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B10086 The safety of appearing at the day of judgement, in the righteousness of Christ: opened and applied. By Solomon Stoddard ... Stoddard, Solomon, 1643-1729. 1687 (1687) Wing S5709; ESTC W22065 210,940 366

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received ye the Spirit by the works of the law or by the hearing of faith Gal. 3.2 the law is not of faith Gal. 2.12 if the inheritance be of the law it is no mere of promise gal 3.5 18. if there had been given a law that could have given life verily righteousness should have been by the law Gal. 3 21. that I may be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ the righteousness which is of God by faith Phil 3 9 by the deeds of the law shall no flesh be justified in his sight but now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested Rom 3 20 31 we conclude that a man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law Rom 3.28 if they that are of the law he heirs faith is made void Rom 4 14 if by grace it is no more of works Rom 11 6 by these places it seems there is no need of having the righteousness of the law in order to our justification The resolution of this doubt does depend upon the right understanding of what is meant by the law and by the works of the law by the law he intends a meer covenant of works abstracted from that gracious way of accomplishing of it which God has revealed in the Gospel and thus the law is utterly uncapable of justifying of us it is weak through the flesh Rom 8.3 and the way of life by the law is distinguished from that way by faith for though the covenant of works leaves room for salvation by Christ and does no way forbid such a way of salvation yet it provides no Mediator for fallen man yea is utterly silent as to a Mediator for him leaves sinful man in a perishing condition denouncing the curse against him shews him no way of salvation tells him not of any possibility of salvation the covenant of works made no provision for salvation but it gave way to mans salvation in case the righteousness of it were fulfilled by a surety so that the way of life by the law and by the Gospel are divers ways but not opposite the covenant of grace supposes a covenant of works and finds out a new way of fulfilling it yet the practise of those who sought Justification by the covenant of works alone was contrary to the doctrine of grace whosoever is justified by the Law that is seeks to be justified on conceits that he is justified by the law is fallen from grace Gal 4 5. the Law and Gospel are indeed by God in a glorious subordination one to the other but men by seeking to be justified by the covenant of works alone do set one in opposition to the other By the works of the law the Apostle understands such works as men themselves do perform in conformity to the law this is evident because he calls them his own righteousness which is of the Law Phil. 3.9 and these works are utterly uncapable of justifying us though Christs works according to the law are the matter of our justification Rom 5.19 but our personal conformity to the law being attended with so much imperfection can't justifie us we must seek our justification by the righteousness that the law requires but not by our own works according to the law Israel is not blamed for seeking after the righteousness that is the righteousness of the law but because they sought it as it were by the works of the Law Rom. 9.31 32. For the fuller clearing up of this Truth that Christ has performed the Righteousness that the Law required of us whereupon the satisfaction of our Consciences does so much depend I shall briefly speak to these Particulars 1. What is the Covenant of Works 2. What difference is there between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant with Adam 3. That the Covenant of Works did admit of a Mediator 4. That Jesus Christ is a Mediator 5. Christs work as Mediator was not to restore man to his former condition but to bring him to Salvation 6. That Christ has performed the Righteousness of the Law. 7. That he performed the Righteousness of the Law for us 8. That this is sufficient for the Elect of God in all Ages 9. That he has so purchased Salvation that the Elect cannot fail of it The first thing to be considered is What is the Covenant of Works as it relates to Man I shall not now consider it as the Angels are concerned in it and I shall give this deseription of it The Covenant of works is an everlasting Rule of Righteousness wherein God requires perfect Obedience as the condition of Life and forbids all disobedience on pain of Death the Explication of this may be taken up in these Propositions PROPOSITION I. The Covenant of Works is not an agreement between God and man but a rule of Righteousness between them sometimes the word Covenant is taken for a promise without condition Gen. 9.11 but frequently for a Law with promises and threathings persons indeed are not taken into the Covenant of Grace without their actual consent but this is not necessary in other Covenants as in the Covenant that God makes with the Infant seed of his People Deut. 5.3 29. Deut. 15. the children of Gods people are born under this Covenant that is under that Law with such sanctions so in the Covenant of works there is no need that Man should consent Adam did not give his consent antecedently to the making of the Covenant for he was made under it and there are millions of men that never gave any consent unto it yet hand as firmly bound by it as if they did God being infinitely mans superiour and having a Legislative power over him might make him under such a Covenant without asking his consent this covenant is nothing else but a righteous rule which God by his own authority has constituted between himself and man according unto which he will distribute awards and punishments to men In this covenant God has given Law unto himself marked out a path for himself to walk in he was at liberty might if he had pleased have forborn to exact punishment for sin might have annihilated man after a course of perfect obedience might have chose in some other way to have rewarded his obedience might have bestowed blessedness on him as an absolute free gift without any condition at all but in this covenant he has bound up himself and laid down a rule according to which he will proceed PROPOSITION II. The covenant of Works is an everlasting rule of righteousness between God and man this is a Rule that God never will vary from it is not proper to say that the covenant of works is abrogated it is very true that the condemning power of it respecting Believers is taken away but that is by the fulfilling of the Law not abrogating of it the covenant of works does yet continue in its full force it takes
solemn Ordinances founded upon this Doctrine of Salvation through the blood of Christ this Doctrine is the foundation that these Ordinances are built upon the design of these holy Ordinances is to be witnesses to us of our Redemption and Salvation by the blood of Christ and indeed the Ordinance of the Ministry is founded upon the same bottom if this Doctrine were not true there had been no occasion for these Ordinances as it was with the Sacraments of the Old Testament they were seals of the righteousness of Faith so are the Sacraments of the New-Testament and certain it is that all the Ordinances of God are built upon realities who can imagine that God would appoint any Ordinance that should be like the stock that is the graven Image a Doctrine of Vanities Jer. 10.8 God delights in no Worship but what has a good foundation in the Sacraments God requires us to worship him in a religious attendance upon him while he is teaching us this Doctrine of salvation by the righteousness and blood of Christ in the Sacraments God requires us to worship him in a religious acknowledgment of the truth of this Doctrine and this would never be if the Doctrine were not infallibly true God needs no such Worship as is not built upon a real foundation it is not suitable to give him any Worship that is not built upon realities God would never accept any such honour as this from us much less require us to give it him if this Doctrine of Salvation by the blood of Christ were not true to deny the Doctrine of Salvation by the blood of Christ is to make the Sacrament a meer mockery in the Sacrament God does by sacred Ordinances witness to the salvation of Believers and he will never prophane his own Ordinances by failing in the performance of that promise these Sacraments being Ordinances appointed of God to teach us this Doctrine of salvation by Christs blood we are thereby warranted to pray for a blessing upon them for the furtherance of our spiritual and eternal good but this we might not do if the Doctrine held forth by them were not true the Sacraments being appointed by God to testifie this Doctrine to us we have a warrant in the celebration of them and at other times to praise and bless the Lord for sending Christ Jesus to work out salvation for us but certainly if this Doctrine were not true there would be no reason for us so to do neither would the Lord accept of such praises if there were not certain salvation to be had by Christ no man alive can give a reason of the institution of the Sacraments nor salve the honour of God who has appointed them to teach us this Doctrine of salvation by the righteousness of Christ There be two things principally that may be objected against this Doctrine Objection 1. That Faith is said to be imputed for righteousness Rom. 4.3 21 22. Gen. 15.5 6. to which it may be added that Faith under the Gospel comes in the room of works that were required under the Law hence Faith and Works are so often opposed by the Apostle in the matter of Justification Rom. 3.28 Gal. 2.16 Answer 1. That Faith that is imputed to us for righteousness is believing in Jesus Christ it is not any act of Faith nor any other act of justifying Faith that is imputed for righteousness but only believing in Christ this is evident because that is the description of justifying Faith in other places of the Scripture he that believeth in him shall have everlasting life John 3 6. this Faith is described ver 22. But for us also to whom it shall be imputed if we believe on him that raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead here this Faith is described 1. It is Faith on God a relying or depending upon him 2. The consideration under which this is acted on God that is as having raised up Jesus our Lord from the dead that is as having wrought out salvation for us by Jesus Christ it may be objected against this interpretation that this Faith that was imputed for righteousness to Abraham is called a blessing God Rom. 4.3 and the promise that he believed was a promise of a numerous posterity Gen. 15.1 5 6. Ans This Faith of his did include in it a believing of the promised seed and a believing on him God had before promised that in him all the families of the earth should be blessed Gen. 12.3 and now he promises him a posterity like the stars in number and Abraham entertains this promise as it included in it the promised seed and as Christ says rejoyced to see his day and saw it and was glad Job 8.56 this was reckoned unto him for Righteousness this is plain from Gal. 3.6 7 8. 2. Faith in Jesus Christ does inforest us in the righteousness of Jesus Christ whoever has this faith has the righteousness of Christ God might have made over this righteousness of Christ to us without any condition if he pleased or upon any other but faith was suitable and God has appointed this to be the way of our partaking in the righteousness of Christ and hereby men come to have an interest in that men come to have an interest in Christs righteousness called gold and white raiment by buying that of him that is by believing on him Rev. 3.18 The righteousness of God is through-Faith in Christ Phil. 3.9 so that all that have this faith have the righteousness of Christ 3. It is very probable that the Apostle intends no more when he sayes Faith is imputed for righteousness then this that Believers are reckoned righteous through the righteousness of Christ the phrase seems to import somewhat else then if he had said that their Faith was their righteousness to be reckoned for righteousness seems to note to be accepted in stead of personal righteousness and so Faith is accepted through the righteousness of Christ this is further confirmed from that phrase Heb. 11.7 He became heir of the righteousness which is by Faith that is of the righteousness of Christ which is applied unto us by Faith and there is no necessity of understanding any thing more by that phrase the righteousness of Faith Rom. 4.11 13. but the righteousness which we have an interest in by Faith. 4. Yet it may be granted without danger that Faith is our evangelical righteousness but not our legal righteousness God has made two covenants with men the one is the covenant of works the other the covenant of grace in the covenant of works perfect holiness is the condition that is the righteousness that must be fulfilled in order unto life in the covenant of Grace believing is the condition and this may be called Gospel righteousness because according to the terms of the Gospel all Believers are declared righteous in the sight of God and the promise of salvation is made unto believing but believing is not our legal righteousness it does
not answer the demands of the Law there is a necessity of the righteousness of Christ which is legal righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 and indeed Faith could not have been the condition of salvation had it not interested us in the righteousness of the Law the covenant of Works and covenant of Grace also must be fulfilled or we cannot be saved Christ fulfilled the covenant of works for us and gives us Faith in his righteousness whereby we fulfil the covenant of Grace 5. Whereas it is added to stengthen the Objection that Faith under the Gospel comes in the room of works under the Law and therefore as works under the Law were to be the matter of justification so is Faith under the Gospel I Answer Faith does not under the Gospel properly come in the room of works for works are necessary under the Gospel unto Justification works are the purchasing cause of life only God has found out another way of performing those works than the Law speaks of namely by a Surety but yet perfect Obedience is as necessary as at first for our Justification the Gospel does not justifie us in any way of contradiction to the Law works now are the legal condition of Justification but Faith is the evangelical condition of Justification and every Believer does fulfil both those conditions one in his Surety the other in his own person Faith is the condition of the covenant of Grace and Faith interests us in the righteousness of Chrst whereby the covenant of works is also fulfilled and when the Apostle does oppose Faith and the works of the Law he does not oppose Faith to the works of the Law as performed by Christ for they work together for our Justification but he opposes it to our works that our works in obedience to the Law can never justifie us works under the Law were the purchasing cause of Justification and so they are still works under the Law were the condition of Justification and they only but now they are the legal condition and Faith is the evangelical condition Faith is all the condition required to be performed by us in our own persons Objection 2. God has made many promises of forgiveness of sins unto Obedience and so also of Salvation whereby it seems that it is not safe relying upon Christs righteousness but upon our own there be many promises of forgiveness Isai 1.16 17 18. Wash you make you clean put away the evil of your doings c. come and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool Mat. 6.14 for if you forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you 1 John 3.9 if we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins Isai 55.7 let the wicked forsake his way and the righteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon So there are many promises of Salvation made unto Obedience Rom. 8.13 if ye by the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the flesh ye shall live Mat. