke what the Prophet saith in Amos 5.15 Amos 5.15 It may be the Lord will be mercifull to the remnant of Joseph though before in ver 12. the Lord had told them that he knew their manifold and mighty sinnes yet the Prophet here puts them in hope it may be the Lord will yet be mercifull much more should wee be incouraged by the plaine promises of God And therefore when we heare the Lord say I will be mercifull
him or for him not for our selves but for him mourning that we have pierced him and grieved his Spirit by our sinnes 5. An heart willing to forgive and to doe good unto those that have done evill against us Mat. 6.14 Mat. 6.14 when wee cannot onely forbeare them but forgive them and beare a loving heart to them that have been unloving towards us This disposition of heart in us springs from an higher fountaine of grace which hath been shed downe upon us in forgiving our sinnes When the heart can reason with it selfe to suppresse revengefull desires when they are stirring in us and can argue as Mat. 18. and Eph. 4. Mat. 18. Eph. 4. the Lord is willing to forgive me my debts and ought not I also to forgive my fellow-servant that hath offended me Such a disposition of heart is a fruit and token of the forgivenesse of our sinnes Mat. 6.14 The grace that hath been shewed us in the forgivenesse of our sinnes workes an answerable disposition in us making us ready to forgive the sinnes of our brethren 6. A free and full confession of sinne when we deale openly with the Lord freely willing to open all our whole heart before the Lord discovering knowne sinnes secret sinnes the most prevailing beloved and inward corruptions willing to take the shame of all unto our selves and still to be more vile in our selves that mercy might be glorified in our forgivenesse When we can bring out the whole pack and not keepe a sin back so farre as wee know any thing by our selves but lay all open and naked before the face of God till there be no more to be found such confession hath a promise of forgivenesse 1 Joh. 1.9 1 Joh. 1.9 There may be a forced confession as was that of Saul when he was so fully convinced of his sinne that he would no longer deny it 1 Sam. 15. And of Judas who out of extremitie of horror and rage of conscience was made to confesse his wickednesse in betraying innocent bloud There may be also a formall superficiall and partiall confession when we doe in a generall fashion confesse our selves sinners which confession hath no promise of forgivenes because these confessions are ever accompanied first with a desire if possible to maintaine our own innocency secondly with a spirit of unbeliefe and misgiving heart fearing lest our own mouth should judge us and wee become witnesses against our selves Thirdly with a spirit of pride loath to confesse our selves to be so vile as we must acknowledge our selves to be if we should confesse all our sinnes against our selves But when a man is willing to search out all his sin unto the last that he may lay open all his heart and confesse all his iniquitie against himselfe before the Lord being vile in his own eyes and desiring to be more vile loathing himselfe for all his abominations of such an one that can thus come before the Lord in humble confession of his sinnes I doubt not to say unto him Goe thy way in peace thy sin is forgiven thee If God give us a heart thus humbly to confesse it is unto us a signe there is in God a heart mercifully to forgive Exhortation to all the Saints that have tasted of this rich grace Vse 6 in the forgivenes of their sinnes Let them ascribe glory unto him that hath shewed this mercy on them extolling that grace which hath forgiven them this the Lord lookes for he would have his grace glorified by us Eph. 1.6 Ephes 1.6 The Lord himselfe publisheth this as his own glory that he is a God forgiving iniquitie transgression and sin Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 And the servants of God have herein given glory unto him as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passeth by the transgression of the remnant of thine heritage We should make the praise of this grace to ring through the whole world that heaven and earth may take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed on us This grace can never be sufficiently glorified by us To teach us willingly to become servants unto this God of all Vse 7 Grace who dealeth thus mercifully with his people See Hos 14.5 Hos 14.5 When the Lord there promiseth to heale the rebellions of his people by taking away their iniquities from them marke what this workes in them ver 9. What have wee say they any more to doe with Idolls with our former sinnes we will serve them them no more we will henceforth serve thee our gracious God which promisest to heale all our backslidings His will wee be him will wee serve And thus much of the second Benefit The third Benefit of the Covenant is the renewing and sanctifying of our natures by the graces of the Spirit The Lord having first justified us by his grace in the forgivenesse of our sinnes he the● goes on to sanctifie us that we might be an holy people unto him to serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes Luk. 1. Luke 1. When he hath made us imputedly righteous he will have us inherently righteous also And by the promise of this benefit the Lord answers another scruple which his people might be subject unto We might thinke with our selves this is indeed a great benefit which the Lord hath promised hith●rto namely to forgive all my sin But though the Lord should performe all this mercy unto mee forgiving unto me all my former sins unto this day yet I have such a vile sinfull nature within mee that I shall returne and sin againe as wickedly as ever I did before and so shall bring a new guiltinesse upon my self Hereto the Lord answers No it shall not be I will renew alter and change that sinfull and wicked nature that is in you I will make your heart a new heart so as you shall be enabled to doe my will and walk in my wayes I will sanctifie you to be an holy and pretious people to my self This renovation and sanctification of our nature stands first in cleansing away our sinfull corruption and then in an infusion and filling of us with the holy graces of the Spirit As a vessell which wee intend for any honourable use first wee scoure and rinse out the filth that is in it and then we sweeten it with other things and so make it fit for service and use Satan had defiled us with his loathsome filthinesse but so many as the Lord sets apart unto himselfe to be vessels of honour in his house those hee cleanseth from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and seasoneth them with all the sweet and gracious gifts of his Spirit Hence it is that we are said to be made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Peter 1.4 and to be renewed with the ren●wing of the holy Ghost Titus 3.5 And we are said to be created new in Christ Jesus Eph. 2.10 because
22. By these and such other promises faith encourageth us to return unto our God taking words unto our selves and pleading the Covenant of his grace towards us intreating him to receive us graciously Hoseah 14. This work of faith brought Peter back to Christ after his shamefull denyall of him it made him to lament his sinne and to look up unto him for grace and forgivenesse whereas Judas wanting this faith lies down in desperate sorrow never able to rise up nor recover himselfe any more And thus we see how faith doth act both in bringing us into Covenant with God and helps us also to walk in Covenant with him And thus we have shewed first That faith is the condition of the Covenant secondly Why faith is appointed to be the condition rather then works thirdly It is the act not the habit which is the condition on our parts fourthly What those acts of faith be by which it brings us into Covenant and inables us to walk in it Quest But here a further question is made by some what manner of condition faith is It 's granted will some say that faith is a condition but it is a condition only consequent to our Iustification and so to our being in Covenant with God but it s no antecedent condition wee are as they conceive in a state of Grace and salvation before faith and then faith comes and believes that Iustification and salvation which was before given Answ This is some of that new light which the old age of the Church hath brought forth which what it tends unto I know not unlesse it be to this that a man should not look at any habituall grace in himselfe whether sanctification or faith or any other in as much as these availe nothing according to them to a mans Iustification seeing wee are Iustified before faith They would have a man to see nothing in himselfe because as they think the Grace which is seene is temporall the Grace which is not seen is eternall though a man knows that he hath faith yet say they he is not thereby justified nor brought into the estate of grace but is justified before faith therefore never look at this or that in your selves all these are nothing to your Iustification or salvation This as I think is the end of this opinion In opposition whereunto I lay down this conclusion according to the Scripture That we are not actually justified nor in a state of grace and salvation before faith before we believe This I hope to prove by evidence of the word only before I come to the proof of it to prevent mistake observe how I speak of actuall Iustification whereas our Iustification may be considered either First as purposed and determnied in the minde and will of God Or secondly as impetrated and obtained for us by the obedience of Christ Or thirdly as actually applyed unto us so as we may be truely said to be actually just in the sight of God in the two former respects it is not denyed God purposed to justifie us before the world was and therefore much more before our faith And that atonement and obedience which Christ hath performed for us is also before our faith and before we were born But the question is whether this Righteousnesse wrought for us by Christ bee actually applyed to a sinner before hee believe whether one as yet not believing bee actually acquitted of his sinne and accounted just and righteous before God And this is that which I am now to prove against the Patrons of the former opinion sc that we are not actually justified before faith It s not a condition only consequent but antecedent to our actuall justification and being in state of grace before God Reas 1. To make our justification goe before faith is to place our justification before our vocation and calling and so inverts the order observed by the Apostle Rom. 8.30 who placeth our calling before our justification and if our calling be before our justification then is our faith also before it because we are not called effectually of which kinde of calling we now speak as the Apostle doth untill we believe faith therefore being comprehended in our calling and calling being before justification faith also of necessity must goe before our justification Reas 2. Consider the words of the Apostle in Rom. 3.22 where he saith That the righteousnesse of God is by the faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe In which words are three things first What is that righteousnsse by which we are justified namely not our own righteousnesse but the righteousnesse of Christ here called the righteousnesse of God secondly The persons upon whom this righteousnesse comes that they may be justified by it and that is upon those that doe believe thirdly The meanes by which it comes to be upon them and that is by faith the righteousnesse of God is by faith on them that doe believe justification is here limited to them that doe believe not extended to them that believe not and least any should evade by saying that they are called believers in regard of Gods prescience and foreknowledge not in respect of any present habit of faith actually dwelling in them in which sence some are called sheep Joh. 10.16 therefore to prevent this evasion the Apostle addes the meanes by which they come to have this righteousnesse of God upon them which is by faith though it had been enough to have said that it was upon them that believe yet to put this matter out of doubt he addes those words that it is by faith And if it bee by faith then not before faith but if it is by faith as the Apostle affirmes therefore not before faith If faith were a condition consequent to our justification not antecedent it could not bee said to be by faith In Psal 50.15 The Lord puts a double condition concerning our deliverance out of trouble one antecedent call upon me another consequent and thou shalt glorifie me in the midst of which two stands the deliverance promised so as the order is first we must call secondly then God delivers and then thirdly we must glorifie him now if our faith were a condition only consequent to our justification then it stands in no other place in respect of justification then doth our glorifying of God which followes our deliverance out of trouble and it so then we may as well be said to be delivered by our glorifying of God which follows our deliverance as to bee justified by faith which followes our justification Reas 3. From Num. 21.7 8 9. compared with Ioh. 3.14 15. I reason thus faith hath the same place and use in our justification as the Israelites looking had in their healing when they were stung with the fiery Serpents but they were not first healed and then to look and see what it was that had healed them but they were first to look upon the Brazen Serpent and then by
