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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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understand here by bowing the knee Answ 1. Some take this literally as the Papists who in their worship bow the knee as often as they heare the Name of Jesus mentioned The Learned Zanchy is of an opinion that some of the Ceremonies in use amongst the Papists might have an innocent Original as their signing with the Cross to show that they were not ashamed of the Cross of Christ with which the Heathens did reproach them and so the standing up at the Creed to note their resolution to strive together for the Faith that was once delivered to the Saints So genuflection to the Name of Jesus was say some in opposition to the Arrians who denyed the Divinity of Christ but whether these things were so innocent at the first seeing they are all of humane institution and have been abused to superstition we have justly laid the use of them aside And this Text cannot be so understood for if by Name we understand the power of Christ then by bowing the knee must be meant our submission and subjection to this power By bowing therefore to the Name of Jesus is understood that obedience and subjection which is due to the Soveraign power and Auhority of Christ Thus when Joseph was exalted to that Dignity and Authority in Egypt Gen. 41.43 Joh. 5.22 23. Mat. 28.18 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2.8 that there was none greater than he but Pharaoh himself They cryed in the streets where Joseph went Bow the knee Thus God the Father gave Jurisdiction and Authority to the Son that they which honour the Father might also honour the Sonne All power saith Christ is given me both in Heaven and in Earth He is the Prince of Life and the Lord of Glory to whom all obedience service and subjection is most due Quest 2. Who are they must bow the knee to Christ and be in subjection unto him Answ All Creatures for the Enumeration is full which Chrysostome thus Expounds 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chrysost in loc Things in Heaven on Earth and under the Earth i. e. Angels Men and Devils which Theodoret doth more clearly Explain 1. Things in Heaven i. e. good Angels and glorified Saints spirits of just men made perfect 2. Things on Earth all men living both good and bad 3. Under the Earth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 infernalia i. e. Devils and damned spirits All these must bow the knee and must yield subjection unto Jesus Christ I. All knees in heaven shall bow to Christ voluntarily 1. The good Angels they did alwayes honour and obey the Lord Jesus It was the joy of the Angels of Heaven to be Subject and Serviceable unto Jesus Christ 1. Before the Incarnation of Christ an Angel instructed Daniel concerning the Messiah Dan. 9.24 and how long it should be before his coming 2. When the fulness of time was come an Angel comes to the blessed Virgin and said Feare not Mary for thou hast found favour with God Luke 1.30 31. and behold thou shalt conceive in thy womb and bring forth a Sonne and call his Name Jesus 3. As soon as ever he was born an Angel brings the glad-tydings of it and a whole Hoste of them who sang together Job 38.7 Luke 2.13 and shouted for joy at the Creation of the world do with a song Celebrate Christs Nativity Glory be to God on High c. 4. When Jesus Christ was in danger to be kill'd by Herod an Angel warnes of the danger Mat. 2.13 and directs his Mother to flee with him into Egypt 5. When he was tempted by Satan forty dayes together a little before he entered upon the work of his Ministry Mat. 4.11 behold Angels came and Ministred unto him 6. When he was in his Agony in the Garden ready to take the cup of trembling out of his Fathers hand there appeared an Angel from heaven strengthening him Luke 22.43 This blessed Creature out of love and duty seeing his Lord and Master in such distress came in to succour him 7. And as the Angels gave the first notice of his Birth so also of his Resurrection an Angel told the woman He is not here Mat. 28.6 he is risen 8. The Angels attended Christs Ascension into Heaven for they told the Disciples Acts 1.11 That as they saw him ascending into heaven so he should come again from Heaven in like manner 9. And with infinite delight did they welcome Christ to heaven where Heb. 1.6 upon his first coming all the Angels did worship him Mat 25.31 2 Thes 1.7 Mat. 24.31 10. And Lastly When Christ shall come at the last day to judge both quick and dead he will come with all his holy Angels with him and shall be Revealed from Heaven with his mighty Angels who then most willingly will be employed to gather together all his Elect from the foure Windes of Heaven Col. 1.16 All this service the good Angels performe unto Christ not only as he is their Creator for by him were created even the things that are in heaven But they yield him this Subjection as he is their Head and Governour Col. 2.10 Eph. 1.21 22. and so he is called the Head of all Principality and Power i. e. Of Angels And this voluntary subjection to Jesus Christ is because they have benefit by Christ though not in a way of Redemption yet they owe their Confirmation unto Christ The good Angels though they were created good and excellent creatures Hoc ipsum quod sancti Angeli ab illo statu beatitudinis in quo sunt mutari in deterius nullo modo possunt non est iis naturaliter insitum sed postquam creati sunt gratiae divinae largitate collatum Aug. de fide ad Pet. Diac. cap. 23. Qui erexit hominem lapsum dedit Angelo stanti ne laberetur Bern. yet as creatures their state is mutable and they had in them a potentiality and a possibility to sin and fall as well as those Angels which left their first station But this possibility is removed by Christ who by his grace did lift up fallen man and by his Powen preserves the Angels that they shall not fall And therefore it is that in a way of thankfulness the Angels in Heaven do bow their knee in Subjection and Service unto Christ 2. As the glorious Angels bow the knee to Christ in heaven so the spirits of just men made perfect the souls departed do in Heaven praise adore and worship the Lord Jesus Christ and do yield voluntary subjection and obedience to him unto which duty they are more carried by a principle of thankfulness that Christ hath Redeemed them this is shadowed out unto us by the Vision of Saint John who having seen the Lord Jesus taking the Book with seven Seales and opening it he heard the Saints in Heaven singing a new Song and saying Thou art worthy to take the Book and to open the Seales thereof for thou wast slain
my eyes have seen thy Salvation What unspeakable joy will it be to see your Christian Friends and Relations to whom you have been instrumental in their New Birth and Regeneration all Crowned in one day with an everlasting Diadem of Bliss which never shall decay There shall be no hypocrite then for you to lose your love upon which is now the great cooler of your charity and keeps your affections in a greater reserve but there none but true Eagles and heaven-born souls will be able to look upon that Sun in glory you shall then rejoyce that there are so many pure spirits able to praise and love that God whom you could never yet nor will then be able to love and praise enough or as you desire When the glorious Angels begin their Hallelujahs the Saints shall also joyn in one common Quire * Psal 149 5. they shall be joyful in glory and sing aloud upon their everlasting beds of rest Oh how the Arches of heaven will eccho when the high praises of God shall be in the mouths of such a Congregation for as when one eye moves the other roles and when one string in concord with another is struck the other sounds such a blend and sympathy of praises shall there be in that heavenly Chorus with these * Psal 150.6 high sounding Cymbals in most flourishing expressions and anthems upon the divine glory If the Sun Moon and Stars did as Ignatius sayes make all * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in Epist ad Eph. Luke 15.7 a Quire as 't were about the Star that appeared at Christs Incarnation * and there be joy in heaven at the conversion of a sinner no wonder then * Job 38.7 the morning starres shall sing together and the Sons of God shou●● for joy when there shall be * Heb. 12.23 a general Assembly and Church of the first-borne and the spirits of all the just shall be made perfect And though there may be one Starre differ from another in glory yet there will be no * Videbit civitas illa quod inferior non invidebit Aug. de civ 22. 29. envying one anothers happiness but every one bear his part whatever it be in the lower or higher praises of the God of glory with a most harmonious variety in perfect symphony for there we shall love one another as our selves love God and our blessed Saviour better than our selves and he will love us better than we can love our selves or one another * Oh quot quanta gaudia obtiniebit qui de tot tantis beatitudinibus sanctorum jubilabit Ans alicu ni fallor de beatitu Oh how many and how great joyes shall he possess who shall keep an eternal Jubilee in the enjoyment of so many and so great beatitudes and felicities of others as truly as of his own I have done with the possession and its qualification it is a Kingdom I now come to its preparation prepared for you from the foundation of the c. But how is this Kingdom of so long preparation when Christ tells his Disciples I go to prepare a place for you when he departed hence John 14.1 1. Therefore this Kingdom was prepared even when the foundations of the world were laid * Job 38.7 for there the morning starres did sing together God Created the Heavens and then the earth and the spiritual world of Angels above before the foundation of the earth below though as some judge Moses mention'd it not being to teach a dull people by sensible objects concealed the notion of spirits lest they should Idolatrously worship and attribute the Creation of the world to them And so the Empyrean Heaven and seat of glory some venture to say God then made and determinately too in the Aequinoctial East of Judea call'd therefore the Navel of the whole earth to confirm it they tell us Adam was made with his face towards the East and so they worshipped Eastward three thousand and odd years And thence Christ call'd the * Luke 1.79 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 East or day-spring from on high and * Zac. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lev. 16.14 the blood was to be sprinkled on the mercy-seat Eastward seven times But we may answer the curiosity of this enquiry about the Ubi and determinate place as he of old was answered that asked what God was doing before he created the world he was making Hell for such unbelieving Querists and Heaven for the reward of an humble Believer 2. It was prepared from the foundation of the world in regard of divine predestination for that which is last in obtaining is first in the intention of rational agents so God from eternity designing his own glory in the salvation of the Elect and their blisseful fruition of himself may be said to have set the Crown upon them while they were in the womb of his Decree and to have prepared them a Kingdome before they were born And though God made all the world for man yet it was to be kept under his feet he reserved himself to be the Crown of his hopes and Portion of his heart He chose us in Christ before the Foundation of the World therefore * Ephes 1.4 all was ready But 3. In regard of Divine D●spensation the carrying on the whole oeconomy hath been from the Foundation of the World and so being the Kingdome is not yet given up all unto the Father it may be still said to be preparing for though God being our heaven it was always ready yet by our fall we lost our title to this Paradise Christ intervenes to divert the flaming Sword of vengeance enters a Covenant with his Father sends the glad tydings of it into the World * Gal. 3.8 before he came * Levit. 16.6 Hebr 9.7 typifies in the * Gal. 4.4 fuln●sse of time makes * Rom. 5.11 1 John 2.2 atonement proclaims reconciliation and pardon to penitent sinners sends his Word and Spirit to wait to be gracious to sollicit the World till all that are the truly called guests are invited and brought in then he shuts up the door of mercy opens the grave summons all to judgme●t by the last Trumpet makes the separation and then pronounceth this Benediction so that though the Kingdome was from the Foundations of the World prepared yet in regard every Kingdome includes Subjects as well as Soveraign Christ when he was going that so he might send his Spirit to comfort his Disciples and to gather in more Subjects may be said to prepare a place for them though most significantly he went to prepare them for that Kingdome But Parabolical and Metonymical Expressions must not have too rigid an Interpretation exacted from them but our Saviour having bid his Disciples to go before and prepare a place for him to eat the Passeover with them in he tells them that he is going to prepare the Supper of the Lamb and
Gospel-knowledge into the dark world and an heart full of love to that truth which he holds forth to others that what he publisheth with his lips he may be ready to witnesse with his life and to seale up the testimony of Jesus with his dearest blood Both these our Apostle in this Chapter after a passionate salutation in the five first verses commendeth to Timothy scil 1. To look to his light by stirring up the gift of God that was in him Timothy must not suffer his gifts to lie sleeping under the ashes but must blow them up as the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ignem sopitum suscitare word signifieth into a fire by study prayer and execrise 2. He calls upon Timothy to look to his zeal that that may not be extinguished but that his heat may be equal with his light And this he doth two ways 1. Negatively 2. Affirmatively Ver. 8. 1. Negatively Be not ashamed of the testimony of the Lord nor of me his Prisoner Ministers of the Gospel must neither be a shame to the Gospel nor ashamed of the Gospel no although attended with disgrace and persecution from the reprobate world And what herein he commends to Timothy he first practised in his own person ver 11. Though he was a prisoner for the Gospel yet he was not ashamed of the Gospel I suffer c. neverthelesse I am not ashamed Rom. 1.16 2. Affirmatively The Apostle exhorteth Timothy to prepare for persecution Ver. 8. Be thou partaker of the afflictions of the Gospel The Ministers of the Gospel should be so farre from being scandalized at the sufferings of their leaders that they should be always disciplining themselves for the same warfare to preach the Cross of Christ and to be ready also to bear the Crosse makes a compleat Minister of the Gospel This the Apostle urgeth upon a three-fold account 1. A good Cause 2. Good Company 3. A good Captain Timothy and other Evangelists they have no reason to be afraid or asham'd of their sufferings for 1. They have a good Cause ver 12. For the which cause I suffer what Cause is that why the Gospel ver 10. And this he presents under a twofold commendation 1. The glory of the Gospel 2. The manifestation of that glory Ephes 3.8 1. The glory of the Gospel As having wrapt up in it the unsearchable riches of Jesus Christ grace and glory holinesse and happinesse He hath saved us and called us with an holy calling Believers have begun their everlasting salvation on this side heaven 2. The manifestation of that glory It was given from eternity but it is revealed by the appearance of our Lord and Saviour in the flesh it lay hid in Gods purpose but it is brought to light in the Gospel ver 9.10 Such a glorious gift and so gloriously unveiled is worth not only our sweat but our blood not pains only but persecution yea to suffer in such a cause is not more our duty than it is our dignity 2. They have good company Saint Paul himself is in the Van of them who though an Apostle by extraordinary missi n and commission ver 11. yet was not only a Preacher of the Gospel but a Sufferer for the Gospel ver 12. For which cause I suffer these things what things scil Imprisonment and affliction ver 8. A sufferer and yet not ashamed of his sufferings Neverthelesse I am not ashamed They may be ashamed of their sufferings Causa facit Martyrem non poena 1 Pet. 4.15 that suffer for sinne but sufferings for Christ and his Gospel are matter of triumph and rejoycing 1 Pet. 4.13 16. Here is encouragement for Gospel-sufferers And Thirdly They have a good Captain Iesus Christ the Captain of our salvation Who that he might intender his own heart towards his suffering-followers by his own experience was made perfect through sufferings and accordingly he is very tender of and faithful to all that endure persecution for his sake Heb. 2.10 this was a ground of the Apostle his confidence I am not ashamed for I know whom I have believed I know him by report and I know him by experience I know his faithfulnesse and I know his All-sufficiency I have deposited my liberty my life my body my soul my all in his custody and I am perswaded as he is able so he is willing to keep all safe to his glorious appearance I may be a loser for Christ I shall be no loser by him whatever I lay down now I shall take up again one day with the advantage of immortality he will keep the trust I have committed to him it is but equity that I should keep the trust which he hath committed to me 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ver. 14. 1 Tim. 1.11 even the glorious Gospel of the blessed God committed to my trust committed to me upon those very termes that I should not only publish it with my lips but attest it with my blood Thus in his own person the Apostle sets Timothy and his Successors a Copy and an Encouragement which he windeth up in the words of my Text the sum of the Precahers duty Hold fast the forme of sound words c. q. d. The premises considered let neither pleasures nor persecution the love of life nor the fear of death take thee off from a faithful and vigorous discharge of thy Ministerial office but whatsoever it may cost thee Hold fast the form of sound doctrine c. Briefly for the opening of the words The form 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Greek it signifies a Module or Platforme a Frame of words or things methodically disposed as Printers set and compose their Characters or Letters in a Table Types Words By words we are to understand doctrine evangelical truths the principles of Christian Religion 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sound And they are called Sound words either from the intrinsecal nature when they are purely taught and delivered Evangelical truths without mixture the principles of Religion in their native purity and simplicity Truth and nothing else but truth Or else sound words from their effect and operation because they be of an healing vertue and influence like the waters in Ezekiels vision that issued out from under the * Ezek. 47.1 threshold of the Sanctuary which * Ver. 9. healed wherever they came Which thou hast heard of me It may be understood of the whole Platforme of Gospel-doctrine in general Or Else very probably of a Collection of some principal points of Religion which the Apostle had methodically digested and either preached in Timothy his hearing or drawn up in writing and committed to Timothy as a trust and treasure not only for his own help and direction in preaching but to transmit over to others for the use and benefit of succeeding generations in the Church of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Tim. 6.20 so called
face and with twain his feet and with twain did he flee and one cryed to another Holy holy holy Lord of Hosts the whole earth is full of his glory The Angels are pure and innocent Creatures they fear not his angry justice but they adore his excellencies and perfections his is a dread when a most Serene Majesty Penal fear is inconsistent with the joys of heaven but the fear of admiration is perfected there and in this sense the fear of God continues for ever Psal 19.9 In all our addresses to him we should compose our spirits by the awful apprehension of that infinite distance which is between God and us Eccles 5.2 Let not thine heart be hasty to utter any thing before God for God is in heaven and thou upon earth the greatest distance in nature is but an imperfect discovery how much we are beneath God 't is the effect of grace to represent the Divine being and glory so to the soul that in the most social duties it may have impressions of fear Psal 2.11 Serve the Lord with fear and rejoyce with trembling We should fear his greatnesse and power in whose hands our life and breath and all our wayes are the fear of God having its actual force upon the soul is operative and instrumental to holy walking from whence the fear of God is taken in Scripture for the whole duty of man it being an introduction to it The fear of God and keeping his Commandments are joined together Eccles 12.13 This is the Prepositus which governs our actions according to Gods will this is a watchful Centinel against the most pleasant temptations it kills delight in sin by which the integrity of most men is lost for delight cannot dwell with fear this is the guard and security of the soul in the days of trouble the fear of God countermines the fear of men this cuts off base and unworthy complyings therefore the Lord brings this as an antidote against the base fear of men Isa 51.12 13. Who art thou that thou shouldest be afraid of a man that shall dye and of the son of man that shall be made as grass And forgettest the Lord thy Maker that stretcheth forth the Heavens and laid the foundations of the Earth This exalts a Christian above humane frailty and makes him despise the threatnings of the world whereby many are terrified from their constancy It is the most unreasonable thing to be Cowards to men and fearless of God Men have but a finite power and so they cannot do that hurt they would and they are under the Divine Providence and therefore are disabled from doing that hurt which otherwise they could do but the power of God is absolute and unconfined therefore our Saviour presses with vehemency upon his Disciples Matth. 10.28 Fear not them which kill the body but are not able to kill the soul but rather fear him who is able to destroy both body and soul in hell He lives for ever and can punish for ever therefore when duty and life cannot stand together he that flies the danger by delivering up his soul exchanges the pain of a moment for the torments of Eternity Timent Carcerem non timent Gehennam timent Cruciatum Temporalem non poenas ignis aeterni timent modicum mori non aeternum mori Austin upbraids the folly of such They fear the Prison but they fear not Hell they fear temporal torment but they fear not the pains of unquenchable fire they fear the first but not the second death 3. Dependance in respect of his al-sufficiency to supply our wants and Omnipotency to secure us from dangers First his al-sufficiency can supply our wants he is the Sun Fountain and Mine of all that is good from hence the Prophet glories in God Habbakkuk 3.17 18. Although the fig-tree shall not blossome neither shall fruit be in the Vines the labour of the Olives shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat the Flock shall be cut off from the fold and there shall be no herd in the stalls yet I will r●joyce in the Lord I will joy in the God of my salvation He expresses not only things for delight as the fruit of the Vine and fig-tree but things for necessity as the meat of the field and the flocks of the stall and the utter failing of these together for otherwise the want of one might be supplied by the enjoyment of another Now in the absolute losse of these supports and comforts of life the Prophet saw all things in God want of all outward things is infinitely recompenc't in the presence of God The Sun needs not the glimmering light of the Stars to make day God without the assistance of the Creatures can make us really happy in the enjoying of him we have all things and that to the greatest advantage The things of this world deceive our expectations and draw forth our corruptions but in God we enjoy them more refinedly and more satisfyingly the dregs of sin and sorrow being removed by possessing God there is no burden which we are not able to bear but he takes it a●ay our wants weaknesse and sufferings and there is no excellency of his which we are able to enjoy but he conveys to us his grace his glory There is true riches in his favour true honour in his approbation true pleasure in his peace He is the treasure and triumph of the soul Lam. 3.24 The Lord is my portion saith my soul therefore will I hope in him He is such a portion that all temporal crosses cannot hinder its influence on us and his influxive presence makes heaven he is a portion that cannot be lost he inseparably abides with the soul The real belief and application of this will keep a Saint in an holy independency on earthly things Cum mundus exarserit cogitat se nihil habere de tanta mole perdendum the flames which shall burn the World cannot touch his portion he may stand upon its ruines and say I have lost nothing Moreover this will keep the soul upright in the course of obedience for all the exorbitancies and swervings from the Rule proceeds from the apprehensions of some particular good in the Creature which draws men aside Those who want the light of faith which discovers Gods al-sufficiency only admire present and sensible things and to obtain these they depart from God but the more eagerly they seek after these temporal good things the further they run from the Fountain of goodnesse which alone can sweeten the best things we enjoy and counterbalance their absence the Creatures are but of a limited benignity the necessity of their number proves the meanness of their value but one God answers all he is an infinite and indefective good he is for all the powers of soul and body to hold them in their pleasant exercise and to give them rest he is alone able to impart happinesse and to preserve that happinesse he imparts
