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

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of the forgivenesse of sinnes in the killing of the sacrifice in putting their sinnes upon the head of the Goat So also the Law was written in their hearts else David could not have said Thy law is within my heart but not so fully as in the new manifestation of the Covenant under the Gospel In Joh. 7.39 it is said The Spirit was not yet given because Jesus was not yet glorified not but that the Spirit was then given in a measure but not so abundantly as after his ascension So here c. But in Gal. 4.22.24 25. the Covenant at Sinai is expresly distinguished Object 6 from the new covenant or testament the covenant at Sinai being signified by Hagar which brings forth children to bondage who was cast out with her sonne and ha● no inheritance with Isaac the sonne of the free woman therefore the covenant at Sinai must needs be a covenant of workes It is not to be denied Answ but that the Law which is the summe of the covenant of workes was then published at Sinai but wee must withall remember what was before expressed concerning the two-fold consideration of the Law First Absolute in it selfe as it was given to Ad●m Secondly Respective depending upon the promise of grace in which respect it was given to that people of Israel Now the Apostle speaks of the Law and covenant of works both wayes First he speak●s of it in the relative consideration as it had respect to that people and to the covenant of grace before made with them in Abraham and of this consideration of it he speakes from Chapter 3.17 to Chapter 4.21 and then from the beginning of ver 21. of the fourth Chapter to the end of the Chapter there he begins to intreat of the Law as simply considered in it selfe And indeed if wee so consider it simply by it selfe it doth containe nothing but a covenant of workes and begets children to bondage which shall have no inheritance with the children of promise which lay hold of the new Covenant but yet the former truth still holds firme and unshaken namely that it was not a Covenant of workes as it had respect to that people that is it was not given to them with intent that they should looke to be justified and to live thereby but onely to lead them to Christ and to restraine transgression as the Apostle fully shewes in the third Chapter This two-fold consideration of the Law here spoken of is evident to any that doth with attention read those two Chapters and attends to the scope of them for that which the Apostle speakes concerning the Law and the Jewes being under the Law Chap. 4.1 2 3. c. cannot be meant of those that are under it as under a Covenant of workes but of those that were children of God by grace though yet under age c. Againe that which he speakes of the Law in Chap. 4.29 30. with the verses before from ver 21. to the end cannot be applyed otherwise then to the children of the Law and Covenant of workes strictly and properly so called And therefore this two-fold consideration of the Law is grounded upon the Text it selfe And the Apostle ariseth from one of these unto the other First speaking of the Law as it had reference to that people shewing for what end it was given unto them which he handles Chapter 3.17 to Chap. 4.21 and then falls to an absolute consideration of it in it selfe shewing the danger of being under the Law being so considered simply as a covenant of workes namely that it casts us out of the inheritance which is given onely to the children of promise the Covenant then which God made with Israel at Sinai was a covenant of grace God renewing with them the former covenant made before with them in Abraham but withall did then shew them the covenant of workes what it was thereby to force them to cleave unto the former promise of grace The summe is that though the Law which containes the covenant of workes was delivered to the Israelites at Mount Sinai by a Mediator Moses by reason of that reference it had in them to the covenant of grace yet was it not so given by a Mediator unto Adam to whom it was given as a meere covenant of workes by which he should live And in this appeares the difference between the one Covenant and the other the covenant of workes is without a Mediator there being no breach between God and man when the covenant of workes was given But the covenant of grace is by a Mediator to make up the breach which sin hath made between God and us so as now in this estate of sin there is no peace with God no blessing from God but it must be obtained by the Mediator between God and man Jesus Christ Hence is that Ephes 2.13.16.18 where the Apostle shewes how both Jewes and Gentiles are made neere to God by Christ Wee were aliens and strangers but now are made Citizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God and have entrance and accesse to the Father by Christ Neither is there any other blessing to be looked for but as it comes to us through the hand of the Mediator he it is that hath received gifts for men Psal 68.18 and he gives gifts to men Eph. 4.8 by him wee have remission of sinnes Eph. 1.7 by him wee receive the Spirit of life and grace Joh. 1.16 By him the Mediator wee enter and are brought into covenant with God by him we are kept in covenant with him by him wee receive all the blessings of the Covenant and without a Mediator there is no peace no blessing to be looked for All the promises of the Covenant are made by him and fulfilled 2 Cor. 1.20 In him they are yea and Amen though every promise doe not by name mention Christ yet it hath respect unto Christ and without Christ wee can receive nothing that comes in the nature of a blessing or that comes from grace Grace comes onely by Jesus Christ Joh. 1.17 This serves to let us see the misery of all such as are under the Vse 1 Law under the Covenant of workes and not under grace let them consider they must come and stand before God the Judge of all who shall judge every man according to his workes and then shall all their sinnes be set in order before them and laid unto their charge and the Law passe sentence of death upon them and their own Consciences terrifie them and which is the upshot of their misery there shall be none to plead for them not one in heaven and earth to stand betwixt Gods wrath and them to turne it away from them but they shall be left unto themselves to dye and perish in their sinnes The Law hath no Mediator Christ is no Mediator to such as are under the Law he hath not a word to speake for them he tells such Joh. 17.19 how little they must
I will forgive let every soule say within it selfe Surely then I will try I will seeke I will sue for mercy that I may be forgiven But what should I doe that I may be forgiven Quest 1. Enter into thine owne heart Answ and search out all the sinnes of heart and life which thou art privie unto Lament 3.40 Lam. 3.40 This is the Lords owne direction Jer. 3.12 13. Jer. 3.12 13. when the Lord first promised that he would shew himselfe mercifull and not let his wrath fall upon them yet presently addes But know thou thine iniquitie for thou hast fallen by rebellion c. 2. When thou hast found out thy sin goe then before the Lord and confesse and judge thy selfe before him as Ezra 9.6 Ezra 9.6 Confesse thy selfe worthy to be destroyed Doe as the Prodigall did Luke 15. Luk. 15. I am no more worthy to be counted thine 3. Present before the Lord the sacrifice of the Lord Jesus bring no satisfaction of thine owne make no mention of thine own righteousnesse or good deservings but fly onely to the bloudy sufferings and sacrifice of Christ to find acceptance reconciliation through him without that bloud there is no forgivenesse Heb. 9. Heb. 9. 4. Come not before God with an heart purposing still to continue in thy sinne but together with prayer for pardon joyne prayer for a spirit of grace and holinesse to make thee a new heart and a new spirit that sin may live in thee no more be willing to bind thy selfe by Covenant to the Lord to glorifie that grace shewed on thee if he will please to be gracious towards thee in taking away this sin Hos 14.3 with 9. Hos 14.3 with 9. Thus come before the Lord and then as men that have any great legacy left them by the will of another they will intreat for it they will plead the Testament of the Testatour and if that will not prevaile they will bring it into the Court of Justice and there sue for it So let us doe beg intreat require the performance of this legacy of the new Testament which grace hath bequeathed unto us and if this obtaine not then bring our cause into the Covenant of grace and there sue and plead before the throne of grace There bring out the words of the Testament and say Lord here is thine owne Covenant and promise hold the Lord fast to his promise which he hath made and plead with him and say Lord why are thy mercies restrained from me where is thy faithfulnesse why dost not thou pardon mine iniquitie Though I be worthy to perish yet remember thy Covenant make good thy promise in which thou hast caused thy servant to trust Such importunitie the Lord will not take ill he delights thus to be overcome by the pleas of his people Doe thus and he that hath promised will also fulfill and will take away all thine iniquitie and receive thee graciously Hos 14.3 Vse 5 For singular comfort to all the people of God who doe in any faithfulnesse and truth of heart endeavour to walke according to the Covenant they have made with him To all such this word of Consolation doth belong that their iniquitie is pardoned their sin is forgiven It was a word of comfort Christ spake to the palsie man Mat. 9.2 Mat. 9.2 Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee So Isai 40 1 2. Isai 40.1 2. And thence was that speech of Christ to Mary in Luke 7.48.50 Thy sinnes are forgiven thee goe in peace There is peace indeed when Christ promiseth sin to be forgiven Now so it is to all the covenanted people of God their sin is forgiven here is their comfort See Psal 103.17 18. Psal 103.17 18. If wee keepe his Covenant his loving kindnesse and mercy is ours to forgive us our sinnes Shall man saith Eliphaz be more just then God shall man be more pure then his maker Job 4.17 Job 4.17 So may we say in this case Shall man be more faithfull then God more mindfull of his Covenant and promise then his Maker No God is the faithfull God keeping Covenant and mercy with those that feare him If we then which are so apt to breake our Covenant with God and men if wee be carefull to keepe Covenant with him how much more will God performe this promise of his Covenant towards us to pardon our sinnes If wee be not unfaithfull towards him he cannot be unfaithfull towards us Nay though we were in part unfaithfull yet cannot he deny himselfe 2 Tim. 2.13 2 Tim. 2.13 Quest But how may I know that my sinnes are forgiven me Answ 1. A plainer evidence I cannot give then this before named scil a carefull conscionable and constant endeavour to walke in Covenant with God Psal 103.17 18. Psal 103.17 18. But I have many failings in the keeping of my Covenant Object Yet so long as you doe not renounce your Covenant Answ and breake the bond till you doe agree to the loosing of the knot in which you have bound your selfe chusing to turne back after your former liberties the substance of the Covenant is not yet broken though some article of the Covenant may be violated There be some trespasses against some particular clauses in Covenants which though they be violated yet the whole Covenant is not forfeited 2. An affectionate and cordiall love to the Lord Jesus who hath washed us from our sinnes in his bloud is a sure signe that our sins are forgiven us Luk. 7.47 when wee so thinke of Christ as that nothing is too much for him nothing enough all we doe or can doe is too little for him and as nothing to that which our soule desireth this love never goes alone but is accompanied with this blessing of forgivenesse And sure thus it is with those that feele in any measure the efficacy of Christs bloud easing their consciences from the guilt of sin They could be content to wash Christs feet not with teares onely but with their hearts bloud and to dye for love of him who hath loved them and given himselfe for them to save them from their sinne 3. The mortification and dying of sinne in our hearts is a signe that our sinnes are forgiven us When Christ takes away Jacobs sinnes he also turnes away ungodlinesse from Jacob Rom. 11.26 27. Rom. 11.26 27. If sin live in us the guilt of it remaines still upon us I meane if it live in us in full strength 4. If we have a tender heart to mourne over Christ whom wee have pierced Time was when we could tread under feet that precious bloud by which we are sanctified But now it melts the heart to thinke that that bloud which wee have so despised should yet be sprinkled upon us to wash us from our sinne This kindnesse of Christ towards us makes our hearts to mourne over him Zach. 12.10 Zach. 12.10 They shall mourne over
as in our first creation we were then created holy and righteous after the Image of God so now we are renewed unto the same image again The Lord doth with us as the Potter doth with his vessell when the first fashioning of it is broken he returns and makes it another vessell as seems good in his eyes Jer. 18.3 By this work of renovation and changing our natures there is a new disposition wrought in us clean contrary to that which was before Whereas before the wisdome of the flesh and our corrupt will was quite contrary and even enmity against the Law of God and would by no meanes bee brought into subjection Rom. 8.7 Rom. 8.7 yet now we are made to love the Law and delight in the Commandements of it in our inward man Rom. 7. Rom. 7. The law is not now any more a law without us to urge and enforce us but it is a law within us it is written not in Tables of stone but in the heart according to that promise Jer. 31. Jeremy 31. I will write my lawes in your heart● and in your inward parts will I put them By which writing there is stamped upon the heart an inward disposition and inclination of mind and will to doe the things which the law doth command The law being there within us it is unto us as our own bowels loving it and making pretious account of it This blessing the Lord promiseth in his covenant as we may see in Ezek. 36.25 26 27. Ezek. 36.25 26 27. I will powre clean water upon you and yee shall be clean yea from all your filthinesse will I cleanse you A new heart also will I give unto you a new spirit will I put within you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and give you a heart of flesh and I will put my spirit withi● you c. And hence I think it is that the Lord calls himselfe Psalm 71.21 The holy One of Israel not onely because he is holy in himselfe and will be so acknowledged by them but because he sanctifies his Israel unto himselfe making them holy according to that Levit. 20.8 Levit. 20.8 I am the Lord which sanctifieth you And in Isai 43.15 Isaiah 43.15 I am the Lord your holy One. And in Habbak 1.12 Habbak 1.12 the Prophet calls the Lord his holy One. Art not thou of old O Lord my God my holy One He is not onely our mercifull God to pardon us but our holy one to sanctifie us And for the same cause we read of the promise of the Spirit Gal. 3.14 Gal. 3.14 Because God hath promised to give his Spirit unto those that hee takes to bee a people to himselfe This bl●ssing of sanctification the Lord will perform unto all his people making them an holy people unto himselfe First because hee hath for this end chosen them that they might be holy Eph. 1. Ephes 1. and therefore he will bring them to that estate of holinesse to which hee hath chosen them What he hath chosen us to he will bring us to Gods purposes are not in vain hee will perform to us all the good hee hath intended towards us Secondly Christ hath purchased the spirit of grace for us Joh. 17.19 John 17.19 For their sakes saith Christ sanctifie I my selfe offering up himselfe as a consecrate offering unto God that they may bee sanctified by the truth It was for our sanctification that he offered up himself Thirdly hee hath filled himselfe with all grace for that same end that we might bee filled by that abundance of grace which is in him Psal 68.18 Psalm 68.18 he received gifts for men not to keep them to himselfe alone but to communicate unto us that out of his fulnesse wee might all receive grace for grace John 1.16 And therefore Christ is said to bee not onely righteousnesse unto us but sanctification because he hath filled himselfe to the end that he might also fill us with his own sanctity and holinesse Fourthly Christ hath prayed for our sanctification John 17.17 And wee know that hee was heard alwayes no prayer of his ever returned empty but came back with a full bl●ssing Fifthly Gods covenant is to give us all things that pertain to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Pet. 1.4 Sixthly the Lord is an holy God and therefore will have those that are in covenant with him to bee an holy people Lev. 11. It would be a d●shonor to God to have his name called upon a sinfull and prophane people Ezek 36.20 Ezek. 36.20 And beside the end of the covenant betwixt him and his people is Communion God takes a people into covenant with him that he might communicate himselfe unto them that hee might possesse them and they enjoy him but God cannot communicate himselfe in the sweetnesse and familiarity of his love unto unsanctified ones And therefore he will have his covenanted people to be holy that he may communicate himself unto them Seventhly when the Lord gives himself unto a people to be a God unto them he gives himselfe wholly unto them keeping back nothing from them which might make them an happy and blessed people And therefore as he doth communicate himselfe to them in his mercy and grace to pardon their sin so he doth also in his purity and holinesse to sanctifie them and to cleanse them from their sin Eighthly God will be glorified in all his people whom he takes neer unto himselfe Levit. 10.3 Levit. 10.3 and in Isai 43.21 Isaiah 43.21 This people have I formed for my selfe they shall shew forth my praise But God could have no glory from us in this world if he should not sanctifie us Herein is he glorified when wee bring forth much good fruit John 15. John 15. and shine forth in good works Matth 5. Matth. 5. and shew forth the vertues of him that hath called us c. 1 Pet. 2. In these things God is glorified by us but this glory wee can never bring to God till he have sent down his Spirit of glory and grace upon us Now lest this blessing of sanctification should seem too little to be reckoned among the great blessings of the covenant let us therfore consider how great a priviledge this is to be renewed sanctified by the grace of Gods holy Spirit This is intended to us as a blessing in Isai 44.1 2 3. Isa 44.1 2 3 The Lord maketh many sweet promises to his Israel and in verse 3. I will saith the Lord powre my Spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thy buds When God powres on any his Spirit then hee would have us to know that he powres on them a rich blessing My Spirit and my Blessing saith God As it is a mans curse to bee left under the power dominion of sin so contrà it is a blessing to be set free from sin
stony heart from us and give us an heart of flesh soft and pliable to his will Fourthly As we could not renew sanctifie our selves so neither could any other help us and restore us againe to the holines we had lost In Ezek. 16.5 Ezek. 16.5 the Lord tells his people there how little helpe they had from any other when they lay in their misery there was no eye that pitied them to doe any thing to them or to have compassion on them The Priest and the Levite they come and look on but they passe by on the other side there is nothing done to heale the wound which Satan by sin had given to our soules but they are let alone to putrifie and corrupt the whole man more and more so as from the crowne of the head to the sole of the foot there is nothing but sores and swelling and wounds full of corruption Isai 1. But when the Lord saw that there was none to helpe then he himselfe like the good Samaritan comes washeth our wounds powring in wine and oyle to cleanse and to heale us Such was our pollution so deeply set that all the water of the Sea all the bloud of bulls and goats could not cleanse us yea though we should wash in Nitre and take us much sope yet our iniquity would still stand undone away before the face of God Jer. 2.22 Onely that spirit of life that spirit of holines that spirit of power which is in Christ Jesus that spirit being shed down upon us that cleanseth us washeth us sanctifies us without this all helps under heaven had been in vaine without this spirit neither Word Sacrament Commandements promises or being trained up in the Communion of the Church and Christian families neither any nor all these could availe to renew us to the grace from which we are fallen 1 Cor. 6.11 1 Cor. 6.11 Fiftly Let me adde this one thing more If we should look at God himselfe onely as just and not as gracious we could never have hoped to have obtained this blessing from him Justice could have said no other unto us then as Ezek. 20.39 Seeing you would not obey me goe therefore serve every man his Idoll serve your sin When we had turned the glory of God into a lye and had worshipped the creature above the Creator who is blessed for ever Justice would then have given us up unto vile affections and to our owne hearts lusts and to a reprobate mind to doe the things that are not convenient so receiving in our selves such a recompence of our errour as was meet Rom. 1. Rom. 1. This would have been the reward of Justice upon us for our sin But here Grace comes in and powres downe upon us a spirit of grace and of sanctification Zach. 12.10 Zach. 12.10 to wash us from our uncleannes that we might be an holy people unto God And hence it is that in 1 Pet. 5.10 when the Apostle prayes for the perfecting of our sanctification in us he looks at God as a God of all Grace The God of all Grace saith he which hath called us unto his eternall glory by Jesus Christ confirme strengthen and stablish you c. As thereby shewing from what fountain the benefit of sanctification comes namely from Grace from the God of all grace He is a God of all grace towards us in sanctifying of us This may helpe to settle us and confirme us in the truth namely Vse 1 that seeing Sanctification is a blessing of the Covenant of grace even as forgivenes is therefore it is a warrantable and safe way for a man by and from his sanctification to take an evidence of his justification and of his estate in Grace before God Forgivenes of sinnes and sanctification are both of them blessings of the same Covenant As is the one so is the other the one is of grace so is the other of grace also Here therefore to take an evidence of our justification standing in the forgivenes of our sinnes from our sanctification is not a turning aside from the Covenant of grace to a Covenant of workes but it is to prove one benefit of the Covenant of Grace by another benefit of the same Covenant This argument is unanswerable I reason thus If justification and sanctification be both of them b●nefits of the Coven●●t of Grace then to evidence the one by the other is no turning aside to a Covenant of works But they are both of them benefits of the Covenant of Grace Ergo. If so be the forgivenes of our sinnes were promised in the Covenant of Grace and Sanctification were a blessing of the Covenant of workes then might it well be said that to evidence one by the other were a turning aside from the Covenant of grace to that other of workes But when they are both promised both communicated to us by the same Covenant there is no colour to charge this way of evidencing our estate with turning aside to another Covenant Object But may not a man that is under the Covenant of workes by giving himselfe to holy duties and actions and exercising himselfe in them come to attaine an habite of holines and be truly sanctified Answ Some have not doubted to affirme as much but falsely and the falsity of this opinion may be made evident by these Considerations following 1. This opinion imports thus much That one under the covenant of workes may performe acts that are holy which is false he may indeed doe such things as are materially holy as being commanded of God whose word and Covenant doth sanctifie them make the things holy in themselves but they are not formally holy but coming from their impure hearts thereby they are polluted and defiled Tit. 1. And therefore can have no such power to worke sanctitie in the subject whence they come 2. If true sanctification may be in one that is under the Covenant of workes then must we of necessity change the articles or promises of the Covenant of Grace make the promise of sanctification no part of it we must blot out those promises of writing the law in our hearts and putting a new spirit within us and all other promises of the like nature must be rased out of the covenant of grace if one under the Covenant of workes may attaine to this sanctification by his owne workes 3. This opinion is directly crosse and contrary to the Apostle in Gal. 3.2 where he tells us that we receive the spirit of Sanctification not by the workes of the law but by hearing of faith preached It is the doctrine of grace not of workes which makes us partakers of this spirit And hence it is that in 2 Cor. 3.6 he tells us that it is the new Testament which is the ministration of the Spirit by which the Spirit is ministred and conveyed uto us The law or the workes of the law doe not 4. Our being sanctified and our being Saints is
on earth yet we shall see that there is help in heaven though none in our selves yet there is in God and in his faithfull Covenant Vse 5. To stirre up those that doe yet finde themselves destitute of all Grace not able to discern the least spark of goodnesse in themselves let them notwithstanding consider what God hath promised in his Covenant He hath therein promised a new heart a new spirit to create us anew in Christ Jesus He hath promised to poure out waters upon the dry ground Esay 44.3 where there is no sap no moisture no goodnesse but their moisture is turned into the drought of Sommer yet upon such dry grounds on such dry trees the waters of the Spirit shall be poured out and they shall be made to bring forth fruit The wilde forrest of Lebanon shall become as Carmell the Desart a fruitfill Field goe therefore thou poore lost creature thou sinfull soule who never yet to this day hadst one drop of Grace wrought in thy heart goe thou to the Throne of Grace lament thy sinfull and wicked heart before God begge this mercy of him say unto him Lord thou hast promised to give thy Spirit unto such as aske him of thee Now Lord give it unto me a poore sinfull creature make me even me also a partaker of this bless●ng Object But here perhaps you will say these promises are made only unto those that are in Covenant with God but alas thou art a stranger and an alien and hast ever so been unto this day thou hast no part in these promises Answ They belong to all that either are in Covenant with God or ever shall be though they be not as yet fulfilled in thee yet they may be intended unto thee these promises may be thine in respect of Gods purpose of grace and intention though not as yet in respect of actuall performance and execution To encourage all to seek after this blessing Consider with your selves three things 1. The extent of these promises I will poure out my Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 Whosoever is thirsty come and drink of the waters of life freely yea turne you saith Christ to scornfull sinners at my correction and then behold I will poure out my Spirit upon you And in Ezek. 36. compare verse 20. with 25 26. There you may see that those upon whom he promiseth to poure his Spirit they were such as had polluted Gods name among the Heathen and made it to be blasphemed and yet even to those the Lord promiseth that when the time of Grace was come for mercy to manifest it selfe in them upon them hee would poure out his Spirit and cleanse them from all their uncleannesse 2. Consider the freenesse of these promises come and buy without money or money-worth Isai 55.2 drink of the waters of life freely Apoc. 22.17 3. Consider Christ forwardnesse and readinesse to give to every one that askes hadst thou but asked saith Christ to the woman in Ioh. 4.20 I would have given thee the water of life Mark the place and occasion of Christs words Christ being then weary and thirsty by reason of his journey he askes of the woman a cup of water to drink no great matter to give bring but a cup of water and being by the well side where was water enough and ready at hand yet she gives it not but stands wondering that he being a Iew should aske water of her that was a Samaritane well saith Christ thou denyest me a cup of cold water to drink being weary and thirsty but hadst thou asked of me I would have given thee the water of life Nay and did give it unto her though shee denyed him a cup of water out of the well yet Christ gave her the water of life What would the Lord Iesus have us to take notice of in this his speech unto her and her dealing towards him but that he is more forward to give that water of life his holy Spirit to a poore sinner then we are to give a cup of common water to a thirsty soule O blessed redeemer who would not come unto thee Goe therefore thou that hast denyed the least mercy and kindnesse to Christ in any of his members though thou hast thought a cup of water too much for them yet seek grace from him Aske his Spirit intreat him to make thy heart new within thee doe but aske and seek and he will doe more then thou canst hope or think plead the promise of his Covenant and wait in hope Thus much for the third benefit 4. The fourth benefit which God promiseth unto his in his Covenant is our preservation in the state of Grace to which we are called This is a part of his Covenant with us that he once taking us to be a people unto him in Christ he will never forsake us any more but keep us in that estate for ever And by this promise the Lord takes away that last great scruple which the soule is apt to make in this manner although may one think the Lord hath shewed mercy unto me thus farre that he hath given me hope of the forgivenesse of my sinnes past and hath changed my heart in some measure so as it is my desire to do his will yet for all this I finde still such strong opposition against mee by enemies within and without so many corruptions within and temptations from without that I shall never be able to hold out unto the end but as David said I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul so thinks the soule here in mids of many pursuits by the enemy I shall one day perish by the hand of Sathan I shall not be able to withstand him Now to this feare of our heart the Lord answers by this promise and benefit which he hath Covenanted to make good unto us he undertakes to keep us in the same estate of Grace to which he hath brought us he tells us no yee shall never perish feare it not he which hath begun the work will perfect it in us and for us And as God said unto Iacob in Gen. 28.15 I am with thee I will keep thee saith the Lord I will not forsake thee till I have performed unto thee all that I have promised thee So he saith unto us I will keep you till I have perfected towards you all the good pleasure of my goodnesse 2 Thes 1.11 I will keep you in my own hand I will guide you by my councell and afterward will bring you to glory Psal 73. This blessing we have promised to us in Ier. 32.39.40 They shall fear me for ever and I will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I wil never turn away from them to doe them good but I will put my feare into their hearts that they shall not depart from me and in Isai 54.8 With everlasting mercy have I had compassion on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer For this is unto me as the waters