to him by the Father Esa 50.5 6. Joh. 10.17 18. And according to all this which Christ thus covenanted with the Father he was carefull to discharge the same Joh. 17.4.6 Joh. 12.49 50. 4. According to all this Covenant passed betwixt the Father and Christ Christ expects the glory which was promised to himselfe and to his members To himselfe Joh. 17.5 and to his members Joh. 17.24 He expects the accomplishment of both from the Father Thus farre then I grant a Covenant betwixt God the Father and Christ and hence it is that God is called the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes 1.3 which is by reason of the Covenant betwixt them But if any shall hereupon conclude that there is no Covenant passing betwixt God and us then I say they deny that which is as cleare in Scripture as the Sunne shining at noone day I may say of them as the Apostle doth of some 1 Tim. 1.7 that when they would be teachers they understand not what they say nor whereof they affirme There is therefore a Covenant passing between God and man which I will prove by these evidences 1. Consider those expresse testimonies wherein mention is made of Gods Covenanting with the people of Israel which must needs hold forth a Covenant between God and man Deut. 4.23 Take heed unto your selves lest you forget the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you c. Esa 55.1 2 3. where the Lord calls every one that thirsts after life to come unto him These are called to enter into Covenant with God but these speeches cannot be applyed to Christ but to us that wee should come to Christ and through him make up an everlasting Covenant betwixt God and us see also Jer. 31.31 I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Judah and in Ezek. 20.37 saith God I will bring them into the bond of the Covenant which places hold forth a Covenant between God and man 2. Consider more particularly such testimonies as doe expresse Gods Covenant with sundry particular Saints as with Abraham Gen. 15.18 and 17.2.4.7 and the same renewed to Isaac Gen. 26. 3. and confirmed to Jacob Gen. 35.12 all mentioned together Levit. 26.42 Psal 83.3 2 Chron. 13.5 I thinke that there is none so sottish as to say these persons were Christ 3. Lest any should say It 's true God makes a Covenant with us but it is made with us not in our persons but in Christ Therefore in the third place consider such Scriptures as doe not onely expresse a Covenant of God made with us but a Covenant on our part made with God as Psal 50.5 Call my Saints together that make a Covenant with mee with sacrifice the Saints make a Covenant with God Hence we are said to passe into Covenant with the Lord Deut. 29.12 as God for his part enters into Covenant with us so doe we also with him 4. Consider those places frequently used in Scripture in which wee are said sometimes to keep Covenant as Psal 25.10 Psal 44.17 103.17 18. Sometimes to transgresse and breake Covenant Gen. 17.14 and not to be faithfull in Covenant Levit. 26.15 From which places I argue thus Those that either keepe or breake Covenant those are in Covenant and doe make a Covenant with God but wee are said to breake or keepe Covenant Ergo. 5. Consider that the Covenant made with Christ concerning us was made from everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 The promise was made to Christ before the foundation of the world but there is a Covenant also made in time Deut. 29.12 noted in these words this day if there were no other Covenant between God and us but what is made with Christ then it cou●d not be said to be to day because the Covenant made with Christ was before the world was and therefore the Covenant and promise that is made to day must needs be made with us 6. That Covenant of which Christ is the testator must needs be a Covenant with us else if the Covenant were made onely with Christ then he must be both testator and the partie to whom the Testament and Legacies are bequeathed which is absurd Men doe not use to bequeath a testament to themselves but Christ is appointed the testator Heb. 9. In the covenant between the Father and Christ there he is a partie not the testator but in this he is the testator therefore besides the covenant between God and Christ there is also a Covenant between God and us and therefore the covenant is not made with Christ alone but with us also 7. A seventh argument may be taken from the paritie and likenesse between the covenant of works and the covenant of grace though there be great difference between them as shall be shewed afterward yet they agree in this in that they are both made betwixt the same parties and persons between God and man God made a covenant of workes with Adam and that being broken he comes and makes with him a new covenant of grace through Christ Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman shall breake the serpents head one of these covenants comes in the roome and stead of the other and therefore the parties covenanting are the same God and Adam in the first covenant the same God and the same Adam in the second covenant 8. From the end and use of the Sacraments which is to confirme the covenant of grace as being the seales of it Rom. 4.11 Now in reason these two must goe together the Covenant and the seale of it It were a fond thing in a man to make a covenant with one and to give the seales to another they must have the seales that have the covenant made with them but the seales of the covenant the Sacraments are given to us and therefore the covenant is made with us also 9. If there be no promise or covenant made to us as some would have it then infidelitie and unbeliefe is in us no sinne for as the Apostle saith Where there is no law or commandement there is no transgression so where there is no promise there is no unbeliefe When God promiseth and yet then wee believe not this makes unbeliefe a great sinne but if wee have no promise made unto us then are wee not bound to believe and so our not believing is no sinne 10. The contrary doctrine is a doctrine tending to licentiousnesse for as the covenant tends as wee have heard to bind us faster to God to walke before him in obedience so on the contrary to say that there is no covenant between God and us it opens a gap to loosnesse of spirit For if there be no covenant then cannot a man be charged with unfaithfulnesse to God though he walk never so loosly and therefore let such men as broach such tenents take heed whilest they teach such libertie they be not found to be the servants of corruption 2 Pet. 2.19 These are the arguments to
and obey him no need was there to stirre him up to believe Gods goodnesse towards him of which he had no cause to doubt But when God cometh to make a Covenant of grace with man he finds him in his sin and rebellion full of feares and doubts and therefore had need to be encouraged to believe that God will be reconciled but then it was not so there was then nothing to cause distrust and therefore faith was not expressed in that covenant yet faith was then required as wee have shewed though not the same faith that is required in the covenant of grace But they differ in three things 1. The covenant of workes commandeth faith in God as a creator to preserve our being but not as a redeemer to deliver us from misery Adam was not bound to believe on God as a redeemer for then he needed no redemption But the Covenant of grace requires faith in God as a redeemer redeeming us from sinne and misery The Jewes professed they believed on God but by what faith When the faith of the Gospel was preached unto them by Christ and his Apostles they counted it a strange thing they clave to the Covenant of workes they therefore believed on God as a Creator but believed not on grace revealed in the Gospel by this faith they believed not on him 2. The Covenant of workes required faith to believe in God loving mee as created holy and continuing in the same puritie and holinesse before him and no further but the Covenant of grace commands faith to believe in God loving us and pitying us lost sinners 3. The faith required in the Covenant of workes was mutable as now all the righteousnesse required in that Covenant and so might be lost as afterwards it was by the sinne of Adam but the faith required in the Covenant of grace is such as is begotten of an immortall seed 1 Pet. 1.23 and therefore cannot be lost but abide● and continues for ever It is a faith that cannot faile Luk. 22. Thus yee see the same faith is not required in both Covenants Secondly It is not required in the Covenant of grace for the same end as it was in the Covenant of workes In the Covenant of workes faith was required as a part of that righteousnesse which the Law required it is one of the duties of the Law but in the covenant of grace it is required not as any part of our righteousnesse but onely as an instrument to receive and apprehend the righteousnesse which is wrought for us by Christ and therefore the faith required in the Covenant of workes was a giving unto God but the faith required in the Covenant of grace is onely a receiving from God that which he freely offers us Quest So that if the question be asked and stated thus Whether the Law and Covenant of workes doe require the same faith and to the same end as the Covenant of grace doth Answ I answer No it doth not as is evident by that of the Apostle Gal. 3.12 The Law is not of faith i it is not the doctrine of faith requiring faith and promising life upon believing but the Law saith thus The man that doth these things shall live in them as if he should say the Law requires not believing but doing therefore those are deceived that would bring in the faith of the Gospel to be required in the Law For the second doubt Quest 2 Whether doth not the Covenant of grace require workes as well as doth the Covenant of workes I answer It doth as is evident Titus 2.11.14 Answ The grace of God that bringeth salvation teacheth us to be zealous of good workes and Mat. 5.16 Let men see your good workes saith Christ though Christ preached not a Covenant of workes but of grace yet he calls for good workes But marke the difference 1. The Covenant of workes doth not require workes for the same end as the Covenant of grace for that requires workes as the matter of our justification before God so saith Moses understanding him in a Legall way Deut. 6. last This is your righteousnesse but the Covenant of grace requires workes not as a part of our righteousnesse but that thereby wee should glorifie God and manifest it that wee are made righteous by Christ James 2. wee are thereby declared to be righteous the godly conversation of a Christian maketh it evident to the consciences of men that he is a justified man 2. The workes that are required in the Covenant of grace are not required from the same beginning the Covenant of workes requires workes to be performed from our own strength and abilitie received in the Creation it presupposeth abilitie in our selves to doe what it requireth But the Covenant of grace requireth workes to be done by the help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ Phil. 4.13 I can doe all things saith the Apostle through Christ strengthning mee that is the power which the Covenant of grace directs us unto 3. The Covenant of grace doth not require works in the same order as the Covenant of workes doth for the Covenant of workes requires workes first and then faith to believe our selves beloved unto life but the Covenant of grace requireth faith first and then that we bring forth good workes therefore saith the Apostle Titus 3.8 Let them which have believed be carefull to shew forth good workes He doth not say Let them which have done good workes believe but first believe and then doe good workes he placeth faith before workes and hence it is that the obedience of the Gospel is called the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 as following faith and springing from it Thus then this difference of the condition of the Covenants remaineth the one Covenant commanding workes the other faith Vse Let therefore every soule looke unto his faith that expects to receive the blessing of life by faith wee are brought into Covenant with God and are enabled to wait for the blessing of it Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfu●l A●raham Gal. 3.9 Though there be imperfection in your works yet if your faith be working and it be not a dead faith but fruitfull manifesting it selfe in a holy life here is comfort it is faith that gives interest in the Covenant of grace let it appeare that it is a faith unfeigned and this is the condition to which God hath promised life and salvation Differ 2 The second maine difference is this namely that the Covenant of workes is made without a Mediator to mediate between God and man But in the Covenant of grace there is a Mediator coming between to unite God and man together and make them one Hence Heb. 9.15 Christ is called the Mediator of the new Testament so also Heb. 12.24 but the first Covenant of workes had no Mediator The reason of this difference is because when God came to make a covenant of workes with Adam then there was no disagreement between God and man