stream of Christs blood if thou beest imbarqued by faith runs directly into the Ocean of endlesse boundlesse bottomlesse happinesse If thou hast open'd the door of thine heart to let Christ in the blood of Christ hath open'd and unlock'd the door of heaven and thou canst not be shut out A crucified Christ entertained will one day make glorified believers his Humiliation is the ready Roade both to his and his peoples exaltation CHRISTS EXALTATION Phil. 2. 9 10 11. Wherefore God also hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow of things in heaven and things in earth and things under the earth And that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is the Lord to the glory of God the Father THE former Verses-speak of the deep humiliation of Jesus Christ these words contain the Doctrine of Christs most glorious Exaltation If you view Christ in the words before going you will behold the Sun of righteousness ecclipsed but in this Text you will see him shining forth in his strength and splendour The Doctrine of Christs Humiliation leads you to Mount Calvary but this Doctrine will lead you to Mount Tabor to Mount Olivet There you may see Christ standing at the Bar but here you see him sitting on a Throne of Majesty and glory The former Doctrine shews you the Son of man in the forme of a servant but this represents Christ to you the Son of God like himself in the glorious estate of Triumphant Majesty You have heard how Christ died for our sins Rom. 4.25 Rom. 5.10 and how we are Reconciled by his death and now you shall heare how he rose for our justification and how we are saved by his life In his Humiliation there was neither form nor beauty Isa 53.2 Heb. 1.2 nor comliness did appear but now you will see him in the excellency and brightness of his Fathers glory In Christs Humiliation you heare how he was reproached in his Person Name Doctrine Ministry and Miracles but he is now exalted and hath a name given him above every name And whereas in his Humiliation his enemies bowed the knee in scorne to him yet in his Exaltation they must bow the knee with fear and trembling Then they cried after Christ Crucifie him crucifie him but God hath exalted him so as every tongue must confess that Jesus is the Lord to the glory of God And thus Contraries are illustrated by their contraries the sufferings of Christ like a dark shadow to a curious picture Contraria ●juxta se posita magis elucescunt or a black vaile to a beautiful face do make the glory of his Exaltation the more glorious The height of Christs Exaltation is best known by considering the depth of his humiliation the Cross of Christ as one saith being the best Jacobs staff to take the height of this morning Star or rather Sunne of Righteousness breaking forth most gloriously from under a dark Cloud In these three verses we have these Particulars considerable 1. The Connexion between the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ in these words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wherefore also God hath exalted him 2. The Doctrine of Christs Exaltation laid down God hath highly exalted him 3. The end of Christs Exaltation it was for the glory of God the Father Before we come to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation we will a little consider the connexion of these three Verses with the three preceding Verses viz. 6 7 8. where it is said that Jesus Christ being in the forme of God and thought it not Robbery to be equal with God but made himself of no Reputation and took upon him the forme of a servant and was made in the likeness of men and being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross wherefo●e God also hath highly exalted him c. It is a Question amongst Divines whether the Humiliation of Christ be the Meritorious cause or only the Antecedent of his Exaltation and yet they that dispute this do all agree in this That Jesus did not by his Humiliation and sufferings merit such things as he was invested withal before he suffered for that which is meritorious must alwayes precede the reward and therefore it cannot be said that Christ did merit the personal union of his Divine and Humane Nature nor the happiness of his soul nor his Habitual Graces which He had from the first Moment of his Incarnation Christi humiliatio est exaltationis meritum ejus exaltatio est humiliationis praemium Aug. Hac enim particula 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seu propter quod meritum Christi denotat quibus sibi suam exaltationem nobis totam salutem promeruit Zanch. in loc First There are some Divines who interpret the particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a causal and so hold that Christ by his Humiliation did merit his Exalta●ion and of this opinion was Augustine who calls Christs Humiliation the meritori●us cause of his Exaltation and his Exaltation the r●ward of his Humiliation The Popish wr●ters go generally this way I find also amongst Protestant Writers the Learned Zanchy of this Opinion who upon this Text hath this Note By this Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wherefore The Apostle notes the merits of Christ whereby he hath merited his own Exaltation and our Salvation And that which favours this Explication is that saying of the Apostle concerning Christ Heb. 12.2 That for the joy that was set before him he endured the Cross and despised the shame as if having an eye to the Recompence of the Reward enabled Christ to persevere with more patience when he became obedient unto death even the death of the Cross Neither doth it derogate from the freeness of Christs sufferings that he was rewarded for them for even that glory that Christ hath in heaven is for our good and comfort Nor was it out of indigence and necessity that Christ accepts of glory in a way of Reward of his obedience but herein he commended his love the more to us that would so far condiscend and so far even in his Exaltation humble himself to receive glory in the way of obedience which he might have challenged by vertue of his personal union Even as a Prince who though he hath right to a Kingdom by Inheritance and Succession yet he will accept of it as a Reward of his Obedience and Conquest over its enemies 2. But others understand the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the Text not as signifying the Humiliation ●f Christ to be the meritorious cause but only the Antecedent of his Exaltat●on and so they make this particle to be not causal but connective only and so I find some of the Ancient Translations as the Aethiopick Version doth only ioyn the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ together Humilavit seipsum magnificavit
eum Deus And for this may be rationally urged 1. That in the whole wo●k of our Redemption effected by Christ Jesus Christ had a respect no● unto himself but unto us It is for us that he humbled himself to the Death of the Crosse for us men and our Salvation 2. Jesus Christ had right to all the Honour Glory and Majesty which now he is possessed of in Heaven by vertue of his being the Sonne of God and the glory which he hath now in Heaven John 17.5 he had with God before the world was 3. The freeness of Gods love in giving Christ and of Christs in giving himself for us was such that the main intention of God was that not Christs but our estate might be bettered John 1. ●18 Rom. 9.5 if the Son of God had never left the bosome of the Father he had been for ever God bl ssed in himself But such was the love of the Father that he gave his only begotten Son that we might not perish Joh. 3.16 who believe but might have everlasting life 4. It is fit to be considered that the glory which Christ hath in Heaven in sitting at the right hand of God is such that it cannot be merited by the sufferings of the Humane nature of Christ And therefore it is said 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath fr●ely given him a name above every name This last interpretation of the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is that to which most of our Protestant Divines do incline I will not here undertake to determine the Question I find it the judgement of some of our Learned Divines Dr. Featly Mr. Anthony Burgesse That there need be no Controversie about this thing for the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes order but whether the order of causality or antecedency or both may be consistent with the Analogy of Faith 1. For if we look upon Jesus Christ as rewarded for his sufferings for us we may thence be assured that our sufferings for him though of another nature shall be eternally rewarded Psal 58.11 2. Or if you note the order only that Jesus Christ was first humbled and then exalted we may thence learn that before honour is humility Prov. 18.12 1 Pet. 5.6 and that if we Humble our selves under the mighty hand of God in due time he will exalt us Leaving therefore this Question I proceed to the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation as it is laid down in this Text. Doct. It pleased God the Father for his own glory that the Lord Jesus Christ after he had been deeply humbled should be highly exalted Thus it pleased God that he who had humbled himself to the death of the Cross Heb. 7.26 Phil. 2.7 Acts 3.15 1 Cor. 2 8. Acts 2.36 Heb. 2.16 1 Pet. 3.22 should be made higher than the Heavens and he who had taken on him the form of a Servant should now appear in Heaven like himself the Prince of life and he that made himself of no reputation should now be in Heaven the Lord of Glory and the same Jesus who was crucified God hath made both Lord and Christ and He who took not on him the nature of Angels but took on him the seed of Abraham is exalted above Angels being gone into Heaven and is on the Right Hand of God Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him There is a word in the Text that is very Emphatical which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted The Elegancy of the Greek tongue is singular The Apostle hath a notable word Ephes 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3.8 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Minimorum minimus Beza Minor minimo Cor. a Lap. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Emphaticus est hic notandus Pleonasmus q. d. Super omnem altitudinem exaltavit super-exaltavit Ambros Multiplicavit sublimitatem ejus Syr. Sublimitate sublimavit eum Arab. Insigniter extulit Justinianus lesse than the least of Saints and here we have a no less remarkable word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath highly exalted him God hath exalted Jesus Christ above all Exaltation the Exaltation of Jesus Christ was super-superlative The Latine Version of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Exaltavit eum he exalted him is too low to express the sublimity of the Greek word We have here an elegant and an emphatical Pleonasme which the Greek tongue borrows of the Hebrew as is frequently used in the New Testament as it is said of the Magi when they saw the Star they rejoyced with great joy Mat. 2.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so when Christ came to Celebrate his last Passeover he saith to his Disciples Luke 22.15 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 With desire have I desired to eat this Passeover So it is sa●d here the Lord Jesus Christ was very highly exalted he was exalted with all Exaltation Jesus Christ in his Resurrection was exalted in his Ascension he was highly exalted in his sitting at the right hand of God he was very highly exalted above all Exaltation Christ in his Resurrection was exalted above the Grave in his Ascension above the Earth and in his Session at Gods right hand he was exalted above the highest Heavens It is very Remarkable how the steps of Christs Exaltation did punctually answer to the steps of his Humiliation There were three steps by which Jesus Christ descended in his voluntary Humiliation Heb. 2.16 2 Cor. 5.21 Gal. 3.13 Gal. 4.4 Heb. 7.22 1 Cor. 5.7 First His Incarnation by which he was made of a woman and so became man he was made sinne and so became out Surety he was made a Curse and so became our Sacrifice This was the largest step of Christs Descension and Humiliation for it was more for the Son of God to become the Son of man than for the Son of man to die and being dead to be buried and being buried to continue in the state of the dead and under the power of death untill the Third Day Answerable to this degree of his Humiliation was his Resurrection for as by his Incarnation he was manifest in the flesh Rom. 1.3 4. the son of man made of the seed of David according to the flesh so by his Resurrection from the dead he was declared to be the Son of God with power according to the Spirit of holiness The Resurrection of Christ was the first step of his Exaltation He was declared to be the Son of God Clarificatio Christi ab ejus resurrectione sumpsit exordium Aug. He was alwayes the Son of God even during the dayes of his flesh but then he was openly declared to be the Sonne of God that he could by his own Almighty Power raise up the Temple of his Body which the Jewes had Destroy'd The second step of Christs Humiliation was his poor painful and contemptible life and his painful shameful and cursed death of the Cross Heb. 5.7 He was found in
that Jesus Christ is the Lord. For the first of these we will enquire 1. What we are to understand by the Name given unto Jesus Christ 2. How this Name is a Name above every Name 3. How we are to understand this that God hath given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to Christ a Name above every Name In Answer to the first First Some by this Name do understand the Name Christ Jesus and so take it literally but neither Jesus nor Christ is a name above every name 1. Not Jesus for that was the name of Joshua the Son of Nun the famous Captain of Israel called Jesus by the Apostle Hebrews 4.8 And of this Name was the High Priest Joshuah the Son of Josedek Haggai 1.1 1 Sam. 24 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Unctus sive Christus Domini Isa 45.1 Nomen supra omne nomen non intelligendum est de aliquo externo cognomine vel Jesu vel Christi Brent Heb. 1.4 5. 2. Neither is Christ a name above every name for Saul is called the Lords anointed Christus Domini And so also the Prophet speaking of Cyrus calleth him the anointed of the Lord. We cannot therefore understand this of any name either of Jesus or Christ for Paul is here speaking not what the name of our Saviour was but of the Honour Dignity Power and Majesty to which Christ was advanced Secondly Others as Hierome and Theodoret do think that in that Christ was called the S nne of God he had therein a name above every name and this Exposition is gathered from that passage of the Apostle that Jesus Christ was much better than the Angels as he hath by Inheritance obtain'd a more excellent name than they for unto which of the Angels said he at any time Thou art my Sonne this day have I begotten thee But though this be true that to be the eternal Son of God is a Name above every Name yet this cannot be meant here for it is spoken of that which Christ was exalted to after his Humiliation but from Eternity he was the Sonne of God and did not cease to be so by his Incarnation and Humiliation Thirdly By Name therefore we are to understand that Power Dignity Per nomen potestas dignitas significatur Calvinus Gen. 6.5 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Viri nominis 1 Chron. 5.24 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Viri nominum John 1.14 and Authority which Christ was invested withal after the dayes of his flesh and Sufferings were finished 1 Sometimes in Scripture-phrase Name is put for glory and Renown So we read of men of Renown it is in the Hebrew Men of Name and of famous men Heads of the House of their Fathers What we read famous men is in the Hebrew Men of Names and thus the glory which Christ is invested withal is the Glory of the only begotten of the Father 2. By Name in Scripture-phrase is meant power and Authority and the Soveraignty by which Christ is King of Nations and King of Saints and thus the Scripture speaks The works saith Christ that I do in my Fathers Name John 10.25 they beare witness of me in my Fathers Name i. e. by the Power of God Acts 3.6 Acts 4.7 Thus P●ter speaks to the Criple In the Name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth arise and walk i. e. by the Power of Christ for so it is expressed when the Council questioned them for this thing they are asked By what power or by what name have you done this So then we are to understand by Name that Honour Authority and Dignity which Christ now enjoyes in Heaven of which he spake when he was ascending into Heaven All power is given me in Heaven and Earth Mat. 28.18 and the Glory of Christs Name is such that it shall be celebrated through all the Ages of the World Heaven and Earth shall Ring with the praises of his Name as the Angels praised his Name at his Birth Behold I bring you good tydings of great joy Luk. 2.10 11 13 14. which shall be unto all people for unto you is borne this day in the City of David a Saviour which is Christ the Lord and suddenly there was with the Angel a multitude of the Heavenly Hoste praising God and saying Glory be to God in the highest on earth peace good will towards men So they do now praise him and worship him in Heaven Heb. 1.6 Rev 5.12 saying Worthy is the Lambe to receive Power and Riches and Wisdome and Strength and Honour and Glory and Blessing Secondly How hath Christ obtained a Name above every Name This Nomen super omne nomen a Name above every Name is a demonstration of Christs Super-Exaltation and it notes four things First This is a Name above every Name that Jesus Christ should be the only Saviour of the World that his Name should be the Only One Name by which we are saved Of this the Apostle The stone which the builders refused Acts 4.11 12. is become the Head of the Corner neither is there any Salvation in any other for there is none other Name under heaven given amongst men John 4.42 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby we must be saved He is indeed the Christ the Saviour of the World which we may understand not only emin●ntly but exclusively He is the Saviour there is none besides him We read that God did raise Saviours to his people Israel so acknowledged the Levites in their solemn Fast-day Nehem. 9.27 Thou O Lord deliveredst thy people into the hands of their enemies who vexed them and in the time of their trouble when they cryed unto thee thou heardest them from heaven and according to thy manifold mercies thou gavest them Saviours who saved them out of the hand of their Enemies Such a Saviour was Moses to the Israelites from the Egyptians Joshua from the Canaanites Gideon from the Midianites Jeptha from the Ammorites and Sampson from the Philistims but all these were but partial petty and temporal Saviours These saved the body from misery and that but for a time Christ saves our souls from our sins Mat. 1.21 and that for ever All these Saviours stood in need of the Saviour Joshua himself had eternally perished had it not been for Jesus Jesus Christ was the only Saviour to whose most precious and saving Name all the Old Testament pointed at He was the Saviour in whom all the Promises were performed all the Types accomplished and all the Prophesies fulfilled Acts 10.43 Gen 49.10 Psal 110.1 Isa 7.14 Jer. 23.5 Dan 9.29 Hag. 2.9 Mat. 12.21 It was unto this only Name the Saviour that all the Prophets bare witness He he it was that was Jacobs Shiloh Davids Lord Isaiahs Immanuel Jeremies Branch Daniels Messiah and Haggie's desire of all Nations It is in his name and his Name alone that all Nations shall trust and that for salvation Secondly Jesus Christ hath a Name above every Name in that he
conceive what God hath prepared even for the bodies of those who love him and wait for his appearing Aug. de Civitate Dei lib. 22. cap. 21. Quae sit quam magna spiritualis corporis gloria quoniam nondum venit in experimentum vereor ne temerarium sit omne quod de illa profertur eloquium The Schoolmen reduce them to four heads Impassibility sibility Impassibilitas Subtilitas Agilitas Claritas Subtilty Agility Clarity The Apostle also comprizeth them under four particulars It is sown in weakness it is rai●ed in power It is sown in corruption and raised in incorruption It is sown in dishonour and raised in glory It is sown a natural body and raised a spiritual body Objection If it be a spiritual body how is it the same body Answer It is called a spiritual body not in regard of the substance of it but of the qualities of it and that in two respects 1. Because it shall have no need of meat or drink but shall be as the Angels of Heaven Mat. 20.30 not that we shall have Angelicam essentiam but Angelicas proprietates not the essence but the properties of Angels We shall neither eat nor drink but shall be as the Angels We shall have as Tertullian saith corpora reformata Angelificata Even as a Goldsmith saith Chrysostome puts his silver and gold into a pot and then melts it and forms of it a gold or silver b wl or cup fit to be set before Kings so the Lord melts the bodies of his Saints by death and out of the dead ashes and cinders of the bodies of his servants he frameth and will make goodly vessels of honour to stand before him and to praise him for ever in heaven 2. It is said to be a Spiritual body because it shall be absolutely subject to the soul In the state of glory the soul shall not depend upon the body but the body upon the soul In this life the soul is See this more fully handled in the Sermon preached at Dr. Bollons Funeral as it were carnal because serviceable to the flesh but at the Resurrection the body shall be as it were spiritual because perfectly serviceable to the Spirit But the time will not give me leave to insist largely upon this point So much in answer to the six particulars propounded for the explication of this Doctrine Now for the Application Use 1. LEt us believe this great truth and believe it firmly and undoubtedly That there shall be a Resurrection of the body and that the same numerical body shall rise again the same for substance though not the same for qualities The great God can do this for he is Almighty and to an Almighty power nothing is impossible God can do it because he is Omnipctent and he cannot but do it because he hath promised to do it He cannot be true of his word if the body do not rise again nor can he be a just God as I have shewed for it is just with God that as the body hath been partakers with the soul in good or evil actions so it should be partakers with the soul in everlasting rewards and everlasting punishments And it is just with God that the same body that serves him should be rewarded and the same body that sins against him should be punished And the truth is if the same body doth not rise it cannot be called a Resurrection but rather a new creation as I have shewed Let us I say firmly believe this truth for it is a fundamental truth and the foundation of many other fundamental truths For if the dead rise not then is not Christ risen and then is our faith vain and our preaching in vain Remember Job in the Old Testament believed this Use 2. IF there be a Resurrection of the dead Resurrectio mortuorum est consolatio fiducia Christianorum here is great consolation to all the real members of Jesus Christ For the Resurrection of the dead is the comfort and the hope and confidence of all good Christians This was Jobs comfort upon the dunghil Job 19.26 27. and Davids comfort Psal 16.7 and Christs comfort Mat. 20.19 But the third day he shall rise again It was Christs comfort and it is the comfort of every good Christian 1. Here is comfort against the fear of death As God said to Jacob Gen. 46.3 4. Fear not to go down to Egypt for I will go with thee and I will bring thee out again So give me leave to say to you Fear not to go down to the house of Rottenness to the Den of Death for God will raise you up gain Your Friends and Acquaintance leave you at the grave but God will not leave you The grave is but a dormitory a resting-place a storehouse to keep you safe till the Resurrection Christ hath perfumed the grave 1 Sam. 26. As David when he found Saul asleep took away his spear and cruse of water but when he awoke he restored them again So will death do with us Though it take away out strength and our beauty yet when we awake at the Resurrection they shall be restored again unto us God will keep our dead ashes and preserve them safe as a Druggist keeps every whit of the drug he hath beaten to powder A Saint while he is in the grave is united to Christ he sleeps in Jesus and Jesus will raise him up unto life everlasting John 11.24 2. Comfort against the death of our friends Though they be dead yet they shall rise gain as Martha told Christ I know that he shall rise again at the Resurrection 1 Thess 14. The Saints who dye in the faith of Christ are dead in Christ and such he will raise and bring with him to judgement If a man be to take a long journey his wife and children will not weep and mourn because they hope that ere long he will return again A man that dyes in Christ and sleeps in Christ doth but take a journey from Earth to Heaven but he will come again shortly and therefore let us not mourn as men without hope for our godly relations for we shall meet again and in all probability shall know one another when we meets though not after a carnal manner for we shall rise with the same bodies And if Lazarus was known when raised and the Widows Son known by his Mother if Adam in Innocency knew Eve when he awoke and Peter knew Moses and Elias in the Transfiguration which was but a dark representation of Heaven it is very probable that we also when we awake at the great Resurrection shall know one another which will be no little addition to our Happiness 3. Comfort to those who have maimed and deformed bodies At the great Resurrection all these deformities shall be taken away therefore it is called A Day of Restitution Acts 3.21 wherein God will set all things in joynt If there were
beauty thus by the Sun-beams we may clearly see a Divine providence Besides when it retires from us and a Curtain of darknesse is drawn over the world that proves the wisdome and goodnesse of God the Psalmist attributes the disposition of day and night to God the day is thine Psal 64.16 and with an Emphasis the night also is thine notwithstanding its sad appearance yet it is very beneficial its darknesse enlightens us its obscurity makes v sible the Ornaments of heaven the stars their aspects their dispositions their motions which were hid in the day it unbends the world and gives a short and necessary truce to its labours it recreates the wasted spirits 't is the Nurse of nature which poures into its bosome those sweet and cooling dews which beget new life and vigour the divine providence is also eminent in the manner of this dispensation for the Sun finishing its course about the world in the space of twenty four houres I speak of that part of the world which is inhabited causes that succession of day and night which doth most f●tly temper our labour and repose whereas if the day and night should each of them continue six entire months this division would be very inconvenient for us We may farther observe a wise providence in the diversity it hath used to lengthen and shorten the dayes and nights for the advantages of several Countryes for that part of the earth which is under the line being scorcht with immoderate heat wants a continual supply of moysture therefore the longest and coolest nights are there but it is otherwise in the Northern parts for the beams of the Sun being very feeble there providence hath so disposed that the dayes are extream long that so by the continuance of the heat the fruits may come to maturity and perfection And as the difference of day and night so the diversity of seasons proceeds from the motion of the Sun which is a work of providence no lesse admirable than the former as the motion of the Sun from East to West Psal 74.17 Thou hast made the Summer and Winter makes the day and night so from North to South causes Summer and Winter by these the world is preserved Summer crownes the earth with flowers and fruits and produces an abundant variety for the support of living creatures the Winter which seems to be the death of nature robbing the earth of its heat and life contributes also to the Universal good it prepares the earth by its cold and moysture for the returning Sun in the succession of these seasons the Divine Providence is very conspicuous for since the world cannot passe from one extream to another without a dangerous alteration to prevent this inconvenience the Sun makes its approaches gradually to us the Spring is interposed between the Winter and Summer that by its gentle and temperate heat it may dispose our bodyes for the excesse of Summer and in the same manner the Sun retires by degrees from us that so in the Autumne we may be prepared for the asperities of the Winter And to close this part of the Argument the invariable succession of times and seasons is a token of the same providence the Sun which runs ten or twelve millions of Leagues every day never failes one minute of its appointed time nor turns an inch out of its constant course but inviolably observes the same order so that there is nothing more regular equal and constant than the succession of day and night to ascribe this to hazzard is the most absurd extravagance for in the effects of chance there is neither order nor constancy as we may see in the casting of a Dy which hardly falls twice together upon the same square it is necessary therefore to conclude that an intelligent principle guides the revolutions of the Sun thus uniformly for the advantage of the world Psalme 19.1 2 3. The heavens declare the glory of God the firmament shews his handy work Day unto day utters speech and night unto night addes knowledge There is no speech nor language where their voice is not heard what is that language and voice but a Universal Sermon to the world of Gods being and excellency Let us now consider that vast extent of aire which fills the space between heaven and earth this is of so pure a nature that in a moment it transmits the influences of heaven to the lower world this serves as an arsenal for thunders and lightenings whereby God summons the world to dread and reverence this is a treasury for the clouds which dissolving in gentle showers refresh the earth and call forth its seeds into flourishing and fruitfulnesse this fannes the earth with the wings of the winde allaying those intemperate heats which would be injurious to its inhabitants this is the Region for the Birds wherein they passe as so many self-moving Engines praising the Creatour this serves for the breath and life of man from hence we may conclude the wisdome of a God who so governes the several Regions of the aire as by them to convey blessings for the necessities of man and to send judgements for the awakening the secure to seek after God Let us now descend to the Sea and see how that informes us there is a God 't is a Truth evident to reason that the proper place of the waters is next to the aire above the earth for as it is of a middle nature between these two Elements being purer and lighter than the earth but more grosse and heavy than the aire so it challenges a situation between them that as the aire on all parts encompasses the Sea in like manner the Sea should overspread the earth and cover the whole surface of it that its natural inclination is such appears by its continual flowings who then hath arrested its course and stopt its violence who hath confined it to such a place and compass that it may not be destructive to the world certainly no other but the great God who first gave it being and motion besides that which renders the power of God more conspicuous is that by so weak a bridle as the sand its rage is bounded when it threatens the shore with its insulting waves you would fear lest it should swallow up all but it no sooner touches the sand but its fury is turned into froth it retires and by a kind of submission respects those bounds which are fixt by the Creatour Now that the fiercest Element should be represt by the feeblest thing in the world and that which breaks the Rocks be limited by the sand is a wonder of providence therefore the Lord alledges this as an effect only proceeding from his power and challenges an incommunicable glory upon this account Job 38.8 9 10 11 verses Who shut up the Sea with doores when it brake forth as if it had issued out of the womb when I made the cloud the garment thereof and thick darknesse a
