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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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is not justified by workes or through workes by the Law or through the Law opposing faith and workes in the matter of Iustification but not in respect of their presence faith I say and works not faith and merits which could never be without doubt he excludes the efficiency and force of the Law and workes in justifying But the particles By and of doe not in the same sense take Iustification from the Law and workes in which they give it to faith For faith only doth behould and receive the promises of life and mercy but the Law and works respect the Commandements not the promises of meere grace When therfore Iustification and life is said to be by faith it is manifestly signified that faith receiving the promise doth receive righteousnesse and life freely promised Obedience to all Deut. 7. 1● 10. 12. Ier. 7. 23. Lev. 19. 17 18. Luk. 10. 27 Mar. 12 30. Gods Commandements is covenanted not as the cause of life but as the qualification and effect of faith and as the way to life Faith that embraceth life is obedientiall and fruitfull in all good workes but in one sort faith is the cause of obedience and good workes and in another of Iustification and life eternall These it seeketh in the promises of the Covenant those it worketh and produceth as the cause doth the effect Faith was the efficient cause of that pretious oblation in Abell of reverence and preparing Heb. 11 4 7 c. the Arke in Noah of obedience in Abraham but it was the instrument only of their justification For it doth not justifie as it produceth good workes but as it receiveth Christ though it cannot receive Christ unlesse it brings forth good workes A disposition to good workes is necessary to justification being the qualification of an active and lively faith Good works of all sorts are necessary to our continuance in the state of justification and so to our finall absolution if God give opportunity but they are not the cause of but only a precedent qualification or condition to finall forgivenesse and eternall blisse If then when we speake of the conditions of the Covenant of grace by Condition we understand whatsoever is required on our part as precedent concomitant or subsequent to justification repentance faith and obedience are all conditions but if by Condition we understand what is required on our part as the cause of the good promised though only instrumentall faith or beliefe in the promises of free mercy is the only Condition Faith and workes are opposed in the matter of Justification and Salvation in the Covenant not that they cannot stand together in the same subject for they be inseperably united but because they cannot concurre or meete together in one the same Court to the Iustification or Absolution of Man For in the Court of Iustice according to the first Covenant either being just he is acquitted or unjust he is condemned But in the Court of Mercy if thou receive the promise of pardon which is done by a lively faith thou art acquitted and set free and accepted as just and righteous but if thou believe not thou art sent over to the Court of Justice Obedience is two-fold perfect in measure and degree this is so farre required that if it be not performed we must acknowledge our sinne in comming short And this God is pleased to exact at our hands that we might walke in humility before him strive after perfection and freely acknowledge his rich grace and mercy in accepting and rewarding the best service we can tender unto his Highnesse when in the Court of Iustice it deserveth to be rejected 2. Sincere uniforme and constant though imperfect in measure and degree and this is so necessary that without it there is no Salvation to be expected The Covenant of Grace calleth for perfection accepteth sincerity God in mercy pardoning the imperfections of our best performances If perfection was rigidly exacted no flesh could be saved if not at all commanded imperfection should not be sin nor perfection to be laboured after The faith that is lively to imbrace mercy is ever conjoyned with an unfained purpose to walke in all well pleasing and the sincere performance of all holy obedience as opportunity is offered doth ever attend that faith whereby we continually lay hold upon the promises once embraced Actuall good workes of all sorts though not perfect in degree are necessary to the continuance of actuall justification because faith can no longer lay faithfull claime to the promises of life then it doth vertually or actually leade us forward in the way to Heaven For if we say we have fellowship with God and walke in darknesse we lie and doe not the truth But if we walke in the light as he is in the light we have fellowship one with another 1 Joh. 1. 6 7. This walking in the light as he is in the light is that qualification wherby we become immediatly capable of Christs righteousnes or actuall participants of his propitiation which is the sole immediate cause of our justification taken for remission of sinnes or actuall approbation with God The truth of which Doctrine St John likewise ratifies in tearmes equivalent in the words presently following And the blood of 1 Ioh. 1. 7. Christ cleanseth us walking in the light as God is in the light from all sinne But of these things more largely in the severall degrees how this Covenant hath been revealed In this Covenant man doth promise to repent of his sinnes and repenting to cleave unto the promise of mercy made in Iesus Christ and in saith to yeeld willing cheerefull and continuall obedience In contracts amongst men one may aske more and the other bid lesse and yet they may strike agreement But it is altogether bootlesse for men to thinke of entring into Covenant with God if they be no● resolved to obey in all things The practise of all Gods people who ever made Covenant with his Highnesse doth expressely speake thus much when they solemnly entred into or renewed their Covenant for thus they promise Whatsoever the Lord saith that will we doe Exod 24. 3 7. The people said unto Joshua The Lord our God will we serve and his voice will we obey Josh 24. 23. And they entred into Covenant to seeke the Lord God of their Fathers with all their he art and with all th●e●r sou●e That whosoever would not se●ke the Lord God of Israel should be put to death whether small or great whether man or woman 2 Chron. 15. 12 13. And the King stood by the pillar and made a Covenant before the Lord to walke after the Lord and to keepe his Commandements and his Testimonies and his statutes with all their heart and all their soule to performe the words of this Covenant that were written in this booke and all the people stood to the Covenant 2 Chron. 34. 31. 2 Kings 23. 3. They entred into a Curse and into
that cleaveth unto their best works being graciously pardoned I have sworne and I will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous Psal 119. 106. judgements Did the Prophet think himself able punctually to fulfill the Law How will that stand with his Prayer Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living Psal 143. 2. be justified No but he knew sincere and willing obedience which he promised and would performe should be taken in good part And this is further apparent by the prayers of the faithfull Judge me O Lord for I have walked in mine integrity Remember Psal 26. 1 11. Isai 38. 3. Neh. 1. 5 9. Psal 25. 10. Dan. 9. 4. Jer. 31. 32. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight It never came into the heart of these Worthies to conceit they had been able to justifie themselves before the barre of Gods justice in any particular action great or small as if it had been without all defect or staine being tried in the rigour of justice nor could their integrity ought availe them if no obedience did find acceptance with God but that which is every way compleat It is said of Josiah that he turned 2 Kin. 23. 25. to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses that he declined not to the right hand or to the left Of David that he kept the Commandements 2 King 21. 3. of God and his Statutes that he kept the Commandements of 1 Kin. 11. 34. 1 King 14. 8. 1 King 15. 5. God and followed him with all his heart to doe that only which was right in his eyes that he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and turned not aside from any thing that he commanded him all the dayes of his life save only in the matter of Vriah the Hittite and 1 King 22. 43. of Jehoshaphat that he turned not aside from doing that which was right in the eyes of the Lord Of Asa that his heart was perfect before the 2 Chro. 15. 12. Lord all his dayes Of Asa and the people that they sought the Lord with all their heart and all their soule From these passages we cannot prove either that these servants of God did or that it is possible for men in this life to fulfill the Law exactly or that the Law is given with such moderation as that the imperfections which did cleave unto these and the best servants of God were no sinnes because in phrase of Scripture the words will not beare that weight it may be confuted by Text it selfe setting down severall imperfections even in them who are said not to have turned aside from the Commandements and it is directly contrary to divers other passages of holy writ But thence we may soundly gather that the Law as it was given to Israel doth admit and allow of sincere and unpartiall obedience though it be imperfect and answer not to that exactnesse which is required These words Doe this and live must not be interpreted as if they did promise life upon a condition of perfect obedience and for works done in such exactnesse as is required but they must be expounded Evangelically describing the subject capable of life eternall not the cause why life and salvation is conferred and by doing sincere uniforme unpartiall obedience not exact fulfilling of the Law in every title is to be understood Doe this and live what is it more then this If ye will obey my voice and doe my Commandements Psal 112. 1. ye shall be to me a peculiar treasure Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his Commandements Psal 106. 3. Blessed are they that keep judgement and he that doth righteousnesse at all times Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the Law of Psal 119. 1 2. the Lord. Blessed are they that keep his testimonies and that seek him with the whole heart Who so looketh into the perfect law of liberty Jam. 1. 25. and continueth therein he being not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the worke this man shall be blessed in his deed To them who by patient Rom. 2. 7. continuance in well-doing seeke for glory and honour eternall life which passages are to be understood of sincere and upright walking and shew who are justified and to whom the promises of life pertaine but not why they are justified And in like manner that of the Apostle The doers of the Law are justified may be expounded Rom. 2. 13. Evangelically not of them that fulfill the Law which should be justified by their works but of them that soundly obey who are justified of grace by faith not for their works And hence it appeares what works the Apostle opposeth to faith in the matter of justification not only perfect works done by the strength of nature of which sort there be none at all but works commanded in the Law as it was given to Israel such as Abraham and David walked in after they were effectually called such as without whose presence faith it self could not be existent such as are necessary in the person justified these works are opposed to faith in the matter of justification not that faith can be without them but because they cannot be causes together with faith in Justification And of necessity if faith be opposite to works exactly perfect it must be opposite to them that are imperfect and stained in part that be impurely pure because the Covenant of Grace calleth for perfection though it accept sincerity and in all reason perfect righteousnesse should rather be accepted for righteousnesse unto life than that which is imperfect and falleth short of that which is required For the better administration of this state and nationall Covenant it pleased God to ordaine sutable Ordinances for the teaching and applying of this Covenant scil of Ministery and Priesthood The first of these the Apostle openeth setting down the state of the Gentile and Jew before Christ came compared both together and how both stood in comparison to the Church after Christ in regard of this Ordinance of teaching As the Gentile Gal. 3. 23 24 25. before Christ was a man constrained to live without a shelter the Jew at the same time is better provided for for he had the Law taught to cover his head in a storme that it be not too violent But we after Ch●ist dwell in well-grounded yea seiled roomes that we need not to feare the blowing beating or flowing in of the Sea raine or wind for we have the Ordinances of the Gospell The Gentiles before Christ ran wild like beggarly bruits without all schooling the Jew a great deale better for the time being he had a Schoole-master to teach and nourture him even
fall by whom not only the Elect but the whole frame of nature received benefit In the Creation God raised up a great Family wherein he made Adam the head and all his posterity inhabitors the frame of Heaven and Earth his domicile the creatures his servants this Family upon the fall was broken up the present Master turned out of his imployments the children beggered the servants returning to God their Soveraigne and the whole frame of the creature under attainder God thus defeated if I may so speake sets up a second Family called the Family of Heaven and Earth wherein Jesus Christ the womans seed Gen. 3. 19. is the Head Matth. 28. 18. Ephes 1. 22. Col. 1. 19 20. stiled the second Adam Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth and that with more soveraignty and amplitude of injoyment then ever the first Adam had the whole creature being put under his feet The children of this Family are the faithfull who be the adopted Brethren Rom. 8. 15. sometimes called the seed The servants be the wicked and those of two sorts either such as attend in the Church neerer about Christs person or further off as in farme-houses for baser offices The creatures by a second ordinance from their former Master free are stated upon Christ though they beare some brands of evill from the sinne of their former Master the domicile though not so beautifull returnes to Christ So the Covenant of Grace entring upon the breaking up of the former Family investeth Christ with all as purchaser of the lost creature from revenging justice and as Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth who freely conferreth the heavenly inheritance upon the adopted sonnes and brethren and vouchsafeth earthly blessings and some spirituall common gifts to the wicked which may be called servants both those that more neerly attend his person and those that be further off But of this more hereafter CHAP. III. Of the Covenant of Grace in generall THe Covenant of Grace is that free and gracious Covenant which God of his meere mercy in Jesus Christ made with man a miserable and wretched sinner promising unto him pardon of sinne and eternall happinesse if he will return from his iniquity embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfained and walke before God in sincere faithfull and willing obedience as becomes such a creature lifted up unto such injoyment and partaker of such pretious promises This Covenant is opposite to the former in kind so that at one and the same time man cannot be under the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of grace For he cannot hope to be justified by his perfect and exact obedience that acknowledging himselfe to be a miserable and lost sinner doth expect pardon of the free mercy of God in Iesus Christ embraced by faith The condition of the Law as it was given to Adam excludes the necessity of mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne and the necessity of making a new Covenant argues the former could not give life Heb. 8. 