man was yet righteous persisting in that innocency and righteousnesse in which he was created there was yet no breach made the heart and mind of man answering to the mind of God and therefore there was no need of a Mediator to bring them together But when the Covenant of grace is made with man there is a former breach between God and him and so there is need of a third partie of a Mediator to make them one Hence is that in Gal. 3.20 A Mediator is not a Mediator of one whiles wee are one with God there is no need of a Mediator no more then there is need for one to mediate between a man and himselfe this is the ordinary interpretation of that place though it may probably beare another sense and so it was betwixt God and man in the beginning there was no variance then between them by sinne then God made a Covenant with man as with his friend as Abraham is called the friend of God but when sin had made a breach between God and man then strangenesse and enmitie followed God is estranged from us and wee are enemies unto God so that without a Mediator wee can never come to be united into Covenant againe Now man feares and trembles to come before God and God being offended cannot be at peace unlesse his Justice be satisfied Therefore when Adam had once sinned he feared to come into the presence of God and hid himselfe till God revealed and made knowne to him the Mediator of the Covenant that the Seed of the woman should breake the Serpents head The Covenant of workes was delivered to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai by the hand of a Mediator Gal. 3.19 Object and so the difference is taken away I grant the Covenant of workes was then revealed and made Answ 1 knowne to the children of Israel as being before almost obliterated and blotted out of mans heart and therefore God renewed the knowledge of the Covenant of workes to them I grant also that the Law was given to them by the mediation Answ 2 of Moses who was a mediator betwixt God and them But I adde withall that the Law though it containe the summe Answ 3 of the Covenant of workes yet was not delivered unto that people for this end to stand between God and them as a Covenant of workes by which they should be justified and live but onely as it was subservient and helpfull unto them to attaine the end of the former Covenant of grace which God had made with them in their fathers God had promised Abraham to be a God to him and to his seed but now the Israelites having been long trained up among an ignorant and Idolatrous people they little knew what need they had to flie to the promise of grace and therefore the Lord now reveales his Law to them in that manner to make them see by the terrors of the Law that they cannot come neare unto God thereby this was the Lords end in giving the Law unto them and not to stand between God and them as a Covenant of life by which they should live This is evident by that of the Apostle Gal. 3.19 Wherefore then serveth the Law The Apostle had before proved that wee are justified by faith in the free promise and not by workes some then might object Why was the Law then given to the children of Israel The Apostle answers it was given to restraine transgression to convince men of sin and to be as a Schoolmaster to bring them to Christ Gal. 3.24 These then were the ends of giving the Law 1. That the knowledge of sinne might abound Rom. 5 19 20. The Law entred that sinne might abound that is the knowledge of it that man might know his sinne Secondly To lead them to Christ Thirdly To restraine the transgression and sinne of man and to keepe them in obedience But not as I said to stand in the forme of a Covenant for them to be justified and saved thereby The Law is to be considered two wayes First Absolutely and by it selfe as containing a Covenant of workes Secondly Dependantly and with respect to the Covenant of grace 1. Absolutely alone by it selfe and so it was given as a Covenant to Adam in the beginning and so considered it shews the way and meanes of life by which wee might live 2. Respectively as having reference to the Covenant of grace and so it was given to the children of Israel at Mount Sinai both as antecedent and consequent thereto As antecedent to it to prepare them for Christ and the Covenant of grace and also as subsequent to it to teach them how to walke and please God when they were entred into a new Covenant with him And thus was it given unto them And here because some may doubt of this truth I will therefore lay downe some grounds to confirme it and to make it cleare that the Covenant made with Israel at Mount Sinai was not a Covenant of workes Argu. 1 That Covenant which God made with Israel at Mount Sinai had Circumcision for the signe and seale of it which was the signe and seale of the same Covenant which God made with Abraham Gen. 17. And therefore this Covenant made with Israel having the same signe and seale with the other made with Abraham it was the same Covenant also For if the Covenant had been altered the seale should have been altered also the seales of the one Covenant not being sutable to the other It were now absurd to bring in the seales of the Covenant of workes made with Adam and to annex them to the Covenant of grace now made with us in Christ and no lesse inconvenient were it to put the seales of the Covenant of grace to the Covenant of workes Now if this Covenant made with Israel was the same with that which was made with Abraham having the same seale and confirmation then surely it was not a covenant of workes but of grace because the covenant made with Abraham was a covenant of grace and not of workes Rom. 4. Object But it may be said that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes else how doth the Apostles Argument hold which he urgeth Gal. 5.3 where he saith If yee be circumcised yee are bound to keepe the whole Law As implying that Circumcision was a seale of the covenant of workes binding them to the observation of the whole Law that they might be justified thereby even as Baptisme binding us to believe on Christ for forgivenesse of sinnes is therefore called a Sacrament of the Covenant of grace Wee must consider Circumcision two wayes First Answ According to its primitive institution as it was appointed by God unto Abraham and then as it was abusively urged and intended by those Judaizing Apostles which sought to corrupt the truth In the Primitive institution of it it was appointed to be a seale of the covenant of grace as is evident Rom. 4.11 But the
false Apostles urged it as a worke of the Law as a dutie and worke to be done necessary to justification and salvation Now the Apostle in saying that if they were circumcised they were bound to keepe the whole Law doth not look at the Primitive institution of it but hath respect to that which the false Apostles intended urging Circumcision as a work of the Law necessary to their justification and salvation and thus taking it the Apostle doth truly tell them that if they were circumcised in this manner and to this end they were bound to keepe the whole Law because by what reason Circumcision was necessary by the same reason all the rest of the Law was necessary also and if they were bound to observe Circumcision to be justified by it then were they also bound to observe the whole Law because if wee be justified by workes wee must doe all the Law to obtaine justification by it This is the Apostles intent but this doth no more prove Circumcision to be a seale of the covenant of workes then our Baptisme is Concerning which I may say as much as Paul doth of Circumcision if any shall esteeme Baptisme as a worke by which to be justified I will then say to such a one that if he be baptized in this manner and for this end to be justified by it as by a worke that then he is bound to keepe the whole Law But did not Circumcision in the Primitive institution of it Quest bind them to the observation of the whole Law Yes but not in that sense as now wee speake of Answ it bound Abraham and all his seed and all such people as should joyne themselves unto them to observe all the ordinances and commandements of God But how not as workes to be justified by but as meanes by which they should testifie themselves to be a separated people severed from other people of the world having peculiar Lawes given to them to walke by They had ceremonies to lead them to Christ such as no other people had they had Judgements and Lawes of State given by God himselfe so as no other people of the world had the like they had the Morall Law revealed unto them more fully then any other people and in the observation of all these they were to testifie themselves to be the people of God not communicating with the Lawes of other Nations but walking in their owne but yet not so as to justifie themselves thereby Circumcision bound them to the observation of the Law in the former way but not in the latter Argu. 2 The covenant of workes binds not to the observation of the ceremoniall law but of the Morall onely but that covenant at Mount Sinai bound them to the keeping of the Ceremoniall law and therefore was not properly a covenant of workes Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 9.1 to 6. That the first Testament or Covenant had ordinances of divines service c. By the first Testament meaning the Covenant delivered at Mount Sinai Now these ordinances mentioned by the Apostle were types and figures of spirituall things belonging to the Church of the new Testament and did appertaine to the covenant of grace signifying the blessings wee receive by Christ and if these ordinances respecting Christ were given in the first Testament or Covenant then surely that Testament or Covenant was not a Covenant of workes Argu. 3 That Covenant which did so convince of sinne as that it did also shew the way of expiation of sin and of forgivenesse could not be a covenant of workes for the covenant of workes onely convinceth of sinne and condemnes for sinne but shews not the way of expiation of sinne But this covenant at Mount Sinai did so convince of sinne that withall it shewed the way of forgivenesse for it taught men to looke for righteousnesse by the bloud of the sacrifice which was in type the bloud of Christ and therefore it so revealing and shewing Christ it could not be the covenant of workes Argu. 4 The covenant of workes was in Adam made with all none excepted not with one people more then another But this covenant made with Israel was made with them as with a select chosen and peculiar people whom God had taken to himselfe out of all the people of the earth and thence is that Preface before the Law I am the Lord thy God that brought thee out of the land of Aegypt God had separated them to himselfe from Aegyptians from Canaanites from Edomites c. and then revealed his Covenant unto them therefore this covenant made with Israel alone cannot be a covenant of workes which is made with all flesh That covenant which God made with Moses his person was Argu. 5 not a covenant of workes but of grace but the covenant which God made with them was the same which he made with Moses as appeares Exod. 34.27 therefore c. If any shall say that God then made a covenant of workes with Moses then it must follow that Moses was not now nor before under a covenant of grace which is contrary to the Apostle Heb. 11.23 24. when he saith By faith Moses when he came to yeares c. or else if he were before and now under the covenant of grace and yet now God makes another covenant with him putting him under the covenant of workes then a man may be at the same time under both covenants of workes and grace and so both under blessing and curse and in a state both of life and death If it had been a covenant of workes which God made with Israel Argu. 6 at Mount Sinai then should he have called them from a covenant of grace to a covenant of workes from a covenant of life to a covenant which now in this estate of corruption ministers nothing but death which is contrary to the Apostle Gal. 3.17 where he shews the Law cannot disanull the former Testament this were to make the Lord goe from a covenant of grace to a covenant of workes and it were the same in effect as to make them perfect by the flesh when the Lord had begun with them in the spirit Gal. 3.3 God carries on his people from faith to faith from grace to grace and not from grace to workes Therefore the covenant then establisht with them was not a covenant of workes for them to expect life by but onely the covenant of workes was then revealed with reference to the covenant of grace That covenant which was made by a sacrifice coming between Argu. 7 and confirmed by the bloud of the sacrifice that covenant is not a covenant of workes but this covenant was so made and confirmed Exod. 24.2 3 4 5 6 7 8. that sacrifice typed the sacrifice of Christ that bloud typed out Christs bloud but Christs bloud doth not confirme the covenant of workes but of grace But against this some doe object divers things Object 1 They say the covenant made with Israel at Mount
