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A81812 The fulnesse and freenesse of Gods grace in Iesus Christ; declared in the point of election, by a middle way betweene Calvin and Arminius, and different from them both, in an uniforme body of divinitie. By Francis Duke.; Fulnesse and freenesse of Gods grace in Jesus Christ. Part 1. Duke, Francis. 1642 (1642) Wing D2501; Thomason E146_23; ESTC R22338 174,028 185

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end So also in his first estate of the perfection of the creation he could not convey to his posterity the supernaturall good joyntly but his * The law of nature properly so called never was since the fall in any man in it's pure naturals but only in the second Adam therefore now to referre any thing well done by men to the st ength of their pure naturals is a grosse mistake pure naturals alone For before hee was put in the prefiguration of the Garden his naturall holinesse and righteousnesse were alone and not by Gods Ordinance related a meanes to a supernaturall end but on the contrary by his transgressing the covenant hee had power to conve● the losse of both of meanes and end not onely the losse of right and possession in the knowledge of all good both naturall and supernaturall things either in faith or fruition with Angels but also by force of Gods justice in the Covenant to convey the knowledge of evill every way equivalent in evill to all the foresaid good But this evill was Adams third estate namely his fall which is the next ground to be handled So much for the second ground CHAP. III. Opening the State of the world by Adams fall AS the fall of Adam extended to himselfe and to all his posterity Rom. 5.12 so it brought him and his posterity from the highest spire * The infinite God bound himselfe for Adams further assistance according as he did apply his personal perfections by the rules of the Covenant and the reasons why hee did not so see from pag. 17. to pag. 20. and in cap. 12. of the knowledge of God to the deepest gulfe of the knowledge of evill And whereas both are referred to the knowledge which is in man the reason is because man is most capable of his highest felicity or of his deepest misery onely by his knowable powers which was also implyed in this that the tree of triall was called the tree of knowledge of good and evill But here may be demanded what Adam and wee his posterity lost and what we lost not and what wee found by his fall Quest First we lost the perfection of the whole creation wholly Answ Secondly we lost the garden of Eden as it was an object of faith the figure of the felicity of Angels Thirdly we lost totally our pure naturals that is the perfection of both Tables of the Law as containing our righteousnesse and holinesse the most expresse Image of God by creation Fourthly wee lost the beginning of our supernaturall righteousnesse and holinesse contained in the institution of the Covenant for we lost that estate of faith Wee lost the ultimate perfection of supernaturall holinesse by which we should enjoy God in his most immediate expressions of his essentiall perfections in the glory of Angels and in a word we lost all the good of this world and that to come Secondly that which we lost not in briefe was this First we lost not the being of this creation but the blessednesse of it We lost not the Essence of our reasonable soules nor their essentiall faculties as memory conscience will and understanding for all these remaine in men under eternall death Wee lost not a body proper to our kind nor a personall union of both soule and body together for these men also have under eternall damnation So much for what we lost and what we lost not Quest But what found wee by our fall in Adams transgession Answere We found the knowledge of evill as first the evill of transgression secondly the evill of punishment and of the evill of transgression the first root of bitternesse did arise from Adams remissenesse of this second state contained in the condition of the Covenant and this appeares by his sinne of omission which brought on his sinne of commission generally in two things but particularly in six things First his eating the fruits of this plantation generally by Gods more speciall appointment as a meanes to bring him to an higher end then did his food in the perfection of the creation how could he then have omitted this generall help to that supernaturall end if hee had not beene rem●sse of the conditions comprised in the Covenant Secondly this Garden being so sequestred from all the terrestriall globe and in plants for pleasantnesse transplendently surmounting all the terrestriall globe prefiguring generally to Adams faith the pleasures and felicity of Angels how could he then have omitted this universall help if he had not beene remisse of the conditions comprised in the Covenant So much for these in generall Againe more particularly first his worke assigned him by Divine institution to dresse and keepe this choyce part of the whole creation by the worke of his fingers prefiguring unto him that the perfection of the creation depended on his worke in the Covenant for good and evill And how could he then omit this prefiguration for a help if he had not bin remisse by a sleepy faith in this particular Secondly when he looked on the tree of life in it's flourishing perfections in all the branches thereof as prefiguring to him his naturall branches or off-spring depended on him in the worke of the Covenant for celestiall felicity how could he then have omitted this helpe to lead his faith to the negative rule of the Covenant if he had not beene remisse in this particular Thirdly he knowing all the fruits of the trees in the Garden his to eate without restraint excepting this one tree of good and evill how therefore could hee omit the deniall of himselfe this one thing to attaine the good comprised in the Covenant if hee had not beene remisse in this particular God threatning him most expressely with death yea a most certaine death if he did not abstaine from eating that forbidden fruit how then could hee omit this helpe to repell Satans assault by whom or by what mean●s soever suggested to avoid so dangerous a consequence if hee had not beene remisse of the conditions of the Covenant His eyes seeing that River comming in but one way into the Garden yet divided into foure in that Paradise of pleasure and thence issuing it's chrystall streames of waters of life as from the Throne of God downe the terrestriall globe foure wayes prefiguring to him the good comprised in the Covenant as running downe from Gods most righteous justice to his posterity throughout all generations for his glorifying Gods truth and faithfulnesse by denying the fruit of this forbidden tree how could hee then omit this as a helpe to set his faith on worke if he had not beene remisse of the good comprised in the Covenant When his eyes beheld this tree of Knowledge of good and evill or the fruit of it how could he omit to set his faith on worke to feed his soule with it's signification of the good if hee did abstaine or a fall into the contrary evill if he did eate and how durst he feed his body with
