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A46354 Several sermons preach'd on the whole eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans eighteen of which preach'd on the first, second, third, fourth verses are here published : wherein the saints exemption from condemnation, the mystical union, the spiritual life, the dominion of sin and the spirits agency in freeing from it, the law's inability to justifie and save, Christ's mission, eternal sonship, incarnation, his being an expiatory sacrifice, fulfilling the laws righteousness (which is imputed to believers) are opened, confirmed, vindicated, and applied / by Tho. Jacomb. Jacombe, Thomas, 1622-1687. 1672 (1672) Wing J119; ESTC R26816 712,556 668

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but on the outside of the Ark which will not save from drowning 'T is the internal special Union which you must look after whether you be in Christ so as to receive life growth spiritual influences from him as the branch doth from the root Other Unions might be alluded to 'T is very true that Baptism is an ingrafting Ordinance into Christ therefore 't is set forth by being baptized into Jesus Christ Rom. 6.3 and Gal. 3.27 you read As many of you as have been baptized have put on Christ and again 1 Cor. 12.13 By one spirit we are all baptized into one body But then it must be limited to such and such subjects and as the spirit accompanies it working therein Faith and Regeneration So that the matter comes to this upon Baptism alone in the external reception of it you cannot be confident but if you can find that you are also true Believers and regenerate persons then you are right as to your Vnion and safe as to Non Condemnation This twofold Distinction being premised and opened in the General the main Question now lies thus before us How may a person know whether the Vnion in which he stands to Christ be internal special and saving or whether it be only external material and common 'T is a Question of very high import for answer to it I shall desire you 1. To fix your thoughts upon the double Bond of it 2. To look into some trying Scriptures which lay down marks and characters about it First make your search after and by the Bonds of the Mystical Vnion the Spirit and Faith As 1. Enquire whether you have the Spirit for it being the bond of the Vnion 't is evident that none can be a partaker thereof who is not first a partaker of the Spirit The Apostle lays it down very expresly * Rom. 8.9 If any man hath not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his that is he is none of those who are savingly united to him Whoever is in Christ the Spirit of Christ is first in him that being the agent by which this blessed In-being is brought about I told you the Spirit is the bond of the Union on Christs part which yet you are to understand not of the Spirit meerly as it resides in Christ himself but as 't is given and communicated to us he by his own Spirit as poured out upon Believers and dwelling in them takes hold of them and joyns them to himself Not that there is any priority of time betwixt the gift of the Spirit and the Vnion for they go together at the very same instant wherein the Spirit is received the Soul is united to Christ but in order of Nature the reception of the one is antecedent to the Vnion with the other 1 Joh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in us by the Spirit which he hath given us and chap. 4.13 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us by the Spirit which he hath given us Observe it still the Apostle grounds the evidence of the Vnion upon the Spirit as given to the Saints not as it resides in Christ himself O therefore let the serious inquisitive Christian put such interrogatories as these to himself Have I the Spirit is he given to me doth he dwell in me for accordingly as he can answer these queries so will he be able to conclude whether he be in Christ or not And he that would know whether he hath the Spirit he must examine what he feels of its great acts in himself To have the Spirit 't is for a man to be brought under the great and special effects and operations thereof at present I say no more of it I hope hereafter I shall These are various there 's Illumination whence he 's called The Spirit of wisdom and revelation Eph. 1.17 Quickening whence he 's called the Spirit of Life Rom. 8.2 Conviction the promise is he shall convince the world of sin Joh. 16.8 he 's the Spirit of Grace and Supplication Zech. 12.10 the sanctifying Spirit 1 Pet. 1.2 the Spirit enabling to mortifie sin Rom. 8.13 working a person up to all holy obedience Ezek. 36.27 Now then what do you find in your selves of these high and precious operations of the Spirit here lies your participation or having of it and consequently the evidence of your Union with Christ This great Spirit is never idle where he is he is always an active operative working Spirit is he so in you doth he teach enlighten convince humble draw to Christ raise up the heart to heavenly things excite to duty assist in duty c. if so then he is in you and you are in Christ if it be not so then you have not the Spirit and thereupon are none of Christ's 2. Enquire about the other bond viz. * Soli verè Fideles sunt membra Christi idque non quatenus Homines sed quatenus Christiani nec secundum regenerationem ac proinde non secundum ipsam humanae Naturae substantiam per se sed quatenus illa in Christo ut altero Adamo renovatur singulis ejus partibus novâ ac spirituali qualitate Sanctificatis ut simus novi homines Polan Synt. Theol. p. 454. Faith Ask your selves in secret how the case stands as to Faith say O is this precious grace wrought in us are we sincere and sound Believers have we heartily clos'd with Christ according to the Gospel-offer have we received Christ and whole Christ is our trust relyance confidence for pardon life salvation grounded upon him and upon him only do we cast our selves upon his alone Merits renouncing every thing in our selves have we that Faith which is wrought by the (a) Eph. 1.19 Almighty power of God which (b) Acts 15.9 purifies the heart (c) 1 Joh. 5.4 overcomes the world (d) Gal. 5.6 works by love is attended with (e) Jam. 2.20 good works is it more than a meer dogmatical or historical Faith than such an easie common presumptuous false Faith as that which is in the generality of men O that you would herein deal faithfully with your own Souls let the search be deep and thorough go to the very bottom of your deceitful hearts bring things to an issue be sure that you be not mistaken if the Faith be right the Vnion is sure yea every thing else is sure but if that be unsound do not flatter your selves you are not in Christ Jesus but in the woful state of disunion and distance from him Thus the Examination must be made from the Bonds of the Vnion To clear up the thing yet further in order to your passing true judgement upon your selves I would direct you to a few trying Scriptures 1. Let the First be that 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new Creature what a glass is this for every one of us to see our faces in The thing to be known is our being
Hominem in Personam But now in the Mystical Vnion 't is otherwise there 't is the Vnion of Persons but not Personal Vnion this I 'le endeavour to clear as well as I can In the Mystical Vnion there is the Vnion of Persons the Person of Christ is united to the Person of the Believer and the Person of the Believer is united to the Person of Christ For Faith being the uniting grace and this faith receiving the Person of Christ * Joh. 1.12 Faith is a receiving of Christ himself we cannot receive the benefits that come by him without receiving of himself as in Marriage the Consent is I take thee not I take thine c. Vines on the Sacram. p. 120. To as many as received him c it must also unite to the Person of Christ In the Marriage-Vnion 't is person joyned to person and so 't is in the Mystical Vnion also How is a Believer said to be in Christ it cannot so properly be said that he is in the graces or in the comforts or in the gifts of Christ but the meaning is he is in the Person of Christ so that this is an Union of Persons For further this Vnion doth not lye only in some moral or spiritual acts qualities or gracious indowments as oneness of will or oneness of disposition c. but it lies in the Oneness of Persons And therefore * Nostra ipsius conjunctio non miscet Personas nec confundit substantias sed affectus consociat confaederat voluntates Cypr. Cyprian's explication of this Vnion with Christ is not full enough Our Vnion saith he with Christ does not mingle Persons nor confound Substances so far very true but it unites affections and wills if he meant that this was all then 't is conceived he came short there is more in it than so for there is besides this uniting of the Affections and Will the uniting though not the mingling of Persons The Father Son and Spirit are one not only in respect of Consent as some most falsely tell us but also in respect of Nature and Essence Now far be it from me to say that Christ and the Saints are one in this sense yet withall I say even between them there is an higher Vnion than barely that of oneness of affection and will I say no more than what * Vide Zanch. in Cap. 5. ad Eph. p. 245. Polan Synt. Theol. Lib. 6. cap. 35. p. 454. Hujus Unionis interventu fit ut tum Beneficiorum Christi tum Substantiae ipsius fiamus participes quia beneficia omnia vis illa vivifica quae animas nostras sustentat in vitam aeternam non possunt à Corpore Sanguine Christi cui inhaerent adeoque ab ipso Christo divelli Trelcat Inst Theol. Lib. 2. p. 189. Bucan L. C. 48. p. 818 819. 'T is not an Union of Christ with a Believer in Accidents only as in Opinion Affection in Consent of Mind and Heart or in likeness of Disposition and Conversation but it is an Union of Substances Essences Persons As Mr. Perkins saith the Person of him that believeth is united to the Person of Christ Reyn. Praec p 49. Others who write upon this Argument generally say But that you may not go too high I add this Vnion is not Personal 't is but Mystical not Personal For then Christ and the Believer would properly and physically make but one person and then it would be so many Believers so many Christs and then the Believer would have no subsistence but in Christ as the Humane Nature of Christ hath no subsistence but what it hath in the Godhead and then he would merit in what he did as Christ quà Man did by virtue of the Personal Vnion Therefore we must conclude that though here is an Vnion of Persons the Person of Christ in a mystical way being united to the person of Believers yet here is not any Personal Vnion they both notwithstanding this remaining several and distinct Persons These things may seem as indeed they are abstruse and dark to you I 'le come to that which will be somewhat more plain and easie For the further Explication of this Great Mystery there are Three Things which I 'le speak to 1. I 'le endeavour to open the several Kinds or Branches of that Vnion which is betwixt Christ and Believers 2. I 'le give you those Scriptural Resemblances by which 't is shadowed and set forth 3. I 'le give you the several Properties of it Vnion Mystical Legal Moral 1. First Let me open the several Kinds or Branches of this Vnion 'T is Threefold Mystical Legal and Moral A Believer is united to Christ three ways Mystically Legally Morally Take any of these singly and they will not be enough comprehensive but take them jointly so there 's all in them Of the Mystical Vnion 1. First there 's the Mystical Vnion so we usually call it Which may be thus * Vide Bodium in Ephes 5.28 p. 786. more fully describing of it describ'd 'T is that supernatural spiritual intimous Oneness and Conjunction which is betwixt the Person of Christ and the Persons of Believers through the Bond of the Spirit and Faith upon which there follows mutual and reciprocal Communion each with the other If this Description be taken in pieces it contains in it the most considerable things to be known about the Mystical Vnion For 1. Here is the proper General Nature of it viz. Oneness and Conjunction Christ and Saints are united how why in respect of that Oneness and Conjunction that is betwixt them This the Scripture-Expressions do mainly refer to and clearly hold forth They are said to be in Christ and Christ in them they are said to dwell in Christ and Christ in them to abide in Christ and Christ in them to be one with Christ as he is one with the Father the several Scriptures which speak to these things have been already cited They are further said to be (a) 1 Cor. 6.17 joyned to the Lord and to be one Spirit to be (b) Eph. 5.31 32. one flesh Christ (c) Gal. 2.20 lives in them he is the (d) Eph. 1.22 Head they the Members he the (e) Joh. 15.5 Root they the Branches he the (f) 1 Cor. 3.9 11. Foundation they the Building he the (g) Eph. 5.28 c. Husband they the Wife All these expressions I say point to that Oneness and Conjunction which is betwixt Christ and Believers in which the General Nature of the Mystical Vnion doth consist 2. Here 's the Qualities or Properties of this Vnion 't is a supernatural spiritual intimous Vnion to which I shall speak by and by 3. Here 's the Subjects of this Vnion Christ and Believers And that too is set down with this modification the Oneness and Conjunction is betwixt the Person of Christ and the Persons of Believers of which before 4. Here 's the Media or
Vincula Vnionis the Means or Bonds of this Union the Spirit and Faith 5. Here is also the Effect or Consequent upon this Union namely mutual and reciprocal Communion each with the other This will be opened in what will follow Only at present let me open the fourth Head the Means and Bonds of the Mystical Union In all Unions there is something which binds and knits Thing and Thing Person and Person together what is it then which binds knits conjoyns Christ to Believers and Believers to Christ I answer 't is the Spirit and Faith The Spirit unites Christ to us and Faith unites us to Christ First the Spirit is the bond of this Union on Christs part for by this he takes possession of Believers * Christ lives in us not by local presence but by the special supernatural operation of his Spirit Perkins upon Gal. 2.20 p. 216. dwells in them lays hold of them apprehends them as the word is Phil. 3.12 In * De Trinit de Poenit. Tertullians Dialect Spiritus nos Christo confibulat the Spirit doth joyn and button Believers to Christ And then Faith is the bond or ligament on our part Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts how by Faith Christ lays hold on us by the Spirit and we lay hold on him by Faith he comes to us by the Spirit and we go to him by Faith The Spirit of God does not only discover and make out the Union of the Soul with Christ Hereby we know that he abides in us by the Spirit which he hath given us 1 Joh. 3.24 but he works promotes and brings it about As 't is in that Vnion which is amongst the Saints themselves * 1 Cor. 12.13 by one Spirit they are all baptized into one body So 't is in the Vnion which is betwixt Christ and them by this One Spirit they are all made one with Christ Therefore saith the Apostle * Rom. 8.9 If any man have not the Spirit of Christ he is none of his he means he hath neither interest in him nor union with him And then there is Faith which unites on our part for that is the uniting Grace the Sinew or Ligament which knits and binds the Soul to Christ that by which the Soul clasps and clings about Christ By faith we apply our selves to Christ and Christ to our selves and that application is the ground of union So also by Faith we * Joh. 1.12 receive Christ upon which receiving of him we are united to him and made one with him The spiritual ingrafting too is by this as you may see Rom 11.19 20 and this is our eating Christs flesh and drinking-Christs-blood upon which he dwells in us Joh. 6.56 Thus the Union is brought about both on Christs part and on the Believers part and this is the Mystical Vnion Of the Law-Vnion Secondly There is the Legal or Law-Vnion betwixt Christ and Believers The ground of this Union is Christs * Heb. 7.22 Suretyship he as the Saints 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Surety struck hands with God as the word imports put himself into their stead took their debt upon himself and bound himself upon their account to make satisfaction to God Now from this act of Christ there results that Law-Vnion which I am upon Saints as 't is said by some are united to Christ three ways Spiritu Carne Vadimonio as they are partakers of his Spirit as he hath assumed their Nature and as he hath engaged for them as there Sponsor or Surety You know in Law the Debtor and the Surety are but one Person the Law looks upon them as One and makes no difference betwixt them and therefore both are equally liable to the debt and if the One pay it 't is in the eye of the Law as much as if the Other had paid it So 't is with Christ and us he is our Surety for he took our debt upon himself engaged to pay whatever we owed as * Philem. 18.19 Paul once did to Philemon for his Onesimus entred into bond though not with us yet for us Upon this Christ and we are but One Person before God and accordingly he deals with us For he makes over our Sins to Christ and also Christs righteousness and satisfaction to us he now in a legal notion looking upon both but as One person And this Consideration is of great use and so accordingly 'tis improved by the Orthodox against Socinians to clear up and confirm those great Truths which concern Christs Sufferings and the Believers benefit thereby For if it be ask'd How could Christ he being a Person perfectly innocent suffer in a penal manner as he did he being altogether guiltless in himself how could the Father with justice fall upon him as though he had been guilty Or grant that he did thus suffer yet how can any good by his suffering redound to others I say if any shall raise such Questions the Answer is ready That Christ and Believers in Law are but one Person he having submitted to be their Surety in a voluntary substitution of himself in their stead and susception of their Guilt whereupon it came to pass that their Guilt was imputed to him upon which the Father might without the least impeachment of his justice severely fall upon him and his righteousness merit satisfaction was imputed to them for that being performed by their Surety 't is theirs to all intents and purposes as if they had perform'd it in their own persons Briefly upon this Law-Vnion resulting from Christs Suretiship our Sins were very well imputable to him and his merits to us This doth so exactly fall in with the common notion and case of Suretyship amongst Men that I need not any further insist upon the illustration of it The Adversaries therefore who deny that Christ either did or could suffer in the Sinners stead or that there is any imputation of his Merit to Believers are so pinched with this his being a Surety that they oppose it to their utmost wholly deny that too and are feign to make good one denial with another But here I digress Two things I shall add upon this Head and then dismiss it 1. That the Oneness of Person 'twixt Christ and the Saints which hath been affirmed of them more than once or twice in the opening of the matter in hand is not to be carried further than that particular Sense and respect in which 't is affirmed I mean this They are not one Person in respect of Nature Essence or any personal Vnion onely they are so in respect of that Mystical and Legal Oneness of Person that is betwixt them And this latter Oneness is very well consistent with the different Natures of the Subjects united though the former is not so 2. That this Law-Vnion is only proper to Christ the Second Person The mystical and the moral Union in some sense doth reach to the other Persons
of (d) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. Confer supra cap. 7.23 24. ubi utriusque Legis neinpe Legis Peccati Mortis mentio facta est Quare non videtur hic esse Figura 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vorstius in Schol. Interpreters open it The Law of Sin is always attended with the Law of Death and freedome from the Law of Sin is always attended with freedome from the Law of Death the power and dominion of Death stands or falls by the power and dominion of Sin But what is this Law of Death * August contra Fortunat. Disput 2. Austine answers the Law of sin is Whoever sins shall dye the Law of Death is Dust thou art and to dust shalt thou return * Lex mortis est mortuum perseverare mortuum est de morte non esse reditum ad vitam Cajes Cajetan makes it to be permanentia in morte the abiding or continuance in the state of Death So Believers are freed from it for though they may for a time be subjected under it yet it shad not always have power over them so as to hold them forever as the Word is used concerning Christ Acts 2.24 they shall arise and live again they are not under the Law i. e. the everlasting evercontinuing full power and strength of Death You have Ver. 10 11. the matter of this Explication If Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin but the Spirit is life because of righteousness But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you But to pass these by as the Law of Sin is the power of sin so the Law of Death is that power and right which it hath over Men by reason of sin for it hath its empire and dominion as well as sin Therefore as you read of the reigning of sin so also you read of the reigning of Death Rom. 5.14 But death reigned from Adam to Moses 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it reigned as a King as the word imports Death is either Temporal or Eternal both of which carry that in them which may give them the Title or Denomination of a Law but regenerate persons upon the Law of the Spirit of Life are freed from both From the first not simply and absolutely but onely in a restrained sense viz. as 't is strictly a Curse or the fruit and product of that primitive Curse Gen. 2.17 From the second as it notes eternal condemnation for these two are all * Ut sibi respondeant Mors damnatio Estius one they are absolutely freed This Death they being in Christ and by the sanctifying Spirit delivered from the Law of sin hath no power or authority over them I say no authority for 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 20.6 on such the second death hath no power This is the First General in the Words that Gracious Deliverance from the Law of Sin and Death which they hold forth Second General The Second is the Subject of this deliverance This the Apostle puts down in his own Person The Law of the Spirit c. hath made me free from the Law of sin and death Here is Enallage Personae the change of the Person 't was them in the foregoing Verse 't is me in this I have already observed and I would now more fully open it that our apostle throughout this whole Chapter wherein he mainly treats of the Saints Priviledges speaks altogether in the Plural Number excepting onely this one Verse 'T is true where he is speaking of some high act of Grace as performed by himself there he purs it in the Singular Number as Ver. 18. I reckon that the sufferings of this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall be revealed in us And so too where he is speaking of some high Assurance a thing not so common there also he expresses it in the Singular Number as Ver. 38. For I am persunded that neither c. But wherever the great and fundamental priviledges of Believers are before him there he always expresses himself in the Plural Number then 't is us altogether And 't is observable that oven where he speaks of himself as to some special act or enjoyment yet even there as to the main Priviledge he takes in all the people of God You may see this made good in the two fore-mentioned places 't is I reckon but 't is the glory that shall be revealed in us and 't is I am persuaded but 't is shall separate us from the love of God Well! here he puts in himself as the Subject of the Priviledge but 't is not to exclade or shut out Others onely he propounds himself as one great Instance of freedome from the Law of sin by the Law of the Spirit here is application and appropriation as to himself but no impropriation or exclusion with respect to Others He that had so much of Faith and Experience as to be able to apply this to himself had withall so much of Knowledge and Wisdom as to know that it was with Others yea with all regenerate persons just as it was with himself And therefore 't is in the * Observandum est in causâ Gratiae nullum esse inter Apostolum quemvis Christianum duntaxat verum discrimen Non est quod dicamus Paulus suit Apostolus nos non item ex eo quod sibi contigit per gratiam Christi probat hoc quod tribuit omnibus Christianis Muscul Continet Argumentum á Testimonio viz. experientia Apostoli ita fimul Argumentum á Pari quod enim Apostolus in se expertus fuerat id pari ratione omnes credentes in se experiuntur nempe operationem illam Spiritus Sancti regenerantis Piseas Non ego solus sed omnes quotquot in Jesu Christo sunt c. Zuingl Me fidelem quemvis Gomar i. e. quemvis verè Chriftianum Grot. Pronomen me demonstrat ipsum in Christo ambulantem c. personam fiquidem talium induit Cajes In corum personâ de se Apostolus loquitur haec verba Estius Soto will be sure to extend it far though for be glosses upon it Me i. e. Gonus humanum persons of all these that he here thus speaks and this me is inclusive not exclusive every Child of God in the world may say as here Paul doth the Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the Law of Sin and Death and indeed every Believer should be so well acquainted with the workings of the Spirit of God upon his own heart as to be able to apply this to himself But why doth Paul here particularize himself and speak thus in the Singular Number in this place rather than in Others I ansiver 1. Because he looked upon himself
upon the Conscience it speaks nothing against the dominion of sin 5. Men may do that which materially is very good and may hold on in so doing for some time and yet be under the Law of Sin O there are many who pray hear the Word attend upon Ordinances give alms c. and yet Sin is still regent in them because 1. though they do all this yet the heart is not at all changed in them now Sins power never goes off till the heart be made new 2. because which is more demonstrative the heart is rotten in all this Christ hath the external duty but Sin hath the heart some outward respect is shown to God but yet the heart is set for some Lust against God as you read of those Ezek. 33.31 And they come unto thee as the people cometh and they sit before thee as my people and they hear thy words but they will not do them for with their mouth they shew much love but their heart goeth after their covetuousness 'T is a thing too common for men even in their external serving of God to serve Sin more than God and Gods work is done by them for the matter of it but Sin so far interposes its authority and strength as that it carries it in the Sinner as to his Ends in what he doth and if it can but sway and order him in them God may have the external act but still it hath the soveraiguty and power within The same holds true too as to a plausible outwardly good Conversation external piety is too well consistent with the internal reign of Sin it rules in the fair professing-Hypocrite as well as in the gross and scandalous Sinner By this you see you may run your selves upon great mistakes in taking up with such Evidences as will not prove your being made free from the Law of Sin O that the consideration thereof might make you the more careful lest you as many thousands are to their eternal undoing should herein be deceived as also quicken you to the tryal of your selves by those things which will infallibly prove the thing in hand What are they why no allowed subjection to Sin no tame quiet submission to its commands inward renouncing nay abjuring of its authority a rooted vigorous opposition to it in all its cursed suggestions an utter dislike and hatred of it the bent and impetus of the heart set against it universal resignation of a mans self to the Law and Will of God an hearty willingness nay desire to come under the rule and government of the Lord Jesus c. these are the things you are to enquire after and to judge by for these are sure Evidences which you may relye upon Happy is that man who finds these in himself he may with confidence build upon them that he is indeed made free from the Law of Sin but he that is confident upon any thing short of these will sooner or later find he was too credulous So much for this Use VSE 2. To exhort Sinners to make out after this freedom The next shall be to exhort you and others yea all men in the whole world if I could reach them to labour after and make sure of a share and interest in this blessed freedom from Sins power and dominion Regenerate persons you hear have it shall the Vnregenerate sit still and be quiet and contented under the want of it God forbid To be made free from the Law of Sin what a mercy or priviledge is this ô how much is there in it to excite draw allure Sinners to desire love and value it and to be industrious after it He that can upon good grounds say over the words of the Text needs no higher happiness 't was more for Paul to say the Law of the Spirit of Life c. than if he could have said that God had given him all the Kingdoms Crowns Diadems Riches Honours Pleasures of this world You see he applies it to himself and surely he had comfort enough in that application now Sinners when will you be able to say the same of your selves that you also by the power of the Spirit are made free from the Law of Sin ô as Eliphaz once said to Job hear it and know it for thy self Job 5.27 so I would say to you hear this and know it for your selves so as to get it for and to be able to appropriate it unto your own selves so as to take the me here as coming out of Pauls mouth concerning himself into your mouths one by one concerning your selves Sirs this is a thing of such importance that we Ministers cannot speak too much or be too earnest about it 't is the great end of our Lord and Master in his employing us in the work of the Ministry to open your eyes to turn you from darkness to light and from the power of Satan unto God Acts 26.18 and therefore though I have said so much already to press the thing upon you yet I must further plead with you in order to the more effectual pressing of it Therefore consider hath not this Sin tyranniz'd long enough over you are you willing still to continue under its thraldom and vassalage must this cursed Vsurper forever sit upon the throne shall it yet command and give Law to you What woful and miserable bondage attends its empire and government hath been described largely shall all that be nothing to you to be slaves the very worst of slaves shall that be but a little thing in your eye Other bondagé not half so bad you cannot bear you detest and dread it shall the worst bondage only be tolerable nay eligible 'pray look * Pag. 189 c. back to the description of Sins bondage and methinks your hearts should rise at it 'T is an astonishing thing to consider that so excellent a Creature as Man who hath such an excellent Being in him as a reasonable and immortal Soul should so tamely submit to so base a●thing as Sin and make no more of servitude to it Doth God in the Gospel so graciously tender Liberty privative and positive to you and will you not accept of it may you be made free and will you not ô stupendious folly is this after the manner of men with respect to external liberty or bondage When God sent Moses to deliver Israel out of their bondage what madness would it have been in them not to have accepted it let there be a ransom sent to the poor Captives under Turkish cruelty would they not readily embrace it ah Sinner the Lord Jesus came from Heaven on purpose to redeem thy poor captive Soul out of the hands of Sin and Satan he hath on his part effected what he came about he now offers his Merit and Spirit to make thee free nay he invites intreats sollicits beseeches thee that thou wilt accept of the liberty purchased for thee and yet wilt thou hug thy chains play with
