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A85428 Christ set forth in his [brace] death, resurrection, ascension, sitting at Gods right hand, intercession, [brace] as the [brace] cause of justification. Object of justifying faith. Upon Rom. 8. ver. 34. Together with a treatise discovering the affectionate tendernesse of Christs heart now in heaven, unto sinners on earth. / By Tho: Goodwin, B.D. Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1642 (1642) Wing G1232; Thomason E58_2; Thomason E58_3; ESTC R8966 205,646 392

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Formalists among the Jews had who without the Messiah closed with Promises and rested in Types to cleanse them without looking unto Christ the end of them and as propounded to their faith in them This is to goe to God without a Mediator and to make the Promises of the Gospel to be as the Promises of the Law Nehushtan as Hezekiah said of the Brasen Serpent a piece of brasse vaine and ineffectuall like the waters of Bethesda they heale not they cleanse not till this Angel of the Covenant come downe to your faith in them Therefore at a Sacrament or when you meet with any Promise get Christ first downe by faith and then let your faith propound what it would have and you may have what you will of him There are three sorts of Promises Three sorts of Promise and how Christs Person is the object of faith in applying them all and in the applying of all these it is Christ that your faith is to meet with 1. There are absolute promises made to no Conditions as when Christ is said to come to save sinners c. Now in these it is plaine that Christ is the naked object of them so that if you apply not him you apply nothing for the onely thing held forth in them is Christ 2. There are Inviting Promises as that before mentioned Come to me you that are weary The promise is not to wearinesse but to comming to Christ they are bidden Come to him if they will have rest 3. There are Assuring Promises as those made to such and such qualifications of sanctification c. But still what is it that is promised in them which the heart should onely eye It is Christ in whom the soule rests and hath comfort in and not in its grace so that the sight of a mans grace is but a back-doore to let faith in at to converse with Christ whom the soule loves Even as at the Sacrament the elements of Bread and Wine are but outward signes to bring Christ and the heart together and then faith lets the outward elements goe and closeth and treats immediately with Christ unto whom these let the soule in So Grace is a signe inward and whilst men make use of it onely as of a bare signe to let them in unto Christ and their rejoycing is not in it but in Christ their confidence being pitcht upon him and not upon their grace whilst men take this course there is and will be no danger at all in making such use of signes and I see not but that God might as well appoint his owne work of the new creation within to be as a signe and help to communion with Christ by faith as he did those outward elements the works of his first creation especially seeing in nature the effect is a sign of the cause Neither is it more derogatory to free grace or to Christs honour for God to make such effects signes of our union with him then it was to make outward signs of his presence SECT II. CHRIST the object and support of faith for Justification in his death ROM 8. 34. Who shall condemne Christ hath dyed CHAP. I. How not Christs Person simply but Christ as dying is the object of Faith as justifying TO come now to all those foure particulars of or about Christ as the object of faith here mentioned and to shew both how Christ in each is the object of faith as justifying and what support or encouragement the faith of a Beleever may fetch from each of them in point of Justification which is the Argument of the maine Body of this Discourse First Christ as dying is the object of justifying faith Who shall condemne Christ hath dyed For the explanation of which Explained 1. By two Directions I will 1. Give a direction or two 2. Shew how an encouragement or matter of triumph may from hence be fetcht 1. 1. Direction The first Direction is this That in seeking forgivenesse or justification in the Promises as Christ is to be principally in the eye of your faith so it must be Christ as crucified Christ as dying as here he is made It was the Serpent as lift up and so looked at that healed them Now this direction I give to prevent a mistake which soules that are about to beleeve doe often run into For when they heare that the person of Christ is the maine object of faith they thus conceive of it that when one comes first to beleeve he should looke onely upon the personall excellencies of Grace and Glory which are in Jesus Christ which follow upon the Hypostaticall Union and so have his heart allured in unto Christ by them onely and close with him under those apprehensions alone But although it be true that there is that radicall disposition in the faith of every Beleever which if it were drawne forth to view Christ in his meere personall excellencies abstractively considered would close with Christ for them alone as seeing such a beauty and suitablenesse in them yet the first view which an humbled soule alwayes doth and is to take of him is of his being a Saviour made sinne and a curse and obeying to the death for sinners He takes up Christ in his first sight of him under the likenes of sinfull flesh for so the Gospel first represents him though it holds forth his personall excellencies also and in that representation it is that he is made a fit object for a sinners faith to trust rest upon for salvation which in part distinguisheth a sinners faith whilst here on earth towards Christ from that vision or sight which Angels and the souls of men have in heaven of him Faith here views him not onely as glorious at Gods right hand though so also but as crucified as made sin and a curse and so rests upon him for pardon but in heaven we shall see him as he is and be made like unto him Take Christ in his personall excellencies simply considered and so with them propounded as an Head to us he might have been a fit object for Angels and men even without sin to have closed withall and what an additon to their happinesse would they have thought it to have him for their husband but yet so considered he should have been and rather is the object of love then of faith or affiance It is therefore Christ that is thus excellent in his person yet farther considered as clothed with his garments of bloud and the qualifications of a Mediator and Reconciler it is this that makes him so desirable by sinners and a fit object for their faith which looks out for justification to prey and seize upon though they take in the consideration of all his other excellencies to allure their hearts to him and confirme their choice of him Yea I say farther that consider faith as justifying that is in that act of it which justifies a sinner and so Christ taken onely or mainly in his
up to Heaven and that as far above Angels and Principalities as the Apostle speaks Eph. 1. as the Heavens are above the Earth will you not in your faiths hopes proportionably ascend and climb up also have thoughts of pardon as far exceeding your ordinary thoughts as the heavens are above the earth Therefore first view him as ascending into Heaven ere ever hee comes to be at Gods right hand and see what matter of triumph that will afford you for that you must first suppose ere you can see him at Gods right hand and so is necessarily included thought not expressed here But that place fore-quoted out of Peter 1 Pet. 3. gives us both these two particulars included in it 1. His Ascension Who is gone into Heaven And 2. his power and authority there Is at Gods right hand and hath all power and authority subject to him and prompts both these as fit matter to be put into a good conscience its Answer and Apologie why it should not be condemned therfore both may here as well come in into faiths triumph and that as being intended also by the Apostle and included in this one expression He speaks with the least to shew what cause faith had to triumph for the least expression of it his purpose being but to give a hint to faith of that which cōprehensively contains many things in it which he would have us distinctly to consider for our comfort CHAP. II. Shewing first what evidence for our justification Christs Ascension into Heaven affords unto our Faith upon that first forementioned consideration of his being a Surety for us FIrst then to see what triumph his ascending into Heaven will add unto our faith in matter of non-condemnation And herein 1. By considering what was the last action he did when he was to Ascend Blessing his Disciples first there is not nothing in it to consider what he then did and what was his last Act when he was to take his rise to fly up to Heaven He blessed his Disciples and thereby left a blessing upon earth with them for all his elect to the end of the World The true reason and minde of which blessing them was that he being now to go to execute the eternall office of his Priest-hood in Heaven of which God had sworn Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec As Melehisedec in the Type blessed Abraham and in him all the faithfull as in his loins therefore the Apostle said that Levi paid tithes unto Melchisedec in Abrahams loines therefore he was blessed in his loines so did Christ begin this new and second part of his Priest-hood with blessing the Apostles and in them all the elect to the end of the World This was the last thing that Christ did on earth yea this he did whilst ascending he was taken up whilst he did it So Luke 24. 50. 51. And thus solemnly he now did this to shew that the curse was gone and that sin was gone and that action speakes thus much as if Christ himselfe had said To shew the curse was removed and their sins pardoned O my brethren for so he styled his Disciples after his Resurrection I have been dead and in dying made a curse for you now that curse I have fully removed and my Father hath aquited me and you for it and now I can be bold to blesse you and pronounce all your sins forgiven and your persons justified For that is the intendment and foundation of blessing Blessed is the man whose sins are forgiven him and therefore that was the true meaning of his blessing them which he reserved thus as his last Act to shew how by his death he had redeemed them from the curse of the Law now going to Heaven was able to blesse them with all the spirituall blessings that are there and which Heaven can afford for Heavenly they are called in that respect And in blessing his Apostles thus he blessed all that should believe in him Ephes 1. 4. And as in Abraham blessed by Melchisedec all the faithfull were blessed so in these Apostles all the elect to come are blessed As when God individually blessed Adam and Eve at the first Creation yet he in them blessed all that were for ever to come of them so Christ in blessing them blessed us and all that shall beleeve through their word to the end of the World And that they were thus then to be considered as common persons receiving this blessing for us all appeareth by Christs words then uttered I am with you to the end of the World i. e. with you and all your successors both Ministers other believers Mat. 28. ult And Christ herein did as God did before him When God had done his worke of creation He looked upon all he had done and saw that it was good and he blessed it Thus did Jesus Christ now that he had by that one offering perfected for ever all the elect he comfortably vieweth and pronounceth it perfect and them blessed and so goes to Heaven to keepe and enjoy the Sabbath of all there Now Secondly let us see him Ascending A second support from the very Act of Ascending and see what comfort that will also afford our faith towards the perswasion of Iustification The Apostles stood gazing on him and so doe you lift up your hearts to gaze on him by faith and view him in that act as he is passing along into Heaven as leading sin hell death and devill in triumph at his Chariot wheeles And therewith let your faith triumph in a further evidence of justification Thus Ephesians 4. 8. out of the 68. Psalme ver 18. the Apostle saith How it was an act of Triumph over death hel sin c. When he ascended up on high he led captivity captive to which Hebraisme the Latine phrase vincere victoriam to win a victory doth answer then He led captive all our spirituall enemies that would have captived us they being now captived Now leading of captives is alwaies after a perfect victory And therefore whereas at his Death he had conquered them at his Rising scattered them now at his Ascension he leades them captive And so that Psal in the Type begins ver 1. Let God arise and let his enemies be scattered let them flee before him so at his Resurrection they did And then he ascends in triumph ashere in token of victory he is ascended up on high ver 18. he ascends as David after his victory up to Mount Sion for the celebrating of which that Psal seemes to have beene made by David whereof this was the intended Type Two Acts of Triumph in it And two Actus triumphales triumphing Acts there were here mentioned 1. Leading the captives bound to his Chariot wheeles as the manner of the Roman triumphs was when the Conqueror went up to the Capitol and other Heathens in Davids time As Achilles led Hector captive who
this worke of Intercession for us and that in heaven to be added to all the former For the first I will proceede therein by degrees First It is one part of his Priest-hood You must know that Christ is not entred into heaven simply as a fore-runner which hath been explained to take up places for you but as a Priest also Made a Priest after the order of Melchisedec which is more then simply a Forerunner Yea his sitting at Gods right hand is not onely as a King armed with power and authority to save us but he sits there as a Priest too Thus Heb. 8. 1. We have such an High Priest who is set downe at the right hand of the Majesty on high In the old Leviticall Priest-hood Two parts of the High-Priests office the High-Priests office had two parts both which concurred to make them High-Priests First Oblation or offering the Sacrifice Secondly Presentation of it in the Holy of Holies with Prayer and Intercession unto God to accept it for the sinnes of the people The one was done without the other within the Holy of Holies This you may see in many places especially Levit. 16. 11 15 16. where you have the Law about the High Priests entring into the Holy of Holies he was not to come into the holy place till first he had offered a Sacrifice for himselfe and the people ver 11. and 15. and this without Then secondly when he had killed it he was to enter with the bloud of it into the Holy of Holies and sprinkle the Mercie-seat therein with it ver 14 17. and to go with Incense and cause a cloud to arise over the Mercie-seat And this you have also Heb. 13. 11. it is said that The bloud of those beasts that were burnt without the Camp was brought into the Sanctuary by the High-Priest And in that 16. of Levit. you shall finde the Atonement made as well by the bloud when brought into the Holy place ver 16. as by the killing of the beast ver 11. Both these were acts of the High-priesthood for Atonement And this was done in a Type of the Priestly office of Christ and the parts thereof So Heb. 9. 23. he cals all those transactions under the Ceremoniall Law the patterns of things heavenly instancing in this part of Christs office ver 24. For Christ sayes he is not entred into the Holy places made without hands as that was which are the figures of the true but into heaven it selfe to appear in the presence of God for us Now then in answer to this Type there are two distinct parts of Christs Priesthood First 1. Christs offering up himselfe the offering himselfe a Sacrifice up to death as Heb. 9. 26. which answers to the killing of the Sacrifice without the Holy of Holies for answerably he was crucified without the City Heb. 13. 12. Secondly 2. Entring into the Heavens to Intercede he carryed this his bloud into the Holy of Holies namely the Heavens Heb. 9. 12. where he appeares ver 24. and there also prayes in the force of that bloud And the Type of those prayers was that cloud of Incense made by the High-Priest so it is expresly interpreted Rev. 8. 3. c. The Angel Christ is said to have had much Incense to offer it with the prayers of all the Saints Which Incense is his owne prayers in heaven which he continually puts up when the Saints pray on earth and so perfumes all their prayers and procures all blessings for them Both these parts of his Prist-hood the Apostle Iohn mentions in his first Epistle Both proved Chap. 2. ver 2. where as he cals Jesus Christ a propitiation for our sins that is an Oblation or Sacrifice offered up for us So likewise he cals him our Advocate both going to make up this his office And indeed this latter of Intercession and bringing his bloud into the Holy of Holies or heaven is but the same action continued That bloud which he offered with tears and strong cryes on the Crosse where he likewise interceded the same bloud he continues virtually to offer up with prayers in the heavens and makes Atonement by both onely with this difference On earth though he interceded yet he more eminently offered up himselfe In heaven he more eminently intercedes and doth but present that Offering Secondly this was so necessary a part of his Priest-hood that without it he had not been a compleat Priest Without Intercession he had not been a perfect Priest Thus Heb. 8. 4. If he were on earth he should not be a Priest That is If he should have abode on earth he should not have been a compleat Priest Paul saith not that if he had offered that his sacrifice on earth he had not been a Priest for that was necessary but that if he had staid still on earth after he had offered it he had not been a Priest that is a perfect Priest for he had then left his office imperfect and had done it but by halves seeing this other part of it the work of Intercession lay still upon him to be acted in heaven Thus the High-priest his Type if he had only offered Sacrifice without the Holy of holies had not been a perfect High-Priest For to enter into the Holy of holies and to act the part of a Priest there This the peculiar work of the High-Priest who was in this Christs Type was the proper peculiar work of the High-Priest as such Which shews that Christ had not been an High-Priest if he had not gone to heaven and Priested it there too as I may so speak as well as upon earth Yea if Christ had not gone to heaven and were not now become a Priest there then the Leviticall Priest-hood were still in force and should share the honour with him and the High-priest must continue still to goe into the Holy of holies To this purpose you may observe that so long as Christ was on earth though risen the Types of the Law held in force and were not to give way till all the truth signified by their Ministery was fully accomplisht and so not untill Christ was gone into heaven as a Priest and there had begun to doe all that which the High-priest had done in the Holy of holies and as his Type fore-signified And this is plainly the meaning of what follows in that Heb. 8. ver 4. as the reason or demonstration why that Christ should not have been a Priest if he had not gone to heaven not onely as a King but as a Priest too as he had affirmed ver 1. Seeing sayes he that there are Priests upon earth that doe offer gifts according to the Law The force of the Reason lyes thus There are already Priests and that of a Tribe he was not of that offer gifts on earth before he came into the world And therefore if that had beene all his Priest-hood to be a Priest on earth