Pet. 2.20 then their latter end is worse then their beginning Here is another way to make voyd the grace of God to our selves 3. When we turne the grace of God into lasciviousnesse as Jude third verse when men presume upon grace they sin presumptuously and thinke that Grace shall beare all save all and though they goe on presumptuously in an head-strong way yet Grace shall pardon all This Paul meets withall Rom. 6.1 Rom. 6.1 Shall we fin that grace may abound c. Men are ready to abuse the precious Grace of God we will sinne and grace shall abound This turning of grace into wantonnesse frustrates the Covenant of grace unto our selves Jude 3.4 verses Let us therefore take heed that we sin not against grace I would to God that none of these things were found in the Generation of Jacob among our Churches sinnes against Grace are the most dangerous sinnes therefore beware Differ 12 The Covenant of workes was made with man in the state of Innocency before his fall but the covenant of grace was made afterwards when he had fallen for before the fall there was no impossitie but man was able to have fulfilled the Law and therefore God might justly require such obedience of him then man stood in no need of a Covenant of grace he might have had life by the Covenant of workes but after the fall then he became impotent unable to fulfill the Law which God had given him and then without a new Covenant of grace he could not live and therefore now God enters into a Covenant of grace with him Object This may seeme to imply that the Covenant of workes is more ancient then the Covenant of grace which is not to be granted because the Covenant of grace was from before the world began 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 I answer that both covenants must be considered two wayes Answer First as they were in mente divina in the counsell and purpose of the Father Secondly as they are actually enacted and stricken with us Now if we speak of the former how they were in the eternall purpose of God then I say it is true that the covenant of grace was from eternity But so was the covenant of works also which appeares by these two things First both these purposes that I may so speak for our conceiving though both are but one in God I say both these I wil glorifie my self in my justice and I wil also glorifie my selfe in my grace are from eternity one as well as the other Rom. 9.22.23 Now the means of glorifying his justice is by entring with m●n into a covenant of works therefore as the end was from eternity so was the means also Secondly Christ himself when he received the promise and covenant of grace for us did withall receive a commandment and covenant of works to be fulfilled by him in our behalfe Hence he is said to bee made under the law Galat. 4. Galat. 4. he received a commandment from the Father John 12.49 John 12.49 And was sent to fulfill the righteousnesse of the Law for us Rom. 8.3 Rom. 8.3 By which means he becommeth the end of the Law Rom. 10.4 Rom. 10.4 And as he was made under the Law and did fulfil it in fulness of time wherin he was sent so he was preordained hereunto before the world was 1 Pet. 1.20 1 Pet. 1.20 So that in respect of Gods counsell and purpose there is neither prius nor posterius betwixt these covenants but they are from everlasting neither of them before nor after another But if we look at the manifestation and enacting and striking of the covenant with us the covenant of works was first in as much as the state of perfection was before the state of imperfection in which the covenant of grace was made with us Therefore for a man now to suppose an accomplishing of the covenant of works to be saved thereby Vse is in eff●ct to conceive a new creation of man or to suppose man not fallen but as perfect as Adam was in his creation before his fall and is in effect the same as to say that we have no need of a covenant of grace as then Adam had not The covenant of works is revealed by the light of Nature but Differ 13 the covenant of grace is revealed by a supernaturall light from above Natures light teaches men to look for life and righteousnesse by works and this is written in all mens hearts Rom. 2.15 Rom. 2.15 And therefore if you should ask all the men in the world severally one by one How doe you hope to be saved They would all answer By works and by doing good All men by nature have something of the law in their hearts though sin hath blotted out a great part of it but the covenant of Grace is not known but by the revelation of the Spirit Hence saith the Apostle 1 Cor. 2.6 7 8. 1 Cor. 2.6 7 8. that the Gospel is a mystery an hidden wisdome which none of the Princes of the world knew though they have the greatest helps to find out hidden things but it is brought by the Son out of the bosome of the Father John 1. John 1. Flesh and bloud doth not reveale this doctrine Matth. 16.17 Matth. 16.17 Vse Then let no man think to attain the knowledge of the covenant of grace and find out the mystery thereof by naturall understanding by any strength of wit learning The strongest parts will not reach it till it be revealed to us from heaven And if any have understood the mystery of this covenant let them learn to say as Christ doth Mat. 11.25 Father I thank thee that thou hast revealed these things unto me c. Differ 14 The covenant of works was made with all men all men being in Adams loins and he standing as a publick person in the room of all his children when God made that covenant with him but the covenant of grace is not made with all men but only with the faithfull with those that are given unto Christ by the Father John 17. John 17. And therefore by the covenant of works God is a God to one as well as to another God is not God of one people more then of another by the covenant of works for it was made equally with us all in Adam it being made with him for all his posterity And therefore seeing we are all equally the sons of Adam this covenant makes no difference betwixt man and man but all are shut up under it all bound to fulfill it and if they break it as we all doe then liable are we to the sentence of death But in the covenant of grace God is the God of one people and not of another Hence is that in Gen. 17.21 Gen. 17.21 God saith that he will establish his covenant with Isaac and not with Ishmael So it was made with
him or for him not for our selves but for him mourning that we have pierced him and grieved his Spirit by our sinnes 5. An heart willing to forgive and to doe good unto those that have done evill against us Mat. 6.14 Mat. 6.14 when wee cannot onely forbeare them but forgive them and beare a loving heart to them that have been unloving towards us This disposition of heart in us springs from an higher fountaine of grace which hath been shed downe upon us in forgiving our sinnes When the heart can reason with it selfe to suppresse revengefull desires when they are stirring in us and can argue as Mat. 18. and Eph. 4. Mat. 18. Eph. 4. the Lord is willing to forgive me my debts and ought not I also to forgive my fellow-servant that hath offended me Such a disposition of heart is a fruit and token of the forgivenesse of our sinnes Mat. 6.14 The grace that hath been shewed us in the forgivenesse of our sinnes workes an answerable disposition in us making us ready to forgive the sinnes of our brethren 6. A free and full confession of sinne when we deale openly with the Lord freely willing to open all our whole heart before the Lord discovering knowne sinnes secret sinnes the most prevailing beloved and inward corruptions willing to take the shame of all unto our selves and still to be more vile in our selves that mercy might be glorified in our forgivenesse When we can bring out the whole pack and not keepe a sin back so farre as wee know any thing by our selves but lay all open and naked before the face of God till there be no more to be found such confession hath a promise of forgivenesse 1 Joh. 1.9 1 Joh. 1.9 There may be a forced confession as was that of Saul when he was so fully convinced of his sinne that he would no longer deny it 1 Sam. 15. And of Judas who out of extremitie of horror and rage of conscience was made to confesse his wickednesse in betraying innocent bloud There may be also a formall superficiall and partiall confession when we doe in a generall fashion confesse our selves sinners which confession hath no promise of forgivenes because these confessions are ever accompanied first with a desire if possible to maintaine our own innocency secondly with a spirit of unbeliefe and misgiving heart fearing lest our own mouth should judge us and wee become witnesses against our selves Thirdly with a spirit of pride loath to confesse our selves to be so vile as we must acknowledge our selves to be if we should confesse all our sinnes against our selves But when a man is willing to search out all his sin unto the last that he may lay open all his heart and confesse all his iniquitie against himselfe before the Lord being vile in his own eyes and desiring to be more vile loathing himselfe for all his abominations of such an one that can thus come before the Lord in humble confession of his sinnes I doubt not to say unto him Goe thy way in peace thy sin is forgiven thee If God give us a heart thus humbly to confesse it is unto us a signe there is in God a heart mercifully to forgive Exhortation to all the Saints that have tasted of this rich grace Vse 6 in the forgivenes of their sinnes Let them ascribe glory unto him that hath shewed this mercy on them extolling that grace which hath forgiven them this the Lord lookes for he would have his grace glorified by us Eph. 1.6 Ephes 1.6 The Lord himselfe publisheth this as his own glory that he is a God forgiving iniquitie transgression and sin Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 And the servants of God have herein given glory unto him as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passeth by the transgression of the remnant of thine heritage We should make the praise of this grace to ring through the whole world that heaven and earth may take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed on us This grace can never be sufficiently glorified by us To teach us willingly to become servants unto this God of all Vse 7 Grace who dealeth thus mercifully with his people See Hos 14.5 Hos 14.5 When the Lord there promiseth to heale the rebellions of his people by taking away their iniquities from them marke what this workes in them ver 9. What have wee say they any more to doe with Idolls with our former sinnes we will serve them them no more we will henceforth serve thee our gracious God which promisest to heale all our backslidings His will wee be him will wee serve And thus much of the second Benefit The third Benefit of the Covenant is the renewing and sanctifying of our natures by the graces of the Spirit The Lord having first justified us by his grace in the forgivenesse of our sinnes he the● goes on to sanctifie us that we might be an holy people unto him to serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes Luk. 1. Luke 1. When he hath made us imputedly righteous he will have us inherently righteous also And by the promise of this benefit the Lord answers another scruple which his people might be subject unto We might thinke with our selves this is indeed a great benefit which the Lord hath promised hith●rto namely to forgive all my sin But though the Lord should performe all this mercy unto mee forgiving unto me all my former sins unto this day yet I have such a vile sinfull nature within mee that I shall returne and sin againe as wickedly as ever I did before and so shall bring a new guiltinesse upon my self Hereto the Lord answers No it shall not be I will renew alter and change that sinfull and wicked nature that is in you I will make your heart a new heart so as you shall be enabled to doe my will and walk in my wayes I will sanctifie you to be an holy and pretious people to my self This renovation and sanctification of our nature stands first in cleansing away our sinfull corruption and then in an infusion and filling of us with the holy graces of the Spirit As a vessell which wee intend for any honourable use first wee scoure and rinse out the filth that is in it and then we sweeten it with other things and so make it fit for service and use Satan had defiled us with his loathsome filthinesse but so many as the Lord sets apart unto himselfe to be vessels of honour in his house those hee cleanseth from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and seasoneth them with all the sweet and gracious gifts of his Spirit Hence it is that we are said to be made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Peter 1.4 and to be renewed with the ren●wing of the holy Ghost Titus 3.5 And we are said to be created new in Christ Jesus Eph. 2.10 because
a little season but for evermore Psal 16. ult Whiles we are here we enjoy life here is glory also in a degree and here are pleasures too but here they are not full there is some death mixed with our life some basenesse with our glory some sorrowes with our pleasures And though they were full which they are not yet they last but for a time But there and then they shall be full and for evermore I cannot passe by that admirable expression of the Apostle in 2 Cor. 4.17 where speaking of the blessed estate of Gods people in the life to come he calls it a farre more excellent eternall weight of glory 1. There is glory 2. A weight of glory as much as we are able to beare 3. There is an excellency in it and excellent weight of glory 4. There is one excellency added to another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a most excellent glory 5. and lastly all this eternall a most excellent eternall weight of glory here is a large expression in few words This is the hope of Gods people which they wait for And for this they have Gods faithfull word and promise his Covenant and Testament and for our assurance he hath already given us the earnest of it in our hearts even the Spirit of Grace and the Spirit of glory which by guiding of us in the wayes of Grace here leads us on day by day to come nearer to our salvation then when we first believed till at last he bring us to glory even to the full end of our faith and hope the salvation of our soules And thus much of the benefits of the Covenant The fourth Part. THE CONDITION OF THIS COVENANT IT remaines now that we come to consider the condition of the Covenant in which we must walke that the Lord may performe unto us the mercy which he hath promised us There is a way of the Covenant in which the Lord conveyes his blessings as we may see in that expression used by the Lord himselfe concerning Abraham Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham saith the Lord that he will teach his houshold c. that I may bring upon Abraham that which I have spoken unto him The Lord fully intended to doe to Abraham as he had promised but yet the Lord will have Abraham to walk so and so before him and then God will bring upon Abraham the blessing which he had promised the like we have in Ier. 11.5 6. Great are the blessings which God hath promised to those which are the faithfull seed of Abraham and therefore as we desire to enjoy the blessing promised so we must see also what he requires of us that he may performe unto us what he hath promised and this is called the stipulation or condition of the Covenant And concerning this I will shew these foure things 1. That there is a condition required 2. Why the Lord hath put a condition to the promise of life 3. What the condition is 4. Whether the putting of such a condition doth or can stand with the free Grace of the Covenant yea or no. First That there is a condition of the Covenant The Lord doth not absolutely promise life unto any he doth not say to any soule I will save you and bring you to life though you continew impenitent and unbelieving but commands and works us to repent and believe and then promises that in the way of faith and repentance he will save us He prescribes a way of life for us to walk in that so wee may obtaine the salvation which he hath promised he brings us first through the doore of faith Act. 14. And then carries us on in the way of faith till he bring us to the end of our faith the salvation of our soules There are indeed some promises which seeme so absolute as to exclude all condition on our part as that promise in Esay 43.25 For mine own sake will I put away thy transgressions c. and so Ezek. 36.22 Where there is no mention made either of faith or any other Grace in us as a condition required on our part But if any shall hence argue that the promise of life is so absolute as to exclude all respect unto faith in those to whom the promise is made and because there is no mention made of faith in such promises therefore there is no intendment of it as if it were not understood but wholly excluded I may as well argue against the merits of Christ also and exclude them by the like reason because there is no mention of them no more then of faith in those absolute promises But as there is no remission without the blood of Christ Heb. 9.22 So neither is there without faith in that blood Rom. 3.25 as God never promised to forgive us our sins without respect to Christ though Christ be not alwayes mentioned in every such promise so neither doth he promise to save without faith though it be not alwayes mentioned particularly To prove that there is a condition in the Covenant of Grace it may be made evident sundry wayes 1. From the nature of a Covenant which is an agreement between severall parties Covenanting together upon mutuall conditions required on both parties Foedus saith Rollock is promissio sub certa conditione Roll. de vocatione efficaci A man may make a promise alone without any condition But a Covenant properly binds both parties and hath a condition annexed Abraham and Abimeleck promise one to another in their Covenant made betwixt them they mutually binde themselves Gen. 20. And so it is betwixt God and Abraham Gen. 17.27 I grant that the word Covenant is sometimes used concerning such promises as are without condition as in Gen. 9.9 Where the Lord speaking of his purpose and promise never to destroy the earth any more he calls that promise his Covenant though there be no condition there annexed But the Question is not how a word may be used upon some speciall occasion but what is the proper nature of a Covenant which doth require mutuall stipulation or condition on both parties This is but one place where the word Covenant is taken for a promise without a condition more such places I know not any in Scripture and besides there was speciall reason of calling it a Covenant namely to shew the unchangeablenesse of his purpose touching the mercy promised that it is as sure as if we had tyed him thereunto by Covenant upon some condition performed by us before hand But this is not properly a Covenant where there is not a mutuall obligation and binding of the parties one to another by condition Hereto agreeth that saying of Beza in 2 Tim. 1.12 Mutua est inquit depositi obligatio inter Deum Sanctos ipsius Though on Gods part this obligation is prorsus gratuita wholly free as hee there speaks though Gods binding of himselfe to us bee free yet ours is not so to God But concerning the freenesse of the Covenant
Wildernesse was changed in respect of the manner of Administration of it because it was not confirmed by the death of the Testator but this is confirmed by death and therefore herein neither matter nor forme can be changed any more in Joh. 17.24 We have Christ there making his last Will and Testament to be executed by his Father and what his Will is we have it expressed in his own words Father I will those whom thou hast given me may be where I am c. And who those be that hee meaneth by them that are given him is plainly expressed verse 20. Even those that believe in his name Christ doth not bequeath the Legacy of his Testament unto all in generall but to such as doe believe as for the rest he bequeathes nothing unto them Joh. 17.9 Object But there be same absolute promises of the Covenant which are without any condition at all on our part as the promises of the first grac● c. in which God promiseth to his Elect as yet uncalled that he will give them a new heart and take away the stony heart from them Ezek. 11. 36. Answ 1. We must consider the Covenant not only as consummate and made up with our selves in our own persons but as it was begun and first made with us and for us in Christ in which regard it is said to bee made with us before the world began Tit. 1.2 a promise of grace being made to Christ for us and to us in him Now if we thus consider the Covenant as made with us in Christ so the first grace it selfe is conditionall as well as the last Christ receives the promises of grace for us but he receives not the least of them but upon condition that he must lay down his life for them that he may performe them unto us as we see in Esay 55.5 Where God the Father makes a promise to Christ that he shall call a Nation or People to the knowledge of himselfe which is a promise of the first grace given us in our first conversion and calling but in respect of Christ this is not absolute but conditionall as appeares in verse 4. for he must be a witnesse unto the people to testifie unto them the will of the Father which he performed in his Propheticall and Priestly Office yea he must make his soule an offering for sinne Esay 53.10 and upon this condition he must have power to call a Nation to bring them home by effectuall calling unto God and thus in respect of Christ the very first Grace is conditionall though without condition on our part 2. Consider the Covenant in respect of the end of it which it leads unto which is life and salvation in which respect it is called a Covenant of life and peace Ma●th 2.5 and if wee thus consider it it is conditionall in respect of our selves for these promises of life and peace are not made but upon condition of faith and obedience not to the unbelieving and profane Rom. 10.9.10 13. Rom. 8.13 Mat. 5.3 to 10. and thus whether we look to the first Grace as the beginning of the Covenant or to the last Grace as the end of it the one is conditionall in respect of Christ the other in respect of our selves there is a condition of both 3. The giving of the first Grace in our calling goes before our pesonall Covenant betwixt God and us by which we bind our selves unto him to take him for our God to depend upon him and to submit our selves unto his will first the Lord doth dispose us and fit us to a walking in Covenant with him by putting into us his own spirit as it is in Ezek. 36. and then he requires an actuall performance of Covenant on our part to walk according to the Grace received Look how it was in that Covenant made with Adam so it is in this Covenant of Grace in respect of the point in hand though otherwise there be wide differences betwixt them as we have seen before first God indues Adam with an habituall righteousnesse thereby enabling him for that obedience which he was to walk in and then having thus qualified him the Lord enters into a Covenant with him requiring of him to walk according to all that Law which was set before him and in that way of working righteousnesse to look for the life which was promised him so it is here in the Covenant of Grace first the Lord comes and takes away from us the heart of stone that evill heart of unbeliefe and gives us a spirit of faith and renewing Grace and then draweth the soule into a Covenant with him to walk with him in a way of faith depending upon him by faith and obeying him by faith so looking for the promise of eternall life Thus it was with Abraham first God gives unto Abraham a believing heart then he comes to him and tells him Abraham I am come to enter into a Covenant with thee and withall tells him what are the articles and conditions of the Covenant both on Gods part and on Abrahams on Gods part That he will be to Abraham and to his seed a God to blesse him and to be an alsufficient good unto him and on Abrahams part Requiring That he walk before him and be upright and keep his Covenant which was commanded him and so it is with all the Adult Children of Abraham first God gives us a spirit of Grace beginning to renew us then propounds to us the great things of his Covenant which he will bestow upon us and commands us to depend by faith upon him for the performance of them and if we thus consider of the giving of the first Grace this doth no whit crosse the condition of the Covenant but makes way for it enabling us to walk in Covenant with God that so he may bring upon us the good which he hath promised us Object But this putting of a condition to the Covenant of grace may seeme to confound it and to make it the same with the Covenant of works Answ It is not the having of a condition but the identity or samenesse of the condition which makes them the same Covenant all Covenants have a condition but all Covenants are not therefore one and the same but do differ according to the difference of the conditions which are made there being then one condition in the Covenant of works and another in the Covenant of grace they are therefore distinct Covenants though there be a condition in both Thus then we see there is a condition of the Covenant But to come to the second point before propounded why may some say doth the Lord require any condition of us and not bring us to life and glory without requiring any thing at our hand Answ 1. It is meet we should glorifie God and his grace towards us before he exalt us and bring us unto glory in this way it was that Christ himselfe went into glory according