SEVERAL SERMONS Preach'd on the whole EIGHTH CHAPTER OF THE EPISTLE to the ROMANS EIGHTEEN OF WHICH Preach'd on the FIRST SECOND THIRD FOVRTH VERSES are here Published WHEREIN The Saints Exemption from Condemnation the Mystical Vnion the Spiritual Life the Dominion of Sin and the Spirits agency in freeing from it the Law 's inability to justifie and save Christ's Mission Eternal Sonship Incarnation his being an Expiatory Sacrifice Fulfilling the Laws righteousness which is imputed to Believers are opened confirmed vindicated and applied BY THO. JACOMB D. D. The FIRST VOLUME of the FIRST PART Hoc mihi concedetur nihil unquam fuisse inter homines tam absolutum in quo vel expoliendo vel ornando vel illustrando non fieret locus sequentium industriae Calvin in Ep. ad Gryn London Printed by W. Godbid and are to be Sold by M. Pitt at the White-Hart in Little-Britain and R. Chiswel at the Rose and Crown and J. Robinson at the Golden Lion in St. Pauls Church yard 1672. To the Right Honourable ELIZABETH CONVNTESSE DOWAGER OF EXETER My Ever Honoured LADY MADAM ALthough I know before hand how the prefixing of your Name upon this account will be resented by your Ladyship yet I am by so many Reasons thereunto oblig'd that I must venture to do it and cast my self upon your Goodness for my pardon This Volume of Sermons which is but a Forerunner to Two or Three more I presume therefore humbly to dedicate to your Honour which though in it self and in your Ladyships esteem it be a very insignificative thing yet however 't is a declaration to the World that I am sensible of my vast obligations to You and that I would catch at every thing wherein I might testifie how much I am beholden to you And I hope you will not be offended with me for the doing of that which all who know my Circumstances would have wondred if I had omitted Surely Madam those extraordinary Favours which for above Twenty Years you have been pleas'd to confer upon me and mine deserve over and over all those little expressions of humble Respect and Gratitude which I can possibly make This Dedication therefore being design'd for those Ends I beseech you that you will please to put a favourable interpretation upon it But besides this your Ladyship may upon several Considerations claim a special interest in this Work if there be any thing of good either in it or by it One of which I shall not conceal the rest I must When I had finish'd my Preaching on the Chapter which I have gone over You was pleas'd to desire me and your Desires are and ought to be Commands to me to publish to the World what I had done in a private Auditory which desire of Yours in concurrence with my own hopes of doing some good did very much prevail with me to engage in this difficult and painful Undertaking which was before as much besides my intention as against my inclination So that Madam you are in a special manner to be own'd in what is here done and the truth is if any benefit shall thereby accrue to any it must under God upon several accounts in a great measure be ascribed to your Honour you having been so instrumental in the promoting thereof Madam that which once was preached to your Ear is now presented to your Eye and it is my hope and shall be my prayer that those heavenly Truths which in the Hearing of them were not unto you as well as others without some considerable efficacy and sweetness may not in the Reading of them be unto you less efficacious and sweet The Chapter opened is a Summary of Evangelical Duty and Comfort through the rich Grace of God you are in a very eminent manner a performer of the One and through the same Grace of God you are also a partaker of the Other and shall I trust grow up daily yet more and more to an higher participation of it I cannot wish you to be more holy than to do what is here enjoyned nor more happy than to possess what is here promised It pleases the Merciful God the soveraign disposer of Life and Death in whose hands Yours and all our times are as yet to continue you in the land of the living When many very many of your dear Relations are taken away and are not you your Self are yet spared with a small number of Survivors I beseech you give me leave if you do not give it me I must take it to pray for the long continuance of this mercy that your days may still be prolonged on earth and that you may arrive at a far greater Age than what as yet you have arrived at You are impatient I fear a little too much to be gone partly from the dread you have of the infirmities which attend old age and your weariness of the world and partly from the pantings of your Soul to be with Christ and in the possessing of the heavenly Glory But good Madam I beseech you not too much haste no not for Heaven it-self you 'l have it never the sooner for that He that hath determin'd your Days and Months and hath allotted you such Work to do in your Generation will have you let your own thoughts and desires be what they will live out that time and finish that work which he hath set you be entreated therefore quietly and chearfully to wait all the days of your appointed time till your change shall come Heaven will be the same twenty years hence that now it is and the longer you are kept out of it upon the doing of Gods work the better it will be to you at last 'T is one of the highest degrees of grace that here a Saint is capable of to be sure of Heaven and yet in order to service to be willing for a time to be kept out of Heaven here was the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theodoret. heighth of Pauls grace and the excellency of his Spirit Philip. 1.23 24 25. For I am in a straight betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Nevertheless to abide in the flesh is more needful for you And having this confidence I know that I shall abide and continue with you all for your furtherance and joy of faith 'T is a Saying of * Ingentis animi est alienâ causâ ad vitam reverti Seneca It argues a great and generous mind for one to be willing for the sake of another to return to life again surely that Christian discovers true greatness of Spirit who for the good of Others is willing to continue in this Life and to be kept out of that which is far better Madam your Serviceableness is known to all but to your Self many have cause to bless God for the good which they reap by your means who can speak that which 't is not convenient for me to write it will be
heart such as thus * Math. 5.4 mourn shall be comforted these * Joh. 2.9 waters Christ will turn into wine As joy in sin will end in sorrow so sorrow for sin will end in joy But to return to our Apostle He had as to his outward state his abasements and his advancements too and he knew how to carry himself under both * Philip. 4.12 I know how to be abased and I know how to abound So as to his inward state he also had his abasements and his advancements Sometimes t is O wretched man that I am c. there 't was abasement then presently 't is There is no Condemnation c. there 't was advancement And let me add that Pauls comfort in this Chapter had never been so high so full as to himself so encouraging as to others if he had not in the former Chapter first smarted under the cutting and piercing Conviction of Sin O to have one who but even now was almost pressed down under Soul-burdens now saying yet there is no Condemnation to them c. how may this animate and strengthen the Faith of a poor Christian when ever troubles of Conscience by reason of sin shall be upon him The Prop. considered in its parts This being the Proposition I will consider it in its Parts And so you have in it First The Praedicate or the Priviledge asserted viz. exemption from Condemnation There is therefore now no Condemnation c. Secondly The Subject or the Persons described to whom and to whom onely the Priviledge belongs And to take the most easie division of the words at present they are described 1. By their Vnion with Christ in reference to their State they are such who are in Christ Jesus 2. By their Qualification or Property in reference to their Course they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit I conceive this Clause doth more immediately refer to the persons who are in Christ and is properly descriptive of them yet mediately they may refer to and be descriptive of the persons to whom there is no Condemnation as I shall hereafter show Of the different readings of the words If you take the words in the body of them there is some yet no very great difference in the reading of them The latter branch but after the Spirit is wholly left out by the Vulgar Translation and by those Expositors who follow it I know not why unless it be because the Syriac Version did the same which * Proinde nulla est Condemnatio iis qui non ambulant secundum carnem in Jesu Christo Vers Syr. Version in the reading of the Words is not only defective as to this but very harsh in the misplacing of them There is therefore no Condemnation to those who walk not after the flesh in Christ Jesus Some other such Variations might be taken notice of but I 'le pass them by The General Proposition being taken in pieces will afford us these two Observations 1. That there is no Condemnation to them who are in Christ Jesus The Obs raised 2. That such who are in Christ Jesus and so secured from Condemnation this is their Property or Course they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit The discussing of these two Points will take me up some time Of the first Observation I begin with the First in the handling of which I will 1. chiefly speak to the Priviledge and only in a general way joyn the description of the Subject with it 2. I will then more particularly speak to that and show what it is to be in Christ Jesus or how persons may be said to be in Christ Jesus Of the First at this time For the better opening of which I must premise these seven things Seven things premised for explications 1. First the Apostle doth not say There is now no Affliction or no Correction to them who are in Christ but there is no Condemnation to them who are in Christ 'T is one thing to be afflicted another thing to be condemned God may and will afflict his Children but he 'le never condemn them it may be much affliction yet 't is no Condemnation Indeed God afflicts here that he may not condemn hereafter 1 Cor. 31.32 When we are judged we are chastened of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the World God is so gracious that he will not condemn yet withall so wise so just so holy that he will afflict Grace in the Heart secures from eternal not from temporal Evils God cannot condemn and yet love but he can chasten and yet love nay therefore he chastens because he loves As many as I love I rebuke and chasten whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth And it may be even to them who are in Christ not only bare Affliction but there may be something of the nature of * Quamvis Deus abso●vit verè poenitentes ab omni poenâ satisfactoriâ propter Christi mortem non tamen illos liberat abomni poenâ medicinali castigatoriâ Davenant in Col 1.24 See of this Burg. of Justif Lect. 4.5.10 Eaxt. Aphor. p. 68. c. Boltons Bounds c. p. 163. c. Rutherf● Survay pa●●● ch 31. Punnishment in that affliction though not in a vindictive way or upon the account of satisfaction The nearer a person is to Christ and the dearer he is to God the surer he is to be punished if he sin Tou only have I know of all the Families of the Earth therefore I will punish you for your iniquities Amos 3.2 God may pardon and yet punish temporal punishment is very consistent with pardoning Mercy Psal 99.8 Thou answeredst them O Lord our God thou wast a God that forgavest them though thoù tookest vengeance of them for their iniquities God had put away Davids sin yet he shall smart for it his own Soul shall live but his Child shall dye as a punishment for his sin See 2 Sam. 12.13 14. The Malefactor may not be condemn'd to dye as to his Life he may be acquitted yet he may be judged to be whipp'd or burnt in the hand for his offence so 't is here You must distinguish therefore betwixt no Condemnation and no Affliction or no Correction Saints are exempted from the former but not from the latter 2. Secondly The Apostle doth not say there is no Matter of Condemnation in them who are in Christ only as to Fact he saith there is no actual Condemnation to such There is a vast difference betwixt what is deserved and what is actually inflicted betwixt what is de Jure and ex Merito and what is de Facto Take the very best of Saints there is enough and enough in them which deserves eternal Condemnation and if God should proceed according to their merit it would be Condemnation over and over again for even they have sin and commit sin and wherever
To excite all to get into Christ Use 3. Some Directions in order to it Use 4. Several Duties pressed upon those who are in Christ Use 5. Comfort to such in Eleven Particulars TWo things have been observed in these Words the Priviledge and the Subjects of that Priviledge I have done with the First and go on now to the Second Here is no Condemnation a very high and glorious Priviledge who are the Persons to whom it belongs Such as are in Christ Jesus This I have hitherto but touch'd upon in the General but am now to fall upon the more particular opening of it To them which are in Christ Jesus Here are the two great Names or Titles of our blessed Lord Christ with respect to God Jesus with respect to us he is Gods Christ and our Jesus Gods Anointed and our Saviour But I do not intend in the least to stay upon these Titles I 'le only speak to that one thing which here lies before me viz. being in Christ Jesus To them which are in Christ Jesus So we fill it up but in the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Original 't is only to them in Christ Jesus The Words are descriptive the Apostle doth not design in them to set down the Meritorious Cause of Non-condemnation no not with respect to Christ himself but only to describe the Persons who have an interest therein for he doth not say there is no Condemnation because of Christ or through Christ though that be very true but there is no Condemnation to them who are in Christ I grant that something argumentative may be fetch'd out of them but in their first and main scope they are descriptive Qu. What is it to be in Christ Jesus What it is to be in Christ opened Answ 'T is * Qui sunt in Christo i. e. qui credunt in Christum per fidem ei sunt insiti Piscat in Schol. So. Beza Esse in Christo Jesu est fide Christo adhaerere Spiritu insitus esse ut membrum Capiti Pare Conjunctis fide cum Christo Jesu Vatabl. Qui sunt incorporati per fidem dilectionem fidei Sacramentum Aquin generally opened by that mystical Vnion which is betwixt Christ and Believers through the Spirit and Faith To be in Christ 't is to be ingrafted incorporated mystically united unto Christ This Vnion in Scripture is set forth sometimes by the Saints being in Christ sometimes by Christs being in them Sometimes I say by their being in Christ So here in the Text and so in several other places 1 Joh. 5.20 We are in him that is true even in his Son Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 5.17 If any man be in Christ he is a new creature 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus c. Then 't is also set forth by Christs being in them 2 Cor. 13.5 Know ye not that Christ is in you except you be Reprobates Col. 1.27 Christ in you the hope of glory Rom. 8.10 And if Christ be in you the body is dead because of sin c. The difference betwixt Saints Being in Christ and Christs Being in them Now I conceive these two Expressions do both point to one and the same thing viz. to the Spiritual and Mystical Vnion betwixt Christ and Believers Yet possibly as to some Modes and Circumstances there may be some difference betwixt them Which a Reverend Person in a late * Mount Pisgah pag. 22. Treatise thus sets forth Christ is in the Believer by his Spirit 1 Joh. 4.13 1 Cor. 12.13 the Believer is in Christ by Faith Joh. 1.12 Christ is in the Believer by Inhabitation Eph. 3.17 the Believer is in Christ by Implantation Joh. 15.2 Rom. 6 3. Christ is in the Believer as the head is in the body Col. 1.18 as the root is in the branches Joh. 15.5 Believers are in Christ as the members are in the head Eph. 1.23 as the branches are in the root Joh. 15.7 Christ in the Believer implyeth Life and Influence from Christ Col. 3.4 1 Pet. 2.5 the Believer in Christ implieth communion and fellowship with Christ 1 Cor. 1.30 When Christ is said to be in the Believer we are to understand it in reference to Sanctification when the Believer is said to be in Christ it is in Order to Justification Further this Vnion in Scripture is set forth sometimes by the Saints abiding in Christ and Christs abiding in them Joh. 15.4 Abide in me and I in you 1 Joh. 3.24 Hereby we know that he abideth in us c. Sometimes by their dwelling in Christ and Christs dwelling in them 1 Joh. 4.13 Hereby know we that we dwell in him and he in us because he hath given us of his Spirit Joh. 6.56 He that eateth my flesh and drinketh my blood dwelleth in me and I in him Eph. 3.17 That Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith Sometimes by Christs living in them Gal 2.20 c Yet not I but Christ liveth in me Sometimes by that Oneness that is betwixt Christ and them Joh. 17.21 22. And some make that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that gathering together in one all things in Christ Eph. 1.10 to point to this Vnion I dispute not about that but certainly this is that which is here held forth when the Apostle saith there is no Condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus It being so my business then will be as God shall assist to discourse of that admirable and glorious Vnion which is betwixt Christ and Believers 'T is a very high and noble and excellent Argument O that I may in some measure reach the greatness spiritualness and glory of it I will not at all insist upon the proving of the Thing viz. that some persons are in Christ or that there is this blessed Vnion 'twixt Christ and Saints for the Scriptures ' forementioned sufficiently prove it and I do not meet with any who deny it Though there are some different Notions about it and some different Explications of it yet all grant there is such a thing So that my only work will be first to open and then to apply it And indeed there 's great need of the former Vnion with Christ a great Mystery because this Vnion is a very profound and abstruse point 't is a mystery a very great mystery a truth which lyes very deep and is not easily to be understood All believe it but few understand it all grant the quod sit but for the quid sit how much are the most knowing persons in the dark about it The Apostle speaking of it calls it a great mystery Eph. 5.32 and Col. 1.27 he sets it forth by the riches of the glory of this mystery what 's that why Christ in you the hope of glory Indeed 't is such a mystery as that we shall never fully understand it till we come to Heaven where all mysteries shall be unfolded and particularly this of the mystical
Vnion Joh. 14.20 At that day ye shall know that I am in my Father and you in me and I in you that day refers either to the time when the Spirit should be given which is promised v. 16 17 or to the glorisied state spoken of v. 19 upon the effusion of the Spirit men may come to know something of this Union but it will never be fully understood by them till they be in Glory In the opening of it so far as the present state and the height of the mystery will admit of I must look into the Word and keep to that and fetch all from that for 't is Revelation and not Reason which here must give us Light The Word having reveal'd it Reason may be useful as an Handmaid to shadow it out by such and such Resemblances thereby to help us the better to conceive of it but that which must be our first and main Guide about it is Scripture Revelation Now the Scripture speaks of a threefold Vnion 1. There is the Vnion of three Persons in one Nature Of the Vnion of the Three Pexsons of the two Natures in Christ and of the Mystical Vnion 2. There is the Vnion of two Natures in one Person 3. There is the Vnion of Persons where yet Persons and Natures are distinct 1. There is the Vnion of three Persons in one Nature This is in the Trin-Vnity where you have three Persons united in the Godhead the Trinity in Vnity and the Vnity in Trinity One in Three in respect of Nature and Essence and Three in One in respect of Personality This is that ineffable incomprehensible Union which is between the Father Son and Holy Ghost in the same common Nature of the Godhead Of which the Apostle speaks 1 Joh. 5.7 There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one Here are Three and yet One Three as to their distinct Personal Subsistences and yet One as to their common Nature This a Mystery to be adored not to be fathomed a * The Union betwixt the Three Persons c. the knowledge of this is not nay cannot be attained unto by the Light of Nature No example can illustrate no Reason Angelical or humane can comprehend the hidden excellency of this glorious Mystery But it is discovered to us by a divine Revelation in the written Word and our Faith must receive and our Piety admire what our Reason cannot comprehend Cheynel of the Divine Trin-Unity ch ● p. 19 Vide Aquin. p. 1. Qu. 39. Art 1 2. Lombard Lib. 1. Dist 2 3. Mystery much too deep for the Plummet of Reason to reach he that by Reason would go about to grasp it is as foolish as he that would attempt to put the Ocean into a bucket or to grasp the Universe in the hollow of his hand 2. There is the Vnion of two Natures in one Person This is that which we commonly call the Hypostatical Vnion or the Union of the two Natures in Christ his Godhead and his Manhood both making up but one Person You may thus conceive of it 'T is the substantial supernatural conjunction of the two Natures in Christ the Divine assuming the Humane and giving it a subsistence in its self so that both make but one Person and yet so as that the being and properties of both Natures are preserved intire As to this twofold Vnion I am not at present concern'd to speak to them when I shall come to the third Verse I shall have occasion there to speak to the latter 3. There is the Vnion of Persons where yet Persons and Natures are distinct and this is the Mystical Vnion The Mystical Vnion opened that which is betwixt Christ and Believers this I am only now to speak to Concerning which that you may not mistake the Nature of it you must know here is Vnion but no transmutation confusion or commixtion here is the union of persons but not personal union 1. Here is union but no transmutation confusion or commixtion I 'le put them together for brevity sake Believers are united to Christ but yet not so as that they are changed or transformed into the very essence or being of Christ so as to be Christed with Christ as some too boldly speak or that he is changed or transformed into the essence and being of Believers no you must not entertain a thought of any such thing Christ is Christ still and Believers are but Creatures still notwithstanding this Union though they be really and nearly united yet both keep their Natures distinct and are the same after the Union that they were before it As it is in the Persons in the Sacred Trinity (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc de Orthod Fide lib. 1. cap. 11. pag. 42 there is Vnion but no confusion they are Essentially one yet they have their personal Properties and distinct Subsistences And as it is in the two Natures of Christ they are under a near Vnion they make but one Person yet for all this they are (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Synod Calced distinct the Godhead is not turned into the Manhood nor the Manhood into the Godhead they are united but not confounded or converted for both of them even after this Union do still retain their * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Damasc Dial. cap. 66. essential properties without confusion or conversion So 't is in the Union of Believers with Christ for thus far we may make use of the two former Vnions to open the Mystical Union by they all agree in This though in other things they differ You may take a lower resemblance of it if you please In Man there is a near Vnion between Soul and Body and these two united make up the man * Vide Nemes de Nat. Hom. p. 97. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. yet upon the union the Soul is not turned into the nature of the Body nor the Body into the nature of the Soul they are not confounded though united they yet retain their essence and properties distinct the Soul is the Soul still and the Body is the Body still So it is in the Vnion between Christ and Believers 2. Here is the Vnion of persons but not personal union And here lies the difference between the Mystical Vnion and the Hypostatical Vnion The Hypostatical Vnion is Personal but not of Persons the reason is because in Christ there are two Natures but there is but one Person there is this Nature and that Nature in Christ but not this Person and that Person in Christ as Nestorius held there is in Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aliud aliud but not alius alius as the Learned express it Christ did not assume the * Vide Lombard Lib. 3. Dist 5. Person of man but the Nature of man into his Person Non assumpsit Hominem Personam sed
not of sameness so Matth. 5.48 Be ye perfect even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect So 1 Pet. 1.15 16 't is so to be interpreted here Believers are not one with Christ as he is one with the Father in respect of the manner of the Union but as to the truth and reality of it so 't is as verily as truly one with Christ as Christ is one with the Father 'T is an higher Vnion 'twixt the Father and the Son but 't is as real an Vnion 'twixt Christ and Believers Thirdly 'T is a spiritual Vnion Not a gross fleshly corporeal Union you must not so conceive of it but a divine inward spiritual Union 'T is the uniting of hearts and souls together in an imperceptible way and the bonds of this Union are spiritual namely the Spirit in Christ and Faith in us and the Union is to be judged by that which is the bond of it The Husband and the Wife are * Eph. 5.31 one flesh but he that is joyned to the Lord is * 1 Cor. 6.16 17. one Spirit I have set before you several external and material Resemblances of it but the Union it self is internal immaterial and spiritual When Christ had been speaking so much of it under the resemblance of eating and drinking he adds to prevent mistakes * Joh. 6.63 It is the Spirit that quickneth the Flesh profiteth nothing the words that I speak unto you they are spirit and they are life q.d. You must take me in a right sense in all that I have said I do not intend any fleshly or corporeal eatiug as some grosly imagine I only mean spiritual eating and drinking by Faith Neither saith he would I be thought to speak of any Union that is carnal and earthly 't is the heavenly and the spiritual Union onely which I design in all that I have spoken Fourthly 'T is a near intimous Vnion The Persons here concern'd are not only truly and really but nearly closely intimately united each to the other The Union betwixt them is so near that there is no Union excepting what hath been excepted to be compared with it so near that we know not how to conceive of it much less how to express it we may borrow some light here and there from the scattered Vnions of Nature but they all in point of nearness are vastly short of it In the * 1 Cor. 6.17 Text cited but now the Apostle tells us He that is joyned to the Lord is one spirit where he opposes joyning to Christ to joyning to an Harlot v. 16. Of which he saith He that is joyned to an Harlot is one body and though this be out of the due course yet he carries it up to the Marriage-Vnion for two saith he shall be one flesh But he heightens the Mystical Vnion with Christ he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit This is the highest Scripture which I know for the describing of the intimousness of the spiritual Vnion First the Apostle says he that is joyned to the Lord In the Greek 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that is glewed to the Lord 't is the same word which is used Eph. 5.31 he shall be joyned or glewed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to his wife It speaks the Firmness and the Nearness of the Union And then he says he that is thus joyned to the Lord is one Spirit what an Expression is this what could be spoken higher to be one Spirit is much more than to be one Flesh inasmuch as the Union of Spirits is the nearest Vnion that is imaginable The Apostle opposes the spiritual conjunction 'twixt Christ and Believers to that carnal conjunction that is 'twixt person and person he that is joyned to an Harlot is one body and one Flesh but he that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit Saints are not only Flesh of Christs Flesh and Bone of his Bone by which phrase the heighth of the Conjugal Vnion is set forth and by which the * Quae loquendi Formula ex literis Veteris Testamenti videtur esse desumpta Ita enim Fratres cognati de se mutuò loqui solent Os meum Caro mea Pet. Mart. Jews us'd to express the greatest nearness in consanguinity but which is much higher they are one Spirit with him 'T is not said they have one Spirit or that Believers are * Vide Gr●●ium in loc spirited as Christ was or that they are led acted animated by the same Spirit that he was though I conceive that is the very thing intended in the expression but the Apostle says the better to set off the intimousness of the Vnion Christ and they are one Spirit which is as high as any thing that could be spoken Again Believers are so near to Christ that in a sober sense they may be said to be a part of him yea such a part of him that he as Head and Mediator would not be compleat without them for as he is so considered they are his fulness Eph. 1.23 the fulness of him that silleth all in all 't is spoken of the Church the Body of Believers Once more the Union is so near that they both have one and the same Name Christs own Name and Title is given to them 1 Cor. 12.12 So also is Christ the Apostle means Christ Mystical not Christ Personal Compare Jer. 23.6 This is the name wherewith he shall be called the Lord our righteousness with Jer. 33.16 This is the name wherewith she shall be called the Lord our righteousness which is spoken too of the Church The Wife upon the Marriage-Vnion loses her own and is called by her Husbands name and so 't is here He that is Christ shall be called the Lord our righteousness and She that is the Church shall be called too the Lord our righteousness here is communication of names which speaks the nearness of the Vnion Nay Christ and the Believer are but * Ex quo fit ut ipsemet quoque Christus usque adeo arctè noster evadat nos vicissim illius ut apud Patris Tribunal Christus Ecclesia non quidem hypostaticâ substantiarum unitione sed quod ad istam communionem attinet mysticâ velut unum idem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unus Christus efficacissunè censeamur Bucan L. Com. 48. p. 821. One mystically though not substantially and this is the highest of all O this is a close and intimate Union indeed Fifthly T is a total Vnion I mean this the whole Person of Christ is united to the whole Person of Believers and the whole Person of Believers is united to the whole Person of Christ Christ is not in this or that single Nature but in both his Natures not in this or that Office but in all his Offices made one with them And they too reciprocally are made one with him as to the whole man not as to the Soul only but