Sinai had not Christ for the Mediator of it Heb. 8.6 But Christ was the Mediator of the covenant of grace ever since that covenant was first made even in the time of Adam Gen. 3.15 and of Abraham Joh. 8.5 and of Moses Acts 15.11 and afore his coming in the flesh as well as since Heb. 13.8 Answ I grant that Christ was not in his owne person visible Mediator of that covenant yet in his type he was for when Moses stood betwixt God and them Deut. 5.5 and as a Mediator he tooke the Law from God to deliver it unto them Gal. 3.19 he did not so stand in that place of Mediator in his owne name but in the name of Christ as representing Christ of whom he was therein a type and figure so that what Moses did in that Mediatorship Christ did it in him It is said of Christ 1 Pet. 3. He went and preached to the old world in the ministry of Noah so he went and was Mediator between God and Israel in the ministry of Moses and as Aaron was Mediator between God and them in the Priestly office so was Moses in the Propheticall office and yet neither of them in their owne names and for themselves but both of them as they were types of Christ and thus Christ was Mediator of that typicall covenant in his type and afterward Mediator of the Evangelicall covenant in his owne person Object 2 The covenant of grace is said to be established upon better promises then the first covenant made at Mount Sinai Heb. 8.6 Now these better promises are promises of life upon better conditions i upon condition of faith in Christ and not upon that impossible condition of perfect obedience to the Law The covenant of grace therefore being built upon better promises then the former covenant at Mount Sinai therefore the covenant at Mount Sinai cannot be a covenant of grace because the promises of the covenant of grace are alwayes the same Acts 15.11 Answ As wee read of better promises so we read also of a better testament and better sacrifices Heb. 7.22 8.6 9.23 Now mark shall we from those better sacrifices of the new Testament conclude that the former Testament which had sacrifices though it wanted these better sacrifices was a covenant of workes No the covenant of workes taken properly hath no sacrifices at all The same I say concerning the better Testament Heb. 7.22 8.6 Where the comparison is betwixt the Testament under the Messiah and the Testament under Levi as the verses before doe make manifest the Testament under the Messiah is called a better Testament then that under Levi yet was that Testament under Levi a Testament or Covenant of grace and not of workes This therefore I conceive that those better promises are not so called in regard of the substance of the promises but of the manner of propounding them Even as the sacrifices of the new Testament are said to be better then the sacrifices of the old not in substance but in the manner of exhibiting If I may so speake they had the same sacrifices in substance as wee have even the Lambe slaine from the foundation of the world Rev. 13. But he was then slaine onely in types and figures not really or personally But now in the new Testament there is a reall and personall offering up of Christ himselfe and not in the type onely and therefore it is called a better sacrifice And so it is in the promises the promise of eternall life was then made but how seldome plainly expressed but shadowed over in the promise of their dwelling in the land of Canaan which was to them a type of heaven but now wee have the promise of eternall life plainly and nakedly set before us so that wee may say as they said Joh. 16. Now speakest thou plainly and speakest no parables now the Lord speakes to us without putting such vailes before our eyes which held them that they did not see into the end of that which was spoken so as now in this sense our promises are better then theirs because more clearly and plainly revealed In a word the Covenant under the Messiah is compared with the Covenant under Levi the sacrifices of the one with the sacrifices of the other the promises of the one with the promises of the other Looke then how the one is better so are they all as the sacrifices of the one are better then the sacrifices of the other so is the Testament and so are the promises which betternesse is not in the substance but in the manner of revealing The Covenant made at Mount Sinai was the Covenant of the Object 3 Morall law which is the Covenant of workes This objection is answered by that which was before delivered Answ 1 of a two-fold consideration of the Law 1. Absolutely 2. With respect to the Covenant of grace and as dependant on that and thus onely it was delivered to them and not as a Covenant by which they should be saved no more then it is to us though wee have it in our Bibles Answ 2 Though the Morall Law was then given them yet there was more then that Law delivered to them namely all the ordinances of the Ceremoniall Law which belong to the covenant of grace and not of workes and all of them together made up but one covenant wherein they were to walke with God Object 4 The first Testament delivered at Mount Sinai was such as no salvation could be attained by it for therefore it is said not to be faultlesse Heb. 8.7 But the Covenant of grace did alwayes bring salvation Therefore c. Answ That Covenant did give life and salvation was attained by it And though it be said to be faulty yet not so as to hinder or debar from salvation but onely it was defective in respect of the full perfection of the new Covenant as it is now revealed It was not so cleare and manifest as now it is there was then a defect in comparison of what it is now by the revelation of Jesus Christ but not faulty to as that interpretation would make it Compare herewith Heb. 10.1 2 3 4. Object 5 This is made a difference betwixt the covenant of grace and the covenant at Sinai that the covenant of grace promiseth forgivenesse of sinnes and the writing of the Law in our hearts which the former covenant at Sinai did not Therefore it was not a covenant of grace but of workes Answ It is true the covenant at Sinai did not promise forgivenesse of sinnes scil so clearly and the writing of the Law in our hearts scil so abundantly in so full a measure as the new covenant doth but if from the denying of the full measure we shall deny the whole benefit in any measure this will not follow no more then this followes that because the Prophets did not reveale Christ so plainly as the Apostles therefore they did not reveale him at all They had types
it He can do it Jude 24. Jude 24. and he is faithfull and will do it 1 Thes 5.24 1 Thes 5.24 it being his covenant and promise and he cannot deny himself In the covenant of works Gods highest end is the glorifying of Differ 5 his justice In the Covenant of grace it is to glorifie his Grace In the Covenant of Works God reveales himself a just God rewarding good and punishing evill condemning sin but in the Covenant of Grace he shews himself a God gracious and merciful forgiving iniquity c. as Jer. 31.31 32. Jer. 31.31 32. I will be mercifull to your iniquity c. The Covenant of Works forgiveth no sin there is nothing but strict justice in that Covenant In this Covenant God looks not at any mans repentance and turning from sin but only considers whether he hath sinned As in Courts of Justice where there are tried matters of life and death there is no regard had whether the party be penitent or no but whether the fact be committed and if found guilty he is led to execution so in Gods Court of Justice which he keeps according to the tenor of the Covenant of Works Justice acts and doth all Justice indictes Justice examines Justice pronounceth sentence Justice executes the punishment and so whosoever hath sinned receives according to the evil that he hath done And hence it is that when Adam had sinned the inquisition is not whether he repented him of the evill that he had done but what hast thou done Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I said unto thee thou shalt not eat And the Lord finding that he had offended pronounces curses and death But in the Covenant of Grace it is otherwise There God looks at the repentance of his people and accepts of humiliation and faith in Christ Hence is the counsell of the Apostle Acts 2.37 Acts 2.37 Repent and be baptized c. When they saw the horrible sin which they had done in killing the Lord of life they being the children of the Covenant he tels them that yet there was mercy for them they might obtain forgivenesse of sins Hence also Jonah 3.10 Jonah 3.10 when God saw their repentance and that they turned from their evill wayes he also turned from the evill which he said he would do to them and did it not The voyce of the Covenant of Works is like the first speech of Nathan to David Thou art a childe of death the voyce of the Covenant of Grace is like his after speech when he saw Davids humiliation and repentance The Lord hath put away thy sin In the Covenant of Works God speaks as Ezek. 18. Ezek. 18. The soul that sinneth it shall die In the Covenant of Grace he speaks as Ezek. 33.11 Ezek. 33.11 As I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a sinner They are both expressed in one place Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 The Lord gracious and mercifull slow to anger yet not acquitting the wicked but visiting iniquitie c. In one Covenant God condemnes both sin and sinner in the other he condemnes the sin but spares and gives life to the sinner to glorifie his grace thereby In the Covenant of workes he aymes to make his power and justice knowne as Rom. 9.22 cap. 2.5 Rom. 9.22 cap. 2.5 But in the other to glorifie grace as Isa 48.9 Eph. 1.6 The reason of this difference is because God will be glorified in all his attributes as he is glorious in all so he will have the glory of all to be seene He will have his power and wisdome knowne in the creation of the world his goodnesse knowne in the continuance and preservation and ordering of it his faithfulnesse in keeping covenant with us according to the covenant made his justice in a covenant of works his grace in a covenant of grace which he makes with us in Christ Jesus Vse 1 This may smite feare and terrour into the hearts of all such as are strangers unto the Covenant of grace such as never yet entred into a new Covenant with God by that new and living way which is opened to them in Christ Let such consider what hath been said that in the covenant of workes under which yet they stand there is no grace shewed but strict justice without any mercy Let such therefore bethinke themselves what a God they must meet withall and with whom they must have to do even with a just God a God of judgement a God of vengeance that will not spare their misdeeds what ever justice can require of them they must satisfie to the utmost mite were it so that mercy and justice might sit on the bench together that justice might be tempered and mixt with mercy your sentence might be the more tolerable But these two sit in two severall Courts Justice without mercy and therefore when nothing but justice shall judge you who can stand what flesh may abide it In Psal 78.5 Psal 78.5 with the cup of the Lords wrath is said to be full mixt but in Rev. 14.10 Rev. 14 10. it is said to be pure wine unmixt both together imply that it is both mixt and unmixt how both mixt of all sorts of plagues but unmixt without any drop of mercy pure wrath without any dram of mercy to allay the bitternesse of the cup of wrath and how bitter then will this cup be more bitter then gall yet this must all the wicked of the earth drinke and wring out the very dregs of it Psal 78.5 Psal 78.5 This is an hard saying but a true saying as God is true Therefore Isa 27.11 Isai 27.11 God speaking of the wicked people of the Jewes saith he He that made them will not have mercy on them neither shew them any favour And in Ezek. 5.11 Ezek. 5.11 He threatens that his eye shall not spare neither will he have any pitie And Hos 1.6 Hos 1.6 I will no more have mercy c. And James 2.13 They shall have judgement without mercy As God will be made marveilous in his mercy toward those that are vessels of mercy prepared unto glory 2 Thes 1.10 2 Thes 1.10 so as men shall wonder at the aboundance of grace shewed towards them so on the contrary God will be admired and wondred at in his judgements upon all sinfull and ungodly ones he will make their plagues wonderfull Deut. 28.59 He will deale with his own servants onely in a way of grace with these onely in a way of justice And if so what will their end be Justice will spare neither high nor low it is impartiall and alike towards all Justice will passe by no transgression but will have an account for all greater or lesse wicked thoughts idle words foolish jests Justice will not remit any part of the punishment which the Law calls for but it will have the full to the utmost furthing Let this strike