that will have life and wring it out of the hand of justice in stead of life shall have the wages of death as his deserved and just reward See 2 Tim. 1.18 It is mercy which the best must look for at that day Vse 2. This may be a ground of incouragement to such as are or at least seem to themselves to be afar off aliens to God strangers to his Covenant let them draw neer and seek to be partakers of this grace so freely offered the blessings whereof are great of infinite value yet are they as free as great in respect of greatnes they might seem to be above hope but in respect of the freenesse of them they are under hope by this consideration the Lord encourageth his people to seek unto him for acceptance Receive us graciously Hos 14.2 and if any say but alas how can we which have forsaken our God and gone after our Idols and done such abominations be accepted by him hereto the Lord answers I will love them freely he looks for no worth in us for which he should shew grace unto us but only that we must accept that which is so freely offered It s usuall with such as most desire and long after grace to be most fearfull and doubtfull of obtaining Oh there is so much unworthinesse in them how can they hope to finde acceptance with God they can see nothing in themselves for which God should accept them and t is true but though you can see nothing in your selves yet you may see enough in God Looking downward you see unworthinesse in your selves but look upward and then behold riches of free grace in God Grace is never the further off because you can see no worthinesse in your selves nay the more you discerne your selves unworthy the more neer is the aboundance of grace to be manifested in you if ye trust unto it say not therefore you are unworthy thereby nourishing distrust in your selfe but say rather though I be unworthy yet I will commit my selfe to that free grace of God which is vouchsafed to unworthy ones nay I say more such as are not unworthy shall never taste of this mercy and grace of God it s given to none but to unworthy ones The very thought and opinion of our own worthinesse dwelling in us excludes us and cuts off from grace here is then a prop to our weak faith this puts a plea into the mouthes of all dejected souls let them look to this sweet name of grace here take hold here rest here cast anchor in this harbour we shall be safe in the midst of all stormes and as the Church in Lam. 3.8 considering the greatnesse of her affliction shee said Her hope was perished from the Lord yet considering again how her heart was humbled within her she re-assumes her hope which before was perished my soule saith she is humbled within me therefore have I hope shee hoped then even when her hope was perished so let us do when our hope is perished in respect of any goodnesse in our selves yet considering the free kindnesse and grace of God let us stir up our hopes and say as she did I have hope because the Lord is gracious freely offering grace to the unworthy were it not for this Name of grace we should never tell how to open our mouthes before the Lord If he should say unto us what can you say for your selves why I should not condemne you We must answer truly nothing Lord nothing in our selves onely thou art gracious who freely pardonest the sins of thy people I cannot desire to be accepted of thee for any thing that is in me but I commit my selfe to thy free and rich grace which is able to do for me abundantly above that I can aske or thinke And here to adde a word more concerning the absolute promises of which I have spoken something before we may by that which hath been spoken discerne the right use of those promises they are to be incouragements or attractives to draw us to rely upon free grace in such times when we are most discouraged in our selves there be severall seasons in which both kinds of promises both absolute and conditionall are of speciall use there is a time wherein the soule is apt to slumber being overtaken with a spirit of security apt to presume and to walke negligently there is a time also of dismayednesse and dejection of Spirit every thing causing feare though we walke in conscionable care before God Now when that security and carelesness prevails in us then is a time for us to look unto the conditionall promises and the qualifications expressed in them not giving rest unto our selves untill we finde them in our selves contrariwise when the soule lyes under fear pressed downe with sence of our owne vile unworthinesse then is a time to looke unto the absolute promises considering with our selves though we be poore lost wretched miserable yet the Lord hath promised for his own sake to succour us and to do us good To apply absolute promises to one of a loose carnall and sensuall spirit it is as if you should give him a cup of poison to drink but to apply the same to a poor dejected spirit sensible of its owne vilenesse here it is as new wine which glads the heart of man Every thing is beautifull in its season as Solomon speaks so are these promises in their severall seasons the absolute promises to incourage the weak and dejected the conditionall to search to waken and stirre up the secure Vse 3. To exhort us to honour this free grace of God by which we are taken into Covenant with him all that God doth towards us being done for the praise of this glorious grace of his Ephes 1.6 This is Gods end and this was Pauls practice 1 Tim. 1.13 14. ever seeking to magnifie this grace and Ephes 2.4 and Isai 63.7 where there is mention of rich mercy great love exceeding riches of grace great goodnes tender love great mercy multitude of loving kindnesses Reserve we therefore the whole glory of our salvation intire unto grace alone mixe nothing with it adde nothing to it adding and mixing debaseth it as water mixed with wine or copper with gold It was Davids expression which he used when he had received those ample promises from God for thy words sake and according to thine own heart saith David hast thou done all these great things unto thy servant 2 Sam. 27.21 so thinke we all that mercy and goodnesse which the Lord hath done for us he hath not done it for our sakes or according to our worthinesse but according to his owne heart according to the purpose of his grace towards us say therefore Not unto us O Lord not unto us but to thy Name be the praise it is enough for us that we have life the blessing the comfort let grace alone have all the glory Vse 4. To stir us up to imitate this free grace of God
stands firme betwixt him and us he mediates with the Father for us when he sees him provoked by our sin he mediates with us also by his Spirit bringing us back to God in a way of repentance so renewing our Covenant towards him and helping us to take new hold of his Covenant towards us Christ is a Priest for ever to be Mediator of an everlasting Covenant Vse 1. Here is a spring of everlasting consolation to those that are in Covenant with God this fountaine of comfort will never be dryed up Let other things end or change as they will yet God is ours in an everlasting Covenant never to be broken off death may put an end to other Covenants betwixt man and man but this Covenant betwixt God and us stands fast for ever Though Abraham be dead yet God is Abrahams God still and by vertue of this Covenant betwixt God and him Abraham shall be raised up and live againe This may stay the minds of weak ones in time of desertion when they seem to be dead livelesse lost and cast off as if God would remember them no more yet then consider Gods Covenant is an everlasting Covenant so that if ever you gave up your selves to God by Covenant to be one of his this Covenant shall continue and abide for ever If ever you found your selves infolded in the bands of this Covenant know for certaine the Lord will not loose you he will remember his Covenant and promise and will return and love you again and that with an everlasting love what he hath been unto you the same he will be for ever and ever You will say perhaps you have sinned and now he is angry with you for your sin suppose it be so he may be angry with his dearest ones as he was with Moses Deut. 1.37 but he will not alwayes chide Psal 103.9 nor will he cast off for ever Lament 3.31 he will be pleased againe and will love you with an everlasting love see Psal 89.28 29. to 38. Here is a ground of everlasting consolation in this everlasting Covenant Vse 2. For exhortation First Let this stirre us up for ever to magnifie that riches of mercy which hath taken us into the bond of this everlasting Covenant There is no end of this mercy and goodnesse Oh that there might be endlesse prayses sounding from us with enlarged desires to publish this grace shewed on us If this Covenant had been for a little season it had been the lesse mercy but that we should have the High God to enter into an everlasting Covenant to be our God for ever who can sufficiently admire this goodnesse When God had made that large promise to David concerning his House and Kingdom for ever 2 Sam. 7.16 See how David was taken up with admiration Lord saith he who am I and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto namely to the Kingdom And yet this was but a smal thing in thy sight O Lord God and therefore thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while vers 19. This enlargement of Gods love to Davids house for a great while even to stablish it for ever this enlarged Davids heart and mouth towards God as not knowing how sufficiently to set forth the praise of his goodnesse Truly such is the mercy shewed us in making this Covenant with us that if we might live unto eternity we should think we never had day enough or time enough to magnifie this everlasting mercy shewed on us 2. Let it admonish us to be constant in our Covenants and in all duties of love according to what we have Covenanted and promised It s mentioned as one of the sinnes of the Gentiles that they were Covenant-breakers Rom 1.30 Let it rest with Gentiles let it never be said that it is the sinne of those that professe themselves the children of an everlasting Covenant 3. Let all those that are as yet without and have no part in this Covenant of God Let them seek to partake in it come within the bond of it it brings an everlasting blessing which failes not In the things of the world the more continuance any thing is of the more esteem it is of Inheritances are preferred before leases c. All the things of the world are but temporal the things of God which he passeth over to his by his Covenant are eternal ● Cor. 4.1 the things which are temporal please us so long as they last but when they are past the comfort of them is vanished with them and many times it irkes us that we had them and now have them not but the things of this Covenant are everlasting if we be once possessed of them we shall never grieve for the losse of them they shall never be taken away because they are given to us by an everlasting Covenant Come off therefore from the dying and perishing things of the world and seek the things of this everlasting Covenant in them is continuance and we shall be saved Esay 64. 4. The fourth property is that it is a holy Covenant Deut. 19.24 Luke 1.72 And it is so called an holy Covenant in these respects 1. In respect of the parties contracting and entering Covenant one with another which are the holy God and his holy Saints First the holy God that God to whom the Seraphins cry Holy Holy Holy Esay 6. he is one party that is confederate in this Covenant Secondly his holy Saints are the other party in it Psal 50.5 For God doth not take the wicked by the hand as Job speaks Iob 8.20 to enter into Covenant with them He doth not allow them so much as to take his Covenant into their mouths Psal 50.17 He is the God of the just of the righteous and holy people he is the King of Saints Apoc. 15. he will have no fellowship with the wicked 2. In regard of the parts of the Covenant whether we look at the promise on Gods part or at the condition on our part First the promise on Gods part is holy Psal 105.42 he remembers his holy promise he hath spoken it in his holinesse Psal 60.6 And the substance of his promise is holinesse which he hath promised to work in the soules of his people he hath promised to sanctifie us to take away the stony heart to poure clean water upon us to cleanse us from all our filthinesse and to make us holy Ezek. 36.25 26. Zach. 3.3.4 Secondly the condition on our part which i● faith by which we lay hold of the Covenant is holy also therefore called by the Apostle holy faith Iude 20. It is a most holy grace of the Spirit purifying both heart and hand not daring to touch or lay hold of the Covenant with unwashen hands 3. In respect of the Commandement it commands holinesse Be ye holy saith the Lord for I the Lord your God am holy Levit. 11.44 19.2 20.7 and therefore it is that Gods calling is termed
with open violence in our streets he that rideth upon the Red horse having power given him to take peace from the earth and that men should kill one another Apoc. 6. In these times so full of perplexitie and trouble it cannot but be welcome newes to heare of Conditions of peace and when death comes to our dores and we are at deaths-dore then to be offered a Covenant of life This Covenant here spoken of is a Covenant of life and peace and therefore seasonable It is also the more sutable in regard of that holy and gracious practise begun by our renowned Parliament going before the body of the Kingdome in entring into an holy Covenant with the God of heaven to become the Lords people the onely way to a blessed peace Till we be at one with God it will be in vaine by humane policies to devise wayes of peace with men but peace being once made in heaven will bring peace on earth and good will amongst men If otherwise man still rage yet shall his rage be restrained and turne to Gods praise the Lord on high hath a bridle for his lips and an hooke for his nostrills he will subdue the oppressour and will still the enemy and the avenger Blessed be they whose care it hath been to draw the Land into this holy covenanting with God let mercy and peace be upon them as upon all the Israel of God And blessed be that God who hath put this care into their hearts as being the onely way to obtaine an assured blessing This Covenant so happily begun is the principall subject of this booke in which thou mayst see both the necessitie for every soule to enter into a Covenant with God and how it is to be done as also how those that have made a Covenant with God are to walke in it and what blessings doe belong unto those that so walke When these things were first preached in New-England there was little thought of publishing them in such a time But he which inhabiteth eternitie with whom all things are present fits things past to those that are present and to come that his wisdome might be knowne to order all beyond what we conceive or thinke It is now some five or six yeares since I first began to handle this doctrine now published a time then full of trouble in these American Churches through the inordinate activeness and impetuous violence of some busie spirits of whom the Country is now well rid through the Lords great goodnes deeming all others except themselves to be wholly ignorant of the Covenant of grace and to be shut up under a Covenant of workes All the Preachers in the Land were legall Preachers the Christians legall Christians as having onely the letter of the Gospel but not understanding the mystery or spirituall meaning of it as it was revealed unto themselves by the spirit The disputes about the two Covenants did then exceedingly trouble the minds of many amongst whom there was little speech but about the covenant of grace and of workes and of being under a Covenant of workes I having then in the course of my Ministery propounded to my self this order to follow namely on one part of the Lords day to handle one part of the body of Divinitie concerning God Creation Man his first pure estate and so on concluding that part with his lapsed and falne estate and on the other part of the day to speak of the means of Gods restoring man againe to the state of salvation I could not then passe by the handling of the Covenant of grace without a purposed declining from that which both the agitations of the Countrey and mine own proposed method did lead me unto Hereupon I entred upon the handling of this subject in the ordinary course of my Ministry endeavouring my self so far as the Lord enabled me to settle the minds of those amongst whom I lived in the knowledge of the truth concerning which some were wavering by reason of those spirits of error which were gone abroad deceiving the minds of some This was the occasion of handling this doctrine When I had finished it it pleased God to give it such acceptance in the hearts of the hearers that many of the chiefe amongst them came to me with a solemn request desiring me to publish what I had delivered that so they might have it continue with them which request of theirs as it was unexpected by me so was I both unwilling and unable to satisfie their desire unwilling as being conscious to my self of mine own infirmities unfit to publish any thing in this learned age and unable as not having so penned any part of it as to make it fit for publick use But the earnestnesse of their desire on the one side and the rawnesse of the draught which I had written for the help of my self on the other side so far crossing one another gave occasion of a second revising of what was before done which also caused some further additions thereunto and hath at last brought forth that such as it is which is now presented to thy view And thus thou understandest gentle Reader the occasion both of the preaching and publishing of the doctrine of the Covenant which now comes forth Which notwithstanding the former inducements I should hardly have adventured to have published had I not been encouraged thereto by some others of better note It is not any confidence I have in my self which hath drawne me forth into publick view I thank God I do in some measure know mine own weaknes But if the Lord will use his weakest instruments to perfect his own praise who am I that I should let God I wish this had been undertaken by some other of greater strength but none hitherto appearing in this kinde being desired to what I have done I have been content to yeeld to the desires of those that have perswaded me hereunto There is a Treatise of the New Covenant published some yeares ago by a precious light in the Church of God whose worke is come almost into all mens hands If that worthy servant of Christ had lived to see these dayes we now live in or then were when these things were delivered I doubt not but he would with much more accuratenesse have handled these things then my weaknesse is able to attaine unto But God having carried him to his resting place before these questions brake forth which have since troubled and doe still trouble the world it is not to be marvelled that some one coming after him inferior unto him may adde something to that which hath been before delivered The opinions formerly stirring in New-England and now in old if fame be not a lyer have given occasion to touch some things not of ordinary occurrence As namely 1. Whether the Covenant of grace be made betwixt God and man or onely betwixt God the Father and Christ 2. Where also by occasion of the former question is handled that place in
which he enters into covenant with he puts a kind of royalty and dignity upon them when it shall be seen they are a people in covenant with the most high God In Jer. 13.11 I have tied them to me that they might be my people and that they might have a name and a praise and a glory And in Deut. 26.18 19. the Lord hath avouched thee to be his people to make thee high above all people c. In Zech. 11. The first staffe which is interpreted to be the Covenant betwixt God and his people as is plainly expressed vers 10. is called by the name of Beauty because this is the beauty and glory of any people to be in covenanant with God these are the ends why God enters into covenant with his people and by vertue of it passeth over all the salvation which he intends to bestow upon them Before I come to the Use I will cleer one doubt which is made by some Object It is granted will some say that there is a covenant by which God conveys salvation unto his people but not such a covenant as hath been mentioned betwixt God and us but only between God and Christ and by vertue of that covenant betwixt God the Father and the Son we have life and salvation made good unto us Answ That there is a covenant passed betwixt the Father and the Son concerning our salvation I willingly grant and shall open and confirm by Scripture the whole businesse of our salvation was first transacted between the Father and Christ before it was revealed to us hence we are said to be given unto Christ Joh. 17.6.10 as if the Father should say to the Son These I take to be vessels of mercy and these thou shalt bring unto me for they will destroy themselves but thou shalt save them out of their lost estate and then the Son taketh them at his Fathers hand and looking at his Fathers will Joh. 6 37.39 he taketh care that none be lost of them which his Father hath given him This Covenant is expressed in Scripture First on the Fathers part and here 1. There is a designation and appointment of Christ the Son to the office of the Mediatorship to be a means of bringing us back to God and into a Covenant with him Hence Christ is said to be sealed by the Father Joh. 6.27 as marked out for such a purpose 1 Pet. 1.18 he was ordained in the counsell of the Father before the foundation of the world hence also said to be chosen of the Father Isai 42.1 noting out his designation to this work 2. There is a commandment from the Father to the Son which he must submit unto and obey thereby to effect the salvation of his people he had a commandment what to teach and instruct them in as the Prophet of the Church Joh. 12.49 He had a commandment to enlighten the elect with the knowledge of the truth Isa 42.6 7. to be a light to the Gentiles to open their eyes c. A commandment also he had to lay down his life for those that are given unto him Joh. 10.18 and to be tender over the Lambs carrying them in his bosome Isai 40.11 3. There is a promise from the Father to the Son the Father covenants with him First to give him the Spirit in an abundant measure Isai 42.1 Isai 11.1 2. the Spirit shall rest upon him Secondly he makes him a promise of assistance and help in this great work of our redemption Isai 42.6 I will hold thy hand what is the meaning of that see Isai 45.1 saith God of Cyrus whose right hand I have holden that is I have strengthened him to conquer the nations so God promiseth he will hold the hand of Christ that though he met with strong oppositions yet he would strengthen him with his power that he should not be discouraged Isai 42.4 Thirdly a promise of blessed successe that he shall not labour in vain Isai 53.10 he shall see his seed the sufferings of Christ were dolores parturientis as a woman with childe though she suffer many pains yet she sees her childe at last so shall Christ see many believing on his name so Isai 55.5 they are the words of promise made by the Father to the Son that nations that know him not should run unto him Fourthly a promise of rule and dominion that he shall have dominion over all those that are saved by him this soveraignty and rule is promised to him in Isaiah 40.10 The Lord Christ shall come with power and his arm shall rule for him and Isai 42.4 He shall set judgement in the earth and the Isles shall wait for his Law to submit themselves unto it and thence it 's said in Micah 4.3 that he shall judge among many nations c. that is rule order command and direct as a Judge and Ruler among his people the which promise is now accomplished all judgement being committed to the Son Joh. 5.22 Fiftly a promise of glory to follow and that first to Christ himself and then to the members of Christ To Christ himself Isai 55.5 A nation shall run to thee because I have glorified thee they are the words of God the Father to Christ the Son promising to him glory and such glory as should make the nations of the world run unto him So also to the members of Christ there is a promise of glory unto them which promise was made known to Christ from the beginning and Christ brings out that secret out of the bosome of the Father and reveals it to his Disciples It is saith he my Fathers pleasure to give you a kingdome Christ knew the Fathers will by the covenant passing between the Father and him and this will of the Father concerning the glory promised to them Christ doth bring forth to light Thus we see there is a covenant on the Fathers part now see it on Christs part where 1. There is an acceptation of the Office to which he was designed by the Father he did not take the Office of Mediatorship upon himself but first the Father calls him unto it and then the Son accepts it and saith Lo I come Hebr. 5.4 5. Psal 40.7 8 Hebr. 10.7 2. There is a promise on Christs part to depend and trust upon the Father for help according to the promise made by the Father thus Heb. 2.13 the Apostle brings in Christ promising confidence and affiance in the Father I will trust in him and Isaiah brings him in as looking for help from God The Lord will help me though I have many against me men and devils yet the Lord will help me Isai 50.7.9 he promises to wait upon his Father for support and strength whereto agrees also that in Isaiah 49.5 My God shall be my strength 3. A promise of submission to his Fathers will in bearing the reproaches and injuries that should be done unto him and to lay downe his life for those that were given
to him by the Father Esa 50.5 6. Joh. 10.17 18. And according to all this which Christ thus covenanted with the Father he was carefull to discharge the same Joh. 17.4.6 Joh. 12.49 50. 4. According to all this Covenant passed betwixt the Father and Christ Christ expects the glory which was promised to himselfe and to his members To himselfe Joh. 17.5 and to his members Joh. 17.24 He expects the accomplishment of both from the Father Thus farre then I grant a Covenant betwixt God the Father and Christ and hence it is that God is called the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ Ephes 1.3 which is by reason of the Covenant betwixt them But if any shall hereupon conclude that there is no Covenant passing betwixt God and us then I say they deny that which is as cleare in Scripture as the Sunne shining at noone day I may say of them as the Apostle doth of some 1 Tim. 1.7 that when they would be teachers they understand not what they say nor whereof they affirme There is therefore a Covenant passing between God and man which I will prove by these evidences 1. Consider those expresse testimonies wherein mention is made of Gods Covenanting with the people of Israel which must needs hold forth a Covenant between God and man Deut. 4.23 Take heed unto your selves lest you forget the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you c. Esa 55.1 2 3. where the Lord calls every one that thirsts after life to come unto him These are called to enter into Covenant with God but these speeches cannot be applyed to Christ but to us that wee should come to Christ and through him make up an everlasting Covenant betwixt God and us see also Jer. 31.31 I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and Judah and in Ezek. 20.37 saith God I will bring them into the bond of the Covenant which places hold forth a Covenant between God and man 2. Consider more particularly such testimonies as doe expresse Gods Covenant with sundry particular Saints as with Abraham Gen. 15.18 and 17.2.4.7 and the same renewed to Isaac Gen. 26. 3. and confirmed to Jacob Gen. 35.12 all mentioned together Levit. 26.42 Psal 83.3 2 Chron. 13.5 I thinke that there is none so sottish as to say these persons were Christ 3. Lest any should say It 's true God makes a Covenant with us but it is made with us not in our persons but in Christ Therefore in the third place consider such Scriptures as doe not onely expresse a Covenant of God made with us but a Covenant on our part made with God as Psal 50.5 Call my Saints together that make a Covenant with mee with sacrifice the Saints make a Covenant with God Hence we are said to passe into Covenant with the Lord Deut. 29.12 as God for his part enters into Covenant with us so doe we also with him 4. Consider those places frequently used in Scripture in which wee are said sometimes to keep Covenant as Psal 25.10 Psal 44.17 103.17 18. Sometimes to transgresse and breake Covenant Gen. 17.14 and not to be faithfull in Covenant Levit. 26.15 From which places I argue thus Those that either keepe or breake Covenant those are in Covenant and doe make a Covenant with God but wee are said to breake or keepe Covenant Ergo. 5. Consider that the Covenant made with Christ concerning us was made from everlasting 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 1.2 The promise was made to Christ before the foundation of the world but there is a Covenant also made in time Deut. 29.12 noted in these words this day if there were no other Covenant between God and us but what is made with Christ then it cou●d not be said to be to day because the Covenant made with Christ was before the world was and therefore the Covenant and promise that is made to day must needs be made with us 6. That Covenant of which Christ is the testator must needs be a Covenant with us else if the Covenant were made onely with Christ then he must be both testator and the partie to whom the Testament and Legacies are bequeathed which is absurd Men doe not use to bequeath a testament to themselves but Christ is appointed the testator Heb. 9. In the covenant between the Father and Christ there he is a partie not the testator but in this he is the testator therefore besides the covenant between God and Christ there is also a Covenant between God and us and therefore the covenant is not made with Christ alone but with us also 7. A seventh argument may be taken from the paritie and likenesse between the covenant of works and the covenant of grace though there be great difference between them as shall be shewed afterward yet they agree in this in that they are both made betwixt the same parties and persons between God and man God made a covenant of workes with Adam and that being broken he comes and makes with him a new covenant of grace through Christ Gen. 3.15 The seed of the woman shall breake the serpents head one of these covenants comes in the roome and stead of the other and therefore the parties covenanting are the same God and Adam in the first covenant the same God and the same Adam in the second covenant 8. From the end and use of the Sacraments which is to confirme the covenant of grace as being the seales of it Rom. 4.11 Now in reason these two must goe together the Covenant and the seale of it It were a fond thing in a man to make a covenant with one and to give the seales to another they must have the seales that have the covenant made with them but the seales of the covenant the Sacraments are given to us and therefore the covenant is made with us also 9. If there be no promise or covenant made to us as some would have it then infidelitie and unbeliefe is in us no sinne for as the Apostle saith Where there is no law or commandement there is no transgression so where there is no promise there is no unbeliefe When God promiseth and yet then wee believe not this makes unbeliefe a great sinne but if wee have no promise made unto us then are wee not bound to believe and so our not believing is no sinne 10. The contrary doctrine is a doctrine tending to licentiousnesse for as the covenant tends as wee have heard to bind us faster to God to walke before him in obedience so on the contrary to say that there is no covenant between God and us it opens a gap to loosnesse of spirit For if there be no covenant then cannot a man be charged with unfaithfulnesse to God though he walk never so loosly and therefore let such men as broach such tenents take heed whilest they teach such libertie they be not found to be the servants of corruption 2 Pet. 2.19 These are the arguments to