in Christ and how may that be known thus by our being New Creatures The Apostle sets it down indefinitely that he may reach every person if any man be in Christ c. This New Creature is one of the greatest riddles of Christianity to men that have it not 'T is that new creation which the Soul passes under in the work of Conversion or that great and universal change which follows upon Conversion a converted man is a changed man a quite other person than what he was before he may say with Austine I am not I all old things are pass'd away and all things are become new as it follows in the place alledged Upon Conversion understanding judgment thoughts will affections Conscience heart tongue life all is new when the Sinner is turned from Sin to God he hath new Principles from which he acts new Ends for which he acts new Guides and Rules by which he acts is not here a wonderful change Now are you acquainted with this New Creature what do you find of it in your selves it converns you to make sure of it for all is nothing without it * Gal. 6.15 In Christ Jesus and so in reference to the proof of being in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but a new Creature O this is all in all this must be the sure and infallible witness of your Union with Christ Therefore examine your selves about it I beseech you look back compare your selves with your selves hath any thorough change been wrought in you are you not the same you ever were just such as you came into the world Can any that hears me say O blessed be God! 't is not with me as it hath been Time was when I was blind as ignorant a Creature as any but I hope now in some measure I am enlightened God hath shined into me and set up such a Light in me that I see what I never saw before and I see it in another manner than I did before Time was when I could swear curse be drunk take Gods name in vain profane Sabbaths c. but I dare not now give way to such impieties Time was when Sin and I agreed very well but now my heart rises at it * Psal 119.104 I hate every false way Time was when I had no love for Duty I liv'd in the total omission of it but now I love Prayer I love the Word and all the Ordinances of Christ are precious to me Time was when I was all for the world my whole heart was taken up in it but now * Phil. 3.8 I count all but loss that I may gain Christ now None but Christ none but Christ Can any of you thus speak here 's a change indeed upon that the New Creature indeed and upon that Being in Christ indeed There 's a double change which evermore accompanies the Mystical Vnion 1. The State of the Person is changed He who before he was in Christ was a Child of wrath is now upon his being in Christ an heir of Grace he that before the Union was in a state of Condemnation is now after the Union in a state of Salvation 2. The Nature is changed there 's a new Nature a new Soul not physically yet morally infus'd into the regenerate person the * 2 Pet. 1.4 divine Nature it self is now communicated to him whereupon he doth not think speak or act as he did before he doth not love or live as before he walks in newness of life as 't is Rom. 6.4 This is the change which we are to make sure of for assuredly the Lord Jesus will put none into his bosome or make them a part of himself but first the New Creature shall pass upon them to prepare and make them fit for so near and so close an Union 'T is not consistent with his honour to take a Sinner just as he finds him and without any more adoe to own him as a member of himself There out any more adoe to own him as a member of himself There cannot be a passage-from one Head to another but there must be some not able alteration Christ will not break off a branch from the first root and ingraft it into himself but he will first alter the very nature and property of it 'T is not in the power of Creatures to change those whom they take into Union with them the Husband may take the Wife into his bosome but he cannot change her Nature temper disposition As Bernard saith of Moses Aethiopissam-duxit sed non potuit Aethiopissae mutare colorem he married an Aethiopian but he could not alter her Aethiopian complexion much less could he alter her inward temper But Christ can and doth thus work upon those whom he takes into near Union and relation if he joyns the black swarthy Soul to himself he puts a new complexion upon it he makes it comely with his own comeliness as God promises Ezek. 16.14 So then by this you may know whether you be truly really savingly in Christ viz if you be new Creatures without the new Creation there 's no Mystical Vnion 2. Another trying Scripture is that Gal. 5.24 They that are Christ's who are in him have crucified the Flesh with the Affections and Lusts This also is a very close Word and it speaks this No Crucifixion no Vnion The crucified Head will have crucified Members he that is planted in Christs person shall * Rom. 6.4 be planted in the likeness of Christs death O is Sin crucified in you did you ever set that upon the Cross which brought the Son of God to the Cross is there in you that death to sin which carries some analogy to Christs death for sin is the Flesh with all its cursed retinue the affections and lusts thereof mortified in you is the corrupt Nature dead as to its former power and soveraignty in the Soul for that 's the crucifixion here spoken of Assure your Selves Christ will not have a member in him to be under a foreign power the Flesh shall not be the Ruler where He is the Head where he brings about the Vnion he will have the Dominion My Text too speaks of this Flesh and it tells you that they who are in Christ Jesus do not walk after the Flesh but after the Spirit Paul here seems to rise and to go on step by step would you know who are exempted from Condemnation he tells you such who are in Christ would you further know who are in Christ he tells you such who walk not c. Here then is the Characteristical Note of all who are in Christ they live not the fleshly carnal sensual Life but the spiritual heavenly holy Life Sirs what is your walking 't is the Conversation that must discover the Vnion do but reflect upon your course of Life and that will plainly tell you to what Head you belong 1 Joh. 2.6 He that saith he abideth in him ought himself
Christ being your head why do you not live under more constant more free and full derivations from him Why is not this Union improved as a standing cordial in and against those faintings and despondencies of Spirit which sometimes you lye under why is not this more pleaded with God in the midst of sad thoughts and misgivings of heart many other things might be instanc'd in 'T is too much a truth all other Vnions are better improved than this great Mystical Vnion with Christ the branch makes the best of the root and draws from it as though it would exhaust all its life and vertue O that we could carry it so to Jesus Christ even to draw from him as though we would draw him dry if such a thing was possible We say in Philosophy * Unumquodque quò prop●ùs accedit Causae primae eò abundantiùs recipit the nearer any thing comes to the first Cause the more abundantly it doth receive from it as the nearer a thing is to the Sun the more it doth participate of its light and heat now you Believers are very nigh to Christ * Coloss 1.19 in whom all fulness dwells you are even in him O what full supplies of Grace should you be fetching from him upon all occasions why should they want or what should they want who are not only at the fountain but in it 5. Such as are in Christ must be very humble To be humble Christians your Vnion is very high but your Spirits should be very low High alliances are apt to puff men up you are highly allied indeed Christ is your Head your Husband your Brother he and you are * Heb. 2.11 all of one yet be not proud When the Apostle was speaking of the ingrafting of the Gentile-believers into Christ he adds Others by unbelief are broken off you stand by Faith be not high minded but fear Rom. 11.20 the same I say to you O ascribe nothing to your selves do not entertain or give way to any self-exalting thoughts never think you can subsist by your selves live under a constant sense of your dependance upon Christ let there not be a thought in you that Christ is in the least beholden to you 't is the root which bears you you do not bear the root Rom. 11.18 You are one with Christ yet you come infinitely short of him he is in you yet above you 't would be pride of the first magnitude to equalize your selves with him Especially never think that because of this Union you can merit any thing of God The Papists would fain prove the Saints meriting in what they do from their Union with Christ but 't is a weak proving of it and our Divines give a good reason against it because the Vnion betwixt Christ and Believers is only mystical and not personal now 't is the personal Vnion only that is the ground of merit O * Luke 17.10 when you have done all say you are unprofitable How unprofitable then are you when you do so little nay when you do nothing at all as you ought to do 6. Be very holy They who are joyned to such an head To be holy how should they live what holiness can be high enough for such an Vnion Will you pretend to be in Christ and yet live in Sin will you dishonour Christ your head by a loose vain unholy unsuitable conversation How should they * 1 Pet. 2.9 shew forth the vertues of Christ who are the members of Christ Methinks this Union with him should greatly sharpen the Soul against Sin and cause it to repel all temptations and sollicitations thereunto with an holy detestation as he once did * Gen. 39.9 How shall I do this great wickedness and sin against God what I a member of Christ one with Christ shall I do so and so As for Others who belong to a degenerate root they will bring forth degenerate fruit but I who am ingrafted into so noble so excellent a stock shall I bring forth no better fruit This precious Soul which was so immediately created by God and is so immediately united to Christ shall that be prostituted to Sin and Sathan This Body too hath its share in this Union and shall I take the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot 1 Cor. 6.15 Surely such who are one with Christ should in all things be like to Christ where there is union and communion there should be conformity Christians if you live as Others do you will make the world to question whether there be such a thing as union with Christ or at least to think but meanly of it O therefore as you have received Christ so walk ye in him Col. 2.7 'T is Obedience and holy walking which must evidence your union to others to your selves 1 Joh. 3.4 He that keepeth his commandements dwelleth in him and he in him and hereby we know that he abideth in us by the spirit which he hath given us And the Union it self calls for it 1 Joh. 2.6 He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also so to walk even as he walked O how should they live who live in Christ and * Gal. 2.20 To be heavenly minded he in them 7. Are you in Christ then be heavenly minded Such as are in him should be much with him in the heavenliness of their thoughts and affections Our Vnion is with our Lord in Heaven and our * Phil. 3.20 conversation should be with him in heaven also our * Col. 3.1 head is there and our * Matth. 6.21 treasure is there should not our hearts be there also what a contradiction is an earthly conversation to the heavenly union how sad a thing is it that a Believer who is so near to Christ should yet live at so great a distance from him and carry it as though he was rather in the world than in Christ Jesus If thou beest glewed to Christ do not live as one who is glewed to the world 8. Be fruitful and very fruitful To be fruitful he that abideth in me bringeth forth much fruit Joh. 15.4 Christ saith it is so sure I am it should be so If you be branches ingrafted into Christ there 's a special obligation lying upon you to be very fruitful for else you will disparage your root and also frustrate the expectations of him who lays out much cost upon you in order to your fruitfulness The Husbandman God the Father looks for much fruit from such as you and if you do not answer his expectations hee 'l purge you that is hee 'l lay some sharp afflictions upon you and thereby make you to bring forth more fruit He will not take you away as he doth those who are only externally in Christ or cast you out for the fire but hee 'l afflict you to some purpose This is our Saviours own awakening Doctrine Joh. 15.2 The promise is Psal 92.13
14. Those that be planted in the House of the Lord shall flourish c. they shall bring forth fruit c. O how fruitful should they be who are planted in the Lord himself Saints upon their being One with Christ should be one amongst themselves 9. Such as are one with Christ should be one amongst themselves Saints are under a double Vnion One with Christ and One amongst themselves and the Latter is as real as the Former and purchased by Christ as well as the former for the proof of which read and weigh Eph. 2.14 c. The members in the body natural as they are united to the head so they are also united each to the other and so 't is here O that this Vnion amongst Saints was more conspicuous and evident But with grief of heart be it spoken little is to be seen of that whilst much of that which is opposite to it is every where too apparent what schismes rents divisions are there to be found even amongst them is not this spoken of in Gath are not the great Enemies of Christianity too well acquainted with it Now what a sad thing is this that when they are all one in Christ Jesus as 't is Gal. 3.28 there should yet be such divisions fractions and distances amongst themselves Some Divines make this to be the matter of Christ's prayer Joh. 17. where he pray'd that all Believers might be one as the Father and he were one i. e. that they might be One in Vnity and Concord amongst themselves Which interpretation though the higher Vnion must by no means be excluded is very probable from the Argument with which Christ twice backs his prayer That the world may believe that thou hast sent me It must therefore be some external and visible Vnion of which the world in order to this conviction might take notice which the Saints Mystical Vnion with Christ is not but their Vnion or Unity amongst themselves is And it appears that upon this very prayer of Christ there was a little after great unity and concord amongst the primitive Christians Act. 2.46 And they continuing daily with one accord c. Act. 4.32 The multitude of them that believed were of one heart and of one soul c. just as Christ had prayed And O that the virtue of this prayer might reach us also at this time for surely our divisions are so many and so great our breaches so wide that I think nothing can or will unite us but the alone efficacy of Christ's intercession A stronger motive to Vnity cannot be set before the people of God than that which I am upon they who are so joyn'd to Christ should not be disjoyn'd amongst themselves as they have but one head and are all members of the same body so they should have but * Jer. 32.39 Believers upon this Vnion should know Christ better than others do one heart and one way 10. Are you in Christ You should then be well acquainted with him so as to attain to a considerable degree of the knowledge of him Others who are afar off from him may be ignorant of him but you who are so nigh to him should know him well He told his Disciples that he would * Joh. 14.16 17. pray the Father and he would give them the Comforter c. Even the spirit of truth whom the world cannot receive because it seeth him not neither knoweth him but ye know him for he dwelleth with you and shall be in you This was spoken of the Saints knowledge of the Spirit but it holds true as to the knowledge of Christ himself the world knows him not but Believers know him how doth that come to pass why from this for he dwells in them and is in them and they in him O how should the consideration of this Union excite you to labour after a clearer knowledge of the Lord Jesus Persons we live with we know them fully Christ lives in you and you in him what a shame will it be if you do not so far as your capacity will admit of know him distinctly Surely saith Jacob * Gen. 28.16 the Lord was in this place and I knew it not whoever thou art if thou beest a gracious person surely the Lord is in thee and thou in him and yet thou neither knowest thy Vnion nor the Person to whom thou art united 'Pray let this put you upon the daily diligent studying of Christ that you may arrive at higher knowledge of him * Job 22.21 acquaint your selves with him and do it thoroughly upon the intimateness of the Vnion there should be intimateness of acquaintance Hitherto I have been speaking to such who are in Christ VSE 5. Comfort to them who are in Christ by way of Exhortation I shall now further speak to them by way of Consolation And you that are such O rejoyce and be exceeding glad let your hearts be even filled with joy what abundance of comfort is there wrapt up for you in this your union with Christ 't is a flower out of which all sincere Christians may suck a great deal of Evangelical sweetness For the setting forth of which let me go further than that special-priviledge which the Text holds forth As this speaks the dignity of their Persons 1. Are you in Christ Jesus this speaks the excellency and dignity of your persons How great and honourable must they needs be who are thus nearly united to so glorious a Person as Christ the Mediator the eternal Son of God! * Psal 149.9 this honour have all the Saints 'T is no great matter what the world says or thinks of you Men vilifie you and look upon you as the very scum and filth of the earth so they did long ago to far your betters 1 Cor. 4.13 The precious sons of Zion comparable to fine Gold how are they esteemed as earthen pitchers Lam. 4.2 And 't is no great matter what your outward condition is in the world that may be mean and inglorious enough I say these are things not much to be regarded so long as you are the members of Christ you being so what a glory and greatness must this needs reflect upon you Mark that expression Joh. 17.22 The glory which thou hast given me I have given them what glory doth Christ speak of it follows that they may be one even as we are one this is glory indeed 'T is a great honour to be a member of the Church so the good Emperour Theodosius judged of it who preferr'd his being a member of the Church before his being Emperour of the World but 't is a far greater honour to be a member of Christ 'T is an high expression concerning Israel that they were a people near to God Psal 148.14 You Believers are near to God indeed for you have not only communion with him who is God but union also you are one with the Father and one with the Son you must
with respect to the Non-condemnation and also to the Being in Christ This Clause is descriptive of the persons who have an interest or share in that which goes before and so 't is an evidence or description either with respect to the No-condemnation or to the being in Christ There is therefore now no condemnation to whom why to them who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit Wherever there is an holy conversation in this life there shall be no condemnation in the life to come and so vice versâ Or it refers to the other branch immediately foregoing to them that are in Christ Jesus who are they or how may they be known the Apostle thus characterizeth them they are such who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit An holy spiritual course is an infallible evidence and inseparable concomitant of Vnion with Christ These two may reciprocally be predicated each of the other thus they who are in Christ walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit and They who thus walk are in Christ You may take the Words in which of these two references you please but their immediate conjunction seems to carry it for the latter they being link'd and coupled with the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 them that are in Christ Jesus but both may very well be taken in Which way soever we take it certainly there is as to both a restriction and limitation in the Words the Non-condemnation and the Vnion belong onely to those who walk not after the Flesh c. Yea they are conditional as to the priviledge even to them who are in Christ Jesus there is no condemnation to such provided or upon this condition that they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit and so the * Non est igitur ulla damnatio eis qui sunt in fide Jesu Christi dummodò se exerceant non in his quae propria sunt carnis sed in his quae propria sunt Spiritus Vers Arab. Arabick Version paraphraseth upon them Why the Apostle singles out this Character The Apostle designing to describe such who are freed from condemnation or such who are in Christ he pitches upon that evidence and character which is plain and obvious and not upon that which might have been more dark obscure and hard to be understood He grounds it upon the course of a man's life and conversation and what may better be known than that He does not lay it upon Election or the secret Decree of God and say there is no condemnation to them whom God hath * Eph. 1.4 chosen before the foundation of the world to them whom God hath * Act. 13.48 ordained to eternal life whose names are * Rev. 13.8 written in the book of life though that be a very great truth but because persons possibly herein might not be so well able to judge of themselves therefore he saith there is no condemnation to them who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit This walking is a thing that is manifest and easie to be known I cannot so easily find out my Election for that lies deep and hid as I can my Conversation which in a great measure is expos'd to the view of others much more to my own And whereas the Apostle had been speaking of Vnion with Christ that being a great mystery and men might not so well know how to judge of themselves concerning it therefore he comes to that which would fully and plainly open it to them He saith whoever they be who are in Christ this is the course they take they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit They that can find which upon faithful searching may easily be found that they do not live the carnal and sensual life but the holy and spiritual life though this being in Christ be a great mystery in it self yet this walking will clear it up to them so far as their interest in it is concern'd that they are indeed in Christ What Walking imports Who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit 'T is a very usual Metaphor in Scripture to set forth the course of life by walking * Gen. 5.24 Enoch walked with God c. i. e. the course of his life was holy * Gen. 17.1 I am God Allfufficient walk before me and be perfect * Luk. 1.6 Zachary and Elizabeth were righteous walking in all the commandements and ordinances of God blameless with very many such places That which in this Verse is called walking after the flesh in the 12 and 13 Verses 't is called living after the flesh I might in several particulars shew you the aptness of this Metaphor how proper it is to set forth the course of life but I will not stay upon that This branch of the Text leads me to that Second Observation which I raised from the whole Verse at my entrance upon it namely That such who are in Christ and thereby freed from Condemnation 2 Observ this is their property or course they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit In the discussing of which my main work will be to open the twofold Walking here mentioned Yet before I fall upon that let me take notice of Seven or Eight things which lie very plainly before us in the Words Eight things premis●d for the clearing up of the Words and of the Observation 1. The Apostle does not say There is therefore now no condemnation to them in whom there is no Flesh or to them who have no Flesh in them but he saith to them who walk not after the Flesh Alas if the Former should be the description and character of justified persons and of such who are in Christ then none would be justified or in Christ there would not be so much as any one person in the world exempted from condemnation or united to Christ for there 's not a man upon the earth I except not * Rom. 3.10 one in whom there is not more or less of this Flesh The very best of Saints in their lower state are not wholly freed from it the most spiritual whilst here below are but mixt imperfect creatures made up partly of Flesh and partly of Spirit so 't is in the natural and so 't is in the moral notion also Paul himself lay under a sad sense of this as you see Rom. 7.14 25 'T is most truly said by (a) Elton upon the Text. One upon the words Perfect sanctification is the rule that is to be laid to the Saints in heaven not to those that are upon the face of the earth And 't is a saying of Bernard Velis nolis intra fines tuos habitabit Jebusaeus the poor burdened Christian whether he will or no shall have the Jebusite the Flesh dwelling in him Men before conversion are entirely Flesh but they are not after conversion entirely Spirit The Apostle here saith There is now
the Apostle in these words contrary as to their propensions tendencies workings lustings in the Subject Oh they put men upon different courses so different as that in their proper acceptation they cannot consist insomuch that he who walks after the flesh cannot walk after the spirit neither can he who walks after the spirit walk after the flesh A man cannot move to two contrary points as East and West North and South at the same time no more can a man walk heaven-ward and hell-ward at the same time now the Flesh draws hell-ward and the Spirit draws heaven-ward so that it is impossible in sensu composito to follow both These are the two opposite Masters which none can serve together Matth 6.24 Friendship with the Flesh is enmity to the Spirit whoever therefore will be a friend of the Flesh he must be an enemy to the Spirit I allude to James 4.4 6. The Order of the things here spoken of is to be observed First 'tis being in Christ Jesus and then 't is walking not after the Flesh but after the Spirit this I may briefly take notice of though it be not the thing here directly intended There must be union with Christ before there can be spiritual walking for walking is an act or operation of life dead things do not move there can be no motion where there is no life Especially spiritual and holy walking depends upon life but now there is no such life in the soul till being united to Christ it be quickened by him He who is out of Christ cannot live the holy life for 't is union with him that lays the foundation of all holiness in us The branch must first be ingrafted into the stock and then it bears fruit so here Therefore saith Christ Joh 15.4 5. Abide in me and I in you As the branch cannot bear fruit of it self except it abide in the Vine no more can ye except ye abide in me I am the Vine ye are the branches he that abideth in me and I in him the same bringeth forth much fruit for without me ye can do nothing Holiness is the evidence of Vnion so it comes in in the Text and Vnion is the ground of Holiness so it comes in in this Head Holy walking is an infallible consequent upon being in Christ and that is a necessary antecedent to holy walking 7. 'T is imply'd That there were in the Apostles time and so will be to the end of the world different Walkers some will walk after the Spirit and some after the Flesh As 't was said with respect to persecution * Gal. 4.27 As then he that was born after the Flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit even so it is now So it may be said with respect to the different conversations of men as then in Paul's days some walked after the Spirit and some after the Flesh even so it is now So long as the world stands some will be carnal as well as some spiritual the distinction of Saints and Sinners of godly and ungodly of good and bad will abide whilst this world shall abide There is the broad way of the flesh there is the strait way of the spirit in both of which some or other will always be walking And the misery is * Mat. 7.13 14. many walk in the broad way of the Flesh when but few walk in the strait way of the Spirit this may have its thousands but that hath its ten thousands 8. The Apostle expresses it in the general onely by not walking after the Flesh but after the Spirit He doth not instance in those particulars which are proper either to the one or to the other as he doth Gal. 5.17 c. onely he speaks in the gross But all the several Particulars are included in the General and run into that as all waters do into the Sea Be it pride coveteousness uncleanness c. all center in the Flesh so be it humility heavenly-mindedness holy love c. all center in the Spirit and derive their being operation efficacy from the Spirit Therefore the Apostle sets it down thus generally under the Flesh comprehending all Evil and under the Spirit all Good he sums up all the several Sins under the former and all the several Graces under the latter These things being premis'd I come now to the main Point Such as are in Christ Jesus this is their property or course they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit This I will 1. explain 2. prove 3. apply For Explication The Observ opened I must speak to the parts of the Description severally and show 1. What is meant by Flesh and by walking or not walking after it 2. What is meant by Spirit and by walking after it And as I go along I will take in the Doctrine and particularly bring down to it the several explications of the Description Negative and Affirmative What is meant by Flesh and by not walking after the Flesh I begin with the First Which that I may the better cleer up observe that there is a being in the Flesh and a walking in or after the Flesh which two though they be never parted yet they are distinct the First refers to a man's State the Second to his Course There is a being in the Flesh of which you read Rom. 7.5 For when we were in the Flesh the motions of sin which were by the Law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto death Rom. 8.8 9. So then they that are in the Flesh cannot please God but ye are not in the Flesh but in the Spirit c. Then there is a walking after the Flesh this inevitably follows upon and suits with the former They who are in the Flesh will certainly walk after the Flesh for the Conversation always agrees with the State Now 't is this walking which the Text speaks of You have the same expression 2 Pet. 2.10 But chiefly them that walk after the Flesh c. 't is also set forth by living after the Flesh v. 12 13. of this Chapter If you turn to one Scripture you 'l find the phrase there used in a quite other sense than that in which 't is here used 2 Cor. 10.3 explained 'T is 2 Cor. 10.3 Though we walk in the Flesh we do not war after the Flesh what may be the meaning of walking in the Flesh in this place I conceive it notes the Apostles living the * Porrò hoc loco Paulus alitèr dicit ambulare secundum carnem quam alibi cum dixit In carne ambulantes non secundum carnem militamus ibi enim in Carne ambulare est mortalem adhuc vi●am ducere hic autem secundum Carnem ambulare idem est quod militare secundum Carnem h. e Genio ac voluptatibus indulgere pravis cupiditatibus morem g●r●re Justin same nàtural life with other men and also the meanness of his external appearance