you have them in the last Chapter ver 16. I Iesus have sent mine Angel to testifie unto you these things in the Churches I am the root and the off-spring of David and the Spirit and the Bride say Come and let him that heareth say Come and let him that is athirst come and whosoever will let him take of the water of life freely They are the latter words I cite this place for The occasion of these words was this Christ was now in Heaven and had before promised one day to come again and fetch us all to Heaven And in the meane time marke what an ecchoing and answering of hearts and of desires there is mutually betweene Him from heaven and beleeving sinners from below Earth calls upon Heaven and Heaven calls upon earth as the Prophet speaks The Bride from earth sayes unto Christ Come to me and the Spirit in the Saints hearts below sayes Come unto him also and Christ cryes out as loud from Heaven Come in answer unto this desire in them so that heaven and earth ring againe of it Let him that is athirst come to me and let him that will come come and take of the waters of life freely This is Christ speech unto men on earth They call him to come unto earth to Judgement and he calls sinners to come up to heaven unto him for mercie They cannot desire his comming to them so much as he desires their comming to him Now what is the meaning of this that upon their calling upon him to come he should thus call upon them to come It is in effect as if he had plainly uttered himselfe thus I have a heart to come to you but I must have all you my Elect that are to be on earth come to me first You would have me come downe to you but I must stay here till all that the Father hath given me be come to me and then you shall be sure quickly to have me with you Hereby expressing how much his heart now longs after them This to be his meaning is evident by the words which he adds ver 20. He which testifies these things namely Christ sayes Surely I come quickly And if we observe how much by the by as it were these words of Christs doe come in it makes them the more remarkable to shew his heart in uttering them This Book was intended meerly as a Prophecie of the times of the Gospell untill his comming unto which period of it when Iohn had brought that Prophetique story he brings in the Bride longing for that comming of Christ The Bride sayes Come And no sooner sayes she so but Christ by way of retortion doth likewise say Come unto her also yea it puts the more observation upon it that he had uttered the same words before Revel 21. 6. but notwithstanding he will repeate them again and have them to be his last words All which shews how much his heart was in this part of the Gospel to invite sinners to him that now when he is to speake but one sentence more till wee hear the sound to judgement he should especially make choice of these words Let them therfore for ever stick with you as being worthy to be your last thoughts when you come to die and when you are a going to him He speakes indeed something else after them but that which he sayes afterwards is but to set a seal unto these words and to the rest of the Scriptures whereof this is the chiefe And further to shew that these words vvere singled out to be his last and that he meant to speak no more till the day of judgement therefore also he adds a curse to him who should adde to them or take from them He adds indeed after that another speech but it is onely to ingeminate his willingnesse to come quickly were all his elect but once come in to him so ver 20. And all this tends to assure us that this is his heart and wee shall find him of no other minde untill his comming again And that you may yet the more consider them as thus purposely brought in by him as his last words to make them stick with us let me adde another observation about them and that is this that at another time when he was upon earth he in like manner singled out these very words I mean the matter of them as the conclusion and shutting up of many dayes preaching Thus Iohn 7. 37. In the last day that great day of the Feast Iesus stood and cryed If any man thirst let him come to me and drinke These words were spoken on the last day of the feast after which hee vvas to preach no more at that time and for a good vvhile after unto them and he had preached upon all the former dayes of that feast as his manner vvas and it vvas the great day of the Feast vvhen he had the greatest audience and you see he chooseth this for his last sentence of tht his last Sermon then and vvhen he vvould give them something at parting as a Viaticum vvhich he would have them carry home vvith them to feede upon above all the rest these are his vvords If any man thirst let him come to mee and drinke which himself interprets to be beleeving on him ver 38. and he stands up to speak this yea he cries sayes the text vvith open mouth with utmost vehemencie to the intent that all might heare this above all sayings else And thus in like manner at this time also when he is to speak no more but to hold his tongue for ever till the day of Judgement nor is to write any more Scriptures he then sends his Angel to testifie these to be his last words and this although he had spoken them before It was therefore assuredly done to shew his heart in them They were his last words then and they shall be mine in the closure of this Discourse for vvhat can there be added to them THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven TO Sinners on Earth II. PART HEB. 4. 15. For we have not an High-priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sin THE onely Use I shall make of these words is to be a foundation unto that second part of that head or point of Doctrine into which I have made an entrance which was to demonstrate the gracious inclination and temper of Christs he art towards sinners now he is in Heaven The extrinsecall Demonstrations of this which I make the first part of it are dispatched And for a ground-word to these more Intrinsecall Demonstrations which make a second part I have chosen this Text as that which above any other speaks his heart most and sets out the frame and workings of it towards sinners and that so sensibly that it doth as it were take our hands and lay them upon Christs breast and let us feele how his heart
Peter that he could command millions of Angels to his rescue but he meerly submits unto his Father Not my will but thy will be done sayes he for God had laid upon him the iniquities of us all Esay 53. Let our faith therefore look mainly to this designe and plot of God and of Christ in his suffering to satisfie for our sins and to justifie us sinners When we consider him as borne flesh and bloud and laid in a manger think we withall that his meaning was to condemne sin in our flesh Rom. 8. 4. So when we read of him fulfilling all or any part of righteousnes take we his mind in withall to be that the Law might be fulfilled in us as it follows there who were then represented in him and so the fulfilling of it is accounted ours Behold we him in his life time as Iohn the Baptist did even as the Lamb of God bearing and taking away the sins of the world and when upon the Crosse let our faith behold the iniquities of us all met in him Surely he hath borne our sorrowes bearing our sinnes in his body on the tree and thereby once offered to beare the sinnes of many 1 Pet. 3. Heb. 9. c. This intent of Christ in all that he did and suffered is that welcome newes and the very spirit of the Gospel which faith preys and seiseth on CHAP. III. What support or matter of triumph Christs death affords to faith for Justification NOw having thus directed your Faith to the right object Christ and Christ as dying let us secondly see what matter of support and encouragement faith may fetch from Christs death for Justification And surely that which hath long agoe satisfied God himselfe for the sins of many thousand soules now in heaven The fulnesse of Christs satisfaction may very well serve to satisfie the heart and conscience of any sinner now upon earth in any doubts in respect of the guilt of any sins that can arise We see that the Apostle here after that large discourse of Justification by Christs righteousnes in the former part of this Epistle to the Rom. and having shewed how every way it abounds Chap. 5. he now in this 8. Chap. doth as it were sit down like a man over-convinced as ver 31. What then shall we say to these things He speaks as one satisfied and even astonished with abundance of evidence having nothing to say but onely to admire God and Christ in this work and therefore presently throws downe the Gauntlet and challengeth a dispute in this point with all commers Let Conscience and carnall reason Law and Sinne Hell and Devils bring in all their strength Who is he shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods Elect who shall condemne Paul dares to answer them all and carry it with these few words It is God that justifies It is Christ that dyed And as in ver 37. We are more then conquerours in all these It was this that brought in the Prodigall that in his Fathers house there was bread enough And so likewise he who ever he was who was the Author of the 130. Psal when his soul was in deep distresse by reason of his sins ver 1 2. yet this was it that setled his heart to wait upon God that there was plenteous redemption with him Christs redemption is not meerly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a price or ransome aquivalent or making due satisfaction according to the just demerit of sinne but it is plenteous redemption there is an abundance of the gift of righteousnesse Rom. 5. 17. and unsearchable riches of Christ Ephes 3. 8. Yea 1 Tim. 1. 14. the grace of our Lord that is of Christ as ver 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we translate it was abundant but the word reacheth farther it was over-full redundant more then enough And yet sayes Paul ver 13. I had sins enough to pardon as one would think that might exhaust it I was a blasphemer c. But I found so much grace in Christ even more then I knew what to doe withall I shall not insist so largely on this first Head of Christs dying as upon those three following because it is the main subject of another Discourse which through Gods grace I intend to publish though in another method Onely for a taste to instance in some few particulars How Christs satisfaction may be set against the guilt of any sins and so made use of by faith shewing how Christs satisfaction may be opposed and set against the guilt of a poore sinners offences What is there that can be said to aggravate sin in the generall or any mans particular sins that may not be answered out of this Christ hath dyed and something not be considered in it which the conscience may oppose thereto So that what ever evill which according to the rules of spirituall reason which the righteous Law proceedeth by and containeth as the foundation of its righteousnesse in condemning or aggravating sinne a mans conscience may suggest to be in sinne oppositely hereunto may a mans faith according to the like rules of true spirituall reason shew a more transcendent goodnesse to have been in Christs death which the Gospel reveales and so may oppose the one to the other and have as good reason to shew why sinne should not condemne from CHRISTS death as Conscience can have that the Law may condemne As first 1. Against the hainousnesse of sin in the generall Is sinne the transgression of the Law Christ dying the Law-maker was subjected to the Law and will not that make amends Is sin the debasement of Gods glory manifested in his Word and Works Christs dying was the debasement and emptying of the brightnesse of his glory in the highest measure being personally manifested in the flesh The one of them is but as the darkning the shine or lustre of the Sun upon a wall but the other is as the obscuring of the Sun it selfe Sins highest evill lies in offending God but Christs righteousnesse is oppositely the righteousnesse of God himselfe or Iehovah made our righteousnesse So that God in our sinne is considered but as the object against whom but God in this our righteousnesse is the subject from whom and in whom this righteousnesse comes and is feated And so his God-head answerably gives a higher worth to it by how much the alliance which the subject hath to an action of its owne that proceeds from it is nearer then that which an object hath against which the action is committed Or secondly 2. Against any aggravation of particular sins what peculiar aggravations or circumstances are there in thy sinnes to weigh down with which some circumstances in Christs obedience and death may not be paralleld to lift thee up againe As first 1. Against the greatnesse of the act of any particular sin what ever Is it the greatnesse of thy sinne in the substance of the fact committed hath there been
ver 6. Otherwise as that woman said to Philip when she came to him for justice and he put her off Then cease sayes she to be a King So if Christ should deny any such soule to take its cause in hand he must then cease to be a Priest He lives to intercede He is a Priest called by God as was Aaron ver 6. Wherefore he ought to doe it in that it is his office 3. And if thy soule yet feareth the difficulty of its owne particular case in respect of the greatnesse of thy sinnes and the circumstances thereof or any consideration whatsoever which to thy view doth make thy salvation an hard suit to obtaine the Apostle therefore further addes He is able to save to the utmost what ever thy cause be and this through this his Intercession That same word to the utmost is a good word and vvell put in for our comfort Consider it therefore for it is a reaching vvord and extends it selfe so farre that thou canst not look beyond it Let thy soule be set upon the highest mount that ever any creature vvas yet set upon and that is enlarged to take in and view the most spacious prospect both of sinne and misery and difficulties of being saved that ever yet any poore humbled soule did cast within it selfe yea joyne to these all the objections and hinderances of thy Salvation that the heart of man can suppose or invent against it selfe lift up thy eyes and looke to the utmost thou canst see and Christ by his Intercession is able to save thee beyond the Horizon and furthest compasse of thy thoughts even to the utmost and worst case the heart of Man can suppose It is not thy having laine long in Sinne long under terrours and despairs or having sinned often after many enlightnings that can hinder thee from being saved by Christ Do but remember this same word to the utmost and then put in what exceptions thou wilt or canst lay all the barrs in thy way that are imaginable yet know thou that the gates of Hell shall not prevail against thee 4. Again consider but what it is that Christ who hath by his death done enough to save thee doth yet further for thee in Heaven If thou thoughtest thou hadst all the Saints in Heaven and Earth jointly concurring in promoving thy salvation and competitours unto God in instant and incessant requests and prayers to save thee how wouldest thou be encouraged shall I tell thee one word out of Christs mouth who is the King of Saints will do more then all in heaven and earth can doe and what is there then which we may not hope to obtain through his Intercession And wouldst thou know whether he hath undertaken thy cause and begun to intercede for thee In a word Hath he put his spirit into thy heart and set thy own heart on work to make incessant Intercessions for thy selfe with groans unutterable as the Apostle hath it Rom. 8. This is the Eccho of Christs Intercession for thee in Heaven 5. And lastly If such a soule shall further object But will he not give over suing for me may I not be cast out of his prayers through my unbeliefe Let it here be considered that he lives ever to intercede And therefore if he once undertake thy cause and getteth thee into his prayers he will never leave thee out night nor day He Intercedeth ever till he hath accomplisht and finished thy salvation Men have been cast out of good and holy mens prayers as Saul out of Samuels and the People of Israel out of Ieremies but never out of Christs prayers the smoak of his Incense ascends for ever and he will intercede to the utmost till he hath saved thee to the utmost He will never give over but will lye in the dust for thee or he will perfect and procure thy Salvation Onely whilst I am thus raising up your Faith to him upon the worke of his Intercession for us let me speak a word to you for him so to stir up your love to him upon the consideration of this his Intercession also You see you have the whole life of Christ first and last both here and in heaven laid out for you He had not come to earth but for you he had no other businesse here Vnto us a Son is born And to be sure he had not dyed but for you for us a Son was given and when he rose it was for your justification And now he is gone to heaven he lives but to intercede for you He makes your salvation his constant calling O therefore let us live wholly unto him for he hath and doth live wholly unto us You have his whole time among you and if he were your servant you could desire no more There was much of your time lost before you began to live to him but there hath beene no moment of his time which he hath not lived to and improved for you Nor are you able ever to live for him but onely in this life for hereafter you shall live with him and be glorified of him I conclude all with that of the Apostle The love of Christ it should constraine us because we cannot but judge this to be the most equall that they which live should not henceforth live unto themselves but unto him who dyed for them and rose again and out of the Text I also adde sits at Gods right hand yea and there lives for ever to make Intercession for us FINIS THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven Towards SINNERS on Earth OR A TREATISE DEMONSTRATING The gracious Disposition and tender Affection of Christ in his Humane Nature now in Glory unto his Members under all sorts of Infirmities either of Sin or Misery By THO GOODWIN B. D. LONDON Printed for R. DAWLMAN M DC XLII THE TABLE OF The Heart of Christ in Heaven towards Sinners on Earth 1. Demonstrations of the gracious disposition of his Heart towards us Extrinsecall shewing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that it is so Part 1. Intrinsecall shewing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Reasons why it must needs be so Part 2. 2. The Manner how his Heart is affected towards us and the way how it comes to passe that such affections are let into his heart Part 3. Part I. Containing Demonstrations Extrinsecall §. I. Demonstrations from Christs carriage at his last Farewell and his last Sermon John Chapters 13 c. and in his last prayer John 17. the scope of all which was to assure his Disciples of his being constant in his Affections towards them 5 1. From his carriage at his last Fare-well And this in foure things 6 2. From many passages in that his last Sermon in 5. things 13 3. From his last Prayer Joh. 17. which Prayer is a patterne of his Intercession in Heaven and so an expression of what his heart is there 22 §. II. Demonstrations from many passages and expressions after his Resurrection 24 This Resurrection