a mind to returne to the Law though they had had grace revealed to them We have a mind to live and dye under that Covenant as the fish in the Sea and the mole in the earth But see what it is a severe and rigid Master the will of it can never be accomplished Therefore fly from it to this amiable and gracious Lord that accepts of weakest indeavours so they be done in sinceritie So long as wee strive to doe the will of the Lord and fly to grace for pardon and acceptance wee doe fulfill the Covenant of grace Therefore cast off that yoke which cannot be borne and take the yoke of Christ upon us for that is easie and his burthen light Mat. 11.29 30. Mat. 11.29 30 Though we doe by sin breake the Covenant of workes and so Differ 11 make it voyd that there is no life and salvation to be had thereby yet there is hope and helpe by flying to the Covenant of grace But if the Covenant of grace be broken and made voyd as it may to those which onely externally lay hold on it there is no more helpe for such a soule It 's in vaine to fly back to the Covenant of workes I deny not but many sinnes may be committed by those that are under the Covenant of grace which yet doe finde helpe and mercy from God as was shewed out of Rom. 5.16 Rom. 5.16 Because the bond of the covenant is not broken As it is between man and wife though shee be foolish passionate and wilfull yet these doe not breake the Covenant of marriage so long as shee remaineth faithfull So here But if the Covenant of grace be made voyd then there is no more helpe nor hope It is in the Covenant of workes as it was under the Law Num. 35.6 25. If a man had committed man-slaughter he was subject to the avenger of bloud yet there were Cities of refuge for him to fly unto where he was to remaine to the death of the High-Priest so it is with those that sin against the Covenant of workes though one hath committed bloudy sins yet there is a refuge for him which the Apostle seemes to allude unto Heb. 6.18 Heb. 6.18 We have strong consolation that have made our refuge c. The Covenant of grace is as Isa 25.4 a refuge against the tempest c. Here is a safe Sanctuary it saves such as are condemned by the Covenant of workes But if a man sin against the Covenant of grace so as to make it voyd to himselfe there is no refuge for him no remedy for him as Solomon speakes of those that being often reproved harden their neck Prov. 29.1 Hence is that in Heb. 10. from 26. to 31. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sinnes c. The reason of this difference is Because in the Covenant of workes we have to doe with justice but in the covenant of grace with grace and mercy and therefore as when a man hath committed a trespasse against the Law and Justice condemnes him yet the grace and favour of the Prince may save him but if he contemne the favour of the Prince then he must dye So though we have provoked justice yet we may fly to grace and get helpe there but if wee have offended against mercy and made grace our enemy whither can wee then goe there is no refuge then left for us Vse To let us see the great danger of sinning against Grace there is danger in sinning against the Covenant of workes but it is more dangerous to sin against Grace For there is helpe for such as breake the Covenant of workes but no helpe for such as make voyd the Covenant of grace to themselves These are the killing and destroying sinnes that leave no remedy It is true as was said before that the Lord passeth by many weaknesses of his servants that desire and indeavour to cleanse themselves from all filthinesse and spareth them as a Father his sonne Mal. 3.17 Mal. 3.17 But contemptuous sinnes against Grace are beyond all helpe This is to sin desperately Herein men stumble at the stumbling stone they thinke that now under the dayes of grace though they be yet under the Law they may sin without danger and continue in their evills but here the danger is the greatest therefore take heed how you make Grace your enemy If the Law condemne us Grace may save us But if Grace save us not who shall plead for us How doe men sin Quest so as to make the Covenant of Grace voyd unto themselves and to make Grace their enemy 1. By neglecting and slighting the offers tenders of Grace Answ which are made unto them hereby they become guilty of sinne against Grace In Mat. 22. and Lak 14. the Father invites men to the marriage of his Sonne and so to receive all the blessings that are prepared and made ready There is mercy ready forgivenesse ready c. But marke their answer They cannot come the profits and pleasures of the world hinder them ●rom embracing the tenders of Grace What follows then the sentence goes out of the mouth of Grace it selfe They shall not taste of my Supper Grace invites but it is refused and therefore passeth that direfull sentence So Psal 81.11 Psal 81.11 God offers himselfe to be a God unto them but they will have none of him Then he gave them up to walke after their own hearts lusts c. When we will not have his Grace upon his tearmes then God gives up to Justice When God calls upon us as he doth upon his people Isai 55.1.3 Isai 55.1.3 Come unto me and incline your eare take me to be a God unto you and I will make a sure and everlasting Covenant with you if then wee depart away from God as Hos 11.2 Hos 11.2 and wee will have our lusts and keepe the Idols of our hearts then the offers of grace are made voyd unto us 2. When men turne back from the grace which they have received and grow weary of it when we are convinced of the excellency of grace and doe take hold of the Covenant as it were with one hand but not with all our heart and therefore doe Apostatise and turne back to our own lusts then doe we frustrate all the promises of grace to our selves This exposes grace to contempt as if there were more good to be found in sin and in the world then in the grace of Christ Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 10.26 39. Heb 10.26 39. That they that sin wilfully after they have received the knowledge of the truth there remaines no more sacrifice for sin They that draw back doe it to their own perdition and so Psal 73.27 Psal 73.27 They that turne back from thee shall perish If they be entangled againe saith the Apostle Peter 2 Pet. 2.20 2
which above all other he desires to be delivered from And surely such is the disposition of all those whose hearts God hath effectually touched with his spirit of grace that if they had the kingdomes of the world for their own they could be content to forgoe all so they might be rid of sin and have their sanctification perfected in them Now as we have s●●ne that this sanctification is a singular benefit and blessing unto us so let us consider also how it springs forth unto us out of the same fountain of grace as did the former benefit of forgivenesse of sins These two streames issue out of the same fountaine of grace When God sanctifies us adding this benefit to the former we may then say Grace grace wee doe herein receive a double grace Grace in forgiving grace in sanctifying of us here is grace upon grace It is a blessing of rich grace And this will appeare if we consider First How impiously and wickedly we have forsaken our first holy and blessed estate in which the Lord had created us God made man righteous Eccles 10. ult Eccles 10. ult but he would be finding out many inventions of his own and if he could not invent them in the shop of his own braine then he would take them out of Satans forge by those inventions thinking to make himselfe more excellent then God had made him and so did wilfully cast away that glory of grace with which he was clothed defaced the Image of God which was stampt upon him bringing upon himselfe a sinfull and shamefull nakednesse to the contempt of his person before all creatures cast off his God that had formed him setting light by the God of his salvation chusing to obey the cursed suggestion of Satan Gods enemy rather then to retaine his communion with God This did he and we in him and now the Lord might have said unto us all Let him that is filthy be filthy still Seeing you have thus defiled your selves you shall never be cleansed untill I have made my wrath to fall upon you Ezek. 24.13 It is wonderfull grace if ever the Lord will returne to such to renew us and sanctifie us by his grace Our sin was like the sin of Angels who kept not their first estate no more did we wee sinned as they did but we are sanctified and not they here is grace towards us not towards them They are suffered still to persist in their malicious wickednesse but we are renewed againe according to the Image of him that created us Ephes 4. Ephes 4. Secondly Consider the loathsomenes of the sin and corruption which we have brought upon our selves and doth now lie upon us A wicked man is loathsome saith Solomon Pro. 13.5 Prov. 13.5 So loathsome is the sin that is in us that we are made even to loath our selves and to count our selves more filthy then the dung of the earth Ezek. 6.9 When the Lord formed man in the beginning it was not silver or gold or any such precious matter out of which he fashioned him but it was out of the vilest of the Elements out of the earth the dregs setlings of all creatures The matter out of which man was then made was but vile and base Wonder it was that God would set the gracious Image of his holines upon so contemptible a creature But though it was then but vile yet it was as I may so speake innocent harmles The pollution of sinne had not as yet defiled it there was nothing in it as yet which should make the holy God to loath the creature which he had made sinne had not as yet stained the earth with its filthines But now by sin man is become abominable his uncleannesse is as the filthines of the menstruous the filthy leprosie of sin is not in his forehead alone but is spread all over him so that the Lord might say unto him Depart depart yee polluted stand apart the pure eyes of my holines cannot endure to behold such loathsome filthines But now behold and wonder even the God so glorious in holines Exod. 15.11 even he seeing us lye polluted in our bloud he doth not passe by on the other side but he takes pitie on us and takes us and washeth us with water he washeth us from our bloud and anoynteth us with oyle Ezek. 16.6.9 yea and cloaths us againe with white linnen of sanctity and holines adornes us with ornaments of grace which are as jewels of silver and jewels of gold c. ver 10 11 12 13. and makes us beautifull by his owne beauty which he puts upon us And is not this grace Had wee seene our blessed Saviour rise up from the table to wash the foule feet of his servants we would have wondred How much more wonderfull is this that he should take us filthy lepers and wash us in the waters of Jordan untill we be wholly cleane Consider that place in Ezek. 16.9 how the Lord himselfe amplifies this grace towards us in washing us from our polluted bloud No lesse then three times together doth the Lord there mention this When I saw thee polluted in thy bloud saith the Lord and againe When thou wast in thy bloud and a third time Even when thou wast in thy bloud then I took thee and washed thee and said unto thee Thou shalt live Why doth the Lord so ingeminate so double and treble this When thou wast in thy bloud but onely that we might the more observe his abundant grace towards us in purifying such loathsome uncleane ones as wee are Doubtles David when he had defiled himselfe by that great and foule sin he counted it mercy and rich grace to have a cleane heart renewed in him Psal 51. Ps●l 51. Thirdly Consider how unable we are to cleanse and purifie our selves we are like little babes who can defile themselves but would lie in their uncleannes for ever should not the nurse wash cleanse them we once stript our selves of the garments of grace but now we know not how to put them on any more we were men at that time when in Adam wee laid them by and put them off But now like little children we should starve with cold and nakednesse should not the Lord pitie us and put these garments of grace upon us We are saith the Apostle of no strength Rom. 5.6 Rom 5.6 not able to thinke a good thought 2 Cor. 3. nor to will one good desire but it is God that worketh in us both will and deed of his good pleasure of grace towards us Phil. 2.13 Phil. 2.13 It is not in our willing or running but in God shewing mercy Rom. 9.16 Rom. 9.16 And it is not unworthy our observing how in ver 18. he opposeth mercy to hardening He hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth to teach us to look at it as a speciall mercy when he is pleased to take away the hard