Secondly his Omnipotency can secure us from dangers The Creation is a standing Monument of his Almighty Power for what but Omnipotency could out of nothing produce the beautiful Fabrick of heaven and earth man cannot work without materials but God doth and that which exalts his power is that he made it by his Word he spake the Word and they were made saith the Psalmist Psal 33.9 There went no greater pains to the Worlds Creation than Gods command Moreover the World is preserved from perishing by the power of its Maker Certainly without the support of his mighty hand the World had long before this time relapfed to its primitive nothing Many instances we have of his power in those miraculous deliverances which he hath shewn to his people in their extremity sometimes by suspension of the Works of Nature his dividing the Red Sea and making it as a solid Wall that the Israelites might have a secure passage his stopping the Sun in its course that Joshua might have time to destroy his enemies his suspending the nature of the fire that it might not so much as singe the garments of the three Hebrews his shutting the mouth of the devouring Lyons and r turning Daniel in safety from that dreadful Den And are not all these and many others of this kind not only the pregnant testimonies of his love but the everlasting Characters of his Omnipotency Moreover that which expresses the power of God with as great a lustre is the turning of the hearts of many cruel enemies from their intended rage to favour his people thus did he change the heart of Esau who had resolved the death of his brother that instead of killing him he exprest the greatest tendernesse and the most endearing affections to him thus did he so sway the hearts of the Egyptians towards the oppressed Israelites that instead of securing them under bondage they encouraged their departure by enriching them with jewels of silver and of gold Exod. 12.35 Now our duty is to glorifie this power of God by placing our trust on him Psal 121.2 3. My help comes from the Lord who made the heavens and the earth he will not suffer thy foot to be moved by dependance on God the soul is composed in the midst of the most apparent dangers as the upper Region of the Aire is calme and serene whatever stormes are here below thus David expresses the same courage in all Estates when he was retired into a Cave to shelter himself from the fury of Saul he sung the 57. Psal which he then composed My heart is fixed O God my heart is fixed Psal 57.7 I will sing and give praise and afterwards when he triumphed over Hadadezer the King of Zebah he composed the hundred and eighth Psalme and sung the same words O God Psal 108.1 my heart is fixed I will sing and give praise i● faith taught him the same song in the Cave and on the Throne in all our exigencies we should apply the power of God the cause of our perplexing fears is our low apprehension of Gods power and therefore when we are surrounded with difficulties and dangers then we are surprised with terror and dispondency whereas when there are visible means to rescue us we lift up our heads but our duty is in the greatest extremities to glorifie his power and to refer our selves to his goodnesse and though we cannot be certain that God will by miracles rescue us from dangers as he did many of his people in former Ages yet we are sure he will so abate the power and force of the most injurious enemies as they shall not conquer the patience nor break the hope of his people 4. We owe perfect obedience to Gods will vid. Subjection to his Commands and submission to his Providence 1. Subjection to his Commands As he is the first cause so he is the Supreme Lord he that gave us life must give us law God hath an absolute title to our service as Creator this made the Psalmist desire the knowledge of Gods Commandments in order to his obedience Psal 119.73 Thy hands have made me and fashioned me give me understanding that I may learn thy Commandments he may learn this from the universal obedience of all creatures those which are without reason sense or life inviolably observe his commands Esay 48.13 Mine hand hath laid the foundations of the earth and my right hand hath span'd the heavens when I call to them they stand up together as prepared to execute his commands The insensible parts of the World are so compliant with his will as to contradict their proper natures to serve his glory fire descends from heaven at his command the fluid Sea stands up as a solid wall in obedience to him this upbraids our Degeneration and Apostasie that we who are most indebted to the goodnesse of our Creator should prove disloyal and rebellious when the inferiour creatures with one consent serve and glorifie him Lastly we owe submission to the will of his Providence there is no shadow of exception can be formed ag●i●●t his Sovereignty he may do by right whatever he can do by power therefore we should acquiesce in his dispensations this consideration silenc't David Psal 39.9 I held my tongue and said nothing because thou didst it as the presence of a grave person in authority quiets a disordered multitude so the apprehension of Gods supremacy composes our riotous thoughts and passions unquietnesse of spirit in troubles springs from the ignorance of God and of our selves by impatience we cite God before our Tribunal and do as it were usurp his Throne we set up an antiprovidence as if his wisdome should be taught by our folly and sometimes in afflictions we eye the next cause but do not look upward to the Soveraign Disposer of all things l ke Balaam who struck the Asse but did not see the Angel which opposed him thus from a brutish imagination we regard the visible instrument of our trouble but consider not the Providence of God in all from hence it is that our spirits are full of unquiet agitations we live continually upon self-created Racks Now the humble acknowledgement of Gods hand and the submitting of our selves to his will as it glorifies God so it gives ease to us as there is the greatest equity so policy in our willing stooping to him Rom. 14.11 As I live saith the Lord every knee shall bow to me and every tongue shall confess to God he engages his life and honor for this if there is not a voluntary there must be a violent subjection to him the wilful man never wants woe the spring of our daily misery as well as our sins is opposition to Gods will but the chearful resignation to his Providence what a blessed pill of rest is this to the soul what a Sabbath from all those sinful and penal disturbances which discompose our spirits 't is a lower heaven for as in the state of glory
where there is the same will there is the same nature indeed with men it is the same specifical nature not numerical because there is but one God only therefore here it must be the same numerical nature Observ The doctrine I would speak more fully to is the doctrine of the Trinity or that there are three persons in the divine essence In the prosecution of this point I shall by Gods assistance observe this method 1. I shall speak something to the notion of a Divine person 2. I shall shew you that these are three persons in the Divine essence 3. I shall speak somethi●g to the distinction of those pers s. 4. I sh●ll speak to the order of these persons 5. I shall enquire whe●her the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature 6. The Use and Application 1. I shall speak something to the notion of a divine person what a divine person is or wherein it consists Resol 1. Negatively a divine person in the precise notion of it is not a being or singularis substantia persona natura singularis clare distinguitur there is a clear difference between person and nature as you may perceive by these following considerations 1. Our Lord Jesus Christ assumed the nature of man and yet not the person of men 2. Those things which may really be separated are not the same but that personality may be separated from nature appears by the foregoing instance 3. If a person were a being it must either be finite or infinite if finite then something finite would be in God if infinite then there would be three infinites in God or which is all one there would be three Gods now Deum trinum asserimus Deum triplicem negamus 2. Positively a person is modus rei the manner of a being and a divine person is modus divinae essentiae the divine essence modificated or the divine essences considered three manner of wayes for i●stance consider the divine essence as the fountain or principle of deity so it is the first person consider it as streaming forth from the Fa●her so it is the second person consider it as breathed forth by Father and Son and so it is the third person I said before that the Father is the fountain or principle of deity now this must warily be understood I do not say the Father is the cause of deity but the principle there is a wide difference between p incipium causam a principle and a cause Omnis causa est pr●ncipium sed omne principium non est causa the cause of a thing may be called its beginning but the beginning of a thing is not necessarily its cause the beginning of a line is not the cause of it But to return where we were a divine person is modus divinae essentiae the divine essence modificated the divine essence considered three manner of wayes now the manner of a thing is neither ens nor nihil it is neither a thing nor yet nothing for instance the folding of my hands is not ens for then I should be a Creatour and make something nor is it plainly nothing for there is difference between my hands folded and my hands expanded Now we use the word person because it notes the subsistence of the most excellent kind of being and hath more in it than subsistence hath we say a beast doth subsist but it is absurd to say a beast hath personality because a person notes an understanding subsistent Heb. 1.3 besides the word person is attributed to God in the Scripture in the Epistle to the Hebrews you finde these words made use of by the Apostle concerning Christ the brightnesse of his glory and the expresse Image of his person 2. I am to shew you that there are three persons in the divine essence and that from Scriptures both in the Old Testament and in the New 1. By Scriptures in the Old Testament to that purpose take into your thoughts these particulars 1. A plurality of persons may be proved by that Scripture Gen. 1.26 Gen. 1.26 where God speaks of himself in the plural number Let us make man in our Image this notes more persons in the Godhead than one 't is true something is urged by way of Objection Object 1. God speaks by way of Apostrophe unto the Angels that they should bear witnesse of the works of Creation it is usual in Scripture for God to speak to the creatures as in the Prophecy of Isaiah Isa 1.3 Hear oh heavens and give ear oh earth for the Lord hath spoken Resol 1. Although God is sometimes brought in in the Scripture speaking unto the creature yet it is impossible that this Scripture should be expounded after this manner For 1. Those unto whom God speaks were companions with him in the work of Creation Let us make man after our Image now God did not make use of Angels as instruments in the work of Creation not indeed could he so doe For 1. Every instrument must have subject matter to work upon but Creation doth nor presuppose a subject but make it 2. Every instrument must have time to work in but Creation is in an instant and therefore when we read that God created the world by Jesus Christ as in the Epistle to the Hebrews Heb. 1.2 by whom speaking of Christ he made the world this particle per or by non est nota instrumenti sed nota ordinis notes not instrumentality but the order amongst the divine persons for as there is an order in regard of themselves so in regard of their operations operari sequitur esse and hence it is that although we read that God the Father made the world by Jesus Christ yet we do not read that Jesus Christ made the world by the Father 2. God speaketh unto those persons after whose image man was to be made Let us make man after our image now man was not to be made after the image of Angels but the image of God himself Ob ect 2. God speaks more magnatum or more pincipium after the manner of great ones who speak in the plural number Resol 1. If God speaks more magnatum after the manner of great ones why doth he not alwayes or at least frequently speak after this manner you will find God speaking in Scripture for the most part in the singular number even in this very book of Genesis Behold Gen. 6.17 Gen. 9.9 Gen. 15.1 Gen. 17.1 I even I do bring a flood of waters upon the earth Behold I even I establish my Covenant with you Fear not Abraham saith God I am thy shield and thy exceeding great reward and elsewhere I am the Almighty God walk before me and be thou perfect 2. If God speaks in the plural number after the manner of great ones then certainly he would speak after this manner when he discovers most of his royalty and power and Majesty as he did at the
may not believe a doctrine thus holy a doctrine thus practised by him that published it and confirmed by miracles then a man is under an impossibility of ever being satisfied from any thing from God for what shall satisfie If God speak to us from heaven we should as much suspect that as if an Angel come from heaven we should suspect him but since we believe and know there 's a God and he is just and merciful it 's impossible the divine goodnesse should consent to such Impostors But you will say what are these miracles to us I say therefore thirdly they are a sufficient reason to engage us to believe the divinity of this holy doctrine though we never saw them You do not see Christ your selves nor did you see him dye nor work miracles but would you have had Christ live alwayes among you If you would he must then never dye and the great comfort of our life depended upon his death he dyed is risen and gone to heaven would you have him come down from heaven and dye that you might see it and would you have him dye quite thorow the world at the same time which must be if you would imagine we must see every thing our selves it 's a great piece of madnesse to believe nothing but what we see our selves Austin was troubled himself in this case Lib. 6. Con●es cap. 4. he had been cheated before and now he was resolved he would believe nothing but what should be plain to him at length says he O my God thou shewed'st me how many things I believed which I saw not I considered I believed I had a father and mother and such persons were my Parents how can I tell that a man may say it may be he was drop't from heaven and God made him in an extraordinary way so if I never were out of this Town it 's madnesse for a man to say there 's never another Town in England or to say there is no Sea because I saw it not Nay if a man come and tell me there 's this doctrine that teaches me all self-denial mortification weanednesse from the world and say this is of God and when he hath done ventures life children family have we not reason to believe it If you will not believe 't is either because the first persons were deceived themselves or else because you think they would deceive you now deceiv'd themselves they could not be when they saw so many miracles done and deceive you that they would not neither for would any good man to deceive an other undo himself they dyed for it and writ this book and sealed it with their blood and therefore there can be no reason to doubt of it they were witnesses and delivered what they saw Luke 1.2 7. Prop. As we have rational evidence the Scripture is the Word of God so we have evidence also from inward sensation born we are with principles of conscience and the truths in this book are so homogeneal to man that he shall finde something within himself to give testimony for it 2 Cor. 4.2 By manifestation of the truth commending our selves to every mans conscience in the sight of God Joh. 5.44 Men believe not because they receive honour one of another and in Scripture they that would not believe are they that would not repent Mat. 21.28 to the 33. men that practice drunkennesse whoredome sensuality covetousnesse pride and know that these things are sinnes they are the great unbelievers because they are loth to leave their sins offer the greatest reason in the world for a thing if it be against a mans interest how hard and almost next to impossible is it to convince him A man would believe that the Romans were in England that reads the Roman History but if he shall finde the coyne of the Roman Emperour he will much more believe it Do a bad action O the secret terrours that a man finds within him as if he felt something of hell already Do a good action and the secret sweetnesse joy and peace that attends it that he cannot but say I believe it for I feel some degrees of it already 1 Cor. 14.24 25 c. he speaks to the inward principles of his conscience The reason men believe not the Scriptures is not because 't is unreasonable to believe them but because they have a desperate love to sinne and they are loth to entertain that that should check their interest There is in every life that certain sagacity by which a man apprehends what is natural to that life what nourishes that life a man that lives according to the Law written in his heart finds there 's that in this Revelation that feeds nourishes and encourages it so that this man finds experimental satisfaction in it Doth the Word of God tell me the wayes of God are pleasant I thought they were hard and difficult now I finde the yoke of Christ is easie and that no happinesse like this and no blessednesse like that I thought if I did not comply with such things I could never be blessed now I finde I need nothing to make me happy but my God he finds and feels these things are certan true and real Thus I have done with the demonstration You will easily observe I have neither taken notice of what the Papists tell us we must believe the Scripture because the Church saith it we cannot tell what the Church is till the Scripture had told us And though I have not mentioned the testimony of the Spirit yet I suppose I have spoke to the thing for I cannot understand what should be meant by the testimony of the Spirit except we either mean miracles wrought which in Scripture is called the testimony of the Spirit of Christ Acts 15.8 9. the giving of the Holy Ghost it 's the giving of those extraordinary miracles that fell down among them so Heb. 2.4 Acts 5.32 I say if by the testimony of the Spirit you mean this then you can mean nothing else but the Spirit assisting enabling helping our faculties to see the strength of that Argument God hath given us and by experience to feel what may be felt which comes under the head of sensation APPLICATION First then study the Scripture If a famous man do but write an excellent book O how do we long to see it or suppose I could tell you that there 's in France or Germany a book that God himself writ I am confident men may draw all the money out of your purses to get that book you have it by you O that you would study it Wnen the Eunuch was riding in his Chariot he was studying the Prophet Isaiah he was not angry when Philip came and as one would have thought asked him a bold question Vnderstandest thou what thou readest he was glad of it Acts 8 27 28. one great end of the year of release was that the Law might be read Deut 31.9 it 's the wisdome of
the whole earth mans baser part the body but his celestial part his heaven-born soul is contaminated by it the sun moon and stars in it are turn'd into blood 2. This Original sin is diffused derived and communicated 2. Diffusive whereas actual sins are not Personal faults of Parents are not imputed to Children and defile not their Children unlesse imitated or unbewail'd Childrens teeth are not set on edge by the sowre grapes their Parents thus eat but Original sin being the sin of the nature of the Parent becomes the sin of the Child and will be entailed further to the last man upon earth for Children have the nature but not the person of their Parents An Objection answered And let it not seem strange that God should suffer this original sin to be so vastly diffusive that he should not exempt his own people wholly from it There is the same reason that corruption should remaine amongst them which there was for the abode of the Canaanites amongst the Israel of God of old It tryes them and brings them often to Bochim and makes their life a vall y of teares and whilst they go on their w●y weeping and crying unto God by reason of it they beare precious fruit for God does make good come unto believers out of this great evil making it an Antidote against carnal confidence and self-love a meanes to exercise their faith and a sure evidence of his own power and presence in the keeping of them Besides it is farre better for us by this occasion to be under the second Adam then ever it could have been being under the first The first Adam was a head of clay of the earth earthly The second Adam is a head of gold 1 Cor. 15.47 The Lord from heaven Though we were made holy in the first Adam yet having a mutable will we might under him perish everlastingly but they that are in Christ shall not perish but have everlasting life a glory beyond what we could have had if we had continued in innocency for under that first Covenant we could have expected only a reward answerable to our own works but under the second we hope for glory in some measure proportionable to Christs merits Though we know not what that glory is yet this we know that when he appeares we shall be like him 1 Joh. 3.2 And in the mean while as the Israelites who were before but Brick-burners and potters by reason of the Canaanites amongst them learn'd the art of warre and became Renowned soldiers so the true Israel of God by this meanes put on their whole spiritual Armour and dayly fight the good fight of faith and become more than Conquerors to conquer a lust being more glorious than to conquer a Kingdome through Christ that strengthens them when these Philistines are upon them as upon Sampson then the Spirit of the Lord comes upon them 〈◊〉 and what lust is able to stand before his Spirit Josh 10 24 25 As Joshuah took the five Kings and shut them up in the Cave at Makkedah till the Battel was over and then slew them So the Lord is pleased to shut up and restrain the corruption of his people in the Cave of their body untill their warfare be finished but then he brings them out and slays them they shall then never see these enemies more And therefore holy Paul who cryes out Rom. 7.24 25. Who shall deliver me addes presently I thank God c. as if he had breathed the same breath out in praise which he had taken in in prayer for deliverance so soon does God answer prayer made against this sin according to his will And thus we have seen something towards the explaining of this difficult matter Application The nature of this undertaking being more to informe your judgments than to deal with your affections I shall the rather hope to be excus'd if I be not proportionably so large in the Application which I am now come unto and shall lay down what I intend to speak to under these two heads 1. Of Instruction 2. Of Exhortation to inform your judgment and to quicken your practice 1. If we all have corruption thus by nature inherent in us 1. Use of Instruction it may silence all complaints against God for exposing of us to such wants and miseries at our very entrance into the world and so all along during our continuance in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whence come evils was a question which did much puzzle the Philosophers of old here we are resolved of it The evil of sin and sorrow com●s from this root No wonder now that our children are more miserable than the young ones of Beasts or Birds because they are more si●ful 2. Hence it follows that in the very best there is a mixture borh in their principles and actions There was two in Rebecca's womb there are two in their hearts the Old m●n and the New man nature a●d grace flesh and Spirit Hence that striving that ●ombate betwixt them daily The unregenerate person this sin reigns in his body is as a Temple and his soul as a Shrine for this his Diana This keeps the house and all things are in peace In the glorified Saint this sin is wholly done away this unclean thing does not go with him into the new Jerusalem Only the gracious person is the field in whom the flesh warreth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh He is like the Moon which hath its spots when it receives the fullest influence from the Sun sin in him will not dye willingly but as a dying man multiplies his stroaks at his enemy though they are comparatively but weak ones 2. Use of Exhortation For Exhortation let me recommend these following Duties 1. To a right knowledge of this sin 1. Get a right knowledge of thy self according to this doctrine it is folly in men to have travel'd much abroad and to be strangers in their own Countrey It will be found the greatest folly for thee to be never so knowing in other things if thou beest a stranger to thine own heart and dost not know that it is desperately wicked The very Heathens apprehended this precept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Know thy self to be of such consequence as to grace it the more they said it came down from heaven I am sure it is Gods message unto you from this truth this day Know your selves unlesse you know your selves thus lost Christs coming will be in vain unto you John 3.4 10. for he came only for the lost sheep Nicodemus had never doubted so much of Regeneration and a new birth had he understood the defilement of his first birth I am afraid there are many Masters in Israel that are ignorant of this still or else they would labour not only to reforme their lives but especially to get new hearts also thou canst not kill one lust unlesse thou layest the Axe
