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A57966 The covenant of life opened, or, A treatise of the covenant of grace containing something of the nature of the covenant of works, the soveraignty of God, the extent of the death of Christ ... the covenant of grace ... of surety or redemption between the by Samuel Rutherford ... Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661. 1655 (1655) Wing R2374; ESTC R20879 369,430 394

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3.13 Rev. 21.1 Isa. 65.17 and they shall be above the heavens that are when the mysticall body shall be perfected yea and the dust into which the bodies of the Saints are resolved keeps a spirituall Covenant relation to God in Christ As Exod. 3.6 Mat. 22.32 Joh. 6.39 Rom. 8.21 22 23. for no joint or part of the body but it must share of Covenant glory We look little to any thing but to have and injoy the dead lump and body of Gold dead lands without Christ. See Hos. 2.18.22 Ezek. 34.25.27 Ezek. 36.29 Lev. 26.6 Psal. 37.9 11 29. 1 Tim. 4.8 Heb. 13.5 6. Math. 6.25 26. Psal. 34.10 O fair inheritance 4. As to the second which is the main controversie to injoy life and being is the substance of the act no sin Men contraveen a Law to be so and so born to wit in sin for it s forbidden by a Law But to be born and live is no sin but by order of nature before Originall sin Nor is it forbidden more to man to be born and live then its forbidden to beasts nor to eat sleep wake then to them So neither is it commanded by a Law to die but it is commanded and commended to die well to fall asleep in Christ 1 Thes. 4.14.16 to be faithfull to the death Acts 7.60 Rev. 2.10 Rev. 14.13 2. The Elect who are born heirs of wrath as others Eph. 2.3 And all the Reprobate should kill themselves or be killed from the birth if to live and eat were sin in it self But only the Lord of life and death and his Minister the Magistrate hath power to take away life and being no man can be his own burrio But if it were sin in it self to live they ought to expire and restore an usurped life which they possesse malâ fide to the owner the Lord as a theef is oblidged to restore stollen goods 3. The dominion of Reprobats over the creatures is a part of the good Image of God Gen. 1.26 27. and they breath live ride sail and are no more then the Elect to lay these aside then they are to lay aside the naturall knowledge of God by which they are to glorifie God as God Rom. 1.19 20 21. Rom. 2.14 15. Act. 14.16 17. Now the Reprobates have not utterly lost the Image of God as to know there is a God to honour their parents to hurt no man 4. This opinion looks the rather like a fancie that it is a temptation in weak ones under a sad desertion Sathan riding upon their Melancholie a complexion not sanctified usefull to Sathan and if sanctified a seat of mortification and humble walking for they judge it sin to eat and drink and sleep they having no right thereunto but so they have no right to live and are oblidged to kill themselves and upon the same ground it was sin to Adam to speak to answer God to breath to hear the news of the blessed seed which all are acts of life and so acts of sin and upon the same ground that they cannot perform these without sin they should not pray for in praying they cannot but take the Name of God in vain For we are not to abstaine from a duty because of the sinfulnesse which adheres to the duty by reason of our corruption for in Christ the sinfulnesse is pardoned and the duty accepted 5. It necessarily must follow if it be sin to eat because the non-converted have no right spirituall in Christ to bread the converted may spoil by their grounds all the non-converted of their goods houses gold gardens vineyards lands and upon the same ground for the crime of non-regeneration they must also deprive them of their lives and kill them For they have alike right that is no right these men being Judges to either life or goods And so Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self must be meant of the converted neighbour but with fire and sword all other neighbours may be killed and spoiled and so there should be no stealing no oppressing no crushing of the widow the stranger the fatherlesse the weaker not grind the faces of the poor though their Redeemer be strong contrair to the Scripture Prov. 23.11 Jer. 50.33 34. Psal. 94.5 6 7 8. Psal. 14.4 Exo. 22.26 27. Isa. 3.12 13 14 15. Mic. 2.3 and so it were lawfull to take Crowns Kingdomes inheritances lands dignitie and honour from all the unregenerate Princes powers and rulers on earth to cut off with the sword all the heathen Nations who as yet know not Christ and it were lawfull for the regenerate sons and brethren to kill and spoil Father Mother Brethren Sisters Kings Potentates Countrey-men strangers Orphans exiled captives prisoners sick weak imprisoned all infants that are by nature the heirs of wrath upon this ground the converted ones judge all non-converts to be void of all due right to life or goods and so in these men the societies Churches of Christ must cease Obj. These who injoy that of which they deserve to be deprived have no due right to that of which they deserve to be deprived but are usurpers and so sin But all the non-regenerated are such or they who use that to which they have no right do sin in the act of using it Ans. 1. They who injoy that of which they deserve to be deprived they sin and have no due right to use it Is not universally true They who injoy that which they may and ought by their own private power restore such as ill conquished goods They sin in using that true Prov. 3.27 Exod. 22.26 27. Luke 19.8 It s a sin to withhold the rayment though laid in pawnd which should cover the poor mans skin in the night and they have no right to injoy that But they who injoy that what ever it be of which by sin they deserve to be deprived they have no due right to that it is denyed For if it be life being eating sleeping and such things as only can be taken away by a judiciall power and by God the Lord of life and death and cannot be taken away by themselves for it is lawfull for no man to punish himself and take away his own life nor by any other except for capitall crimes they have due providentiall right to keep and injoy all such things untill the same power that gave them remove them nor do they sin in using them And it is most dangerous to say that Devils and the damned in Hell who dishonour the Majesty of God by their living and being and so by sin deserve to be annihilated and deprived of their being do sin in that they live and are not annihilated and that all the Elect before their conversion sin in that they injo● being and life A judge sentenceth a man to die for killing his father within 24. houres but by invincible providence he is rescued out of the hand of the Magistrate and lives diverse years after the sentenced
Covenant of Redemption is explained in three eternal acts 1. Designation of one 2. Decree and destination 3. Delectation in the work p. 302 303. The attributes of God declared herein p. 304.305 The Fathers eternall delighting in the Son 309 307 The strength of Gods love to man p. 306.307.308 CHAP. VIII The differences between the Covenant of Suretyship made with Christ and the Covenant of Reconciliation made with sinners 2. The conjunction of the Covenants 3. How the promises are made to the Seed The place Gal. 3.16 opened 4. Christ suffered and acted ever as a publike head p. 308 309 310. CHAP. IX The 13. Argument from the necessity of Gods call 2. Of Typicall sprinkling of the blood of the Covenant and of the Testament The place Heb. 13.20 opened Of the place Heb. 7.22 the act of Suretyship the assurance of our state p. 316 317 318. How the promises are made to Christ p. 317 The peculiar nature of Christs Testament as such a Testament p 318 319 Of the Suretyship of Christ. p. 323 324 Punishment suffered by the Surety can remove punishment from the guilty man but cannot remove formally the inheren● guilt and how this was done by Christ. p. 323 324 Christs undertaking for all p. 326.327 Of the place Prov 8.22 23 24 c. p. 306 307 308 327 Arminius yeelds a Covenant between the Father and the Son p. 327 328 And how for Jehovah cannot promise a seed to Christ as a reward of his work by their way having no Soveraigne power over the will p. 328 329 330 Of such as are his seed O● the Covenant of the Lord with David p. 836 837 Ps. 89. opened ibid. p. 338 339. Mic. 5.2 p 339 CHAP. X. Christ procures the Gospel to be Preached to Reprobates but undertakes not for them A necessary distinction of the Covenant as Preached according to the approving will of God and as acted upon the heart according to the decree of God The place Jer. 31 Heb. 8. This is my Covenant opened p. 339 340 341 342. The distinction of the approving wil of God of his wil of pleasure p. 342.343 Antinonians confound the efficient cause of the obedience and the objective cause or the rule of the Word p. 345 346 The purpose and scope of the Holy Ghost is not Heb. 8. and Jer. 31. to speak or treat of the Covenant of Grace as Preache● in the 〈◊〉 but as acted upon the heart that so Christ may be advance● as a more spirituall and effectuall teacher and Priest then Moses Aaron c. p. 346 347 348 Which two are confounded by Antinom●ans CHAP. XI Of the promises made to Christ in the Covenant of Mediation p. 349 350. A twofold justification of Christ p. 349 Christ had a promise of influences Adam had none at all p. 350 351 Our mistake touching comforts and duties p. 351 Christs satisfaction p. 351 352 We may flee to the Covenant becau●e of Christ p. 352 353 Rods are booked in the Covenant o● Works Deut. 28. and in the Covenant of Grace to both the Covenanters Psal. 89.30 31 c. p. 353 CHAP. XII The condition and properties of the Covenant of Redemption p. 355 356. No such condition is required of Christ as of Adam p. 356 The paying of the price of blood and dying is the formall condition of the Covenant of Redemption upon the part of Christ p. 356 357 The holy qualifications of Christ in the Covenant of Suretyship p. 357 358 These qualifications how to be followed by us p. 354 Christs Grace of headship what force it may have upon us p. 360 361 The properties of the Covenant of Suretyship 1. Freedom 2. Graciousnesse 3. Eternitie p. 361 362 363 The exposition of that place 1 Cor. 15.28 p. 3●3 364 Christ even after the universall judgement a mediatorie Head King and Lord p. 366 367 368 Errata Pag. 2. lin ●9 read Immortality p. 15. l. 19. r. no-beings p. 17. l. 29. r. no-beings p. 2 r. l. 1 2. r. God therefore p. 22. l. 31. r. God it p. 28. l. 26. r. Isa. 42. p. 39. l. 10. r. abiding Life p. 43. l. 24. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 51. l. 27. r. is in the substance p. 53. l. 2. r. no grinding of p. 55. l. 16. r. floor p. 70. l. ● r. literally p. 92. l. 10 11. r. decreed p. 96. l. 5. r. ground p. 103. l. 13. r. as symbolick p. 104. l. 36. r. that the. p. 134. l. 14. r. but cannot p. 136. l. 21. r. here p. 140. l. 13. r. seated no discursive p. 141. l. 33. r. gnawing p. 160. l. 26. r Menochius p. 166. l. 26. in ma● r. spectasset p. 168 l. 17. r. it is not only p. 169. l. 29. r. head p. 186. l. 33. r. Gal. 14. p. 195. l. 1. r. thereof p. 201. l. 20. r. partaker p. 206. l. 11. r. have it so p. 218. l. 29. r steep for sharp p. 221. l. 11. r. not only not quarrell p. 239 l. 15. r. depends not upon p. 249 l. 1. r. Arminius p. 251. l. 29. r. acceptation p. 269. l. 26. r. arts p. ● l. 3. r. who are not dead to opinions p. 282. l. 14. gave thee p. 299. l. 29. r. in his hand p. 309. l. 36. dele Joh. 8. p. 314. l. 24. r. are p. 316. l. 10. r. he that said p. 333. l 18. r. agrees to be p. 344. l. 15 r. and will have THE COVENANT OF LIFE OPENED CHAP. I. What is to be spoken of the COVENANT of LIFE shall be reduced to these Heads 1. The nature and differences of the Covenant of Works and that of Grace 2. The Mediator of the Covenant of Life 3. The application of Covenant-Promises 4. Of Covenant-Influences of Grace under the Gospel Of the latter especially of the last not much hath been spoken by any in a practicall way CHAP. II. Propositions touching ADAMS Covenant-state THe Apostle 1 Cor. 15.47 The first man is of the earth earthie the second man is the Lord from Heaven speaking of the two eminently publick persons the noble heads of great Families makes the condition of the first Adam to be animal and earthly that of the second Adam to be spiritual and Heavenly And without doubt to be born of the house and seed of the second Adam John 1.12 13. must darken the glory of the first birth so as there is no great ground to boast of the skin and empty lustre of Nobility and good blood Although when the creature called I and self do creep in to lodge in a poor feeble piece of clay that clay so lustred must be some God The flower and choisest of Adam his Paradise-state is an earthly condition as is evidenced by his eating Gen. 2.9 16. sleeping 21 his being placed in a Garden to dresse it 8 16 17 his marriage 23 24. his Lordship over birds beasts fishes Gen. 1.28 But in the second Adam besides all these
by the payer no more a satisfaction for that man nor for Devils Is too near to the nature and to being a part of the satisfaction If one pay a summe that fully exhausts the debt of such a broken man upon condition the broken man say Amen to the paying thereof otherwise it shall be as not payed he must take up the summe again if the broken man refuse to say Amen to it for if he take it not up again but it be payed and fully satisfie for and exhaust the debt the mans debt is payed and the Creditor in justice cannot exact one farthing from the broken man Now nothing given to the Justice of God by way of satisfaction for the sins of unbeleevers was ever repeated or taken back again by Christ. Nay but say they the ransome was not payed at all for Judas but only upon condition that he beleeve but he never beleeved and therefore it was never payed for Judas Answ. This is that we say that Christ gave no reall ransome at all for the sins of Judas by way of satisfaction But they say that there is as well a ransome payed for all the sins of Iudas finall unbeleef excepted to free him in justice from eternall stroaks as for all the sins of Peter to free him only it is not accepted of by the Creditor because Judas by faith assented not unto the bargain But assenting or not assenting accepting or not accepting that are posterior to the payment are nothing up or down to the compleatnesse and perfection of the satisfaction made for the exhausting of Justice for Justice receives not two satisfactions or ransomes for Judas one upon the Crosse from Christ another in Hell from Iudas yea and it must follow that reall payment was made to Justice for all the sins of Iudas upon the Crosse and that he suffers for none of them in Hell but for only finall unbeleef which is no sin against the Covenant of Works and the Justice thereof but only and formally against the Covenant of Grace so that as yet satisfying of Divine Justice for sins must be halfed and parted between Christ and Iudas which the Scripture teaches not Also the Father either accepts the ransome of Christ because it is intrinsecally and of it self sufficiently satisfactory or because Iudas does beleeve it is so The latter cannot be said for beleeving adds nothing to the intrinsecall sufficiency of the satisfaction as not believing diminishes nothing from the sufficiency thereof Yea and so the Fathers formall reason of accepting of the satisfaction of Christ must be terminated upon our poor act of believing whereas the formal ground of the acceptation thereof is the intrinsecall excellency and worth of the Sacrifice being an offering of a sweet smelling savour to God Eph. 5.2 And because he offered the ransome of the blood of God-man of the Prince of life Act. 20.28 1 Cor. 2.8 and offered himself to God Eph. 5.25 26. Heb. 9.14 Mat. 20.28 1 Tim. 2.6 Rev. 1.5 nor is there any sufficiency in his death from the worth of beleeving And the reason why he accepts it for Peter not for another is the election of grace It is true the blood is a price refuseable but it is this way refuseable because the Lord might have followed a Law-way with Adam and all his sons and have denyed to give his Son a Ransome for us but it is not refuseable because of any insufficiency in the Ransome Now faith is to satisfaction as the approximation of and the laying on of dry fewell to the fire which is only a condition of burning but the fire is the formall cause of burning Yea if we speak properly faith is not so much as a condition without the which offended Justice is not satisfied nor is it a condition by any Scripture of the world without the which God laid not our iniquities on Christ for whether we beleeve or not God laid our iniquities upon him and made him sin for us Isa. 53.6 2 Cor. 5.21 Therefore by necessity of Justice he must accept that Ransome intrinsecally so sufficient which did restore more glory to God then the sins of all for whom Christ died took from him Nor is it imaginable to say that any act of obedience or beleeving can perfect the satisfaction of Christ and make it sufficient yea or causatively make it ours For God by no necessity of Justice but of his own free pleasure requireth faith as a condition of our actuall reconciliation for beside that he might have required any other act of obedience as love he might have accepted the Ransome without inquiring any act of obedience on our part as the Lord bestowed a calme Sea and deliverance from shipwrack upon the Idolatrous Sea-men upon the very act of casting Ionah in the Sea without the intervention of any saving faith on their part As a gracious Prince may send a pardon to free a condemned Malefactor from death and may command that it be valid in Law for him without the mans knowledge and far more without his acceptance thereof upon his knees especially since by a speciall paction between the Father and the Son he restored abundantly more Glory to God by suffering for all for whom he died then they took from God by their sins and that restitution was made to Justice without the interveening of any act of the creatures obedience But the truth is it is much to be doubted whether they who hold such a satisfaction to be given of God for the sins of all Elect and Reprobate but so as it shall not be valid in Law nor effectuall to quiet Justice but they must all suffer eternall vengeance and perform personall satisfaction in Hell to Justice except there interveen an act of obedience of the creature to make it effectuall do really and sincerely acknowledge against Socinians a reall satisfaction and compensation made to offended Justice by Christ For how is it reall and not rather scenicall and formall which may and should be null and in vain if the creature make it not reall by beleeving And especially if God out of his grace which is absolutely free work in us the condition of beleeving Can God give his Son as a Ransome for us upon condition that we beleeve if he himself absolutely work the condition in us They will not admit this CHAP. V. God intended a Law-dispensation but for a time 2. Adam how he was ordained for a Law-life 3. How predestinated to Glory in Christ how not 4. That the Heathens have no more Universall Grace then Devils 5. No ground for such grace IT is apparent that God intended not a Law-dispensation in Paradise to stand for ever For 1. nothing is spoken of Adam after the fall but of his procreating of children of the Patriarchs of Adams dying and of his actings before the fall the place of Paradice being scarce well known which sayes the Lord had a farther design to lay aside
the Lord had followed Adams obedience with no reward at all For man as a creature owes himself to God and as sweetly and pithily Anselme saith as a redeemed one I owe my self and more then my self to thee because thou gave thy self who art so farre more then my self for me and thou promises thy self to me Now God who is more and greater then Adam promised himself to be enjoyed by Adam if he should continue in obedience For what can the highest goodnesse sayeth he give to one that loves it but it self 3. If God of justice give Adam life Adam might compell God to pay what he oweth him else he should be unjust But the creature can lay no necessitie on the Creator either to work without himself nor can he cause him to will 4. The proper work of merite saith great Bradwardine and of him that works must go before the wages in time or in order of nature And if the worker receive its operation and working for wadge from God first and by his vertue and help continue in operation and working he cannot condignely merit at the hand of God but is rather more in Gods debt after his working then before his working because he bountifullie receives more good from God then before especially because he gives nothing proper of his own to God but gives to God his own good But no man first acts for God for God is the first actor and mover in every action and motion As that saith Who gave first to the Lord and it shall be recompensed him 5. If this was yesterday just that life eternall is due to Adam for his work before God made it just and due then from Eternitie and before any decree of God it was just and due Certainlie God upon the same reason was debtour to make such a Covenant that was just before he made it just And this is no Covenant of God for God not making the justice of the Covenant and the ju●t connexion between work and wadge he cannot be the Author of the Covenant But neither is Adam the Author of the justice nor of the just Covenant Upon the same ground it was then an everlasting justice without and before God from Eternitie Non datur justum prius primo justo 6. If God did more for Adam then he can recompence God for it as the Father hath done to the Son then he could not merit at the hand of God But God did more to Adam in giving to him being faculties mind will affections power habites his blessed Image then Adam can never be in a condition in which he can recompence God or give him more annuall and usurie in his acting of obedience then the stock was he received in proportion As the Son can never give the Father in recompence so much or the captive ransomed from death can never give to his ransome payer who bought him so much as the one and the other shall no more be under an obligation and debt of love and service to father and ransomer then to a stranger that they never knew Nor could Adam thus be freed of God so as he should be owing nothing to him If any say God may freely forgive all this obligation and debt To which Bradwardine Answers well 1. The forgiving of the debt when the debtor hath nothing to pay is a greater debt taken on 2. God saith he may forgive so in regard of actuall obligation that he is not oblidged ad aliquid faciendum sub poena peccati to do any thing under the pain or punishment of sin as the hireling is obleiged to work when he hath made a Covenant to work and so we are not oblidged to do as much as we can for God But in regard of habituall obligation God cannot forgive the debt that the reasonable creature owes to God for so he might dispence with this that the reasonable creature owe no obedience to God suppose he should command it which is impossible They seeme therefore with eyes of flesh to look upon God who say that God by necessitie of justice must punish sin yea that the most High cannot be God except he punish sin and that he should not be God if all his Lawes imposed upon men were only promissorie and void of all threatnings What could not God have said eat not of the tree of knowledge for if ye eat not your obedience shall be rewarded with life eternall and no more might he not have laid aside all threatning What Scripture or reason teacheth to say that God if he create a reasonable creature and under a morall dependencie which it hath and must have of God then must God by necessitie of nature punish the sinner yea so as if he punish not he should not be God nor just but must fall from his naturall dominion except he make penall laws and so he should not be God except he say to Adam if thou eat thou shalt die or shalt be punished for eating but this is not proven by one word except this the reasonable creature is not nor cannot be subject to God Creator except God punish the sinner But that is denyed Adam should have had a Morall dependance upon God and God should have been God and essentially just if sin had never come into the World and if God had kept Adam under a Morall Law as he did the Elect Angels who never felt or knew the fruit of a Morall Law broken and transgressed And God if he imposed any penall Law upon the Elect Angels as penall which shall be an hard work to prove yet had a naturall dominion over the Elect Angels and suppose no Law but only a rewarding and remunerative Law had been over their heads should God be no God in that case and if any deny that God hath a perfect dominion over the Elect Angels he is not worthy to be refuted 2. Shew me in all the Old or New Testament any penall Law of active obedienc● as penall imposed upon the man Christ or where is it written If the Man Christ sin he shall eternally die I tremble at such expressions Is the Lord therefore not the Lord and hath the Lord fallen from his naturall dominion over his Son the Man Christ Or 3 will any man deny but the Lord might justly have laid upon all men and upon the Elect Angels a Law only remunerative not penall at all a Law only with the promise of a reward and void of all threatning of death first or second or any other punishment and yet he should have been the Lord and had a naturall dominion over Angels the Man Christ and all mankind 3 Suppose the Lord had never imposed the Law penall forbidding the sin against the Holy Ghost upon the Elect beleevers nor any other penall Law but by vertue of the most sufficient ransome of the Blood of God payed for man he had made them now after the fall as the
we have pleased him once and beside that peace a scumme and a froath smoakes up unsensible in the heart we are profitable to God it would be the worse with him if he wanted our prayers and service but had the Lord any missing of Heaven and of Angels and Men in these infinite and innumerable ages of duration that went before any created being When he was upon these infinite and self-delighting thoughts solacing himself in that infinite substantial fairenesse and love his Son Christ Prov. 8.89.30 2. You can give nothing to God Creator of all but it must be either an uncreated God-head but he who perfectly possesseth himself will not thank you for that or your gift most be a created thing But how wide is his universall dominion can you give to one that of which he was absolute Lord before all the Roses are his all the Vineyards all the Mountains he is the owner of the South and the North of the East and the West and infinite millions of possible Worlds beyond what Angels and all Angels can number for eternitie of ages are in the bosome of his vaste Omnipotencie He can create them if hee will And what ye give to another it was out of his dominion but all things are in his dominion for who spoiled him of what he had David blessed the Lord when the people gave for the Temple excusing himself and the people that they took on them to give to the great Lord-giver 1 Chro. 29.11 Thine O Lord is the greatnesse and the power and the glorie and the victorie and the majestie for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine thine is the Kingdome O Lord and thou art exalted as head above all vers 12. Both riches and honour come of thee and thou reignest and in thy hand it is to make great and to give strength unto all 14. But who am I and what is my people that we should be able so willingly to offer after this sort for all things come of thee and of thine own have we given thee Hence none can give to Gd. 1. Because he is JEHOVAH the Eternall God then he gives all and nothing can be given to him 2. Because of the greatnesse and infinitenesse of God Giving is an adding to him to whom we give But nothing can be added to him for thine is the greatnesse the power and the majestie 3. Nothing can be given to him who is universall and full Lord and Possessour of heaven and earth and all things therein for all that is in the heaven c are thine 4. Nothing can be given to him who is so Lord that he is exalted as Head Prince and King above all created Kings and their dominions over their own 5. But all the goods of the Subjects are the Princes or the Commonwealths The Jurists distinguish as the Schoolman Theod. Smising Tom. 1. de Deo tractat 3. disp 4. q. 5. fig. 65. a two-fold jus jus altum jus bassum The Prince and Commonwealth have a sort of eminent right to the goods of the Subjects to dispose of them for the publick good as they may demolish a castle belonging to a private man in the frontiers of the enemies land because it hurts the country and may be better made use of by enemies against them for the countrey And they may compell him to sell it but this hinders not but every Subject hath a dominion and right to his own goods to use them at his pleasure which the Prince cannot do Ahab the King hath no right nor dominion over the vineyard of Naboth to compell him to sell it or give it against his will to his Prince For the earthly Prince nay the man himself the just Proprietor before men cannot bear that so as it may be said of God vers 12 both riches and honour come of thee and thou reignest over all For God created the being of gold and of every thing that we can give to God which no earthly Prince can do 6. Nothing can be given to him in whose hand is power and might and to make great and to give strength For 1. Riches and things we give are of him 2. Power might and strength to give either Physicall to bear a burden to his house Or 2 Morall a willing mind and heart to give is in his hand Or 3. A mixt power the being of the act of giving is his v. 7. Of thine own we give thee Can we give to any that which is his own already Can ye give to a Crowned King over such a Kingdome his own Crown Can ye give to the righteous owner of his own lands his own Garden and his own vineyard in gift but every being created is the Lords 8. Saith David v. 15. We are strangers before thee and sojourners as all our fathers were And that saith the Lord is the only Heritor and we but Tennents at will and strangers both fathers and sons though for five hundreth or a thousand years fathers and sons have lineally and in heritage before men possessed such lands yet before thee saith he we and our fathers have but Tennent-right and are strangers from thee And what can a meer stranger to life and being give to the just Heritor and Lord of life and being 9. And our dayes saith David on the earth are as a shadow and there is none abiding life and being is a shadow of being and God is the only first excellent being and suppose we should give life and being to and for him it is but a borrowed shadow that we give him And we are not lords of our own being we have not absolute right over our selves to give our selves to him If Do●g will not give himself to God and act for God Psal. 51.2 God shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place and root thee out of the land of the living Job 27.21 the east wind of God carrieth him away and as a storm hurleth him out of his place Ye shall bestow life and being worse then upon God God shall make morter of thee O fool who makes a god of borrowed I great I and poor Nothing-self Nay if there be a Pronoun in thee O let it be this Oh if my separation from Christ and the blotting ●f my name out of the Book of Life and my heaven might be a foot●tool to heighten the glory the high glory of the Lord in the salva●ion of many 2. This Pronoun self and mine is a proud usurper against God Was he not an Atheist or a churle and his name folly who said 1 Sam. 25.11 and breathed out so many my's Shall I take my bread and my waters and my flesh which I killed for my hearers and give it to men whom I know not whence they be And he was as madde a fool who thus speaks Isa. 10.13 By the strength of my hand have I done it and by my wisdom
