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A77515 Two treatises the one, handling the doctrine of Christ's mediatorship : wherein the great Gospel-mystery of reconciliation betwixt God and man is opened, vindicated, and applyed. The other, of mystical implantation : wherein the Christian's union and communion with, and conformity to Jesus Christ, both in his death and resurrection, is opened, and applyed. / As they were lately delivered to the church of God at Great Yarmouth, by John Brinsley, minister of the Gospel, and preacher to that incorporation. Brinsley, John, 1600-1665.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1652 (1652) Wing B4737; Thomason E1223_1; ESTC R22919 314,532 569

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Prevention of sin not of any satisfaction made for it Of taking away the Power not the Guilt of it otherwise then occasionally viz. by making us capable of receiving remission upon Repentance Christs expiation is properly of the guilt of sin But this evasion is no less palpable then the former True Christ doth also in this sense purge away sins But the Purging and cleansing there spoken of is properly and principally the taking away of the Guilt of sin by way of Remission This is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Purgation which the Author to the Hebrews there aymeth at So we shall find himselfe expounding the word and thing chap. 9.22 Almost all things are by the Law purged with blood and without shedding of blood is no Remission The later clause expoundeth the former shewing what he meaneth by Purging viz. the taking away the Guilt of sin by way of Remission And S. John doth as much for himself v. 9. of that first chapter where he puts these two words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Forgiving and cleansing of sin together so shewing what Purgation it was that he had before spoken of ver 7. viz. Purgation by way of Remission by taking away the Guilt of sin In this way Christ is said to have purged our sins by way of Expiation properly so called Purging them by the Sacrifice of himselfe A mystery clearly represented and held forth in those expiatory Sacrifices the sin-offerings under the Law Concerning which pardon a necessary digression That those Sacrifices were a Type of Christ none but a Socinian will or date to deny Expiatory Sacrifices under the Law a type of Christs expiation Scripture being so expresse and full for it And that as elsewhere so specially in this Epistle to the Hebrews where the Apostle speaking of those Legall Rites and Ceremonies the Sacrifices among the rest he tels us that they served unto the example and shadow of heavenly things cap. 8.5 And chap. 9. v. 9. Heb. 8.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cap. 9.9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he tels us that the first Tabernacle was a figure of the time then present in which were offered up both gifts and Sacrifices All of them Types and Figures And again verse 23. he calleth them patterns of things in the heavens And verse 24. Vers 23. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vers 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Figures of the True viz. of Christ and his Sacrifice Thus again chap. 10.1 he cals the Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a shadow of good things to come That was but a shadow And what was the substance but Christ Christus Christi Christ and his benefits Christ he was the True Minister of the sanctuary and of the Tabernacle which God hath pitched Soe you have it chap. 8.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Minister of the holy things These are those good things whereof the Law is there said to be a shadow even the good things of Christ the Benefits procured and dispensed by him Those Ceremonies were the shadow Christ the Body So the Apostle expressly informes us Col. 2.17 where speaking of some Ceremoniall observations he saith they were a shadow of things to come but the Body is of Christ And St. John intimates no less Joh. 1.17 where he tels us that the Law was given by Moses but Grace and Truth came by Jesus Christ He was the Truth of all those Types the substance of all those shadowes A truth so evident that surely were not men brought to great straights in maintaining their Errour they would never deny or once call it in question The Representation cleared This being thus cleared for we are inforced to clear our way as we go finding it so obstructed at every turn as it is by the many cavils of the Adversarie come we now to take notice of that Representation which I spake of which is held forth in and by those Expiatory Sacrifices and see wherein they were a Type of Christ and his sacrifice For this purpose consult we that place of Leviticus cap. 10. ver 17. where Moses declareth unto the people the Institution of the sin-offering shewing to what end it was given to the people God hath given it you saith he to bear the Iniquity of the Congregation to make attonement for them before the Lord. Marke it Herein are two things to be taken notice of First this Sacrifice standeth in the roome of the people in their stead bearing their sins And then it maketh attonement for them before the Lord. In both a lively Type of Jesus Christ and of his Sacrifice upon the crosse wherein he in like manner first stood in the room and stead of his people bearing their Iniquities as I have shewen you And then Expiated them made Attonement for them Quest Quest How those sacrifices are said to expiate 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad Expiandum Montanu But how are those sacrifices said to make an Attonement for the people or to Expiate them for so the Hebrew word is there most properly rendred importing a freeing and delivering one from the Guilt and punishment of sin Now how are those sacrifices said to have done this A. For answer to this we must take notice that in those sins committed under the Law there was a twofold guilt Answ A twofold Guilt under the Law Pareus Com. ad Heb. cap. 9. Dub. 1. A Ceremoniall and a Morall guilt or an Externall and an Eternall guilt An Externall or Temporall guilt a guilt before men binding the offenders over unto temporall punishment An Eternall or Spirituall guilt before God binding them over unto Eternall condemnaton Now as for the former of these that Externall or Ceremoniall guilt that was expiated and taken away by performing that which was legally required in the way of a Ceremoniall satisfaction Hereby the people offending was acquitted before men in foro Externo and freed from Temporall guilt and punishment by vertue of that Sacrifice or rather Gods Ordinance and Institution concerning it But for the later that Eternall and Morall guilt that was expiated and taken away by those Sacrifices only Typically and Sacramentally viz. as they represented and shadowed out the true Expiatory Sacrifice of Jesus Christ And thus are those Sacrifices said to have Expiated the people It is a Sacramentall phrase and manner of speech wherein that which is the proper effect of the thing signified is attributed to the signe Even as the Sacramentall water in Baptism is said to wash away sins Act. 22.16 Thus did the blood of these Sacrifices expiate the sins of the people by representing the Expiation of Christ that Satisfaction wherby his people are freed from eternall guilt Such an expiation hath Jesus Christ made And that by his Blood Christs expiation made by his blood In this way the sin offering is said to have made that Legall Typicall Ceremoniall Expiation Levit. 17.11 It is the blood
Religion I a corner stone in that Foundation and a Truth principally aimed at by the Apostle in the Text I have now in hand as I have shewn you from the verse following as also because among other Truths of God I find it of late called in question nay utterly exploded and that by some who to use Paul's words Gal. 2.9 seemed to be Pillars men of no mean note in the Church of God Now passe we on to that which remains wherin I shall be as concise and briefe as conveniently I may finding the work to swell in my hand far beyond my expectation when I first took it up Secondly As Christ is a Surety in way of Satisfaction so of Caution II. Christ a Surety in way of Caution In the former he is a Surety de praeterito for what is past In this later he is a Surety de futuro for what is to come A Surety in way of Caution undertaking for those whom he hath so reconciled unto God viz. for the performance of the stipulation of the conditiōs of the covenant required on their part This Jesus Christ our Mediatour undertaketh and effecteth wherein he being the Truth again out-strips the Type Moses that Typicall Legall Mediatour he could go betwixt God and the people declaring his mind unto them receiving and returning their answer unto him Both these we find Exod. 19.7 8. Moses called for the Elders of the people and laid before their faces all these words which the Lord had commanded him And all the people answered together and said All that the Lord hath spoken we will do And Moses returned the words of the people unto the Lord. Thus he went betwixt them as an Internuncius an Intermessenger reporting the mind of each to other But he durst not ingage for them As for God he durst and did ingage for performance of the Covenant on his part And hee laid an ingagement upon the people Both these he did in and by that one Ceremonie which we meet with Exod. 24.8 Having first read the Booke of the Covenant in the audience of the people and received their Answer to the purport aforesaid Then he tooke the blood of the Sacrifice and sprinkled it on the people By that Ceremonie confirming and ratifying the Covenant Assuring it on Gods part and ingaging the people to fidelitie and constancie on their part as God willing I shall shew you more fully anon in moralizing of that Ceremonie But engage for them he durst not Which if he had done he had not been able to performe it But this doth our Mediator the Lord Jesus He having by his death reconciled his people unto God Undertaking for performance of the conditions on the behalfe of his Elect viz. Faith and Obedience now he undertaketh for them for their performance of the Stipulation the conditions of the Covenant on their part What the Stipulation is you have heard already Even the Obedience of Faith so the Apostle calleth it Rom. 1.5 and 16.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The obedience of Faith or if you will divide them Faith and Obedience These without any just offence I may call the conditions of this Covenant Faith whereby the Covenant is accepted upon the tearms on which it is tendred and Christ the Mediator of it received Obedience wherby it is kept viz. in an Evangelicall way in respect of desire and indeavour This it is which the Psalmist calleth Keeping of the Covenant Psalm 25.10 and 103.18 Not a Legall but an Evangelicall keeping when the promises of grace being beleeved there is a serious desire and indeavour of yeilding obedience to all God's Commandements Now for this Christ undertaketh on the behalfe of his Elect that they shall thus keep the Covenant that they shall thus Consent and Obey as the former Translation rendreth it Isaiah 1.19 And undertaking it he effecteth it working in them what the Covenant requires This he doth by his Spirit which is to them in whom it dwels first a Spirit of Faith So you find it expresly called 2 Cor. 4.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of Faith So called not only because it is not given but to beleevers as Grot. glosseth upon it but also because it worketh Faith in the soul inclining it to receive Christ the offer of grace by and through him And then a Spirit of Holinesse So the Spirit of Christ is called Rom. 1.4 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Spirit of Sanctity or Sanctification Because being Holy in it selfe it sanctifieth the person in whom it dwelleth Thus it sanctified the Humane nature of Christ wherein it dwelled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostle phraseth it Col. 2.9 Really Substantially Essentially Bodily And thus it sanctifieth all true beleevers in whom it dwelleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 after a Spirituall manner being communicated from Christ unto them as from the Head to the Members Thus doth Jesus Christ this our Mediator come unto all his Elect people as by his merit so by his Spirit So may wee most fitly understand that of Saint John 1 John 5.6 This is hee that came by water and blood Both these issued out of the side of our Saviour upon the crosse surely not without a mystery Betokening a double benefit redounding to all believers by and through him The one of Justification the other of Sanctification Thus Christ is said to come to them first by Blood taking away the guilt of sin Then by water cleansing them from the filth and pollution of sin Both which were shadowed out by the like Types under the Law There in the Service of the Tabernacle was Blood and water Blood in the Sacrifices water in the Legall ablutions Both Types of Christ who thus cometh unto his people as by Blood Justifying so by water Sanctifying them This is that which the Apostle telleth us 1 Cor. 1.31 where speaking of the Benefits which beleevers have by Christ he saith hee is made unto them of God Righteousness Sanctification i. e. The cause and procurer of both Of Righteousnesse through his merit Of Sanctification by his Spirit Thus doth Jesus Christ worke in the heart of his Elect both these Conditions of the Covenant Faith and Holinesse And as he beginneth this worke in them With perseverance so he maintaineth and continues it Causing those whom he hath thus reconciled unto God to persevere in Faith and Obedience In faith I have prayed for thee that thy faith faile not saith our Saviour to Peter Luk. 22.32 The like he doth for all that are given to him taking order for their persevering in faith So as though it may fail in the mouth as Peter did yet it shall never fail in the Heart And as in faith so in Holinesse this he also maintaines which he doth by the continuall Supply of his Spirit mortifying and keeping under corruption nourishing and exciting of grace putting them on in the course of their Obedience guiding their feet into the