my conscience and speaks not a word of comfort to me The Word 1. Rings many a sad peale in the ears of conscience and which he cannot abde to hear or think of in that it doth declare 1. His sinne The Word faithfully disovers Gods streightness and mans crookedness and swervings from that platforme and rule to which he should be conformed as the Counter-part to the Original This charges omissions commissions and bunglings in the good which he does do Psal 05.21 and sets all in order before his eyes if possible to make him ashamed and confounded in himself 2. The due and desert of sinne every breaker of the Law the Law pronounces and dooms to be cursed There is that necessary connexion that it is impossible to be chargeable with sin against the Law and not liable to the Curse of the Law Gal. 3.10 Cursed is every one that continueth not in every thing that is written in the Book of the Law to do it Justification it self takes not away the desert of sin pardoned sins are as well sins and as much sins as they were pardon makes not the Malefactour none makes not that the fact was not committed or not faulty or that it deserved not death for then he should have been legally acquitted not graciously pardoned Those will never take heaven of grace that take not hell as their proper desert The Lord will have his own weare this rope about their necks the desert of hell in their hearts to the very grave Assurance and in the very highest degree takes not away the sense of the deserts of sin but amplifies and enlarges them The deserts of sin shall be perfectly acknowledged in the state of glory and the Ransomer adored and admired upon this score Nothing so heightens grace as this that persons deserving to suffer are yet freed in Christ from suffering eternal wrath as if they had not deserved it This desert was no doubtful and dark point in the consciences of the Hearthens themselves Rom. 1. ult They know the judgement of God that they which commit such things are worthy of death But the Word more distinctly layes this home to the heart Prov. 11.23 The expectation of the wicked is wrath There is nothing else that he can justly and solidly expect in that estate and expecting otherwise he does but cozen himself 3. The sinners exclusion while in that estate from any part in the great and precious promis●s of the Gospel The Word opens the promises but knocks his fingers off from touching and eating of this Tree of life This is none of the meanest heart-cutting terrors to natural men to see many come from the East and West and sit down with Abraham and Isaac and Jacob in the Kingdome of heaven and themselves cast out Mat. 8.11 12. incorporated with the Patriarchs into fellowship of the same grace and title to the same glory and themselves debarred from both to view the unsearchable riches of Christ displayed and themselves justled off from any intermedling as to present application or grounds of application of them as their own I met lately with a godly woman who heard a Sermon full of choice comforting supporting promises to weary and heavy laden sinners which warmed her heart but in the closure was strucken through with the first arrows of God discerning her self excluded in her present estate from any part in them This makes the Gospel a fiery Serpent to sting them which is the Pole holding up the brazen Serpent for healing to others 2. The Word attaches and binds him over Ye shall answer this at the day of Christ and hangs the writ upon his door as the man that is in Gods debt and is to look for an Arrest and to be dragged into prison till the utmost farthing be paid unlesse a speedy timely peace be made and inforces this partly from the will and justice of God that hath made indignation and wrath tribulation and anguish the portion of every soul that goeth on to do evil Rom. 2.8.9 and partly from the nature and circumstances of sin it self Debts may be so great so long owing so growing and the negligence and boldnesse of the debtor such that makes it necessary in point of wisdome not to keep the writ longer off from his back 3. The Word excites terrours A man bound in a very great summe in which the forfeiture will be his undoing the very obligation troubles There are no debts but where any ingenuity is induce answerable cares And the Lord knowing the frame and tendring the peace of his people advises therefore against all debts especially sticking under them and not coming timely and carefully off Rom. 13.8 Owe nothing unto any man much more to be over head and eares in Gods debt and no care to agree with him is a very dreadful condition Mat. 5.25 If these terrours actually are not yet they are very subject every moment to be excited The Sea may be very calme but the least storme makes it nothing but commotions conscience though now quiet hath a very wide and clamorous mouth when the Lord commissions and commands it to rebuke for sin These terrours hold the sinner in bondage or all his life time subject unto bondage Heb. 2.15 This is the second branch of the misery of a natural estate to be in all these respects under the Curse of the Law and to have the Lord fight against him with the sword of his mouth Revel 2.16 Here is patience that the Lord will fight with this sword first that he may reclaime and lead to repentance rather than destroy him and if this prevaile then is the curse turned into a blessing and the bondage ends in liberty indeed but if this do not prevaile then there remains nothing else but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devoure the adversaries Heb. 10.27 3. Every natural man and woman is obnoxious to all the effects of the wrath of God and of the curses denounced in his Word 1. There are manifold effects of Gods wrath that are upon him or are apt every moment to be rushing in upon him in this life 1. Upon the body Look upon all the breaches flawes defects monstrosities in the body and set them upon the score of sin Every man else had been like Absalom and much more 2 Sam. 14.25 From the sole of his foot even to the Crown of his head there was no blemish in him these argue not special sin Joh. 9.2 yet had never been without sin look upon all diseases natural or adventitious John 5.14 Sin no more lest a worse thing come unto thee there had never been a stone in the reins or in the bladder if not first in the heart These crumblings by degrees into the dust flow in by sin We pity the ruines which War hath made in goodly Palaces but those are nothing to the havock which sin hath made in the more noble Fabricks of
is wrath in Domestique relations And wrath as terribly mixeth in Publick Relations Ministers preach not oversee not are not ensamples to the flock have not experience nor ability or care rightly to divide the Word of truth and muzzle the gain-sayer Misled themselves and mislead others c. Magistrates mind not the things of Christ are tight and vigilant over the good indulgent to the evil Beare the sword in vaine c. Such vials there is much wrath poured through 5. Upon the holy things of God and of his people Ours come not with acceptance to God The Lords not with savour closenesse authority c. to us The very book of the Covenant needs sprinkling Heb. 9.19 The Law which is pure and clean Psal 19.8 9. is made a killing letter 2 Cor. 3.7 The Gospel which is the grace of God bringing salvation Tit. 2.11 is made a savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 the Lords Supper an eating and drinking judgmsnt to our selves 1 Cor. 11.29 and Christ himself is made for falling Luke 2.34 and a stone of stumbling and rock of offence 1 Pet. 2.8 without Christs blood taking away sin the very book of grace had never been opened Rev. 5.4 and though the choicest in it self being opened would never have been useful unto us and sorer wrath cannot be than to curse our very blessings Mal. 2.2 and the very means of grace that they shall be uselesse and for judgment 6. Upon the whole man the person is under the effects of wrath 1. Inslaved to the Divel This is plain 1. From the Scriptures Else converting grac● could not a Col. 1.13 deliver from the power of darknesse nor men be said when b 2 Tim. 2.26 God gives repentance to recover themselves out of the snare of the Divel that were taken captive by him at his will 2. From the likenesse of mans work with Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men of a Trade are ordinarily of a company together but here the rule failes not 1 Joh. 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Divel that is by doing the same work discovers himself of communion with and in thraldome to him The first finders of a Craft are Fathers and Successors and Imitators in the Craft are called children Gen. 4.20 we naturally and freely do the Divels work John 8.44 The lusts of your Father ye will do and have no minde to the Lords work nor can brook the same to be done circumspectly and exactly by others Acts 13.10 Thou child of the Divel enemy of all righteousness 3. From the community of principles the very mind and will of Satan is engraven upon our spirits and expresse themselves inefficacy and obstinacy of sinning These principles are Satans image instead of Gods 4. From the natural mans subjection to the guidance of Satan regenerate persons are led by the Spirit but Satan filleth the hearts of natural men He had possession of Judas his heart and by a piece of mony rides deeper into him and prevails to engage him to betray Christ This is a lamentable branch of the natural mans misery 2. He is banished and separated from God both from conformity to and communion with him and doth electively banish and cast himself forth of the Lords presence This appears 1. From the former point viz. mans fellowship with Satan there cannot be fellowship with God and with Satan together These communions are inconsistent in the same Spirit at the same time in a reigning intense degree 2. From Gods end and his Apostles and Ministers in the writing explanation and application of the Scripture 1 John 1.3 That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. Were this fellowship already in the state of nature there needed not this means of rebringing into fellowship with God Defiers of the evil one with their mouths are not the lesse in league with him in their hearts 3. From the language of the carnal heart Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thee This they speak internally and the desire of their souls is to be rid of God notions of God are a saplesse and burdensome piece of knowledge Rom. 1.18 They did not like to retain God in their knowledge To banish our selves is the heighth of mans sin and folly and to be banished the heighth of the Lords wrath and of mans misery Now do we know what a man loseth in the losse of God that is impossible for any created understanding to conceive The world is a Dunge●n without the Sun the body a carrion without the soul but neither so necessary as God is to the soul A taste of the goodnesse of God made the world and the lives of the Martyrs nothing to them Psal 30.5 In thy favour is life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindnesse is better than life The very heaven of heaven lies in the enjoyment of God and the hell of hell in the losse of him The losse of him is the losse of the Fountain from which all kinde of good doth or can come The losse of the cause is the losse of all the effects of all the blessed affections influences and promises of God The losse of all those blessed hopes that fill the soul with joy unspeakable and full of glory No prayer praises faith love fear or any spark of other grace are to be found in truth upon the hearth of that heart Now the person in league with the Devil and banished from and without God in the world must needs be miserable and accursed 3. He is discontented and unprofitable in every condition Rom. 3.12 They are altogether become unprofitable The Holy Ghost makes a natural man of no more use than rotten things which we cast forth to the dunghill for their unprofitablenesse This is a dreadful ruine that a creature so excellent should become unprofitable to others and very far from comfort to himself in any condition The wife having all for use and the husbands heart hath nothing because not the authority dominion and disposition which is proper to the husband Israel have bread and quailes from heaven and water from the Rock that followed them a table everywise furnished for need and for delight and yet grumble because not meat for their lusts Many have all things very good and the wisdome of heaven could not carve fitter and better things and yet all not good enough Let sin creep in and Adam will not be content in Paradise or the Apostate Angels in heaven but leave their own habitation Go from God and take thy leave and farewell of contentment and satisfaction 4. He is grown a Wolf and Devil to his brethren Biting and devouring Gal. 5.15 tearing pulling catching at advantage flying upon the necks of the weaker Men execute much of the wrath of God in these feuds among themselves so that the Caution is
any receive not him this wrath tarries still and will cleave to and abide upon him for ever John 3.36 He speaks with authority Luke 19.27 Those mine enemies bring them and slay them before me and it shall be done 3. That the Psalmist makes it as it is a point of wisdome in the greatest to kisse the Son with a kisse of homage and subjection Psal 2 11 12. least he be angry what is the danger of that and ye perish in the war of your hopes and purposes and never compasse grace nor glory If his wrath be kindled but a little blessed are all those which put their trust in him 4. That then ye may plead with the Lord with humble boldnesse Psal 74.1 Why doth thine anger smoak against the Sheep of thy Pasture remember thy Congregation which thou hast purchased of old the rod of thine inheritance which thou hast redeemed c. 5. And assure your hearts of welcome Prov. 21.14 A gift in secret pacifieth wrath and a reward in the bosome strong wrath Mark their policy Acts 12.10 and be assured the relations of Christ are beloved of the Father Job 33.24 Then he is gracious to him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransome 2. To those which the Lord hath translated out of their natural condition 1. Bring the work often to the touchstone that you may not boast in a false gift gold will endure the test and be more fully manifested to be gold indeed and finding the work to be right live with an enlarged heart to the praise of that grace which hath made this change 2. Deal seriously in the mortification of sin which God only strikes at and in order thereto count sin the worst of evils if this were done and throughly and fixedly done in our spirits there is nothing of any other directions would be left undone To set up this judgement there needs 1. Ploughing carefully with the Lords heifer viz. search into the Oracles of God there and there only are lively portraitures of sin and the genuine products and traine of sin 2. The eye-salve of the Spirit We are blinder than Batts in this matter and are indisposed very much or rather wholly to let this truth sink down into our hearts 3. Applications to the Throne of grace None but those which deal in good earnest in heaven will see the hell and mystery of sin in themselves He gives the Holy Ghost to them which ask him 4. Excussions and communings with your selves Prov. 20.27 The spirit of man is the candle of the Lord searching all the inward parts of the belly and duly made use of will tell many stories correspondent to the Word of truth use conscience and use therewith another and bigger candle to rummage the dark room of thy heart with Superadde to conscience the succours of the Word and Spirit and thou shalt do something in the search and finde out convictively the swarms of evil in thine own heart 5. The work of grace There will be else a beam in the eye and plaine things will not be plaine to us Gods work holds intelligence and is of amicable affinity with his Word grace hath the only excellent faculty in looking through sin 6. Attendance to the Lords administrations against sin God writes in great letters in the world what he had first written in the Scriptures every breach by sin should lead down into more hatred brokennesse of spirit and shame before the Lord for sinne This is the engaging evil this engages God and the holy Angels and Devils and the very man against himself Nothing can be his friend to whom sin hath made God an enemy Wo to the man that is in this sense alone and hath heaven and earth and hell and all within the Continent of them against him it is impossible for that mans heart and hands to stand strong This is the mighty prevailing evil Never was man so stout as to stand before the face of sin but he shivered and was like a garment eaten up of moths This hath fretted the joynts of Kingdomes in pieces Psal 39.11 and made the goodliest houses in the world a heap of rubbish Zech. 5.4 will make Bab lon that sits as a Queen an habitation of Divels Rev. 18.2 and the hold of every foule spirit and a Cage of every unclean and hateful birds made the Angels Divels and heaven it self too hot for them Never were the like changes made as by sinne grace makes not changes of richer comfort than sin doth of dismal consequence it is made by the Holy Ghost an argument of the infinity of the power of God to pardon and subdue sinne Micah 7.18 3. Bear all afflictions incident to an holy course chearfully The Martyrs went joyfully into the fire because the flames of hell were quenched to them bore their Crosse easily because no curse and damnation to them in Christ Jesus Gal. 3.13 4. Reduce your anger to the similitude of Gods which is very slowly kindled and is an intense holy displicence only against sin Psal 103.8 and is cleans'd from all dregs of rashnesse injustice and discomposure such zeal should eat us up John 2.17 MANS IMPOTENCY TO Help himself out of that misery ROM 5.6 For when we were yet without strength in due time Christ dyed for the ungodly IN this Chapter there are two parts in the first the Apostle layes down the comfortable fruits and priviledges of a justified estate in the second he argues the firmnesse of these comforts because they are so rich that they are scarce credible and hardly received The firmnesse and soundnesse of these comforts the Apostle representeth by a double comparison 1. By comparing Chr st with Christ and 2. Christ with Adam Christ with Christ or one benefit that we have by him with another from the Text to ver 12. then Christ with Adam the second Adam with the first to the end of the Chapter In comparing Christ with Christ three considerations do occur 1. The efficacy of his love towards us before justification with the efficacy of his love towards us after justification the argument standeth thus if Christ had a love to us when sinners and his love prevailed with him to die for us much more may we expect his love when made friends if when we were in sin and misery shiftless and helpless Christ had the heart to die for us and to take us with all our faults will he cast us off after we are justified and accepted with God in him this love of Christ is asserted in the 6. verse amplified in the 7. and 8. verses and the conclusion is inferred verse 9. much more then being now justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him The second Comparison is of the efficacy of the death of Christ and the efficacy of the life of Christ 't is absurd to think that Christ rising from the dead
reward him for it And all this the Father makes good to Christ 1. He fits him for this work both in a large effusion of the graces and gifts of the Spirit upon him John 3.34 God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto him And also in the preparing of a body for him Hebr. 10.5 2. He strengthens him and supports him in the work Isa 42.1 Behold my servant Christ is our Lord but in the work of Redemption he was the Fathers servant whom I uphold and therefore you finde when Christ was put upon the greatest tryals God gave in eminent succour to him as in the case of temptation Matth. 4.11 and in his agony in the Garden Luke 22.43 And there appeared an Angel unto him from heaven strengthning of him And certainly if Christ had not had support and strength from the Godhead he had never been able to have bore up under and carried thorough his terrible sharp work You finde him encouraging himself and acting faith upon this that God would own him and stand by him in this undertaking Isa 50.7 8 9. The Lord God will help me therefore shall I not be confounded Therefore have I set my face like a flint and I know that I shall not be ashamed He is near that justifyeth me who will contend with me Psal 16.8 c. I have set the Lord alwayes before me because he is at my right hand I shall not be moved c. 3. Further God the Father succeeds and prospers him in the work When thou shalt make ●his soul an offering for sin he shall see his seed the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in his hand This was promised and also made good to Christ in the numerous body of believers past present and to come I might here enlarge upon a threefold gift which the Gospel holds forth There 's the Fathers gift the Sons gift and the Believers gift The Fathers gift lies in Election such and such individual persons he gives to Christ Thine they were and thou gavest them me John 17.6 We are a free gift to Christ in El●ction as Christ is a free gift to us in Redemption The Sons gift lies in the giving of himself for us Who gave himsel● for us that he might redeem us from all iniquity c. Tit. 2.14 And then there is the Believers gift and that is he gives up himself to Christ to be ruled by Christ disposed by Christ saved by Christ he gives up himself to the Lord 2 Cor. 8.5 The Father giving believers to Christ and promising that believers in time should also give themselves to him was a great encouragement to Christ to give himself for believers and if you read John 17. you shall see there that Christ when he had done his work takes much notice of the accomplishment of this promise to him in believers who are his seed owning of him and closing with him 4. Lastly God will and doth reward Christ upon his undertaking to redeem man he tells him he shall not lose by it His days shall be prolonged Isa 33.10 i. e. his Kingdome shall be set up in the world to endure for ever God would divide him a portion with the great and he should divide the spoile with the strong because he hath poured out his soul unto death Ver. 12. And many such promises you have made to Christ Accordingly God hath exalted him far above all principality and power Eph. 1.21 22. hath put all things under his feet made him to be head over all things to the Church given him a Name which is above every name that at the Name of Jesus every knee should bowe Phil. 2.9 and all because to give satisfaction to his Father he made himself of no reputation and became obedient unto death Ver. 7.8 even the death of the Cross And thus you see what the Father demands and what he doth indent and promise to his Son in case he will engage in this undertaking not as if the Son was unwilling so to do you must not so understand it but the work being of such a nature so hard so grievous it pleased the Father thus to Treat with him Prop. 3 In the third place The Lord Jesus Christ engages in the work accepts of the termes and conditions set before him and undertakes to satisfie his Fathers demands And in order to satisfaction which God stands upon as you have heard before Christ is willing to fulfill the whole Law which was the rule or measure or standard for this satisfaction God had been dishonoured by the violation of his Law and the disobedience and non-performance of it was that which kept God and the sinner at a distance and therefore he will only be satisfied and reconciled upon the fulfilling of it here is my Law saith God satisfie it and my justice is satisfied You must know this that though a sinner as to himself is justified upon the termes of the Covenant of grace yet as to his surety he is justified upon the Covenant of works for the surety must pay the whole debt and the Father will bate him nothing Object Where is then some will say the freenesse of grace in the justifying and acquitting of a sinner if God will be satisfied to the utmost what becomes of mercy if the surety pay the debt to the Creditor is it any great favour for the Creditor to let the debtor out of prison Sol. To this I answer Free grace is very well consistent with full satisfaction and notwithstanding the latter the former is very glorious partly because God himself found out this way of satisfaction partly because God accepts it for the good of the sinner as though he had made it in his own person That place of the Apostle is observable Being justified freely by his grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ Rom. 3.24 Notwithstanding Redemption by Christ yet we are justified freely as freely as though Christ had done and suffered nothing at all But this is a digression I say the Father demanding the fulfilling of the Law Quod requi●it lex nempe tum plenam paenae reatibus nostris debitae luitionē ut à condemnatione liberemur tum plenam legis praestationē ut ad aeternam vitam 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inveniamur ex illa promissione Hoc fac vives Beza Christ undertakes to do it and therefore he willingly puts himself under this Law When the fulnesse of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to Redeem them that were under the Law that we might receive the adoption of Sonnes Gal. 4.4 5. And he submits not only to the duty of the Law but also to the penalty of the Law not only to do what the Law enjoynes but also to suffer what the Law threatens and the former he makes good by his active obedience the latter by his passive obedience To open this a
little further Christ here doth two things First He undertakes to performe the whole moral Law and therefore when he comes into the world his eye was upon this Thus it becometh us to fulfill all righteousnesse Mat. 3.15 I am not come to destroy the Law but to fulfill Mat. 5.17 And all this Christ did for our good that the righteousnesse of the Law might be fulfilled in us Rom. 8.4 a very convincing place for the imputation of Christs active obedience Secondly Whereas a special Law was laid upon him as he was our Meditour he is willing also to obey that in order to our redemption That Christ should die was no part of the moral law but it was a positive special law laid upon Christ well he makes it good I lay down my life this Commandment have I received of my Fath●r Joh. 10.18 Christ as Mediator had a command from his Father to die and he observes it And to be short whatever the Father put him upon in his whole Mediatory work he did it all so he tells us I have finished the work which thou gavest me to d● Joh. 17.4 Prop. 4 Fourthly In this faederal transaction betwixt the Father and the Son both parties were free here was no necessity co-action or any thing of this Nature but both were free The Father was free in his demands of satisfaction he might have let man alone in his state of guilt and wrath he might have suffered all man-kind to have perished and to be thrown into hell he had been infinitely happy in himself though there had been no such thing as Redemption by Christ 'T is true without this God had not had satisfaction to his justice for if Adam and his posterity had burned in hell to all eternity all would have been nothing in a way of satisfaction but there had not been the least diminution of his essential glory and blessednesse in himself The Son is free too on his part he freely consents to the terms of this Covenant and in the fulnesse of time freely engages in the making of them good Heb. 10.5 Lo I come to do thy Will O God Psal 40.8 I delight to do thy Will O God yea thy Law is within my heart Ver. 6. And therefore he sayes there Mine ears hast thou bored As the servant in the Law when he was willing to stay with his Master Exod. 21.6 and to do his work h●s eare was bored so 't was with Christ he was willing to serve his Father in this businesse the greatest that ever was carried on in the world and therefore sayes he Mine eares hast thou bored Christ was free in all his obedience and if it had not been free and voluntary it would not have been satisfactory or meritorious whatever he did or suffered it was from love not necessity This truth is so evident from the whole current of the Gospel that I need not enlarge upon it Prop. 5 Fifthly Th se two persons in this blessed Covenant they do mutually t●ust each other I say they do mutually trust each other for their respective making good the termes of this Covenant the Father trusts the Son and the Son trusts the Father the Father trusts the Son for the making of his soul an offering for sin the Son trusts the Father for the seeing of his ●eed To bring th●s assertion down to time in the times of the Old Testament the Father trusts the Son in the times of the New Testament the Son trusts the Father Before the coming of Christ the Father takes up the Patriarchs and others to heaven upon assurance of this that Christ in the fulnesse of time would take our nature upon him and therein make full satisfaction Christ having promised to do thus the Father takes his word and so takes up old Testament-believers to glory Since the coming of Christ the Son now trusts his Father for he hath offered up himself paid down the full ransome and yet he doth not reap the full benefit of it many believers being not yet glorified but he trusts his Father that one by one they all shall be so in due time This may seem to be but a notion I confesse we have no place of Scripture positively asserting this but the nature of the thing demonstrates it for there being some distance of time in what was to be done by both persons there must be a mutual trusting each of the other Prop. 6 In the sixth place These two persons all along in their proper and peculiar transactions they deal each with the other as under a Covenant and they hold each other to the termes of the Covenant that was betwixt them Not that there 's any question of their breaking of it but thus we may with an humble reverence conceive of it The Father holds the Son to the engagement on his part he will not spare him or bate him any thing satisfaction he will have to the utmost though it cost his life and blood Rom. 8 32. And therefore you may observe the prayer of Christ John 12.27 Father save me from this houre he seems to check or recall himself but for this cause came I unto this houre this is but that which I engaged to go through and therefore I must do it And his Father answers him there accordingly Ver. 28. Father glorifie thy Name still Christs eye was upon that his Fathers glory well saith the Father I have both glorified it and will glorifie it againe He speaks thus not only upon the accompt of his Soveraignty but of the Covenant also that I am speaking to The Son also stands upon the termes of this Covenant and therefore having performed the conditions on his part he now makes his claime both for himself and his members that the Father will make good the conditions on his part Father sayes he John 17.4 5. I have glorified thee on earth I have finished the work which thou gavest me to do And now O Father glorifie thou me with thine own self with the glory which I had with thee before the world was And for his members he speaks more in the language of a Covenant Verse 24. Father I will that they also whom thou hast given me be with me where I am that they may behold my glory c. I will not only I pray or beseech but I will I ask this as my right by vertue of the Covenant betwixt us I having done thus and thus 't is but my due for though glory is a gift to us 't is a debt to Christ and so I claime it that those whom thou hast given me may be with me in glory Prop. 7 I 'le adde but one thing more and then I have done with the Explicatory part This federal transaction betwixt the Father and the Son it was from all eternity Here lies the difficulty and this is that which stumbles some I 'le speak but a word to it I say this Covenant