for I am ●rudent I removed the bounds of the people 14. And my hand hath found as a nest the riches of the people and as one gathereth ●ggs that are left so have I gathered all the earth and there was ●one that moved the wing or opened the mouth or peeped This 〈◊〉 the fool-axe boasting against him that heweth with it And ano●her fool said Make an agreement with me by a present and come out to me Isa. 36.16 And this mad-nothing is above God chap. 37.10 Let not thy God in whom thou trustest deceive thee The Tyrant of Egypt the great Dragon that lyeth in the midst of the river said My river is mine own and I have made it for my self Ezek. 29.3 God made the Sea and all the Rivers There be three Pronouns in the mouth of another proud Monarch Dan. 4.30 And the King spake and said Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom by the might of my power and the honour of my Majesty So soon as there falls from the great Lord of being a chip or shadow of created being especially where being is rationall and under a Law there follows and results the Lord withdrawing a proud supposed I and a vain conceit of self and a dream of God-head comes in with borrowed being And therefore created sinlesse self is to be denyed Adam denyed not himself and thought in his sick imagination he should be like God knowing good and evill Gen. 3. Christ the more excellent Adam pleased not that noble self Rom. 15.3 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He denyed himself as man as a gracious meer man to be God or more then a man And this self-deniall is in elect Angels who blush and are sinlesly ash●med of self and cover their faces with wings before shining Infinitnesse of Glory and proclaim him thrice Holy holy holy Isa. 6.2 3. And who knowes not we owne grace as our own my prayers my faith my holiness my tears as if grace had a relish from self not from God but Paul 1 Cor. 15.10 Not I but the grace of God not my grace in me that was with me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. But is there no paction between GOD and the creature Surely we must say that the covenant between GOD and Adam is of another nature yea and promises also then these that are between man and man for there is proper giving and taking betwixt the creature 2. The proper covenants between man and man require that both parties be free and independent one of another there may interveen a jus a right and a debt upon the promissor to him to whom the promise is made Omne promissum ex ore fideli cadit in debitum Jurists say there is no proper binding Covenants between the father and the son the lord and the servant for the son and the servant are not lords of themselves nor sui juris The father by no paction can remove the foundation of the debt of nature that the son oweth to the father for impossible it is but if such a man be son to such a man but he owe to his father as to an instrument quod sit vivat being and living and the son can not satisfie by paying the father for that summe and the father can not cancell the band nor give him an acquittance Far lesse can any recompence the Lord for life and being The fallen Angels and damned in hell and all wicked men are in the Lords Compt-book everlasting debters to him for being But God who is more then a Father to whom men are but painted fathers may thus farre loose the bond as he may command the son to sacrifice the father as well as once he commanded the father Abraham to offer up his son to God But God cannot resigne his right that he hath over the creature to a creature because he cannot leave off to be Creator and so cannot lay aside or make over Creator-right jus Creatoris to any 2. Say that a creature had a jus or right over the Creator it is either an uncreated right or a created right so to pursue God by Law as to cause him do him justice it cannot be an uncreated right for that were near to blasphemie For no created head can bear the royall Crown of the King of Ages If it be a created right this created right must be under the dominion of him who is universall Lord of all then may the Lord make use of it at his pleasure then may not the man make use of it at his pleasure for an absolute dominion of one and the same thing cannot be in the hands of two absolute Lords who may have contradictory desires concerning the same thing such as the holy Lord and sinfull men often are Let us correct the bold pleadings and the daring charges that our vain hearts put upon the Lord Why dost thou strive against him saith Elihu Job 33.13 for he gives not account of any of his matters Men dare say when they are under the vengeance of ordinary sufferings The wayes of the Lord are not equal Ezek. 33.10 If our transgressions and our sins be upon us and we pine away in them how shall we then live But upon whom should sins and transgressions and the punishment thereof be if not upon the carcases of the Authors Will ye raise letters to summond him Where is the judge Where is the Tribunall But he promised so and so But this is not the Question of strict justice that saith something against the veracity and faithfulnesse of God but nothing against the justice But neither doth a promise as a promise raise a plea of unjustice against the holy and glorious Lord suppose he should not fulfill his promise For 1. A paction by promise creats no equality of justice between thing and thing between wage and work otherwise he that is called to the Vineyard and labours from the third hour hath a just plea for he should have more wages then a penny which he gets who labours but one hour But the Lord makes not the equality or proportion between much labouring for many hours and the quantity and degree of the wage his r●le But the Lord pleads the free Covenant for his standing rule Mat. 20.13 Friend I do thee no worng didst thou not agree with me for a penny And vers 15. Is it not lawfull for me to do what I will with mine own Hence read our sickly queroulus nature 1. Naturally we argue from much working and would conclude God much running long swea●ing and pains in keeping the Covenant of Works should binde God except he be unjust to give me as many ounces and pound weights of Glory everlasting as I have fasted moments and told over prayers upon beads and uttered sighs Wherefore have we fasted and thou sees● not We work and keep the Covenant of Works but God payes us not our wage Though
and his seed What mercy My Covenant shall stand fast with him Hence they are called the sure mercies of David Isa. 55. The Lord following the seed of the Godly with real mercies so that it cannot be called the favour of a ceremony and instituted or positive priviledge belonging only to the Jews as that his seed is blessed Psal. 37.26 Psal. 112.2 This mercy must be taken away either in mercie or in wrath but that a real mercy of a blessing should be taken away in mercy except a spirituall mercy of saving grace in Christ were given in place thereof cannot be said far lesse hath it any truth that a real mercy can be removed in wrath from Infants in Jesus Christ in whom the Nations are blessed And we see Deut. 28. the blessing of an observed Covenant and the curses of a broken Covenant are extended to the fruit of the body to the sons and the daughters v. 418.32 Job 21.19 Job 29.14 Job 18.15 16 17. And that this is not a New Testament dispensation who can say And that outward positive favours are bestowed on Infants is clear 1. That Christ laid his hands on them and blessed them making them a fixed copy of the indwellers of his Kingdom 2 The promises of the Covenant are made to them Act. 2.39 3. They are clean and holy by Covenant holinesse 1 Cor. 7.14 which cannot be meant of being born of the marriage-bed For Paul Rom. 11.16 saith the same of the Jews root and branches Fathers and Children And no man dreamed that Paul Rom. 11. intends to prove that the Jews shall be insert in again because they are free of bastardie Father and sons Now Infants understand no more any of rhese to be blessed by the laying on of the hands of Christ and to be such as have title to the promises Acts 2.39 and to be Covenant-wise holy 1 Cor. 7. then they understand Baptism 4. The same Covenant made with Abraham is made with the Corinthians 2 Cor. 6.16 I will be their God and they shall be my people Which is Prophesied of the Gentiles under the New Testament Ezek 11.17 18 19 20. Ezek 34.23 24 25. Jer. 31 31 32 33 34 35 36. Jer. 32.36 37 38 39 40. Zech. 13.9 Hos. 1.10 11. 1 Pet. 2.9 10. And it is made to the Gentiles with an eke of a new heart and a larger extent of the Covenant under the New Test. for which cause it is called a better Covenant hath better promises Heb. 7.22 Heb. 8.6 7 8 9 10 11 12. Now that were a strange eke and excellency of the New Testament Covenant above the Old to forfeit without farther processe all Infants under the New Testament of all Covenant-right which was due to them of old under the Covenant which the Lord calls faultie Egypt shall be my people except their 1. Infants 2. And except their aged and their non-Saints 5. Infants in the former Covenant had right by birth to the means of salvation to be taught and Catechised in the Law of the Lord because born of Covenanting Parents within the Visible Church and so had title to Covenant-calling and GODS Covenant-choising Mat. 22.4 as is clear Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham will command his Children and his houshold after him and they shall keep the way of the Lord Exod. 20.10 Deut. 6 6 7. And thou shall teach them diligently unto thy Children Exod. 12 26 27. Ps. 78.4 5 6. Now if Infants be without the Covenant as the Infants of Pagans then they have no more Covenant-right to the hearing of the Gospel and a treatie with Christ and Covenant then Pagans have It s not enough to say their Fathers owe that much naturall compassion to their souls as to teach them it being a Parents duty Yea but what warrand hath a Father as a Father to make offer of a Covenant of Grace in the Name of GOD to one Pagan more then to another since all are equally without the Covenant if there be a Covenant-call warranted to them where is the Fathers command to propone and ingadge the Covenanters consent if the Children be Pagans but as they have a right by birth to the call they being born where the call soundeth they must have some visible right to the Covenant it self more then other Pagans It s but of small weight to say that Rom. 9. Paul expoundeth that in the New Testament I will be thy God and the God of thy seed only of the spirituall seed such as Jacob who was predestinated to Glory not of those that are carnally descended of Abraham otherwise it should follow that these that are in the Covenant might believe that they should be saved though void of Faith and Repentance Answ. The purpose of the Apostle Rom. 9. is to Answer a sad Objection if the Jews be cast off and rejected of God as Paul by his extreame desire to have them saved insinuates then the Word of God takes no effect and his calling and choising of them for his people takes no effect v. 6. He Answers it is not failed though the body of Israel be rejected For there are two kinds of Israelits some only carnall and born according to the flesh Others sons of promise and chosen of God Now the word of promise takes effect in the latter sort to wit in the chosen and in the sons of promise for they are not cast off of God and so the Word of God takes effect v. 6. 2. But the truth is if there be none Covenanted with God but the chosen under the New Testament then there is no such thing as an externall and visible Covenanting with God under the New Testament then must all the Nations Isa. 2.1 2. Kingdomes of the World Rev. 11.15 all Egypt Assyria Isa. 19.25 all the Gentiles Isa. 60. be internally Covenanted and sons of promise and predestinated to life And that 2 Cor. 6.16 I will be your God and ye shall be my people under the New Testament must infer that all in Covenant under Christ must be spiritually in Covenant and the Visible Church of Corinth and of all the Kingdomes of the world Rev. 11.15 must be the invisible and chosen Church and as many as are called must be chosen contrair to Mat. 22.14 Hence Q. 1. Have Infants now under Christ no priviledge nor Covenant Grace externall by their birth and discent from beleeving Parents Ans. Sure they have For Acts 2.39 the promise is to you and to your children Either to all children or to some the Text makes no exception If it be said to all conditionally if they beleeve not absolutely Ans. That must be an internall covenanting proper to the elect and the promise is not made to the aged but conditionally so they beleeve And yet the promise shall be made to Infants and Children but not while they come to age 2. To be cut off and casten out of Covenant is a dreadfull Judgement Zecha 11.9 Hos. 2.3 4 5. Rom.
11.20 well because of unbeleef they are broken off Then because the Jewes beleeve in Christ already comed all their children for no fault but for the beleef of their Parents must be cut off 3. Whereas Paul makes it a misery that the Ephesians 2.12 were strangers from the Covenants of promise ●aving no hope and without God without Christ. And Peter that the Gentiles were no people 1 Pet. 2. then that misery lyes upon the Infants of Christians and all within the Visible Church untill they be converted and baptized and the Gospel is no favour to them that they are within the net and in the office house of Grace the Visible Church where the word is Preached to children who are to be taught Gen. 18.19 Deut. 6.7 Exod. 12.26 27. Psal. 78.1 2 3 4.5 6 7. 2 Tim. 3.15 and the Lord reckons it among the favours that hee bestowes not on every Nation but onely on his owne Covenanted Israel that the Word of the Gospel to gather them and their Children Math. 23.37 2 Tim. 3.15 Psal. 78.1 2 3 4 5. and his Statutes and his Judgments are declared and Preached to them Psal. 147.19 20. Deut. 5.1 2 3 4. c. 6.1 2 3 4 6 7. Psal. 81.4 and that the Oracles of God and the promises are committed to them Rom. 3.1 2. Rom. 9.4 the promises and the giving of the Law and the Covenants and the service of God And that this is a special blessing in the New Testament to old and young is clear from Acts 13. when Paul turnes from the blaspheming Jewes to the Gentiles 47. I have set thee to be a light to the Gentiles that thou shouldest be for salvation to the end of the earth Now this Covenant salvation is Isa. 49.6 I wil give thee to restore the preserved of Israel 8. I will give thee for a Covenant to the people to establish the earth 9. That thou mayest say to the prisoners go forth c. Now if it be said it was indeed a singular priviledge to the Jews but what places of the New Testament make it a Covenant priviledge to the Gentiles and their seed if the Word of the Covenant Preached to the aged under the New Testament can the same wayes by accident be Preached and promises come to the ears of the unbaptised Children now growing to be capable of hearing the Gospel Acts 2.39 2 Tim. 3.15 as to Pagans and such as are no lesse stranges to the Covenant and void of all right by the Covenant made with their Parents then Indians and their children who worship Satan Paul not without a command Preacheth the Word of the Covenant to the discerning Gentiles Acts 13.47 from Isa. 49.6 9 10. must not the fathers have command to speak the Gospel to their children Or doth not the warrand that Parents and Pastors have to take within the Covenant the fathers warrand them to preach the same Covenant to the children where as otherwise the Apostles should have said we have no warrand to offer the Covenant to any or to Preach Christ a given Covenant to any But 1. To such as are come to age 2. Such as are Converts 3. To such as can give signification by confession that they are not onely visible but also invisible and chosen confederates and they should have said all children are now by Christ excluded as prophane Gentiles and heathen from the Covenant of Grace because there can be none say Anabaptists but reall Believers under the New Testament in Covenant with God Yea but the New Testament offers Christ a Covenant in the preached promises alike to fathers and sons Math. 4.16 The people fathers and sons that sate in darknesse saw great light c. Math. 19.43 Therefore I say unto you the Kingdome of God shall be taken from you and given to a nation bringing forth the froots thereof And is it not a punishment to be deprived of the Kingdome If the Kingdome of God come where the Preached Covenant is Math. 3.2 Math. 12.28 and the Bridegroome among them and so cause of joy Math. 9.15 and the Golden Candlesticks be there and the Son of God walking in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks Rev. 1.20 c. 2.1 sure this is much to children If it be said it is very nothing for children understand nothing of this What then is meant by the Prophecie of the incoming of the Gentiles Psal. 87.3 Glorious things are spoken of thee O city of God 4. I will make mention of Rahab and Babylon to them that know me behold Phylistia and Tyre with Aethiopia that man was born there 5. And of Zion i● shall bee said this and that man was born in her 6. The Lord shal count when he writeth up the people that this man was born there And Christ Prophecying of the desolation extends the judgement of a despised Covenant to the children and the house Math. 23.37.38 Luke 19.44 Luke 22.24 how should there be under the New Testament Covenant wrath for the fathers Covenant breaking derived to the children if in their fathers the sucking children brake not the Covenant then they have been in Covenant with their parents especially since a Visible Covenanting by borrowed allusions to altars speaking the language of Canaan offering incense swearing by the Lord is spoken of Egypt and of five that is of many cities of Egypt and of all the Gentiles Esa. 19.18 19 20. 21. Mal. 1.18 and Covenant blessings shall be derived from fathers to children The Lord shall say 25. Blessed be Egypt my people and Assyria the work of my hands and Israel mine inheritance It must be a narrow blessing of Covenanted Egypt Assyria Israel if it be a blessing of these come to age 2. Professing the faith 3. And baptised How can the Lord say blessed be Egypt and though the whole seed be visibly in Covenant old and young yet it followeth not that therefore every promise that is absolute that is that of a new heart is made to all and every one within the Visible Covenant for it is promised Deut. 30.6 to the Jews and was given to them and undenyably the visible body of the Jews and their seed were the chosen and externally Adopted and Covenanted people of God Deut. 29.10 11 12 13. Deut. 7.6 Deut. 10.19 and the Lord calls them those whom he delivered out of Egypt his people Exod. 3.7 I have seen the affliction of my people Ezek. 37.12 O my people I will open your graves as many as Saul and David did feed whether they have a new heart or not the Lord calls them his people 1 Sam. 9.16.2 2 Sam. 7.8 See Psal. 50.7 Hear O my people Psal. 81.13 Jer. 9.26 and so the Church of Corinth 2 Cor. 16. is called his people and the Kingdomes of the world the Lords Kingdomes in Covenant Rev. 11.15 and there were many of them uncircumcised in heart Jer. 9.26 Isa. 1.10 Amos 9.7 and with many of them God was not well pleased 1 Cor.
10.5 and so it is most false that none are in Covenant under the New Testament but only Believers For Judas Demas Simon Magus and all the externally called for they cannot be baptized but as in Covenant with God Math. 22.10 are by their profession in Covenant externally as the Jews profession sayeth they accepted of and consented unto the Covenant of Grace for 1 Cor. 10.7 Be not ye Idolaters as some of them commit not fornication tempt not Christ murmur not as some of them v. 8.9 th●se and the like say we are the same way in Covenant as they were and our Visible Church now and the Visible Church then are of the same constitution Q. And may we not say that the same Covenant of Grace we are under is the same in nature and substance with that Covenant made with Abraham Ans. The same Christ was their Mediator as ours Heb. 13.8 their Rock and our Rock Christ. 1 Cor. 10.1 2 3 4 5 6. Ioh. 8.56 2. We are justified as Abraham and David Rom 4.1 2 3 4 5. Gen. 15.6 Ps. 32.1 2. 3. They were saved by Grace the Gentiles as well as they Acts 15.11 by faith Acts 10.43 Heb. 11.1 2 3 4.13 c. 4. There is no more reason to say it was a civill Covenant made with Abraham because it distinguished Abrahams seed from other Nations and an earthly Covenant because Canaan was promised to them not to us then to say there be two Covenants of Works one made to Adam with a promise of an earthly Paradice and another Covenant of Works to the Jews with an earthly Canaan And a third to these who in the Gospel time are under a Covenant of Works Yea upon the same account the Covenant of Grace made Psal. 89. 2 Sam. 7. with David having a Throne promised to him should be yet another Covenant different from the other two And since a Covenant here is a way of obtaining salvation upon condition of obedience John Baptist should be under another Covenant of Grace then the Apostles For to their faith is promised the working of miracles Mark 16.16 17 18. But John wrought no miracles and many thousands of beleevers work no miracles and they must be under a third Covenant For though Canaan was promised to Abrahams seed there is no reason to call it an earthly Covenant or another different covenant for to all beleevers the blessings of their land are promised Ezek 36.25 26 30 31. Jer. 31.31 compared with 38 39 40 41 42 43. Mat. 6.33 Luke 12.31 1 Tim. 4.8 Heb. 13.5 6. 5. What if we say the Covenant made with Abraham Exod. 3. proves by our Saviours reasoning Ma● 22.31 32 33. that Infants shall not rise again and be in Angel-state and saved otherwise if Infants and all beleevers in the Saduces time be not under the same Covenant with Abraham no Infants shall have a Covenant-Resurrection nor a Covenant-Salvation Or then there is some other salvation for Infants that are saved to wit some Pagan heaven without the Covenant and without Christ and if Infants be Pagans without the Covenant either none of them are saved and chosen to life Contrair to Christ Mat. 18.2 3 4. Mark 10.13 14 15 16. and the Anabaptists grant Or there is a salvation 1 without a Covenant and so without the New and Old Testament 2. Without the Name of Jesus and the Blood of the Covenant Contrair to Acts 4.12 1 Joh. 1.8 Rev. 1.5 3. they shall be saved without the Visible Church the way that Pagans are saved Q 3. Are they not saved all of them Is not this enough But because the Kingdom of Christ is spirituall the Element of water can do them no good except they beleeve Ans. If his Kingdom be not spirituall because his wisedom hath appointed externall signes then no promise which is but good words shall be made to Children contrair to Acts 2.39 for they can do them no good untill they beleeve 2. Then should there be no Preaching of the Gospel to all Nations as Mat. 28.20 for impossible it is that all Nations can be profited by the Gospel 3. The doubt suppones that it is legall servilitie and Jewish to be under the Gospel Preached and the dispensation of signes and seals even to the aged such as are Baptism the Supper rebukes censures 4. To be a visible member and visibly in Covenant and to be baptized except all be sound beleevers must be Jewish Now certain it is a new Testament Ordinance that Ministers Preach and baptize all nations though the greatest part beleeve not Q. 4. If faith sanctifie as faith then an unbeleeving whore might be sanctified by a beleeving fornicator For faith will do its formall work in every subject Answ. Paul never meant that faith doth sanctifie in every subject but in subjecto capaci Faith sanctifieth not incest and sin they are not capable to be separated to a holy use If fire as fire burn then might all the water in the Ocean be dryed up with the least sparkle of fire If prayer as prayer obtain all things shall it obtain that the sacrificing of your son to God shall be accepted of him as holy and lawfull worship Mr. Baxter saith excellently upon this subject A thing must be first lawfull before it be sanctified God sanctifieth not sin in or to any See the Argument 1 Cor. 7. learnedly and solidely vindicated by him so as the dispute is at an end now Q. 5. What holiness is it that is called federal or Covenant holiness which is in Infants Ans. It is not so much personall holinesse though it may so be called because the person is a Church member separated from the world to God as holinesse of the seed Society Family or Nation which is derived from father to son as if the father be a free man of such a City that priviledge is so personall as it is by the Law hereditarie freedome derived from father to son if the father have jus ad media salutis right to the means of salvation so hath the son Hence this was first domestical God made the Covenāt with Abraham and his family I will be thy God and the God of thy seed Gen. 17. it was extended to him not as a father only but as to the head of the family the children of Servants born in Abrahams family were to be circumcised and to be instructed as having right to the means of salvation Gen. 17.12 He that is eight dayes old shall be circumcised among you every man-child in your Generations so it is Generation-holinesse he that is born in the house or bought with money of any stranger that is not of thy seed So God showes clearly that in Abraham he chosed the Nation and the house Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham that he will command his children that is too narrow a Church Visible and his houshold after him that they shall keep the way of the Lord. 2. Afterward
he choosed the Nation to be a peculiar people holy to himself Deut. 7.6 7. but not with another new distinct Covenant but in the same Covenant 8. But because the Lord loved you and would keep the oath that he had sworn to your fathers to wit to Abraham Deut. 10.15 He chose their seed after them even you above all people not above all houses Amos 3.2 You only have I known of all the families of the earth So the externall Church Covenant and Church right to the means of grace is given to a society and made with Nations under the New Testament Isa. 2.1 2 3. Psal. 2.8 9. Psal. 22.27 Psal. 87.2 3 4. Rev. 11.15 Matth. 28.19 20. And not any are baptized in the New Testament except the Eunuch and Saul Acts 8.39 who were baptized firstly but they were baptized as publick men representing a seed also societies are baptized All Judea Mat. 3.3 All the land of Judea Mark 1.5 All the multitude all the people Luke 4.7.21 Sure the fathers were so Christianed and Baptized as their children had right to the same seal So Joh. 3.22 23 26. Cornelius his house and all with him were baptized Acts 10.33 47. Three thousand at once Acts 2.39 40 41. The Jayler and his house Acts 16.33 servants and friends The houshold of Stephanas 1 Cor. 1.16 was Baptized And this 3. is holden forth as the Church as the houshold of Narcissus which are in the Lord Rom. 16.11 Aquila and Priscilla and all the Church at their house v. 5. The Church at the house of Philemon Phil. v. 2. which teacheth that the Covenant holinesse is of societies and houses under the New Testament as in Abrahams house and as Abrahams house was Circumcised so are whole houses under the New Testament Baptized 4. Paul aptly calls it the holinesse of the lump or Nation and the first fruits root-holinesse the holinesse of the root and the branches Of the Olive Tree and the branches Rom. 11.16 17. 5. The speciall intent of God in sending the word of the Covenant must evidence this he sends not the Gospel unto and for the cause of one man to bring him in but to gather a Church and his elect ones by a visibly and audibly Preached Covenant to a society to a City to Samaria Acts 8. To the Gentiles Acts 13. To all Nations Mat. 28.19 20. that they and their children may have right to salvation and to the means thereof and to the Covenant and therefore we are not curiously to inquire whether the faith of the father be real or not if the Gospel be come to the Nation to the House to the Society The Lord in one Abraham in one Cornelius in one Jayler whom he effectually converts as far as we can gather from the Scriptures choises the race house society nation and gives them a Covenant-holinesse the mans being born where the call of God is does the turn as much as the faith of the Parent For by the root is not necessarily meant the Physicall root the father For Abraham was not the Physicall root and father nor Cornelius of all the servants and friends in the house But if a friend be in the house or society and professe the Gospel he and his obtain right to Baptism and the means of salvation But as touching real holinesse it is not derived from a beleeving father to make the son a beleever Scripture and experience say the contrair Nor 2. is internall and effectuall confederacie with God that by which one is a son of promise Rom. 9. and predestinate to life a nationall favour For 1. no man is chosen to life in his father because the father is chosen A chosen father may have a reprobate son 2. Election to life is not of nations or houses or societies but of single persons It is not said before the nation had done good or evill I chosed this nation all and whole not this but I loved this man not this man Q. What is the formall reason and ground that any hath right to Baptism Ans. If we speak of a passive right if the Eunuch beleeve Act. 8. and if such have received the Spirit Acts 10. they may receive baptism The Eunuch moves not the Question whether Philip should sin in baptizing him or not The Eunuch was troubled to make sure his own not Philips Conversion They who bring that Argument 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 8. and that Mark 16. to prove that only such should be baptized who beleeve actually and are come to age They prove that the Church sinneth if they baptize any but such as are predestinated to life and really beleeve For the faith that Philip asked for was reall with all the heart not as the faith of Simon Magus And the faith Mark 16.15 is real saving faith that brings salvation he that beleeves is saved 2. It can not be visible faith only for that is in Simon Magus he doth visibly so beleeve and is baptized Yet upon that faith he was not saved being in the gall of bitternesse 3. He that beleeves not is damned The meaning must be he that beleeves not savingly is damned Or then he that beleeves not visibly as Magus and Judas is damned but this is most false for Peter beleeves not as Judas and yet he is not damned Or then the meaning must be he that beleeveth both really savingly and also professedly and visibly is saved And that is true but it concludes that none are to be baptized but both real and visible believers 4. If it be true that none are to be baptized but Covenanted ones as Acts 2.39 And if none be Covenanted ones under the New Testament but real beleevers and such as are predestinated to life as our Anabaptists teach from Rom. 9. then must the Church without warrant of the Word baptize Magus Demas Judas 5. Then must also all Judea all the Generations of vipers baptized have been both real and visible beleevers for they were all baptized Mat. 3.3 4. Mark 1.5 Luke 1.7.21 Let Independents consider this and what D. Fuilk and Mr. Cartwright Paraeus Calvin Beza and our Divines speak on these places against the auricular confession of all the huge multitude 6. It is a wonder that any man should dream that the Eunuch made a case of conscience Acts 8. whether it was lawfull to Philip to baptize and not whether he himself did beleeve and could worthily receive the seal Act. 8.36 here is water saith he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 7. So none can warrantably baptize any but persons dying in faith and it s not certain these have the faith that is Acts 8.37 Mar. 16.16 But for the formall warrand of such as baptize neither are the aged as the aged nor Infants as Infants to be baptized for so all the aged and all Infants even of Pagans are to be baptized Nor 2. are all in Covenant to be baptized For such as are only really and
