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A54589 The difference between the old and new covenant stated and explained with an exposition of the covenant of grace in the principal concernments of it / by Samuel Petto ... Petto, Samuel, 1624?-1711. 1674 (1674) Wing P1896; ESTC R31110 148,845 372

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thus reasoneth That cannot be a justifying righteousness in our present fallen estate 1. Which is not perfect for the least sin is enough to condemn Rom. 3. 20. Gal. 3. 10. Nor 2. which is our own of our own working out Rom. 10. 3 5. Nor 3. Which leaves any place for boasting Ephes 2. 9. Rom. 4. 2. Nor 4. which is opposite unto grace Rom. 4. 4. And upon these accounts all Evangelical Works are excluded out of Justification for they are imperfect they are our own subjectively they would leave room for some boasting if acceptance to life were upon these seeing it should be by our giving unto God also the way were opposite to grace for if the condition were never so small yet being performed the reward might be claimed upon our act and so would be of debt not of Gospel-grace Rom. 4. 4. The works of Abraham and David after conversion are excluded out of justification vers 2 3 6. which argueth that although Evangelical obedience kept in its due place doth not derogate from the grace of God yet it doth and is opposite to it if introduced into justification So that Gospel-grace doth not consist in a bare abatement of the rigor of the Law nor in making a bargain with us for the sake of Christ to accept of our faith repentance and sincere obedience instead of that which is perfect but it standeth in excusing us from a personal performance of that righteousness which is the condition of life and admitting Jesus Christ to answer the Law in our stead For the grand difference between the Law and the Gospel is the one justifieth by our own the other by anothers righteousness If man himself be the Doer for life that is the righteousness of the Law which saith Rom. 10. 5. the man that doth them shall live in them In opposition to it that of the Gospel is called the righteousness of faith vers 6. and of God vers 3. because it is to be sought out of our selves in another in the free promise and that which we are the subjects of is to be disclaimed here Phil. 3. 9. Rom. 10. 3. The asserting it to be by any of our personal performances giveth them the very place of works in the Covenant of Works which is anti-evangelical and introduceth some merits as well as perfect works would have done The being enabled by grace to them doth not hinder meriting any more than as one saith my furnishing a man with my tools to work with hinders his deserving a reward All ability that Adam had in innocency was from the favour of God and what he was to do was duty Faith it self is not the least of that righteousness it is an act of obedience but as such it is not said to justifie nor as it worketh by love although it doth so work Gal. 5. 6. Nor as a condition of life as I have elsewhere manifested but only as a means for the applying Christ and his righteousness much less can any works of ours be a part thereof The new creature availeth to being crucified to the world Gal. 6. 14 15. i. e. as a means but it is not said that it availeth to justification To justifie is to declare a person to be righteous the true God cannot pass a false sentence therefore we cannot have justification without having a righteousness this cannot consist in any act of ours as faith repentance or obedience as is already manifested therefore it must be of anothers working out the very righteousness of Jesus Christ Rom. 5. 18 19. 1 Cor. 1. 30. And if his obedience being to the Law may be called a legal righteousness yet as the same is applied by faith it is to us an evangelical righteousness All the question then is whether evangelical works are not of the same use in justification that faith is of have they not the same place and office there that faith hath I answer negatively they have not for often we read of the righteousness of faith never of the righteousness of love in that business We are said to be justified by faith not in the same sense to be justified by love or works It 's true there is a necessity of Evangelical works to testifie our faith obedience and thankfulness to God but they are required not as conditions but as effects and declarations of our justification Things are said to be done when they are manifested as Rom. 3. 7. 4. 15. A tree is known by the fruits And thus not only open acts but those that are secret when regular have an aptitude to evidence faith and that a person is justified even when they are not actually seen Paul speaketh of being justified before God by receiving or applying the righteousness of Jesus Christ in the free promise this is only by faith James speaketh of being justified by manifesting to a mans self or others that it is applied this is by Evangelical works and not by faith only Thus by offering up Isaac the person of Abraham was declaratively justified as it did shew his faith to be true vers 18. Gen. 22. 12. and not his working but his believing is said to be imputed to righteousness Jam. 2. 23. if this be justification in the sense of Paul yet it is by faith and he was called the friend of God there is justification declared by works as God acted kindly towards him so he acted in a friendly way towards God He is a vain man that contenteth himself with a faith that standeth in a bare assent to some propositions of truth without the power of them upon his heart vers 14 19 20. That is a dead faith which doth not profit is not attended with salvation which remaineth without works vers 17 20 26. therefore it is not the same true faith which any are justified by but another thing That unfruitful faith which is blamed here certainly was as far from justifying them as it was from saving them and so is not the faith which Paul insisteth upon for by that men were justified and that in order before works for they cannot be performed in an instant though they certainly follow but the justification and faith which they are put upon and called to declare by works these are of a Gospel stamp The Lord Jesus having fully performed the Law as the condition of the New-Testament hence it becometh absolute to us If improperly a duty a way or means to the enjoyment of some blessings of it be called a Condition I contend not But a Condition properly is more than a causa sine qua non it is a cause that hath a moral efficiency in it for the fulfilling of it is that which giveth right and upon which a man hath a title to what is promised and without it none and so it is a moral efficient cause of the enjoyment of the good promised in a Covenant Faith and repentance are great duties but nothing performed by us can be such
Rom. 6. 14. The accepting of Jesus Christ in our stead to be our second Adam was as by Covenant so of meer grace as well as what is promised to us through him they together make up but one Covenant of grace Some call the former a Covenant of amity or friendship because God and man were in perfect amity and a Covenant of nature because natural integrity did capacitate to perform it but these do not so fully express the nature of it seeing the promised life therein was to be by working Some call the latter a Covenant of faiths and there is indeed an opposition between the Law of faith and the Law of Works i● the matter of justification Rom. 3. 27 28. That particular priviledge of the Covenant viz. Justification is by saith and not by the works of the Law but in a distribution these are not the most distinct members o● the whole Covenant seeing Faith is but particular blessing and fruit of it hence that cannot be expressive of the whole nature thereof that is not the opposite Condition or doth not take the place that works had in that Covenant with the first Adam it is rather what was done or suffered by Jesus Christ that supplieth this Isa 53. 10 It is therefore improper especially unless by faith be meant the righteousness of Jesus Christ applyed thereby rather than that particular grace for application And note that in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians justification is said to be by faith in opposition only to works not to Jesus Christ or free grace If we should give faith the place that was given by the false Prophets unto works we should be culpable and egregiously cross the mind of the Apostle in this matter as well as they did Some Grace in that Covenant with the first Adam do no more make it coincident with or deny that in and with Christ to be a Covenant of Grace than some Works viz. Evangelical in that with Christ doth deny that with the first Adam to be a Covenant of Works or than some faith in God required in the Covenant of Works viz. the believing that word Gen. 2. 17. doth deny that which they call the Covenant of faith to be so It must therefore be said it was not Gospel grace or faith in a Mediator that was found in the Covenant of Works and so as properly as this may be denominated of Works so may the other be called a Covenant of grace especially seeing the Gospel is called the word of grace Act. 14. 3. Act. 20. 32. As to the several parts following in the distribution of this Covenant of Grace some of them carry evidence with them as what is said of primary revelation renovation consummation c. the other will be further cleared in the sequel yet thus much I would say here for the clearing of them That the Covenant of grace was made with Jesus Christ that Text doth witness Isa 42. 6. for the Father is contracting with him yea all the Covenant of the people is firstly with him he not only removeth obstacles that would hinder their fruition of federal blessings as an interested Friend whose name is not in a Covenant may do among men but he is the great Covenanteer a Covenant of the people the promises are primarily made to him on the behalf of men and he maketh the first claim to all as his own right his own due by a grant or Covenant under the hand and seal of the Father to himself this will be proved in the next question That also the Covenant is made with us in Christ is no less evident Believers are of the seed of Abraham and David and of the house of spiritual Israel to whom the promises run they may lay claim to them in their head Gal. 3. 9 14 29. Rom. 11. 27. Ezek. 20. 37. Jer. 31. 31. Heb. 8. 8. If any doubt of the second distinction into Legal and Evangelical let them know I am far from thinking that the mount Sinai dispensation was a Covenant of Works to Israel as if the design and intendment of God therein had been to afford eternal life to Israel upon their own doing but yet it is called the Law Rom. 10. 5. Gal. 3. 10 13 17. Even in way of opposition to the promise vers 12. Yea. vers 8. God preached before the Gospel to Abraham Here the Covenant with Abraham is expresly called Gospel and that in contradistinction from the very Sinai dispensation which is called the Law undeniably he speaketh of the Law not as given to Adam before the fall for then man himself must have been the door for life and not another for him but as given at mount Sinai 430 Years after that promise to faithful Abraham vers 17. So that the Covenant of grace is rightly distinguished by legal and Evangelical for the holy Spirit here giveth us both parts of the distinction speaking expresly of that at mount Sinai as one member of it yea he maketh these so opposite as he saith vers 12. and the Law is not of faith and so is not the Covenant of grace but yet the Sinai Law appertaineth and referreth to it viz. as holding forth the Condition thereof to be fulfilled by Jesus Christ CHAP. II. Of the Oneness of the Covenant with Jesus Christ and us THe Covenant of grace was made or established not only with us but joyntly with Jesus Christ and us in him so as both are within one and the same Covenant For the great transactions with Jesus yea even the giving and sending of him and his accepting the office of a Redeemer and undertaking for us these are all of grace as well as what is promised to us through him therefore the Covenant of grace must take in all that conduceth otherwise than by a meer Decree to our restoration and eternal Salvation And in Isa 42. 6. the Father is contracting with the Son I will give thee for a Covenant of the people therefore that with the Son and with the people belong to one and the same Covenant Indeed as that which partaketh of the nature or is a part is put for the whole so that with the people alone even here beareth the name of a Covenant as being within the grand contract with Jesus Christ as a branch and parcel thereof yet both together make up that one Covenant of grace as appeareth thus 1. There is no Scripture Evidence for making these two Covenants one of Surety ship or redemption with Jesus Christ and another of grace and reconciliation made with us that distinction which some use is improper for the parts of it are coincident seeing that as with Jesus Christ was out of meer grace also John 3. 16. And it is promised that Jesus Christ should be given for a Covenant therefore it is of grace that we are redeemed by him 2 Tim. 1. 9. There was grace before the World was and that must be in the Covenant as
Christ in the way to Salvation but not in the least or that which justifieth or saveth See what earnestness and vehemency the Apostle useth herein vers 3. I testifie again to every man that is circumcised that he is a debtor to the whole Law Where is intimated that an acting in any work upon a legal account or on a legal ground is a putting our selves under the obligation of and is all one as if we sought life altogether by the Law For if they were circumcised upon a principle or opinion of its conducing to their Justification they became debtors thereby to the whole Law though they did not think other services required or themselves obliged to them yet by one they put themselves under the bond of the whole Thus then if any should act in any Gospel Institutions as Baptisme or the Supper of the Lord upon a like account as they did take up circumcision viz. with an opinion of their conducing to justification and acceptation with God unto Eternal Life they would thereby make themselves debtors to the whole Law So if they should give Repentance mourning for sin self-emptiness yea Faith it self the same place and act therein upon such a ground as they did in Circumcision Christ would be rendred of no effect unto such Souls 2. When there is a living in the Spirit of the Old Covenant in dealing with the Promises of the New then indeed there is a mixing of the two Covenants which are so distinct The Old Covenant carried with it a Spirit of bondage and terrour Rom. 8. 15. Heb. 12. 18. And if Souls in looking to the Promise carry it as if they were conversing with God upon the burning Mount eyeing chiefly Divine wrath dwelling more upon a Divine curse than upon the Grace of God in the free Promise in looking for mercy here is the Spirit of the Old Covenant so when souls are shie of the Promise and ready to stand at a distance from it when they carry it towards God as if Jesus Christ had not satisfied the curse of the Law and yet in part look to the Promise The Old Covenant did run upon D● and Live intending that Jesus Christ should be the doer in reference to Eternal Life but when souls are like those who were hired into the Vineyard Mat. 20. vers 1 2 c. when they are indenting with God for their penny when they must have such incomes and such injoyments from God in case they act in duty when they seek the reward upon their own doing they may work hard and sink under their burthen and have little thank for their pains as that Parable sheweth When duty is not mannaged with a Gospel Spirit when the Divine Spirit is not acting the Soul by the Promise of the New Covenant it cometh to little The Old Covenant did run upon condition and so when Souls dwell upon conditions performed by or wrought within themselves and build their Hope Peace and Comfort upon them so as they look little or nothing to the free Grace of God in absolute Promises make but little use of these in comparison of the other then they are too much in the Spirit of the Old Covenant and mixing with the New CHAP. VII Of the nature of the Mount Sinai Covenant IT will now be asked What manner of Covenant was that at mount Sinai which is called the worse Covenant what kind of Covenant was it Sol. In general it was a Covenant of Works as to be fulfilled by Jesus Christ but not so to Israel Or It was the Covenant of Grace as to its legal condition to be performed by Jesus Christ represented under a conditional administration of it to Israel This is a knotty puzling Question in Divinity for the clearer opening of it I must answer both Negatively and Affirmatively SECT I. Answ I. NEgatively in four Propositions Prop. I. The Sinai Law was not given as a Covenant of Works to Israel It was designed to be a Covenant of Works as to be accomplished by Jesus Christ as will appear afterward but the end of the Lord was not that it should be so to Israel For 1. The nature of a Covenant of Works and also the general current of Scripture denieth the Sinai Law to be such A Covenant of Works requireth perfect personal obedience promising life or a reward of Justice thereupon and threatning death upon the least violation thereof This is evident from the Covenant with Adam in innocency Gen. 2. vers 17. He obeying it is implied he should live he disobeying by eating the forbidden Fruit the sentence of death passeth upon him and apparently this is a true description of a Covenant of Works for whatever is opposite unto this speaketh Grace if Justification and Eternal Life be attained by anothers righteousness or obedience without their personal performance of it there is Grace herein if the reward be not of Justice it must be of Grace if imperfections and sinful failings be not followed with death there is Grace in that also Now the design or intendment of God in giving the Sinai Covenant was not that Israel should by their own obedience obtain Eternal Life and Salvation Indeed the false Apostles in Gospel times did put upon personal obedience they urged Circumcifion and other works of the Law as necessary unto Justification and Eternal Life but in opposition to them the Apostle argueth in diverse Chapters in the Epistles to the Romans and Galatians proving that they come by a righteousness performed for us by Jesus Christ Rom. 3. vers 20. Therefore by the deeds of the Law i. e. as performed by themselves shall no flesh be justified in his sight it is vers 28. Without the deeds of the Law Gal. 2. vers 16. Gal. 3. vers 10. As many as are of the works of the Law i. e. as performed by themselves are under the curse and vers 11 12. Gal. 5. vers 2 3. Yea our Salvation is not of works Ephes 2. vers 8 9. 2 Tim. 2. 9. Adam forfeiting life when he might have had it on the terms of his own doing hence the Lord would never deal with man in that way any more And lest any should think that this was only since the Sinai Covenant was at an end the Apostle proveth that our works are now excluded from the instances of Abraham and David Rom. 4. vers 2 3. For if Abraham were justified by works he hath whereof to glory but not before God and addeth it is to him that worketh not vers 5. and vers 6. Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousness without works Where it is plainly intimated that we are justified in Gospel times in the same way for substance with them of old and he expresly saith that this was not by works of their own performance no not by such as they came up to after they were in a state of grace much less by any works of theirs
