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A29699 Paradice opened, or, The secreets, mysteries, and rarities of divine love, of infinite wisdom, and of wonderful counsel laid open to publick view also, the covenant of grace, and the high and glorious transactions of the Father and the Son in the covenant of redemption opened and improved at large, with the resolution of divers important questions and cases concerning both covenants ... : being the second and last part of The golden key / by Thomas Brooks ...; Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2 Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing B4953; ESTC R11759 249,733 284

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that is wrapped up in the Covenant is an everlasting joy and the righteousness that is wrapped up in the Covenant is an everlasting righteousness and the life that is ●r●pped up in the Covenant is an everlasting cap. life John 3. 16. and all the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 glory and salvation that is wrapped up in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●verl●sting the Covenant relation that is 〈◊〉 God and his people is everlasting and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Covenant is everlasting viz. Jesus Christ yesterday and Heb. 13. 8. to day and the same for ever Though the Covenant in respect of our own personal entring into it is made with us now in time and hath a beginning yet for continuance it is everlasting and without end it shall remain for ever and ever But Secondly This Covenant of Grace under which the Saints stand is sometimes stiled a Covenant of life Mal. 2. 5. My Covenant was with him of life and peace life is restored and life is promised and life is setled by the Covenant There is no safe life no comfortable life no easie Omnis vita ●st pr●p●●d ●e●ation●m Philosophers say that a fly is more excellent than the hea●ens because the fly has life which the heavens have not life no happy life no honourable life no glorious life for any sinner that is not under the bond of this Covenant All mankind had been eternally lost and God had lost all the glory of his mercy for ever had he not of his own free grace and mercy made a Covenant of life with poor sinners A man in the Covenant of Grace hath three degrees of life The first in this life when Christ lives in him The second when his body returns to the earth and his soul to God that gave it The third at the end of the world when body and soul reunited shall enjoy heaven Thirdly This Covenant of Grace under which the Saints or faithful people of Christ stand is sometimes 〈◊〉 a holy Covenant Daniel describing the wickedness of Antiochus Epiphanes saith His heart shall be against the Da● 11. 2● 30. holy Covenant He shall have indignation against the holy Covenant And have intelligence with them that forsake the holy Covenant So the Psalmist For he remembred his ●sal ●●5 42 43. Heb. 〈◊〉 of his ●●liness that is 〈◊〉 sacred and 〈◊〉 Covenant that ●e had ●ade with Abraham and ●is posterity holy promise and Abraham his servant Pro●ise her● being put for Covenant by a Synechdoche Luk. 1. 72. To perf●rm the mercy promised to our fathers and to remember his holy covenant The parties interested in this Covenant are holy here you have a holy God and a holy people in Covenant together Holiness is one of the principal things that is promised in the Covenant the Covenant commands holiness and encourages ●● holiness and works souls up to a higher degree of holiness and sences and arms gracious souls against all external and internal unholiness See my Tre●tise of holiness Psal ●0 5. Heb. 3. 1. 1 Thes 5. 27. 2 P●t 1. 21. 1 Pet. 3. 5. 1 C●r 3. 17. ● Pet. 2. 9 c. The Author of this Covenant is holy the Mediator of this Covenant is holy the great blessings contained in this Covenant are holy blessings and the people taken into this Covenant are sometimes stiled holy brethren holy men holy women An holy Temple an holy Priestood an holy Nation an holy People as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the margent together When ever God brings a poor soul under the bond of the Covenant he makes him holy and he makes him love holiness and prize holiness and delight in holiness and J●b 8. Psal 20. press and follow hard after holiness A holy God will not take an unholy person by the hand as Joh speaks neither will he allow of such to take his Covenant into their mouths as the Psalmist speaks Fourthly This Covenant of Grace under which the Saints stand is sometimes stiled a Covenant of peace Numb 25. 12. Behold I give unto him my covenant of peace Peace is the comprehension of all blessings and prosperity Mat. 2. 5. All sorts of peace viz. peace with God and peace with conscience and peace with the creatures flows from the Covenant of Grace There is 1. An external peace and that is with men 2. There is a supernatural peace and that is with God 3. There is an internal peace and that is with conscience 4. There is an eternal peace and that is in heaven Now all these sorts of peace flow in upon us through the Covenant of Grace The Hebrew word for peace comes from a root which denotes perfection the end of the upright man is perfection of happiness Hence the Rabbins say that the holy blessed God finds not any vessel that will contain enough of blessin●● f●● Israel but the vessel of peace Peace is a very comprehensive word it carries in the womb of it all outward blessings it was the common greeting of the Jews 〈◊〉 be unto you And thus David by his proxy salutes Nab●l Peace be to thee and thy house The Ancients were wo●● to paint Peace in the form of a woman with a ho●n of plenty in her hand The Covenant of Grace is that hand by which God gives out all sorts of peace unto us Isa 54. 