is explained in pag. 32. Or how was the worke of a perfect rest in Christ by Faith and in fruition by hope finished from the foundation of the world as the Author to the Hebrewes affirmes Hebr. 4.3 and as is explained pag. 25. To the second part of the Objection true it is by Adams default hee was as is described pag. 30. dead in sinne farre more deepe then I suppose you meane for man being dead in sins and trespasses against the universall grace of God in Christ is farre different from that in Adams fall as to be twice dead and pluckt up by the roote is different from them both as in the prosecution of the sixth point will clearely appeare To the third part of the Objection true it is mortality seized upon his body but it is also as true that by mercy in the blood of the Lambe mans body came but thus to be mortall for this mortality doth but at most separate the soule from the body which is but the shadow of that death intended in the Covenant for us in the fall of Adam as is described pag. 21. 22. 23. and as will more appeare by the death of the second Adam in the eighth Chapter following Object 4. Your observation is refuted Rom. 5.12.13 c. Are all Infants that die saved if not what is the cause of their condemnation Answ To the first part Rom. 5.12.13 the Apostle to the praise of Gods universall grace parallelling the first Adam to the second Adam hee there layes downe a double Argument the first that although by Adams sinne sinne entred into the world that is originally as the cause of all mens perishing when they were dependant on him in the Covenant for afterwards hee was as are all men Christ only excepted but a private man cap. 5. So that Adams sinne as now it is is but the occasion of mans sinne by his owne default to his eternall destruction and their owne sinne is the onely cause thereof as committed against Christ and the ground thereof is exprest by the Apostle in the 18. verse following Secondly it is further implyed in these two verses that that mans sinnes now so committed that is against Christ to whom all power is given and to whom all stand related for good and evill that the prevalency of their sinne against him doth increase the prevalency of the shadow of death unto them namely the frequency of the separation of the soule from the body and also of death in the substance namely mans separation from God his chiefest good in this relation and united to the contrary evill and by his owne remissenesse being ignorant of all yet then God in mercy to the promise added the Law to reveale to reckon or impute mans sinne unto him that he might see how hee runne on his owne misery wherefore in the 20. verse rightly saith the Apostle The Law entred that the offence as the spring of misery might abound that where sinne abounded grace might much more abound that as sinne had raigned unto death even so might grace raigne through righteousnesse unto eternall life by Iesus Christ verse 21. Therefore my observation is confirmed by the Apostle in these verses and not refuted See these verses further explained in cap. 9. to the second part of the objection yes all Infants are saved and therefore I can shew you what once was the cause of their condemnation namely Adams one offence when he was a publike person and the signe of it now onely remaines in their nature to meet and dispose them as fit subjects successively to receive salvation in the universall grace of God by Iesus Christ as saved creatures namely the poyson of the Serpent as reduced but to a seed the foresaid infusion flowing from the estate they are now in namely Gods universall mercy in the promised seede imputed righteousnesse as is further described pag. 36. 37. Object 5. If Adam fell the ninth houre of the sixth day Pag. 25. how did God in the end of that day see all his workes to be very good Answ I demand of you how he did see all his works the sixth day very good in the end of that day seeing it is not mentioned so in the Text and Moses saith expresly that on the seventh day God ended his workes which he had made and therefore it remaines for you to prove that God said so according to your inference at the end of the sixth day and in what sense Moses meanes that God ended his worke on the seventh day see pag. 34. Object 6. The exposition of the particle Put Pag. 28. savours of Semipelagianisme so doth the phrase of internall disposition infused universally Answ If that exposition which tends to demonstrate God onely in Christ Iesus an unversall good to man and that it pleased the Father that in him all fulnesse should dwell and so in all things Christ must have the preheminence to communicate even the least good to man as a meanes to his chiefest good and all restored by Christ then surely if this doctrine savour of Semipelagianisme it becomes you and I to be not onely halfe or almost but altogether Pelagians And that this doth so demonstrate God in Christ besides the maine scope of this whole Treatise see in cap. 6. cap. 12. in my answer to the tenth Objection cap. 12. the which doth most clearely prove the point Object 7. The last clause is false Pag. 30. Answ It is not so untill you have proved it so Object 8. The universall election is false Pag. ibid. Pag. 31. Object 9. Men perish for Adams transgression and their owne Answer to both Objections Both these Objections are answered in my answer to the 21. and 22. pages precedently Object 10. That justification without Faith Pag. 33. is against the current of Scripture Ans That this text nominates justification I am sure is true Rom. 5.18 and that the Apostle relates this justification without relation to mans receptive instrument of beliefe is as true for here the Apostle relates this justification to man as meerely passive when God was found of us that sought him not even when wee as Adam received this imputation to life and glory when God came to seeke and to save that which was lost not imputing out sinne to Adam according to the justice of the Covenant Therefore this justification as opposed to the ordinary reception of it by mans instrument of beliefe called justifying * Mans beliefe receiving this justification is therefore called justifying faith Faith was extraordinary and therefore although not according to the current of Scriptures yet according to the Scripture as for example that light which was before the Sunne was made in an ordinary course to communicate light unto the world was true light so this truth is truth though not according to the current of Scriptures in an ordinary course But as for this justification as related to mans receptive
he did although hee knew that from Caines exemplary concision the wickednesse of man was great in the earth yea every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evill continually then it * God is said to repent not in any respect of his internall divine glory for in his unmeasurable perfections he is one intire serene stilnesse but God is said properly to repent according as hee doth d●aw backe that good or ev ll which he communicates to man by that second definitive rule of truth mentioned ca. 8. by which he ordinarily wills his glory to ●eturne to himself from man repented the Lord that he had made man in the earth and yet all the said time of Noahs preparing the Arke before their eyes God did by it excitively draw them implicitly telling them yet there was mercie for them But this mercy they despise minding onely earthly contentments agreeable to sense as the bruit as is further implyed by the words of our Saviour F●r saith hee in the dayes of Noah that were before the flood they were eating and drinking and marrying and giving in marriage untill the day that Noah entred into the Arke And that all this time God did excitively draw them to returne to him by Christ is witnessed by Saint Peter for saith hee God in the spirit of Christ preached to them who sometimes were disobedient when as once the long suffering of God wayted in the dayes of Noah while the Arke was in preparing and as I said before this grace they despised wherefore God spared not the old world of the ungodly but brought in the flood c. Mat. 24.38 1 Pet 3.19.20 2 Pet. 2.5 Yet here we must not judge that all that perished in this temporall judgement perished eternally For godly men sometimes in Gods generall judgements are swept away for their great remissenesse to Gods great mercies extended to them and yet passe through that shade of death to eternall life as did good old Eli and as did meeke Moses whose carkasse fell in the wildernesse amongst the rest yet God let him see the terrestriall Canaan a figure of the celestiall felicity as a pledge of his sure passage through that shade of death to eternall life so also all in this flood who perished being Infants or in childhood or naturall Ideots or the like passed through this dreadfull flood to eternall felicity Therefore O Lord thou punishest unwillingly nor grievest the children of men to crush under thy feet all the prisoners of the earth Lam 3.33 Againe where Saint Peter referres salvation to Noah saying that Noah the eighth person was saved hee meaneth not but the other seven in that Arke which was the figure of Christ were also saved in it from the stood But in the number eight another thing is meant namely as an eighth day was to be the promised seed his resurrection day therefore here the number of eight as referred onely to Noah implyed that although the other seven were saved from that flood in the Ark ye Noah only then was