short of all its blessings No I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me If there were any danger of forfeiting and losing these it must be either on Gods part by his leaving of them or on their part by their departing from him and here the Lord hath undertaken to secure against both these and so the matter is out of Question it was not thus in the Old Covenant Indeed what the Lord hath absolutely promised yet he hath appointed means in order to the attaining of it internal as Faith and external as Ordinances and commands utmost attendance upon him ordinarily in the use thereof this is necessary as a duty and sin ariseth upon the neglect of it Thus the Lord is unalterably determined to vouchsafe a frame of obedience Ezek. 36. 25 to 30. Yet obedience is to be performed by us we are to be the Agents and we may sin about the means in the way to the injoyment of such mercy as is laid up in absolute promises Faith is to be exercised in these else what use are they of and we may be faulty in not attending to it 3. If there be any such condition of the New Covenant it were most like to be precious Faith but that is not A condition properly taken is influential into right if performed it giveth right to the benefit promised if not performed there is no right and therefore is a cause it giveth jus ad rem which a man may have and yet be forced after to Sue for possession If it be only in a Mode or accident it is thus as if a great Estate be granted upon paying a white Lilly if a person bringeth a yellow Lilly and not a white he hath no right all is null and void upon such a tickle point are they who stand upon such conditions for Eternal mercies Now Faith giveth no right Joh. 1. 12. To as many as received him gave he power to become the Sons of God even to them that believe on his Name Jesus Christ is offered in the free Promise of the Gospel Faith that consenteth or receiveth him and a right and title in him to the blessings of the Covenant it doth not give one The Father offereth righteousness in a way of gift Rom. 5. 17. Faith accepteth the offer receiveth Jesus Christ for righteousness and so conduceth to Justification Rom. 4. 3. Abraham believed God and it was counted to him for righteousness i. e. it was reckoned a means unto righteousness so ver 5. Not that Faith it self was reckoned the least of that righteousness whereby we are justified but a means for the applying of Jesus Christ who is our righteousness The Covenant as to that priviledge of it Justification is not so absolute as to be without all means yet may be absolute without any condition properly so called As condemnation without any new act of receiving is the resultancy from the Law upon disobedience to all under the Covenant of Works so Justification is the resultancy of a Divine Promise upon the obedience of Jesus Christ to all those that are under the New Covenant That unbelievers are not justified by it is because they are not actually under it Not because they have not fulfilled the condition of it but because they are not interested in the obediential righteousness of Jesus Christ which is the condition of it Rom. 10. 10. The act of God in justifying is to be answered by the act of Faith consenting to the offer of the Gospel As the death and satisfaction of Jesus Christ is enough to answer if the accusation be that we are sinners and deserve Eternal wrath so if the accusation be that we have no interest or portion in this satisfaction any thing that can evidence our interest in Christ is a sufficient plea to answer that be it Faith or other Graces they may be pleaded as evidences but not as titles as fruits and effects of a right given but not as causes and conditions fulfilled by us giving us that right It is a great mistake to think that there is no plea in this case but from the performance of a condition For an evidence may be from the effects as well as from causes even in civils a meer witness may carry it in such a charge when he can testifie I saw the person put into peaceable possession of such an Estate Besides if this charge he drawn up against those out of Christ many things may make it good if against those that are in Christ then who draweth this up Not God for he it is that justifieth and therefore he will not condemn Rom. 8. 33 34. if Satan or their own hearts then as gracious effects are enough to answer so by direct acts of Faith there ought to be a stedfast resisting and withstanding of Satan and he will flee from them 1 Pet. 5. 9. Jam. 4. 7. No necessity of pleading the performance of a condition to help against this 4. Our obedience though evangelical is no such condition of the New Covenant as there was of the Old unto Israel For the Lord hath undertaken that his people shall obey Ezek. 36. 25 to 30. I will put my spirit within you and cause you to walk in my ways Heb. 8. 10. obedience is as absolutely promised as any other blessings in the New and therefore it cannot be the condition thereof The Apostle having asserted and largely proved Rom. 3. that justification is by faith not by the works of the Law he further cleareth it from the instances of Abraham and David Rom. 4. 3. Abraham believed c. and vers 4. Now to him that worketh the reward is not reckoned of grace but of debt This strongly implieth that the reward must be reckoned of grace but of debt This strongly implieth that the reward must be reckoned of grace and not of debt the emphasis is upon this so as if it were otherwise the whole force of his argument were taken away and the stress is not upon the word reckoned yet if it were the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being applied to both must signifie a true judgement and just estimation as Rom. 8. 18. 9. 8. 1 Cor. 4. 1. for really and in true account the reward is of grace and it is as firmly asserted that if it were of works it were in the same account of debt Say some only meritorious works would make it so but let it be considered that works can be meritorious only one of these two ways either 1. By being of such value and worth as that in justice such a recompence is deserved by them yea though there were no contract that way and dare any say that any works of men even in innocency could thus merit at the hands of God is not all obedience due to God so as when we have done all we are unprofitable servants Luk. 17. 10.
pardon will be as early as the actuality of the sin and hence he speaketh as if all were actually forgiven already 3. Believers are alwaies under Justification unto life and therefore cannot at any time be actually under the obligation of the Law unto Eternal death It is nothing less than a sentence of death and condemnation a dreadful Curse that the Law denounceth against sinners Gen. 2. 17. Gal. 3. 10. Cursed is every one that continueth not in all c. So that if Believers were one day or moment laid under the obligation of the Law by new acts of sin then so long they must be unjustified again there must be an intermission of their Justification For condemnation is opposed to and utterly inconsistent with present Justification Rom. 5. 16 18. Rom. 8. 33 34. Whereas it is expresly said Rom. 8. 1. There is no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus There is not a bare suspension of the Curse but they are differenced in respect of their state from others which are out of Christ after union with him yea after the fullest pardon yet every sin deserveth condemnation pardon doth not remove the desert of sin but the legal obligation which is to condemnation that is taken off vers 33 34. Joh. 5. 24. He that believeth hath everlasting Life and shall not come into condemnation By daily pardons there is a continuation of a persons Justification and some Faith he hath but although the new acts of Faith may not alwaies be put forth the same moment that he sinneth yet he is secured from condemnation even at first believing or passing from Death to Life The same might be evinced from the declared freedom from the Law and in Curse Rom. 6. 14. Gal. 3. 10 13. At many as are of the works of the Law are under the Curse this strongly implieth that others viz. Believers are not under the Curse so ver 13. And though materially the affl●ctions of the Elect before conversion be the same with others under the Curse yet the least Atome of that doth not formally light upon them For Jesus Christ underwent the whole of it on their behalf They were sententially by the Law under the Curse before believing but not executively then much less after being united to Jesus Christ 4. Believers are continually under the New Covenant and therefore the very instant wherein their sins are committed they are remitted or the persons are disobliged from the Law Curse and so actually pardoned For unto this there is requisite only interest in the satisfaction of Jesus Christ which they have in union with him and the Lords declaring their discharge thereupon and this is by the New Testament which was established by his blood for the remission of sins Matth. 26. 28. All pardoning mercy is treasured up there this is the very act of Pardon Believers are alwaies within the New Covenant and therefore have an actual right to the pardon of all sins not only past and present but also to come they have it beforehand in the Promise though not actually in possession they have a ground of claiming after pardons may urge the faithfulness of God in his promise for the affording of them also the instant wherein their sin is committed the New Testament declareth it remitted for that is a standing pardon ever speaking on this wise to all under it your sins and iniquities will I remember no more Jer. 31. 31 34. Heb 8. 12. so as they cannot be under the Laws obligation to punishment any more Believers are under the Promise of a New Heart and writing the Law there which assureth that they shall further repent believe c. Yet such spiritual frames may not immediately be afforded seeing these are gradually attained by a real change but remission of sin is a relative change made in an instant by the Promise upon all under it when they want it And here let it be observed that pardon or forgiveness of sin is a Divine grant by the Law of Grace the New Covenant that is his act of Oblivion Heb. 8. 12. Heb. 10. 16 17. Rom. 11. 27. On which account we read of the Law of Works and the Law of Faith Rom. 3. 27. and this latter in reference to Justification and remission of sin As present condemnation is by a Law even by the Divine Law of Works that passeth Sentence upon sinners the seed of the first Adam who are under it the very instant of their sining whether they be aware of it or not So answerably present Justification and remission of sin is by the Law of Grace the New Covenant that passeth a Sentence upon all the seed of Jesus Christ the second Adam who are under it the very instant of their sinning when often at the very time they do not discern it And as among men o●● may have his offences pardoned by an Act of Oblivion which he is under though no accusation be drawn up against him to put his case upon tryal before a Judge that may come afterward thus it is not by a judicial Act by an Act of God as a Judge but as a Law-giver that he giveth present Justification and Pardons they are the Sentence of his Law the New Testament which Believers are alwaies under accusations from Satan or their own Consciences may come afterward and a tryal before the Judge in the great day The not understanding this hath run into many mistakes some asserting Justification to be from Eternity whereas they might easily understand that the Elect may yea must be under a Sentence of the Law of Works without the least execution of the Curse upon them by the Lord as a Judge till by coming under the Sentence of another Law even the New Testament they be discharged from it Others talk of pleading to a charge and upon a plea being discharged as their Justification whereas that is only the Sentence of one Law declaring a discharge from the Sentence or Curse of another Law upon their interest in the righteousness of Jesus Christ by union with him The Lord is not dealing as a Judge there often the Lord is mentioning Judgement as a future thing Paul reasoned of Judgement to come Act. 24. 25. Matth. 11. 22 24. and 12. 36. 2 Pet. 2. 9. Joh. 12. 47 48. The Word will judge you at the last day The present work of Jesus Christ is not to judge the World but to save it Now he cometh in a dispensation full of Grace with intreaties and beseechings that he may win over Souls to a subjection unto the Law of Faith which is a ministration of righteousness and Life exceedingly glorious 2 Cor. 3. But he will deal in another way when he cometh forth as a Judge then he will come cloathed with terrour and we must all appear before his judgement Seat 2 Cor. 5. 10. When the times of refreshing shall come then will their sins be blotted out Act. 3. 19. Not as if they wanted
the first saving gift of God Christ and the Promises go together There are special marks of distinction whereby persons in Covenant are differenced from the World which agree to none that are out of Christ Heb. 9. 15. they are called ones that receive the Promise Abraham that famous Covenanter was not actually so till the time of his effectual calling from thence the four hundred and thirty years do commence which give the first date to the Covenant or Promise as made with him Gen. 12. Gal. 3. 17. not from the day of his Nativity much less from Eternity although then he was an Elect Vessel by becoming Christs men become Abrahams Seed and Heirs of Promise ver 9. 14 26 29. So the New Covenant runneth to the House of Israel and Judah Heb. 8 13. and none are the spiritual Israel for Life and Salvation till in him Rom. 2. 28 29. Till then they are so far from a Covenant state which is of Life Peace Mercy Salvation Mal. 25. Isa 54. 10. and 55. 3. Luk. 1. 71 72. Rom. 11. 26 27. That they are declared to be in an opposite state they are at enmity dead in trespasses and sins and children of wrath as well as others Ephes 2. 1 2 3 5 8 15 16. Col. 1 21. This may appear further by an enumeration of the principal blessings of the New Covenant it is promised there that he will write his Law in their hearts and be to them a God Heb. 8. 10. but till in Christ they are without God in the World Ephes 2. 12. The greatest difficulty is as to the great priviledge of Pardon or Remission of sin under which the whole of Justification is signified Heb. 8. 10 12. Rom. 11. 27. Some think that we are justified from Eternity others at the death of Christ but actual personal Justification of a sinner before God is at his union with Jesus Christ and the gift of Faith not before For 1. None are actually interested in the righteousness of Jesus Christ before union with him and the gift of Faith it is he that is made unto us righteousness 1 Cor. 1. 30. 2 Cor. 5. 21. if without Christ then without his righteousness Rom. 5. 18. By the righteousness of one upon all unto Justification of Life none therefore ever attain Justification without a righteousness For it consisteth in a Divine declaration of a persons being righteous and if he were not so it were a false Sentence which is incompatible to the true God Neither will a righteousness of his own working out though by the help of Grace serve for this end of Justification but of that one Jesus Christ hence ver 19. By the obedience of one many are made righteous As his suffering and death did make satisfaction for sin so his obedience is a righteousness meriting blessings even Eternal Life ver 21. and it is called the righteousness of Faith Phil. 3. 