invisibly in Covenant and do make no profession of Christ at all are not warrantably by the Church to be baptized Only these whether old or young that are tali modo visibili federati such as professedly and visibly in Covenant and called Acts 2.39 are warrantably baptized Hence they must be so in Covenant as they be called by the word of the Covenant for they cannot be baptized against their will Luke 7.29.30 Q. What warrand is there Act. 2.39 for Infant Baptisme Ans. I shall not contend for the actuall baptizing of them at that instant But every one of you be baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 father and sons Why the promise is to you and to your children break the Text into an hundred pieces and blood it as men please the Genuine Thesis which cannot be neglected is These to whom the promise of the Covenant does belong these should be baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the promise of the Covenant is to you and to your children Ergo you and your children should be baptized The assumption is the expresse words of Peter and the Proposition is Peters Every one of you be baptized 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for to you is the promise of the Covenant Calvin Bullinger Brentius Gualther clear it 2. Who they are who are in the nearest capacity to be baptized he explaines when he showeth that the Covenant promise is made to these who are far off to the Gentiles whom the Lord shall call then all that are under the call and offer of Christ in the Preached Gospel as Prov. 9.1 2 3 4. Math. 22 bid them come to the wedding Luke 14.16 17 18. c. are externally in Covenant and such to whom the Covenant is made and should be baptized it s presumed they give some professed consent to the call and do not right down deny to come else they should be baptized against their will 3. Calvine showes Acts 2.39 that the Anabaptists in his time said the promise was made to Believers only but the Text saith it is made to you and to your children to infants to the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant made with the fathers Acts 3.25 Now what ground doe Anabaptists give that all infants believe or that some believe since to them their children were as Pagans without Christ without the Covenant if to the children when they come to age and shall believe but what need to adde and to your believing Children for these are not children but men of age their fathers and they both being believers Now Peter sets down two ranks the aged who heard the word with gladnesse and were pricked in heart v. 37.41 and the children and to both the promise is made and what ground is their to exclude sucking children for the word Acts 2.39 is Math. 2.18 1 Cor. 7.14 where sure the word is taken for sucking children of whose actuall faith the Scripture speaks not 2. The promise is to you and to your children can have no other sense then the promise and word of the Covenant is preached to you and to your children in you and this is to be externally in Covenant both under the Old and New Testament If it have another sense it must be this the Lord hath internally Covenanted with you the 3000. who have heard the word and with your children and you are the spirituall seed and sons of promise predestinate to life eternall as Rom. 9. they expone the seed in Covenant But 1. Were all the 3000. Ananias and Saphi●a and their children the spirituall and chosen seed for he commands all whom he exhorts to repent to be baptized And 2. Now to Simon Magus and Demas and numbers of such Peter could not have said the promise is made to you and to your children if it be only made to reall and actuall believers as they say Peter therefore must owne them all whom he exhorts to repent as the chosen seed But if the former sense be intended as how can it be denyed to wit the word of the Covenant is preached to you an offer of Christ is made in the preached Gospel to you Then it cannot be denyed but the promise is to all the Reprobate in the Visible Church whether they believe or not for Christ is preached and promises of the Covenant are preached to Simon Magus to Judas and all the Hypocrites who stumble at the Word to all the Pharisees as is clear Math. 13.20 21 22 23. Acts 13.44 45. Acts 18.5 6. Math. 21.43 1 Pet. 2.7 8. 3. The promise I will be your God and ye shall be my people must be one way expounded in the Old Testament to wit you are externally only in Covenant with God But in the New Testament it must have this meaning I wil be your God 2 Cor. 6.16 that is you are all predestinate to life and the sons by promise and the spirituall seed to whom I say I will be your God But so it may well be said there were no internall Covenanters in the Old Testament and there be none but only internall Covenanters in the New Testament so that when the Lord sayeth Rev. 11.15 The Kingdomes of the earth are mine and my sons He must say the Kingdomes Egypt Assyria Tyrus Ethiopia c. are chosen and the spirituall seed and these Covenanted Nations and the Kingdomes of the Gentiles are all internally and effectually called and there are no Visible Churches in the New Test. but only all invisible and saved 4. If these words The promise is to you and to your children be limited to as many as the Lord shall effectually call either fathers or children But Mr. Stev Marshel judiciouslie observes there is no more a Covenant-favour holden forth to their children then to the children of Pagans for the children of Pagans if God effectually call them have the promises made to them 5. It s clear that externall Covenant-holinesse is to these men ceremoniall holiness now out of date and then externall calling the only means of internall and effectuall calling Math. 22.14 1 Cor. 1.18.23 24. Luke 15.1 2. and the fixed Church-hearing of the Preached Gospel is a ceremony 2. That God should be the God of Infants of the seed of the Jews a mercie to fathers and sons coming from free love Deut. 10.15 Gen. 17.7 Deut. 7.6.7.8 and Prophesied as a mercy to the Gentiles by all the Prophets was a ceremony removed now in Christ. Yea 3. externall Covenanting and adopting and choising of Israel is no mercy except that a Pedagogie of the Law is a mercy for a time 4. The promise is to you and to your children must be in a contradictorie way expounded to wit the promise is no more made to your children so long as they are Infants then to Devils Yea fathers and children not beleeving though chosen to life are excommunicated from Visible adoption calling hearing the Gospel promises for there is no Covenanting now under
6.12.15 Heb. 8.6 Heb. 9.14 1 John 5.1 is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to your children of the New Testament to your Infants if they beleeve say they 1. Can Infants actually beleeve 2. Is not the promise so made to Turks if they beleeve But it were an easier way to Anabaptists to say infants under the New Testament are externally in Covenant where as Parents beleeve and members of the Church are followed with Covenant mercy only because they understand not and the administration is more spirituall under the New Testament and faith more urged God requires not the dipping of Infants in Rivers a ceremony more onerous more truely in women with child virgins diseased persons in winter in cold countreys against the word the second Command the third the fourth the sixth the seventh then that it needs to be refuted it being only a ceremony which they may well want But now Infants of beleevers are casten out for no fault of the Covenant of Grace 2. From Covenant mercy to the thousand Generation Contrair to Gen. 17.7 Exod. 20.5 3. From Covenant-prayers and Church-prayers Contrair to 1 Sam. 12. Ps. 28.9 Ps. 67.1 2. Ps. 103 4 5. 4. From the blessing of the Lords Covenant-presence who dwels in the Nation in the Kingdom Ps. 135.21 Ps. 132.13 14. Rev. 11.15 Isa. 19.25 Isa. 2.1 2 3. 2 Cor. 6.16 I will dwell in them and walk in them and be their God and they shall be my people 18. And I will be a father to you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord God Almighty Though this be spoken to all the Covenanted people of God yet are Infants casten out of the bosome of a Covenant Father and God 5. Infants are debarred from Covenant-calling and gathering in under the wings of Christ Contrair to Matth. 28.19 20. Matth. 23.37 Psal. 147.19 20. and excluded from Gods Covenant-choise Contrair to Deut. 7.6 7 8 9 13 14. Deut. 10.15 and left being heirs of wrath a prey to Satan 6. They are Excommunicated from Covenant-blessings earthly and the Tabernacle-protection promised in the Old and New Testament Contrair to Deut. 28.4 Lev. 26.6 7 8 9. Psal. 37.18.22.25 26. Psal. 92.10 Psal. 112.1 2 3. Ezech. 34.24 25 26. Ezech. 36.29.35 36 37. Ezech. 8.7 8. And in the New Testament Matth. 6.27 28.33 1 Tim. 4.8 Heb. 13.5 6. which were nothing if our Heavenly Father provide bread protection safety dwelling in the land and our houses to the fathers but the children had no charter but to beggery to the sword to be devoured by wilde beasts and the diseases of Egypt And the Infants have nothing from the Covenant but what Infants of Amaleck and Babylon 1 Sam. 15.1 2. Ps. 137.5 and of Sodom have Gen. 19. 7. They are members of Satan of the Kingdom of the Prince of darknesse not members of Christs Body since there be but two Kings two Gods Satan 2 Cor. 4.4 Eph. 2 1 2. Eph. 6.12 Matth. 12.29 and Christ the King and Head of his body And it is known that Infants within the Visible Church suffer incursions of Devils dreadfull diseases death and being without the Covenant as Pagans these evils must either be acts of revenging justice and preparatorie to the judgement of eternall fire or blessed in Christ But if the former they are damned if the latter what blessing is there without Christ 8. Being without the Covenant 1. Infants cannot be chosen and predestinate in Christ to salvation as Eph. 1.4 Rom. 9.11 nor given to Christ to be saved Covenant-wayes as John 17.2 John 6.39 nor loved from eternity nor in time as Arminians teach and so must be carried in Christ to Heaven or Hell or rather to a mid place without God or providence or decrees or fore-knowledge or counsel of God 2. They being without the Gospel-Covenant cannot be redeemed by Jesus Christ his Blood but some other way Contrair to Acts 4.12 3. If Infants be born without sin as Anabaptists teach they die and go either to Heaven and so Christ took not on him their nature and is not their Saviour or they go to everlasting torment and yet never sinned which is repugnant to Divine Justice Or to some third place of which the Scripture speaks not And yet the word saith Rev. 20.12 that the dead small and great shall stand before God and shall be judged And the Scripture saith Infants are capable of punishment and of being cut off and the Parents punished in them and they bear Covenant-wrath in their Parents As is clear in the seed of Jeroboam of Achab of others Ezod 20.5 Gen. 17.14 4. Neither remission of sins Justification nor life eternall nor Sonship nor Adoption in Christs suffering death and in the Blood of the everlasting Covenant can belong to Infants if they be without the Covenant 9. Nor can children be capable of being blessed of Christ or of his laying on of hands As Mark 10. if they be not under the N. Test. capable of Covenant-grace And it is to be minded that Covenanting Parents Luke 18. 1. Such as came to him to be cured of their diseases and beleeved him to be the Messiah the Son of David as the blind call him Mat. 20. and the woman of Canaan Mat. 15. Luk 18.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brought to him little Children as Mat. 8.16 Mat. 9.2 Luk. 4.40 they brought the sick 2. The children were not diseased nor possessed And the Parents being desirous they might be blessed as the event proved it is clear they were not children of heathen but members of the Visible Church 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of such is the Kingdom of God Luk. 18.16 we cannot think that his meaning is of such as such is the Kingdome of God as if all Infants of Jew and Heathen belonged as subjects to the Visible Church for then the Infants of all Heathen should be Covenanted members of the Visible Church and yet their Parents are without the Visible Church and when they grow to age they should without any scandall be Excommunicate which were monstruous nor can the Invisible Kingdom of God be of such as if all Infants because Infants were saved Nor 4. Can the taking of them be a meer Embleme that such were blessed for so beside that Doves and Lambs for meeknesse are capable of being taken in the armes of Christ and blessed Christ bids them in all times coming be suffered to come and not forbidden v. 16. which saith he desired the whole spece of Infants of the Visible Church to be brought to him Nor doth Christ make acts of Emblems ordinary but he will have children at all time to come to him forbid them not He once cursed the fig tree that was an Embleme and did but once wash his Disciples feet and that was an Embleme And 5. He could not mean that only Infants predestinate to glory should be suffered to come For he saith indifferently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉
34.15 16. 1 King 11.2 Ezra 9.2 12. Nehem. 13.23 Judg. 3.6 7. Judg. 4.2 3. Except there be some middle between a cursed and a blessed seed a seed in the Church and in Covenant and the seed of the Serpent of Heathen without the Covenant 2. A middle between the Kingdom of darknesse of Satan and the Kingdom of God of his dear Son Contrair to Eph. 2.2 3 4. Acts 26.18 Col. 1.13 14. 1 Pet. 2.9 10. Eph. 5.8 which is unknown to Scripture Yea the Covenant is made to Christ and his seed Gal. 3.16 and the same blessings of Abraham comes on us Gentiles Gal. 3.13 14. But he and all his seed were blessed and in grace by the externall call of the Covenant Ezek. 16.1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. Deut. 7 7 8. Rom. 10.25 I will call them my people that were not my people and her beloved which was not beloved And this externall calling is of Grace and so Grace no merit as well as predestination to life is grace or for grace For whosoever are called not because Elect but because freely loved of such a God and without merit called Father and Son they are in a state of grace● But so are all within the Visible Church If any object by Christs comming all the Nations old and young are not become the Nations of the Lord and of his Christ but only true Believers even by our Doctrine Answ. They are become the Kingdoms of the Lord not only because they are truely converted but because they are the chosen of God in the Office-house of Christ and Christ reigns over them by the Scepter of his Word whom he is to convert And external Covenanting with God is of it self free Grace and a singular favour bestowed of God Psal. 147.19 20. Deut. 5.1 2. Mat. 21.42 43. Luke 14.16.21 2. It is free Grace that God will have hypocrites and real infidels to beget children to him that are internally in Covenant with him and fills up the number of the Elect by Reprobate Parents who are instrumentall to the in-coming in the world and into the Visible Church of many Heirs of Glory and in so doing there is a Church right communicated from Reprobate Parents to their Children that are Heirs of Glory 3. Externall Covenanting goes before internall Covenanting as the means before the end and the cause before the effect For faith comes by hearing of a sent Preacher Rom. 10.14 and the Preaching of the Gospel is a saving means of begeting a new heart and of a new spirit Hence 1. All must be first externally in Covenant before they can be internally and really in Covenant 2. God is a God simply to some and no more but a God to them in regard of outward Church priviledges as the Word Seals Protection Peace Hedge of Discipline his planting and watering by a Ministry But he is to speak so more then a God to others Hos. 2.19 I will betroth thee unto me for ever yea I will betroth thee unto me in righteousnesse in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercy Now the Lord is joyned to back-sliding Israel in an externall marriage Covenant But Jer. 3.14 not in righteousnesse in loving kindnesse and mercy in reference to the rotten party In regard of which he saith v. 2. Plead with your mother plead for she is not my wife neither am I her husband Zech. 8.7 Thus saith the Lord I will save my people from the East Countrey and from the West Countrey 8. And I will bring them and they shall dwell in the midst of Jerusalem and they shall be my people and I will be their God in truth and in righteousnesse Then he is not to all a God in truth and righteousnesse fulfilling the first and substantiall promise of ingraving the Law in the heart not that he keeps not Covenant even to external confederat● to wit the conditionall Covenant for if they should beleeve they should be saved but he promised not a new heart and faith to them 3. Because he is a God externall to the Elect and that of free Grace therefore he is a God in truth and righteousnesse to ingrave his Law in their heart But externall confederation is not the adequate cause for then he should give a new heart to all with whom he externally Covenants but the adequate cause is confederation external tali modo out of his discriminating love and free grace he is a God to some 4. He is a God to his Elect that he may ingrave his Law in their heart and inward parts so that the promising to be a God tali modo is the cause and the ingraving of a new heart is the effect Jer. 31.33 Jer. 32.38 And they shall be my people and I will be their God That is the cause 39. I will give them one heart and one way that they may fear me for ever for the good of them and of their children after them See the same order Ezech. 11.19 20. though the words ly not in that order there and here And Heb. 8.10.5 God is not then a God to any because they have a clean heart and the Law ingraven therein for then they should be in Covenant before they be in Covenant And so this is true because he is our God in truth and righteousnesse therefore we beleeve but this is not true because we beleeve therefore he is our God except we argue from the effect to the cause But to return Calvine on Matth 19.14 We hence gather that the grace of Christ is extended to Infant age for whole mankind had perished Beza Infants are also comprehended in the free Covenant Pareus its unlawfull to ●●barre these from baptism and the Church whom Christ ●●ds come to him c. Obj. But Christ commands not they be baptized Answ. Nor doth Christ in this place command the Parents to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord Nor speak the Evangelists of any Parentall duty shall we from that conclude it was not Christs mind that the Parents take care of the fourth fifth Command Pareus saith it was neither time nor place Mat. 28.19 he bids baptize all 3. He who prayed for them blessed them laid his hands upon them invited them to bring Infants to him of all which Infants were as uncapable as of the use and ends of Baptism and of actuall confession of sin and of beleeving judged they ought be Baptized 4. It s never to be found where any are Baptized but the Head of the Family is Baptized And when we read that houses were Baptized 1 Cor. 1.16 Acts 16.33 There is no more ground to say Infants are not Baptized then to say when the Lord saith to Abraham Gen. 12.2 I will blesse thee and make thy name great And 22.17 in blessing I will blesse thee And when the Lord saith Isai. 19.25 blessed be Aegypt my people he should mean he would blesse Abraham
not his seed and that he minds to blesse the aged of Aegypt and of Assyria but not their seed and infants because they understand no● what a blessing of God means and yet the fruit of the womb and the seed are said to be blessed Psal. 37.26 Deut. 7.13 and God so intreated to blesse Israel and to blesse Davids house Psal. 28.9 Psal. 67.1 Deut. 26.16 2 Sam. 7.29 the meaning should not be that God would blesse the young Infants and Children in Israel and in Davids house And when Jacob is said to provide for his own house Gen. 30.30 And the beleever to provide for his Family 1 Tim. 5.8 the meaning should be that they should provide for the aged of the house who understood what provision is but should not provide for the young ones who can not know what it is to be hungry to morrow To say young ones are not capable of Baptism is to begge the Question For 1. all Israel were Baptized in the Sea and in the Cloud old and young 1 Cor. 10.1 2. 2. All Israel old and young are capable of the blessing Covenanted Psal. 28.9 Psal. 67.1 ● and so of the seal Anabaptists grant as they must if Infants be in Covenant they ought to receive the Seal of the Covenant Lastly how is it that by baptized houses must be meant only these come to age who can actually beleeve The Jews Rom. 11.16 are holy root and branch first fruit and lump fathers and children and the Jews shall be brought in again Why The Generation to come in is holy for the Covenant made with their fathers Well say Anabaptists but notwithstanding of the federall holinesse you talk of Rom. 11.16 that gives not right to the casten off to be Baptized and admitted to Church priviledges for the casten off are no Church and have no Church priviledge your federall holinesse then must be a dream Ans. But these to come in and to be re-ingrafted are holy intentionally in the decree of God because of their beloved fathers and when God shall call them the same Covenant made with Abraham gives them right and these branches not in being and the unborn Generation are only intentionally holy by this federall holinesse and they shall be actually holy when they shall be born but it followeth not but the present Generation not broken off through unbeleef as Paul and others called by the name of election Rom. 11.7 have right because of their fathers For God hath not cast off his people whom he hath fore-known For I am an Israelite saith Paul v. 1 2. of the seed of Abraham and there are thousands of Jews now hid as in Elias his time who bowed not their knee to Baal but the body of them the great bulk is fallen away and cut off Hence the Jews are holy federally and not holy beloved of the fathers federally and not beloved federally holy and keep Church right to Baptism and Ordinances in regard of the founder and invisible part And not holy federally nor having any Church right to Baptism in regard of the wilfully broken off body that crucified Christ and stand to their fathers bloody deed these have no more Church-part nor portion to Ordinances then Simon Magus Acts 8. notwithstanding of their carnall discent from Abraham And when God made the Covenant with Abraham Gen. 17. and renewed the same Deut. 29. he made it with these who were not there standing v. 14 15. not with you only c but virtually radically with us Gentiles who were not then born as touching the substantialls for Priest-hood Law-service Types Sacrifices Circumcision yea Baptism the Lords Supper Pastors Teachers Elders to rule Deacons were all accidents to the substance of the Covenant to wit to beleeve in Christ and to obtain righteousnesse and life by Christ As the same way to the same City hath other hedges way-marks bridges this year which it had not 500. years agoe And look as a father that knowes he shall beget so many hundreth sons who shall all be Kings and have the same royall inheritance writeth a Charter intituling them all before they be born to the same inheritance They have all virtuall and radicall right ere they be born with the first heir And when they are born he makes not another Covenant with them So Deut. 29.14 15. he sayeth not He shall make another Covenant with these when they shall be born but I make a Covenant with you and with these that are not here not born Hence by way of excellency he calleth it the Covenant the Covenant of the Lord Jer. 2● 9 Deut. 4.23 Josh 23.11 My Covenant saith the Lord Gen. 17.7 9 10. Exod. 19.5 Psal. 50.16 His Covenant Psal. 105.8 He remembred his Covenant for ever Psal. 111.5 He will remember his Covenant for ever 5.9 His Covenant with Abraham Isaac and Jacob 2 King 13.23 When Hazael King of Syria oppressed Israel in their saddest afflictions Levit. 26.42 43. The Scripture is called the Book of the Covenant Exod. 24.7 2 King 23.4 2 Chron. 34.30 21. The Question is easily determined it can be the Book of no Covenant but of that made with Abraham the oath unto Jacob 1 Chron. 16.16 17. Psal. 105.9 Jer. 11.5 Dan. 9.11 Luke 1.73 Heb. 6.15 17. and to the fathers the everlasting Covenant Gen. 9.16 Gen. 17.9 13. which relates to Adam also Levit. 24.8 2 Sam. 23.5 made unto David 1 Chro. 16.17 Psal. 105.10 Isa. 61.8 Heb. 13.20 which cannot be if there be so many Covenants as some speak of the new Covenant and the better Covenant Heb. 8.8 13. Heb 12.20 Jer. 3.81 Heb. 7.21 which newnesse and excellency is all expounded of the Mediator now God the Word made Flesh Heb. 7. c. 8. c. 9. And we would remember that Rom. 11. Paul proves 1. God hath not casten off the Jewes wholly 1. Arg. Because I Paul am a Jew and he hath not casten me off Ergo in one the Covenant may stand 2. From his unchangeablenesse God hath foreknown them 3. From the example of the Church in the dayes of Elias By way of p●●occupation it is true many are fallen off but as then seven thousand were in Israel who bowed not their knee to Baal so now Because the election of grace doth not fall now or then Then saith he not of works He reconceals that he saith with what before by a preoccupation And have all the Jewes fallen short of righteousnesse and he answers All are not fallen short The election that is the elected have obtained righteousnesse the rest not 2. To make way to exhort the Gentiles to walk worthy of the place and room of the Jews He speaks some more of the doctrine of Reprobation as he spake Ch. 9. of eternall predestination and of 2. The casting out of the Jews and of their blinding and hardning They have fallen in Gods decree not that they may utterly fall 2. That the Gentiles may be provocked by
their fall Hence by diverse Arguments he proves that the Jewes shall be brought in again to Christ 1. From four ends of the Jews fall v. 11. 2. To provoke them to come in v. 11. 3. That some may be saved 4. For the riches of the worlds salvation Whence the magnifying of Pauls Ministry v. 13 14. 2. Arg. From the great fruit If their fall be the riches of the world their incoming again must be the resurrection from the grave of the buried unbeleeving world v. 15. 3. Arg. They must be brought in These who are holy separated from the world for the Covenant-call of God must be brought in again But so is Israel The Assumption he proves by p●rts 1. The masse and root of Israel is holy the Fathers were the Covenanted visible stock line root as all the Old Testament sayeth then the posterity the first fruits the branches partly born partly to be born must be holy Covenant-wayes The tree root and branches are holy and of the same nature Therefore the branches have right to Christ to the Covenant to Baptisme and the seals Hence Anabaptists without all reason say that he speaks not of federall and externall holinesse but of reall internall and true holinesse only of the invisible body predestin●ted to life for though invisible holinesse cannot be excluded except we exclude the holinesse of Abraham Isaac and Jacob who were without doubt a part of the root yet he must be taken to speak of that holinesse of the Covenant and Church as made visible and of the visible collective body of the Jews not of only reall and invisible holinesse 1. Because this was true in the dayes of Elias If the root be holy the branches are holy And it is a New Testament-Truth of perpeall verity If the Fathers be holy so must the Sons The Fathers have Church-right to Circumcision to Baptism to the Passeover and to the Lords Supper so have the Children but it is most false of the invisible mysticall body and root only and of reall and internall holinesse For neither in Old or New Testament is it true If the Fathers be predestinated to life justified and sanctified and saved so must the Children be Ishmael Esau Absalom and all the world of Hypocrit●● called from their prophanenesse Sodom and Gomorah Isai. 1.10 uncircumcised in heart as Egypt Moab and Ammon Jerem. 9.26 as the Philistines Amos 9.7 Then should that 2. Distinction of Jewes in the heart and inward and of Jews in the flesh Rom. 2.28 and of the children of the flesh that are not of the spirituall seed and of the children of the promise Rom. 9.7 8. and of the persecuting children of the bond woman not justified by faith and of the children of the promise Gal. 4.23 24 c. fall to the ground Yea 3. If by the root and the lump be understood only Believers and chosen to life the whole Israel which is as the sand of the sea should be saved whereas the Word of God saith a remnant only shall be saved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX Te●la A part taken out shal be saved Rom. 9.27 Isai. 10.22 23. Hos. 1.10 4. By the branches must be meant all the visible body of the Jews old and young Now if Anabaptists give us a Visible Church of the Jewes of all reall believers even the branches and Infants which shall hardly be proven by the Scripture these infants at least being visible Believers may lawfully be baptized being both internally and visible and externally in Covenant For this Scripture is expresly expounded by them of reall and inherent holinesse and so Infants must be reall Believers and in Covenant Ergo they must be baptized What can be replied is not imaginable but they have not actuall faith and possibly that is not known to the Church But this Scripture saith that the branches and root both are holy 2. It shall be new Divinity that none are to be baptized but such as are under the actuall ●●●rcise of their faith a thing that cannot be discerned by the Church in these that are come to age 5. Here shall also be this new Divinity that predestination to life and glory must be propagated and derived from the lump to the first fruits from the root and parents to the branches and children 5. It s against the whole current of the Text that Paul spake abstractly of the only invisible body really sanctified and not of the visible body For 1. The body invisible is an elect seed that cannot fall away But the body that here he speaks of are such of which a part are hardned and blinded and under the spirit of slumber and a part elect and chosen 7. The election have obtained the rest are hardned and of such a body compared with the body in the time of Elias of which multitudes fell away slew the Prophets digged down the Altars and a good number were beleevers that bowed not their knee to Baal and so is the body now saith Paul 1 2 3 4 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is a mixt body 3. He speaks of the body that is fallen and stumbled v. 11. and these whom he preaches unto to provoke them to a holy emulation to come in to Christ by the incoming of the Gentiles v. 13 14. which is sure a visible body and which shall be ingraffed in again v. 23. which includes a visible body of diverse generations 4. Yea he must speak of a Nationall election and externall calling as Deut. 7.7 8 9. Deut. 10.15 Psal. 132.13 Isai. 41.2 Not of a personall election of some certain persons who fell were blinded rejected fully and totally in their persons and received in and ingraffed as sound believers again for the Scripture speaks of no such boating in and out but of a huge numerous body of which some fell some stand and includes diverse generations 5. The collective visible body of Jews and Gentiles are such as Paul preacheth unto v. 13 14. such as are ingraffed in in the room of the Jews and ingraffed into the Olive of the visible Body and partake of the fatnesse of Ordinances Baptism Co●enant-comforts promises Now if any say that this proves not that Infants are ingraffed then must they say that Infants of the Jews before Christ partaked of no fatnesse of the Covenant Circumcision Blessings Presence Protection 2. That they were not broken off with their fathers and so that they now stand 3. That the Infants of the Jews are not holy branches as the root is holy as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and that none but the fathers shall be ingraffed in and only 4. The aged and the baptized actuall believers of the Gentiles are the ingraffed ones not their Infants they are all Heathen and Pagans as well as the casten off Jewes 5. That the Jewes ingraffing in again shall be to their great hurt so as God was long agoe their God but shall no more in time coming be their