10. Neither shall the Covenant of my peace be removed saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee The Covenant is here called the Covenant of peace because the Lord therein offers us all those things that may make us compleatly happy for under this word peace the Hebrew comprehend all happiness and felicity Ezek. 34. 25. And I will make with them a covenant of peace the Hebrew is I will cut with them a covenant of peace This expre●ion of cutting a Covenant is taken from the custom of the Jews in their making of Covenants The manner of this ceremony or solemnity Jeremy declares saying I will give Je● 34. 18. the men that have trans●ressed my Covenant which have not performed the words of the Covenant which they had struck before me when they cut the calf in twain and passed between the parts thereof Their manner was to kill Sacrifices to cut This Ceremony or Solemnity of co●enanting The Romans and other Nations used some Ju●ge T●e Heat●●ns borrowed this custom 〈◊〉 the Jews But of this before these Sacrifices in twain to lay the two parts thus divided in the midst piece against piece exactly one over against another to answer each other Then the parties Covenanting passed betwixt the parts of the Sacrifices so slit in twain and laid answerably to one another The meaning of which ceremonies and solemnities is conceived to be this viz. as part answered to part so there was an harmonious correspondency and answerableness of their minds and hearts that struck Covenant And as part was severed from part so the Covenanters implyed if not
and applyed in the following Treatise their fears and doubts c. would quickly vanish and they would have their triumphant songs their mourning would soon be turned into rejoycing their complaints into Hallelujahs Neither do I know any thing in all this world that would contribute more to seriousness spiritualness heavenlyness humbleness holyness and fruitfulness then a right understanding of these two Covenants and a Divine improvement of them There are many choice Christians who have alwayes either tears in their eyes complaints in their mouths or sighs in their breasts and O that these above all others would make these two Covenants their daily Companions Let these few kinds suffice concerning the following Treatise Now Sir John I shall crave leave to put you and your Lady a little in mind of your deceased and glorified Father He is a true Friend saith the Smyrnean Poet of Ponder upon that Deut. 13. 6. Thy friend which is as thine own soul old who continueth the memory of his deceased Friend When a Friend of Austin's dyed he professed he was put into a great streight whether he himself should be willing to live or willing to dye he was unwilling to live because one half of himself was dead yet he was not willing to dye because his Friend did partly live in him though he was dead Let you and I make the application as we see cause your glorified Fathers Name and Memory remains to this day as fresh and fragant as the Rose of Sharon among all those that fear the Lord and Cant. 2. ● had the happiness of inward acquaintance with him The memory of the just is blessed but the name of the wicked shall not In the Original it is The memory of the just Prov. 10. 7. M●moria just 〈◊〉 So Bat● 〈◊〉 benam 〈◊〉 servasso 〈◊〉 Plant. If I may but keep a good Name I have wealth e 〈…〉 saith the Heathen 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in benedictionem shall be for a blessing the very remembring of them shall bring a blessing to such as do remember them The Moralists say of Fame or of a mans good Name Omnia si perdas famam servare memento Quâ semel amissâ postea nullus eris i. e. Whatsoever commodity you lose be sure yet to preserve that Heb. 11. 1● 39. A good renown is better than a golden Girdle saith the French Proverb jewel of a good Name This jewel among others your honoured Father carried with him to the Grave yea to Heaven There is nothing raises a mans Name Fame in the World like holyness The seven Deacons that the Church chose were holy men Act. 6. 5. and they were men of good report V. 3. They were men well witnessed unto well testified off as the Greek word imports The Persians seldom write their Kings Name but in characters of gold throughout the Old and New Testament God has written the Names of just men in golden characters as I may speak Cornelius was a holy man Act. 10. 1 2 3 4. and he was a man of good report among all the Nation of the Jews V. 22. Ananias was a holy man Act. 9. 10 20. and he was a man of a good report Act. 22. 12. Gajus and Demetrius were both holy men and of a good report witness that third Epistle of John The Patriarchs and Prophets were holy men and they were men of a good report Heb. 11. 