with this spirit of submission and seek peace from him go and put thy rope about thy neck like Benhadads servants and confesse thy own guiltinesse without this God will never enter into covenant with thee God will have thee know thou must take thy life as a free gift of grace and that thou standest at his mercy either to save thee or destroy thee 3. Come with an humble submission to yeeld up thy self to the obedience of the will of God wee must receive him from the law of our life by which we must live When you come to make a covenant with God you must not come to give lawes unto God but to take lawes from God not to impose lawes upon him that he shall save you so and so but you must leave God free to make the conditions of the covenant after his own minde and will think it honour enough that you may be a people in covenant with God and have your life granted by covenant from him but for the conditions leave them to God let him command and require what he will he must be free or else he will not make a covenant with you This is that which Hezekiah exhorted to to come and give the hand to the Lord and serve him we must come and make a covenant with God as a servant with his master as Subjects with their Prince a covenant of service not to be our own Lords the sons of David and princes of Israel when Solomon sate upon the Throne came and gave the hand unto Solomon 1 Chron. 29.24 they made a covenant with him but it was with submission to his power such is the covenant which we must make with God we must give the hand under God submitting to him to be ruled by him Thence it is that we are called upon to deny our selves If any one will be my disciple let him deny himself c. we must not cleave to our selves to our wills and make our own Lawes we must deny our own inclinations wills and affections refuse to be governed by them and resign up our selves to the will of God this is the resolution we must come unto if we will enter into covenant with God as it was in the sacrifice of the Law he that offered it laid his hand upon the head of it as dedicating it to God and quitting it from himself as if he should say I have no more to do with this bullock it is now the Lords that was in part the signification of that action so if we will be the Lords people in covenant with him we must resigne our selves only and wholly to be for him Rom. 12.1 2. we mu●t present our bodies as a living and acceptable sacrifice consecrate and devote them to God to live unto him and to be our own no more as it is in a marriage covenant when a man and woman make a covenant they do resigne up themselves one to another not to be to themselves any more it is a marriage covenant that we make with God I will marry thee to my self saith the Lord therefore we must do as the Spouse doth resigne up our selves to be ruled and governed according to his will 4. If we would enter into covenant with God we must come before him in the name of a Mediator that is the Lord Jesus in the mediation of his sacrifice we must offer up to the Lord a satisfaction for all our treacherous rebellion against him in that sacrifice we must come and seek reconciliation and the renewing of our covenant with God without such a sacrifice whereby Gods justice may be satisfied there is no hope of a covenant to be made between God and you As in the Law Exod. 34.1 to 8. they come and sacrifice and so the covenant is made between God and them Now these were types of Christs sacrifice come therefore sprinkled with the blood of Christ and say Lord here is the blood of the sacrifice which maketh satisfaction for my rebellion and in this blood enter into covenant with me They that make a covenant with God do it by sacrifice Psal 50.5 And therefore in the mediation of Christs blood and by faith in it look for a re-union and knitting of God and us together 5. After all this that you have broken your covenant with your sins judged your selves for them submitted your selves to the will of God and come in the name of a Mediator then by faith look at the gracious invitation of God and consider his readinesse and willingnesse to enter into covenant with you though there be an infinite disparity between the God of glory and us yet he is pleased to invite us to make a covenant with him if you seek to him he will not turn away his face from you as Hezekiah saith to the people 2 Chron. 30.8 9. though he might turn away from you in wrath and displeasure yet he will not but will enter into a gracious Covenant with you He that cometh to me I will in no wise cast off saith Christ Joh. 6.37 In that manner therefore goe thou and humble thy selfe before God confesse thy treachery and rebellion and looke at God as having a golden scepter in his hand and intreat him to enter into a Covenant with thee and submit thy selfe wholly to be at his command plead the promise of his grace touch the top of the scepter and take hold of the Covenant and then certainly in time the Lord will speake to thy soule and conscience by the testimony of his Spirit that he will be a God unto thee and take thee to be one of his people Thus you see the way to enter into Covenant with God It may serve for all such as are already entred into Covenant Vse 3 with God to admonish such to looke unto themselves and to take heed they be not unfaithfull in the Covenant that they have made with him Take heed of breaking Covenant but let us walk according to the covenant that we have made with him This the Lord expects Exod. 19.5 that if wee enter into covenant with him we should be carefull to keepe it In the things of this life a strict eye is had to the covenant In all conveyances of Lands we look narrowly to the covenants and if they be broken all is gone Now ou● life lyes upon our keeping covenant with God labour therefore so to walke that it may appeare that you have a care to keepe the covenant which you have made with God Wee have made a covenant with him in our Baptisme in our conversion and turning unto God and coming to the Lords Supper Now it is not enough to enter into Covenant but wee must keepe it wee have broken the first covenant of workes take heed wee breake not a second there being no more place for any more covenants Now therefore cleave to the Lords Covenant and live unto him Let there not be in any of us an unfaithfull heart to
and obey him no need was there to stirre him up to believe Gods goodnesse towards him of which he had no cause to doubt But when God cometh to make a Covenant of grace with man he finds him in his sin and rebellion full of feares and doubts and therefore had need to be encouraged to believe that God will be reconciled but then it was not so there was then nothing to cause distrust and therefore faith was not expressed in that covenant yet faith was then required as wee have shewed though not the same faith that is required in the covenant of grace But they differ in three things 1. The covenant of workes commandeth faith in God as a creator to preserve our being but not as a redeemer to deliver us from misery Adam was not bound to believe on God as a redeemer for then he needed no redemption But the Covenant of grace requires faith in God as a redeemer redeeming us from sinne and misery The Jewes professed they believed on God but by what faith When the faith of the Gospel was preached unto them by Christ and his Apostles they counted it a strange thing they clave to the Covenant of workes they therefore believed on God as a Creator but believed not on grace revealed in the Gospel by this faith they believed not on him 2. The Covenant of workes required faith to believe in God loving mee as created holy and continuing in the same puritie and holinesse before him and no further but the Covenant of grace commands faith to believe in God loving us and pitying us lost sinners 3. The faith required in the Covenant of workes was mutable as now all the righteousnesse required in that Covenant and so might be lost as afterwards it was by the sinne of Adam but the faith required in the Covenant of grace is such as is begotten of an immortall seed 1 Pet. 1.23 and therefore cannot be lost but abide● and continues for ever It is a faith that cannot faile Luk. 22. Thus yee see the same faith is not required in both Covenants Secondly It is not required in the Covenant of grace for the same end as it was in the Covenant of workes In the Covenant of workes faith was required as a part of that righteousnesse which the Law required it is one of the duties of the Law but in the covenant of grace it is required not as any part of our righteousnesse but onely as an instrument to receive and apprehend the righteousnesse which is wrought for us by Christ and therefore the faith required in the Covenant of workes was a giving unto God but the faith required in the Covenant of grace is onely a receiving from God that which he freely offers us Quest So that if the question be asked and stated thus Whether the Law and Covenant of workes doe require the same faith and to the same end as the Covenant of grace doth Answ I answer No it doth not as is evident by that of the Apostle Gal. 3.12 The Law is not of faith i it is not the doctrine of faith requiring faith and promising life upon believing but the Law saith thus The man that doth these things shall live in them as if he should say the Law requires not believing but doing therefore those are deceived that would bring in the faith of the Gospel to be required in the Law For the second doubt Quest 2 Whether doth not the Covenant of grace require workes as well as doth the Covenant of workes I answer It doth as is evident Titus 2.11.14 Answ The grace of God that bringeth salvation teacheth us to be zealous of good workes and Mat. 5.16 Let men see your good workes saith Christ though Christ preached not a Covenant of workes but of grace yet he calls for good workes But marke the difference 1. The Covenant of workes doth not require workes for the same end as the Covenant of grace for that requires workes as the matter of our justification before God so saith Moses understanding him in a Legall way Deut. 6. last This is your righteousnesse but the Covenant of grace requires workes not as a part of our righteousnesse but that thereby wee should glorifie God and manifest it that wee are made righteous by Christ James 2. wee are thereby declared to be righteous the godly conversation of a Christian maketh it evident to the consciences of men that he is a justified man 2. The workes that are required in the Covenant of grace are not required from the same beginning the Covenant of workes requires workes to be performed from our own strength and abilitie received in the Creation it presupposeth abilitie in our selves to doe what it requireth But the Covenant of grace requireth workes to be done by the help of the Spirit of Jesus Christ Phil. 4.13 I can doe all things saith the Apostle through Christ strengthning mee that is the power which the Covenant of grace directs us unto 3. The Covenant of grace doth not require works in the same order as the Covenant of workes doth for the Covenant of workes requires workes first and then faith to believe our selves beloved unto life but the Covenant of grace requireth faith first and then that we bring forth good workes therefore saith the Apostle Titus 3.8 Let them which have believed be carefull to shew forth good workes He doth not say Let them which have done good workes believe but first believe and then doe good workes he placeth faith before workes and hence it is that the obedience of the Gospel is called the obedience of faith Rom. 16.26 as following faith and springing from it Thus then this difference of the condition of the Covenants remaineth the one Covenant commanding workes the other faith Vse Let therefore every soule looke unto his faith that expects to receive the blessing of life by faith wee are brought into Covenant with God and are enabled to wait for the blessing of it Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfu●l A●raham Gal. 3.9 Though there be imperfection in your works yet if your faith be working and it be not a dead faith but fruitfull manifesting it selfe in a holy life here is comfort it is faith that gives interest in the Covenant of grace let it appeare that it is a faith unfeigned and this is the condition to which God hath promised life and salvation Differ 2 The second maine difference is this namely that the Covenant of workes is made without a Mediator to mediate between God and man But in the Covenant of grace there is a Mediator coming between to unite God and man together and make them one Hence Heb. 9.15 Christ is called the Mediator of the new Testament so also Heb. 12.24 but the first Covenant of workes had no Mediator The reason of this difference is because when God came to make a covenant of workes with Adam then there was no disagreement between God and man
false Apostles urged it as a worke of the Law as a dutie and worke to be done necessary to justification and salvation Now the Apostle in saying that if they were circumcised they were bound to keepe the whole Law doth not look at the Primitive institution of it but hath respect to that which the false Apostles intended urging Circumcision as a work of the Law necessary to their justification and salvation and thus taking it the Apostle doth truly tell them that if they were circumcised in this manner and to this end they were bound to keepe the whole Law because by what reason Circumcision was necessary by the same reason all the rest of the Law was necessary also and if they were bound to observe Circumcision to be justified by it then were they also bound to observe the whole Law because if wee be justified by workes wee must doe all the Law to obtaine justification by it This is the Apostles intent but this doth no more prove Circumcision to be a seale of the covenant of workes then our Baptisme is Concerning which I may say as much as Paul doth of Circumcision if any shall esteeme Baptisme as a worke by which to be justified I will then say to such a one that if he be baptized in this manner and for this end to be justified by it as by a worke that then he is bound to keepe the whole Law But did not Circumcision in the Primitive institution of it Quest bind them to the observation of the whole Law Yes but not in that sense as now wee speake of Answ it bound Abraham and all his seed and all such people as should joyne themselves unto them to observe all the ordinances and commandements of God But how not as workes to be justified by but as meanes by which they should testifie themselves to be a separated people severed from other people of the world having peculiar Lawes given to them to walke by They had ceremonies to lead them to Christ such as no other people had they had Judgements and Lawes of State given by God himselfe so as no other people of the world had the like they had the Morall Law revealed unto them more fully then any other people and in the observation of all these they were to testifie themselves to be the people of God not communicating with the Lawes of other Nations but walking in their owne but yet not so as to justifie themselves thereby Circumcision bound them to the observation of the Law in the former way but not in the latter Argu. 2 The covenant of workes binds not to the observation of the ceremoniall law but of the Morall onely but that covenant at Mount Sinai bound them to the keeping of the Ceremoniall law and therefore was not properly a covenant of workes Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 9.1 to 6. That the first Testament or Covenant had ordinances of divines service c. By the first Testament meaning the Covenant delivered at Mount Sinai Now these ordinances mentioned by the Apostle were types and figures of spirituall things belonging to the Church of the new Testament and did appertaine to the covenant of grace signifying the blessings wee receive by Christ and if these ordinances respecting Christ were given in the first Testament or Covenant then surely that Testament or Covenant was not a Covenant of workes Argu. 3 That Covenant which did so convince of sinne as that it did also shew the way of expiation of sin and of forgivenesse could not be a covenant of workes for the covenant of workes onely convinceth of sinne and condemnes for sinne but shews not the way of expiation of sinne But this covenant at Mount Sinai did so convince of sinne that withall it shewed the way of forgivenesse for it taught men to looke for righteousnesse by the bloud of the sacrifice which was in type the bloud of Christ and therefore it so revealing and shewing Christ it could not be the covenant of workes Argu. 4 The covenant of workes was in Adam made with all none excepted not with one people more then another But this covenant made with Israel was made with them as with a select chosen and peculiar people whom God had taken to himselfe out of all the people of the earth and thence is that Preface before the Law I am the Lord thy God that brought thee out of the land of Aegypt God had separated them to himselfe from Aegyptians from Canaanites from Edomites c. and then revealed his Covenant unto them therefore this covenant made with Israel alone cannot be a covenant of workes which is made with all flesh That covenant which God made with Moses his person was Argu. 5 not a covenant of workes but of grace but the covenant which God made with them was the same which he made with Moses as appeares Exod. 34.27 therefore c. If any shall say that God then made a covenant of workes with Moses then it must follow that Moses was not now nor before under a covenant of grace which is contrary to the Apostle Heb. 11.23 24. when he saith By faith Moses when he came to yeares c. or else if he were before and now under the covenant of grace and yet now God makes another covenant with him putting him under the covenant of workes then a man may be at the same time under both covenants of workes and grace and so both under blessing and curse and in a state both of life and death If it had been a covenant of workes which God made with Israel Argu. 6 at Mount Sinai then should he have called them from a covenant of grace to a covenant of workes from a covenant of life to a covenant which now in this estate of corruption ministers nothing but death which is contrary to the Apostle Gal. 3.17 where he shews the Law cannot disanull the former Testament this were to make the Lord goe from a covenant of grace to a covenant of workes and it were the same in effect as to make them perfect by the flesh when the Lord had begun with them in the spirit Gal. 3.3 God carries on his people from faith to faith from grace to grace and not from grace to workes Therefore the covenant then establisht with them was not a covenant of workes for them to expect life by but onely the covenant of workes was then revealed with reference to the covenant of grace That covenant which was made by a sacrifice coming between Argu. 7 and confirmed by the bloud of the sacrifice that covenant is not a covenant of workes but this covenant was so made and confirmed Exod. 24.2 3 4 5 6 7 8. that sacrifice typed the sacrifice of Christ that bloud typed out Christs bloud but Christs bloud doth not confirme the covenant of workes but of grace But against this some doe object divers things Object 1 They say the covenant made with Israel at Mount
such hypocrisie in their best actions that they cannot thinke that ever such sorry services such lame and sick sacrifices should be accepted of God But tell me you that thus complaine To what do you look that you may finde acceptance with God To your workes or to the riches of grace revealed in the covenant of grace accepting your person through Christ Doe you looke that your worke should be accepted for its own sake or through grace in Christ your persons being first accepted in him If you looke to your workes God regards neither you nor them but if you fly to the aboundance of grace looking for your acceptance there then feare not thy weakest endeavours are accepted before God and doe find favour in his fight Our comfort lyes not in the excellency of our duties but in our free acceptance in Christ Thinke thus thy workes being done never so weakly are not worse then thou thy selfe wast when first thou wentest to the throne of grace begging to be received through grace If then God did in mercy accept thee when thou wast so vile doubt not but out of the same grace and mercy he will accept thy worke also his promise being that he will spare such as a man spareth his sonne that serveth him Mal. 3.17 Mal. 3.17 Great cause hast thou to be humbled and displeased with thy selfe that thou canst performe no better service to thy God that thou art so dead and livelesse in the things of thy God who hath so graciously looked upon thee But no cause therefore to thinke that thy service is not accepted because Gods acceptance begins in the person not in the worke accepting the worke for the persons sake And therefore if God have accepted thy person he will accept thy worke also The fourth difference is this In the Covenant of workes a man Differ 4 is left to himselfe to stand by his own strength But in the Covenant of grace God undertakes with us to keep us through faith The reason of this difference is because when God comes to make a Covenant of workes with Adam he finds him furnished with a sufficiency of power which was put into him in his creation But when he comes to make with us a Covenant of grace in this estate of sin he finds us of no strength Rom. 5.6 Rom. 5.6 impotent feeble possessed with a spirit of infirmitie made up of weaknesses having no power and therefore Isa 40.29 the Lord promiseth unto such that he will give strength unto them and increase power The Lord knowes the infirmitie of our flesh how impossible it is for us to fulfill any part of the righteousnesse which the Law requires Rom. 8.3 Rom. 8.3 He knowes also what powers we have against us Ephes 6. and therefore he tells us that we are kept not by our own power but by his power through faith unto salvation 1 Pet. 1.5 1 Pet. 1.5 And hence is that in Joh. 10.28 Joh. 10.28 Christ tells us that none shall plucke us out of his hand And this is the reason that though Adam fell from his first estate and lost the life promised in that Covenant made with him yet we fall not he had more strength of grace then wee and wee have more corruption then he for he was then pure without sin yet being left to his own liberty he willingly forsooke the commandement of God and fell into a state of perdition But wee being weaker then he yet being once taken into the Covenant of grace though we have the same powers of darknesse against us as he had yet wee fall not so as to sin unto perdition as he did because wee are supported by the power of God Adams life was put into his own hand ours is put into the hand of Christ wee are committed to his care and trust The Father hath given us unto the Sonne the Sonne hath taken us at the hand of the Father and hath undertaken with the Father for us to present us before him As in Gen. 43. Gen. 43. Judah undertakes with his father for Benjamin At my hand saith he shalt thou require him c. So doth Christ undertake for us at his hand the Father requires us and Christ hath ingaged his own faithfulnesse to keepe us till he have presented us perfect before his Father Vse 1 See hence the ground of that which sometimes seems marvellous in our eyes we see men of different abilities some simple weak and despised others indued with eminent gifts and excellent parts yet those that so excell many times fade and fall away their graces wither their light is extinct and they go out like the smoke of a candle with an ill savour whereas the weak and simple ones are upholden and go from strength to strength and increase with the increasings of God The reason hereof is because the one sort viewing themselves and their own excellencies in the glasse of their own conceit they trust in themselves and in their own strength and do not commit their souls to God to be kept by him and so are left unto themselves And then at length meeting with some temptation which is stronger then they their confidence and their strength fails them and so they fall and being left unto themselves they are never able to rise any more whereas the other being sensible of their own infirmitie and casting themselves on the power of God to be kept thereby they are hereby preserved and upholden against all the powers of darknesse which are against them so that either they fall not or if they do fall yet they rise again And thus it comes to passe that these that are weak in themselves they are strong through Christ as 2 Cor. 12.9 2 Cor. 12.9 And those that are strong in themselves are indeed weake in the power of God having no help nor assistance from him and so are quite overthrown This may stay the mindes of those that are weak they think they Vse 2 shall never hold out They cannot deny but the Lord hath shewed mercy on them and wrought his grace in their hearts but they feare they shall not hold out they feel such a power of corruption in themselves so many lusts such strong temptations who can endure True not of your selves but God is able to make you stand Rom. 14.4 Rom. 14.4 do but commit your soules to him in wel-doing as 1 Pet. 4.19 1 Pet. 4.19 And then consider that noble resolution of the Apostle 2 Tim. 1.12 2 Tim. 1.12 I know whom I have believed and I am perswaded that he is able to keep that which I have committed to him go thou and do likewise If a friend relying upon thy trust and faithfulnesse should bring a Jewell to thee and intreat thee to keep it carefully thou wouldest be ashamed to be carelesse of it Christ is the faithfull and true witnesse therefore commit thy soul to him and he will keep