God then of the Pagans and the lately cut off fathers Nor can the Adversaries say that Jewish Infants were broken off through unbelief because they are capable neither of belief nor of unbelief to them Then they remain in the Olive tree members of the Church as before and God must be still their God when the fathers are cut off vers 17. And again when the fathers shall be reingraffed and they made Christians the Infants shall be out of Christ and have no more Covenant-right or Church-right to Baptisme then the Infants of Egyptians and Philistines had to Circumcision Obj. Shall not by this means all the Infants of all the Gentiles be ingrafted in and baptized Answ. The Text warrants us to say it only of the Children of the ingrafted and called Gentiles that they have right to baptism Obj. This Text is spoken of these that have hereditary Covenant-right from their naturall Father Abraham We Gentiles have not that naturall relation to Abraham nor are we his naturall sons nor branches Answ. It s false that the Jews by birth as birth had hereditary right to Church-priviledges they had right by such a birth from Abraham taken in out of free-love to Covenant fellowship with God and his children are naturall that is kindlie 2. First branches and sprigs before us Gentiles to beleeving Abraham but we beleeving are made Abrahams by proportion and are secondary and so wild branches 2. Abraham is not the Physicall but a Morall root For the Covenant was made with Abraham not as a beleeving Father but as a beleeving Head of Children of Servants and strangers under him as the Covenant is laid as an Heavenly depositum upon Zacheus in relation not to his children only but to his house Luke 19. For when he is made a sonne of Abraham salvation that is the Covenant of Life comes to him and to his house and so to Cornelius Acts 10. and to the Jayler Acts 16. and to their houses and the same way I distinguish seeds Q. How can the Jews that are come in be federaly holy for their fathers Since now it is about fifteen hundreth years since their father● were broken off from Church and Covenant May not all the world Jews and Gentiles be federally holy branches by the same reason because the Covenant was made with and Preached unto Adam a beleeving root and father in Paradice So it would appear once in the Covenant of Grace and all the seed to the coming of CHRIST are federally holy as well as they Answ. This is as great a difficultie to the Adversaries and insuperable as to us for the Jews unborn by their way are no more holy in their branches and off-spring then Turks and Indians and their children untill they grow to age and actually beleeve and so are the Infants of Americans and such as worship the Sun or Satan that way holy And so the branches of the Jews have no holiness from the root nor are they beloved for the fathers as vers 28.2 All the Jews leave not off to be members of the Invisible Church For Paul saith Rom. 11.25 blindnesse in part is happened to Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a part of Israel For howbeit the visible masse and body of the Jews rejected Christ and wrath ●e come upon them to the outmost 1 Thes. 2.16 yet that is not said universally of all the Jews 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Yea Paul wrote to the Jews the Epistle to the Hebrews James to the twelve Tribes scattered abroad Jam. 1.1 and Peter 1 Pet. 1.1 and John to the Jews I judge not in a visible body and these are not broken off the Olive and do though not in a Visible Church way derive Covenant right to the branches that shall be ingrafted in But many Nations descended of Adam have universally rejected Christ and know not the Name of Christ the blessed seed Q. May we not say that the root is Christ as mysticall Head from whom we partake of the s●ppe of grace and life and fatnesse Answ. The intent of Paul is to prove that the Jews cut off because of their unbeleef shall be ingrafted in again in the Lords own time because of the holinesse of the Covenant that was in the root and in the first fruits Abraham Isaac and Jacob It is true their Covenant-holiness is not the adequat cause why they shall be ingrafted in really into Christ for so all the carnall children who had this relative holinesse must be really ingrafted in Christ but it is with the Lords free love both the cause of their personall and of their Church ingrafting and the continued deriving of that relative holinesse being a continued free favour in its kind is the Lords love in the same kind to root and branches otherwise it should not bear truth which is said v. 28. which expores this ver 28. that they are beloved for the fathers not as if they were predestinate to life because Abraham was so chosen but because of the Fathers Covenant-holinesse which was holinesse from Christ not as root and head through influence of saving grace but as a politick head which yet is what we say For because Christ is holy as root head and Redeemer the Jews once his Church Visible and to be so again the branches are not really holy by faith because all of them were not in Christ But if all Jews and Gentiles and also Infants who are Jews and Gentiles and parts of the body be baptized into the visible body so are Infants See more of this in Mr. Cotton Mr. Black Mr. Cobbet Mr. Rich. Baxter who have closed the dispute learnedly CHAP. XV. The differences of externall and internall Covenanting 2. No Universall Grace Rom. 10.18 Psal. 19.3 nor in Scripture 3. Nor power of beleeving to all given by Christ. HEnce the clear differences betwixt the externall visible and Nationall Covenanting of the people of old when they were brought out of the Land of Aegypt And the internall and personall though it may be visible also Covenanting with God 1. This under the New Testament is a new Covenant and all the old shadows are abolished The former is the old 2. This is with the house of Israel and Judah chosen persons and so personall with single men You shall not give a Nation Kingdom or Land with which the Covenant internally is so made as if all and every one without exceptions must know the Lord savingly what may be the converted Jews case whether the whole body of them all and every one shall be visible real and personall Covenanters as the place Rom. 11.26 seems to say I cannot determine and all and every one be saved for then must all the visible house of Israel be saved and not the chosen only 3. The visible externall Covenant was broken Jer. 31.32 The other personall and internall is never broken 4. The promise of a new heart is really fulfilled in all the persons and
4.5 Matth. 12.36 37. they are everlastingly punished And if Christ have suffered on the Crosse for all the sinnes of the Reprobate how are they judged and condemned for these sins as the Scripture saith And what Scripture saith they are condemned for the guilt of only unbelief or that Pagans are condemned for Gospel-unbelief where as Sodom Gomorrah Mat. 10.15 the men of Niniveh Mat. 12.41 Tyrus and Sidon Mat. 11.21 and such as have sinned without the Law Rom. 2.12 13 14 15. are freed of Gospel-guiltinesse and condemned for sinnes against the Law and yet this same way saith that there is a Gospel-Covenant made with all even thousands of Pagans who never heard of a Gospel never ingadged themselves by any profession to take the Lord for their God in Christ yet Christ bare their sins on the Tree and made his blood applicable to them by a Gospel-Covenant if they shall beleeve Whence they must all break the Covenant of Grace of which many of them never heard and be condemned for no sins but the last act of Sodomy gluttony parricide for the Gospel threatteneth not death to any sin but to finall unbelief say they There are not any sinnes committed against the Gospel but they are also sinnes against the Law because God incarnate and Immanuel is God and leaves not off to be God consubstantiall with the Father because he assumes the nature of man Then as the first Command oblidgeth Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac when God shall reveal that Command and Moses and the people are by that first Command to believe their deliverance out of Egypt and so if the fir●● Command oblidge us to believe and obey all Commands and Promises and Threatnings of God revealed and to be revealed because the Lord is God then must Christ God Redeemer and Immanuel be beleeved by this Command and so finall unbelief and finall despising of Christ God Redeemer is as directly against the first Command and so not a sin only threatned and forbidden in the Gospel as simple unbelief and simple despising of Christ God Redeemer For the believing final believing and unbelief and unbelief continuing to the end differ in the accident of duration not in nature and essence As a Rose that grows for a moneth only and a Rose of the same nature that groweth and flourisheth for three moneths Otherwise Christ could not have pronounced Peter blessed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 16.17 in the present for believing in the present for he should not have been blessed to the end as Solon said of his blessed man And this cannot but subvert our faith crush the peace hope consolation of weak Believers to whom undoubtedly the promise of perseverance i●●bsolutely made Jer. 31.31 35. Jer. 32.39 40. Isai. 54.10 Isai. 59.20 21. Joh. 4.14 Joh. 10.27 28. 2. If there be as formall a transgression of the fi●st Command in finall unbelief as in unbelief simply considered and in the other sins of Judas and other Apostates Why but as Christ bare in his body the sins of unbelief and satisfied for them he must so also bear the sins of finall rebellion and unbelief And shall we believe that Christ payed a satisfactory ransone of blood upon the crosse for the yesterdayes unbelief of Judas and not for the dayes unbelief If it be said No man can break the Gospel-Covenant for it is an everlasting Covenant Ans. It s an everlasting Covenant but yet all who sin against the commanding love and authority of our Immanuel especially they so professing to be his do truly break the Covenant but they so break it as it leaves not off to be the Covenant of life both to the breakers if they repent and beleeve and to others for so is the nature of this Covenant and so it is everlasting but the Covenant of Works if once broken ceases to be a Covenant of life for ever because the nature of it is to admit of no repentance at all Obj. Does not the Law command the sinner offending God to mourn and be humbled and confesse Ans. It doth But it injoines not repentance as a way of life with a promise of life to the repenter as the Law or as a Covenant of Works commands to its native and proper Covenanters obedience and every single act of obedience as a way to obtain the reward of a Law-life nor does the Law as a Covenant of Works command justifying faith and reliance upon God Redeemer or Immanuel but rather as the Law of Nature or as the Law of thankfulnesse to a Ransoning and Redeeming God the Law does this Though in a speciall Covenant way the Gospel command faith in Christ. Obj. But finall unbeleef as against God Redeemer and so considered is the only breach of the Covenant of Grace He that beleeves not is condemned as the man that rejects the only remedie of sin Ans. The only breach of the Covenant of Grace is too narrow to be the adequat cause of damnation for many Pagans who never heard of Christ and are under no Covenant but that of Works are condemned not for not beleeving in him of whom they never heard Rom. 10.14 nor for breach of the Covenant of Grace but for breach of the Covenant of Works 2. Unbelief may be called the nearest cause of damnation to such as 〈◊〉 within the Visible Church as the wilfull refusing of medicine which only and infallibly would heal the sick man of such a disease is the cause of his death but is the Morall cause For the disease it self is the Physicall cause or the materiall cause of the mans death And without doubt uncleannesse covetousnesse sorcerie lying idolatrie c. and many the like sinnes beside unbeleef are 1 Cor. 6.9 Eph. 5.5 6. Rev. 21.8 Rev. 22.15 Jud. 6.7 8. 2 Pet. 2.17.10 11 12 13 2 Thes. 2.9 10. 1 Pet. 4.3 4. 2 Pet. 2.2 3 4 5. the causes of the damnation of many visible professours where as this way saith Christ did satisfie upon the Crosse for all th●se sins and the damned of visible professours suffer in hell only for finall unbeleef And it seems unjust that both Christ and they should suffer satisfactory punishment for these same sins done against the Law And as strange that Ch●●st should die for any and not die for their sinnes since the Scripture useth the word of dying for sinnes Rom. 4.25 delivered from our sinnes Christ is a p●opitiation for our sinnes and the same way not for ours only but for the sinnes of the whole world he died for sinners Heb. 2.17 that he might make reconciliation for the sinnes of the people that is for the sinfull people or sinners Heb. 9.28 so Christ was once offered to bear the sinnes of many That is to bear the sins of the sinfull many that he died for Heb. 10.12 But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sin sat down on the right hand of God that is after
1. The nature of obeence 2. The worth and excellencie of obedience The more the obedience be from our selves the more it partakes of the nature of obedience Hence four kinds of obedience are to be considered 1. Christs obedience was the most legall obedience and also the most perfect for he obeyed most of his own of any from his own will purely Ioh. 10.18 Mat. 26. ●9 42 44. His own blood Hebr. 9.14 Rev. 1.5 My blood saith he Matth. 26.28 He gave his life a ransome Matth. 20.28 He gave himself a ransome 1 Tim. 2.6 By himself he purged our sins Heb. 1.3 Gave himself for his Church Eph. 5.25 Offered himself Heb. 9.14 And therefore the satisfaction that he made was properly his own It s true the life flesh and blood which he offered to God as common to the three Persons was equally the life flesh blood of God by way of Creation and efficiency For God as God created His Man-hood and gave him a body but that Man-hood in abstracto was not the offering but all these in concreto and the self including the value and the dignitie was not the Fat●ers not the Spirits but most properly his own and the Sons only by way of personall termination and subsistence 1. There are contradictory tearms affirmed of this holy self the Son and of the Spirit and the Father The Son was God incarnate 2. The son offered himself his own life his own blood to God for our sins Neither the Father nor the Spirit at all is God incarnate neither Father nor Spirit offered his own life his own blood to God Neither the Father nor the Spirit hath to speak so a personall or terminative dominion over the flesh and blood of Christ. 2. Christ was in no sort oblidged to empty himself and cannot be under a jus or obligation to the Creator or the creature Of free love and his own will he became Medi●●●● God Man and being crea●ed man and having said here am I to do thy will having stric●en hands with God as Surety of the Covenant none more oblidged being holy and true And therefore though Christ-Man was most strictly tyed to give the Father obedience yet he was not oblidged to give him such and such obedience so noble so excellent from a personall Union for Christ God cannot properly come under any obligation Hence the obedience of Christ is most meritorious because maximè indebita in regard of the God-head most undebtfull and yet obedience most debtfull in regard of the Man Christ. 3. Most from his own will personally considered the affection love the bended will highest delight to obey lay personally near to the heart and holy will of Christ God With desire have I desired to eat this Passeover He went foremost in the journey to Ierusalem when he was to suffer Much of the internall propension of the will makes much and as it were heightens and intends the nature of obedience so that Christs and our obedience have scarce an univocall definition 4. He gave and restored more glory to offended justice by such a noble incomparably excellent death then Adam and all his Sons took of glory from God therefore against impure Socinus it is a most reall satisfaction and compensation where glory by obeying and suffering is restored in liew of the glory taken away All that Socinians say that God cannot be a loser and needs not glory and nothing can be taken from him and nothing can be given to him proves nothing but that it is not such a satisfaction as one creature performs to another nor is it a satisfaction that brings profite to God For can a man be profitable to the Almightie Nor such a satisfaction as eases a disquieted minde Which proves not Christ to be a Saviour painted in a meer coppy to us and only a godly Martyr who saveth onely by preaching and witnessing and not by a most reall and eminently clear satisfaction 2. The Elect Angels next to Christ gave obedience in their Law course but not so properly of their own as Christ for some discriminating and strengthning grace they had from Christ Mediator their head Col. 2.10 that they should not fall and something from the Election of Grace which do not necessarily agree to the Covenant of Works which they performed without sin and the more extrinsecall help from grace the lesse merit so farre is grace from being as Jesuites say the essentiall requisite of merit that the work is lesse ours and so the lesse meritorious that it hath grace Let not any say then Christs obedience that came from the fulnesse of the Spirit without measure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 must so be lesse meritorious which is absurd for the reason why grace in Angels and men who are meer creatures diminishes the nature of merit is because grace is not their own nor their proper due but supernaturall or preternaturall and so hurts the nature of the merit but to the meriting person Christ-God-Man nothing is supernaturall nothing extrinsecall nothing not his own Grace is his own as it were by a sort of personall dominion not to say that the Man Christ as man did not merit yet as man he was born sinless and with the full Image of God 3. Adam gave more faintly obedience more indeed of his own but it was lesse obedience and lesse will in it then the obedience of Angels and had he continued his obedience had been proper obedience but this is to be observed none did ever actu secundo and by the only help of simple nature attain Justification and Salvation by the simple Covenant of Works but men and evill Angels fell under both though that was a possible Covenant and holy and spirituall yet God set it up to be an inlet to pure Justice in the reprobate Angels and so to free grace in elect men 4. The obedience of faith or Gospel-obedience in the fourth place hath lesse of the nature of obedience then that of Adam or of the Elect Angels or that of Christs It s true we are called obedient Children and they are called the Commandements of Christ and Christ hath taken the Morall Law and made use of it in an Evangelick way yet we are more as it were patients in obeying Gospel-Commands not that we are meer patients as Libertines teach for grace makes us willing but we have both supernaturall habits and influences of grace furnished to us from the Grace of Christ who hath merited both to us and so in Gospel-obedience we offer more of the Lords own and lesse of our own because he both commands and gives us grace to obey And so to the elect beleever the Law is turned in Gospel he by his Grace fulfilling as it were the righteousnesse of the Law in us by begun new obedience Rom. 8.4 and to the reprobate the Law remains the Law and the Gospel is turned in the Law for all conditionall
is infinite because of the infinitnesse of the person before and without the decree of God 2. Nor is it true that Christs dying for all and every one which is a dream makes salvation possible to all so that the Covenant is Preachable to all upon condition of beleeving Act. 10.43 To him Jesus Anointed who went about doing good and so was man v. 38 to him who was slain in our nature not for all and every man v. 39. to him whom God raised up the third day v. 40. To him gave all the Prophets witnesse as it is v. 43 that through his Name who ever beleeves in him shal have remission of sins 2. And this would be considered whoso beleeves in Christ are justified and saved how it is universall It is most true thus There is a sure connexion between faith and life eternall and the connexion is decreed of God or the concatenation of the end and the means or of the means and the end faith and salvation And it is true whether all beleeve or none at all beleeve and whether all or none at all be saved as is this whosoever shall keep the Law perfectly shall be justified and saved by the works of the Law But 1. it makes neither faith nor salvation possible to Pagans and Reprobates nor perfect obedience in doing the Law nor Justification or salvation by the works of the law possible to any living man But the Question is whether the connexion of the former be made true by the decree and revealed will of God promising life to the beleever by no means but only by this because Christ died for all and every one And so this should have been false if all Pagans and Reprobate and Elect beleeve they shall be saved if Christ had died only for the Elect. This must be proven either by Scripture or by some solid reason from Scripture for it saith this Reprobats can not have life by beleeving in Christ crucified for them except it be true that Christ was crucified for them but none can be saved by beleeving that Christ died for them except they also beleeve that Christ rose from the dead and ascended and inter●●eds in Heaven for them Then one might infer this could not be true but false if Reprobats beleeve they shall be saved except Christ have died risen again ascended and interceeds for all Reprobate and Elect. For true and saving faith the only condition of salvation must lay hold on the Resurrection Ascension and Intercession of Christ as well as on his dying for all The reason why it cannot be true that Reprobats shall be saved if they believe except Christ have died for them is ●y this way they cannot beleeve that Christ hath died for their sins except it be true that he died for their sins Yea I answer they cannot beleeve that Christ rose again for their righteousnesse except it be true that Christ also rose for the righteousnesse of the Reprobats this latter they cannot say It is said by Christs dying for all God hath now a condition●ll will of saving all and every one Elect and Reprobate if they shall beleeve which conditionall will was not in God before Christs dying for all Yea without Christs dying for all salvation upon condition of beleeving had been impossible But not to say that it is unworthy of the Holy Lord that new wills and new decrees should arise in him upon any thing that falls out in time such as the crucifying of the Lord Jesus Such Doctrine we condemn in Vorstius and in Arminians as is well observed by D. Twisse such a decree as this that God should say I decree will and intend remission and life purchased by the death of Christ to all Pagans that never hear the Gospel to all Reprobats so they shall beleeve in Christ And yet I never decree they shall beleeve nor have grace to beleeve saith no more then there is a connexion between faith as the condition and remission and life eternall as the thing promised as when God had decreed that Jerusalem should be burnt and deny grace to obey Yet saith Jeremiah from the Lord Jer. 38.17 If thou wilt assuredly go forth to the King of Babylons Princes then thy soul shall live and this City shal not be burnt with fire and thou shall live and thine house And the Lord says to Cain Gen. 4.7 If thou dost well and shall savingly beleeve as Abel thou shalt be accepted Then was that connexion decreed of God it containing a most just condition of life and a condition to which Zedekiah and Cain were oblidged but that the death of Christ made the Lord to intend and decree conditionally and in any tearms either acceptation to life or remission to Cain as the end and well doing as the means or intended to purchase the grace either of the one or the other is not warranted by Scripture for both the one and the other are the fruits of the merits of Christ Show 1. how God can will and decree such a thing to the Reprobate for it s as if a father would say I purpose to sell such a plot of ground to my son so he pay me an hundreth Crowns When 1. the son by no possiblity hath or can have the hundreth Crowns but only from his father 2. When the father of his free pleasure hath decreed never to give him the hundreth Crowns or the plot of ground 2. Show how faith is made possible by Christs death when it is not purchased to the reprobate by Christs death it is not surely made physically possible by Christs death if it be said that it is made possible morally rationally and objectively to them because there cannot be an offer of life made to Reprobates and to all upon condition of faith except Christ have died for the Reprobate that is denyed and never proven If one should come say they to the Antipods or to such as never heard of Christ and Preach the Gospel he should not before he Preach look for any new establishing of the conditionall Covenant who ever beleeves in Christ shall be justified and saved but should take it as granted it was made with them before therefore by Christs death the Gospel of it self is Preachable and may be Preached to all Nations quovis seculo in any age as it was to Job Ans. If any come to the Antipods and any Nation that never heard of Christ having the gift of Tongues and Preach to such or by his own industrie acquire the gift of such Tongues and by the strong hand of providence Preach the conditionall Covenant these providences should be a command and the setting up of a shining torch there should prove these people as to the elect among them in Gods minde were a Covenanted people no lesse then the Church of Samaria And there were no need to expect a new establishing of the conditionall Gospel-Covenant But how is that proven to be from
Christ and beleevers actually freed from satisfactory punishment So that both beleevers and Christ must actually bear the satisfactory punishment Which indeed makes beleevers half redeemers with Christ against which we disputed before 3. Arminians denies that we payed our debts to God in Christ paying them for us So that the broken man cannot be said to have satisfied the debt in and through the surety who satisfied for him which in all Law is unjust And since Arminians denies that we payed to Justice a ransome for sin because our Surety Christ payed for us he must deny that Christ was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our iniquities or that the chastisement of our peace was upon him Contrair to Isai. 53.5 because we made him not our Mediatour and Surety but God made him Mediatour and laid our iniquities upon him Isai. 53.6 But it is accidentall in Law that the debter substitute the surety or request him to take the place of surety upon him But he is a reall and a most legall surety who not requested of free grace becomes surety and pays the very same summe in speciè in kind that the debter ought to pay this reason does prove he is both a surety and a gracious surety As a Kings son who comes in and layes down his head for a malefactor truely and really dyeth and layeth down his life in the room and place of that malefactor though there was no Covenant nor paction between him and the Kings son though neither the malefactor nor any friend in his name did request the Prince to become surety and die for him Reuben offers his two sons to Jacob as pawnds to be slain if he should not bring home Benjamin safe to the father And had Jacob accepted of the offer Reubens two sons who knew not of the bargain had been sureties for Benjamin Gen. 42.37 and Judah might have been Law-surety for Benjamin to Jacob though Benjamin requested him not to take any such place The Lord the Creditour and Christ the Cautioner did strike hands together Christ put himself in our room as an hostage pledge and surety to die for us and payed the first and second death the summe that we was owing according to a paction between the Lord and Christ and we requested not Christ to be surety only by beleeving we thank him and subscribe and say Amen to what is done But in Law we payed in regard the same nature that suffered was ours and accepted as ours But Arminians clearly refuse that Christ shall be an hostage and surety for us because the offended party of his own furnished not one that died for him and so he strikes at the root of a reall sacrifice that is satisfactory to God because one and the same cannot be both satisfied and de suo of his own furnish a satisfying surety For so as his own Socinus saith one cannot be both a satisfier and a person satisfied and this is no satisfaction at all saith Socinus 4. Our beleeving cannot effectuate this that Christ hath actually born the satisfactory punishment due to us Arminius saith that Christ hath not actu ipso actually born that punishment he must say he hath born it only potentially potentià Then its like when we beleeve he bears that punishment compleatly but he cannot die nor suffer but once only he must mean that Christ did actually bear our sins but the satisfactory punishment is not accepted as suffered in our name But our beleeving hindereth not but he hath in genere causae moralis meritoriae really as a meriting cause deserved that God in justice cannot exact from us that same satisfactory punishment that Christ hath suffered for our sins its impossible that our faith can adde any meritorious power to Christs death therefore though not in our selves and physically yet really morally legally in Christ deliverance from satisfactory punishment is due to us we being in Christ legally and life eternall is due to us being in Christ according to the rigour of justice and injuria irrogata Christo sponsori foret wrong should be done to Christ and commutative justice by which ex condigno by condignitie he hath bought freedom from hell and right to heaven to these he died for if we should suffer eternall wrath in our persons whether we beleeve or beleeve not for beleeving is no part of the meriting cause of the satisfying ransome Yea Christ by right of buying and selling and we in Christ our surety may claime freedom from the second death and right to everlasting life so as God should fail against commutative justice against Christ and break with reverence and humble submission to his Glorious Majesty be it spoken Covenant to Christ and he should buy with a price more then enough his seed and not get his wages if these he died for die the second death and come short of glory eternall if the Lord say to Christ I promise to thee a seed that they shall be delivered from the second death and have life eternall providing thou shalt give me a price abundantly sufficient to buy these to wit the life and blood of God-Man and offer thy self a sacrifice upon the Crosse to offended Justice If CHRIST shall do this and pay the ransome and Christ get no wages no saved seed but they perish through the want of faith only either must faith be a part of the ransome which none can say or then the Lord shall not keep Covenant to Christ. 5. When Arminius saith that the Lord can nullo jure by no Law nor Justice crave of us faith and conversion to God if we have payed our debts by rigour of justice exactly to God in Christ who legally in our stead and place payed for us he supposes plainly that God requires faith and obedience of us as a part of recompence made to offended Justice And Armini●s saith that Christs righteousnesse is ours not as performed by him but as imputed to us by faith So that faith comes in as a collaterall price payed for us or a part of the price the very act and work of beleeving being counted ours and our righteousnesse before God Yea but God by no necessity of hurt Justice craves faith and repentance from us That CHRIST died not for our good only but in our stead is proven 1. Because Christ in some other more legall way died for us then for Angels for he died for their good that he might ●e made the Head of Angels Col. 2.10 Phil. 2.7 8 9 10 11. Rom. 10.9 11. and he died for the good of the whole Creation that he might make all things new and restore the creatures to their perfection which by the sin of man they had lost Rom. 8.20 21 22 2● Acts 3.21 Rev. 21.5 but he died not as suffering punishment due to the Angels and the work of Creation in their stead ●s wounded for their transgressions as he died for our