of ver 17. miraculous works wrought by the power of God for the confirming of their Doctrine And of such use were those unparalell'd works wrought by Christ himself They were a strong confirmation to his word carrying with them a strong conviction leaving unbelievers without excuse and aggravating their Infidelity So our Saviour presseth it upon the Jews in that place fore-named Joh. 15.24 If I had not done among them the works which no man did they had not had sin They might then have had some plea some excuse for their Infidelity their rejecting him and his doctrine How ever their sin had not been so hainous as now it was This Testimony added to the former rendred their infidelity both inexcusable and damnable Thirdly By his Blood 3. By his Blood Thus he also confirmed his Doctrine taking his death upon it sealing the Covenant with his Blood Thus were Covenants anciently ratified and confirmed by Sacrifices Psal 50.5 with Blood Thus was that Old Covenant made betwixt God and his people as I shewed you even now with the sprinkling of Blood Exod. 24.8 And Moses took the Blood The Old Covenant made with Blood and sprinkled it on the people and said Behold the Blood of the Covenāt which the Lord hath made with you In imitation wherof the Heathens afterwards made their Covenants after the same manner Thence came the word Sanctio a Sanction as some conceive it à Sanguine from Blood which was used in the making of it A mystical ceremony betokening the constancy and stability required in keeping of the Covenant specially Covenants made with God which ought to be even to the shedding of blood loss of life As our new Annotation explains it in the place last named Or as others importing a Commination Grot. Com. in Mat. 26.18 or execration against him that should violate such a Covenant viz. that his blood should be shed after the same manner Even as the story tels us of Saul 1 Sam. 11. Engaging the people to a just revenge of that reproachful affront offered by Nahash the Ammonite to the men of Jabesh-Gilead when he required them to put out their right eyes before he would make a covenant with them He took a yoake of oxen saith ver 7. and hewed them in pieces and sent them through all the Coasts of Israel by the hand of the Messengers saying Whoseever cometh not forth after Saul after Samuel so shall it be done unto his oxen viz. they should be hewed in pieces after the like manner The like signification probably there was in this Ceremony of blood used in covenants to intimate what they deserved who should violate them viz. to have their blood shed Thus was that old Covenant made And thus was this new Covenant So is the new Covenant made It was ratified after the like manner with blood Only with this difference That was confirmed with the blood of Beasts this with the Blood of the Mediator as the Apostle observeth it Heb. 9.12 c. To this end among other it was that Jesus Christ shed his Blood upon the Cross for the ratifying that Covenant wherof he was the Mediator So much we may learn from himselfe Mat. 26.28 where in the Celebration of his last Supper taking the Cup into his hands which was a Sacrament of his blood afterward to be shed upon the Crosse This saith he is my blood in the new Testament or Covenant And thus elsewhere we finde the Blood of Christ called the Blood of the Covenant So you have it Zach. 9.11 where the Prophet speaking of those deliverances Temporall and Spirituall which poor captives should receive by the Messiah As for thee saith he by the blood of thy Covenant I have sent thy prisoners out of the pit where is no water That Blood of the Covenant was the Blood of the Messiah whose Covenant is by Blood as the margin there readeth that place And so again Heb. 10.29 and 13.20 the Apostle speaking of the Blood of Christ he calleth it the Blood of the Covenant the Everlasting Covenant id est the Blood of Christ wherby the new Covenant was ratified and confirmed So it was and that both on our part and Gods part On our part in the wayes aforesaid minding us how stable we ought to be in the Covenant of our God how we ought to resist even unto Blood if God call us to it striving against sin Heb. 12.4 And what we shall deserve in case we shall violate that Covenant On Gods part assuring us of the performance of the Covenant Which last I conceive without any prejudice to what hath been already said may be looked upon as most properly and peculiarly intended by the Apostle in that place forealledged Heb. 7.22 where he calleth Christ the Surety of this better Covenant Pareus Com. ad loc viz. Quia novum foedus sanguine morte suâ obsignavit as Pareus explains it Because he hath sealed the New-Covenant with his Blood taking his death upon it Therby assuring unto beleevers the performance of all those promises which he had made to them in the name of God his Father Here is a third Insurance 4. The fourth and last is the Spirit 4. By his Spirit This is yet a further witness So Saint John maketh it in that known but obscure place 1 John 5.8 There are three that bear witnesse in Earth the Spirit and Water and Blood What he means there by water and Blood I have shewen you before from the sixth verse which I fell with by the way By the one is understood the benefit of Justification purchased by the blood of Christ By the other of sanctification an effect of his Spirit which is compared to water for the cleansing purifying qualitie of it Now to these the Apostle joyns also the Spirit as giving yet a further Testimony It is the Spirit that beareth witnesse saith the sixth verse there Not but that the Blood and the water bear witnesse also The Blood of Christ shed upon the Crosse and sprinkled upon the Conscience of the Beleever that sealeth up the Covenant to him And so doth the work of Grace the work of Sanctification wrought in the heart by the Spirit But besides this there is yet another witness which is the witnesse of the spirit viz. an Immediate work of the same spirit of Christ sealing up the covenant of grace unto the soul and conscience of a beleever assuring and perswading him of Gods performance of the conditions of his part The witness of the Spirit what This is the witnesse which the Apostle spea of in that known place Rom. 8.16 The spirit it selfe beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the children of God The spirit beareth witnesse concerning our Adoption with our Spirit or to our Spirit the Original wil bear either 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And this it doth not only mediately by the work of it by making a real and
comparing the one with the other his former with his later thoughts his Book De Satisfactione with some of his Comments So doing I have found the one clear and candid free from subterfuge or evasion such as whatever hath been assayed by way of reply to it may give full satisfaction to any unprejudiced spirit The other so palpably guilty of both as that they deserve both Censure and Pity And this to me and I suppose it may be the like to others hath been and is no small confirmation of this Truth of God Surely if any one had been able to answer Grotius it should have been Grotius himselfe then whom I know none more able to have done it and as it seemeth none more willing But finding him so foiled by himselfe so unable by all his Artifice to build again what before he had destroyed I cannot but subscribe to that Apocryphall Text 1 Esdras 4.41 Magna est veritas praevalet Great is Truth and mighty above all things May these my poor labours contribute ought towards the clearing and vindicating of this sacred Truth upon which I do freely adventure my own soul not knowing in what other way to look for salvation whilest God hath the Glory and others the Benefit my selfe shall have what I aimed at In the desire whereof I rest Thine in the Service of this blessed Mediatour JOHN BRINSLEY An Alphabetical Table of the chief Points handled in this TREATISE A CHrist an Advocate for his people and how p. 168 Christ an Agent or Lidger Ambassadour in heaven 160 How Christ performeth the office of an Agent in heaven for us on earth 162 Angels whether they have any benefit by Christs Mediation 198 Christ the Head of good Angels 202 To the good Angels Christ is a Mediator of Confirmation 201 Primitive Angel-worship 268 Christ the Annointed how 38 The Greek particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explained 75 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expounded 77 Comfort against fear of totall and finall Apostasie 233 Christs appearing on earth in the end of the world 88 Christ appeareth once upon earth and once in heaven 90 Christ an Arbitrator betwixt God and Man 48 To receive the Attonement what 246 Christ an Atturney for his people and how 170 The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 explained 125 B HOw Christ is said to bear our sins 66 The difference betwixt Christs bearing our sins and our sicknesses 67 Sins expiated by Blood 102 Covenant old and new both made with Blood 148 149 C CHrist called to the office of a Mediatour and that by God his Father 34 36 How Christ was called to this Office 37 When Christ was called to this Office 42 Christ a Surety by way of caution 139 Conditions of the new Covenant Faith and Obedience 141 Christ an undertaker for the performance of these Conditions ibid. No cruelty in the Sufferings of Christ 129 Crueltie what and when 130 D DAvid annoynted a type of Christ 38 39 The death of Christ more then a preparatory to his oblation 93 Comfort against Death 239 The Law Deuter. 24.16 against commutations of Punishment explained and cleared 114 Christ the Disposer of his people 193 Christ a Dispenser to his people ib. E SAtan a Mediator of Enmity 28 Mediators of Enmity too many 29 Naturall enmity betwixt God and Man 221 Sense of enmitie preparatory to reconciliation 222 Enmity against God to be laid aside 247 Expiation how understood by the Socinian 98 Christs expiation properly of the guilt of sin ibid. Expiatory Sacrifices under the Law a type of Christs expiation 99 Sacrifices under the Law how they are said to expiate 101 Ezek. 18.20 explained and vindicated 106 F FAith and Repentance subordinate unto Christ and his satisfaction 110 Forgivenesse of sins how consistent with Christs satisfaction 125 126 The Parable of the Kings forgiving his servants Mat. 18.23 explained 127 G A double Garment wherwith Christ cloatheth his Elect 191 The Elect gathered by Christ into his Kingdom of Grace and Glory and how 181 Christs giving himself for us explained and vindicated 74 Christ truly God evinced by Scriptures 10 The God-head of Christ evinced by Argument 12 Christ not Mediator only as God 204 God taken Essentially and Personally 209 Christ as God-man differeth from God and man 210 Christ as God differeth from his Father a threefold difference 211 The God-head of Christ concurred with his man-hood in all the acts of his Mediatorship 213 The God-head concurring with the man-hood in suffering 4 ways 216 Christ a governour generally over the whole world specially over mankind 175 Christs government over the Reprobate world 176 Christs government over the Elect world 180 Christs outward government in his Church 184 Christs inward government in the Hearts of Beleevers 185 The Grace of God consistent with Christs Satisfaction 120 Grace gloriously manifested in Christ his satisfaction in five particulars 121 c. The Grace of God exalted by the Doctrine of Christs satisfaction more then by the Socinian Doctrin 123 The Grace of God in vaine to four sorts af Persons 242 The Grace of God in Christ to be received 246 Guilt under the Law twofold viz. Ceremonial External Morall Eternall 101 H HEarts of men not known by Saints or Angels 269 Hebr. 9.26 opened and glossed upon 88 The Holy Ghost how said to intercede 261 I CHrist took our infirmities how 69 Comfort against daily infirmities 231 Innocent persons may suffer for the nocent and how 115 Christ an Interpreter betwixt God and Man 50 Christ an Intercessor upon earth in heaven 154 156 Intercession made by Christ for his people but against his enemies 157 158 Christs Intercession a necessary Transaction putting life into his death 159 Saints upon earth how Intercessors 259 Neither Saints nor Angels properly Mediators of Intercession 266 Isai 53. a cleer Prophecie concerning Christs Satisfaction opened 63 Isa 53.4 compared with Mat. 8.16 and cleered 66 Comfort against the last Judgment 240 Christs Satisfaction how consistent with the Justice of God 113 Justice twofold Strict Moderated ibid. Justification an act of grace notwithstanding Christs Satisfaction 124 L JAcobs Ladder the mystery of it 46 Christ a Lidger-Ambassadour in heaven and great need he should be so 161 Whether one man may lay down his Life for another 117 Christ an absolute Lord over his own Life 118 Christ gave his Life a ransome for many for a world 119. 126 Gods eternall Love to his Elect what 26 The Love of God demonstrated in appointing and giving Christ to be a Mediator 35 This Love declared in three particulars 225 M MAgistrates though enemies to the truth must be prayed for and why 3 4 Christ true Man but not meet Man 119 Christ Mediatour not onely as Man 204 The Man Christ Jesus why so called 207 Christ a Mediator betwixt God and Men 6 A twofold Mediation of Christ Satistantiall Operative 7 Mediation of Christ how managed and carried on viz. by 5 stops 48 Christ
undertaking to answer and make satisfaction unto the Justice of God for them And in this respect it is chiefly and principally as Bellarmine and others rightly observe upon the Text that he is here called by our Apostle a Mediator In this respect principally called a Mediatour in the Text. Neque apud ineruditos tantùm sed apud eos qui elegantiùs loquuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicitur is qui placat aliquem Grot ' de Satisfact cap. 8. Object Here is no mention of Gods wrath or displeasure A Mediator betwixt God and men id est One that interposeth himselfe betwixt the wrath of God and them undertaking to satisfie their debts and so to reconcile them unto God Thus the word in the Text as Grotius noteth may fitly be rendred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Plaactor One that pacifieth and appeaseth another by giving satisfaction and contentment to him And in this sense it is here applyed unto Christ Obj. Not so saith Socinus and his followers The word here signifieth no more then what it doth elsewhere Interpres Internuncius an Interpreter an Intermessenger betwixt God and Man Not a Peace-maker No here is not a word saith he concerning any wrath or displeasure of God against sin or sinners that might induce us to make such a construction of the Apostles meaning Ans But to this Pareus Answ Pareus in Heb. 8.6 returns him an Answer It is not to be conceived that what ever belongs to such or such a subject should be mentioned where-ever that subject is touched upon True the Apostle maketh no mention of Gods wrath against sin and sinners in this place This we finde elsewhere But elsewhere he doth sufficiently abundantly Romans 1.18 The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodlinesse of men Cap. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Such is the state and condition of all men by nature They are all alike Children of wrath Ephes 2.2 Being out of Christ not beleeving on him the wrath of God abideth on them John 3. last A truth so sufficiently known so frequently inculcated by himself and others as that there was no need why the Apostle should here make any mention of it before he call Christ a Mediator But if this satisfie not look but a little after and there shall we finde what is by the Adversarie desired Who gave himselfe a Ransome for us In which words as Bellarmine well noteth upon it the Apostle assigneth the cause and Reason of what he had said plainly shewing in what respect it was principally that he called Christ a Mediatour viz. In as much as hee gave himselfe a Ransome unto God his Father making satisfaction for the sinnes of his people Objection Satisfaction But Object No mention of Christs satisfaction in Scripture Christoph Ostorodius contra Purgationem peccatorum Ar gum 1. Answer Pareus ad Rō 9. Dubio 12. Though not the word yet the thing is Grot. de Satisf cap. 7. in initio where doe wee meet with this word in Scripture thus applyed unto Christ and his Mediatorship So some demand of us Answ To whom Pareus and others soon return Answer that though the word be not found yet the thing is being set forth in other expressions which are equipollent and equivalent And this it is that our Adversaries contend against as Socinus acknowledgeth it not the word but the thing And this it is that we must with earnestnesse contend for against them for this truth of God is a part of that Faith which was once delivered to the Saints and a principall part of it a foundation-stone a principle of Christian Religion the maine hinge upon which the whole worke of our salvation turneth Take away this the satisfaction of Christ and what sure foundation shall our faith rest upon If this foundation bee destroyed then what shall the righteous doe They must then goe seeke for another way of Justification then by faith in the merits of Christ And so seek for a new way to heaven which none of their forefathers ever yet found Let me therefore take up a little time for the asserting and vindicating of this truth of God against the Adversaries and Opposers of it Wherein my aime shall be to deal as little as may be in a Polemicall controversall way in arguing and disputing the case with them but rather in demonstrating it against them by laying this foundation as sure as I can that so you may with more assured confidence adventure your soules upon it Christ is said to be a Mediator as a Surety undertaking and making satisfaction unto God for the sins of his people That he is so Christs Satisfaction evinced by Scripture Testimonies Scripture is clear to those who will but look upon it without prejudice To go about to call in all those Texts that speak to this purpose would prove a long if not a tedious work I shal single out some of them which I conceive to give in the clearest and most convincing evidence And here I shall begin with the old Testament Old Testament where I shall in the first place have recourse unto that clear Prophecie concerning Christ then which all the old Testament affords not a clearer which wee meet with Isaiah 53. Isa 53. Arg. 1. There shall we finde a mutuall compact and agreement betwixt the Father and the Sonne about this way of Reconciliation viz. by way of satisfaction This the Father imposeth And this the Sonne submits to The Father imposeth it by charging the sinns of his Elect upon him So you have it verse 6. Ver. 6. The LORD laid on him the iniquities of us all Not the sinns themselves not the evill in them or fault of them but the guilt and penalty belonging to them This GOD laid upon his Son charging it upon him as a Creditor chargeth a debt upon the surety requiring satisfaction from him Or as the margin readeth it according to the Originall He shall make the iniquity of us all to meet on him Even as many debts of severall persons are charged upon one common surety and so all meet together upon his head Thus did the sins of all God's Elect or all true believers for of such and onely such he there speaks as Diodate expounds it such as having union with Christ have a true spirituall Communion amongst themselves they all meet together upon the head of their common surety the Lord Christ Even as the sins of Priests and people met together upon the head of the Sacrifice being layed upon it by the Priests who to that end laid their hands upon the head of it as you may read Exod. 29.10 15 19. by that Ceremony putting and laying their own sins and the sins of the people upon the head of that Sacrifice which was to be offered up for them Even thus saith the Prophet did God the Father lay the sins of his
gave his life a Ransome Mat. 20.28 Whom God hath set forth to be a Propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 In whom we have Redemption through his Blood the forgiveness of sins Ephes 1.7 Ye are redeemed with the Blood of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1.19 Thou wast slain and hast redeemed us to God by thy Blood Rev. 5.9 Places are numerous which give attestation to this truth Were there no other those last words of our Saviour were sufficient John 19.30 Consummatum est It is finished What was finished Why the great Work of Redemption for which he came into the World That was not only inchoated begun but consummated perfected there His Passion was not only a Praeludium a Preparation to this work but even the accomplishment of it There was this great benefit of Remission of sins merited purchased There wanted nothing but the Application of that merit to the persons of God's Elect to the making it effectuall unto them for their Justification Otherwise the work it self was compleat perfect By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Heb. 9.14 To this Truth this our Apostle in this Epistle to the Hebrewes speaketh so fully so clearly as we shall not need to seek elsewhere for evidence Cap. 1.3 Christ is said to have purged our sins by himselfe i. e. by the offering of himselfe before he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high before his entrance into Heaven Cap. 9. ver 12. he is said to have entred into the holy place that is Heaven By his own Blood having obtained Eternall Redemption for us viz. by the shedding of that blood Here in this 26th verse which I am now discoursing upon he is said to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himselfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which word properly signifieth a Sacrifice slain as Grotius observes from that place of Saint John John 10.10 where the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which signifies to sacrifice is used simply for to kill The thiefe cometh not but to steale and to kill 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Now Christ was slain upon the Altar of the Crosse and there was he sacrificed And by that Sacrifice he took away sin not onely the power of it as the Socinian would have it but the Guilt and Punishment of it This is that as I said which is here properly and principally intended as being the immediate fruit of this Sacrifice The explating and taking away sin in reference to the Guilt of it abolishing the Obligation of sin so as it shall not bind the believer over unto condemnation This is that which Christ hath done for us And this he hath done by that Sacrifice as our Surety First taking our sins upon him Which he did as a Surety for his Elect. and then taking them away Both these are comprehended in that one word which we meet with in the last verse of this Chapter Christ was once offered saith the Apostle to bear the sins of many 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Originall a full and emphaticall word signifying not only to bear but also to bear away And both these hath Christ done by our sins Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world saith the Baptist of Christ John 1.29 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word signifieth both Ferens and Auferens bearing them and bearing them away Both these did the Scape-goat under the Law as you may see Lev. 16.21 22. The High Priest laying the iniquities of the people upon the head of that Goat it beareth them upon it and beareth them away out of sight Thus hath the Lord Jesus of whom that Goat was a Type he having the sins the iniquities of his Elect laid upon him by God his Father as the Prophet Isai hath it in the place forenamed Isai 53.6 he beareth them as you have it in the last verse there And bearing them he took them away 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That is the word which St Peter also maketh use of 1 Pet. 2.24 He bare our sins in his Body upon the Tree The word saith Beza Beza Gr. Annot ad loc writing upon that place it properly signifieth Attollere or sursùm ferre to take and carry up So the Syriack there rendreth it as he observes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bajulavit sursum tulit He bare our sins and carried them up This hath Jesus Christ done for us He hath born our sins and carried them up viz. up upon his Crosse there to make satisfaction for them according to that of the Apostle Colos 2.14 where he speaketh of Christ's nayling the Hand-writing of Ordinances unto his Crosse and so taking it out of the way Thus hath Christ by the sacrifice of himselfe taken away the sins of all that beleeve on him Expiating them Purging them That is the expression which this our Apostle elsewhere maketh use of viz. chap. 1.3 where speaking of Christ he tels us that he hath by himselfe purged our sins And Saint John maketh use of the same word 1 John 1.7 The blood of Jesus Christ purgeth or cleanseth us from all sin Give me leave to take hold of the skirt of that expression we may learne somewhat from it which may conduce not a little to the clearing of the point in hand touching Christs taking away our sins by the sacrifice of himselfe To which end I shall enquire Que. How is Christ there said to purge our sins Quest How Christ is said to purge our sins Ans Answ Nor only declaratively but effectually I answer Not only Declaratively as Socinus would have it declaring the sins of beleevers to be purged upon their Repentance That is but a miserable evasion So it must needs appear to him that looketh upon the former of those Texts with an impartiall and unprejudicated eye where it is not said that Christ declared a Purgation of sins but he made it So the Originall hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 purgatione factâ having made a Purgation And that by himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not declaring what his Father had done or would do but what Christ himselfe had done Quest But what Purgation is it that is there spoken of whether from the Power or Guilt of sin Quest Whether Christ purgeth onely from power and not also from guilt Ans Answ Socinian evasion Dr. L. in Heb. 1.18 Vide Grot. de Satisfact c. 7. Expiation how understood by the Socinian Here Socinians being put by the former shift some of them make for this Christ is said to Expiate and purge our sins say they in as much he succoureth us in our Tentations and so preventeth sin in us This is all which those of that way mean when they speak of Christs expiation which they in word acknowledge but in truth deny they refer it only to sins to come not to sins past And understand it only of the destruction or
that maketh an attonement for the Soul And in this way it is the Lord Jesus hath made this true and real Expiation viz. by his Blood shed upon the Altar of the Cross The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin saith Saint John 1. Joh. 1.7 Behold here an Expiation a full and perfect Expiation A full and perfect expiation wherein the shadow cometh short of the substance the Type of the Truth As for those Sacrifices they extended only to a Ceremoniall and Temporall Expiation and that onely of some sins But the Sacrifice of Christ extendeth to a reall Eternall Expiation and that of all sins So Paul delivers it in his Sermon at Antioch Act. 13.39 By him all that beleeve are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses By the Law of Moses by those Legall Sacrifices therein prescribed none could be justified before God for any sins So much wee may learne from this our Apostle Heb. 10.1 The law can never by those sacrifices which they offered year by year make the comers thereunto perfect That is as touching the Conscience as the same pen expounds it chap. 9.9 They could not in and by themselves as separated from their spirituall significations sanctifie or purifie the Conscience they being Corporall and that Spirituall Neither could they give an absolution in foro conscientiae they could not give any assurance to the Conscience that sin was pardoned and reconciliation obtained with God In reference hereunto the Apostle telleth us ver 4. of that 10th chapter that It is not possible that the blood of Buls and of Goats should take away sin Take away the Eternall guilt of it And as for the External and Temporall it extended as I said only to some kindes of sin Thence was it as the Hebrew Doctours observe that David deprecating of his Adultery and Murther Psal 51.16 he waves the offering of Sacrifice for them Why so not onely because Sacrifices themselves severed from the Blood of Christ could not ought availe to the purging away of any sin but also because the Law had provided no sacrifices for those sins To which the Apostle may be conceived to allude Heb. 10.26 where speaking of that unpardonable sin the sin against the Holy Ghost wilfull malice against the Truth of the Gospel received and acknowledged he saith There remaineth no more sacrifice for that sin But now the Blood of Jesus Christ as it is a true and reall Expiation making satisfaction for sin and so purging the conscience from the guilt of it so it extendeth to all sin So it doth where the remedy is not refused as it is in the sin fore-named that sin exempted from mercy And thus have I at the length taking hold of the clew of the Spirit held forth in the sacred Scriptures passed through this last evidence or proof upon which I have insisted the longer because I apprehend it to be of speciall consequence and importance for the vindicating and clearing of this Truth touching Christ's taking away of sin by way of Expiation by making satisfaction unto the Justice of God for it I am not ignorant that the Adversary yet seeketh out for other evasions besides those already named for the declining of the force of this Argument But I find them to be such as vulgar and ordinary capacities are not capable of apprehending and conceiving them which though no more should be said to them is more then a probable evidence that there is no strength in them but that they tend meerly to the darkening of the Truth which to those who will not shut their eyes against the light shineth forth clearly in those aforenamed plain and simple Evidences And therefore I shall not trouble you with them To what hath been spoken in way of further confirmation of this Truth I might yet ex abundanti add many Scripture Evidences more And to them I might also subjoyne the Testimony of the Church held forth by the eminent Lights therein in their successive generations a work which I find already done to my hand by one well versed in this Controversie and those Records But I will not hold forth a Candle to the Sun Grotius de Satisfact in Calce Testimonia veterum Give me leave onely for further satisfaction to take notice of some few of the principall Arguments which the Adversary taketh up either from Scripture or Reason for the expounding of this Doctrine This task I shall dispatch with all convenient brevities These Arguments or Objections Socinian Objections answered such as I have met with I finde them all reducible and referrable to three heads First How can this Doctrine of Christ's Satisfaction stand with the Truth of God Secondly How with his Justice Thirdly How with his Grace and Mercy All these Attributes are charged by the Adversary to be impeached and prejudiced by this our Doctrine But how unjust this charge is will I trust clearly appear in their vindication Begin with the first Object 1 How can this stand with the Truth of God His Truth in his Threatnings Christ's Satisfaction inconsistent with the Truth of God 1. In his threatnings his Truth in his Promises both which seem to disclaime any such way of Reconciliation Alleg. 1. For the Threatnings They charge sin upon the head of the sinner That of the Prophet Ezekiel is express Ezek. 18.20 The soul that sinneth it shall die the son shal not bear the iniquity of the father neither shall the father bear the iniquity of the son the righteousnesse of the righteous shall be upon him and the wickednesse of the wicked shall be upon him Lo here is a Law that excludes all Commutations of Penance of Punishment requiring satisfaction from the person offending not from any other Ans Answer To this it is answered It is a mistake if any shall look upon this as an universall and indispensible Rule Ezek. 18.20 explained and vindicated which God doth tie himself to walk by at all times in all places towards all persons No both Law and Practise speak the contrary For Law that Apendix to the second Commandement is well known I the Lord thy God am a jealous God visiting the iniquities of the fathers upon the children unto the third and fourth generation of them that hate me Exod. 20.5 And for Practise Precedents are obvious Canaan is cursed for the sin of his father Cham Gen. 9.25 Sauls sons and Nephews are hanged up for the fact of their father and that not without God's approbation 2 Samuel 21.8 Seventy thousand persons perish for David's sinne in numbring the people and that by God's immediate stroake 2 Sam. 24.15 whereupon David conscious of his own guilt and their innocencie cryeth out in way of a just commiseration I have sinned and I have done wickedly but what have these sheep done ver 17. Instances of this kind are numerous 1 King 14.10 The Lord threatens to