the members of Christ and make them the members of an Harlot will not himself take the members of Harlots I mean great and gross Sinners they so continuing and make them the members of himself It shall be known by the goodness of mens walking that they belong to a good head for Christ's honour is highly concern'd therein And hence it is that such who are in Christ shall walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Thus you have the Doctrine explained and confirmed I am now to fall upon the Application of it By way of Information First three Things it informs us of VSE 1. Of Information in Three Things 1. That Believers even in the times and under the dispensation of the Gospel are not to lay aside or cast off Scripture-Marks Signs or Evidences grounded upon sanctification and holiness in order to the finding out of their spiritual State and Condition 1. Scripture-Signs and Marks are not to be rejected For wherefore doth the Spirit of God here thus characterize persons in Christ which walk not after the flesh but after the spirit but for this end that by this Character or Mark men may know whether they be indeed in Christ or not the like you find in very many Other places The Antinomians do not approve of this Doctrine they will not hear of any Evidences or Signs of this or that priviledge fetched from Sanctification or Holiness or any thing inherent in our selves An Opinion weak and false yea directly contrary to the tenor of the Word How great a part of the Bible might be blotted out as altogether useless if what they affirm herein was true Read but the First Epistle of John you will find it throughout to be Characteristical or Evidential of mens State from the fruits and effects of sanctification the Places therein are so many and so common that I neither well can nor do I in the least need to make any particular rehearsal of them 'T is strange that men cannot distinguish betwixt Grounds as to the Thing and Evidences as to the Person Far be it from us to make Sanctification or Holy Walking the grounds of our union with Christ or of our justification yet they are the evidences by which we come to know that we are in Christ and justified by him And the Question is not what the Spirit of God can do or possibly sometimes may do viz. whether he doth not in an immediate manner without the making use of these Signs reveal to a Believer his Union with Christ and interest in Gospel-blessings but the Question is What is the ordinary method of the Spirit in the witnessing and clearing up of these things to a Soul And surely that is first by the witnessing of faith sincerity holiness of life and then by witnessing to them and upon them And a Christian cannot ordinarily exspect assurance of his Vnion with Christ or of any other thing but in this mediate way Very much might be spoken about this but I think it is not now so necessary as sometimes it hath been and * See Rutherf Survey of Antinom par 2. c. 55. p 81. c. Binning who hath some Sermons upon Rom 8. lately published speaks something to it p. 23. c. divers have largely wrote upon it therefore I will pass it over 2. Popish Calumnies are injurious and groundless 2. Secondly it shows us how groundless and injurious those high calumnies and sharp invectives are which some ROMANISTS in their Writings upon this Text are pleased to cast upon and let fly against PROTESTANTS and their Doctrine Because the Apostle here saith that such who are freed from condemnation and in Jesus Christ do not walk after the flesh but after the spirit how do some Popish Expositors from hence take occasion to oppose traduce revile censure and strangely misrepresent the Protestant Doctrine and the worthy Assertors of it Amongst others with what acrimony and virulency doth * Ubi ergo umbraculum Calvinianum cum solâ fide aliquo pietatis studio penè inefficaci Stapl. Antidot p. 624. Vide pluta p. 625 626 Contzen in Quaest 3. p. 308. An Sectarii bona opera per suam expositionem condemnanda doceant Et in V. 2. Quaest 2. p. 310. Si Phingez aliquis adulterum Calvinianum in ipsâ libidine configat coelo eum continuò inserit justus est enim est ei condemnatio quamvis secundum carnem cum occideretur ambularet Justin Magnoperè falli necesse est Haereticos qui manere in Christo nihil aliud esse putant quam aliquem sibi certò polliceri Christi merita sibi fuisse communicata atque adeo peccatis omnibus expiatis se esse justum Stapleton and Contzen two who had 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Libanius speaks of some here fall upon Calvine Beza Pareus c. as if they did oppose nay quite nullifie the strict holy and spiritual life and instead thereof by their Opinions did encourage and promote the carnal and fleshly life I instance in these only because they are the persons who in their Expositions upon the Text in hand are pleased so freely to spit their venome upon this account but 't is that reproach and scandal which occurrs very frequently in the body of their Polemick Writers Amongst whom what more common than to tell the World that Protestants make holiness good works c. to be unnecessary that they are only for Faith and imputed Righteousness that their principles tend to looseness and profaneness and what not Now did we not too well know the Spirit which acts these adversaries it would make us to stand and wonder that Opinions so sound so agreeable to the word of Truth as those are which in these matters the Protestants hold in opposition to Rome should yet be so maliciously reflected upon That scandals so undeserved so often answered should yet be continued that mens passions and censures should be so high and sharp where their grounds and reasons are follow How much hath been spoken and written over and over again for the vindicating of Opinions and Persons from these imputations for the due and right stating of things and yet 't is all one Dissenters calumniated before and so they will do still Protestantism was blackened and branded before and so it shall be still I will not insist upon the making any Apology or Defence for this or that person in what they have said by way of Exposition upon the Text for they need no such thing and as to that for which they are censured they say nothing but what the Body of Protestants hold And for the forenamed Authors Calvine c. do they not upon * Tria simul conjungit Apostolus imperfectionem quâ semper laborant fideles Dei indulgentiam in eâ condonandâ regenerationem Spiritus atque hoc quidem postremum ne quis vanâ opinione se lactet ac si liberatus esset a
maledictione carni suae interim securè indulgens Ut ergo frustra blanditur c. Calvin Non satis est Christum ore profiteri oportet Fide per opera esfioaci Christo ahhaerere quod fit non Carnis sed Spiritus ductum sequendo in vitâ Observa secundò quòd connexam esse docet Justificationis Sanctificationis Gratiam adeò ut divelli nequeant ut frustra de priore glorietur qui posteriorem non habeat Qui igitur hab●nas laxant carni testantur se in Christo non esse c. Hinc refutatur trita Papistarum Calumnia c. Atqui docemus cum Apostolo non esse in Christo nisi qui secundum Spiritum ambulant qui carni indulgent eos inanem Fidem profiteri c. Pareus Sunt cohaerentes quidem c. Beza this very place say that which might be enough to all ingenuous men to obviate these Calumnies But let this pass Give me leave onely in the General to vindicate our Faith in this matter and to shew that what we believe herein is not at all repugnant to this or to any other Scripture For do we hold that Believers are exempted from condemnation and shall most certainly be sav'd upon their being in Christ though they live a sinful carnal wicked life how often have our Opposers been told that we detest and abhor such an Opinion We say indeed that sanctification holiness or walking after the Spirit are not the meritorious causes of Non-condemnation that honour we give to the alone merits of our Saviour yet withall we say that whoever hath an interest in such blessedness he is a sanctified person and he must and shall live an holy life Is not this enough as much as what the Word will bear us out in Can we not be for Walking after the Spirit unless we make it to be a Cause of our justification or can we not hold imputed righteousness but we must deny inherent righteousness are these two inconsistent Our Adversaries asperse us as if we denied the latter which we do not but what may we say of them who do most certainly deny the former To go on Do not we set inherent righteousness as high as they bate but perfection and merit the First of which would make it impossible in this life as the Other would derogate from the freeness of God's grace and the fullness of Christ's merit And we appeal to the world do our Censurers with their principles live more holily than Protestants with theirs we wish we could see it Nay take the whole model and platform of their Doctrine and of ours and let the would judge which doth most tend to the * See Dr. Stillingslees of the Idolatry of the Church of Rome Chap. 3. p. 178. promoting of a strict and holy conversation Indeed if we give way to the flesh and walk after the flesh we are to be blamed for our practices but the principles of our Religion are strict holy and good In short we are for the same things which They contend for and that too in the highest measures and degrees so far as the infirmities of the present state will admit of but not upon the same grounds We are for the spiritual life as the fruit and evidence of the Vnion and as always attending the person who is in Christ and shall not be condemned but we dare not make it to be the meritorious ground or to have any causal influence upon the one or the other If this will not satisfie let our revilers revile on 3. There are but Iew who are in Christ 3. If this be the way and course of such who are in Christ that they walk not after the flesh but after the spirit it informs us then that there are but few who are in Christ or who have any interest in the Mystical Vnion I would not streighten or narrow the Grace of God or the happiness of the Creature further than the word it self doth but on the other hand I must not make them wider than that doth The most it is to be feared are out of Christ because the most do walk after the flesh 't is but here and there some few who walk after the spirit Instead of walking not after the flesh but after the spirit the generality of men walk after the flesh and not after the spirit they are in the flesh there 's their state and they walk after the flesh there 's their course O that this was not as evident as the light of the noon day This Flesh as you have heard is either the corrupt Nature in the general or more particularly 't is the corrupt Nature venting it self in and about fleshly and sensual things now in both respects how do fleshly Walkers abound As to the First what an unholy sinful life do the most live how doth the depraved Nature break forth and show it self in their whole course this is that which acts them all along by which they steer and order their conversation And as to the Second look upon the greatest number of men how sensual are they they lie tumbling and wallowing in the mire of Lust are even immers'd and swallowed up in fleshly things minding nothing so much as the pleasing of the flesh Go to them at their Tables there 's gluttony excess in eating and drinking they pamper the body whilst they starve the soul Mind them in their pursuits 't is some fleshly good they mainly drive at some fleshly interest by which they steer their course what do they most consult but the Fleshes ease and interest O that 's the thing which they make provision for that they may fulfil the lusts thereof which the Apostle so expresly forbids Rom. 13.14 their forecasts projects contrivances are for the Flesh yea all their thoughts are imployed as so many caterers or purveyours for their sensual lusts is not this walking after the flesh and is not this more or less the Walk of the most Alas as to that walking after the spirit which hath been opened how few are there that know any thing of it the generality are wholly strangers to it understanding the Angelical life in Heaven as well as the spiritual holy life of Saints here upon earth you can scarce make them believe that there is such a life so far are they from the living of it Thus 't is with the multitude and is not this then too clear an evidence too full a demonstration of the paucity of such as are in Christ O that we could bewail and lament it what more plain than that such who are in Christ do walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit and what more plain too than that the body of men do walk after the Flesh and not after the Spirit Sirs let us not flatter and think too well of our selves * Ut eos omnes intelligamus esse exclusos qui Fidem Evangelium jactitant cum interim volutentur in
crassissimis vitiis c. P. Mart. Addo quòd fortasse Paulus non tam spectasse videtur vim Baptismi quâ omnis macula penitus abstergitur sed ad mores ac vitam eorum qui Christi gratia perceptâ omnes vitae suae rationes ad Christi legem exigunt atque it a pravae cupiditati nonobsequuntur Justinian we talk of Faith make our boast of the Gospel glory in our Baptism lay a great stress upon our Church priviledges when yet notwithstanding all this we are meer Flesh-pleasers our Conversations are carnal and fleshly doth not this proclaim us to be yet out of Christ VSE 2. Of Examination about our walking whither it be after the flesh or after the spirit Secondly Let me desire you to examine what your walking is whether it be after the flesh or after the spirit Is spiritual walking the property of all who are in Christ must this evidence your union with him how then doth it concern you all to judge aright about it Here are two Sorts of Walkers and every man in the world comes under the One or the Other for these two divide the world betwixt them Now where are you what is your course which of these walkings do you come under what do you follow Flesh or Spirit I told you at the first this is a thing which may be known the Apostle doth not lay the Evidence upon something that is abstruse and hard to be understood but upon that which is easie to be found out surely with a little diligence every person may know what his walking is I intreat you therefore to urge this home upon your selves O let every one say how do I walk what a kind of life do I live holy or sinful spiritual or carnal Brethren your freedom from Condemnation depends upon your Vnion with Christ will you not find out that then your Union must be known by the holiness of your walking and will you not understand your selves about this also O what a blessed thing is it when a man is clear in this so that he can frame a Syllogism upon it thus He that walks not after the flesh but after the spirit he is in Christ But I through grace am one who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit therefore I am in Christ This is a good bottom to build assurance upon these premises will bear the weight of such a conclusion be sure you take up with nothing short of this 'T is onely the spiritual life which must assure of the Mystical Vnion 1 Joh. 1.6 If we say that we have fellowship with him and walk in darkness we lie and do not the truth 1 Joh. 2.4 5 6. He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a liar and the truth is not in him But whoso keepeth his word in him verily is the love of God perfected hereby know we that we are in him He that saith he abideth in him ought himself also to walk even as he walked Faith indeed is the bond of the union but holines of heart and life is the mark or evidence of it And 't is the walking which makes the Christian 't is not external profession the being of such or such a party some good religious talking but 't is the course of life which is the distinguishing character betwixt person and person O that God would direct every one of you to pass righteous judgment upon himself concerning this I need not add any thing to what hath been laid down in order to the helping of you in this Tryal The walking after the Flesh and after the Spirit have been opened and by the particulars which make up each of them you may be able to judge of your selves 'Pray go over them in your own thoughts again and again and say is the Flesh or the Spirit our principle our guide what are our affections do we savour the things of the Flesh or of the Spirit what are our secret and strongest propensions are our Ends fleshly or spiritual I say go over these things again and again and there 's no question of it but that serious and frequent examination in a little time will fully clear up the thing to you Atwofold walking after the Flesh Onely to prevent mistakes let me tell you there is a twofold walking after the Flesh One more gross and manifest the Other more close and more indiscernable The first is when the Flesh breaks forth and openly vents it self in external and bodily lusts such as adultery uncleanness drunkenness gluttony c. this is * 2 Cor. 7.1 the filthiness of the flesh The Second is when the Flesh more secretly vents it self in internal heart-lusts such as are kept in and lie smothering in the Soul as pride self-love envy coveteousness c. this is the filthiness of the Spirit the Apostle gives a Catalogue of the actings of the Flesh in both of these respects Gal. 5.19 20 c. Now here 's the mistake of men they confine walking after the flesh to the first of these the latter being little regarded by them so that if they do not live in whoredome gross intemperance open profaneness bruitish sensuality they think all is well whereas they may be free from these gross practises and yet be walkers after the flesh The corrupt Nature hath other out-lets besides these and there may be Sins ulcers within when they do not externally show themselves O be not deceived you are not possibly so and so vitious in the outward conversation but if there be within in the Heart malice hatred envy uncharitableness self exalting inordinate affections to the world coveteousness these are enough to bring you within the compass of walking after the flesh * Invidentia vitium Diabolicum quo solus Diabolus reus est c. Non enim dicitur Diabolo ut damnetur adulterium commisisti furtum fecisti c. sed homini stanti lapsus invidisti Aug. de Disc Chri. cap. 1. Devils you 'l grant are bad enough 't is because of their envy pride c. for the grosser sins of the Flesh they are not liable to them * De Civitate Dei l. 14. c. 2. Austine proves that the Stoicks that strict Sect of Philosophers were as guilty of this upon their inward unmortified corruptions as the Epicureans themselves a more debauched and sensual sort of men if they be not wrong'd for as to Epicurus himself * Against whō see Dr. Meric Casaubon of Incredulity par 1. p. 202. c. Laertius Gassendus c. give a quite other character of him Do I see one living a bruitish life wallowing in his filthy lusts laying the reynes upon the neck of his corruptions he 's drunk defiles his body lives in open wickedness c. I 'm sure this man walks after the flesh these are the works of the flesh which are manifest Gal. 5.19 every eye sees and every tongue cries shame
it bringeth forth Sin now Sin must be taken at the first conception as soon as the temptation offers it self and begins to allure and tickle by something that it presents so that the Heart inclines to a closure with it now fall on presently and parlie no longer This brat of Babylon must be dasht in pieces in its very infancy 't is good to kill the Cockatrice in the very egg to quench the fire at the first smotherings of it within or else it will quickly flame forth in the life even to the making the conversation carnal Be very watchful over the initial suggestions of the Flesh and fall upon the timely exercise of mortification upon the first motions of sin say Sathan Flesh * Mat. 16.23 get thee behind me thou art an offence to me But I must not further expatiate upon these things So much for the disuasive part of this Vse against walking after the flesh 2 Branch of the Vse to exhort to Walking after the Spirit I go on to the persuasive part wherein I would most earnestly exhort you to walk after the Spirit I will be but short upon this because that which I have already spoken hath a great tendency to the promoting of it for the truth is whilst I have been disuading you from walking after the Flesh I have in effect been persuading you to walk after the Spirit in beating you off from that I have been drawing you on to this You have heard what it is so to walk what now remains but that you would all endeavour to put it in practise and O that this might be your way and course Let others live as they please let it be your fixed resolution that you will live the holy spiritual heavenly life True there are but few who do thus walk the World is but a great Exchange wherein the Spirits Walk is very thin whilst the Fleshes Walk is full and crowded but 't is better to be with the Few in the way of the Spirit than with the Many in the way of the Flesh And I desire you to lay it to heart have not you your selves too long walked after the flesh is it not high time for you to think of another Course 1 Pet. 4.3 The time past of our life may suffice us to have wrought the will of the Gentiles when we walked in Lasciviousness Lusts Excess of Wine c. When will ye walk in newness of life as the expression is Rom. 6.4 when shall the renewing and the renewed Spirit command govern act guide you in your whole conversation when will you so walk that you your selves and others too may know by the spiritualness of your deportment that you are indeed in Christ Jesus * The exhortation to walking after the Spirit pressed by some Motives Here consider in opposition to what was said of the former walking but three things 1. This is excellent Walking The spiritual life is the excellent life * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Eth. lib. 10. cap. 7. this speaks somewhat more than what is of man there is something divine and supernatural in it To be acted by to live under the conduct and guidance of the blessed Spirit to have affections propensions ends all holy this is truely great This is the Life which is most agreeable to the humane Nature not onely as consider'd in its primitive unstained glory and excellency but as 't is now under its sad ruins and decays O how unbecoming how ill doth a vitious Conversation comport even with that Reason natural Light and those broken excellencies which are yet left in Man Man is not so low but that by complying with sensual Lusts he yet acts below himself nay so far as he puts on the Sinner he puts off the Man where he un-Saints himself he un-Mans himself Sensuality and wickedness carry in them a contradiction to his very Being nothing so well suits with that as a pious religious heavenly course Further the fleshly life is a base sordid life but the spiritual life is a raised noble life So much as the Spirit is above the Flesh the Soul above the Body so much is the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist ibid. p. 138. spiritual life above the sensual or carnal life The life which I am urging upon you is the very life of God himself for the Apostle speaks Eph. 4.18 of some mens being alienated from the life of God through the ignorance that is in them by which life of God he means in part the holiness of God or that holy life which God lives the holy liver then he not being alienated from Gods holiness lives the life of God he acts in * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plato in Thaeaet conformity though under a vast disproportion to the great God must there not then needs be unspeakable glory and excellency in Spiritual Walking The more one lives the fleshly life the more he resembles the Beast the more one lives the spiritual life the more he resembles God the Creature is not so much debased and depressed by the One but he-is as much advanc'd and dignified by the Other Saints may be censured and misjudged by the world but in truth they come the nearest and are most like to God that they might be judged according to men in the Flesh but live according to God in the Spirit 1 Pet. 4.6 I do but allude to these words for I know in their first and proper sense they point to another thing than that which I cite them for Gods people are judged as if they lived according to men walking in or after the Flesh as others do but 't is not so they walk in or after the Spirit and so live according to God what a great thing is this for poor creatures to live according to God! who would not so live And this too is the Life of the blessed ones in Heaven take the glorified Saints how do they walk not after the Flesh I assure you for they have no such Flesh to walk after they are wholly freed from the sinning and sinful Nature are perfectly renewed and sanctified and accordingly they act All in them or from them is divine and spiritual there 's nothing that they do but what flows from a gracious principle all their thoughts and affections are swallowed up in God their love joy delight are unmixtly spiritual the pleasures of the Flesh are nothing to them they have not the least inclination to the least evil the great thing they mind and rejoyce in is the Glory of God O what an holy spiritual life do the Saints live in heaven Must not the same life then needs be excellent in the Saints here so far forth as they can reach it in their imperfect state Surely none can undervalue or think low of it but onely they who are altogether ignorant of and strangers to it A Child of God would not for a thousand worlds live any other
life nay should God leave him to his liberty to make his own choice and fully assure him of his future blessedness let his choice be what it would yet he would chuse to live the spiritual rather than the carnal life was there no Heaven nor no Hell yet the sincere Christian would be for holy walking because of that excellency and intrinsick goodness which he sees in it 2. Walking after the Spirit is pleasant delightful comfortable walking that which begets true peace solid joy unspeakable comfort in the Soul The more spiritual a man is in his walking the greater is his rejoycing O * Psal 119.165 what peace have they who thus walk The Flesh must not vye with the Spirit about true comfort men exceedingly mistake themselves when they look for pleasure delight and satisfaction in a fleshly course alas 't is not there to be had It s very sweet is bitter there 's gall and wormwood even in its hony * Prov. 14.13 Even in laughter the heart is sorrowful and the end of that mirth is heaviness It promises indeed great things but it falls exceedingly short in its performances eminently it doth so in its promises of joy and comfort True peace is onely to be found in a holy course Rom. 8.6 To be spiritually minded is life and peace life hereafter peace here 2 Cor. 6.10 As sorrowful yet always rejoycing 2 Cor. 1.12 Our rejoycing is this the testimo●● of our Conscience that in simplicity and godly sincerity not with fleshly wisdom but by the grace of God we have had our conversation in the world There 's no comfort like to that which attends * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Eth. l. 1. c. 9. holy walking the true Christian would not for a world exchange that joy which he hath in his Soul in and from Meditation Prayer the Word Sacraments Promises mortification of sin holiness communion with God the hope of glory for all that joy which the Sinner hath in the way of sin and in his sensual delights Would you have the * 1 P●t 1 8. joy which is unspeakable the * Phil. 4.7 peace which passeth all understanding the * Job 15.11 consolations of God which are not small O walk after the Spirit Men have false notions of Religion which experience must confute the Devil belies and misreports the ways of God as if a godly life was a sad pensive melancholly life pray try and then judge be perswaded to fall upon this heavenly course and then tell me whether * Prov. 3.17 wisdomes ways be not ways of pleasantness and all her paths peace Psal 119.14 I have rejoyced in the way of thy testimonies as much as in all riches The Flesh is outdone by the Spirit if it gives some outward flashy joy the Spirit with advantage gives inward solid abiding joy should not this allure you to walk after it We always love to walk where our walking may be most pleasant and delightful surely to walk with God to live in communion with Father Son and Spirit to be taken up in the contemplation and fruition of heavenly things to be always sucking at the breasts of the Promises to act in the daily exercis● of Grace I say surely this must needs be pleasant and delightful Walking indeed And the Spiritual Walker hath not onely this peace and satisfaction whilst he lives but in a dying hour too he is full of comfort O the Soul-chearing reflexions which he then can make upon an holy life O that heart-exhilerating prospect which he hath of the World to come whether he looks backward or forward all administers ground of rejoycing to him Is it thus with the Sinner the Sensualist alas 't is quite otherwise when Death comes and lays his cold hands upon him what bitter pangs of Conscience doth he feel what dreadful terrours do sill his Soul how doth the sense of Judgment and Aeternity strike him with astonishment All his sensual Comforts do now fail him and he did not live so full of joy but he dyes as full of sorrow This shall ye have of mine hand ye shall lye down in s●rrow Isa 50.11 but Mark the perfect man and behold the upright for the end of that man is peace Psal 37.37 3. This is blessed Walking for it evermore ends in salvation It do●● not onely at present evidence Non-condemnation and Vnion with Christ but it assures of Heaven and certainly brings to Heaven at last Holiness and Happiness never were never shall be parted Every motion hath its terminus or end the End of this motion or walking is eternal rest Rom. 8.13 If ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live Gal. 6.18 He that soweth to the Spirit shall of the Spirit reap life everlasting Prov. 12.28 In the way of righteousness is life and in the path-way thereof there is no death so that if you will be perswaded to enter into and to hold on in the way of the ●pirit it will infallibly lead you to eternal life and what can be spoken higher The sum of all is this I here set * Jer. 21.8 life and death before you if the One will not allure you to an holy heavenly conversation nor the Other deter you from a sinful carnal conversation I have then no more to say but surely such as have any sense of God of the worth of the Soul and of the things of the world to come they will resolve for the spiritual life * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Athenag Leg pro Christian p. 35. Athenagoras in his Apology for the primitive Christians states their practice thus If saith he we did believe that we should onely live the present life there might then be some room for suspicion that we might be as wicked as others indulging flesh and blood and drawn aside by covetuousness and concupiscence but we know that God is privy not onely to all our actions but to all our thoughts and words that he is all light and sees what is most hid in us and we are fully perswaded that after this life we shall live a much better life with God in Heaven and therefore we do not live as others do whose life will end in Hell fire O that we could as easily draw men to the heavenly life as we can apologize for those who live it or set down the grounds and reasons why they live it And now you who are Flesh-followers will nothing prevail with you shall all these Considerations be ineffectual will you yet persist in your fleshly course though an Angel with a drawn sword stands before you to stop you in your evil way yet * Numb 22.22 Balaam-like will you go on will you set your selves in a way that is not good as the wicked are described Psal 36.4 are you at that language * Jer. 18.2 We will every one walk after our own devices and we will every