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
must be plain with you I beseech you consider how Jews and Pagans and Divels will rise up in judgment against you 1. The Jew may say I had a Legal yoke upon me which neither I nor my Fathers were able to bear Christ invited me only into his Garden of Nuts where I might sooner break my teeth with the hard Shell of Ceremonies than get to the little more than bitter Kenel of Gospel promises you have those promises in abundance with more ease Cant. 6.11 q. d. Their Nuts were ripe but their Pomegranates full of sweet Kernels of Gospel-grace were not then budded The Jew may complain that in the best of their Sacrifices the smoak fill'd their Temple smoak only to provoke them to weep for a clearer manifestation 2 Cor. 3.14 Those of the Jews that were most enraged against Christ yet had they known him they would not have crucified the Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 The Jew may say Though we could but groap after Christ your eyes are dazled with his glory We had but the Old Edition of the Covenant of Grace in a Character very darkly intelligible you have the Last Edition with a Commentary of our Re●ection and the Worlds Recep ion and the Spirits Effusion you have all that heart can wish Oh had we but one of your days of the Son of man we would not have sinned against so great salvation Sirs what do you think your consciences will be forced to reply O true true must the Gospel-sinner say I have known own'd and professed Christ and have been angry with Ministers and Friends when they did but question my being in Covenant but I have not in any measure walked worthy of the Gospel But I passe by the Jew let 's hear what the Pagan hath to say against you 2. I perish Eternally may the poor Pagan say without all possibility of Reconciliation and have only sinned against the Covenant of Works having never heard of a Gospel-Covenant nor of Reconciliation by a Mediatour Alas should I have improved my Naturals to the highest Reconciliation by Christ could never have entred into my head Oh had I heard but one Sermon had Christ but once broke in upon my soul to convince me of my undone condition and to have shewen a righteousnesse unto me but woe is me I never had so much as one offer of Grace But so have I must you say that refuse the Gospel I have or might have heard thousands of Sermons I could scarce escape hearing one or other shewing me the danger of my sin and my necessity of Christ but notwithstanding all I heard I wilfully resolved I would have nothing to do with him I could not indure to hear strictnesse prest upon me it was all the hell I had upon earth that I could not sin in quiet 3. Nay may the Divel himself say 't is true I was ever since my fall maliciously set against God But alas so soon as ever I first sinned God kick't me out of heaven and told me he would never have mercy on me And ' though I liv'd in the time of all manner of gracious Dispensations I saw Sacrifices offered and Christ in the flesh and the Gospel preached yet how could this choose but enrage me the more to have God as it were say Look here Satan I have provided a remedy for sin but none for thine this set me upon revenge against God so far as I could reach him But alas alas had God ever entred into any Covenant with me at all had God put me upon any terms though never so hard for the obtaining of mercy had Christ been but once offered to me what do you think would I have done would I have hearkened to any thing you could say to Refuse Christ and Salvation Could you or all the Angels in heaven have kept me from minding Christ But Woe to me may the Gospel-sinner say I have as good a Remnant of the Covenant of Works in my nature as the Pagans have I have all the discoveries of God in the Legal Covenant that the Jews ever had I am under a Better Dispensation than the Divels were under before their Fall The Gospel of Grace is urged upon me And therefore O poor Jew whatever may be said against thy breach of Covenant there 's a thousand fold more to be said against mine O poor Pagan whatever is to be said against thy breach of Covenant there 's ten thousand fold more against mine O wretched Divels whatever may be said against your sinnes there 's infinitely more to be said against mine I am the most Foolish Mad Wilful Rebel that ever waged war with the grace of God Sirs Is all this nothing to you Can you hear these things quietly I know you dare not think them over again and sin at the same rate as before if you think your souls any thing worth or heaven and glory any thing worth now offer up your selves to Christ in the Gospel-Covenant Thus much for the first Inference That their estate is dreadful that are not in the Gospel-Covenant The second Inference is this That their estate is comfortable that are in the Gospel-Covenant I will only instance in two things 1. The weakest and poorest faith and service is accepted through Christ in the Gospel-Covenant The Covenant of Grace is made to poor weak sinful fraile man through a Mediator God doth not expect that we should be perfect here Poor Christians have more ado to pardon themselves than to have God to pardon them They quarrel more with themselves for want of holinesse than God quarrels with them for it Beloved here are some comfortable Riddles of Grace for you to resolve The Covenant is meerly of Grace Grace runs through all the veins and arteries of it all the life blood and spirit of the Covenant are Grace Grace through Jesus Christ. And yet Beloved though it be wholly of Grace it is of Debt by being a Covenant God is pleased to enter into Bond to make good his Deed of Gift What God doth for the heires of promise it is no more than what is debt to Christ and what through him he is graciously engaged for us O the comfort of being in Covenant with God! you will say so indeed if you adde 2. This Gospel-Covenant is so made that it can never be disanul'd Alas we do not know where nor how to make a Covenant sure in the world he that is my friend to day may be my enemy to morrow his Bond may be good to day and may be to morrow insoluble There are ways more than we know of to evade the strictest Covenant to disanull the strongest Oath but now God hath sworn by himself Hebr. 6.13 that he will certainly blesse those whom he takes into Covenant with him God hath sworn by his holinesse Psal 89.34 35. As if he should say Let me not be accounted a holy God if I break Covenant with any of my people Nay he
in this nature only Heb. 4.14 15 16. 2. His Names Christ Jesus this was his proper Name Jesus Christ his appellative Name Jesus that denotes the work and businesse for which he came into the world as appeares from the reason which the Angel that came from heaven as an Herauld to proclaim his incarnat●on gives of the imposition of this Name Thou shalt call his Name J●sus f●r he shall save his people from their sins This Name though it be given to others in Scripture yet to him eminently to them as types of that compleat Saviour who should come after them and save his people from their sinnes Christ that denotes the several Offices in the exercise whereof he executes this work of salvation Christ in the Greek being the same with Messiah in the Hebrew i. e. anointed Under the Law the solemne ordination or setting apart both of things and persons to special services was by anointing thus we read of three sorts of persons anointed Kings Priests Prophets and in respect of all these Offices Jesus is called Christ From the words thus briefly explained arise these two Observations 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator 2. That there is no other Mediator between God and man but Jesus Christ Doctr. 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator and indeed considering what God is and withal what man is how vastly disproportionable how unspeakably unsuitable our very natures are to his how is it possible there should be any sweet communion betwixt them who are not only so infinitely distant but so extreamly contrary God is holy but we are sinful Isa 6.3 with Gen. 3.5 1 Joh. 1.5 with Eph. 5 8. Rom. 7 1● in him is nothing but light in us nothing but darknesse in him nothing that 's evil in us nothing that 's good he is all beauty we nothing but deformity he is justice and we gui●tinesse he a consuming fire and we but dried stubble in a word he an infini●ely and incomprehensibly glorious Majesty and we poor sinful dust and ashes who have sunk and debased our selves by sin below the meanest rank of creatures and made our selves the burthen of the whole Creation and can there be any communion any friendship between such Can too walk together Amos 3.3 except they be agreed And what agreement can there ever be but through a Mediator If ever God be reconciled to us it must be through a Mediator because of that indispensible necessity of satisfaction Rom. 8.7 and our inability to make it If ever we be reconciled to God it must be through a Mediator because of that radicated enmity that is in our natures to every thing of God and our impotency to it and thus in both respects that God may be willing to be a friend to us and that we may not be unwilling to be friends to him there needs a Mediatour 2 Cor. 5.19 compared with Joh. 14.6 Doctr. 2. That there 's no other Mediator betwen God and man but Jesus Christ And one Mediator i. e. but one Opus est Mediatore ad Mediatorem istum Bernard p. 262 Leo. 1. Papa Roman Epist. 83. ad Palestinos Episcop c. 4. The fondnesse of Papists in their multiplicity of Mediators not only unto God but to our Mediator himself having no other foundation than only their superstition cannot be of moment with them who labour to be wise according to Scripture That those members of the Church who are contemporary here on earth do indeed pray for one another cannot be denied but that they are therefore Mediators of Intercession hath been denied by the more Antient Papists themselves This Title of Mediator is throughout the New Testament appropriated unto Christ Heb. 8.6 H●b 9.15 Heb. 12.24 and indeed there 's none else fit for so high a work as this but only he Resol 1. The singular suitablenesse of his person to this eminent employment To interpose as a Mediator betwixt God and men was an employment above the capacity of men Angels or any creature but Jesus Christ in respect of the dignity of his person was every way suited for this work Which you may take in these four particulars 1. That he was truly God equal with the Father of the same nature and substance not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the like nature but of the same nature as is excellently cleared by that famous Champion for the Deity of Christ against the Arrians Athanasius Col. 2.9 In him dwelleth the fulness of the God-head bodily Non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non divinitatis sed deitatis D. Prideaux fasc p. 76. 't is not the fulnesse of the Divinity but of the Deity thereby intimating an identity of essence with God the Father and holy Ghost Though the Divine essence be after a several manner in the several Persons of the blessed Trinity in the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without receiving it from any other in the Son by an eternal generation and in the holy Ghost by proceeding yet 't is the same essence of God that is in all three persons Tylen Syntagm p. 401. Lysord his plain mans senses exercised p. 82. because such is the infinite simplicity of this essence that it cannot be divided or parcelled Thus Christ not to speak any thing concerning the other persons is stiled so the Son of God as one equal with the Father for upon this it is that the Jews ground their charge of blasphemy against him that he said God was his Father making himself equal with God Joh. 5.18 The force of their reason lies in this the natural Son of God is truly God and equal with God as the natural son of man is man equal and of the same substance with his father Angels and men are the Sons of God by Adoption Lyford p. 93. but Christ is the natural Son of God the only Son of God and therefore truly God I and my Father are one Joh. 10.30 he thought it no robbery to be equal with God Phil. 2.6 For the further confirmation of this take these Arguments 1. He whom Scripture honours with all those Names which a●e peculiar unto God must needs be God That Christ hath these Names ascribed to him appeares from these instances He is not only stiled God the Word was God Joh. 1.1 but God with such additional discrimination● 〈◊〉 neither Magistrates who because they are Gods Depu●ies and Vicegerents here on earth Psal 82 6. are sometimes called Gods nor a●y creature is capable of The great God Tit. 2.13 The true God 1 Joh. 5.20 The mighty God Isa 9.6 Over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 The Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 The Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15.48 Yea that great Name Jehovah the Lord or Jehovah our
the burden of it You have not y●t resisted unto blood Heb. 12.4 saith the Apostle striving against sin as if he had said you are not yet come to the hottest of the battel it may be you have gone through some light skirmishes a few ill words or outward losses but when Christ was challenged by this Goliah and none durst take up the Gantlet he resisted unto blood and verily the evil of sin is not so much seen in that thousands are damn'd for it as that Christ dyed for it If you should see a black vapour arise out of the earth and ascend by degrees till it covered the face of the heavens and obscure the Sun in brightest Noon-day lustre you would doubtlesse conclude there must needs be a strange and preternatural malignity in that vapour What shall we then think of sin that brought down the Son of God from heaven darkned his glory took away his life laid him in the dust After whom is the King of Israel come out saith David to Saul after whom dost thou pursue after a dead dog after a flea As if he had said 1 Sam. 24.14 methinks the King of Israel should never trouble himself about such a sorry and inconsiderable thing as I am a dead dog cannot bite when alive indeed he is a fierce creature he may flie in a mans face and tear out his throat but death tames him A dead dog needs no chain and a flea cannot bite very much the mark it makes is but a flea-bite you that have slight thoughts of sin do as good as say that the God of Israel entred into the lists and armed himself for the Battel against a dead dog nay that he lost the Field and was worsted by a flea the evil of sin is not so much seen that it is a knife that cuts our fingers as that its a knife redded over with the blood of our dear Redeemer 3. Hence note the exact and impartial justice of God and his most righteous severity against sin that rather than that shall passe unpunished his only begotten and everlastingly beloved Son shall shed his blood and become lyable and obnoxious to a curse In the blood of Christ as a mirrour is represented the most condescending mercy and inflexible severity that ever the world saw Son saith God if thou wilt undertake for sinners and undergo that penalty that is due to sin thy blood must go for it and nothing can be abated he prays the Cup may passe if possible but justice was inexorable he was upon such terms that it was not possible God hath set forth Christ to be a propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3.25 to declare his righteousnesse that he may be just One would have thought he would have said to declare his love and mercy that he may shew himself gracious nay but though there be a truth in that the Apostle pitches upon another Attribute To declare his righteousnesse that he may be just If there were any respect of persons with God or if exact justice could have warp't and been drawn away with any accessory and circumstantial considerations doubtlesse Christ should have gone free and an indemnity from suffering should have been the Sons priviledge 4. This is sad and dreadful news to all impenitent and unbelieving sinners What will be their doom that have no share in this blood of Christ and not only so but trample it under foot as an unholy thing Let them look to it it will one day rise up against them as a witnesse for their certain damnation for such there 's a much sorer punishment Heb. 10.29 woe to those that have not the blood of Christ to plead for them but ten thousand woes to them that have the blood of Christ pleading against them And where it cries not for pardon it cries out for vengeance with a witnesse They are the enemies of the Crosse of Christ saith the Apostle whose end is destruction Phil. 3.18 19. And what better end could it rationally be hoped they should come to that have an enmity against the Crosse of Christ If that which is light in th e be darkness Matth. 6.23 how great is that darknesse If the healing saving blood of Christ be destruction how dreadful is that destruction the death of Christ is to a wicked man one of the saddest stories and most dreadful tragedies that he can read or hear of because having no interest in it he understands what must certainly be acted upon himself and if God would not hearken to the prayers of his Son how is it likely he should be moved with the cry of Rebels and Enemies When God sent the Prophet Jeremiah upon his Errand to the Nations with the Cup of his fury that they should drink and be drunken and spue and fall and rise no more upon case of their refusal to drink tell them saith he that loe I begin to bring evil on the City which is called by my Name Jer. 25.29 and sh uld ye be utterly unpunished ye shall not be unpunished As if God had said Carry a Cup and if they refuse tell them Jerusalem hath been before them and I am resolved it shall go round My own people shall not drink unpledged and they shall not be unpunished God hath prepared a Cup for all Christ-rejecting sinners warmed with fire and spiced with brimstone and if they wince and make a sowre face let them know Christ hath had it Gods only begotten and beloved Son hath drunk deep on 't and how or with what face can they expect to escape What! will God say to such a one Behold he whose judgment was not to drink of the Cup Jer. 49.12 hath assuredly drunken and art thou he that shalt altogether go unpunished thou shalt not go unpunished but thou shalt surely drink of it Use 2 2. For Exhortation and that in six particulars 1. Hath Christ shed his blood for sin let us then shed the blood of sin let sin never live one quiet quarter of an houre in our souls that would not let Christ live in the world Christ dyed unto sin for Satisfaction let us dye unto sin by Mortification He died unto sinne once likewise reckon ye also your selves to be dead indeed unto sin Rom. 6.10 11. Every Saint should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Apostles phrase is Rom. 6.5 planted together in the likenesse of his death And he further explaines his meaning Ver. 6. Knowing this that our old man is crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that henceforth we should not serve sin And verily unlesse by the death of sin in you you can have no comfortable evidence that the death of Christ was for you Christ was crucified and they that are Christs Gal. 6.24 Gal. 5.2 have crucified the flesh with its affections and lusts If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing saith the Apostle I
the form of a Servant He was despised in his Person Ministry and Miracles in the dayes of his flesh that is whilst he lived here upon earth He was poor in estate followed by the poor he had not where to lay his head Mat. 11.5 Mat. 8.20 he was reproached and counted a Sabbath-breaker a wine-bibb r an enemy to Caesar a Blasphemer he was counted every thing but what he was Answerable to this great Exinanition of Christ is his ascension into Heaven and sitting at the right hand of God Man did not so despise and disparage but God hath honoured him to sit on the right hand of God note the great honour that Jesus Christ is invested withal as he was man Psal 8.5 so he was lower than the Angels But in that he hath said unto him Sit thou on my right hand he hath e xalted him above the Angels for to none of the Angels hath he said at any time Psal 110.1 Thou art my Sonne Sit thou on my right hand To sit at Gods right hand is to be next in dignity and honour unto Almighty God and this is that which the Apostle speaks of showing how God raised Jesus Christ from the dead and set him at his own right hand in the Heavenly places Heb. 1.13 Eph. 1.20 21 22. far above all principality and power and might and dominion and every name that is named not only in this world but also in that which is to come and hath put all things under his feet and gave him to be the Head over all things to the Church Thus all the dishonour and reproach that was cast upon Christ in his life and the ignominy of his shameful painful and cursed death of the Cross is now taken away by Christ his ascending up into heaven sitting at Gods right hand Heb. 1.6 and all the Angels of God worshipping him And thus our Lord Jesus was exalted from a death of shame to a life of glory and that not to a temporary but an eternal life Christ was raised up not as Lazarus to die againe but Christ died but once but lives for ever at the right hand of God to make Intercession So speaketh Christ of himself Rom. 6.10 Heb. 7.25 Rev. 1.18 I am he that liveth and was dead and behold I am alive for evermore Thus he that descended in his burial into the lowest parts of the earth is the same also that ascended up far above the Heavens Eph. 4.9 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 3. His coming to judge the world answers his being judged in the world and by the world Mat. 25.31 32 Veniet judicaturus qui venit judicandus As Christs Exaltation began at his Resurrection so it shall be compleated when he shall come in his glory and all the holy Angels with him then shall he sit upon the Throne of his glory and before him shall be gathered all Nations He that came at first to be judged shall come the second time to judge the world We have in the Scriptures several descriptions of Christs glorious coming to judge the world but when he shall come indeed he will make known his power and glory to all the world Joh. 5.22 27. 1 Cor. 1.8 2 Cor. 5.10 2 Tim. 4.1 1 Cor. 11.26 2 Thes 1.8 Acts 10.42 God hath given the judgement of all things and persons into the hands of his Son Jesus Christ the day of judgement is therefore called the Day of Christ and the Judgement-seat is the Tribunal of Christ the appearing the coming the revealing of Jesus Christ the judge of quick and dead The Apostle gives you the first and last part of Christs Exaltation in one Text and make the first part of it as an assurance of the last God saith he hath appointed a day in the which he will judge the world in righteousnesse Acts 17.31 by that man whom he hath ordained wher●of he hath given assuranc● unto all m●n in that he hath raised him from the dead John 5.22 23. Whence we may believe that as certainly as Christ did rise so certainly shall he come to judge the world God hath given us assurance of the one by the other And this committing all judgement to the Lord Jesus Christ is that he might be glorified the Father hath committed all judgement to the Son that all men should honour the Son as they honour the Father Sedebit Judex qui st●tit sub judice damnabit vere reos qui falso factus est reus Aug. Then shall our Saviour appear in his glory and judge those wicked ones that judged him We read how the Jews by the help of Judas and the Souldiers took him and bound him and led him to the High Priest and afterwards to Pilate and how basely he was betrayed falsely accused unjustly condemn'd and cruelly murthered But there will be a day when Judas and the wicked Jews when Herod Demonstrabit in judicio potentiam qui ostendit in cruce patientiam Acts 17.31 Isa 53.10 and Pontius Pilate and the Souldiers and all his enemies shall be drag'd into his presence and then the Lord Jesus who before shewed his patience will shew his power and he who was so unjustly condemned shall judge the world in righteo●sness and he that was numbred amongst Transgressours shall at that great day judge and punish all transgressours And thus as Christ humbled himself in his Incarnation in his Life Death and Burial so God the Father hath exalted him in his Resurrection Ascension Session at the right hand of God and in constituting him Judge of quick and dead Jesus Christ by his Resurrection overcame all his enemies Heb. 2.14 Col. 2.15 death and him that had the power of death the Devil By his Ascension and sitting on the right hand of God he hath Triumphed openly over them and by his being appointed Judge of all he will avenge himself of all his enemies when all must appeare before that High Court of Justice from which there is no appeal So that the Lord Jesus Christ by his Resurrection Quanto humilius sese dejecit tanto sublimius exaltatus est Brent in loc is exalted above the grave by his Ascension above the earth by his sitting at Gods right hand he is advanced above the heavens and by being the Judge of all he is Exalted above Angels Principalities and Powers and as he was abased more than others he is Exalted above all others Thus in part the glorious Exaltation of Christ hath been set forth in the several degrees thereof For the further Demonstration of the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation let us consider the particulars thereof as they are contained in this Scripture and they are these three 1. God hath given him a name above every name 2. That every knee of things in Heaven and things on the earth and things under the earth shall bow to the Name of Jesus 3. That every tongue must confess
is exalted to sit at the Right hand of God which is a Name or honour which never the Angels nor Arch-Angels had This I prove from that passage of the Apostle in his Epistle to the Hebrews where it is said concerning Christ Who having purged our sinnes is sate down on the Right hand of the Majesty on high Heb. 1.3 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 being made so much better than the Angels as he hath by Inheritance obtained a more excellent Name than they for to which of the Angels said he at any time Sit on my right hand till I make thine enemies thy Foo●-stoole Heb. 1.13 Thirdly He hath a Name above every Name because it is through this Name that the Name of God becomes a comfort unto us The Attributes of God are the Name of God Now without an Interest in Christ we shall have no comfort in any Attribute of God To a Christless sinner all the Attributes of God are against him as for instance 1. God is wise that 's the worse for a wicked man for he knows all that wickedness thine own heart is privy to and much more evil by thee Jer. 17.10 1 Joh. 3.20 than thine own heart knoweth 2. God is holy and therefore he must needs hate those that are Filthy Being of purer eyes than to behold iniquity 3. God is just and if the righteousness of Christ do not Skreen thee the wrath and vengeance of God must needs break out upon thee for thy guilt Hab. 1.13 4. God is Almighty and how shall the Potters Vessel endure the least touch of his hand how shall the chaffe stand before the Whirl-wind of his wrath how shall the stubble dwell with everlasting burnings and such are all Sinners out of Christ All the thoughts of God must needs be terrible to all those souls that are out of Christ But the Name of Christ is that which makes the Name of God a Sanctuary and strong Tower the face of God shines upon us in the face o● Jesus Christ Prov. 18.10 As Moses when he was hid in the Rock could with delight hear the Name of God proclaimed so how sweet 2 Cor. 5.6 ● Exod. 33.21 22. 1 Cor. 10.4 and lovely and comfortable are all the Attributes of God to all those that are in the Rock the Rock Christ Jesus 1. God is a wise God the more is my comfort Psal 73.24 Mat. 6.32 may a Believer say for he knows how to guide me he knows what I want and how to supply it 2. God is a holy God and that 's a comfortable Attribute for in Christ he is our sanctification 1 Cor. 1.30 3. God is a merc●ful and gracious God so he is in himself but in Christ Jesus he is most merciful gracious and full of compassion to pity and pardon his children Even as a Father pitieth his Children Psal 103.13 so the Lord pitieth them that fear him 4. He is an Almighty God mighty in power and thus his Name Prov. 18.10 Rom. 8.31 through the Lord Jesus is a strong Tower the righteous fly unto it and finde succour and through Christ a believer can say If the Lord be for us it matters not who are against us 5. Lastly Even the Justice of God through the Lord Jesus Christ becomes an Attribute of comfortable Consideration for because God is just therefore he will not condemn those for whom Christ hath satisfied Rom. 8.1 Mal. 3.17 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus God will not condemn those that are in Christ but for his sake will spare them as one spar●th his Son that serves him And thus the Name of Christ is a Name above every Name because through his Name it is that the Name and Attributes of God become comfortable unto us Fourthly And Lastly The Name of Christ is a Name above every Name because his Name should be most precious and powerful in his Church throughout all Generations thus all the Assemblies of the Church should be in the Name of Christ Matth. 18.20 John 14.13 1 Cor. 5.4 they must meet in his Name all Prayers are to be made in the Name of Christ All Church-Censures are to be in his Name Mat. 28.19 Ministers must Preach and Administer the Sacraments in the Name of the Lord Jesus and thus he hath a Name above every Name 3. The third thing propounded is How are we to understand the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God hath given him a Name c. I answer This must be understood of Christ as Mediatour for so considered and so only he was capable of Exaltation 1. There are some that hold that Christ as God was exalted that now in Heaven the glory of the God-head which lay hid and was vailed in the Tab●rnacle of his flesh John 1.14 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is now exerted and so exalted But the manifestation of the Deity is no exaltation of the Deity When the Sun shines out of a dark night the ayre is illustrated but the light of the Sunne is not encreased The Lord Jesus was exalted in that Nature in which he was humbled and that is his Humane Nature 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Greg. Nyss As the Divine Nature could not suffer neither can it be exalted God being the highest cannot be exalted It was the Humane Nature of Christ that is thus exalted If we look upon the Divine Nature of Christ John 10.30 Phil. 2.6 Non nová indigeb at exaltatione à Patre qui aequalis erat Patri Calv. Non ea accepit Christus quae non prius habebat sed accepit ut homo quae habebat ut Deus Theod. In qua forma crucifixus e stin ipsa exaltatus est Aug. so he was one with the Father and equal to the Father and thus it must not be thought that Christ could be capable of Exaltation When God gave him a Name Theodoret excellently unfolds this great Mystery thus Christ saith he did not receive that which he had not before but he did receive that as man which from all eternity he had as God 2. But we answer that the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the Text hath Relation unto Christ as Mediatour God-man not as God so he could not be exalted at all nor as a meer man for so he could not be capable of so great Exaltation The Humane Nature of Christ being a Creature cannot be capable of Divine Worship or of sitting at the right hand of God But the Humane Nature of Christ by the personal inseparable union it hath to his Divine Nature is thus advanced Having finished the first particular of Christs Exaltation that God hath given him a Name above every Name I now proceed Secondly Another particular of Christs Exaltation is this That at the Name of Jesus every knee should bow In the handling of which I will endeavour to resolve these Questions Quest 1. What are we to