stony heart from us and give us an heart of flesh soft and pliable to his will Fourthly As we could not renew sanctifie our selves so neither could any other help us and restore us againe to the holines we had lost In Ezek. 16.5 Ezek. 16.5 the Lord tells his people there how little helpe they had from any other when they lay in their misery there was no eye that pitied them to doe any thing to them or to have compassion on them The Priest and the Levite they come and look on but they passe by on the other side there is nothing done to heale the wound which Satan by sin had given to our soules but they are let alone to putrifie and corrupt the whole man more and more so as from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot there is nothing but sores and swelling and wounds full of corruption Isai 1. But when the Lord saw that there was none to helpe then he himselfe like the good Samaritan comes washeth our wounds powring in wine and oyle to cleanse and to heale us Such was our pollution so deeply set that all the water of the Sea all the bloud of bulls and goats could not cleanse us yea though we should wash in Nitre and take us much sope yet our iniquity would still stand undone away before the face of God Jer. 2.22 Onely that spirit of life that spirit of holines that spirit of power which is in Christ Jesus that spirit being shed down upon us that cleanseth us washeth us sanctifies us without this all helps under heaven had been in vaine without this spirit neither Word Sacrament Commandements promises or being trained up in the Communion of the Church and Christian families neither any nor all these could availe to renew us to the grace from which we are fallen 1 Cor. 6.11 1 Cor. 6.11 Fiftly Let me adde this one thing more If we should look at God himselfe onely as just and not as gracious we could never have hoped to have obtained this blessing from him Justice could have said no other unto us then as Ezek. 20.39 Seeing you would not obey me goe therefore serve every man his Idoll serve your sin When we had turned the glory of God into a lye and had worshipped the creature above the Creator who is blessed for ever Justice would then have given us up unto vile affections and to our owne hearts lusts and to a reprobate mind to doe the things that are not convenient so receiving in our selves such a recompence of our errour as was meet Rom. 1. Rom. 1. This would have been the reward of Justice upon us for our sin But here Grace comes in and powres downe upon us a spirit of grace and of sanctification Zach. 12.10 Zach. 12.10 to wash us from our uncleannes that we might be an holy people unto God And hence it is that in 1 Pet. 5.10 when the Apostle prayes for the perfecting of our sanctification in us he looks at God as a God of all Grace The God of all Grace saith he which hath called us unto his eternall glory by Jesus Christ confirme strengthen and stablish you c. As thereby shewing from what fountain the benefit of sanctification comes namely from Grace from the God of all grace He is a God of all grace towards us in sanctifying of us This may helpe to settle us and confirme us in the truth namely Vse 1 that seeing Sanctification is a blessing of the Covenant of grace even as forgivenes is therefore it is a warrantable and safe way for a man by and from his sanctification to take an evidence of his justification and of his estate in Grace before God Forgivenes of sinnes and sanctification are both of them blessings of the same Covenant As is the one so is the other the one is of grace so is the other of grace also Here therefore to take an evidence of our justification standing in the forgivenes of our sinnes from our sanctification is not a turning aside from the Covenant of grace to a Covenant of workes but it is to prove one benefit of the Covenant of Grace by another benefit of the same Covenant This argument is unanswerable I reason thus If justification and sanctification be both of them b●nefits of the Coven●●t of Grace then to evidence the one by the other is no turning aside to a Covenant of works But they are both of them benefits of the Covenant of Grace Ergo. If so be the forgivenes of our sinnes were promised in the Covenant of Grace and Sanctification were a blessing of the Covenant of workes then might it well be said that to evidence one by the other were a turning aside from the Covenant of grace to that other of workes But when they are both promised both communicated to us by the same Covenant there is no colour to charge this way of evidencing our estate with turning aside to another Covenant Object But may not a man that is under the Covenant of workes by giving himselfe to holy duties and actions and exercising himselfe in them come to attaine an habite of holines and be truly sanctified Answ Some have not doubted to affirme as much but falsely and the falsity of this opinion may be made evident by these Considerations following 1. This opinion imports thus much That one under the covenant of workes may performe acts that are holy which is false he may indeed doe such things as are materially holy as being commanded of God whose word and Covenant doth sanctifie them make the things holy in themselves but they are not formally holy but coming from their impure hearts thereby they are polluted and defiled Tit. 1. And therefore can have no such power to worke sanctitie in the subject whence they come 2. If true sanctification may be in one that is under the Covenant of workes then must we of necessity change the articles or promises of the Covenant of Grace make the promise of sanctification no part of it we must blot out those promises of writing the law in our hearts and putting a new spirit within us and all other promises of the like nature must be rased out of the covenant of grace if one under the Covenant of workes may attaine to this sanctification by his owne workes 3. This opinion is directly crosse and contrary to the Apostle in Gal. 3.2 where he tells us that we receive the spirit of Sanctification not by the workes of the law but by hearing of faith preached It is the doctrine of grace not of workes which makes us partakers of this spirit And hence it is that in 2 Cor. 3.6 he tells us that it is the new Testament which is the ministration of the Spirit by which the Spirit is ministred and conveyed uto us The law or the workes of the law doe not 4. Our being sanctified and our being Saints is
if it should not there enjoy God it would say I finde not him whom my soule loveth and longeth for where is he I must finde him ere my joy can be full Thus a sanctified heart aspires to fellowship with and enjoyment of God himselfe It stayes not till it come to the top of the ladder where God is Ordinances are as so many steps to ascend up unto him be only is the end which the godly heart seeks in them when we rest in them not seeking or not finding God in them this is but formality not true sanctity True sanctity stayes not till we can say as 1 ●oh 1.3 Verily our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Iesus Christ 7. True sanctification makes us exceeding sensible of our own wants and weaknesses in Grace making us to see how farre short we come of that perfection which should be in us Thus it was with Paul he strove unto a conformity wi●h Christ but saith he I have not yet attained unto it And so it was with David Psal 119.5 Oh that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes q.d. but alas how short doe I come of such a course when men are so full and so perfect that they lack nothing it s a sign that pride and selfe-conceit and hypocrisie hath filled their heart rather then true sanctity These are proud Pharises Hypocrites Laodiceans who are indeed poore and blind and naked and miserable having no truth of Grace in them It s a true saying He that wants nothing in Grace hath nothing others there are which are ever wanting ever craving begging as men that are made up of wants seeing such abundance of corruption in themselves that it makes them to abhorre themselves when they come before God only this they doe they are still purging themselves in that fountaine of Grace Zach. 13. seeking to grow up to full holinesse in his feare 2 Cor. 7.1 These are sanctified soules such Christ pronounceth blessed Blessed are the poore in Spirit Blessed are these that thus hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Matth. 5. 8. There bee sundry sanctified affections and dispositions which doe shew forth true sanctification were it is As First holy mourning for sinne when our sinne is our chiefest sorrow as it was in David Psal 51.4 Secondly a chusing of the way of Grace when godlinesse and Grace with losse accompanying them are chosen and preferred before riches and treasures of the world doing as Moses who chose affliction rather then the treasures of Aegypt Heb. 11. and David who said of himselfe I have chosen the way of thy precepts c. What ever befall us this is our resolution in this way I will live in this I will die Thirdly a caring and taking thought for the things of Christ Paul that chiefest of Saints had his head full of these cares even cumbred with them every day This was from the abundant Grace of God which was in him those that are after the flesh they take thought for the flesh to fulfill the lusts of it Rom. 13. but those that are after the spirit they take thought for the things of Christ Phil. 2. Fourthly an holy zeale and earnestnesse for good to be active and working for Christ with an holy emulation and contention of Spirit being provoked thereto not only by the zeale of others as 2 Cor. 9. but even by their lukewarmnesse the lesse they doe we will doe the more and seek to draw on others by our example loth that any should bee more forward in evill then wee for good By these things try we our selves try we our sanctification where these things are there is the Spirit of holinesse and where they are not in some degree more or lesse there the Spirit of Grace is not nor have those that doe wholly want these things before named any part or portion in any saving blessing of the Covenant Vse 4. For direction unto all Gods people which have given up themselves by Covenant unto God These doe many times complaine of the power of their corruptions prevailing against them They see so much sinfull uncleanesse in themselves that it makes them to doubt whether the Spirit of Grace ever had any abiding in them Now for these here is direction how to get help that they may become pure holy undefiled and clean from their sin Let them look unto the promises of this Covenant which God hath made with his people Here is a fountaine of Grace opened unto them to wash in God hath promised That he will poure clean water upon them and will cleanse them from all their filthinesse Ezek. 3.25 He hath said he will wash away the filthinesse of the daughters of Zion that they may be cleane Are you then Ieprous and unclean in your own eyes Goe then and wash seven times in these waters of Iordan and so your leprosie shall depart from you Goe to God and plead his Covenant and promise and say unto God Lord thou hast made promises unto thy servants that thou wilt not only forgive the sinnes of thy people but that thou wilt sanctifie them and make them an holy people unto thee why then am I still thus corrupt sinfull and uncleane Lord wash me wash me throughly till I be cleane from all my sin This is our way to get help against our corruptions wee think for the most part that if we have sinned we must indeed goe to God for pardon and forgivenesse but we think we must work out our sanctification of our selves by our own watchfulnesse resolutions vowes and promises made unto God But herein we wrong our selves were there not more help in Gods promises which he makes to us then in our promises to him we might lie in our pollutions for ever we must therefore goe to God for help against all our corruptions seeking to him by faith in his Covenant and promise saying as Iehoshaphat Lord I am so borne downe by the power of my sinne that I know not what to doe only mine eyes are unto thee doe thou subdue mine iniquities doe thou help me The whole life of a Christian is a life of faith the life of justification the life of sanctification we live both these lives by the faith of the Sonne of God Gal. 2.20 and therefore we are said to be sanctified by faith because by faith we seek for and receive the Spirit of sanctification which is promised unto us Herein then lies our help What is the reason that after so many resolutions against such or such a sinne yet we are overcome againe and againe It is in a great part because we look at the victory against them to come as from our selves we think this or that shall doe it but the Apostle tells us that the victory by which we must overcome is our faith 1 Ioh. 5.4 Rest upon Gods faithfulnesse for help and strength against sinne as well as for forgivenesse of sinne And then though there be no help