7. He that is under grace cannot at the same time be under the law and he that waites for Salvation of meere and rich grace to be vouchsafed cannot expect it as the deserved wages of his good worke from justice and not of mercy What then may some say is the Law abolished or is it lawfull for Christians to live as they list because they be not under the Law Not so but the Law hath a double respect one as the unchangeable rule of life and manners according to which persons in Covenant ought to walke before and with the Lord and in this sense it belongs to the Covenant of grace The other as it is propounded in forme of a Covenant as if he must necessarily perish who doth neglect or breake it in the least jot or tittle and in this sense the Covenant of grace and workes are opposite The matter of Evangelicall precepts and of the Morall Law is the same but the forme of promulgation is not the same the rule is one but the Covenants differ Materialy the Law that is the matter and argument of the Law as a rule stands in force but if formally it did continue as a Covenant there could be no place for repentance nor for the promise of forgivenesse or mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne or the quickning of them that be dead in trespasses The Covenant of workes is of justice the Covenant of grace is of grace and mercy which cannot agree and take place in one and the same subject for he that try●th justice perceiveth not the force of mercy è contra This might be common to both Covenants that God doth freely give reward because he was not bound unto it by any Law and that is done of grace which we are not tied unto by Law but in the Covenant of Grace he gives the reward of meere and rich grace and that to the creature which hath deserved Hell This Covenant entered immediately upon the fall and so may be called a Covenant of Reconciliation not of friendship At the very instant when God holy and true was pronouncing judgements upon the severall delinquents in the fall setting downe his sentence against the Tempter both in his instrument the Serpent and the maine Author Sathan he brings in the party who should execute the same in which execution is unfolded the Covenant of grace for the Salvation of the creature that the Serpent had destroyed that God might be knowne in wrath to remember mercy At the very fall and before judgement was pronounced upon the delinquents that were tempted the Covenant of mercy was proclaimed that by vertue of this Covenant God might prevent further waste of his creature which Sathan might haue wrought upon his new advantage in following his good successe and that the tempted might have some comfort before their judgement least they might have been swallowed up of wrath The Authour of this Covenant is God considered as a mercifull and loving Father in Iesus Christ as a Creator he strooke Covenant with Adam in his integrity as a Saviour he looked upon the poore creature plunged into sinne and misery by reason of sin The cause that moved the Lord to make this Covenant was not any worth dignity or merit in man for man never had ought which he had not received and now by his disobedience had deserved to be cast off for ever neither was the present misery into which he had cast himselfe the cause that moved the Lord to receive man into favour for the Angels more excellent by creation as miserable by their fall he hath reserved in chaines of darknesse The sole moving cause why God made this Covenant Bonitatis Dei donumest quod liberare nos voluit quod verò aliter quam tali modo liberare nos noluit p●ccatorum nostrorum est meritum was the love favour and mercy of the Lord. Deut. 7. 7 8. Only the Lord had a delight in thy fathers
and graciously to reward it As God was pleased freely to make these promises to Abraham so also to confirme the same unto him by Oath By my selfe have I sworne saith the Lord. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heires of Promise the immutability of his counsell confirmed it by an Oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us Abraham was strong in faith yet was it not superfluous or altogether needlesse that God of his superaboundant love and mercy should adde his Oath to the former promise for the further setling and assurance of his servant Here that common saying may be of use Aboundant cautelousnesse doth not hurt nay it is of great profit and behoofe But this is to be further noted that God had respect to the posterity of Abraham For Isaack was present then to whom the promises were confirmed in his father which when both the one and the other ought to inculcate to their posterity it was a matter of no light moment that they might holily affirme that God hath confirmed them both by word and Oath In this passage Abraham believed God and it was imputed to Gen. 18. 6. Rom. 4. 3. Gal. 3. 6. Jam. 2. 23. him for righteousnesse both the spirituall good things promised on Gods part in the Covenant and the condition required on mans part are implied For the Apostle hence concludes that Abraham was freely justified by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus and in this is included all eternall and spirituall blessings which doe accompany each other For whom God doth justifie them he glorifieth In the first expression the thing required on our parts was obscurely implied and we had much to doe to find it out but in this passage it lieth bare Abraham believed c. This condition in Abraham the Apostle fully followeth against the Justiciaries of his and our times opposing it to the condition of works in attaining the blessings of Abraham strongly proving that this faith made Abraham the friend of God and a justified person having nothing to glory in this kind before God from any worke But seeing this text is so oft alleadged and pressed by the Apostles and so much controverted among men it is not amisse to handle the words more at large In the Originall word for word they run thus He beleeved the Lord or in the Lord and he imputed that to him righteousnesse The Sptuagint render it and the Apostles alleadge it thus Abraham beleeved God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse The word believed imports he thought the words of God to be sure certaine stable and constant and signifieth such a beliefe as is opposed to fainting as it is said of Jacob when he heard the report of his sons that Joseph was alive his heart fainted because he believed not but when he believed his heart revived Gen. 45. 25 26. And David saith of himselfe I had fainted unlesse I had beleeved Psal 27. 13. So that it is a lively motion of the heart or soule assenting unto and trusting in the word of God as firme and stedfast Now whether you reade the word following in or upon God as Arias and Pagnine or God as the Apostles alleadge it it is all one for here to believe God as all circumstances doe shew is to put trust and confidence in God or with lively adherence to sticke or cleave Joh. 5. 24. unto the word of God And he imputed sc God or he in whom Abraham believed as the construction it selfe and words following manifestly convince or it was imputed as a Isa 22. 8. Mich. 1. 7. Ezek. 23. 47. Gen. 50. 20. 1 S●m 18. 15. Jer. 18. 7 8. 49. 30. 2● 11. Exod. 26 1. 39 32. Psal 40. 17. active verbes amongst the Hebrewes are expounded passively The word translated imputed is of large signification and imports to thinke reckon Rom. 6. 11. Psal 44. 22. Rom. 8. 36. devise purpose conclude Rom. 3. 28. resolve plot esteeme fore-see reason Mark 11. 31. consult of a matter how it may be brought to passe looke unto and take care of But more properly to the matter in hand it is to account unto a man or repute unto a man or reckon unto a man any thing to be his or to be good paiment and satisfaction for him in his accounts And that we may the better conceive the meaning of it in this text let us consider some other passages in which it is used Bloud shall be imputed unto that man he hath Gen 38. 15. 1 Sam. 1. 13. Lev. 17. 4. 25. 5● Numb 18. 27. 2 Sam. 19. 19 20. shed bloud This your heave offering shall be reckoned unto you as though it were the corne of the threshing floore Let not my Lord impute iniquity to me Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne Phineas stood up and executed judgement and so the plague stayed and that was counted to him for righteousnesse If the uncircumcised keepe the ordinance of the Law Psal 32. ● Psal 106. 31. Rom. 2. 26. Rom. 4. 11. 5. 18. Rom. 9. 8. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 19. ● Cor. 12. 6. 2 Tim. 4. 16. shall not his uncircumcision be counted for circumcision That righteousnesse might be imputed to them also Sinne is not imputed when there is no Law The children of the promise are counted for the seed Let a man so account of us as of the Ministers of Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their sinnes unto them I refraine lest any man should account of me above that he seeth in me At my first answering no man assisted but all forsooke me I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge Even as David also describeth the Rom. 4. ● blessednesse of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without works If he hath wronged thee or oweth thee ought put Philem. v. 18. Rom. 4. 4. that on mine account Now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by favour but by debt Here it hinders nothing that righteousnesse imputed should simply note out a righteousnesse of grace and acceptation whenas the word imputed joyned with others noting desert and debt may signifie the cleane contrary For example when it is said that God gives gifts unto the sonnes of Psal 68. 18. Eph. 4. 8. men all understand a free bestowing of good things amongst them but when he saith he giveth them the spirit of slumber Rom. 11. 8. eyes that they should not see eares that they should not heare then albeit the word giving in it selfe promiseth some grace yet being matched with such words it hath a contrary signification to that which naturally it signifieth when mention is simply of violent men and of raveners or
thing whereunto it is imputed In the last phrase imputation commeth in betwixt righteousnesse it selfe as the thing imputed and life as the end whereunto it is imputed This passage whereof we now speake is diversly interpreted by Orthodox Divines but all aiming at the same truth and meeting in the maine being rather severall expressions of the same truth then different interpretations The first is That faith is imputed unto righteousnesse that the obedience of Christ apprehended by faith may be righteousnesse unto the apprehender For faith and beleeving ever implieth the possession of Christ and his obedience in our hearts and the imputation of faith unto righteousnesse is the thing that makes Christ possessed by faith to be our righteousnesse Christs obedience is righteousnesse in it selfe so that it is neither our faith nor Gods imputation of our faith that makes his obedience to be righteousnesse but imputation of faith to us as ours maketh the obedience of Christ possessed by faith being righteousnesse in it selfe to be our righteousnesse For as the making of that whereby we obtaine possession to be ours maketh the thing possessed also to be ours so that imputation of faith which is a gift supernaturall and not within our power maketh Christs obedience to be that unto us which it is in itselfe though it were never imputed unto us And to confirme this exposition that of the Apostle is alleadged With the heart man beleeveth Rom. 10 10. unto righteousnesse and with the mouth he confesseth unto salvation In which sentence the Greeke word which is rendred unto cannot be rendred for without darkning if not perverting the true sence and meaning of that place For we are said to believe with the heart unto righteousnesse in the same sence and meaning wherein we are said to confesse with the mouth unto salvation Neither is there any reason why faith should be said to be imputed unto righteousnesse in any other sence as concerning the word unto then we are said to believe unto righteousnesse but in all reason the Greeke word which we render unto must in both these phrases be taken in one and the same sence that is as we believe with the heart to this end that we might by faith as the only apt and meete instrument and only covenient and effectuall meane to apprehend and possesse attaine to the possession of the righteousnesse of God in Christ even so the Lord our God imputeth faith to us as our own to this end that the righteousnesse which we possesse by it may make us righteous before him or be righteousnesse unto us in his sight The second exposition is that faith is graciously imputed reckoned or esteemed for righteousnesse or in the place or steed of righteousnesse because the righteousnesse of Christ is imputed to none but beleevers For those sinners onely are justified before God who we speake of them that live till they come to yeares of discretion by a sound and saving faith doe lay hold of and rely Quae semper tacentur nunquam affirmantur Quae affirmantur dum reliqua tacentur sola affirmantur upon Jesus Christ as he is set forth of God to be a propitiation Hence it is that the Covenant of Grace in steed of the righteousnesse of the Law required to legall Justification which is wanting in us by reason of our sins exacteth no other thing inherent in us as a cause of Justification or condition in respect whereof we are justified but faith alone And thus in a fit sence it may be said that faith is of grace accounted in steed of legall righteousnesse not that it is the meritorious or materiall cause of our Justification as legall righteousnesse should have been if Justification had been by the Law nor that it is accepted for the perfect righteousnesse of the Law but because it is the sole instrumentall or conditionall cause required on our part to Justification in respect whereof we are acquitted from our sins For in the Covenant of workes perfect obedience is required at our hands to Justification but in the Reputare sive imputare adjustitiam idem est quod in justitiae loco numerare Covenant of Grace nothing but faith on our parts is called for and that not as the forme or matter of Justification but the instrument only whereby we receive remission of sins and are partakers of the merits of Christ The third Exposition is that when faith is imputed for righteousnesse it is not to be understood materially as though the dignity worth and perfection of faith made us just but relatively and in respect of the object that is to us beleeving righteousnesse sc of Christ is freely imputed and by faith we receive righteousnesse and remission of sins freely given of God And therefore to say faith justifieth and faith is imputed for righteousnesse are phrases equivalent For faith justifieth not by it's merit or dignity but as an instrument and correlatively that is the merit of Christ apprehended and received by faith justifieth not faith whereby it is apprehended and received unlesse it be by an improper speech wherein the act of the object by reason of the neare and strict connexion betwixt them is given to the instrument And with this exposition for substance of matter agreeth theirs that make an Hypallage in these words faith is imputed unto or for righteousnesse as if the sence was this righteousnesse is imputed unto faith or the faithfull are partakers of the righteousnesse of Christ The thing questioned in these expositions is whether the words must be taken tropically or properly but the matter and substance of doctrine contained in them is one and the same For herein they all agree that Abraham did beleeve the whole truth of God revealed but his beleefe which was accepted for or unto righteousnesse did respect the promised seed Abraham beleeved the power of God to performe whatsoever he promised he beleeved whatsoever God plainly promised and he beleeved what God promised though farre off as the giving of the Land of Canaan but the principall thing promised was that in his seed all Nations of the earth should be blessed and belief in this promise was accepted for righteousnes All earthly promises made to Abraham proceeded from the meer love and favor of God towards him and many of them were types and figures of spirituall so that in beleeving them he must needs beleeve the promise of blessing in his seed which is Christ Abraham could beleeve no promise but he must beleeve that God is the rewarder of them that diligently seeke him but he cannot beleeve in God as the rewarder of them that seek him unlesse he have an eye to the promised seed The righteousnesse here mentioned is not the singular righteousnesse of this or that act whereby a man is said to doe justly or righteously which is called the righteousnesse of fact but universall righteousnesse or the righteousnesse of Justification whereby a man is freely acquitted