death his Resurrection Ascension into heaven his sitting at Gods right hand and Intercession for us which of all the other hath beene more largely insisted on I shall now annexe as next in order and homogeneall thereunto this Discourse that follows which layes open The HEART of Christ as now he is in heaven sitting at Gods right hand and interceding for us How it is affected and graciously disposed towards sinners on earth that doe come to him how willing to receive them how ready to entertaine them how tender to pity them in all their infirmities both sinnes and miseries The scope and use whereof will be this To hearten and encourage Beleevers to come more boldly unto the Throne of Grace unto such a Saviour and High-priest when they shall know how sweetly and tenderly his heart though he is now in his glory is inclined towards them and so to remove that great stone of stumbling which we meet with and yet lyeth unseen in the thoughts of men in the way to faith that Christ being now absent and withall exalted to so high and infinite a distance of glory as to sit at Gods right hand c. they therefore cannot tell how to come to treat with him about their salvation so freely and with that hopefulnesse to obtaine as those poore sinners did who were here on earth with him Had our lot been think they but to have conversed with him in the dayes of his flesh as Mary and Peter and his other Disciples did here below wee could have thought to have beene bold with him and have been familiar with him and to have had any thing at his hands For they beheld him afore them a man like unto themselves and he was full of meeknesse and gentlenesse he being then himselfe made sinne and sensible of all sorts of miseries but now he is gone into a farre Countrey and hath put on glory and immortality and how his heart may be altered thereby we know not The drift of this Discourse is therefore to ascertaine poore soules that his Heart in respect of pity and compassion remains the same it was on earth that he intercedes there with the same heart he did here below and that he is as meek as gentle as easie to be entreated as tender in his bowels so that they may deale with him as fairely about the great matter of their salvation and as hopefully and upon as easie tearmes obtaine it of him as they might if they had beene on earth with him and be as familiar with him in all their requests as bold with him in all their needs Then which nothing can be more for the comfort and encouragement of those who have given over all other lives but that of faith and whose soules pursue after strong and entire communion with their Saviour Christ Now the Demonstrations that may help our faith in this I reduce to two Heads The first more extrinsecall and outward The second more intrinsecall and inward The one shewing the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of it that it is so the other the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the reasons and grounds why it must needs be so First for those Extrinsecall Demonstrations as I call them they are taken from severall passages and carriages of his in all those severall conditions of his namely at his last Fare-well afore his Death his Resurrection Ascension and now he is sitting at Gods right hand I shall lead you through all the same Heads which I have gone over in the former Treatise though to another purpose and take such observations from his speeches and carriages in all those states he went through as shall tend directly to perswade our hearts of the point in hand namely this that now he is in heaven his heart remains as graciously inclined to sinners that come to him as ever on earth And for a Ground or Introduction to these first sort of Demonstrations I shall take this Scripture that follows as for those other another Scripture as proper to that part of this Discourse JOHN 13. 1. When Iesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father HAVING LOVED HIS OWNE HE LOVED THEM TO THE END or for ever §. I. Demonstrations from Christs last Fare-well to his Disciples IT was long before that Christ did break his mind to his Disciples that he was to leave them and to goe away to heaven from them for Ioh. 16. 4. he sayes he had forborne to tell it them from the beginning But when he begins to acquaint them with it he then at once leaves with them an abundance of his heart and that not onely how it stood towards them and what it was at the present but what it would be when he should be in his glory Let us to this end but briefly peruse his last carriage and his Sermon at his last Supper which he did eate with them as it is on purpose penned and recorded by the Euangelist Iohn and we shall find this to be the drift of those long Discourses of Christs from the 13. to the 18. Chap. I will not make a Comment on them but onely briefly take up such short observations as do more specially hold forth this thing in hand These words which I have prefixed as the Text are the Preface unto all that his Discourse that follows namely unto that washing of his Disciples feet and his succeeding Sermon which accordingly doe shew the argument and summe of all 1. Demonstration from his carriage at his last fare-well The Preface is this Before the Feast of the Passeover when Iesus knew that his houre was come that he should depart out of this world unto the Father having loved his owne which were in the world he loved them unto the end And supper being ended Iesus knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands and that he was come from God and went to God he then washed his Disciples feet Now this Preface was prefixed by the Euangelist on purpose to set open a window into Christs heart to shew what it was then at his departure and so withall to give a light into and put a glosse and interpretation upon all that followes The scope whereof is to shew what his affections would be to them in heaven He tels us what Christs thoughts were then and what was his heart amidst those thoughts both which occasioned all that succeeds 1. He premiseth what was in Christs thoughts and his meditation He began deeply to consider both that he was to depart out of this world Iesus knew c. sayes the Text that is was then thinking of it that he should depart unto the Father and how that then he should shortly be installed into that glory which was due unto him so it followes ver 3. Iesus knowing that is was then actually taking into his mind that the Father had given all things into his hands that is that all power in
now insisted on when yet this primary qualification I then passed over and reserved unto this mention it is said Every High-Priest taken from among men is ordained for men and that to this end that so he might be one that can have compassion namely with a pity that is naturall and kindly such as a man beares to one of his owne kind For otherwise the Angels would have made higher and greater High-Priests then one of our nature but then they would not have pityed men as men doe their brethren of the same kind and nature with them And secondly this was also Gods end and intention in ordaining Christs assumption of our nature which that other place before cited namely Heb. 2. 16 17. holds forth Verily he took not on him the nature of Angels but the seed of Abraham That is an humane nature and that made too of the same stuffe that ours is of and it behooved him to be made like us in all things that he might bee a mercifull High-Priest c. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To the end hee might become or be made mercifull But was not the Son of God as mercifull may some say without the taking of our nature as afterwards when he had assumed it Or is his mercy thereby made larger then of it selfe it should have beene had he not tooke the humane nature on him I answer Yes he is as mercifull but yet 1. Hereby is held forth an evident demonstration and the greatest one that could have been given unto men of the everlasting continuance of Gods mercies unto men by this that God is for everlasting become a man and so we thereby assured that he will be mercifull unto men who are of his owne nature and that for ever For as his union with our nature is for everlasting so thereby is sealed up to us the continuation of these his mercies to be for everlasting So that he can and will no more cease to be mercifull to men then himselfe can now cease to be a man which can never be And this was the end of that assumption But secondly that was not all His taking our nature not onely addes unto our faith but some way or other even to his being mercifull Therefore it is said That he might be made mercifull c. That is mercifull in such a way as otherwise God of himselfe alone had never beene namely even as a man So that this union of both natures God and Man was projected by God to make up the rarest compound of grace and mercie in the result of it that ever could have beene and thereby fully fitted and accommodated to the healing and saving of our soules The greatnesse of that mercy that was in God that contributes the stock and treasury of those mercies to be bestowed on us and unto the greatnesse of these mercies nothing is or could be added by the humane nature assumed but rather Christs Manhood had all his largenesse of mercie from the Deity So that had he not had the mercies of God to enlarge his heart towards us he could never have held out to have for ever been mercifull unto us But then this humane nature assumed that addes a new way of being mercifull It assimilates all these mercies and makes them the mercies of a Man it makes them humane mercies and so gives a naturalnesse and kindlinesse unto them to our capacities So that God doth now in as kindly and as naturall a way pity us who are flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone as a man pities a man Thereby to encourage us to come to him and to bee familiar with God and treat with him for grace and mercie as a man would doe with a man as knowing that in that man Christ Jesus whom we beleeve upon God dwels and his mercies worke in and through his heart in an humane way I will no longer insist upon this notion now because I shall have occasion to touch upon it againe and adde unto it under that next third generall Head of shewing the way how Christs heart is affected towards sinners Onely take we notice what comfort this may afford unto our faith that Christ must cease to bee a man if he continue not to be mercifull seeing the very plot of his becomming a man was that hee might bee mercifull unto us and that in a way so familiar to our apprehensions as our owne hearts give the experience of the like which otherwise as God hee was not capable of And adde but this bold word to it though a true one that he may now as soon cease to bee God as to bee a man The humane nature after he had once assumed it being raised up to all the naturall rights of the Son of God whereof one and that now made naturall unto him is to continue for ever united And he may as soone cease to be either as to be ready to shew mercy So that not onely the scope of Christs office but also the intention of his assuming our nature doth lay a farther engagement upon him and that more strong then any or then all the former THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven Towards Sinners on Earth PART III. HEB. 4. 15. For we have not an High-Priest who cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all things tempted like as we are yet without sin §. I. Some generals to cleare how this is to be understood That CHRISTS Heart is touched with the feeling of our infirmities together with the way how our infirmities come to be feelingly let into his Heart HAving thus given such full and ample Demonstrations of the tendernes samenesse of Christs Heart unto us now he is in Heaven with that which it was whilst he was here on earth and those both extrinsecall in the first part and Intrinsecall in the second I now come to that last Head which I propounded in the opening of these words namely the way and manner of Christs being affected with pity unto us both how it is to be understood by us and also how such affections come to be let into his heart and therein to work these bowels of compassion unto us This in the beginning of the Second Part I propounded to be handled as being necessary both for the opening and clearing the words of the Text which mainly hold forth this as also for the clearing of the thing it selfe the point in hand For as I there shewed these words come in by way of pre-occupation or prevention of an objection a sif his state now in heaven were not capable of such affections as should tenderly move him to pity commiseration he being now glorified both in soule and body Which thought because it was apt to arise in all mens minds the Apostle therefore fore-stalls it both by affirming the contrary We have not an High-Priest that cannot be touched c. that is he both can be or is capable of it and
more like to these of ours then those are which the Angels have So then by these two steps we have gained these two things That even in Christs humane nature though glorified affections of pity and compassion are true and reall and not metaphorically attributed to him as they are unto God and also more neere and like unto ours here then those in the Angels are even affections proper to mans nature and truly humane And these he should have had although this humane nature had from the very first assumption of it been as glorious as it is now in heaven But now thirdly adde this further that God so ordered it that before Christ should cloathe this his humane nature with that glory he hath in heaven and put this glory upon it he should first take it as cloathed with all our infirmities even the very same that doe cleave unto us and should live in this world as we doe for many yeeres And during that time God prepared for him all sorts of afflictions and miseries to run through which we our selves doe here meet withall and all that time he was acquainted with and inured unto all the like sorrowes that we are and God left him to that infirmity and tendernesse of spirit to take in all distresses as deeply as any of us without sin and to exercise the very same affections under all these distresses that we at any time doe find stirring in our hearts And this God thus ordered on purpose thereby to fit him and to frame his heart when he should be in glory unto such affections as these spoken of in the Text. And this both this Text suggests to be Gods end in it as also that fore-mentioned place Heb. 2. 13. For as much as we namely his members are partakers of flesh and bloud which phrase doth ever note out the frailties of mans nature as 1 Cor. 15. 50. c. he himselfe tooke part of the same that he might be a mercifull High-Priest c. ver 17. And then the Apostle gives this reason of it ver 18. For in that himselfe hath suffered being tempted he is able this Ability is as was before interpreted the having an heart fitted and enabled out of experience to pity and to succour them that are tempted The meaning of which is that it was not the bare taking of an humane nature if glorious from the first that would thus fully have fitted him to be affectionately pitifull out of experience though as was said the knowledge of our miseries taken in thereby would have made him truly and really affectionate towards us with affections humane and proper to a man and so much neerer and liker ours then what are in the Angels themselves or then are attributed to God when he is said to pity us but further his taking our nature at first cloathed with frailties and living in this world as we This hath for ever fitted his heart by experience to be in our very hearts and bosomes and not onely or barely to know the distresse and as a man to be affected with an humane affection to one of his kind but experimentally remembring the like in himselfe once And this likewise the Text suggests as the way whereby our distresses are let into his heart the more feelingly now he is in heaven We have not an High-Priest that cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sinne And the more to comfort us herein observe how fully and universally the Apostle speaks of Christs having beene tempted here below First for the matter of them or the severall sorts of temptations he sayes he was tempted 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in all points or things of any kind wherewith we are exereised Secondly for the manner he addes that too 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 like as we are His heart having been just so affected so wounded pierced and distressed in all such tryals as ours use to be onely without sinne God on purpose left all his affections to their full tendernesse and quicknesse of sense of evill So that Christ took to heart all that befell him as deeply as might be he slighted no crosse either from God or men but had and felt the utmost load of it Yea his heart was made more tender in all sorts of affections then any of ours even as it was in love and pity and this made him a man of sorrows and that more then anyother man was or shall be Now therefore to explicate the way how our miseries are let into his heart come to stir up such kindly affections of pity and compassion in him it is not hard to conceive from what hath now been said and from what the Text doth further hint unto us 1. The understanding and knowledge of that humane nature hath notice and cognisance of all the occurrences that befall his members here And for this the Text is cleare For the Apostle speaks this for our encouragement That Christ is toucht with the feeling of our infirmities Which could not be a reliefe unto us if it supposed not this that he particularly and distinctly knew them And if not all as well as some we should want reliefe in all as not knowing which he knew and which not And the Apostle affirmes this of his humane nature as was said for he speaks of that nature that was tempted here below And therefore the Lambe that was slaine and so the man Christ Jesus is Revel 5. 6. said to have seven eyes as well as seven hornes which seven eyes are the seven spirits sent forth into all the earth His eyes of Providence through his annointing with the Holy Ghost are in all corners of the world and view all the things that are done under the sunne in like manner hee is there said to have seven hornes for power as seven eyes for knowledge and both are defined to be seven to shew the perfection of both in their extent reaching unto all things So that as all power in heaven and earth is committed unto Him as Son of man as the Scripture speakes so all knowledge is given him of all things done in heaven and earth and this as Son of man too his knowledge and power being of equall extent He is the Sunne as well in respect of knowledge as of Righteousnesse and there is nothing hid from his light and beames which doe pierce the darkest corners of the hearts of the sons of men He knowes the sores as Solomon expresseth it and distresses of their hearts Like as a looking-glasse made into the forme of a round globe and hung in the midst of a roome takes in all the species of things done or that are therein at once so doth the enlarged understanding of Christs humane nature take in the affairs of this world which hee is appointed to governe especially the miseries of his members and this at once 2. His humane nature thus knowing