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God and to like purpose eternal life in spoken of as the reward of Obedience Hebr. 11.1 26. He had respect to the recompence of reward Col. 3.24 knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance for ye serve the Lord Christ Answer To the first part of the Objection from promises of forgiveness made to Obedience I Answer 1. That forgiveness is not alwayes taken in Scrpture for the act of Justification whereby God does take off the sentence of eternal condemnation but many times it is taken for Gods overlooking sin so as not to bring that temporal calamity that he might have done so when God removes a temporal judgment he is said to forgive their sins Mich. 7.18 so when he forbears to destroy a people that have deserved it and only brings some less judgments on them he is said to forgive them Psal 99.8 Thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance on their inventions Psal 78.38 He forgave their iniquity and destroyed them not Numb 14.20 21 22 23. And the Lord said I have pardoned according to thy word c. but they shall not see the Land that I sware unto their Fathers and sometimes he bestows this pardon upon them whom he does not deliver from the sentence of condemnation and sometimes he denies this unto them whom he does deliver from a sentence of condemnation Moses's sin shall not be so forgiven but that he must dye in the Wilderness for his trespass at the waters of Meribah Eli shall not be so forgiven but that sore judgment shall come upon his Family the preventing or removing of temporal calamities whether in ward or outward is called forgiveness and this is the very thing is intended by forgiveness sometimes when God makes promises of forgiveness unto obedience and reformation the meaning is that God will prosper them and bless and not pursue them with Judgments and calamities this is evident because sometimes God promises forgiveness to a Nation in a way of obedience it is promised as a National blessing so in that Isai 1.16 17 18. therefore it does not intend deliverance from eternal condemnation for God does not promise that as a publick blessing depending upon publick reformation 2. Sometimes when God promises forgiveness unto Obedience the meaning is that if the soul do return unto God by a true work of conversion he shall be justified when men are converted they are brought into a state of acceptance with God God is reconciled unto them so that place is to be understood Isai 55.7 let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him Act 3.19 repent therefore and be converted that your sins may be blotted out and the reason why God promises forgiveness upon conversion is because Faith which is the condition of the covenant is included in conversion converted persons have Faith in Christ Jesus 3. Sometimes when forgiveness is promised unto particular acts of Obedience the meaning is that those acts of obedience are a sign that a man is in a justified condition so that is to be understood Mat. 6.14 for if you forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will forgive you and that 1 John 1.9 if we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive our sins these things are not the condition of forgiveness much less the meritorious cause of forgiveness but they are a sign that a man is such an one to whom the promise of forgiveness does belong so any one upright act of obedience is a sign that a mans sins are forgiven and shall be forgiven in the day of Judgment because they are things that do accompany Faith in Christ though they have
no influence unto justification 2. To the second part of the Objection that promises of Salvation are made to Obedience I Answer 1. That the promises of eternal life are not made unto obedience as that which does merit eternal life and therefore the best of Gods servants do acknowledg themselves unworthy of any good Gen. 32.10 They shall walk with me in white for they are worthy Luk. 21.36 Watch ye therefore and pray alwayes that ye may be counted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to pass and to stand before the Son of man but the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rendred worthy often signifies no more than conveniency and suitableness so Eph. 4.1 walk worthy of the vocation wherewith ye are called but the obedience of the people of God cannot merit eternal life there are two wayes of meriting neither of which can belong to the obedience of the Saints one is when men do merit a reward from absolute justice from the meer dignity of the work in this sence one man can merit from another but no man from God for whatever man does for God is but a due Debt and because no man can do any good but by the grace of God the work it self is the gift of God there is another way of meriting and that is according to the tenour of the Law when man keeps the Law he does deserve a recompence according to the tenor of it thus Jesus Christ has merited life for us Eph. 1.14 he has purchased the heavenly possession so the Angels merited blessedness for themselves but the Obedience of the Saints is not meritorious in this sense because it fails of legal exactness there be many sins mixed with their obedience and their best obedience is very imperfect and polluted and indeed it is upon the account of Christ that the obedience of the Saints is accepted 1 Pet. 2.5 We offer Sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ 2. The promises of eternal life are not made to obedience as the proper condition of it because God is absolutely engaged to bestow eternal life upon Believers every Believer has already performed the condition of the Covenant and is under an absolute promise of life John 1 2. This is the promise that he hath promised us even eternal life and obedience is promised to them therefore cannot be properly a condition 3. The promises of eternal life are made unto obedience as the sign of it obedience is an evidence that a man is an heir of eternal life good works do declare that a man is one that shall be saved obedience is an evidence of the love of God it is from love that a man is enabled to live a life of obedience and they are an evidence that a man is a believer where there is obedience there is Faith also men are sanctified by Faith in Christ Acts 26.18 4. The promises of eternal life are made to obedience as wherein God has appointed to lead men to it God has purposed to lead men in a way of holiness unto happiness and wherever he begins to deliver men from sin here to deliver them perfectly hereafter this is the order wherein God has appointed to bestow salvation first to sanctifie and then to glorifie God has appointed to prepare all those for glory here that he does intend to bestow it upon hereafter he prepares them here for that holy place for that holy company for that holy work that is there though they shall be more fully prepared at the time of their dissolution this is the method that God has designed to save men in that they shall have their fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Rom. 6.27 3. To the third part of the Objection that Glory is called the reward of Obedience I Answer 1. That when Heaven is called a recompence the word is not taken for that which is deserved there is a plain difference in the way wherein God inflicts death and bestows life Rom. 6 23. the wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life through Christ Jesus our Lord. 2. Heaven is not properly bestowed upon the Saints upon the account of their obedience as the condition of it it is upon the account of the obedidience of Christ as the meritorious cause and upon the account of their Faith as the condition of it their obedience is indeed the way wherein they do receive it and so it is a recompence of it they have heaven in a way of obedience and heaven will make an abundant recompence for all their labour and travail the people of God take pains undergo hardships undergo many temptations and conflicts in a way of obedience but heaven will make amends for all and abundantly recompence all their trouble in the way of serving God at the end of their journey they shall receive heaven and that will make amends for all their trouble 3. Saints when they go to heaven shall receive a recompence on the account of their good works their good works are the condition of an additional glory the essential glory of heaven is given on the account of Christs purchase and that God has promised to bestow in a way of obedience but besides those promises there are others wherein God has engaged further degrees of glory upon condition of obedience there will be a gracious reward by the covenant of grace given to every act of obedience performed by the Saints Mat. 10. ult God will take an account of all the good works of his Saints and recompence every one so that the more any Saint does for God the more glory shall be bestowed upon him Phil. 4.17 and hence it is as one Saint does more for God than another so the glory of one shall exceed the glory of another God will not overlook any thing that is done by his people though the obedience of the Saints be imperfect yet it is capable of being rewarded by the covenant of grace it is not properly the condition of enjoying heaven but it is the condition of enjoying further degrees of glory in heaven CHAP. VIII USE I. Reproof to those that seek salvation by their own righteousness VSE I. THe improvement we shall make of this truth is first to reprove those that are seeking acceptance with God and salvation by their own righteousness that neglecting the righteousness of Christ are seeking the favour of God by their own works this was the very spirit of the Jewish Nation in those declining times wherein Christ Jesus was upon the earth and this is one great part of the apostacy of the Antichristian Church that they teach Justification by works but besides these it is the ordinary practice of such whose consciences are awakened and terrified first to seek their peace and work out their reconciliation by their own righteousness when once the sinner is stung with the guilt of sin and under the awful apprehensions of Gods wrath the first way
that presents it self for his relief is the reformation of his sins and diligent applying himself unto the duties of Religion and they are travelling this way after peace sometimes many years with a neglect of Christ men ought indeed to seek their peace with reformation but not by their reformations but men are mightily wedded to this way of seeking salvation by their own duties this is one of those things that make the work of conversion so exceeding difficult it is a difficult thing to bring men to be earnestly seeking salvation and when they are brought unto that it is very difficult to bring them to seek it in the right way they sought it not by faith but as it were by the works of the Law Rom. 9.32 but men have no ground at all for this it is safe appearing before God in the righteousness of Christ but it is no ways safe for men to trust in their own righteousness when men make their own righteousness the ground of their confidence they do but flatter themselves and please themselves in a vain delusion their own works can never procure their acceptance with God. In prosecuting this Vse let us consider 1. Who they are that seek salvation by their own Righteousness 2. What righteousness they do attain unto 3. What are their temptations to seek their salvation in this way 4. What confidence they have in their own righteousness 5. How they do to hide it from themselves that they trust in their own righteousness 6. The vanity of mens trusting to their own righteousness The first thing to be considered is Who they are that seek salvation by their own righteousness But before I give you their characters it will be needful to premise two things 1. They that seek salvation by their own Righteousness do not expect salvation from the covenant of works as it requires perfect obedience in order unto life they dare not adventure their souls on the strictness of the Law though they had need to do so if they seek life by their own works but they do not thus they look upon their righteousness as that which will allay the Anger of God and be an inducement unto God to save them that which will win the good-will of God and draw the heart of God to them yea they look upon their righteousness as that which will bring God in their debt that God is beholden to them for their service yet they do not lay claim to blessedness by the strictness of the Law for they know and confess themselves to be sinners they pray for forgiveness which things are inconsistent with justification by their own works the Jews did not stand upon a strict covenant of works Rom. 9.31 32 they sought it as it were by the works of the Law but these men do make such a mixture of the covenant of works with the covenant of grace wherein the covenant of works is predominant they make some profession of the Gospel and yet adhere to a covenant of works therefore the Apostle tells them that if they be circumcised Christ shall profit them nothing Gal. 5.2 they made account to have some benefit by Christ so they made account to have some benefit by grace therefore the Apostle tells them that whoever of them are justified by the Law are fallen from grace they did not pretend to the strictness of the Law but took in Gospel Principles into their way of justification and yet were legal all the while this makes the Apostle dispute in that manner against them Rom. 6.11 if it be grace it is no more of works otherwise grace is no more grace but if it be of works then is is no more grace otherwise work is no more works they mingled grace and works together they made their own works the foundation of their hopes and yet took in the plea of Gods grace and Christs Righteousness they thought their own works did contribute something and the grace of God through Christ would make up their defects 2. The Saints of God have a great deal of a self-righteous spirit remaining in them and men must not conclude because they find such workings in their hearts that they are self-righteous no doubt many of the Galatians that were tainted with the doctrine of the Legallists were really converted Gal. 4.14 there was somewhat of this spirit in Peter Mat. 19.29 we have forsaken all what shall we have therefore as the people of God are not compleatly delivered from other corruptions so not from carnal confidence there is such a spirit working and sometimes prevailing in them but there is also in the Saints an evangelical spirit Phil. 3.3 we rejoyce in Christ Jesus and have no confidence in the flesh they allow not themselves to have any confidence in the Flesh These things premised take these characters of those men that seek salvation by their own righteousness 1. Such men as magnifie themselves by their duties and frames they count highly of themselves because of what they do pride is the very spirit of self-righteousness The self-righteous man sets a great price upon what he does he loves to be thinking upon what he has done how his heart melted in such a duty how his affections were drawn out and enlarged in such a prayer what he has done and suffered in the cause of God he loves to chew over duties again as things that do commend him to God while another man is magnifying free-grace and the Righteousness of Christ the self-righteous man is idolizing his own services falls in love with his own beauty is taken with his own carriage and thinks that God and man should be taken with him he thinks his works do ingratiate him with God and draw the heart of God towards him so the Pharisee Luke 18.12 I fast twice in the week and give tithes of all that I possess he minds God of it what a choice man he was and thinks that God has not many such servants as himself he counts his own righteousness his riches Rev 3 17. he is rich in prayers rich in mournings rich in duties of Religion and of charity he is not brought to be poor in spirit he don't see himself without money and without price but has a considerable estate of his own to live upon he thinks that by his duties he gains somthing towards the paying for salvation Phil. 3.7 he places his confidence in those things and glories in them as a rich man boasts of his wealth so he boasts of his righteousness and despises other men as the Pharisee Luk. 18 11. I am not as other men or like this Publican whereas the spirit of a Saint is to glory in the righteousness and sufferings of Christ Gal. 6.14 God forbid that I should glory save in the Cross of Jesus Christ 2. Such men make their duties their refuge in time of danger such men are oftentimes scared from a remembrance of their former courses and sence of present