9. that being a means for our application of that righteousness which is given Rom. 3. 22 25 26. Not that Faith is the meritorious procuring cause of our Justification it hath not the same causality therein that Jesus Christ hath No more is required to the release of our obligation it self than what the Law by which we are obliged doth exact which is satisfaction as to Duty and Penalty the solution thereof was by Jesus Christ alone but more is required partly to make way for this viz. a compact or new Covenant concerning it without which all sufferings by another had been of no advantage to us partly as a means of application viz. Faith Rom. 10. 10. with the heart man believeth unto i. e. as a means unto righteousness and hence Justification is often said to be by Faith Rom. 3. 28. Rom. 5. 1. And the Question then was not how are men manifested and declared in their own Consciences to be justified but how are they justified before God and in his fight and that is not before but by Faith Gal. 3. 11. The scope of the Apostle Rom. 4. is to prove that we are justified by Faith and the righteousness thereof and not by works of the Law without cause of glorying ver 2. from the instances of Abraham and David ver 3. for what saith the Scripture Abraham believed God and it was counted unto him for righteousness and ver 6. David deseribeth the blessedness of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousness without Works And here note Pardon of sin is not the whole of Justification there is also necessary unto that end a righteousness if it were of our own working out then we were justified and saved by our own works which the Scripture generally denyeth this were to confound Justification and Sanctification as if Jesus Christ only satisfied for the sins and defects of a righteousness which we perform so as that is accepted unto Life whereas it is by a righteousness of Faith which is not of our own working out but wrought out for us by Jesus Christ The false Prophets themselves from among the Jews that urged these works of the Law upon the Romans and Galatians insisted much upon the ceremonials which plainly implieth an acknowledgement of sin and argueth that they did not expect Justification without pardon but carnally looked for pardon in the way of their own works and the Apostle in opposition to them excludeth out of Justification not only works wrought by their own natural power but even those which were by sanctifying Grace for the works of Abraham and David who were believers are here excluded Some think the righteousness of Jesus Christ or his active obedience in our stead needless unless as a part of his satisfaction for sin because say they the Law requireth not of us both suffering and obedience I Answer The Law as a Covenant of Works required suffering in satisfaction for sin and as it belongeth to the Covenant of Grace so it requireth perfect obedience to be fulfilled by Jesus Christ as the condition of the Justification and Life of sinners and new obedience which referreth to sanctification is to be performed by Christians as the fruit and effect of their spiritual Life Rather it was needless that Jesus Christ should fulfill righteousness or yield active obedience to the Law as part of a satisfaction for sin when by his passive obedience he underwent death which was the very same and all that the Law threatned against the sinner If man had never violated or broken the Covenant of Works or had never sinned then the Law would have required only righteousness of him for Life the tenour of it being Do and Live When man had sinned then the Law at a Covenant of Works required only suffering and threatned death Gen. 2. 17. but ceased in its promise of Life that immediately became null and void It is true the Law as a natural rule of righteousness required still perfect obedience that was due to God by right of Creation and his sinning could not
seed upon earthly comforts but Christians live by Faith by what is laid up in Divine Promises by these things they live they know not how to subsist in any state or condition without a Promise they would count themselves dead creatures without that whatever earthly enjoyments they had in possession Neither will a Promise alone satisfie without Jesus Christ in it Christ liveth in me he is the very Life of their lives without him nothing but spiritual swoonings faintings dyings and all from the want and failings of Faith That fetcheth in all influences from Jesus Christ for the supporting and hath the great hand and stroak in all the actings of spiritual Life all spiritual motions are managed thereby Heb. 11. 6. Without Faith it is impossible to please God And therefore Sanctification is but a secondary or after evidence That is not discernable till first there be a discerning Faith which speaketh Justification If Faith be inevident all other Graces will be so also Faith may be shewed unto others by Works Jam. 2. 18. A man may be Declaratively justified by Works but if a man doubteth of his Faith he will as well doubt of his Works whether they be from a Gospel root or not For no Love of the right stamp and so no due obedience but what is the fruit and issue of Faith in the Lord Jesus For that worketh by Love Gal. 5. 6. As first acts of Faith do not consist in believing that our sins are pardoned but in a receiving Jesus Christ and his righteousness as the way to pardon Joh. 1. 12. So if Christians kept up in acts of Faith by outgoings of heart to him in the way of the Promise for all that is wanted there would be not only sweet flowings of Love and Evangelical obedience issuing thence but also they would be filled with all joy and peace in believing Rom. 15. 13. I have often thought if Christians did give more attendance to such direct acts of Faith and spent less time in questioning their conditions or giving way to doubtings about them they would find their interest in the Covenant cleared up yea and consolation also coming in as by the by 3. By Faith Souls are venturing upon the Free Grace and faithfulness of God in his Covenant in the greatest distresses with good success The New Covenant is made up all of Promises and the Gospel is called the Word of Faith because it is the Work of Faith to draw out what is vesseled up there Heb. 10. 38. Now the Just shall live by Faith Not only as to Justification but as to expectation of mercy promised Many would be acting Faith in the concluding interest in Christ and Eternal Life but they should be acting it by a cordial owning of Evangelical principles Yea Christians should lead their whole Life in looking to the Love and Faithfulness of God in his Promise for all their relief and succour in any condition they come into here yea even for Eternal Mercy Heb. 6. 18. They are pursued by spiritual enemies corruptions and Temptations and are in great danger but by hope which floweth from Faith and can act no higher than Faith doth they go yea run for refuge to the hope to the heavenly glory that is set before them so as they lie as at Anchour in such stormy daies and here are two immutable things the Promise and the Oath of God that by these they might have strong consolation By Faith they realize the very things contained in the Promise or Covenant and so their interest in it is experimentally witnessed to them They can say at such a time when we were in Soul distress so as all the means in the World could contribute nothing towards inward ease quietment and consolation then we being inabled by Grace to bear the weight of our Souls and our conditions upon the Faithfulness of God in his Covenant or Free Promise we found relief and refreshment It was not meerly our own fancy and imagination but we were delivered out of our distresses by Faith we were inabled to draw out of the Promise the Milk of consolation which it was beyond the power of all creatures to afford us and thus they find that the Covenant or Promise is their own 4. By Faith in the Free Promise there is a standing Conquerours in Jesus Christ over all spiritual enemies it is a great matter of the Covenant that the Seed of the Woman should break the Serpents bead Gen. 3. 15. And therefore there is through Grace a vanquishing all the enemies of Salvation Sin and Satan through the blessed Seed the Lord Jesus The Promises are accomplished within the Soul but the way is Ephes 6. 16. Above all take the Shield of Faith That not only is best for descrying Satan in all his Stratagems but for the withstanding of him also Joh. 5. 4. This is the Victory that overcometh the World even our Faith When the Soul hath Combates or Spiritual Conflicts and reason is foiled cannot bear up then Faith appeareth as Victorious not in its own strength but in the strength of Christ and his conquest which it maketh use of in these encounters And thus conquering acts of Faith as before venturing relieving and discovering acts are useful for witnessing interest in the Covenant I might shew that Faith hath other acts as acts of assurance drawing up conclusions he hath loved me and given himself for me Gal. 2. 20. But I have said enough to shew that it giveth a knowledge of being within the New Covenant CHAP. XIII Of the Use of Absolute Promises THe Question will now be What Use is there of absolute better Promises When or in what cases are they to be made use of Answ 1. They are of Use for the manifestation of the riches of Divine Grace and Love to sinners if there may be some Grace in promising great blessings upon a very small condition certainly there must be more Grace and Love in promising the same absolutely without any condition This maketh to the magnifying of the Lord in his owning Israel above all people that he loved because he would love Deut. 7. 6 7 8. not because they were greater or more lovely than others or had any beauty or comliness in them but for his own sake as is often intimated Absolute Promises are high expressions of Divine Love as Heb. 8. 10 11 12. They proclaim rich mercy and great Love Eph. 2. 4 5. That the Lord should break through all unworthiness and undeservings this may work into the greatest self-emptiness and self-abasement The Lord peremptorily promised the establishing of Davids throne for ever 2 Sam. 7. 13 16. and this Grace melts his heart into a deep sense of his own nothingness ver 18 19. Who am I O Lord God what is my house c. Thou hast spoken also of thy Servants house for a great while to come and is this the manner of man O Lord God So that absolute Promises of Divine
life for none can duly keep them before believing and then they have it but that their right to it may be evidenced by such good effects For these were already in a state of grace and were before interested in Jesus Christ unto eternal life on which account they are opposed to those that are without vers 15. without are dogs c. The use of the tree of life was the confirming in life Gen. 3. 22 23. So this keeping his Commandments of which believing is chief is the way to a confirmation in a living state or to give a further testimony of their right to life So Jam. 2. 24. By works a man is justified and not by faith only Not that love or evangelical works come in the least into justification it self as a cause or condition thereof the Epistles to the Romans and Galatians are full against this but are the fruits and effects of it They as evidences testifie to a mans self or to others that he is justified as vers 18. I will shew thee my faith by my works We are then not properly but only declaratively justified by works they as precious effects do argue a lively saith which is a means unto imputed righteousness and justification not a syllable that it is a condition thereof So 1 John 1. 9. If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness Not that our confession is properly a condition ingaging the faithfulness and justice of God to forgive I proved before that is not suspended till our confessing but a way and means to our gaining a sense a fresh application an evidence and manifestation of our interest in forgiving grace And as evidences so they may promote comfort only we are to take heed that we do not ground and bottom our consolation on the qualifications within but on the promise it self or the Lord therein without Many are drawing and fetching their comfort from their faith and other graces and lay the stress of it there and accordingly are up and down ebbing and flowing therein in stead of fetching it from the Lord in the promise an immutable thing Heb. 6. 18. by the means of faith and taking that and other graces only as evidences of interest in it Some because they are weary and heavy laden thence take their rest and refreshment whereas they are called out of themselves to come for it to Jesus Christ Matth. 11. 28. When qualifications lie most dark or are most clearly discerned yet we should not look so much to these as to Jesus Christ in the promise for Consolation Thus I have endeavoured to open the nature of the Old and New Covenant As to the Mediatorial Office of Jesus Christ it is largely handled by others and so shall not be insisted upon by me at present Only I would say thus much when Jesus Christ was upon Earth he performed the Office of a Mediator as to satisfaction and now he is in Heaven he doth it still as to intercession Heb. 7. 25. He presenteth his obedience continually to the Father for our obtainment of what he hath purchased Would we have any soederal blessings thè Law written in our heart in more lively characters the Lord witnessed more fully to be our God or sin to be pardoned let our faith be acting upon him as one that mediateth for our obtainment of all for he is the Mediator not of the Old but of the New and Better Testament which is established upon better Promises FINIS Books Printed and are to be sold by Elizabeth Calvert at the Black-spread Eagle at the West end of St. Pauls Folio THe Scripture Directory for Church Offices and People Or a Practical Commentary upon the whole Third Chapter of the first Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians To which is annexed The Godly and the Natural Mans Choyce upon Psal 4. vers 6 7 8. By Anthony Burgesse Pastor of the Church of Sutton Coldfield in Warwick-shire IEPON 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Temple of Solomon Pourtrayed by Scripture Light wherein all its famous Buildings the Pompous Worship of the Jews with its Attending Rites and Ceremonies the several Officers imployed in that Work with their Ample Revenues And the Spiritual Mysteries of the Gospel vailed under all are treated of at large by Samuel Lec The History of Diodorus Siculus containing all that which is most memorable and of greatest Antiquity in the first Ages of the World until the War of Troy Renodaeus his Dispensatory containing the whole body of Physick discovering the Natures and Properties and Vertues of Vegetals Minerals and Animals Burgess on the Corinthians Wrighton the Pentateuch Quarto Christopher Goad his Sermons Entituled Refreshing Drops and Scorching Vials Samuel Gorton his Exposition on the fifth Chapter of James Samuel Hartlib of Bees and Silkworms Large Octavo Owen of In-dwelling Sin Steels Anditote His Husbandmans Calling Gales Idea of Jansenism Conversion Exemplified Heaven Realiz'd FINIS