and somewhat more then for the Churches profit any may see Stephanus his Thesaurus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For is often the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paul Rom. 9. I would wish to be separated from Christ for my brethren that was not that they might be saved or not it were contrair to his prayer 2 Cor. 5.15 If Christ died for all then all were dead The bread is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world The good shepheard gives his life for his sheep I lay down my life for my sheep Greater love then this hath no man that a man should give his life for his friends It is expedient that one die for the people Joh. 11. Christ hath died for the ungodly Rom. 5. in their stead For the just ver 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for noteth most frequently vice loco in the place and stead As also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 18.33 would God I had died for thee Absalom The LXX the Syriack version and the Chalde paraphrase in thy stead I would I had died and thou remained alive Gen. 22.13 A sacrifice for Isaac in stead of Isaac Gen. 44.33 I shall remain pledge saith Reuben for the lad 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in paund for the lad Num. 3.12 I have taken the Levites for all the first born in stead of the first born So LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. When a ransome is given for another in point of justice Mar. 10.45 Christ gives his life a ransome for many Matth. 20.28 He came to give his dear precious life a ransome in stead of many 1 Tim. 2.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a counter ransome for all Matth. 5.38 Eye for eye tooth for tooth Exod. 21.24.23 Thou shalt give life for life Give that peece of money for thee and me Mat. 17. Isa 43.4 I will give men for thee and people for thy life 3. It is used thus when a man is given in place of another Pro. 11.8 The righteous is delivered out of trouble and the wicked cometh in his stead Job 34.24 and he makes others to stand in their place Heb. as before Psal. 45.16 in stead of fathers shall be sons Job 16.4 Oh! if your soul were in my souls stead 4. It is when the son comes in the room and stead of the father or one kills another which is a sad exchanging of one person for another and though the following King does not act in the person or by the nāe authority of him who went before yet there is one person changed and another raigns in his place and room 1 Chron. 14.1 Abijah sleept and Asa his son raigned in his stead LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 King 3.7 Thou hast made thy servant to raign in the room of David my father LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Kin. 11.43 Rehoboam raigned in his stead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chal. Paraphrastes pro eo 31. Abijah raigned in his stead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Kin. 1.17 Joram raigned in his stead LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Kin. 15.28 Baasha slew him and raigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Kin. 8.15 He slew him and Hazael raigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Kin. 15.10 Shallum slew him and raigned in his stead 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 14. Menahem slew him and raigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ver 30. Hoshea smote him and raigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 So Esth. 2.4 Eccl. 4.15 2 Sam. 17.25 Gen. 30.2 1 King 16.10 Zimri raigned 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezek. 16.32 Joseph heard that Archelaus did raign in the room of Herod his father Mat. 2.22 Tremellius and Trostius both turn it loco Herodis Mat. 5.38 eye for eye It s the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 17.27 give it for me and thee The same word Luk. 11.11 If his son aske a fish for a fish in stead of a fish Tremellius and Trostius in place of a fish loco piscis he will not give him a serpent Rom. 12.17 neither render evill for evill So the same in both Languages is 1 Thes. 5.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 1 Pet. 3.19 and 1 Cor. 11.16 Her hair is given her in stead of a covering The same word in the Syriack is 1 Pet. 3.18 The Lord Christ died the just for the unjust in stead of the unjust Christ is Gal. 3.13 made a curse for us in our stead Matth. 20.28 Syriack that he might give his life a redemption for many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vice multorum And the same is Mar. 10.45 and Rom. 5.6 in due time Christ died for the wicked 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Syriack 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro vel vice improborum 8. While we was sinners Christ died for us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in our place 2 Cor. 5.15 If one died in place of all men all were dead Mark 14.24 This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for many loco multorum Luk. 22.20 This cup is the New Testament in my blood which is shed in place of you Joh. 10.11 The good shepheard layes down his life for his sheep in place of his sheep The same word Joh. 11.50 Know ye not that it is expedient that one man die in the place of the people that the whole people perish not Then the intrinsecall end of Christs dying consisteth not with the perishing of these for whom he died for he died that the whole people should not perish 1 Tim. 2.6 Who gave himself a redemption for every man Tit. 2.14 Who gave his soul in stead of us Heb. 2.9 Who tasted death in the place of every man 1 Pet. 2.21 Christ died in stead of us 1 Pet. 4.1 Rom. 9.3 I pray that I were separated from Christ in stead of my brethren The same word so constantly used can hardly signifie for the good and profit either of things or persons As Luk. 11.11 will the father give the son a serpent in stead of a fish for the good and profit of a fish 1 Thes. 5.15 See that none of you render evill for evill i. e. evil for the good and profite of evill a wild sense and it is wilder in the case of persons when it is said the son raigns 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so often by the Seventy Translators in stead of his father that must be for the good and profit of the dead father But nothing can be wilder then to say Jehu killed Ahabs seed and Zimri slew his Master Elah Hoshea slew the King and he raigned in his stead as the Seventy say not once that is he raigned for the good and profit of the King whom he slew and so slaying of Kings and rooting out the race and posterity of Kings shall be their good and profit Socinus and the Catechism of Raccovia saith if to die for sinners be as much as to
head by the ascent of Mount Olivet it is good he also praises and sings Psalms 2 Sam. 15.30 Ps. 3.1 2 3. If he be at home in his house it is good he praises Ps. 30. Ps. 101. If he be banished in the wildernesse and chased from the house of God its good he praises Psal. 42. Psal. 63. Psal. 84. Nothing falls wrong to a mortified soul. The people cry Hosanna Christ bids them rejoice their King comes Zech. 9.9 The wicked spits on his face and plucks off the hair that is good Isa. 50.6 I gave them face and back to be doing their will Heat to a gracious spirit is good cold is good joy is good sorrow is good health is good sicknesse is good Ezekiah gets a victory the Assyrians are slain that is good Isaiah prophecies that all that are in his house and his treasures shall be spoiled and his children carried captive good is the word of the Lord Is spoil and captivity and the sword good Yea Ezekiah closes with it Isai. 39.8 Grace wonders at nothing laughs at nothing weeps at nothing but faintly rejoices at nothing wantonly closes with all sayes Amen to all for Christ was crucified for me and I am crucified in and with him Q. 3. What are the speces or sorts of mortifications that we may know the true mortification A. 1. It s hard to give the division of them logically There is 1. a naturall mortification there is no fire in the affections of sucking infants to Crowns Kingdomes to treasures of Gold and Silver that is not mortification but virtually there is as much fire in a flint stone though formally it be cold as may burn twenty Cities Concupiscence driven away from the aged Eccles. 12. the hearth-stone is cold and there is in it such a deadnesse to lusts not because of deadnesse of sin Originall it lives as the souls of the old men live but because the tools are broken the animal and vitall spirits are weakened the man loves the journey but the horse is crooked and laid by there is nothing of Christs death here 2. There is a compelled mortification sicknesse and withered arms and legs and strong fetters in the prison poverty and want care for bread and the armed man poverty that hath a sharp sword necessity blunts the affections in their second acts the man hath no mind of whooring And many drink water who through Christ crucifying are not mortified to wine and strong drink 1. There is often in this an ignorance of CHRIST crucified and no faith 2. A reluctance to divine dispensation and no gracious submission to God which is in one crucified to the world 3. There is a Philosophick mortification to the creatures which are seen by the light of nature to be very nothing and most unsatisfactory to the naturall man but there is no supernaturall deadness in the heart wrought by the death of Christ. Archimedis and other great spirits sick of love to know the nature motion and influence of the starres and pained with a speculative disease of books and to know much do contemn and despise honour gain pleasure the three idols of ambitious of covetous and voluptuous men but there is no deadnesse no bluntning of the operations of the soul toward the idol world flowing from the beleeved in crucified Lord of Glory except you say that Plato and Aristotle and such were crucified with Christ Learning works not mortification 4. There is a religious or a madly superstitious mortification The Monks saith Luther dreamed that the world was crucified unto them and they unto the world when they entered unto their Monasteries but by this means Christ is crucified not the world Yea the world is delivered from crucifying and is the more quickened by that opinion of trust they had in their own holinesse and righteousnesse Col. 2.23 In will-worship in humility and neglecting of the body not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh There is much vain and counterfeit mortification and Papists have as good warrand to sacrifice their lives to God and to offer a bloodie sacrifice unto God under the New Testament as to shed their own blood in whipping and scourging and such bloody worship hath the ground of mortification that Baals Priests had to launce themselves with knives to the effusion of blood And the same may be said of pilgrimages of voluntary poverty in which as Luther said the world and all their lusts are quickened 5. Not unlike to this is the Pharisees mortification in which they are not crucified with CHRIST but alive and vigorously strong to self-righteousnesse to merits to dead works 6. There is a civill or morall mortification which hath diverse branches As 1. Senec● teacheth that nature is satisfied with water for drink and a ●urse for a house yet he was a covetous man himself And shall Horatius Cocles be a mortified man because he defended the Romans against the three Curiatii alone Though the bloody Gallant killed his own sister And was the state mortified who pardoned him that bloody fact for his gallant service And Decius father and son who suffered so much for their Countrey and loved it more then their own blood And must Africanus Major and Cato who suffered for the liberty of the publick and Diogenes who lived on herbs be mortified men to the world But what avails it to be dead to the bulk of a bit body of clay and yet be alive to vain glory 2. There is an occasionall deadnesse rising from the sight of a father a brother a friend dead not from the death of Christ. An unbeleever dies with this word I would not live for all the world and we are like water spilt on the ground The house is burnt all spoiled treasures and the stock by land and sea-robbers are plucked away and riches have wings Hence mortification transient for a time but lusts fallen in a sown are not dead they rise again and live 3. There is another transient mortification as D. Preston observes when the conscience is affrighted with Judgement and some fire-flaught of restraining grace is up 4. A good calm nature naturally either dul and stupid or some clement and meek disposition and free of the fire that often follows the complexion and hampered in with teachers parents company education learning seems a mortified nature But that is true mortification that flowes from faith in a humbled crucified Saviour and it is not to beleeve that Christ was mortified in our room and place as Saltmarsh and Antinomians would say Faith in Christ crucified is our mortification causatively in radice not formally Q. 4. To what things must we be crucified Answ. Gal. 6.14 To all things created to the world wee condemn and despise and hate the world and the world does value us nothing 1. There is a deadnesse to self which was in Christ our samplar of mortification Ro. 15.1 Let us not please
but then there should never have been such a thing known to the generations to come as that Ark of glory that huge and boundlesse all fulnesse of the indwelling Godhead in the Man Christ. Sure had there been none sick such a suffering Physician to heal us had never been none lost would have said there is no Saviour none dead in sin would say there is no need of such a Lord and Prince of life by whose swelling wounds we are healed Isa. 53. 4. Nor was it fit that this should never be known to Angels and men that the Lord honours so many redeemed sinners with a grant and licence to love so high so precious a Redeemer and as it were to marre and black his fairnesse and desirable excellency with our feeble and sinfully weak love he being so far above our love or faith or praises 5. The Gospel-wonders should not be an eternally sealed book to men and Angels as Revel 12.1 that wonder in heaven A woman cloathed with the Sun and the Moon under her feet and upon her head a crown of twelve Stars should be known And what was shewed to John was to be shown to the Churches Rev. 21.10 And he carried me away in the Spirit to a great and high mountain and shewed me that great City the holy Hierusalem descending out of heaven from God 11. Having the glory of God I mean here the wonders of grace mercy declared justice as that the most High should empty Himself and the Godhead be united to clay that there should be such a high Bridegroom so low and sinfull a Spouse that death should conquer death that Nothings of clay should sing their debts eternally cast down their crowns being made of sinners glorified Kings and not be ashamed to cast down their crowns before him that sits on the throne Nor should the gifts and graces of God be hidden Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son how should he not with him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 give us all things begrace to us all How should he not make heaven and earth free grace to us and all a masse of grace to us Eph. 1.6 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He hath begraced us all over in Christ. 1 Tim. 1.13 But I obtained mercy as dipped in a sea of mercy Luk. 1.28 Hail Virgine 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled with free grace Let us forgive one another Col. 3.13 as Christ begraced pardon to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That we might know 1 Cor. 2.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things that are freely given us And what a debt must that be the forgiving of ten thousand talents more then to forgive millions and tuns of gold Hence the Question whether Law-innocency and never sinning or Gospel-repentance and rising again in Christ be most excellent It is answered 1. Simply to us It is better and morally more excellent never to fall never to be sick then to rise in Christ and be healed by such a Physician But sinning and falling being considered in relation to a more universall good there is more excellency in Gospel-rising then in Law-standing As 1. There is more feeling deeper sense in the woman which did wash Christs feet with her tears and wipe them with the hair of her head then in some who never so fell And Christ may hold forth something of this Luk. 15.7 Likewise I say unto you saith Christ there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth more then over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance True it is our Saviours scope is not to compare repentance and Law-innocency together or to show that the Pharisees needed no repentance as if they were not in a lost condition but to show what joy was in heaven with the Lord the father of the forlorn son and in the Angels at the home coming of repenting sinners And is not a Jewell of ten thousand millions of more worth then a Diamond that is not worth the eighth part of that summe Adams innocency and never sinning should have been by the common influences of Law-love and the same may be said of Angel-innocency But Gospel-repentance is the gift procured at a dearer rate Christ was exalted a Prince to give repentance Acts 5.31 Neither should there be sense and such loving sense of free grace in the forlorn son had he never fled away from his father and never been so received with a welcome of grace which he beleeved before he felt it CHAP. VI. Q. 11. Whether there be any such thing as a Covenant of Suretyship or Redemption between JEHOVAH and the Son of GOD That there is such a Covenant is proven by 11. Arguments NO doubt Christ God-Man is in Covenant with God being a person designed from eternity with his own consent and in time yeelding thereunto and yet he stands not in that Covenant-relation that we stand in as we shall hear 1. Arg. What Argument does prove that there is a people in Covenant with God who call the Lord their God as Zech. 13.9 Jer. 32.38 Isai 25.9 the same shall prove Christ to be in Covenant with God As who can say he is my God he must be in Covenant with God As Jer. 31.33 I will be their God and they shall be my people Ezek. 11.20 Ezek. 34.24 25 30. Now this is clearly said of Christ Psal. 89.26 He shall cry unto me thou art my Father my God and the Rock of my salvation The Son the only begotten of the Father saith thou art my God Heb. 1.5 And again I will be to him a Father and he shall be to me a Son It is expounded of Christ but was first spoken of Solomon the Type 1 Sam. 7.14 My mercy that is my Covenant-mercy to the Son of David and his seed shall stand sure as the dayes of heaven Psal. 89.28 29 34 35 36. 1 Chron. 22.10 He shall build a house for my Name he shall be my Son and I will be his father Then follows the Covenant-promise And I will establish the Throne of his Kingdom over Israel for ever which is expounded Psal. 89.28 29 c. of Christ a Covenanted King as long as the Sun and the Moon indures 34 35 36. and cannot agree to David whose Kingdom is now gone As also Christ flees to this Covenant in his extream suffering my God my God why hast thou forsaken me Psal. 22.1 Mat. 27.46 So Psal. 40. it is Christ who saith v. 8. I delight to do thy will O my God And it is a Covenant compellation my God and spoken by him v. 6. Mine ears thou hast opened who removes all sacrifices and offers himself a sacrifice Heb. 10.5 A body thou hast prepared me So also Ps. 45.7 Thou lovest righteousnesse and hatest wickednesse Therefore God thy God a Covenant word hath anointed thee with the oyl of gladnesse above thy fellows See glorified Christ glorying in this Rev. 3.12 Him that overcometh will I make a
pillar in the house of my God and he shall go no more out and I will write upon him the Name of my God which is New Jerusalem which cometh down out of heaven from ny God Four times he calls him his God The Lord speaks in his Type Psal. 118.28 he who comes in the Name of the Lord and is made the head of the corner Thou art my God and I will praise thee thou art my God I will exalt thee Christ is a noble example in this teaching us to ride at this ●nchor of hope thou art my God by Covenant Mic. 5.4 Christ shall feed in the Name of the Lord his God Isa. 55.4 2. Arg. Is taken from the Lords way of calling of Christ to his Office of Mediator So he who is the Lords chosen called and sent servant is either ingadged in the service by necessity of nature so that God cannot choose but he must choose and call him and he must by the same necessity of nature be chosen and called to that service or he is the Lords chosen and called servant by free agreement and consent of the Lord who calls and of the partie called which is a Covenant between Master and Servant the Lord and the sent Ambassadour who is sent the Lord the Messenger who comes with such news Now of Christ it is said Isai. 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold my chosen in whom my soul delights And of meer grace and free-love both God sent him and he came Joh. 3.16 1 Tim. 1.15 for by no necessity of nature was Christ sent to preach glad tidings to the meek to bind up the broken-hearted to proclaim liberty to the captives Isai. 61.1 to say to the prisoners go forth Isai. 49.9 For Isai. 42.6 I the Lord have called thee saith he in righteousnesse 7. To open the blind eyes to bring out the prisoners from the prison and them that sit in darknesse out of the prison-house Nor can we say that any thing but the good will of the Lord did conclude or determine him to send 1. To save men not Angels Heb. 2.16 2. Some men not others Joh. 15.13 14. 3. So ill deserving men as lost ones Luk. 19.10 sinners ● Tim. 1.15 Rom. 5.6.8 3. When the Lord speaks of the Covenant of grace Ezek. 37.23 he addes a word of this Covenant I will cleanse them so shall they be my people and I will be their God 24. And David my servant the son of David Christ for David was dead shall be King over them and they all shall have one Sheepherd Ezek. 34.23 I will set up one Sheepherd over them and he shall feed them even my servant David he shall feed them and he shall be their Sheepherd 24. I the Lord will be their God And Zecha 13. JEHOVAH ownes Christ as this Sheepherd as one of his hireing v. 7. Awake O sword against my Sheepherd Mal. 3.1 The Messenger of the Covenant whom ye delight in behold he shall come saith the Lord of Hosts Hence this David is the Servant Sheepherd and Messenger of the Lord either by nature which cannot be said for the Man Christ is by Nature his servant but Christ-Mediatour God-Man is not so his servant or he is so by free consent on the Lords part who hires and sends him and on Christs part who graciously condescended to be hired and undertook for us which all along must be understood of no servile reward 3. Arg. Christs voluntary yeelding to the work proves this if Christ God Man willing to empty himself and take on him our nature did offer his service to God saying Sacrifice and burnt-offering thou didst not desire Psal. 40.6 Heb. 10.5 a body thou hast prepared me 7. Then said I loe I come in the volume of the book it is written of me to do thy will And if Christ-God-Man did willingly lay down his life of his own goodnesse and no man could take his life from him against his will Joh. 10 11 18. Joh. 18.5.8 Joh. 14.31 Luk. 9.51 Then is Christs free consent to be our surety and Redeemer to seek and to save us clear Matth. 20.28 Luk. 19.10 And if it pleased the Lord to bruise him Isa. 53.10 and of love to give him to the death for us Joh. 3.16 Rom. 8.3.32 Matth. 21.37 then the Lords consent that he should be our Surety Saviour and Redeemer is no lesse evident Now a mutuall agreement between JEHOVAH and the Son for one and the same undertaking is a compact and Covenant to have us saved 4. Argument is from the agreed upon giving and taking between the Father and the Son where there is a free giving of some to the Son to be ransoned and keeped upon the Fathers part and a most free closing of the Son to own and answer for the given and to lose none but to raise them up at the last Day There certainly is a Covenant gone before as Jacobs reckoning with Laban Gen. 31.39 That which was torn of beasts I brought not unto thee I bare the losse of it of my hand didst thou require it whether stolen by day or stolen by night 40. Thus I was in the day the drought consumed me and the frost by night and my sleep departed from mine eyes This evidently speaks a Covenant upon Labans part delivering his flock to Jacob as to a servant and sheepherd saying I contract with thee I deliver my flock to thee answer for them make an account to me of dead and living And on Jacobs part a taking burden Covenant wayes to take care of them and a Covenant-yeelding require thou at my hand old and young weak and strong of the flock I bind my self to keep them So Christ hath delivered and given to him of the Father so many by head and name Joh. 17.2 As thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as thou hast given him 12. Those that thou gavest me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 I have kept and none of them are lost Joh. 6.37 All that the Father hath given me shall come unto me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the comer to me I will in no wise cast out 39. And this is the Fathers Covenant will that sent me that every one which seeth the Son and beleeveth on him may have ●●verlasting life and I will raise him up by Covenant and Gospel-promise at the last day And what speaketh stronger consolation then the Father gave me to the Son Christ to be saved and the Son undertook for me hath given a written band under his hand to keep me O what happinesse that I am not mine own keeper but that Christ hath given it under his hand and the Father and the Son have Covenant-wise closed and stricken hands the one having given and the other received me a-keeping 2. My soul enter thou not into their secrets who lay all peace comfort assurance of
salvation upon their own Socinian faith that is their indifferent relying upon the Saviour Jesus and their own holiness watchfulnesse obedience love to God Sure the comfort joy peace assurance subjective that they have in their conscience can be no stronger then the objective and fundamentall certitude of standing persevering overcoming flowing from free-will which is woefully free and indifferent to persevere and stand or not to persevere not to stand but to fall away It s a stronger consolation and the strongest should be the Christians choise that is founded upon the Fathers giving and the Sons receiving of sinners and the faith of salvation to me which relies and leans upon Christs undertaking for me that I shall not be lost nor casten out then upon my undertaking for my self The fifth Argument is from Christs receiving the Seals Who so receives in his body the Seals of the Covenant of Grace Circumcision and Baptism and yet needs no putting off of the body of the sins of the flesh by Circumcision and needs no forgivenesse of sin no regeneration no burying with Christ in Baptism as Col. 2.11 12. Rom. 6.3 4 5. and eats the Passeover and needs not that the Lamb of God take away his sins as Joh. 1.29 since he is holy and without sin he must be under the Covenant and God must be his God in some other Covenant then sinners are for these seals are proper to a Covenanted people strangers and Pagans might not receive them but these in Covenant only Gen. 17.7 Exod. 12.48 Matth. 28.20 Col. 2.11 12. and Christ must have received Seals for other uses and ends then sinners received them to wit to testifie that he was the God of both Jews and Gentiles and that he was the undertaker for us in a Covenant of suretyship for us to perfect a higher command then any mortall man was under to wit to lay down his life for sinners Joh. 10.18 and beside that for our cause he was made under the Law to fulfill all righteousness and so was Circumcised Luk. 2.21 Baptized Matth. 3.13 16 17. did eat the Passeover with the Disciples Mat. 26.18 19 20. Mar. 14.18 Luk. 22.13 14. he in coming under that state in which he must because a man fulfill the Law and be under even Gospel commands so far as they were suteable to his holy Nature testifieth in obeying all commands even of the Morall Law and as the Son of God he was under no such obligation that he was under a speciall ingagement and compact to God for the work of Redemption And we are taught to feel what imbred delight and sweetnesse of peace is in duties when Christ Covenants with God to come under the Law and under the hardest of commands to lay down his life for sinners because it was a Law and command by Covenant that hath most of obedience which hath most of a Law Q. Was Christ such an one as needed seals to his speciall Covenant with the Father Ans. He needed no seals at all to strengthen his faith of dependency for there was no sinfull weaknesse in his faith yet he was capable of growing Luk. 2.52 For the Law requires not the like physicall intention and bendednesse of acts of obedience from the young as from the aged 2. In that the receiving of the seals proves Christ to be Surety of the Covenant of Grace it makes good that he was under the other Covenant and to perform the obedience due to the speciall command of dying as to a command of Covenant 6. Argument is from the Lords libertie If God might in justice have prosecuted the Covenant of Works and Adam and his might justly have suffered eternall death for sin for the Law is holy and just and the threatning Gen. 2.17 just except the Lord had of grace made another Covenant then must the Lord send or not send a Saviour to suffer and be a suffering Redeemer and Surety as pleased him or not pleased him and if Christ may refuse to undertake or willingly agree as pleased him and Christ being God●consubstantiall with the Father might have stood to the Law-way of works For who or what could have hindered him to follow a course of justice against all men then if both agreed to dispense with that Law-way to save man Here is Covenant-condiscension between JEHOVAH and the Son of quieting Law and pitching on a milde Gospel-way 7. Argument from the promises made to Christ He to whom the promises are made as to the seed so as in him they are yea and Amen and he who is eminently the chief heir of the promises as ingaged to make good the promises on the Lords part to give forgivenesse Jer. 31.34 Heb. 8.12 perseverance Jer. 32.39 40. Isa. 54.10 Isa. 59.21 peace Ezek. 34.25 Lev. 26.6.11 12. yea and a new heart Jer. 31.33 Ezek. 11.19 Heb. 8.10 life eternall Joh. 10.28 and to make good the promises upon our part by fulfilling the condition and giving habituall grace Jer. 31.33 Ezek. 36.26 and actuall influences Jer. 31.34 to know the Lord Ier. 32.39 40. Ezek 36.27 to and with him God must strike a Covenant of suretyship that he shall have the anointing in its fulnesse above his fellows without measure to make good all these promises as Mediatour for it is not simply grace and life that the Lord bestows upon his people but grace out of the store-house of the Mediatour God-Man Now this must be given to Christ by promise Gal. 3.16 Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made he saith not and to seeds as of many but as of one and to thy seed which is Christ He cannot well mean mysticall Christ that is Christ and all his for they are indeed many and numerous as Isai. 2.1 2. Isai. 60.1 2 3 4 5 6. Psal. 22.27 compared with Rev. 5.11 Rev. 7.9 for the promises are made to Christ-God-Man eminently not formally For 2 Cor. 1.20 All the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen For the promise is made to us for Christ and through his grace then the promise is made first to him and more eminently and to us for him Propter quod unumquodque●ale id ipsum magis tale 2. The promises are fulfilled and made good not because we fulfill the condition but for Christ in whom and by whose merit both the grace promised and the grace habituall and actuall to perform the condition be it faith repentance humility c. is freely given to us 3. Christ is he who makes the Covenant and all the promises Act. 7.32 Who said to Moses I am the God of thy fathers the God of Abraham 34. I bave seen I have seen the affliction of my people which is in Aegypt and I have heard their groaning and am come down to deliver them And now come I will send thee unto Aegypt And v. 35. Moses is made a Ruler and a deliverer by the hands of the Angel that appeared to