by faith without the works of the Law But that they might not seeme directly to crosse the Apostle they say we are not justified by the works of the Law that is exact and every way perfect whereunto wages is due by debt but by works of grace graciously esteemed for righteousnesse when in the rigour of the Law it is not exact and perfect righteousnesse But first we reade that God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation Rom. 3. 24 25. by faith in his bloud that by the faith of Jesus we might receive remission of sinnes but we find not that he hath ordained Christ to be a propitation through works that by works we should be saved And if God have not taught any such manner of Justification it is not for us to receive it We reade of two waies of Justification by faith and works but of a third manner by faith and works both as joynt causes or con-causes we find nothing in Scripture Secondly By the doctrine of faith we are bound to acknowledge and confesse that Christ Jesus by his eternall Priest-hood is not only the sole meritorious cause of all grace or righteousnesse inherent requisite to finall absolution but these presupposed in the party to be absolved he is likewise the sole immediate cause of finall absolution or justification Without observation in some measure to all the Commandments of God we cannot enter into the kingdome of heaven but we enter not for the obedience we have performed To what use then doth our inherent righteousnesse or observance of Gods commandements serve us If it hath been sincere and ●●fained though imperfect yet the faith that brought it forth will make a sincere and faithfull plea for mercy in the day of tryall in which he that hath been an hearer only and no doer of the Law or hath done in part what God would have done but not sincerely nor faithfully shall not be heard Our imperfect obedience then is not the immediate cause of our absolution but the obedience and righteousnesse of Christ By the immediate and next cause we understand such a cause as is necessarily accompanied by the effect and without whose participation the effect never doth nor can be-fall any such a cause as whosoever is partaker of is by participation of it forth-with absolved such a cause as who so can probably hope to be partaker of he may upon the same degrees of probability hope for finall absolution such a cause as who so doubts or feares least he shall never be partaker of in this life must upon the same termes doubt or despaire of his absolution or salvation But if workes be accounted for the exact righteousnesse of the Law unto us not the obedience of Christ received by faith but the works of holinesse in us are the absolute cause of remission of sins and acceptance unto life And what else doe the words sound as they be interpreted but that as exact obedience to the Law should have been the matter or cause of Justification from justice so sincere obedience by the estimation of grace is the matter of Justification by grace They will say I know faith and workes are onely the condition without which remission cannot be obtained but faith is not a bare condition without which the thing cannot be for that is no cause at all but an instrumentall cause and workes if they be any cause of Justification instrumentall they cannot be but the matter whereupon and for which we are justified or accounted righteous Workes doe not embrace Christ but if causes of Justification they must challenge to themselves and therefore how faith and workes should be conjoyned as con-causes in Justification it is impossible to conceive seeing the one that is faith attributes all In eo q●od solvimus est aliqu●●atio meriti to the free-grace of God the other that is workes challenge to themselves the one will aspire no higher but to be the instrumentall cause of free remission the other can sit no lower but to be the matter of Justification if any cause at all For if works be accounted to us in the roome or place of exact obedience in free Justification doe they not supply the place are they not advanced to the dignity of works compleate and perfect in Justification from justice 3. If faith with workes be accepted for righteousnesse to Justification then faith justifieth not as it imbraceth the promises of mercy and by it we partake in the merits of Christs death and obedience but as it doth give assent to the truth of the Gospell and adhere and sticke to the Commandements for in that sense it is an act or exercise commanded in the Gospell and not only as it doth receive Christ and the promise of forgivenesse But in Scripture every where faith in Christ in the Lord Jesus or the Gal. 3. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 24. bloud of Christ is said to justifie not faith in other promises threatnings or Commandements 4. How can it be proved that in the matter of Justification the Apostle doth oppose faith to workes exactly perfect and compleat only and not to the workes of grace done according to the prescription of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to be a rule how people in Covenant ought to walke To him that worketh Rom. 4. 4 saith he the wages is of debt but he that worketh is not only perfectly just but he that is mercenarie that is to him that worketh for his reward as if the reward should be given him for his worke For thus the Apostle argues When wages is given to an hireling or mercenary it is of debt But Justification or life is not given of debt but of grace Therefore it is not given to him that worketh or to the mercenary Properly God oweth nothing to him that fulfilleth the Law either exactly or sincerely when they doe nothing but their duty and there is no proportion betwixt God and them but because they seeke righteousnesse and life by workes if God should retribute to them a reward he should be thought to doe it as it were of debt The Law was given to be a rule of direction to them that be in Covenant and workes of the Law are workes done according to that prescription which the Apostle here excludes from being any cause of Justification though he that walkes according to this Law being not an hearer but a doer of the Law is blessed in his deed But of this more at large in the next Chapter 5. Consider the opposition which the Apostle makes betwixt his owne righteousnesse which is of the Law and the righteousnesse Phil. 3. 9. which is of God by faith I count all things saith he but as d●ng that I might winne Christ and be found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousnesse which is of God by faith If then the righteousnesse of
God through faith be the matter whereupon or for which we are justified we are not justified by workes but the righteousnesse of God through faith is the matter whereupon we are justified Christ is the end of the Rom. 10. 4. Law for righteousnesse to everyone that beleeveth We are made the righteousnesse of God in him The righteousnesse of the Law is not 2 Cor. 5. 19. here put for workes done exactly by the strength of nature but for workes done according to the prescription of the Law according to which people in Covenant ought to walke to whom God hath promised that if they keep his Commandements they shall be unto him a peculiar people ch●sen generation and royall priesthood Exod. 19. 5. Non justificatur homo partim justitia partiali imperfect â inb●rente partim accepti latione imperfecti properfecto By the righteousnesse of God to understand remission of sinnes and regeneration by faith faith and workes and by the righteousnesse of the Law workes done by the strength of nature is rather to offer violence unto then to interpret this Text of Scripture And by the same reason the Popish Glosses upon this Text are confuted as false and vaine Bellarmine would make the sense this Faith is imputed for righteousnesse that is faith is justice by which Abraham was justified For if Abraham was justified by workes he hath whereof to glory in himselfe But with God he hath Rom. 4. 2. not whereof to glory To him that worketh not faith is imputed for righteousnesse therefore faith is not the righteousnesse of the Law The Question there disputed is not by what worke Abraham was justified but after he had done many and great works in the manner of Justification he presented himselfe before the throne of grace not only sub forma pa●peris but which is more of an ungodly man to receive absolution from the hand of grace by a true and lively faith And faith is accounted for righteousnesse by gracious acceptation but what is accounted by free favour that is not truly and really the thing it is accounted for inherent in us It will be said Faith was not reputed to Abraham for righteousnesse after that he excelled with many vertues having embraced Christ But the holy Ghost rather testifies although the excellency of Abrahams vertue was great whereby he had increased by long perseverance yet he was not otherwise accepted as righteous unto life but because by faith he received grace offered in the promise The faith of Abraham was great and excellent for degree and measure but it was not accepted for righteousnesse in regard it was strong and eminent but because it laid hold upon the promised feed The faith of Abraham was eminent but not perfect and justified him not absolutely as an excellent vertue but relatively as it received the promise of mercy not as if Abraham was thereby made perfect by inherent holinesse for then Abraham had whereof to glory in himselfe but as in himselfe a sinner and ungodly he obtained free and full remission of the meere grace and favour of God So that we may conclude from this passage of holy writ that Abraham was justified by faith alone but this his faith though alone in the act of Justification no other grace coworking with it was not alone in existence did not lie dead in him as a dormant and idle quality Saving faith is lively and operative attended with every other grace of the Spirit setting them upon their worke animating and quickning them thereto and regulating them therein It stirres up sorrow for sinne and purpose of amendment it raiseth the soule earnestly to long after and heartily to crave mercy it comes to Christ as an humble poore penitent petitioner for forgivenesse but that which is done by faith stirring up sorrow and working by prayer is not done partly by faith partly by sorrow and partly by prayers but by that faith which doth enforce to pray For faith leaneth upon the promise and no promise is made the condition of prayer being shut forth Aske and it shall be given you Mark 11. 24. Therefore our Saviour Christ being intreated of many that he would heale them attributeth all the force of their prayers to faith Thy faith hath saved thee And so by what faith Abraham embraced the promise by the same he offered up his Son Isaac Workes then or a purpose to walke with God justifie as Jam. 2. 22 23. the passive qualification of the subject capable of Justification or as the qualification of that faith that justifieth or as they testifie or give proofe that faith is lively but faith alone justifieth as it embraceth the promise of free forgivenesse in Jesus Christ Abrahams faith was accepted for righteousnesse but Abraham himselfe Gen. 17. 1. is commanded to walke before God and to be perfect There be divers phras●s in the Scripture of the Old Testament expressing the same thing for substance as to walke before God Gen. 17. 1. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 24. 40. and 48. 15. 1 Kin. 3. 6. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 116. 9. Isai 38. 3. Psal 56. 14. 1 King 9. 4. to walke with God Gen. 5. 22. and 6. 9. Mal. 2. 6. Mic. 6. 8. to walke after God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 King 23. 3. Hos 11. 10. to walke in the name of God Zech. 10. 12. to walke in the wayes of God 1 King 3. 14. Deut. 10. 12 13 14. wholly to follow after the Lord. i. e. to exhibite full obedience to the Lord. Numb 32. 12. Deut. 1. 36. Josh 14. 14. to stand in the sight of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God 1 King 17. 1. to walke in the light of the Lord. Isai 2. 5. to walke in equity Isai 57. 2. to walke in truth in judgement and uprightnesse 1 King 2. 4. and 3. 6. 2 King 20. 6. The two first phrases of walking with God and before God the Sept. Interpreters doe most commonly render to please God though 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 now and then they retaine the phrase of walking with or before God or walking after God and the Apostle seemes to have respect Isai 38. 3. unto their translation when he doth so alleadge it Heb. 11. 5. For he is reported to have pleased God In the New Testament there be Phrases that import the same thing for substance as to walke in the truth 2 Joh. 4. to walke in all the Commandements Statutes and Ordinances of the Lord. Luke 1. 6. to walke worthy the Lord that is as becomes the sonnes of God 1 Thess 2. 12. Eph. 4. 2. and to please him in all things Col. 1. 10. to walke in Christ Col. 2. 6. that is to doe all after the rule and command of Christ vers 6. and set before our eyes his glory as the white we shoot
principall things The power of God is not encreased nor diminished but then it is said to be perfected when in the judgement of man it doth that which is most hard and difficult For we live and die in God and this is of the power of God but when in the greatest streights and even in death it selfe we live and breathe the power of God doth after a speciall manner shew forth it selfe and is perfected in us that is doth shew it selfe to be exceeding great which cannot be conquered or overcome In the same manner as the Apostle saith Fath is perfected by works Jam. 2. 21. not that works doe perfect faith but that faith whilest it brings forth good works doth manifest how perfect it is it borroweth not force from workes but in works doth declare what force it hath Thus the graces of the Spirit are perfected whilest by the effects it is made manifest how perfect they are Psal 19. 7. Mat. 5. 48. Psal 18. 30. Heb. 12. 23. 3. That is perfect which is every way absolute and compleate to which nothing is wanting nothing superfluous and so the soules of the just are made perfect in Heaven In the first degree perfection is necessary to salvation without which we cannot be partakers of the eternall inheritance in the second and third degree it is to be striven after though the latter cannot be obtained in this life The greatest measure of perfection attaineable in this present life is an imperfect perfection but that imperfection is sin and therefore though we come short we must strive forward towards perfection that we might be perfect hereafter Integrity is necessary because the most holy God will never give himselfe to be possessed and enjoyed to a spirituall adultresse who doth affect any other lover more or besides him A woman Rev. 14. 3 4. may have many friends but one as an Husband Conjugall love of it own nature is of that kind that it must be of one and cannot be communicated to many If God be wholly ours we must be wholly his And if we joyne ought with God or take in ought with him we doe not we cannot cleave to him alone When there are two objects upon which the heart is set it is divided and men of divided hearts can have no fellowship or communion with him We cannot serve God unlesse we serve him intirely he cannot be our Master if we have any other Matth. 6. 24. God heares them that pray with their whole heart Jer. 29. 12 13. is found of them that seeke him with their whole heart Psal 119. 2. Deut. 4. 29 30. takes pleasure in them that be intire in their way Prov. 11. 20. and accepts their work Deut. 33. 11. If a Christian be not intire he can never be perfect in degree for what is defective in parts can never be made up by any growth He can never come to be a perfect man in Jesus Cerist and every way compleate in whom the work of grace is imperfect and maimed in the parts essentiall or integrall If a plant be imperfect it will never be a perfect tree If a Child be borne maimed or imperfect no growth of parts received can restore what is defective in nature If a Christian be sanctified in mind only or in some affection only and not in every part no growth in what he hath obtained can ever make his sanctification perfect and compleate Integrity is the qualification of a subject capable of finall pardon and eternall blessednesse through grace Remission of sins is received by faith but faith that embraceth pardon doth unite and knit the soule inseparably to God and to the word of his grace it seasoneth every affection and stirreth them up to their proper functions according as the word directeth Blessed is the man whose iniquity is forgiven and whose sin is covered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sin and in whose spirit there is no guile God will passe by the imperfections which he espieth in the best service of his children when once he seeth their hearts to be intire and perfect towards him Hypocrisie drowneth many excellent graces and causeth God to take no notice of them but integrity is so well pleasing to his Majesty that if it be not shaken he will not see many other infirmities This is the chalenge against the Church of Sardis I have not found thy works perfect before God Rev. 3. ● David had many imperfections and did often step aside in the way but he is not accused to breake the whole Law in any thing save in the matter of Vriah 1 King 15. 5. The Holy Ghost hath noted sundry defects in Asa but addeth this of him by way of conclusion yet his heart was perfect towards the Lord all his dayes 1 King 15. 14. Contrarily in Jehu after a large description of many excellent things it is observed But Jehu regarded not to walke in the Law of the Lord with all his heart and so his service in destroying Ahabs house rewarded with a temporall blessing 2 King 10. 31. Hose 1. 4. 2 Chron. 30. 15 19. to the fourth generation was reckoned murder Hezekiah is bould to pray in behalfe of them that came unprepared to the Passeover The good Lord be mercifull unto him that prepareth his heart to seeke the Lord God though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary An Husband will beare with many aberrations in the behaviour of his Wife so long as he is perswaded of the intirenesse of her heart towards him and so dealeth the Lord with them that feare before him with all their hearts Great is the excellency many the priviledges of the intire and perfect man Better is the poore that walketh in his integrity Prov. 28. 6. 19. 1. Psal 1 19. 1. Causall blessednesse is the pardon of sin but perfection is blessednesse in order to the execution and fullnesse thereof The perfect man is actually blessed but the cause of blessednesse is the free mercy of God Psal 119. 80. Job 8. 20. Psa 37. 18 19. 2 Chron. 16. 9. then he that is perverse in his wayes turning away now on this side now on that though he be rich Integrity advanceth the poore man above the wealthy and yeeldeth him more sound comfort and profit both then all the riches in the world can They are blessed that walke in the perfect way Not they that walke in the way of the Ministery or of the Magistracy but indefinitely they which walke in any way allowable by the word with a perfect heart be it never so meane or simple they are blessed Blessed are the undefiled in the way whatsoever it be be it to be the scowrer of Channels drudge in a Kitchen or to serve in the Gallies More particularly The perfect shall not be confounded Let my heart be intire in thy statutes that I be not ashamed For God will not cast away the perfect