this way gloriously manifested 1. In that God was pleased thus to dispence with his own Law In dispencing with his Law The Law was peremptory The day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt die the death Gen. 2.17 under that one particular menacing every transgression with death Now with this Law God being the supream Law-giver and so having power to dispence with his own positive and penall Lawes he dispenceth being content to accept that satisfaction which the Law required from the person of another This dispensation was an act of grace free grace God was no waies bound to admit of such a satisfaction by a Surety which the rigour of the Law exacted from the person of the offender 2. That God was pleased to indulge such a dispensation unto Men not to Angels For men not Angels God spared not the Angels which fell saith Saint Peter but cast them down to hell and delivered them into chaines of darknesse to be reserved unto Judgment 2 Pet. 2.4 Jude 6. Here is no relaxation but a strict execution of Justice upon them Not the like upon man To him God grants a dispensation a gracious dispensation moderating Justice with Mercy admitting such a Satisfaction for him not for the Angels 3. That God did not only admit this way of Satisfaction but himselfe finde it out In finding out this way This was his Act an act of his Wisdome God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe 2 Cor. 5.19 When men and Angels were at a losse neither of them could find out a way of satisfaction unto the Justice of God but by an eternity of punishment now God himself findeth out a way This was an act of Grace of speciall and singular Grace there being nothing else that could move God to it but his Grace Yet further 4. That God should put his own Son upon this Work 4. In putting his Son upon the work His Son his Naturall Son his own Image his onely Son his dear and welbeloved Son his second selfe that he should give him here was grace here was love unparalell'd love So God loved the world that he gave his onely begotten Son John 3.16 So how So as cannot be either paralell'd or expressed That he should give him and that not only to declare the way and means of Reconciliation by his Doctrine in his Life and to confirm it with his Blood in his Death which is the highest pitch that the Socinian reacheth but also to make Reconciliation as the Authour to the Hebrews hath it cap. 2. ver 17. And that by making satisfaction unto the Justice of God by giving his life a Ransome for us Surely never such an act of Grace as this Herein God commendeth his love to us that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us saith Saint Paul Rom. 5.8 Herein is love saith Saint John not that we love God but that he loved us and sent his Son to be the Propitiation for our sins 1 John 4.10 This act of God in giving Christ unto death for us how ever it was an act of Justice towards Christ yet it was an act of Grace towards us So the Apostle expresly holdeth it forth Heb. 2.9 That he by the grace of God should taste death for every man the grace of God towards the universality of his Elect for whose sake Christ was offered Henceforth then let the mouth of the Adversary be for ever stopped Christ's Satisfaction exalteth God's Grace Let not Socinians charge this upon us as they do that whilest we assert the Satisfaction of Christ we derogate and detract from the Grace of God Nay therein we advance and exalt it and that far above what ever they by their doctrine do or can do To give Christ to be a Surety for us is a greater act of grace then to give him to be a Teacher to us To give him to die for us in our room and stead is greater grace then to give him onely for a Guid to direct and lead us by his Doctrine and Example Yet further 5. In the fifth place Behold the Grace of God further exercised in the Application of this Satisfaction 5. In the free Application of this Satisfaction to some not others Where is it that God applyeth the death of Christ maketh it effectuall to one and not to another Surely this is no other but an act of Grace free Grace Let it then go for a most unjust and groundlesse imputation that Christ's Satisfaction cannot stand with the grace of God when as the one shineth forth so clearly so gloriously in the other Justification an act of grace notwithstanding this Satisfaction Alleg. But yet it will be said If such a Satisfaction hath been made and received how can Justification then be said to be an act of Grace free-grace So we find it held forth in Scripture Isai 43.25 I even I am he saith the Lord that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake Being justified freely by his grace saith the Apostle Rom. 3.24 Now how can this be if such a Satisfaction be made Ans To this it is answered Still both these will stand well together God blotteth out our sins for his own sake and yet for Christ's sake The phrase excludes our merits not his merits No it is with his Blood that these sins are blotted out 1 John 1.7 Rev. 1.5 Again well may God be said to forgive sins for his own sake whilest he forgives them for his Son's sake in as much as Father and Son are both one One as in essence so in will and worke only differing in order of working Thus are they one in this act of Justification And thence is it that forgivenesse of sins is attributed sometimes to Christ Col. 3.13 Even as Christ forgave you And thus may we be said to be justified freely by Grace and yet through the merits of Christ So much we may learn from the Apostle in that place alledged Rom. 3.34 where he putteth them both together Being justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus The like again Ephes 1.7 In whom we have Redemption through his Blood the forgivenesse of sins according to the riches of his Grace And well may these stand together as being causes subordinate the one to the other God's grace the supreme and first moving cause Christ's Redemption the meritorious and procuring cause Thus are we said to be justified not onely by Grace but freely by Grace viz. in reference to us our merits not so to the merits of Jesus Christ Alleg. But it may be further said How Forgivenesse of sin standeth with this Satisfaction Supposing such a Satisfaction how then can sins be said to be forgiven That is the word in frequent use in Scripture In the Lords Prayer we pray Forgive us our Debts And so we finde Justification frequently called the forgivenesse of sins one part of it being by a Synecdoche put
the State which he negotiates for And so doth Jesus Christ of all his Elect. For their sakes it was that he sanctified himselfe when he was upon Earth John 17.19 In all the services which here he undertook he had an eye unto them seeking their welfare more then his own And the like he doth now in Heaven He sitteth at the right hand of God as their Agents interceding for them This was shadowed out in the High Priest under the Law who when he went into the Holy Place there to appear before the Lord he had the Names of the twelve Tribes of Israel ingraven in stones first upon his Humerall then upon his Pectorall bearing them both upon his shoulders and upon his heart as you shall finde it Exod. 28.12 29. in both shewing that he entred into that place not onely or principally in his own behalfe but in the behalfe of the Tribes whom he represented and presented before the Lord to the end that they might be had in continuall remembrance with him as the 29th verse there explains it A lively Type of Christ's Intercession who being entred into the Heavens he there appeareth before God in the behalfe of his Elect whom he beareth as it were upon his shoulders and upon his Heart sustaining their persons and presenting their condition unto God his Father so causing them to be had in perpetuall memory And thus presenting them unto God he procureth their welfare by commending their estate and condition unto God Expressing his constant will and desire for their good that they may be delivered from evill that they may enjoy all the benefits whch he hath merited for them by his death And thus is he said most properly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to intercede for them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 significat Interpellationem quae fit cum postulatione Estius Com. in Heb. 7.25 viz. by making requests on their behalfe This saith Estius is the most proper signification of the word therein following Augustine with whom the Apostles Interpellare is the same with Postulare To Intercede is to make Request So our former Translation renders it in that place fore-named Rom. 8.34 Estius in Rom. 8.34 Heb. 7.25 Who also maketh request for us This Jesus Christ doth though not vivâ voce Orally and vocally by word of mouth as the same Jesuit would willingly have it drawing in Thomas though without any just ground to be of the same mind with him yet really and effectually viz. by the presenting of his merit and expressing his will and desire on the behalfe of his people in such a way as is congruous and sutable to that glorified state Thus doth he intercede make requests for them thereby impetrating and obtaining for them such things as they stand in need of and he hath merited for them As viz. that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which Paul speaketh of Phil. 1.19 a continuall supply of the Spirit whereby they are strengthened and assisted against all Tentations comforted in all Tribulations delivered from every evill work inabled to the performance of every duty and finally preserved unto his heavenly Kingdom All which are fruits of Christ's Intercession though merited by his death upon the Cross yet impetrated and obtained by his Intercession in Heaven And thus we see how Jesus Christ this our Mediatour appeareth before God on the behalfe of his people as an Agent conserving their Peace maintaining their Intercourse and Communion with God reconciling their emergent differences and procuring their welfare Secondly He appeareth before God as an Advocate 2 As an Advocate being So Saint John calleth him 1 John 2.1 If any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Originall A word generally and properly signifying any one that is invited and called in to the help and assistance of another That is also the proper meaning of the word Advocatus In Scripture we find it attributed sometimes to the Holy Ghost and sometimes to Christ To the Holy Ghost Then it is fitly rendred a Comforter So you find it Joh. 14.16 15.26 16.17 In this place and only this of St John it is attributed unto Christ and here it is most fitly rendred an Advocate An Advocate we know what he is One that is of counsel with another and pleadeth his cause in open Court at the Bar of Justice And such an Advocate is Jesus Christ unto his people 1. He is of Counsel with them 2 of Counsell with them That is one of the Titles given to him by the Prophet Isai Isai 9.6 Wounderfull Counsellour So Christ is to his people counselling them in the midst of all their straits and difficulties which he doth by his Word and Spirit 2. And as of Counsell with them so pleading for them 2 Pleading for them This he doth in the High Court of Heaven at the Bar of God's Justice In which respect he may be fitly said to appear for them Even as an Advocate appeareth for his Client and pleadeth his cause answering all Accusations and Allegations which are made against him vindicating his right So doth the Lord Jesus appearing before God he pleadeth the cause of his people answering what ever Accusations or Allegations are brought in against them by Satan or their own Consciences vindicating their right to Heaven and Eternall Life All which he doth by the continuall presentation of his Merit unto God his Father the Merit of his Death and Passion whereby he hath made a full satisfaction unto his Justice for all their sins This it is which pleadeth for them even the Blood of Christ which as the Authour to the Hebrews saith of it Heb. 12.24 Speaketh better things then the Blood of Abel Abel's blood pleaded against Cain crying for vengeance Gen. 4.10 But the Blood of Christ pleadeth for his Elect crying for mercy pardon for them even for all that shall believe on him For them the Blood of Christ speaketh a good word pleading the generall plea a Plenè satisfecit a full satisfaction made unto the Justice of God for them So as by this meanes they are freed from the Accusation and Condemnation of the Law wherunto otherwise every day by reason of their renewed transgressions they become obnoxious This is the ground of Paul's Triumph Rom. 8.33 34. Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen who is he that condemneth c It is Christ that dyed yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for us This hee doth as an Advocate there pleading the cause of his Elect 3ly As he is an Advocate so also an Attourney 3. As an Attourny An Attourney wee know what in Law it means One that is authorized to appear for or to act in the name of another And such an Attourney is the Lord Jesus on the behalf of his elect people 1. Appearing before
to be beutifull Rom. 10.15 Loe here then glad tidings of good things as it there followeth So is it to a convicted a condemned Rebell to hear of some speciall favorite who hath undertaken to mediate for him with his Prince to make his peace much more that he hath done it Such are the tidings which the Gospel brings to all selfe-convicted selfe-condemned sinners who being convinced of Enmity desire Reconciliation with God Loe here a Mediatour the great favorite of heaven the onely begotten Sonne of God he hath undertaken to make their peace nay hee hath done it So as there wants no more to the compleating of this Reconciliation but onely that they should come unto him and unto God by him of which I shall speak more anon And therefore let not any in the sense of this Enmity runne away from God as Adam did in the garden If they be but willing to be Reconciled lo here a way a certaine way made for it For this very end is Jesus Christ appointed a Mediatour betwixt God and men This for those who are yet in a state of Enmity 2 To such as are Reconciled 2. For those who are Reconciled unto God all true Beleevers who being by faith made one with Christ have received the Attonement are at one with God by and through him let them with comfort look up to this their Mediatour drawing and drinking water from this well of Consolation Which they may do divers wayes 1. Here is comfort to them against their daily sins their daily infirmities 2. Comfort against daily infirmities which deserve to separate and threaten a breach betwixt their God and them to disolve that agreement which is betwixt them and to make God an Enemy to them again True this they deserve to do and in their own nature they tend to it Never a sin but being a breach of Gods Law tends to a breach betwixt God and the sinner But here is the comfort There is one that interposeth betwixt God and them even this our blessed Mediator the Lord Jesus If any man sin saith Saint John We have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous 1 Joh. 2.1 If any man sin viz. of Infirmity being overcome by some temptation not purposing not intending so to do but doth the Evill which he would not as the Apostle saith of himself Rom. 7.19 let such a one know and know it to his comfort He hath an Advocate with the Father a Mediator an Intercessour who is at hand to plead his cause to answer what can be laid to his charge A strong