saved in it as risen with Christ by faith in the object of justification by which he built the Arke to the saving of his house by which he condemned the world and became heire of the righteousnesse which is by faith Hebr. 11.7 figuratively implying that God in Christ is the Saviour of all men from Adams transgression and more to live in this day of Grace to receive by faith his free guift of life in glory yet his salvation is more speciall to them that believe as here in Noah wee see and as before is noted Cap. 4. Againe God having in the Arke saved both man and beast at least paires of all kinde At their comming out of the Arke then Noah that by faith rested onely upon the pillar of truth and object of life for the good of this life and a better hee no sooner comes out of the Arke into the world but hee refreshed his heart by faith in the seed of the womans satisfactory righteousnesse as the only ground of all blessednesse Genes 8.20 In Adam pu●e naturalls man had a naturall ●ight to the creatures and the good of the● afterwards by the Covenant not onely that but also a right to the Creatures in a supernaturall relation and then that right in the fall being l●st then the second Adam as the first-borne of every c●eature opened the womb of all perfection towards which it doth travell til now and then God by g●ft conferred upon all mankind divine right of this life and that to come so likewise when by the universall apostasy of man that right was deservedly to be cut off yet then God established by Ch●ists satisfactory sacrifice to man a right as to the world to come so to the creatures till time shall be no mo e as here wee see therefore all mankind have a divine right to the Creatures Wherefore God manifested to all of them that on it hee rested also fully contented and satisfied towards the world yea although now God did fore-see the concision of the hearts of the children of men for future times against him as it precedently was in Caines posterity yet upon Christs satisfactory righteousnesse he now ratifies to all mankind this worlds good till time shall be no more to be mans day of Grace to receive Gods guift of eternall glory for saith Moses Iehovah smelled a Savour of rest and Iehovah said in his heart I will not againe curse the earth any more for mans sake for the imaginations of mans heart is evill from his youth neither will I any more smite every thing living as I have done while the earth remaineth Seed-time and Harvest and cold and heat and Summer and Winter and day and night shall not cease vers 21.22 And accordingly in the next Chapter God againe renewes his mercifull production of mankinde for This is the third production of mankind given by God the first before the fall Gen. 1. the second by Christ the second Adam and restorer of all Gen. 3.16 the third is this mercifull restauration saith Moses God blessed Noah and his sonnes and said unto them be fruitfull and multiply and replenish the earth Also he gave man right over the Creatures and a Law to eate flesh letting out the blood thereof also a law against murthering of mankind Verse 2.3 And commands them to consider all this to be the renewing of his Covenant of Grace universally to all mankind For saith Moses God saith unto Noah and his sonnes with him saying And I behold I establish my covenant with you and with your seed after you for ever and with every creature that is with you v. 8. Also God gave them the Rain-bow as a witnesse of this mercy to perpetuall generation Verse 13. and Vers 16. saith God the Bow shall be in the cloud I will looke upon it that I may remember the everlasting Covenant betweene God and every living creature of
not for the Covenant required faith in truth and love to God in that relation hee stood but with all his heart and all his soule and all his strength and no more Therefore though hee was at the foresaid brink of desperation yet he sinned not Againe the strength of his humane nature being not able to keepe up from desperation under that vast and dreadfull separation yet hee in his unfained cry why hast thou forsaken mee as the second Adam witnessed Gods truth namely that God really intended death that is this twofold separation as it was said in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt certainly die the death (a) This death of the second Adam proves that God really intended the same to man w●th the fi st Adam and so dissolved that lie of Satan who said yee shall not die at all for he being personally God-man and so more powerfull then any meere creature therefore justice required his personall power so farre as need was and therefore although as a meere creature he cryed out Why hast thou forsaken mee yet in the power of his personall operations hee cries out My God my God and so Faith mightily (b) Christ descended not locally into the place of the damned because his faith and love to the full sati faction of divine justice wrought up to God through all interposing difficulties therefo●e it was unpossible hee should be held of the sorrowes of death and so hee triumphed over all the enemies of his Fathe●s glory which was to result to him out of the good of mankinde Psal 16.8.11 working by love reached the power of an endlesse life from under the most vast depth of separation in an endlesse death I say this was by Faith in Gods truth and Gods righteous justice to him in that relation in which he then stood for his eternall blessednesse for saith hee to God I set thee ever before me and thou wilt open to me the way of life and so with a loud voyce hee renders his soule saying Father into thy hands I commend my Spirit Luk 23 46. And so by the eternall Spirit as saith the Apostle Hee offered himselfe to God without spot to purge our consciences from dead works to s●rve the living God he so (c) But now to this point there are three which beare witnesse in heaven namely the th●ee persons in the one God in their severall order by uphold●ng and maintaining that created Angelicall glory for the members of the second Adam to all eternity which God from time to time here on earth hath promised them and still doth evidence it by three witnesses on earth namely first by Christs blood-shed as the seale of the satisfaction of divine justice which obtained that eternall life Secondly by water namely the worke of Re●eneration cleansing mans Spirit in Faith and love to the mystery Thirdly by the Spirit in the ministe●y of the word and Sacraments most eminently witnessing the purchase and free gift of that glory to man through a●l ages 1 Iohn 5.7.8 witnessed that other truth of Gods against Satans lie namely that God really intended to man the knowledge of good in the glory of Angells by his Covenant with Adam and in the righteousnesse of the second Adam and so dissolv'd that other lye of Satan that God only pretended it but never intended it and to the same end he gave himselfe also a ransome for all men in the fourth estate of man to redeeme them from their Apostacie And for conclusion to this Chapter observe these five particulars First that when in common speech we say that Christ fulfilled the Law we may rightly understand it only of the Morall Law because he by perfect love to God and his Neighbour did fulfill all Lawes that is not only the Covenant as it was with Adam but also as upon these two did hang all the Law and the Prophets with respect of mans fourth estate as before is proved Secondly is it so that Christ rais'd his Soule (a) The first Resurrection of Iesus Christ our Lord. by beliefe of truth and perfect love from that vast depth of death and that that was his first and great resurrection as the second Adam Hence observe that the raising of his body was his second resurrection and most properly by the glory of the Father (b) The second Resurrection of Iesus Christ our Lord. and from Divine Justice his first step to his eternall happinesse for so great a worke as the redemption of the world Phil. 2.9 in this fourth estate of man Thirdly is it so that the works of the Sonne of God was so potent in beliefe of truth to that blessednesse which was set before him Heb. 12. as that it wrought up to God from under so vast a separation in flames of burning love to Gods glory by the redemption of the world Hence observe that to put any worth upon any other mans works as to affirme they can deserve