it can hardly be questioned whether that Covenant wherin we are bound to take God to be our Father King and Saviour be the Covenant of grace or no And by the same reason it is manifest that the Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience and doth build these upon it as a foundation It prescribeth faith in the first place and throughout namely that we acknowledge God the Law-giver to be the Lord our God the only true God and testifie that faith unto him by an universall and uniforme obedience to that whole Law and every title thereof The Law was given for this end that it might instruct us in faith which is the mother of a good conscience and of love Christ and faith is the end and soule of the Law not understood of the Jews The summe of the Law is faith or love and both these carry the same sence because though Moses Rom. 10. 4. Deut. 10. 12. Calv. on Deut. 10. 12. Rom. 14. 23. make mention of love and Paul of faith yet that love doth comprehend faith and this faith doth contain love Certainly Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne even all works though good in shew and for substance seeming agreeable to the rule of the Law if they issue not from faith they are vaine and hypocriticall if they be not quickned and enlivened by faith they are but the carkasse of a good worke And then if God command not faith in the Law in some sort why doth he command other things which without it are frivolous Our best works are unsavoury before God if they be not seasoned with faith For without Heb. 11. 6. faith it is impossible to please God Therefore the Lord in Covenant commanding the observation of his Law exacteth faith also without which the Law cannot be obeyed in an acceptable manner For when the Law is spirituall and commandeth true worship and invocation how can it be observed without faith Would the Lord have the Israelites remaining in infidelity to observe the Law Or did he ever allow man since the fall of Adam to come or have accesse unto him but only in the name of a Mediatour Or was life and salvation ever promised to man since the fall but upon condition of faith in the Messiah Indeed the condition of obedience which God requireth and man promiseth is the chiefest thing urged in the Law but free and gracious pardon wherein consisteth the happinesse of the Saints is therein promised and proclaimed They under the old Testament lightly following the letter mistooke the meaning not looking to the end of that which was to be abolished whereunto Moses had an eye under the vaile For they perceived not so well the grace intended by the legall Testament which the perfection of the morall Law whereof they could not but faile should have forced them to seeke and the imperfection of the typicall Law which made nothing perfect should have led them to find but they generally rested in the worke done as was commanded by either Law when as themselves were unable to do the one and the other was in it self as unsufficient to help them Fourthly after the giving of the Law a Covenant betwixt God and Israel was established by mutuall and willing consent Deut. 4. 31. Exod. 24. 3 4. the people promising to obey and doe whatsoever the Lord commanded In the Land of Moab Moses was commanded by the Deut. 29. 1 9. Lord to make a Covenannt with the children of Israel beside the Covenant which he made with them in Horeb. This Covenant they entred into was the same that God made with them upon Mount Sinai even the same that did containe the blessings and curses before pronounced But this Covenant was a Covenant of Grace not of works for God never commanded his people that he might set them on high above all people of the earth and that they might be an holy people unto him to avouch him to be their God by a Covenant of works Moses would Deut. 29. 12. never have exhorted the people by Oath to bind themselves unto the Lord in a Covenant of works for that had been to bind themselves unto the most dreadfull curses whereas they were to enter into this Covenant that they might prosper in all that they Deut. 29. 9. doe That Covenant is of Grace wherein the good things promised are all free and gratious but it was of grace that God promised Deut. 7. 12. 2 Chro. 6. 14. to be the God of Israel and therefore the Lord when he keepeth Covenant with Israel is said to keep the mercy which he swore unto their Fathers and when he established them for a people unto himselfe and is their God he is said to performe the Oath which he swore unto their Fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob. Deut. 29. 13. The Legall Covenant or Covenant of works cannot be renewed after it is once broken seeing it admitteth not repentance of sinne past but exacts perfect and perpetuall obedience But this Covenant made with the Israelites might be renewed after transgression did admit repentance When thou art in tribulation and Deut. 4. 30 31. all these things are come upon thee even in the latter dayes if thou turne to the Lord thy God and shalt be obedient unto his voice for the Lord thy God is a mercifull God he will not forsake thee neither destroy thee nor forget the Covenant of thy Fathers which he swore unto See Deut. 30. 1 2 3. 1 Ki. 8. 34 35. Psal 106. 45. Eze. 16. 61 6● Deut. 30. 11 12 13 14. Rom. 10. 6 7. them And if the Covenant after transgression may be renewed it is of grace The Law which is written in the heart of the spirituall seed is part of the Covenant of grace for the righteousnesse of faith speaketh on this wise This Commandement which I command thee this day it is not hidden from thee neither is it farre off It is not in heaven that thou shouldest say Who shall goe up for us to heaven and bring it unto us that we may heare it and doe it Neither is it beyond the sea that thou shouldest say Who shall goe over the sea for us and bring it unto us that we may heare it and doe it But the word is very nigh unto thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou maist doe it But the Law given by Moses is engraven in the heart of the spirituall Isai 51. 7. Psal 37 31. seed or people effectually in Covenant as they are called a people in whose heart is the Law No man will deny the Covenant which God keepeth with them that love him and keepe his Commandements to be the Covenant of Grace But the Covenant which Israel entred into is that which the Lord Dan. 9 4. Nehem. 1. 5. Deut. 7. 12. keepeth with them that love him and keepe his Commandements Fifthly the godly Kings and
of Adam by the Law of nature written in his heart Confidence in God through Christ or the Messiah was required of the Israelites by the Law published upon the Mount Adam was to performe obedience to the Lord immediately without a Mediatour being himselfe pure and innocent But the Israelites being in themselves sinner● ●ould not in their own names performe service pleasing and acceptable unto the Lord. Adam knew he was beloved of the Lord so long as he continued in obedience but had no warrant to wait upon his mercy when he had broken the Covenant of works But to the Israelites God bound himselfe in Covenant upon Mount Sinai promising to be their God and take them for his people notwithstanding they were sinners in themselves which could not be without forgivenesse and this Covenant they might and did renew by repentance after transgression The Law is not to be confounded with the Gospell but the sacred and inviolable knot of the one with the other is to be maintained unlesse we shall make God contrary to himselfe The Law doth not so directly and expressely teach faith in When Paul saith Faith came by the Gospell it is to be understood of the manner of propounding vvithout the invvrappings of types that the Doctrine vvas ● taught plainly vvithout types and figures Rom. 8. 3. Christ but require obedience yet doth it leade us to Christ and more obscurely command faith in him The Gospell doth more fully reveale Christ and the grace of God in him commanding faith by name but it doth also urge presse and exact obedience Thus sweetly doe the Law and Gospell consent together But here it is to be noted that faith is commanded in the Law which exacteth every thing that is good but it is given to us not by the Law but of the holy Ghost The distinction of the Law and Gospell as they are opposed one to another is cleare and evident but as the Law was given to the Jewes it is not opposite but subordinate to the Gospell The Law in it selfe considered exacted perfection of works as the cause of life but when that was impossible to man by reason of the infirmity of his flesh it pleased the Lord to make knowne to his people by the ministery of Moses that the Law was given not to detaine men in confidence of their own works but to leade them unto Christ Whatsoever the Law teacheth whatsoever it promiseth whatsoever it commandeth alwayes it hath Christ for the scope thereof For though the Law of righteousnesse promise a reward to the keepers thereof yet after it hath shut up all men under sinne it doth substitute another righteousnesse in Christ which is received by faith not purchased by the merit of works And therefore the Apostle doth reprehend the Jewes as perverters of the true sense and meaning Rom. 10. 4 5 6 c. of the Law when they sought to be justified by their works and sheweth that Moses taught them to look for Salvation in the Messiah and seek for that righteousnesse which is by faith Whereby it is manifest that the Law was given 〈◊〉 be a manuduction unto Christ in whom we have Redemption from all things from which by the Law of Moses we could not be justified and a rule to the faithfull according to which they must frame their conversation For what word was that which Moses saith was neere even in their hearts but the Law which the Lord gave upon Mount Sinai and promised to write in the hearts of his people under the Covenant of Grace And from this ground it is not hard to answer what is further objected against this truth as If faith be commanded in the Law then being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the Law For faith is not a work of the Law nakedly and absolutely considered as it exacteth perfect obedience of man in his own person but of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to direct them unto Christ who is the soule and life of the Law And though it be commanded in the Law as it is in the Gospel or new Covenant yet it justifieth not as a part of Regeneration or an act of obedience and work of Grace by it worth or dignity but in respect of that office whereunto it is assigned of God and as it receiveth the promises of mercy It is a s●phisticall forme of reasoning to say Faith is commanded in the Gospell therefore if we be justified by faith we are justified by the works of grace The arguments are like and both faultie For justification by faith in Christ is opposed to justification by the works of the Law because he only is justified before God by the Law whose acts being examined by the Law are found just and righteous according to that which the Law requireth but he is justified by faith who being in himself ungodly believeth in Christ for salvation So that according to the Apostles meaning wheresoever faith be commanded he is justified by faith without the works of the Law who is acquitted from sin by the meer and rich grace of God in Jesus Christ received by faith And to seek justification by works is to rest upon our works for salvation as they that answer in all things to that righteousnesse personall which the Law requireth Justification by faith and justification by workes are opposite and so is faith and workes but faith is not opposed to one act commanded whereby the promise is received for then it should be contrary to it selfe but to works whereby the Law is fulfilled in our owne persons to workes I say not to one work because no one worke can justifie but all are necessary If it be said the Apostle doth every where oppose the Law and the Gospel or the old and new Testament The answer is from the same ground that in the Scriptures of the new Testament the Law as well Ceremoniall as Morall is opposed to faith or the Gospel and yet the Ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ as all men acknowledge Therefore the Apostle doth not perpetually and absolutely oppose the Law and the Covenant of grace for he teacheth expresly that faith establisheth Rom. 3. 31. the Law For he understood the force and sentence of the Law to consist in faith but because the Jews addicted to the latter of the Law did pretermit the force and life of it Paul proves the Law so taken and separated from faith to be the cause not of life but of death as that which did not only want Christ who is the soul of the Law but is opposite to him And therefore Paul doth this because the Jews faith being let passe did seek righteousnesse in the dead works of the Law and did oppose the Law to the Gospel and Christ who was the end and scope of the Law This will be more plain if we shall examin the particular passages of Scripture wherein this matter is handled
be thinke themselves of their evill doings confesse their iniquities and turne unto the Lord. The frequent and earnest exhortations of the Prophets made to backsliding and rebellious Israel that she should acknowledge her wickednesse and returne unto the Lord is a full Commentary of that which Jer. 3. 7 22. 4. 1 2. Ezek 18. 27 28 Ezek. 18 31 32. 33. 11 13. God required of them in this Covenant in case they should turne away from the holy Commandment The Lord protesteth by his Prophet Ezekiel that he hath no pleasure in the death of him that dieth but rather that he should repent and live and the same for substance he made knowne to Israel in the Covenant which he stroke with them sc that if they transgresse and goe astray he doth admit will accept and approve nay command their unfained repentance and comming home unto the Lord that they might live This question Why will ye die ye house of Israel is put forth to the people in Covenant and not indifferently to all and every man living It is manifestly spoken of the house of Israel whom God had spared notwithstanding their manifold and great provocations to whom he not only gave space of repentance but used meanes to bring them to repentance by sending Prophets unto them to admonish them of their sins to denounce the judgements of God against them for their impenitency and earnestly to exhort them to cast away their transgressions that they might live God then doth approve and command the returne of his people that have gone astray he waiteth for their amendment useth meanes to bring them to the knowledge of themselves is not wanting to them in any thing that in justice or promise he ought to doe for them but yet it is not his will effectually to bring every man to repentance whom he doth command to repent The Commandment of God shews what is our duty but not what God will worke in every man the commandment lieth upon them that be obstinate and rebellious but they have not grace to will their conversion or amendment Neverthelesse we must not thinke either that God doth dissemble or that he is the authour of mans impenitency for mans corruption pravity and wilfulnesse is the cause of his going on in evill and his impotency is not a meere infirmity which he doth bewaile but a stubbornesse which he doth foster and cherish by all means The condition of this Covenant in the sence afore-said is faith in the promised Messiah which is implied in the promise I will be thy God and commanded in the precept built upon it Thou shalt have me to be thy God For God is not the God of Israel but in and through the Mediatour neither can Israel take God to be their God but by faith in the Messiah In the Prophets we meet with no exhortations more common then these Trust in the Lord commit thy selfe unto the Lord rowle thy burden upon him leane upon the Lord but what the Prophets exhort-unto that is commanded in this expressure of the Covenant and trust in the Lord man a sinner cannot unlesse it be in and through a Mediatour Israel is commanded to seek the Lord and walk before him in all well-pleasing But without Heb 11. 6 7. Quod addit Apostolus nondum venisse fidem Gal. 3. 23. quamd●● Dei po pulus sub legis custodia detinebatur id aliò spectat scil fides Apostolo eo loco est eva●ge lica fontis misericordiae Dei Rom. 3. 29. in Christi filij Mediatoris sanguine declaratio quam fidem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vocat quippe revelationis Christi gradum excellentissimum eadem prorsus ratione qua Johan aj●●at spiritum John 7. 39. Jer. 31. 33 34. 32. 