THE DIFFERENCE Between the OLD and NEW COVENANT Stated and Explained WITH An Exposition of the Covenant of Grace in the Principal Concernments of it By SAMUEL PETTO Minister of the Gospel Isaiah 55. 3. I will make with you an everlasting Covenant even the sure mercies of David LONDON Printed for Eliz. Calvert at the Sign of the Black Spred-Eagle at the West end of St. Pauls 1674. TO THE READER IT is a matter of highest concernment unto the souls of men to have a special acquaintance with the Covenant of Grace the great Charter which all spiritual and eternal blessings are holden by and the way and means wherein they have their conveyance or are derived to them There are many useful Treatises already extant on this subject but still there are some weighty points referring to it as with Jesus Christ and especially concerning the Old mount Sinai Covenant and also the New which have need of farther clearing for the unfolding of many Scriptures the establishing the faith and promoting the comfort of Christians If it might be the fruit of my present undertaking to contribute any thing this way or to give light into those glorious mysteries so as God might be honoured thereby I should have my aim In order to the further opening of some matters insisted on in this Treatise I shall add that which followeth As the Covenant of Works was made with the first Adam and all his seed in him promising preservation in life upon condition of mans own perfect obedience to the will of God Gen. 2. 17. So the Covenant of Grace was made with Jesus Christ not meerly as God but as to be incarnate or designed to be Mediator as a second Adam and with a Gospel seed in him promising all spiritual blessings even eternal life and salvation upon the condition or consideration of his undergoing the curse and yielding perfect obedience to the Law on their behalf Isai 53. 10 11. Rom. 5. 6. to the end In this large sense it compriseth that between the Father and the Son for our redemption which was full of grace and did flow from the free favour of God to poor sinners 2 Tim. 1. 9. Tit. 1. 2. as well as that to or with us viz. the New Covenant for the application of what is promised thereupon which some speak of as if it only were the Covenant of Grace Thus its constitution was from eternity Tit. 1. 2. though its revelation was in time to Adam Abraham David c. Gen. 3. 15. 12 c. Now that being the condition of the Covenant of Grace that the righteousness of the Law should be performed or all the demands of it as to duty and penalty answered by Jesus Christ hence it was necessary that there should be some means for his coming actually under our very obligation to that end the Lord in infinite wisdom made a revival or repetition of the Covenant of works as to the substance of it with a new intent in the Covenant at Mount Sinai which did run upon Do and Live Gal. 3. 10 12. not that Israel should have eternal life by their own doing but that Jesus Christ should be born under the very Law that we were obliged by Gal. 4. 4. Not meerly to make a valuable satisfaction by something in lieu of it for his taking our nature and making intercession or other works of his being of infinite merit and valùe might then have served the turn without his sufferings but as that word Gen. 2. 17. required to undergo the very curse and to fulfil the very righteousness of it in our stead which he did accordingly and herein especially consisteth our redemption Gal. 3. 12. Gal. 4. 4 5. The fulfillng the Old and confirming the New Covenant are the immediate effects of his death He stood therein as the Mediator not of the Old but of the New Testament Heb. 9. 15. therefore he died not meerly to procure a New Covenant or that God might with honour deal with men upon new terms but to make good the terms or conditions of the New The Mount Sinai Covenant with reference to the matter of it may be said to express the Legal Condition of the Covenant of Grace as to be fulfilled by Jesus Christ even as the New Covenant holdeth forth the blessings promised unto us that condition being performed by him These are matters so distinct as I hope none will take offence that I as I have explained my self speak of the Old and New as two distinct Covenants when compared each with other as Gal. 4. 24. Heb. 8. Seeing I do not assert that at Sinai to be a Covenant of works for eternal life to Israel upon their obedience to it as some would have it rather its reference is wholly to that of grace though it be not the whole of it Neither do I assert two Covenants of Grace or ways of salvation for substance distinct But whereas it is usually judged that the Old is one and the same with the New differing from it only in some circumstances and accidents as rigorous exaction of duty by fear terror c. I on the other hand think that spiritual blessings were dispensed out by the Covenant with Abraham and though Israels obedience to the Moral Law was on another account a fruit of holiness and sanctification yet as the same obedience had relation to the Mount Sinai Covenant so it ushered in only temporals to them even as a child oweth obedience to his Father by a natural obligation but if a Father should promise an estate upon some acts of the same obedience then they would be cloathed with a double respect or have a double use so here The Mount Sinai Covenant being thus opened many Scriptures will be explained and it will be discovered what those works of the Law are which we are so often denied to have justification by viz. All works performed by our selves as the least of a righteousness unto justification or which cometh to the same as a condition giving right and title to Salvation Act. 15. 1. Rom. 9. 30 31 32. Phil. 3. 9. It is only the Obedience of Jesus Christ to the Law that availeth to these ends The Apostle industriously proveth that men have not such eternal mercies by their own works morla or ceremonial either without or in conjunction with Jesus Christ Rom. 3. 20. 9. 3. Gal. 3. 11 21. Gal. 5. 4. the seeking to be justified or saved thereby is opposite unto true sanctification whence discourses thereof are often interwoven in the Epistle to the Romans and Galatians It 's true the very works of the Law of Moses are most particularly opposed because the controversie of that day with the Jews and Judaizing professors of Christianity was concerning these yet if men give any other works the same place and office by acting upon a legal ground they become as works of the Law and the Apostles arguments are equally forcible against them For he
with Jesus Christ which was for the reconciling the World unto the Father 2 Cor. 5. 18 19. Coloss 1. 20 21. It is true Christ only is our surety and Redeemer not we in our own persons yea he is our head our Lord and King and on that account of his standing in those different capacities he hath some peculiar precepts and promises appropriated to him which are not afforded to us in the same manner or degree yet this hindreth not the Oneness of the Covenant with him and us as it is promised unto Abraham that in him all the Families of the Earth should be blessed that he should be a Father of many Nations Gen. 12. 3. and 17. 4. Which promises are of a higher nature than are made to us for every Believer is not the Father of many Nations yet we are within the same Covenant that was made with Abraham Rom. 4. 11 12 13. Gal. 3. As in Covenants between Princes some Articles may be concerning prerogatives or royalties that are peculiar to them in their publick capacities which the people share not in but in them as striking sayl c. other grants may concern the people in their private capacities as Merchants Mariners c. yet Prince and people within the same contract So doubtless there may be diverse grants to Jesus Christ in his publick capacity in the office of a Mediator other promises made to his Seed yet King and Subjects head and members are within one and the same Covenant as the principal debtor and the surety within the same obligation Gal. 4. 4 5. Indeed the same Covenant of grace may be distinguished as it is made with Jesus Christ and as with us yet not to intimate two distinct and compleat Covenants but two Subjects of the same Covenant As with Jesus Christ it had its constitution from eternity before we had a being as with us it hath its application in time after we exist I had rather therefore distinguish one and the same Covenant of grace into these two parts 1. For redemption and reconciliation this as with Jesus Christ for us Gal. 3. 13. Tit. 1. 2. 2 For Application this as with us in him Heb. 8. 10. From eternity Jesus Christ was a Mediator undertaking the Covenant but in time is executing and interceding for our participation of it 2. The Covenant of grace was made with Jesus Christ as a publick person a second Adam and therefore with all his Seed in him the Covenant of Works being violated Jesus Christ was appointed as the means for restoration and recovery He was our David King of Saints Isa 53. 3. Luke 1. 32. and so represented many Subjects he was a common parent having a great Spiritual Seed Isa 53. 10. The first Adam was a figure of him that was to come Rom. 5. 14. i. e. of Jesus Christ and wherein it is specified as the first standing for his Seed derived unto them sin and misery death and condemnation So the second standing for and representing his Seed deriveth unto them righteousness justification and eternal life vers 15. to the end 1 Cor. 15. 45 47. Thus they are compared together and Jesus Christ the Second preferred before the first If the first Adam had never fallen it is not imaginable that he should have injoyed life by one Covenant and his posterity by another their life would have been by keeping as their death was by breaking one and the same Law of Works So Jesus Christ the Second Adam and all his spiritual Seed injoy justification and life by one and the same Covenant of grace We are quickened together with him Coloss 2. 13. i. e. as our common person standing in our stead 3. All in the Covenant as with us is undertaken for and promised in the Covenant as between the Father and the Son and so together make up but one Covenant For his being the Covenant of the people implieth that all promised to or to be performed by the people it is secured in the contract with Jesus Christ Whatsoever was requisite unto our restoration redemption and reconciliation he agreed to work it out Isa 53. 10. there were the same objects and end in that as with him and that as with us 1 Pet. 1. 18 19. 1 Cor. 6. 20. Yea all necessaries also for application is in the Covenant as with him Is Justification and the giving of a new heart promised to us Jer. 31. 31. The same is promised to Jesus Christ Isa 53. 11. By his knowledge i. e. by the knowledge of him shall my righteous Servant i. e. Jesus Christ justify many and he shall see his Seed and be a light to the Gentiles Isa 4. 2. 6. Which implyeth newness of heart and having God for their God 4. All blessings afforded in a Covenant way to us were primarily granted to Jesus Christ and therefore the Covenant is joyntly with him and us as Mr. R. observeth Christ is first justified and acquitted from the guilt of sin and then we Isa 53. 11. Christ first Sanctified and filled with the Spirit and then we Isa 42. 1. He first glorified and then we Heb. 1. 2. Rom. 8. 17. Jesus Christ is our great Fcosee in trust he hath all the riches of grace and glory granted to and vested in him to our use and behoof both have them by the same Covenant Indeed he hath the precedency he excelleth in dignity and power he is the first-born among many brethren Rom. 8. 29. the first born from the dead Coloss 1. 18 19. All fulness dwelling in him all is firstly granted into his hands and in the Second place to us If we would obtain any Spiritual gists any graces any comforts any glory we must be beholden to him borrow all from his store receive all from his hand The Divine Spirit is from him Joh. 16. 7 8. All grace from him Rom. 16. 20 24. 1 Cor. 16. 23. Repentance from him Act. 5. 31. He is exalted to give repentance and the forgiveness of sins Faith it self from him Heb. 12. 2. Which argue that all flow from the same Covenant The Name of Jesus Christ is in the Covenant he is the principal party there to whom all the promises are primarily made on our behalf 5. Union with Jesus Christ is the only way to promised blessings and therefore the Covenant is made joyntly with him and us 2 Cor. 1. 20. Not only some but all the promises of God in him are yea and in him amen Twice in him none of the promises are made immediately to us but all invariable unchangable in their making and in their performance or accomplishment yet it is in him I might argue also from Jesus Christ his receiving the same signs with us Baptism and the Supper and why were they applied to him if he were under one Covenant and we under another 6. All the antient Covenant expressures run joyntly to Jesus Christ and also to Relievers which are his Seed the promises to
perfect obedience they would have been hopeless of injoying these if such a typical expiation and attonement had not been provided that their sins might not hinder their arriving at them So that Morals Ceremonials and Judicials did belong to and with the promises and threatnings annexed made up the Sinai Covenant Answ 2. The better Covenant is an absolute Divine grant by way of Promise of those great blessings which come in by the mediation and Ministry of Jesus Christ as its excellency it is said to be that whereof he is Mediator and so it is the New Covenant or Testament Heb. 9. 15. and 12. 24. That it runneth upon absolute terms may be seen Heb. 8. 7. to the end And it is declared that it is not according to the Old vers 9. Therefore the chief scope and design of the Apostle in mentioning these promises rather than any other is the discovering wherein especially the New is differenced from and is said to be better than the Old Here are four grand Promises of the New Covenant instanced in which are so comprehensive as all others made to us are some way reducible to them 1. The inscription of the Divine Law in the hearts of men Heb. 8. vers 10. I will put my Laws into their mind and write them in their hearts In the state of innocency the Law was found in lively Characters there but since the fall it needeth to be transcribed or written over again The Old Covenant had the Law written upon Tables of stone without not absolutely promised and but rarely found within insomuch as the Lord even weepeth over them Deut. 5. 29. O that there were such a heart in them that they would fear me and keep all my Commandments But in opposition to the Old here the Lord undertaketh to write it upon better Tables even of the heart importing his affording an inward frame disposition and inclination for an universal compliance with the Divine Will and then no sooner is any thing offered of a Divine stamp but all the faculties of the Soul understanding will and affection with the greatest readiness stand bent for a conformity to it yea the Soul is carried forth that way not so much by legal external inforcements as by internal powerful obligations that whereas the Old had a large Volume of Laws Institutions and Ordinances which they were commanded to yield obedience to in the New all is comprised in a little room and turned into Promise I will write my Law in their Hearts the spiriting for all is assured to them Here the Promise leadeth the way to the Obedience And O how sweet is it when it beginneth with and is the fruit of a Divine Promise 2. A mutual relation between God and Souls Heb. 8. 10. I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a people Here is propriety each in other By the Old Covenant they were externally interested in God but as by that with Abraham then so by the New since it is more absolutely promised unto some that he will be their God which must import that they shall have more sweet converses and communion with him under the New than under the Old and have higher manifestations of their injoyment of him And happy is that people whose God is the Lord Psal 144. 15. What then can they want All Creatures are theirs yea Christ theirs Grace theirs Glory theirs all the Attributes of God theirs his Wisdom Power Goodness Faithfulness Loving kindness all theirs all his Promises yea his All-sufficiency theirs and what can they desire more than to have him who is all in all Also they shall be to me a People that is I will own them in a clearer more eminent and glorious way than under the Old There shall be a greater separation in their Spirit and in their whole course from all corruption from Sin Satan the World and a greater dedication unto God 1 Cor. 6. 19 20. and 2 Cor. 6. 17. Zech. 14. 19 20. In that day every Pot in Jerusalem and in Judah shall be holiness to the Lord there shall be an Universal tincture of holiness Isa 44. 5. and One i. e. one by one shall say I am the Lords There shall be a more voluntary and free self-resignation unto him yea when they find their hearts stand off and hang back from God it is under Promise they shall be to me a People they may plead the Promise for enablement to make over themselves in a fuller way unto God than formerly 3. Special illumination is Promised Heb. 8. vers 11. They shall all know me from the least to the greatest There shall be an enlargement of their knowledge and acquaintance with God and Divine things It would seem rather to exclude private teaching than publick they shall not teach every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother but it is not absolutely exclusive of outward teachings by instruments and means but comparatively it holdeth forth how surpassingly excellent those discoveries under the New Testament should be above those under the Old they far transcend and go beyond these are more eminent and universal not only some but all shall know me c. Yet publick and private teachings were to be attended to as means conducing to this end Mat. 28. 19 20. Ephes 4. 11 12 13. and 6. 4. Col. 3. 16. Those teachings then of the Divine Spirit do not render the other void or unnecessary Under the Old they had some dark typical shaddowy representations of God and Jesus Christ under the New they shall have those that are more clear and out-strip the other Yea it is under Promise they shall all know me and therefore they are to make an improvement of that toward the gaining a more eminent measure of knowledge than those in Old Testament times arrived at 4. Remission or Pardon of Sin is promised Heb. 8. vers 12. For I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more That particle for argueth it to be a reason of his affording other federal blessings he will write his Law in their hearts for he will forgive their sins he will be their God and they shall be his people for he will pardon their iniquity Forgiving Grace is the very spring of other mercies that maketh way for sharing in them and nothing without that There was a typical forgiveness in the Old Covenant Heb 9. 9 10 14. and 10. 1 2 3 c. but there is real Remission in the New Heb. 10. vers 16 17. and by this the whole of our Justification is noted out whence the Apostle Rom. 4. from the way of the non-imputation of sin proveth our Justification to be by Faith and not by the works of the Law But Pardon of Sin denoteth 1. Freedom from an obligation unto the punishment of the Law for pardon is opposed to guilt which properly is obligation to punishment Exod. 34. Pardon our iniquity and