him in the bush This is Christ the Angel 38. of the Covenant Mal. 3.1 Whom they tempted 1 Cor. 10.9 Of whom the Lord said Exod. 23.21 Beware of him and obey his voice and provoke him not for he will not pardon your transgressions for my Name is upon him And this Angel saith I am the God of Abraham the Omniscient God that sees the afflictions of his people 3. Hears their prayers 4. Delivers them out of Aegypt Exod. 20.1 2 and so the Author of the Covenant and of all the promises It is much for weak beleevers that God stands ingadged in Christ by Covenant with him to give us to beleeve and to beleeve to the end Hath the Lord given himself Surety for the standing of a tottering beleever Is there not ground to beleeve that Christ shall make good his undertaking Also if all the promises be made to Christ who is the Author of the Covenant and upon condition that Christ do his part and lay down his life then sure Christ is under a Covenant to injoy his reward when he hath done his work And to have a beleeving seed is Christs reward heaven and earth can make no ●urer binding for faith and salvation 8. As the former Argument is from the promise made unto Christ and fulfilled to him so this is from the Predictions Prophecies and Promises of him as he of whom such glorious promises are foretold and may claim the thing promised by faith he hath some word of promise for suiting these things which is a Covenant if he shall do what is required of him and fulfill the Commandement Joh. 10.18 But such Prophecies and Promises there be of CHRIST Isa. 22.22 The key of the house of David will I lay upon his shoulder so he shall open and none shall shut and he shall shut and none shall open 23. And I will fasten him as a nail in a sure place and he shall be for a glorious Throne to his fathers house 24. And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his fathers house the off-spring and the issue all vessels of small quantity from the vessels of cups even to all the vessels of flagons Zech. 3.8 For behold I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH Zech. 6.12 Speak unto Joshua saying Thus speaketh the Lord of Hosts saying Behold the man whose Name is the BRANCH and he shall grow up out of his place and he shall build the Temple of the Lord 13. Even he shall build the Temple of the Lord and he shall bear the glory and shall sit and rule upon his Throne Mic. 5.4 And he shall stand and feed in the strength of the Lord in the Majesty of the Name of the Lord his God and they shall abide For now shall he be great unto the ends of the earth 5. And this man shall be the peace when the Assyrian shall come into our land So Psal. 72.7 In his dayes shall the righteous flourish c. Hence as Christ prayed in faith Joh. 17.5 to be glorified with the glory he had with the Father before the world was because he finished the work though he was not yet crucified but he had a mind fixed to suffer So may Christ pray in faith to Govern right and to bear the glory and to feed in the strength of the Lord and to have a conquished people since he was to fulfill all the work that was laid upon him And this supposes a Covenant Hence Arg. 9. from the suite he bids his Son aske which he will grant Psal. 2.8 Aske of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance and the ends of the earth for thy possession Psal. 89.26 He shall cry unto me thou art my Father my God and the Rock of my salvation 27. Also I will make him my first-born higher then the Kings of the earth 28. My mercy will I keep for him for ever c. If God say to us call upon me in the day of trouble and I will hear thee This argues a Covenant that God shall hear if we pray Then it sayes if Christ the Mediatour shall pray he shall be heard and prospered with successe in his work 10. Argument from the work of Christ and the wages which a Covenant calls for Christ complains Isa. 49.4 Then I said I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought and in vain there 's work Shall he have nothing for his work He adds Yet surely my judgement is with the Lord and my work with my God v. 6. He receives an answer of a full reward for his work And he said it is a light thing that thou shouldest be my servant to raise up the Tribes of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles that thou may'st be my salvation unto the end of the earth Which words are cited true of Christ by Luke Act. 13.47 when Christ is Preached to the Gentiles And as one who laboured for us so he craves his wages though the Jews pay him unworthily Zech. 11.12 Then I said if ye think good give me my price and if not forbear pay me or pay me not Yet the Lord payed him Phil. 2.7 He made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and became obedient to the death the death of the crosse Here is work followeth his wages call it merit or what else it s a reward and the end of his suffering which Christ both desired and intended as the fruit of his labours v. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Therefore God highly exalted him and gave him a Name above every name Act. 5.21 Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and Saviour Isa. 53.10 When he shall make his soul an offering for sin which was work hard enough he shall see his seed which was his souls desired wages he shall prolong his days the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in hand 11. He shall see of the travail of his soul and be satisfied 12. Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoyl with strong that is an ample reward Follows his work because he hath powred out his soul unto death and he was numbred with the transgressours and bare the sins of many and made intercession for the transgressours Hence his care to finish the work of him that sent him and to do his will Joh. 4.34 Joh. 17.4 Joh. 8.29 and as the Father loved so he rewarded the obedience of his Son not by necessity of nature but by a voluntary compact but he loves his obedience Joh. 10.17 Therefore doth my Father love me because I lay down my life that I might take it again Joh. 15.10 If ye keep my Commandements ye shall abide in my love even as I have kept my Fathers Commandements and abide in his love Nor can it be denied but
a redeemed and saved people was much in the heart of Christ and much in his desire and intention Joh. 10.10 I am come that they may have life and have it more aboundantly And if to finish the work especially of saving lost man was his meat and drink Joh. 4.34 and he prayed for the ransoned ones Joh. 17. to sanctifie them 17. That they might he where he is 24. There must be always in the heart of Christ a design of love in that he made redeemed ones his end his work his souls satisfaction Isa. 53.11 And O how worthlesse were we that the desire of God should be toward us How far below the price that love put on us Was man a Crown and wager for God for God for such a God to run for to work for and to win Was there not a more fixed seat in Angels then in clay for so high a love as the Love of God Is there room in so low a peece of created Nothing for so high and deep so broad and long a design so high an aime as nothing could be the last and the least result of transcendent love but great Immanuell God with us Reason might say a lesse price may buy poor man a lower design may compasse sinners But love said no lesse could do it and this love is not capable of a mistake in buying infinite love cannot erre in designes of free-love 11. Argument is from the Oath of God Christ is made a High Priest another way then other Priests Heb. 7.21 For those Priests were made without an oath but this with an oath by him that said to him the Lord hath sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchizedec Psal. 110.4 No man enters to an office by an oath to be faithfull or to be for ever in such an administration but he enters also to the office by Covenant And this oath is sworn by the Lord JEHOVAH to Christ The Lord hath sworn thou art a Priest It s a more excellent Priesthood which is confirmed by an oath then that of Aaron which is confirmed by no oath Psal. 89.35 Once have I sworn by my Holinesse that I will not lie unto David the Messiah my Anointed the son of David 36. His seed shall endure for ever Act. 2.30 Therefore being a Prophet and knowing that God with an oath had sworn to him that of the fruit of his loins according to the flesh he would raise up Christ to sit upon his Throne 31. He seeing this before spake of the Resurrection Psal. 1●2 11 The Lord hath sworn in truth unto David he will not turn from it of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy Throne 12. If thy children shall keep my Covenant and my Testimony that I shall teach them their children also shal sit upon thy Throne for evermore They shall sit so and so by Covenant blessed in Christ. And so the stability and certainty of the decree and oath is not to make the children of David secure but watchfull in their duty But this is not a condition without the which the Messiah should not reign but without this he should not reign to their comfort and everlasting good But otherwise the truth of the Lords Covenant-faithfulnesse depends not upon mens unbeleef Rom. 3.3 and for the certainty of this promise and oath which made good Christ his reign which shall not cease see 2 Sam. 7.12 1 King 8.25 2 Chron. 6.16 Luk. 1.69 Gen. 21.17 18 Hence there is no Covenant made with Christ that the Covenant of Works made with Adam should stand for ever 2. No oath in that Covenant 3. No promise or oath to give perseverance and the Spirit and influences of grace for that effect And the oath of God that Christ shall be King of my will to reign over the heart to give repentance as a Prince Acts 5.31 and that God hath sworn him to be an eternall Priest who offered himself a sacrifice to deliver me from the present evill world Gal. 1.4 to ransome me from my vain conversation 1 Pet. 1.18 to bring me to God 1 Pet. 1.18 that I should being dead to sin live to righteousnesse 1 Pet. 2.24 Eph. 5.25 26 27. Heb. 13.11 12. Rev. 1.5 6. is somewhat more comfortable then the doctrine of Papists Arminians who say that any tempted Saint may be a justified Saint to day and an Apostate a limme of Satan and a child of perdition to morrow as Judas was as if Christ were not a sworn Advocate in the nick and hour of temptation to help in the act of winnowing and had not made promises of actuall grace to actuall temptations when they come Luk. 22.31 1 Joh. 2.1 Math. 10.19 And if Christ be sworn a King Advocate an high Priest to overcome the rockinesse and flinty and stony rebellion of will providing that will shall first yeeld and not play the King against Christ for any thing I see the Covenant of grace is looser the corruption of the Covenanter being ten times stronger to evill then the will of Adam was then the Covenant of Works and the Gospel an infinitely more plain path to a more fiery hell then the Law And it speaks much of free grace that the everlasting salvation of the Elect is in such a castle as the oath of the Omnipotent and infinitely faithfull Lord. Lastly the Argument is the more considerable that every Priesthood even that of Levi is imposed by Covenant Mal. 2.5 My Covenant was with him of life and peace CHAP. VII The Covenant of Redemption is explained in three eternall acts 1. Designation decree or ordination and delectation in the work 2. Mercy and peace truth and righteousnes are agreed in this Covenant 3. The designed sending of the Spirit cannot be a Covenant as this was 4. The twelfth Argument 5. The thoughts of eternall love THe Covenant of Redemption is two wayes considered 1. As transacted in time between Jehovah and Christ in his actuall discharge of his office of King Priest and Prophet 2. As it is an eternall transaction and compact between Jehovah and the second Person the Son of God who gave personall consent that he should be the Undertaker and no other And these three acts are considerable in the Persons in this latter consideration 1. Designation of one 2. Decree and destination 3. Delectation in the work As to the first There must have been a Person either the Father or the Son or the Spirit 1. By God from eternity set apart separated and designed And 2. This person must have given an actuall consent from eternity to the designation Now the person designed was the Son only this lot eternally to speak so fell upon only him who was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lamb fore-ordained before the foundation of the world 1 Pet. 1.20 And because Christ-God equall with the Father does not begin to consent and agree to the designation
in time nor can Christ-God will any thing in time which he did not will and consent unto from eternity therefore he was present with the Father and consented unto the designation and closed the bargain from eternity upon which account Christ had the glory of a designed Saviour with the Father before the world was and prayes that he may God-Man be glorified as touching the manifestation of that glory to Angels and men with the glory that he had with the Father before the world was Joh. 17.5 and here is an eternally closed Covenant between JEHOVAH and the Son with the consent of parties And who sees not our debt of love for a foresight and providence of pure grace Behold a designed Physician before we be sick and Christ with his own consent writing himself the repairer of the breaches before the house fall and the healer and binder up before the bones be broken 2. Christ is chosen and predestinate the head the first born of the house and of the many brethren and sayes Amen to the choise and we are chosen in him as our head and he was fore-ordained the Mediator and the Lamb before the foundation of the world was laid to be slain for our sin Hence 2. offended Justice by the breach of the Covenant of Works in all the three Persons pleads that man should die and that pleading is most just and the Law cannot be broken nor repealed The soul that sins must die Ezech. 18. the threatning Gen. 2.17 must be fulfilled 2. Mercy pleads not having a Throne higher then justice as Arminius saith that so many chosen ones may find mercy and peace calls for reconciliation to sinners 3. Infinite wisedome also requires that justice and righteousnesse under the name of mercy we comprehend free and rich grace may meet and peace and righteousnesse may kisse each other Psa. 85.11 Hence all these Attributes of glory must come forth that a Throne may be set up and a Psalm may be sung Rev. 5.12 and the thousands of thousands may cry Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power and riches and wisedome and strength and honour and glory and blessing 13. And every creature which is in heaven saith John and on the earth and under the earth and such as are in the sea and all that are in them heard I saying Blessing honour and glory and power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne and unto the Lamb for ever and ever Hence 1. there is no conflict between mercy and justice as Arminius saith nor any naturall desire in God to have all Angels and men saved which is hindered by justice Job sayeth truely c. 23. v. 13. He is of one minde and who can turn him from this end which he intends as if he could not compasse it to another end and what his soul desires in saving or destroying even that he doth 14. For he performeth the thing that is decreed for me and all creatures and his decrees are most free Eph. 1.11 and many such things or many the like things are with him Therefore it pleased his most free soveraign and absolute Counsell to bring forth to Angels and men to heaven and earth to sea and to all creatures the glory of justice truth mercy peace grace power wisdom Rev. 5.13 and in Christ the decreed and appointed Mediator the Lamb fo●e ordained as Peter 1 Pet. 1.20 to be slain and who agreed to the decree and in an eternall compact took the burden upon him to fulfill that of Psal. 85.10 Mercy and Truth are met together Righteousnesse and Peace have kissed each other 11. Truth shall spring out of the earth and Righteousnesse shall look down from Heaven So that in this transaction the Father and the Son and Spirit let out to men for their salvation the glory of all th●se Attributes Obj. Did not the Holy Ghost also from eternity say Amen and agree to be sent by the Father and the Son to lead the Saints in all truth to sanctifie to comfort them And did not the Father and the Son from eternity decree to send the Spirit And did not the Spirit also consent to the decree before the world was And so shall there be also a Covenant between the Father and the Son sending the Spirit Joh. 14.26 Joh. 16.13 14 15. and the Spirit who is sent Ans. Every mutuall agreement between the blessed Persons concerning their actions without cannot be called a Covenant nor need we contend about names What if we say that there is some Oeconomicall and dispensatory agreement of sending and being sent yea even in the Works of Creation Redemption and Sanctification though two things stand in the way to hinder us to call such an agreement with the name of a voluntary compact or Covenant 1. It seems naturall and not voluntary that there is such an admirable order of working as the Father creates by the Son as by his eternall wisedome but yet a person a suppositum different from the Father and by the Spirit as his mighty power a third Person 2. The Son is decreed with his own consent to be the Person to empty himself to be in time cloathed with our nature and to put on the state and legall condition of a Covenant-Obeyer of God to the death the death of the crosse and is made a little lower then the Angels and this may well be called a Covenant-transaction and a course of Covenant-obedience in the Mediator which condition the Holy Ghost comes not under And what should man say when the votes of the Three carries it that our iniquities should be laid on the Son Isa. 53.6 and the Son should be sent Gal. 4.4 and he from eternity should step out Lord send me here am I to do thy will Joh. 3.13 No man no person 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath ascended up to heaven but he that came down from heaven even the Son of man which is in heaven These votes of love fell not upon Angels but upon man And how should it break my rockinesse that Christ spake for me undertook for me took all my diseases upon him before I was and before my disease had being We reckon it great favour Such a man pleaded kindly and boldly for you in your absence when you was not to speak for your self As its love to provide a rich inheritance for the child not born and to fight for the sleeping child that he may not be killed when we had neither being action nor vote in Christs undertaking Obj. Such as are chosen in Christ such are foreseen beleevers when they are chosen Ans. Justly learned and pious M. Bayn denies that for God choised the noble royall Family Christ the Head and all the Branches in Him Love eternall love begins at the head descends to the off-spring But not because they are in Christ by faith and actually are foreseen believers for that is all one We were in Christ
as the tree is in the seed as all the Rose trees and the Vine trees are in the first Rose tree and the first Vine tree created of God virtually For because God choosed us therefore shall we be in Christ by faith yea and he choosed us and ordained us to be in Christ by faith when He gave us to the Son to be keeped by him The third considerable act here is an act of delectation and the place is observable Prov. 8.22 The Lord Chanani possessed me It s not Bara created me It s not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the LXX have it but as Aquila 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the beginning of his way as Cartwright before he had created any thing 23. I was set up from everlasting Tremellius inuncta fui I was anointed Aben Ezra Electa fui I was chosen The vulgar Latine I was ordained from the beginning or ever the earth was 24. When there were no depths I was brought forth when there were no fountains abounding with waters 25. Before the mountains were setled before the hills was I brought forth c. In all which the authority of Christ saith Cartwright is proven from his eternity antiquity immortality c. and all this time He was with God as is fully v. 30. cleared Then I was by him as one brought up with him Chald. Para. I was nourished up as à maid at his side He will not want his Son out of his eye I was daily his delight rejoicing alwayes before him The Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 die die from day to day Rabbi Solomon annorum myriades myriads of years The Father and the Son from eternity delighted one in another and were solacing themselves in the works without themselves and the ratio formalis as it were that which took up the love delight and thoughts of God when as yet there was no world no mountains no depths c. is Christ as Redeemer delighting himself with the sons of men 31. I was with him rejoycing in the habitable part of his earth Heb. Sporting or playing with the sons of men both because of all his works as Ambrose saith he most longed for man and made heaven and rested not and made the earth and rested not and made the Sunne Moon and Stars and rested not there and made man and then rested as having found the choisest peece of work he so much delighted in So the Father and the Son were taken and as it were love saith Bernard triumphed over God and they sola●ed their heart in that great design of love and from eternity passed over that long and sweet age of myriads of ages in the pleasant and delighting thoughts of that boundlesse and bottomlesse Ocean of love to wit God is to be made sick and to die a love for the sons of men Love being above and in a maner not stronger then the grave only and then death and hell but some way with reverence to his holinesse mightier then the most High and brought God down to sick clay that you may saith Bernard see if you take heed joy sadned faith feared salvation suffering life dying strength weakned and this wisedome was hid up and kept secret since the world began Rom. 16.25 Hidden wisedome in the heart of the Lord from eternity which God ordained before the world unto our glory 1 Corinth 2.7 the like whereof the eye hath not seen nor the ear heard nor hath entered in to the heart of man v. 9. to conceive So that this mystery of the Covenant between Jehovah and the Son of God was as it were little enough to busie the thoughts of the infinite understanding of of the highest Lord God Father Son and Spirit as containing the unsearchable riches of Christ Eph. 3.8 Say there were millions and ten thousand millions of Globs of new whole earths of all gold mines perfect and purest gold yet should they not all come near to the borders of this riches and these all were in before there was a Creation and he lets out of this fulnesse to us and we are sinfully poor beside Christs gold mines and dry beside the rivers of wine and milk and dead a thousand times being under the flowings and outlettings of life and of such a life Hence the 12. Argument If Christ the Son was designed and fore-ordained with the Father the Spirit and his own consent to be the person should pay the ransome of satisfaction and to be satisfied in his soul with the getting and injoying of the bought and well payed for and ransoned yea the over-ransoned sons of men who ravished love and heart of Father and Son before the mountains were brought Prov. 8.22 23 c. 30 31. forth and when as yet there were no depths then was that bargain of love closed and subscribed before witnesses from eternity For could the heart of Christ be cold and indifferent to undergoe suretyship for the sons of men Who warmed and kindled a fire of Redeemers love in his heart from everlasting Or was his consent to the Covenant but as late and young as since Adam fell or Abraham was called to leave his countrey and his fathers house Gen. 3. Gen. 12 Ah! it s an older love then so A yesterdayes love time-mercy a grace of the age with the world could not have saved me Nor were our Charters and Writtes of Gospel-grace first drawn up in Paradice Nay but copies and doubles of them only were given to Adam in Paradice The love of God is no younger then God and was never younger to sinners and woe to us if grace and mercy to redeemed ones should wax old and weaker through age and at length die and turn in everlasting hatred I desire to hold me fast by that Jer. 31.3 I have loved thee with an everlasting love He meets as Calvin well observes with a blasphemous temptation of Sathan that the people had in their mouth Ho the Lord appeared to me of old but that is a love from one year to another and it s out of date now the Covenant-love to Abraham is dead and away and the Lord is changed No I have loved thee not for a year or a summer The Covenant-love is older then thy poor short time-love Obj. But I may leave off to love God and he loves me no longer then I love him Ans. Where is then everlasting love and because he loves us we shall not leave off to love him Night and overclouding of the Sun is not a perishing of the Sun out of the world his love quickens my fainting love CHAP. VIII The differences between the Covenant of Suretyship or Redemption made with Christ the Covenant of Reconciliation and of Grace made with sinners 2. The conjunction of the Covenants 3. How the promises are made to the Seed that is to Christ the meaning of the place Gal. 3.16 4. Christ acted and suffered alway as a publick head IT
is not the same Covenant that is made with Christ and that which is made with sinners 1. They differ in the subject or the parties contracting In this of suretyship the Parties are Jehovah God as common to all the three on the one part and on the other the only Son of God the second Person undertaking the work of Redemption In the Covenant of Reconciliation the Parties are God the Father Son and Spirit out of free love pittying us and lost sinners who had broken the Covenant of Works 2. Hence the Covenant of Suretyship is the cause of the stability and firmnesse of the Covenant of Grace It s true Psal. 89.19 David is meant when he sayes I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people 20. I have found David my servant For the grace of election made David mighty in the Lord and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him and made him mighty to execute his office But this is so to be understood saith Mollerus and others of David as it is also to be referred to Christ upon whom the strength of our salvation is laid and the strength laid Covenant-wayes upon Christ is the cause why David and his seed stand sure in an everlasting Covenant of reconciliation Though the Covenants of Suretyship and of Reconciliation differ yet must they not be separated but faith principally must be fixed upon the most binding Covenant-relation between JEHOVAH and the Son of GOD. Eye Christ alwayes in the Covenant else it s but the sheath or scabbard of a Covenant and a letter to us 3. There be two parts as it were of the Covenant of Redemption 1. A Covenant of Designation 2. Of actuall Redemption The former is eternall for the Lord does not begin in time to d●signe Covenant-wayes the Son to be the Consenter to be our Surety nor doth the Son in time begin to consent But the Covenant-consent in 1. Designing of one Person the Son and no other Of 2. Decreeing and fore-ordaining of Him 3. Of mutuall delighting in love and in eternall thoughts in the sons of men to be redeemed 1 Pet. 1.20 Prov. 30.31 Was closed and concluded in an ended bargain from everlasting for the Parties were coexistent and together and rejoicing in one another and in the common work to borrow that expression thinking long till the day of marrying of God and man and untill Immanuels day should dawn Joh. 8. Abraham rejoiced to see my day But as touching the other part the Man Christ untill he should be Man and have a mans will he could not in two wills close with the Covenant of actuall Redemption But the Covenant of Reconciliation is no more eternall then the creation which is eternall in the Decree of God as are all things that fall out in time But this Covenant was made in Paradice though it was decreed from everlasting yet it had no being as a Covenant nor could have any so long as the Covenant of Works did stand But it came in due time the physick and the Physitian Christ the blessed seed not few hours after Adam was fallen came to his sick-bed or rather to his death-bed Blessed be his love who redeemed us in our low condition for Adam had no faith to receive nor hope of a Redeemer Christ came not sought for not sent for not so much as desired by us For how could we desire a thing impossible to our knowledge Or could we thirst for a ransome of the blood of God unknown to Angels or Men This is preveening grace indeed 4. They differ in the subject matter The Covenant of Redemption is 1. who shall be the surety of Redemption to undertake for man Here am I saith the Son thy fellow Zech. 13.7 2. What shall be his work What shall be his wage He shall lay down his life that shall be his work he shall be obedient to his Father to the death even the death of the crosse And his wage shall be He shall see his seed and God shall give him a name above every name But no such work is laid on us nor such a reward to be expected by us in the Covenant of Reconciliation Only here life and forgivenesse is promised to us upon condition of beleeving in Christ and fit it is that Christ be alone none under such a Commandement as He Joh. 10.18 5. The Covenant of Redemption hath different commands 2. Promises 3. And conditions from the Covenant of Reconciliation The Commands of the Covenant of Suretyship are of two sorts 1. Some common 2. Some proper and peculiar The former is that Christ fulfill all righteousnesse Matth. 3.15 obey the whole Law being made under the Law Now the command of being under the Law is two wayes considered 1. As laid upon the Son of God so it is no command but a voluntary desire And so his consenting to take on our nature is a consenting to empty himself and to be under the Law but no act of obedience because he was under no commanding obligation to take on him ou● nature But 2. as it is laid upon him now God-Man and the Word made flesh he is under a necessity to give perfect obedience Heb. 10.5 Therefore coming into the world The Son being to enter into the world and to take on our nature speaketh to the Father thus Sacrifice and offerings thou desirest not as expiations to take away sin for they cannot expiate sin A body thou hast framed to me which is the only one sacrifice of the true Lamb of God which taketh away sin Joh. 1.29 and that once for all And there are not any sacrifices ever to come after Heb. 9.26 28. And perfect obedience with all the heart was tendered by Christ from a holy nature he being full of the Holy Ghost from his Mothers womb so as none could accuse him of sin Heb. 4.15 Heb. 7.26 Joh. 8.46 and this obedience had influence in Christs obedience To the 2. to wit to that proper and peculiar command of suretyship that never man was under but only Christ. Joh. 10.18 This Commandement to lay down my life for sinners received I and I only from my Father Psal. 40.6 Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire mine ears thou hast opened 8. I delight to do thy will O my God yea thy Law is within my heart Now thus we are not either wayes under the commands of the Covenant of Grace Who in heaven and earth but Christ could have come under baile and an act of suretyship for us 2. There were promises of an higher nature made to Christ in his Covenant then are made to us in our Covenant of reconciliation to wit dominion from sea to sea A Throne at the right hand of God is not made to Angels Heb. 1.8 13. nor to us nor is there remission and pardon promised to him as to us of this hereafter 3. The