place or a man that is drowning they catch hold on a twig or a rotten stick though it be insufficient to help them or as with a Traitor that gets into a Castle because he sees no other way of preservation so awakened sinners are seeking by their own righteousness to make their peace because they know no other way they dare do no other tho they have many misgivings of heart that all their righteousness will not do yet they look on this as the most probable way and hence dare not take any other course This appears 1. Because terrors of Conscience put them upon their duties tho afterwards they may find some delight in them and some affections to God and his wayes yet the first thing that sets them going is terror fear makes them reform and pray they are scared into Religion they are forced out of these sinful practises and fired out of those wayes of sin that they were addicted unto their fear does direct them unto this way as the safest if they knew a better way they would not violently pursue this for there is that principle in every man by nature that carries him out necessarily to seek his own happiness fear and dread of hell make them do what they do in Religion Job 41.25 ●y reason of breakings they purifie themselves 2. They are afraid to see the plague of their own hearts experience witnesses to this that they dare not yield themselves to be such as they are many a sinner dare not yield himself to be unsound in Religion to be unconverted they compass sea and land to strengthen their false hopes and many a man that knows he is unconverted and has some conviction that he must see the badness of his heart before he be converted and accordingly prayes for it that God would open his eyes and discover it to him yet all the while he is secretly nourishing an apprehension that his heart is better than it is he hopes he hates sin that he desires holiness that he is sincerely labouring after the work of humiliation and he dreads the sight of his own heart is very loth to yield it to be so bad as it is and when God forces the conviction on him it is a terror unto him he is like a man that desires that a limb of his body should be cut off for the preservation of his life yet when it comes to be done it is a terror to him so a natural man does not see the plague of his own heart nor will he ever see it till it be forced upon him 4 Let us consider what confidence such men may attain unto And it is plain from the Scripture that such may be very confident of their good estate and future salvation they may be strongly possessed with it that they shall be saved tho many that are seeking life by their own righteousness live in dismal perplexity and through fear of death are subject to bondage and others live an unquiet life between hope and fear according as the frames of their hearts are yet there be those that do attain a very strong confidence Prov. 30.12 there are a generation that are pure in their own eyes yet not cleansed from their filthiness Joh. 9.40 are we blind also a self-righteous man may be more confident than many Saints and this confidence does arise partly from a conceit of the worthiness of their carriages they think that their carriages do make up the breach between God them partly from signs which are of two sorts 1. False signs many times men make rules to judg of themselves by which are fallacious and deceitful men make a judgment of themselves by a false Standard they take such to be signs of salvation as may be found in many a man that perishes either from their own fancy or the apprehensions of some other men or from mistaking some other pieces of Scripture men look upon that to be a sign which does not distinguish an Heir of glory from a child of wrath it may be of great advantage for Ministers to lay down sometimes probable signs but men must have a care that they dont draw conclusions from thence when men try themselves by false signs they take a ready course to deceive themselves thus men do when they conclude from hence that they pray constantly in secret they don't know that they allow themselves in any known sin they associate with the people of God they are liberal to the poor they are accounted of by the godly c that they are in a good estate and shall be saved 2. True signs misapplied that many times men mistake in judging of themselves tho the rule they go by is good yet falsely apply it to themselves they take that which they find in themselves to be another thing than it is the rule is good but the qualification is not found in them that rule which does indeed condemn them they do justifie themselves by so they justifie themselves by those signs of trial of love to the Brethren hatred of sin believing in Christ concluding upon some mistakes that it is so with them 5 Let us consider how such self-righteous men do hide it from themselves that they trust in their own righteousness for the Scripture does so plainly witness against justification by works that if they saw that they trusted in their own works that alone were enough to dash all their comfort so that there is a necessity in places of Gospel-light that such men do add this delusion to the other to perswade themselves that they do not make their own righteousness the foundation of their confidence hence self-righteous men please themselves that they believe in Christ they trust in their own righteousness and yet fancy that they trust in the righteousness of Christ and this they do by such pretenses as these 1. They pretend that they don't trust in their own righteousness because they are convinced that their own righteousness cannot save them they are satisfied that their own works cannot justifie them before God they think the opinion of the Papists is sottish and irrational they are settled in that Doctrine that works cannot justifie them but this may be where mens confidence is in their own works there are none among us that do think that works can save them yet there be multitudes that do put their trust in their own righteousness the reason of this is because men seek salvation by mixing the covenant of works and grace together they reckon that works alone cannot save them yet they reckon that they will contribute much to their salvation they think that works are not sufficient of themselves for their salvation but yet they think they have a great stroak in their justification they think their works do gain God to be willing to save them and that there is somewhat of merit in them yet they judge they will not do alone without grace and the righteousness of Christ
covenant with him and when that covenant was broke he presently proposed a new covenant to him it is no part of the work of man to devise a way of his own head to lead to heaven but to walk in that way that God has prescribed unto him but when men trust in their own righteousness they go without book they have no word from God to warrant their way they lean unto an invention of their own this is like the practice of Jeroboam that kept a Fast in the moneth that he bad devised in his own heart 1 Kings 12.32 33. men in this way do venture their souls upon a fancy of their own God gives them no assurance that he will accept them in that way men have only their own judgments for it that this is a way of salvation God has not told them that this way satisfies him and answers his expectations but men guess that this way will do men venture it as if they were able by their own understandings to determine what way would please God and needed not any revelation in the Word they stay not for a promise but boldly venture upon God without one what madness is to desert the way that God directs to and take away of your own as if you had found out a better way to heaven than God tells you of you have an imagination that this way will do but is it not a daring thing for men to venture the eternal state of their souls upon an imagination of their own it is great folly for men to neglect the way wherein they have a promise and trust in one wherein they have none you act in this as if you did not matter though you should perish 't is strange that men should in a matter of such importance go upon such slender ground if you should be mistaken in your judgment what way pleases God your souls are lost and if you should miscarry in this way it would not he strange for you had no warrant from God for it you may miscarry and God be faithful God is under no covenant engagements unto you in this way is it not strange that men should be shie and scrupulous and afraid to trust God in such a way wherein they have his solemn promise and yet bold and daring to rely on him in such a way wherein he has given them no encouragement herein preferring their own judgment before the covenant of God. 2. God has declared against that way it is a presumptuous thing to trust in God without his Word but more presumptuous to trust in God against his Word and thus these men do for God in his word has abundantly witnessed against this way God sends men word from heaven that this way by mens own righteousness is insufficient for salvation he tells us that that was the reason of the miscarrying of the Jews because they sought as it were by the works of the Law. Rom. 9.32 he reproves men for conceitedness of their own righteousness Rev. 3.16 he tells that that if they seek Justification by the Law they are fallen from the covenant of grace Gal. 5.4 he tells them that no man living can be justified by the works of the Law Gal 2 16. Rom. 3.20 he tells they will be ruined in this way behold all ye that kindle a fire and compass your selves about with sparks walk in the light of your fire and in the sparks that ye have kindled this shall ye have of my hand ye shall lie down in sorrow Isa 50.11 he declares that they are cursed that do so gal 3.10 as many as are of the works of the Law are under the curse how dare any man then thrust himself upon God in this way is God wont to discourage men from their duty and threaten them in way of safety will men believe the vain imaginations of their own hearts before the positive declarations of Gods Word do men think that God reproves them when he is not angry and threatens them in jest does God speak one thing now and will he speak another at the Day of Judgment is there one rule given for conscience to judg by here and another for God to Judg by hereafter will God curse those at the Day of Judgment that he blesses now bless those that he curses now will he not judge the secrets of men according to the Gospel Rom. 2.6 men are too timorous when they dare not trust in God in that way that he has proposed and commended unto them and men are too bold when they trust in God in that way that he condemns what assurance can they have of acceptance where the Word of God gives them assurance of the contrary it is madness to challenge life in such a way as God has wittnessed against what reason can men give of such declarations if there were any bottom for Faith in their own righteousness you have a strange kind of Faith that will venture upon God though he witnesses against you what comfort can men take in such a way men had need of strong arguments to satisfie themselves that that is a way of salvation that God calls a way of damnation would God discourage them from it if it were indeed a way of salvation can men expect that God will deny his Word in the Day of Judgment to save them 3. It is against the rule of Justice for men to be saved in that way it is against the justice of the Law the Law puts in an unanswerable objection against the salvation of such men the law allows the salvation of those that believe on Christ Rom. 3.26 it has not a word to gainsay but it stands as a flaming sword to keep other men out of paradice in a way of confidence in mans own righteousness there is no way to reconcile the justice of God and mens salvation if men be saved in such a way what will become of the Law and what will become of the justice of God that stands engaged to fulfil the Law what warrant have men to expect salvation in such a way wherein God must part with his own glory before he can bestow glory upon them wherin he must deny his nature before he can satisfie their expectation how can men think that God is so in love with their performances as to pervert Judgment for their sakes and pull them into heaven by force though the Law does possibly declare against such proceedings God would not save believers but with the leave of the Law till care was taken that that might be satisfied and will he save these men to the overthrow of his Law and everlasting reproach of his justice the righteousness of the Law does not admit of their salvation 2. The law requires that the curse must be executed for sin the Law pronounceth the sinners accursed Gal 3.20 cursed is every one that continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the Law to do them
place against the sins of ungodly men being executed to the full upon them Mat. 5.18 it has taken place against the sins of the Elect upon Jesus Christ the curse having been executed upon him Gal 3.13 He ba●k redeemed us from the curse being made a curse for us and God does bestow eternal life upon none but those who have fulfilled the righteousness of the Law in their Surety eternal life is given as a recompence of Christs Righteousness Rom. 5.21 PROPOSITION III. This covenant of Works could not be known by our first Parents any other way than by divine revelation because both the promises and threatnings of this covenant depended on the free will of God so that whatever a bilities of understanding Adam had in his first estate they were insufficient to make a discovery of them the precepts of the Law were written In the heart of man when he was first made and so they are still though not so legibly Rom. 2.15 They show the works of the Law written in their hearts and this I dont understand to be any distinct work of God from that of creating the soul for the precepts of the Law excepting that one of the Sabbath have a self-evidencing power so that supposing man to have an understanding he can't but have some knowledg of them and supposing them to have an understanding not corrupted he can't but have a clear knowledge of them but the promises and threatnings of the Law are not understood by any thing written in mens heart Conscience indeed by its own natural light does give evidence that sin is offensive to God and so affright men with expectation of wrath but it can't witness the certainty of Judgments much less of eternal condemnation except it have received some further light either from the Works or Word of God. PROPOSITION IV. The Covenant of Works does require Obedience only as the condition of life there are several other Obligations upon us unto Obedience some antecedent to the covenant of works as the infinite excellency of God the work of Creation some of them consequent as the dying love of Christ Gods giving converting Grace and many the like but the covenant of works requires it only as a condition of life and hence tho the covenant of works be fulfilled for us by Jesus Christ so that there is no engagement on us to perfect obedience as it is a condition of life yet those antecedent obligations do remain upon and we ow obedience still as a natural due Psal 95.6 that primitive obligation as we are creatures will ly upon us for ever besides those other obligations that God has laid upon us since PROPOSITION V. The covenant of works requires perfect but not personal obedience the obedience required in the covenant of works is perfect for one transgression layes man open to the curse but it does not stand upon personal obedience every one is obliged to personal obedience but this is upon another account and not by vertue of the covenant of works the covenant of works never tied us up to personal obedience as the condition of life God has been so far from binding us up to personal obedience as the condition of life that he never did propose that way unto us but from the beginning of the world constituted a publick person to act in our behalf and upon his failing immediately revealed Jesus Christ to be another publick person to act for us Rom. 5.19 PROPOSITION VI The life promised in the Covenant of works is a life of glory in heaven the promise is life Gal. 3.12 The man that doth them shall live in them some have thought that Adam should have had only the continuance of that blessedness which he was created in if he had kept the Covenant it is very true that there is no mention in the Covenant of his going to heaven but we have clear ground to conclude from Scripture that if man had stood he should have gone to heaven according to this promise 1. Because hell where the devils are is the reward of disobedience by the covenant of works therefore heaven where the holy angels are is the reward of Obedience it is meet the rewards should be proportionable I know it is answered that sin deserves evil at Gods hands but holiness which is due unto God does not deserve any rewards but this does not take off the force of the argument for it is by the Law that sin merits as well as holiness and hence wicked men are punished only for such sins as they commit in this life 2 Cor. 5.10 and there is as much goodness in holiness as evil in sin and it is a meet thing that God should bestow as much good in a way of obedience as he inflicts evil in a way of disobedience besides the Law expresses the punishment of sin by death Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death and the reward of obedience by life Gal. 3.12 the man that doth them shall live by them therefore it is a life directly opposite to that death a life that contains as much good in it as that death doth evil those terms do mutually explain one the other 2. Because Christ in fulfilling of the law for us has purchased life for us in heaven Christ has purchased heaven for us Epb. 1.14 it is called a purchased possession and he did it by performing the righteousness of the Law for us it is by making of us righteous that we come to have a title unto eternal life Rom 5.21 Grace reigns by righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. 3. Because Christ tells the young man in the Gospel that enquired of him what good thing he should do that he might have eternal life that if he would enter into life be should keep the Commandments Mat. 19.16 17. where we may mind that the life enquired after by the young man was a life in Heaven and that Christ in this answer is leading of him to the covenant of works upon a design to convince him of his inability to keep it 4. Because the Apostle Paul gives that as the reason that men cannot be justified by the Law because they are sinners Rom. 8.3 3.20 the Legallists that Paul disputes against expected eternal life in heaven by their works yet in all his disputes with them he never telis them that the covenant of works does not promise any such thing if he could have told them so that would clearly have cut off all their hopes but he still shows that they can't have Salvation by the Law upon this account because they can't fulfil it yea he plainly implies that the reward by the Law and Gospel are the same but the way of obtaining it is different Rom. 4.4 He that worketh has the reward by debt be that worketh not hath it by grace The second thing that falls under Consideration here is What is the difference between the Covenant of works and the