together unless that which we build upon them or infer from them do agree with other Scriptures where the Thing is fully and professedly handled I dare not undervalue the least the meanest particle in God's Word yet I would be loath to bottom a fundamental Article of Faith upon such a particle especially when it admits of various senses as this here doth if it hath not the current of the Word to back it For our Opinion of Justification by the alone righteousness of Christ imputed to the Sinner and laid hold on by Faith we ground it upon several full and entire Discourses where our Apostle doth professedly handle that Argument proving Justification to be according to what we hold But our Adversaries to prove their justification by inherent righteousness very often I do not say always catch at some little single word and that they make the foundation which they build this Opinion upon In short against this For in the Text I mean too onely as they pervert it for in truth they have not so much as even this little Word to favour them we set the whole third fourth fifth Chapter of this Epistle to the Romans where the Apostle in a full discourse upon it doth plainly lay Justification upon imputed not upon inherent righteousness and which of us now do build upon the surest and safest bottom 2. What if this particle supposing it to be Causal doth point to the description of the persons and not to the priviledge some of their own * Stapl. ut prius Tolet. Causam exponit cur qui sunt in Christo non secundum carnem ambulant Authors do carry it so where then is the strength of their Argument from it to prove the fonmal Cause of No Condemnation All that then can be deduced from the Words is this that Grace in the heart is the Cause of an holy life that men upon regeneration are delivered from the Law of Sin and therefore they walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit what is this against us And with respect to their Glosses who questions or denies inherent righteousness or that that doth free from sin provided you take it with a double limitation 1. that the freeing from Sin upon regeneration be understood of the taking away its power 2. that it be not carried so far as quite to justle out imputed righteousness or set so high as to have that attributed to it which is onely proper to Christs righteousness Our * Si Spiritus vitae vivificans Sanctificans c. Ergo liberati sumus à Lege peccati mortis Regeneratione Sanctificatione non solâ Justitiae imputatione Gratia ergo inhaerens est quae liberat à peccato Contz Quaest 1. in Vers 2. cap. 8. ad Rom. Torsit hic locus tàm Calvinum quam Bezam quia inhaerentem Justitiam per veram peccati victoriam luculentèr probat imputativam subvertit Stapl. Antidot p. 625. Adversaries misrepresent our Opinions and trouble themselves in a great measure to prove that which we never deny and then asperse us as though we did deny it 3. 'T is one thing to be the Proof of a thing another thing to be the Cause of that thing Regeneration indeed proves Justification for every regenerate person is a justified person but 't is not the cause of justification for the person is not therefore justified because he is regenerated but because Christ's righteousness by Faith is made over to him 'T is one thing to say therefore a man lives because he hath sense and moves and another thing to say therefore a man lives because he hath a living Soul in him the Sense and motion prove the life but 't is the living Soul which is the cause of life So here the Believer shall not be condemned because the Law of the Spirit of Life c. this evinces the certainty of the thing but 't is not the proper Cause of it So that the For in the Text is onely Nota probationis but not causalitatis and so 't is used up and down in the Gospel in very many places 4. 'T is very true that (a) Legem Spiritus impropriè vocat Dei Spiritum qui animas nostras Christi sanguine aspergit non tantum ut à peccati labe emundet quoad reatum sed ut in veram pietatem sanctificet Calvin Calvin in part doth interpret the Words of regeneration and inherent righteousness but then foreseeing the Objection that would be made upon it he explains himself about it and saith (b) Siquis excipiat veniam ergo quâ sepeliuntur nostra delicta pendete à regeneratione facilis est solutio Non assignari causam à Paulo sed modum tradi duntaxae quo solvimur à reatu Calvin If any shall reply that then pardon or justification doth depend upon regeneration the Answer says he is obvious Paul doth not set down the Cause wherefore we are absolved from Guilt onely the Manner wherein this is done He adds further (c) Perinde valet haec sententia ac si dixisset Paulus Regenerationis Gratiam ab imputatione Justitiae nunquam disjungi 'T is as much as if the Apostle had said that regeneration is never separated or parted from the imputation of Christs righteousness So that he doth not argue for Non-condemnation or Justification from inherent righteousness as the proper Cause of it but onely as these two always go together and as this is the order and method of God wherein he justifies And 't is true too that * Legem Spiritus Vitae nec pro lege fidei c. sed pro ejus efficaciâ per quam peccatum i. e. corruptio ipsaque adeo mors sensìm aboletur ut docet infra V. 10. 11. denique pro Regenerationis gratiâ accipio cui opponitur carnis i. e. Naturae nostrae corruptio Beza Beza doth take in here under the Law of the Spirit Regeneration and Sanctification but then 't is very well known what he makes to be the Law of the Spirit of Life principally viz. the Sanctity and Holiness of Christ's humane Nature which he saith being imputed to the Believer he is thereupon justified * In his verbis Calvinum Orthodoxae Augustinianae expositioni conformitè dicere quis dubitaverit sed audiantur reliqua impostoris technae ac fraudes apparebunt Stapl. ubi supra Quam Legem Spiritus cum probè intellexissent recentiores Haeretici perperam transferunt non ad Gratiam justis inhaer●ntem sed ad externam Christi justitiam quam robis quodaminodo affingi volunt imputari Justin And now Calvin and Beza have lost all their credit So long as they expounded the Words of inherent righteousness they were very sound and orthodox but now they thus explain themselves no Censures are severe enough for them now if Stapleton may be believed they are not adulteratores sed carnifices Verbi Dei I know Pareus to avoid the
large to be written out Ambrose expounds it The Law saith he of the Spirit of Life it is the very Law of Faith * Chrysostome distinguishes much to the same purpose 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc The Law of Moses was a Spiritual Law because it forbad Sin but it was not the Law of the Spirit of Life because it could not remit Sin and so quicken the dead But this Law of Faith is the Law of the Spirit of Life because it doth not onely restrain Sin but it also restores from death c. This Law in Christ Jesus that is by Faith doth free the Believer from the Law of Sin and Death The Law of Sin is that which dwells in the members which persuades to that which is contrary to the Will of God the Law of Death is the Law of Moses because it kills Sinners And no wonder that this Law should be the Law of Death when the Gospel is to some the savour of death unto death and so he goes on in the further explication of it Amongst modern Interpreters Pareus follows this Exposition making the Law of the Spirit of life to be the Doctrine of the Gospel and the Law of sin and death to be the Law of Moses The Gospel saith he is the Law of the Spirit because 't is attended with the conveyance of the Spirit the Law of Moses was spiritual but not the Law of the Spirit because it did not convey the Spirit And that was the Law of Sin because it discovered sin irritated sin made sin to be sin and of Death too because it had a killing virtue in it 2 Cor. 3.6 The letter killeth but the spirit giveth life Thus Pareus who after he had laid down and opened his Opinion thus concludes With submission to other mens judgments I judge this to be the most plain and genuine meaning of this place This way very many * Lex Spiritu● c. est doctrina Evangehi fide apprehensa Osiand Fortasse legem Mose intelligit per legem peccati mortis à quâ etiam lege liberati sumus in vulgato Jesu Christi Evangelio Massus Utraque est Spiritus Sancti ut actoris utraqne est Spiritus nostri directiva● sed haec est Spiritus Sancti quatenus est vivificator noster in Jesu Christo c. Cajetan Legem peccati vocat literam Legis quae peccatum excitare solet damnationem revelare Vatabl. Opponitur haec Lex Spiritus Legi Mosaicae Crell Posset etiam per Legem peccati mortis intelligi Lex Mosis c. Perer. Vide Lud. de Dieu in loc Baldwin Dr. Hammond in Paraphr Others go either as to the whole or as to the most considerable part of it But neither shall I close with this Interpretation and that for two Reasons I. Because though the Gospel may very well be stiled the Law of the Spirit of life yet it sounds somewhat harsh to call the Mosaical Law God's own Law the Law of sin and death There is I grant something of truth in it and it may admit of a very fair and sound explication but then there must be a great deal of stating and limitation and cautioning before you can come at it And therefore many * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Chrysost Legem peccati mortis non ausim cum quibusdam accipere pro Lege Dei c. Quamvis enim peccatum augendo mortem generet Paulus tamen ab hâc invidiâ consultò supra deflexit Calvin His verbis non significatur Lex Mosaica c. Pet. Mart. Expositors do not approve of the application of this title to the Mosaical Law Nay our Apostle himself warns us against it whose way and custome it was whenever he had touch'd upon any thing which might seem to reflect any disparagement upon the Law presently to subjoin something for the vindication of its honour Rom. 7.7 What shall we say then is the law sin God forbid when the commandment came sin reviv'd and I dy'd and the commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death c. yet saith he the law is holy and the commandment holy and just and good was then that which was good made death to me God forbid but sin that it might appear sin working death in me by that which is good that sin by the commandment might become exceeding sinful No man did ever depress the Law more than Paul did in the matter of Justification yet in other respects none did ever more vindicate and exalt it Well! this is one Reason why I shall not fall in with this Sense A Second is this because the Apostle here is not treating of the Law-state or Gospel-state or of the Covenant-aàministration proper to either but he is more closely treating of the State of Nature and of Grace of freedome from Condemnation by the taking away of sins power and guilt in pursuance of which he pitches upon Sanctification by the Spirit and Satisfaction by the Son And therefore though the Former Notion may be taken in yet certainly that which directly falls in with the Latter as that Sense will which I shall presently give must be most agreeable to the Apostles Scope in this place 3. Thirdly by the Law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus Some understand nothing but the very Spirit of Christ Jesus They make the Law of the Spirit to be the very Spirit it self and nothing more thus * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost Theophyl O●cumen Theodor. say the same Lex Spiritus i. e. Lex quae est Spiritus Aquin. Chrysostome and his Followers This is a very good foundation to build upon but yet without some further addition it will not so fully reach that special matter in the Words which hath a great weight and emphasis in it 4. Fourthly therefore Others do interpret them not onely as pointing to Gods Spirit but to make it the more express they consider the Spirit of God as renewing as regenerating as working the new and heavenly life in the Soul with great power and efficacy The Spirit is stiled the Spirit of life both as he is a living Spirit himself and also as he is a quickening Spirit to the Creature as he makes Sinners who were * Eph. 2.1 dead in trespasses and sins to live by working Grace and Regeneration in them and so life thereby But what is the Law of the Spirit of Life why 't is the mighty power of the regenerating Spirit put forth upon men in order to the freeing of them from the power and dominion of sin There are I know sundry other explications given of it (a) Lex-Spiritus vitae una eademque est quae Lex Dei sicut una eademque est Lex peccati mortis Nihil damnationis erit his qui Lege peccati quae est Lex mortis liberantur Legi Dei quae est Lex
Jesus is as much as (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Occumenius Lex Spiritus vitae i. e. gubernatio Spiritus vitalis quem suppeditat Christus non solum admonens nos exemplo mortis suae ad charitatis opera perficienda sed etiam operans illam in cordibus nostris Oecolamp by Christ Jesus the Spirit is given and doth work as a regenerating Spirit or the Spirit of life according to the will and good pleasure of Christ 4. (c) In Christo Jesu quia non datur nisi his qui sunt in Christo Jesu Aquin. As this Spirit is given onely to those who are in Christ Men out of Christ have nothing to do with it his Members are onely its Temples without the Spirit there 's no Vnion and without the Vnion there 's no Spirit As the Member doth not participate of the Animal Spirit but as 't is united to the Head so a man doth not participate of the blessed quickening Spirit of God but as he is united to Christ but these things will be more largely insisted upon when I come to the ninth and tenth Verses Now the Words which I am opening mainly point to this what is it which is in Christ Jesus why 't is the Spirit it self therefore (d) Placet supplementum qui ut referatur ad Spiritum in Graeco subaudiatur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 quasi scriptum sit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Piscat So Erasm Some also would have an Article inserted here to make the reference to the Spirit more clear thus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. Then as to the Third and Last thing the Law of the Spirit that too is in Christ Jesus Thus that mighty power which the Spirit at any time doth exert in the work of Regeneration it is conveyed to a person and doth take hold of him in Christ Jesus that is in and through Christ viz. as this effectual Operation of the Spirit is grounded upon Christ's purchase and is put forth in pursuance of Christ's redeeming love This is a truth which might be largely opened but I fear I have been too long already upon the clearing up of this Branch of the Text And yet I cannot omit to tell you that there 's One reference more which * Quamquam nihil vetat quin illa verba 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 construantur cum verba sequente 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Piscat in Schol. Some do mention as this in Christ Jesus may refer to and be joyned with the Word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath made free Then the Sense would be this 't is by Christ that Saints are made free from Sin and Death whatever spiritual freedome Believers have they owe it all to Christ he hath the great hand in it as the Efficient and meritorious Cause thereof But this I 'le pass by because though it be a thing unquestionably true yet the generally received pointing of the Words will not admit it to be here intended I have now finished the Explicatory part the difficulty of the Words and the different Expositions put upon them all of which may be useful though all are not so pertinent and proper must be my Excuse for my being so redious and prolix upon it Having given you their proper sense and monning I should next draw out those Doctrinal Truths which are contained in them but that I shall not do at present Onely there 's One of them which I shall mention and briefly close with How the Spirit of God is the Spirit of Life 't is this The Holy and Blessed Spirit is the Spirit of Life so he is here expresly stiled the Law of the Spirit of Life Which Words are applied to the Witnesses Rev. 11.11 where 't is said of them that the Spirit of Life from God entred upon them but yet know though 't is the same words yet 't is not the same sense For by the Spirit of Life as applied to the Witnesses nothing is meant but their civil living again in their restunration to their former Power Office Liberties of Service c. but when 't is applied to the Great Spirit of God it carries a quite other and much higher sense in it What 's that why it notes his living in himself and also his being the Cause of Life to the Creature He 's the Spirit of Life 1. Formally 2. Effectively or Causally A few words to each 1. First as to the Formal Notion The Spirit of God is the Spirit of Life as he is a living Spirit as he lives in himself or hath life in himself For as the Father hath life in himself and hath given to the Son to have life in himself Joh 5.26 so the Spirit hath life in himself also And 't is not an ordinary or common life which the Spirit lives but 't is the self same life which the Father and the Son do live he being truly God lives the same increated infinite independent blessed life which the two Other Persons do * Genitivus Hebraico more pro Epitheto ponitur Calvin Est Genitivus Epitheti loco Estius Expositors generally observe that Life when 't is here joyned with the Spirit is not to be taken Substantive but Adjective 't is according to the Hebrew I diome where when two Substantives are put together the Latter of which is in the Genitive Case that is to be rendred as an Adjective or as an Epithete of the Former as the Bread of life is living bread the Water of life is living water the Glory of Grace is glorious Grace c. so here the Spirit of life is the living Spirit Theophylact joyning this Life with the Law going before saith this is spoken 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as if the Law of Life was set in opposition to the Law of Sin and Death but Life is not to be joyned with the Law but with the Spirit himself 2. Secondly the Holy Spirit is the Spirit of life Effectively or Causally He is a quickening a life-bestowing or life-working Spirit in the Creature he makes Sinners to live and is the spring of that heavenly and supernatural life which is in the gracious Soul As he hath life in Himself so he communicates it to Others he is not onely a living Spirit but he is also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a quickening Spirit And this is One of his great acts namely to quicken he 's the Spirit of * 2 Cor. 3.17 liberty and he 's also the Spirit of life he 's a teaching inlightning convincing strengthening comforting purifying Spirit and he 's also an enlivening and quickening Spirit And as the Father and the Son live in themselves and quicken * Joh. 5.21 whom they will so the Holy Ghost too hath life in himself and quickens whom he will as he is said to divide gifts to every one severally even as he will 1 Cor. 12.11 The Spirit is * Oecumen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the
guide and the giver of the spiritual life as the Soul gives life to the Body so the Spirit of God gives life to the Soul in which respect he is called * Dicitur Spiritus vitae quód animam vegetet vivificet divinâ gratiâ Contzen Sicut Spiritus naturalis facit vitam naturae sic Spiritus Divinus facit vitam Gratiae Aquin. the Spirit of life And this Life or Quickening by the Spirit is either that which is at the first Conversion or that which is subsequent and follows after Conversion 1. First there is that Life which is proper to the first Conversion When the Sinner is converted he 's quickened or made alive for indeed till that great work was done in him in a spiritual sense he was no better than a dead man before renewing grace there 's no life 'T is the regenerating Spirit which inspires this into the Soul I say into the Soul for that 's the receptive subject of this Life There is another Life or quickening to be wrought also by the Spirit which is proper to the Body of which the Apostle speaks here Verse 11 shall also quicken your mortal bodies by his Spirit that dwelleth in you in reference to which Christ too is called a quickening Spirit 1 Cor. 15.45 but the proper subject of the present and spiritual enlivening by the Spirit is the Soul Now take a man before Conversion he hath a Soul spiritually dead he lives the life of Nature the common animal life and that 's all but when the Spirit comes and renews him it breaths a divine and excellent life into him Eph. 2.1 You hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins Luk. 15.32 for this thy brother was dead and is alive again The Spirit of life is the Spirit of regeneration and he working as a regenerating Spirit is the Spirit of life 2. There is the Spirits quickning after Conversion For this in such a sense is a continued abiding repeated act we are but once regenerated and therefore but once habitually quickned but the actual and subsequent quickning is renewed and reiterated from time to time This lies in the exciting and actuating of the several Graces the taking off the deadness of the heart in holy Duties the drawing out of vigoxous and lively desires after God and Christ the raising and stirring up of the Affections c. And all this is done by the Spirit of life also the life and liveliness too of a Christian is from the vital quickning influences of the Spirit without which there can be no spiritual vivacity in him Therefore the Spouse pray'd * Cant. 4.16 Awake O North wind and come thou South blow upon my Garden that the Spices thereof may flow out she directed her prayer to the Spirit and what did she pray for for that which I am upon viz. the enlivening and exciting of her Graces she expresses it metaphorically but this was the thing which her Soul breath'd after To apply this in a word for 't is not a point which I intend to stay upon Sirs V. S. R. You see whether you are go for life Here 's the Spirit of life to him therefore you must apply your selves for life 't is the living Spirit which must make you live Are you not spiritually dead is not this the sad condition of all who lie in the Natural State what are such but as so many walking Ghosts they are no better than dead even whilst they live as the Apostle speaks of the Widow that lives in pleasure 1 Tim. 5.6 is not Grace the Life of the Soul what is Life it self but a kind of Death without Christ and Grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Ignatius Alas you may move walk breath eat drink sleep put forth all the several acts of the animal Life and yet for all this in reference to any spiritual Life be but dead persons And is it so with any of you O why do you not fly to the Spirit of Life that you may be quickned God convince you of the misery of spiritual Death that you may endeavour to get out of it and God convince you of the glory excellency necessity of the spiritual Life that you with the most earnest desires pursue after it what is is to have the Life of Nature and to want the Life of Grace to have living Bodies without and dead Souls within to be able to doe whatever is proper to Nature and not to be able to put forth one vital act of Grace Is not the spiritual death a certain forerunner of the eternal death can he that is dead here being without God hope to live with God hereafter O that you would be persuaded to make out after the spiritual Life I would in hearty desires say that for every dead Soul which they once wrote upon the Tomb of dead Brutus utinam viveres would to God that thou mightest live But how shall that be accomplished why thus here 's the Spirit of Life whose Office it is to quicken the dead whoever thou art therefore if thou wilt but betake thy self to this Spirit he can and he will give thee Life Life thou must have for 't is better to have no Life than not to have this Life Life thou maist have nay Life thou shal● have if thou wilt but implore improve wait depend upon this Spirit of Life Further you that are Saints in whom the quickning Spirit hath effectually wrought yet do not you find your selves too often under great deadness certainly you are great strangers to your selves if you do not find it to be so you are not dead yet often under deadness O now whenever 't is so with you and you groan under it as your burden do you also apply your selves to this Spirit of Life You go to Duty attend upon Ordinances pray hear the Word receive the Sacrament and you would fain be lively in all would you be so indeed look upwards then as knowing 't is the Spirit of Life that must make you so Quickning Grace is very pretious to the Soul that is sincere a Child of God cannot be without it he cannot be satisfied in the bare having of grace unless it be lively nor with the bare performance of Duty unless he be lively in it How earnest was David in his prayers to God for it Psal 119.25 37 40 88. Quicken thou me according to thy word Quicken thou me in thy way Quicken me in thy righteousness Quicken me after thy loving kindness the earnestness of his desires after it made him go over it again and again And no wonder it is so for how sweet are Ordinances to a gracious person when he hath life in them when therein he can get his Graces up his Affections up and lively when he prays and hath life in prayer hears and hath life in hearing receives and hath life in receiving O then great is his joy Deadness very much hinders Comfort in
thy fetters love thy dungeon be fond of thy bondage and prefer it before liberty what is this but madness not to be parallel'd what ingratitude is this to thy Saviour what cruelty to thy self as to thee I may well alter Tiberius's ô gentem c. into ô animam ad servitutem natam Further I pray you think of this if Sin rule you will Christ save you you cannot but know the contrary you know that he rules wherever he saves that he will be the Governour Where he is the Saviour that Sins yoke must be taken off and * Matth. 11.29 his yoke taken up or no salvation and yet shall Sin be obey'd and be thy Lord and Sovereign rather than Christ The business comes to a narrow issue let Christ rule thee and hee 'l save the but let Sin command thee and 't will condemn thee the Law of Christ and of the Spirit is the Law of Life but the Law of Sin is the Law of Death but these things have been insisted upon O that this Spirit which frees from the Law of Sin would shew you what there is in the Law of Sin men do not endeavour to get out of it because they are not convinc'd of the evil that is in it did they but know what it is they would choose to dye rather than to live under it And as for you let me ask you how you carry it in other respects you hate the Tyrant without will you love the Tyrant within you groan under the Laws of men when they are a little heavy shall there be no groanings under the far heavier Laws of Sin you will not be called slaves to any will you be content to be indeed slaves to Sin is a barbarous Turk cry'd out of when a Devil and a cursed Nature are never regarded But one Consideration more as God made you at the first you had nothing to do with this Law of Sin no he made you for his own government to be subject to himself his Law was written within you to command and act you in your whole course how then came Sin by this power how did it get up thus into the throne why onely by the first Apostacy from God Adams Fall was Sins Rise its reign commenc'd from mans rebellion 't is a meer upstart and intruder God never design'd this power to it will you now by your liking of it and continuance under it give an after-ratification or approbation of its power It hath depriv'd you of your primitive liberty and will you not endeavour to regain it when Sardis was taken by the Grecians Xerxes commanded that every day when he was at dinner one should cry aloud Sardis is lost Sardis is lost that hereby he might be inminded of what he had lost and stirr'd up to endeavour the regaining of it ô Sirs your Original Liberty is lost Sin hath got it out of your hands this we proclaim in your ears from time to time that you may never be quiet till you have recovered it and yet will you do nothing in order thereunto will you e'ne sit still under this inexpressible loss ô that 's sad All this hath been spoken to set you against Sins dominion to excite you to the most earnest endeavours to be rid of its soveraignty to cause you to fly to the Spirit of Life that you may be made free from the Law of Sin to work holy purposes in you that Sin shall no longer reign over you that you may say with the Church Isa 26.13 O Lord our God other Lords besides thee have had dominion over us but by thee onely will we make mention of thy name O that I might prevail with some Soul to say with respect to Sin Ah Lord other Lords have had dominion over me lust pride passion covetuousness sensuality have ruled me just as they pleas'd but I desire it may be so no longer I am resolved now onely to be subject to thy self ô do thou dethrone Sin and inthrone thy self in me let me be brought under universal hearty ready subjection to thy Laws and let not the Law of Sin carry it in me any longer c. One Direction given for the Sinners being freed from Sins power In what ways and by what means a poor enslaved Sinner may be made free from the Law of Sin is a very weighty enquiry and I would hope that some Sinners being convinc'd by what hath been spoken have it in their thoughts For answer to it there 's one Direction only which I shall at present give 't is this Get into the regenerate state regenerate persons are the adequate Subjects of this freedom they and none but they are freed from Sin as a Law Paul so long as he was unconverted was as much under this Law as any person whatsoever but as soon as it pleased God to convert him he was made free from it This deliverance depends upon the state it must be the state of regeneracy till which Sin will keep up its regency and soveraignty in the Soul ô as you have heard when Grace once comes into the heart the kingdom of Sin goes down and the kingdom of Christ goes up therein but never before All your strivings endeavours convictions purposes promises will never make Sins throne to shake and fall till you be renewed and sanctified Therefore pray much for the regenerating Spirit and attend much upon the regenerating Word in order to this great work Joh. 3.5 Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter into the kingdom of God Jam. 1.18 Of his own will begat he us by the Word of truth c. 1 Cor. 4.15 In Christ Jesus I have begotten you through the Gospel 't is this Spirit and this Word which must renew and bring about the new birth in you and so deliver you from the power of darkness and translate you into the kingdom of Gods dear Son as the Apostle speaks Col. 1.13 But this will be more properly enlarg'd upon when I shall come to the third Observation therefore here I 'le say no more about it VSE 3. To such who are made free from the Law of Sin first by way of Counsel 3. I will direct my self to those who by the Spirit of Life are made free from the Law of Sin something to them 1. by way of Counsell 2. by way of Comfort By way of Counsel I 'le urge three duties upon them 1. The first is hearty and deep humiliation and this is incumbent upon such partly upon what is past and partly upon what is present Regenerate persons to be deeply humbled though they be made free from the Law of Sin First hath the Lord been so gracious to any of you as to bring you out of the Natural bondage to dethrone and bring down this Sin which did at such a rate domineer over you ô you must be deeply humbled upon your taking a view of what is past