condemnation but the gift is of many offences unto justification c. Adams one sin brought guilt upon him and all his posteritie because he was under the covenant of workes and therefore justification can be had by that Covenant no more But it is not so in the Covenant of grace neither one sin nor many sinnes doe exclude from life in this covenant But this gift is of many offences c. And this holds true not onely of such sinnes as are committed before our entrance into a covenant of grace with God but of such sins as are committed afterward as is evident Psal 89.31.34 God having made a Covenant with them though he chastise them yet his Covenant will be not breake c. The reason of this difference is from the summe and scope of the Covenant of workes which is to bind us to a totall full perfect and constant obedience of the Law in all things unto the end Gal. 3.10 so that one or once fayling breakes that Covenant But in the Covenant of grace God promiseth not onely to forgive but to multiply forgivenesses Isa 55.7 Isai 55.7 Hence though in many things we sin all as James 3.2 yet 1 Joh. 2.2 1 Joh. 2.2 wee have an Advocate with the Father And 1 Joh. 1.7 The bloud of Christ cleanseth us from all sin No number of sinnes doth exclude from salvation till they be accompanied with finall Apostasie impenitency and unbeliefe till as Heb. 3.12 wee doe by an evill heart depart away from the living God Hence also saith the Apostle Rom. 5.19 Where sin abounds there grace abounds much more God will glorifie his grace by our sinne As sin takes occasion by the Law Rom. 7.10 so grace takes occasion by our sin God will glorifie his grace thereby and make it marvellous in the eyes of the world so that men shall wonder that such grace should be shewed in pardoning such sinnes that they shall say as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passest by the transgression of the remnant of thy people Consolation to the weake Saints of God Vse who are often cast downe in themselves through sense of their own infirmities and the many falls they are subject unto by reason of which they are cast into sad feares and doubts concerning themselves yea so farre as to make conclusions against themselves that they cannot belong unto God because as they thinke if they were the Lords people and his grace were effectuall in them they should not be so often overcome But such must know that so long as the sinnes that are in us be repented of and mourned for it is not one nor many infirmities which can make voyd the Covenant of grace which wee are entred into or hinder us of the blessing that comes thereby Wee must remember that we are not under the Law but under Grace wee must not be too severe against our selves like Novatians denying pardon to second falls In so doing we set such limits to the grace of God as he himselfe hath not set God hath not said He will pardon once and no more or that he will pardon sinnes before grace received but not those committed after God never so stinted his grace but his gift of grace is against many offences unto justification of life In denying therefore of pardon to our selves for sins iterated and for our often infirmities so long as there is a spirit of repentance working in us and we are humbled for them before God we doe not onely wrong our selves and deprive our soules of the peace we might enjoy but we do wrong to the grace of God as if that grace were not sufficient for us as if that God could not or would not renew his gracious pardon to us as wee renew our repentance towards him Let such consider what the Lord hath commanded us to doe we must not onely forgive seven times but seventy times seven times if our brother turne againe and say it repenteth me And can wee thinke that God lookes for more mercy from us towards our brethren then he will shew towards his owne children He hath bidden us daily to pray for the forgivenesse of our sinnes as knowing that we are subject to daily infirmities and doe stand in need of daily mercy and forgivenesse And therefore to limit Gods grace as we are apt to doe is in effect to turne the Covenant of grace into a Covenant of workes as if there were no more grace under the one then under the other Know therefore that whiles there is in us an holy watchfulnesse against the sin that dwells within us whiles it is our desire and care to please the Lord whiles we feele in our selves the spirit of grace causing us to mourne over him whom we have pierced by our sinnes though we be overtaken again and again through the infirmity of the flesh that is in us yet know that it is not one nor many offences that can deprive us of the blessing of this covenant of grace in which God hath promised to multiply forgivenesses according to the multitude of his great mercies Yet let no man abuse this doctrine unto carnall liberty this is childrens bread impure dogges and carnall livers that make no conscience of sinning have nothing to doe with this consolation it is onely to support the weak to comfort the feeble minded not to encourage the wicked and impenitent in their sin Let such know that though God abound in mercy and do multiply forgivenesses unto such as are humbled for their sins yet he will multiply plagues also upon impenitent wretches that goe on in their evill way To such neither many nor any one of all their sins shall be forgiven but being under the law they shall make an account to God for every transgression God will repay them all their wickednesses not one shall be forgotten or forgiven He is indeed abundant in goodnesse reserving mercy for his people and so he is also abundant in wrath against rebellious sinners and will abundantly reward the proud doer That the covenant of works if it be accomplished and fulfilled Differ 8 leaves in man matter of glorying and boasting in himselfe but the covenant of grace excludes all glorying in a mans selfe and leaves him nothing of his own to boast of but in the grace of God If Adam who was under the covenant of works had fulfilled that covenant he might have come before the Lord and said Behold Lord I have fulfilled the commandment which thou gavest me and done thy will now therefore justifie me and give me the life which thou hast promised here Adam had had something in himselfe to glory in Thus the Apostle speaks of Abraham that if he had had the righteousnesse of works by his fulfilling of the Law he should have had whereof to glory before God Rom. 4.1 Rom. 4.1 he might have said as the elder son did in Luk. 15.29 Luke 15.29
Jacob and not with Esau with Abel and not with Cain with David and not with Saul not with Iudas but with Peter with the Jewes first and not with the Gentiles and after with the Gentiles and not with the Jewes By this covenant one people becomes a more peculiar people then another As first of Peter 1 Pet. 2.9.10 2 chap. the covenant of grace is not universal it is not made with all as the covenant of works was Let none therefore look for the blessing of life and salvation by being a son of Adam Vse the blessing of the covenant of grace is no common blessing Naturall life is common to all but spirituall and eternall life is the peculiar blessing of the covenant of grace made onely with those that are given unto Christ Therefore the Lord speaking of those that he will be a God unto Zach. 13.8 9. Zach. 13.8 9. saith That two parts shall be cut off and to the third hee will say You are my people Let us not therefore flatter our selves with vain hopes that he that made us will save us No he that made you will have no compassion on you so long as you remain an impenitent and disobedient people Isai 27.11 Isai 27.11 All doe not so much as heare of this covenant nor know it all that doe heare of it and have knowledge of it doe not enjoy the blessing of it as Matth. 13.11 Matth. 11.25 Matth. 13. Matth. 11.25 Therefore it were good for every one of us that we would begin to suspect our selves and to question our interest in this covenant Ask our selves yea and ask others and goe and enquire at the Lords own mouth Am I within this covenant Have I any part or portion in the blessing of it Sure I am that I am by nature under the covenant of works but am I translated into the covenant of grace The salvation brought by this covenant Object is a common salvation Jude vers 3. True it is common to all that doe beleeve Answer whether they bee Jewes or Gentiles whether those that lived before the incarnation of Christ or since There is not one way of salvation for one and another for another but one way for all that shall be saved But it is not common to all flesh therefore doe not build upon this false principle that all that heare of the covenant of grace with their eares are partakers of the blessing comming by it No it is no common salvation but onely to those that enter into a covenant with God to those that beleeve and bring forth the fruit of a living Faith One that is under the covenant of works may get from under Differ 15 that covenant and may come to be under the covenant of grace but he that is once under the covenant of grace can never bee brought back under the covenant of works any more A member of Adams body may be lost but a member of Christs body can never be cut off Adam being under the covenant of works lost himself wholly and therefore may lose a member of his body much more But those that are engraffed into Christ are safe he saves himselfe and all that belong to him Esay 63.5 John 17.12 Vse 1 A word of incouragement to those that are yet under the covenant of works that yet live in their sins and find their consciences condemning them consider there is a possibility that you may come to be under a covenant of grace break off your sins give up your selves unto God it may be he will receive you Vse 2 See the safe estate of those that are under the covenant of grace here is a safe harbour here cast anchor upon this rock and here is no danger the ship may be tossed but cannot perish In Matth. 8. the ship in which Christ was was tossed with wind and water so as the Disciples were afraid yet it sunk not The law hath no more power against you yee cannot come under the power of the law any more Rom. 6. Thus much of the differences between the covenant of works and of grace which differences are carefully to be observed and kept inviolable for if we begin to confound these two covenants we bring in a confusion into all Religion As the Papists have done by confounding the differences between the covenants They make the covenant of grace to differ no otherwise from the covenant of works then a thing more perfect from that which is imperfect and to be distinct onely in respect of degree and so in effect they make them all one They call the commandements given by Moses the old Law and the Gospel the new Law and herein they make all the difference that the new Law as they call it giveth rules of greater perfection and difficulty then the old Law As where the old Law as they term it commanded Thou shalt not kill the new Law forbids one to be angry unadvisedly c. And hence scil from the confounding of these two covenants follows their doctrine of the possibility of the keeping the whole Law That whereas the Scripture speaketh of an Evangelical keeping of the law in uprightnesse and sincerity and acknowledgeth it in the Saints as in Zachary and Elizabeth they not putting difference betwixt Law and Gospel they apply this to a legall keeping of the commandement which is quite contrary to the mind of the Spirit of Truth speaking in the Word Hence also they teach that there is but o●e way of justification in both covenants which is by works as they say The new law gives more grace to fulfill the commandement of it then the old doth but the way of justification is the same thus they teach Therefore we must be carefull of keeping these differences between the covenant of works and of grace But Christ who was the Minister of the covenant of grace Object calls his doctrine a new commandement John 13.34 15. chap. 12. Joh. 13.34 cap. 15.12 and therefore it is a doctrine of works as well as the former commandement given by Moses It is true that the Gospel and Covenant of grace hath its commandement Answer 1 as well as the law and covenant of works but withall it reveales the free promise of grace and of righteousnesse without works which the law and covenant of workes doth not The commandements of the covenant of grace are in part Answer 2 different from the other commandements of the covenant of works For the great commandement of the covenant of grace is that we beleeve in the Name of the Son of God that we may have life by him 1 John 3.23 1 John 3.23 thereupon the Gospel is called the Law of Faith as opposed to the law of works Rom. 3.27 Rom. 3.27 Though the doctrine of grace command the same duties as the Answer 3 covenant of works doth as of love feare and of keeping the commandements and it ratifies the duties of the
revelation of the Law so there was more cleare revelation of Christ to them Though at the best it was but darke in comparison of what it is now in the dayes of the New Testament This should teach us with thankfulnesse to accept and prize these dayes of the Sonne of man Vse wherein Chri●●●ath so clearly revealed the Covenant of his Grace to us that many Kings and Princes have desired to see the things that wee see c. Nay how many in other Nations doe desire to see the things that we see and yet cannot see them Abraham saw Christ but it was afarre off The Israelites saw him but he was then vailed But now wee see him with open face How may wee stand and admire this grace and say with the Disciples John 14. Lord why is it that thou wilt reveale thy selfe to us and not to the world Count it not a small mercy that wee have Christ revealed so clearly now more then formerly It is one of the great promises of God unto his Church as we may see Isai 11.9 Isai 11.9 That the earth shall be filled with the knowledge of God And Jerem. 31.34 That all shall know the Lord c. These are the dayes fore-spoken of wherein wee doe in a degree and measure see eye to eye Isai 52.8 though something more may be added in the conversion of the Jewes As God therefore promiseth it as a blessing so count it a blessing Christ taketh the vaile from before his face and saith Behold me behold me O yee sonnes of men Isai 65. Isai 65. Therefore First grow up in the knowledge of the covenant and of the blessings of it We should not now bee ignorant of what God hath promised on his part nor what he requires on our part If we have any intimation given us of a Legacy in some rich mans will O how carefull are we to enquire into it How much more should we labour to know this Testament Secondly labour also to grow setled in the doctrine which the covenant teacheth us not being carried away with every new fangled conceit but grounded in the truth which you have received Be children in malice but in knowledge and judgement be men of ripe age able to discerne between things that differ and to try all things holding fast that which is good Vnlesse we doe thus First we lose the benefit of the dayes of light in which we live if we be still ignorant of the covenant and of the benefits thereby to be received and live not by faith in them as good we had never heard them we take Gods grace in vain In vain should the Sunne rise and give light if wee shut our eyes and will not see it Secondly if we be still ignorant of the doctrine of the covenant and unsetled it argues a sinfull neglect and great contempt of the grace of God and of the light we enjoy and therefore as men open their windowes when the day appeareth though they had drawn their curtains before so let us open our eyes to discerne the doctrine of the grace of God Thirdly if any be now ignorant and ungrounded in the doctrine of grace it is a token of a dangerous estate therefore saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 4.4 If our Gospel be now hid it is bid to them that are lost in whom the God of this world c. And so for ungroundednesse see what the Apostle Peter saith 2 Pet. 3.16 2 Pet. 3.16 That they that are unstable and pervert the Scriptures doe it to their own destruction Seeing the doctrine of grace is so clearly manifested let us labour to know it and to be stablished therein that so we may turn neither to the right hand nor to the left Seeing the light of grace doth more clearly shine now then in Vse 2 dayes before let us therefore goe on in our way with more alacrity and cheerfulnesse of spirit we having the day-light shining to us and guiding us The light of the Lord is risen up on high to guide our feet into the way of peace Therefore as travellers though they walk heavily and uncomfortably whiles they are compassed with darknesse yet when light appeares they goe cheerfully so we that are pilgrimes and travellers should rejoyce that the day is come as they that sailed with Paul Acts 27. we should rejoyce in the light striving against all discouragements we meet withall and walking on cheerfully in the way that is set before us To teach us to walk more exactly inoffensively considering Vse 3 we have our way so plain before us It is no wonder if they that be in the dark stumble they cannot see the blocks that be in their way but they that walk in the day stumble not So it should be with us we should now labour to take heed of offences both of giving and taking offences causlesly John 11.9.10 Endeavour to walk inoffenso pede If we stumble it is not for want of light but of heedfulnesse Let us strive to walk evenly considering wee have more light then the Saints had formerly Labour to suppresse our inordinate passions and affections pride worldlinesse self-willednesse emulation keep these within these should be like the wild beasts of the field which retire to their dens when the Sunne ariseth they are afraid to bee seen in the light so these wild lusts of ours should not dare to appeare in these dayes of light they cannot stirre forth but the light will discover them sinne is now more conspicuous and more odious Let us therefore walk soberly modestly and orderly Thirdly the third difference in the manner of dispensation is in respect of power and efficacie The dispensation of the covenant works more powerfully and strongly now then in the dayes before Christs comming It was then more weak in the consciences of Gods people then now if we speak of the body of them Hence saith the Apostle Heb. 7.18.19 The commandement going before was disanulled by reason of the weaknesse of it It was not then simply and absolutely weak and unprofitable so that it could not communicate life and salvation to any but comparatively weak in respect of the lively and powerfull communication of it now Hence also Galat. 4.9 Gal. 4.9 they are called weak and beggerly rudiments The covenant then did not bring men to that perfection in grace as the new covenant doth And this was becau●e there was a lesse forcible influence of the Spirit accompanying the dispensation of the covenant then The spirit was not then given in that large measure as now because Christ was not then glorified Joh. 7.39 And because the spirit was given in a less measure therefore those ordinances were lesse profitable The liberall pouring out of the Spirit was reserved unto the time of Christs ascension to the end it might bee known that it is from Christ glorified that we doe receive the Spirit as John 16.7 If I goe not away
saith Christ the holy Ghost will not come When Christ ascended then he gave plenitude of gifts to men Ephes 4.7.8 Eph. 4.7 8. Then the Spirit was shed down abundantly as Titus 3.6 It was given before more sparingly but now more fully And this we may see in some particulars 1. There was less power of faith in the Saints before Christ then since When the doctrine of faith was more fully revealed then was faith it selfe more revealed in the hearts and lives of the people of God Gal. 3.23 Gal. 3.23 Before faith came saith the Apostle implying there was a time when there was lesse faith in Gods people According to the measure of the manifestation of the doctrine of faith such is the apprehension of faith 2. The spirit of love was lesse in them then it is now in Gods people For according to the measure of our faith so is our love The lesse they knew the loving kindnesse of God towards them in Christ the lesse they loved Hence saith the Apostle Gal. 4.6.7 that God hath sent the spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Abba Father and therefore we are no more servants but sonnes c. It was a more servile spirit which wrought in them being drawn by the terrors of the law more then by the promises of grace but we have the spirit of adoption the spirit of love and of a sound mind as 2 Tim. 1.7 2 Tim. 1.7 Love reignes more under the dispensation of the covenant now then before 3. They had a lesse measure of comfort to support and carry them on against the discouragements and troubles that they met withall we have the comforts of the Spirit in a more full measure Luke 2. Luke 2. Christ is called the consolation of Israel therefore the more we have Christ imparted to us the more means of comfort have we Hence is that speech of our Saviour These things I say unto you that your joy may be full It 's a full joy which wee have now in comparison of what they received Therefore in these respects the dispensation of the covenant of grace is more powerfull now then it was then To stirre us up to walk in more power and fruitfulnesse Vse according to the seasons of grace wherein we live Where there is more given there will be more required As God committeth more to us then to the Saints formerly let us bring forth more fruit or else the greater will our account be It will not be enough for us to say These infirmities were in the people of God formerly David and Abraham and other Saints sinned thus and therefore though wee sin in the same kind wee may attaine life as they did The covenant offereth us more grace it is dispensed in more power and efficacie their slips are for our caution not for a warrant to us First Labour to bee filled with the spirit of power and of a sound mind Those that are weak and sensible of their owne infirmity should strive to grow in strength that they may bee able to say as Micah 3.8 Micah 3.8 I am full of power And as the Apostle Paul Phil. 4.12.13 Phil. 4.12.13 I can doe all things through the power of Christ Wee must not bee infants and babes but grow up to bee men in Christ that the power of Christ may appeare to dwell in us There is power enough in Christ and we have the promise of all the grace that is in Christ to supply our wants withall Every one that will may come and take freely he is a full conduit every one that hath an empty vessell may goe and fill it Doe therefore as those that have their vessels empty and would have them filled with water they set them under the conduit pipes and there they stand untill they be full Christ is a conduit full of grace every ordinance is as a pipe by which he powres into us some of his spirit Here therefore wee must come and stand under Christ that he may powre down upon us st●nd with our vessels open with open hearts that we may be filled as Zach. 4.3.12 Zach. 4.3.12 The bowles of the candlestick stand under the dropping of the Olive trees and so receive oyle continually to maintain their light so must we Christs divine power gives us all things that pertain to life and godlinesse 2 Pet. 1.3 2 Pet. 1.3 Let us but receive and we may be fulfilled Secondly as we should labour to be filled with the Spirit so should wee endeavour also to expresse the power of it in our conversation 1. In labouring to subdue our corruptions wrath impatie●cy emulation pride worldlinesse c. Let us set our feet upon the necks of these tyrants that have risen up against us and fought gainst our souls Labour to shew forth such power of the Spirit that we may become more then conquerours 2. In being filled with the power of Faith to bear afflictions wants and necessities if God call us thereunto Let us not then shrink and faile but rest upon the faithfull covenant of God who hath promised us all good things for this life and the life to come 2 Tim. 1.8 2 Tim. 1.8 Faith will help us in extremities 3. Labour to be fruitfull in all goodnesse endeavouring to doe good to every one according to the measure received Vessels that are full desire vent Job 32. And if we be vessels of mercy filled with mercy and grace from above we should also vent forth to others that grace and those blessings which we have received Be not like dry vessels that will vent nothing Be also patterns of goodnesse and holinesse unto others In these things grow up to the fulnesse of the stature of Christ Thirdly as we should thus grow in the power of grace so should we expresse more of the comfort of grace and joy of the holy Ghost which is powred forth now more abundantly then before Let us imitate that patterne Acts 9.31 They walked in the feare of the Lord and in the comfort of the holy Ghost We should not walk heavily and droopingly with faces cast down spirits discouraged but labour to expresse the heavenly joy of the Saints above rejoycing in Christ with joy unspeakable and glorious 1 Pet. 1.8 1 Pet. 1.8 Rejoyce in the plenteous grace which is opened to us abundantly The Fountain is open we may come and take freely Look how it would joy a poore man if a rich friend should say unto him Come unto me in all your wants I will help you so should it be with us though we are poore and in wants yet we have a rich friend in heaven the Lord Jesus Christ and hee will open the rich treasure of his goodnesse to us if we goe unto him The fourth difference is in regard of the extent of it The covenant of grace in the old dispensation of it was revealed onely unto one people the nation of the
in effect all one but we are Saints by calling and our calling is by the Gospel of Grace 2 Thes 2.14 and therefore our sanctification is from Grace also 5. We are sanctified by being in Christ whence are those expressions frequent in Scripture Saints in Christ Iesus sanctified in Christ and such like Now our implanting into Christ is onely from Grace and therefore so is our Sanctification also 6. Our sanctification is called a new Creation Create in me a cleane hear● O God saith David Psal 51. Psal 51. And in Ephes 2.10 Ephes 2.10 We are created unto good workes And in 2 Cor. 5. We become new Creatures in Christ Iesus And in Ephes 4.24 Ephes 4.24 The new man is created after God in holines c. All which imply that there must be a creating power put forth to the working of this new man in us We must therefore deifie the workes of the Law and make a God of them induing them with a creating power if we will ascribe such efficacy unto them as to worke true sanctification in us 7. We receive the Spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 therefore not by the workes of the law 8. Christ tells us plainly the world of unbelieve●s that are under the Law cannot receive the Spirit Ioh. 14.17 Iohn 14.17 whom the world cannot rece●ve 9. Sanctification is purchased for us by the bloud of Christ He gave himselfe for us to purge us c. Tit. 2.14 T it 2.14 And so in Ephes 5.25 26 27. He gave himselfe for his Church that he night sanctifie it The third Part. THE BENEFITS and BLESSINGS this Covenant brings THE Covenant of Workes presupposeth our sanctification but it promiseth it not It presupposeth it I say because there could have bin no place for a Covenant of Works if God had not first given Adam a spirit of holinesse to enable him thereunto First therefore God creates man holy and then makes a Covenant with him requiring of him to work according to that holiness of his nature which he was endued with but if he violated and brake this Covenant this Covenant doth not promise to renew him to holinesse again this promise belongs to another Covenant But especially consider the proper and immediate worker of our sanctication which is the Holy Ghost Rom. 15.16 for which cause the spirit is called the spirit of Grace Zach. 12.10 and the spirit of holinesse Rom. 1. Election is the immediate work of the Father Redemption the work of the Sonne Sanctification the work of the Holy Ghost All the whole Trinity working together in the work of our salvation yet every one in his owne order First the Father elects then the Sonne redeems and lastly the Spirit sanctifies Concerning these severall works of the three Persons we are to consider 1. That they are all of equall extent 2. That they doe all issue from the same spring and fountaine of Grace First they are of the same extent none larger nor narrower then another Those that the Father hath chosen those doth the Sonne redeem Those that the Sonne hath redeemed those doth the Spirit sanctifie The Father chooseth none but whom hee gives to the Sonne to be redeemed by him the Sonne redeems none but those that were so given him by the Father and so it holds also in the third place that the Holy Ghost sanctifies none but whom the Father had chosen and the Sonne redeemed Secondly as it is thus in the extent so it is also in respect of the ground and cause from which they issue and spring Look then as our Election is of Grace and not of works Rom. 11.6 and our Redemption is of Grace Rom. 3.24 so is our Sanctification also Tit. 3.4 5. Not according to the works which we had done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of the new birth and the renewing of the Holy Ghost so that the same grace favour and good will which moved the Father to set his love upon us in our Election and caused the Sonne to give himselfe for our Redemption the same Grace sends or brings the Spirit into our hearts to renew us unto holinesse And thence it is that sometimes we are said to be chosen that we might be holy as in Eph. 1.4 sometimes said to be redeemed that we might be holy Luke 1.74 75. to the end that we might know that our sanctification and renewing unto holinesse doth come from the same grace as doe our election and redemption and therefore as our election is not of works but of grace and our redemption is not of works but of grace so it is also concerning our sanctification I conclude therefore that by the works of the Law no man being under the Law or Covenant of works can attaine to true sanctification and holinesse And if sanctification be not by the Law or Covenant of works then it necessarily and invincibly followes that for a man to try his estate in Grace by his sanctification is no turning aside to a Covenant of works Thus much we do not unwillingly assent unto namely that there is a kinde of outward sanctification improperly so called or rather an outward reformation which a man under the Covenant of Works may attayn unto The Law hath a power not only to irritate and provoke the lust that is within by its contrariety thereunto Rom. 7.11 but also to curb and restrayn the breaking of it forth into outward acts by the terrour of it Gal. 3.19 Exod. 20. And by this reformation thus wrought by the work of restraynt the unclean Spirit may seem to be cast forth Math. 12. but whatsoever reformation is thus wrought is as farre from true sanctification as earth is from heaven For though this reformation doth and may come from some inward work of the Spirit of God upon the spirit and soule of man as namely to convince and terrifie the conscience to stirre the affections and to awe the will also so that a man dares not commit the things he would yet the minde and will is still unrenewed the frame and disposition of the heart is still the same as it was before and therefore this reformation is not true sanctification That may be by the Law this is only by the Gospel and from Grace Object But in Hebr. 10.29 it is said of some who in respect of their inward estate never went beyond a Covenant of works yet of them it is said that they were sanctified by the blood of the Covenant which is the blood of Christ therefore such as are under a Covenant of works may be sanctified Answ There is a twofold sanctification one reall another in profession only As some men are said to beleeve when the work of faith is really wrought in the heart who are therefore said to be found in the faith Tit. 1.13 and 2.2 so others are said to beleeve only because they make a profession of faith as Iohn 2.23 Acts 8.13