consolation So is it to a pretended delinquent to know that he hath a good Advocate who knoweth how to answer the Law Such an Advocate have all penitent beleeving sinners an incomparable Advocate Jesus Christ the righteous one who by his own perfect obedience hath satisfied the Law already which being by him pleaded stops all further proceedings in way of Justice Such an Advocate have we One who is the Propitiation for all our sins as it there followeth verse 21. One who by that Propitiatory sacrifice offered up upon the altar of the Crosse expiated satisfied for the sinnes of his people And having made that satisfaction upon earth now he pleadeth it in heaven Otherwise he should lose the fruit of his death Having shed his blood upon earth now he presents it in heaven This did the High-Priest under the Law as I have shewen you Heb. 9.7 Having first slain and immloated offered up the sacrifice in the first Tabernacle the outward part of it then he presented the Blood of it in the second Tabernacle the holy place there offering it up for the Errours of the people You know the mystery The former of these was a Type of Christ's Oblation upon the Crosse the other of his Intercession in heaven where he continually presents unto God his Father the merit of that blood which was shed upon the Crosse offering it up for the sins of his people their 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their Errours their sins of Infirmity which they are continually subject to And by this means doth he maintain that peace which before he had made by the blood of his Cross viz. by Appearing in heaven as a Mediator an Advocate on the behalf of his people A just ground not only of Consolation but of Triumph unto all beleevers so the Apostle maketh it in that place fore-cited Rom. 8.33 34. where he closeth up that his excellent Treatise of Justification with this triumphant Challenge Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen c. Who is he that condemneth It is Christ that dyed Yea rather that is risen again who is even at the right hand of God who also maketh Intercession for us So long as we have such a Mediator in heaven we shall not need to fear that our sins of infirmity shall ever make a breach betwixt our God and us 2ly Upon this ground let beleevers strengthen their hearts against the inordinate feare of totall and finall Apostacie 2. Comfort against feare of falling away of falling away from the grace of God True this of themselves they are subject to but this they shall be preserved from by the power and care of this their blessed Mediatour to whose custody they are committed This is a benefit which as I have shown you the Elect Angels are conceived to reap from Jesus Christ the benefit of Confirmation so as they shall never fall from God as the other did And this benefit shall all true beleevers have by this their Mediator Being once given to him and once reconciled unto God by and through him they shall never more fall from his grace and favour againe but they shall now be kept by his power through faith unto salvation So much we may learn from the Apostle Rom. 5. 10. If when we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Of the two Reconciliation is a greater work then Confirmation To be brought into grace and favour with God then to be kept in it Now Christ having effected the former hee will not faile in the later they who have received the fruit and benefit of his death let them bee assured of the benefit of his Intercession Being Reconciled by the one they shall be saved by the other Upon this condition it was that God the Father gave his Elect people unto Christ that hee should redeem them and save them This is the Fathers will which hath sent me saith our Saviour that of all which he hath given mee I should lose nothing but should raise it up again at the last day John 6.39 O Christians Can you but evidence this to your own soules that you are given to Christ given to him to believe on him as the verse following explains it ver 40. now doubt not your standing in the grace of
this his imbracing Christ in the armes of his faith 1. Sustentation and Support Resemb 3. 1. Sustentation This benefit hath the Ivie from the Oake Though weak in it self not able to stand alone yet being joyned to the Oake now it stands sure bids defiance to all stormes and tempests As long as the Oak standeth that cannot fall The like benefit hath the christian from his Christ Though weak in himself not able to stand by himself not able to resist the least blast of Tentation yet being united unto Christ he is now supported in all estates borne up in all Conditions made able both to do and to suffer I am able to do all things saith this Apostle but how Through Christ that strengthneth mee Phil. 4 13. Here was Pauls strength not in himselfe but in Christ So much some conceive that Enigmaticall expression of his to import 2 Corinthians 12.10 When I am weak then am I strong When weak in himselfe then strong in Christ He it was that strengthned him The Lord stood by me and strengthned me so he tels Timothy 2 Tim. 4.17 And the like will he do to every soul that cleaveth to him and rests upon him Applic. Applic. Which speaks abundant consolation to all selfe-despairing souls Consolation to self-despairing souls which are made apprehensive of their own impotency their own inability to stand of themselves Let them know that being made one with Jesus Christ he is able to support them to make them stand As the Apostle saith of the weak brother Rom. 14.4 He shall be holden up or established for God is able to make him stand So say I of and to the weak Christian who despairing of his own strength relyeth wholly upon Jesus Christ he shall be holden up for Christ is able to make him stand Of all plants none weaker then the Ivie yet being joyned to the Oak none stand surer The Christian is weak in himselfe of himselfe subject every day to fall from the grace of God but being once united unto Christ Rom. 5.2 he standeth sure An Arminian Cavill refuted Object True may the Arminian say so long as that union continues he doth so But what if that be dissolved So long as the Ivie holdeth close to the Oak it is sure but what if it be separated severed from it Ans To this let the Apostle himselfe return the answer Rom. 8.38 39. I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. shall be able to separate us from the love of God in Jesus Christ our Lord. No separation of the Believer from Christ Death it selfe which maketh a separation betwixt the soule and the body yet cannot make a separation betwixt Christ and the believer If the Ivie may be plucked and parted from the Oake there I leave the Similitude Sure I am the believer cannot be separated from Christ and consequently not fall away finally or totally from the grace of God And therefore how weak so ever in our selves yet be we strong in the Lord. So the Apostle expresseth it Ephes 6.10 Finally my brethren be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might The Ivie is weak but the Oak is strong We are weak but Christ is strong El Gibbor the Mighty God Isai 9.7 Be we strong in the power of his might so shall his might be our might 2 Cor. 12.9 His power shall be made perfect in our weaknesse supporting sustaining strengthening us 2. And as supporting so nourishing 4. Resemb 2. Nutrition There is the fourth Resemblance The Ivie clasping about the Oak it receiveth nourishment from it which it sucketh and draweth from it after a secret and hidden manner And the like benefit doth Christ afford unto the believer The believer being united unto Christ he now liveth upon him as the Ivie upon the Oak The life which I now live in the flesh saith the Apostle I live by the faith of the Son of God Gal. 2.20 From him the believer by the power of his faith an attractive grace sucketh and draweth a spirituall vertue after an hidden manner Even as that poor woman in the Gospel by the touch of her finger or rather her faith drew from him a sanative vertue for the cure of her bodily infirmitie So doth the believer by the like touch of faith draw from him a nutritive vertue for the nourishing up of his soul unto eternall life Of which vertue all true believers are in their measure made partakers Being made one with Christ they live upon him His flesh is to them meat indeed and his blood is drink indeed John 6.55 He giveth unto them that water of life John 4.14 which whosoever drinketh shal never thirst any more viz. Siti totalis Indigentiae with a thrift of totall indigencie such a thirst as ariseth from a totall privation of God's grace thus is nourishment conveyed from Christ unto all true believers But of this I shall have occasion to insist more largely and fully when I come to handle the other similitude of Ingrafting where it will fall in more properly and naturally 5. Resemb 5. To this I might add in the fifth place that which followeth from the two former put together Living and dying with Christ viz. that which the Apostle himselfe here specifieth and instanceth in The Ivie being supported and nourished by the Oak now it liveth and dieth with it Thus the believer that is united unto Jesus Christ he partaketh with him both in his death and life In his death dying in him in regard of the merit of his death which redoundeth unto the believer no lesse then if he himselfe had died dying with him dying unto sin as he died for sin and that by a vertue issuing from his death In his life quickned and raised up by him and with him quickned from the death of sin raised from the grave of sin to a new spirituall and heavenly life the life of grace here and glory hereafter But both these I shall have occasion to deal with more fully in opening the Sequell of the Text to which place I shall refer them Thus you see the former of these Allegories in measure made out Come we to the later which my eye is principally upon as conceiving it here more properly intended by the Apostle Believers are planted together with Christ by way of Insition not only Complantati Similit 2. Believers planted with Christ by way of Insition but Implantati not only planted together with him but in him Even as the graft and the stock are planted together so is Christ and the believer they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Insititii as Erasmus renders it Grafted with him Grafted with him as the former Translation hath it A Metaphor which this Apostle seemeth to be much delighted in and taken with In that 11th Chap. to the Romans we may see him prosecuting it at large where speaking of the bringing in
up to the life of grace here and glory hereafter And this power this spirit all true believers in their measure are and shal be made partakers of even as the members of the naturall body participate in those animall spirits which are in the Head And hereby they shall be inabled as to mortifie sin so to live unto God And thus you see the communion which is betwixt Christ the Believer as betwixt the Stock the Graft implanted in it Applic. Which is a ground of everlasting consolation to all those that are truely baptized into Christ A ground of everlasting Consolation mystically ingrafted into him by faith Being thus made one with him now let them know that all that is Christs is and shal be theirs The sap that is in the Stock is for the use and benefit of the Graft And thus whatever is in Jesus Christ it is for the Benefit and advantage of those that are in him So as All that is in Christ is the Believers what is it that they can want Is it pardon of sin is it Grace and favour with God Lo here is merit enough for both He hath by his obedience active and passive made an abundant satisfaction to the Justice of God He hath done and suffered enough to finish the Transgression and to make an end of or seal up sins and to make Reconciliation for iniquity and to bring in everlasting Righteousnesse Dan. 9.24 Here is nothing wanting to the Justification of a Believer before God Nor yet to his Sanctification As there is a fulnesse of merit so there is a fulnesse of spirit in Christ It pleased the Father that in him should all fulnesse dwell Col. 1.19 So it did during his abode here upon earth The Word was made flesh and dwelt amongst us full of grace and truth John 1.14 Upon his change of State he received an addition to that fulnesse When he ascended up on high he received gifts for men Psal 68.18 Gifts which he might distribute and give unto men as the Apostle renders that of the Psalmist Eph. 4.8 He ascended far above all heavens that he might fill all things So it followeth ver 10. All things that is all his Elect and faithfull people all which do and shall in their measure receive of that his fulnesse Of his fulnesse we have all received grace for grace saith Saint John John 1.16 We all all believers have received grace for grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 grace upon grace say some one grace after another abundance of grace or grace for grace graces answering to those graces which are in Christ as the characters in the wax answer those in the seal or grace for grace The grace of Sanctification following upon the grace of Justification both flowing from the free-grace and good will of God in Christ And this believers receive from the fulnesse which is in Christ which is not only a repletive but a diffusive fulnesse Plenitudo non vasis sed fontis Not like the fulnesse of a vessel which if a drop be taken from it it suffers a diminution by it but of a fountain which runneth over for the benefit of all that will come unto it Such a fulnesse of Spirit such a fulnesse of Grace is there in Jesus Christ who is in that respect compared to a Fountain Zach. 13.1 In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David for sin and for uncleannesse That Fountain is Christ himselfe whose merit and spirit represented by the water and blood issuing out of his side in his Passion are as streams ever running from a living Spring sufficient to wash and cleanse all believing sinners from the guilt and pollution of sin Here is merit enough for their Justification and here is spirit enough for their Sanctification And in both these Believers being united unto Christ have and shall have communion with him A four-fold Benefit flowing from this Union and Communion Out of which Generall still to follow the Metaphor bud forth divers other particulars The Graft being thus put into the Stock made one with it and partaking in the sap and juice that is in it it now receiveth from it a four-fold benefit viz. Nutrition Augmentation Fructification Sustentation Nourishment Growth Fruitfulnesse Establishment And the like four-fold benefit we shall find accrewing unto the Believer from this his union and communion with Jesus Christ Each of which will yeild us a severall Resemblance A first of these Benefits is Nutrition 6. Resembl 1. Benefit Nutrition nourishment This the Graft receiveth from the Stock And this the Believer receiveth from Christ So the Apostle holdeth it forth though under a different Metaphor Col. 2.19 where comparing Christ to the Head and the Church to the Body he sheweth how the one receiveth nourishment from the other Not holding the Head from which all the Body having nourishment ministred 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Graeci 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 appellant illum qui omnia ornamenta suppeditat sacras Choreas agentibus Abbis ducta Motaphora 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dicitur quicunque aliis suppeditat res ad quemcunque finem necessarias Et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est hoc facere abundè copiosè in Davenant in Col. 2.19 The word there used signifieth generally a Supply of all things requisite and convenient and that in an abundant manner Such a supply doth the Head make unto the naturall Body It giveth to every part sense and motion and particular abilities for the discharge of their severall offices and functions as to the eye to see to the ear to hear c. And such a supply doth Jesus Christ make unto his mysticall Body giving spirituall sense and motion to every member with abilities and graces sutable to their severall offices and conditions furnishing them with whatever is requisite for their Personall Salvation and the Churches Edification In this place the word more particularly imports a supply of such things as are necessary for the nourishing of the Body Est autem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 accipere ea quae alendo corpori sunt necessaria Grotius ad loc These the Head supplyeth to the members of the naturall body And these Jesus Christ supplyeth to the members of the mystical Body even to all that are in him Such a supply the Stock maketh to the ingrafted Branches And such a supply Christ yeildeth to all those living spirituall Branches that are ingrafted into him ministring to them spirituall Aliment for the nourishing up of their souls unto eternal life To the nourishment of the naturall Body there are but two things requisite Christ is perfect nourishment to the Believer viz. Meat and Drink and both these is Christ unto the believer My flesh is meat indeed and my blood is drink indeed saith he to the Jews John 6.55 Meat indeed and drink indeed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 verè eminentissimè Truely and really though