Personall excellencies cannot properly be called the object of it But the Formalis ratio the proper respect or consideration that maketh Christ the object of faith as justifying must necessarily be that in Christ which doth indeed justifie a sinner which is his obedience unto death For the act and object of every habit or facultie are alwayes suited and similar each to other and therefore Christ justifying must needs be the object of Faith justifying It is true that there is nothing in Christ with which some answerable act of faith in us doth not close and from the differing considerations under which faith looks at Christ have those severall acts of faith various denominations As faith that is carryed forth to Christ and his personall excellencies may be called uniting faith and faith that goes forth to Christ for strength of grace to subdue sinne may answerably to its object be called sanctifying faith and faith as it goes forth to Christ as dying c. for justification may be called justifying faith For faith in that act looks at what in Christ doth justifie a sinner and therefore Christ considered as dying rising c. doth in this respect become the most pleasing and gratefull object to a soule that is humbled for this makes Christ suitable to him as he is a sinner under which consideration he reflects upon himselfe when he is first humbled And therefore thus to represent Christ to Beleevers under the Law was the maine scope of all the Sacrifices and Types therein All things being purged with bloud and without bloud there being no remission Heb. 9. Thus did the Apostles also in their Sermons So Paul in his Epistle to the Corinthians seemed by the matter of his Sermon to have known nothing but Christ and him as crucified 1 Cor. 2. 2. as Christ above all so Christ as crucified above all in Christ as suiting their condition best whom he endeavoured to draw on to faith on him Thus in his Epistle to the Galatians he calls his preaching among them the preaching of faith Chap. 3. 2. And what was the maine scope of it but the picturing out as the word is of Christ crucified before their eyes ver 1. so he preached him and so they received him and so they began in the spirit ver 3. And thus also doe the seals of the Promises the Sacraments present Christ to a Beleevers eye as they hold forth Christ as was in the former direction observed so Christ as crucified their scope being to shew forth his death till be come 1 Cor. 11. 26. the Bread signifying Christs body broken in the sufferings of it and the cup signifying the sufferings of his soule and the pouring of it forth unto death And hence likewise as faith it selfe is called Faith on Christ as was before observed so it is called Faith on his bloud Rom. 3. 24 25. because Christ as shedding his bloud for the remission of sinnes is the object of it So the words there are Whom God hath ordained to be a propitiation through faith in his bloud to declare his righteousnesse for the remission of sins And look how God hath ordained and set forth Christ in the Promises under that picture of him doth faith at first close with him And one reason similar to the former may be grounded on the 24. ver of that 3. to the Rom. Being justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Christ And as I shewed before in the reason of the former direction that all Promises hold of his Person as being Heire of all the Promises so the speciall Tenure upon which forgivenesse of sins doth hold of him is by purchase and by the redemption that is in him So that as the promise of forgivenesse refers to his person so also to this redemption that is in him Thus both in Eph. 1. and Col. 1. In whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of sinnes His person gives us title to all the promises and his bloud shews the tenure they hold on a purchase and a full price 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an adequate price 1 Tim. 2. 6. And as sin is the strength of the Law and of the threatnings thereof so Christs satisfaction is the strength of all the Promises in the Gospel In a word an humbled soule is to have recourse to that Christ who is now alive and glorified in heaven yet to him as once crucified and made sinne He is to goe to Christ now glorified as the Person from whom he is to receive forgivenesse c. but withall to him as crucified as through whom considered in that condition he then was in he is to receive all CHAP. II. What in Christs death faith seeking justification is especially to eye and look at NOw then a second Direction for faith towards Christ as dying Direction 2 is Faith is principally and mainly to look unto the end Faith is especially to look at Christs end and mind in dying meaning and intent of God and Christ in his sufferings and not simply at the Tragicall story of his death and sufferings It is the heart and mind and intent of Christ in suffering which faith chiefly eyeth and which draweth the heart on to rest on Christ crucified When a Beleever sees that Christs aime in suffering for poore sinners agrees and answers to the aime and desires of his heart and that that was the end of it that sinners might have forgivenesse Namely that sinners might have forgivenesse and that Christs heart was as full in it to procure it as the sinners heart can be to desire it this draws his heart in to Christ to rest upon him And without this Without this the meditation of the story of his Passion unprofitable the contemplation and meditation of the story of his sufferings and of the greatnesse of them will be altogether unprofitable And yet all or the chiefe use which the Papists and many carnall Protestants make of Christs sufferings is to meditate upon and set out to themselves the grievousnesse of them so to move their hearts to a relenting and compassion to him and indignation against the Jews for their crucifying of him with an admiring of his noble and heroicall love herein and if they can but get their hearts thus affected they judge and account this to be grace when as it is no more then what the like tragicall story of some great noble personage ful of heroicall vertues and ingenuity yet inhumanely and ungratefully used will work and useth ordinarily to work in ingenuous spirits who read or heare of it yea and this oft-times though it be but in the way of a fiction Which when it reacheth no higher is so far from being faith that it is but a carnall and fleshly devotion springing from fancie which is pleased with such a storie and the principles of ingenuity stirred towards one who is of a noble spirit and yet abused Such
direct opposition to his having born our sins and appearing then with all our sins laid to his charge He appeared charged with them then but now he shall appeare as apparently and as manifestly to be without those sins for of our sins it must needs be meant and so to be discharged of them as fully as ever he appeared charged with them For it is said He shall appeare without sin and therefore to the judgements of all it shall be made manifest that that God that once charged him with them hath now fully discharged him of them The Apostle speaks of it as of a great alteration made in this respect betweene Christ as he was whilst on earth and Christ as he is to appeare the second time and is now in heaven And this alteration or discharge must necessarily be made by God for he is the Creditour vvho followed the Suit and therefore he alone can give the Acquitance Now secondly 2. There must be some season of time when this discharge from our sins was first made unto Christ from hence it will follow that there must be some time when this alteration was first made and discharge given when Christ from being sin as he was made should become without sinne through Gods acquiting of him and this say I was at his Resurrection It is not deferred as then to be first done when he is to appeare the second time though then it appeares indeed but it is really done before for hee comes then to judge others for sinne Now in reason when should this Acquitance or Justification from our sins be first given to Christ and legally pronounced on him but when he had paid the last farthing of the debt and made his satisfaction compleat which was then done when he began to rise for his lying in the grave was a part of his Humiliation and so of his Satisfaction as generally Orthodoxe Divines hold Now therefore when he began to rise then ended his Humiliation and that was the first moment of his Exaltation His Acquitance therefore bears Date from thence even from that very houre Hence thirdly 3. That this must needs be and was first made to him at his Resurrection we read as that Christ was condemned so that he was justified Thus 1 Tim. 3. 16. God is said to be manifest in the flesh and then that this God-man was justified in the spirit That is whereas God was manifest or appeared in flesh to condemne sinne in the flesh as Rom. 8. that same God-man was also justified in the spirit from all those sins and so received up to glory as it follows there And not to goe far the very words of this my Text It is God that justifies are taken out of Esay 50. 8 9. and as there they are first spoken by Christ of himselfe then when he gave his back to the smiters in his death as in the verses before and vvas put to death as a condemned man he comforts himselfe vvith this He is neere that justifies me who shall condemne And when was that done or to be done but at his Resurrection So the phrase in Timothy imports if you compare it with another in Peter 1 Pet. 3. 18. Being put to death in the flesh and quickned in or by the spirit Paul he sayes Iustified in the spirit Peter he sayes Quickned in the spirit both meane one and the same thing By Spirit is meant the power of his God-head and Divine nature whereby he was at once both raised from the grave and from under the guilt of sin together He was at once both quickned or raised and justified also And that by Spirit they mean his Divine nature the opposition in both places evidently implyes for it is opposed to his Flesh or humane nature Now because he was quickned or raised by the power of the God-head and at that raising him he was justifyed also by God and declared justifyed by that Resurrection as he had been declared condemned by his death Hence to be justified is put for his Resurrection for that was his justification or declaration to all the world that he was justified from all the sins laid to his charge And that other place I cited out of Isaiah hath the same meaning also for Christ there comforts himselfe against the Jews condemning him and putting him to death with the hopes of Gods justifying of him when he should have gone through that work And Christs meaning there is this God will raise me up and acquit me though you condemne and kill me In the other Prophets you shall find Christ still comforting himself against his condemnation at his death with the thoughts of his Resurrection which he fore-saw as shortly to follow after it as here in Esay he comforts himselfe with these hopes of his being justified after their condemnation of him For instance Psa 16. 9. My flesh shall rest in hope thou wilt not leave my soule in hell nor suffer thy holy One to see corruption Which words you know Peter in the Acts doth twice interpret of Christs Resurrection In like manner here in Esay against his death and condemnation he comforts himself with the hopes of Gods justification of him at his Resurrection He is neere who justifies me and he shall help me who shall condemne And further His Resurrection therefore called his first begetting to confirm strengthen this notion because his Resurrection was the first moment of this his justification from our sins therefore it is that God cals it his first begetting of Christ This day have I begotten thee speaking manifestly of his Resurrection Acts 13. 35. And the reason of his so calling it is because all the while before he was covered with sin and the likenesse of sinfull flesh But now having flung it off he appears like Gods Son indeed as if newly begotten And thus also there commeth to be the fuller conformity betweene Christ justification ours For as our justification is at our first being born again And therein a conformity between our Regeneration and his Resurrection so was Christ also at this his first glorious begetting He was under an Attainder before here was the Act of Restitution first passed And as at our Conversion which is to us a Resurrection wee passe from death to life that is from an estate of death and condemnation unto justification of life so did Christ also at his Resurrection which to him was are begetting passe from an estate of death and guilt laid on him to an estate of Life Glory and justification from guilt and so shall appear as the word is Heb. 9. ult as he doth now in heaven without sin for he became to be without sin frō that very moment Thus I have shewn how Christ was justified at his Resurrection Now then in the 2. §. 2. place 2. That Beleevers were all justified in Christ his justification as a Common person representing them I am to
we were dead with Christ even then when he dyed so in the 2. of Coloss 13. we are said to be risen with him in respect of our justification which is the thing in hand The words are And you being dead in your sins namely the guilt of your sins and the uncircumcision of your flesh that is in respect of the power of corrupt nature hath he quickned together with him having forgiven you all your trespasses See here the forgivenesse of our sins or our justification is called a quickning or a raising up of us as the 12. ver hath it together with him in a conformity and relation to that justification from our sins which at his Resurrection he received in our names His meaning is he was justified then in our names and so we are now justifyed through the vertue of that our communion with him therein For if you mark the connexion of the words with what follows ver 14. you will finde this forgiving of their trespasses ver 13. through their being quickned together with him not onely to have been done when they beleeved and so when they had that justification personally first applyed to them of which it is true the words in the 12. ver are to be understood but also then to have been done when he having as it follows in the 14. ver blotted out the hand-writing of Ordinances which was against us nailing it to his Crosse and having spoiled Principalities and Powers and got the victory namely in his rising again had made a shew of them openly in his ascending to heaven triumphing over them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in himselfe as the Margent hath it of which words I shall farther speak in the next Head So as then when Christ did this in himselfe then were our sins forgiven then were we acquited with him and triumphed with him he doing all this in our stead representing us CHAP. VII How all this both the support of our faith and our Justification by Christs Resurrrection is sealed up to us in Baptisme The Conclusion How faith may make use of Christs Resurrection in its pleas to God ANd all this our communion with Christ in his Resurrection both in respect of Sanctification which the 6. of the Rom. holds forth and of Justification which this place in the Coloss holds forth is lively as both places declare set out and sealed up to us in the Sacrament of Baptisme Rom. 6. 3 4. we are said to be buried with him in Baptisme c. and Col. 2. 12. Buryed with him in Baptisme wherein also you are risen with him The ominent thing signified and represented in Baptisme is not simply the bloud of Christ as it washeth us from sin but there is a farther representation therein of Christs Death Buriall and Resurrection in the Baptized's being first buryed under water and then rising out of it and this not in a bare conformity unto Christ but in a representation of a communion with Christ in that his Death and Resurrection Therefore it is said We are buryed with him in Baptisme and Wherein you are risen with him It is not simply said like as he was buryed and rose but With him So as our communion and one-nesse with him in his Resurrection is represented to us therein and not onely our conformity or likenesse unto him therein And so Baptisme representeth this to us that Christ having once in himselfe sustained the persons of all the Elect in his Buriall and Resurrection that now upon the party himselfe who is baptized is personally particularly and apparently re-acted the same Part againe in his Baptisme thereby shewing what his communion with Christ before was in what was then done to Christ that he then was buried with Christ and rose with him and upon that ground is now in this outward sign of Baptisme as in a shew or representation both buryed and also riseth againe And moreover hence it is that the Answer of a good conscience which is made the inward effect of this Ordinance of Baptisme 1 Pet. 3. 21. is there also attributed unto Christs Resurrection as the thing signified and represented in Baptisme and as the cause of that answer of a good conscience Even Baptisme saith he doth now also save us as being the Ordinance that seales up salvation not the putting away of the filth of the flesh or the washing of the outward man but the answer of a good conscience towards God By the Resurrection of Iesus Christ To open these words Our consciences are that principle in us which are the seat of the guilt of all the sinnes of the whole man unto whose Court they all come to accuse us as unto Gods Deputy which Conscience is called Good or Evill as the state of the man is If his sinne remain unpardoned then as his estate is damnable so his conscience is evill If his sins bee forgiven and his person justified his conscience is said to bee good Conscience having its denomination from the mans state even as the Urine is called good or bad as the state of the mans body is healthful or unsound whose Urine it is Now in Baptisme forvivenesse of sins and justification being sealed up to a believers faith conscience under that lively representation of his Communion with Christ in his Resurrection hence this is made the fruit of Baptisme that the good conscience of a believer sealed up in Baptisme hath where withall from thence to answer all accusations of sin that can or doe at any time come in upon him and all this as it is there added By vertue of the resurrection of Iesus Christ namely in this respect that his Communion with Christ in his Resurrection hath been represented in his Baptisme as a ground of his faith and of that Answer unto all accusations So that indeed the same thing that Paul sayes by way of triumph and defiance to all accusations Who shall condemne Christ is risen the very same thing Peter here mentions though not by way of Defiance yet of a Beleevers Answer and Apologie That if sinnes doe come to condemne or accuse a good conscience is ready to say Christ is risen and I was then justified in him There is my Answer which nothing in heaven nor hell is able to reply unto This is the answer of a good conscience by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ Now to crown this second Pillar of Faith with this Coronis or Conclusion Application by way of Application or Direction to a believers faith How saith is to make use of this in pleading our Justification How to make use of Christs Resurrection in point of non-condemnation You heard before out of Rom. 6. that in respect of Mortification as the Apostle there reasoneth we may be truly said to have been perfectly dead to all sinne in Christs dying unto sin once and through his representing us therein as dying unto sinne in and with him So as although we be for