of the Covenant with Abraham and his seed and proveth it on this wise Gal. 3. vers 15 16 17. This I say that the Covenant that was confirmed before of God in Christ the Law which was four hundred and thirty years after cannot disanul Where he argueth thus That which was made at Mount Sinai coming after could not disanul that with Abraham which was of a more antient date or long before it He speaketh not of the moral Law barely as a Rule of Life for so even before Abraham it was immortalities were ever sinful and exposed those that were guilty of them unto dreadful Judgements as Sadom and Gomorrah to fire and brimstone and the old World to a deluge of Water therefore he must speak of the Law considered as a Covenant given at Mount Sinai and thus it was not till four hundred and thirty years after that with Abraham so these must be two distinct Covenants of vastly different dates else the Apostles argument which is built upon their difference in respect of time is not cogent it is of no force if they be of the same date one as early as the other for the false Apostles among the Galatians might have said the Law as a Covenant was as early as Abraham for substance though not for form and administration this had been enough to elude his plea which was grounded upon the time of it especially seeing the Law was urged amongst the Galatians not meerly as to any circumstances in that new ministration but as to the substance of it the question then being Whether Justification and the eternal inheritance were by the works of the Law or by Grace and in a way of Faith The Apostle argueth that this federal transactiion at Sinai not having a being till Moses so long after that with Abraham hence it could not establish another way of life opposite to that viz. by works of the Law Also Deut. 5. vers 2 3. The Lord our God made a Covenant with us in Horeb the Lord made not this Covenant with our Fathers but with us The Sinai Covenant is clearly intended here by that at H●reb compare Deut. 4. vers 10 11 12 13. with Exod. 19. vers 1 8. 9. and this is expresly denied to be made with their Fathers the Sinai Covenant then was not made with the Patriarchs not made with Abraham Isaac and Jacob or with any that lived before the time of Moses they that were alive at that day are intimated to be the first with whom it was made it was not with our Fathers but with us even with us who are all of us here alive this day those then which before the times of Moses were dead had not this Covenant made with them and therefore it is distinct from that which was made with the Fathers Abraham Isaac and Jacob c. He doth not say the Lord made not this administration of it with our Fathers or he made it not in this form but the Lord stroke not this Covenant he denyeth the Covenant it self to be cut with them It is an adding to the word to put in as some do tantum as if the meaning were this not only with our Fathers but also with us This is to say it was made with the Fathers when the Holy Spirit expressly denieth it Such additions admitted else-where in Scripture would be found to be desperately dangerou● and here can by no means be allowed seeing the Apostle giveth it an after date Gal. 3. 17. 2. The better Covenant and that at Sinai are contradistinguished and so must be two distinct Covenants else the opposition were groundless Jer. 31. vers 31 32 I will make a New Covenant Not according to the Covenant I made with their Fathers i. e. not according to the Sinai Covenant for that was it which was made when they were brought out of the Land of Egypt He doth not say I will set up a new administration of my Covenant though that had been true but a New Covenant there is a plain opposition between Covenant and Covenant and therefore the New and that at Sinai must be two distinct and not one and the same in different forms and the rather because this New Covenant is not opposed to the Covenant with Abraham and to that with David but only to that with Moses and Israel at M●●ent Sinai Let any instance be given of any thing that is found contradistinguished in such a manner as these are when only some modification and different respects of the same subject is intended to be signified thereby 3. The bitterness of the Covenant were not a sufficient evidence that the ministration of Jesus Christ is of greater excellency than the other if they were not two distinct Covenants The Apostle proveth that Jesus Christ hath obtained a more excellent Ministry by this Medium Heb. 8. vers 6. By how much also he is a Mediatour of a better Covenant He doth not say Only a better administration but a better Covenant and much of the force of his Argument were lost if the Ministry of those Levitical Priests and also Christs were conversant about the same Covenant but if they be two then it is very foreible they ministred about one Covenant and Christ about another and a better and therefore his is the more excellent Ministry Besides it is taken from his being a Mediatour of that better Covenant which implieth that he was not then a Mediatour of that worse Sinai Covenant though of old typified therein which their Ministry related to Indeed it had been a slender proof of the excellency of his Ministry if the better Covenant were the same for substance with the worse seeing then that at Sinai must be still continuing and so Jesus Christ not only in his Type but in his own person must be Mediatour thereof Ministring therein which that Text doth not give the least countenance to but there and also else-where Christ is called the Mediator of the New Covenant in opposition to the Old Heb. 12. vers 18 19 20 24. Heb. 9. 15. Even in the satisfying the Old by his death And therefore they must be two distinct Covenants 4. The many Notes of distinction that are given of them argue that they are two Covenants they are not only called the Old and the New this possibly might be said of the same Subject as we say the Old and the New Moon and yet one and the same Moon but the first and the second Heb. 8. vers 7. If that first Covenant had been faultless then should no place have been sought for the second As Dr. C. saith That it should be affirmed of one and the same Covenant that this is the first Covenant and that is the second and yet those two should be but both one that is strange 5. They are successive the Second cometh in the place of the First and so they must two distinct Covenants Heb. 10. vers 9. He taketh away the First
before they did believe else the Apostles argument were not cogent for the false Prophets might easily have answered that now in Gospel times we are not justified as Abraham and David were and so they might have waved whatever is urged from these instances seeing all that he saith is built upon this very foundation that we are justified as they were only this can hardly be evaded that David who lived under the Sinai Covenant yet is denied to be justified by works of his own Yea the Apostle excludeth them even from the nature of a Covenant of works which is such a ground as denieth lapsed man in any Age to be saved by his own obedience vers 4. Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace but of debt Therefore unless it could be said that those under the Sinai Law had Eternal Life not of grace but of debt it must be said that they had it not in the way of a Covenant of works 2. Moses and the Children of Israel were antecedently under a Covenant of grace or before the making that at mount Sinai therefore that could not be a Covenant of works In the very Preface he saith Exod. 20. vers 2 5. I am the Lord thy God the Lord did not first become their God by that but was so before as they were the seed of Abraham and under that with him Exod. 2. vers 24. and 3. vers 6 7. I have seen the affliction of my people vers 15 16. And Moses himself entred into the same Sinai Covenant with the people Exod. 34. vers 27. I have made a Covenant with thee and with Israel Not only with Israel but with him also Now it is not imaginable that the Lord would reduce them and Moses himself from Covenant of Grace back to that of Works Surely the Lord would advance them highor rather than bring them lower He is ever one and the same in his Grace and Promises unto souls no such unconstancy and changeableness is found with him 3. The Sinai Testament typically revealed mercy for sinful men and therefore was not a Covenant of Works For that being once violated and broken holdeth forth nothing of mercy to the smner whatever his Repentance be giveth no hope of Salvation but denounedth Judgement Death and utter destruction against him Adam having eaten the forbidden Fruit that saith Gen. 2. 17. Dying thou shalt die Whereas the Sinai Covenant includeth the Ceremonial Law as well as the Moral as is plain Heb. 9. vers 1 2 3 c. The first Testament had Ordinances of Divine Service and a worldly Sanctuary a Tabernacle Priests and Sacrifices offerings for the errors of the people c. Although these services did not of themselves expiate sin and purge the Conscience yet they did point out a way wherein they might have an expiation of and freedom from sin which a Covenant of Works giveth not the least intimation of Yea the Sinai Covenant was ordained by Angels Gal. 3. vers 19. in the hands of Moses a typical Mediator and this argued a variance between God and Israel else no need of any and there is grace in a Covenant that doth admit of any way for the making up of such differences there was abundance of Grace wrapt up in many Types and Ordinances in the Sinai Covenant yea it was confirmed by blood and sprinkling called the blood of the Covenant Exod. 24. vers 3 4 5. Which typified the blood of Jesus Christ and therefore it was no Covenant of Works for that speaketh nothing thereof 4. There had been an utter impossibility for Israel or any other to have attained unto Eternal Life and Salvation if they had been under that at Sinai as a Covenant of Works For they could never have performed the works which were the condition of it and so must have been hopeless of the benefit which was promised thereupon Gal. 3. vers 21. If there had been a Law that could have given life righteousness had been by the Law This clearly concludeth that righteousness did not come by the Law i. e. as performed by us in our own persons and also that the Law could not give Life no Eternal Life to be expected by it and he speaketh of the Sinai Law as is clear vers 17. and therefore that could not be a Covenant of Works to Israel or us for Eternal Life Rom. 8. 3. also proveth the Law could not free from condemnation in that it was weak through the flesh and so no Eternal Life was attainable thereby 5. That way which the Lord had established with Israel for Life and Salvation before the Sinai Covenant was utterly inconsistent with that of Works and therefore that could not be a Covenant of Works Gal. 3. vers 18. For if the inheritance be of the Law it is no more of Promise These two waies cannot stand together if it be by one of them then it is not by the other they carry a contradiction each to other If Israel had the inheritance by the Law i. e. by works performed by themselves then it could not be by the obedience of another of Jesus Christ for them if it were by their own righteousness of the Law then it could not be by the righteousness of Jesus Christ entertained in the Promise by Faith one of these waies doth necessarily subvert overthrow and destroy the other so as the same person at the same time cannot have it both waies Now such an opposite way of a Gospel Promise was established with Israel long before the Sinai Covenant Gal. 3. ver 16 17. They were the seed of Abraham and be concludeth that the Sinai Law coming so long after could not disanul the Abrahamatical Covenant or Promise wherein they had interest which was so long before it and consequently it was no Covenant of Works to Israel for then it must necessarily have disanulled the foregoing Promise as that demonstration vers 18. doth evidence SECT II. Prop. 2. THat the Sinai Law was not a mixt Covenant for Eternal Life to Israel It was not partly a Covenant of Works to them and partly of Grace For 1. It is an undoubted obstacle or hindrance in the way of Salvation to be seeking it in a Covenant of works by personal performances and therefore that at Sinai could not be so much as in part such a one to Israel The reason why Israel obtained not righteousness and so life was because they sought it not by Faith i. e. in another in Jesus Christ but as it were by the Works of the Law Rom. 9. vers 31 32. He doth not say they sought it altogether by their own Works but after a sort as it were and this obstructed and hindred their arriving at it Thus their coming short of Salvation is resolved into the same cause Rom. 10. vers 1 3. They going about to establish their own righteousness have not submitted themselves unto the righteousness of God A seeking Salvation then by
our own Works which are our own righteousness keepeth off from a submission unto that righteousness which is necessary unto Eternal Life and therefore if it were a mixt Covenant one part of it would hinder another as if the Lord in the same dispensation should pull forward and backward do and undo put upon seeking Life and yet on that which is a let in the way to it which were an impeachment to the wisdom of God for any to assert 2. Legal works are excluded out of Justification and Salvation in conjunction with Jesus Christ and therefore the Sinai Law could not be a mixed Covenant Gal. 5. vers 2 3. I Paul say unto you that if you be circumcisied Christ shall profit you nothing vers 4. Christ is become of no effect to you whosoever of you are justified i. e. seek to be justified by the Law ye are fallen from Grace Act. 15. 1 11. Ephes 2. 8 9. This implyeth that they urged Circumcision or Works of the Law and Christ too for Justification and Life the Argument had been insignificant to them if they had not expected profit and advantage by Jesus Christ and by the Works of the Law too and the Apostle concludeth one of these to be exclusive of the other a mixture of our own Works is a falling from the way of Grace a taking any of our services in conjunction with Jesus Christ in that matter is enough to shut out from all benefit and advantage by Christ he shall profit nothing if he alone be not owned herein 3. After a violation of a Covenant of Works nothing less than utter ruine and destruction are threatned therein Gen. 2. vers 17. In the day thou eatest thou shalt die There is nothing Promised by it ever after whatever services be performed nothing but Death thenceforth to be expected from it and therefore the Sinai Law could not be a mixt Covenant in regard Israel is often accused by the Lord for breaking of it Jer. 31. vers 32. Which Covenant they brake c. no good could be reaped from that part which was supposed of Grace the death threatned in the other part hindreth all good so that unless Israel could have kept it without violation which they could not it must have been altogether unprofitable to them for as Dr. Bolton saith man was not able to stand to the lowest terms to perform the meanest condition 4. There is such an opposition between our Works and Divine Grace in relation to Eternal Life that they are inconsistent each with other therefore the Sinai Law could not be a mixt Covenant There is no medium participationis or so as to partake of both there was an impossibility of having life both waies this I cleared before from Gal. 3. vers 18. which is equally strong here It is further proved Rom. 11. vers 4 5. It is said to be by Grace vers 6. If by Grace then it is no more of Works otherwise Grace is no more Grace but if it be of Works then it is no more of Grace otherwise Work is no more Work Which clearly intimateth that the way of Grace and Works are so mutually destructive one to the other that if it be by one it cannot be by the other If Israel had been to do any thing for Eternal Life though never so small it would have denied it to be of Grace Gratia nullo modo gratia nisi om●i modo grafia Aug. Grace is no way Grace unless it be every way free and therefore seeing Israel was justified and saved as we are Act. 15. 11. and we are justified freely by his Grace Rom. 3. 24. and saved by Grace Eph. 2. 8. hence the Sinai Law could not be a mixt Covenant partly of Works and partly of Grace the one way being so Diametrically opposite to the other SECT III. Prop. 3. THat the Sinai Law was not only a Covenant for temporal mercies as the Land of Canaan and such like but did in some further way belong to the Covenant of Grace and bad the great concernment thereof even our Eternal Salvation as its principal aim and end Temporal blessings were dispensed out and possibly those only by vertue of the Sinai Covenant upon Israels performance of it but yet as it was to be performed for them by Jesus Christ so it respected the great matters of the Covenant of Grace even Spirituals and Eternals as may appear For 1. There are Typical representations is it of Spiritual and Eternal blessings There was abundance of the Gospel wrapt up in those legal Types and shaddows of old There were Priests and a High-Priest an eminent Type of Jesus Christ who is therefore called a High-Priest also Heb. 8. 1. and else-where O what an advantage was it so long before the Incarnation of Jesus Christ to have such a lively Emblem of this his glorious Office which our everlasting Salvation had such a necessary dependance upon That as the Levitical High-Priest did stand and appear for the People in many waies and for many precious ends that none else could so they might expect that Jesus Christ would do the like for them As the Priests did offer Sacrifice for the errours of the People so they might look that the Lord Jesus would offer a better Sacrifice for them They might easily guess that the Anti-type Jesus Christ would far excel out-strip and go beyond the Types the substance beyond the shaddow so Jesus Christ would be far more excellent than any of those figures of him What a priviledge was it to have some lively resemblance of all this so long before-hand Heb. 9. vers 23 24. Those things under the Sinai first Testament are intimated to be patterns of things in the Heavens and figures of the true There was a holiest of all which the High-Priest alone went into once every year not without blood signifying that the holiest of all was not made manifest whilst the first Tabernacle was standing vers 3 7 8. this intimateth that Jesus Christ the great High-Priest should enter into that which was truly the holy of holies to appear in the presence of God for us vers 24. and so that their holiest of all was a Type of Heaven A like Type thereof was the Land of Canean and therefore it beareth the very name that Heaven it self is set out to us by it is called the rest of the Lord Psal 95. 11. If they shall enter into my rest i. e. into the Land of Canaan Deut. 12. 9. This was another Type of the rest in Heaven Heb. 3. vers the last compared with Heb. 4. vers 8 9. Many other instances might be given wherein the Sinai Covenant represented matters of the Covenant of Grace even Spirituals and Eternals to Israel 2. Some of the same Promises of Spiritual and Eternal blessings which are found in other federal expressures are under a conditional form in the Sinai Covenant and therefore that appertaineth some way to the Covenant of Grace and