of Sin for though that puts forth a great efficacy in the manner of its working yet it doth not rise to such a pitch or degree of efficacy in what is evil as the Spirit of God doth in what is good Set corrupt Nature never so high yet 't is but a finite thing and so hath but a finite power but the Spirit is an infinite being and in his saving and special workings he puts forth an infinite power and therefore He must work more efficaciously than Sin can do the Law of the Spirit must carry it against and notwithstanding the Law of Sin for though both pass under the same appellation of Laws yet they are Laws of a different kind and nature with respect to their power and efficacy This Law or power of the Spirit is that which I will speak to and for the better opening of the Truth in hand which mainly points thereunto I 'le do two things Two things propounded for the opening of the Observation 1. I 'le speak to the necessity sufficiency efficacy of the power of the Spirit in order to the freeing of men from the power of Sin 2. I 'le shew in what Way or Method the Spirit doth work and exert his power in his rescuing of Souls from Sins power In the First of these Heads three things are put together which must be spoken unto apart The Necessity of the Spirits power to free from Sins power 1. First of the necessity of the power of the Spirit Concerning which I may confidently affirm that 't is indispensably absolutely necessary for the divesting Sin of its long possessed soveraignty no less a power than the mighty power of this Spirit can bring down Sins power ô it s no easie thing to rescue the poor enslaved captive-soul out of its bonds Omnipotency it self is requisite thereunto that 's the * Luk. 11.21 22. strong man which keeps the palace till Christ through the Spirit which is stronger than it comes upon it and overcomes it Israel had never got out of their bondage under Pharaoh if God himself had not brought them out of it through a mighty hand and by an out-stretched arm as you read Deut. 5.15 and so 't is here Let 's bring it to a particular case take a Sinner who is under the Law of Vnbelief as there are too many such God knows nothing shall ever free this Sinner from the power of his unbelief unless a divine and an almighty power from above be put forth upon him 'till this be done all the Calls Commands Invitations Promises of the Gospel are all weak and ineffectual therefore 't is said to be the faith of the operation of God Col. 2.12 and the Apostle pray'd that God would fulfil the work of faith with power 2 Thes 1.11 and says the Prophet who hath believed our report and to whom is the arm of the Lord revealed Isa 53.1 without the revealing of Gods mighty arm there 's no believing and you read that God in sanctification and the working of Faith doth put forth the exceeding greatness of his power according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Eph. 1.19 20. what can be spoken higher than this You see the Law of the Spirit is necessary to the freeing of a person from the Law of Vnbelief and is it not so in all other things wherein Sins power shows it self The power of Nature which some do so much magnifie can never conquer the power of Sin alas 't is impar congressus there 's no eaven match betwixt them and besides Natures greatest strength is on Sins side its relicks onely where 't is good are for God against Sin but its full and entire strength as 't is bad are for Sin against God God hath but its shattered sorces as it were but Sin hath its full Body what can enfeebled Nature what will depraved Nature do against Sin Let it be considered if the power of Grace in the Regenerate be so small that by that alone without the concurrence of divine and special assistance from above they can do nothing which Christ affirms Joh. 15.5 no not so much as think a good thought as the Apostle affirms 2 Cor. 3.5 what then can be expected from meer Nature in the Vnregenerate in whom Sin is in its full strength as to the weakning or subduing of it In things of a spiritual nature the Scripture doth not onely deny the act but the power too Joh. 6.44 No man can come to me except the Father draw him 1 Cor. 2.14 The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God c. neither can the know them because they are spiritually discerned Jer. 13.23 Can the Aethiopian change his skin or the Leopard his spots then may ye also do good that are accustomed to do evil So in that which I am upon 't is not onely the Sinner doth not free himself from the Law of Sin but of himself without the mighty power of the divine Spirit he cannot so do he that is not strong enough to subdue some one particular Lust how shall he be able to subdue the whole body of Sin in all its united and combined force as he that cannot conquer one single Souldier can much less conquer the whole Army If God leave a man to grapple with Sin meerly by his own strength woe be to him The necessity of the Spirits power to free from Sins power made out in some Particulars That the power of the Spirit is absolutely necessary to free from the power of Sin will be very evident if you consider those several advantages which it hath for the securing and holding up of its power in the Sinner As 1. 't is in possession 2. It hath been so a long time may be twenty forty theescore years to be sure from the time of the Sinners coming into the world for its power and his birth are of the same date now Vsurpers in possession and who have long been so are not so easily conquer'd 3. It s dominion is entire it hath all on its side the whole Soul is for Sin insomuch that when the Spirit of God comes to grapple with it he finds nothing there to side with him or to take his part which argues the necessity of his infinite power When there is a party within a Kingdom ready to fall in with the foreign force that comes to depose the Tyrant he may with more facility be vanquished but if all the people unanimously stick to him then the conquest is the more difficult As Christ once said * Joh. 14.30 the prince of this world cometh and hath nothing in me so the poor Sinner may say the Sin-subduing Spirit comes but he finds nothing in me to close with him 4. The natural man likes the power of Sin it hath his heart which is worst of all for the securing of its empire he
convertere At vero simile aequaleque auxilium condiscipulo Judae contulisti sed ego superaddidi quod tu mihi supernaturaliter non dedisti viz velle convertere cumque non amplius receperim quam ille tamen ego amplius fcci quam ille cum jam justificatus evadam ille in peccato permaneat itaque non amplius tibi tuaeque gratiae d●beo quam iste Judas qui non est conversus Hoc autem Christianae aures audire exhorrescunt Bannez in D. Ward de Grat. discrim p. 40. have whereof to glory he himself having done that which was the highest and the hardest thing in Conversion And herein lies the mysterious operation of the Spirit in that though he acts thus efficaciously and victorio●sly upon the Will yet he doth not at all violate infringe or intrench upon its (b) Ne arbitreris istam asperam molestamque violentiam dul●is est suavis est ipsa suavitas te trahit Aug. Gratiâ Dei humanum arbitrium non aufertur sed sanatur c. Fulgent l. 2. de verit Praed Divina haec actio non laedit voluntatis liberatem sed roborat neque tamen extirpat radicitus vitiosam resistendi possibilitatem sed efficacitèr suavitèr dat homm firmam obediendi voluntatem Theol Mag. Brit. in Acta Syn. part 1. p. 679 Deus ita utitur voluntate vt ipsa voluntas sese elective vitalitèr ex practico rationis judicio agat Rhaetorf de Gr●t Exerc. 3. cap. 3. Vide Norton's Orthod Evangel p 114. Natural liberty which is yet secured because the Spirit exerts all this power in such a way as doth very well agree with that liberty for he carries on the work suavitèr as well as fortitèr with efficacy but without any coaction or violence all being done by him in an accommodation and congruous attemperature of things to the Wills native and ingenit liberty and he working per certam scientiam victricem delectationem as (c) De Peccat Mer. Rom. lib. 2. cap. 19. tom 7. Austine speaks Therefore 't is said Psal 110.3 Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power mark what a sweet harmony and consistency there is betwixt the efficacy of Grace and the Wills liberty Cant. 1.4 Draw me we will run after thee draw me there 's efficacious grace we 'll run there 's free and voluntary obedience and see how well they agree draw me and we will run what more forceable than the former what more free than the latter Let us but fix upon the right notion of Liberty viz spontaneity not indifferency and that which I have said will be clear enough But to come to what is easie the converting Spirit so puts forth his power upon the Will that he makes it willing to close with what is good he removes that averseness obstinateness reluctancy that is in it against what is holy and spiritual whereupon it most readily complies therewith And in reference to the casting off the yoke of Sin and the taking up of the yoke of Christ he never gives the Will off till he hath brought the Sinner to say Sin from this day forward I break of all my allegiance to thee I 'le be ruled by thee no longer I resolve now to change my Master Lord Jesus I am thine I have been a traytor and rebel against thee too long but now I fully surrender up my self to thy Government thy Laws only I 'le be subject unto do thou rule command order dispose me as thou pleasest put thy yoke upon me I willingly stoop to it thus his Will is subdued and now he 's made free from the Law of Sin So much of the power of the Spirit and of its way of working upon the Will in order to this effect 3. I might go on the shew the way of the Spirits agency upon the affections as he doth disengage and disentangle them from Sin nay set them directly against it and so freeing the Sinner from the Law of Sin But this being necessarily consequential upon the two former I will not at all stay upon it So much for the Spirits workings at the first Conversion Of the Spirits subsequent workings after Conversion for the keeping down of the power of Sin 2. Secondly I am to consider the exertings of his power in his subsequent workings after Conversion during the whole life by which he keeps free from the Law of Sin and secures from its actual dominion this being not so proper to the Text I 'le dispatch it very briefly The good Spirit doth not put forth his power only in his first regenerating Sin-subduing acts but he continues so to do to the end of the Believers life having brought Sin under he 'le keep it so it will be endeavouring to regain what it hath lost but this gracious Spirit will not suffer it Having made the conquest he will parta tueri make good the conquest having gained the throne in the heart for God and Christ he 'le order it so that that shall be secured for them that Sin shall never ascend it any more And truly there is much power in this as well as in that which went before ô this corrupt nature will be stirring making head upon all occasions to get up again it must be a mighty strength which must suppress and break it in all its attempts therefore here too 't is the Law of the Spirit But how is this done by him Answ by his constant and continued agency in and regency over the renewed Soul The Law of the Spirit may have reference to these also that look as Sin is a standing Law in the Unregenerate it having in their whole course the command of them and it being the constant active principle in them efficaciously urging and exciting them to what is evil so the Spirit is standing Law in the Regenerate it too in their whole course having the command of them and it being the constant abiding lively principle in them efficaciously urging and exciting them to what is good by which continued actings he keeps Sin under forever For if it shall offer at any time by its sollicitations promises threatnings to recover its former dominion the Spirit is ready at hand to set in with other commands promises threatnings thereby to obviate and countermine Sin in its interposures he watches Sin in all its motions and assaults and accordingly applies himself in his guiding governing strengthening grace so that Sin can make but little on 't in all its endeavours You read here in this Chapter Ver. 14. of the leading of this Spirit As many as are led by the Spirit of God they are the Sons of God and 't was Davids prayer Psal 51.12 that God would uphold him with his free Spirit so we read it but * De Sp. Sanct. l. 6. p. 213. Chysostome renders it by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the leading governing commanding Spirit which he saith is so called because
when he manages himself with his * Isa 53.1 own arm then Sin falls and dyes before it but in any other hand it doth but little execution I would fain convince you of the insufficiency inability of all Causes or things within or without and consequently of the absolute necessity of the Spirits efficiency in order to the divesting Sin of its dominion and thence it is that I stay so long upon this Argument but I 'le close it with this one Consideration viz. Take the Saints themselves such as have true Grace wrought in them who consequently are made free from the Law of Sin and put even these upon particular and gradual Mortification the mortifying of some one Lust be it what it will or the mortifying of it in an higher degree than before I say take these very persons and let things too be brought thus low yet they of themselves without the mighty assistance of Gods Spirit can do nothing about them special grace from above is requisite to every act and degree of mortification by the Saints themselves Rom. 8.13 If ye through the Spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live 't was spoken to renewed persons therefore it must be understood of gradual and progressive mortification now saith Paul if ye through the Spirit c. implying that even such persons in such mortification which of all is most easie must be enabled thereunto by strength from the holy Spirit convey'd to them Whence I infer an utter inability in the unregenerate to free themselves from the Law of Sin they having no principle in them to further such a thing as the Saints have for their mortification Sin having its full unbroken strength in them which it hath not in the other their work not being gradual mortification but habitual and the first mortification of the whole body of Sin which therefore is much harder than the former I say upon this stating of things how unable must these be to throw off Sins power If the Saint be so weak how weak is the Sinner if the Saint must have the Spirits help or else Sin will be too hard for him in its relicks how much more must the Sinner have it in whom Sin is in its full strength he being under the Law of Sin what can he do further than attend upon the means to free himself from it Blessed be God that this Spirit is engag'd in this work otherwise there would be no such thing in the world as freedom from the Law of Sin Two things inser'd by way of advice 1. That Sinners would betake themselves to the Spirit for freedom from the Law of Sin It being so two things I would infer by way of advice 1. Let such who desire this mercy betake themselves to the Spirit for it Such who desire it did I say methinks upon what hath been said all should passionately desire it will any be willing still to continue under Sins Command I will suppose all that hear me to be heartily desirous to cast off its yoke no longer to live in subjection to it c. the onely thing that troubles them is the difficulty of the thing and all their enquiry is how they may be rid of this Tyrant who hath so long domineer'd over them If so then I would give them this direction Fly to the Spirit of Life let them cast themselves down at the feet of this Spirit expecting onely deliverance by and from him 'T is a great while before Sinners will be brought to desire such a thing when they are brought to that then they mistake themselves about the way of obtaining it fain they would be made free but they do not betake themselves to that Spirit which alone can make them so Sirs your case is desperate if this Spirit of Life do not undertake it no power in heaven or in earth can relieve you but his As that evil Spirit once said to him that would undertake to cast it out * Acts 19.15 Jesus I know and Paul I know but who are ye so here Sin despises and defies all that will meddle with it it onely knows and cannot stand before this omnipotent Spirit Christs infinite merit alone frees from its damnation the Spirits infinite power alone frees from its dominion therefore to that you must fly for this freedom You may possibly think this and that may do the work but you 'l be deceiv'd suppose you are brought under some convictions Sin will do well enough for all them suppose you resolve thus and thus for the future Sins throne may stand fast enough for all that suppose you sit under such a Ministry Sin can let you hear the Word powerfully preached and yet rule you as much as ever O do not deceive your selves I tell you nothing will or can effectually pull the Scepter out of this Vsurpers hand and disengage the Heart from obedience and bondage under Sin but this one thing the Law of the Spirit of Life With the most humble hearty fervent prayer therefore go to him and say O blessed Spirit pity and help me deliver a poor Captive that is held in Sins chains and fetters break its yoke for me rid me out of the thraldom I have so long liv'd in put forth thy power in me to free me from Sins power over me I 'm undone forever if thou dost not help me I know not what to do against Sins mighty Host only * 2 Chr. 20.12 mine eyes are unto thee I have heard that 't is thy office to rescue and set free poor inslaved Souls such a one am I ô do this for me thou blessed Spirit I must not let thee alone 'till this be done take thine own course and method convince humble terrifie c. do any thing with me onely let not lust pride ignorance passion covetuousness sensuality any sin whatsoever any longer reign over me Could I but bring you thus to pray the thing was done if it be the Spirit of supplication it will be the Law of the Spirit c. never did any sincerely desire to be freed from Sins dominion but 't was done for them at the Spirits time in the Spirits method and according to that measure which the Spirit sees best In your betaking of your selves to him in prayer 1. See that you pray in Faith believing the sufficiency of his power Let Sin be never so high he 's able to bring it down do you believe this all other things are weak and can contribute but little to your help but the mighty Spirit can do it easily and effectually Sin cannot stand before him no more than you can before it when he undertakes it he 'l subdue it to purpose notwithstanding all its strength You cannot be too diffident as to your selves nor too confident as to the Spirit 2. Let all other Means be joyn'd with Prayer They are but means and therefore not to be relied upon yet they are means
dye Rom. 5.12 Wherefore as by one man Sin entred into the world and Death by Sin even so Death passed upon all men for that all have sinned Ver. 17. For if by one mans offence Death reigned by one c. here 's Death and the Law of Death too by Sin it hath got a power over men so as to reign over them Had there been no Sin there had been no Death if man had continued in his sinless and innocent state he might have been * Vide Grot. de Sat. c. 1. p. 18. mortal i. e. under a posse mori he being but a Creature and made up of contrary principles but he had not actually dyed much less had he been under a necessity of dying if he had not sinn'd Death did not come into the world upon Gods meer dominion and Soveraignty or meerly upon the frailty of the humane Nature as Pelagians of old and (a) Mors non erat poena vel effectus transgressionis Adami sed conditionis naturalis consequens Socin de Statu primi hominis Vide Praelect Cap. 1. contra Paccium Cap. 5. Socinians of late assert but as the (b) Calov Soc. Prost p. 250. Hoorn Soc. conf vol. 1 l. 3. c. 4. p. 583 c. Franz Scho Sacr. Disp 1. p. 7. fruit and punnishment of Sin Immortality was a part of (c) Molin Enod Grav Qu. de statu Innoc. Tract 3. p. 62. Gerhard Loc. Com. de Imag c. t. 1. c. 4. p. 199. Z●●em de Imag. c. c. 8. Art 2. Moret●n's threefold state of man p. 1. c. 2. p. 35. Gods Image at first imprinted upon man that image being defac'd mortality took place You know in Gods dealing with our first Parents how he back'd his Command or Prohibition with the threatning of death Gen. 2.17 Of the tree of knowledge of good and evil thou shalt not eat of it for in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye they disobeyed this most equitable Commandment and thereby brought death both upon themselves Gen. 3.19 and also upon all their posterity Besides the guilt of this Sin made over to all mankind by imputation there is mens personal sin habitual and actual which renders them yet more obnoxious unto death and that too not onely to temporal but also to eternal death Rom. 6.21 the end of those things is death v. 23. the wages of sin is death The Apostle in James 1.14.15 treats of the first and last of Sin shows where it begins and where it ends sets down its rise progress and final issue But every man is tempted when he is drawn away of his own lust and enticed Then when lust hath conceived it bringeth forth sin and sin when it is finished it bringeth forth death Sin is the issue of Lust and Death is the issue of Sin So that our Apostle here in the Text might upon very good grounds link and couple Sin and Death Where 't is the Law of Sin there 't is the Law of Death 2. Observe that 't is the Law of Sin and the Law of Death which is here coupled together so that where 't is the Law of Sin there and there only 't is the Law of Death When Sin is reigning and commanding then 't is ruining and condemning 't is the power of Sin that exposes to the power of death Rom. 6.16 Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness 'T is true every sin in its own nature deserves death the Scripture knows no such thing as venial sin it being judge all and every sin is mortal indeed as to event the Apostle saith there is a Sin not unto death 1 Joh. 5.17 but as to merit every Sin be it what it will deserves death Yet God is so gracious as that Sin shall not condemn and end in death where it doth not command 'Pray mark it how in the words the Law of the Spirit is join'd with Life and the Law of Sin with Death as where the power of the Spirit is there is Life so where the power of Sin is there is Death I know the Death in the latter Clause doth not carry a direct opposition to the Life in the former for the Life there referring to Grace and Regeneration and not to Glory hereafter the Death which refers to eternal Condemnation and the misery of the future state cannot be look'd upon as directly opposite to that Life yet there is a truth in the Parallel As upon the Law of the Spirit there is Life spiritual and eternal so upon the Law of Sin there is ' Death spiritual and eternal too Further I know there is a great disparity betwixt the Spirits working Life and Sins working Death the Law of the Spirit works Life in the way of proper Efficiency and Causality the Law of Sin works Death only in a final consequential meritorious way yet here also we may speak by way of Parallel as the power of the Spirit works Life in its way so the power of Sin works Death too in its way That which I drive at is very plain if I be so happy as to express my self clearly about it Regenerate persons are made free from the Law of Death 3. Observe that such who are brought under the power of the regenerating Spirit they are made free from the Law of Death This was Paul's happiness here laid down and 't is the same to all that are regenerate the proof of which I need not insist upon for this deliverance undeniably follows from the former they who are made free from the Law of Sin by that Grace are also made free from the Law of Death it being the Law of Sin which subjects the Creature to the Law of Death The power or right of Death stands or falls by the power of Sin so that if the person be freed from the latter as you have heard every regenerate person is it certainly follows in the course and methods of Gods Grace that every such person shall be freed from the former too for the Law of Death is penal or the effect of the Law of Sin now take away the Cause and the Effect ceases Quest How is this to be understood But a little explication will be necessary How may Regenerate Persons be said to be made free from the Law of Death For answer to this Answ you know Death is either temporal or eternal I do not instance in spiritual Death because though 't is very true that the Saints upon the Law of the Spirit are made free from this Death yet I conceive that is not so much intended here the former lies in the separation of the Soul from the Body for a time the latter in the everlasting separation of both Soul and Body from the love and favour and presence of God This separation from God is
be told there 's poyson in it and that if he drinks it he 's a dead man ô the stupendious folly nay madness of men we tell them from Gods own mouth there 's death at the bottom of sinful practises and yet because these suit with and please their sensual part they will venture upon them The fear of temporal death to be inflicted by the Magistrate keeps off many from those enormous acts which otherwise they would commit they dare not thus and thus transgress the Law by stealing killing c. though they have a good mind to it why because they know if they so do they must dye Ah Sinner God backs his Laws with the penalty of eternal death to which thou makest thy self liable by the violation of them and yet wilt thou dare to do it shall the fear of this not at all restrain thee from what is evil Here 's the Devils cunning in his temptations he presents the bait but hides the hook he tempts from and by the pleasure delight contentment that is in sin but conceals the death that will follow upon it nay he doth not onely conceal the evil threatned but either in thesi or in hypothesi he flatly denies it This lying Spirit will tell the Sinner he may sin without danger what dye for it no there 's no such thing thou shalt not dye Thus he began in his first assault upon our first Parents Gen. 3.4 And the serpent said to the woman ye shall not surely dye and thus he doth with Sinners to this very day He always sharpens his temptations by blunting the edge of the Laws threatning assuring the poor besotted Creature that he may sin and yet not dye Now I beseech you do not hearken to him or believe him for he is what he always was a lyar and so a murderer Joh. 8.44 Let the temptation be never so inviting and alluring yet 'pray consider * 2 Kings 4.40 death is in the pot and therefore there is no meddling with it let the enticements of Sin be never so specious and plausible yet know nothing less than eternal death will inevitably follow upon it and doth not the evil of that infinitely weigh down all the good which Sin promises Sin is the falsest thing in all the world its promises are very fair but its performances are quite contrary it pretends to this and that which takes with the Sinner exceedingly but the very upshot and end of all is everlasting destruction Suppose it be as good as its word as to some temporal concerns yet alas its good is soon over and gone but its bad abides forever the pleasant taste of its hony in the mouth is but short but its gall lies fretting in the bowels to all eternity now what madness is it for a man for a few minutes delight to run himself into everlasting and endless torments 'T is one of the saddest things that is imaginable that men do and cannot but know that 't is Sin and Death and yet in a st●●nge defiance of God and in a bold contemning of all that he threatens yea even of eternal death it self they will venture upon Sin Rom. 1.32 Who knowing the judgment of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death not onely do the same but have pleasure in them that do them But surely did they but know and consider what this death is they would not carry it thus I cannot now enter upon any particular description of it onely let me tell them what there is in it the absence of all good the presence of all evil is not this enough that in short 't is the summary and abridgment of all that misery which the Humane Nature is capable of and should not such a thing make a poor Creature tremble As to this death the Sinner would fain dye but cannot he must live though he be dead even whilst he lives at the * Mors prima pellit animam nolentem de corpore mors secunda detinet animam nolentem in corpore Aug. de Civit. Dei l. 21. c. 3. first death the Body and Soul are loth to part but in the second death they would fain part if they might but the just God will keep them together that as they sinn'd together so they shall suffer together What a sad meeting will there be 'twixt these two at the general Resurrection when they shall be reunited onely in order to their being eternally miserable Now do not Sinners tremble at this do they not dread that which will bring all this upon them if not what can we further say or do As to you dearly Beloved I hope you are not given up to a reprobate mind to this desperate hardness of heart to make nothing of dying eternally 'pray therefore * Psal 4.4 stand in awe and sin not do not dare to live in that for which you must dye and perish forever let Sin dye that you may never dye for it must be either its death or yours If you live sin you love death and is death a thing to be lov'd Prov. 8.36 He that sinneth against me wrongeth his own Soul all they that hate me love death Methinks that 's a very sad description of the carriage of the poor amorous Wanton under the enchantments of the whorish Woman Prov. 7.21 22 23. With much fair speech she caused him to yield with the flattering of her lips she forced him He goeth after her straightway as an oxe goeth to the slaughter or as a fool to the correction of the stocks Till a dart strike thorow his liver as a bird hasteth to the snare and knoweth not that it is for his life Sirs will you carry it thus under Sins enchantments not considering that it aims at your life and exposes you to eternal death A fool sees but a little way but a wise man looks to the issues and consequences of things you know what I mean Simply to dye is not so much but to dye eternally ô that 's a formidable thing as you would shun that shun sin for it● house is the way to Hell going down to the chambers of death Proverbs 7.27 VSE 2. Comfort to all Regenerate Persons 2. Let the people of God see their happiness and take the comfort of it You that by the power of the regenerating Spirit are made free from the Law of Sin know that upon this you are also made free from the Law of death ô precious and admirable mercy what a cordial is this to revive you under all your faintings As to temporal death you are not wholly exempted from it that 's common to you as well as to others yet 't is a quite other thing to you than what it is to others ô whenever it shall come bid it welcome and do not * Non est formidandum quod liberat nos ab omni formidando Tertull. Ejus est mortem timere qui ad Christum nollet