the present but imperfectly mortified in our selves yet when corruptions arise the Apostle bids us help our selves against them by faith reasoning our selves to stand wholly dead to sin when Christ dyed and so to conclude from thence that we shall one day be fully dead to sin because we then did perfectly dye in Christ unto it which kinde of reasoning also God would have us use as a motive and of all motives that are in the Gospell it is the strongest against any corruption when as it ariseth Shall I that am dead to sin in Christ and so am freed from it shall I live any longer therein Ver. 2. Now as God would have our faith make this use of our Communion with Christ in his death in point of sanctification just so when guilt of sin ariseth in thy conscience to accuse or threaten condemnation reason thou thy selfe as the Apostles word is in that other case or reckon thy selfe as our translation hath it justified in Christ in his Justification which was done at his Resurrection Yea and seeing God would have thee use thy Communion with Christ in his Death as an argument to move thee to mortifie sin bidding thee to reckon thy self dead to sin in Christ doe thou desire him in like manner to reckon thee as justified at Christs Resurrection for the ground of both is the same and return that as an argument to him to move him to justifie thee And this is that answer of a good conscience which Peter speaks of this is the meaning of Pauls challenge Who shall condemne Christ is risen And should thy heart object and say But I know not whether I was one of those that God reckoned justified with Christ when he arose Then go thou to God and aske him boldly whether he did not doe this for thee and whether thou wert not one of them intended by him put God to it and God will by vertue of Christs Resurrection for thee even himselfe Answer thy faith this question ere thou art aware He will not deny it And to secure thee the more know that however Christ will bee sure to look to that for thee so as that thou having been then intended as if thy heart be drawne to give it self up to Christ thou wert shalt never be condmned SECT IV. FAITH supported by Christs ASCENSION AND Sitting at Gods right hand ROM 8. 34. Who is he that condemneth It is Christ who is even at the right hand of God CHAP. I. A Connexion of this third Head with the two former Shewing how it affords a farther degree of Triumph Two things involved in it 1. Christs Ascension 2. Christs power and authority in heaven I Come next to this third great Pillar and support of Faith Christs Being at Gods right hand and to shew how the view and consideration hereof may strengthen faith seeking justification and pardon of sinne Who is he that condemneth Christ is even at Gods right hand In the opening of which I shall keep to the begun method both by shewing how Iustification it selfe depends upon this and the evidence thereof to us both which the Apostle had here in his eye and from both which our faith may derive comfort and assurance And I meane to keep punctually to the matter of Iustification onely as in the former These two latter that remain here in the Text Christs sitting at Gods right hand and his interceding for us are brought in here by the Apostle as those which have a redundant force and prevalencie in them for the non-condemnation of the Elect that although the two former abundantly served to secure it yet these two added to the former do make the triumph of faith more compleat and full and us more then Conquerours as it after follows Nor doth this place alone make mention of Christs sitting at Gods right hand which I now am first to handle in this its relation and influence into our Iustification the assurance of faith about it but you have it to the same end use and purpose alleadged by that other great Apostle 1. Pet. 3. from the 18. to the 22. And if the scopes of these two Apostles in both places be compared they are the same Here the Resurrection of Christ and his sitting at Gods right hand are brought in as the ground of this bold challenge triumph of faith and there is Peter is mentioned the Answer or Plea of a good conscience in a beleever justified which it puts into the Court and opposeth against all condemning guilts so it is called ver 21. The Apostle alleadging the Resurrection of Iesus Christ as one ground of it the answer of a good conscience by the Resurrection of Iesus Christ And then further to back and strengthen this Plea or Answer of a good conscience the Apostle puts his Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand into the Bill as further grounds confirming it so it follows who is gone into Heaven and is at the right hand of God Angells and Authorities and Powers being made subject to him All which the Apostle here expresseth in one word as enough to carrie it that Christ is even at Gods right hand The soule hath a sufficient answer against condemnation in Christs death and Resurrection full enough though it should stop there yea therein can faith triumph though it went no further for it can shew a full satisfaction given in his death and that accepted by God for us and Christ acquited and we in him Therefore faith you see comes to a rather there But then let it go on to consider Jesus sitting at Gods right hand and making intercession for us and then faith will triumph and insult over all accusers be more then a Conqueror then it comes not to a rather onely as here but to a much more shall we be saved by his life thus Rom. 5. 10. And the meaning thereof is that if his death had power to pay all our debts and justifie us at first then much more hath his life this power So that his death is but the ground and foundation of our faith herein and the lowest step of this ladder but these other are the top full triumph of faith therein And our spirits should rise as the Apostle herein riseth Faith upon these wings may not onely fly above the Gun-shot of all accusations and condemners but even cleane out of their sight and so far above all such thoughts fears as it may reach to a security that sins are forgotten and shall be remembred no more What joy was there in the Disciples when they saw Christ risen Ioh. 20. Therefore in the Primitive times it was used as a voice of joy and to this day the Grecian Christians s entertain each other at that time of the year with these words The Lord is risen your Surety is out of Prison fear not But as Christ said in another case so say I what will you say if you see your Surety ascended
worshipped him so his Father welcommed him with the highest grace that ever yet was shewne The words which he then spake The welcome God gave Christ when he came to Heaven The words he first spake to him we have recorded Psal 110. Sit thou at my right hand till I make thine enemies thy footestoole You may by the way observe for the illustration of this how upon all the severall parts of performance of his office either God is brought in speaking to Christ or Christ to his Father Thus when he chose him first to be our Mediator he takes an oath Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedec Againe when Christ came to take upon him our nature the words he spake are recorded Loe I come to doe thy will a body hast thou fitted me so Heb. 10. out of the 40. Psal Likewise when he hung upon the Crosse his words unto God are recorded Psal 22. 1. My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee In like manner when he rose againe Gods words used then to him are recorded Thou art my Sonne this day have I begotten thee Psal 2. which place is expounded of the Resurrection Acts 13. 33. which is as much as if he had said Thou never appearedst like my Sonne till now for whereas I chose a Son to be glorified with power and Majesty hitherto thou hast appeared onely as a Son of man Enosh sorry man hitherto thou hast been made sin a curse not like my Son but hast appeared in the likenes of sinfull flesh and of a servant all besmeared with bloud therefore this is the first day wherein I make acount I have begotten thee even now when thou first beginnest to appeare out of that sinfull hue and likenesse of sinfull flesh now I owne thee for my Sonne indeed And in him he owned us all thus at his Resurrection And then last of all when he comes into Heaven the first word God speakes to him is Sonne sit thou at my right hand thou hast done all my worke and now I will do thine he gives him a Quietus est rest here sit here till I make all thy enemies thy foote-stoole And now what say you are ye satisfied yet that God is satisfied for your sins What superabundant evidence must this Christs sitting at Gods right hand His sitting downe at Gods right hand afford a double evidence give to a doubting heart It argues First that Christ for his part hath perfectly done his worke and that there is no more left for him to do by way of satisfaction This the word sitting implies Secondly It argues that God is as fully satisfied on his part this his sitting at Gods right hand implyes For the first 1. That he had perfectly and compleatly performed all his work that was to be done by him for our justification The phrase of Sitting doth betoken rest when work is fulfilled and finished Christ was not to returne till he had accomplisht his worke Heb. 10. The Apostle comparing the force and excellencie of Christs Sacrifice with those of the Priests of the old Law sayes that Those Priests stood daily offering of Sacrifices which can never take sins away Their standing implyed that they could never make satisfaction so as to say We have finished it But Christ sayes he ver 12. after he had offered up one sacrifice for ever sate downe c. Mark how he opposeth their standing to his sitting downe He sate as one who had done his work Thus Heb. 4. 10. He that is entred into his rest speaking of Christ as I have elsewhere shewne hath ceased from his work as God from his Secondly 2. That God also accepted it and was infinitely well pleased with it this his being at Gods right hand as strongly argues that God is satisfied for if God had not been infinitely well pleased with him he would never have let him come so neere him much lesse have advanced him so high as his right hand And therefore in that place even now cited Heb. 10. ver 10 11 12. compared with the former verses this is alledged as an evidence that Christ had for ever taken sinnes away which those Priests of the Law could not doe who therefore often offered the same Sacrifice as ver 11. That this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sinnes for ever sate downe on the right hand of God as thereby shewing and that most manifestly that he had at that once offered up such a satisfactory Sacrifice as had pleased God for ever and thereupon took up his place at Gods right hand as an evidence of it so possessing the highest place in Court This setting him at Gods right hand is a token of speciall and highest favour So Kings whom they were most pleased with they did set at their right hands as Solomon did his Mother 1 Kings 2. 19. and so Christ the Church his Queen Psal 45. 9. and it was a favour which God never after vouchsafed to any Heb. 1. To which of all the Angels did he say Sit thou on my right hand Therefore Phil. 2. it is not onely said that he exalted him but superexaltavit he highly exalted him so as never any was exalted for he was made thereby higher then the heavens Thus much for the first Head CHAP. IV. Demonstrates in the second place what influence Christs Ascension hath in a beleevers non-condemnation upon that second premised consideration of Christs being a Common person for us The security that Faith may have from thence WE have thus seen what triumphing evidence and demonstration both Christs Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand doe afford us for this that Christ being considered as our Surety hath therefore undoubtedly subdued our enemies and sins and satisfied God Let us now consider further what force efficacie and influence these two both his Ascending and fitting at Gods right hand as an Head and Common person for us have in them towards the assured working and accomplishment of the salvation of believers his Elect And from the consideration of this which is a second Head our faith may be yet further confirmed and strengthened in its confidence Who shall condemne it is Christ that is at Gods right hand I shall take in as in the former both his Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand 1. By considering And first for his Ascending consider these two things in it which may uphold our confidence 1. That the great end and purpose of that his Ascending the errand 1. That the great end of his Ascending and entring Heaven was to prepare a place for us and bring us thither the businesse he Ascended for was to prepare and provide a place for us and to make way for our comming thither This he assures his Disciples of Iohn 14. 2. In my Fathers house are many mansions I go to prepare a place for you as Ioseph was secretly sent before by Gods intendment to prepare
a place in Egypt for his Brethren whom Gods providence meant to bring after him so more openly doth Christ Ascend to Heaven professedly declaring that to be his businesse I go to prepare a place for you and it is my Fathers house saith he where I can provide for you and make you welcome You heard before what welcome God gave Christ when he first arrived there and what he said to him and Christ said as it were again to God I come not alone I have much company many of my brethren and followers to come after for it was the declared and avowed end of his comming to prepare a place for them I prayed when I was on earth that where I am they might be also Iohn 17. and now I am come hither my traine must come in too I am not compleate without them If you receive me you must receive them also and I am come to take up lodgings for them Thus the Captain of our salvation being made perfect through sufferings and then crowned with glory and honour in bringing of many Sons to Glory as Heb. 2. 10. of which company he was Captain is brought in saying to God ver 13. Behold I and the Children which God hath given me he speakes it when brought to glory I am their Captain and they must follow mee Where I am they must be Lo I am here and am not to come alone but to bring to glory all the Children which thou hast given me They shall be all welcome saies God there is roome enough for them many mansions so that we neede not feare nor say in our hearts doubting and despairing Who shall ascend up to Heaven for us to bring us thither as Rom. 10. Christ hath done it That is the first thing but that is not all 2. 2. That he entred in our very names and stead took possession in our right He entred into Heaven in our very names and so is to be considered in that act as a Common person as well as in his Death and Resurrection and so representing us and also taking possession in our right and we in him as a guardian takes possession for Heirs under age Heb. 6. 20. the fore-runner is for us entred into Heaven the fore-runner for us that is our fore-runner A fore-runner is a fore-runner of followers and of such as stay not long behinde and usually goes before as a harbinger to provide and take up lodgings for them that are to come and writes the names of those who are to come over the doores of such and such roomes that they may not be taken up by any other And so Heb. 12. 23. the names of the first borne are said to be written in Heaven or enrolled there And 1. Pet. 1. 5. their places or mansions in Heaven are said to be reserved for them they stand empty as it were yet taken up so as none shall take them from them their names and titles to them being entred and superscribed And so he truly entred pro nobis for us that is in our stead and in our names as a Common person and therefore the High-Priest in the Type entred into the Holy of Holies with all the names of the Tribes on his Breast even so doth Christ with ours even as a Common person in our names thereby shewing that we are likewise to come after him and this is more then simply to prepare a place it is to take possession of a place and give us a Right thereto So that your Faith through this consideration What comfort faith may derive from this We may behold our selves in heaven already may see your selves as good as in Heaven already For Christ is entred as a Common Person for you Justification hath two parts First Acquitance from sin and freedome from condemnation as here Who shall condemne And Secondly Iustification of life as it is called Rom. 5. 18. that is which gives title to eternall life Now dying and rising as a Common person for us procures the first sets us perfectly enough in that state of freedome from condemnation But then this Christ his entring into Heaven as a Common Person sets us farre above that state of Noncondemnation It placeth us in Heaven with him You would think your selves secure enough if you were ascended into Heaven As Heman said of his condition that he was free among the dead that is he reckoned himselfe in his despaire free of the company in Hell as well as if he had beene there thinking his name enrolled among them and his place taken up so you may reckon your selves as the word is Rom. 6. free of the company of Heaven and your places taken up there so that when you come to die you shall go to heaven as to your own place by as true a title though not of your own as Iudas went to Hell which is called his own place as Act. 1. the Apostle speaks What a start is this how far have you left below you pardon of sins and non-condemnation you are got above How securely may you say Who shall condemne Christ hath ascended and entered into Heaven This is the first branch of the second Head The influence that Christs Ascension hath into our justification and salvation CHAP. V. Demonstrateth in like manner what influence Christs sitting at Gods right hand hath into our justification upon that second consideration of his being a Common person And the security faith may have from thence THe consideration of his sitting at Gods right hand may in respect of the influence that it must needs have into our salvation yet adde more security unto our Faith if we either consider the power and authority of the place it selfe By considering two things and what it is to sit at Gods right hand Or secondly the relation the person he beares and sustaines in his sitting there even of a Common person in our right And both these being put together will adde strength mutually each to other and unto to our faith both to consider how great a prerogative it is to sit at Gods right hand and what such a one as sits there hath power to doe and then that Christ who is invested with this power and advanced to it he possesseth it all as our Head and in our Right as a Common person representing us And 1. §. 1. 1 The prerogatives of the place which are two Consider the prerogatives of the place it selfe they are two 1. Soveraignty of power and Might and Majestie 2. Soveraignty of authority and judgment either of which may secure us from non-condemnation 1. 1 Soveraignty of Majesty and power Soveraignty of power and might this the phrase sitting at Gods right hand implies Mat. 26. 64. where Christ himselfe expoundeth the purport of it Hereafter you shall see the Sonne of man sitting on the right hand of power And so 1 Ephes 20. 22. this is made the priviledge of Gods setting him at his
Yet so as his sitting in heaven as it is indefinitely expressed is understood to be as in our right and stead and as a Common person and so is to assure us of our sitting there with him And yet How we may be said to sit in his Throne in our proportion So Rev. 3. 21. it is expresly rendred as the mind and intendment of it Him that overcommeth I will grant to sit with me in my throne even as I also am set downe with my Father in his throne There is a proportion observed though with an inequality we sit on Christs Throne but He onely on his Fathers Throne that is Christ onely sits at Gods right hand but we on Christs right hand And so the Church is said to be at Christs right hand And represents our sitting at the latter day as Judges with him Psal 45. 9. Yea further and it may afford a farther comfort to us in the point in hand this represents that at the latter day we shall sit as Assessors on his Iudgement-seat to judge the world with him So Mat. 19. 28. and Luke 22. 30. When the Sonne of Man shall sit in his glory ye shall sit upon twelve thrones judging the Tribes of Israel So as this our sitting with him it is spoken in respect to Iudgement and to giving the sentence of it not a sentence shall passe without your votes So as you may by faith not onely look on your selves as already in heaven sitting with Christ And so if we be condemned it must be with our own votes and consent as a Common person in your right but you may look upon your selves as Judges also So that if any sinne should arise to accuse or condemne yet it must be with your votes And what greater security can you have then this for you must condemne your selves if you be condemned you may very well say Who shall accuse Who shall condemne for you will never pronounce a fatall sentence upon your owne selves As then Paul triumphed here The triumph of faith thereupon so may we for at the present we sit in heaven with Christ and have all our enemies under our feet As Ioshuah made his servants set their feet on the necks of those five Kings so God would have us by faith to doe the like to all ours for one day we shall doe it And if you say We see it not I answer as Heb. 2. the Apostle saith of Christ himself Now we see not yet all things put under him ver 8. Now not under him for he now sits in heaven and expects by faith when his enemies shall be made his foot-stoole as Heb. 10 12 and 13. ver but we see for the present Iesus crowned with glory and honour ver 9. and so may be sure that the thing is as good as done and we may in seeing him thus crowned see our selves sitting with him and quietly wait and expect as Christ himselfe doth till all be acomplished and our salvation finished and fully perfected His Intercession now remains only to be spoken of which yet will afford further considerations to strengthen our Faith His sitting at Gods right hand notes out his power over all from God but his Intercession all power and favor with God for us so as to effect our salvation for us with Gods highest contentment and good will and all yet further to secure us Who shall condemne c. SECT V. The Triumph of faith from Christs INTERCESSION ROM 8. 34. Who also maketh intercession for us CHAP. I. A connection of this with the former and how this adds a further support Two things out of the Text propounded to be handled First The concurrencie of influence that Christs intercession hath into our Salvation Secondly The security that Faith may have there-from for our Justification WE have seene Christ sitting at Gods right hand as a Judge and King having all authority of saving or condemning in his own hands and having all power in Heaven and Earth to give eternall life to them that believe And the confidence that this giveth us Let us now come to his Intercession and the influence which it hath into our Iustification and salvation which as it strikes the last stroake to make all sure so as great a stroake as any of the former therfore as you have heard that there was an All-sufficiencie in his Death Who shall condemne it is Christ that dyed a Rather in his Resurrection yea rather is risen again a much rather 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that he lives and is at Gods right hand Rom. 5. 10. The Apostle riseth yet higher to an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a saving to the utmost put upon his intercession Heb. 7. 25. Wherefore he is able to save to the utmost seeing he ever lives to make intercession So that if you could suppose there were any thing which none of all the former three could doe or effect for us yet his intercession could do it to the utmost for it selfe is the uttermost and highest If Money would purchase our Salvation his Death hath done it which he laid downe as a price and an equivalent ransome as it is in 1. Tim. 2. 6. If Power and authority would effect it his sitting at Gods right hand invested with all power in Heaven and Earth shall be put forth to the utmost to effect it If favour and entreaties added to all these which oft times doth as much as any of those other were needefull he will use the utmost of this also and for ever make intercession So that if Love Money or Power any of them or all of them will save us we shall be sure to bee saved saved to the utmost 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all manner of wayes by all manner of meanes saved over and over For the cleering of this last generall head The Intercession of Christ and the influence and security it hath into our faith and justification I shall handle two things and both proper to the Text. First Shew how unto all those other forementioned Acts of Christ for us this of Intercession also is to be added by him for the effecting our salvation and the securing our hearts therein This that particle Also in the Text calls for Who also maketh Intercession for us Then Secondly to shew the security that faith may assume and fetch from this Intercession of Christ or his praying for us in heaven Who shall condemne it is Christ that maketh intercession for us CHAP. II. The first Head explained by two things First Intercession one part of Christs Priesthood and the most excellent part of it TOwards the Explanation of the first of these two things are to be done First To shew how great and necessary and how excellent a part of Christs Priesthood his Intercession and praying for us in heaven is Secondly To shew the peculiar influence that Intercession hath into our salvation and so the reasons for which God ordained