and Acts 20.28 to feed the Church of God which he hath purchased with his own blood To compleat the fitness of Jesus Christ for the work of a Mediator there were necessary some special qualifications of the humane nature especially holiness and wisdom his holiness was necessary unto all his Offices he would not have been fit to have executed his Prophetical Office without that he had need be holy and faithful that is to declare the mind of God to man without this he would not have him fit to have executed the Office of a King he that rules the world and judges mens eternal estate had need be holy without this he would not have been fit to have executed the Office of a Priest he that was to work out righteousness for others and satisfie for their sins must be holy and this qualification was perfect and compleat in Jesus Christ Heb 7.26 For such an High-priest became us who is holy harmless undefiled separate from sinners Here Christ's holiness is set forth positiorly he was holy and negatively in three branches He was harmless free from actual sin undefiled that is free from original pollution separate from sinners free from that common sin of mankind which they committed in Adam the other qualification of wisdom was especially necessary unto the execution of his Prophetical and Kingly Offices this he needed an extraordinary measure of and God has furnished him suitably Joh. 5.34 God giveth not the spirit by measure unto him by which expression we are not to understand infinite gifts for the humane nature is not capable of an infinite qualification but extraordinary qualifications beyond what God does bestow on other men this was spoken concerning those gifts given him at the time of his Baptism when the Spirit rested on him and questionless are far exceeded by those gifts bestowed on him when he Ascended to the Right-hand of God. A second thing requisite unto the Mediatorly Office of Christ was the consent of the Fathor There was a necessity of his approbation that the Mediator might have authority to discharge his Office there could be no redemption without the consent of him whose prisoners we are and altho the sufferings of Christ were in their own nature a valuable consideration for our redemption yet there could not be satisfaction without the consent of God. God might not be imposed on nor any satisfaction obtruded upon him without his consent the Office of a Mediator as it implies authority over man so it implies subsection and subordination to God and accordingly in this work Christ is Gods servant Isai 42.1 Behold my servant whom I uphold and the Scripture does give in abundant evidence that the Father did consent to this undertaking of Christs he is called Gods Elect Isa 42.1 mine Elect in whom my soul delighteth he was chosen by God to this work so he is said to be foreordained 1 Pet. 1.20 Christ did not intrude into this Office but was called of God Heb. 5.5 6. when he came into the world be was sent of God John 5.37 he came with a commission and it was under Gods hand and seal John 6.27 God has confirmed Christ in his Office be an Oath Psal 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent thou art a Priest for ever after the Order of Melchizedek The third thing requifite to the Mediatorly Office of Christ was his own consent It was not meet that such an Office should be forced upon him that it should be put upon him to dye for sinners without his own choice and that if we consider the innocency and excellency of his person but he did freely consent to take this task upon him his will as he is God is the same with the Fathers and as man he closed with it he voluntarily undertook this work of redeeming and saving sinners Heb. 10.6 then said I lo I come in the volumn of the book it is written of me to do thy Will O God Gal. 2 20. he loved me and gave himself for me John 10.18 no man taketh it from me but I lay it down of my self The consent of the Father and the Son is represented to us in Scripture after the manner of a covenant called by Divines the covenant of redemption in which transaction we may take notice of these five Articles 1. The Father promised to fit the son for the work of redemption by preparing an humane nature that so he might be capable of working out our redemption Heb. 1● 5 a body thou hast prepared me his manifestation in the flesh was preordained 1 Pet. 1.20 2. The Son covenanted to answer the law for us that he would suffer for our sins and work out righteousness for us Mat 20.28 The Son of man came to give his life for a ransome for many John 10.18 I have power to lay down my life and power to take it again and this Commandment have I received of my Father 3. The Father covenanted to accept the obedience and sufferings of Jesus Christ for the Elect that their debt should be remitted unto them and they saved thereby Isa 44.6 it is a light thing that thou shouldst be my servant to raise up the tribe of Jacob and to restore the preserved of Israel I will also give thee to be a light unto the Gentiles that thou mayst be my salvation to the end of the earth Isa 53.10.11 12 when he shall make his soul an offering for sin he shall see his seed c. 4. The Father covenanted to invest him with full authority to accomplish the salvation of his redeemed ones and apply to them the benefits of his death and in order to this to advance his humane nature unto highest dignity and glory John 17.2 thou hast given him power over all flesh that he may give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him Eph. 1.22 he hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be bead over all things to the Church 5. The Son covenanted fully to accomplish the salvation of all the Elect John 6.39 this is the will of the Father that sent me that of all that he hath given me I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day These things were agreed to between the Father and the Son. The fifth Proposition for the clearing this Argument is That Christs work as Mediator was not to restore Man to his former condition but to bring him to Salvation Our primitive estate in Adam was an estate of innocency we were habitually holy without any offence probationers for glory neither in an estate of condemnation nor in an estate of justification and God if he had so pleased might have appointed Christ to have restored us to our primitive condition to have set us free from the guilt and power of sin and so might put us upon it to have wrought for our own blessedness again according to the tenor of the former Covenant but Christ
discovery of reason the light of nature does not teach us that there is any way of reconciliation much less does it teach us what it is the light of nature may discover to us that many pretended wayes of acceptance are delusions for it is contrary unto reason to imagine that God will take up with such things but to determine what is the way is clearly beyond the most raised understanding of man without divine revelation upon a supposition that there was a possibility of any other way of acceptance for sinners besides this by Jesus Christ and I know no ground from Scripture to say that God was confined to this way that he was necessitated if he would save sinful man to take this course in order to his Salvation it will unavoidably follow that the light of nature will leave man short of this knowledg how can the light of nature reach the free determination of the Will of God but besides this the knowledg of the way of our acceptance with God through Christ does necessarily suppose the knowledg of those two great mysteries that of the holy Trinity and that of the Incarnation of the Son God which do utterly surpass all the dictates of the light of nature Flesh and blood reveals not those things but the Father that is in Heaven Mat. 16.17 hence the Gentiles were utterly mistaken as to this way of reconciliation and as Paul speaks became vain in their imaginations But besides these there are many others who have been advantaged with the light of the Gospel that have been unsatisfied in that account which the Scriptures have given concerning the way of our acceptance and have pleaded for such methods of Salvation as the Word of God is utterly a stranger to withal wresting many passages of Scripture to vindicate their own delusions thus as the Jews of old so especially the Papists Socinians now go about to establish a righteousness which the Gospel does not acknowledg and fix upon a way of acceptance with God that has no better foundation than their own sophistical reasonings this is not to be attributed to any obscurity in the Scripture in the matter of our Justification but greatly to the pride that men have in their own understandings carnal reason suggests that otherwayes are more probable than that which is commended to us by God carnal reason is full of objections against the Doctrine of our acceptance by Christs righteousness and men know not how to deny their own reason they dent carry a sence upon their hearts of the imperfections and deceits of their own reason they know not what dim sighted things they are carnal reason is a thing much idolized many men have not learned that lesson to be satisfied in the testimony of God but make their understanding the rule and measure of Principles in Religion lay so much weight upon their own reason that they judg things must be so as their reason represents them loth to entertain any thing in matters of Faith that they do not see with their own eyes partly to the enmity of the hearts of men unto this way of acceptance by Christ this way of Salvation is very suitable to our necessities but no wayes suitable to our natural disposition mans heart would sooner fall in with such a way of Salvation wherein he might have somewhat of his own to glory in this way tends much to the exalting of God and abasing and emptying of man the spirit of man is to set up his own righteousness and not be beholden unto the righteousness of another which makes men unwilling to believe this Doctrine of our acceptance by Christ and this opposition of the heart hereto prepares men to receive the contrary Doctrine Arguments that have little strength in them will take great impression upon men of corrupt minds where there is strength of affections plausible pretences will gain consent slender proofs will serve the turn where mens spirits are strongly byassed But it were well if none else did reject this Doctrine but only those that do professedly plead against it there be multitudes that do joyn in making this confession that are far from entertaining it how high so ever mens professions be there are no more that do thorowly believe this than are regenerated and effectually called there is a kind of perswasion of it which carnal men may have which perswasion the Scriptures sometime calls Faith but it is such a perswasion as leaves men really ignorant of this Truth some men have a perswasion of it wrought by tradition because it is handed down to them from former Generations and generally received in the places where they live or by those that they have particular esteem for upon the same account that a Turk gives credit unto the principles of his Religion Jer. 2.11 the Doctrine is received upon the authority and testimony of man which leaves the Soul under such uncertainty as quite obstructs the spiritual efficacy of the truth upon their hearts There is a perswasion that arises from rational convictions their reason tells them that other wayes of acceptance are frivolous that of all wayes that are pretended this must needs be the true way and they can strongly argue that there is acceptance to be obtained in this way from the accomplishment of the covenant of works by Christ from the design of God to magnifie his Grace c. but this perswasion is not sufficient to encourage a foul to venture himself on Jesus Christ There fs also a perswasion that ariseth from common illumination besides that light which is let into the hearts of men in their conversion there is a more than ordinary illumination bestowed upon some sinners the spirit of God gives an affecting sight of the way of Salvatipn enlightning natural Conscience with a great discovery of the way of life by Jesus Christ this is called a tasting of the good Word of God Heb 6.5 the fruit whereof is a rejoycing in the Gospel Mat. 13.20 this illumination is only by an extraordinary assistance of mens natural reason not by giving an eye of Faith unto them neither is this light sufficient to satisfie all the objections which may afterwards arise in the heart hence such men if afterwards they have a thorow sight of their hearts dare not venture their souls on Christ till God by a further work of the Spirit has convinced them of the certainty of the Gospel but there is no man how great soever his profession how large soever his knowledg is that continues in a natural condition does thorowly be-believe this truth This I shall clear up by two Considerations 1. Because all those that do thorowly believe this will immediately venture themselves upon Christ as there is no perswading of men before to come to Christ so there can be no keeping of them from Christ after they are convinced of this the assurance of the truth of the Gospel is ever accompanied with a powerful operation
Covenant with Adam Gods covenant with Adam is generally confounded with the covenant of works to the great hindrance of our understanding of Gods dealings with Man-kind Adam indeed was made as well as we under a covenant of works under a covenant of life upon condition of perfect obedience but besides this there was a particular covenant with Adam whereby he was constituted a legal head or representative of his posterity to act in our behalf to stand or fall for us as well as himself this is plainly held forth in that he is said to be the figure of him that is to come that is of Christ Rom. 5.14 he was the figure of Christ inasmuch as he was made a publick person as Christ also was this also is evident because we sinned in him his fall is truly ours Rom. 5.12 which could not have been if we had not been in him as our representative because God had constituted him our head therefore his sin became ours Rom. 5.19 1 Cor. 15.22 There is a great difference between these two covenants there might have been a covenant of works though there never had been any such covenant with Adam constituting him a publick person that was accidental to the covenant of works God made a covenant of works with the Angels but he never appointed them any publick person to act for them but every one stood singly for himself we make a great difference between them in these three particulars 1. The Covenant of Adam proposed a particular way for the accomplishment of the covenant of works the covenant of works states the condition of life but God by ●aking Adam a publick person finds out a way for the fulfilling of this condition God has proposed two wayes for the accomplishing of the covenant of works First By making a covenant with Adam to perform obedience for his posterity this way sailed The Second was By making a covenant of redemption with Jesus Christ wherein Christ undertook to fulfil the covenant of works for us this I call the second way because tho this covenant was made first yet it was revealed last as not to take place until the covenant with Adam was violated 2. The Covenant with Adam has never been fulfilled but the covenant of works has Adam utterly sailed of performing that particular covenant made with him if that covenant had been fulfilled all mankind had been happy whereas they were all exposed to misery by him Rom. 5.12 but the covenant of works has been fulfilled Christ fulfilled it Matth. 