and Angels shall with one consent own acknowledge and praise Jesus Christ as the Lord and as their Lord. They shall acknowledge him to be the Lord their Maker and their Saviour and so they shall cry Hosanna to him and they shall acknowledge him to be their Lord and Soveraign and so they shall cast down their Crowns at his feet and with everlasting Hallelujahs sing Worthy is the Lamb that was slaine Rev. 5.12 13. to receive Wisdom Power and Riches and Strength and Honour and Glory and Blessing There is but one thing more to be opened in this Scripture and that is the end of Christs Exaltation which was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the Glory of God the Father 1. Some by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 do understand that Jesus Christ is exalted unto the same glory with the Father in Heaven being now sate down at his right hand and so they make these words to signifie not the end wny but the end whereunto Christ was exalted And thus the Arabick and the Vulgar Latine Omnis lingua confileatur quia Dominus Jesus Christus in gloriâ est Dei Patris Rev. 3.21 And though I believe that there is a truth in this viz. that Jesus Christ after he had overcome his enemies sate down in his Fathers Throne yet I cannot see how the Greek will bear this Interpretation 2. We shall therefore take these words Vnto the glory of God the Father as signifying the great end of Christs Humiliation and Exaltation to wit the glory of God As God had no motive without himself so he had no end beyond himself John 3.16 Deut. 7.7 in giving of Christ God gave Christ for us because he loved us and wherefore did he love us but because he loved us and the maine end of all was Eph. 1.6 that all might be to the praise of the glory of his grace Thus Christs Exaltation was for the honouring of God the Father Jesus Christ prayed Father glorifie thy Name then came there a voice from heaven saying I have both glo●ified it and will glorifie it againe As if God the Father had thus answered Christ Sonne I have glorified my Name in thy Humiliation John 12.28 and I will glorifie it again in thy Exaltation God the Father glorifies his Son that he might glorifie his own Name Luke 10.16 John 5.22 23. He that despise●h Christ despiseth God that sent him and he that honoureth the Son honoureth the Father Having spoken of the Exaltation of Christ as the Apostle handles the Doctrine of it in these Verses I shall conclude all with the improvement and Application thereof I. Use of Information If Christ was first humbled and then exalted Luke 24.26 Act. 14.22 we may learn from hence that as Christ first suffered and entered into his glory even so must we through many Tribulations enter into the Kingdom of Heaven As it was with the Head so may we expect it will be with the Members the Crown of Thornes before the Crown of life the Crosse of shame Joh. 19.2 Rev. 2.10 before the Throne of Glory Humiliation before Exaltation Christ got not the Crown sine sang●ine sudore he sweat drops of blood for it and we cannot expect an easier and shorter way to glory Our way to heaven is like that of the Israelites to Canaan Psal 66.12 which was through fire and water into a wealthy land 2 Tim. 2.11 12. This is a faithful saying If we suffer with Christ we shall reign with him first suffer and then reign we pass through Marah unto Elim through Bacah to Berechah through bitterness to blessedness II. Vse of Exhortation Is Jesus Christ thus exalted then let us our tongues our knees our hearts and our lives acknowledge him to be our Lord. Joh. 19. Joh. 19. Rev 4.10 Rev. 15.3 1. What the Jews and Pilate and Herod and the Souldiers did in scorne let us do in sinc●rity They put a Crown of Thornes on his head let us cast down our Crowns at his foot-stool They bowed the knee and cryed Ave Rex Judaeorum Hayle King of the Jewes Ubi thronus Christi ubi sceptium ubi Corona ubi Pu●pura ubi Ministri Crux fuit thronus sceptrum clavi purpura sanguis Corona spinae Ministri Carnifices Aug. Tanto charior es mihi quanto vilior factus es pro me Bern. let us bow the knees of our souls unto him and say Ave Rex Sanctorum Blessed be thou O King of Saints whereas the Cross was his Throne the nailes his Scepter his Robe was made Purple with his own blood his Crown was Thornes his attendants were the Executioners Say then O blessed Saviour thou art the more p ecious to my soul because thou wast so much vilified for my sake 2. Let us take heed that we do not violate our allegiance to him whom God hath exalted to be Lord and Christ Sinners Exod. 5.2 Psal 12.2 Luke 19.27 do not say Who is the Lord that we should obey his voice Do not say Who is Lord over us Do not O do not say We will not have Christ to reign over us 1. Consider Christ is a Saviour only to th●se that su●mit unto him He is the Authour of eternal life to them that obey him Heb. 5.9 It is a vaine thing to expect the Priviledges and Dignities that come by Christ and not to submit to the duties and services which are due unto Christ Tit. 2.11 12. The Gospel is a Message of Eternal life only to those to whom it is a rule of a spiritual life What will you cry to Christ to save you and in the meane time serve the Devil and your lusts But the true believer doth not only cast himself into the armes of Christ to be saved but also casts himself at Christs feet to serve him and is as willing to be ruled by him as to be Redeemed by him Many love Christ but it is for their own sakes who desire to finde but will not be at the paines to seek him Multi amant Christum sed non propter Christum amant benedictionem non jurisdictionem multi cupiunt Christum consequi qui nolunt sequi desiderant inv●nire quem nolunt quaerere M●retricius amor est plus amare annulum quam sponsum Aug. and so instead of serving the Lord Christ they do but serve themselves upon him 2. Consider O foolish sinner that every knee must one day bow to Christ O then what folly is it to rebell against him to whom thou must at last be forced to bow Would the Brethren of Joseph think you have so despised and despitefully used Joseph if ever they had thought that there would come a day that they must supplicate to him for their lives and liberties The proudest sinner will at the last day Mat. 7.21 cry Lord Lord c. Do not then lift up the heel against him to whom thou
must one day bow the knee 3. Consider That the sinnes of Christians are far greater than of the Jews against Christ They sinned against Christ in the state of his Humiliation but we sin against Christ who is now exalted on the right hand of God The Jews put Christ to death for saying Mat. 26.64 Hereafter you shall see the Son of Man sitting on the right hand of power and coming in the Clouds of Heaven and shall we we Christians put the Lord of glory to open shame who do believe that he is sate down at the right hand of the Majesty on High Acts 3.17 The Jews many of them both Rulers and people knew not that Jesus was the Christ they had a hand in his death but it was through ignorance for had they known it g Cor. 2.8 they would not have crucified the Lord of Glory but it must be horrible wickedness for us to rebell against Christ who do believe his Exaltation Sub pedibus ejus eris aut adoptatus aut victus Aug. 4. And Lastly Consider That Christ at last will be too hard for the most hard-hearted sinner If you will not bow you will be broken O obstinate sinner if thou wilt not kiss the Son thou wilt lick the dust under his feet if thou wilt not bow as a Child thou wilt be made to bow as a Slave if thou wilt not bow to his golden Scepter Mat. 11.29 Psa 110.1 thou wilt be broken with his Iron Rod In a word if thou wilt not bear his Yoke thou shalt become his Foot-stool III. Vse of Comfort to Bel●evers great is the Consolation which doth arise from the doctrine of Christs Exaltation 1. Is Christ exalted to the right hand of God then we may comfortably believe that he hath perfectly satisfied Gods justice for us John 16.9 we may now rest upon Christs righteousness that he hath accomplished fully all his undertaking because he is gone to the Father Christ by his Death overcame his enemies by his Resurrection he scattered them by his Ascension he triumph't over them by his Death he paid the debt by his Resurrection he came out of Prison and by his Ascension he shews himself openly to God the Creditor and pleads satisfaction The Humiliation of Christ confirmed and ratified the New Testament his Exaltation gives him opportunity to execute his last Will and Testament for he is now exalted as a Conquerour Rev. 1.18 and hath the keys of death and hell delivered to him This comfort the Apostle urgeth upon the Doctrine of Christs Exaltation for if when we were enemies Rom. 5.10 we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life Our salvation began in the humiliation but it is compleated in the Exaltation of Christ Heb. 7.25 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He did not undertake what he was not able to finish for he saves his people to the uttermost 2. This is our comfort though Christ be highly exalted yet he is mindful of us He is not only a faithful High Priest in things pertaining to God to make reconciliation for the sins of the people but he is a merciful high Priest Heb. 2.17 18. to remember the sufferings of his people and to succour those that are tempt●d The Lord Jesus though he be safely landed upon the shore of eternal glory yet he hath an eye to and a care of his poor Church Heb. 4.15 Heb. 5.2 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is tossed with tempest and afflicted He is not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 one that can be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he doth pro magnitudine miseriae condolere he bears a share with us in our afflictions and temptations The manner of men is that great preferments makes them forget their former poor acquaintance Honores mutan● mores but it is otherwise with Chr●st He is exalted above the Heavens and yet he is not unmindful of his Church on earth The dayes of his Passion are ended but not of his compassion as Joseph though he was the Favourite of Egypt yet was not ashamed to own his Brethren who were poor Shepherds Heb. 2 11. Heb. 6.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Joh. 20.17 Exod. 28.9 10. no more is Jesus Christ ashamed to call us Brethren Christ is gone into heaven as our F●re-runner and there he is an Adv●cate for us with the Fa her Just when Christ was going into heaven he sends this comfortable message to his Disciples I ascend to your God and my God to your Fa her and my Fa her Our great High Priest hath all the names and necessities of his people written upon his Breast-plate Believers are engraven upon the palmes of his hands Isa 49.16 Cant. 8.6 yea they are set as a Seal upon his heart Videmus caput nostrum super aquas Greg. 3. And last Consolation is this Christ is exalted to heaven and so shall all believers in due time the Head hath taken possession of heaven for all his Members In all the several parts of the Humiliation and Exaltation of Christ he acted not as a single person but as the Second Adam representatively as a publick person so that all those who are in Christ Jesus have an interest in that Redemption he hath purchased for Believers Gal. 2.20 Rom. 6.8 Christ was crucified and a believer is crucified with Christ Christ dyed and a believer is dead with Christ Col. 3.1 Christ rose from the dead and believers are risen with Christ Christ is ascended up to heaven and believers sit together with Christ in heauenly places Eph. 2.6 1 Cor. 6.2 Christ wil come to judge the world and the Saints as Assessors to Christ shall judge the world Rev. 3.31 Christ is sate down in his Fathers Throne and believers shall sit with Christ in his Throne In a word our Lord Jesus Christ who is now possest of the glory of heaven John 14.3 Joh 16.24 will come again to fetch us to heaven that we may be where he is that we may not only see his glory but partake of it for when he shall appear we shall appear with him in glory Col. 3.4 THE SATISFACTION OF CHRIST DISCUSSED COL 1.20 And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himself by him I say whether they be things in earth or things in heaven THE Apostle having congratulated the Colossians their faith and love and other graces and poured forth a prayer for them in the 14. verse he enters upon a Declaration of the Gospel-mystery the Person and Offices and work of Christ His person ver 15 16 17. he is God c. his Office ver 18. he is the Head of the body the Church c. His work in the 20.
verse Having in the 19. verse asserted Christs fitness for that work it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell c. Besides that infinite fulness which he had as God by natural and necessary generation there was another unmeasured fulness depending upon Gods 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and good pleasure and thereby imparted unto Christ Now he comes to shew his work described First By its nature To reconcile to himself to make peace Secondly By its instrument that is the blood of the Cross by him Thirdly The object of it which are All things whether they be things in earth or things in heaven By which learned Davenant understands the Angels spoken of as the things in heaven and so many others supposing that the Elect Angels wer● confirmed in their estate by Christ But with submission to better judgements I conceive 1. that there is not sufficient evidence in Scripture to shew that the holy Angels had their confirmation from Christ nor doth it seem to be necessary forasmuch as it is commonly acknowledged that Adam who was under the same Covenant with the Angels if he had continued in the observation of Gods precepts for so long time as God judged meet he should have been confirmed by vertue of the Covenant of Works some other way And therefore it was rather to be thought that the Angels have their confirmatiom from Christ as God and Head over all things than as Mediatour The actions of Christ as Mediatour supposing a breach according to that place Gal. 3.20 A M●diatour is not a Mediatour of one i. e. of two parties which are one politically i. e. which are agreed in one but of parties at variance 2. Howsoever if the Angels had been confirmed by Christ yet surely they were not reconciled by Christ for Reconciliation implies a former enmity as these things in heaven are said to be And therefore I rather understand it of departed Saints Patriarchs Prophets c. who as they went to Heaven not to any Limbus so this expression is used to insinuate that they were saved by the grace of Jesus Christ even as we as it is Acts 15.11 and that the blood of Jesus Christ did expiate not only those sins which were committed after his death but those also which were long since past Rom. 3.25 as Sol nondum conspictus illuminat orbem The light and influence of the Sun is dispersed among us before the body of the Sun doth appear above our Horizon So then here you have mans Reconciliation Justification and Salvation described together with the procuring cause of it set forth 1. More generally By him 2. More specially By the blood of his Cross by the shedding of his blood for us by his death and passion compleated on the Cross The doctrine I intend to handle is this That the death of Jesus Christ is the procuring cause of mans justification and salvation Amongst all those heresies which God hath suffered to spring among us that they that are approved may be manifest none are more dangerous than those which concern the person and office of Christ of those many streams of errour which run into the dead Sea of Socinianism these are two They deny the Godhead and the satisfaction of Christ and so indeed subvert the whole Fabrick of the Gospel This latter I shall here endeavour to discuss and shall proceed in this Method 1. I shall explain it 2. Assert 3. Defend 4. Apply it 1. For the Explication of this great Gospel-mystery which truly if it fall we are without hope and so of all creatures most miserable I shall lay down these steps First God made the world and man in it for his own service and glory And this end he cannot be disappointed in but must have it one way or other Secondly Man by sin thwharted Gods end and cast dirt upon his glory and so doth every sinner Every sin is a reflection upon Gods Name a blot in Gods Government of the world so that some make it a pretence for their Atheism saying That if there were a God he would not suffer sin to be in the world Thirdly God is inclined by his Nature and obliged by his interest to hate sin and punish the sinner and so to recover his glory 1. I say God is inclined by his nature to hate and punish sin I do not positively conclude that he is absolutely obliged I shall not here meddle with that nice question Whether God was so far obliged to punish it by his nature that he could not pardon sin without satisfaction but this is manifest look upon man as a sinner and so Gods Nature must needs be opposite unto him The Scripture describes God in such manner not only in regard of his Will but also in respect of his Nature Hab. 1.13 Thou art of purer eyes than to behold evil and canst not look on iniquity c. Exod. 34.6 where the nature of the Divine Majesty is represented among other parts of the description this is one He will by no meanes clear the guilty Psalme 11.5 The wicked his soul hateth and the reason is added from Gods Nature ver 7. For the righteous Lord loveth righteousnesse his countenance doth behold the upright And it may further appear that here punishment of sin is not an act of Gods Will but of his Nature Because the Actions of Gods Will are only known by Revelation not by reason or the light of Nature but that God should and would punish sin this was known by natures light to such as were unacquainted with Revelation-light Hence came the Conclusion Acts 28.4 This man is a Murderer whom though he hath escaped the Sea yet Vengeance suffereth him not to live Vengeance 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a supposed Goddesse but indeed nothing else but Divine Justice 2. God is obliged by his interest to punish him as he is the Ruler of the world By sin there comes a double mischief 1. God is wronged 2. The world is wronged by a bad example and hardned in sin so that if God might pardon sin as it is a wrong to himself yet he is in a manner obliged to punish it to right the wronged world and to make such sinners patterns of severity that the world may not make them examples of ungodlinesse even as King James might pardon the Powder-Traytors so far forth as his Person was concerned but if you look on it as a wrong to the whole Nation to the Protestant Religion so he was obliged to punish them to make them warnings to others in the like cases so that you see mans punishment was necessary for Gods glory and the Worlds good Fourthly The punishment to be inflicted must be sutable to sins Nature and Gods Majesty and therefore an infinite punishment for this is justice to observe an exact proportion between sin and punishment Fifthly The only way whereby this punishment might be suffered and yet man saved was by the incarnation and
we are as really united unto Christ as the members of the body are to the head Hence are we said to be h Ephes 5.30 members of his body of his flesh and his bones As the head communicates real influences to the body so doth Christ to Believers communicates to us his Sp●rit graces fulnesse spiritual light life strength comfort Joh. 1.16 4. A close near dear intimate union Like that of the food with the body which it nourisheth Hence Believers are said to eat Christs flesh and to drink his blood John 6.54 Such an intimate union as that one possessive particle is not sufficient to expresse it not said my Vineyard is before me but my Vineyard which is mine is before me Cant. 8.12 5. An inseparable perpetual indissoluble union A marriage knot which neither men sins sorrows death nor Divels are able to dissolve Who or what can separate us from the love of God The Apostle clearly resolves his own question i Rom 8 38 39 I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. Believers are held in Christs hand he that would break this union must first be too hard of fist for Christ yea and for his Father too No man shall pluck them out of my hand my Father is greater than all and no man can pluck them out of my Fathers hand Joh. 10.28 29. And thus we have dispatch't the second Question 3. What are the efficient causes of this union Sol. 1. The efficient causes of this union are either principal or less principal 1. Principal and so this great work of union being opus ad extra 't is indivisum and so ascribed 1. In common to the whole k 1 Pet. 5.10 John 6.44 45. Ephes 2 6 7. Godhead Hence we are said to be call'd by God the Father into the fell●wship of his dear Son 1 Cor. 1.9 So likewise this union is ascribed to the Sonne The dead shall hear the voice of the Sonne of God and live Joh. 5.25 Joh. 10.16 2. But more especially the Spirit of God in a more peculiar sense is said to be the principal Author of this union He it is that knits this marriage knot betwixt Christ Jesus and true Believers Look as l Acts 4.24 Creation in some respect is appropriated to the Father m 1 Pet. 1.18 Redemption to the Son so the Application of that Redemption to the Holy Ghost 'T is by one Spirit that we are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 'T is by the Holy Spirit the Comforter That we are convinced of sin righteousnesse and judgment Joh. 16.7 8 9. 'T is by the Holy Ghost that we are renewed Tit. 3.5 2. Lesse principal or the means or instruments of union These are twofold outward inward 1. Outward Generally all the Ordinances of God by the Ordinances it is that we come to have n Job 22.21 acquaintance that is union and communion with Jesus Christ 'T is by these golden pipes that golden oyle is conveyed to us from that golden Olive Zech. 4.12 More especially 1. The Word read preach't meditated on believed improved 'T is by hearing and learning of the Father that we come to Christ Joh. 6.44 45. The Holy Scriptures were written for this end that through them we might have fellowship with the Father and his Sonne 1 Joh. 1.3 The way to have Christs company is to keep Christs words Joh. 14.23 2. The Sacraments those spiritual Seals and Labels which God hath fix't to his Covenant of Grace 1. Bapti me By one Spirit we are baptiz'd into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence we are said to be buried with Christ by Baptisme into death Rom. 6.3 4. Baptisme styled the Laver of regeneration Tit. 3.5 By Baptisme we put on Christ Gal. 3.7 2. The Lords Supper this is a great means of strengthning and evidencing our union and advancing our communion with Christ Jesus We are all made to drink into one Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence that 1 Cor. 10.16 The bread which we break is it not the communion of means arg●ments evidences of our communion with the body of Christ The wine which we drink is it not the communion of the blood of Christ Thus much for the external means of union 2. Inward internal intrinsecal means of union on mans part i. e. faith Not a bare historical miraculous temporal dead faith No but a living working justifying saving faith Christ comes to dwell in our hearts by faith Ephes 3.17 'T is by faith alone that we receive Christ Joh. 1.12 That we come unto him and feed upon him Joh. 6.56 'T is by faith that a Believer lives in and to Christ and Christ lives in and for a Believer Gal. 2.20 Thus much for the Explication of the termes of our Proposition for the fixing of it on a right Basis I now proceed to the second part of my discourse viz. Now That there is such a spiritual mystical real close inseparable union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers 2. Confirm appears three ways 1. From those many synonymical terms and equivalent expressions whereby the Scriptures hold forth this union Christ is said to be in Believers Col. 1.27 Rom. 8.10 To dwell in them Ephes 3.17 To walk in them 2 Cor. 6.16 So are Believers said to abide in Christ as he abides in them 1 Joh. 4.16 Joh. 15.17 To dwell in Christ as Christ in them Joh. 6.56 To put on Christ to be cloathed with him Gal. 3.27 Each of these expressions clearly import that near and intimate union that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers The King of Saints hath two Mansion houses one in heaven the Throne of his glory another on earth a Tabernacle of flesh the heart of a Believer which is the seat of his delight Prov. 8.31 his lesser Heaven Isa 57.15 66.1 2. 2. From those several similitudes by which the Scriptures shadow out this union Believers are said to be lively stones 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. Christ the living foundation the chief corner-stone on which they are built Ephes 2.20 21. Believers are styled living branches Christ the true Vine into whom they are engraffed and in whom they bring forth fruit Joh. 15.1.5 Christ the faithful loving discreet Bridegroom Believers his Loyal Affectionate obedient Spouse Ephes 5.31 32. Cant. 2.16 5.1 Believers are intitled Christs body Ephes 1.23 Bone of his bone flesh of his flesh Ephes 5.30 Christ the Believers head Ephes 1.22 In a word the head and mystical body are call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 In all these Resemblances he that runs may read the union betwixt Christ and Believers pourtrayed out to the life unto us 3. From that communion which there is betwixt Christ and true Believers Omnis communio fundatur in unione Communion where ever it is of necessity argues union as the effect necessarily implies the cause Believers they communicate with Christ in his fulness Joh. 1.16 In his o 2 Cor 5.21 Solus