were of truth and righteousnesse But it may be said if Christs dying for sinners remove as a satisfactory punishment the guilt and obligation to eternall wrath what way is the reall and as it were the physicall inherency and essence of sin removed Ans. The obligation to wrath is removed only in a legal way by suffering of punishment due to sin which Christ hath done But the essence reall of sin is only removed as every other contrair is removed by the expelling of sin out of its subject and by introducing the contrair form to wit inherent righteousnesse and the perfect habit of Sanctification and holiness Now for this Christs dying and suffering wrath due to us suppose Christ should die a thousand thousand times for us his dying cannot as a satisfying cause or as a punishment remove this For 1. a punishment suffered by our Surety can but exhaust and remove the punishment due to the sinner for whom the suretyship is undertaken But 2. Christs dying cannot as a punishment remove sin as sin and as contrair to the holy Law and make us defiled wretches and servants of sin holy as the paying of ten thousand Crowns for a forlorn waster cannot make him to be no waster and a man that hath obeyed the Law only it makes that in Law the payment cannot be charged upon him 3. Christs transacting with God as our Surety is not only then meerly to remove eternall punishment but to purchase by the merit of his death the healing and sanctifying of our nature Heb. 10.10 By the which will we are sanctified by the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all Then our Sanctification is procured to us by the will of God not simply as his commanding will for then should all and every one whom the Lord commands to be holy 1 Pet. 1.16 be sanctified which we see is not done but by the will of the Father commanding Christ to die Joh. 10.18 Joh. 14.31 and the will of Christ offering himself once for a sacrifice for sin is the will which sanctifies us So Pareus well saith it is the will with its correlate for in the willing passive obedience of Christ are we sanctified really by the merit of his death though this be wrought by degrees 2. Since the Father consents and wills that Christ die and the Son willingly offers himself a sacrifie the number as judicious and Godly M. Dickson hath well observed on the place and these all for whom Christ offered himself were condescended upon betwixt the Father and the Mediatour God knew those whom he gave to the Son to be ransoned and Christ knew those whom he bought And the necessity of this Covenant appears in this that the comfort cannot be solide if a child of God never have any assurance of his being gifted of the Father to the Son in particular For two things are clear here 1. That the Lord knows who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 and that if God gave some to the Son as Joh. 17. then the Son received them in a certain number And if Christ bought them by Covenant he must know how many As one who buyes a flock but he knows the quality and number of the flock 2. The knowledge sometime shall be this distinct that I was by name among them who loved me and gave himself for me And as the offering of every Priest is by way of Covenant and promise so if a sacrifice in the faith of the great sacrifice be offered to God then will God accept it here is a Covenant so is the Body of Christ offered by the Covenanting-will Heb. 10.10 And any doubt that may or doth arise concerning your self by name 1. It may as well be moved in some respect against the whole number and no wise man will say that the bargain betwixt the Father and the Son was so blind as the number was not agreed upon For since all the bought are sinners and so inclined to sinfull doubting of the bargain that which as a doubt is moved by one may be moved by all severally and all severally denying themselves to be the men for whom Christ bargained By this sinfull questioning of the transaction none at all were agreed upon 2. Every doubting of Gods love to me once justified and who have once fled to Christ for refuge is grounded upon sin and unworthinesse now none were given by the Father to the Son from eternity upon respect of either faith or unbeleef or holinesse or bad deserving It s true it is not known to me but by beleeving that I was given Covenant wayes to the Son But the Question is if sin be any ground why one justified should cashier himself out of the number of the gifted ones to Christ and committed to the Mediatour It s true it should be mourned for as a thing that doth not a litle hinder Sanctification in its progresse but should not brangle Justification nor the faith of our interest in Christ. 4. The necessity of this Covenant appears in that salvation is taken off free-will and the slippery yea and no of free-will in the Covenant of Works and laid upon one that is mighty upon David to govern Israel as their King but Psal. 89.19 upon Christ as excellently M. Dickson in all respects more eminently then David a stronger help mighty to save appointed of the Father in all cases he is one of our kind taken out of the people acquainted with our condition c. The lesse of the creatures will and the more of Gods will if gracious as here be in a Covenant the better Because the more grace and stability even the sure mercies of David that is of Christ Is. 55.3 Eze. 34.23 Eze. 37.24 must be here 5. The well-head of salvation for meer free-will and good pleasure in God instituted this dispensation must be here And most eminent freedome of grace made the bargain so that the Magna Charta the great Charter of the Gospel I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy is here eminently for mercy and free-love began at the head man For the Covenant of Grace as notably M. Dickson is consolidated in Christ our head and he hath the first right as man to say unto the Father that which is here said as Intercessour and Mediatour for the Elect he shall cry unto me thou art my Father my God and the Rock of my salvation As a father binds for his heirs and children A King subscribes articles of peace and seals them for the land and subjects The Ambassadour for the Prince and State that sent him makes answer So Christ acts in the Covenant of Redemption for his heirs seed subjects people and if the comparison might be made Gospel-free-grace as Covenant-mercy is more in the Covenant of Redemption then in the Covenant of Reconciliation for principally they are here as waters in the fountain Hence in this Covenant is fountain-love
fountain-grace all the satisfaction that the Lord craves of sinners begins at this spring the old and eternall design of love in the heart of God toward his Son his everlasting delight the bosome darling and beloved of the Father is the designed Prince upon whose shoulder is the Government Here was mutuall love-delight acted by the Father and Son Prov. 8.31 My delights were with the sons of men even before the fountains of waters were created v. 24. O what everlasting out-goings and issuings of eternall love came from the heart of the Father and the Son in their eternall Covenant-delights towards the sons of men here was the eternall marriage of the Lamb the Kings eternall Son and of the not as yet created Bride first written and sealed by the King and his Son and our not knowing of this and Gods delighting in us when we little knew or dreamed of his eternall love highnesse his grace Should the heart of God be taken and to speak so be sick of love for so many Nothings whom he was to make heirs Far more being reconciled and justified we need not fear we shall be saved Here in this Covenant were first drawen the lineaments and draughts of the free and gracious interest of Jesus Christ to the sons of men And who should not wonder here at the purest fountain-grace that is in Jesus Christ which did set on work eternall wisedome to frame such an eternall peace of God Covenanting with the Son of God and love eternall hiring love eternall with the reward to speak so of the certain hope of enjoying a soul-satisfying seed and a numerous off-spring of Redeemed ones if love should die and triumph over justice which was done by love 6. There is here much of the eternall interest of JEHOVAH to the Son and of the essentiall love of God to his only begotten Son Prov. 8.24 When there was no depths I was brought forth 30. Then I was by him as one brought up with him and I was daily his delight rejoycing alwayes before him And they may that have been verified Jer. 30.21 And their noble One shall be of themselves and their Governour shall proceed from the midst of them and I will cause him to draw near and he shall approach unto me for who is this that engadged his heart to approach unto me saith the Lord The love eternall here in JEHOVAH loves and wonders that Christ his Son layes hands upon his own heart to take upon him the Office of Redeemer and Priest and the Lords saying Who is this is a note of love and wonder as Psal. 24.8.10 Isa. 63.1 Cant. 6.10 and that his heart closes with the Covenant-designe Obj. But Arminius himself also teacheth that there was ● Covenant betwixt the Lord and Christ. God required of Christ our Priest that he would lay down his life for sin give his flesh for the life of the world and he promised if he should so do he should see his seed and be an eternall high Priest after the order of Melchisedeck and by the exercise of his Priestly Office he should be exalted to a royall dignity Christ our Priest closed with the condition and said Behold here am I to do thy will c. And Socinians who hold him to be a divine Man only will agree that Christ was under an obedientiall Covenant to God Ans. Arminians and others may yeeld to a Covenant between the Father and the Son but it is a far other thing then such as we hold for Christ did close with the condition of laying down his life for sinners But when Christ hath ended his work and payed the price of Redemption laid down his life for Pharaoh Cain for Aegyptians Syrians Persians Chaldeans and all in whom ever was the breath of life yet cannot the Lord promise to Christ that he shall have any seed or one redeemed one nor can the Lord either promise or pay wages to Christ For a promise if sincere is of things that are in our power to do even among men Can a King promise that to morrow he shall cause the wind for seventy dayes to come blow out of the North-West It s not in his power Now Arminians Socinians and all of that Family teach that God hath no forceable antecedent dominion to bow and determine the free-will of any one man The Lord then no more can promise nor give the reward of a seed to Christ for his work of laying down his life for man then he can ingage that the Serpent with reverence to our blessed Lord shall see his seed For when Christ hath wrought the same work payed the same very ransone as these Sophists teach for millions that perish through their own free-will eternally What seed hath he of them Where is his wage Were not all and every one of mankind promised in the Arminian Covenant to be the gifted seed of Christ upon condition that they should repent and beleeve But Arminians deny that God doth promise faith or that he is so Lord and Master of the free-will of any as indeclineably and unsuperably he can make good his promise and cause them beleeve and persevere therein to the end and that is it by which they are his seed It s but said in vain that God promises they shall be Christs gifted seed providing they be willing to beleeve that is but to say the Lord promises all shall be his seed providing they shall be his seed For willing beleeving makes them his seed 2. By this also the Lord promises what is in mens power to perform and it might fall out that all and every one should do the like that multitudes do who perish eternally and so shall Christ do his work and injoy no seed at all But the Covenant of suretyship which we teach makes not the truth of God to depend upon our faith or our unbeleef Yea the Lord promises that Christ without all fail shall undeclineably see his seed yea and shall be the restorer of the Tribes of Jacob and a light to the Gentiles and the salvation of God to the ends of the earth Isa. 49.6 Isa. 54. He shall be King and Lord of the Iles Isa. 42.6 7. Isa. 60.9 Psal. 2.8 9. A Prince and a sheepherd over his people Ezek. 34. Ezek. 37.24 25. Psal. 89.25 not upon condition they be willing over whom he is set but to meet with the temptation Ah! my iron and rockie will shall still resist the Lord and he shall be King of the Nations if the Nations shall determine their own will to submit to him and vote that he be Crowned King Nay but the Covenant-promise saith he shall be King of thy will This is a part of his raign Psal. 110.2 The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion rule thou in the midst of thine enemies 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Deut. 30 6. Ezek. 11.19 20. Ezek.
36.26 27. Jer. 31.31 32 33 34 35. Jer. 32.39 40. Neither can there be confidence and faith in God through the sure mercies of David nor peace nor solide consolation nor warrand to pray for the Lords gracious bowing of the will to be his seed except it be beleeved Covenanted that God shall be the God of his people and their King not over the element of the sea only to rule it and over the mountains and the stones and rocks but also over the particular wills and the willing and nilling choosing of good and refusing of evill in the men of the Iles. And how could the Son pray Father give the inheritance of the Heathen to me according to promise Ask of me and I will give thee c. Psal. 2. If the Father could answer nothing but what Arminians and Socinians say he answers as also the beleever out of the fleshes weaknesse must dictat this return of prayer Son with good will I grant the Heathen and the ends of the earth to thee in heritage and possession so they be willing to submit to thee But what if they refuse to obey either me or thee I did never Covenant with thee Son to do more then I can try thy strength and force their free-will if thou can if they be willing well and good it is there is a bargain My approving and commanding will is that they be thy seed and thy willing people but my decree is not to Lord it over their will that is a fundamentall act of Government that all my subjects have liberty of conscience to will or nill as they please Nay but the Covenant of Suretyship includes the sure mercies of David and the Lord gives band word and writ and seal of blood and the Oath of God to the Son Psal. 110.4 Heb. 7.21 for the will Isa. 53.4 Behold I have given him for a witnesse of the people a leader and commander to the people But what if they will neither lead nor drive Yea the Lord promises they shall not need to be driven they shall be willing and run 5. Behold thou shalt call a Nation that thou knowest not and Nations that knew not thee shall run unto thee because of the Lord thy God and of the Holy One of Israel for he hath glorified thee And a strong reason of this is given the Gentiles run Whence comes this forwardnesse of the Gentiles who knew not God Because saith Isaiah of Jehovah thy God of Christ Mediatour in Covenant with thee Psal. 22.1 Joh. 20. ●0 because of thy God the Holy One of Israel the running saith Calvin notteth the efficacy of the calling and they run to Christ because of Jehovah and the mighty power of God in the Man-Christ ● Noteth because saith Piscator And another reason because he hath glorified thee O Christ he hath declared thee to be the Son of God by thy rising from the dead ascension to heaven given thee a Name above all names Rom. 1.4 Phil. 2.7 8 9 10. So Musculus Piscator Marlorat Gualther Diodati So the running of the Gentiles to Christ is the glorifying of Christ and a part of the reward it s Christs glory that he hath a seed that runs after him Then And M. Dickson upon these words Ps. 2. Aske of me after Christs resurrection and declaration of his formerly overclouded Godhead he should continue in the Offi●e of his Mediation and Intercession and by vertue of his payed ransone of Redemption call for the inlargement of his purchased Redemption among the Gentiles for this is the Fathers compact with the Son saying aske of me and I will give thee the Heathen so that both by free Covenant and by merit Christ challengeth a seed and it were unjustice in the Lord with reverence and glory to his Holines to deny to Christ that for which he hath given a condign ransone and price But he hath payed a condign Covenant●ransone of his own precious self and offered blood for h●s seed Hence 1. though a weak beleever cannot by merit suit a bowed will and a circumcised heart from the Lord Yet 1. may be suit it by the band of the Covenant of Redemption between Jehovah and the Son and a Redeemed one may say it was an Article of the Covenant of Redemption that my stony heart should be taken away and a heart of flesh given to me and faith hath influence to be supported that God articled Covenant-ways such a wretch as I am to Christ and look as the book of life called the Lambs Book of Life contains so many by name head and in all their individuall properties Jacob Paul c. that are written and inrolled for glory so are all and I by name in a Covenant-relation given of the Father to the Son Joh. 17.3 9.11 Joh. 6.39 and that is surer then heaven or the fixed ordinances of nature Jer. 31.35 36. Psal. 89.37 38. Happy such as can ride at this anchor Though I mean not that the decree of election and the roll of the Mediatour to me or the gracious Surety●Covenant between Jehovah and the Son as relating to me by name must be the nearest object of faith or that alwayes a beleever doth read this roll but his faith often is and ought and may be supported thereby 2. Christ may suit by vertue of both the Surety Covenant and by the justice of God his condign merite to me a fixed will to run the way of his Commandements Christs appearing with blood Heb. 9. and his prayer as high Priest Joh. 17. prove that in Christs Bill for us there is justice the merite of blood and that his Advocation is 1 John 2.1 grounded upon justice and he stands there as Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the righteous without sin now imputed not now made sin nor made a curse but by order of strict justice justified and righteous and the act of Suretyship taken off and as the hand-writing against us is cancelled upon the Crosse Col. 2. So the hand-writing of oblidged punishment due to Christ as our Surety is removed and he now justified in the Spirit without sin Heb. 9.28 Such a one as cannot die Rom. 6.9 Rev. 1.18 and cannot die a death satisfactory for sin because as beleevers cannot die the second death Christ having died for them neither can Christ suffer the second death again or be twice a curse for once he died for all But our faith is so supported not a little in this I darre not put merit or justice in my suits to God but I beleeve it is and must be in Christs bill and that bill is for me mercy and only mercy is in the sinners bill but the justice of a condign ransoner is in Christs suits and so faith looks to Christ As 1. having the first Covenant-right to heaven as the great Lord receiver of the promises And then we have a second right in him 2. Faith looks to Christ as having
more right to us because he hath the right of justice then we have to our selves for its free-graces title which we have to our selves for we gave no ransone for our selves and we gave no ransone for eternall life and therefore all the doubtings and acts of unbeleef in order to the Surety of the Covenant do resolve upon some apprehended breach between the Father and the Son that either the one or the other or both have failed to each other and have broken the Articles of the Covenant which is a reproaching of both the Father and the Son So that nothing is more necessary then to beleeve firmly the Covenant-faithfulnesse of God 3. What strong bands of beleeving and holy living have we from this Surety Covenant When 1. good-will and freegrace is become the ingadger of the faithfulnesse of God as he is true God and with a Covenant-tye to keep sure our salvation as he will be true to his Son and so to himself and to his own Holy Nature that we shall be saved yea and not that only but by Office as King and High Priest he hath laid bands upon himself and made it the duty of his Office to save us So that any good man thinks his office of a King and a Prophet or a Priest lays bands upon him to acquit himself faithfully in the charge So that Christs sworn Office of High Priest lays bands upon him to compassionate as a feeling head all his own and to be touched with their infirmities then must unbeleef in these particulars say we judge that Christ will not do his duty in his Office and that he shall break his faith of Suretyship and fail under his band of Suretyship How needfull then must the firm perswasion of compleat qualifications and fulnesse of anointing of Christ for the compleat discharge of his duty be O! beleeve him to be the faithfull High Priest who expiats and heals you in all the measure kinds degrees circumstances of time place of the particular transgressions you are guilty of Psal. 103.3 Who forgiveth all thine iniquities who healeth all thy diseases And if a man judge himself ingaged to go about such duties as his surety and ransone-payer in his name hath promised far more are we to walk as the redeemed of the Lord since there was an eternall Covenant-undertaking between Jehovah and the Son of God that we should fulfill the undertaking And sure it is Law-faith or beleeving of Law-threatnings cannot have such influence upon our spirits to cause us obey the Law as the motives of a concluded act of suretyship and closed compact between the Father and the Son that we shall obey him And indeed it is a meditation that morally and spiritually should obtain from us that we be holy as he is holy and strongly melt the rocky heart When we remembred that JEHOVAH as a designed Surety gave band for the heart of a sinner from eternity and enters himself Cautioner for our rebellious will it should put us to beleeve so much and morally lay bands on our will Q. How are we to conceive of the act of Suretyship A. Jehovah from eternity decrees that the Son be the designed person who shall take on our nature and lay down his life for sinners The Lord promises he shall have a redeemed seed for a reward In this offer Jehovah ingadges that we shall be Christs seed and so shall be by the immortall seed born again and shall beleeve and be gifted to Christ as saved here Jehovah undertakes that we shall beleeve 2. Christ agrees to the designed person It is written of me and so decreed of God from eternity I delight to do thy will I shall lay down my life for these given to me And here the other party Jesus Christ coming by his own consent to die does also undertake 1. In dying to ransone us from hell and merit life to us and make us his purchase So 2. he being a Saviour by merit he by his death purchaseth the Spirit and meriteth the new heart and so undertakes for us in this regard both parties undertake for us And the Spirit being the same very God with the Father and the Son also is by his own consent designed comforter and actor in his way by the anointing without measure that he puts on the Man Christ and the grace given to his members But the only formall parties in the compact are the Lord Jehovah and the Son party consenting before time and his Manhood in time becoming one who imbraces the Covenant of Suretyship and calls the Lord his God Ps. 22.1 Joh. 20.17 Rev. 3.12 Isa. 55.5 Hence if we imploy faith and hold out to the Lord the undertaking for us in the Covenant there is an answer framed to all our temptations from our own frailty As Adam and the Angels fell and how can we stand But God said never of them as Psal. 89.19 I have laid strength upon one that is mighty and Christ was no designed undertaker for Adam nor was Adam to beleeve such a thing Therefore it is fit to observe that not only the Head Christ and the body changes names as the body is called Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 and Christ called David Isai. 53.3 Ezek. 34. Ezek. 37.14 David my servant shall be King over them So also many things in one Psalm are spoken of David both in an Historicall and Typicall truth as Psal. 22. But there are some things Psal. 16. so spoken of David that they are true only Typically of Christ and spoken Prophetically as David saith Ps. 16.10 Thou will not leave my soul in grave neither will suffer thine Holy One to see corruption And the Apostle Peter denies that this can be exponed of David for Acts 2.26 27 28 29 30. and Paul Acts 13.34 35. And as concerning that God raised him from the dead now no more to return to corruption he said on this wise I will give you the sure mercies of David Wherefore he saith also in another place thou shalt not suffer thine Holy One to see corruption 35. But David after he had served his own Generation by the will of God fell on sleep and was laid unto his fathers and saw corruption And it is not to be doubted that the Prophecie Psal. 22. They divided my garments they pierced my hands and my feet is only a Prophecie of Christs being crucified Nor was ever David crucified To say in another case David was crucified will not help for it might be said in another case David saw no corruption for all beleevers are delivered from the dominion curse and sting of death Hence it may well be said that same Psal. 89. must prove both the Covenant of Suretyship and the Covenant of Grace v. 3. I have made a Covenant with my chosen I have sworn unto David my servant thy seed will I establish for ever and build up thy Throne to all Generations Though it be
called Davids Throne here Luk. 1.32 yet we may freely speak of Davids Throne as of Davids body both saw corruption there is an end of Davids Throne temporall But sure the Scripture calls it the Throne of Christ Heb. 1.8 But unto the Son he saith thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Luk. 1.33 And he shall raign over the house of Jacob and of his Kingdom there shal be no end Dan. 7.14 And there was given him Dominion and Glory and a Kingdome that all Nations and Languages should serve him His Dominion is an everlasting Dominion which shall not passe away and his Kingdom that which shall not be destroyed Isai. 9.7 Of the increase of his Government and peace there shall be no end upon the Throne of David and upon his Kingdome to order it and to establish it with judgement and with justice from henceforth even for ever Obj. But this Covenant is made to and with David that Solomon and one of Davids line shall sit upon Davids Throne untill the Messiah the true beloved shall be born 2 Sam. 7.12 13. Ans. It s true and although these of Davids line sinned yet by vertue of this Covenant for Davids sake God gave a Throne temporall to him 1 King 11.32 34. 2 King 8.19 2 King 19.34 But it is as true that this also to wit Christs everlasting Throne is here meant I will build up thy Throne to all generations for Davids Throne is not builded to all generations nor can it be said of Davids Throne which is said of this Throne Heb. 1.8 But unto the Son he saith thy Throne O God is for ever and ever Therefore this oath and promise is made to Christ as well as to David except we say that an everlasting Throne is mo●● properly the Throne of David then the Throne of Christ. 2. 19. I have laid help upon one that is mighty I have exalted one chosen out of the people 18. I have found David my servant Most grave Divines and it may be they gathered it from v. 38 39 c. think that the Psalm was composed upon the occasion of the ten Tribes division from Davids house as composed by Ethan 1 King 4.31 Others that Ethan lived in the captivity of Babylon after Davids death But the calamity seems greater then the division of the ten Tribes Philo refers it to the time of Jehoiakim Ambrose maketh the mighty to be Christ So Eusebius and Hieronimus expound the whole Psalm And our Divines say that the verity must be in Christ for the help and deliverance of the new afflicted and captive people for the like of this publick●desolation as v. 38 39 40 c. never befell David after he was King can not be laid on a dead man And though he were now alive the help of Davids fallen glory v. 42 43 44 c. must be the Messiah Hence the Covenant must be with him whose Throne is built for ever and shall not fall v. 3 4. and upon whom as upon a mighty one is laid the help of his fallen Church This is not David only though he be not excluded but Christ principally 3. With him the Covenant must be made in his way as with Surety Head and Redeemer upon whom the enemy shall not exact whose enemies shall be plagued v. 22 23. and whose enemies shall be made his foot-stool Ps. 110.1 2. and that is Christ as well as David 4. With him must the Covenant of Redemption be made in his way of whom God saith v. 25. I will set his hand also in the sea and his right hand in the rivers The Chalde Paraphrase expounds his hand to be his power and command which is to Euphrates as is promised Exod. 23.31 Num. 34.3 but fulfilled in David and Solomon 1 King 4.8 Solomon raigned from the sea of Sodom the red sea to the Mediterran sea and west and from Euphrates to the utmost of Canaan North and South but specially in Christ who hath all Nations Gentiles and Jews for his own Psal. 2.8 9. Psal. 22.27 Psal. 72.8 9 10 11. Isai. 2.1 2. Rev. 11.15 Christ Jesus not David Zech. 9.10 shall speak peace to the Heathen and his Dominion shall be even from sea to sea and from the river even to the ends of the earth The Angel and Creator of Angels who set his right foot upon the sea and his left foot upon the earth Rev. 10.2 is this great Conquerour 5. With him this Covenant must stand of whom the Lord v. 26. saith He shall cry unto me Thou art my Father my God and the Rock of my salvation 27. I also will make him my first-born higher then the Kings of the earth Now this cannot well agree to David at least most coldly as Calvine saith should the Apostle reason and conclude that Christ were above the Angels when he citeth this place Heb. 1.4 5. For unto which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Son this day have I begotten thee And again I will be to him a Father and he shal be to me a Son In the literall sense it is meant of Solomon 2 Sam. 7.14 1 Chron. 22.10 and is meant here of David Athanasius proves him hence to be God the first begotten of many Brethren Cyprian Cyrillus Augustine Hieronimus contend against the Jews that this is necessary to be understood of Christ not of Solomon not of David who cannot bear the Name of the Lords first-born but must be so named as the Type of him who is the first-born of every creature c. Col. 1.15 6. So my mercy will I keep for him for evermore and my Covenant shall stand fast with him ●9 His seed also will I make to endure for ever and his Throne as the days of Heaven If the Covenant be made with him who hath an eternall seed then sure principally with Christ Without whom saith Calvine who otherwise much loves to follow the letter of the word this Prophecie hath no effect for eternity is only in Christ not in David Ver. 30. If his children forsake my Law c. a pre-occupation if an eternall seed be promised to Christ then although Christ and his Children sin no matter the hazard is not great He Answers the danger is not to be despised I will visite the sons of Solomon and others 2 Sam. 7.14 with the rod of men 15. But my mercy of the Covenant of Redemption and of Reconciliation I will not take from him as I took it from Saul This is not spoken of Christ for he cannot sin but of Christs seed his spirituall seed and the businesse is so contrived as the seed of Christ and his children shall not sin unpunished but yet there is a difference between the sins of the reprobate Saul and such like and of the spirituall seed of Christ. So he takes his mercy Covenant-mercy but offered conditionally utterly away from reprobats when they sin