righteousness consisting in Precepts Threatnings and Promises holding forth life upon an impossible condition to lapsed man perfect doing in this sense Moses gave it not nor is it a Covenant of faith but of works But this doth not satisfie for I see no ground for that large acceptation of the Law Rom. 10. vers 4. speaketh of the Law for righteousness and so is taken as strictly as vers 5. only it is said to be performed by Jesus Christ and then by believing souls are interessed in his performance and Gal. 3. vers 12 23 24. he speaketh of the Law as a Schoolmaster to Christ which we are not under Besides the Law in that strict sense wherein this Objection granteth it to be a Covenant of Works is that in which it was given at Sinai Rom. 10. vers 5. Moses describeth the righteousness of the Law he that doth them shall live in them Therefore the Law was given in that restrained sense by Moses Further in that large acception it cannot be proved to be cloathed with the nature of a Covenant whatever in that is of a foederal nature or can belong to it as a Covenan trunneth upon the terms of that perfect Obedience in that strict sense Do and Live and so apparently it putteth on the Nature even of a Covenant of Works though not intended to be performed by Israel for life but by Jesus Christ for them SECT VII Prop. 2. THat the Sinai Covenant under a typical servile administration of the Covenant of grace promised temporal mercies to Israel upon the condition of their Obedience It s servile and typical nature is clearly holden forth Gal. 4. vers 3. 24. Heb. 8. vers 9. and will be more fully manifested elsewhere It s Conditional form is obvious it promiseth nothing but upon the condition of obedience and that not only to be performed by Jesus Christ but also by Israel Exod. 19. vers 5 6. If ye Israel will obey my voice and keep my Covenant c. Deut. 4. vers 13. He declared unto you his Covenant which he commanded you to perform even ten commandments you i. e. Israel as v. 1. is required to yield obedience or commanded to perform it and he speaketh of the same Covenant made in Horeb or at Sinai when the Lord spake to them out of the midst of the fire vers 10 11 12. yea Israel is blamed for violating that Covenant Jer. 31. vers 32. Which Covenant they brake c. therefore it was their duty to keep it That it promised Temporal mercies to Israel upon the condition of their obedience is manifest Levit. 26. vers 3 4 c. If ye walk in my statutes and keep my commandments and do them what then then will I give you rain in due season and the Land shall yield her increase c. these are outward mercies vers 6. I will give you peace in the Land c. there is another temporal mercy And not only obedience to the judicial commands which respecteth them as a Commonwealth but to all moral and ceremonial precepts is required to these ends The Ten Commandments are rehearsed Deut. 5. and then Statutes and Judgements mentioned and observing all is urged to this end that they may live and enjoy the land of Canaan and length of dayes therein V. 31 32 33. Deut. 6. vers 1 2 3 17 18 24. and Deut. 11. vers 8. Therefore shall you keep all the commandments which I command you this day here a universal obedience is injoyned they were to keep not only some but all the Commands and what will follow Vers 9. I will give you the rain of your land in his due season c. by all which it appeareth that Israels obedience to the whole Sinai Covenant was required in order to their fruition of temporal blessings Yea not only external viz. that of the outward man but cordial obedience is required to this end Deut. 11. vers 13. If ye will hearken diligently to my commandments which I command you this day to love the Lord your God and to serve him with all your heart and with all your soul Then vers 14. I will give you the rain of your land c. send grass c. outward mercies So Deut. 6. 5. Conscience then was concerned even about these things and disobedience to moral precepts which did bind their Conscience was given as a reason of their being excluded from their temporal mercies Jer. 11. vers 8 10 c. Jer. 44. vers 21 22 23. It resteth then to be proved that the Sinai Covenant as to be performed by Israel did belong to the administration of the Covenant of grace or had grace in it to them It is true it required of them not only sincere but perfect obedience even in order to temporal mercies it must be to all commands with all the heart as I have proved their coming short of that was sinful for in that very Covenant some Sacrifices were appointed where sincere obedience was performed for sins of infirmity as of ignorance c. as well as for others Lev. 4. vers 26 29 31 35. and 5. vers 10 13 16 18. and alsewhere This providing a relief a remedy doth imply that Israel would fail would sin and stand in need of that forgiveness which in many cases was here promised yet in pursuance of these directions which are punctually given by the Lord in offering sacrifices exactly according to appointment they should be forgiven that is so far as temporal judgements threatned should be averted and temporal mercies promised should be afforded these sins should not be any hindrance in the way of them thus far it was a real forgiveness for if there had been no real expiation by those sacrifices and something forgiven how could they have been typical of that forgiveness which Believers have of their sins by the true sacrifice Jesus Christ It was not real spiritual forgiveness as to the Conscience that was promised there so the Law could not make him that did the service perfect as pertaining to the Conscience Heb. 9. 9. And let it be observed when the Apostle speaketh not in relation to temporals but to eternals then he mentioneth the tenor of the same Sinai Law to be Do and live and cursed is he that continueth not in all things Gal. 3. vers 10. Rom. 10. verf. 5. We are not to think that the righteousness whereby we are justified is to be performed by our selves as if the sacrifice of Jesus Christ were intended only to expiate and obtain the pardon of our sins in coming short thereof No such a righteousness is exacted unto justification and eternal life as is absolutely perfect hath no flaws or sinful imperfections in it no forgiveness is needed there it is such as could not be performed by any but Jesus Christ alone vers 4. Rom. 5. latter end hence if the Romans and Galatians would so much as attempt the seeking it by any works of their own
to Moses a pattern of the Tabernacle which was for publick Worship with a strict injunction Heb. 8. 5. See that thou make all things according to the pattern shewed thee in the Mount Heb. 9. 1. Exod. 25. 40. And in that and the following Chapters of the Book there are rules about the Ark Table Candlestick and the institution of Ministers used in the service of the Tabernacle as Aaron and his Sons in the Priests Office here is direction for the consecration of the Ark and Tabernatle the Altar of incense and many Ordinances and Institutions which hold forth another use of the Sinai dispensation 4. To be a Platform model or rule for Government Ecclesiastical and Civil Israel received righteous Laws Statutes and Judgements from God himself therein they were differenced from and excelled the Nations that they were more immediately under the Government of God as their only Law-giver And not only an Eternal Curse but many Ecclesiastical and Civil penalties and censures are threatned upon breaking of those Divine Laws Exod. 22. ver 1 4 20. Levit. 20. Numb 5. and 19. Deut. 13. and 25. with many others This then was one use of it to be an instrument for the Government of the Children of Israel 5 Another end of it was to give a typical representation of many glorious mysterious appertaining to the Covenant of Grace these matters were not empty insignificant rites but by Divine appointment served as shaddows types and patterns of heavenly things Heb. 8. 5 6. and 9. 23. Even their temporal mercies were typical representations of Spiritual and heavenly blessings The Land of Canaan figured out the heavenly rest The Levitical or Aaronical Priests were eminent Types of our great High-Priest the Lord Jesus Heb. 7. The Tabernacle a Type of his humane Nature Whence he is said to be a greater and more perfect Tabernacle not made with hands Heb. 9. 11. and 8. ver 2. It might also figure out the true Church Rev. 21. 3. The Ark the furniture for the most holy place which none but the High-Priest might enter into Heb. 9. ver 3 4 7. properly referreth to Jesus Christ who is the great repository in whom the Divine Law is treasured up for Believers He is their glory and direction unto eternal rest many other Types there were of him I might also note that Moses was below with the people for their incouragement against fear at the promulgation of the Law and making and confirming the Covenant but was called up higher towards the top of the Mount for receiving the Tables of the Covenant and the pattern of the Tabernacle Exod. 19 ver 24 25. and 20. ver 1 20. and 24. ver 12. 18. all which may typifie that Jesus Christ standeth with us for our incouragement in receiving the fiery Law and upon more immediate converses with God giveth forth the frame of his solemn Worship These were the ends of the Sinai Covenant CHAP. X. Of the Differences between the Old and the New Covenant and the excellency of the latter above the former IT may be inquired How is the New Covenant wherein the ministration of Jesus Christ doth lie a better Covenant than the Old which was made at Mount Sinai I would premise that in Heb. 8. and also Jer. 31. ver 31 32. the opposition is not between the Covenant of Works as with the first Adam and the New but between the Old made when Israel came out of Egypt at Sinai and the New Covenant These are they which are compared and therefore the Differences between these either in their matter or form must hold forth the excellency and betterness of the New Covenant above the Old 1. The New Covenant presupposeth obedience unto life to be performed already by Jesus Christ and so is better than the Old which required an after performance of it The very tenour of the Sinai Covenant was Do this and Live Levit. 18. 5. Deut. 27. 26. Rom. 10. 5. Here Israel was ingaged in a federal way to perform the righteousness required in the unspotted Law the very doing is injoyned which our Eternal Life hath dependance upon even perfect doing Gal. 3. 12. Indeed Israel ingaged yet they were to perform this by their Surety Jesus Christ But all was then undone unfulfilled unperformed Jesus Christ not being then manifested and hence the Law had then a commanding force might exact that obedience at the hand of Israel who Covenanted there that it should be yielded in time to come But the New Covenant taketh it for granted that all this doing for Life is over already past and not to come Jesus Christ being actually exhibited that as the Old Covenant seemed to be made up of Precepts or Commandments so the New is made up of Promises consisteth of nothing else Heb. 8. ver 8 to the end giving a declaration that all is fulfilled there remaineth nothing to be done either by Principal or Surety for that end viz. Life The Lord is so fully satisfied as in the New he giveth a general acquittance and acknowledgeth that he hath no more to demand all is turned into Promise I will and ye shall Jesus Christ is said to be the Mediatour of the New Testament ver 6. that is actually so to intimate that in this short term Mediatour we have now in accomplishment the summ of all the doing required in the Old Covenant and way is made for our receiving the Promise Heb. 9. 15. Within the seventy weeks the Messiah came Dan. 9. 24. To make reconciliation and bring in everlasting righteousness before righteousness was commanded viz. in the Sinai Covenant but then it was introduced By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 10. 14. Nothing remaineth to be done for the procurement of these Eternal blessings Hence in opposition to that Sinai Law which ran upon those terms Do and Live under the dispensation of the New we hear so often of Believe and be saved and he which believeth hath everlasting Life Mark 16. 16. Joh. 3. 16 36. Not that believing now taketh the place of doing in the Old Covenant For then it must be our righteousness unto Justification Gal. 3. 12. Rom. 10. 5. whereas that which justifieth is called the righteousness of Faith ver 6. and Phil. 3. 9. and therefore Faith is distinct from that righteousness it self is not the least Atome of it therefore not our believing but the obedience of Jesus Christ is that which cometh in the room and stead of that doing for Life intended in the Law Rom. 5. 19. He is the Lord our righteousness Jer. 23. 6. 1 Cor. 1. 30. But to note that it lieth wholly out of our selves that it is not by any of our performances but in another even Jesus Christ it is said to be by Faith i. e. as a means of application Believe that the work is not now to do Jesus Christ hath done all and saith he Joh. 8. 24. If ye believe not
Job 22. 3. 35. 7. If thou be righteous what givest thou him Rom. 11. 35. Who hath first given to him and it shall be recompensed to him again Credendum est firmiter dari nihil ab hominibus per modum indebiti vel accipi à Deo per modum lucri Tract Sacr. Or else 2. They merit ex pacto by some contract or Covenant that though the works be inconsiderable in value to the reward yet the Lord hath promised such a reward to them thus only and no otherwise could the obedience of Adam in a state of innocency be meritorious for he did owe all as duty to God even by right of creation he might have required all without ingaging himself to give any reward and finite services could not merit in worth and value an infinite reward but the Lord promised it to his perfect unsinning works No otherwise did any among the Romans or Galatians expect justification or eternal life in a way of works but only falsly imagining that the Lord had made a promise of salvation unto these Thus a reward may be of merit and of debt and yet of grace in some sense though not of special Gospel grace for all good promised or given by the Lord to his creature is of grace seeing God oweth nothing to any Thus the making of a promise to Adam in a state of innocency for the rewarding of his works was of grace yet the promise being made if he had continued in that state the reward would have been of debt and therefore upon the same ground if the reward were now promised to us upon evangelical obedience then that were as truly meritorious though the condition were more favourable and life as really of debt as it would have been to Adam upon his sinless obedience for only the promise must have made it so there and the same is found here The Text in hand must refer either to the works of the Law which cannot properly merit because due even by the Law of Nature or else to those performed by Abraham after believing and then he concludes that if the reward were of these it were reckoned of debt neither of these could render it so but only by a Divine promise assuring such a reward upon the performing such works as the condition thereof and therefore seeing he concludeth it not of debt hence no obedience of our own can be such a condition of the New Covenant It is difficult to understand how the reward can be a debt legally and in justice due and yet not God a debtor when it is only his compact or Covenant that it becometh debt if that may be our due which another possesseth though he be not bound to us yet where it becometh due only by promise as in the case in hand and that upon an act of ours as the supposed condition it seemeth that the promiser is a debtor though considered antecedently to his promise he was free and in Rom. 4. 4. not only is God denied to be a debtor but the reward is denied to be a debt therefore there is no promise of it upon such a condition as our works which would make it of debt in opposition to that it is said to be of grace that is of Gospel Grace It 's true there are Divine Promises of the reward upon Christs works but they are not made immediately to us either upon our believing or obeying but mediately and at the second hand so as the ground of our claim is not our performing any Gospel condition upon which it is promised for then it were as really of debt as Adams but all the Promises are immediately made to Jesus Christ upon his righteousness and meritorious obedience on which account all become debt to him and thus God is not a debtor to us but to himself to his own goodness and faithfulness and to his Son and not our works but faith is the means unto our being counted righteous in his righteousness which only merited our eternal reward 2 Cor. 1. 