speak elswhere Vse 3. To teach us hereby to try our selves whether we have any part in that salvation which God promiseth in his Covenant when we heare the Lord say as he doth herein my Text As for thee also thou shalt bee saved by the blood of thy Covenant wee should search and see whether we have been made partakers of this salvation promised But how shall we know that even by our sanctification if the Lord hath renewed and sanctified our natures and made us new creatures in Christ At what time God saveth his people at the same time he sanctifieth them And thus he tells the Israelites Ezek. 36. when he promiseth them to bring them back into the Land which their Fathers dwelt in which was unto them a type of heaven and was therefore called the Lords Land Hos 9.3 2 Chron. 7.20 he tells them withall that when and at what time he would performe this unto them at the same time he would poure out his spirit upon them and would cleanse them from their iniquities vers 33. sutable to that of the Apostle Tit. 3.4 5. he hath saved us by the washing of the new birth and by the renewing of the Holy Ghost At what time God sanctifieth us at the same time he saveth us he gives us the one as a pledge of the other And therefore it is that when the Lord had converted and sanctified the heart of Zacheus and made him a new creature hee did withall thus testifie unto him This day is salvation come to thy soule c. Luke 19.9 Some do deny this way of triall as if no evidence could bee had from our sanctification till we first know our election and justification by immediate revelation of the Spirit This mediate witnesse of the spirit which is by habituall and inherent graces is not to be harkned unto untill the immediate witnesse hath spoken But if there be no triall and knowledge of our estate to be had by habituall grace then 1 What did Christ mean when he told his Disciples that hereby should all men know them to be his Disciples if they love one another Iohn 13. What did Paul mean when he bids us prove our selves whether we be in the faith or no 2 Cor. 13. David surely was deceived when he said hereby I know that I shall not be confounded when I have respect unto all thy Commandements if so be no knowledge of our good estate may be gathered hereby Yea to what end did Iohn lay down all those signes and tokens of a blessed estate which are scattered here and there through the whole first Epistle his scope in that Epistle being this even to give unto the faithfull some certaine evidence of their salvation as is manifest by Chap. 5.13 And this being his scope mark then how frequent and plentifull he is in bringing in evidences of this nature as now we speak of as we may see Chap. 1.7 If we walk in the light of holinesse as he is in the light then have we fellowship one with another that is God with us and we with him so Chap. 2.3 4. hereby we are sure that we know him so as to have eternall life by the knowledge of him John 17.3 if we keep his Commandements and in verse 29. Know yee that he which doth righteousnesse is borne of him and in Chap. 3.7 hee that doth righteousnesse walking in the righteousnesse of a good conscience and upright conversation is righteous namely by imputation even as Christ is righteous and in verse 9.10 he that is borne of God sinneth not In this are the children of God known from the children of the Devill even by righteousnesse and loving of our brethren and verse 14. hereby wee know that we are translated from d●ath to life because we love the brethren so also verse 18 19. and 24 and Chap. 4. verse 7 12 13 16. Surely these are no lying Testimonies these witnesses are true If in taking evidence from these things we be deceived we may herein say as Ieremiah said in another case O Lord I am deceived and thou hast deceived me Ier. 20.7 2. If there were no evidence to be taken hereby this were to leave the work of the Spirit in as much darknesse and obscurity as is the work of the Father and the Son But the work of the Spirit is to make known and manifest unto us the things that are given us of God 1 Cor. 2. So long as the Fathers work of election stands alone and is not accompanied with the work of redemption and sanctification his electing of us is so hidden in his own bosome that none can tell what he will doe with any of the sonnes of men whether he will save any or destroy all But when the sonne comes and layes down his life for mans redemption hee doth thereby bring to light the Fathers intention thus farre that it is now known that certainly there be some whom the Lord will save But yet who these some be that is counsell still that is unknown therefore in the third place the Spirit comes and sanctifies those that are so chosen and redeemed And now by this work of the Spirit it is known not onely that there be some that God will save but the very persons themselves are thereby singled out and marked these have the seale and marke of God upon them whereby they are known to bee the sheep for which Christ laid down his life according to the counsell and will of the Father Even as in Matth. 3.17 when the Spirit came down upon Christ then God witnessed This is my beloved Sonne So it is here concerning our selves hereby we have Gods witnesse testifying of us that we are his children even by his Spirit of sanctification which he hath sent down into our hearts By this we know that we are children redeemed and chosen If we be sanctified we are saved Our salvation is begun and shall be perfected in due time Object But when the Apostle saith we know that wee are translated from death c. his meaning is as if he should say we which have first received the seale and immediate witnesse of the Spirit we know c. but others cannot know it Answ This is not the meaning of the Apostle as is evident to any one that with attention doth observe the scope and manner of the Apostles writing The matter stands thus There were a number in the Apostles time such as Iames elsewhere speakes of which professed to know and believe in Christ and would say they had faith as it is in Iam. 2.14 and yet they had no works They would say they had fellowship with the Father 1 Ioh. 1.6 and yet they would walk in darknesse They would say they knew God 1 Ioh. 2.3 and yet would not keep his Commandements They would say they did abide in Christ and yet did not walk after the steps of Christ ver 6. They would say they were in the light and
if it should not there enjoy God it would say I finde not him whom my soule loveth and longeth for where is he I must finde him ere my joy can be full Thus a sanctified heart aspires to fellowship with and enjoyment of God himselfe It stayes not till it come to the top of the ladder where God is Ordinances are as so many steps to ascend up unto him be only is the end which the godly heart seeks in them when we rest in them not seeking or not finding God in them this is but formality not true sanctity True sanctity stayes not till we can say as 1 ●oh 1.3 Verily our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Iesus Christ 7. True sanctification makes us exceeding sensible of our own wants and weaknesses in Grace making us to see how farre short we come of that perfection which should be in us Thus it was with Paul he strove unto a conformity wi●h Christ but saith he I have not yet attained unto it And so it was with David Psal 119.5 Oh that my wayes were directed to keep thy statutes q.d. but alas how short doe I come of such a course when men are so full and so perfect that they lack nothing it s a sign that pride and selfe-conceit and hypocrisie hath filled their heart rather then true sanctity These are proud Pharises Hypocrites Laodiceans who are indeed poore and blind and naked and miserable having no truth of Grace in them It s a true saying He that wants nothing in Grace hath nothing others there are which are ever wanting ever craving begging as men that are made up of wants seeing such abundance of corruption in themselves that it makes them to abhorre themselves when they come before God only this they doe they are still purging themselves in that fountaine of Grace Zach. 13. seeking to grow up to full holinesse in his feare 2 Cor. 7.1 These are sanctified soules such Christ pronounceth blessed Blessed are the poore in Spirit Blessed are these that thus hunger and thirst after righteousnesse Matth. 5. 8. There bee sundry sanctified affections and dispositions which doe shew forth true sanctification were it is As First holy mourning for sinne when our sinne is our chiefest sorrow as it was in David Psal 51.4 Secondly a chusing of the way of Grace when godlinesse and Grace with losse accompanying them are chosen and preferred before riches and treasures of the world doing as Moses who chose affliction rather then the treasures of Aegypt Heb. 11. and David who said of himselfe I have chosen the way of thy precepts c. What ever befall us this is our resolution in this way I will live in this I will die Thirdly a caring and taking thought for the things of Christ Paul that chiefest of Saints had his head full of these cares even cumbred with them every day This was from the abundant Grace of God which was in him those that are after the flesh they take thought for the flesh to fulfill the lusts of it Rom. 13. but those that are after the spirit they take thought for the things of Christ Phil. 2. Fourthly an holy zeale and earnestnesse for good to be active and working for Christ with an holy emulation and contention of Spirit being provoked thereto not only by the zeale of others as 2 Cor. 9. but even by their lukewarmnesse the lesse they doe we will doe the more and seek to draw on others by our example loth that any should bee more forward in evill then wee for good By these things try we our selves try we our sanctification where these things are there is the Spirit of holinesse and where they are not in some degree more or lesse there the Spirit of Grace is not nor have those that doe wholly want these things before named any part or portion in any saving blessing of the Covenant Vse 4. For direction unto all Gods people which have given up themselves by Covenant unto God These doe many times complaine of the power of their corruptions prevailing against them They see so much sinfull uncleanesse in themselves that it makes them to doubt whether the Spirit of Grace ever had any abiding in them Now for these here is direction how to get help that they may become pure holy undefiled and clean from their sin Let them look unto the promises of this Covenant which God hath made with his people Here is a fountaine of Grace opened unto them to wash in God hath promised That he will poure clean water upon them and will cleanse them from all their filthinesse Ezek. 3.25 He hath said he will wash away the filthinesse of the daughters of Zion that they may be cleane Are you then Ieprous and unclean in your own eyes Goe then and wash seven times in these waters of Iordan and so your leprosie shall depart from you Goe to God and plead his Covenant and promise and say unto God Lord thou hast made promises unto thy servants that thou wilt not only forgive the sinnes of thy people but that thou wilt sanctifie them and make them an holy people unto thee why then am I still thus corrupt sinfull and uncleane Lord wash me wash me throughly till I be cleane from all my sin This is our way to get help against our corruptions wee think for the most part that if we have sinned we must indeed goe to God for pardon and forgivenesse but we think we must work out our sanctification of our selves by our own watchfulnesse resolutions vowes and promises made unto God But herein we wrong our selves were there not more help in Gods promises which he makes to us then in our promises to him we might lie in our pollutions for ever we must therefore goe to God for help against all our corruptions seeking to him by faith in his Covenant and promise saying as Iehoshaphat Lord I am so borne downe by the power of my sinne that I know not what to doe only mine eyes are unto thee doe thou subdue mine iniquities doe thou help me The whole life of a Christian is a life of faith the life of justification the life of sanctification we live both these lives by the faith of the Sonne of God Gal. 2.20 and therefore we are said to be sanctified by faith because by faith we seek for and receive the Spirit of sanctification which is promised unto us Herein then lies our help What is the reason that after so many resolutions against such or such a sinne yet we are overcome againe and againe It is in a great part because we look at the victory against them to come as from our selves we think this or that shall doe it but the Apostle tells us that the victory by which we must overcome is our faith 1 Ioh. 5.4 Rest upon Gods faithfulnesse for help and strength against sinne as well as for forgivenesse of sinne And then though there be no help
hee makes them able to lend unto others makes them the head and others the taile c. sets up his own above and the other beneath 7. God is in Covenant with our whole man he is the God of our body as well as soule and spirit we are wholly his he hath taken us wholly to be his own and therefore even as our Saviour Christ in Matth. 22. doth hereby prove the resurrection of Abrahams body because God was in Covenant with Abraham he was the God of Abraham of whole Abraham body as well as soule and therefore God being the God of the living and not of the dead Abrahams body must live and rise againe so by the same argument we may gather assurance that God will provide for our outward man because he is the God of the whole man he is a God to us not only to pardon our sinnes to sanctifie and save our soules but he is the God of our bodies also to feed and to cloth them to minister to them such things as are convenient for them And hence is that in 1 Cor. 6.13 as our body is for the Lord to serve and glorifie him so is the Lord also for the body to redeem it to nourish it to glorifie it 8. The Lord knowes how many discouragements we meet with here to dishearten us in his service And therefore he casts in these outward blessings as encouragements to provoke us to serve him with more willingnesse and cheerefulnesse of Spirit As Hezekiah caused the Levites to have provision brought in unto them that they might be encouraged in the service of the Lord 2 Chron. 31.4 so will the Lord doe much more hee will have his servants to know that they shall not serve him for nought Iob 1. not so much as to shut a doore in his house in vaine Mal. 1. 9. The Lord hath commanded such duties unto his servants as they cannot performe without a supply in these outward things works of love mercy kindnesse helpfulnesse one to another yea he would have us to abound in these things and as examples to goe before all other people And therefore he will also furnish us with sufficiency that we may be compleat unto every good work He will not send on a message and cut off the feet of him whom he sends Prov. 26.6 10. The Lord looks for service from our outward man give up your body as an holy living Sacrifice unto God Rom. 12.1 Glorifie God in your bodies and spirits for they are God's saith Paul 1 Cor. 6. but he will not reap where he hath not sown nor look to gather where he hath not scattered he will sustaine us if he look for service from us 11. We are Gods houshold and family and therefore hee will provide for his own If he have charged us to provide for our own 1 Tim. 5.8 he will not he cannot be wanting to his If he feed the Ravens Job 39.3 and cloath the Lilies Matth. 6.26 he will not suffer his children to want bread 12. By giving us these outward things the Lord would nourish our faith in the hope of things spirituall and heavenly for when we see his care over us in these lesser things it may assure us that he will not neglect us in those that are of greater moment The outward blessings which God gave unto Israel were not outward blessings alone but pledges and tokens of better things he gave them bread from heaven and it was an outward bodily food but not that only but it was a pledge to them of the true bread from heaven he gave them water out of the Rock which did quench their bodily thirst but not that only but was a sign and pledge of Christ the true Rock out of whom springs the water of life he gave them a good and fat land to dwell in where they had vine-yards orchards gardens and lived in pleasure therein through his great goodnesse Neh. 9. but not as an outward blessing only but as a pledge of a better inheritance And thus doth he unto us though every thing is not now typicall to us as to them yet thus far we may go to say that these outward blessings are made pledges unto us of Gods love towards us in better things so as we may argue from the lesse to the greater that if he be so mindfull of us in these smaller things of this life then doubtlesse he will not neglect us in those greater things which concerne the eternall salvation of our soules 13. He knowes we have need of these things Matth. 6.32 and therefore he having commanded us to give unto him that needeth Ephes 4.28 and open our hand wide unto the poore Deut. 15.11 surely he will not shut up the bowels of his compassion from his own needy servants but will open his good treasure unto them to satisfie them with good things Deut. 28.12 Quest But sometimes wee see Gods faithfull servants to bee kept short in these outward blessings how comes this to passe the Lord having made such ample promises unto them and how farre forth may any bee assured to have a sufficiency in these things Answ To the first I conceive thus First all the promises of things pertaining to this life are subordinate and subservient to the promises which concern our inward man and our eternall salvation God doth not promise us these outward things so as to make against our spirituall good but so as to further and help it forward he promiseth them with Christ not against Christ nor to hinder his Kingdome in our hearts Rom. 8.32 If it so fall out that sufficiency in these may better us in the inward man wee shall not want them but because the Lord sees us sometimes to abuse them to the fulfilling of our wanton desires to pride security confidence and trusting in them here the Lord is free from his promise least by filling us with those things that are outward he should empty us of that little grace that is in us Secondly there are times of tryall in which the Lord will try all his children The Lord will try the righteous saith the Prophet Psal 11.5 thus he tryed them in Heb. 11.36 37. they were tryed with mockings and scourgings being destitute afflicted and tormented Thus also he tryed Israel in the wildernesse Deut. 8.2 16. and thus he tryed holy Job God will know what is in us he will see whether we serve him for wages yea or no or whether wee would continue to serve him out of love though he should give us nothing Hee will see whether we follow him for loaves or whether we can be content to cleave to him in wants and necessities having nothing But though the Lord will thus try us yet these times of tryall last not alwayes these are not the wayes of Gods ordinary dispensation towards his people During these times of tryall the Lord doth sometimes cut short his servants in outward things but it is to do
but legall Christians and legall Preachers as allowed this way All her assurance was from revelation it was revealed unto her that shee was one of the Elect of God and shee knew all things by immediate revelation from above but I fear she knows not that her glorious revelations were but Satanicall delusions Let her damned heresies shee fell into denying the resurrection c. and the just vengeance of God by which she perished terrifie all her seduced followers from having any more to doe with her leaven which shee spred among them Beware of her sinne least yee perish in her plague Vse 2. Is there a condition of the Covenant Then let this provoke us all who look for the blessing which it brings to be faith●ull with God in keeping our Covenant with him take heed we fall not short of the condition least we be deprived of the blessing this is that which the Apostle teaches us Heb. 4.1 Seeing we have a promise left us of entering into his rest there is the blessing promised let us feare least through unbeliefe any of us should be deprived there is the condition required The words through unbeliefe are not in the Text expressed but they are evidently implyed as appears both by the coherence with the third Chapter and by that which followes Chap. 4.2 To be deprived of such a blessing is a heavy losse such as can never be recompenced and the preventing of this losse so far as concernes us is by keeping of our Covenant which the Lord commands us to walk in If we forsake the condition we forsake the promise and therefore it is also that when God took Abraham into a Covenant with him he did not only tell Abraham what he would be unto him a God to blesse him but he brings Abraham to walk in Covenant with him Thou also shalt keep my Covenant saith the Lord Gen. 17.9 Thou shalt walk before me and bee upright Gen. 17 1. When God takes us into Covenant with him we are said to be brought into the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20. to teach us that now we must look at our selves as tyed and bound unto God in a Covenant never to be broken we are not now any longer at our own liberty to walke as we list but must observe our Covenant to walk therein when we walk so that we may truly say before the Lord our heart is not turned back from thee neither have we dealt falsely with thee in thy Covenant as it in Psal 44.17 18 this keeps the heart in a comfortable expectation of the blessed hope which is set before us Thus Paul I have kept the faith I have finished my course and now henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4.7 8. Let us carefully walk in the condition and then the promise will be sure not only sure in it self but su●e to us 2 Pet. 1.10 These bonds of the Covenant are not like the fetters of a prison they are like the pleasing bonds of wedlock vincula nuptiarum which every one gladly enters into Oh let us love these bonds give up both our hands unto the Lord yea and our hearts also to be bound in them for ever these are sweet bonds they work no griefe seek not therefore to break them Psal 2. nor cast them from you say not we will be our own and walk by our will such lawlesse and licentious spirits as will be at liberty they shall be at liberty to their wo they shall have such a liberty as Jeremy threatned to the rebellious Jewes a liberty to the sword to the famine and to the pestilence Jer. 34. a liberty to goe to hell to their eternall destruction a liberty with a curse granted unto them in wrath which shall end in chaines of everlasting darknesse and bring them into that prison from whence there is no going out Therefore let all such as look for the blessing and life promised in the Covenant Let them walk faithfully in the condition of it and in this way expect the mercy which is promised Thus wee have shewed First That there is a condition of the Covenant Secondly Why the Lord hath put a condition unto it 3. The third point follows to shew what the condition is which though it hath been obiter mentioned before yet is now to be spoken of more particularly The condition then of the Covenant of Grace is faith Rom. 4.16 Rom. 10.9 10. If thou believest in the Lord Jesus thou shalt be saved so Acts 18.31 Joh. 3.16 hence in Rom. 3.27 The Gospel is called the Law of Faith because as the Law of works doth put works as the condition of that Covenant so the Gospel puts faith as the condition of the new Covenant Quest But why is faith made the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. The blessing of life promised is not in our selves but in Christ Christ is life and he which hath the Sonne hath hath life and he which hath not the Son hath not life 1 Joh. 5.12 We are dead Colos 3.3 and our Works are dead Heb. 9.14 there is no life in them they cannot bring life unto them that doe them nor can wee quicken our own soules but Christ is the life of men Joh. 1.4 Colos 3.4 and the way to receive Christ and the life which is in him is only by faith Ioh. 1.12 unbeliefe rejects Christ and puts him away But faith as an hand puts forth it selfe to receive him in whom our life is If we had life in our selves and could have found it in our own works it had then been needlesse to appoint faith as the condition of the Covenant but being that both we our selves are dead in sinne and our works are dead works nothing but death to be found in either therefore it s required that wee believe in Christ that we may receive life from him 2. The condition of the law is now become impossible unto us through the infirmity of our flesh Rom. 8.3 and therefore the Apostle saith that the Law cannot possibly give life Gal. 3.21 Therefore the Lord would go that way with us no more the Lord saw by Adam what would be the fruit of that condition if we had been put upon the same as Adam was we should have done as he did we should have shewed our selves men like men transgressing the Covenant as Hoseah speaks Hos 6.7 This condition being above our ability to performe the Lord hath in goodnesse appointed another which is possible through grace to be fulfilled by us having now received a spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 It is now given us to believe Phil. 1.29 this is possible 3. It is by faith that it might be by grace Rom. 4.16 The Covenant is stablished upon the condition of faith that it might appeare to be by grace that wee obtain the blessing the condition must answer the nature of the Covenant therefore being a Covenant of grace the