1 2. For by it the Elders obtained a good report their holyness did eternalize their Names The Apostles were holy men 1 Thes 2. 10. and they were men of good report 2 Cor. 6. 8. Now certainly it is none of the least of mercies to be well reputed and reported of next to a good God and a good conscience a good report a good name is the noblest blessing It is no great matter if a man be great and rich in the world to obtain a great report but without holyness you can never obtain a good report Holyness uprightness righteousness will imbalm your names it will make them immortal Psalm 112. 6 The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance Wicked men many times out live their names but the names of the righteous out live them Holy Abel hath been dead above this five thousand years yet his name is as fresh fragrant as it 1 John 3. 12. was the first day he was made a Martyr When a sincere Christian dyes he leaves his name as a sweet and as a lasting scent behind him his Fame shall live when he is dead This is verified in your precious Father who is now a sleep in Jesus 1 Thess 4. 14. Now you both very well know that there was no Christian Friend that had so great a room in his heart in his affections as I had and you can easily guess at the reasons of it neither can you forget how frequently both in his health sickness and before his death he would be pr●ssing of me to be a Soul-friend to you and to improve all the interest I had in Heaven for your internal Mat. 25. 33. and eternal good that he might meet you both in that upper world and that you might both be found with him at the right hand of Christ in the great day of the Lord. I know that your glorified Father whil'st he was on earth did lay up many a prayer for you in Heaven My desire and prayer is that those prayers of his may return in mighty power upon both your hearts and having a fair opportunity now before me I shall endeavour to improve it for the everlasting advantage of both your souls and therefore let my following counsel be not only accepted but carefully faithfully and diligently followed by you that so you may be happy here and blessed hereafter The first word of counsel is this Let it be the principal care of both of you to look after the welfare of your precious and immortal souls If your souls are safe all is safe if they are well all is well but if they are lost all Mat. 16. 26. The Soul is a greater mir●cle in man than all the miracles wrought amongst men saith Augustine is lost and you lost and undone in both worlds Christ that only went to the price of souls hath told us That one Soul is more worth than all the world Chrysostom well observeth That whereas God hath given us many other things double viz. two eyes to see with two ears to hear with two hands to work with and two feet to walk with to the intent that the failing of the one might be supplyed with the other he hath given us but one soul if that be lost hast thou saith he another soul to give in recompense for it Ah Friends Christ left his Fathers bosom and all the glory of Heaven for the good of souls he assumed the nature of men for the happyness of the soul of man he trod the wine-press
of Isa 63. 3. John 17. Luke 23. 34. Math. ●6 28. his Fathers wrath for souls he prayed for souls he payd for souls and he bled out his heart-blood for souls The soul is the breath of God the beauty of man the wonder of Angels and the envie of Devils 'T is of an Angelical 1 Pet. 5. 8. nature 't is a heavenly spark a celestial plant and of a Divine off-spring Again weigh well the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the incomparable price which Christ payed for the redemption of the soul what are the riches of the East or West Indies the spoil of the richest Nations rocks of 1 Pet. 1 18 19. Diamonds mountains of gold or the price of Cleopatra's draught to the price that Christ laid down for souls 1 Pet. 1. 18. 19. 1 John 1. 4 12. Heb. 22. 23. The soul is a spiritual substance capable of the knowledge of God of union with God of communion with God and of an eternal fruition of God There is nothing can suit the soul below God nor nothing that can satisfie the soul without God nor nothing that can save the soul but God The soul is so choice so high and so noble a piece that it Divinely scorns all the world in point of acceptation justification satisfaction dilectation and salvation Christ made himself an offering for Heb. 9. 11 12 13 14. Cap. 10 10 14 Ga. 4 4 5 6. Heb. 2. 8. sin that souls might not be undone by sin The Lord dyed that slaves might live The Son dyed that servants might live The natural Son dyed that adopted sons might live The only begotten Son dyed that bastards might live Yea the Judge dyed that malefactors might live Ah Friends as there was never sorrow like Isa 53 3. Gal. 2. 20. Christs sorrow so there was never love like Christs love and of all his love none to that of soul-love to say much in a little room The spiritual enemies which daily war Eph 6. 11 12. 1 Pet. 2. 11. Heb. ult Rom. 1● 17. 1 Cor. 11. 23. 27. against the soul the glorious Angels which hourly guard the soul and the precious ordinances which God hath appointed as means both to convert and nourish the soul The soul is capable of a Crown of life Rev. 2. 