20. All the promises in him are yea and in him Amen c. We cannot claim any one promise in our own name upon performing any Gospel condition our selves though by the help of grace for then though it were never so small it were of debt to us but our only claim is in him in the right of our elder brother Jesus Christ and thus it is of debt to him but only of grace to us Saith Augustin in Psal 83. Debitorem Dominus ipse fecit se non accipiendo sed promittendo we can plead for nothing promised but upon the account of Divine faithfulness whereas if any act of ours though never so small were the condition of any promise then being performed we might plead for what is promised in a way of Justice whose formal reason Aquinas teacheth is ut sit ad alterum justice consisteth in giving to another what is his due viz. by contract promise or otherwise If Divine Promises pass into a debt it is to none but himself saith Dr. Arrowsmith in his Tract Sacr. Ipsi etiam Deo competit duplex debitum condecentiae unum fidelitatis alterum And a little after out of August Deus sibi debitor est ut agat condecenter prout congruit bonitati suae u●i seipsum negare non potest ita non debet aliquid se indignum facere And a little after out of Davenant Cum Deus dat vitam aeternam Petro aut Paulo Divina voluntas non solvit debitum creaturae sed sibi ipsi See more ibid. pag. 335. It either saith or obedience were a condition then there were a suspending acts of God upon some acting of the Creature which saith Dr. O. of Persev P. 53. cannot be without subjecting eternity to time the first cause to the second the Creator to the Creature yea then by our performing of it the Lord were laid under an obligation to afford mercy promised even life and salvation to us and we might claim these upon our own act In short therefore we may have the recompence of reward in our eye as an incouragement unto duty 1 Cor. 15 last Heb. 11. 26. 12. 2. Yea we may exercise faith as a means to the fruition of life and salvation and yield evangelical obedience that we may shew forth the praises or may honour him that hath called us by such choice fruits and effects thereof and as evidences of interest therein Thus we may in the strength of Christ strive to enter in at the strait gate conflict with and overcome spiritual enemies and work out salvation 1 Cor. 9. 24 25. Rev. 2. 7 11 17 26. Phil. 2. 12. We may pray read hear believe repent as ways or means to the obtainnent thereof seeking the right thereunto only in Jesus Christ But we may not believe or obey as a condition for then upon the performance thereof we have right and title to the promised blessings even to eternal
of any sin at the same time See 2 Cor. 5. 21. ●om 3. 23 25. Yea further Jesus Christ suffered not the tantundem something in lieu or stead of what we should have suffered but the idem the very same punishment of the Law that was due to us and therefore continual interest in that must needs render at all times disoblig●d or pardoned Gen. 2. 17. In the day thou eatest dying thou shalt die Death then was the utmost penalty that was exacted nothing more was required of us by the Law of works and nothing less was suffered by Jesus Christ in our stead Heb. 2. 9. That he by the grace of God should tast death for every man The very thing that was threatned was undergone by him for us As to the eternity of the death and such circumstances that we are liable to these arise from the incapacity of our persons that cannot bear infinite sufferings in a short time as Jesus Christ did for us or as Mr. B. observeth that despair and death in sin proceed not from the threatning in it self considered but from the condition and disposition of the persons upon whom the execution of the curse falls punishment properly is satisfaction for injury done but sin is a continuing of the injury See Christ in Travel pag. 71. Gal. 3. 13. Made a curse for us the very thing yea all that the Law threatned was the curse and Jesus Christ did not undergo something in the room of it but the very curse of the same Law that we were under and therefore the idem Jesus Christ having undertaken the office of a great high Priest Isai 53. 6. The Lord hath laid on him the iniquity of us all I cannot understand how iniquity it self could be transacted upon the Lord Jesus it is a non ens a privation of good if it could pass from one subject to another yet it could not fall upon any without the pollution of the subject where it resteth for it is altogether evil any thing short of this is not sin deny pollution and you deny sin it self to be upon any subject Jesus Christ was so infinitely pure as he could not suffer the least tincture of defilement therefore by iniquity must be understood the guilt of sin or its obligation to punishment not a tantundem that had not indeed been our iniquity but it was our very guilt whatsoever the Lord threatned against us and might exact from us on the account of our sin it is expressed by his being wounded for our transgression vers 5. by his being made an offering for sin vers 10. by his hearing iniquity vers 11. whatsoever burthen therefore was to be undergone or man was liable to bear for his iniquity this was laid upon Jesus Christ and that by the Fathers hand the Lord laid it there O what grace was here to us it was the Lord that was offended provoked dishonoured by sin and yet how desirous was he that we should be discharged from it in that he would with his own hand lay it upon his beloved Son Jesus Christ And it is the iniquity of us all it was not at an uncertainty the persons were determined by tale by number by name in whose stead he underwent all this He was wounded for our transgressions and bruised for our sin and the chastisement of our peace was upon him vers 5. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. Now seeing Jesus Christ underwent the idem the very same penalty that was threatned by the Law and for the very persons and believers are always interested therein hence they cannot one minute of time be unpardoned 2. Believers are at all times actually interested in the general acquittance obtained by Jesus Christ and therefore are not without the actual pardon of particular sins one moment after the commission of them for that acquittance is our general pardon As he was charged with our sin so he was discharged by the father from it Isai 50. 8. He is near that justifieth me c. It is spoken of Jesus Christ as appeareth vers 6. He had justification not for himself he needed none but for us our sin or guilt being laid upon him and all demands of Divine justice being fully answered he was justified obtained a general acquittance for the whole body of his seed hence it is not only said he was delivered for our offences Rom. 4. 25. i. e. suffered death the wages due to us for sin but also was raised again for our justification If he had not made full satisfaction for us death would have held him still in that it could not hold him any longer this argueth that it had no Dominion over him but he had a compleat victory over that last enemy and his resurrection was his general acquittance for all the Elect and thus it was for their justification Believers have a ground to say as Rom. 8. 34. It is Christ that died yea rather that is risen again They have then not only a continual interest in his death but also in his resurrection and they are put upon triumphing in faith on this account vers 33. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect it is God that justifieth c. It is the standing priviledge of all that are in a justified state that nothing can be justly laid to their charge and therefore none of their sins are one moment actually unpardoned as to Law guilt for then they might be laid to their charge Colos 2. 12 13. Quickned together with him He stood as a common person and virtually his seed might be said to die and rise at the death and resurrection of Christ himself in their room and stead but some actual sharing with him is here intended for he saith you are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God this priviledge is not injoyed till they attain a work of faith with power and then the whole advantage of his resurrection becometh theirs in Jesus Christ they have a general acquittance and discharge Believers are risen with him it is reckoned unto them as if they had died and risen again in their own persons neither is this suspended until daily acts of Faith although these are not to be neglected but it is at their first conversion at their first Faith and recovery out of a spiritually dead condition you being dead in your sins both be quickened together with him That general Justification at his rising becometh theirs at first believing which will secure from all Law guilt that it will seize upon them no more as it followeth having forgiven you not only some but all trespasses they have then in their rising with Jesus Christ a general discharge in hand not only for sins past and present actually but for all even those to come virtually this general pardon will be ever ready that as soon as there is an actual commission of particular sins by that they will be immediately disobliged from them The actual
free him from the obligation of it It promised nothing to a sinner it would imply a contradiction that it should promise Life to him still upon perfect unsinning obedience when he was already a sinner under the threatning of Death Yea if immediately after Adams sinning satisfaction had been made and he pardoned yet he had been but in statu quo prius in his former state If the Covenant of Works had been in force again is at the first he must afterward have yielded perfect obedience else no promise of Life and therefore there is no incongruity in saying that man sinning the Law required satisfaction for sin and yet also required righteousness unto Life much more in our case for there is another Covenant viz. of Grace made with Jesus Christ the second Adam wherein he hath undertaken by suffering to make satisfaction for our sin without which we could never have been freed from the threatned death there was no other way to it the Lord might have refused a substitute and therefore might without any shew of injustice put in what terms he pleased for our restoration unto Life If freedom from threatned death were obtained still the Lord might have annihilated us we had no promise of Eternal Life that in the Covenant of Works being null and void upon the transgression of the first Adam Behold therefore the Lord agreeth to stand to the first terms the second Adam undertaking to do what the first should have done to fulfill the same righteousness the Lord doth thereupon promise Life again Thus the Law is drawn into the Covenant of Grace and requireth the same perfect righteousness as before to be fulfilled not by our selves for Life but by Jesus Christ the second Adam as the aforementioned Scriptures do witness which assert not only suffering but also the righteousness of that one Jesus Christ to be necessary unto Justification and Life as Rom. 5. 18 19 c. and hence the Sinai Covenant which he fulfilled did run in the first form of Do and Live The ground of this mistake is a false supposition viz. that no more is needful unto Life but satisfaction for our sin and disobedience as if Life would naturally follow upon that which is to say either that we have Life without any righteousness whereas there is no Promise of it to Adam or to any since that run that way or else that we have it by a righteousness of our own working out Christ satisfying for our sins and defects therein and this is to affirm that we have life still by the Covenant of Works and in the way thereof which to affirm is very anti-evangelical and unscriptural For there are many Testimonies that unto the pardon of sin there is needful a New Covenant Heb. 8. 12. and that Life is by that and the righteousness required to it wrought out not by our selves but by another for us even Jesus Christ And thus the death of Jesus Christ was needful to our freedom from death although we obeyed in him or he obeyed in our stead to merit for us Eternal Life which is promised thereupon not now by the Old Covenant of Works but by the New Covenant of Grace And thus although Christ fulfilled the Law for us so as it is imputed to us and we made the righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5. 21. Yet it doth not follow that we should be freed altogether from the obligation of the Law unto obedience For the righteousness of Jesus Christ his obeying and fulfilling of the Law for us was as the condition of Life or that upon which the Lord hath promised Justification unto Life but we may be and are obliged to obedience not for that but for other ends not in the least for our Justification and title to Life but as a part of our Sanctification and we sin in not obeying that we may glorifie God by those fruits of our being Spiritually alive Christs obedience was for one end ours is for another as his sufferings were for one end our afflictions for another and neither of them unnecessary 2. No actual interest in the promises of the New and better Covenant before union with Jesus Christ and Faith Even the Elect of God so long as unconverted and without Christ are without promises as I have manifested Ephes 2. 12. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Gal. 3. 22. they were not from Eternity the Seed of Abraham ver 29. he had no Seed so early If the sinner himself had satisfied then it had been no pardon for he is not-pardoned that payeth his whole debt himself but Jesus Christ interposed he underwent the Curse and the New Covenant or Free Promise is Gods grant or act of Pardon Heb. 8. 11. and 10. ver 16 17. This is my Covenant Their sins and iniquities will I remember no more Remission of sin then is a glorious fruit and benefit of the New Covenant not only manifested but conferred thereby God justifieth Rom. 8. 33. and this is his pardoning act Not Faith it self or any Grace within us is that which giveth the pardon Faith only receiveth the Remission of sins Act. 10. 43. and the Divine gift of it is by an immutable thing even by the Promise of the New Covenant And hence if any Object That Jesus Christ as a Surety had the obligation of the Elect transferred upon him and made full satisfaction to the Law for them and so disabled it for holding them obliged because they cannot eventually be damned It is Answered As our obligation and condemnation was by the Covenant of Works so our declared freedom from its obligation and our Justification must be by the New Covenant that is the way laid out for the giving of it forth And though our sin was transferred upon him and an Act passed which rendred it certain that we should be justified yea and sanctified too in due season yet not so as that we were immediately disobliged but in the way laid out by Divine appointment for that end The Covenant of Works being violated though satisfaction must be given to that yet that contained no Promise of Life to a sinner upon anothers undergoing the very penalty threatned therein and therefore was so far from giving ipso facto deliverance that it would have availed nothing towards it without a New Covenant because payment by a Surety was a refusable satisfaction the Lord without any appearance of injustice might have said the Soul that hath sinned it shall die Therefore the Sentence of the Law lyeth against us till by the Covenant of Grace we be discharged from it in the way and time therein appointed which is at union with the Lord Jesus 3. None are actually and personally the Seed of Jesus Christ as the second Adam before union with him and Faith therefore none are actually and personally justified till then They are only his Seed such as he redeemed that he doth justifie Isa 53. 10 11. Rom. 3. 24 25. The two Adams