by their obedience to God that he should free them from eternall death or render them the reward of eternall life yea and that they can supererogate for others also I say observe that any of this Doctrine is not only a blasphemous derogating from Christs workes but also against the guift of God imputing it arrogating to man that which is not his also it overthroweth the foundation of mans salvation and that fundamentally for it not only makes voyd the object of Justification but cuts off mans worke of Faith to that object in a justifying relation as before is observed against the Iewes pag. 78. Fourthly is it so that God estated the Covenant with Adam that if it were by him fulfilled God by him should then receive the praise of his justice to all eternity in the foresaid twofold respects as Chap. 2. pag. 12.13 And likewise if the second Adam did fulfill it that by him under divine justice hee also might receive the praise of his justice to all eternity and that Christ accordingly did render him his justice to every tittle and pronounc'd it finished Hence observe that God never intended nor needed to make a personall reprobation of most men to unavoydable destruction to the everlasting praise of his justice For if the Covenant had bin fulfilled by either Adam it it was to the praise of his justice to all eternity as here we see and the Covenant of grace is so full to this point that all mankinde may ascend to eternall life by Christ if they will but apply themselves in what they have received and to what they might receive in him yet by Christ Gods justice is eternally glorifyed as is proved Therefore God never made in vaine such a personall reprobation to passe upon the most of mankinde Fiftly observe that when I say Christs righteousnesse is imputed to all mankinde in generall or to man beleeving truth more speciall as is described I meane not Christ his righteousnesse essentially as God nor
it in their hearts and so although the Hea●hen had not the Law yet by some meanes they might come to know the Law and so the Law became written in their hearts Suppose some did so come to know the Law Answ yet it makes nothing to the purpose for it is one thing to have the Law of Christ in the Theory in some mens minds as it is in the divels and another thing to have the spirit of man inclined universally to worship the divine Majesty and to implore the same in time of need with hope of mercy yea so farre that if this be improved in man having not the Law it will neverthelesse terminate in the true circumcision of the heart as is plainly proved in the 7. Chap. of this Treatise Againe as for the divels and men so farre forth as they adhere to him their consciences may accuse them of evill but that the consciences of divels can excuse them in any respect of uprightnesse to God-ward as did the consciences of these Heathen excuse as well as accuse Rom. 2. but not so in divels by any testimony of Scriptures therefore the spirits of all mankind were meetly disposed by the foresaid infusion and the serpents nature as reduced but to a seed to receive mercy from the throne of grace in Jesus Christ But it wil be objected this disposition came not by Christ Object 12 in the foresaid infusion but it is the remainder of the Law left in the fall of Adam hereditarily descending in the nature of man This contradicts the former because it grants some good dispositions naturally inclining mankinde to God which is not in divels Againe Answ this implyes the justice of God was not universally full in the fall of Adam therefore man lost not the Law totally and eternally consequently not all holinesse and righteousnesse consequently some power internally remaines by which he may returne to God in the Covenant as it was in the first Adam for no power is in it selfe of no use proper to it's end therefore not this Againe it implyes the fall of Adam was not so irrecoverably deepe as to need the second Adam to be a person infinite in power by it to raise us from that vast misery consequently the restauration of the world may rather be attributed to the dignity of Christs Person then to the absolute necessity of his person so dignified in power to make good his Fathers truth against all the lies of Satan to the full satisfaction of divine Justice in the improvement of his personall operations as in the 8. Chapter is proved Againe it eclypseth the glory of Gods grace and mercy by Christ Jesus because it referres this internall inclination of the Law written not to Gods universall mercy in the gift of the promised seed when none but the Image of Satan by his lies was written in mans heart by Satans malice and mans owne remissenesse and by divine Justice totally and eternally so to remaine And in a word because this brings man to turne his eyes to looke upon his left and remaining abilities so that all he hath before faith is not received from Gods mercy in Christ but from his owne store and so by pride to fall from grace Therefore this internall disposition was infused by Gods universall grace in the promised seed And to conclude as this opinion on the one side lessens the glory of Gods Justice in the fall of Adam and also the glory of Gods grace by the second Adam the restorer of all so also it continues an intermingled confusion in the body of Divinity Object 13 to the furtherance of the mysteries of iniquity Againe it will be objected although by Moses God doth expresse the planted and inclosed garden of Eden was made with every tree good for food and pleasant to sight and different from the perfections of the created globe and made in the midst thereof to grow two trees and named the one the tree of Life the other the tree of Knowledge of good evil Likewise threatned Adam with certaine death if hee did eate of the fruit forbidden him yet because God did not in plainnesse of speech expresse that by these two things he prefigured to Adam that by his worke in the Covenant God intended to raise the world from it's naturall perfections to a supernaturall perfection and man to the glory of Angels or to an evill equivalently contrary therefore we are not to believe any such thing was then intended by God to Adam as a publike person by Covenant Answ It doth not follow by any just consequence if wee carefully examine Gods proceedings in manifesting to mankind the transcendent glory of Heaven for as to Adam in the garden before the fall he did not in plainnes of speech expresse the same so never after till the fulnesse of time for till then God at sundry times and in divers manners spake in times past unto the Fathers hath in these last dayes spoken unto us by his Son in open face and plainnesse of speech but never before Heb. 1.2 3 2 Cor. 3.12.18 But to proceed to a particular answer for proofe of the point and first as God did not by Moses in plainnes of speech declare what he meant to Adam before the fall by those figures so neither after the fall by Moses to the world was Christ the second Adam in plainnesse of speech exprest to be the first borne of every creature from the dead fall of Adam opening the wombe of all perfection but in figures as by Cain as the first borne and by the Law of the first borne of mankind and the Law of the first borne of beasts and the Law of the first fruits of vegetables as growing in the terrestriall Canaan Exod. 13.2 Exod. 22.29 30. Neither was it ever in plainnesse of speech made knowne by Moses nor the Prophets that the whole creation travelleth till now with man believing truth from the bondage of corruption to be partaker of the glorious libertie of the s●nnes of of God but onely figured as by a Law for the land to rest as well as for mans rest and in the number of seven as pointing at perfection as pag. 35. 36. Neither was it by Moses not the Prophets made knowne to the world in plainnesse of speech that Christ as God-man should second the first Adam in the worke of the restauration of the world but inclusively in the promised seed of the Woman to breake the serpents head and also as the seed of Abraham and David c. Neither as by Moses in plainnesse of speech did God expresse that the garden of Eden was the figure of Angels glory to Adam so neither did hee expresse by plainnesse of speech to Israel that the Land of Canaan was to them a figure of the heavenly Canaan but by the agreement of the Type with the Antitype as is implyed Esay 51.3 yet the Apostle concludes that God denyed them rest in the Land of