10. Of a Crown of glory 1 Pet. 5 4. Of a Crown of righteousness 2 Tim. 4. 8. Of an incorruptible Crown 1 Cor. 9. 25. The Crowns of earthly Princes stand as Queen Elisabeth is said to swin to her Crown through a Sea of sorrow a Sophisters cap on one side of the head Many may say of their Crowns as that King said of ●is O Crown more noble than happy In the time of Galienus the Emperour Anno Christi 260. there were thirty Competitors on foot for the Roman Crown and Throne who confounded and destroyed one another A Princely Crown is oftentimes the mark for envy and ambition to shoot at Henry the VI. was honoured with the Crowns of two Kingdoms France England the first was lost through the faction of his Nobles the other was twice plucked from his head Earthly Crowns have so many cares fears vexations and dangers that daily attend them that oftentimes they make the heads and hearts of Monarchs Prov. 27. 4. Doth the Crown endure to all generations Heb. To generation and generation ake which made Cyrus say You look upon my Crown and my purple robes but did you but know how they were lined with thorns you would not stoop to take them up But the Crowns that immortal souls are capable of are Crowns without crosses they are not attended with care of keeping or fear of losing there are no evil persons nor evil spirits that haunt those Crowns Darius that great Monarch fleeing from his enemies he threw away the Crown of gold from his head that he might run the faster but a sincere Christian 1 Pet. 1. 5. is in no danger of losing his Crown 2 Tim. 4. 8. His Crown is laid up in a safe hand in an omnipotent hand Now what do all these things speak out but the preciousness and excellency of the soul Once more the excellency of the case or cabinet viz. the body intimates a more than ordinary excellency of this Jewel the body is of all materials the most excellent how does David admire the rare texture and workmanship of his body I am wonderfully made I was curiously wrought in Psal 139. 13 15. the lowest parts of the earth When curious workmen have some choice piece in hand they perfect it in private and then bring it forth to the light for men to gaze at so here The greatest miracle in the World is Man in whose very body how much more in his soul are miracles enow betwixt head and feet to fill a volume One complains that men much wonder at the high Austin The Stoick thought it was better to be a fool in the form of a man than wise in the shape of a beast mountains of the Earth the huge waves of the Sea the deep falls of Rivers the vastness of the Ocean and at the motions of the Stars c. but wonder not at all at their wonderful selves Galen a prophane Physician and a great Atheist writing of the excellent parts of mans body he could not chuse but sing an Hymn to that God whosoever he were that was the Author of so excellent and admirable a piece of work he could not but cry out Now I adore the God of Nature Now if the Cabinet be so curiously wrought what is the Jewel that is contained in it O how richly and gloriously is the soul embroydered How Divinely inlaid and enamel'd is that Princes impress their images or effigies upon the choicest mettals viz. gold and silver God hath engraven his own Image with his own hand upon Gen. 1. 26. Dama●cen Angels and Men. The soul is the glory of the Creation a beam of God a spark of celestial brightness a vessel of honour a bird of Paradise a habitation for God The soul is spiritual in its essence God breathed it in God hath invested it with many noble endowments he hath made it a mirrour of beauty and printed upon it a Gen. 2. 7. Heb. 12 9. Eccles 12. 7. Zach. 12. 1. surpassing excellency The soul is spiritual in its object it contemplaces God and Heaven God is the orb and center where the soul doth fix God is the Terminus ad quem the soul moves to him as to his rest Return to thy rest O my soul this Dove can find no rest but in this heavenly Ark nothing can fill the soul but God nothing can quiet the soul but God nothing can satisfie the soul but God nothing can secure the soul but God nothing can save the soul but God The soul being spiritual God only can be the adequate object of it The soul is spiritual in its operations it being
23 26. can never be happy here nor blessed hereafter and yet it is possible for a man with Herod to reform many things Mark ●● 2● Mat. 26. 20 21. 22 1 The●s 5. 23. and yet be a lost and undone man for ever as he was Judas was a very reformed man but he was never inwardly changed nor throughout sanctified The Scribes and Pharisees were outwardly reformed but they were not inwardly renewed A man may be another man than what once he was and yet not be a new man a new creature When a sinner is sermon-sick O! then he will 2 Cor. 5. 17. 2 P●t 2. 20 22. D●st 5. 5 6 7 8. leave his sins but when that sickness is off he returns with the dog to his vomit and with the sow to her wallowing in the mire Sometimes conscience is like the hand-writing upon the wall it makes the sinners countenance to change and his thoughts to be troubled and the joints of his loins to be loosed and his knees to smite one against another and now the sinner is all for reforming and turning over a new leaf but when these agonies of conscience are over the sinner returns to his old courses again and often times is twofold more a Child of Hell than before There was a Matth. 