3.15 and we in him Rom 8.4 3. By vertue of Adams covenant we are only liable to punishment for that sin which we committed in him for that covenant only laid duty on him as he was to act joyntly for himself and us and that covenant was at an end on his eating the forbidden fruit but by the covenant of works we are liable to punishment for our personal sins that covenant threatens death for any transgression Gal. 3.10 A Third thing to be considered is That the Covenant of Works did admit of a Mediator It will be readily granted that though the evil of sin be incomparably great yet it is not so great but that God may have compassion upon us and find in his heart to provide a Mediator for us his infinite mercy may move him to give us a Redeemer though sin do greatly provoke him The great question is Whether he has not so bound himself by his lavv as to take away all possibility of help by a Mediator Whether the Law will give way to the interposure of a Mediator Whether the Word of God does not bind him to punish the sinner in his own person if so it is a vain thing to expect any help from a Mediator for no violence may be done unto the law and the words of the curse have such a force as if they did devote the sinner unto personal ruine in the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely dye Gen 2 17. but we must distinguish between such threatnings as are legal and such as are personal some threatnings are personal and infallibly to be fulfilled upon these that are threatned though the threatnings of eternal destruction against impenitent sinners must unavoidably take place on them but there are some threatnings which are legal and intend no more but that the Offender must dye legally that is be punished with death either in his own person or the person of his surety thus many humane laws are to be understood thus it is among men in case of debt and there is nothing in the words of the law that does contradict this interpretaiton The words do enforce no more than this the words of the law are not any ways strained by putting this sence upon them neither is there any thing in the case of it self to oppose this interpretation for the fufferings of a furety answer the end of the Law as well as the sufferings of the Offenders Gods name is as much vindicated and there is as full a testimony given to the holiness of God by the sufferings of a surety as if the sinner had suffered in his own person there is no probability that Adam did at first understand this interpretation of the cnrse it was a secret that God kept in his own breast until there was occasion for its publication indeed from the first publishing of the Law God shewed that a publick person might perform the preceptive part of it for others and by failing therein might expose others with himself unto ruine as Adam did Which shews it also to be very fair that a publick person may suffer for us if a publick person may ruine us why may not a publick person recover us but we have no grounds to conclude that Adam knew any thing of the possibility of salvation in case he sinned but God after the Fall revealed it unto him But God has by his practice clearly given us this interpretation of the curse of the Law God himself has provided a Mediator for us and inflicted the punishment of our sins on him which shews it is no ways contradictory to his law so to do such a proceeding is agreeable to the law otherwise Go would never have had an hand in it God has shewed us how the law is to be understood in executing it on Jesus Christ and it is very unreasonable to think that there should be any thing in the law to hinder our salvation by Jesus Christ for this way of salvation has been decreed by God before the world 1 Pet. 1.20 he was foreordained before the foundation of the world and certainly he would never make such a law as should overthrow his decree the law must be so understood as not to cross his everlasting purposes of saving sinners by Christ the Apostle argues that the covenant of grace could not be disanulled by the law of Moses which was given four hundred and thirty years after Gal. 3.17 so I may
argue that the everlasting purpose of God to save us by the sufferings of Christ cannot be disanulled by a law that was made in time and therefore that law must be so understood as not to cross that design The fourth thing to be cleared is That Jesus Christ is a Mediator Though the law left room for a Mediator yet God was at liberty whether he would provide one or no but he has provided Christ and put him into this Office. Christ stands in that relation of a Mediator and this implies both duty and authority to work out all our salvation for us both as to the purchasing and also the applying of salvation That Christ Jesus is a Mediator is set down in express terms 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one Mediator between God and man the Man Christ Jesus the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is peculiar to the holy Scripture Socinus would have it to signifie only Gods Interpreter and it may be that may be the meaning Gal. 3.19 it was ordained by angels in the hand of a Mediator but the word generally notes one that stands between God and man to make up the breach that sin had made that this is intended in the forementioned place is evident by the next words ver 6 who gave himself a ransome for all so that his mediation consisted in giving himself a ransom or at least he was such a Mediator as did give himself a ransom this must also be the meaning of the word Heb. 9.15 and for this cause he is the Mediator of the New Testament that by means of his death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are ealled may receive the promise of the eternal inheritance There is plainly held forth that he executed his Mediatorly Office in dying for transgression and in order to our injoying an eternal inheritance The same Mediatorly Office of Christ is held forth 1 Cor. 8.5 6. for though there be that are called Gods whether in heaven or in earth as there be Gods many and Lords many but to us there is but one God the Father of whom are all things and we in him and one Lord Jesus Christ by whom are all things and we by him The Heathens did distinguish between their Gods into celestial and terrestial the celestial and soveraign Gods they thought to be immortal of a sublime and pure nature the terrestial were the Deified souls of famous men deceased whose Office it was to be as Mediators and Agents between the soveraign Gods and mortal men these they called Baalims or Lords unto these superior and inferior Gods h●d toes elegantly allude ver 6. so that when he says that to al 's there is but one Lord he means one Mediator the same Mediatorly Office of Jesus Christ is held forth forth in those titles of Prophet Priest and King which are frequently given unto him and contain under them the several parts of his Mediatorly Office There are three things requisite unto the Mediatorly Office of Christ the fitness of his person the consent of the Father and his own consent The first thing requisite was the fitness of his person whereby he was capable of discharging this Office it did not become infinite Wisdom to lay such a task on one that was uncapable of performing it and this requisite was found in Jesus Christ this undertaking was too great for any meer creature but it was not too heavy a burden for the shoulders of Jesus Christ he was fit to purchase our salvation and also to apply it and upon this account he was much prized by God he is said to be Elect and Precious 1 Pet. 2.6 as a Prince prizes some men because they are of such abilities that they are fit to serve him in the greatest Offices of the Kingdom so God having a design to save sinners he prizes Christ as a person fit to bring about that design The principal fitness of Jesus Christ for the work of Mediator consists in his being God man in our person yet we must not think that he did not enter into his Office till he was actually incarnate the incarnation was necessary to his full discharge of that work but he entred into his Office and began to fulfil it before his incarnation our sins were not actually imputed to him till his incarnation but he was a Mediator immediately upon the fall of man from that time his blood was efficacious Rev. 13.8 He is the Lamb slain from the foundation of the world from the time of the making of the covenant of grace he was a Mediator Heb. 12.24 and the salvation of the Patriarks in the first ages of the world was the fruit of the mediation of Christ and therefore that solemn consecration of Christ at the time of his Baptism was not unto the Office of a Mediator but the work of his publick Ministry Christ by being man was fitted as for some other parts of his Office so especially to fulfil the law for man to obey and suffer for us had he been only God he had been uncapable of obedience or sufferings had he taken upon him the nature of angels he had been uncapable of obeying and suffering for us the Mosaical Law concerning the right of redemption in the kinsman did typifie that Christ should be our kinsman this manifested what God intended but that doth not prove that there was a necessity of it but if he had assumed the angelical nature he could not have fulfilled that law that was given to man the precepts and curses of the law were fitted to mans nature and some of them could not be fulfilled By the angelical nature besides the teuour of the covenant of works with man ran thus that man must fulfil the righteousness of the law and in case of disobedience man must bear the curse of it this the Apostle shews when he teaches us that because we did partake of flesh and blood Christ also partook of the same that by death he might deliver us Heb. 2.14 and intimates ver 16. that if he had taken the nature of angels it would not have served the turn and whereas he adds that he took on him the seed of Abraham we are not to understand that there was any necessity of that any further than from the promises and prophesies thereof that he should come of that stock but he mentions his coming of Abraham as that which evidenced that he was of the same nature with us Christ by being God was fitted not only for his Prophetical and Kingly Office to the execution whereof Divine Power and Wisdom was requisite but he was also fitted for his Priestly Office so that the divine nature had an influence into the satisfactoriness of the sufferings of Christ that is held forth Heb. 9.14 how much more shall the blood of Christ who through the eternal spirit offered himself without spot to God purge your consciences from dead works
that righteousness themselves as he would have done if Adam had kept the covenant of works but he don't do thus the promise in the covenant of works is life which includes all manner of felicity but Believers are far short of felicity they have much sin remaining in them are left to fall into many sins they are liable to very sore and dreadful afflictions and to death the promise of the Law is not fulfilled to them therefore it seems they have not the righteousness of the Law. Ans 1. These sorrows do not come upon the People of God for want of a perfect righteousness or for want of compleat satisfaction and this is an evdence of it because those sorrows do not come in a way of vindictive justice or vengeance though they are for the matter of them the same with the curses of the Law yet not for the manner they do not come to satisfie God for sin those Saints that have the most sin have not always the most sorrow to be left unto sin is not a curse to the people of God Hezekiah was left to sin in mercy 2 Chron 32.31 It was that be might know what is in his heart and so their afflictions Rev. 3.19 Whom I love I rebuke and chasten Jer 24 5 I have sent them into the land of the Chaldeans for their good Sin opens a door to afflictions but God brings them in mercy All the wayes of the Lord are merccy and truth to such as keep his covenant and his testimonies Psal 25.10 2. Though Christ has fulfilled the righteousness of the Law for us yet God is not absolutely bound to reward the righteousness of Christ just in the same manner as he would have done the righteousness of Adam though the righteousness be the same yet there may be circumstantial differences in the reward blessedness is the reward of righteousness but there may be so the circumstantial parts of the reward that may differ as it was with the sufferings of Christ he suffered not in all things the same that the Elect should have done but yet he suffered as much so it is here Christ has purchased perfect blessedness for us yet he has not so purchased it that God is bound to bring us presently and at once into the possession of it Christ has purchased the good of the covenant of works viz. blessedness to be dispensed to us according to the tenor of the covenant of grace viz. to have it begun here and perfected hereafter therefore he is called The Mediator of the new covenant Heb. 12.24 and his seed is called the blood of the everlasting covenant Heb. 13.20 3. There is special reason also why God should not wholly deliver his people from sin and sorrow in this world the special reason why he leaves them to sin is to take occasion thereby for the magnifying of his pardoning grace there are also weighty reasons why he exercises his people here with many sorrows in particular that he may vindicate his own holiness and that he may carry on the work of Sanctification in them in a way suitable unto the nature of Man. CHAP. IV. The second Argument from the Prophecies and T●pes of the Old Testament the third Argument from God's love in giving his Son to dye for us the fourth Argument from the Exaltation of Christ Argument 2. GOd has foretold in the Scriptures of the Old and New Testament that Christ should bring us to Salvation by his righteousness therefore it is safe appearing before God therein God has foretold this both in the plain Prophecies that he gave to the ancient Church and in those Types that he gave them wherein this Truth was represented 1. It was foretold in the Prophecies of the Old Testament God by degrees did reveal much of the way of Salvation unto the Church of Israel though it fell abundantly short of those manifestations which he has given in Gospel times yet what was then made known serves as a great confirmation of the truth of the Gospel and I shall not insist on such Prophecies as do only hold forth Salvation by Christ without revealing the particular way of it as where it is said the seed of the woman should bruise the serpents head that in him all the Families of the earth should be blessed that he should be a light to the Gentiles and salvation to the ends of the earth though I might make good the Argument from hence for our condition was such that Christ could not save us without working out righteousness for us but I shall only urge such Prophecies as do hold forth Christs saving of us by his righteousness of which there are these four sorts 1. It was foretold that the Church should have their righteousness from Christ that they should derive their Justification from him Isai 45.24 Surely shabl one say in the Lord Jehovah have I rightousness and strength righteousness is not here taken for holiness or the righteousness of sanctification but the righteousness of justification the Church has its sanctification from Christ by infusion and assistance and their justification from him by the imputation of his righteousness and henco that Name The Lord our Righteousness is given to Christ Jer. 23 6 and the same name is given to the Church Jer. 33.16 both of them in remembrance that the Church does derive her Righteousness from Christ accordingly Christ is said to bring in everlasting Righteousness Dan. 9.24 2. It was foretold that Christ should dye for our sins the death of Christ was not onely foretold but also upon what account it should be 1 Cor. 15.3 Christ dyed for our sins according to the Scriptures this we have at large set down in Isa 53 where we may mind 1. What he suffered namely death besides many other calamities he was brought as a Lamb to the slaughter ver 7 he was cut off out of the land of the living ver 8. God made his soul an offering verse 10. 2. Vpon what account he suffered the Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all ver 6. 3. What benefit redounds to us by his sufferings by his knowledge that must not be understood subjectively but objectively by the knowledg of him shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities 3. It was foretold that Christ should effect our salvation by doing that for us that sacrifice and burnt offering could not do Psal 40 6 7 8. sacrifice and offering thou didst not desice but mine ears hast thou opened c. concerning which Scripture you may observe these things 1. That the thing that sacrifices could not effect for us was our reconciliation there was some imagination in men that sacrifices should make their peace but God did not accept them upon that account 2. When he says mine ears hast thou opened he speaks concerning Christ this we have the authority of the Apostle for Heb. 10.5 3. By this phrase is imported the Obedience and