33 34. quae comparatè tantum dicuntur non autem absolutè quasi haec nullo gradu jam tum contingerent faith it is impossible to please God For he that commeth to God must believe that God is and that he is the rewarder of them that diligently seeke him We cannot seeke God nor pray unto him without faith for to seek God is to trust in him But all men will confesse the Israelites were by Covenant bound to seeke God and pray unto him As Gideon Barak Sampson Jepthah David and Samuel through faith subdued Kingdomes wrought righteousnesse obtained promises c. So the faithfull and true Israelite by faith walked with God and became heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith As God is one who shall justifie the circumcision by faith and the uncircumcision through faith without question in the Covenant of Grace he taught the Circumcision to seek justification by faith and not by the works of the Law Neverthelesse herein God called for and his Israel was bound to yeeld obedience to all his Commandements Strict exact perfect obedience the Lord doth require so that the least failing must be acknowledged to be a sin uniforme and sincere obedience is so required that without it there can be no Salvation Perfect obedience is commanded that if a man will trust in his works to be justified thereby he must either bring that which is every way compleat or be cast in judgement Sincere obedience though imperfect is approved that the imperfection of their best works being covered and their transgressions graciously pardoned they might be accepted by faith in Christ who is the end of the Law as righteous unto eternall life This distinction was formerly propounded but now is more largely to be confirmed The Law requires perfect and exact obedience for secret faults even thoughts arising from corrupt nature before they attained Rom. 7. 7. full consent are therein condemned and he that trusteth in his works if he continue not in every thing that is written in the Gal. 3. 10. book of the Law to doe them he is accursed But to them that be in Covenant the Law was given with such moderation that sincere obedience was accepted of them though attended with Psal 19. 12 13. many imperfections as is cleare by that of the Psalmist who can understand his errours cleanse thou me from secret faults keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sinnes let them not have dominion over me then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from the great transgression The godly Governours and people of Israel were well acquainted with the meaning of the Law and what obedience should be accepted at their hands And when 2 Kin. 23. 3. 2 Chro. 15. 12 13 14. Neh. 10. 29 30 31. they promised and bound themselves by Oath to walk in all the Statutes Judgements and Ordinances of the Lord or of the Law of Moses they did neither pervert the sense of the Law nor promise punctually to fulfill the Law in every jot and title Therefore they understood the tenour of the Law as it was given unto them to admit of upright unfained and true obedience the imperfection
the Nations of the earth be blessed though no exclusion be expressed the Apostle is Gal. 3. 16. bold to interpret it as if it had been said In thy seed alone Whom he foreknew them he predestinated this proposition is not Rom. 8. 29 30. expressely exclusive is it not then exclusive in sense When David saith The Lord is my God he excludes not the faithfull from the same preeminence but when the Lord saith to his people I am the Lord thy God he excludes them that be not in Covenant Abraham beleeved God and it was accounted to him for righteousnesse Gen. 15. 6. here is not restriction added but the proposition is exclusive Whosoever beleeveth in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting Joh. 3. 16. life doth not this proposition exclude works from being a cause of Salvation because only is not added Some answer that these passages be exclusive because the Apostle expressely shuts forth works from the act of Justification Rom. 3. 28. whereas they rather teach that faith doth comprehend repentance conversion and new obedience and that works are not excluded from the act of Justification but only works done by the power of nature But leaving that the proposition is for the matter exclusive and that the Apostle shewes from the thing it self proving hereby that Abraham after he had followed the Lord a long time and yeelded obedience to his commandements was justified by faith without the works of the Law The words therefore may be exclusive though only be not added and that they be restrictive is plain by the thing signified for what is it for Christ to lay down his life for his sheep or to purchase his Church by his bloud but to bruise the serpents head to redeeme them from all iniquity and purifie them to be a peculiar people to himselfe ●o save his people from their sins to deliver them from the feare of hell and death and to blesse all Nations of the earth according to the promise made to Abraham This needs no further confirmation then the next answer which they make that the words be exclusive not in respect of the thing it selfe but of the modus which others expresse thus that Christ died for his sheep in respect of the application and event For if it be exclusive in the modus exclusive it is as well though only be not added as if it was And the question is not of the sufficiency of Christs death for all men in respect of the magnitude and excellency of the price nor of the efficiency of his death in some degrees for such as shall not inherit the crown of glory but of the modus whether he died sufficientèr efficientèr quantum in se for all and every man That this Modus is excluded will appeare in that we shall never reade that Christ died for any but for his sheep his Church his brethren his people or them that be considered as such in respect of present profession externall administration and application of his benefits Vnto you is borne this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Luke 2. 11. Luke 1. 68 69 70. Lord. Blessed be the Lord God of Israel because he hath visited and redeemed his people and hath raised up an borne of Salvation in the house of his servant David as he spake by the mouth of his holy Prophets which have been since the world began That we should be saved from our enemies and from the hands of all that hate us Mine eyes have seen thy salvation which thou hast prepared before the face of Luke 2. 30 31 32. all people A light to lighten the Gentiles and the glory of thy people Israel Wherefore in all things it behoved him to be made like unto his Heb. 2. 17. brethren that he might be a mercifull and faithfull high Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the s●nnes of the people Thou art worthy to take the booke and to open the seales thereof for Rev. 5. 9. thou wast slaine and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood out of every kinred and tongue and people and nation And generally in every place they for whom Christ is said to die are called his elect his sheep his people his brethren not barely called into Covenant but received upon their acceptance thereof The severall passages alleadged to prove the universality of Christs death have been examined already and found to speake directly to this purpose But amongst them that be called into and accept of the Covenant some be elected simply others in comparison some be the sheep and brethren of Christ in truth and sincerity others in profession and externall administration or in some respect only And as we must distinguish of the elect and sheepe of Christ so of his dying for them For he died for all his elect as they apply and be partakers of the benefits of his death he died saving-effectually scil to bring them to grace and glory according to the election of grace for his simply elect and people in truth that is for them upon whom Salvation should be conferred and to whom it should be soundly applied So the Prophet telleth us Christ died that indeed and most certainely Isa 53. 10. he might see his seed and bring many brethren unto God And if Christ died not for his sheepe for this particular end that by his speciall grace and that which is given to none others they Rom. 9. 18. Job 10. 15. might injoy the fruit of his death we must confesse that Christ in this saying doth give no particular comfort to his sheepe and in that whole Chapter which is absurd And though sheepe and beleevers materially be the same formally in this place they be not for when Christ saith to the Pharisees Yee beleeve not for yee are not of my sheepe Joh. 10. 16. If to be a beleever and the sheep of Christ doe signifie the same thing he should say ye beleeve not and that which followeth My sheepe heare my voice and follow me Joh. 10. 27. should be the same as if it had been said the beleevers beleeve So that sheepe and beleevers are reciprocall but formally they are not made sheepe by faith but by election Moreover the acquisition of righteousnesse by the death of Christ and the application thereof are things to be distinguished but so inseperably conjoyned that for whomsoever it is acquired to them it is applied By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall beare their iniquities Isa 5● 11. He bare the sinne of many and made intercession for the transgressours Isa 33. 12. By his stripes are we healed Isa 53. 5. Who was delivered for our offences and was raised againe for our justification Rom. 4 25. As by the offence of one judgement came upon all men to condemnation even so by the righteousnesse of one the free gift came upon
Covenant how they differ viz. eight wayes p. 32. Christ more darkly revealed in the Covenant of promise and why ib. Covenant of promise when it began and how long it continued 36. The degrees of it ib. the parts of it 43. who contained under it 45. the Covenant of promise whether made in Adam with every infant that should be born into the world p 46. Covenant of grace as manifested to Abraham p. 47. what peculiarly to be observed therein ib. the grand promises of it 53. the temporall promises 54. Covenants personall family-Covenants and nationall p. 52. Covenant with Abraham how confirmed p. 90. All are not in Covenant in one manner p. 91. Covenant of grace under Moses till the return out of the Captivity p. 92. Covenant of works whether made with man fallen 93. Obscurity among Divines in differencing the old Covenant and new 95. Covenant made with Israel particularly explicated and what Moses brought to the further expressure of the Covenant of grace 122. Gods Covenant with David 143. c. In this Covenant Christ more cleerly manifested then before 144. The things promised in this Covenant 146 147. The condition of it 149. The execution of this Covenant 150 151. c. In this Covenant some things promised absolutely some conditionally 152 153. Two things to be considered in this Covenant 154. Covenant made with Israel after the Babylonish Captivity 156. c. The promises of this Covenant 158 159. c. In what sense this Covenant may be called new 161. Wherein this Covenant exceeded the former which God made when he brought them out of Egypt 161 162 163. Of the new Covenant or Testament and how God hath revealed himself therein 194. See New Testament D DOubting what the right course to take with him that doubts whether he should beleeve because of his former transgressions 226 Dead to what purpose invitations made to them that are dead in sins 244 Death inflicted on none but sinners or him that beareth the person of a sinner 276 Debt a two-fold paying of a debt 290 Decree of God to punish sin the reason of it 276 E ELect are in grace with God in respect of Ordination and appointment though after brought into grace by Christ by actuall collation and communication 292 Examination of our selves necessary p. 87. a meanes to attain and preserve uprightnesse 188 Exhortations to all import not a generall purchase of salvation for all 208 209. they are usefull both to them that have received the truth and to them that have not 209. to what purpose exhortations and invitations are to perswade men to believe that have no power 247 Externall blessings more esteemed of under the Covenant of promise and why p. 34 F FAith why not expressely required in the Covenant of nature p. 12. Faith which the righteousnesse of nature presupposeth how it differs from the faith required in the Covenant of grace p. 12. Faith the alone cause on our part required of justification and salvation 18. In what sense it is imputed for righteousnesse 63. Three divers opinions of orthodox Divines about the imputation of Faith 64. 65 66 Faith hath not the place of our righteousnesse but doth answer in our participation of Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers of Adams sinne 67 68. Though faith be commanded in the law it followeth not that being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the law 114. Faith whether that Christ as be died to impetrate remission of sin for me in particular be the object of justifying faith 227. Faith justifying is not without an apprehension of mercy in Christ to be obtained but implyeth not an apprehension of mercy in the pardon of sin already obtained 227 Faithfull all of the same faith with Abraham 91 Father though the same work be done by Father and Son yet a difference in the manner of working 268 Fathers before Christ and Christians in the time of the Gospell under the same Covenant for substance 26 Fellowes how the faithfull are called Christs fellowes 311 Fellowship with the Saints a signe means of uprightnesse 188 Fulnesse of grace of two sorts 311 G GIving doth not alwayes import an act of grace p. 61 Gospell why meet that the promise should goe before it 32. Grace bestowed more plentifully under the Gospell how to be understood 35. Gospell in what sense called everlasting 37. How faith is said to come by the Gospell seeing it was commanded in the law 113. The law as given to the Jewes not opposite to the Gospell ib. Gospell strictly taken or the new Testament when it took its beginning 197 198. Good that the intellectuall nature is capable of is double 313 Graces how given by the hand of the Apostles how by Christ 320 Guile of our spirits how to finde it out 187. c. how to take up our selves for it 192 H HAnd right hand what it signifieth in Scripture 303 Head how Christ is the head to his body 318 Heart a double heart what 185. signes of a good heart ibid. Heathens some remainders of Gods Image in them and many temporall blessings vouchsafed them whence it cōmeth to passe 13 Heaven The fathers that died before Christ had not that perfect state in heaven that now they have we are presently possessed of and in heaven they did expect their redeemer 35 36. The Kingdome of Heaven not expressely mentioned in the old Testament 132 Heavenly things wrapt up under earthly in the old Testament 33 Humane nature of Christ most highly exalted 305. Christ as man hath a prerogative above every creature 214. He is set above all principality and power and dominion and what signified hereby 214. He hath a power above every creature 215. The man Christ is King of heaven and earth 216. yet this power is not infinite simply ibid. Humanity of Christ whether to be adored 321 I IEhovah what it denoteth 123 Jewes why made a nationall Church 92. they had a double vail ●ver their eyes 120. An illustrious type of election in them 33 Incarnation of Christ whether necessary to goe before its effects and benefits 28. Incarnation of Christ the day of his coronation and espousals 294 Impute what it signifieth in Scripture 60 61. Imputation of a good thing three wayes 62. Imputation and reputation how differ ib. Certain corollaries about imputation See Faith 62 Infants holy by Covenant 52 Integrity see Vprightnesse the necessity of it 80 81 82 83. It sets a faire glosse upon the meanest actions 83. The effects and fruits of it 85. Meanes to attain it 86 87 88. How a Christian is to stir up himself to attain Integrity 88 89 c. Impotency of man such that he can neither move to any thing of himselfe that is good nor manage grace when vouchsafed 199. Impossible how that which is impossible may be an object of Gods desire and approbation 245. Innocent whether an Innocent person ought to suffer