naturall or violent death Christians you cannot be too jealous too suspicious of your selves in a matter of so great consequence as this Too credulous you may easily be too cautelous ye cannot And therefore if some sins be dead within you impannell a Jury call a Coroners enquest upon them in your own souls and make enquiry how they came by their death Whether they died a violent or a naturall death Search what wounds they have received and whether they were deadly wounds or no. Enquire what weapon it was that slew them whether the Sword of the Spirit that two edged Sword the Word of God What purposes what resolutions have been taken up and levelled against them What prayers and tears have been spent upon them If you find not these signes you may give in your verdict that they died a natural death which is no true Mortification in as much as it doth not carry the similitude of the death of Christ in this particular which was a violent death What to be done when some sins are dead alone Quest But here happily some may say In this case what shall wee do finding our sins to be dead alone in what way shall we now attain unto true Mortification Ans 1. To this I shall answer in a word 1. Bury them out of sight 1. If they be dead then bury them Bury them out of the sight of God and out of the sight of your consciences and that by suing forth the pardon of them in the Name of Christ never resting untill God hath been pleased to cast in a Quietus est into your bosomes assuring you that as they are dead to you so they are dead to him and shall never rise up in judgement against you If they be dead bestow your prayers upon them for the covering of them So doth David upon the sins of his youth which he desireth God not to remember Remember not the sins of my youth Psal 25.7 Bury them 2 2. Cast stones upon their graves And bury them as the use is to bury those whom we call Felones de se those who are their own executioners make away themselves Drive a stake through them and cast stones upon their graves Shew your detestation of them after they are dead If your sins be dead already so as you cannot take vengeance on them as you desire yet deal with them as the souldiers dealt with our Saviour John 19.32 33 34. who when they came and found that he was already dead and so had prevented their intentions in breaking of his legs according as the custome was they pierced his side and let out his heart blood to make him sure for reviving again Or as those enraged persecuters in the Marian dayes dealt with that man of God that renowned Confessour Martin Bucer who being long before dead and buried and so out of the reach of their malice they took up his bones and burnt them taking vengeance as they thought upon his Relicks After the like manner let aged sinners deal with their sins Are they dead by the course of nature and so have prevented your mortifying of them your breaking of their bones yet pierce the pericardium of your own souls pierce your own hearts by true and unfeigned repentance for them letting out the life blood of them working your hearts to an utter abhorrence and detestation of them making them sure for ever reviving again And take vengeance upon the relicks the remainders of them You are dead to such or such a sin as touching the outward act never rest till you be dead to it also as touching the inward affection till you have brought your hearts to this frame and temper that you cannot think of the sins of your youth without abhorrence and loathing of them and your selves for them Thus deal with those sins that are dead already 3. Fall upon those which are alive 3. As for those which are yet alive fall upon them speedily bringing them forth to execution There is no naturall man but hath some sin or other still ruling and reigning in him As in an aged sinner in whom many other sins are dead yet it may be covetousnesse liveth for that sin many times begins to live when many other sins begin to die or malice liveth and reigneth in him c. Now if you would be avenged of your sins execute the Survivour As in a treasonable conspiracy which is not detected till long after the plotting and acting of it the surviving traitour suffereth for all the rest So let it be here Your sins have conspired against you sought your ruine and destruction all your dayes This it may be hath been hid from you you have not been aware of it and so have walked upon the pits brink the brink of hell not fearing any thing and so let your sins alone But now arise for the Philistins are upon you Behold the traitours your lusts they are in your bosome Thereof happily some are dead but bring forth the Survivours let them suffer for the rest let not them also go in peace to their graves If covetousnesse or malice or any other sin be yet alive make sure it die a violent death This will onely minister comfort unto you that you are truely mortified persons truely dead unto sin when you are in this particular made conformable to Christ in his death when your sins die a voluntary but withall a violent death And what I say unto you The same counsell given to all let me speak it unto all All that hear me this day be they old or young let me speak unto you concerning your sins as Gideon once said to his son Jether concerning the two captivated Princes of Midian Zeba and Zalmunnah Judg. 8.20 Vp and slay them Or as Elijah to the men of Israel concerning the Idolatrous Priests and Prophets of Baal 1 King 18.40 Take them and let not one of them escape You can never have any true comfort or safety untill your sins have received their death's wound And therfore fall upon them and let them not die alone I remember what a true Christian Virago Acts and Monuments a good woman once wrote to that bloody Bonner Bishop of London concerning the Martyrs which he starved in prison that it would be more for his honour to bring them to the stake when they were fat and well liking then to starve them and let them die alone in the prison Let me apply this counsell of hers to my present purpose and tell every one that heareth me this day that it will be more for your honour and comfort to bring forth these true traitours your sins your lusts I mean to bring them to the stake to execution and put them to death then to let them pine and languish and be starved in the prisons of your bodies and so to die alone Herein is the honour and glory of a young man when he can subdue and mortifie
the sins of his youth and that whilest they are vigorous and strong not when they are pined and starved with age or sicknesse Be not therefore over pitifull or mercifull to your sins lest you be cruell and mercilesse to your own souls As long as they live you cannot be in safety And therefore forthwith bring them forth sacrificing them to the Lord now they are fat and flourishing The fat and young beasts under the Law were fittest for sacrifice The younger and more flourishing your sins are the more acceptable will the oblation be True mortification of sin is one of those sacrifices of righteousnesse which the Prophet David speaketh of Psal 51.19 which the Lord will accept Herein the sin is the sacrifice and every Christian must be a Priest to slay this sacrifice Sacrifices under the Law must not die alone No more must it be in this Evangelicall Sacrifice Sins must not die alone It was a Leviticall Prohibition Deut. 14.21 The people must not eat any thing that died alone Such a Mortification where sins die alone shall never find acceptance with God I beseech you think upon this a little To reprieve lusts dangerous you that willingly reprieve your lusts spare them suffer them to live and rule and reign in you now hoping and resolving to take a course with them hereafter you will repent in your age How can you expect that God should ever accept of such a dead sacrifice that ever he should smell a sweet savour from such a Mortification such a Carion a sacrifice that died alone And therefore that you may find acceptance with him sacrifice your sins now now before they be a day older let them not live till to morrow for fear they should die alone or your selves die before them Now bring them forth in the sight and presence of God Arraign condemne crucifie mortifie them whilest they might yet live This is true Mortification when the body of sin dieth as Christ died a violent death 4. Resemb A painfull Death Such was the death of Christ Painfull to his body Rabbini aiunt Non fuit mos in Israele ut clavos figerent in pedibus aut manibus hominum qui lapidati aut suspensi fuissent Martinius in Symbolum Dolorous to his soul In the fourth place it is also a painfull death Such was the death of Jesus Christ a dolorous and painfull death Painfull in his body The Jewes and Romanes had many kinds of death Amongst all none more painfull then crucifying specially after the Roman manner where the malefactour was fastned alive to the Crosse his hands and feet being nailed thereunto and so bearing the whole bulk of his body distended after that manner Such was the death of Jesus Christ being put to death under a Roman Power he was crucified after the Roman manner a painfull death And as painfull so dolorous It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief saith the Prophet Isaiah Isai 53.10 As painfull to his body so dolorous to his soul attended with Agonies both antecedent and concomitant before it and in it Before it What an agony do we find him in in the Garden In the Garden Luke 22.44 Being in an agony saith the Text his sweat was it were great drops of blood Whether a bloody sweat or no cannot from thence certainly be concluded as Grotius notes it out of Theophylact and Euthimius The Text saith onely It was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as it were drops of blood But however Sudor vix solet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grotius ad loc a strange and extraordinary kind of sweat it was arguing a vehement conflict of soul caused by a deep apprehension and sense of his Fathers wrath due unto sin and sinners whose Surety he then was And as before his death so in it Upon the Crosse As in the Garden so upon the Crosse There also Christ had his agonies his soul-conflicts These were those 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those pains or pangs of death from which Saint Peter tels us Christ was loosed Acts 2.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The word properly signifies the pains of a woman in travell Such were the pains of Jesus Christ in his death Gravissimi dolores quales esse solent mulierum in partu morientium Grotius ad Act. 2.44 which the Prophet calleth the travell of his soul Isai 53.11 like the pains of a woman dying in travell which the Psalmist calleth the pains of hell So he speaketh of himselfe being a Type of Christ Psal 116.3 The sorrowes of death compassed me and the pains of hell gat hold upon me Not onely the sorrows or cords of death Kebli Maveth the Cables of death as our English word answers the Hebrew both in sound and sense but the pains of hell took hold upon him The one upon his body as malefactours who are pinioned with cords when they are led to execution Vide Diodat in Psal 18.5 or as dead bodies that lie bound in the grave as the story tels us of Lazarus John 11.44 The other upon his soul And such were the pains which took hold upon our blessed Saviour in his Passion which extorted from him that passionate expostulation My God my God Mat. 27.46 why hast thou forsaken me complaining of that which was more grievous to him then a thousand deaths his Fathers present dereliction withdrawing his wonted presence from him Such was the death of Jesus Christ A pattern of Mortification which is a painful work And herein again behold it a true pattern of the Christian's Mortification his death unto sin which is also a painfull death Mortification is a painfull work The very word imports no lesse To kill a man or mortifie a member will not be without pain And so much is insinuated in those other expressions which the Spirit of God maketh use of to set forth the nature of this work as where it is called a Circumcision Be circumcised to the Lord and take away the foreskin of your hearts saith the Prophet Jeremiah Jer. 4.4 By that allusive Periphrasis setting forth the nature of true Mortification which is a spiritual Circumcision a cutting off of the superfluitie of sinfull and inordinate lusts Now Circumcision was a painfull work specially to aged persons so the Shechemites found it of whom the story tels us Gen. 34.25 that being circumcised they were so soar the third day after as that they were not able to stir to defend themselves Such is the spirituall Circumcision a painfull work specially in aged confirmed sinners causing a soarnesse in the soul Elsewhere it is called a Suffering in the flesh So Saint Peter phraseth it 1 Pet. 4.1 Hee that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin Meaning thereby the Christians Mortification which is a suffering in the flesh an irksom and painfull work to flesh and blood And as a suffering in the flesh so a Crucifying of the flesh Gal. 5.24