Mihi placet ut 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Nominativus positus sit absolutè loco Genitivi ut sensus sit cum enim effet impossibile c. Erasm Fateri necesse est Panli orationem mutilam esse imperfectam nifi dicamus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 positum esse absolute loco secundi Casus quo Graeci eo firmè modo utuntur quo Latini Casu auferendi c. Justin Some would read it absolutely and change the Nominative Case into the Genitive the Greeks using that Case as the Latines do the Ablative in that form of expression thus for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they turn it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Law being unable in that it was weak through the flesh God sent c. Some take it in the Accusative Case and put in the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the impossible part of the Law God performed or made good by the sending of Christ Some change the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 into 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 putting in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what was the impossible of the Law or to the Law that God supplied by the sending of his Son this comes neerest to our Translation * Impossible legis i. e. impossibilitas implendae legis ex eo procedebat quoniam Lex infirma erat per Carnem Tolet. Some make the impossibile Legis to be taken Substantivè for impossibilitas implendae Legis which impossibility of fulfilling the Law proceeded from hence because the Law was weak through the flesh ‖ So Camerarius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Articâ constructione usitatà accipi commodè potest pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Beza Propter impotentiam Legis eò quod per camem erat infirmata Pare Some tell us the Words are an Atticism and they make a double Atticism in them 't is first 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and then 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Then the sense of them runs thus For the impotency and inability or because of the impotency and inability of the Law therefore God sent his Son The * Quùm impotens esset Lex propter infirmitatem carnis c. V. Syr. Ob defectum virium legis quo laborabat in carne c V. Arab. Et cum impotentes cramus ad praestandum mandata legis c. V. Ethiop Ancient Versions bring it in with a Since or Because Since there was an utter impossibility or inability in the Law to justifie or recover lost man therefore God pitch'd upon another way viz. the Incarnation Obedience Satisfaction of his own Son I thought it not amiss to put down these several Explications and Readings of the Words for the satisfaction of more inquisitive persons concerning the Expression it self and the Coherence of the Matter but as to the plain Sense that our Translators as I said before give us very well For what the Law could not do or because of the Laws inability to do in that it was weak through the flesh therefore God sent his Son c. The Sum of the Words in Two Proposi ions I pass from the Letter of the Words to the Matter contain'd in them and that may be sum'd up in these Two Propositions 1. There was something to be done by and for the Sinner 1. Prop. which the Law could not do it was under an impossibility of doing it 2. Therefore the Law could not thus do 2. Prop because it was weak through the flesh For the better understanding of which Propositions 4 Questions answered it will be necessary to resolve these Four Questions 1. Of what Law doth the Apostle here speak 2. What was the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which the Law could not do 3. How is the Law said to be weak 4. What is meant by the Flesh from which the Laws weakness proceeds First Of what Law doth the Apostle here speak 1. Quest What Law is here meant when he saith What the Law could not do I answer Of Gods own Law and that too in its strict and proper acceptation Answ For the Word Law is taken sometimes in an improper allusive Metaphorical notion as in the Verse foregoing where you read of the Law of the Spirit and of the Law of Sin which is nothing but the power and commanding efficacy of the Spirit and of Sin But here in this Verse 't is to be taken in the strict and proper notion of a Law viz. as it notes that declaration or revelation which God the great Law-giver hath made of his Will therein binding and obliging the reasonable creature to duty I know Some understand the Law here of that * Lex mentis quae impleri non poterat propter carnem peccati Tolet. Crediderim ego non hic legem Mosis sed legem illam mentis accipiendam esse Justin Potest de lege mentis intelligi quam supra dixit velle facere bonum sed per infirmitatem fragilitatem carnis implere non posse Orig. Law of the Mind spoken of Chap. 7.23 which lies in strong propensions efficacious and commanding impulsions to what is holy and good springing from the Sanctifi'd nature in regenerate persons But I conceive this interpretation is not so genuine nor so well suiting with the Apostles Scope in the words where he is treating not of the Law which is in some persons but of the Law which is imposed upon all of that Law the righteousness of which was to be fulfilled as it follows Vers 4. and therefore it must be understood of Gods own Law that being it which Christ was to fulfil and satisfie and not any other Law Since then the Words point to the Law of God we must bring the Question into a narrower compass and enquire What Law of God is here spoken of For answer to which that I may as much as I can avoid unnecessary excursions I shall only say this That 't is either that Primitive Law which God impos'd upon Adam and in him upon all mankind upon the keeping of which he promised Life upon the breaking of which he threatned death it being the Summary of the Covenant of Works Or else 't is that Law which God gave the people of Israel from Mount Sinai namely the Decalogue or Moral Law Which Law was but a new draught of the Law first made with Adam for that being by his Fall much defac'd nay almost quite obliterated as it was written in his heart it pleas'd the Lord to copy it out again and to write it afresh in Tables of Stone in fair and legible Characters And this too was a Scheme or Transcript and Summary of the Covenant of Works first made with Adam though it was not given to the people of Israel purely and absolutely as the Covenant of Works for in reference to its end and design there was much
improvement of it Was Christ sent and did God thus send him what doth this great act of God call for from us I 'le tell you in a few things 1. It calls upon us greatly to admire God Use 1. God to be admired for his sending of Christ O how should all our souls be drawn forth and elevated in the adoring of God for his sending of Christ What rich Mines of Grace have we in these few words God sent his own Son Here 's the greatest thing that ever God did or ever will do 't was much that he should make a World but what 's the making of a World to the sending of a Son The Apostle in the Text seems to ascend step by step and to crowd together variety of great and glorious things that he might the more heighten God's Love and draw up the hearts of Believers to the admiration of it For 1. here is Sending 2. God sending 3. God sending a Son 4. His own Son 5. The sending of this Son in our flesh Yea 6. in the likeness of sinful flesh Yea 7. in that Flesh to offer up himself as a Sacrifice for sin 8. Doing this for this End that sin might be condemned and that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us 9. Doing this too when the Sinners Case was desperate as to the Law is not here maguum in parvo and doth not the Apostle thrust things together heaping one thing upon another that he might the better set off and aggrandize the Love of God There 's enough in any One of them to make you stand and wonder but when you have them conjunct and all set before you in their proper emphasis and import how should you be affected and wrought upon to admire the Grace of God! The truth is take all together and you have here a representation of that Low Mercy Goodness which was too great and bigg for any but a God If you read no further than the Law could not do in that it was weak through the Flesh there man is utterly lost but if you go on to God 's sending of his Son c. there the day of Salvation begins to dawn there 's an effectual remedy for a desperate malady now the case is altered O let the blessed God be therefore for ever magnify'd and adored 2. More particularly The Love of God the Father to be admired this calls upon you to admire the Love of God the Father and alwayes to entertain good thoughts of him they are distinct Heads however let me put them together I would not too curiously divide or distinguish betwixt the Sacred Persons in their several Acts much less would I set them in competition or prefer one before another as if we were more beholden to the One than to the Other As they center in the same common Essence 't is the same Love and the same gracious actings in all but yet they being personally distinct and they having those acts which are proper to them as so distinguished so they have their special and peculiar Love And 't is very good for us to understand what is immediately done by the Father what by the Son what by the Spirit which we must the rather endeavour after because the Scripture usually I do not say alwayes apply's this effect to the First that to the Second and another to the Third Person I am at present only to speak to the acts of the Father wherein he hath display'd that Love which is proper to him which if you please to look into as the Scripture sets them forth you will find your selves under a strong obligation to admire him as personally so considered For 'pray observe who did from all eternity predestinate elect choose you was it not God the Father Predestinating Love is the Father's Love Eph. 1.3 4 5. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ According as he hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world c. Having predestinated us unto the adoption of Children by Jesus Christ to himself according to the good pleasure of his will After this came Redeeming Love and had the Father no hand in that Love nay had not He the first and the chief hand therein For did not he find out the ransom Job 33.24 I have found a ransom did not he contrive and lay the whole model and platform of Redemption in his eternal purpose and ordination therefore 't is said Isa 53.10 The pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand that great Work resolves it self into the Will and pleasure of the Father as the first and principal Cause of it Christ as Mediator is brought in but as subordinate to him as being but the ministerial and executive agent in redemption for 't is but in his hands that the pleasure of the Lord should prosper Who chose sent called Christ to that Work and fitted him for it but the Father as you have heard So also who assisted and strengthened him in it but the Father Isa 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold of which upholding and strengthening Grace by the Father Christ assured himself beforehand as you read Isa 50. 7 9. and it was accordingly made good to him as you read Matth. 4.11 Luke 22.43 Then again who rewarded Christ when he had finished his Work but the Father therefore to him Christ pray'd for this Joh. 17.4 5. I have glorified thee on the earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was And now Christ hath made the purchase who doth authoritatively collate upon persons the blessings purchased but the Father Rom. 8.33 It is God that justifieth 2 Cor. 5.18 All things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ c. Luke 12.32 Fear not little flock it is your Father's good pleasure to give you the Kingdom Who is it that works in Sinners their meetness for heaven but the Father Col. 1.12 Giving thanks unto the Father which hath made us meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light Who is it that reveals the great mysteries of the Gospel but the Father Matth. 11.25 I thank thee O Father Lord of heaven and earth because thou hast hid these things from the wise and prudent and hast revealed them unto babes Who bestows and gives the Spirit but the Father Joh. 14.16 I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the Spirit of Truth And to shut up this who secures and keeps in a state of grace but the Father Joh. 10.29 My Father which gave them me is greater than all and no man is able to pluck them out of my Father's band Now Christians may
you not be fully convinced by all this that the Father's Love to you is very great and if so will you not admire him for it You must * Joh. 5.23 honour the Son even as you honour the Father and you must adore bless love the Father even as you do the Son God forbid that I should go about to lessen your most thankful sense of what the Son and Spirit have done for you but yet know that these the Father as the first Cause doth work by 't is He who by them doth do so great things for you 'pray think high of their love but then think high of his love too Further I would persuade you to entertain good thoughts of the Father 'T is a temptation though not so usual which some gracious Persons lie under they can with more comfort think of the Son than of the Father they do not so much question the Love of the Son as of the Father they cannot deny but that the Son is indeed a very gracious Person for he came from heaven * Luke 19.10 to seek and to save what was lost to * 1 Tim. 1.15 save Sinners yea the chiefest of them c. hereupon they can in some comfortable manner encourage themselves to hope in him But as to the Father they are not so confident they are more jealous and suspicious and have a greater dread of him than they have either of the Son or of the Spirit Doth Satan assault any of you in this manner or do such thoughts as these prevail over you O be convinced of your mistake You have as great encouragement for faith and hope from the Father as you have from the Son for you hear 't was He who sent Christ and whatever Christ was or did all was but in pursuance of his good pleasure therefore have you any reason to think otherwise than well of him Surely * 1 Joh. 4.16 God is Love this very thing his sending of his Son represents him as full of Mercy Goodness and Grace the Sinner hath not the least cause to be jealous or afraid of him O when unbelief and hard thoughts of God the Father begin to rise beat them down by arguing thus was not He the first spring from which redeeming Grace did flow the great contriver and willer of man's recovery who set Christ on work but he who sent him into the world to be a Saviour but he who imploy'd his own Son for the good of Sinners but he O that you would labour to get your Faith encourag'd and strengthened as to the first Person and that it might rise up to the first Cause of all and there fix and terminate that your faith and hope may be in God as the Apostle expresses it 1 Pet. 1.21 Christ sayes Joh. 14.1 Let not your heart be troubled ye believe in God believe in me also and let me say he believe in Christ believe in God also as the fountain and original of all your happiness Christ to be loved for his ready submission to his Father in sending him 3. It calls upon us to love Christ greatly O how should the consideration of this endear Christ to every gracious heart God sent him but not against his will how willing was he to be sent upon the errand of your Salvation he freely consented to whatever the Father was pleased to put him upon for your good He very well knew before hand what would follow upon this sending what he was to undergo how he was to be abased if he do engage to redeem and save you yet notwithstanding this no sooner did the Father call him to it but he most readily and cheerfully obeyed O the infinite Love of Christ He came down from heaven that he might carry you up to heaven he that was a Son for your sake stooped to be a Servant that you of slaves might be made sons What had become of you if Christ had refused to come when the Father sent him O love the Lord Jesus let his Person be very dear and precious to you admit him into your hearts who was willing to take the whole business of your Salvation into his hands what Love can be enough for a Father sending and a Son coming 'T is true God sent him but his obedience to his Father was no diminution of his Love to you and 't is true in this Embassy he acted in a way of inferiority to his Father but 't was his pity to you which made him willing to put himself into such a state of subjection and inferiority for that did not proceed from his Nature before he had assumed yours but meerly from his dignation and gracious condescention and now after all this will you not love him how can you do otherwise than love him Suppose you had heard him as soon as ever God had signified his pleasure to him and said Son the fulness of time is come I must send thee down to earth to redeem man saying Father I am ready here I am send me whithersoever and about whatsoever thou pleasest to promote thy Glory and the good of Souls I am willing to go where-ever thou 'lt have me yea I le stick at nothing which thou shalt judge necessary for the preventing of the Sinners everlasting ruine Send me to be made Flesh I submit to lie in a Manger I submit to die upon a Cross I submit lay what Commands upon me thou pleasest to further the Salvation of Souls they shall all be obey'd Suppose I say you had heard Christ uttering such Words to his Father doubtless it would have wrought very much upon you your Hearts would have been all in flames of Love to him O wretched Creatures we know all this was spoken and done too by our Lord Jesus and yet how cold how weak is our Love to him Christ a Pattern herein for imitation 4. It calls upon you to imitate Christ in his carriage with respect o his being sent Thus never go till you be sent then go readily both of these were admirably done by our Lord Jesus He went not till he was sent before he would move one step he would have his Father 's Mission and Commission a great Mind he had to be at Redeeming Work his Heart was exceedingly set upon it yet he would stay till he was sent called authoriz'd thereunto by his Father But as soon as he was so called how readily and cheerfully did he engage * Heb. 10.7 Lo T come to do thy Will O God Now in this his deportment he hath set us an excellent copy to write after teaching us alwayes humbly to wait for a Call from God and when it comes let it be what it will faithfully to comply with it Whatever rank or station God hath set you in see that you therein * 1 Cor. 7.17.20 24. abide and that you meddle with no Work Employment Office Vndertaking further than as you are called thereunto
semel tantum missus est Dei Filius secundum alterum saepe missus est mittitur quotidie Nam secundum alterum missus est ut sit Homo semel tantum factum est secundum alterum verò mittitur ut sit cum Homine quomodo quotidiè mittitur ad Sanctos missus est etiam ante incarnationem ad omnes Sanctos qui ante fuerunt etiam ad Angelos Unde Aug. de Filio c. Lomb. L. 1. D. 13. twofold sending of him the one External and Visible the other Internal and Invisible the First was Christ's sending to be Man that 's past and over and was to be but once the Second is Christ's sending into Man that yet continues and is reiterated from time to time Now these two though they are of a different nature must not be parted he that would regularly hope for Salvation by Christ must have the latter as well as the former sending for 't is most certain that a Christ without if it be not also a Christ within will never save A Christ in our Flesh must be accompanied with a Christ in our Hearts there must be not only a Christ sent to us but also a Christ sent into us or else he will not profit us The whole business of Merit lies upon the Christ without as he took our Nature and therein fulfilled the Law but the fitting or qualifying of persons to have a share in the blessings merited that lies in the Christ within as he is received into the heart In a word the impetration is by Christ without but the application is by Christ within Now therfore I say you must nor rest in the One unless you find the Other too there are very dangerous mistakes abroad in the world about this Some are all for a Christ within making nothing of a Christ without a most pernicious Opinion and destructive of all Christianity Others again are all for a Christ without contenting themselves with this that he was sent into the world to save Sinners and this to them is enough for future happiness they look no farther But now whoever would be wise to Salvation must take in both so as to adore believe in rest upon a Christ as externally sent and yet so as to make sure of a Christ in * Col. 1.27 himself through the gracious operations of the Spirit Paul here in this Verse speaks of the External Sending in the 10 Verse he speaks of the Internal Sending And if Christ be in you all that live under the Gospel know the former but few know the latter O how is it with you Christ was sent to you but is he in you he was formed in the Virgins womh but is he formed in your hearts as the expression is Gal. 4.19 he came from heaven in a corporeal manner for you but did he ever in a spiritual manner come into you you have the external mission but have you also the mystical Vnion hath the Father who sent his own Son in your Flesh sent also his own Spirit into your hearts which is the great Promise of the New Testament as the former was the great Promise of the Old see Joh. 14.26 Joh. 15.26 Joh. 16.7 'Pray search diligently into these things for be assured that a Christ as only sent in the likeness of sinful flesh if He and his Spirit be not also received within I say a Christ so stated will never make you happy Men exhorted to believe in him whom God sent 6. Did God thus send Christ it calls aloud to you all to believe in him Hath the Father chosen him set him apart every way fitted him to be a Redeemer sent him into the world for that end and after all this will you not receive embrace fly to and venture your selves your All upon him O what an Argument is this to draw Sinners to an hearty closure with Christ what will engage Souls to believe on him if this will not Christ as sent is the Object the Ground and also the great Encouragement of Faith Sinners you may very safely believe on him for he 's no Impostor or Deceiver but that very person whom God sent to be the Saviour of the world And 't is not only so that you may safely believe on him but 't is your great duty to believe on him for he who sent him layes this as his grand Command upon you so to do 1 Joh. 3.23 And this is his Commandment that we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ Joh. 6.29 This is the work of God that great Work which he injoyns that ye believe on him whom he hath sent 'T is observable how high Christ speaks of the knowledge of himself under this notion as he was sent of God Joh. 17.3 This is life eternal that they might know thee the only true God and Jesus Christ whom thou hast sent As also how desirous he was that the World might know and believe that he was thus sent of God Joh. 17.21 23. That they all may be one as thou Father art in me and I in thee that they all may be one in us that the world may believe that thou hast sent me I in them and thou in me that they may be made perfect in one and that the world may know that thou hast sent me Now what was it that Christ propounded to himself in all this certainly he had more in his eye than the bare notional knowledge of or naked assent to this great Truth that he was the Person sent of God Yes his desire reach'd to a practical and fiducial knowledge of it to such a knowledge as might be attended with true and saving Faith So that 't is not enough for you to know and believe in a common and general way that Christ was indeed sent of God which will only make you differ from Jews and Heathens but you must so know and so believe it as to receive accept close with rest upon him in a saving manner which will make you differ from all outside and formal Christians Further let it be considered what was God's great design in the sending of Christ 't was this that Sinners believing in him might live So the Gospel tells you over and over * Joh. 3.16 17 God so loved the world that he gave or sent his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world but that the world through him might be saved is not here a strong engagement as well as an high encouragement to believe And it being God's act to send his Son he looks upon Himself as highly concerned according as men carry it towards him therefore saith Christ * Math. 10.40 He that receiveth me receiveth him that sent me * Luk. 10.16 He that despiseth me despiseth him that sent me And especially this holds true in
liv'd to see this and yet shall we doubt of the thing surely that would be sad The Ratriarchs and they who lived under the Law had but some dimmer discoveries of it here and there an obscure promise and that was all to them for a long time this was reveal'd but in types and shadows And it was too a great way off from them yet they saw the promises afar off and were persuaded of them as the Apostle tells us Heb. 11.13 and now when Christ is come when the thing is done shall we be doubting and questioning in our selves about it when our light is so clear shall our faith yet be weak Our Lord 's coming in Flesh to redeem Man was that great thing held forth in the Scriptures of the Old-Testament and they are full of it observe that passage Heb. 10.5 5 6 7. Wherefore when he cometh into the world be saith Sacrifice and offering thou wouldest not but a body hast thou prepared me in burnt-offerings and sacrifices for sin thou hast had no pleasure Then said I Lo I come in the Volume of the Book it is written of me to do thy will O God what doth Christ mean by the volume of the book I answer the whole body of the Old-Testament-Scriptures this was not written only in this or that particular Text but you have it all along interwoven into the body of those Scriptures now when the whole stream and current of the Scripture runs to this very thing shall we yet give but a languid assent about it Especially when we have the New-Testament-revelation superadded to the former the New Testament I say which gives us so full an account as to matter of fact in reference to the Conception Nativity Life Death of Christ which shews us how this and that Prophesie pointing to his Incarnation was fulfill'd which asserts it over and over again telling us expresly that the Word was made Flesh God was manifested in the Flesh c. shall we notwithstanding all this yet stagger in our faith about the truth of Christ's being sent in flesh O believe it and believe it steadily so as to look upon it as a thing without controversie Satan hath all along more or less made his assaults upon Christians in this as well as in other matters and no question he 'l do the same to you if it be possible to undermine and hinder your firm assent to it but let him not prevail Firmly to adhere to Christ as sent in flesh 2. But under this branch of Exhortation I am to urge not only firmness of assent but also firmness of adherence I mean this you must believe that Christ was sent in flesh so as to cleave and stick to him as sent in Flesh There are some amongst us whom therefore I cannot but look upon as most sadly deluded and most dangerously erring in the very Fundamentals of the Christian Religion who make little of a Christ in this notion they are all for a Christ within them but as to a Christ without them or a Christ in flesh as born of the Virgin Mary crucify'd at Jerusalem c. I say a Christ thus stated they decry and disregard O that from what I have heard and read I had not too just occasion for this charge T is highly necessary therefore that I should say something to antidote you against this venome that under the pretence of a Christ within you do not lose or overlook a Christ without In a sober sense we are for a Christ within as much as any viz. as he is formed in the Soul at the new birth Gal. 4.19 as he is united to and dwells in believers Col. 1.27 Rom. 8.10 but yet 't is a Christ without as incarnate whom we rely upon for life and salvation as he is so considered we eye him in the great acts of faith and ground all our hope and confidence upon him I have * p. 310. before told you that a Christ as formed in the heart is necessary to justification and salvation for he saves none but those who have this inward work but yet 't is a Christ as formed in the Virgins womb and as dying upon the Cross who is the proper efficient meritorious procuring Cause of Justification and Salvation These two must by no means be parted yet their efficiency or causal influence upon Sinners good is very different for by the one mercy is procur'd by the other 't is only apply'd the impetration is by the Christ without the application only is by the Christ within And therefore though you are to put an high value upon the latter and to endeavour to make sure of it as the way and condition of receiving benefit by Christ yet you are to know that 't is the former by which all is merited and therefore there the great stress of your Faith must lie 't is a Christ as taking flesh and dying in flesh that you must stick unto Matth. 1.21 She shall bring forth a Son and thou shalt call his name Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Christ the Son of Mary was to save 1 Tim. 1.15 This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners c. the Apostle layes the meriting of Salvation upon a Christ without as coming into the world and not as coming into the heart he who died upon the Cross was slain suffer'd at Jerusalem hee 's the person whom God hath exalted to be Prince and Saviour Acts 5.30 31. The God of our Fathers raised up Jesus whom ye slew and hanged on a tree him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel and forgiveness of sins surely where persons have not forfeited the very principles of Christianity this is a thing which needs no proof Indeed Christ in the Spirit will very little profit those who disregard him in the flesh But no more of this Paul hath a passage which I would a little open 2 Cor. 5.16 Henceforth saith he know we no man after the flesh yea though we have known Christ after the flesh yet now henceforth know we him no more how know Christ no more after the flesh what doth he mean by this did he cast off all respects to him all relyance upon him as considered in his Flesh O no! all that he aims at is this he knew Christ no more after the flesh that is so as to have any further converse with him in a fleshly way he did not expect again to eat and drink with him as sometimes the Apostles had done all that external converse was now at an end Or he means that he did not look for any fleshly advantages by him as worldly honor preferment riches c. Or again that he did not know him as in the state of his former abasement and humiliation so the word flesh is sometimes taken more restrainedly