perfect beauty without the least spot That fairest of ten thousand Can● 5.10 That altogether lovely one Ver. 16. This Christ is theirs Christ that indeficient never-failing good is theirs Heb. 13.5 True indeed creature comforts and earthly interests like Absoloms Mule are apt mostly then to faile us when we most need them Yea but Jesus Christ is such a Sun of righteousnesse that he knows no setting no declining Mal. 4.2 He is a Fountain of life ever running In a word Christ that full filling sufficient all-sufficient person Gen. 17.1 in whom d Quae faciunt divisa beatum in hoc mixta fluunt concenter all the scattered excellencies of the whole Creation in whom is compleatly treasured up whatsoever an angry God can require for his satisfaction or an empty creature desire for its perfection This is the person in whom Saints by union have a real interest 2. In Christs properties My horses are as thy horses my Chariots as thy Chariots said Jehoshaphat to Ahab all his Councels and Forces devoted to his service Son all that I have is thine Luk. 15.31 Believers has Christ an Arme of power 't is for your protection has he an Eye of knowledge depth of wisdome 't is for your direction A Stock a Treasury of perfect righteousnesse 't is for your justification A Spirit of holinesse 't is for your sanctification Has he rowling yearning bowels of mercy 't is that he may shew you compassion A Lapp of All-sufficiency for your provision Arms of Grace an heaven of glory for your reception Psal 73.24 3. In Christs promises In all those great rich precious gracious promises 2 Pet. 1.4 wherein all they wan● and infinitely more than they can desire or imagine is made over to them 2 Cor. 1.20 Christs promises are the Believers Magna Charta to the confirmation whereof God has been pleased to adde bo●h his Oath and Blood Hebr. 6.17 18. for Seals 4. In all Christs Providences let them seem never so black and gloomy The hottest Furnace they are thrown into does but loose their bonds and the scorching flames become a warme Sun Dan. 3.25 This is the fruit of Gods sharpest rods * Isa 27.9 the taking away of their sin The Lyon affords them meat the Anakim himself proves their bread All things work together for their good Rom. 8.28 Every wind though it blow never so crosse speeds them to their Port. Not a stone thrown at them but it is to them a pr●cious stone Not a Thorn in their Crown but i● turns into a Diamond Not a twig in their Rod but is sweetned and sanctified The saddest Providences like the Snow falling on them and descending to the hem of their garments there freeze into a gem to deck them 5. In all i. e. True Bel●evers have such an universal interest in all that Christ is hath could speak suffer or can do that the Apostle going about to take an Inventory of their large Revenue and as it were despairing to give in an exact acc●unt of the particulars is faine to couch them in one sum total All are yours 1 Cor. 3.22 23. Wherein are observable 1. The Believers portion the fullest imaginable All are yours Then the term for life and death too in possession and reversion Things present and things to come Lastly the tenure the surest the high st that can be they hold in ●apite for their better assurance their demesns are entail'd on the Crown All yours because you are Christs and Christ is Gods Thus you see what comfort flows from this Doctrine of Union with Relation unto Christ. There 's yet another Dug which swels with Consolation and that is to be drawn 2. With respect to Believers themselves in a threefold regard viz. of their persons graces duties 1. Their persons Believers being united unto Christ they are they cannot but be his Fathers Jedidiahs Beulahs Hephziba's dearly accepted in the Beloved Ephes 1.6 They are also his own delight Prov. 8.31 He rejoyceth over them as a Bridegroom over his Bride They are to him as the Seal on his Arme as a e Cant. 8.6 Signet on his right hand He carries their names on his breast continually Exod. 12.29 And as for the Spirit of God that like Noahs Dove finds no where to rest the sole of his foot but the soul of a sincere Believer of whom it says here is my rest here will I dwell for ever for I have a delight herein 2. Their graces True Believers graces are in themselves very defective and imperfect The eye of their faith like that of Leah a blear-eye The hand of their confidence like that of Jeroboam much withered and blasted The fire of their love like that of green wood apt soon to expire The anchor of their hope very much crackt shoulders of patience sorely bruised feet of obe●ience like Mephibosheth lame yet because united unto Christ all accepted all hold scale and weight in heaven though not as to merit yet as to acceptance 1 Pet. 2.5 There is much alloy in the metal however I see my Sons stamp and Picture on the coyne and therefore saith God it shall passe for currant in heaven 3. Their duti s. Oh the defects of Saints duties How often do they pray as if afraid to be heard hear as if afraid to learn learn as if afraid to do do as if afraid to please and yet being united unto Christ how acceptable are their persons and performances Their weak prayers sound like melody Their broken sighs smell like Incense Their very stammerings seem Rhetorical Cant. 2.14 Not a good word falls from their lips but 't is recorded Mal. 3.16 Not a tear drops from their eye but 't is taken up and bottel'd Psal 56.8 Mites received as if they were Talents Cups of Cold water Ram-skins Goats-hair any thing desires instead of performances the will for the deed grief for want of will for the will it self 2 Cor. 8.12 and all because from such as are united unto Christ in whom the Lord is so well-pleased Matth. 3.17 that he looks on the very smoke of his Saints performance mixt with Christs merits as a sweet perfume Having done with the Consolation arising from this truth we proceed to the last Use which is of 4. Exhortation In it I shall addresse my self 1. To sinners then to Saints 1. To sinners that are as yet * Ephes 2.12 without Christ God Hope in this world Oh be you yet perswaded to give your eyes no sleep your eye-lids no slumber till you are really and closely united to Christ Jesus Methinks poor forlorne creature thou shouldest not need a Spur if thou dost consider 1. The dreadful dismal danger of thy present estate A soul not united unto Christ lies open to all danger imaginable 't is in the very Suburbs of destruction It walks in the valley of the very shadow of wrath death damnation True it may be thou perceivest it not but that speaks thy s●curity not
conscience are constrained to repent of their miscarriage like Shimei his repentance for cursing David occasioned only by the change of Davids condition 2 Sam. 19.20 1 King 2.39 40. and crosse of his own expectation which yet at length leads him to sin against his soul and break his bounds unto his own ruine and like Judas in a dogged humour deploring his sin unto self-destruction many men turn out of sin because it turns Wife and children out of doors deprives them of expected preferment disposeth them into distresse and anguish of soul or body or both these men have no natural enmity to sinne but are like a Bowle turned out of its Biasse by some more than ordinary rub to their desires Give me leave to adde one more and that is the Quakers Repentance 7. False Repentance not fit to be mentioned nor worthy the least refutation it is so notoriously prophane and ridiculous were it not too much successeful in these sad times in which God hath given us up to a spirit of delusion so as that the most palpable of errours finde entertainment this is the Repentance whereby men following the pretended light within them are suddenly converted from extreame loosenesse to extreame strictnesse of behaviour it is to be wondred at to see what a sudden leap the lewdest men make by this rude spirit from the most horrid lewdnesse to the most strange solitary and self-affected way of behaviour these men we must not deny to be changed unlesse we will deny our senses nor own to be Gospel-penitents unlesse we deny our Religion and very reason for themselves professe it to be from no other principle than the light within th●m which they say also is common to all men and so is at the best but natural though in them plainly visible to be diaboli al whilst it carrieth not so far as the light of nature but is contrary to the dictates thereof in natural and civil society darkening nay declaiming against those very notes of distinction which God and nature hath in all Nations made between man and man being violent sudden and precipitate by some absession or enthusiastique impulse as from the Devil not by any moral swasion or intellectual conviction which is proper to a reasonable soule and therefore acts wilfully with rage and rabid expressions not able and so refusing to render a reason of their actions or perswasions but with obduracy persisting in their own self-affected profession without the least possibility of conviction or capacity of discourse reducing them into a direct Bedlam temper fit for nothing but Bedlam Discipline so that in the very forme thereof men of reason and the least measure of Religion must needs conclude their conversion Devilish not Divine yet in the effect of it their repentance must needs appear not to be true Gospel and saving repentance as being dissonant to the nature in the very formality thereof for however it turns them from sin yet not with due contrition and confession or on due conviction not from sin as sin they retain pride railing disrespect to men are void of natural affection despise dominion speak evil of dignities whilst they damne drunkennesse swearing and other the like abominations but it never turnes them unto God nay it keeps them at an equal nay a greater distance from God than from the Devil from heaven than hell whilst they deny civility and the common reverence children owe to Parents Servants to Masters and all Inferiours to Superiours decline God disown and declaime against holinesse praying hearing Sabbath and Sacraments are to them as the vices they do detest Gospel-Ministers and Ministrations are to them an abomination whilst they refuse to sweare they refuse to pray drunkennesse and devotion are equal in their account if with Jehu they drive furiously against Baal and Ahab yet they mind not to walk with God but follow the way of Jeroboam both for Rebellion towards men and confusion in the Church so that they appeare farre from Gospel-penitents I have done with the first general part considerable viz. the nature of repentance and shall now proceed to the second and that is The NECESSITY of Repentance Repentance in the very nature of it which hath been explained doth appeare useful and necessary It is not a thing base and vile to be despised neglected and contemned but admirably excellent and to be prized and pursued by every soul that is studious of true excellency for however proud men prophanely deem and damne it as a puling property and pusillanimous temper of spirit below a man on every ordinary action to sit drooping and pensive and not dare to do as nature dictates and good company requires yet the children of wisdome well pondering what hath already been spoken of it cannot but see it sparkle with such splendid notes as engage them to esteem it and employ themselves in it night and day making it their work and businesse saying as Tertullian Nulli rei natus nisi poenitentiae I am born for nothing but to repentance For from what hath already been spoken it is apparantly excellent in its First Nature being a remorse for guilt and return from sin which who even among the Heathen did not esteem remorse for guilt is the rejoycing of heaven returns are the delights of God in Luke 15.7 10. rhe teares of sinners is the wine of Angels saith Bernard Secondly Authour and Original a grace supernatural grows not in natures Garden cannot be acquired by the most accurate industry or endowments of nature it is from heaven by the immediate operation of the holy Spirit Christ himself is exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance Shall divine works celestial influences lose their esteem Thirdly Ground and principle ●t flowes from faith and is the result of hope it is not the lamentation of despaire but complaint of candor and confidence affording comfort streami g with pleasure from the soule the priviledge of the Gospel and Covenant of grace it flowes from the fountaine of Divine favour 4. Concomitants Confession and Supplication accesse to God with assurance of acceptance Confession is the souls physick saith Nazianzen and Supplication is the Childs portion And indeed what is there in the Nature of Repentance which rendreth it not desirable by every gracious heart or good nature so that to men that seek excellent endowments and are for high and honourable atchievements I must say Repent Repen● This is Alexanders honour this is the only ornament of nature the way to highest preferment is to be humbled under the hand of God But not only is it in it self excellent and to be esteemed by such as can and do obtain it but also necessary not of indifferency but of absolute and indispensable necessity men may not choose whether or no they will repent but must do it with all care and diligence with all speed and alacrity and amongst the many Demonstrations which might be urged I
the fish it is said that he may learn to pray there and preach after Go Temptation winnow me that man well that he may not be full of self-confidence that he being converted may strengthen his brethren Go death saith he smite such a womans husband that she may be destitute of worldly comforts then will she trust in me 1 Tim. 5.5 and fall to prayer and supplication Go ye Caldeans and Sabeans and work your will on my servant Job yea Go Satan and do thy worst make ye him poor I 'le make him honest and pious and more than a Conqueror and bring him forth as gold I will leave a poore people saith the Lord and they shall trust in me In a word the Lord saith Zeph. 3.12 the end of all chastisement is That we should be made partakers of his holinesse Hebr. 12.10 2. If God deliver it is that we should serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse Go saith the Lord to Moses Luke 1.74 75. deliver me that people that they may be to me a Kingdome of Priests and an holy Nation Let Naaman be healed Exod. 19.5 6. that he may become a Convert to that God that hath healed him Sanctifie me that first-borne sonne 2 Kings 5. Exod 13.2 whom I have given thee again Secondly In all Ordinances whose sole and proper end is Sanctification The Word is to sanctifie John 17.17 The commands 1 Thes 4.3 The promises to sanctifie 2 Cor. 7.1 The Sabbath is a signe between God and us that he is the Lord that doth sanctifie us Exod. 31.13 The Sacraments Baptisme is to sanctifie Ephes 5.26 The Lords Supper so Discipline Censures Absolution c. Church-communion private Conference All Ordinances agree in this some of them are for Conversion some for Confirmation all for Sanctification Reas 2. This is that which constitutes a Christian and from which he is denominated All the Christians and Church-members of old were called Saints the Saints at Rome Corinth Ephesus c. That is the Christians of those places and Churches not Saints departed and Canon zed but such Saints as we are or should be visible Saints followers of holinesse And therefore as one is called a Scholar because he followes learning another a Merchant because he follows Merchandize so is the Christian to follow holiness To imagine a Christian without holinesse is to call one rich that hath neither goods nor lands a Scholar without learning to imagine a Sun without light and fire without heat which is a pure contradiction It is holinesse which constitutes the Christian as it is the soul which constitutes the man who without it is a dead carcasse hand foot heart move not neither can the eye see eare hear or tongue speak without the enlivening soul so is the Professor a carcasse or shadow without holinesse all his works dead works his prayers dead praises dead yea his faith hope repentance without holinesse mortua mortifera all dead and deadly Reas 3. Without this no man shall see the Lord. This is the Menacing reason of the Text where there are two things to be explained First One implyed Secondly The other expressed 1. That implied is That in seeing the Lord is the compleat beatitude of the soul Blessed are the pure in heart they shall see God Mat. 5.8 i. e. see the Lord Jesus for the Godhead is inv●sible No man hath seen God at any time nor can we see him 1 Tim. 6.16 But the holy person shall see Christ and the glory of the Divine Essence as much as finite can comprehend of infinite yea see God and live see Christ and be like him 1 John 3.1 2. Jesus Christ seen in heaven is the glass of the Trinity in him we shall see the fulnesse of the Godhead bodily And he is a transforming glasse to those that see him who shall be changed into the same image from glory to glory 2 Cor. 3.18 And the sight of Christ will be to us a transfiguration sight when I look into another glasse I see the image and representative of my self and as it were another self but when I shall look into this glasse I shall see another image and representation as a Parelius by the reflexion of the Sun and as I may say another Christ Hence we commonly call the vision of God the beatifical vision as one saith elegantly Fides justificat Charitas aedificat Spes laetificat Visio beatificat Faith justifies Charity edifies Hope pacifies but it is Vision which glorifies And I may adde Sanctitas qualificat holinesse qualifies that Vision may glorifie And this leads me to the second thing which is expressed 2. Without this no man shall see the Lord. Mark the word no man Be he rich or poor Prince or Peasant yea be he a Prophet Apostle Minister Martyr yea we may carry this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 higher no Angell shall see the Lord what parts soever the man hath whatsoever duties he performeth let him be this or that or any other the best profession way Church let him do let him suffer let him be let him give let him hold what he will ●f he be not holy he comes not into Gods beatifical presence he enters not into the holy hill of God But were he as the Signet o● the right hand he must off were he an anointed Cherub he must out down came the Angels when they had laid down the r holinesse and Adam was driven out of Gods presence when he had driven out holinesse Reas 4. The fourth and last Reason is that thundering one of Saint Peter 2 Pet. 3.10 11 12 13. When the last Trumpet shall sound and sound louder and louder when the day of the Lord shall come as a Thief in the night in the which the Heavens shall pass away with a noise and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat the Earth also and all the works therein shall be burnt up Seeing then all these things shall be dissolved what manner of persons ought we to be in all holy Conversation and godliness looking for and hastening unto the coming of the day of God wherein the heavens being on fire shall be dissolved and the Elements shall melt with fervent heat Neverthelesse we according to his promise look for new Heavens and a new Earth wherein dwelleth righteousnesse Here is nothing but terror in the Text Lamentation and mourning and woe A Thief in the night a great noise fire melting burning dissolving yet is holinesse and righteousnesse secure The new Creature looks for a new Heaven and a new Earth wherein there will be room for holinesse if there be none here as for Lot in S●dome This holinesse is like the blood of the Passeover on the door posts when the destroyer was abroad and a dreadful cry all Egypt over then were the Israelites ready with their loyns girt and staves in their hands expecting the good houre of their last Redemption We have seen it may be
and unsainteth all others Isa 65.5 Which say Stand by thy self come not near me for I am holier than thou these are a smoak in my nose and a fire that burneth all the day saith the Lord. This is the worst spot in the beauty of holiness a spice of that pride that was in Lucifer and his fellow-aspiring Angels that made the first Schisme and separation in the purest Church even in heaven it self among the Angels that were wholly perfect Take heed of this as of the very pest of the Church and the bane of all Religion which is best preserved in unity and humility I shall shut up all with a wish and that an hearty Prayer alluding to what I said at first Oh that all our garments our Profession might be adorned with these Bells and Pomgranates peace and holinesse That as we call on God who is called holy holy holy Rev. 4.6 and on Christ who is called King of Saints Rev. 15.6 and as we profess the Gospel which is a Rule of holiness and are members of the Church which is called a Kingdom of Saints an holy Nation 1 Pet. 2.9 and as we look to be partakers of that Kingdom wherein dwells righteousness and holiness that according to that promise Thy people shall be all righteous Isa 60.21 that holiness to the Lord may be engraven upon all our hearts as with the engraving of a Signet the Spirit of God and holiness to the Lord upon all our fore-heads as to our conversation that as we have had a year which we call Annum Restitutae Libertatis we might have a year Restitutae Sanctitatis this we might safely call Annum Salutis or Annum Domini the year of our Lord. That our Officers might be all peace our Governors holiness Isa 60.17 that our Ministers might be cloathed with righteousness and our Church-Members with holiness that all of different perswasions might not contend but labour for peace and holiness Herein let us agree and all is agreed that the bells of our Horses and Bridles of our Horsemen Commanders and common Souldiers might be holiness to the Lord Zach. 14.20 21. that there might not be a Canaanite or hypocrite in the house of the Lord then might our Land Church Parliament Army City Min●stry be called Jehovah Shammah the Lord is there Ezek. 48.35 yea then would this holiness settle us in peace here and bring us to see the Lord where peace and holiness shall never be separated Even so come Lord Jesus come quickly Amen OF THE Resurrection ACTS 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing unreasonable with you that God should raise the dead THese words are part of St. Pauls Apologie for himself before King Agrippa against the unjust accusations of his implacable enemies wherein 1. He demonstrates the innocency of his life 2. The truth of his Doctrine and sheweth That there was nothing either in his life or doctrine for which he could justly be accused The Doctrine he taught did consist of divers particulars enumerated in this Chapter one of which and that not the least was That there should a day come in which there would be a Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust Now that this Doctrine was not liable to any just exception he proves three manner of ways 1. Because it was no other Doctrine but such which God himself had taught It had a Divine stamp upon it as it is Verse 6. And now I stand and am judged for the hope of the promise made of God unto our fathers 2. Because it was that which all the godly Israelites instantly serving God day and night did hope for and wait and expect in due time to be fulfilled as it is Verse 7. Unto which promise our twelve tribes hope to come for which hope sake King Agrippa I am accused of the Jews and therefore it is called The hope of Israel Acts 28.20 for the hope of Israel I am bound with this chain 3. Because it was a Doctrine which God was able to bring to pass This is set down in the words of the Text Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead The emphasis lieth in the words with you Why should you O King Agrippa who art a Jew and believest in the God of Israel and that he made the world out of nothing think it incredible for this God to raise the dead indeed it may seem incredible and impossible to the Heathen Philosophers who are guided onely by Natures Light but as for you who believe all things which are written in the Law and Prophets why should you think it either impossible or incredible that God should raise the dead This interrogation is an Emphatical Negation and it is put down by way of Question Vt oratio sit penetrantior that so the Argument might take the deeper impression and the meaning is that it is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is not a doctrine exceeding the bounds of faith or contrary to right reason that God should raise the dead The Observation which ariseth naturally out of the words is Doctrine That the Doctrine of the Resurrection of the dead both of the just and unjust is neither incredible nor impossible neither against right reason nor true faith Though it be above reason yet it is not against reason nor against the Jewish or the Christian Faith For the explication of this Doctrine I will briefly speak to six particulars 1. What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead 2. Who are the dead that shall be raised 3. The absolute necessity of believing this Doctrine and believing it firmly and undoubtedly 4. The possibility and credibility of it 5. The certainty and infallibility of it 6. The manner how the dead shall rise What is meant by the Resurrection of the dead The first Particular Answ For answer to this you must first know what there is of man that dyes when any man dyeth Man consisteth of soul and body and when he dyeth his soul doth not dye it is the body onely that dyeth Death is not an utter extinction and annihilation of the man as some wickedly teach but onely a separation of the Soul from the Body It is called a departure Luk. 2.25 2 Tim. 4.6 And an uncloathing 2 Cor. 5.4 and a Departure of the Soul out of the body either to Heaven or Hell When Stephen was stoned his soul was not stoned for while he was stoning he prayed Lord Jesus receive my spirit When Christ was crucified his soul was not crucified for while he was crucifying he said Fa●her into thy hands I commend my Spirit The Wiseman saith expresly That when a man dyeth His body returns to the earth from whence it came Eccles 12.7 but his spirit returns to God who gave it And our Lord Christ commands us Not to fear them that kill the body 1 Luk. 2.4 and after
declare to them the true God and he doth it ab effectu That God which made the world and all things therein is Lord of heaven and earth ver 24. To Create is the best demonstration of a Deity And this God being everywhere by way of repletion * Jer. 23.24 cannot be locally confined He dwelleth not in Tem●l●s made with hands ver 24. And though in former times when the vaile of Ignorance was drawn over the face of the world God seemed lesse severe ver 30. The times of this ignorance God winked at 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He did as it were overlook them not taking the extremity of the Law yet now he commandeth all men everywhere to repent ver 30. And if it be asked why now repent why may we not take our full sleep The Reason is because now is the broad day-light of the Gospel which as it discovers sin more clearly so judgment upon sinners He hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world Which words are Gods Alarum to the world to awaken it out of security This is a sweet yet dreadful point When Saint Paul discoursed of judgement to come Faelix trembled Acts 24.25 He that is not affected with this Truth hath an heart of stone For the illustration of this there are six things I shall discusse 1. That there shall be a day of judgement 2. Why there must be a day of judgement 3. When the day of judgement shall be 4. Who shall be the Judge 5. The order and the method of the Trial. 6. The effect or consequent of it I begin with the first That there shall be a day of judgement There is a twofold day of judgement 1. Dies particularis a particular judgement at the day of death immediately upon the souls dissolution from the body it hath a judgment passed upon it * Hebr. 9.27 Eccles 12.7 Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was the spirit shall return to God that gave it As soon as the breath expires the soul receives its particular sentence and knows how it shall be with it to all eternity 2. There is Dies universalis a general day of judgement which is the great Assises when the world shall be gathered together and of this the Text is to be understood He hath appointed a day in which he will judge the world I might impannel a whole Jury of Scriptures giving in their verdict to this but in the mouth of two or three witnesses the truth will be confirmed Eccles 12.14 God shall bring every work into judgment with every secret thing Eccles 12.14 whether it be good or evil Mat. 12.36 Every idle word men shall speak they shall give account thereof in the day of judgement * Mat. 12 36. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal 96 13. Now is the day of Arr ars then will be the day of Account Psalme 96.13 For he cometh for he cometh to judge the Earth The Ingemination denotes the certainty and infallibility of his coming Secondly Why there must be a day of judgement 1. That God may execute justice on the wicked Things seem to be carried here in the world with an unequal balance The Candle of God shines upon the wicked * Job 29.3 They that tempt God are delivered * Mal. 3.15 Diogenes seeing Harpalus a Thief go●on prosperously said sure God had cast off the government of the world and minded not how things went here below 2 Pet. 3.4 2 Pet. 3.4 There shall be in the last days Scoffers saying Where is the promise of his coming Therefore God will have a day of Assizes to vindicate his justice he will let sinners know that long-forbearance is no forgiveness 2. That God may exercise mercy to the godly Here piety was the white which was shot at they who prayed and wept had the hardest measure those Christians whose zeal did flame most met with the fiery tryal Rom. 8.36 Rom. 8.36 For thy sake we are killed all the day long The Saints as Cyprian saith are put in the wine-presse and oft the blood of these grapes is pressed out God will therefore have a day of judgement that he may reward all the tears and sufferings of his people They shall have their Crown and Throne and White Robes though they may be Losers for him they shall lose nothing by him * Rev. 7.9 Thirdly When the day of judgement shall be 'T is certain there shall be a judgment uncertain when the Angels know not the day nor Christ neither as he was man Matth. 24.36 And the reason why the time is not known is 1. That we may not be curious There are somethings which God would have us ignorant of Acts 1.7 It is not for you to know the times or seasons which the Father hath put in his own power We must not pry into Gods Ark or intermeddle with his Arcana imperii it is a kinde of Sacriledge as Salvian speaks for any man to break into the Holy of holies and enter into Gods secrets 2. God hath concealed the time of judgement that we may not be careless We are alwayes to keep Centinel having our Loyns girr and our Lamps burning not knowing how soon that day may overtake us God would have us live every day saith Austin as if the last day were approaching * Ideo latet ultimus dies ut observentur omnes dies Austin Omnem crede diem tibi diluxisse supremum This is the genuine Use our Saviour makes of it Mark 13.32 Of that day and houre knows no man no not the Angels in heaven Take ye heed watch and pray for ye know not when the time is But though we cannot tell precisely when this day of the Lord shall be yet in probability the time cannot be far off Hebr. 10.3.7 He that shall come Hebr. 10.37 will come and will not tarry Chrysostome hath a simile when saith he we see an old man going on Crutches his Joynts weak his radical moisture dried up though we do not know the just time when he will dye yet it is sure he cannot live long because natures stock is spent So the world is decrepit and goes as it were upon Crutches therefore it cannot be long before the worlds Funerals and the birth-day of judgement The Age which Saint John wrote in was the last time 1 John 2.18 in the Greek it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 John 2.18 the last houre then sure the time we now live in may be called the last minute Psal 96.13 For he cometh to judge the Earth Not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he shall come but he cometh * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to shew how near the time is It is almost day-break and the Court is ready to sit Jam. 5.9 The Judge standeth at the door Verily if Security * Mat. 24.37 Apostasie * 1. Tim. 4.1 Decay of Love * Mat. 24.11