First because here was Conditions betweene God and Adam for life and death I say for life and death to Adam and all mankinde comprehended in generall under the names of good and evill good to be rendered if hee did obey the Rule of the Covenant evill if he did disobey it Secondly those conditions were agreed on by Adam with a full consent he being then not only in the perfections of the second Table of the Law as to love his Neighbour as himselfe but also in the perfection of the first Table of the Law namely in the truth and utmost extent of his love to God with all his Soul● and with all his Strength therefore hee readily concluded this Covenant with God for the world in this different Estate from the former But for the cleare opening of this Second Estate I will propound foure things First what this Garden was 2 What its signification was 3 What Adams obedience in it was 4 What was the end God intended by Adams obedience in this Covenant First this Garden was but a part of the Terrestriall Globe for saith the Text The Lord God planted a Garden Eastward in Eden therefore but a part Gen. 2.8 This Garden was planted by God with Plants some for Adams delightfull consolation and some for his nutrimentall sustentation for saith the Text Out of the ground the Lord God made to grow every tree pleasant to sight and good for food Verse 9. In the midst of the Garden God planted two trees distinguished by two significant names implying some further use for saith the Text God caused to grow the tree of life also in the midst of the Garden and the tree of knowle●ge of good and evill Gen. 2.8 Into this Garden came a River to replenish it in fruitfulnesse and comming in but one there God divided it into foure and from thence it did run downe the terrestriall Globe foure wayes as saith the Text And a River went out of Eden to water the Garden and from thence it was parted and came int● f●ure heads c. Gen. 2.10 This Plantation or Garden being thus finished Adam by God was thither conveyed and the perfections thereof was to depend upon his operations for saith the Text. The Lord God tooke the man and put him into the Garden of Eden to dresse it and to keepe it Verse 5. And so much for what this plantation was Certainly this was for some further end and use then was the perfections of the whole terrestriall Globe for all the trees of this Plantation or Garden were vegetables in their perfections as were those on the whole terrestriall Globe Therefore this Garden as a plantation by sequestration and signification made the onely difference between it and the world And the signification in generall was but this that as in future time the land of Canaan with all it 's fruitfull splendor did prefigure the celestiall Canaan As to the second Adam as appeares Chap. 8. So this to Adam in the beginning of time did prefigure the same Angelicall felicity of Divine glory in the Heaven of heavens From this ground God made the Garden to excell the glory of the whole terrestriall globe that by faith Adams soule might be raised to worke by love to God feeding on Angells food by beliefe of truth So much for the generall signification Againe more particularly First whereas God did not commit the whole terrestriall globe but onely this part as the glory of the world to Adams dressing and keeping This figuratively implies that now by vertue of Gods Ordinance the creation had it's dependence for it's good naturall and supernaturall or for an evill equivalently contrary upon Adams operations in this Covenant And here came in the onely ground how by Adam the creation could be raised higher or lose it's supernaturall perfections and become subject to vanity Rom. 8. Whereas God caused to grow up in the midst of the Garden a naturall tree naming it the Teee of life this figured to Adam that he to his naturall posterity in obeying the worke of the Covenant by beliefe of truth should from Divine Justice be as a tree in his branches of naturall perfections growing up to a celestiall life or as a flourishing tree of eternall life But now this tree of life is onely in Christ Jesus the second Adam to all right believers Rev. 2.7 This River running downe it's chrystall streames foure severall wayes from this Paradise of terrestriall pleasure as from the Throne of God prefigured to Adams faith Gods justice as pure streames of waters of celestiall life for his obedience according to the Covenant should successively run downe to render eternall life first by faith and secondly by fruition to his posterity through all generations to the last of mankind that was to descend of his loynes but now this River onely issues from the second Adam in the doctrine of truth and mercy conveying Gods gift of his imputed righteousnesse as the tree of life Rev. 22.12 The other tree which God caused to grow in the midst of the Garden naming it the tree of Knowledge of good and evill prefigured to Adams faith summarily all contained in the Covenant that is the Knowledge of good equivalent to Angels or the knowledge of evill equivalently contrary in either as he did obey or disobey And the ground why God instituted this Garden thus in all these prefigurations and significations was this Because the heavenly glory to Adams terrestriall perfections was supernaturall for it is one thing for Adam to k●ow by the perfections of the creation that God was able to create a supernaturall glory he appearing by it Infinite in Wisedome Power and Goodnesse And another thing that hee had created it and would bring him to it if hee did obey the rule of the Covenant for the perfections of the creation did demonstrate to Adam that God was able to doe such a thing but no more but the Covenant by God Word was exprest for a contrary evill And all those prefigurations and significations from the agreeablenesse of the type with the antitype did make knowne to Adam that the supernaturall glory was made and in being also from the word knowledge of good that he should ascend to enjoy it to all eternity if hee did obey the rule of the Covenant or an evill equivalently contrary if he did disobey and therefore because supernaturall all was needfull to strengthen Adams faith to withstand the temptation in point of triall See this point cleared to the 13. Objection in Chap. 12. for God doth nothing in vaine And so much for what the Garden or Plantations signification was with respect to Adams worke in the Covenant Thirdly now Adam was to obey two rules in the Covenant one affirmative the other negative The affirmative was to this end namely to continue his naturall being to be a meanes to a supernaturall end by eating the fruits of this Garden for as in the precedent estate of
all flesh that is upon the earth c. And in the next place Moses tels us the manner of the proceedings betweene God and this new Generation Chap. 11. Verse 1. He tells us the whole earth was then of one language and also in processe of time whither they journed and at length setled For he saith it came to passe as they journied from the East they found a plaine in the Land of Shynar and they dwelt there Also hee tels what they said and what they did with an unanimous consent They said one to another Goe too let us make bricke and burne them throughly and they had bricke for stone and slime had they for morter And they said goe too let us build us a City and a Tower whose top may reach unto Heaven And then hee tels us to what end and purpose was this great building set up by all these great Counsell cost and labour namely that their owne imaginations and the worke of their owne hands might get them an immortall Name and Fame on earth For they said Let us make us a name lest we be scattered abroad upon the face of the whole Earth This implies they all were now in this plaine Resident and also their apostasie universally from God in the Pillar of truth in which Oracle was wrapt up the gift of mortall and immortall good for from it wee see upon Noahs sacrifice he conveyed to them and theirs all happinesse present and to come So here you see the manner of the proceedings of this new generation towards God for all his gracious mercy by the promised seed his satisfactory righteousnesse Againe it followes in what manner God proceeded for