but takes not away Covenant-mercy from the seed of Christ And the reason is from the nature of the Covenant v. 34. My Covenant I will not break c. If then the elect and chosen of Christ should fall away God should break and alter his Covenant but impossible is the latter Hence 1. the questioning of the stability of our state being once internally in Covenant with God is a reproaching of God and to make him a liar v. 35. Once have I sworn saith he by my Holinesse that I will not lie unto David Though 1. we seem to reproach our selves in questioning our state being once in Christ yet the truth is the plea is against God and his Truth and Holinesse 2. It s easier to beleeve generall truths then to beleeve particular truths in which our selves and our own actings are interested So spirituall and wilie a snare is unbelief that when we think we are unbelievly fearing our own treachery we are indeed charging treacherie and falshood upon the Holy Lord. 3. In our sinfull plea's with our own state Ah! I am casten out of his sight Psal. 31.22 Jona 2.4 we are overturning the whole Gospel and Covenant of Suretyship and Reconciliation and we say God lied to David and to his Son Christ contrair to that Psal. 89.35 Once have I sworn by my Holinesse I will not lie unto David 36. His seed shall endure for ever for the Lord once justified thee 4. We shall find our selves so selfie in contraverting with God in the matter of fact touching our selves am I in Christ Or am I an Apostate and fallen from Christ That we are more taken up with a hellish fretting for our falling in a state of condemnation then we are grieved for the injurie of unbeleef in traducing the Holy Lord with a lie There is a taste here of Judas his fierie unbelief for he complains more Mat. 27.4 I have sinned in betraying the innocent blood then that God is dishonoured and Christs love offended The grief is more for the interest of I of self that is entered in the borders of hell then that his glory who commands beleeving is overclouded It were good in such a case to go about two things 1. Be lesse moved that self is under these apprehensions lost and cast away then that the spotlesse glory of the Lord suffers What matter of me and of self in comparison of the dishonour done to God What though I and millions like me were tormented if God were not offended Now God 1. who hath bought me 2. Who hath accepted a ransone for me 3. Hath justified me 4. Hath witnessed all these is contradicted in all these and yet we complain only Ah I am fallen 2. Leave the Question concerning your self whether ye be cast away or no when you cannot come to a peaceable and quiet close about it and dwell upon the duty of fiduciall relying on Gods generall Covenant to Davids Son Christ his ingadging with him and Christ his gracious accepting of the condition 5. God sware to the Son of David for the seed that is for the whole race and gave them all to Christ and gave you among them and Christ closed with the condition though ye cannot come to application It s good to feed the soul upon the solatious thoughts I cannot apply but Christ whose egressions outgoings have been from of old from everlasting Mic. 5.2 did apply For Christs everlasting outgoings are not only his eternall generations from the Father but the decrees the sweet eternall flowings emanations and issuings of Christs holy thoughts of me of all the individualls by name of the seed given and received by Christ his eternall acts of soul-delighting thoughts of every redeemed son of man Prov. 8.30 31. Rom. 9.11 Eph. 1.4 1 Pet. 1 2. the eternall acts of love and love-thoughts to Jacob David Peter Mary c. his acts of designing you if ever you beleeved and can rub and blow up experiences under ashes Rom. 5.4 Ps. 77.6 and the thousands that stand before the Throne from eternity his actings of eternall love appointing and setting Chairs Throns Mansions and dwelling places for 〈◊〉 man and this man are so many applications of Christ to you Feed and feast upon these by beleeving the ancient Covenant and you cannot but come to quietnesse of peace in your apprehended estate CHAP. X. Christ procures the Gospel to be Preached to Reprobats but undertakes not for them A necessary distinction of the Covenant as Preached according to the approving will of God and as acted upon the heart according to the decree of God and the differences of the members The place Jer. 31. Heb. 8. This is my Covenant opened A Question it is whether Christ undertakes in the bargain with JEHOVAH for all visibly in Covenant for as is said before these in the Visible Church and their children that are baptized Magus Demas and others are in Covenant thus Act. 2.39 Ans Christ undertakes in his bargain only for the elect and undertakes that the Gospel shall be Preached to them but because many hypocrites are mixed with the Gentiles and Christ is given a light to the Gentiles Preached to a visible multitude as is foretold Isa. 49.6 Isa. 55.4 5. fulfilled Act. 13.46 47. Rom. 15.8 9 10 11 12 c. Therefore he procures to many hypocrites for whom and for whose Redemption he undertakes not that the Covenant shall be Preached by concomitancy because they are mixed with the elect not as an undertaker for them but for Church Discipline Christian Societies and to render such unexcusable Hence a necessary distinction of the Covenant of Grace The New Covenant must be considered 1. As Preached according to the approving and commanding will of God 2. As it is internally and effectually fulfilled in the elect according to the decree and the Lords will of purpose There must of necessity differences be holden forth between these two For Antinomians and legall Justitiaries miserably erre in both extremities The former will have no New Covenant in the days of the Gospel but that which is made with the elect The latter will have no New Covenant but such as is made with the whole race of mankind Pagans not excepted So Socinians Arminians Papists 1. They differ in the parties contracters The parties contracters in the Covenant Preached are God and all within the Visible Church whether Elect or Reprobate and their seed they professing the Gospel Mat. 28.19 20. Act. 2.39 40. Act. 3.25 Ye are the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant which God made to our fathers c. and they were not all the chosen of God This is against the Anabaptists also and against these who will have the Gospel-Covenant to be made with all the world But it s a rich mercy that Professours are dwelling in the work-house of the Grace of God within the Visible Church they are at the pool side near the fountain and
break and the smoaking flax shall he not quench He was most compassionate to sinners inviting them to come Mat. 11.28 29. crying and shouting with a loud voice to the thirsty Joh. 7.37 journeyed from heaven to seek and to save the lost Luk. 19.10 came to serve them with his heart blood Mat. 20.28 his bowels were turned with compassion to perishing souls that wanted the feeding Pastors Mat. 9.36 He sighed deeply in his Spirit at the perverse unbeleef of his deadly enemies the Pharisees Mar. 8.12 wept and shed tears at the foreseen destruction of Jerusalem Mat. 23.37 Luk. 19.41 42. and yet that City slew him Loved as the tender Physician to be much in company with sick sinners Mat. 9.11 12. Luk. 15.1 2 3. Luk. 19.1 2 3 9 10. O what rejoicing when he layes the lost sheep on his shoulder Luk. 15.5 When v. 20. he sees the home-coming sinner he ran fell on his neck and had compassion upon him and kissed him and made a feast and sang and danced for joy There is no humility like his to wash the feet of his servants there is no patience like his who when he was reviled reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously 1 Pet. 2.23 As a lamb dumb before the sh●arer Isa. 53. How gaining of souls was he who preached in the Temple in the Synagogues in the Villages in the Ship at the Sea side at every Table he came to at every Feast at every confluence of people at every way side and stood still and talked with a woman and wanted his dinner upon that occasion And thought he dined well when he gained to the Lord the soul of a woman and of them of Samaria who hated him and refused to lodge him How faithfull and free in rebuking the Pharisees and Rulers and in declaring the truth of the Gospel that he was the Son of God though they attempted to stone him for his free Teaching None mortified to honour as he that refused to be a King Joh. 6.15 and was willing to be worse lodged then birds and foxes Mat. 8.20 and being rich for our cause became poor 2 Cor. 8.9 and endured the crosse despised the shame suffered the contradiction of sinners Heb. 12. and did run and fainted not And was he not a patern of love who laid down his life for his friends Joh. 15.10 even when we were enemies Rom. 5.10 He pleased not himself Rom. 15.3 honoured his Father Joh. 8. sought not his own glory v. 49.50 and saith true Job 5.30 I seek not mine own will but the will of him that sent me Joh. 8.29 I do alwayes these things that please him He faithfully expounded the Law Mat. 5. refuted heresies Mat. 22. glorified God with his miracles he was subject to his Parents Luk. 2.51 payed tribute to the Prince himself Mat. 17.27 and taught others to obey lawfull Governours Mat. 22.21 would not usurpe the place of a Judge Luk. 12. v. 13 14. and witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate 1 Tim. 6.13 and was for that cause born and for that end came he into the world that he might bear witnesse unto the truth Joh. 18.37 none so self-denied he pleased not himself sought not his own glory nor his own ease nor his own will but submitted to the will of God In all which we are 1. to look upon Christ who went about do●ing good Act. 10. as one who 1. was Covenant-wise designed of God and anointed with the Holy Ghost and power to do what he did and to be what he was for our good and it s much for the establishing of our faith that Christ was all this for our salvations sake by counsell and Covenant These gracious qualifications Christ-God undertook to have for our good and they were not given to Christ as personall and proper for himself but as head for we may here distinguish the grace of the person and the grace of head-ship though they must not be divided But as the light and heat of the Sun is not if we may so speak private or personall for the Sun it self but for the earth and all that live and grow out of the earth that need the influences of the Sun and have eyes to injoy the light thereof The water of the fountain is not for that hole or cave of the earth from whence the fountain doth issue but it is very often to 〈◊〉 in strea●● to be a river for the use of the whole land All these excellencies and graces are in Christ not as his to speak so personall induements but as the publick treasure that we may receive of his fulnesse We should think it a strange exorbitancy in nature if all the trees flowers herbs on earth should refuse to receive influences and growing from the Sun and deny to be oblidged to the Sun for light and heat and our unwillingnesse to receive from Christ the publick grace that is made his by Covenant when a publick con●ignation by compact is made for our good proclaims our unbeleef and our wicked estrangement from Christ as if we had said let Christ be gracious for Christ only I shall not be his debt●r Nor is it from the naturall connexion between head and members or because simply Christ is man as we are though the humanity be ground thereof nor is it because Christ simply is anointed with the fulnesse of the Spirit for he is head of the body and Lord Generall Captain of his people no● by nature only not because of grace simply but by Covenant-purchase Rom. 14.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 For this end Christ both died and rose and revived that he might be Lord both of the dead and living There 's a Covenant between the Father and the Son that Christ should die not simply but for and in the name of the heirs of glory such as are designed friends for his dying is a relative and a legall binding and buying by Covenant of so many certain persons and upon this he is made Head and Prince and exalted to give of his fulnesse to give repentance and forgivenesse of sins to the house of Israel Act. 5.30 31. Ah! how do we love to be behold●● to nature to self for Heathen and Pagan vertues by education and morall exercise which is but wild corn and we se● not how unwilling we are to trade with Christ or to buy from him fine gold yet it was given to him without measure as to the universall fountain and head for all his 2. All these are in Christ that he should be a living coppie which we must follow And he is a more lively example then the Gospel it self for Christ is the acted Gospel And if ye look on Christ loving beleeving hoping praying there comes more life and warmnesse from his actions then from the word when we consider that as God would have the
humane nature a chariot to convey to us the fulnesse of merite by satisfaction so must it be the mean of carrying to us the fulnesse of grace by sanctification and then when God Covenants with the Man Christ that love faith hope meeknesse humility and 〈◊〉 shall live speak and act in Christ out to us we are more strongly convinced to follow the footsteps of so blessed a guide Christ is a living glasse in which we see the beauty of grace As also his meeknesse and humility is the meeknesse and humility of God and all these graces have a seat and lodging in our Immanuel God with us they have a drawing and an alluring desirablenes from the Person the Lord Jehovah our King the mighty God the Father of ages in whom they reside The properties of the Covenant of Suretyship are 1. Freedom 2. Graciousnesse 3. Eternity As to the first Nothing could compell nothing could hire Christ for eternity to ingadge his Name in such a band since he well knew what it should cost him how dear it should stand him and saw what indignity shame pain curse and all these conditions before him And what could move the father since he might have followed the Law-course of Works 2. The first draughts of free-grace and the Lords unsearchable riches appears in the sure mercies of David in an everlasting Covenant Isa. 55.3 and Ps. 89.1 I will sing the mercies of the Lord. 2. For I have said mercy shal be built-up for ever Why v. 3. I have made a Cov●nant with my chosen I have sworn unto David my servant 4. Thy seed will I establish for ever c. The giving of the Covenant 2. The design of a Redeemer 3. The sending 4. Anointing 5. The consenting of Christ. 6. His coming 7. Dying are all acts of grace God was no debter to the Man Christ or to any of his kindred and blood-friends more then he was to David and his seed but God would act grace in Christ and make him a samplar and the first coppie of free-grace to all his brethren that they might share with him therein But though he made Christ also a coppie of his Justice Rom. 3.25 and spared not his Son Rom. 8.32 yet Mal. 3.17 the ●ord deals not so with us And they shall be mine saith the Lord of Hosts in that day when I make up my Jewels and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son that serveth him And of Christ it is said Ps. 72.13 He shal spare the poor and needy And O what riches of grace and mercy and plenteous Redemption hath he manifested to us and therefore the more grace he shews to us the more freely and sonly should we serve him with lesse hirednesse and servile disposition If we could love God and Christ with a heart abstracted from heavens hire at least the pleasure of it for pleasure mak● not any conform to God but holinesse doth and the heart not legally fearing the burning torment of hell it were good for since Christ hath freed us from the Law-wrath he takes it not well that we darre approach too near to the mount burning with fire nor does Christ allow our affections of fear and sorrow sadnes to act upon feared everlasting wrath we being justified by faith any other way then in a Gospel-consideration being casten down for our Law-deserving but so as we highly value our ranson-payer and serve him with godly fear 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word Heb. 12.28 must note a difference between the fear and trembling and terrour upon devils for the torment of hell Mat. 8.29 Jam. 2.19 and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the godly fear of believers Heb. 12.28 which is also given to Christ Heb. 5.7 in whom there was no fear of hell torment and therefore the fear of him that can cast both soul and body in hell though it be another word Mat. 10.28 which Christ commands cannot be a servile fear legall for hell such as is in devils and men but a godly fear such as is consistent with the faith of deliverance from the wrath to come for Christ Mat. 10.28 commands that fear fear saith he to deny Christ before men Why fear him who can cast soul and body in hell And immediatly v. 31. Fear not therefore the same word that is v. 28. then he must forbid a fear opposite to servile fear and which stands with the faith of sons who are to beleeve the care of a father which is more toward his children then toward sparrows v. 29 30. And that the word no●●eth a godly fear which is Heb. 12. beside other Greek Authors See Heb. 5.7 see Luk 2.25 Act. 2.5 Act. 8.2 Act. 23.10 and Heb. 11.7 Noah moved with fear 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 built and ark sure the fear of everlasting torment in hell moved not Noah to build the ark for by faith which is saving he builded it v. 7. 3. Eternity is a speciall property of the Covenant of suretyship For 1. the parties are eternall Jehovah the Lord and the Son of God never began to agree upon the designation of the Redeemer for that work it was a bargain closed from everlasting Only the question is when the Son shal render the Kingdom to the Father 1 Cor. 15. whether or not the Covenant shal then cea●e For 1. Christ shal then end his work of Redemption and shal fully and finally have purchased what his soul desires and shall have received his wages and injoy with his conquished bride an eternal sabbath 2. He shall interceed no more for sinners for the sinning of his redeemed ones shall have an end 2. The Son saith Camero shall leave off to raign quod attinet ad regnandi actum according to the act of raigning but as touching the Kingdom it self there shall be no end of the Kingdome But it may appear as there was a time when it was said of Christ Phil. 2.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He emptied himself and took on him the form of a servant So there is a time opposite to that v. 9. Therefore God hath highly exalted him which is not fulfilled in his resurrection ascension and sitting only at the right hand of God but when all power friends and unfriends and the Man Christ shal be subject to the Lord yea even the Son not as God for Christ-God is equall with the Father not as man for so in the days of his flesh as man he ever was and is and shall be subject to God but the Son shall be subject as touching the Office of a formall Mediatour 2. Another distinction is here needfull as Augustine and Ambrose he shall render the Kingdom to the Father not that he shall leave off to raign but that he then shal declare that he raigns not of himself but that he hath his power of raigning from the Father and he shall professe this before men and Angels and so
shall glorifie the Father It s not to be rejected that Hilarius lib. 1. de Trinit 11. August lib. 1. de Trinit c. 8. he shall render the elect back to God as now saved and present to the Father his ransoned ones now perfected so Eph. 5.27 3. Taking the word of raigning for this to excell in eminency of power above all so Christ shall raign eternally but taking the word of raigning as it notes the exercise of royall authority so and so by gathering a Church by the Preached word fighting against enemies and overcoming them to make them his foot-stool untill which time he raignes Ps. 110. And so it may be and is said by some he raigns not after the day of the universall Judgement but these are but the second acts of a King and the not exercising of these acts proves not but Christ is a King actu primo and essentially for the exercise of such and such acts are often extrinsecall to the office But the question shall remain whether he be not for ever and ever a Mediatory King and does retain his headship over the Church so as the Angel say Luk. 1.33 He shall raign 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and of his Kingdom there shal● be no end And as Dan. 7.14 Cameron and others say the meaning of that that his Kingdom shall have no end is only it shall not be destroyed by externall violence as worldly Monarchies that are made away and others rise in their place but that Kingdom say they may well●be called eternall though the King leave off to raign when he leaves off to raign through no weakenesse and want of power but because he needs not raign● there being no need of laws because the subjects are perfected and there are no enemies to be subdued and the King hath obtained that eternall end a glorified people for which he was fighting But yet this seems not to satisfie 1. Circumcision and the Ceremonies and the Priest-hood Exo. 40.15 Lev. 16.29 the fast in the seventh month shall be a statute 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for ever Lev. 6.18 All the mules of the sons of Aaron shal eat the remainder of the meat-offering it shall be a statute for ever in your generations so Lev. 17.7 Lev. 7.34 3● Lev. 23.14 Num. 23.11 23. yet these Ordinances can hardly be called eternall as the Kingdom of Christ is And yet they cease when the body is come and they are not destroyed as humane inventions the hay and the stubble that are builded upon the foundation Christ. 2. These reasons prove that Christ shall not exercise such and such acts of royaltie upon such and such enemies for they shall be no enemies Yet we say not as ●amero that such a Prince leaves off to raign even as Mediatour Christs rendering of the Kingdome dispensatory or Oeconomick to the Father may well be a rendering of an account of his subjects and a presenting of them to God perfected Eph. 5.26 27. without spot and wrinkle Christ having brought them out of danger so as they need not Word Sacraments or a Temple And so 1 Cor. 15.24 He shal put down all rule all power and authority all Magistracy and Government that now is in either Church or State and so saith Par●us the Son shal be subject to the Father having subdued all the rebels as his Fathers Deputie he shall return to his Father the Kingdom now reduced to subjection and made peaceable and lay down his Mediatorie Commission and so be subject to the Father having ended the deputed and delegated charge And it is sure the Son as Mediatour is sent and is a Servant an Angel or Messenger of the Covenant Mal. 3. and the laying down of his written Commission is a sort of subjection and God doth not now actually raign in such a Mediatory way as in the days of Christs flesh he did raign in Christ but now after the last Judgement God is all in all that is not because he is not now all in all and is not the Lord of lords and King of kings but because it doth not so appear to be many now rise against him and contradict him and persecuting his Mysticall body do persecute Christ. 2. He shal be all in all by change of the Oeconomick Government then the Father Son and Spirit shal immediatly glorifie the Church Rev. 21.22 And I saw no Temple therein for the Lord God Almighty and the Lamb is their Temple 3. And the City had no need of the Sun neither of the Moon to shine in it for the glory of God did inlighten it and the Lamb is the light thereof But that Christ shall leave off to be Mediatory King after the last Judgement I deny For there is a twofold Mediation one of uniting sinners to God and mediating between God and them This shall cease and all the royall acts thereof but these with reverence 〈…〉 second operations and acts of royaltie There is another Mediation substantiall by which our natures glorified stand in a substantiall union with God for ever for to what end shall Christ stand glorified in our nature in heaven but to be the substantiall 〈…〉 between 〈◊〉 and us glorified for ever If any say that Christ-God-Man after that day is no Mediatour of reconciliation because there shall be no sin then It s true Nay but even now in the intervall between his ascension and second appearing to Judge the world he acts not as Mediatour of reconciliation to expiate our sins and to satisfie for them for only he did upon the crosse by dying for us so mediate And we will not say he is acting the part of a Priest formally by sacrificing for us in heaven as Socinians teach for he can offer no expiatory sacrifice for us in heaven for he died but once that was on the earth only Obj. But now he Advocats for sinners 1 Joh. 2.1 therefore as now in heaven glorified he is a Mediatour for sinners Ans. True he is a Mediatour and Intercessour now applicatione non expiatione by applying his blood but not by shedding of it And he is an Advocat but called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jesus the Righteous and an Advocat as just and righteous supposeth a right and just cause and that sufficient satisfaction and payment is given to God for the sins of these for whom Christ interceeds the Advocation of Christ is not to plead that beleevers may sin or their sins may be excused as no sins But his intercession is to plead 1. that for his blood we may stand as accepted of God and freed from condemnation 2. That the Spirit procured by the death of Christ may be given to us that we may repent and beleeve But again after the last Judgement Christ stands as Mediatour not to apply his death nor to interceed for sinners when there shall be no sinners but Christ eternally shall appear for us as a paund of a
suspendio vita se exuit Nequaquam aegre fero inquit Socrates nam in Theatro veluti in magno convivio verbis vexor 9. Deadnesse to an office or a place of authority 10. Deadnesse to pleasure 11. Deadnesse to all the world 12. Mortification to creature-comforts to multitude friends hosts armies chariots horse father son daughter husband to city to our mother-countrey c. 13. A deadnes to Captains stoutnesse and valour in warre to birth 14. A deadnes to youth pastime play laughter to hunger fulness 15. A deadnes to Ordinances There be two●things in Ordin●nces 16. Deadnesse to prayer 17. To faith and hope we pray to our owne prayers 18. Deadnesse to cōforts and feeling How farre we may be taken with feeling 19. Deadnesse to the habit stock of created grace 20. Deadnesse to the sweetnes of heaven 21. To the promises M. Isaac Ambrose prima media ultima life of fa●th c. 9. Sect. 2. pa. 2●1 22. Deadnesse to the out-shinings of God to take aright absence presence 23. Deadnes to fair providences of court Godly Princes miracles 24. To saplesse wil-worship Q. 1. How is CHRIST given as a Covenant of the people Is 49 6 Socinus de Servato l. 2. c. 16. Christ is not the cōfirmer only but the Author of the Covenant of grace The death of the Testator how it confirms the Covenant It is true that the death of the Testator to wit such a death of one who is more then a Testator or only man even God man procu●es as a meritorious cause life remission c but this it does not as the death of a Testator and dying friend but as such a so excellent so satisfactory a death which no Martyrs death can do There is a far other thing in Christs blood then power of sealing and witnessing the truth which is in the Martyrs blood The Socinian way quiets not the wa●ened conscience by mā● works but by the blood of Christ apprehended by faith this is done Christ is upon both the Lords side of the Covenant upon our side the satisfactiō i● most 〈◊〉 Justice as justice seeks satisfactiō but Soveraignty of free-grace not justice determines how and who shall pay Justice is not the mediating and interposing attribute but free-grace Our glory was work and wadge to Christ but of free grace to us we bought it not Deep reasons in the depth of unsearchable wisedom why the Lord who can hinder sin to enter in the world thought fit it should be None sick speaks no Saviour no such Physitiā as Christ It is a deep of wisedom that the same men that now are fire-wood eternally in the lake of brimstone might have been if so it had pleased GOD proclaimers of the glory of his grace in heaven the now heirs of glory in their place God might have hol●en up the law●dispensation for ever but then there should have been no place for the Ark of glory J. Ch. The Gospel-wōders of grace should not eternallie have been bi● Whether of the two be most excellent Law-innocency or Gospel-repentance Christ Man must be in Covenant with God Arg. 1. For the Covenant of redemption becaus Christ c●lls the LORD his God 2. Arg. From the Lords calling of his Son to his Office 3. Arg. Christ his offering of his service to GOD proves this Covenant 4 Arg. The Fathers giving of the elect to Christ to be redeemed and the Son his willing receiving of thē proves this Covenant The persons being given of the Father to the Son speaks strong consolation it s no consolation at all to depend upon free-will 5. Arg. Christs receiving of the Seals of the Old New Covenant proves that there is such a Covenant Why Christ received the Seals 6. Arg. God might have followed a Law-way with al flesh not have sent his Son the Son might have refused to be sent 〈◊〉 Ergo by compact Christ came 7. Arg. All the promises how they are made to Christ. Christ is he who made the promises and the Covenant CHRIST is an ingadged Suretie for the standing of a weak believer 8. Arg. From the promises concerning Christ. 9 Arg. Christ is bidden aske a people frō God the Lord promiseth that he will hear 10. Arg. The relatiō of Christs working for wages and the Lords paying him his wages does prove this Covenant A design of love in the heart of Christ toward low man as his alme end 11. Arg. The Lords Oath ●o Christ when he is made Priest and King provs this Covenant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 CHRIST is a sworn Priest and Intercessour for the hour of temptation The most sweet providence of God in designing a Physician to us before we be sick Armin. de Sacerdatio Chri. pag. 14 15. The harmony of the Attributes of God in the declaration of mercy truth justice c. is sweetly made out by this Covenant The sending of the Spirit and the Spirit his free consent to come is not a proper Covenant Gods love in acting for man in time Paul Bayne Comm. on Eph. 1. v. 4. The Lord choosed us not in Christ because he saw us in him by faith The mutuall delights of love between the Father and the Son in their thoughts of the Covenant-love to man Ambros. hexa l. 6. c. 16. Deus fecit Coelum non lego quod requierit fecit terram nec lego quod sic requieverit fecit solem lunam stellas nec ibi lego quod requieverit lego quod fecit hominem quod tunc requieverit Bernard Serm. 64. in Cant. Quid violentius triumphat de Deo Bernard hom ● Super missus est videas si attendas in Christo tristari laetitiam pavere fiduciam salutem pa●i vitam mori fortitudinem infirmari The strength of Gods love to man which we too little value No lesse everlasting love could save us There are different parties in Covenant of Redemption and Reconciliation Help layed upon Christ The Covenant of Redemption most to be eyed Two parts of the Covenant of Redemption one before time another in time How seasonable and timous the Covenant of Reconciliation was the Physick the Physic●an came both in time to the sicknesse 4. Differ The Covenants do differ in the matter work and wages 5. The Covenant of suretyship differeth from the Covenant of Reconc●liation in cōmands 2. Promises 3. And conditions CHRISTS emptying himself was no act of obedience but a most voluntary free act beyond all obligation CHRISTS Covenant helps our Covenant he hath a place in our Covenant How the promise is made unto Christ Gal. 3. v. 16. Da. Pareus Comm. in Gala. 3.16 Hoc semen in quo benedicentur omnes Gentes Aposto●lus interpretatus erat non collective de multis vel omnibus Abraham● posteris sed individue de uno Christo ● quo non ●am corporalis quam spiritualis benedicto hoc est justitia