cause of Salvation 3. Salvation both in the beginnings of it here in holiness and spiritual comfort and in the perfection of it hereafter which is the effect both of Election and Redemption so that that though Salvation be payed for yet Gods sending of his Son to dye for us was a meer fruit of electing grace and never payed for And there are two Reasons of this 1 This was too great a mercy to be payed for our Salvation was an exceeding great mercy but not too great to be purchased but this was a Mediator could not be purchased this mercy was not too great to be given but it was too great to be purchased we might more easily have purchased our Redemption than our Redeemer neither did Christ purchase this mercy for us Christ did not buy his own Office what price could be laid down to satisfie God for such an unspeakable gift 2. This mercy might be bestowed upon us without being purchased God had so bound himself by his Law that man could not be saved without satisfuction that mercy must be purchased but God had not so bound himself by his Law but that it was free for him to send his Son to dye without receiving any satisfaction for this mercy God had tied his own hands so that sinners could not be saved without satisfaction a his faithfulness bound him to stand upon that but God was at liberty to send a Mediator if he pleased his own gracious nature was such that he could do it without any purchase and he had not restrained himself by his word 5. It was great love for God to send his Son to dye for mans salvation when he would have been no looser if man had not been saved if the case had been so circumstanced that God would have suffered much loss if men had failed of salvation there had then been a kind of necessity laid upon God to have sent his Son to dye in order to it but God bestow'd this mercy upon us when it would have been no less unto him if we had perished This may be cleared up by these Considerations 1. This mercy of giving Christ to dye for us was the first thing wherein God laved out himself for our salvation when a person has layed out himself much and been at great expence for the accomplishing of a design t is a disappointment to fail of it and his expence is thereby many times lost but God had not been before this at any expence for mans salvation this was the first thing wherein God layed out himself for our salvation with respect to us who live in these latter dayes the death of Christ was actually before any other endeavours for our salvation and with respect to those Elect that lived before the coming of Christ his death was vertually before any other expence for their salvation Rev 3.8 2. If God had not sent his Son to dye yet he needed not to have lost the glory of his laying out of his wisdom power and goodness in mans Creation what he had expended that way would not have been lost but he would have recovered his glory in mans ruine Prov. 16.4 3 God could have found other wayes to have glorified his grace though God was under no necessity of having any declarative glory neither does he glorifie himself ad ultimum virium to the utmost of his power yet it does please him to glorifie his Attributes and he might have honoured his mercy in the salvation of fallen Angels they were capable of Salvation and it would have been a wonderful exalting of Gods grace to have saved them 2. The next thing to be observed is the force of the Apostles consequence he argues from Gods love in sending Christ to dye for us the certain salvation of those that are reconciled by his death and there is no scruple to be made of their salvation though they have many enemies that seek their ruine though they have much sin remaining in them and have been many ways failing of walking up to that exactness which God requires all those that Christ died for and are first or last instructed in his death shall be saved by him 1. If God had so great love as to send his Son to bear such great sufferings to purchase our salvation then he will not fail to do what ever else is necessary for our salvation he will not stick to do what is else to be done for the compleating of our salvation he that has done the greater will do the less if love overcame the difficulty that was in the way of our redemption it will also overcome whatever difficulty is in the way of the application of redemption it is unreasonable to think that God should have love enough to send his Son to do that which can't be done without pain and sorrow and death and not have love enough to do that which he can do with the speaking of a word the great difficulty in the way of our salvation was the purchasing of it there was wrath to be born a curse to be endured but love broke through that difficulty the rest that remains is easie to God the mortification of sin the quickening of grace the repelling of temptation and giving the actual possession of glory may be effected by God without any difficulty and therefore he won't stick at that Rom. 9.32 If God spared not his emn Son but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him also freely give us all things it is true that God does but by little and little carry on in us the work of sanctification but the reason of that is not that it is any wayes difficult unto him but because that suits the design that is upon his heart neither is it from any unwillingness to help us but because his design is to carry on the work of sanctification so that we shall have continually need of justification we find it difficult to do our part in or●er to our salvation but it is not difficult to God to do his part God carries on the work without difficulty yet so that we shall find difficulty as a Parent with ease helps the child to go yet so that the Child finds difficulty to go it is no burden to God to uphold Grace he that upholds the frame of nature with the word of his power can easily uphold grace what ever stands as an impediment in the way of our salvation may be removed by God without any trouble God puts forth thousands of acts of omnipotency to effect things that are less upon his heart than the salvation of those that he has redeemed and it is no pain nor weariness unto God to be daily carrying on the work of our salvation the opposition that is made to it is nothing to omnipotency Isai 40.28 The Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary 2. If God had such love to us as to send his Son to dye for
true that Jesus Christ entred upon his Kingly power and Office as well as his other Offices from the first publishing of the covenant of grace upon the fall of man and Jesus Christ did in all ages execute that Office in governing the world and bestowing salvation on the Elect but the Scriptures do plainly set forth that Christ has some particular administration put into his hands since his sufferings Eph. 1.20.1 2. since his resurrection God has put all things under his feet Phil. 2.9 speaking of the same time he says God has given him a name above every name Rev. 1.38 I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Amen and have the keys of hell and death the meaning of these Scriptures is that since the Exaltation of Christ the Administrations of things is in the hands of the man Christ Jesus the management of things is carried on by Christ as man the God-head is not excluded but Christ as man has an hand in the government of the world Christ his humane nature will visibly mange the day of Judgement God will judge the world by the man whom he bath ordained Acts 17 31. and this administration is put into his hands that he may bestow eternal life and salvation upon sinners Acts 5.3 him hath God exalted with his right-hand to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance to Israel and remission of sins and if God presently upon the obedience and sufferings of Christ has put such power into his hands it is a clear evidence that he has fully paid for our salvation if Christ had fallen short of purchasing our salvation God would not have given him a commission to have bestowed it God would have stood for full satisfaction he would have objected that it would have bin against justice to have saved them but now Christ having fully paid the debt God exalts Christ to his own right-hand and invests him with full authority to bring them unto blessedness CHAP. V. The fifth Argument from the promise of salvation to all those that do believe in the righteousness of Christ the sixth Argument from the command of believing in Christs Righteousness Argument 5. THat righteousness which God by his promise in the Gospel dos encourage us to trust in for our salvation it is safe to appear before God in that righteousness that God proposes to us to place our confidence in adding a promise of eternal life we may safely appear before him in that right ousuess is unquestionably sufficient to purchase our salvation and we may safely have our dependance upon it as the price of eternal life but God does in the Gospel encourage us by his promise to trust in the righteousness of Christ for salvation he has promised oternal life to all them in the Gospel that do believe in the righteousness of Jesus Christ This I shall clear up unto you in these Propositions PROPOSITION 1. That the encouragement that God gives to those that believe in the righteousness of Jesus Christ is that they shall have eternal life sometimes in the Scripture we find that they that believe shall have their sins forgiven Acts 10.43 but we must not understand that they are only brought into a state of reconciliation at present from which they may fall away again that only their former sins are pardoned So that if they should sin again it is not at their peril of eternal damnation but the thing that the Gospel encourages believers with the hopes of is salvation sometimes it is expressed in more general terms that they shall not be confounded 1 Pet. 12.6 they shall not be cast out John 6.37 sometimes it is expressed that they shall not enter into condemnation John 5.24 sometimes positively That whosoever believeth on him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3.16 PROPOSITION 2. That God engages himself by promise to give Believers eternal life he does not give them some uncertain encouragement of it but binds himself by his promise when God expresses himself in his Word that he that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life Joh. 3.36 and that he that believes and is Baptized shall be saved Mark 16.16 he does not manifest meerly his purposes though all Gods purposes are irrevocable neither are such expressions meer declarations of what God is frequently wont to do as it is with many passages in the Book of Proverbs but they are proper promises God himself calls them promises 2 Tim. 1.1 According to the promise of life by Jesus Christ so Rom. 4.16 Gal. 3.22 and this is a part of the covenant indeed the main part of it God is bound by covenant to give life unto Believers and because Christ has purchased this and other blessings that God is by covenant engaged to bestow he is called the Mediator of the new covenant Heb. 12.24 and hence it is a part of faithfulness to preserve Believers unto glory 1 Thess 5.23 24. the faithfulness of God stands bound unto Believers Heb. 10.2 3. PROPOSITION 3. This promise of eternal life is made to those that believe on the Righteousness of Christ those that have their dependance upon the blood and redemption of Jesus Christ all those that have their expectation from the Righteousness of Christ shall be saved Rom. 2.25 Whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through Faith in his blood We must place our Faith in the sufferings of Jesus Christ this is that Faith triumphs in as the matter of Justification Rom. 8.34 Who is he that condemneth it is Christ that died Quest Here we may enquire What act of Faith it is that is the condition of the covenant of Grace Ans 1. That act of Faith that is the condition of the covenant is a relying upon God through Jesus Christ for salvation as offered in the Gospel there are many acts of saving Faith besides this Faith respects the whole book of God all the Promises Threatnings Prophecies therein by saving Faith we believe the creation of the World the general Deluge the coming of Christ in the flesh but these actings of it are not the condition of the Govenant so likewise by Faith we do depend upon Christ for particular out ward blessings but though that be a thing that does accompany Salvation yet it is not the condition of the covenant but that act of Faith which is the condition of the covenant has those four properties First It is a relying upon God God is the ultimate object of Faith what Christ does in order to our Salvation he does as the Messenger and servant of his Father so that Faith is to rest upon God therefore we are said to come to God by Jesus Christ Heb. 7.25 God is the object of Faith both under the covenant of works and the covenant of grace Our Faith and Hope must be in God 1 Pet. 1.21 Secondly It is a relying on God for Salvation tho sometimes the thoughts are especially upon
that live under the Gospel except those that have committed the unpardonable sin the promise is absolute to all Believers without any exception at all 3. There is no limitation of the promise to be understood there is no exception to be understood men need not fear that God has some reservation in his own breast for no exception that is not fairly to be understood can be of any force to avoid the performance of a promise nothing can be understood to contradict what is expressed besides God tells us that there is no exception Joh 6.37 He that cometh unto me I will in no wise cast out PROPOSITION 5. That the promise of eternal life is made to one act of believing on Jesus Christ 't is not the habit but the act of Faith that the promise is made to the promise under the covenant of works was not made to habitual holiness and the promise under the covenant of grace is not made to habitual Faith as a Womans disposition to marry a man does not give her a right to him or his estate but the actual marrying of the man so it is here it is in a way of covenanting that we have an interest in the covenant of grace the Scripture sets forth that Faith that gives us right in the covenant of grace by words that signifie actions as coming to Christ opening to him believing on him and the like but it is one act of believing that makes a man an heir of life God offers eternal life on condition of one act of believing when God sayes He that believeth shall be saved the meaning is not that he that believeth as long as he lives shall be saved but he that performeth one act of Faith one act of Faith gives a man as real an interest in Christ as a thousand one act of covenanting makes up the match one act of closing with Christ makes a man an heir of life after acts of Faith may evidence his title to heaven but it is the first act of Faith that gives him his title God offers life to us in the Gospel on this condition that he will accept of it Joh. 5.24 and it is unreasonable to think that the meaning of it is if we accept of it an hundred or a thonsand times or as long as we live but the meaning is if we do once accept of it and therefore those that have accepted of it are said to have eternal life 1 Joh. 5.13 This further appears 1. Because they that have performed one act of Faith are already justified and adopted their sins are presently pardoned on their coming to Christ God don't suspend the act of Justification and wait to see whether they will continue to believe but out of hand he issues out a pardon for them If called then justified Rom. 8.30 and these are presently adopted Job 1.12 and there is no revoking of these acts 2. When once Men believe it is part of Gods covenant to make them continue to believe it cannot be properly the condition of the covenant for it is a part of the mercy promised unto us when we come unto Christ all the subsequent acts of Faith are part of that salvation that God promises and surely that that is due unto us by the covenant can't be properly the condition of the covenant continuance of Faith is part of that sanctification which God has engaged to us 1 Cor. 1.30 3. If God did not offer life upon condition of one act of believing we should not have sufficient encouragement to perform one act of believing on Christ if God should say to a sinner if you will accept of the offer of salvation both now and hereafter I will save you what ground could the sinner have to believe the sinner would readily say how doe I know that I shall believe hereafter he could see no safety in such an offer a presumptuous Sinner that doted on his own strength might venture on it but a man that knows himself could not find rest in such an offer but now when he offers life to us if we will now accept it the soul can find encouragement enough there Jer. 3.22 And since God has promised life unto all that believe in the righteousness of Christ it must needs be safe to appear before God in this righteousness we need no greater assurance of salvation than the promise of God this is a sufficient security to believers whatever unlikelihoods may appear to them at at any time of their salvation the faithfulness of God stands engaged and this is a foundation of everlasting comfort the witness of God gives greater assurance than the testimony of all the men in the world if we believe the witness of men the witness of God is greater John 5.9 this we may fecurely rejoice in the words of the Lord are pure words as silver tryed in a furnace of earth purified seven times Psal 12.6 there is no deceit or fraud in Gods promises this is armour of proof against all temptations his truth shall be thy shield and buckler Psal 91 4. if our souls were a thousand times dearer to us than they are we might quietly venture them on the promise of God. God has made a promise to us has sent his servants to publish it in his name has ordained the office of the ministry to witness it unto us from him and surely he has not appointed them to go with a lye in their mouths God has not only said it but given it us under his hand left it upon record to be a witness for us this is the record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Son John 5.11 and we may quietly rely on this it is impossible that the promise of God should fail of its accomplishment God is faithful 1 Thes 5.23 he is very faithful Psal 119.138 his faithfulness reacheth unto the clouds Psal 36.5 it endureth for ever Psal 117.2 God can't forget his word sometimes the memories of men don't serve to keep their promises things slip out of their remembrance but God is not subject to any such infirmity he always minds his covenant Psal 111.5 his promises are all written on his heart no tract of time can wear them out of his remembrance he has remembred his covenant for ever the word which he commanded to a thousand generations Psal 105.8 God is unchangeable men are fickle and inconstant in one mind to day and another to morrow sometimes men change their minds out of meer fickleness somtimes from the change of their condition or divers appearances in providences but God is not subject to any mutation his purposes are more firm than mountains of brass he says repentance shall be hid from his eyes Hos 13.14 God is perfectly holy and therefore cannot fail of his word men having a principle of sin in them may be out-bid to neglect the fulsilling of their promises but there is not the least spark of