this to them saith Moses Iehovah came downe to see the City and the Tower that the children of men builded and Iehovah said the people are all one and they have all one language and this they begin to doe and nothing will restraine them from that which they have imagined to doe These words imply two things first that this building to the foresaid end was very offensive to God secondly that they were so farre gone in this transcendent mischiefe as no ordinary meanes could restraine their desired purposes and therefore God resolves upon an extraordinary meanes to divert them For saith the sacred Trinity Goe to let us goe downe and there confound their language that they may not understand one another and this did effect it For saith Moses Jehovah scattered them from thence abroad upon the face of all the earth and they left off to build the City therefore is the name if it called Babel because Jehovah there confounded the language of all the earth And in the tenth Chapter Moses relates in what parts of the world these scattered families did first settle and then concludes saying These are the Families of the sonnes of Noah after their generations in their Nations and by these were the Nations divided after the flood And so much for the first part of the time of Gods impartiall proceedings to mankind from which precedent premisses observe these particulars First from whence all heathenish Paganisme or Gentilisme did originally spring namely from Gods just punishmen● of this peoples universall Apostasie from the Pillar of truth and Oracle of life and glory descending so famously to them by tradition from Adam by Noah and renewed to them by Covenant from God therefore for this universall apostasie hee left them universally to walke in the vanity of their owne mindes as without God in the world about eighteene hundred yeeres Secondly observe that for mans turning from God in this object of Justification therefore the sacred Oracle was three times confin'd to narrow bounds First when Caine had killed Abel then it was confined to Adam and Evah and so downe to the Families of the ten first Fathers before the flood Secondly then confin'd in the Arke to Noah and his Family when God drowned all the off-spring of the ten Fathers together with Caines Posterity being partakers in apostasy from truth to lying vanities so by punishment in wofull miseries Thirdly confin'd now at Babel when God cast off all the Nations for casting away him in his truth and speciall mercies then was the object of life and glory confin'd to the Family of Shem impleyed Gen. 11. from the 10. verse to the end of the Chapter by Moses recording Shems Genealogie in the Booke of Life and none else mentioning their births their dayes of life and their particular deaths Thirdly observe how that righteous Noah lived and saw the apostasie of the old world and their punishment his own off-springs apostasie at Babel and their punishment the apostasie of Shems Family and so left this world and that family languishing so farre as worshipping the Idol Gods of the Heathen Iosh 24.23 And saith Broughton in his consent of Scripture Noah died but two yeeres before Abraham was borne therefore hee lived to see all this Fourthly observe that notwithstanding all these apostasies yet by tradition God upheld the Oracle of life in the world to this time For Shem now personally continued constant in the truth figuratively personating Christ as King of Peace and Priest of the most high God after the power of an endlesse life although man unbelieving descends downe to endlesse death Therefore Gods proceedings in this first part of time was to all mankinde alike without respect of persons as hee originally said to Caine If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted But if thou dost not well sinne lies at the dore as precedently is explicated CHAP. VI. Opening the second part of time namely from the time that God called Abraham to the time that he called the Gentiles by Christ in the Gospel VVHereas all Families of the earth at this time were cut off from the Oracle of life and Shems Family to which it was last confin'd by apostasie lay now perishing in their owne corruptions yet then comes God and renewes his gift of Christs righteousnesse imputed to come upon all men to justification of life for now hee predestinated all mankinde to life and glory the second time to enjoy this day of grace namely this world as a day of grace to receive by beliefe of his gift of Christs righteousnesse imputed the day of eternall glory This extraordinary mercy thus universally renewed by this second pr destination not onely proves the sufficiencie of Christs imputed righteteousnesse as the Fathers gift for the salvation of all all alike but also Gods willingnesse to have it effectuall as to a reasonable creature to bring him to happinesse according to his kinde not onely in an ordinary way but sometimes extraordinarily as appeareth in the 9. 10. chapters I say all for I meane both Shems Family and all the Families of the Earth which at this time comprehended all mankinde none excepted and for proofe of this point Gen. 12. saith Moses concerning this Predestination Iehovah had said unto * The
Gods word of truth giving this object of life is as Gods hand or instrument to reach this gift to man so also man his beliefe of that truth is as it were mans hand or instrument to receive this gift from God therefore it must be by beliefe of this truth Secondly it must be by beliefe of this word of truth as conveying the object of faith because man his reasonable soule is but a receiver into it selfe all its supernaturall felicity from externall objects believed as in Adam we see and therefore so in this object of justification Thirdly it is by beliefe of this truth because the aforesaid principles of derivative Amity which God put in the nature of all men doth internally dispose them to this Amity with God aswell as to enmity to Satan wherefore at first God requireth man to come to him in beliefe of truth but according to sense and reason as he doth excitively draw out that Principle so to give mans reasonable soule a further internall power to receive his gift of Christ namely a power to believe divine testimony as divine testimony that is to receive it from God as from God for as God gathers not where he strewes not so he gives this power to man that had it not to receive his gift of Christ the ground of all his happinesse Wherefore because this Elect Spouse did not so applie her received Talents to receive more Talents in Gods way to receive life in Christ the object of Faith but contrarily applied Gods talents and his law against him in his own way to have all their own way namely from terrestriall felicity and from Abrahams flesh and from the worth of their owne workes at best but conversant about the object of Faith and no way consonant to Faith in that object therefore God rejected this elect Spouse to the remarkable praise of his justice in all the world sixteene hundred yeares and more therefore he respects no mans person but according to his first Modell If thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted if thou dost not well sinne lies at the dore And from this ground it is the Apostle crieth out at the vast depth of Gods wise providence as being not able to comp●ehend the depth of that righteous dispensation in his justice and mercies interminglingly e●tended to the Generations and Nations of man Rom. 11. from ver 28 to the end And to this point may be referred Ezekiels vision of wheeles full of eyes running one within another c. as Reve●end brought on rightly observes in his Consent of Sc iptures Exodus 33.19.34.6 7. And by this Nations rejection we may take occasion by the way to observe the manner of Gods proceedings with the Sonnes of Adam for as he would not give this Nation possession of the Land promised to Abraham untill the sinnes of the Inhabitants namely the Canaanites were full to their finall destruction so neither would he call in the Gentiles to inherit their promised blessing in the seed of Abraham in whom hee predestinated them to it untill the sinnes of this Elect Nation was full and transcendent by slaying the Sonne of God in which promised seed they received all their good as was prefigured to them when God said to Moses the Mediator in the