deals with Mercy Therefore all the Grace he bestows on us he is said first to receive it even now when in heaven Acts 2. 33. it is said of him after his going to heaven and that he was exalted c. that he received the promise of the Spirit which Ioh. 14. 16. he told them he would pray for And this is part of the meaning of that in Psal 68. 18. He ascended up on high and received gifts for men sayes the Psalmist The Apostle renders it Ephes 4. gave but you see it was by receiving them first as fruits of his Intercession and asking after his ascending He is said both to give as being all of his own purchase and as having power as a King also both to doe and bestow all he doth and yet withall he is said to receive all that he gives because as a Priest he intercedes for it and asks it Free grace requires this This is the first thing Yea 2. Gods justice stood upon it Secondly Justice it selfe might stand a little upon it though there was enough in Christ his death to satisfie it yet having been wronged it stood thus far upon it as those to whom a debt is due use to doe namely to have the money brought home to Gods dwelling house and laid downe there God is resolved not to stoope one whit unto man no nor to Christ his Surety Justice will not onely be satisfied and have a sufficient ransome collected and paid as at Christs death but he must come and bring his bags up to heaven justice will be paid it upon the Mercie-seate For so in the Type the blood was to be carried into the Holy of holies and sprinkled upon the Mercie-seat And therefore his Resurrection Ascension c. were but as the breaking through all enemies subduing them to the end to bring this price or satisfaction to the Mercie-seat and so God having his money by him might not want wherewithall to pardon Sinners so as the blood of Christ is currant money not only on earth but in heaven too whither all is brought which is for our comfort that all the treasure which should satisfie God is safely conveyed thither and our Surety with it The second sort of reasons why God ordained Christs intercession to be joyned to his Death Second sort of reasons it was best for the effecting our Salvation are taken from what was the best way to effect and make sure our salvation and secure our hearts therein and these reasons will shew the peculiar influence that Intercession hath into our Salvation and therein as in the former First in generall God would have our salvation made sure and us saved all manner of wayes over and over 1 1. In generall God would have us saved all manner of wayes By ransome and price as Captives are redeemed which was done by his Death which of it selfe was enough for it is said Heb. 10. to perfect us for ever 2 2. The Application of Redemption to us from Christs Intercession By power and rescue so in his Resurrection and Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand which also was sufficient Then 3 3. More particularly our justification depends on it again by Intercession a way of favour and entreaty and this likewise would have beene enough but God would have all wayes concurre in it whereof notwithstanding not one could fail a three fold cord whereof each twine were strong enough but all together must of necessity hold Secondly The whole Application of his redemption both in justifying and saving of us first and last hath a speciall dependance upon this his Intercession This all Divines on all sides doe attribute unto it whilst they put this difference betweene the influence of his death and that of his intercession into our salvation calling his death Medium impetrationis that is the meanes of procurement or obtaining it for us But his intercession Medium applicationis the Meanes of applying all unto us Christ purchaseth salvation by the one but possesseth us of it by the other Some have attributed the Application of Iustification to his Resurrerection but it is much more proper to ascribe it to his Intercession and what causall influence his Resurrection hath into our Iustification hath been afore in the third Section declared But that his eternall Priesthood in heaven and the work of its Intercession is the applying cause of our eternall salvation in all the parts of it first and last seems to me to be the result of the connexion of the 8 9 and 10. verses of the 5. Chap. to the Hebrews For having spoken of his obedience and sufferings unto death ver 8. and how he thereby was made perfect ver 9. he sayes And being thus first made perfect he became the Author or applying cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of eternall salvation unto all them that obey him and this by his being become an eternall Priest in heaven after he was thus perfected by sufferings for so it follows ver 10. Called of God an High-priest after the order of Melchisedech And Melchisedechs Priesthood was principally the type of his Priesthood in heaven as was before declared One leading instance to shew that his Intercession was to be the applying cause of salvation was given by Christ whilst he was on earth thereby manifesting what much more was to be done by him in heaven through his Intercession there when he was on the Crosse and as then offering that great sacrifice for sin he at that time also joyned prayers for the justification of those that crucified him Father forgive them for they know not what they doe So fulfilling that in Esay 53. ult He bare the sins of many and made Intercession for the transgressours And the efficacie of that prayer then put up was the cause of the conversion of those three thousand Acts 2. whom ver 35. the Apostle had expresly charged with the crucifying of Christ whom ye by wicked hands have taken crucified and slaine These were the first fruits of his Intercession whose prayers still doe reap and bring in the rest of the crop which in all ages is to grow up unto God on earth 3. And more particularly as the whole Application in generall so our Iustification in the whole progresse of it depends upon Christs Intercession As 1. 1 The first act of our justification and our conversion depends upon it Our first actuall or initiall Iustification which is given us at our first conversion depends upon Christs Intercession Therefore in the fore-mentioned prayer on the Crosse the thing he prayed for was Forgivenes Father forgive them You heard before that Christs death affords the matter of our justification as being that which is imputed the ransome the price the thing it self that satisfies And that his Resurrection was the originall act of Gods justifying us in Christ We were virtually justified then in Christ his being justifyed as in a Common Person But
besides all this there is a personall or an actuall Iustification to be bestowed upon us that is an accounting and bestowing it upon us in our own persons which is done whē we beleeve and it is called Rom. 5. 1. a being justifyed by faith and ver 10. receiving the atonement now this depends upon Christs Intercession and it was typified out by Moses his sprinkling the people with blood mentioned Heb. 9. 19. which thing Jesus Christ as a Mediator and Priest doth now from Heaven For Heb. 12. 24. it is said You are come to Heaven and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant and as it is next subjoyned to the blood of sprinkling he shed his blood on the Crosse on earth but he sprinkleth it now as a Priest from Heaven For it is upon Mount Sion to which he had said first in the former verse ye are come and so to Christ as a Mediator standing on that mount and sprinkling from thence his blood and so therein there is an allusion unto Moses Christs Type who sprinkled the people with the blood of that ceremoniall covenant the type of the covenant of grace Now in the 1 Pet. 1. 2. The sprinkling of Christ his blood as it is there made the more proper work of Christ himselfe in distinction from the other persons and therefore was done by Moses who was his type so is it also put for our first justification And this sprinkling as it is there mentioned is from the vertue of his intercession And therefore in that place of the Heb. forecited he attributes an intercession unto it as the phrase that follows which speaks better things c. doth imply of which more hereafter Yet concerning this first Head let me adde this by way of caution which I shall presently have occasion to observe that though this our first justification is to be ascribed to his Intercession yet more eminently Intercession is ordained for the accōplishing our salvation this other more rarely in the Scripture attributed thereunto Secondly 2. The continuance of our justification depends upon it The continuation of our Iustification depends upon it And as his Intercession is the virtuall continuation of his Sacrifice so is it the continuing cause of our justification which though it be an act done once as fully as ever yet is it done over every moment for it is continued by acts of free Grace so renewed actually every moment There is a standing in Grace by Christ spoken of Rom. 5. 2. as well as a first accesse by Christ and that standing in grace and continuing in it is afterwards ver 11. attributed to his life that is as it is interpreted Heb. 7. 25. his living ever to intercede We owe our standing in grace every moment to his sitting in Heaven and interceding every moment There is no fresh act of justification goes forth but there is a fresh act of intercession And as though God created the World once for all yet every moment he is said to create every new act of providence beeing a new creation so likewise to justifie continually through his continuing out free grace to justifie as at first and this Christ doth by continuing his Intercession he continues a Priest for ever and so we continue to be justifyed for ever 3. A full security of our justification given thereby forever There is hereby a full security given us of justification to be continued for ever The danger either must lie in old sins comming into remembrance or else from sins newly to be committed Now first God hereby takes order 1. Against the remembrance of sins past that no old sins shall come up into remembrance to trouble his thoughts as in the old Law after the Priests going into the Holy of holies their sins are said yet to have done Heb. 10. 3. and to that end it was that he placed Christ as his Remembrancer for us so neere him to take up his thoughts so with his obedience that our sinnes might not come into mind not that God needed this help to put himself in mind but onely for a formality sake that things being thus really carryed between God and Christ for us according to a way suiting with our apprehensions our faith might be strengthened against all suppositions and feares of after reviving our guilts Look therefore as God ordained the Rain-bow in the heavens that when he lookt on it he might remember his Covenant never to destroy the world againe by water so he hath set Christ as the Rain-bow about his Throne And look as the Bread and Wine in the Lords Supper are appointed on earth to shew forth Christs death as a Remembrancer to us so is Christ himselfe appointed in heaven to shew forth his death really as a Remembrancer thereof to his Father and indeed the one is correspondent to the other Onely the Papists have perverted the use of the Lords Supper by making it on earth a commemorative sacrifice to God when as it is but a Remembrancer thereof to men and besides their Priests therein do take upon themselves this very office of presenting this sacrifice to God which is proper onely to Christ in Heaven But God when he would make sure not to be tempted to remember our sins any more nor trouble himselfe with them hath set his Christ by him to put him in minde of his so pleasing an offering So the High-Priests going into the Holy of holies was for a memoriall and therein the Type of Christ And this is plainly expresly made the use of this execution of his Priestly office in Heaven Heb. 8. where the Apostle having discoursed of that part of his office as the chiefe thing he aimed at in this Epistle ver 1. and of the necessity of it ver 3 4 and 5. and excellencie of it in this respect ver 6. he then shews how from thence the new Covenant of pardon came to be sure and stedfast that God will remember our sins no more ver 12. which he there brings in as the proper use of this Doctrine and of this part of his Priesthood 2. 2. To prevent the accusing condemning us by new sinne for times to come As by reason of intercession God remembers not old sins so likewise he is not provoked by new For though God when he justifies us should forgive all old sins past for ever so as never to remember them more yet new ones would break forth and he could not but take notice of them and so so long as sinne continues there is need of a continuing intercession Therefore for the securing us in this it is said Rom. 5. 10. That if when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Where we see that his Death is in some more speciall manner said to procure reconciliation at first for sinnes of unregeneracie and to bring us to
Christ but then his life and Intercession or living to intercede is said to keep God and us friends that we may never fall out more What Christ did on earth doth more especially procure reconciliation for sinnes which we doe in the state of nature so as notwithstanding them God resolves to turne us from that state Intercession principally intended for sins after conversion and draw us to Christ But sins which we commit after conversion though pardoned also by his death yet the pardon of them is more especially attributed to his life and intercession as a daily preservative a continuall plaister as some call it to heale such sinnes So that it would seeme that God out of his eternall love doth bring us to Christ and draws us to him through the beholding the reconciliation wrought by his death and so gives us at first conversion unto Christ and we being brought to him he sprinkles us with his bloud and then God sayes to him Now doe you look to them that they and I fall out no more And to that end Christ takes our cause in hand by that eternall Priesthood of his and from that time begins more especially to intercede for us And thus sinnes after the state of grace may be said more eminently to be taken away by that part of his Priesthood which he now in heaven performes That place also 1 Ioh. 2. 1 2. seems to make this the great end of Intercession If any man sinne that is if any of the company of Beleevers to whom alone he wrote we have an Advocate wich the Father so as Intercession principally serves for sins to come or committed after grace received Thus also in his prayer Ioh. 17. which was left as a patterne of his Intercession in heaven he prayes for his Elect as Beleevers I pray for them that shall beleeve through their word Not but that sinnes after conversion are taken away by his death In what sense his Death doth more eminently prevaile for the pardon of sins afore conversion and his Intercession for sins after and sinnes before it by his Intercession also for Christ interceded for those who crucified him and by vertue of that Intercession those three thousand were converted as was observed But the meaning only is that yet more eminently the work of reconciliation for sins before conversion is attributed to his death for sins after conversion to his Intercession Even as the Persons of the Trinity though they have all a like hand in all the works of our salvation yet we see that one part is attributed more to one Person and another to another A third sort of reasons why God ordained this work of Intercession to accomplish our salvation by 3. Sort of Reasons from Christ doe respect Christ himselfe whose honour and glory and the perpetuation of it in our hearts God had as well in his eye in the ordering all the workings of our salvation as much as his owne That all might honour the Sonne as well as the Father as Christ himselfe speaks Now therefore for the maintaining and upholding his glory and the commings in thereof did God ordaine after all that he had done for us here below this work of Intercession in heaven to be added to all the rest for the perfecting of our salvation As First 1. That none of Christs offices should lye vacant it became him and was for his honour that none of his offices should be vacant or lye idle and he want employment in them All offices have work to accompanie them and all work hath honour as its reward to arise out of it And therefore when he had done all that was to be done on earth as appertaining unto the merit of our salvation he appoints this full and perpetuall work in heaven for the applying and possessing us of salvation and that as a Priest by praying and interceding in the merit of that one oblation of himselfe God would have Christ never to be out of office nor out of work And this very reason is more then intimated Heb. 7. 24 25. This man because he continueth ever hath an unchangeable Priest-hood or as ver 21. expounds it for ever And the work of his Priesthood is interpreted ver 25. to be ever to make intercession The meaning is that God would not have him continue to be a Priest in title onely or in respect onely of a service past and so to have onely the honour of Priesthood perpetuated to him out of the remembrance of what he once had done as great Generals have even in time of peace the glory of some great battail fought continued to them in their titles or rewards for ever But God would have him have as the renowne of the old so a perpetuall spring of honour by new work and employment in that office which he is continually a doing so to preserve the verdure of his glory ever fresh and greene and therefore ordained a continuall work for him And the summe of the Apostles reasoning is this That seeing himselfe was to be for ever so should his work and Priesthood be that so his honour might be for ever So ver 28. concludes it Consecrated or perfected for evermore Secondly 2. That Christ might have a continual hand in each and every work of our salvation to the last for the same reason also it became him that the whole worke of our salvation first and last and every part of it every step and degree of accomplishment of it should be so ordered as he should continue still to have as great and continuall a hand in every part even to the laying of the top stone thereof as he had in laying the first foundation and corner stone thereof And this you have expressed Heb. 12. 2. Looking to Iesus the beginner and perfecter of our faith Two things had been said of him as two causes of two effects and we must looke to him in both 1. He is to be looked at as Dying enduring the Crosse as there he is set forth 2. As sitting at Gods right hand and interceding as that whole Epistle had represented him We are to look at these two as causes of a double effect to looke at his dying as that which is the beginning of our faith so according to the Greeke and the margent of our translation and at his sitting at Gods right hand as an intercessor for the finishing of our faith thereby and so of our finall salvation For as Christs worke began in his life and death which is put for all his obedience here below so our first believing as was said begins by vertue of his death at first and as his worke ends in his intercession and sitting at God his right hand so answerably is our faith and salvation perfected by it that thus he might be left out in nothing but be the Alpha and Omega the Beginning and the Ending to whom be glory for ever So that wee