receive Gods testimony and act faith thereupon until he knows God Paul says I know him whom I have believed 2 Tim. 1.12 and every man must know God before he will believe him many men ●o entertain some of the things that God says so the Devils believe and tremble but those perswasions rise from the convictions and not from faith in Gods Word No man will receive any thing meerly on Gods testimony until he know him and therefore will not be assured of that which he can know no other way but by faith and which carnal reason has many objections against 3. The conviction of this Truth is by the Spirit of God it is the work of Gods Spirit to satisfie the heart in this that it is safe appearing in the righteousness of Christ God does create light in the mind to discover this the outward call of the Gospel presents the object before men and the work of the Spirit is to give men eyes to see the truth of it mens natural reason makes them understand the sense of the Proposition and the Spirit of God puts a new light in them whereby they understand the truth of the Proposition their perswasion about this is the fruit of Divine Instruction This I shall shew from several Texts of Scripture John 16.7 8. The comforter will reprove the World of sin of righteousness and of judgment in this Text for the clearing of what is before us we shall take notice of three things 1. That the comforter here is the Spirit of God this is clear not only because he was a person sent to assist in and succeed the Ministry of the Apostles but also because he is called the Spirit of truth John 14.16 17. He shall give you another comforter even the Spirit of Truth 2. That the works of the Spirit here is conviction so 't is in the Margent the word signifies to convince by Argument and Reason and here is the Argument that the Spirit shall convince by ver 10. Because I go to my Father and ye see me no more so the word is used John 8.9 1 Cor. 14.24 3. That the thing that the Spirit does convince of is our safety in Christs Righteousness it is his righteousness that he speaks of for his going to the Father is the argument of it and it is the sufficiency of his righteousness to our salvation This is clear by two things First Because the Spirit is promised to confirm the Doctrine of the Apostles And then Secondly because the argument mentioned verse 10 does confirm this truth Christs Ascention to the right-hand of God shews that he has performed the work he came for and wrought righteousness John 6.45 Every man therefore that hath heard and hath learned of the Father commeth unto me the meaning of this is not that all that were godly among the Jews that had been taught of God should ackowledge Jesus of Nazareth and depend on him this is indeed a truth that upon the setting of convincting light before them they would do it so did Nathaniel Joh. 1.49 the Eunuch Act. 8.37 Cornelius and Lydia this is not the meaning for when he says every one that hath heard learned of the Father he means every one that has been taught by God the Doctrine of the New-Testament and he speaks of such teaching as did immediately draw men to Christ but the meaning is that they who have been taught the Gospel by God will believe on Christ so that this is clear from hence it is the work of God to encourage men to come to Christ and God encourages men by satisfying their hearts in the safety that is in the righteousness of Christ that perswasion that draws men to Christ is wrought by God. Rom. 8.30 And whom he called them he also justified by this Scripture it appears that it is Gods work to satisfie the heart in the safety of coming to Christ when he sayes that they are called of God he means they are inwardly called of God he intends not the outward call because he speaks of it as a proper effect of Predestination and certain fore-runner of Justification and this inward call is nothing else but the enlightning of the mind to see the truth and certainty of the outward call so that those Arguments which God sets before us in his Word to perswade us to come to Christ those he satisfies our hearts in by the inward work of his Spirit by his Spirit he sets home the precepts invitations and promises of the Gospel this inward Call is that which satisfies the heart so that it answers the call of God. Objection 1. It seems not to be work of the Spirit to convince men that they may safely appear in Christs Righteousness because after they have been convinced they doubt again and call it in question whether they may venture on the righteousness of Christ Answer We may well argue that if they have been convinced throughly by the spirit that they will never be utterly carried away with unbelief to reject this truth but we cannot conclude that they would never doubt men may call those things in question which they have learned by the spirit of God so the Prophet did 1 King. 13.17 18 19. yea men may question things that they have been taught by the saving work of the spirit God revealed it to the Disciples that Jesus was the Son of God Mat. 16.16 17. yet afterwards they questioned it Luk. 24.21 they say we verily thought it had been he that should have redeemed Israel the Psalmist no doubt had been convinced that God is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him and yet afterwards he had such workings of heart as these verily I have cleansed my heart in vain Psa 73.13 and it is no wonder for the blindness of the mind is but in part removed and sometimes they have not the exercise of that light which is in them the Devil is busie to throw scruples and objections into their hearts and they have several principles in themselves that lead them to doubt of those things that God has convinced them of they have a principle of unbelief carnal reason and enmity to the truth so that it is no wonder that they have doubts about it Objection 2. If men were convinced by the spirit they would have more understanding than many of them have of this way of salvation many of them understood very little of the confidency of this way of Salvation with the Law of God how the sufferings of one could answer for so many there are maeny Objections that they dont see through Answer Every one that is taught of the spirit has so much knowledg in this way of life as is a foundation for Faith he must have so much knowledg as that his Conscience may be satisfied in the truth of it t is also true that the teachings of the spirit do clarifie mens understandings they come hereby to have more clear conceptions of
manifest at that time that it is his testimony and hereby this differs from the delusions of Satan as the Prophets knew it to be the Lord that revealed things unto them so Saints at the time knew it to be the Spirit of God that witnessed to them they do not need any other help at that time to know it to be the voice of God they do not need a candle to see the Sun though soon after they may have doubts Thus I have cleared up the assumption of the Argument it remains that somewhat be added to evidence the proposition that it must needs be safe appearing in that righteousness upon the account of which God does bestow the beginnings of salvation here And I may evidence that from these two Principles The first Principle is That righteousness which does purchase any part of the good of the covenant does purchase the whole good of the covenant by the righteousness of Christ believers stand already possessed of some part of the good of the covenant and that righteousness that brought them into the possession of that will in due time bring them into the possession of what remains for that which purchases any part of the good of the covenant must needs purchase the whole the condition upon which all the good of the covenant depends was one so that the good of the covenant must be wholy purchased or wholly forfeited it could not be in part purchased in part forfeited the condition of the covenant of works was perfect righteousness if that were performed all the good of the covenant was purchased if that were not performed all the good of the covenant was forfeited an imperfect righteousness would not purchase any one good thing mentioned in the covenant one sin was sufficient to break the whole covenant and expose unto death one sin would make a course of righteousness for many years utterly ineffectual unto the purchase of any good and lay the sinner open unto the curse of the Law Gal. 3.10 Rom. 6.23 whatever was done towards the performance of the condition of the covenant signified nothing except the full was performed that God required so the condition of the covenant of the Mediator was perfect obedience to the law of the Mediator viz. perfect obedience to the commands of the law and perfect bearing of the curse 't is true that the active and passive obedience of Christ have a distinct respect one of them to the possession of good the other to the removal of evil the one is meritorious the other satisfactory one procures the blessings promised the other delivers from the evils threatned but yet Christ being made under such a covenant the success of one depended upon the other and they are joyntly together the purchasing cause of our salvation and one of them would have had no efficacy at all towards our salvation if not accompanied with the other so that this principle stands firm that that righteousness that does not procure all the good of the covenant procures none that righteousness can purchase no good for us that is not sufficient for our compleat salvation that cannot purchase the beginnings of salvation that does not justifie us seeing therefore on the account of Christs righteousness we have already the beginnings of salvation that righteousness is suffieient for our Justification and Salvation The Second Principle is That God in giving the beginnings of salvation in a way of believing in Christs righteousness for salvation does own that to be the way of salvation God does in this way give such mercies as are evidences of his favour and such as do accompany salvation he subdues sin quickens the heart in holiness reveals his loving kindness c. And herein God does plainly testifie that this is the way to salvation and that the righteousness of Christ was the procuring cause of salvation if the righteousness of Christ were not sufficient for our salvation God would be angry with us for believing in Christs righteousness we might expect frowns and judgments in this way but Gods giving the beginnings of salvation in this way does eminently own it to be the way of life when did God in such a way own men in a way of depending upon their own righteousness or external priviledges they have some common mercies but none of the beginnings of salvation but the beginings of salvation being bestowed in this way are an evident sign of divine approbation of it God bore witness to the Apostles preaching this doctrine by many wonderful signs Heb. 2.4 and he bears witness to those that by saith receive this doctrine by wonderful gracious effects in them he gives the earnest of heavenly glory which evidently shews the efficacy of this righteousness which they trust in to accomplish their salvation Eph. 1 13 14. in whom after that ye believed ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession unto the praise of his glory CHAP. VII The ninth Argument From the Sacraments of the New-Testament Two Objections against this Doctrine Answered Argument IX IT is safe appearing before God in that righteousness the efficacy whereof unto salvation we are taught in the Sacraments of the New-Testament But in the Sacraments of the New-Testament we are taught the efficacy of Christs righteousness unto salvation God in these Sacraments is by sensible signs teaching of us this truth so that in the Sacraments there is a divine testimony to this doctrine 1. We are taught the efficacy of Christs righteousness unto salvation by the ordinance of Baptism as 't is said of circumcision that it was a seal of the righteousness of Faith so is baptism the washing of water signifies our washing in the blood of Christ as the legal washings had a respect unto the cleansing away of sin by Christs blood so has our baptismal washing this ordinance practised first by John and afterwards appointed by Christ to be a perpetual ordinance in the gospel church is appointed on this design to strengthen our Faith in this Doctrine 1. This appears because by baptism is held forth our fellowship with Christ in his sufferings that is signified thereby that we have an interest in the vertue of his sufferings that his sufferings are made over unto us that we do participate in the good and benefit of them Rom. 6 3. so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death there was sealed up unto us the vertue and efficacy of his death therefore verse 4. we are said to be buried with him by baptism into death the like expression you have Col. 2.12 we are thereby partakers of his sufferings as if we our selves had suffered and if this be held forth then our justification and reconciliation is held forth for that is procured by the sufferings of Christ Rom. 5.10 we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son. 2. Baptism is