an affliction of spirit causing frequent conflicts within him Now have you found do you find the like symptomes in your selves Surely where the soul never felt any of these pangs these agonies it may well suspect that sin may be asleep or it may be dead to the man but the man is not dead to it True indeed No death unto sin without some agonies as I said these pangs are not alike in all As in the death of the body some have an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Physicians call it a more gentle and easie death then others so is it in this spirituall death this death unto sin to some it is more easie then to others God according to his various dispensations brings off the work of Regeneration and Mortification in a more easie way to one then to another Yet is there no death specially a violent death and such is this death unto sin but it hath some pangs some agonies The least Agonies in true conversion Quest But happily here some may say What are the least of these pangs these agonies that may be in this death What is the least measure of this compunction of spirit this soul-affliction that is requisite unto true Mortification Ans To this I answer and I shall do it with as much indulgence and tendernesse as may be There must be 1. A sense of sin and wrath 1. A sense of sin and of the wrath of God due unto it Such a sense we find in Jesus Christ He was very sensible of the weight and burden of those sins which lay upon him and of the wrath of God his Father due unto them This it was that put him into that preternaturall if not supernaturall sweat And such a sense in measure there must be in the soul of every Christian before he come to die unto sin He must first feel sin as a Burden Mat. 11.28 Come unto me ye that are weary and heavy laden viz. under the weight and burden of sin a burden ready to sink him into hell subjecting him to the wrath and displeasure of God 2. A sorrow for sin 2. From this sense of sin kindly working upon the soul there ariseth an inward sorrow for sin Such an affection we find also in our blessed Saviour before his passion My soul saith he speaking to his Apostles is exceeding heavy 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 undiquaque tristis Mat. 26.38 beset and surrounded with sorrowes even unto death And such an affection in measure there is in every true convert every mortified sinner The apprehension of sin worketh in him an inward sorrow and griefe even that godly sorrow as the Apostle calleth it 2 Cor. 10.7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sorrow according to God that is 1. Coming from God 2. Well pleasing to God 3. For offending of God 4. Bringing the sinner unto God Such a sorrow the Apostle there maketh a necessary ingredient to that Repentance which is not to be repented of 3. From this sorrow for sin 3. A desire of being freed from the guilt and power of it in the third place springeth a serious and unfeigned desire of being freed and delivered from it Such an affection also we find in our blessed Saviour Feeling the burden of the sins of the world lying upon him he was very desirous to be freed from it I have a baptisme to be baptized with saith he to his Apostles meaning his passion his death and how am I straitned untill it be accomplished Luke 12.50 And the like affection shall we find in a regenerate soul viz. a serious and earnest desire of being freed and delivered from that sin whereof it is made so sensible And that not onely from the guilt and punishment but also from the power and dominion tyranny and molestation of it O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the Body of this death 4. And fourthly 4. A striving against sin This desire being unfeigned it will expresse and put forth it selfe in answerable indeavours in effectuall strivings against sin Ye have not yet resisted unto blood striving against sin Heb. 12.4 How did our blessed Saviour wrestle in the Garden offering up prayers and supplications with strong crying and tears to him that was able to save him Heb. 5.7 Thus will a regenerate soul wrastle with God about the death of sin praying against it watching against it going out in the strength of God against it engaging in a continuall war a deadly feud against it Now these are the least of these soul-conflicts wherewith this spirituall death this death unto sin is attended And are we strangers unto these Do we not know what it is to be thus sensible of sin to be thus affected with sin to be thus desirous of deliverance from sin to be thus ingaged against sin Deceive not our selves we are as yet strangers unto this blessed work we do not yet know what this true death unto sin meaneth which also in this particular resembles the death of Jesus Christ It is a painfull death 5. Resemb A lingring death The last particular is yet behind wherein I shall be brief This death is a lingring death Such was the death of Jesus Christ Crucifying is a lingring death Christ hung divers hours upon the Crosse three at the least from the sixth hour to the ninth saith Saint Matthew cap. 27. ver 45. that is from our twelve to three before he gave up the Ghost And herein again doth the Christan's death unto sin carry a resemblance of that his death It is also a lingring death wherein sin is not put to death all at once but languisheth by little and little This is looked upon as one of the main differences betwixt Justification Justification perfected at once and Sanctification The former is a perfect work admitting of no degrees True indeed in respect of manifestation and in the sense of the person justified it is graduall but not in it selfe The person justified may apprehend his justification more clearly then he did but he cannot be more justified then he was Justification being a plenary absolution a full discharge of the sinner from the guilt and satisfactory punishment of all his sins past present and to come True there is a difference betwixt the one and the other Sins past Vide Ames Medul cap. 27. sec 23 24. and present are actually pardoned by a formall Application of the generall pardon unto them sins past onely virtually The former in them selves the later in the subject or person sinning from whom it is required only to shew forth that pardon which is granted and by faith to apply it to himself in respect of the renewed particular acts of sin In the mean time the Grant is perfect and full Numb 23.21 So as God beholdeth no iniquity in Jacob neither doth he see any perversnesse in Israel viz. so as to impute it unto condemnation Not so
Sanctification but so is not Sanctification The believer though he be perfectly freed from the guilt of sin yet not so from the power of it still sin dwelleth in him It is no more I saith the Apostle but sin that dwelleth in me Rom. 7.17 Thus is sin to the Christian not only a lodger for a night but a dweller like a rebellious Tenant that will keep possession in despite of his Owner till the house be pulled down over his head And as dwelling so acting working Though not ruling as a Lord yet molesting and tyrannizing I see another law in my members rebelling against the law of my mind saith regenerate Paul meaning the law of sin Rom. 7.23 Thus is the believers sanctification whereof mortification is a part an imperfect work In Mortification sin receiveth its deaths-wound but is not quite dead True it is in a regenerate soul the body of sin hath received its deaths-wound and in that respect it may be said to be dead as we say of a man that is mortally wounded that he is a dead man but it is not quite dead Still it stirreth and moveth dying but by degrees What the Apostle saith of the renewing of the new man 2 Cor. 4.16 The inward man is renewed day by day we may say it of the destroying of the old man It is destroyed day by day As Paul saith of himselfe in respect of afflictions 1 Cor. 15.31 I die daily which he did as in regard of his continuall expectation of and preparation for death so in respect of the many crosses and tribulations wherewith he was continually assaulted which rendred his life a dying life or a living death so may we say of the Christian in respect of his sins he dieth daily His death unto sin is a dying a continued act Death unto sin a dying So much the Apostle insinuates Col. 3. where he puts persons mortified upon the duty of Mortification Such were his believing Colossians to whom he there writeth They were dead as he telleth them ver 3. Ye are dead dead to the world and dead to the flesh dead to sin yet he puts them upon this duty Mortifie ye your members which are on the earth ver 5. The like he saith to his Romans chap. 8. whom in the 9th verse he approves that they were not in the flesh yet in the 13th verse he puts them upon this duty If ye mortifie the deeds of the flesh ye shall live There is not the most sanctified soul upon earth but hath some remainders of corruption left in it which God in his wise providence permits for the 1. Trying 2. Exercising 3. Humbling 4. The making his own rich grace so much the more glorious by renewing and multiplying of pardons unto them Thus is this death unto sin like unto the death of Jesus Christ a lingring death Applic. And is it so Consolation against the stirrings of sin Here is a ground of consolation to a drooping and dejected soul which feeling the stirring and vigorous acting of sin in it thereupon questions its own estate calls in question the truth of its mortification whether it be truely dead unto sin or no. Let not this discourage Jesus Christ was not dead as soon as he was fastned to the Crosse Is the work of Mortification begun Hast thou taken the same course with the body of sin that the Jewes did with the Body of Christ Hast thou arraigned accused condemned it and fastned it to the Crosse Arraigned it at the Bar of God's Judgement Accused it by way of humble and hearty confession Condemned it passing the sentence of eternall condemnation upon thy selfe for it and then fastned it to the Crosse begun the execution of it set upon the mortification of it with a serious and unfeigned resolution of using all means for the destroying and killing and abolishing thereof If so now though it still strive and struggle let not that dishearten So will a crucified man do and yet in the eye of the Law and in the account of all that see him he is a dead man And so is the body of sin when it is thus crucified Though it do still move and stir yet upon a Gospel-account and in God's estimation it is dead and it shall certainly die The crucified man by little and little he bled to death So shall this old man where the work of Mortification is once truly begun it shall bleed to death the strength of it daily decaying As Haman's wife and friends once told him concerning Mordecai Hest 6. 13. If Mordecai were of the seed of the Jewes before whom he had begun to fall he should not prevaile but should surely fall before him So may it be said of a regenerate person Being of the Seed of Abraham according to the Spirit a Jew inwardly as the Apostle calleth Believers Rom. 2. last of the faith of Abraham having an inward principle of true grace in his soul now that body of sin which hath begun to fall before him it shall not prevail Rom. 6.14 thenceforth it shall not have dominion over him but it shall surely fall Having received the deaths-wound it shall decay and languish more and more As it was betwixt the two houses of David and Saul in the same Kingdome 2 Sam. 3.1 So shall it be betwixt the regenerate and unregenerate part in the same person The one shall wax stronger and stronger the other weaker and weaker The promise is expresse He that hath begun the good work whereof mortification is a part he will perfect it to the day of Jesus Christ This Paul was confident of in the behalfe of his Philippians Phil. 1.6 And this let all true beleevers rest confident of in respect of themselves Vse 2. Onely continue the indeavours of Mortifying it Onely let not this confidence make any secure fearlesse carelesse God will perfect this good work in you but how Nempè vobis cooperantibus as Grotius glosseth upon it You working together with his grace And this let all beleevers bee excited unto Having received this grace of God now work wee together with that grace setting our selves to this mortifying work Not looking upon it as the work of a day or a month or a year but of our whole life time continue we our endeavours making a daily progresse in this work every day labouring to weaken the body of sin more and more praying against it watching against it striving against it Think it not enough that sin hath received the deaths wound A Wild beast though mortally wounded may yet turn again and indanger him that lanced him And so may sin the soul of a regenerate person And therefore having begun this good work the mortifying of sin go on in it As the Romans were wont to deal with their Malefactors Having fastned them to the Crosse then they brake their legs and peirced their side to let out their vitall blood Even thus deal wee with the body of
sin using all means for the through mortification of it breaking the bones the power and strength of sin and peircing the heart of it by renewed contrition and repentance letting out the vitall blood of it never resting till we have let sin wholly out of our heart till the heart be brought to an inward loathing and detestation of all sin and so to feel the whole body of sin daily decaying languishing dying Such is the Christians death a copy and counterpane of the death of Jesus Christ resembling it in the properties thereof a True voluntary violent painfull lingring death And thus have I done with the former of these conclusions which informs us that The Christians death unto sin carries with it a resemblance of the death of Christ for sin It is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the likenesse or Representation of his death The second and third follow All true Beleevers are partners in this death and that by a vertue flowing from Jesus Christ Upon these two I shall insist severally by way of Doctrinall Explication and Illustration jointly by way of practicall Application Begin with the former All true beleevers are partners in this death Doctrine 2. All beleevers are dead unto sin All that are in Jesus Christ are thus conformable to him in his death This the Apostle here layeth down by way of supposition If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death Taking it for granted that all who are ingrafted into Christ have a mysticall union with him they have also a communion with him and that first in his Death This is that which he hath told us in the two verses foregoing Know ye not saith the 3d verse that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized into his death Again ver 4. Therefore wee are buried with him by baptism into death And thus he here inculcates again the same thing under a different expression If we have been planted together in the likeness of his death So are all true beleevers Being in Christ they die with him being dead to sin as he died for sin That they are so Confirmat we find it often asserted by this Apostle as in this chapter ver 2. How shall wee that are dead to sin saith he live any longer therein and again ver 11. Likewise reckon ye your selves to be dead indeed unto sin So elswhere This is that he tels his Colossians Colos 3.3 For ye are dead dead to the world to the flesh to sin This he saith of himselfe Gal. 6.14 The world is crucified to me and I unto the world And the like of all others Gal. 5.24 They that are Christs have crucified the flesh All in effect speaking one and the same thing with this in the Text that all which are in Christ are ingrafted with him in the likenesse of his death being dead to sin as he died for sin Explication Quest But what is this death unto sin Or how are Christians said to be dead unto sin What this death unto sin is Ans It is not my purpose here largely to insist upon the Doctrine of Mortification which as I have touched upon already in handling of the verses fore-going so I shall meet with again and again in the verses following Briefly To be dead unto sin is not to be wholly freed from the Inhabitation and molestation of it to be delivered from the body of sin to have it eradicated plucked up by the roots No that is contrary to universall experience None but find and feel that fomes peccati corruption of nature the body of sin still dwelling and living and working in them But to be freed from the dominion the reigning power of sin To have the vigour and strength of sin which is the life of sin so broken so enervated and weakned by the work of the Spirit of grace dwelling in the soul as that it doth not rule and reign and bear sway as it did before regeneration This it is to be dead to sin So much we may learn from this Apostle who explains his own meaning in the 12th verse of this Chapter Having in the former verse bid his Romans