are to looke upon our Mediator CHRIST as doing as much worke for us in Heaven at this instant as ever hee did on Earth here suffering but there praying and presenting his sufferings All his worke was not done when he had done here that worke here was indeede the harder piece of the two yet soone dispatched but his work in heaven though sweeter far yet lyes on his hands for ever therefore let us leave out none of these in our believing on him CHAP. IV. The second Head The great security the consideration of Christs Intercession affords to faith for our Justification shewed 1. By way of evidence By two things ANd so I come as in the former I have done to shew what strong grounds of security and triumph our faith may raise frō this last act namely Christs Intercession for us in the point of justification Who shall condemne it is Christ that intercedes And this was the second generall propounded and therein to proceed also according to the Method taken up in the former 1. What assurance by way of evidence this doth afford unto faith of non-condemnation 2. What powerfull efficacy and influence this must be of that Christ intercedes First §. 1. to handle it by way of evidence That Christ intercedes To evidence these two demonstrations is a strong evidence to our faith by two demonstrations 1. From the very intent and scope of the worke of intercession it selfe and what it is ordained by God to effect 2. From the end of Jesus Christ himself who lives in Heaven on purpose to intercede for us Our salvation it is both Finis operis the end of the work and finis ipsius operantis in some respect the end of Christ himselfe the interceder and both these doe lay the greatest engagement that can be upon Christ to accomplish our salvation through his intercession 1. For the work it self Intercession you have seen is a part of the office of Christs Priesthood as well as his dying and offering himselfe now all the works of Christ are must be perfect in their kind even as Gods are of which sayes Moses Deut. 32. 4. His work is perfect for otherwise he should not be a perfect Priest Now the perfection of every work lies in order to its end for which it is ordained so as that work is perfect that attains to such an end as it is ordained for and that imperfect which doth not Now the immediate direct end of Christs Intercession is the actuall salvation of Beleevers Elect and persons whom he dyed for The end of his death is Adoptio juris purchasing a right unto salvation but of Intercession procuratio ipsius salutis the very saving us actually and putting us in possession of Heaven To this purpose observe how the Scripture speaks concerning Christs death Heb. 9. 12. He entred into heaven having obtained Redemption or found redemption that is by way of right by procuring full title to it But of his Intercession it sayes Heb. 7. 25. that by it Christ is able to save to the utmost them that come unto God by him that is actually to save and put them in possession of happinesse that is made the end and scope of Intercession there and that phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the utmost notes out a saving indeed a doing it not by halves but wholly and throughly and compleatly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to save altogether to give our salvation its last act and complement that is the true force of the phrase even to effect it to the last of it all that is to be done about it Thus also Rom. 5. 9 and 10. We are justified by his death but saved namely compleatly by his life that is his living to intercede So that the very salvation of Beleevers is it that is the work the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of Christs Intercession Now what security doth this afford What security this affords for to be saved is more then to be justified for it is the actual possessing us of heaven So then do but grant that Christs Intercession is as perfect a work in its kind as Christs death is in its kind and you must needs be saved The perfection of Christs death and the work thereof wherein lay it as on Christs part to be performed but in this that he should lay downe a Ransome sufficient to purchase salvation for such and such persons as God would save and so the perfection of it lies in the worth and sufficiencie of it to that end it was ordained for it being a perfect sacrifice in it self able to purchase eternall redemption for us and to make us salvable against all sins and the demerits of them and to give us right to Heaven and had it wanted a graine of this it had then been imperfect Now then answerably for intercession the comfort of our souls is that the proper work that lies upon Christ therein is the compleat saving those very persons and the possessing them of Heaven this is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the proper worke thereof To out-vie the demerits of our sins was the perfection of his death but to save our soules is the end and perfection of his Intercession Our sins are the object of the one and our soules of the other To that end was intercession added to his death that we might not have a right to Heaven in vaine of which we might be dispossessed Now therefore upon this ground if Christ should faile of our souls salvation yea but of any one degree of glory purchased by his death to any soule which that soule should want this work of his would then want and fal short so much of its perfection That place in Heb. 7. sayes not only that Christ will doe his utmost to save but save to the utmost You may say Object My infidelitie and obstinacy may hinder it though Christ doth what in him lies Well Resp but intercession undertakes the worke absolutely For Christ prays not conditionally in Heaven If men shall believe c. as we doe here on earth nor for propositions only but for persons and therefore he prays to cure that very infidelity Now as if a Physitian undertakes to cure a mad man if he knowes what he doth he considers the madnesse of his Patient and how he will teare off what is applyed and refuse all Physick hee therefore resolves to deal with him accordingly and so to order him as he shall not hinder that help which he is about to afford him and so upon those tearms he undertakes the cure even so doth Christ when by intercession hee undertakes to save us sinners he considers us what we are and how it is with us For Christ otherwise should not be as perfect a Priest in interceding as he was in dying what unbeliefe is in us yet undertakes the matter and so to save us is the scope and end of this his work which if he
it selfe for them and handle matters so as Justice shall be as forward to save them as any other Attribute So that if God be said to be righteous in forgiving us our sins if we doe but confesse them as Chap. 1. of this 1. Epist of Iohn ver 9. then much more when Iesus Christ the righteous shall intercede for the pardon of them as he adds in the second ver of the ensuing Chap. and this if he will be just The worst Case he will make a good one not with colouring it over as cunning Lawyers doe or extenuating things but with pleading that righteousnesse which being put into the opposite ballance shall cast it for thee be there never so many sinnes weighed against it Yea and he will be just in it too and carry all by meere righteousnesse and equity In the explication of this Branch This explicated my purpose is not to insist upon the demonstration of that all-sufficient fulnesse that is in Christs satisfaction such as may in justice procure our pardon and salvation because it will more fitly belong to another Discourse but I shall absolve this point in hand by two things which are proper to this head of Intercession First By two considerations by shewing how that there is even in respect to Gods Justice a powerfull voice of Intercerssion attributed unto Christs bloud and how prevalent that must needs be in the eares of the righteous God Secondly especially when Christ himselfe shall joyne with that cry and Intercession of his blood himselfe in Heaven appearing and interceding in the strength of it For the first 1. How an Intercession and appeale to Gods justice is attributed to Christs bloud the Apostle Heb. 12. 24. doth ascribe a voice an appeal an Intercession unto the bloud of Christ in Heaven The blood of sprinkling sayes he speakes better things then the blood of Abel He makes Christs very bloud an Advocate to speak for us though Christ himselfe were silent as he sayes in another case Abel though dead yet speaketh Heb. 11. 4. Many other things are said to cry to Scripture and I might shew how the cry of all other things doe meet in this but Bloud hath the loudest cry of all things else in the eares of the Lord of Hosts the Iudge of all the world as he is in the 23. ver of that 12. Chap. styled Neither hath any cry the eare of Gods justice more then that of bloud The voyce of thy brothers bloud sayes God to Cain cryes unto me from the ground Gen. 4. 10. Now in that speech of the Apostle forecited is the allusion made unto the bloud of Abel and the cry thereof And he illustrates the cry of Christs bloud for us by the cry of that bloud of Abel against Cain it speaks better things then the bloud of Abel And his scope therein is by an Antithesis or way of opposition to shew that Christs blood cals for greater good things to be bestowed on us for whom it was shed then Abels bloud did for evill things and vengeance against Cain by whom it was shed For look how loud the bloud of one innocent cryes for justice against another that murdered him so loud will the bloud of one righteous who by the appointment and permission of a supreame Judge hath been condemned for another cry for his release and non-condemnation for whom he dyed And the more righteous he was who laid downe his life for another the louder still is that cry for it is made in the strength of all that worth which was in him whose bloud was shed Now to set forth the power of this cry of Christs bloud with justice let us compare it with that cry of Abels bloud in these two things wherein it will be found infinitely to exceed it in force and loudnesse First This cry of his bloud illustrated by a twofold comparison with the cry of the bloud of Abel in all which it exceeds it even the bloud of the wickedest man on earth if innocently shed doth cry and hath a power with Justice against him who murdered him Had Abel murdered Cain Cains bloud would have cryed and called upon Gods Justice against Abel but Abels bloud there is an emphasis in that Abels who was a Saint and the first Martyr in Gods Kalender and so his bloud cryes according to the worth that was in him Now Precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of his Saints and the bloud of one of Them cryes louder then the bloud of all Man-kind besides Now from this I argue If the bloud of a Saint cryes so what must the bloud of the King of Saints as Christ is called Revel 15. then doe If the blood of one member of Christs body what will then the blood of the head far more worth then that whole body how doth it fill Heaven and Earth with out-cries untill the promised intent of its shedding be accomplisht And as the Antithesis carries it looke how the blood of Abel cryed for the ruine and condemnation of his brother Cain so does Christs blood on the contrary for our pardon and non-condemnation and so much the lowder by how much his blood was of more worth then Abels was This was the blood of God so Act. 20. Who therefore shall condemne But 2. Christs blood hath in its crie here a further advantage of Abels blood attributed to it For that cryed but from earth from the ground where it lay shed and that but for an answerable earthly punishment on Cain as he was a man upon the earth but Christs blood is carried up to Heaven for as the High-priest carried the blood of the Sacrifices into the Holy of holies so hath Christ virtually carried his blood into Heaven Heb. 9. 12. And this is intimated in this place also as by the coherence will appeare For all the other particulars of which this is one whereto he sayes the Saints are come they are all in Heaven You are come saies he ver 22 to the City of the living God the Heavenly Hierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels to the Church of the first borne who are written in Heaven and to God the Iudge of all and to the spirits of just men made perfect All which things are in Heaven neither names he any other then such And then adds And to the blood of sprinkling which speakes c. as a thing both speaking in Heaven and besprinkled from Heaven yea wherewith Heaven is all besprinkled as the Mercie-seat in the Holy of holies was because sinners are to come thither This Blood therefore cries from Heaven it is next unto God who sits Judge there it cries in his very eares whereas the cry of blood from the ground is further off and so though the cry thereof may come up to Heaven yet the blood it selfe comes not up thither as Christs already is Abels blood cryed for vengeance to come down from heaven but
his first step to his glory and therefore this a certaine Demonstration 25 1. From the first gracious message which Christ after his Resurrection sent his Disciples who yet had forsaken him 26 2. From his carriage and speech at his first meeting with them 25 §. III. Demonstrations from passages at and after Christs Ascension into heaven 1. At his Ascension his blessing his Disciples 32 2. After he was come to heaven 1. Pouring out his Spirit on them as in his last Sermon he had promised which Spirit is to this day in our Preaching and an Argument of the fulfilling of this 33 2. All those works of Miracles and conversions of soules that accompanied the first preaching of the Gospel doe argue this as also the New Testament written since 34 3. Christs owne words spoken to Paul since himselfe was in heaven doe confirme it 35 4. The last words uttered in Scripture in the Book of the Revelation which was more immediately given unto John by Christ 37 Part II. Demonstrations Intrinsecall §. I. The first sort of Intrinsecall Demonstrations drawn from the Influence which all the three Persons have into the Heart of the Humane nature of Christ in Heaven 48 1. From God the Father Which Demonstration is made forth by two things 1. God hath given Christ a perpetuall command to love his Elect on earth and hath written a Law of love in his heart 49 2. This Law of love remaines for ever in his heart which is proved by two things 1. That it is a Law and that of Love 52 2. That by observing that Law it is that Christ continues in his Fathers love 53 2. From God the Sonne unto whom the Humane nature is united This disposition of grace is naturall to him as he is Gods naturall Sonne 54 Accordingly the Humane nature framed on purpose with dispositions of mercy and meeknesse above all other 55 3. From God the Holy Ghost who on earth filled him with meekenesse and grace above all other dispositions and now resteth upon him in Heaven more abundantly then ever 60 §. II. A second sort of Demonstrations from severall engagements now lying upon Christ in Heaven 70 1. Engagement The continuance of all his Relations and Alliances to us which no glory of his doth any thing lessen or alter ibid. Which relations were made chiefely for the other world and so must needes continue there 72 The Ground of this Engagement 76 2. His love is engaged and encreased by what he did and suffered for us 77 What a great obligation this is 78 3. His office of Priesthood which continues in Heaven doth further require all mercifulnesse and graciousnesse in him towards us sinners This Demonstration hath two parts 83 The 1. Shewing that the office of Priesthood was erected on purpose for grace and mercie ibid. Which is argued 1. By the Ends of it 2. By the Qualifications required for it 85 The 2. Shewing that by reason of this office an eternall duty lyeth upon him to shew grace and mercy and Christ is a faithfull High-Priest to performe that duty 90 Christs advancement can make no alteration in his heart for his Priesthood is his highest advancement And Grace did both Found and now upholds his Throne of Grace 94 4. His own Interest puts him upon these Affections of heart towards us His own joy happinesse and glory are encreased by shewing mercie to and comforting his children upon earth and it is more for his glory then for our good 98 Christ hath a double fulnesse of joy 1. Personall in his Father 2. Mysticall in his Members 99 How Christ rejoiceth in Heaven at our well-doing here on earth 101 5. His having the nature of man the same for substance in Heaven that he had on earth obligeth him to be mercifull unto men 104 The end of his Assuming mans nature was to qualifie him for mercie 105 Though it adds not to the greatnesse of mercie in God yet it addes a new way of being mercifull even as a man 106 Part III. §. I. Some Generals to cleare 1. How this is to be understood That Christs Heart is touched with the feeling of our infirmities 2. The way how our Infirmities come to be feelingly let into his heart 109 1. How this affection in Christ is to be understood This explained by these degrees 1. This affection of compassion is not wholly to be understood in a Metaphoricall sense as when God is said to be afflicted c. that is not meerely after the similitude of men but in a true and reall sense 111 2. These affections in Christs humane nature are more like to ours then those which the Angells have who notwithstanding have affections analogicall to ours 113 3 Christ having taken fraile flesh ere he went to Heaven this fits him yet more for having affections of mercie like unto ours 115 3. For the way how our miseries are let into Christs heart so as to affect it This explained by two things 1 The Humane nature hath the knowledge and cognizance of all that can or doth befall us here 118 2 He remembers how himselfe was once affected when he was under the like 119 §. II. A more particular Disquisition what manner of affection this is The seat thereof whether in his spirit or soule onely or in the whole humane nature Some Cautious added 121 This affection for our better conceiving it set forth three wayes 1. Negatively it is not in all things such as it was in the dayes of his flesh 2 Positively It is yet for substance the very same affection and the seat of it is his bodily heart as well as his soule 124 Foure Cautions or Positions about this 1. In what sense or so far as his Body is made spirituall so far are these Affections spiritualized as they are in his body 125 2. Hence though they move his Bowels yet they doe not perturbe or hurt him in the least 126 3. All naturall humane affections may be still in him that are not unbecomming his state glory And how much the having such affections are suteable to that state and relation wherein he is 128 4. Though a passionate suffering be cut off yet these affections are now more large and strong for the substance of them then they were on earth 130 3. Privatively If his heart suffers not with us under our Infirmities yet he hath lesse joy then his heart shall have when we are freed from all 131 How the Scripture attributes some kinde of Imperfection to some affection in him and in what sense §. III. This Scruple satisfied How Christs heart can bee feelingly touched with our sins our greatest infirmities seeing he was tempted without sinne 133 Foure answers given thereunto for our comfort Vses of all 137 FINIS THE HEART OF Christ in Heaven TO Sinners on Earth I. PART HAving set forth our Lord and Saviour JESVS CHRIST in all those great and most solemne actions of his his Obedience unto