Tipe I will cause all my good to passe before thee meaning Christ and upon his death then c●me on their universall rejection totally but not finally for ever But it will here be objected Because God fore-appointed Christ to be slaine in the truth to answere the figurative Lambe in the Tipe consequently this did impose upon them a necessity that Christ must be slaine as he was and consequently this may seeme injustice in God to make that fact the fulfilling of this Nations sin to their remarkable destruction I grant that Christ must be slaine in the truth to answer the figurative Lambe in the Type I also grant that they were in some sort necessitated to slay Christ as they did but that necessity came not from God for God gave them severall demonstrative rules to the contrary As First by this exemplary punishment upon Cain that the blood of the just shall not goe unrevenged by him and this was recorded to them by Moses Secondly by giving a law to Noah and to his Sonnes that that man which spilt mans innocent blood his blood should be required of him that spilt it This also stood upon Record to them Thirdly to this elect Spouse God gave a figure how hee would have her to demeane her selfe in this fact of the death of Christ by the manner of their Father Abrahams offering Christ Tipically in Isaak as first to Abraham Isaa● was his dearely beloved although he used the knife to bereave him of life Gen. 22. 2. Abraham never intended nor attempted this fact untill from God he received an expresse commandement so to do Thirdly hee did slay him unwillingly in respect of his love to the promised child yet willingly in respect of his love to God and his commandement and so his unwillingnesse became a harmelesse nay-say to God But the fact of the children of Abraham in the death of Christ was a most wrongfull nay-say to God in all they did and therefore saith Christ to them Iob. 8.40 this did not Abraham presenting implicitly to their remembrance Abrahams Typicall fact in this businesse First that as Abraham slew Isaack really in his intention so might they intend and accomplish his death in the truth Secondly as Abraham did love him whom he really slew in his intention so much more ought they to love him in his death as the most proper child of promise Thirdly as Abraham never intended nor attempted to slay the promised seed untill there came an extraordinary command from God to doe so neither ought they much more in this fact of the death of Christ So it is one thing to do that which God before determined to be done by them and another thing to doe that thing as God would have them to do it Fourthly but when that commandement came then although in respect of their love to him they had beene unwilling yet in respect of their faith and love to God in this Mysterie they should have beene obediently willing to kill him as God should prescribe the manner as to Abraham he did for God in Abrahams typicall fact not onely intended to confirme their faith that Christ the seed promised should by the expiration of his life aspire the completion of all righteousnesse for the redemption of this world but also to teach them how to demeane themselves in the manner of Christs death in a harmelesse nay-say to God as did Abraham their Father The Negative precept of the Morall Law forbidding murther stood as their standing law to keepe them from all unjust taking away any innocent mans life much more not to take away the life of him which at least appeared to them a man sent from
the spirit of man for health was this namely it did quicken or enliven the originall principle of amity to God and enmity to Satan even as it did upon the fall of Adam by Christs restauration of all in the type then put into the nature of man hereditarily to descend as precedently is proved so now likewise upon Christ his fulfilling all righteousnesse in the truth this infused principle which was now dead in sinnes and trespasses was by the imbreathing of the spirit of God wheresoever the Gospell came it quickened and enlivened man in dispositions to harken to the externall call of Christ in the object of faith to the end they might receive the gift of faith to receive life in Christ wherefore saith Christ If any man will doe Gods Will he shall know of the doctrine whether it be of God or whether I speake of my selfe Joh. 7.17 18. Likewise he saith Verily verily I say unto you the houre is comming and now is when the dead shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of God and they that heare shall live Joh. 5.25 And the last clause where it is said they shall live leades us to the second part namely the spirits internall more speciall powring upon all flesh that is answerably as men did come in the precedent enlivened or renewed dispositions to Christ in the Gospel as being the object of faith held forth by the word of truth as the brazen Serpent from thence by the powring out of the Spirit they should receive the spirit of faith to be able to receive life in the object of faith as before in the precedent P. Hence it is the Apostle saith Awake thou that sleepest that is under those renewed dispositions towards Christ and stand up from the dead that is and rouse up this grace to harken to Gods call to the object of life and Christ shall give thee light that is the light of right beliefe as the truth is in Iesus from strength to strength and so to receive life in him Ephes 5.14.8 Hence it is that at Ephesus the Apostle said of God even when wee were dead in sinnes hath he quickened us together with Christ by grace yee are saved Ephes 2.5 and saith hee not of workes lest any man should boast for wee are his workmanship created in Christ Iesus unto good workes which God hath afore ordained that we should walke in them that is by his fore-ordination with Abraham as before is declared He also saith to those Gentiles Worke out your salvation with fea●e and trembling for it is God which worketh in you b●th to wi●l and to doe of his good pleasure Phil. 2.13 and the ground why God did thus extraordinarily externally and internally powre out his spirit upon the spirits of the Gentiles dead in sins and trespasses was this That as sinne by their apostasie had raigned unto death even so might his grace raigne through righteousnesse unto eternall life by Christ Iesus our Lord Rom. 5.21 A second ground was this that unlesse God had so excitively drawne them by powring out his spirit they neither could nor would ever come to him by Christ which is implyed by the words of our Saviour when he rebuked the Iewes in their proud apostacie being dead to live in him he saith no man can come unto me except the Father which sent me draw him Joh. 6.44 Likewise to those Iewes having the power of this enlivening spirit imbreathing upon their spirits and st●fled by them he saith Yee will not come unto mee that yee might have life Joh. 5 40. So that we may plainly see even under this extraordinary powring out of Gods spirit upon all flesh his proceedings are equally alike to all without respect of persons for then he sends forth his great Commission into all the world saying to his ambassadors goe yee into all the world and pre●c● the Gospell to every creature he that believeth and is baptised shall be saved hee that believeth not shall be damned Marke 16.15 16. Hence Saint Peter saith of a truth I perceive that God is no respecter of persons but in every nation he that feareth him and worketh righteousnesse is accepted of him Acts 10.34 35. all which is according to the first modell delivered to Caine if thou dost well shalt thou not be accepted c. Hence observe by the way that God is a God keeping covenant for as hee ordained these Gentiles to glory by covenant with Abraham he now accordingly called them to receive it wherefore Saint Peter urgeth the Gentiles upon this ground as well as the Iewes to returne to God in Christ saying repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of Iesus Christ for the remission of sinnes and receive the holy Ghost for saith he the promise is made to you and to your children and to all that are a farre off even as many as the Lord our God shall call Acts 2.39 Object But it will here be objected because he saith as many as the Lord God shall call therefore God intended not to powre his spirit on all and all alike consequently some