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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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awake unto life that your Resurrection may be unto you a Resurrection of life awake arise here Many that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake saith Daniel but how some to everlasting life and some to everlasting shame and contempt Dan. 12.2 Now I know there is none of you but would willingly have your portion with the former of these to awake in the Morning of the Resurrection unto everlasting life That you may so do awake here Awake and arise from sin unto righteousnesse and holinesse here otherwise never look to awake to life and happinesse hereafter They and only they shal be exempted from the power of the second death who have their part in this first Resurrection Rev. 20.6 To let in the Motion A twofold Evasion met with and answered that it may enter and take place with those whom it concerneth give me leave in the next place to meet with a shift or two whereby men do use to bear off the blow to evade the force of this Exhortation We will awake and arise say some but it is yet too soon We would awake and arise say others but we fear it is now too late Thus while the one presumeth and the other despaireth both lie stil in the same grave To meet with both these briefly Evasion 1. The presuming shift It is too soon to arise 1 For the presuming shift We will awake and arise but it is yet too soon Thus did the people in Haggai's time put off the raising and building of the materiall Temple with a nondum tempus This people saith The time is not come the time that the Lord's house should be built Hag. 1.2 Thus do many put off the raising up of this spirituall Temple They wil arise but the time is not yet come A shift like that which Solomon's sluggard maketh use of Prov. 6. Being called upon to awake and arise verse 9. How long wilt thou sleep O sluggard When wilt thou arise out of thy sleep He replyeth in the next verse vers 10. Yet a little sleep a little slumber a little folding of the hands to sleep He wil arise but not yet Even thus do many poor sinners put off the call of God calling upon them to awake and arise out of the dead sleep of sin Yet a little more sleep c. They wil arise from sin to righteousnesse but not yet Modo modo By and by hereafter It may be they think it is yet early day with them their sun is but new risen It is but the morning of their age their youthful season and they must give youth the swinge They think it is with Men as with Horses If they are broke too soon they are spoiled They are afraid lest that impious Proverb which was never yet verified in any should prove true in them Young Saints old Divels and therefore they wil leave this work to their old age When they have nothing else to do then they wil begin to think of this work to look towards God when they are about to leave the earth then they will begin to think of heaven Ans Fond men Old age the unfittest time for this work Is this the time to begin to live when you are ready to die Is this the time to rise from the grave of sin when you are falling into the grave of the earth Is this the time to rise to righteousnesse when you cannot rise from your bed or couch Is this the time to begin to look towards heaven when you begin to stoop and look downwards towards the earth Of all other old age will be found to be the unfittest time for this work You know whose Exhortation it is Eccl. 12.1 Remember now thy Creator in the dayes of thy youth while the evill dayes come not Such are the dayes of old age evil dayes in respect of the manifold infirmities diseases aylements which attend upon it Ipsa senectus morbus est Old age it self is a disease and being so it is the most improper time for this work of Repentance and Amendment of life How can a man be borne when hee is old saith Nicodemus speaking of himself John 3.4 So may we say of being born again Regeneration deferred to old age is How shall an old sinner be made a young Saint The work of Regeneration being deferred untill old age wil then be found both difficult and suspicious 1. Difficult 1. Difficult The Grave of sin is like the Grave of the earth The longer a man lyeth in it the more difficult will his Resurrection be When Lazarus had lyen four days in the grave Martha thought that Christ came too late that there was no possibility of a recovery Lord saith she By this time he stinketh for he hath been dead four dayes John 11.39 The like we may say of aged confirmed sinners who have lyen not four dayes but it may bee forty sixty eighty years rotting and putrifying in the grave of sin so as they stink already their lives and conversations have been scandalous and offensive to all that have come neere them many a day How do we think that such putrified soules should ever be raised again In such the work of Regeneration cannot but be apprehended to be a difficult work It was the speech of Sarah when the Angell told her shee should conceive and bring forth a son in her old age having been to that day barren What saith she shall I after that I am waxen old have pleasure Gen. 18.12 So may an aged sinner say concerning the work of Regeneration What shall I who am now waxen old gray-headed in sin shall I now have pleasure shall I find delight in spirituall and heavenly things which to mee hitherto have been dry and saplesse Shall the Immortall seed of the word become fruitfull in me Shall the new man be conceived shall Christ be formed in my soul which hath hitherto been as barren as dead as ever Sarahs womb was This though to God it is possible and easie yet to man it will be found a difficult work Women who never had a child till their age oftimes pay deare for it before they see it Aged sinners will finde Repentance to bee bitter the worke of Regeneration difficult 2 Suspicious 2. And as difficult so suspicious True Repentance is never too late but late Repentance is seldome true seldome sincere Aged sinners if they begin to forsake their sins and looke towards God and towards heaven it may be suspected that it is not love to God that draweth them but fear of Hell that driveth them to it Upon these grounds let all be perswaded not to put off the call of God Put not off the call of God Doth Christ by the Trumpet of his word summon you as at this time he doth to arise and come forth of the grave of sin do not say that it is too soone Wil you think thus to put off the
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