heaven and earth was his so soone as he should set footing in heaven then in the midst of these thoughts he tells us he went and washed his Disciples feet after he had first considered whither he was to goe and there what he was to be But secondly what was Christs Heart most upon in the midst of all these elevated meditations Not upon his own glory so much though it is told us that he considered that thereby the more to set out his love unto us but upon these thoughts his Heart ran out in love towards and was set upon his owne Having loved his owne sayes the 1. ver 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his owne a word denoting the greatest nearnesse dearnesse and intimatenesse founded upon propriety The Elect are Christs owne a piece of himself not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as goods Iohn 1. 11. He came unto his owne and his own received him not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word shews that he reckon them his owne but as goods not as persons but he cals these here 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his own by a nearer propriety that is his owne children his owne members his owne wife his owne flesh and he considers that though he was to goe out of the world yet they were to be in the world and therefore it is on purpose added which were in the world that is to remaine in this world Hee had others of his own who were in that world unto which he was going even the spirits of just men made perfect whom as yet he had never seene One would think that when he was meditating upon his going out of this world his heart should be all upon Abraham his Isaacs and his Iacobs whom he was going to no hee takes more care for his own who vvere to remain here in this vvorld a world wherein there is much evil as himselfe sayes Iohn 17. 15. both of sinne and miserie and vvith which themselves vvhilst in it could not but be defiled and vexed This is it vvhich draws out his bowels towards them even at that time vvhen his heart was full of the thoughts of his own glory Having loved his own he loved them unto the end Which is spoken to shew the constancie of his love and vvhat it vvould be when Christ should be in his glory To the end that is to the perfection of it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sayes Chrysostome having begun to love them he vvill perfect and consummate his love to them And to the end that is forever So in the Greeke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is sometimes used and so by the Euangelist the phrase is here used in a sutablenesse to the Scripture phrase Psal 103. 9. He will not alwayes chide nor reserve anger for ever so we translate it but in the Originall He reserves not anger unto the end So that the scope of this speech is to shew how Christs heart and love vvould be towards them even for ever when he should be gone unto his Father as well as it vvas to shew how it had beene here on earth they being his owne and hee having loved them he alters he changes not and therefore vvill love them for ever And then thirdly to testifie thus much by a reall testimony what his love would be when in heaven to them the Euangelist shews that when he was in the middest of all those great thoughts of his approaching glory and of the soveraigne estate which he was to be in he then tooke water and a towell and washed his Disciples feete This to have bin his scope will appeare if you observe but the coherence in the second verse it is said that Iesus knowing that the Father had given all things into his hands then ver 4. he riseth from supper and layes aside his garments and tooke a towel and girded himselfe ver 5. after that he powred water into a bason and began to wash his Disciples feete c. where it is evident that the Euangelists scope is to hold forth this unto us that then when Christs thoughts were full of his glorie when he tooke in the consideration of it unto the utmost even then and upon that occasion and in the midst of those thoughts he washt his Disciples feete And what was Christs meaning in this but that whereas when he should be in heaven he could not make such outward visible demonstrations of his heart by doing such meane services for them therefore by doing this in the middest of such thoughts of his glory hee would shew what hee could be content as it were to doe for them when hee should bee in full possession of it so great is his love unto them There is another expression of Christs like unto this in Luke 12. 36 37. which confirms this to be his meaning here and to be his very heart in heaven At ver 36. he compares himselfe to a Bridegroome who is to go to heaven unto a wedding-feast who hath servants on earth that stand all that while here below as without waiting for him at which because they wait so long they may think much Christ adds Verily I say unto you that when the Bridegroome returnes refreshed with wine and gladnesse he shall gird himselfe and make them sit downe to meate and will come forth and serve them The meaning is not as if that Christ served at the latter day or now in heaven those that sit downe there but onely it is an abundant expression in words as here in a real instance to set forth the over-flowing love that is in his heart and the transcendent happinesse that we shal then enjoy even beyond what can be expected by us he utters himselfe therefore by an unwonted thing not heard of that the Lord should serve his servants and wait on them that waited for him And it is to shew his heart to them and vvhat he could be contented to doe for them So that you see what his heart was before he went to Heaven even amidst the thoughts of all his glory and you see vvhat it is after he hath beene in heaven and greatned vvith all his glory even content to wash poore sinners feete and to serve them that come to him and wait for him Now fourthly what was the mystery of this his washing their feete It was as to give them an example of mutuall love and humility so to signify his washing away their sins thus ver 8. and 10. himselfe interprets it It is true indeede that now he is in heaven he cannot come to wash the feete of their bodies but he would signifie thus much thereby that those sinners that will come to him when in his glory he will wash away all their sins He loved his Church gave himself for it that he might sanctifie and cleanse it with the washing of water that he might present it to himself a glorious Church not having spot or wrinkle c. Eph. 5. 25 26 27. This specimen
tied his feete to his Chariot wheels and dragged him dead round about the walls of Troy Now thus did Christ then deale with our sinnes and all other enemies The Second act is casting abroad of gifts He gave gifts to men It was the custome at their triumphs to cast new Coines missilia abroad among the multitude so doth Christ throw the greatest gifts for the good of men that ever were given Therefore who shall condemne sins and devills are not only dead but triumphed over Compare with this that other place Colos 2. 15. Having spoiled Principalities and powers he made a shew of them openly triumphing over them in himself So I reade it and the Greeke beares it and so it is in the margent varied it is a manifest allusion unto the manner of Triumphs after victories among the Romans even unto two of the most notable parts thereof the first of spoiling the enemie upon the place ere they stirred out of the field and this was done by Christ on the Crosse Having spoiled them first as ver 14. hath it He speakes it of the devills our enemies and accusers they had all Gods threatnings in his Law and the Ceermoniall Law the Bond for our debt unto the Morall Law to shew for it in these lay the power of the Devill over us that he could boldly come to God and accuse us and sue our bond And therefore Heb. 2. 14. he is said to have the power of Death Now Christ first tooke away all his power and spoiled him of all his ensignes weapons and colours which he did on the place where the battail was fought namely on the Crosse and nailed our bond thereto and having paid the debt left the bond canceld ere he stirred off the Crosse But then having thus spoiled these enemies on the Crosse hee further makes a publique triumphall shew of them in his own person which is a second Act as the manner of the Roman Emperors was in their great triumphs to ride through the City in the greatest state and have all the spoiles carried before them and the Kings and Nobles whom they had taken they tyed to their Chariots and led them as Captives And this did Christ at his ascension for of his triumphing at his Ascension I take this Triumph in this Epistle to the Colos to be understood and so to be interpreted by that forecited 4. of the Ephesians He plainly manifesting by this publique open shew of them at his Ascension that he had spoiled and fully subdued them on the Crosse That which hath diverted Interpreters from thinking this of 2. Col. to have been the triumph of his Ascension hath been this That the triumph is said to have been made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which they interpret in it as if it referred to the Crosse mentioned ver 14. as the place of it when as it may as well be translated in himselfe i. e. in his own power and strength noting how he alone did this which other Conquerours doe not they conquer not in themselves and by themselves which Christ did And yet it was the Law that if the Roman Emperours or Generals themselves took any thing in War they had a peculiar honour to dedicate it in triumph more peculiarly Now Christ conquered in himselfe and therefore triumphed in himselfe and himselfe alone And thus it became our Redeemer like another Sampson not onely to break Sins bars and fling off Hell-gates and come out of that Prison he was in but as in signe of a Trophie to take them on his back and carry them up the hill as Sampson the Type of him did the gates of the City to an high hill himselfe triumphantly carrying them on his own shoulders Now did Christ then who was your Surety thus triumph then let your faith triumph likewise for this was not onely done by your Surety but in your stead seeing this for us here is to be put to each thing mentioned The Apostle cals for this at our hands here We are more then Conquerors sayes he ver 37. Then A third support to faith from Gods first entertainment of Christ when he came first to Heaven thirdly see him entring into Heaven when he comes first to Court after this great undertaking how doth God looke on him is God satisfied with what he hath done As you know when a Generall comes home there useth to be great observing how the King takes his service as performed according to commission Christ as a Surety undertook for sinners fully to conquer all our enemies and God bade him look that he did it perfectly or never see his face more Heb. 5. He was to be perfect through sufferings and those sufferings to be such as to perfect us also Heb. That this is a further evidence that God is satisfied for sin 10. Now behold your Surety is like a Conqueror entred Heaven let that convince you that he hath satisfied the debt and performed his commission to a tittle God would never have suffered him to come thither else but as soon as ever his head had peept into Heaven have sent him downe again to performe the rest But God lets him enter in and he comes boldly and confidently and God lets him stay there therefore be convinced that he hath given God full satisfaction Christ himself useth this argument as the strongest that could be brought to convince the World that his righteousnesse which he had in his Doctrine taught them was the righteousnesse which men were only to be saved by the true Righteousnesse of God indeede Iohn 16. 9 10. He shall convince the world of righteousnesse that is worke faith in the hearts of men to believe and lay hold on my righteousnesse as the true righteousnesse that God hath ordained and this because sayes he I go to my Father and you shall see me no more That is by this argument and evidence it is and shall be evinced that I who undertooke to satisfie for sin and to procure a perfect righteousnesse have perfectly performed it and that it is a righteousnesse which Gods justice doth accept of to save sinners by In that I after my death and finishing this worke will ascend up to my Father into Heaven and keepe my standing there and you shall see me no more Whereas if I had not fulfilled all righteousnesse and perfectly satisfied God you may be sure there would be no going into Heaven for mee nor remaining there God would send me down again to doe the rest and you should certainly see mee with shame sent back again but I goe to Heaven and you shall see me no more CHAP. III. Shewing what evidence also Christs sitting at Gods right hand having beene our Surety affords to our faith for justification NOw then in the next place for his being or sitting at Gods right hand which is the second particular to be spoken of As soone as Christ was carried into Heaven look as all the Angels fell downe and
right hand All things committed to him ver 20. that he hath put all things under his feete ver 22. A phrase importing the highest soveraignty and power not used of any Creatures Angels or Men none of them have other things under their feet i. e. in so low a subjection as to be their vassals especially not all things and therefore by that very phrase the putting all things under his feete the Apostle argues in that second to the Heb. that that man of whom David in the 8. Psalm there cited by him had spoken was no other but Christ not Adam nor the Angells for to neither of these hath God subjected all things ver 5. but to Christ onely ver 8. who sits in the highest Throne of Majesty And to make his seate the easier hath a world of enemies made his foote-stoole even all his enemies so Psal 110. which is the highest triumph in the world Now to what end hath God committed this power to him Which power God hath committed to him to save his Elect. but that himselfe may be his owne Executor and Administrator and performe all the Legacies which he made to those whom hee died for as the expression is Heb. 9. 15 16 and 17. verses that none of his heires might be wronged Fairer dealing then this could there ever be nor greater security given to us This to have beene Gods very end of investing Christ with this soveraigne power is declared by Christ himselfe Iohn 17. 2. Thou hast given him power over all flesh that he should give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him And accordingly at his Ascension to comfort his Disciples in the fruit of their Ministery Mat 21. 18. he saies All power is given to mee in Heaven and in Earth What holy confidence may this breede in us He is at Gods right hand and we are in his hands Iohn 10. 28. and all his Enemies are under his feete who then can pul us out Revel 1. 18. saies Christ I have the Keyes of Hell and Death The Key is still in the Scripture phrase the Ensigne of Power and authority Now Christ hath both the Keyes of Death What security this affords the postern gate out of this world and of Hell even of the broad gates of that eternall prison So as none of his can be fetched out of this world by Death but Christ he must first open the doore much lesse can any go to Hell without his warrant Yea Matth. 16. 19. He hath the Keyes of the Kingdome of Heaven also to open to whom he will By his Resurrection we may see and rest assured that he hath the Keyes of Death and Hell for he unlockt the doors and came out from thence and by his Ascension and sitting at Gods right hand that he hath the Keyes of heaven whose doore he hath unlockt and now set open What need we then feare Hell when Christ our Redeemer hath the keyes of it Secondly 2. Prerogative All judgement and authority committed to him to sit at Gods right hand imports all judgement to be committed to him for sitting was a posture of Iudges a phrase used to note out their authority So Prov. 20. 8. A King that sitteth on the throne of judgement scattereth the wicked with his eyes and so doth Christ his and our enemies See what Christ sayes Iohn 5. 21 22. The Sonne of man raiseth up whom he will for the Father judgeth no man but hath committed all judgement to the Sonne Now if he who loved us so and dyed for us be the Iudge himselfe then Who shall condemne Christ sits on Gods right hand This is the very inference that after followeth ver 24. of that 5. Chap. of Iohn He that beleeves shall not come into condemnation Christ utters it upon his having said he had all judgement committed to him in the fore-going ver 22. on purpose that he might from that consideration ascertaine Beleevers of their non-condemnation For what need we feare any Under-officers §. 2. when we have the Judge thus for us 2. Particular Both which being his as he is an Head to his Elect. But then in the last place add that second particular mentioned to all these that Christ sits there as an Head as a Common person for us First as an Head so Eph. 1. when the Apostle had so hyperbolically set forth his power of being advanced unto Gods right hand ver 21. farre above all Principalities and powers and above every name that is named not only in this world but that which is to come and how God hath put all things under his feet he adds and hath given him to be head over all things to the Church Observe now he is said to sit there over all things not in his own pure personall right simply as it is his inheritance as he is the Son of God as Heb. 1. ver 3 4 5. it is affirmed of him but he sits thus over all as a Head to the Church That same over all things comes in there betweene his being a Head and to the Chuch on purpose to shew that he is set over all in relation to his Church So that we see that our relation is involved and our right included in this exaltation of his and so put into his commission for this prerogative is there said to be given him He sits not simply as a Son but as an Head and he sits not as an Head without a Body and therefore must have his Members up to him Wherefore in the next ver Therefore hee must have all his members up to him it is added Which is his body yea his fulnesse so as Christ is not compleat without all his Members and would leave heaven if any one were wanting It were a lame maimed body if it wanted but a toe Christ is our Element and he being ascended we are sparks that fly upwards to him He took our Flesh and carryed it unto heaven and left us his Spirit on earth and both as pawnes and earnests that we should follow Nay farther yet Especially seeing he sits as representing them and they sit together with him he is not onely said to sit as our Head but we are also said to sit together with him That is made the up-shot of all in the next Chapter Ephes 2. 6. So that as we arose with him he being considered as a Common person and ascended with him as was said So yet farther we sit together with him in the highest heavens as there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in supercoelestibus in his exalted estate above the heavens as is the meaning of that phrase not that Christs being at Gods right hand if taken for that sublimity of power is communicable to us How to sit at Gods right hand is Christs prerogative alone that is Christs prerogative onely So Heb. 1. 5. To which of all the Angels did he ever say Sit thou at my right hand