23. 15. man in this City who was given up to the highest wickednesses on his sick bed conscience made an Arrest of him and he was filled with such wonderful horrour and terrour that he cryed out day and night that he was damned he was damned he was damned and when he had some small intervals O what large promises did he make what a new man a reformed man he would be but when in time his terrors and sickness wrought off he was seven-fold worse than before Sometimes the awakened Sinner parts with some sins to make room for others and sometimes the Sinner seems to give a Bill of divorce to this sin and that but it is only because his bodily strength fails him or because he wants an opportunity or because there is a more strict eye and watch upon him or because the sword of the Magistrate is more sharpned against him or because James 4. 3. he wants fuel he wants a purse to bear it out or because some Company or some Relations or some Friends lye between him and his sins so that he must either tread over them or else keep from his sins or because he has deeply smarted for this sin and that his name has been blotted his credit and reputation stained Prov. 6. 32 33 34 35. his Trade decayed his health empaired his body wasted c. By these short hints it is evident that men may attain to some outward reformation whose states and hearts were never changed and who were never taken into marriage union with Christ But Tenthly and lastly many take up in a party as of old some cryed up Paul as the only deep Preacher and others cryed up Apollos as the only eloquent Preacher and 1 Cor. 1. 10 11 12 13. many cryed up Cephas as the most zealous Preacher We are for the Church of England say some we are for the baptized People say others we are for the Presbyterian government cry some we are for the congregational way cry others I have so much ingenuity and charity as to judge that some of all these several parties and perswasions are really holy and will be eternally happy are gracious and will be glorious are sanctified and will be saved are now governed by Christ and will be hereafter glorified with Christ Judas was one of Christs party Mat. 26. 20. to the 26. if I may so speak and yet he had no part nor portion in Christ Demas was one of Paul's party and yet he 2 Tim. 4. 10. plaid the Apostat and turn'd an idolatrous Priest at 2 Tim. 1. 15. Thessalonica as Dorotheus saith And Phygellus and Hermogenes were of Paul's party but were only famous for 1 Tim. 1. 19 20. their recidivation and Apostasie Hymeneus and Alexander were of Paul's party but they made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience The five foolish Virgins Mat. 25. 1 2 12. were in society with the wise and were accounted as members of their association and yet the door of Heaven was shut against them Many light slight and vain persons went with the Children of Israel out of the Land Exod. 1● 38. Num. 11. 4. of Egypt even a mixt multitude that imbarkt in the same bottom with them and yet never arrived at the Land of promise O my Friends it is not a mans being of this party or that this Church or that this way or that this society or that that will bring him to Heaven without 1 Pet. 1. 4. He● 1. 2. 1 John 5. 12. a spiritual conjunction with Christ he that would enjoy the Heavenly inheritance must be espoused to Christ the heir of all things For he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life This marriage union between Christ and the soul is set forth to the life throughout that Book of Solomon's Song● though the marriage-union between Christ and the soul Cant. ● 16. 1 Cor. 6. 17. Eccl. 11. 6. be imperceptible to the eye of reason yet it is real things in nature work often insensibly yet really we do not see the hand move on the dial yet it moves the Sun exhales and drawes up the vapours of the Earth insensibly yet really Now this marriage-union between Christ and the soul includes and takes in these following particulars First This marriage-union between Christ and the soul does include and take in the souls giving a present bill of Divorce to all other lovers Sin the world and Consult these Scriptures Hosea 14. 8. Isa 2. 20. Cap. 30. 22. Psalm 45. 10. Exod. 12. 33. Isa 59. ●o C. 3. 3. Satan Are you seriously and sincerely willing for ever to renounce these and be divorced from these there is no compounding betwixt Christ and them sin and your souls must part or Christ and your souls can never meet sin and your souls must be two or Christ and your souls can never be one you must in good earnest fall out with sins or else you can never in good earnest fall in with a Saviour the heart must be separated from all other lovers before Christ will take the soul into his bed of loves Christ takes none into marriage-union with himself but such as are cordially willing that all old former leagues with sin and the world shall be for ever broken and dissolved your cordial willingness to part with sin is your parting with sin in Divine account you may as soon bring East and West together light and darkness together Heaven and Hell together as bring Christ to ●spouse himself to such a soul as has no mind no will no heart to be divorced from his former lovers 'T