impressions in the heart and frame of the Creature which is apparent in the Covenant so often mentioned with the unreasonable creature and this was the manner of covenanting with our first parents in the state of Innocency but is mo●t observable in the restored reasonable creature when God shall put his Lawes into their hearts and write them in their inward parts Jer. 31. 33. and the more perfect the creature growes the more reall shall the impression be But yet in all ages of the Church past and so to the end of the world God hath ever and ever will make expressions outward of this his Covenant with mankinde The Covenant is one thing the name of the Covenant another For the Covenant includes the whole reason of the Covenant with the circumstances but the name sometimes is attributed to some circumstances So the Covenant may be said to be the same and not the same that which is the same in substance varieth in manner and circumstances Deut. 5. 2 3. and 29. 1. and 4 31. Nor is it a thing unusuall in Scripture that this should be affirmed of one and denyed of another which is more illustrious in one then in another though it be common to both as Matth. 15. 24. Interpreters of Scripture give this rule when it seemes to deny the very essence of the thing it doth deny only some circumstance or respect Mark 9. 37. He that receiveth me doth not receive me which negation properly respects the degrees Joh. 5. 45. There is one that accuseth you even Moses that is Moses primarily and especially Gen. 45. 8. God sent me hither when God and his See Jer. 23. 7. Isai 43. 18. brethren had done it but in a divers manner CHAP. II. Of the Covenant God made with man in the state of Innocencie IT hath pleased God to deale with the reasonable creature by way of Promise and restipulation that is by way of Covenant In which God himselfe is one partie covenanting and promising and the whole reasonable creature the other restipulating and obeying The thing holden out by God is eternall life with all immediate blessings the condition on the part of the reasonable creature is free ready and willing obedience whether from nature or grace The causes why God made choice to deale with the reasonable creature in this manner are principally three First that the creature might know what to expect from the Creator into what state soever cast Secondly that the same creature might alwayes recognize and acknowledge what to retribute Thirdly Such manner of dealing suites best with the nature of the reasonable creature and his subordination to the Almighty But passing by what might be spoken of the Covenant with reasonable creatures both men and Angels we will only consider what Covenant God hath made with mankind because the knowledge thereof doth in speciall manner concerne us and in the unfolding thereof the Scripture is most plentifull We reade not the word Covenant betwixt God and man ever since the Creation both in Innocency and under the fall but we have in Scripture what may amount to as much As in Innocency God provided and proposed to Adam eternall happinesse in the present injoyments and cals for perfect obedience which appeares from Gods threatning Gen. 2. 17. For if man must die if he disobeyed it implies strongly that Gods Covenant was with him for life if he obeyed And after the fall it is most evident God was pleased to hold this course with man in all ages and conditions but with some alterations as seemed best in his infinite wisedome and best fitted the present condition of the creature In this manner hath God afforded both the prime and secondary good unto man under Covenants and seales that he might have the greater assurance so long as he walked in obedience and herein God was pleased to condescend to mans weaknesse and for the confirmation of his faith to adde Seales to his Covenants in all times to bind the bargaine The Covenant in generall may be described a mutuall compact or agreement betwixt God and man whereby God promiseth all good things specially eternall happinesse unto man upon just equall and favourable conditions and man doth promise to walk before God in all acceptable free and willing obedience expecting all good from God and happinesse in God according to his Promise for the praise and glory of his great Name The Author of the Covenant is God not God and man for God doth enter into Covenant with man not as his equall but as his Soveraigne and man is bound to accept of the conditions offered by the Lord. There can be no such equality of power and authority betwixt God and the creature as that he should indent with the most High but he must accept what the Lord is well-pleased to offer and command The Covenant is of God and that of his free grace and love for although in some Covenant the good covenanted be promised in justice and given in justice for our workes yet it was of grace that God was pleased to bind himselfe to his creature and above the desert of the creature and though the reward be of justice it is also of favour For after perfect obedience performed according to the will of God it had been no injustice in God as he made the creature of nothing so to have brought him unto nothing it was then of grace that he was pleased to make that promise and of the same grace his happinesse should have been continued The partees covenanting are God and man for God promiseth unto man upon condition and man promiseth unto God what he requireth In respect of Gods promise the Covenant is called his but in respect of the conditions it may be called mans God promiseth freely to recompence Zech. 9. 11. In the bloud of thy Covenant Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 68. the good of obedience which is already due and might be exacted without promise of reward man promiseth to pay that debt of duty which he oweth unto the Lord in respect of the manifold relations wherein he stands obliged unto him The forme of the Covenant stands in a Promise and restipulation wherein the Lord though he might have required the whole To will and to nill the same things is the sure bond of all amity and friendship Now because the communion betwixt God and us is of infinite disparitie therefore his will is a Law to us and our obedience is true love to him debt of obedience without promise of reward in respect of the good things already bestowed upon the creature yet to the end that man might yeeld cheerfull and free obedience he first bound himselfe to reward the obedience of man before he bound man unto him in obedience The Subject of this Covenant in generall is man not differenced by speciall respects for as the Law was given so the Gospell is revealed to man Man in this or that speciall
consideration is the subject of the Covenant as it is divided for kinds or altered for circumstances and degrees but man is the subject of the Covenant without such particular considerations The Lord having respect to the mutability and weaknesse of mans nature was pleased as to try his obedience by Symbolicall precepts so to evidence the assurance of his faithfull promise by outward seales but when the creature shall grow to absolute perfection and unchangeablenesse such symbolicall precepts and outward seales shall cease as needlesse The good promised is eternall blessednesse with all good things that doe accompany it or belong thereunto the good required is obedience to the just and righteous Commandement of God which he as our Soveraigne Lord doth claime and call for according as he shall prescribe and appoint The end thereof is the glory of God viz. the praise of his wisedome justice and bountie And in all these things the Covenants howsoever divided in kinds or varied in degrees and circumstances doe sweetly consent and agree But seeing the Covenant is not one but manifold both in kinds and degrees we must distinguish it and weigh more diligently what doth agree to every kind and whe●ein they agree and wherein they differ one from another Some distinguish thus the Covenant is either of Nature or of Grace or subservient to both which is called the Old Testament Others thus the Covenant is Legall or Evangelicall of works or of grace The Covenant of workes wherein God covenanteth with man to give him eternall life upon condition of perfect obedience in his owne person The Covenant of Grace which God maketh with man promising eternall life upon condition of beleeving And this distinction is one for substance with the former and with that which may be taken from the speciall consideration of the subject with whom it was made scil the Covenant made with Adam in the state of Innocencie or with man after the Fall We reade not in Scripture the Covenant of works or of grace totidem syllabis the neerest we come to it is Rom. 3. 27. the Law of works opposed to the Law of faith which holds out as much as the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of Grace For there the Apostle is disputing about justification and by consequent eternall Salvation which is Gods part to give under a Covenant But of this hereafter The Covenant which God made with our first parents is that mutuall contract or agreement wherein God promised eternall happinesse to man upon condition of intire and perfect obedience to be performed in his owne person The Author of this Covenant was God his Creator and Soveraigne who had bestowed many and great blessings upon man furnished him with excellent abilities and enriched him with singular priviledges This Covenant God made in Justice yet so as it was of Grace likewise to make such a free promise and to bestow so great things upon man for his obedience God did in strict justice require obedience promise a reward and threaten punishment but yet as bountifull and gratious unto his creature intire and perfect if he should so continue God did in justice proportion the reward and the worke the weight of the blessing promised and the work of obedience required but yet I cannot thinke it had been injustice in God to have given lesse or not to have continued so great things to man so long as he continued his obedience No God was pleased to manifest his goodnesse to man continuing in obedience no lesse then his justice as formerly in creation he had shewed himselfe exceeding gratious to man above other visible and corporall creatures This Covenant God made with man without a Mediatour for there needed no middle person to bring man into favour and friendship with God because man did beare the image of God and had not offended nor to procure acceptance to mans service because it was pure and spotlesse God did love man being made after his Image and promised to accept of his obedience performed freely willingly intirely according to his Commandement The forme of this Covenant stood in the speciall Promise of good to be received from justice as a reward for his work Doe this and live and the exact and rigid exaction of perfect obedience in his own person without the least spot or failing for matter or manner The good that God promised was in it kind a perfect systeme of good which was to be continued so long as he continued obedient which because it might be continued in the eye of creating power for ever we call it happinesse life and everlasting happinesse But upon a supposition of Adams persisting in a state of obedience to say that God would have translated him to the state of glory in Heaven is more then any just ground will warrant because in Scripture there is no such promise And if we must not presume above what is written we may say Adam should have continued in that blessed estate in which he was created but as for his translation after some number of yeares spent on earth we reade it not In this state and condition Adams obedience should have been rewarded in justice but he could not have merited that reward Happinesse should have been conferred upon him or continued unto him for his works but they had not deserved the continuance thereof for it is impossible the creature should merit of the Creator because when he hath done all that he can he is an unprofitable servant he hath Luke 17. 10. done but his duty The obedience that God required at his hands was partly naturall to be regulated according to the Law engraven in his heart by the finger of God himselfe consisting in the true unfained and perfect love of God and of his Neighbour for the Lords sake and partly Symbolicall which stood in obedience to the Law given for his probation and triall whether he would submit to the good pleasure of God in an act of it selfe meerely indifferent because he was so commanded Though God had put many abilities and honourable priviledges upon man yet he remained his Soveraigne which by an act of restraint he was pleased to make man thus exalted to know which he did by requiring and commanding his creature to abstain from one fruit in it selfe pleasant to the eye and good for meat This was mans Homage-penny a thing before the command indifferent unto which he had a naturall inclination from which he was now to abstaine because God who had before given to man as part of his patrimony and not as reward of his obedience to this particular restraint liberty to eat of every tree of the Garden here interposed himselfe and reserved this as an Homage unto himself God in his Soveraignty set a punishment upon the breach of this Gen. 2. 16. his Commandement that man might know his inferiority and that things betwixt him and God were not as between equals The subject of this Covenant
and charge which was now greater then God laid upon the first Adams shoulders To have put the prime right of the Covenant upon every particular had left occasion to infinite fals and withall opened a g●p to dis-union which the Lord abhorreth To have chosen out a meere creature and under the fall how could he have made satisfaction for sinne formerly committed or free himselfe from the bondage of Satan Therefore that the Promise might be sure to the Heires of Promise God puts this honour and charge upon Jesus Christ who was the seed to come to whom the Promises were made and in whom all the Promises for all his brethren are Yea and Gal. 3. 19. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Amen The parties who are to partake of the benefits promised are inclosed in the woman as the Mother of the good or rather under the former terme the womans seed For the word seed Gen. 4. 25. and 21. 13. is sometimes taken for one but often collectively which must be judged by the circumstances of the place Now in this Text by the woman is meant Eve and by the seed of the woman the posterity of the woman those scil which degenerate not into the seed of the Serpent which is proved The Papists reade it Ipsa contrary to all Hebrew copies and all circumstances of the Text. The Septuagint translates it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ch●ysast Hom. 17. in Gen. ha●h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though his Latine Interpreters hath made him say Ipsa Iren l. 3. advers haeres c. 38. seem●s to have read it Ipsum Andradius def l. 4. Comas l. 2. c. 15. Cajetan Steuch●● Cosmop in Gen. ● 3. Pagnine Ar. Montan●● Sacraboscus Francis Georg. tom 1. Pathemat probl 15. Felisius e●ucidat Gen. 17. 2. Gal. 3. 16. Decal praec 1. c. 49. Riber in Heb. 1. 15. de Tempt l. 2. c. 2. Perer. in D●● cap. Lindan de opt genere interpretandi l. 3. pag. 126 127. dislike the reading S●e Cypr. sect Adversus Iudaeos l. 2. c. 9. Panel Leo. Sermo 2. de Nativ Dom. Rainold praefat de Idol Rom. §. 6 by the opposition of seeds there made For as the seed of the Serpent must be taken collectively so also the seed of the woman that the opposition may be fit But by the Serpents seed are meant not only venomous beasts but wicked men 1 Joh. 3. 12. And the enmities fore-spoken of do pertaine to all the godly posterity of Eve even from the beginning so that the faithfull who lived before the manifestation of Christ in the flesh cannot be excluded but they must be understood under the name of the seed Christ peculiarly was the seed of the woman but the faithfull are comprehended under that title also the seed of the woman is to be taken collectively but so as it doth comprehend them only who are not the Serpents seed but opposite to them Christ properly is the seed by which the Promise is to be fulfilled the faithfull are the seed to whom the Promise is made The Promise is made to the faithfull and they are and shall be partakers of the Promise● but Christ only is the cause of the blessing to be communicated Christ and the faithfull are comprehended under one kind of seed spirituall not carnall but Christ the principall who in that seed doth so excell that in him he doth bring all the seed of Abraham according to the Spirit unto unity the faithfull are the seed also as they shall inherit the Promise in and through Jesus Christ The worke of Christ the womans seed is to bruise the Serpents head which is a phrase of speech fitted to the condition of the Serpent which is obnoxious to this hurt when he is compelled to creep on the ground that his head should be crushed and bruised by the feet of men And thereby is signified that Christ should destroy death and him that had the power of death that is the devill Heb. 2. 14. that he should destroy the workes of the devill Joh. 12. 3● 1 Joh. 3. 8. And this is true of the faithfull al●o by communication with Christ Christ hath bruised the Serpents head by his owne power but the faithfull overcome by the power of Christ The victory is common to all the seed but the author of victory in the seed is he who is the Head and chiefe and to whom as to an Head the unity of all the rest is reduced Ye have overcome the evill one Rom 16. 20. Luk. 11. 21. 1 Joh. 2. 13. By bruising the Serpents head we must not only understand the deadly wound given to the actors person and his instruments but the desolation of those workes which the Tempter had by the fall planted in the nature of the fallen creature as pride vanity ignorance lust c. 1 Joh. 3. 8. Ephes 2. 15. Now the nature of the fallen creature is such that if you continue his being and remove off him the workes of the Serpent you must necessarily bring in the contrary habits of Grace and goodnesse as of knowledge faith love feare and other Graces of the Spirit So that under this one blessing is comprehended whatsoever is necessary to spirituall blessednes For if Sathan be vanquished the curse of the Law is removed sinne is pardoned the Image of God repaired spirituall freedome and adoption obtained and everlasting happinesse shall in due time be possessed All these blessings which concurre to make up perfect happinesse are inseparably linked and the possession of any one is an undoubted pledge of the rest in due season to be injoyed So the Apostle saith God that cannot lie promised eternall life before the world began or rather Tit. 1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mead. in Ap. 14. 6. ante tempora saecularia that is from the beginning of ages scil in that famous promise of the blessed seed It seemes somewhat harsh to interpret the word promised by decreed to promise and therfore it is better to referre it to this promise made from the beginning of the world And it is manifest by this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he meaneth nothing but what the same Apostle signifieth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 15. 25. and nothing is signified thereby but what elsewhere the same Apostle doth intimate by this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 3. 9. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 1. 26. and that notes the same that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 15. 18. as Ier. 28. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 7. 24. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13. 8. are the same But this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it owne force and propriety doth not signifie from eternity Luk. 1. 70. Act 3. 21. But how must the Serpents head be bruised even by Christs suffering death to satisfie revenging Iustice which was offended by transgression under the former Covenant This is expounded under this terme of bruising his heele by the