looking were healed so it is here with us Christ is lift up on high for us to look unto this looking is by faith Ioh. 3.14 15. and by this looking we are healed and saved Isai 45.22 Reas 4. Look what place works had for our justification to life in the Covenant of works the same place hath faith in the Covenant of grace but works were to goe before our justification in the Covenant of works and therefore so must faith in the Covenant of grace Though Adam was by nature just by an habituall justice yet he was not thereby actually justified unto life but besides his native or habituall righteousnesse he must also performe an actuall righteousnesse and without this he was not to be justified unto life and if he was not to be justified without or before works then are not we justified without or before faith because faith is to us in stead of works and hath the same place now in the Covenant of grace as works had then in the Covenant of works Reas 5. To make faith a condition consequent to our justification is to place faith in the same ranke with works as works are considered in the Covenant of grace for even works also have a place in the Covenant of grace though they are not a condition antecedent yet are they a condition consequent to our justification so as every justified person must walk in good works Tit. 3.7.8 And therefore if faith be placed after justification then it stands but in the same rank with works having no propriety or pre-eminence above works in respect of our justification For though it shall be granted that faith goes before works as the cause be●ore the effect faith producing works as the tree doth the fruit yet they are both alike in respect of justification they are one before another when they are compared betwixt themselves but compare them both with justification and then according to this opinion they goe both together no more is ascribed to faith in our justification then to works if faith follow our justification Reas 6. We are not actually justified till Christ be actually ours Christ being our righteousnesse before God but Christ is not actually ours till he be received by us nor is he received but only by faith Ioh. 1.12 Christ must be received by us or wee have no benefit by him unto salvation Christ is righteousnesse for us before our faith but he is not righteousnesse unto us till he bee received of us by faith our garments are prepared for us before we be cloathed with them but that they may actually cloath and cover us we must take them by the hand and put them on so must we receive Christ Ioh. 1.12 which is done by faith Gal. 3. though he be fit to justifie us before faith yet he doth not actually justifie us or cover our sinfull nakednesse till by the hand of faith we take him and put him on Reas 7. That righteousnesse which is by imputation cannot be before that which is imputed to us as our righteousnesse but the righteousnesse which the Covenant of grace sets forth is a righteousnesse by imputation and it is faith which is imputed for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 Ga● 3.6 and therefore our righteousnesse cannot be before our faith Reas 8. If we were justified before faith then the witnesse of the Spirit of bondage witnessing our bondage under sin and death could not be true for till faith come he testifies unto us that wee are under wrath unjust sinners and this witnesse of the Spirit is true and therefore till wee believe wee are not justified Reas 9. Lastly to omit other reasons which might be produced if justification were before faith we might then ask as the Apostle doth in Rom. 3.1 What is the preferment of faith what profit hath the believer above the unbeliever they are both alike in respect of justification before God when a man comes to believe hee is not a pin the better then he was before he believed but was justified before as well as after and thus faith which is called precious faith is made vile and of little worth seeing a man may be justified without it as well as with it And thus much concerning the third thing propounded about the condition of the Covenant namely what the condition of it is sc Faith 4. The fourth point follows which is whether the putting of a condition doth or can stand with the free grace of the Covenant yea or no for it may seeme that if there be any condition required on our part then the grace of the Covenant is not free and if not free then it s no grace at all and how then is it called a Covenant of grace Ans The putting of a condition doth not hinder or lesson the free grace of the Covenant so long as the condition is Evangelicall and not Legall Some have beene of minde that the promises which we call conditionall are not free promises or promises of free grace and therefore they make an opposition betwixt the promises which are called absolute and the conditionall as if only the absolute promises were free promises excluding the conditionall but the condition annexed being a condition of the Gospel not of the Law doth no more derogate from the freenesse of grace then a Princes offering a royall reward to a Subject upon condition that he doe thankfully accept of it and acknowledge his Princely bounty towards him doth any whit derogate from the freenesse of the gift no more doth the condition of faith by which we receive the grace given unto us of God derogate from the freenesse of his grace towards us a legall condition doth indeed exclude free grace but an Evangelicall condition doth not When the Lord saith Believe and thou shalt bee saved Act. 16.31 and saith also by grace yee are saved Eph. 2.8 There is the like free grace in both Believe and be saved though conditionall is as free grace as if said Thou shalt be saved by grace freely loving thee and pardoning thy sinne That these conditionall promises are of free grace as well as the absolute I prove because First They all flow from the same purpose of grace towards us all Gods purposes towards his Elect are purposes of grace 2 Tim. 1.9 and so are all his promises also Tit. 1.2 for these flow from that eternall purpose of his The promise is but the manifestation of his purpose towards the Elect whether the promise be absolute or conditionall all is one That which was first hid within God himselfe as only purposed by him is afterwards made manifest by his promise And look in what series and order God did purpose to communicate the blessings of grace to his Elect so as one shall succeed and follow the other the same doth he make known in his promise and so doth also execute and fulfill first calling then justifying then glorifying c. Rom. 8.28 29 30. hee doth not save
command us to believe unto life but it must shew us Christ on whom we must pitch our Faith But this the law doth not Christ is only revealed by the Gospel not by the law the Law knows him not Adam in his best estate knew not Christ and yet Adam had then the knowledge of the whole law and of all that the law required The law then not revealing Christ cannot command faith because faith cannot bee without Christ who is the object which it is carried unto Object If it bee said that the law is a Schoole-master to lead us unto Christ and therefore the Law reveales Christ Answ I answer if we take the law for the morall law then its bringing of us to Christ is only occasionall in as much as it drives us from it selfe as making us to see that by it there is no hope of life it curseth all it gives hope of life to none but the Gospel shewing us a salvation to be had in Christ now the Law by the severity of it is an occasion unto us of seeking life where it is to bee found But to bring us to Christ is no proper work of the law It is no otherwise then as if a child knowing the tendernesse of his Fathers love and finding his Schoole-master to be very severe and sharp runnes from the severity of his Master to hide himselfe under his Fathers wing yet not by the teaching or bidding of his Master but his severity is the occasion of it so it is in the point in hand But if we take the Law for the Law Ceremoniall It s true that the Ceremoniall law points out Christ unto us but the Ceremoniall law was Gospel in the substance of it though vailed over with types and shadowes which were to continue till the body was come How the carnall minded Jewes misunderstood those ceremonies it matters not It s certaine that in the primitive institution of them they were ordained for Evangelicall ends and therefore this infringeth not the truth before laid downe namely that the law sc the law of works properly so called doth not reveale Christ and therefore cannot command faith in Christ 4. If faith be commanded not in the Gospel but in the law then unbeliefe is no sinne against the Gospel but only against the law for where there is no commandement or law to bind there is no transgression Rom. 4. so that if the Gospel have no commandement to command us to believe then not to believe is no sinne against the Gospel and if so then those that have had the Gospel preached unto them all their life long shall lie under no more guilt of sinne then those that never had any more then the law only 5. If our calling be by the Gospel not by the law then the commandement which commands faith is a commandement of the Gospel not of the law our faith is wrought by our calling our calling is by the Gospel Gal. 1.15 2 Thes 2.14 and therefore the commandement of faith is a commandement of the Gospel Object Our calling and Faith also is wrought by the Gospel yet not by the commandement but by the promise Answ It is by the commandement though we exclude not the promise the commandement is indeed made more alluring more drawing by the promise annexed but the very name and terme of calling imports that it is not wrought without the commandement and therefore it is that we have these and the like voyces and commandements of Gods calling unto us Come unto me Return unto me Come out from among them Separate your selves and I will receive you Are not these so many commandements of God and by these the Lord inclines and drawes the heart to come unto him In Esay 55.5 there are the words of God the Father unto Christ Thou shalt call a Nation saith the Father unto him and they shall runne unto thee But what voyce is that by which Christ shall call the Nation that comes unto him The Prophet tells us in vers 1.3 Come to the waters yee that thirst saith Christ Come unto mee and I will make a Covenant with you These commandements backed with promises doe draw and make the Nation so called to come to Christ and runne after him so Jer. 3.22 Return O backsliding I●rael Here 's a commandement and what followes Behold we come unto thee for thou art the Lord our God See therefore how the Lord makes use of the commandement joyned with the promise to draw men unto him Thus it was with those Bretheren Mat. 4.19 21. and with Matthew the Publican whom Christ called from the receit of Custome Matt. 9. Follow me saith Christ to him he said no more but presently hee riseth up and followes him Matth. 9.9 And thus usually Come unto me saith Christ follow me believe on me c. which commandedements being accompanied with a Spirit of grace going with them the soule follows Christ to apprehend that grace to which it is called The summe of this argument is this that if there be a commandement concurring to our calling then there is a commandement concurring to the working of our faith and if our calling be by the Gospel then the commandement by which we are called to faith is a commandement of the Gospel and not of the Law 6. In 1 Ioh. 3.23 This saith the Apostle is his commandement that we believe in the name of his Son Iesus Christ Here is a direct commandement to believe Is this a legall commandement the whole Epistle breathes nothing but a spirit of grace and of the Gospel many passages in the Epistle might be noted for the confirmation thereof but I am loth to spend time in a thing so cleare 7. The commandements of the law wound and kill as it is in 2 Cor. 3.6 they doe not heale nor give life but the commandement of believing doth heale and give life to those that are wounded How many dying soules have been raised to life how many wounded consciences have bin eased and healed by that sweet invitation and drawing commandement of our blessed Saviour Come unto me all yee c Matth. 11.28 This comming is all one with believing Joh. 6.35 and the commandement to come is a commandement to believe and will any say this is a legall commandement then could it never have healed and given life as it hath done for the law woundeth but healeth not The comfort and sweetnesse which is in this invitation shews of what nature it is not legall but Evangelicall In Mark 10.49 when Jesus had called Bartimeus To come unto him those about him speak encouragingly unto him Be of good comfort say they for he calleth thee there is comfort in the very call invitation or command of Christ To come unto him It encourageth us to come it shews us that it is his will we should come unto him and that he is willing to receive such as come and will not cast them away Ioh. 6. But the Law