Reckon themselves dead unto sin he adds in this verse Let not therefore sin reign in your mortall bodies that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof This reigning power of sin when it hath the upper hand of the motions of the Spirit of God in the soul beareth such a sovereign incontroulable sway in it so over-powring the faculties of it as that the man is wholly overcome by it made a servant yeilding a willing and spontaneous obedience to it making either none or at best a weak and vain resistance against it this is the life of sin Now when this power is broken when it is conquered by a superiour power the power of the Spirit of grace so as the believer is freed from the dominion of sin now though sin do still live in him yet he is said to be dead to it And he may be said so to be The regenerate person dead unto sin three wayes 1. In regard of God's acceptation and that in a threefold respect In regard of Acceptation Inchoation Assurance 1. In regard of Acceptation God beholding the believer in and through Christ he beholdeth him not as he is in himselfe but as he is in Christ and so he beholdeth him as crucified as dead with Christ Besides where there is a willing and ready mind God accepteth a man according to what he hath and not according to what he hath not So the Apostle informeth us 2 Cor. 8.12 God measures men's bounty and liberality for of that the Apostle there speaketh not by their hands or purses but by their hearts And so is it in all other duties and services Desires and indeavours where they are reall with God go for actuall performances Now this is the Christian's desire He desireth nothing more then to be freed from the body of sin O wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from the body of this death And this he seriously indeavours he doth what in him lieth to kill and destroy it Now this in God's gracious acceptation is death unto sin As it is in the committing of sin Intentions in God's account go for actions Wanton looks are Adultery Whosoever looketh on a woman to lust after her hath committed adultery with her already in his heart Mat. 5.28 Murdering intentions are murder Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer 1 John 3.15 He is so though not before man yet before God who judgeth men by their hearts Even so is it in the killing mortifying of sin He that hath designed the death of it desiring and indeavouring it he is in God's gracious acceptation looked upon as dead to sin 2. In regard of Inchoation 2. In regard of Inchoation The work of Mortification is begun In a regenerate person sin hath received a
How he being the Eternal Son of God drank the Cup of his Father's wrath and that for the sins of the World to the end that he might free and deliver sinners from sin not onely from the guilt but also from the power of it He died unto sin once as the Apostle speaketh in ver 10. of this Chapt for the expiating for the abolishing of sin And shall we live in that for which he died What were this but in as much as in us lyeth to make the death of Christ of none effect This Meditation being seriously wrought upon the heart wil be of speciall force to cause it to rise against sin What did sin cost the Lord of life so deer Was the nature of sin so heinous that nothing but the blood of the Son of God could expiate it Did sin cast him into such a bloody agony such a hell of sorrowes What was he made a curse for sin and shall we yet live in it Did he die for sin and shall not we die to it Suffer we this Mediation to sit upon our hearts untill it hath made an impression upon them 2. By way of Application 2. To Meditation joyn Application Generalities do not affect And therefore bring we this generall truth home to our selves by a particular Application Thus Christ died for the sins of the world and for my sins Who gave himselfe for our sins Gal. 1.4 that he might deliver us from this present evill world Who loved me and gave himselfe for me Gal. 2.20 Thus bring we home the death of Jesus Christ by faith Applying first the merit of it unto our selves By the eye of faith behold we all our sins fastned to the Crosse of Jesus Christ and our selves discharged from the guilt of them by that plenary satisfaction imputed unto us through faith Then hang upon the Crosse of Christ by faith sucking vertue from it as the Graft sucketh juice from the Stock wherein it is engrafted so suck we vertue from Christ and his death for the mortifying of sin by faith depending upon him for a continued influence of his grace and Spirit that so he may work that in us which he hath merited from us freeing us from the power as well as for the guilt of sin 3. By way of Imitation 3. To Application in the third place now add Imitation which now cometh in the right place We have seen how Christ died what kind of death his was His death was a true death a voluntary death a violent death a painfull death a lingring death Propound we this as a pattern for our Imitation writing after this Copie indeavouring to find the like death in our selves in respect of sin A true death a true separation of our souls from the body of sin A voluntary death that we may willingly die unto sin in obedience to the Will and Command of our heavenly Father A violent death that we mortifie sin whilest it might yet live A painfull death that we affect and afflict our own hearts with godly sorrow for those sins whereby we have offended so gracious a God A lingring death that we die daily every day indeavouring to weaken the body of sin more and more So dying we shall live live the life of Grace here and Glory hereafter So much the later part of the Text assures us to which I now come If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death We shall be also in the likenesse of his Resurrection The second Part of the Text. Here have we the second Part of the Text and therein the Apostles Position or Inference deduced from and built upon his former Supposition If we have been c we shall be also c. The words explained Vide Bezam Gr. Annot. We shall be also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the Originall which the Vulgar Latine by a small mistake as may be supposed reading for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 renders Simul etiam Together also but more properly Erasmus and after him Beza Nimirùm etiam Even so so also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We shall be in the likenesse of his Resurrection In the Originall the sentence is Elleipticall and imperfect the words running thus We shall be of his Resurrection Now what word or words shall be called in for the making up this defect and completing of the sense is a question Erasmus supplies it by Participes erimus Even so we shall be partakers of his Resurrection that is we shall be in the number of those to whom the Resurrection of Christ the benefit thereof doth appertain But as Beza notes upon it the Phrase in the Originall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be of his Resurrection will hardly admit that sense Others more fitly make up the defect by calling in those words in the former part of the verse the Antecedent part of the Proposition which are to be repeated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in common viz. We shall be planted together in the likenesse If we be planted together in the likenesse of his death we shall be also planted together in the likenesse of his resurrection The like defective expression as Beza parallels it we meet with John 5.36 I have a Testimony saith our Saviour greater then of John So the Originall hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 majus Johannis greater then of John viz. then that Testimony of John So here If we have been planted together in the likenesse of his death even so 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 We shall be also planted together in the likenesse of his Resurrection The words being thus rendred and opened they hold forth unto us two main Doctrinall Propositions answerable to those in the former part 1. Two Doctrinall Propositions That all true believers being made conformable to Christ in his death they shall be also in his Resurrection 2. This their conformity with Christ in his Resurrection is wrought in them by a vertue flowing from Christ and his Resurrection Thus is it betwixt the Graft and the Stock The Graft being dead with the Stock seeming so to be in the winter it reviveth with it in the Spring After the Winters death it partakes of the Springs Resurrection And this it obtains by a vertue issuing from the Stock transfusing sap and juice into it Even thus is it betwixt Christ and the believer The beleiever being dead with Christ here dead to sin as he died for sin he shall be raised with him Being conformed to him in his death he shall be also in his Resurrection And that by a vertue flowing from him and his Resurrection Both comprehended under this phrase of being engrafted in the likenesse of his Resurrection I shall insist upon them severally Begin with the former Believers being made conformable to Christ in his death Proposit 1. Believers conformable to Christ in his Resurrection they shall be also in his Resurrection Being engrafted in
as the same Apostle hath it cap. 1.2 the last Time or Times so St Peter cals them 1 Pet. 1.5 20. And St John the last Hour 1 John 2.18 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the last Time or Hour So did the Apostles then look upon the world as drawing towards a period a consummation And that not far from it in their times what then may we do in ours But I passe on Thus Christ appeared in the end of the world and that but Once Once and but once 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 As for the Priests under the Law they appeared Often before God in the execution of their Ministeriall function The Priest went always say the 6th and 7th verses of this chapter i. e. daily every day into the first Tabernacle the holy place the second court of the Tabernacle or Temple accomplishing the service of God But into the second the Holy of Holies went the High Priest once every year Thus they appeared Often But Christ our High Priest appeareth but Once Once upon Earth and Once in Heaven Once upon Earth before Men Of this speakes the Apostle here in this 26. verse Once in Heaven before God Of this he speakes verse 12. By his own blood he entred in once into the Holy place i. e. Into Heaven Marke it Once he appeared upon Earth and once in Heaven Christ appeareth once upon Earth and once in Heaven As for any such second appearing upon Earth and returning to heaven before his coming to the last and generall Judgment Millenaries confuted as some imagine this our Apostle taketh no notice of it And therefore I dare not avouch it Nay hee tels mee expresly in the last verse of this chapter that Christ having been once offered to bear the sins of Many he shall appear the second time without sin unto Salvation unto them that looke for him Marke it Christ appeareth not twice upon Earth once to suffer and once to reign there personally and twice in Heaven once after his Resurrection and once after the settlement of his supposed Government as some have conceived but Once upon Earth and once in Heaven As for his second Appearing it shall be unto Salvation to the compleat and perfect salvation both of Soul and Body in heaven so Expositors I think universally expound that place of all those who love and look for that Appearing Heb. 5.9 2 Tim. 4.8 In the mean time let it be enough for us that he hath appeared once upon Earth So it may well be if we do but consider what followeth viz. the end of this Appearance which was To put away sin How Christ is said to have put away sin 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Abrogating abolishing taking away of sin Not taking it out of the world No the world still lyeth in wickednesse 1 John 5.19 Nor yet taking it out of the persons of his redeemed ones so as that it is should have no abiding no inbeing in them No this is a perfection reserved for heaven not to be looked for on Earth But so taking it away as that it shall not be imputed to them nor yet reign in them For both these ends Christ appeared upon Earth for the abolishing of sin in his people both in respect of Guilt and Power It is the former of these that is here properly and principally intended So much will appeare from the next clause which setteth forth the way and means whereby Jesus Christ effecteth this abrogation and abolition of sin viz. By the Sacrifice of himselfe The Sacrifice of Christ himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This was the Sacrifice which Christ our High-Priest offered Not the Bodies of other creatures as those Legall Priests did but his own body Offered upon Earth Vide D. L. in Heb. 1.3 9. ver 26. himself And this Sacrifice he offered up not in Heaven as the Socinian would have it in presenting himselfe before God his Father but upon Earth viz. in his Passion upon the Crosse There was this Sacrifice offered up Duplex est ut legalium quarundam victimarum ita Christi oblatio prior mactationis altera ostentationis Grot. de satisfact cap. 10. True indeed it was afterwards presented in heaven but it was first offered upon Earth So was it with some Sacrifices under the Law The blood of them was represented by the High Priest in the most Holy place as this our Apostle tels us ver 7. of this chapter but they were offered before viz. in the slaying and sacrificing of them by the Priest So was it in this Sacrifice of Christ How ever it be presented before God in heaven which is an other part of Christs Mediatorship as God willing I shall shew you hereafter belonging to the next branch his Intercession yet it was offered up upon earth viz. in his Death 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In mactatione Sacrificium Grot. de Satisf cap. 10. Thus were sacrifices said to be offered up when they were slain So profane Authors ever use the word and Scripture the like When God biddeth Abraham go offer his son Gen. 22.2 he addresseth himselfe to slay him ver 10. which because hee had intentionally done though not with his hand yet in his heart he is therefore said to have offered him up Heb. 11.17 Therein was Isaak a Type of Christ who was offered up after the same manner being actually slain There was he truely offered Hence it is that Saint John calleth him onely the Lamb slain Revel 5.6 and 13.8 which Saint Paul renders Sacrificed Offered Christ our Passeover is sacrificed or offered for us 1 Corinthians 5.7 Thus was Christ first offered up upon Earth Neither was this only a Preparation to that oblation which is made in Heaven as the Socinian would have it but a perfect Oblation The death of Christ more then a preparation to his oblation So was the offering made by the Priest in the Holy-place It was more then a Preparation to an offering a true Sacrifice As for the presenting of the blood of the Sacrifice in the Holy of Holies it was not properly a Sacrifice Grotius ibid. but rather the Commemoration of a Sacrifice already made So standeth it betwixt Christ's Oblation and his Intercession The former was done upon Earth There was the Sacrifice offered The later is only a Commemoration of that Sacrifice a presenting it unto God as it were continually to put him in minde of what was done that for the merit thereof hee may bee propitious unto his people And this is the Sacrifice whereby Christ is said to put away sin By this sacrifice Christ putteth away sin Not properly his Intercession in heaven but his Immolation his oblation upon earth in his death upon the cross So the Spirit of God clearly carries it every where ascribing the work of our Redemption the taking away of sin to the death and blood-shed of Christ He