intire holy blamelesse conversation directed according to the will of God in every place state and condition of life is said to be perfect Blessed are the perfect in the way Psal 119. 1. Keepe thy servant from presumptuous sinnes then shall I be perfect Psal 19. 13. I was also perfect before him and I kept my selfe from mine iniquity Psal 18. 23. It is recorded of Asa that his heart was perfect with the Lord all his dayes though in the same booke many infirmities are noted in him 1 King 15. 14. 2 Chron. 15. 17. Thus Noah Gen. 6. 6. Joh 1. 1. Hezekiah 2 King 20. 3. are said to be perfect David to walke in his integrity Psal 26. 1. yet these examples must not be referred to the second degree of perfection The body is intire when all parts are so knit together that each is preserved and fit for his office the soule is intire when all the parts of righteousnesse are rivetted together amongst themselves and in the whole the conversation is intire when no office of life is neglected no precept carelessely forgotten or sleighted when no occasions or occurrences can remove men from their holy purposes undertaken according to Gods word This perfect man is set as opposite to the Jam 1. 6. unstable double minded perverse froward and restlesse who are off and on turned upside downe with every contrary wind divided He that can be contented to be naught in any thing is naught in every thing and at odds with themselves who loppe and straiten the Commandements as will best stand with their occasions take and leave at pleasure rest in the externall acts of piety or justice or cleane depart from Gods Commandements The integrity of the upright shall guide him but the perversenesse of transgressors shall destroy them Prov. 11. 3. If I say I am perfect mine own mouth shall prove me perverse Job 9. 20 21 22 Who so walketh intirely shall be safe but he that is perverse in his double wayes shall fall in one Prov. 28. 18. So it is noted of Abijam that his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God 1 King 15. 3. of Amaziah Vzziah Jotham they did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with perfect hearts 2 Chron. 25. 2. 26. 4. 27. 2. 2 King 14. 3. 15. 3. and of Solomon that when he was old his wives turned away his heart after other gods and his heart was not perfect with the Lord as was the heart of David his father 1 King 11. 4. 2. That is said to be perfect which hath obtained an high degree of perfection not simply but in comparison of that which is beneath when a man is so habituated in his course that he hath attained a facility and constancy in well doing Children new borne are perfect that is intire but when they be come to ripe age they are perfect in comparison of thēselvs as new born babes But every growth argueth not comparitive perfection but that only which is so great that it may seeme to introduce a new forme or when by long practice a man is so habituated in his course that he hath attained a facility and constancy in well doing Children are more perfect then Infants new borne and Striplings then Children but they are not said to be perfect because the growth is but small but when they are come to ripe age although as age encreaseth much may be added they may be called perfect because then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have attained as it were a new forme So to be perfect and absolute the Philosopher doth attribute to men of ripe age Arist Hist Ani. l. 2. cap. 1. de part Animal lib. 4. cap. 10. Strong meate saith the Apostle belongeth to them that are perfect or of full age Heb. 5. 14. those that have left the Rudiments of Christian Heb. 6. 1 ● Eph. 4. 11 12 13. Religion are called perfect perfect in respect of them that be babes in understanding and stand in need of milke 1 Cor. 14. 20. The Law makes nothing perfect Heb. 7. 19. because it was a rudiment only which was delivered to children so that he that is seasoned with the knowledge of the Gospell is perfect in respect of them that be instructed only in the Law We speake wisdome amongst them that are perfect 1. Cor. 2. 6. here some understand men and by perfect they understand all Christians in generall who are perfect in respect of them that knew not the Gospell Others them that in speciall had made greater progresse in the faith others understand the word things or somewhat that this sence should be that this wisedome doth consist in perfect things But however this text be interpreted the Apostle elsewhere manifestly confirmeth this point shewing that some were perfect in comparison of others who had not yet attained to perfection Here it must be remembred that howsoever the word perfect be referred to knowledge in the mysteries of Religion in the writings of the Apostles yet it is not seldome referred to practice and manners In the first reference they are said to be perfect who have obtained an high degree of knowledge in heavenly and divine mysteries In the second they that teach in deed and fact that they have learned what they professe Let patience have its perfect work Jam. 1. 4. that is let it shew its sincerity and constancy in works that not in words and gestures but in deed and truth it be approved that it cannot be overcome in the greatest evils but doth hould out and remaine invincible He that can bridle his tongue is a perfect man indeed Jam. 3. 2. that is he is not one that is in exercise to learne which is the meane to perfection but hath learned indeed what he professeth He calleth that perfect which is performed in truth and deed and is not counterfet and so ●in is said to be finished when it is committed Jam. 1. 15. and every sound solid operative grace is called a perfect gift Jam. 1. 17. and sincere unfained love is said to be perfect love 1 Joh. 4. 18. Christ was made perfect through sufferings Heb. 2. 10. as he learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. for there is an experimentall learning And to this purpose belongs that speech of our Saviours upon the crosse It is finished for hereby was signified that he had fulfilled all things which he was to doe upon earth Luk. 13. 32. and they that shed their bloud for Christs sake and for the Gospels are said to be perfected Thus the patient are called perfect because patience is a document of a mind most exercised in piety and godlinesse So the power of God is perfected in our weakenesse 2 Cor. 12. 9. for the vertue of Christ is not perfected in weakenesse as in the subject not by infirmity as by the effect but when it sheweth it selfe in the greatest and
word into the affections that it may sweeten their disposition and governe their motion 3. In all endeavours we must include prayer to God in the name of Christ as a chiefe associate for God ordinarily lets in sanctifying grace at the same gate at which honest hearted prayers goe out 4. The fourth meanes is for a man alwayes to possesse his heart with the apprehension of Gods presence and so to keepe it in his feare continually to walke with God as being in his eye and seeing him that is invisible This remembrance of Gods all-seeing presence will make men study to approve themselves before God in all their courses and to sticke unto him with their whole hearts Could the eye of a jealous husband prie into every privy corner of his wives heart she would be afraid to hide any strange lover in her secret affection If but a man nay if but a child could looke into our hearts we durst not deale doubly and deceitfully What God seeth us and shall we dare to dally with him Shall I give him part of my heart and reserve another part for the world for pleasure for sin How should not God find this out for he searcheth the heart and reynes and understandeth the secret cogitations of every soul 5. Another meanes is diligently to review all works of obedience and our affections in the doing of them and to observe what discomfort and trouble follows the maimed and defective performance of good duties And withall when we take our selves tardy in an holy in●●gnation to take revenge of our selves judging and condemning our selves before God The very thinking of the after reckonings we must come unto when we have done our work will make us take heed how we doe it The remembrance of the losse and punishment they shall sustaine whose works are not perfect before the Lord will stirre up respect to every Commandment For who is there that useth for all his actions at the dayes end to call himselfe to a severe examination as the hard Master doth his servants that must not needs in the very midst of his actions reason thus within himselfe anone all this which now I doe must very narrowly be looked over and if the reason why I doe it my affections in doing the worke it selfe be maimed halt or suffer defect in the parts thereof I shall smart for it O the wrings and secret pinches which mine owne guilty heart will give me yea the sentence which by Covenant I am tyed to passe upon my self in case my heart be partiall to the Lord and my work deformed If my worke be not perfect shall I not loose all my labour and be rejected with it Lastly It is good to meditate seriously on the joyes of heaven and the rich recompence of reward reserved for them that cleave unto the Lord with their whole hearts If the happinesse of Saints hereafter doe rightly affect and be soundly beleeved a man will be contented to part with all that he hath to purchase that treasure Whatsoever he hath laid next his heart he will abandon it with detestation rather then deprive himself of that eternall inheritance which God hath prepared To stirre up himselfe to strive after perfection more and more a Christian must first shame himself for his halting and make it odious ah the division of my heart the maimednesse of my service is so apparant that I cannot conceale it from my conscience I have lodged sinne vanity pleasure the world in the closet of my heart which should have been kept entire for the Lord. My purposes for good have been weake my resolutions variable oft-times by occurrences and occasions I have been drawn aside In holy performances I have served mine onw corrupt affections and doing what is right not done it with a perfect heart Mine affection to good hath been partiall base deformed In the greatest matters I have been remisse precise in lesser zealous in one carelesse in another ready to run according to inclination not looking to the direction of the truth I have sometimes been forward to heare not so carefull to meditate and make the word mine own eager and fiery against some particular notorious offences but not vigilant to bridle rash anger boysterous passions and indiscreet and idle speeches My love to the children of God hath neither been pure nor universall I have been apt to admire some dis-esteem others according as they carry themselves towards me and fit me in my humour If he be a cursed deceiver that having a male in his flock doth offer that which is halt and lame to the Lord how justly might I be confounded who have wickedly departed from my God and set my affections upon things of no value Will an husband accept of divided love in his wife will a Prince regard or take in good part that which is lame blind or sick for a present from his Subject O Lord I have dealt exceeding foolishly in tendering such spotted service unto thy Highnesse Secondly He must resolve to keepe himselfe more entirely to Psal 119. 69. 1 King 8. 48. the commandments of God for the time to come I have wickedly departed from my God but now I will returne and keepe his Commandments with my whole heart What can I tender unto They are blessed who have attained some perfection in the exercise of holines Every apprentice deemes him happie who hath the perfect skill of that trade wherein he is exercised 1 King 8. ●9 It is a great shame to leape from pale to sprig and with the moone to change our beliefs Thou art ashamed to be accounted an inconstant man his Majesty lesse then my selfe How can I for shame intreat his favour unlesse I cleave unto him with a perfect heart Can I desire God to be wholly mine unlesse I be wholly his Can I be so impudent as to intreat God to love me with a prime and conjugall love and give me leave to love sinne which he abhorreth to love other things above or equall with his Highnesse Can I looke to be married unto Christ in mercy truth and compassion if my heart doe not affect him above all and other things in and through him alone The Lord is a great King his service must be without spot or blemish His eye searcheth the heart and perfectly understandeth all secret motions a farre off and will give to every one as he knoweth his heart and according to his wayes Men of place looke to have their pleasure done in all things by such as attend upon them and shall I presume to call my selfe the servant of the living God when I doe his pleasure in part only and by halves My obedience cannot be perfect in degree so long as I live here but through the grace of God it shall be universall and that I might attaine absolute perfection in heaven I will strive after it in this life O Lord I have covenanted to sticke unto thy testimonies and by