being actually disobliged for the subjects must exist before even a relative change can pass upon them also after they are born they are at a great distance from God without making up of that they are uncapable of an actual possession of Redemption As a common person Jesus Christ represented many that lived in several Ages of the World and therefore of necessity the actual discharge of particular persons must be at different times not all at once but when they become his Seed Further A debt may be charged upon the principal debtor by an Old Law till a New Law or Covenant declareth his discharge from the obligation Thus the Sentence of the violated Covenant of Works may stand against men till they be declared to be discharged by the New Covenant Heb. 10. 16 17. Yea observe Jesus Christ in suffering death for our Redemption stood as Mediatour of the New Testament Heb. 9. 15. Though therein he satisfied for our breaking of the Covenant with the first Adam as this was drawn into the Covenant of Grace as the condition thereof Once more A debt may be charged upon the principal debtor after a Sureties satisfying the obligation in case the Sureties name was not at first in the same obligation but is admitted afterward by voluntary contract Covenant and consent For there the Covenant is the only determining rule of all matters concerning the discharge Why are they not sanctified and glorified immediately after their coming into the World these being effects of the death of Christ but because the Covenant provideth otherwise If the Name of Jesus Christ as as Surety had been Originally or at first in Adams obligation then more might have been said for an immediate discharge upon his payment of our debt and suffering death but this was not the case for if it had then his suffering death had been necessary and unavoidable though no New Testament had ever been made yea the making of it had been unnecessary vain and useless Whereas it was extreamly necessary there could have been no transferring of our guilt to him without it and his submitting to death was by a voluntary contract Joh. 10. 17 18. And his name not being at first in our bond hence his payment was a refusable satisfaction It was by an act of Free Grace that he was admitted to undertake for us and his payment accepted in our stead and so though he paid the idem the same that we did owe yet there was nothing contrary to justice or equity if the Father added other terms than before and so no need that we should be ipso facto discharged And the Law passeth Sentence not only upon sinful actions but upon the persons for them Gen. 2. 17. Gal. 3. 22. And therefore no Justification till delivered out of this state which is at union with Jesus Christ and Faith 5. I might argue from the many absurdities that attend the asserting Justification from Eternity It would sound harsh to deny that Adam was an Elect vessel and being Elected if Eternal Justification be admitted then he must be actually both under the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace at once and so was bound at the same time to seek Life in two waies utterly inconsistent each with other Gal. 3. 12. viz. by Works and by Jesus Christ through Faith Yea then Adam was actually justified from sin before he had any sin to be justified from before sin entred into the World by his F●ll Rom. 5. 12. and did not become guilty by ●his falling being disobliged from Eternity Neither will this be evaded by saying Our sin was imputed to Jesus Christ before committed and an actual existence of sin is no more requisite unto our disobligation than unto our obligation unto the punishment thereof I Answer The sins of the Elect were not actually upon Jesus Christ till he came actually under the Law which was their very obligation Gal. 4. 4 5. And thus all their sin by that Law did meet upon him before committed answerably when persons do actually come under the New Covenant I grant they are justified yea even virtually from sins not yet committed but the Old Law of Works must needs be in force against them till a New dischargeth from it and this is not till union with Jesus Christ and the gift of Faith And O how miserable then are all they who are out of Christ they are in an unjustified estate seeing they have no Word or Promise to assure them that the Lord hath laid down his Sute against them but great is the happiness of all in Christ of all believers in that they stand justified before the Lord Rom. 4. vers 7. Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven c. it is sin alone that rendreth miserable and now the Apostle challengeth even Earth and Hell for all such Rom. 8 33 34. It is God that justifieth who shall condemn It was God that was injured by sin and who hath power to discharge from it none can reverse or disanul Gods act who shall lay any thing to their charge Sin Satan their own hearts may draw up many charges but will be able to make none good against them why it is God that justifieth It is very extensive it reacheth to all sins Col. 2. 13. Jesus Christ is a propitiation for the sins that are past Rom. 3. 25. that is for sins committed before his Incarnation for it is spoken in opposition to those that sought to be justified by the Works of the Law vers 20 21. To draw off from this he telleth them as Heb. 9. 15. that the Redemption of transgressions that were under the first Testament or their remission was not by legal sacrifices and observances but by the blood of Jesus Christ It doth not deny his being a propitiation for sins to come his faithfulness is ingaged to afford the remission of these 1 Joh. 1. vers 8 9. 1 Joh. 2. vers 1 2. even Believers are daily sinning and the Lord will be extending pardoning mercy unto them yea he will all their life long be magnifying this Title or part of his Name The Lord God pardoning iniquity transgression and sin Exod. 34. 7. yea it is his glory that he is a sin pardoning God Mica 7 ver 18. Who is a God like unto thee pardoning iniquity c. CHAP. XII Of the evidences of interest in the New Covenant IT may be Questioned How or by what means may a Soul know its actual Interest in and Title to the New and better Covenant and the better promises thereof For the clearing of this I shall not insist upon the testimony of the Divine Spirit which is the primary evidence Rom. 8. 16. 1 Joh. 5. 8. nor upon Sanctification as it standeth in spiritual dispositions and inclinations for compliance with the Divine Will either in causing an answerableness of heart to what is commanded from us comprised under a writing the Law there or working into Evangelical
obedience in the Life or bringing up a self-resignation to the Lord as Isa 44. 5. in tho Covenant it is expresly promised they shall be my people These things are insisted upon elsewhere yea frequently by others therefore I shall pass them over at present and mention only one evidence Answ By the operations and actings of precious Faith a Soul may have a clear knowledge of its actual interest in the New and better Covenant That noble Grace of Faith hath such a special relation to the Covenant which is made up of promises that the Gospel is called the Word of Faith Rom. 10. 8. It is so expressive of the great matters of it that Faith often and the Law or Old Covenant are the opposite terms of a distinction Gal. 3. ver 2 5 12 23. Yea ver 9. they that are of Faith are blessed with faithful Abraham they are sharers with him in the same Covenant and blessed therein the very blessings of Abraham come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ ver 14. That we might receive the Promise of the Spirit through Faith Much is to be drawn out of the free Promise for our relief and succour in any condition yea for the influenceing of any other Graces by Faith By that our entercouse with God here is kept up Not that the Promise is made to beliving as a Grace in us or as a gracious Act put forth by us but to the Believer as in Christ Faith is not magnified as a quality but as in the Office of receiving the Promise and of excellent use therein Vers 22. That the Promise through the Faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe Faith is not then properly the condition of the Covenant upon the performance of which they have a right and title to it but a choice effect of it and a singular means for the application of the promises and fetching in of Covenant blessings to the Soul by that the Promise or what is in the Promise is given to it and Faith having thus to do with the Promises it must needs have an aptitude above other Graces above Sanctification and Evangelical obedience to witness a Souls interest in the everlasting Covenant Heb. 11. 1. It is an evidence of things not seen and therefore it self is not as inevident as those other things There are various acts of Faith that by the concurrence of the Divine Spirit may evidence interest in the Covenant 1. By Faith in the Free Promise such glorious discoveries of the Grace and Lov● of God in Jesus Christ unto sinners ar● afforded as their hearts consent to th● offer thereof it is by the shining of Gospel light through the Free Promise into the hearts of men that they are turned from darkness to light Act. 26. 18. The highest natural light will leave them short of a discovery of sin in its exceeding sinfulness and of the riches of Grace in Jesus Christ for the recovery of lost sinners they cannot see these aright till they be revealed by the Divine Spirit Matth. 16. 17. 1 Cor. 2. 10 14. Tit. 2. 11 12. Unbelievers may have a notion of these things but when they are seen by an eye of Faith they appear in another manner Rom. 1 16 17. The Gospel is the power of God to Salvation to every one that believeth The heart stood immediately before at an infinite distance from the Lord Jesus and was full of opposition against him but when there is a work of Faith upon it then Di●ine power is exerted by the Word or Promise of the Gospel for the drawing it off from all other objects to ●itch upon Jesus Christ alone for Salvation in a way of Free Grace then it ●ccepteth of the blessed offer when all ●rguments in the World before would not prevail with it The heart that stood off from him is then brought over to him by the Gospel and why For therein is the righteousness of God revealed from Faith to Faith It is in a Gospel-Glass that a Soul gaineth a right discovery of the excellency of Jesus Christ and that righteousness of his without which no Salvation It is by Faith that there is a learning of the Father so as effectually to be drawn unto the Son This cordial consenting to the offer of the Gospel in submitting to the obediential righteousness of Jesus Christ alone for acceptation unto Life this is Faith unto Justification Rom. 10. ver 3 4 6 10. as the like consent to have him for our Lord to rule over us by his Spirit dwelling in us is Faith unto Sanctification Act. 15. 9. Rom. 8. ver 9 to 16. Thus the Soul maketh out to the blood of Jesus Christ for cleansing from all sin and the first act of closing with Jesus Christ is by Faith in a Free Promise that is the first Grace that lives in it the first breathings of Spiritual Life are thereby such powerful and admirable alterations are found at first acquaintance with Jesus Christ by discoveries above sense fetching in the heart unto him beyond all other means that they must needs be evidencing of interest in the Promise or Covenant from whence all these come Such first things have a mark upon them and often are most discernable the state thereupon being so vastly different from what it was how refined so ever the nature was before Thus some have had their interest cleared up in such a word as that 1 Tim. 1. 15. This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptation that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners of whom I am chief By the eye of Faith a Soul gaineth such a prospect of matchless Love and Free Grace as it is won over to Jesus Christ thereby through a powerful application of the Promise to it self 1 Joh. 5. 10 11. He that believeth on the Son hath the witness in himself he being inabled by Grace to entertain and cordially subscribe to the blessed record upon a Divine Testimony viz. that God hath given to us Eternal Life and this Life is in his Son thereby he setteth to his Seal that God is true in the Word of his Grace that hath a witnessing power and the person hath the witness within himself even when he sometimes doth not discern it 2. By Faith the Soul maketh out to Jesus Christ in the Free Promise as he alone that giveth it subsistence in spiritual Life Oneness with Jesus Christ cannot be without interest in the Covenant 2 Pet. 1. 4. In whom are given to us exceeding great and precious Promises c. Ephes 3. 6. Partakers of the Promise in Christ Ver. 17. That Christ may dwell in your heart by Faith It is a promise-hold that we have of Jesus Christ here his in-being and indwelling is by Faith so he even animateth the Souls of Saints Gal. 2. 20. I live yet not I but Christ liveth in me how I live by the Faith of the Son of God Others live by sense they
Cor. 3. Israels obedience is required for its due and proper end but yet under that the perfect obedience of Jesus Christ is principally intended for a higher end viz. Eternal Life for it is applyed unto Christ and the fulfilling of the Law and delivering us from it is ascribed unto him 6. The great difficulties about this Sinai Covenant vanish if we understand it primarily of the legal condition of the Covenant of Grace to be performed by Jesus Christ and any other way they will hardly be removed The tenour of it plainly is Do and Live and Cursed is he that doth not here lieth the difficult of it Hence on the one hand some account that at Sinai a Covenant of Works to Israel and deny it to be a Covenant of Grace or to belong to that it requiring perfect obedience and not dispensing with one offence Gal. 3. vers 10. There being a Curse annexed to the breaking of it as a blessing to the keeping of it even to doing vers 10. The Seed of it being out-casts Gal. 4. the latter end Now all such Objections melt away if we understand it of the Covenant of Grace as to its legal condition to be fulfilled by our Surely immediately it was thus Covenanted by Israel but terminatively it looked at a performance by Jesus Christ that he should be the only doer for Life and thus a perfect doing was aimed at in the Sinai Covenant and thus it was perfectly fulfilled by Jesus Christ no offence dispenced with the Curse fully undergone by him and they that crowd into the place of Jesus Christ in it and would fulfill it for that end he did even for Eternal Life they are the Seed which are the out-casts On the other hand some assert the Sinai dispensation to be an admistration of the Covenant of Grace only gradually or accidentally and in some circumstances differing from other federal expressures even from the New Covenant Whereas all the blessings of the New are promised as precious Fruits and effects of a pre-supposed accomplishment of the Old by Jesus Christ It is easie to discover the invalidity of other interpretations of Do and Live in the Sinai Covenant which confine the Doing to Israel and do not extend it primarily to Jesus Christ As Say some it is not spoken of the Law abstractly and separately considered but of the Law and the Promise joyntly or as including the Promise But this doth not satisfie for the Apostle saith the Law is not of Faith Gal. 3. vers 12. and addeth but the man that doth them shall live in them Therefore the Law speaketh of such a doing for Life as doth not include the Promise for then it should be of Faith Nay plainly it is a doing directly opposite to believing in the matter of Justification and Life Levit. 18. vers 5. with Rom. 10. vers 5 6. Gal. 3. vers 12. viz. if any men undertake to be the Doers Say others it is not Do and Live by Doing but in Doing Christians live in obedience though not by obedience But this doth not satisfie For it is such a doing as maketh up a righteousness unto Life and is contradistinguished from the righteousness of Faith Rom. 10. vers 5 6. and hence it cannot be meant only of sincere or Evangelical obedience to be performed by Christians at all times but vastly differeth therefrom Say others This Do and Live hath not reference to the Moral Law only but to the Ceremonial also Neither doth this satisfie for there is no ground to exclude the Moral Law it was such a Law as concluded all under sin Gal. 3. 22. Besides the difficulty is the same whether it be by one or the other If in Do and Live a ceremonial doing were intended for Israel that would speak as much for its being a Covenant of Works as if it were a Moral doing even that with Adam in innocency did run upon a Positive Precept concerning Eating or not Eating that Fruit Gen. 2. vers 17. Neither doth the Lord here make a repetition of the Covenant of Works to put them upon their choice whether they would be saved by Working or Believing For they were already within the Covenant of Grace and had the Lord for their God Exod. 20. 1. And doubtless the Lord would not leave them to a liberty to go back from that Grace much less would he enter into such a solemn Covenant as that at Sinai was with them for that end to open a door for their crossing his grand design of free Grace Say others If we look upon the Law separately so it standeth upon opposite terms but if you look upon it relatively as it hath respect to the Promise so those opposite terms have their subservient ends to the Promise and Grace convincing of our sin and impotency c. The Law considered absolutely in it self as Gal. 4. vers 21 to the end so it is nothing else but a Covenant of Works but considered respectively and rerelatively as Gal. 3. vers 17. to Gal. 4. vers 21. and so it is not a Covenant of Works Now it is true that the Sinai Covenant was designed for the ends of the Covenant of Grace or of the Gospel for the Apostle putting the Question Is the Law against the Promise Gal. 3. vers 21. He Answereth God forbid we must then so understand the Sinai Law as in respect of its design and end it may not be against the Promise vers 24. The Law was our Schoolmaster until Christ yet it was for a Gospel end not that we might be justified by the Law but that we might be justified by Faith But still the difficulty remaineth in that separately and absolutely considered it is the Sinai Covenant and runneth upon Do and Live Yea it gendreth to bondage Gal. 4. vers 24. Even as it is the Sinai Covenant It would not conduce to those ends the convincing of sin humbling for it exciting to believing c. But by its own inability for the getting of Life and the avoiding of the Curse as Arguments that way it is therefore presupposed as such a Covenant before its usefulness to these ends Neither can we imagine that the great God would trifle with men in entring into such a solemn Covenant with them on those terms Do and live if there must not be this very doing here intended by some or other or else no life to be attained and it is perfect doing that is called for as I have proved which could not be fulfilled by Israel they were utterly unable for it Gal. 3. vers 21. and therefore it is a doing by Jesus Christ for them that is there intended Say others The Law is taken largely for the whole Doctr ine and Administration of the Sinai Covenant and so it holdeth forth life upon believing in Christ Rom. 10. vers 4. Gal. 3. vers 23 24. and is a Covenant of faith or it is taken strictly as it is an abstracted rule of