should have said unto us you have once broken my Covenant and yet if you will at last fulfill my Law which I gave unto you I will yet accept you as just unto life yet we could not have done it the condition was too hard for us to perform If we had been held close to this condition of fulfilling the Law we should have missed of life for ever The Lord therefore seeing and pittying of our infirmity was pleased to propound unto us another condition saying unto us only beleive Beleive on my son trust on my grace and thou shalt be saved herein the Lord hath condescended to our weaknesse taking compassion of our infirmities laying upon us no other burthen but this Beleeve my promise accept my grace and rest upon it and this thy faith shall save thee Thou shalt never perish 3. It serves for comfort to all Gods faithfull ones that have beleived through grace if you have received this first gift if it be given you to beleeve you shall not fail of a second gift even the gift of eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Though your repentance be lesse then to equall the measure of your sins though your obedience be imperfect yea though your faith it selfe be weak also yet if it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfained syncere and sound this your faith is accepted of God and is imputed to you for righteousnesse Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham saith the Apostle Gal. 3.9 Blessed is shee that beleeveth saith the Angell Luke 1.45 and the Son of God comes in as a third witnesse testifying that whosoever beleeveth in him shall not perish but is passed from death to life Iohn 3. Here are three witnesses from heaven and earth all witnessing the blessed estate of such as do beleive Faith is well termed precious faith 1 Pet. 1.2 Pet. 1.1 because it makes us partakers of all the precious blessings of grace which are contained in the Covenant The faithfull are inheritours of all the priviledges which God hath promised to his chosen and therefore it is that they are called heires of promise Heb. 6.17 and heires of blessing 1 Pet. 3.9 You beleevers be exhorted to see and owne your blessednesse take notice of the great things the Lord hath done for you he hath made a covenant with you even a Covenant of peace and blessing and life for ever God is become your God he will be all things unto you and when all helpes under heaven fail you yet from himselfe he will do you good all your sins are forgiven you his spirit is yours to lead you to sanctifie you and to heal the evils that be in you he will uphold you in that state wherein you stand and will keep you that you shall never perish and will at last bring you to a full injoyment of himselfe in his heavenly Kingdome where you shall for ever blesse him and be made blessed by him and shall rejoyce before him with joy unspeakable and glorious pluck up your hearts therefore and be glad lift up your heads strengthen the weak hands and the feeble knees serve the Lord with gladnesse and joyfulnesse of spirit considering the day of our salvation draweth neer though now for a time you may be in heavinesse through manifold temptations and afflictions in this evill world yet faint not you being partakers of that precious faith you have the holy and faithfull God in Covenant with you to love you to blesse you and to save you and yet a little while and he that shall come will come and receive you to himselfe and then you shall fully know what it is to have beleived and to have been in Covenant with God what it is to have God to be your God when you shall see him and enjoy him as he is Only nourish your faith and live by faith make much of this precious grace cherish it by thinking often on the promises and of that grace which hath been shewed upon you from on high study to walke worthy of that mercy received and in so doing wait for the end of your faith the salvation of your soule 4. If faith be the condition of the Covenant then woe to all unbeleevers that go on in their impenitency and unbeleife Their unbeleife deprives them of that good which the Lord hath by his Covenant promised to his people they have no part nor portion in God they are without God without Christ without Covenant without promise without mercy their sins are unpardoned they are under the curse the wrath of God abides upon them there is nothing to take it away from them but if they abide in unbeleif wrath abides upon them for ever There is a wrath wherby God is angry with his own people but that anger lasts but for a little season it is but for a moment Isai 4.7 8. it passeth away and abides not upon them but the unbeleiver hath wrath abiding on him for ever John 3.36 In Iude 5. it is said that God afterwards destroyed those Israelites that beleived not when once they had had the means of grace made known then not beleiving God afterwards destroyed them you that tread in the steps of their unbeleif you are little troubled to thinke what misery is comming upon you as not knowing that you are in danger but you are under wrath your judgement hastneth and your damnation sleepeth not be awakened therefore be thinke your selves and consider what your end will be by your unbeleif you put a bar to exclude your selves from the blessing of life promised to Gods people you thus continuing the Lord neither will nor can save you You will thinke this an hard saying but you will finde it too true God cannot lye Titus 1.2 much lesse can he forswear but God hath sworne this that such shall never enter into his rest Psal 95. and Hebr. 3. ult In Mat. 13. ult It s said Christ did not many great works in his owne country for their unbeleifes sake But in Marke 6.5 it s said hee could not doe them he neither did them nor could do them unbeleif stops the course and diverts the stream of Gods goodnesse from comming unto us Christs usuall speech to those that expected any blessing from him was this According to your faith be it unto you faith makes all things possible Marke 6.23 It will reverse the sentence of death which is passed upon us and bring us back unto life but unbeleife makes it impossible so that we cannot be saved The Lord can do nothing against his own counsell and will and he hath concluded this with himselfe to save none but such as beleive and that whosoever beleeveth not shall perish all you unbeleevers consider this your unbeleefe will bee your destruction Secondly Is there such a work of faith in bringing us into Covenant with God and in enabling us to walk in Covenant with him 1. This serves to direct all the people of God
how to live and walke before God look at your selves as such as have God in Covenant with you to blesse you with all blessings meet and expedi●nt for you whether they be blessings of this life or that which is to come you are no more strangers and forreiners you are not aliens from the Covenant or common-wealth of Israel All the good which God hath promised to his Israel belongs to you Live therefore a life of faith resting upon the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you Naturall men live by sence and reason live you by faith in Gods Covenant and promise and there is much use to be made of this consideration 1. In case we have sinned and done things that we should not and thereby have grieved the Lord as David did of whom it is said that the thing that David had done displeased the Lord yet herein make use of our faith trusting still to his grace and mercy for forgivenesse according to his Covenant we must not now fly away from God and stand afar off or cast away our hope as if we had lost our God and had no more part or portion in him but still beleive that we renewing our Repentance before him he will still be our God and love us still and will be mercifull to our iniquities Now is a time to put forth faith in Gods promise we must remember we are not under that hard condition of workes but under the condition of Faith It s the weaknesse and sinfull infirmity of many of Gods people who walk in much discouragement of spirit because of some failings which they see in themselves by which they become uncomfortable to themselvs and to others when yet their conscientious walking and tendernes is manifest to all such a discouraged spirit might well become a childe of the Law that is under the condition of Workes but it becomes not such as are under the condition of Faith Hath the Lord said that if his people sin against him after hee hath taken them into Covenant with himselfe he will cast them off and acknowledge them no more See what Samuel speaks to the children of Israel in 1 Sam. 12.19 20. Ye have indeed sinned a great sin and done all this wickednesse yet feare not depart not from following the Lord for the Lord will not forsake his people The Lord know●● our frailty and remembers we are but dust and therefore hath told us that he will spare us as a father spareth his son that s●rveth him Mal. 3.17 and will be mercifull to our sins If we were or could be without sin we should not have needed such promises of forgivenesse but when the Lord tooke us into Covenant with himselfe he knew we should still need daily mercy and compassion to heale our backslidings and foreseeing our need of such promises he hath made them knowne unto us that we might live by them looking up unto him by faith in the fence of our daily infirmities for a gracious acceptance of us and forgivenesse of our sins 2. In case we want any blessing suppose some speciall grace to enable us to walke more fruitfully in our particular places and callings look herein at the Covenant as a storehouse full of all rich blessings and make use of faith which is the condition of the Covenant set that aworke and draw out of this fountain as much as we need if we want wisedome boldnesse meeknesse temperance remember by what means we must receive them we receive the spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 beleive this promise therefore wherein the Lord hath said he will give the Holy Ghost to them that desire him Luke 11.13 This is the way the Saints have taken David when he found his heart defiled with those lusts what course took he to get it cleansed from these impurities he flyes to God by the prayer of faith desiring to have a clean heart created in him when the Church found her self shut up under deadnesse and hardnesse of heart they fly for help to Gods Covenant Thou art our father and we are thy people Breake not thy covenant with us Isai 63. and 64. Ier. 14. 3. In case we be troubled with feares of Apostacy and backsliding as thinking though we have begun well yet we shall never be able to continue Persecutions discouragements temptations are so many so violent that we thinke we shall never stand out against them here also live by faith God will give an issue to all our temptations in the mean time commit our soules to God in well doing and beleeve as Paul did that he will deliver you from every evill work and preserve you blamelesse to his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. If Satan annoy with his temptations say as Jehoshua did The Lord rebuke thee O Satan Zach. 3. and remember the promise The Lord will shortly tread him under our feet Rom. 16. 4 In case of any service or duty to be performed unto God remember his Covenant I will make you able to keepe my judgements and to doe them Ezek. 36.27 In 1 Chron. 15.26 it is said God helped the Levites in bearing the Arke so will he help us to undergoe the burthen of that work which is too heavy for us if we rest upon him by faith if we have a word of faith to assure us that the work to be done is for the generall Gods worke and that it is particularly required of us as Our works a worke of our calling we have then good warrant to depend upon his help he hath called us he hath sent us to the work and therefore he will be with us according to that speech of his to Gideon in Judges 6.14 16. I have sent thee and therefore I will be with thee This is written not for him only but for us also that being called to any ministration or service we might by faith look for the same presence of God with us the same assistance as he had Many other particulars might be named but these may suffice to give a short direction how to live by faith in the promise and Covenant of God according to the severall occasions which befall us 2. As we must depend upon God by faith for all good things which the Covenant promiseth so we must remember the other part of the Covenant That God will be a God over us as well as a God to blesse us and therefore here our care must be to advance the Lord on high that it may be seen by our subjection unto him that we doe acknowledge him to be our God above us and over us he hath humbled himself to take such underlings as we are into Covenant with himselfe and hath thereby advanced us above our selves our duty is to set up him that hath abased himselfe for our sakes and to humble our selves to walke with our God Micah 6.8 It is said of Abraham that by his faith he gave glory to God if we be the children of Abraham let