the Church by his Ministery The curse of Gods revenging justice had now seized upon mankind for many generations even thousands of yeares so that now it was time for God to remember mercy in the midst of wrath and to breake out into a clearer expression of this free gratious Covenant extended to a people sprung up into a great number and to be joyned together in an outward policie The Covenant of free grace running downe in Abrahams seed was daily cast out and grew wilde as in the Ishmaelites Edomites Syrians c. therefore God was now pleased to knit the seed of Abraham together in a stronger and as I may call it a state Covenant that things might grow better and not worse The body of the people to whom the Covenant pertained was now growne populous and numerous so that either it must grow wild and come to nothing by it owne weight or else be brought under the Covenant of God into a state and nationall Church The Covenant which God made with Israel is called the Old Testament or the Law not because it was first as some suppose but because it was to wax old and to give place to the more excellent Covenant succeeding and finally to be abolished Heb. 8. 13. But here at the first we meet with a great difficulty How and whether at all the Covenant of Grace was manifested by Moses Some make the Old and New Testament as the Covenant of workes and grace opposite in substance and kind and not in degree alone and that to introduce an unsound distinction viz. of promise set against Covenant or Testament as though God conferred Grace unto the Fathers only by promise and not by Covenant leaving all that Moses puts under Covenant to be the Covenant of works and old Testament not considering that God calleth his promise of Grace to Abraham a Covenant Gen. 17. 1. being in every branch a compleat Covenant not adverting that the Apostle who knew how to speake according to the sence of the old Scriptures cals the promise made unto Abraham a Covenant or Testament Gal. 3. 17. and the Covenant of promise distinguishing the degrees of manifestation Ephes 2. 12. Neither can it be proved that ever God made the Covenant of works with the creature fallen but whensoever the Scripture speakes of Gods entring into Covenant with man fallen and plunged into sinne and for sinne deserving wrath it must be understood of the Covenant of Grace as shall be shewed hereafter Others make the Old Testament a Covenant subservient to the Covenant of Grace and describe it to be that which God made with Israel in Mount Sinai to prepare them to faith and to inflame them with a desire of the promise and Evangelicall Covenant which otherwise had languished in their minds and to restrain them from wickednesse as it were with a bit and bridle untill the time wherein God should send the Spirit of adoption into their hearts and governe them by the Law of liberty This they make to agree with the Covenant of nature in this that in both the one partie contracting is God the other man both hath a stipulation annexed and that the same in respect of the morall Law the promise is the same in generall and both leade unto Christ But to differ from it in this that the Covenant of nature was made with all men but this with the Israelites alone that was made with man created and perfect in Paradise and had no preludia this was made long after with some part of mankind sinners in Mount Sinai and had many preludia that bound to obedience due by the Law of nature this to the Ceremonies also in that the injoyment of life in Paradise was promised here in the Land of Canaan the Covenant of nature leads to Christ by accident as it shewes what man doth owe unto God and what punishment remaines if he pay not his debt of duty the old Covenant leads unto Christ by it selfe for that is the true and proper scope thereof God exacting his due of man for none other end but that the creature convicted of his imbecillity should flie to Christ The Covenant of Nature leanes upon the Creation and generall conservation the old Covenant upon the Election of Israel his deliverance out of Egypt and conservation in the Land of Canaan The Covenant of Nature was written in the heart but the old Gal. 4. 24. Covenant did beget to servitude and so did compell and restraine by force as when we leave undone what we would doe or doe what we would not for feare that is eternall this temporary written in Tables of stone The thirst after Christ which the Covenant of Nature doth stirre up in man is allayed by the application of Christ either in the Promise or in the Gospell but the thirst which the old Covenant stirred up could not be allayed but by the comming of Christ in the flesh With the Covenant of Grace it agreeth that the Author of both is God both contracted with man a sinner both doth shew sinne both restraine from sinne both leade to Christ both the Symbole of the Church both made by a Mediatour and life promised in both They differ in these that in the Covenant subservient God is considered as reproving sinne and approving righteousnesse in the Covenant of Grace as pardoning sinne and renewing man in righteousnesse the stipulation of the old Covenant is Doe this and live Gal. 3. 12. Of the New Beleeve and thou shalt not come into judgement Joh. 3. 18. The Old Testament was added to the Promise of Grace which went before Gal. 3. 16 17. and shewes sinne not primarily but by experience of humane weaknesse in keeping Covenant But the Covenant of Grace doth this primarily for it teacheth expressely that all men are sinners Rom. 3. 9 23. and that his happinesse doth consist in the remission of sinnes Rom. 4. 6. The old Covenant did restrain from sinne by compulsion Rom. 7. 23. 24. the Covenant of Grace with a free inclination of mind and soule Rom. 6. 12. The Covenant of Grace leads to Christ directly the old Covenant indirectly The old Covenant is the carnall Symbole of the Church of the Jewes the new Covenant a spirituall Symbole of the Church both of Jewes and Gentiles Moses is the Mediatour of the old Covenant Christ God and man Mediatour of the new In the old Covenant is given the spirit of bondage but the Spirit of Adoption in the new Rom. 8. 15. The old Covenant was a meane to the end the new the end it selfe The old Covenant did terrifie the consciences the new doth comfort Man a sinner fallen a sleep is the object of the old Covenant the conscience terrified with sinne the object of the new The old Covenant shewed the manner of worshipping God but gave not ability the new Covenant doth both The old Covenant was an hand-writing against us Col. 2. 14. the new an easie yoke
people of Israel repenting of their transgressions and sinnes committed against God did oftentimes Josh 24. 22 23 24 25. Judg. 10. 16. 1 Sam 7. 3 4 5. 2 Chro. 15. 12. 2 Kin. 11. 17. 2 Chro. 23 16. 2 Ki. 23. 3. Neh. 10. 30 31. 2 Chro. 34. 31. renew their Covenant binding themselves to the Lord to be his people and to walke in Gods Law which was given by Moses and to observe and doe all the Commandements of God the the Lord and his Judgements and his Statutes with all their heart and with all their soule But Jehoshaphat Josiah Nehemiah and other godly Governours who were well acquainted with their infirmities and knew themselves utterly unable to fulfill the Law would never promise punctuall and exact obedience in hope thereby to deserve eternall life or to receive it from God as the reward of their perfect service nor flatter themselves as though they could stand before the Tribunall of Gods Justice in their own Righteousnesse when upon proofe sufficient they saw that no flesh could be justified in his sight Without question they understood that God of his free grace had promised to be their God and of his undeserved and rich mercy would accept of their willing and sincere obedience though weake and imperfect in degree which is in effect that the Covenant which God made with them and they renewed was a Covenant of grace and peace the same for substance that is made with the faithfull in Christ in time of the Gospell Sixthly the Covenant that God made with Abraham was the Gen. 17. 1. Covenant of grace as it is acknowledged but the Covenant made with Abraham is for substance the same with the Covenant made with Israel upon Mount Sinai the promise is the same and the things required the same For in that God promised that he would be God all-sufficient to Abraham to blesse him with all necessary blessings for this life and the life to come In Gal. 3. 8. this he promiseth freely and of his owne meere grace and favour to be their God and make them a Kingdome of Priests and an Exod. 19. 6 7. holy nation unto himselfe In that he requireth of Abraham that he walke with or before him in integrity In this he covenanteth that they should obey his voice and keep his commandements Deu. 26. 17 18. Jer. 7. 23. Deut. 10. 12. Jer. 11 3 4. 1 Ki. 8. 25. 2 Chron. 6. 16. 2 Chr. 17. 3 6. 2 Chr. 6. 14 16. Jer. 2. 2. And what is it to walk with God or before God but to walk in his Law Seventhly when God gave his Law unto Israel upon Mount Sinai he troth-plighted that people unto himselfe and himselfe unto them and that of his meere love not of any merit in them Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the love of thine espousals when thou wentest after me in the wildernesse in a Land that was not sowen Israel was holinesse unto the Lord and Ezek. 16. 8. the first fruits of his increase When I passed by thee and looked upon thee behold thy time was the time of love and I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakednesse yea I sware unto thee and entered into Covenant with thee saith the Lord God and thou becammest mine But if the Law were a perfect draught of the Law of nature Rainold Apol. Thes pag. 211. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Act. 15. 9. Rom. 10. 4. Gal. 3. 24. Christum vocat finem i. scopum legis quia lex sues sacrificiis ritibus c. Christum intendebat Zanch de Redem cap. 11. Thes 5. li. 1. The Decalogue written with Gods own hand upon two tables was an Epitome of all Ordinances appertaining to the Covenant exacting punctuall obedience in the least jot and title as necessary to Salvation and flashing out wrath against the least transgression without any intimation of repentance or hope of pardon the Lord did not at that time troth-plight himselfe unto them Eighthly the Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience and doth build these upon it as a foundation For the end of the Commandement is love love out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith unfained That love which the Law requireth either towards God or towards man must flow from a pure heart and faith it is that purifieth the heart Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse sake and the Law is a Schoole-master to bring us unto Christ But bring us unto Christ it could not if it did not point him out unto us or presuppose him as promised He is not the end of the Law if the Law did not direct to him and require faith in him He is the end of the Law as the Law leadeth and driveth us out of our selves and from all confidence in any works of the Law that by faith in Christ we might obtain righteousnesse It is not the property of a Schoole-master to beat and strike and not to direct or teach That the ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ direct unto him and require faith in him is a thing Exo. 34 27 28. confessed and acknowledged of all men Now the ceremonies are appendices of the Law especially of the first and second Commandements Exod. 24. 8. Heb. 9. 19 20 23. Pigh●disp Ratisp l. 2. as they were given to the Israelites And if they require faith in the Redeemer to come how should we thinke it to be a thing passed over in silence altogether in the Law The deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt was a type of our spirituall deliverance from the bondage of sinne and Satan by the power of Christ as appeares by the Ceremonie and Sacrament of that corporall deliverance the Passeover which was a Joh. 19. 36. 1 Cor. 5. 7. figure of Christ our Saviour Therefore in the first Precept the Mystery of our Redemption by Christ is taught and contained That particular mercy mentioned in that Precept taught the Israelites to expect spirituall Salvation in the Messiah promised In Psal 1. 1 2. Psal 119. 1 2. Scripture they are pronounced blessed who keep the Commandements and observe the Statutes and Judgements of the Lord but withall their blessednesse is said to consist in this that God Psal 32. 1 2. imputeth not sinne unto them that their sinnes be forgiven and transgressions covered The true worshippers of God then are happy not for their works but because God is pleased to accept them in Christ and to pardon their offences This is the true sense of those promises made to or spoken of them that walk in the perfect way and doe none iniquity And if life and Salvation be promised to them that observe and keep the Statutes Judgements and Ordinances of the Lord not for the dignity of the work but through the meere grace and mercy of God pardoning transgressions and sinnes then is faith in the
from all his sins and accepted of God as righteous unto life which is called righteousnesse of the person Faith is not imputed for righteousnesse in respect of the worth or dignity of faith either in habit or act but in respect of it's office whereunto it is ordained in the Covenant of Grace as it doth imbrace Christ and thereby we are made partakers of the merits of his free and willing and perfect obedience to the command of Grace Faith is accounted for righteousnesse in regard of the object and is a cause of that Justification which is of grace A cause I say not a bare condition without which the thing cannot be bu● a cause not meritorious or materiall but instrumentall only receiving Christ promised and offered in the word of grace For Rom. 3 22. Phil. 3. 9. howsoever our righteousnesse be called the righteousnesse of the faith of Jesus or by the faith of Jesus faith it selfe is never called our righteousnesse We reade that Christ is made unto us of God 1 Cor. 1. 30. Rom. 5. 19. Rom. 10. 4. righteousnesse that by one mans obedience many are made righteous that Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse to every one that believeth that the believer is justified by him and by faith in him obtaineth remission of sins We find also by conference A● God did predestinate Christ of grace to this honour of being God in fellowship of person and of being the Prince of out salvation So God in the Covenant he did make with him and the commandment he gave him of laying downe his life did strike it and fulfill it of grace not requiring any thing of his Son more then duties of freeobedience which should of grace have acceptance c. Bain Col. 1. 19. of Scriptures that to be justified by faith and to be justified by Christ is in substance all one And what can be the sence of those places but this that Christ is the meritorious and materiall cause so to speake of our Justification faith the condition and instrument whereby we receive Christ made of God our righteousnesse The Apostle making comparison betwixt the first and second Adam sheweth that as sin commeth from Adam alone unto us all as he in whom we have all sinned So from Jesus Christ alone commeth righteousnesse to all that are in him as from him that hath satisfied the justice of God and performed gratefull obedience at the commandment of grace for them all In which comparison faith never hath the place of our righteousnesse but answers in our participation of righteousnesse in Christ to that which is the ground of our being partakers in the sin of Adam For as we were one with Adam and in respect of orignall and nature were in him and one with him and so by being in him and one with him did all in him and with him transgresse the commandment of God even so in respect of faith whereby onely we are united unto Christ and spiritually made one with him and ingrafted into him we all in him did satisfie the justice of God or are made partakers of the fruit and benefit of his satisfaction Thus our union with Christ and meanes thereof is alwaies to be distinguished from our communion with him in the participation of his righteousnesse as the fruit thereof Like as our being in Adam and one with him is to be distinguished from the fruit thereof which is communion with him in the participation of his transgression If faith be only the hand whereby we put on Christ both as a justifier and sanctifier then it is not the garment of righteousnesse wherewith we are cloathed But it is only the hand whereby we put on Christ as a garment Gal. 3. 27. Rom. 13. 13 14. Faith justifieth as it imbraceth the righteousnesse of God But Christ only is the righteousnesse of God allowed and ordained of God to be our righteousnesse In the third to the Romans and elsewhere oft we meet with this phrase We are justified by faith Now in the fifth Chapter of that Epistle vers 17. it is said that we shall raigne in life through Jesus Christ and verse 19. that by his obedience we shall be made righteous What in the first place is called Justification and Salvation by faith that in the other is called making righteous and raigning in life through Christ and him believed on And so we reade that of faith and by faith and through faith we are justified but we never reade for faith we Rom. 3. 30. 5. 1. are justified Act. 3. 16. First Peter saith His name hath made this man sound through faith in his name And then the faith which is by him hath given to him this disposition of body Is it not plain here that ●aith hath healed him is as much as his name or Christ believed on hath healed him the one phrase expounding the other Christ brought in everlasting righteousnesse into the world Dan. 9. 24. But faith was in the world before the comming of Christ in the flesh Heb. 11. 2. And the Spirit of God in Scripture evidently distinguisheth betwixt faith and Christ apprehended by faith saying The Fathers who believed received not the promise that is Christ the matter of the promise and consequently of righteousnesse Faith they had received but the promise they had not received because Christ in whom their blessednesse was promised was not exhibited in their daies For all b● it by faith they apprehended Christ ●●●cified to come and the righteousnesse which he was to bring unto the world at his comming yet that righteousnesse in the substance and matter of it was never brought into the world So that the very designing of a precise time for the bringing in of our righteousnesse into the world declareth that that righteousnesse materiall is to be distinguished from faith which was in the world in all ages before it was brought in For faith was in the world and did apprehend righteousnesse which was to be brought into the world long before it came as well as now long after that righteousnesse performed it can lay hold upon it to justification For the faith of Gods children before the day of Christ and the faith of Gods children now after the day of Christ did never nor yet doth apprehend any other righteousnesse but that which in that day was brought into the world For it is as easie to faith to apprehend righteousnesse to come as it is to lay hold on righteousnesse past or by-gone like as our faith apprehendeth many things yet to come as our glorification Vorstius and his followers expound this Text in this sence Rom. 3. 28. Gal. 2. 16. Rom. 4. 5. Faith that is repentance conversion and new obedience is accounted for righteousnesse that is in the place or stead of legall righteousnesse or exact obedience though it be not so indeed And so they freely confesse Justification by works which the Apostle saith is