and Christ in the promise Joh. 1.12 Heb. 11.13 A man may have an hand and yet not have the gift which is offered him unlesse hee put forth his hand to receive it faith is the hand of the soule and the putting of it forth is the act by which wee receive Christ offered 2. Look as it was with Adam in that Covenant made with him he had an habituall righteousnesse within him but that was not the condition of the Covenant betwixt God and him but the acting of that inward habit in acts of obedience was the condition of the Covenant so here in the Covenant of grace first God puts into us the habit of faith and then requires of us act of faith to lay hold of the promise and to receive the grace which i● offered in the Covenant 3. It is not an habit of faith but a life of faith which is required of the Saints that are in Covenant with God it is the habit which enables and fits us to live by faith but the life of faith consists in the acts of faith put forth according to the severall occasions we meet withall Gal. 2.20 2 Cor. 5.8 Heb. 11. 4. There must needs be a difference betwixt that which God promiseth as a part of the Covenant on his part and that which he requires of us on our part now the habit is that which God promiseth to us when he saith I will give you a new heart c. and this he worketh in us in our effectuall calling and then the acting of that faith received is that which is required on our part Quest But what is that act or acts of faith by which we perform the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. First there is an act of faith by which we doe as it were first close with the Covenant revealed and offered unto us 2. There is also another act of it by which we are carried on to an answerable walking before God according to the Covenant made with him 1. For the former before we give a direct answer we must lay down these two grounds First That in the making up of the Covenant betwixt God and us God is first with us he is the first mover he begins with us before we begin with him we should never seek to be in Covenant with him if he did not allure us and draw us unto him Thus in Ezek. 20.37 I will bring them saith the Lord into the bond of the Covenant It is the Lord which brings them they doe not first offer themselves And first God prepares his own way for entering into Covenant with us and then he finisheth the work and in this preparation he doth these three things 1. He breaks us off from our Covenant with Hell and Death makes us sensible of our undone estate makes us see that we are without God without Christ without hope Ephes 2. that we are not under mercy that wee are not of his people 1 Pet. 2. 2. He opens unto us his minde and will shewing himselfe willing to receive us to grace and to enter into a new Covenant with us yet againe to take us to be his people and hee to be our God he goes into the streets and open places as it is in Prov. 1.20 21. and there makes publike proclamation Ho ho every one that will Come yee unto me and I will make an everlasting Covenant with you Esay 55.3 Esay 65.1 yea more he comes and beseeches us to be reconciled unto him 2 Cor. 5.20 and speaks to us as pittying us Jer. 3.12 and lamenting over us Ezek. 33.11 thereby to perswade us to come into a Covenant with him 3. By the hearing of these promises and offers of grace the Lord usually scattereth some little seeds of faith in the hearts of those that he will bring unto himselfe which seed being sown doth sometimes quickly put forth and acts towards the Covenant propounded and layes hold of it as we see in Lydia the Jaylor Zacheus and such others but sometimes and that most usually before that faith hath done any great thing in seeking after God to make a Covenant with him the Lord doth againe withdraw himselfe and goes away as Hoseah 5. end hiding himselfe as if he would regard us and look after us no more so that now if we will get into Covenant with him we must seek after him as he before sought after us and must sue unto him for grace to take us into Covenant with himselfe and herein faith begins to shew it selfe beginning to work and move towards the Covenant which the Lord offereth to make with us For though the Lord hath withdrawn himselfe yet he hath left such a touch of his Spirit upon the heart as makes the soule affectionate towards him so as now it cannot rest but feeling its own wo being without God and without Covenant and having heard of the Lords willingnesse to enter into a Covenant with us it now begins to seek after the Lord to be in Covenant wirh him This is the first ground that God is first he begins with us Secondly The second is that whatsoever faith doth in seeking to enter into Covenant with God it doth it alwayes in that way and according to that order in which the Lord hath gone before us in the offer of his Covenant unto us faith doth alwaies follow the Word and doth nothing but as it hath a word of Faith to guide its way it goes step by step as it hath the light of the word directing and going before faith doth not prescribe unto God it will not presume to appoint the conditions of the Covenant onely it answers and applyes it selfe to Gods offer taking conditions of peace but giving none It doth not seek to wind about the promise of grace to our own minde and will It doth not say I will have it thus thus it shall be or else I will admit of no conditions of peace but the soul now finding that the everlasting estate of it for weal or woe life or death stands at the meer good pleasure and mercy of God and knowing that either it must submit to that way of the Covenant and to those conditions which the Lord is pleased to set down or it must perish for ever it gladly comes in humbly accepting the offer of grace in the same way as it is tendred and offered unto us of God Here then that we may see how faith closeth with the Covenant propounded we must see first how God offers himselfe in his Covenant unto us Now in that main promise of the Covenant which is indeed the sum of all I will be thy God God offers himself unto us two wayes as hath been before shewed in the opening of that promise First he offers himselfe unto us as a God of mercy to pardon us as a God of blessing to blesse us with all sufficient blessings 2. As a God over us and above us to order us and to rule us
looking were healed so it is here with us Christ is lift up on high for us to look unto this looking is by faith Ioh. 3.14 15. and by this looking we are healed and saved Isai 45.22 Reas 4. Look what place works had for our justification to life in the Covenant of works the same place hath faith in the Covenant of grace but works were to goe before our justification in the Covenant of works and therefore so must faith in the Covenant of grace Though Adam was by nature just by an habituall justice yet he was not thereby actually justified unto life but besides his native or habituall righteousnesse he must also performe an actuall righteousnesse and without this he was not to be justified unto life and if he was not to be justified without or before works then are not we justified without or before faith because faith is to us in stead of works and hath the same place now in the Covenant of grace as works had then in the Covenant of works Reas 5. To make faith a condition consequent to our justification is to place faith in the same ranke with works as works are considered in the Covenant of grace for even works also have a place in the Covenant of grace though they are not a condition antecedent yet are they a condition consequent to our justification so as every justified person must walk in good works Tit. 3.7.8 And therefore if faith be placed after justification then it stands but in the same rank with works having no propriety or pre-eminence above works in respect of our justification For though it shall be granted that faith goes before works as the cause be●ore the effect faith producing works as the tree doth the fruit yet they are both alike in respect of justification they are one before another when they are compared betwixt themselves but compare them both with justification and then according to this opinion they goe both together no more is ascribed to faith in our justification then to works if faith follow our justification Reas 6. We are not actually justified till Christ be actually ours Christ being our righteousnesse before God but Christ is not actually ours till he be received by us nor is he received but only by faith Ioh. 1.12 Christ must be received by us or wee have no benefit by him unto salvation Christ is righteousnesse for us before our faith but he is not righteousnesse unto us till he bee received of us by faith our garments are prepared for us before we be cloathed with them but that they may actually cloath and cover us we must take them by the hand and put them on so must we receive Christ Ioh. 1.12 which is done by faith Gal. 3. though he be fit to justifie us before faith yet he doth not actually justifie us or cover our sinfull nakednesse till by the hand of faith we take him and put him on Reas 7. That righteousnesse which is by imputation cannot be before that which is imputed to us as our righteousnesse but the righteousnesse which the Covenant of grace sets forth is a righteousnesse by imputation and it is faith which is imputed for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 Ga● 3.6 and therefore our righteousnesse cannot be before our faith Reas 8. If we were justified before faith then the witnesse of the Spirit of bondage witnessing our bondage under sin and death could not be true for till faith come he testifies unto us that wee are under wrath unjust sinners and this witnesse of the Spirit is true and therefore till wee believe wee are not justified Reas 9. Lastly to omit other reasons which might be produced if justification were before faith we might then ask as the Apostle doth in Rom. 3.1 What is the preferment of faith what profit hath the believer above the unbeliever they are both alike in respect of justification before God when a man comes to believe hee is not a pin the better then he was before he believed but was justified before as well as after and thus faith which is called precious faith is made vile and of little worth seeing a man may be justified without it as well as with it And thus much concerning the third thing propounded about the condition of the Covenant namely what the condition of it is sc Faith 4. The fourth point follows which is whether the putting of a condition doth or can stand with the free grace of the Covenant yea or no for it may seeme that if there be any condition required on our part then the grace of the Covenant is not free and if not free then it s no grace at all and how then is it called a Covenant of grace Ans The putting of a condition doth not hinder or lesson the free grace of the Covenant so long as the condition is Evangelicall and not Legall Some have beene of minde that the promises which we call conditionall are not free promises or promises of free grace and therefore they make an opposition betwixt the promises which are called absolute and the conditionall as if only the absolute promises were free promises excluding the conditionall but the condition annexed being a condition of the Gospel not of the Law doth no more derogate from the freenesse of grace then a Princes offering a royall reward to a Subject upon condition that he doe thankfully accept of it and acknowledge his Princely bounty towards him doth any whit derogate from the freenesse of the gift no more doth the condition of faith by which we receive the grace given unto us of God derogate from the freenesse of his grace towards us a legall condition doth indeed exclude free grace but an Evangelicall condition doth not When the Lord saith Believe and thou shalt bee saved Act. 16.31 and saith also by grace yee are saved Eph. 2.8 There is the like free grace in both Believe and be saved though conditionall is as free grace as if said Thou shalt be saved by grace freely loving thee and pardoning thy sinne That these conditionall promises are of free grace as well as the absolute I prove because First They all flow from the same purpose of grace towards us all Gods purposes towards his Elect are purposes of grace 2 Tim. 1.9 and so are all his promises also Tit. 1.2 for these flow from that eternall purpose of his The promise is but the manifestation of his purpose towards the Elect whether the promise be absolute or conditionall all is one That which was first hid within God himselfe as only purposed by him is afterwards made manifest by his promise And look in what series and order God did purpose to communicate the blessings of grace to his Elect so as one shall succeed and follow the other the same doth he make known in his promise and so doth also execute and fulfill first calling then justifying then glorifying c. Rom. 8.28 29 30. hee doth not save
should have said unto us you have once broken my Covenant and yet if you will at last fulfill my Law which I gave unto you I will yet accept you as just unto life yet we could not have done it the condition was too hard for us to perform If we had been held close to this condition of fulfilling the Law we should have missed of life for ever The Lord therefore seeing and pittying of our infirmity was pleased to propound unto us another condition saying unto us only beleive Beleive on my son trust on my grace and thou shalt be saved herein the Lord hath condescended to our weaknesse taking compassion of our infirmities laying upon us no other burthen but this Beleeve my promise accept my grace and rest upon it and this thy faith shall save thee Thou shalt never perish 3. It serves for comfort to all Gods faithfull ones that have beleived through grace if you have received this first gift if it be given you to beleeve you shall not fail of a second gift even the gift of eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Though your repentance be lesse then to equall the measure of your sins though your obedience be imperfect yea though your faith it selfe be weak also yet if it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfained syncere and sound this your faith is accepted of God and is imputed to you for righteousnesse Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham saith the Apostle Gal. 3.9 Blessed is shee that beleeveth saith the Angell Luke 1.45 and the Son of God comes in as a third witnesse testifying that whosoever beleeveth in him shall not perish but is passed from death to life Iohn 3. Here are three witnesses from heaven and earth all witnessing the blessed estate of such as do beleive Faith is well termed precious faith 1 Pet. 1.2 Pet. 1.1 because it makes us partakers of all the precious blessings of grace which are contained in the Covenant The faithfull are inheritours of all the priviledges which God hath promised to his chosen and therefore it is that they are called heires of promise Heb. 6.17 and heires of blessing 1 Pet. 3.9 You beleevers be exhorted to see and owne your blessednesse take notice of the great things the Lord hath done for you he hath made a covenant with you even a Covenant of peace and blessing and life for ever God is become your God he will be all things unto you and when all helpes under heaven fail you yet from himselfe he will do you good all your sins are forgiven you his spirit is yours to lead you to sanctifie you and to heal the evils that be in you he will uphold you in that state wherein you stand and will keep you that you shall never perish and will at last bring you to a full injoyment of himselfe in his heavenly Kingdome where you shall for ever blesse him and be made blessed by him and shall rejoyce before him with joy unspeakable and glorious pluck up your hearts therefore and be glad lift up your heads strengthen the weak hands and the feeble knees serve the Lord with gladnesse and joyfulnesse of spirit considering the day of our salvation draweth neer though now for a time you may be in heavinesse through manifold temptations and afflictions in this evill world yet faint not you being partakers of that precious faith you have the holy and faithfull God in Covenant with you to love you to blesse you and to save you and yet a little while and he that shall come will come and receive you to himselfe and then you shall fully know what it is to have beleived and to have been in Covenant with God what it is to have God to be your God when you shall see him and enjoy him as he is Only nourish your faith and live by faith make much of this precious grace cherish it by thinking often on the promises and of that grace which hath been shewed upon you from on high study to walke worthy of that mercy received and in so doing wait for the end of your faith the salvation of your soule 4. If faith be the condition of the Covenant then woe to all unbeleevers that go on in their impenitency and unbeleife Their unbeleife deprives them of that good which the Lord hath by his Covenant promised to his people they have no part nor portion in God they are without God without Christ without Covenant without promise without mercy their sins are unpardoned they are under the curse the wrath of God abides upon them there is nothing to take it away from them but if they abide in unbeleif wrath abides upon them for ever There is a wrath wherby God is angry with his own people but that anger lasts but for a little season it is but for a moment Isai 4.7 8. it passeth away and abides not upon them but the unbeleiver hath wrath abiding on him for ever John 3.36 In Iude 5. it is said that God afterwards destroyed those Israelites that beleived not when once they had had the means of grace made known then not beleiving God afterwards destroyed them you that tread in the steps of their unbeleif you are little troubled to thinke what misery is comming upon you as not knowing that you are in danger but you are under wrath your judgement hastneth and your damnation sleepeth not be awakened therefore be thinke your selves and consider what your end will be by your unbeleif you put a bar to exclude your selves from the blessing of life promised to Gods people you thus continuing the Lord neither will nor can save you You will thinke this an hard saying but you will finde it too true God cannot lye Titus 1.2 much lesse can he forswear but God hath sworne this that such shall never enter into his rest Psal 95. and Hebr. 3. ult In Mat. 13. ult It s said Christ did not many great works in his owne country for their unbeleifes sake But in Marke 6.5 it s said hee could not doe them he neither did them nor could do them unbeleif stops the course and diverts the stream of Gods goodnesse from comming unto us Christs usuall speech to those that expected any blessing from him was this According to your faith be it unto you faith makes all things possible Marke 6.23 It will reverse the sentence of death which is passed upon us and bring us back unto life but unbeleife makes it impossible so that we cannot be saved The Lord can do nothing against his own counsell and will and he hath concluded this with himselfe to save none but such as beleive and that whosoever beleeveth not shall perish all you unbeleevers consider this your unbeleefe will bee your destruction Secondly Is there such a work of faith in bringing us into Covenant with God and in enabling us to walk in Covenant with him 1. This serves to direct all the people of God
how to live and walke before God look at your selves as such as have God in Covenant with you to blesse you with all blessings meet and expedi●nt for you whether they be blessings of this life or that which is to come you are no more strangers and forreiners you are not aliens from the Covenant or common-wealth of Israel All the good which God hath promised to his Israel belongs to you Live therefore a life of faith resting upon the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you Naturall men live by sence and reason live you by faith in Gods Covenant and promise and there is much use to be made of this consideration 1. In case we have sinned and done things that we should not and thereby have grieved the Lord as David did of whom it is said that the thing that David had done displeased the Lord yet herein make use of our faith trusting still to his grace and mercy for forgivenesse according to his Covenant we must not now fly away from God and stand afar off or cast away our hope as if we had lost our God and had no more part or portion in him but still beleive that we renewing our Repentance before him he will still be our God and love us still and will be mercifull to our iniquities Now is a time to put forth faith in Gods promise we must remember we are not under that hard condition of workes but under the condition of Faith It s the weaknesse and sinfull infirmity of many of Gods people who walk in much discouragement of spirit because of some failings which they see in themselves by which they become uncomfortable to themselvs and to others when yet their conscientious walking and tendernes is manifest to all such a discouraged spirit might well become a childe of the Law that is under the condition of Workes but it becomes not such as are under the condition of Faith Hath the Lord said that if his people sin against him after hee hath taken them into Covenant with himselfe he will cast them off and acknowledge them no more See what Samuel speaks to the children of Israel in 1 Sam. 12.19 20. Ye have indeed sinned a great sin and done all this wickednesse yet feare not depart not from following the Lord for the Lord will not forsake his people The Lord know●● our frailty and remembers we are but dust and therefore hath told us that he will spare us as a father spareth his son that s●rveth him Mal. 3.17 and will be mercifull to our sins If we were or could be without sin we should not have needed such promises of forgivenesse but when the Lord tooke us into Covenant with himselfe he knew we should still need daily mercy and compassion to heale our backslidings and foreseeing our need of such promises he hath made them knowne unto us that we might live by them looking up unto him by faith in the fence of our daily infirmities for a gracious acceptance of us and forgivenesse of our sins 2. In case we want any blessing suppose some speciall grace to enable us to walke more fruitfully in our particular places and callings look herein at the Covenant as a storehouse full of all rich blessings and make use of faith which is the condition of the Covenant set that aworke and draw out of this fountain as much as we need if we want wisedome boldnesse meeknesse temperance remember by what means we must receive them we receive the spirit by faith Gal. 3.14 beleive this promise therefore wherein the Lord hath said he will give the Holy Ghost to them that desire him Luke 11.13 This is the way the Saints have taken David when he found his heart defiled with those lusts what course took he to get it cleansed from these impurities he flyes to God by the prayer of faith desiring to have a clean heart created in him when the Church found her self shut up under deadnesse and hardnesse of heart they fly for help to Gods Covenant Thou art our father and we are thy people Breake not thy covenant with us Isai 63. and 64. Ier. 14. 3. In case we be troubled with feares of Apostacy and backsliding as thinking though we have begun well yet we shall never be able to continue Persecutions discouragements temptations are so many so violent that we thinke we shall never stand out against them here also live by faith God will give an issue to all our temptations in the mean time commit our soules to God in well doing and beleeve as Paul did that he will deliver you from every evill work and preserve you blamelesse to his heavenly Kingdome 2 Tim. 4. If Satan annoy with his temptations say as Jehoshua did The Lord rebuke thee O Satan Zach. 3. and remember the promise The Lord will shortly tread him under our feet Rom. 16. 4 In case of any service or duty to be performed unto God remember his Covenant I will make you able to keepe my judgements and to doe them Ezek. 36.27 In 1 Chron. 15.26 it is said God helped the Levites in bearing the Arke so will he help us to undergoe the burthen of that work which is too heavy for us if we rest upon him by faith if we have a word of faith to assure us that the work to be done is for the generall Gods worke and that it is particularly required of us as Our works a worke of our calling we have then good warrant to depend upon his help he hath called us he hath sent us to the work and therefore he will be with us according to that speech of his to Gideon in Judges 6.14 16. I have sent thee and therefore I will be with thee This is written not for him only but for us also that being called to any ministration or service we might by faith look for the same presence of God with us the same assistance as he had Many other particulars might be named but these may suffice to give a short direction how to live by faith in the promise and Covenant of God according to the severall occasions which befall us 2. As we must depend upon God by faith for all good things which the Covenant promiseth so we must remember the other part of the Covenant That God will be a God over us as well as a God to blesse us and therefore here our care must be to advance the Lord on high that it may be seen by our subjection unto him that we doe acknowledge him to be our God above us and over us he hath humbled himself to take such underlings as we are into Covenant with himselfe and hath thereby advanced us above our selves our duty is to set up him that hath abased himselfe for our sakes and to humble our selves to walke with our God Micah 6.8 It is said of Abraham that by his faith he gave glory to God if we be the children of Abraham let
them and that they shall be surely made good unto us 3. Keep Christ neare unto us for it is he in whom all the promises are unto us Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1. Lay him therefore in our hearts Let him lie between our breasts Cant. 1.12 Let him be to us the dearely beloved of our soule make him our hope as the Apostle calls him 1 Tim. 1.1 even our hope of glory Col. 1.27 Keep him near to us and hope through him and we shall not be disappointed of our hope 4. Lastly labour to keep in our selves a cleare sight of those graces that are expressed in the conditionall promises they being the companions of the faith which saveth us take heed of suffering them to be wounded and darkned in us by worldlinesse wrath impatiency but keep them shining and bright the more evidently we can discern these the more evidence we have of the blessing of the Covenant and the more assurance of full possession These graces are as t were our anoynting by which we are anoynted before hand unto the Kingdome Look to our anoynting then If God have anoynted us by the oyle of his spirit it is not for nothing that he hath done it it is an assurance unto us that it is his pleasure to give us the Kingdome David being anoynted by Samuel got the Kingdome at last though he went through many troubles first Vse 3. This should teach us all to preferre the things of Gods Covenant being so sure and certaine before all the uncertaine vanities of this deceitfull world What the Apostle speaks of riches calling them uncertaine riches 1 Tim. 6. the same may be truly affirmed of all worldly things honour favour of men c. they are all uncertaine things The hope of them is uncertaine and many times proves vaine as it did to Balaam who had faire hopes before him of rising to great honour but all was quasht in a moment when he was slaine with the sword and sent down to the sides of the pit among the uncircumcised And as is the hope so is the possession of them uncertaine also as it was to Haman who in the midst of all his honour stood but in a slippery place for being in honour he continued not but became like unto the beasts that perish What is there of any certainty under the Sunne The world and all things in it is not unfitly compared to a wheele Ezek. 1. and 10. which is of various and uncertaine motion now up now down now going anon returning there is nothing sure in this world but only what we hold by the sure and faithfull Covenant of God and therefore as Christ when he saw his Disciples admiring the stately building of the Temple Are these saith he the things yee look upon so should we say unto our selves rebuking these our foolish hearts when we see them taken with this worlds uncertaine vanities Are these the things yee look for yee walk in a shadow and disquiet you selves in vaine ye graspe at that which ye have no assurance to attaine or if ye doe attaine yet cannot long possesse such are all worldly things But the things which God hath promised in his Covenant are sure certaine infallible though the world be a lyar yet God is faithfull and true he cannot deny himselfe The holy Apostle did well discern this difference betwixt the things of God and the things of this world one of them he calls uncertaine 1 Tim. 6. but speaking of the other I fight not as uncertaine as one that beats the ayre but as certaine to obtaine 1 Cor. 9.26 Truly while a man contends for the things of this world he doth but beat the ayre as if a man should spend his strength in striking great blows at an airie shadow whiles his enemy in the meane time goes free away But those which runne for the crown which God hath promised they shall in time finde that they have not run in vaine neither have laboured in vaine they shall finde a sure reward Prov. 11.18 We love not to lose our labour we think better sit still then labour for nothing But this encourageth to strive with our best strength when we have the prize in our eye when we are sure to obtaine Here therefore first by faith believe the truth of Gods promise and then put on in practice to seek after the things which God hath promised looking at the glory and joy which is set before us and then the sure mercies of David will be our own mercies also as Jonah speaks Jonah 2.8 and will be as sure to us as to David or any of his seed How sure the Apostle esteemed them see 2 Tim. 4.8 18. Take we heed then lest by following lying vanities we forsake our owne mercies that mercy and blessing I meane which if we diligently seek after shall surely be our own 3. The third property of the Covenant is that it is an everlasting Covenant Gen. 17.7 I will stablish my Covenant betwixt me and thee to be an everlasting Covenant so also verse 13. see also Esay 55.3 Ier. 32.40 Heb. 13.20 This Covenant is said to be everlasting 1. A parte antè as being from everlasting in respect of the promise made to Christ for us which was done before the foundation of the world Tit. 1.2 2. A parte post as being to continue from everlasting to everlasting as Moses speaks Psal 9.2 though the Covenant in respect of our own personall entering into it is made with us now in time and hath a beginning yet for continuance it is everlasting and without end Its never to be broken if once made in truth men may seeme to be in Covenant with God and yet it being but seemingly and not in truth such a Covenant may break and come to an end in which sence the Iewes are said to have broke the everlasting Covenant Esay 24.5 But where we do truly give up our selves unto God to be his people and take him to bee our God this Covenant is everlasting its never broken more It is not denyed but by reason of our unstablenesse of Spirit we are apt to make many a breach on our part And it is true also that the Lord might have reserved such a liberty unto himsel●e and a power of revocation to disanull the Covenant which he had made with us But neither hath the Lord put in any such clause of reservation nor doth he take advantage of our infirmity but tells us that which we may trust unto namely that his Covenant with us is for ever and that from everlasting to everlasting he is our God Hence is that in Gen. 17. ● God is said to stablish his Covenant with us as meaning to have it stand and continue for ever and in Psal 89.28 it s said to stand fast and in 2 Chron. 13 5. its called a Covenant of salt because it corrupteth not it faileth not as things that are salted use to last and continue and