glorying who would take away from them the Manhood of Christ since as 't is truly said * Nullus potest eo capite gloriari in quo asserit Naturam suam non haberi Leo Epist 11. No man can glory in that head in which he believes there is not his own Nature And how injurious are the Saints unto themselves who do so little meditate upon improve and draw comfort from Christ in this consideration Wherein doth Christ's Incarnation afford matter of Comfort to Believers If it be ask'd What is there in a Christ incarnate for the strengthning of the Faith the heightning of the comfort of God's Children give me leave to answer this Question in several particulars 1. There 's this in it certainly this must be an effectual and the most effectual way imaginable for the promoting of God's glory and the Sinners good This an effectual way to promote God's glory and the good of Sinners If Christ become Man that must be a very proper and powerful Means in order to these ends for besides the greatness of the thing in it self if it shall please God out of his abundant mercy to propound to himself the bringing about of such things he out of his infinite Wisdom will be sure to pitch upon such means as shall certainly reach them and therefore he pitching upon this unquestionably it shall attain what it was designed for Is not this then ground of joy and a great support to faith to consider that there is a way and such a way way found out as shall infallibly and effectually promote your good 2. In this you have in high demonstration of his * Nihil tam necessarium fuit ad erigendam spem nostram quam ut demonstraretur nobis quantum nos diligeret Deus Quid vero isto indicio manifestius quam quod Dei Filius Naturae nostrae dignatus est inire consortium Aug. de Trin. l. 13. Love yea the highest that was possible The highest demonstration of God's Love for there was in it ultimus divini amoris conatus infinite Love it self could go no higher than a Christ in Flesh Now this Love of God is the strongest the most heart-reviving cordial that can be given to a gracious person and answerable to the degree of that so is the degree of his comfort for evermore where God displayes his highest Love there he hath the highest comfort You that are such do you desire an evidence of this and would that chear you here you have one the very highest that God could give viz. his sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh All the Promises are seal'd by this 3. By this as hath been already observed under a former head all the promises are seal'd confirm'd and ratify'd Christ's Incarnation was not only one of the promises it self yea the grand Old-Testament promise but it was the seal and confirmation of all the rest When God would give Ahaz a sign for the incouraging of his faith as to the making good of a particular mercy promis'd what was that sign why Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a Son and shall call his name Immanuel Isa 7.14 and so it is in all other respects The Promises indeed are confirmed several wayes but there is not any one thing which gives an higher confirmation to them than this Christ's being made Flesh What ever God hath promis'd 't is all sure now to be made good why because his great promise of the Incarnation of his Son than the which nothing could be more high and more improbable is exactly accomplished A Christ incarnate is Faith's highest security Saints you have no reason now to question either God's power for what cannot he do who can unite the Godhead and the Manhood what can be too hard for him who can make a Virgin to conceive or his mercy and willingness to do any thing for you for he that will send his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh what will he stick at what can come after that can be so great as that * Rom. 8.32 He that spared not his own Son how shall he not with him give us all things Well therefore might the Apostle say All the promises of God in him in Christ are yea and in him Amen c. 2 Cor. 1.20 A very great and precious Truth here lies before me All the great objects of the Christians Faith and Hope are by Christ's Incarnation made sure and credible This proved by Instanc●s which there-I would fain speak more fully unto 't is this that all the excellent Objects of the Christians Faith and Hope are made credible nay sure and certain upon the Incarnation of the Son of God This I 'le endeavour to make out in some Instances As the Mystical Vnion 1. There 's first the mystical union betwixt Christ and Believers a very great mystery as you have heard Christ in believers and one with them what can be more wonderful yet 't is sure there is such a thing and we may be assured of it for 't is made credible and certain by that which I am upon The Hypostatical Vnion ascertains the Mystical Vnion the union of Persons is not so much as the Personal Vnion he that hath thus united our Manhood to his Godhead in one Person why may he not mystically unite our persons to his Person this latter union not being so high as the former As 't is said * Heb. 7 7. the less is blessed of the better so I may here say the less is confirmed by the greater if Christ had not come so near us in the taking of our Nature the mystical union might have been more doubtful but now there 's no room for doubting Observe that place Heb. 2.11 Both he that sanctifieth and they who are sanctified are all of one there 's the union in the same common Nature for which cause he is not ashamed to call them brethren there 's the near relation or the mystical union grounded upon the former Communion with God Christ's special presence the inhabitation of the Spirit 2. There 's Communion with God Christ's special presence in the Soul the inhabitation of the Spirit All very high and glorious things so high that the poor creature knows not how to believe them yet they also are very credible and certain upon Christ's Incarnation 'T is more for God to be made man then 't is for God to converse with man God manifested in the flesh is more than God manifesting himself to flesh Moreover Christ in our flesh laid the foundation of the Creatures Communion with God and removed that which hindred it namely distance and enmity these two stood in the sinners way as to this blessed communion but Christ removed them both and so brought it about 'T is observable the Apostle having spoken of the Incarnation of Christ 1 Joh. 1.1 2 3. presently he adds and truly our
Cor. 1.30 to be the Lord our righteousness Jerem. 23.6 and we are said to be the righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 to be accepted in him Ephes 1.6 to be presented to God as not having spot or wrinkle or any such thing Eph. 5.27 by his Obedience to be made righteous Rom. 5.19 Many other Scriptures might be cited which hold forth this great Evangelical Truth and also these that I have cited might be much enlarged upon but the difficulty lying not so much in the general as in the particular stating and explication of it where indeed there is enough of difficulty therefore I shall rather direct my self to that Two Questions raised and answered And here two weighty Questions must be discussed 1. Whether Christ's active fulfilling the Law or his active as well as his passive Obedience be imputed to Believers 2. In what sense may it be said to be imputed to them My Text and the Subject which I am upon from it lay a necessity upon me of speaking something to these Points otherwise I should most gladly have passed them by 'T is much against my spirit God knows to revive and keep up those Controversies which I could wish with all my soul had never been started but being started that they might now be buried And further it grieves me exceedingly to meddle in those matters wherein I must unavoidably differ from some or other of those who for their Piety and Learning are of great eminency and repute in the Church of God and for whose names and persons I have a very high veneration Yet for all this I dare not to please my self and to avoid what is ingrateful to me go out of my way 'T is meerly sense of duty as I apprehend it which makes me to engage in this unwelcome province These Controversies as they are manag'd by some in their utmost latitude are grown to a great vastness but it would be highly inconvenient for me now I am upon the close of this work which is already grown above its due proportion to be prolixe about them I shall contract my self therefore and only in short speak to that which I conceive is absolutely necessary for the clearing up of the things in question Of the First Whether Christs active fulfilling the Law or his Active Obedience be imputed to Believers As to the first question Whether Christ's active fulfilling the Law or whether his active as well as his passive Obedience be imputed to Believers I shall not spend any time about the Terms in enquiring whether they be proper or not or whether the things be rightly distinguished or not since there was action in Christ's passive Obedience and passion in his active all understand the thing which we intend in the use of the words therefore without any further debate I 'le take them as they are commonly used and understood In answer to this Question I find Four Opinious about it 1. That neither the active nor the passive Obedience of Christ are properly and really imputed to Believers 2. That the passive Obedience of Christ only is imputed 3. That both active and passive are imputed 4. That the active Obedience of Christ is imputed as well as the passive but not in the same way not quatenus active but as it was a part of Christ's Satisfaction and Merit For those who espouse the first Opinion SOCINIANS and PAPISTS I will not at present meddle with them One of their great Arguments against the imputation of Christ's Obedience particularly his Active Obedience about which only I would contend viz. that he being a Creature was under an Obligation to obey that he obeying for himself his Obedience could not be imputed to others this Argument I say hath been already answered And as to the other Arguments which they use they will fall in with those which shall be presently spoken unto as they are urged by others who yet are far from being Socinians or Papists against the imputation of Christ's active Obedience Of the Second Opinion Christ's passive Obedience only imputed Secondly there are Others much more orthodox and sound in the Faith than the former who though they hold the imputation of Christ's Obedience yet they limit that imputation to his passive Obedience asserting that that only is imputed to Believers They deny not but that his active Obedience was necessary for his Person and Office for the qualifying of him for his Mediatorship but that it is formally imputed to them who believe that they deny They say God did accept of the Death and Sufferings of his Son as a full satisfaction for his violated Law that the righteousness thereof is fulfilled by his bearing its penalty that upon the alone bearing of that penalty Sin is remitted and the Sinner compleatly justified that this passive Obedience is sufficient to all intents and purposes for Satisfaction and Merit too without any further imputation of his active Obedience so that if the Sinner do but perform the Conditions on his part of believing and repenting in Christ's death alone there 's every way enough for him The Grounds they go upon in the defence of this Opinion are many One is that when the Scripture speaks of reconciliation with God remission of sin justification c. still it lays the stress of all upon Christ's passive Obedience or upon his death and blood so Matth. 20.28 Matth. 26.28 Joh. 6.51 c. Acts 20.28 Rom. 3.25 5.9 Gal. 3.13 Eph. 1.7 2.13 c. Col. 1.20 21 22. 1 Pet. 1.19 Heb. 9.12 Heb. 10.14 Besides this they prove it by several Reasons which are chiefly drawn from the sufficiency of Christ's passive Obedience for the Sinners relief in his lost condition and also from the great difficulties if not absurdities as they judge which attend the other Opinion for the imputation of his active Obedience This Opinion hath the more prevailed since the first broaching of it which was not very long ago for 't was not made matter of Controversie till these latter Ages of the Church not only from the strength and weightiness of the Arguments with which 't is back'd which cannot be deny'd but also from the Assertors of it they being many and some of them persons deservedly of very great reputation in the Church of Christ such as PISCATOR PAREVS SCVLTETVS CAPELLVS CAMERO FORBES with divers others Of the third Opinion both active and passive Obedience imputed The third Opinion is that Christ's whole Obedience active as well as passive is imputed to us his obeying the Law to the full perfect conforming to its commands his doing as well as his dying Obedience is say these made over and reckoned to Believers in order to their Justification and Salvation This also is asserted by several * Cum Christus descenderit de Coelis omniaque egerit passus sit propter nos homines propter nostram salutem nobis enim natus est nobis vixit pro
yet in your sins un-justified persons you lie open to the wrath of that God whose Law you have violated can make no good claim of life for the Law is not done its condition of life is not performed and which is very dreadful if the Laws righteousness be not fulfilled in you the Laws curse will most certainly be inflicted upon you God will have a perfect righteousness and obedience some where or he will not justifie and save if therefore the perfect righteousness and obedience of Christ be not imputed to you what will you do what will become of you wo to that man who when he shall come at the great day to stand before God's Tribunal shall not be judg'd in and through Christ a fulfiller of the Law that shall then be found without the garment of Christ's imputed righteousness how will the Law fall upon him for non-obedience and thereupon demand satisfaction of him in the suffering of eternal torments Pray think of this in time so as to get an interest in Christ's fulfilling the Laws righteousness Some dispute whether his righteousness be imputed to any let your enquiries you taking the thing in thesi for granted be about something else viz. whether in particular it be imputed to you and what you may be and do that it may be imputed to you For your direction and help in both of these enquiries look to three things Vnion with Christ Faith the Spiritual conversation these are the evidences of the priviledge and also especially the two former the grounds and means of obtaining it The us of whom the Apostle speaks in whom the Laws righteousness is fulfilled are 1. Such who are in Christ 1. Cor. 1.30 2. Such who believe Rom. 3.22 Rom. 4.24 Phil. 3.9 3. Such who live the Spiritual Life for so they are here characteriz'd that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit So that would you either know whether Christ obey'd the Law for you and that that his obedience be imputed to you or would you take some course in order to the securing of this grace to your selves these are the things which your eye must be upon that you be in Christ that you be true believers that you be holy and spiritual in your walking God never intended that his Sons Obedience should be imputed to any but only to such as these 2. You who pretend to the having an interest in this glorious priviledge I would with the greatest earnestness exhort you to go as far in your own persons as is possible in the fulfilling of the Laws righteousness And this I would with the more vehemency press upon you because of those ugly aspersions and calumnies which some do cast upon this precious Truth and the worthy Assertors of it How do * Ita nunc juxta hujus bestiae Sanctimoniam he means Beza renatus in Christo credens in eum Christi que justitiam forti fide apprehendens fornicetur inebrietur omni spurcitiâ contaminetur peccatum pro nihilo habetur utcunque supersint reliquiae ejus in nobis Staplet Antidot p. 630. Haec 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sunt daemonum praestigiae quibus Legem Dei eludere c. Vid. Con●●●n in loc Qu. 1. Papists let fly whole volleys of bitter invectives against Protestants because they assert the imputation of Christs Obedience and so expound these Words And there are some Others who are high enough in their censuring and calumniating of this Doctrine as if it tended to nothing but to make men careless and loose and profane as if it opened a wide door to all licentiousness and did cut the sinews of all piety and godliness O therefore I would intreat you to be the more strict exact holy obedient in your course that you may live down all these scandals and that your conversation may be a ●isible confutation of them 'T is no new thing for the Doctrines of imputed righteousness of not resting on the Law for justification the decrying of Works for righteousness the crying up of Faith as the great condition of righteousness and life I say 't is no new thing for these evangelical Truths to be reviled by some and perverted by others Therefore as to the latter the Apostle when he was speaking of them was fain ever and anon to interpose something by way of Caution that he might obviate those misinterpretations perversions abuses which some might make of what he had said * Rom. 3.31 Do we saith he make void the Law † Gal. 2.17 is Christ the minister of sin And surely we have need to do the same as to that which I am upon O say some did Christ in our stead obey the Law is his fulfilling the Law made over to us then we have nothing to do we are under no obligation on our part to obey too is not Christ's perfect fulfilling the Law enough what can be further required of us what need we trouble our selves about any obedience or holy walking But God forbid that any of you should thus reason We are indeed too prone to such reasonings 't is very natural to us to catch at any thing that may comply with the gratifying of the flesh and with the easing of us as to the severities of an holy obediential course and hence it is that we suck poison out of the sweetest flowers turning the grace of God into wantonness But I assure you there 's nothing in Christ's Obedience and in the imputation thereof that hath any tendency or gives any encouragement or patronage to any such loose inferences for though he obey'd the Law for us yet we our selves must obey it too his obedience must not justle out ours both together upon different accounts do very well agree Indeed he having obey'd the Law we are not bound to obey it for such an end as for satisfaction and merit for righteousness and life yet in other respects and for other ends as that we may conform to the Will of God and so please him that we may in our sphere imitate our holy Saviour that we may testifie our love and gratitude to God c. so we are as much bound to keep and obey the Law as ever O 't is such an excellent Law in the commands and injunctions of it that all should delight in conforming to it as 't is the Law of works calling for perfect and personal Obedience and giving no strength thereunto so 't is burdensom but as it is puts the creature upon works and is the rule and matter of obedience so the gracious Soul will delight in it Wherefore though Christ hath fulfilled it for you yet it becomes you too to live in all obediential complyance with it and subjection to it And I say herein go as far as is possible You cannot perfectly fulfil it blessed be God that is not required of you but yet you should do as much
Gospel as well as under the Law Page 13 'T is not only No Condemnation to Believers but positive Salvation Page 16 Of the dreadfulness of Condemnation Page 25 How it may be avoided Page 32 Persons exempted from it are to be thankful and chearful Page 37 c. What the Condemning of Sin is Page 460 There may be troubles in the Conscience after Sin and yet Sin may reign Page 212 The Contrariety of the two Walkings Page 95 The Corrupt Nature set forth by Flesh Vide Flesh The Covenant of Redemption touched upon Page 298 Of the New Creature Page 65 Of the crucifying the Flesh Page 66 D. The Law of Death opened Page 152 249 Sin and Death go together especially when 't is the Law of Sin Page 250 How the Regenerate are freed from the Law of Death Page 253 c. Comfort from hence to such against the Fear of Death Page 257 In temptations to Sin 't is good to consider that 't is Sin and Death Page 254 Comfort to Believers as to Death from their Vnion with Christ Page 81 Christ's Death a strong Dissuasive from walking after the Flesh Page 128 The main Ends of Christ's Death made good against the Socinians Page 518 c. Man had not died if he had not sinned Page 250 Of the Saints Dignity from their Vnion with Christ Page 96 Of the Dominion of Sin See the Law of Sin E. The converting Spirit works efficaciously and irresistibly Page 234 Of the spiritualness of a mans Ends. Page 111 Expiation of sin by Christ's Sacrifice Page 449 That finished on Earth not done in Heaven Page 505 The Nature of this Expiation Page 510 The Extent of it Page 511 Vide Sacrifice F. God the Father's Love to be admired in his sending of Christ Page 303 Saints are to think well of God the Father as well as of God the Son Page 305 Faith the Bond in the Mystical Vnion Page 49 Faith to be repeated in fresh applications to Christ Page 553 There are but few in Christ Page 118 Flesh is in the Best Page 91 All particular Sins comprehended in Flesh Page 97 Of being in the Flesh and walking after the Flesh ibid. Flesh taken for corrupt Nature Page 99 Why that is set forth by Flesh Page 100 Flesh considered more Generally Page 99 Particularly Page 101 The Philosophical notion of Flesh and Spirit Page 105 What it is to walk after the Flesh Vide Walking What the Flesh is by which the Law is made weak Page 263 Of Christ's being sent in Flesh that opened Page 375 He did not bring his Flesh from Heaven Page 376 Of the verity of his Flesh against the antient Hereticks Page 377 379 380 That proved ibid. How he was sent in the likeness of sinful Flesh Page 406 c. And but in the likeness of sinful Flesh Page 410 c. Of the excellency of Christ's Flesh Page 417 He as sent in Flesh is to be believed on Page 424 Of Freedom from the Law of Sin Vide the Law of Sin Freedom from its Guilt and from its Power Page 150 Of Christ's Fulfilling the Law Vide Law G. The eternal Generation of Christ the Son of God proved Page 324 c. The difference between that and common Generation Page 356 Its mysteriousness Page 354 Of the excellency of the Gospel and Christian Religion Page 415 The Priviledges of Believers under the Gospel above those under the Law Page 450 Grace set forth by Spirit and the Reasons why 't is so Page 104 c. There should be in Saints a Growth in Spiritualness Page 137 Of the Spirits being a Guide Page 108 Whether Christ took our very Guilt upon him Affirmed Page 490 H. Heaven made credible upon Christ's Incarnation Page 447 Holiness press'd from Vnion with Christ Page 75 From being made free from the Law of Sin Page 225 From the Incarnation of Christ Page 437 The Holiness and sinlesness of Christ's Humane Nature Page 411 The necessity thereof Page 414 The difference of the Humane Nature as in Christ and as in us Page 386 Of the advancement of the Humane Nature by Christ's assuming it Page 451 Christ to be highly Honoured 'T is shewn wherein Page 363 Humiliation the way to Consolation Page 5 6 Saints to be humbled that they were so long under the Law of sin and that sin still hath such a power in them Page 217 c. As also that there should be that Flesh in them by which God 's own Law is made weak Page 271 Humility press'd from Christ's taking our Nature Page 437 Of the HypostaticalVnion Vide Vnion I. About the Idem and the Tantundem With respect to Christ's Sufferings Page 489 To his Active Obedience Page 608 c. Of the Imputation of Christ's Active Obedience Vide Obedience How the imputation thereof is to be stated Vide ibid. The Incarnation of Christ largely discoursed of Page 372 c. His Mission and his Incarnation two distinct things Page 376 The Latter not impossible not incredible Page 386 The Grounds laid down why Christ was Incarnate Page 387 c. Prophesies and Types of it ibid. Seven Propositions insisted upon for the explication of it Page 393 c. What benefit had they by Christ who lived before his Incarnation Page 397 Why he was Incarnate just at that time when he was incarnate Page 398 A firm Assent is to be given to the Verity of Christ's Incarnation as also a firm Adherence to him as incarnate Page 420 c. Many other Duties urged from this Incarnation Page 426 c. As also the Comfort of it to Believers is set forth in several Particulars Page 441 c. Whether if Man had not sinned Christ had been incarnate Neg. Page 406 Of Inclinations Good or Evil and their difference in the Godly and Others Page 110 The severity of God's Justice in Christ's being a Sacrifice Page 543 The Law unable to Justifie Page 266 Whether there be two distinct integral parts of Justification Page 602 In the Justifying of Sinners God proceeds upon the fulfilling of the Laws righteousness Page 610 As to Christ we are justified by Works as to our selves by Faith Page 610 L. Law of Sin what it is Page 151 What the Law of the Spirit is Page 159 All Vnregenerate persons under the Law of Sin Page 169 c. How Sin is a Law opened in the proper improper notion of a Law Page 172 c. Wherein Sin acts as a Law Page 177 How it may be known when it is the Law of sin That particularly opened Page 179 c. All the Regenerate are freed from the Law of Sin Page 154 203 c. They are freed from Sin only as 't is a Law Page 149 203 206 Their freedom from the Law of Sin proved from Scripture and Argument Page 207 c. How f●r men may go and yet not be freed from the Law of Sin Page 210 A serious Exhortation to all to get free from it
What this sending of Christ was not Page 289 What it was opened in Five things Page 290 How this was consistent with his equality with his Father explained Page 294 The Grounds of Christ's being sent Page 296 The Love of Father and Son to be adored upon this Page 302 c. All are to go when they are sent not before Page 307 None to rest in the external sending of Christ Page 309 Christ as sent to be believed on Page 310 Comforts from Christ's being sent Page 313 None free from Sin here Page 8 Sin a vile and base thing Page 190 The Tyranny of it Page 192 Its advantages against us Page 232 It hath not barely a Being but too great a power even in the Regenerate Page 203 The special and most prevailing Sin must be most resisted Page 222 Christ's Death the highest Demonstration of the Evil of Sin Page 541 What the Condemning of Sin is Page 460 Of the breaking of the Heart for and from Sin upon Christ's being a Sacrifice Page 546 SOCINIANS dealt with and these great Truths made good against them 1. That Christ did praeexist before he was born of the Virgin Page 284 2. That Christ was the Son of God not in respect of the things which they alledge Seven of which are instanc'd in and largely refuted but in respect of his eternal Generation Page 323 c. 3. That he who was antecedently the Son of God was in time made the Son of Man or was incarnate Page 393 c. 4. That Christ was a true and proper Expiatory Sacrifice and the true notion of his Expiation is made good gainst them Page 481 c. 5. That he made Satisfaction to the Justice of God Page 515 6. The principal Ends of Christ's Death are asserted and their Ends thereof proved not to be the principal Page 517 c. 7. That Christ is truly and Essentially God Page 349 Sons of God by Creation by Grace by Nature Page 321 Christ God's Son Page 319 Scripture attestations of it Page 319 c. Christ God's own Son Page 321 That opened Comparatively and Absolutely ibid. His b●ing the Natural Son of God Co-equal Co-essential Co-eternal with the Father begotten of him by eternal Generation is explained proved and largely vindicated against Opposers Page 323 c. He is not God's own Son partly in respect of eternal Generation and partly in respect of his miraculous Conception c. Page 345 c. Of the different communications of the Divine Essence from the Father to the Son and to the Spirit Page 348 Christ's Godhead inferr'd from his Sonship Page 349 How Christ's Sonship is to be studyed Page 354 c. All are to believe Christ to be the Son of God and to believe on him as such Page 358 How he is to be Honoured as the Son of God Page 363 What Comfort doth arise from Christ's Sonship Page 368 How the Spirit is the Spirit of Life Page 162 How 't is said to be in Christ Jesus Page 161 He is the Spirit of Life Formally Page 162 Effectively Page 163 c. What is meant by the Law of the Spirit Page 158 His making free from the Law of Sin opened Page 228 Of the Necessity Sufficiency Efficacy of the Spirits Power and Operation in that Page 230 c. The Spirit the sole Efficient therein Page 243 How he secures against the Law of Sin after Conversion Page 240 Deliverance from Sins power is to be expected from this Spirit and to be ascribed to him Page 244 c. Of the Spirits greatness and glory Page 241 He is greatly to be honoured Page 247 How the Spirit may be obtain'd Page 70 The Spirit taken Personally and Habitually Page 104 What it is to Walk after the Spirit Vide Walking Of Christ's Substituting himself in the Sinners stead Page 483 The true Nature and Ends of the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper Page 528 c. Christ sympathizes with his Members Page 80 T. The Tabernacle a Type of Christ's Body Page 389 Of the Distinction of the Persons in the Sacred Trinity Page ●87 Great relief under Troubles of Co●●ence from Christ's Incarnation Page 513 U. How Sin reigns in the Understanding Page 181 How the Spirit works on the Understanding in order to freeing from the Law of Sin Page 236 Of the Union Of Three Persons in one Nature Of two Natures in one Person Of Persons where yet both Natures and Persons are distinct Page 44 Of the Hypostatical Union Page 399 Of the Sublimeness and Mysteriousness of it Page 400 Opened in Four things Page 401 c. The Mystical Union opened Page 42 c. That also is a great Mystery Page 43 Of the threefold Union 'twixt Christ and Believers Mystical Page 48 Legal Page 48 Moral Page 48 The Bonds of the former the Spirit and Faith Page 49 Several Scripture-Resemblances by which 't is set forth Page 52 c. Six Properties of it Page 54 c. How Persons may know whether they be under it Page 60 Of Natural and Spiritual Union with Christ ibid. Of External or Common and Internal or Special Union Page 61 Sinners exhorted to labour after this Union Page 68 How it may be attained Page 70 Without Union no Communion Page 69 Several Duties urged upon such who are united to Christ Page 72 c. Several Comforts directed to such Page 78 c. The Mystical Union made credible by Christ's Incarnation Page 444 W. Of Walking not after the Flesh but after the Spirit Page 88 Why the Apostle pitches upon this Evidence Page 90 Spiritual Walking not the Cause of the Priviledge but the Property of the Person to whom it belongs Page 93 The contrariety of the Two Walkings Page 95 Men must be in Christ before they can live the Spiritual Life Page 96 There alwayes was and alwayes will be different Walkers ibid. What it is to Walk after the Flesh opened Page 97 103 c. Walking in the Flesh taken in a good sense Page 98 Of the more gross and the more close Walking after the Flesh Page 120 Men dehorted from Fleshly Walking Page 121 c. The Dehortation enforced with diverse Motives Page 122 c. Directions in order to it page 129 c. What it is to Walk after the Spirit Page 104 106 Opened by the Spiritualness of the Principle Page 106 c. Guide Page 106 c. Affections Page 106 c. Propensions Page 106 c. Ends Page 106 c. All in Christ thus Walk Proved Page 112 This Walking Excellent Page 132 c. Pleasant Page 132 c. Saving Page 132 c. Spiritual Walkers are To be very thankful Page 136 To be yet more Spiritual Page 137 To take the Comfort of it Some Discouragements about it removed Page 139 The Will is the principal Seat of Sins Power Page 181 How the Spirit works upon the Will efficaciously yet without the infringing of its Liberty Page 238 Reader In the drawing up of this Index many things occasionally spoken unto have slipped me but thou wilt find them under those main Heads which I chiefly insist upon to each of which thou art here directed FINIS