Inundation of Sin * 2 Tim. 3.1 Revelation of Antichrist * 1 Joh. 3.18 Non secus ac slavescente arista colonus colligit pro foribus adesse messem be made in Scripture the Symptomes and Prognosticks of the last day we having these gray haires among us the day of judgement cannot be far off Fourthly Who shall be the Judge I answer the Lord Jesus Christ Thus it is in the. Text He will judge the world by that man whom he hath ordained That man who is God-man We must take heed of judging others this is Christs work John 5.22 The Father hath committed all judgement to the Son * Judicium erit totius individuae Trinitatis quoad consensum authoritatem Christi vero quoad visibilem actum promulgationem executionem 1. Sagacitas He who once had a Reed put into his hand his Father will now put a Scepter into his hand he who had a Purple Robe put upon him in derision shall come in h●s Judges Robes he who hung upon the Crosse shall sit upon the Bench. There are two things in Christ which do eminently qualifie him for a Judge 1. Prudence and Intelligence to understand all Causes that are brought before him * Hebr. 4.13 He is described with seven eyes Zech. 3.9 to note his Omnisciency he is like Ezekiels wheels full of eyes * Ezek. 10.12 2. Potestas Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an heart-searcher he doth not only judge the fact but the heart which no Angel can do * 2. Strength whereby he is able to be revenged upon his enemies Christ is armed with Soveraignty therefore the seven eyes are said to be upon one stone Zech. 3.9 To denote the infinite strength of Christ and he is described with seven horns Rev. 5.6 As Christ hath an Eye to see so he hath an Horn to push As he hath his Balance so he hath his Sword As he hath his Fan and his Sieve so he hath his Lake of fire Revel 20.10 Fifthly The Order and Method of the Trial. Where observe 1. The Summons 2. The Judges coming to the Bench. 3. The Processe and Trial it self 1. The Summons to the Court and that is by the sounding of a Trumpet 1 Thes 4.16 The Lord shall descend from heaven with the voice of the Archangel and with the Trump of God Saint Hierom saith that whatever he was doing he thought he heard the noise of this Trumpet sounding in his ears Surgite mortui Arise ye dead and come to judgement * Hierom in Mat. Note 1. The shrilness of the Trumpet it shall sound so loud that the dead shall hear it 2. The efficacy of the Trumpet it shall not only startle the dead but raise them out of their graves Matth. 24.31 * Vere vox magna vox tubae terribilis quae petras scindit inferos aperit vincula mortuorum dirumpit haec autem omnia citiuss peragenda quam sagitta in aere transit in momento in ictu●oculi They who will not hear the Trumpet of the Ministery sounding but lie dead in sinne● shall be sure to hear the Trumpet of the Archangel sounding 2. The manner of the Judges coming to the Bench. Christs coming to Judgement will be Glorious yet dr●adful F●rst It will be glorious to the godly The Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the glorious appearing of the great God and our Saviour Titus 2.13 1. Christs Person shall be glorious His first coming in the flesh was obscure his glory was vail'd over Isa 53.2 3. All who saw the Man did not see the Messiah but his second coming will be in vigore fulgore very illustrious and resplendent He shall come in the glory of his Father Mark 8.38 that is he shall wear the same embroydered Robes of Majesty as his Father 2. Christs Attendants shall be glorious He shall come with all his holy Angels * Mat. 25.31 Mat. 25.31 These Sublime Seraphick Spirits who for their lustre are compared to lightning * Mat. 28.3 are Christi Satellitium part of Christs Train and Retinue He who was led to the Cross with a Band of Souldiers shall be attended to the Bench with a guard of Angels Secondly Christs coming to judgement will be dreadful to the wicked At the coming of this Judge there will be ignis conflagrationis a fire burning round about him 2 Thes 1.7 He shall be revealed with his Angels from heaven in flaming fire * Si talis sit horror venientis qualis erit judicantis Aug. c. When God did give his Law upon the Mount there were thunders and lightnings and Mount Sinai was altogether on a smoak because the Lord descended upon it in fine * Exod. 19.16 18. Exod. 19.16 18. If God was so terrible at the giving of the Law O how terrible will he be when he shall come to require his Law 3. The Processe or the Tryal it self Where observe The 1. Universality Of the Tryal The 2. Formality Of the Tryal The 3. Circumstances Of the Tryal First The Universality of the Tryal it will be a very great Assizes never was the like seen 2 Cor. 5.10 For we must all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ * 2 Cor. 5.10 Kings and Nobles Councels and Armies those who were above all Tryal here have no Cha●rter of exemption granted them they must appear before Christs Tribunal and be tryed for their lives neither power nor policy can be a sub●er-fuge They who refused to come to the Throne of Grace * Hebr. 4.16 shall be forced to come to the Bar of Justice And the dead as well as the living must make their appearance Rev. 20.12 I saw the dead both small and great stand be ore God c. We do not use to cite men to our Courts when they are dead but at that day the dead are called to the Bar and not only Men but Angels Jude 6. The Angels which kept not their first estate he hath reserved in chains to the judgement of the great day Secondly The Formality of the Tryal which consists in the opening of the Books * Rev. 12.20 Dan. 7.10 The judgement was set and the books were op●ned There are two books will ba opened 1. The book of Gods Omnisciency God not only observes but registers all our actions Job 14.16 Thou numbrest my steps The word there 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to number * Unde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 liber signifies to put a thing into the book as if Job had said Lord thou keepest thy day-book and enterest down all my actions into the book we read of Gods book of remembrance * Mal. 3.16 Mal. 3.16 This book will be produced at the last day 2. The book of Conscience Let there be never so much written in a book yet if it be clasped it is not seen Men have their sins written in their conscience but the book is clasped
delighting in flowers and their Tulipomania dreame of such a Paradise A silly Countrey Woman coming upon the Exchange was so amazed at the view that she fell down and said She had oft heard of Heaven but never was in it before The voluptuous Epicure will have his a Poetical Heaven of Nectar and Ambrosia the ambitious an Heaven of honours and Gallantry But holy Abraham passed all these by * Heb. 11.10 looking for a City that had foundations The Kingdomes of the world want legs and foundations to stand upon and while men dream of such Paradises they do but build Castles in the ayre without any basis but imagination But look you for the new Heavens Isa 65.17 wherein dwells Righetousness get a Copy of grace in your hearts out of Scripture-Records the Court-Roles of Heaven and then you have * 1 Tim. 6.19 laid hold upon eternal life 'T is easie to be a Saint of the earth a State-Saint a designing Saint nay a Church-Saint but it must be a heavenly Saint one truly holy that is * Col. 1.12 meet to be partaker of the Inheritance of the Saints in light Examine therefore what Authority and entertainment have the most searching truths and cutting Providences of God with you what spiritual wickednesse that never hurt your body Purie or Fame have you forsaken for Christ This sincere beauty of holinesse ●s able to make you Ornaments even to heaven it self 4. Is this Kingdome prepared for those that are Blessed of the Father Oh then labour to obtain your Fathers blessing though * Heb. 12.17 you seek it with teares Now the Father sayes Blessed are the pure the poor in heart the merciful they that pray for them which persecute them be careful not only * Mat. 25.4 to have oyle in your Lamps grace in your hearts but get your * Ver. 7. Lamps trimmed be upon your Watch * Ver. 13. for you know not what houre your Master comes Look how you improve your Talents what good you do in the world Remember it runnes thus in the last account I was an hungry you fed me naked you cloathed me in Prison you visited me and * Mat. 16.27 every man shall be rewarded according to his Works and the more you have of Heaven and Divine love here the more you shall have hereafter for one piece of it will lie in comfortable reflections upon what good we have done in the world though every one hath his * Mat. 20.9 peny that comes in at the Eleventh houre viz. all that is essential unto happinesse yet * 1 Cor. 15.41 one Starre differs from another in glory Art thou therefore in Authority use it for God Art rich alas * Prov. 23.5 riches make themselves wings and fly away Up then and be doing good and make thy self wings of thy Wealth for Heaven by all charitable expressions there is no way to lay your treasure up in Heaven but by laying it out here no way to lend God any thing but by giving to the poor How will hopes of Preferment nourish Conformity Tully tells us A Prince is to be fed with glory and drawn to worthy acts by the allurement of Honour and Renown Did but Christians feed more upon the Heritage of Jacob Isa 58.14 and their Immortal hopes they would act more for their immortal honour such Meditations do as the Philosopher sayes of speculations * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist E●● immortalize men and make them spiritual ones indeed or as Ambrose phraseth it carry them upwards as Birds of Paradise * Volucris in Spiritu factus Exod. 19.4 all upon Eagles Wings to soare on high Fifthly Will Christ say Come ye blessed c. then here is an Io triumphe over all the World Let it look as grim as it will upon thee yet Christ will smile though it gnash its teeth upon thee yet Christ will open his lips and * Cant. 1.2 kiss thee with the kisses of his mouth Lapides loquitur though the world speak words as hard as stones about Stephens ears yet Christ will speak comfortably If the World say Go Get you hence yet Christ will say Come if that say Go ye Cursed Christ will say Come ye Blessed Though men say Go ye Cursed Generation who are hated of all men yet Christ will say Come ye blessed of my Father They say Turn out Christ will say Turn in they cry Away from houses and lands and wives and children and all for Christs sake yet be not discouraged poor heart for Christ will recompence thee a hundred fold and thou shalt have a Kingdome for thy Cottage And when they have done all this they rejoyce that their Plot hath taken effect for they designed your ruine long ago I but Christs thoughts of love run higher yet Come blessed soul inherit the Kingdome prepared for thee from the foundation of the World The World may thrust thee out with both hands Christ will receive thee with both arms When Cyrus gave one of his friends a kisse another a wedge of gold he that had the gold envied him that had the kisse as a greater expression of his favour what if thou hast not the onions of Egypt if thou have the Quails and Manna in the Wildernesse Psal 17.14 if thou beest a man of G ds hand if thou beest one of his heart there is small ground to complain Upon all if an Epicurus was the best of the Philosophers without an Elysium If a Platonick lecture of the immortality of the soul made another cast his life away that he might enter upon that state If an Aristotle upon Euripus banks being not able to resolve himself of the cause of its motion dissolved himself by casting himself into the streame saying If I cannot take thee take thou me when we have such a glory as eye hath not seen nor ear heard nor can it enter into the heart of man to conceive what God hath * 1 Cor. 2.9 prepared for those that love him how shameful●y are we run a ground if we cannot have a kinde of * Phil. 1.23 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rev. 22.20 lust to be dissolved and when Christ holds this price in his hand and cryes Come ye blessed we do not answer Come Lord Jesus Come quickly THE Conclusion 2 TIM 1.13 Hold fast the form of sound words which thou hast heard of me in faith and love which is in Christ Jesus AT the beginning of this Moneths Exercise I entred upon this Text and then resolv'd the matter contained therein into these four Doctrinal Observations 1. Evangelical words are sound words Or All Gospel-truth is of an healing nature 2. It is of great use and advantage both for Ministers and private Christians to have the main Fundamental truths of the Gospel collected and methodized into certain Models and Platforms 3. Such Forms and Models are very carefully and faithfully to be
been said in order to this morning Exercise As you have heard so you have seen Application to the morning exercise this Moneth now elapsed hath brought to your view an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Model of sound words you have had as it were the Summe and Substance of the Gospel preached over in your hearing I know it falls far short both in respect of Matter and Method of a perfect body of Divinity an exact and full delineation of all the chief Heads and Principles of Religion But considering the smallness of the Circle of this monethly course in which this Model was drawn I dare take the boldness to say there hath as much of the Marrow and Spirits of Divinity been drawn forth in these few Morning Lectures as can be rationally expected from men of such various Studies and assidnous labours in the Ministerial work Former ages have rarely heard so much Divinity preacht over in many years as hath been read in your ears in twenty six dayes These few Sermons have digested more of the Doctrine of faith than some large volumes not of a mean consideration now extant in the Church of God Truely every single Sermon hath been a little 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 within itself Each Subject in this morning Exercise hath been handled in so ample a manner and with so much judgement acuteness and perspicuity that it may well passe for a little Treatise of Divinity wherein many profound Mysteries have been discust and stated not with more judgment in the Doctrine than with life and vigor in the Vse and Application The Preachers have sought to find out acceptable words Eccles 12. and that which was spoken was upright even words of truth Insomuch that a man that had never heard of a Gospel before this moneths conduct had been sufficient not only to have left him without excuse but with the wise mens STAR to have led him to Christ The more I dread to think what a tremendous account you have to make who after twenty twirty fourty years Revelation of the Gospel have the addition of this moneth of Sabbaths also to reckon for in that day when the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven in flaming fire c. if while in this Mirror 2 Thes 1.8 beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord you are not changed into the same image from glory to glory by the Spirit of the Lord. I shall not undertake as * Morning Exercise May 1654. formerly to extract the Summe and Substance of what you have heard I have some hope to be saved that labour upon a better account I shall recount to you the Heads only and Points of Christian Doctrine which have been handled in this Monethly Exercise that now in the close of all you may behold as in a Map or Table the Method and Connexion which they hold amongst themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Or a Summary repetition of the Heads of Divinity preacht upon in this Course The first Divine after the preparatory Sermon that preached to you began with that which is the first and chief object of Knowledge and Faith that α and ω in Divinity Subject 1 THERE IS A GOD Heb. 11.6 He that cometh to God must believe that GOD is c. Hereupon because if there be a God then he is to be worshipped and if to be worshipped then there must be a Rule of that worship and if a Rule it must be of Gods own appointment therefore Subject 2 The Second dayes work was against all other Books and Writings in the world to Evince this Truth the SCRIPTVRES CONTAINED IN THE BOOKS OF THE OLD AND NEW TESTAMENT are THE WORD OF GOD 2 Tim. 3.16 All Scripture is given by Inspiration of God By these Scriptures that great Mysterious Doctrine of the Trinity which the light of nature can no more discover than deny was asserted and opened as far as so profound a Mystery can well admit and so The third mornings work was to shew Subject 3 THAT IN THE GODHEAD THERE IS A TRINITY OF PERSONS IN VN●TY OF ESSENCE GOD THE FATHER GOD THE SON AND GOD THE HOLY GHOST God blessed for ever 1 Joh. 5.7 There are three that bear Record in Heaven the FAHER the WORD and the HOLY GHOST and these three are ONE Subject 4 The Creation of Man in a perfect but mutable Estate by the joynt Power and Wisdom of these three glorious Persons was the Fourth Subject opened from that Text Eccles 7.29 God made man upright but they have sought out many inventions Man thus Created God entred into a Covenant with him and so the COVENANT OF WORKS which God made with Adam and all his posterity succeeded in order to be the Subject matter of the Subject 5 Fifth morning Lecture the Text was Gen. 12.17 In the day thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die This Covenant no sooner made almost then broken the work of him that preacht the Subject 6 Sixth Sermon was THE FALL OF ADAM and therein more specially of PECCATVM ORIGINALE ORIGINANS or ORIGINAL SIN IN THE FIRST SPRING and fountain of it the Scripture Rom. 5.12 By one man sin entred into the world c. The Fruit and sad effect whereof being the losse of Gods image and the total depravation and corruption of mans nature Subject 7 The seventh thing that fell naturally to be handled was Peccatum originale originatum or Original corruption in the STREAM and DERIVATION OF IT TO POSTERITY from Psal 1.5 Behold I was shapen in iniquity and in Sin did my Mother conceive me This is the Source of all that evil that hath invaded all Mankind that therefore which naturally succeeded in the Subject 8 Eighth course of this morning Exercise was MANS LIABLENESS TO THE CURSE or the MISERY OF MANS ESTATE BY NATVRE Deut. 27.1 Cursed is every one that continueth not in all the things of the Law to do them or Ephes 2.3 By nature the children of wrath Subject 9 Ninthly Mans impotency to help himself out of this miserable estate was the next sad Prospect presented to your view by that Reverend Brother that preached the ninth course and he took his rise from Rom. 5.6 When we were without strength Christ died for the ungodly That the doctrine of mans impotency when it had laid him in the dust might not leave him there the Subject 10 Tenth Preacher discoursed to you of the COVENANT OF REDEMPTION consisting of the transaction between God and Christ from all Eternity from that Text Isa 53.10 He shall see the travel of his soule and be satisfied In the eleventh place THE COVENANT OF GRACE REVEALED IN THE GOSPEL came next to be unfolded as being if I may so say the Counterpart of the Covenant of Redemption which the Preacher to whom the Subject 11 Eleventh course fell opened to you out of Heb. 8.6 Jesus Christ hath obtained a more excellent Ministry by how much also he is the Mediatour
His sin is entailed on all his seed 137 138. transmitted by imputation p. 139 and 140. made ours without any impeachment of Gods justice p. 141. by generation not imitation p. 142 143. hurt received by him must quicken the acceptance of the second Adam p. 145. his sin will not be our acquittance p. 148. Advantage great by systems and modules of Religion p. 16 17 18 19. Adoption its kinds p. 436. its name explained 437. Divine differs from humane Adoption p. 438. Adoption presupposeth Vocation Regeneration and Justification p. 438. it entitles to God Christ and Heaven ibid. Adoption the properties p. 439. and priviledges of it p. 440. Adoption is different from Regeneration yet not divided from it p. 446. Adoption an effect of faith p 469. Affections unruly cashier'd when we come to heaven p. 650. Angels their service to the Lord Jesus Christ p. 323 324. not confirmed not reconciled by Jesus Christ as Mediator p. 338 339. Antinomians refuted p. 423 424. Apparel of Saints in heaven p. 652. 653. Atheisme three sorts Vita pag. 51 52. Voto pag. 51 52. Judicio pag. 51 52. Assent to Gods being and bounty ground of Addresses to him p. 30. Assurance an effect of faith p. 472. B. Bars to communion with God three and how removed p. 272. Barring sinne imports punishment p. 346. Belief of Gods being the foundation of Religion p 30. fountain of obedience p. 54. Belief of Christ to be the Son of God is not easie p. 66. Believing sinner the subject of Gospel-repentance p. 489. Believers their dignity and duty pag. 433. Believers united to Christ. p. 278. Believers whom p. 379. Believers persons graces and duties relate to Christ. p. 395 396. Birth-right despised is dreadful p. 448. Blessedness of mans-natural rectitude p. 111. Blessed estate of the New Covenant p. 254 259. Blessed how said of the Saints p. 664 665. Bodies of Saints re-united to souls p. 657. Bodies of Saints and sinners differ at Resurrection p. 591 592. Body of man subject to Gods wrath p. 184. Body it s very self-same substance shall be raised p. 591 592 593. It s prime endowments at Resurrection p. 593 594. Bodily infirmities shaken off in heaven p. 651. Blood of sin to be shed for the blood of Christ p. 296. Bowing at the Name of Jesus what it means p. 321. by whom to be done p. 322 323. C. Cause encourageth to suffer p. 2 3. Captain encourageth contest ibid. Calling effectual p. 353. what it is and how wrought p. 357 358. Called who p. 359. few p. 360. by what ib. from what causes p. 361 362 363. by what means p. 365. to what end p. 366. when p. 367. Call is holy ib. heavenly p. 368. without noise p. 370. immutable p. 371. Care accompanieth true r pentance 541. Case of man fallen helpless by nature 207. Catechismes commended 21. Children of God by Regeneration and Adoption 435. Children of God their carriage directed 448 449 450. Christ is Lord how 330 331. a good Captaine 2 3. Christ is truly God 266 267. and truly man 268. God and man 269. Christ and promises not God the immediate object of saving faith 460. Christians changes three 557. Christian Religion reasonable 483. Come ye blessed what kinde of speech 666 667. Command to Adam and Covenant of works 122. Complaints against God charmed 267. Compassion to brethren sheweth a sense of our own natural weakness 215. Communion an evidence of union with Christ 385. Conditions in order to mans Redemption between God the Father and God the Son p. 222 223. Conquest of enemies an effect of Faith 470. Conscience proveth that there is a God 43 44. Conscience engendreth fear 46 47. Consent of Nations universal and perpetual proves that there is a God 48. Confession of sin a part of Repentance 509 510. How to be made 511 512 513 514. Conviction wherein it consists and how it acts 493 494. Contrition wherein it consists 496 497. Conversion its parts 502. Crown of Saints in heaven what 654. It s threefold wreath 655 656. Covenant what it means 123 124 235. Covenants in Scripture 235. Covenant Natural what it is 236. Legal what it is 237 238. Evangelical what it is 239. Covenant an act of condescention in God 130. Imports Gods promise and mans duty 239. Gods dealing with Adam in Paradise how and why called a Covenant 125. Covenant of Works wherein it consists p. 126 127. How and why given by Moses 128 129. Israel was not under it ibid. Men out of Christ yet under it 130. Covenant of Redemption what it is and between whom 216 217 218 219. It is to be particularly improved by Believers 230 231 232. It confirms the Covenant of Grace its blessings 228 229. Covenant what 233. Gospel Covenant the best of Covenants 235 239. Covenant of Works and Grace are to be differenced by men 131. Covenant of Redemption different from Covenant of Grace 218. Creation the work of God 31. Man created holy and mutable 105. Creatures execute Gods wrath on man 189. Themselves liable to Gods wrath 190. Creeds Apostles Athanasii Nicene c. justified 20. Curse of the Law due to man by nature 181. Cure of faln man Omnipotent 208. D Death of Christ its kinde manner and grounds p. 283. The Reasons thereof 290 291 292. Death of Christ a sacrifice and only so possible 342. Deserving cause of Christ his death 345. Death of Christ was in our place and stead 347. Diligence in duty and readinesse to dye for Christ but a reasonable recompence for his death for us 297 299. Christ dyed willingly obediently and humbly 287 288 289. Death of Christ a pregnant Argument to Repentance 528 529 530. Death destroyed by the death of Christ 303. Desire accompanieth Repentance 544. Dependence on God the duty of such as believe God is 60 61. Divel an enemy to Faith 481. Divels subject to Jesus Christ 326 327. Divel limited by Christ 328. Doctrine of Trinity to be prized 82. Dominion of Saints 442. E Elect dead in sin before called and poor in the world p. 359. Entrance of sin into the world what and how 136. Enemies of man foiled by the death of Christ 301. Entertainment of Christ 434. Epistle to the Romans a Module of Religion 8. to the Hebrews 9. to Galathians ibid. Ephesians 10. Timothy and Titus ibid. Errors are obviated by a Module of Religion 12 14. Errors about Repentance 55. Error in fundamentals inconsistent with Faith 480. Morning Exercise when it begun and how profitable it hath been 23 24. Duties towards it 25. Extremity of hell torments by their inflammation fire and preparation and association with Divels 628 629 630 631. Eternity the property of hell torments 632 633. Evidences of eternal life laid down in a Module 15. Exaltation of Christ opposed to his Humiliation 306 307. It s priority to his humiliation as a merit or meer antecedent discussed 308 309. it was exceeding high 311. Exaltation of Christ by three