an holy calling 2 Tim. 1.9 and we called unto holinesse 1 Thes 4.7 and when God takes us into Covenant with him he chargeth us henceforth to touch no unclean thing 2 Cor. 6.17 4. In regard of the effect it works holinesse in those that are called It worketh effectually that which it promiseth and commandeth The promises of the Covenant have a sanctifying vertue in them to sanctifie those to whom they are made for God by them conveyes the Spirit of holinesse into our hearts as the Apostle implyes in 2 Pet. 1.4 and we are thereby encouraged and quickned to grow up ●n all holinesse according to the will of God as is evident by that in 2 Cor. 7.1 compared with chap. 6. end where God having made that sweet promise Come out from among them and touch no unclean thing and I will receive you and ye shall be my sons and daughters saith the Lord Almighty from hence the Apostle inferres Having then such promises let us cleanse our selves from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and grow up unto full holinesse in his feare c. And in regard of this effect of the Covenant thus working holinesse in those that are the people of God they are called the holy people Dan. 12.7 and the people of Gods holinesse Esay 63.18 So in all these respects the Covenant may well be called an holy Covenant And it must needs be an holy Covenant First because the Lord himselfe is the author and ordainer of this Covenant the summe and substance of it was framed and set down in heaven in the counsels of eternity comming forth from the bosome of the Father and concluded by the assent of the Sonne and holy Ghost All the articles of it were first decreed and concluded there and therefore must needs be holy If they had been devised by men they would have been of an other quality savouring of the sinfull and licentious spirit that is in man but being a Covenant of the Lords own drawing he setting down all the articles and conditions of it it must needs be as himselfe is an holy Covenant proceeding from so pure and holy a God hence it is that in Psal 60.6 he hath spoken the words of his Covenant in his holinesse Look as grace and holinesse are united together in God so they are in his Covenant God can no more cease to be holy then he can to be gracious he is both gracious and holy so that his Covenant of Grace is also an holy Covenant as proceeding from him which is both gracious and holy 2. Because the end of this Covenant is to make us partakers of all the holy things of God from which all unholy and uncleane ones are excluded Levit. 12.2 3 6. Psal 50.16 but those that are sanctified enjoy them and use them as their own they are their portion their inheritance Deut. 33. their pearles Matth. 7.6 The Lord would have all his Ordinances to be used holily he cannot abide to have them prophaned and therefore it is that in Ezra 6.21 none but such as were separate from their uncleanesse might eat of the holy things and therefore the Lord will have his people to be an holy people that they may participate in all his holy things Nay more we are called not only to participation of these holy things of God but to fellowship with God himselfe 1 Ioh. 1.3 The Lord saith unto them ye are my people and they say unto him thou art our God Zach. 13. ult But without holinesse no man can have fellowship with God and therefore they must be an holy people that are taken into Covenant with God to enjoy followship and communion with him Quest But wherein stands that holinesse which the Covenant requires of all Gods covenanted people Answ There is a twofold holinesse 1. Relative 2. Positive First Relative in two things 1. In separation from common use 2. In dedication to God 1. There must be a separation from common use in this sence things holy are called separate things Deut. 19 2. Things common in Scripture are opposed to holy to shew that holy things must be separate from common use Hence Solomon speaking of Gods taking Israel to be his own he useth that expression Thou hast separated them unto thy selfe from all the people of the earth c. and thence was that exhortation of Ezra Separate your selves from the people of the lands Ezrah 10.11 and that of the Apostle Come out from among them and separate your selves 2 Cor. 6.17 If then we will be holy we must be separate from the common conversation of the world having no fellowship with the works thereof 2. There must be a dedication and devoting our selves unto God we must be offered up and given unto him Thus the holy dayes were dedicated unto the service of God they were not only separated from common and ordinary use but were dedicated to the Lords service thus were the first fruits called holy and thence the holy things and the dedicated things are taken for one and the same 1 Kings 15.15 as the Altar Numb 7. end the Temple 1 King 8.63 and thus must we be dedicate or given to the Lord as is said of the Macedonians that they gave themselves to the Lord 2 Cor. 8. we must resign up our selves unto him to be his and for him alone Secondly Positive and this is also twofold Habituall Actuall 1. Habituall qualifying and fitting us by graces infused for the service of God which we are devoted unto as all the things that were appointed for the service of God were anoynted with the holy oyl Exod. 30.26 27. so must we be anoynted with the sweet oyntments which are the graces of the spirit 2 Cor. 1.21 1 Ioh. 2.27 The oyntment of the holy Ghost which was poured upon the head of Christ Acts 10.38 must run down upon us that the savour of his oyntment may be found upon us Cant. 1. we must be sanctified throughout in soule in body and in spirit 1 Thes 5.23 2. Actuall it s not enough to have grace in us but there must be an holy use and exercise of those graces that are in us they are not given to us to be idle or that we should be slothfull in the possessing of them but that we should put them forth in our practice so as to be fruitfull in the improvement of them 2 Pet. 1.8 and thence it is that the Apostle speaking of the holinesse which the Lord requires to be in his people he doth not only require a holinesse of disposition by inherent graces but that we should be holy in all manner of conversation 1 Pet. 1.15 16. and for this cause the way of Saints is called holy Esay 35.8 they are sanctified not only in their vessels as 1 Sam. 21. but their way is holy also and they are said to be undefiled in their way Psal 11 9. where the soule is sanctified by the spirit of Christ the life will be
falsifying God will not own he knowes the terms of his own Covenant and will hold to that which his own hand hath written he will acknowledge none of Sathans forgeries his Covenant is holy and either we must take the Covenant as Gods offers it or we can never partake o● the blessing of it Try we our selves therefore by the Spirit of holinesse and therby judge of our interest in the blessing of life which the Covenant promiseth Signes 1. True holinesse is conformable to the first pattern of holinesse which is the Lord himselfe as it is written Be ye holy for I the Lord your God am holy True holinesse stands not in conformity with this world nor doth it rest in imitating the best examples that be in the world but makes us strive to a conformity with God to be even as he is in this world 1 Ioh. 4. following the Lord till we come to be partakers of his own holinesse Heb. 12. 2. True holinesse towards God is ever accompanied with righteousnesse towards men It s but hypocriticall holinesse which is not attended with righteousnesse The new man which is created after God is said to be created in righteousness and true holinesse or holinesse of truth There is a true holinesse and there is a false lying and dessembling holinesse how is the one discerned from the other holinesse of truth hath righteousnesse going with it but false holinesse thinks it enough to seeme holy towards God neglecting duties of justice and righteousnesse towards men It was not so with the holy Apostle who speaking of his own conversation among the Saints appeales to their consciences how holily how justly how unblameably he had his conversation among them 1 Thes 2.10 these two which God hath so joyned together we must not put asunder if we will approve our selves to have attained that holinesse of truth 3. True holinesse works for holy ends the glory of God Pet. 4.11 the credit of the Gospel Tit. 2.10 and the salvation of men 1 Cor. 10. ult It abhors those Pharisaicall ends of hypocrites mentioned in Matth. 6. 4. There is in a sanctified Christian both light and life light in his minde life in his will and affection The light which is in him makes him to see both the loathsomnesse of sin and the excellency of grace and the life that is in him makes him to feel the burthen of his own corruptions and to long after the grace which is still wanting in him so that true holinesse makes us weary of the body of corruption that is in us groaning under it as under a misery not to be endured as Paul did Rom. 7.24 and makes us thirst after more grace that we might be enabled in every thing to please God Psal 119.5 Painted holinesse puffes up with conceit of our own goodnesse as Esay 65.5 but true holinesse humbles us by reason of the sight and sence we have of the corruption that is in us More such signs might be added but I hasten to an end By these try we our selves and see thereby what part we have in the blessing of the Covenant Vse 3. To stirre up all that have taken hold of this Covenant and doe professe themselves to be a people in Covenant with God Let them labour to expresse this holinesse in their lives and wayes that they may thereby approve themselves to be faithfull in their Covenant with God can two walk together except they be agreed Amos 3.3 certainly unlesse we agree to walk in holinesse with our God we cannot long walk together nor hold Covenant one with another let us then strive to be a holy people unto the Lord our God separate from the pollution of the world devoted to his service and honour Motives 1. This is Gods end in taking us into Covenant with him that he might be glorified Esay 43.21 44.23 In 1 Pet. 2.9 the Apostle tells us we are for this end taken to be a peculiar people unto God that we might shew forth the vertues of him that hath called us out of darknesse into his marvellous light he took us to himselfe when he saw us polluted in our bloud Ezek. 16. yet then he cloathed us with the beauty of his own vertues that his name may be glorified in us but without holinesse we pollute Gods name and make it vile we honour it not Ezek. 36. ●0 2. Sanctity and holinesse is the beauty and glory of any people by which they excell all other people of the world Deut. 26. ult In Exod. 15.11 God himselfe is said to be glorious in holinesse and the same is the Churches glory too which is then glorious when it is holy and without blame Ephes 5.27 we cannot honour our selves more then by growing up in true holinesse nor can we make our selves vile any way so much as by sinful impiety Psal 15.4 3. Our holinesse is that which must testifie to the world and to our own consciences that we are indeed the people of God as Christ by the Spirit of holinesse raising him up from the dead wa● declared to be the Sonne of God so we are declared to be Gods saved ones by the same spirit of holinesse raising us up and quickning us unto newnesse of life This is Christs mark which he sets upon all his redeemed ones they are holy This is written in their foreheads Holinesse to the Lord and therefore they are said to be sealed with the holy spirit of promise Eph. 1.13 as men set on their seales to note their propriety in that thing that is sealed If then we will know or have the world to know that we are God's we must be sealed with the spirit of holinesse 4. Holinesse is the perfection of our Christian state this is that which we wish for even your perfection saith the Apostle 2 Cor. 13.9 and what perfection is that even the same that he mentions Chap 7.1 that they might perfect their holinesse in the feare o● God This was mans perfection in the beginning and the same shall be our perfection in heaven Heb. 12.23 Holinesse adds perfection to all other gifts and without this they are all of no worth Wisdome without holinesse is but fox-like craftinesse courage without holinesse is but lyon-like cruelty humblenesse without holinesse is but basenesse of spirit justnesse in dealing without holinesse is but heathenish harmlesnesse but let holiness be added to each of these and then are they perfect as a colour of a perfect die 5. Holinesse makes us live the life of God which all other unsanctified ones are strangers from Ephes 4. by holinesse the life of Christ is manifest to be in us 2 Cor. 4. so that we may say that now we live not our selves but Christ liveth in us Gal. 2.20 wickednesse makes a man live the life of Devils holinesse conformes us to the life of Christ 6. All those that are in Covenant with God are a people neare unto him and being neare unto him he
with God 44 45 46 wherein both Covenants agree 50 51. wherein they differ 52 56 70 73 75. how faith in both differ 53 54. both Covenants considered two wayes 97 the Covenant of works requires faith 52 53. why the Lord conveys life and blessednesse to us by the Covenant 26 27 28 the Covenant of Grace the same in all ages 102 103 more powerfully dispensed since then before the comming of Christ 112. D Demeanour of Fath after prayer 307 308. Differences between the two Covenants fifteen 52 between faith in both covenants 53 54 between both in requiring works 55 between the Commandement of Law and Gospel 332. Discontent● the causes of them 134. Dispositions sanctified tokens of true sanctification 239 240. Draw nothing in us to Draw God into Covenant with us 353. E Effects of the Spirit of Grace in the soul 88 of true sanctification 235 236 237 of light in the soul 380 Effect of the Covenant is to work holinesse 373 seq England an admonition to it to receive the Grace offered 14. Encouragement to faith 261. Enmity in our nature against God 353. When it is that we make grace our Enemy 95 96. Evangelicall condition excludes not free grace 326. Everlasting the Covenant is 367 why so 368 the blessings of the Covenant are so ibid. how the first Covenat is so 369. Exalted God is to be Exalted chiefly 346. how he is to be Exalted 348 when hee is ibid. F Faith the condition of the Covenant of Grace 295 why it is ibid. how closeth with the Covenant 302. encouragements to it 261 two acts of it 289 290 not commanded in the Law 331 proved ibid. its workings 304 its weaknesse 303 its earnestnesse in prayer unto God 307. its demeanour after prayer as God answers or not answers 308 309. Looks on the Lords Government as a mercifull government 312 reconciles the heart unto God 313 enables to walk with God ibid. when the life of faith is most seen 314 faith of Christ why so called 329 It is a strengthening grace 317 gets assisting strength from Christ 313 We are not actually justified before it comes 322 the reasons of it ibid. Fall why the Saints cannot fall away 248. Father God the Father in Covenant with us 124 with Christ 29 30. Forgivenesse of sin the benefit of it 164 why the Lord doth forgive sinnes 165 166 what a man is to doe that he may be forgiven 169 signes when a mans sinnes are forgiven 171 172. Freenesse of Gods grace 81 how the condition and the freenesse of grace agree in the Covenant 292 The condition in the Covenant excludes not the freenesse of grace 291 how it appeares that the Covenant is free 354 why it is so 356 the freenesse of grace in the Covenant 353. G Gentiles beleeving are the seed of Abraham 17. God alone satisfies a sanctified soule ●38 his things great 346. Glorying twofold 87 what glorying is ibid. the Covenant of grace teacheth to glory in God alone 85 88 holinesse the glory of a people 381. Gospel vayled in the Ceremoniall Law 330 the commandement of Faith a commandement of the Gospel Government of the Lord when we are under it 153 154 a mercifull government 312. Grace habituall may be a tryall of our state 231 232 it appeares in cleansing us from filthinesse of sinne 181 why the Lord would have his Covenant to bee of free Grace 356 the free grace of God in pardoning of sinne 159 the infinitenesse of it 160 Faith a strengthning Grace 317 the Covenant at mount Sinai a Covenant of Grace 65 66 the performance of the promise of Grace is Grace 355 the freenesse of Grace in entring into Covenant with us 353. H Habituall holinesse 376 Habit of Faith not the condition of the Covenant 298 reasons of it ibid. Heaven Canaan a type of it 107. Heart sanctified finds no peace but in the way that 's holy 236. Holy Ghost in Covenant with us 124 the Covenant a holy Covenant 373 why it is holy 374. Holinesse what 375 a twofold holinesse ibid. signes of a true 379 it s the glory of a people 381 the perfection of our Christian state 381 it s wrought by the Covenant 373. I Iewes after their conversion shall continue faithfull 7 shall inhabit their own land again 16 their conversion 17 18 reasons of it 19 two hindrances of their conversion 20 why wee should pray for their conversion 20. Iustice without mercy in the Covenant of Works 77. Iustification considered three wayes 322 sanctification an evidence of it 183 it goes not before faith 322 the reasons of it Ibid. K Knowledge of the Covenant what benefit 119 120. Know whether we be in Covenant 378. L Law considered two wayes 58 Ceremoniall a Gospel vailed 330 commandeth not faith 333 the condition of it impossible to be fulfilled 295. Law-Giver who and how 328. Libertines mistake the Covenant 379. Light the effects of it in the soule 380. Life of Faith what it is 314 when it is most seen ibid. Love of God to us should comfort us in the enjoyment of lesser blessings 273 274. M Man in Covenant with God two wayes 361 man seeks not God but God man 353. Mediator who 68 69 the Covenant of Grace given by a Mediatour 66 Chirst in his Type a Mediatour of that Covenant given at Mount Sinai 62 wee are not to goe to God but by a Mediatour 67 68 Christ that Mediatour 68 69 Christ an everlasting Mediatour 370 the comfort the mediation of Christ affords the Saints 69 70. Morall Law how it leads to Christ 330 Motives to holinesse 330 seq Mover in making the Covenant who first 299 353. N Nature of man in enmity against God 353. New why the Covenant of Grace is so called 195 New-England 14. O Obedience of the soule to God at its first conversion 310. Old why the Covenant of Grace is so called 105. Outward blessings pledges of better things 262 what the Outward blessings are that God promiseth his servants 264. why the Lord keeps his servants sometimes short in Outward things 263 in what manner God premiseth Outward blessings 165 they are part of the Covenant 267 they may be prayed for 166 God is the giver of them 271 272 the causes why the Saints are often deprived of them 267 seq when Outward things are blessings and tokens of Gods love 272 273 Outward blessings should make us serve God with the Outward man 274. P Peace cannot be wrought in the soul by the Covenant of works 90 91 a sanctified soul can finde no Peace but in that that 's holy 236. People of God are promised to have God himselfe 122 123 reasons of it 126. Person God first acceps the Person then the sacrifice 70 71. Personally God personally in Covenant with us 1●4 Perseverance in grace the Certainty of it 245 246 the reasons of it 246 247. Preservation in the state of grace part of the Covenant 243 244. Performance of the promise o● grace is free grace 353. Perfection of a Christian state what 281. Positive holinesse what 376. Possession of honour uncertaine 366 true grace is an everlasting Possession 255. Professours severall sorts of them hollow-hearted 256 257. Promises absolute the use of them 289 conditionall are of free grace 326 proved ibid. promises to encourage the people to return from Babylon 2. Q Qualifications may be tokens of Iustification 234 Qualifications in the promises when we are to make use of them 358. R Reasonable it is that God should rule over his people 311. R●concilement of the heart unto God is by faith 313. Relative holinesse what 375. Righteousness that justifies what it is 322. Riches of grace opened 126 Riches uncertaine 366. S Salt why the Covenant is so called 368. Saints who is their strength 254. Sanctifi●a●ion twofold 227 it s a blessing that will make those that receive it blessed 177 why so 178 179 it is an evidence of justification 183 Sanctification more manifest to the soul then Iustification 233 the reason of it ibid. the effects of Sanctification 235 236 237. It makes wary against staining sins 237 it makes us sensible of our weaknesses 23 some reall work in the soul proves not a reall Sanctification 228. Security that is wrought by assurance what it is 241. Seed of Abraham double 35 36. Separation between Iew and Gentile ended at Christs Ascension 97. Sinne a wrong done to God 160 Sinne turns good things into evill 164 Sinne the greatest evill why 163 God chuseth sometime the worst of sinners 354 why he doth so 355 Sins cannot make voyd the Covenant of Grace 84 85. when it is that Sinne makes voyd the Covenant of Grace 95 96. Son the Son of God in Covenant with us 124. Spirit whether the Spirit of Law or Grace dwels within us 88 how to know when our comfort is from the Spirit of grace 89. Storehouse of rich blessings what is 342. Streng●h of the Saints who is 254. Substance the absolute and conditionall promises one in substance 29. T Temporary blessings of the Covenant 259. Testament why the Covenant called a Testament 283 284. The old Testament revealed the Covenant of Grace darkly 107 why so 109 it revealed it only to the Iewes 115 116. Thankfulnesse 118. Things of God great things 343. True taken two wayes 228. Truth of sanctification signes of it 235 seq Truth of holinesse signes of it 379. Trust encouragements to Trust in God 261. Tryals of our estate may be made by the conditions of the Covenant 288 289. Tryall of our estate may be made by habituall grace 231 232. V Vnbeliefe the danger of it 340 unbeliefe dishonours God 363 it shames us 362 it weakens our comfort 363. Vncertaine riches are uncertaine 366. Vnworthinesse hinders not the freenesse of Gods grace 357. Vse of absolute promises what 289. W Worst of sinners chosen of God 353. Work of Faith what 314 how Works are considered in the Covenant of grace 3●4 The Covenant of grace requires Works 35 The Covenant at Mount Sinai not a Covenant of Works proved 58 A man that is under the Covenant of Works cannot attaine sanctification 184 the reasons of it ibid. Our Works are dead works 295 good Works the fruit of the Tree of faith 9 justification cannot be attained by the Works of the Law 226. Z Zeale for God is an honour to God 149. FINIS
hereof it is that all the blessings of the Covenant are said to be everlasting forgivenesse of sinnes is everlasting being once forgiven they are never remembred any more Ier. 31.33 The peace and joy which comes thereby is everlasting also your peace shall no man take from you Ioh. 16. and our joy is everlasting Esay 35.10 our salvation is an everlasting salvation Esay 45.17 our life is an everlasting life Ioh. 3.16 All the blessings of the Covenant are to continue not only like Iosephs blessing to the end of the everlasting hills Gen. 49.26 but for ever and for ever This new Covenant of grace is like the new heavens and new earth which shall never wax old nor vanish away Esay 66.22 Hence it is that baptisme is but once administred because the Covenant is but once made the promise of it being given once and for ever The supper is often administred because of the many breaches on our part and the manifold weaknesses of our faith which we are subject unto the Lord being pleased in that Sacrament to renue the seale of his Covenant towards us for the setling of our faith and the stablishing of us in the assurance of his grace which hath been so often witnessed to us in the renuing of the Seale of the Covenant but baptisme being the Seale of our enterance into Covenant with God is but once administred because the Covenant is but once made and being once made stands fast for ever The Reasons why this Covenant is everlasting are these Reas 1. From Gods vnchangablenesse he is a God that changeth not and therefore whom he loves once he loves for ever and to the end Joh. 13. his gifts and calling by grace are without repentance Rom. 11.29 his love is everlasting Jer. 31.3 his kindnesse is everlasting Esay 54.8 and his goodnesse shall be everlasting towards them that he takes in Covenant with him Object If this reason hold that the Covenant of grace is therefore everlasting because God is unchangeable then by the same argument the Covenant of works may be proved to be everlasting also so that that Covenant should not have been broken Answ It followeth not because the Covenant of works speaking of the accomplishment of it by man with whom it was made was not built upon Gods purpose within himselfe but was left to the liberty and will of man either to fulfill it or break it as himselfe would but the Covenant of grace is built upon Gods immutable purpose which cannot change The Apostle joynes these two together purpose and Grace 2 Tim. 1.9 to give us to understand that all the wayes of his grace which he leads his people into and therefore also this way of his Covenant is according to his eternall purpose within himselfe Herein that first Covenant was not as this latter is and therefore though the one was broken yet the other cannot Secondly This may be added also that that first Covenant in respect of the substance of it is unchangeable and everlasting and it is the unchangeablenesse of it which doth condemne all the Sonnes of Adam and did bring Christ from heaven to fulfill it for those which should believe Gods unchangeable justice will not suffer any unjust person to live in so much that either we must have Christ to fulfill the justice of that Covenant for us or else for the breach of it we must perish for ever None but righteous ones saith justice shall have life the reward of righteousnesse This justice in God is unalterable and changeth not and thus farre there is little or no difference between the one Covenant and the other but both are alike but here is the difference that in the Covenant of works God promised life to Adam in case he obeyed but did not promise to uphold him in a way of obedience to the end that he might not misse of the life promised Whereas in the Covenant of grace God doth not only promise life to those that doe believe but promiseth that their faith shall not faile and that he will keep them by faith unto salvation and preserve them to his heavenly Kingdome The promises therefore of this Covenant are larger and better then of that other this being made with none but with those that the purpose of his grace doth reach unto He makes this Covenant with his chosen Psal 89.3 and with them only It is revealed to many but made up with few even with those that are vessels of mercy prepared unto glory thirdly In the Covenant of works distinguish these two First the terme substance or heads of the Covenant propounded and agreed upon betwixt God and man secondly The fulfilling or violation of it by man with whom it was made The substance of the Covenant is one the fulfilling of it is another The substance of it doe this and live is not changed though the fulfilling of it by Adam did faile as well it might because God never promised him to cause him to fulfill it but only to give him life in case he did work therein But in the Covenant of Grace both these are promised one as well as the other the Lord not only promising life to those that doe believe but that he will uphold us in the faith unto the end And hereupon it follows that though in the Covenant of works man failed in his duty yet the Covenant on Gods part remaines inviolate for if God give life upon obedience performed or inflict death upon disobedience God doth in so doing performe this Covenant towards man this being all that God promised in that Covenant but in the Covenant of Grace there can be no totall breach on our part so as to dissolve the Covenant betwixt God and us but it will import a failing of the Covenant on Gods part also because he hath promised us to keep us with him for ever and gives this as the reason why his Covenant with us shall be everlasting namely because he will put his feare unto our hearts so that we shall never depart away from him so that if the Lord should now suffer his Covenant-people wholly to depart and to break Covenant with him there must follow some change of minde in God as having thoughts of love towards us when he took us into Covenant with him and of dislike when he suffers us to depart from him but there is no such change in God therefore this his Covenant with us is everlasting Reas 2. From the everlasting mediation and intercession of Christ● who for ever stands betwixt God and us to make up all breaches which might be made by our default As he hath obtained an eternall redemption for us Heb. 9.12 and hath brought in an everlasting righteousnesse for us Dan. 9.24 So doth he sit at the right hand of the Father and lives for ever to make eternall intercession for us Rom. 8.34 And by this intercession of his we continue for ever in favour with God and the Covenant