Rom. 9.32 they sought it as it were by the works of the Law. 2. They pretend that they do not trust in their own works for tho they do take encouragement from them yet it is only as they are signs of a good estate not as the foundation of their Faith they say that Ministers do commonly give men signs from their works and qualifications to try their good estate and so does the Word of God and we find that holy men in Scripture have laid great weight upon them and they are not to be blamed for that that is not a self-righteous spirit but many men that make this pretence do make them the foundation of their Faith for they take their first encouragement from hence to come to Christ and dare not come when they can see nothing in themselves to encourage them 3. They pretend that they are not seeking salvation by their own righteousness but they are only labouring after a work of Humiliation to prepare them for Christ they have all along been instructed that there can be no true Faith without a foregoing work of Humiliation and therefore they only wait for that work in order to their coming to Christ but men do greatly deceive themselves in this thing a natural man may have a work of Humiliation but a natural man cannot heartily seek after it for every unhumbled sinner is striving against the work of Humiliation they are opposing of it either by endeavours to set up a righteousness of their own seeking in that way to escape condemnation instead of yielding to God they are flying to their strong holds sheltering themselves in their prayers reformations desires c. or else by wrangling as a person pursued runs away till overtaken and then he fights so the sinner when he sees that he can't save himself is contending with God objecting against divine proceedings thinks that Gods dealings are very hard measure Rom. 9.19 in both these methods they oppose the work of Humiliation and when a sinner thinks that he is seeking after the work of Humiliation he is opposing it he is indeed striving against the work of Humiliation when he is seeking of it as much as when he is seeking to strengthen and increase his desires and affections for indeed he is making a righteousness of Humiliation he labours after it that that may commend him to God he thinks that would ingratiate him with God he looks at Humiliation as an eminent peice of righteousness as a castle that would shelter him from the wrath of God he looks upon Humiliation as a choice frame of spirit he looks on at it as a great attainment so that those that stay away from Christ under pretence that they are not humbled and are waiting for a work of Humiliation are seeking salvation by their own righteousness 6. Let us consider the vanity of mens trusting in their own righteousness men do please themselves with an idle dream when they put their confidence in their own Righteousness all that they gain by it is to go the more pleasantly to hell mens own righteousness is but a sandy Foundation to build upon the hopes of such men shall be cut off and their trust prove a spiders web it is a needless thing for men to trust in their own righteousness there is foundation enough for Faith without that there is no need of our own righteousness to draw the heart of God to us the love of God is free and independent there is no need of our own righteousness to satisfie the Law for us Jesus Christ has done that fully there needs no addition of our own to perfect his work and it is a vain thing for men to trust in their own righteousness they idolize it and give an honour that does not belong to it yea such persons do cast great reflections upon Christ as if he laid down his life to no purpose they cast disparagement upon God they despise the love of God in sending Jesus Christ cast reflection on him as if he might have spared that cost they do what in them lies to make the death of Christ in vain yea it is a dangerous thing men think it is a great venture to depend up on the righteousness of Christ but it is a desperate venture for men to depend upon their own righteousness such whose eyes God has opened would not for a thousand worlds venture their souls upon that foundation there is not only hazard of miscarrying but certain ruine in that way the expectations of such men will end in miserable disappointment though Paul had done as much for God as any man alive yet he durst not entertain such a thought of appearing before God in his own righteousness Phil. 3.9 That I may be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law he that trusts in his own righteousness takes as certain a course to ruine his own soul as he that lives in ways of unrighteousness This appears 1. God has made no promise to you in this way there are promises made to them that trust in the Righteousness of Christ but there is not a syllable that way to those that trust in their own righteousness it is a presumptuous thing for any man to promise himself salvation in such a way wherein God does not promise it to him God indeed in the covenant of works does promise life upon the account of perfect obedience but what is that unto you who are destitute of that obedience who neither have nor ever can fullfil the condition of that covenant God also promises salvation in the Gospel to those that are sincerely godly and righteous but where does he speak one word of saving them upon the account of their own righteousness or to save those that confide in their own righteousness God is wholly silent as to any such promise if there were such a promise there would be a foundation for Faith but God gives no encouragement unto men to depend upon their own righteousness which he would certainly do if that were a way of safety for God undertakes in his Word to direct men the right way to heaven if this way had been right God would not have neglected to have promised salvation to them in this way besides it has bin Gods manner all along to deal with man in the way of a covenant to that end that men may be encouraged to walk in the right way to the obtaining of good and honour him by exercising Faith in his Word Gods manner is to propose conditions to men and give them assurance of the benefit in that way he never left mankind to guess at the way of salvation and to contrive by their own wisdom a suitable way to bring them to heaven the wisdom of man is utterly insufficient to any such work God knew his own mind what way pleased him and has bound himself unto man in that way when he first made man he entred into a
to the enjoyment of himself in a way of hearkening to his counsels why did God make such a creature that should have such a capacity and such desires if he had not an heart to bestow this good upon him God satisfies the desires of every living thing heavenly glory though it be great yet it is not too much for our need he bestows upon the beasts of the earth the fish of the sea and Fowls of heaven such things as are suitable to their needs and why should we think that God is unwilling to bestow upon man what he needs if men will take the directions that he gives unto them 4. God has made heaven on purpose to bestow it upon men together with the angels the earth was made for man and so was heaven too God raised this glorious building on purpose to entertain men it is a Kingdom prepared for them from the foundation of the world Mat. 25.34 God has prepared for them a City Heb. 11.16 this was one of the first works that God ever did to prepare this place of blessedness for men he did not need any heaven for himself he was infinitely happy before heaven was made bnt he made it on purpose for such as shall come to Christ how then can we think that God is unwilling to bestow it upon them now it is made he will not say it is too good for them he turned man indeed out of Paradise that was made for him because that was made for him only so long as he retained his integrity but the heavenly Paradise was made for such as will come unto Christ 5. This is but proportionable to that design that is upon the heart of God men do not stick to do great things for the accomplishing of designs that lie much upon their hearts Princes will be at vast expence to shew their magnificence the Artist will take a great deal of pains to shew his skill and God has a design upon his heart to manifest his glory and has done great things for that end he made this glorious fabrick of heaven and earth to be as a glass wherein his glory is represented and the eternal salvation of such as you is greatly subservient to this end Eph. 1.5 6 Eph. 2.6 7 here is nothing in this contrary to Gods glory nothing that is an hindrance to it but it suits that end the mercy of God is much honoured by his pardoning and saving of sinners Micah 7.18 herein is seen what free compassion is in the heart of God it is much for the glory of God to lead sinners through all the difficulties of the way unto heaven it is much for the glory of God notwithstanding all their unworthiness to bestow heaven upon them it is much for the glory of God to have multitudes in heaven to be spectators and admirers of his glory Joh. 17.24 That they may be with me where I am to behold my glory which thou hast given me 6. There has been a great price paid for it if you had kept the covenant of works and been perfectly obedient unto God without any defect you would not have doubted of Gods readiness to accept of you and save you but here is as fair a way made for your acceptance and salvation God is fully satisfied for every jot of that glory that he promises unto you Jesus Christ has payed the full price of it according to the tenour of the covenant it is a due debt to all that are partakers of the righteousness of Christ it is an act of Justice in God to bestow salvation upon them heavenly glory is purchased glory Eph. 1.14 until the redemption of the purchased possession Discouragement 2. The many sins that he has been guilty of sometimes a Saint has a dismal frightful apprehension of his sins they appear to him as a dark cloud he knows that God is an holy and a jealous God he speaks dreadfully in his Word against sinful practices and has brought dreadful judgment upon angels and men for their sins and hence he is fearful that God will not pardon him his sins proves his great temptation hence his heart is still harping upon that string that God is an holy sin-revenging God and that he hath been guilty of abundance of sin Psal 40.12 mine iniquities take hold of me so that I am not able to look up they are more than the hairs of my head therefore my heart faileth me And there are two things especially that prove matter of temptation and make him afraid to believe One thing is the many aggravations that he sees in his sins he sins against light against covenant not withstanding abundance of mercy with a great deal of perverseness they have reiterated sins after bewailing of the same they have sinned with deliberation their sins seem to have exceeded the limits of pardoning mercy The other thing is that they fear that their sins do speak and evidence their hypocrisie they are apt to think they should not they could not do so if they were not hypocrites they fear that such carriages are not consistent with grace and thence they are much discouraged they think if they have been hypocrites all this while there is very little hope for them that would be such a provocation that they fear God would never pardon it the fear of their hypocrisie makes them fearful to cast themselves upon Christ For the removal of this discouragement Consider 1. That the law of God leaves as much room for the pardon of great fins as of little ones lesser sins and greater sins are all mortal by the law by the sentence of the law one sin is as certainly destructive as a thousand The wages of sin is death Rom. 6.23 and the Law does allow of the pardon of multitudes as well as of one the Law allows of the pardon of sin provided there be satisfaction the Law stands upon it to have punishment but it does not stand for personal punishment in case of great sins no more than in case of little sins the Law makes no distinction but it gives as much liberty for the pardon of great offenders as of lesser there is no tittle that way in the covenant of works that great sinners must dye in their own persons the thing that the Law looks at is that sin be punished according to the demerit thereof that the Justice of God be vindicated but God does not bind up his own hands that he may not forgive great sinners he reserves that liberty to himself in the law of punishing any sins in a surety and so of pardoning them the law admits of the pardon of any sin if there be satisfaction the reason that the sin against the Holy Ghost is unpardonable is not from any thing in the covenant of works but because God when he provided a surety made an exception of that sin but if sin be punished the law is satisfied the law does not forbid the pardon
of great sinners that is evident because God does pardon great sinners Luk. 7.47 her sins which are many are forgiven 2 Jesus Christ has satisfied for great sins and great sinners as well as lesser when God sent Jesus Christ it was in his liberty to appoint him to dye for what sins and sinners he pleased Christ Jesus was capable of satisfying for one as well as for another for he was so worthy a person that he was capable by his sufferings to expiate the greatest sins his short sufferings were sufficient to satisfie for the greatest offences and God did put that work upon him to satisfie for great sins and he has discharged it he has satisfied for great offenders Christ has payed a price of redemption for the greatest sins one excepted therefore generally in Scripture it is said that he has made reconciliation for sins without any exception he bare our sins 1 Pet. 2.24 he is the propitiation for our sins 1 Joh. 2.2 he has purged our sins Heb. 1.3 yea the Scripture testifies that his blood cleanseth us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 he died for the chiefest sinners as is implyed 1 Tim 1.15 and therefore sinners without distinction are invited to come to Christ for forgiveness 3. Gods manner is to suffer a great deal of sin to remain in his people here he could if it pleased him purge it out all at once but he suffers it to be otherwise for many great ends as to magnifie his power in preserving the seed of grace notwithstanding all that opposition which is made by Satan and their own corruption so to carry on the work of sanctification in such a manner as that they shall stand in continual need of justification and pardon and among other ends this is not the least to try the saith of his people and exercise taht there be none of the people of God but are attended with a great deal of sin so was Noah Jacob Asa Jehosaphat and Paul Rom. 7.23 I see another law in my members warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity to the law of sin that is in my members and that shews that God can love those that have a great deal of sin in them and that he can pardon them his suffering of it to be in his own evidences the sufficiency of grace to pardon it 4. God is as free to pardon hypocrites as any other men if they come unto Jesus Christ the people of God are afraid many times that they are hypocrites but that should not discourage them from believing hypocrites are as wellcome to come unto Christ as Saints God does not exclude those that have lived long in a way of hypocrisie they may come with freedom of spirit notwithstanding men should not suspend the exercise of Faith until it be cleared up to them they are no hypocrites when they are most in the dark about their state their way is to trust in the name of the Lord and stay themselves upon their God Isa 50.10 if you should be hypocrites there is encouragement enough to receive the Gospel God has pardoned thousands that have spent a great deal of time in hypocrisie were not the Jews that Christ and the Apostles offered salvation generally to hypocrites had not Paul lived a great while in a way of hypocrisie and Nicodemus God rejects not any man that accepts of Jesus Christ though he has been an hypocrite Discouragement 3. That God passes by many others and does not bestow salvation upon them there be many whole Nations that God passeth over and leaves to perish and many particular men among his visible people many are called but few are chosen Mat. 20.16 and they can't see any reason why God should bestow salvation upon them when he does deny it to multitudes of others why God should make such a difference between them and others when they are called on to believe on Christ they are afraid to do it it damps their hearts to think that there are so few that God does save so many rejected and they can fee nothing in themselves to incline the heart of God to them God passes over many wise men noble men valiant men rich men learned men good natur'd men men of great accomplishments and don 't bestow salvation on them if they could but see any reason why God should set his heart upon them and make such a difference between them and others it would not be so hard to them to believe but when they consider what kind of men God has cast off and rejected it makes them fear that God will reject them also the severity of God upon others discourages them as if there were little likelihood of their salvation they are frighting of themselves as if there were little hopes for them it is a sinking thing to them that many men more probable than they have fallen short of Salvation if they could give a reason why God should set his heart upon them when he rejects others it would mightily satisfie them but because they can't they are full of doubts For the removal of this Discouragement Consider 1. The only reason why God sets his love on one man and not upon another is because he pleases he acts the soveraignty of his own will in it it is his own will that makes the difference between men 1 Cor 4.7 who maketh this to differ from another and what hast thou that thou hast not received Rom 9.15 I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy God in loving of men acts arbitrarily he acts as the Potter in forming his Vessels to divers uses out of the same lump the with of God is sufficient to move him to chuse one and refuse another he can bestow his love upon men where there is nothing in them to draw it the will of God can act independently and indeed it cannot have a dependance upon any other thing there is nothing out of God that can incline the will of God all those things that men are apt to suppose to have an influence upon the will of God have indeed a dependance upon his will there is nothing in any man to sway the will of God any way there is nothing in any man to be an argument with the Lord to love him nothing that can work upon the affection of God to make God love him he has no excellency that can perswade the Lord to love him whatever beauty understanding good nature he has those things can't sway God God is not taken with those excellencies and accomplishments that are in men as to have his heart fastened and allured to them thereby and on the other hand there is nothing in man that can hinder God from loving of him if the man be weak in understanding of contemptible and wicked Parents and his outward condition mean yet God can set his heart upon him there is nothing in this and that man that can have any efficacy upon