were personally reprobated c. Answer The Apostle might well make this restriction yet never have any such intention First because he knew Gods proceedings upon the kindreds and nations of the earth should be by degrees calling some sooner and some later and not all at one time as all on a day as wee use to say therefore hee might well say as many as our Lord God shall call although it be intended personally alike to all Secondly the Apostle might well say as many as the Lord God shall call because hee knew God from the beginning had ordained to deny the efficacie of his call to some sort of men as he did to Cain for when he predestinated both Iewes and Gentiles in Christ Jesus with Abraham hee then gave the same rule of cursednesse to man turning this grace into wantonnesse as well as blessednesse to man submitting to it in the obedience of faith as formerly is declared therefore hee might well say as many as our Lord God shall call c. So likewise our Saviour alluding to this same rule of cursing and blessing to families and cities in the call of these Gentiles hee saith Some are the sonnes of peace and some are not Luke 10.3.5.18 For not onely believers but all mankinde in generall especially at that time of grace were the sonnes of peace that is in a reconcileable condition to God in Christ Jesus as for example although Cain was not a believer as was Abel yet there was a time when hee was a sonne of peace that is reconcileable in Christ his acceptable righteousnesse by Gods owne nterrogative testimony although afterwards hee was not for rejecting the spirits reproofe of sinne and so gracious an incouragement of him to submit to receive life and glory as formerly is proved Likewise our Saviour according to this rule of cursing and blessing in
at God as the eye doth follow the light So that if Adam was created in knowledge after the Image of him that created him as certainly hee was then mans originall righteousnesse in his pure naturals was this namely Col. 3.10 Eph. 4.24 man * Mans original righteousnesse operating understandingly from the effect to the cause from the whole creation to the Creator according to the rules of the perfections of the creation as to him in whom he and they did live move and had their being The reason why thus to operate was his naturall righteousnesse is because it was right according to the perfection of that truth which shined in the perfections of the creatures to him Againe his holinesse in his pure naturalls was this his operating according to the perfections of the creatures in the Mans originall holinesse purity of his perfect love to God in all through all and above all living not so much amongst the perfection of the creatures where he was as in God whom he so loved and the reason why in these perfections of love was conteined his naturall holinesse was this Because by it hee did not onely set God above all creatures but also by it hee did rightly dedicate himselfe to Gods use onely and alone with al his soule with al his heart and with all his strength for it is the property of love to adde to the perfection of the thing loved more then to it selfe as wee see in Ionathan and Moses c. That Adam had this in the perfection of it is proved thus if all love in men generally doth arise from that agreeablenesse which is betweene the subject and the object as certainly it doth then in Adam most of all because to him the Subject God the Object did shine in all the perfection of the creation in a sutable agreeablenesse in all things in all respects as before is proved Therefore in Adam there was the truth of that perfect love to God againe and not onely the truth but the uttermost extent of love in the strength thereof for if the beauty of the Object being transparant to the Subject will draw forth all the strength which is in the Subject to it selfe as in I●nathan to David 2 Sam. 1.26 Exod. 32.32 and Moses to God then much more did it draw forth Adams love to God as the most transparent object of beauty being an object of infinite goodnesse excitively drawing out his soule in all his strength in a liking and uniting affections in all through all and above all And from this Principle in his minde did naturally * The first originall of the first Table of the mo●all law spring the first Table of the morall Law namely to love God with all the soule and with all the strength and here I will note these five observations for conclusion of this Chapter First that man in his innocency in the perfections of his righteousnesse and holinesse was but the receiver of all his good as his being passively by creation and his blessednesse actively by reception as by his sense his reason will and affections he enjoyed God And what had hee that hee had not received for it is proper to God alone to be being and blessednesse in himselfe and of himselfe Therefore both men and Angels are but receivers of all their good from God Secondly here observe that the perfection of the creation in the estate of pure naturalls had no dependancie upon Adams Personall perfections or his perfect operations whereby they could keepe or lose their created perfections by him therefore it was from some other cause whereby they became subject to fall into vanity for in this estate Adam depended upon them for the support of his Personall perfections and operations but not they upon him for they were created in their flourishing perfections before Adam was All being made first in their immediate dependancie upon God but hee last therefore in this estate they had no such dependancie upon him Thirdly here observe that man perfect in holinesse and righteousnesse did not by false apprehensions interpose the good in the Creatures betwixt God and him to cut off his blessed union of love to God nor God from him for hee by that perfect love loded himselfe and all that created good in Go● from whom it came and so returning to God the glor● of all his workes which hee had created and made and so gave God full content Fourthly observe that in the estate of perfect Creation of the world God establish'd his Glory to returne to him in a mutuall concordancie of mans good and no otherwise and therefore the state of Creation produced man good and no evill for God looked upon all and saw it was all good as liking it well Fiftly observe that although Adam did beleeve God to be being and blessednesse in himself and of himselfe and communicating all blessednesse to him yet this estate to Adam was not an estate of Faith for Adams beliefe of all this did arise to him by naturall demonstration from the perfections of the Creation according with the perfection of his Senses and Reason and so to his will Therefore all to him was but Naturall but in an estate of Faith to live by Faith in God First for the thing beleeved it must be Supernaturall Secondly man his minde must depend for the attayning of it upon the credit he gives to the word of God which only declares the thing to him but so was not this Estate and therefore this was not an Estate of Faith to Adam But his next estate to this was an Estate of Faith namely the worke of the Covenant which is the next ground to be treated of And so much for Adams first Estate being naturally perfect in all CHAP. II. Opening the Covenant betweene God and man GOD having revealed to Moses the Creation of the World hee in the next place makes knowne to him a Garden that was Planted by God himselfe without the helpe of man in which place comes in the second Estate of Adam before his fall and his entrance into this Garden was to enter into Covenant with God and God with him for good and evill for this Estate did not propose good only to Adam as did the Estate of Creation * Adam was by God fitly enabled to perform the Covenant in the behalfe of God and the world before God called him to so weighty a b●sinesse and the reasons why God led Adam from one perfect State to a higher a●e primarily two first because the created perfections of this world could not direct or admit him to enjoy God answerable to his vast comprehension being a Spirit so neare the Angelicall nature secondly because God was delighted to receive his glory at as high a pitch as his reasonable creature could apprehend or comprehend its felicity to all eternity but good and evill was in the Covenant propounded unto him I call it a Covenant