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A31258 The Christian's crown of glory, or, Holiness the way to happiness shewing the necessity of sanctity, or a Holy life, from a serious consideration of the life of the Holy Jesus, who is Christ our sanctification : also a plain discovery of the formalist or hyppocrite : together with the doctrine of justification opened and applied. T. C. 1671 (1671) Wing C129; ESTC R10329 137,037 229

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Christ hath given the hand of Faith doth put it forth make application of the Merits and mediation of Jesus Christ for his Purification and doth in truth draw in vertue by that application 1 Joh. 3. 3. He that hath this hope doth purifie himself even as he is pure Faith exerts the office of all the senses and of all the members 't is the eye the hand the mouth the foot of the Soul c. as might be proved easily if I should exspatiate As Christ is all in all to the soul in the sanctification of it so Faith of all graces is all in all in the out-going of the soul to Christ and in the Incomes of grace from him 2. As Faith is the Instrumental so the Causa Administra Evangelium est medium ceu instrumentum quo Spiritus san●tus efficaciam suam exerit sidem conversionem operat●r Syntag Polan Word is the ministring cause or medium of sanctification Psa 19. 7. The Law of the Lord is perfect converting the Soul the Law in all its Exhortations Commands Consolations Prohibitions Comminations and Promises is a perfect Law serving as a perfect means for conversion But the Promissory and Consolatory part thereof is principally more purifying Having these promises let us cleanse our selves c. 2 Cor. 7. 1. 2 Pet. 1. 4. The Go●pel or Law of Faith is vehiculum spiritus the Chariot in which the spirit rides to give your souls a gracious visit Gal. 3. 2. Received ye the spirit by the works of the Law or by the hearing of faith Fides quae creditur He that makes the Clouds his Chariots makes also his Word his Ordinances and his Ministers his Chariots wherein he ●ides down into these lower parts to give the world a meeting Mr. Allens Heaven Opened p. 172. i. e. by the hearing of the Gospel which is the doctrine of faith The sanctifying spirit accompanying the holy Word then the Word is sanctifying Joh. 17. 17. Sanctifie them by thy truth thy Word is truth When the Gospel is spoken and heard in the evidence and demonstration of the Spirit and of Power then is the Arm of the Lord revealed Isa 53. 1. then the Word of God works and grows mightily for sanctification and salvation then the blind eyes are opened then are the captives released then are the dead raised then are the lepers cleansed then are the devils dispossessed then are filthy souls washed unholy souls sanctified 7. Causa Exemplaris The Exemplar or Pattern to which our Sanctification in the two parts of it viz. our mortification and vivification is conformable is the Death and Resurrection of Jesus Christ by vertue of the force and energy whereof through the operation and application of the spirit of faith our sanctification is effected The Apostle Paul holds forth a clear Analogy or proportion between our dying to sin and Christs dying for sin and between our newness of life or vivification and Christs Resurrection Rom. 6. 4. 5. 6 7 8. where ye may see at large the parallel between them And the Apostle Peter tells us We are begotten again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead 8●y and lastly The glory of Gods Grace in the Conservation and Salvation of a sinful creature is the supreme end or final cause of our Sanctification there is a mutual intimate coherence and relation of these three to o●e another 1. The glory of Gods Grace is the Supreme end as of our Election in Christ so of our Sanctification by him All the Acts of Gods love in Christ whether immanent or transient they are all for the praise of the glory of his grace both in this and in the other world Eph. 1. 4. 6. And specifically Sanctification hath a direct tendency unto and termination in the glory of God When we keep our bodies and spirits chaste and holy we are then said to glorifie God 1 Cor. 6. 20. Glorifie God in your bodies and in your spirits which are Gods 2. Consecration This is finis qui the end for which quoad nos we are sanctified and necessary necessitate medii to our Salva●ion Jam. 1. 18. We are begotten by the Will of God ●hat we might be a kind of the first fruits of his creatures that is as Beza Polanus and others observe that we might be consecrated and devoted to the Lord separated from the common lump of mankind as an holy offering as the first fruits under the Law were presented to the Lord as an holy Offering as the Lords own portion 3. Salvation This is our ultimate end the Apostle Peter acquaints us 1 Pet. 1. 3. We are begotten again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus Christ c. What is that lively h●pe we are begotten and born to in Regeneration he tells ye in ver 4. Even to an inheritance incorruptible und●filed that fadeth not away reserved in heaven for you This incomparable Inheritance dignified with all these transcendent Epithets See Dr. Owens Death of Death p. 119 120 121 122 c. is comprehended in one word Salvation 2 Thes 2. 13 14. God hath from the beginning chosen us to Salvation that is the end through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth that is the way and means Thus having cleared our way now we come to the plain and full definition of Sanctification Sanctification in the sense of the Text and of this Tract is a new inward habitual frame of grace infused by the power of the Eternal Spirit into the heart of a justified person united to Christ whereby he is renewed after the Image of Christ in knowledge righteousness and true holiness and thereby enabled to die to sin and to live to God for the praise of Gods glorious grace in his Consecration and Salvation This definition is the sum of the former discourse every part and branch of this description hath been already proved in the aforegoing particulars therefore I shall not actum agere do over the same things again only give me leave to acquaint you our Sanctification Holiness is not any single grace alone but a Constellation ● conjunction of all graces together in the Soul or Inherent Holiness consists in these two things 1. In the infusing of holy principles divine qualities or supernatural graces into the soul such as the Apostle mentions in Gal. 5. 22 23. But the fruit of the spirit is love joy peace long-suffering gentleness goodness faith meekness temperance against such there is no Law These habits of grace which are severally distinguished by the names of faith love hope meekness patience temperance c. are nothing else but the new nature the new creature the new man which after God is created in righteousness and true holiness Ephes 4. 24. These seeds 1 Joh. 3. 9 2 Cor. 1. 21. 1 Joh. 2. 27. of holiness these habits of grace are those sweet oyntments where with all must be
with that Cooling-Card 2 Pet. 2. 19. While they promise them liberty they themselves are the servants of Corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought in bondage They are the slaves of Satan in the bonds of lust I wish that all Prodigals and presumptuous sinners would seriously mind that Text But my Brethren I trust that ye have otherwise learned Christ If so be ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the truth is in Jesus then ye do put off concerning the former conversation the old man c. ye do put on the new man which after 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in sanctitate veritatis vulg God is created in righteousness and true holiness or holiness of Truth Ephes 4. 22. 23 24. I trust the Lord hath given ye an understanding to know things that are excellent and to approve them that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ as the Apostles prays for the Phillippians Phil. 1. 9 10. Many excellent Gifts the Father of Lights bestows upon his Children indeed every good and perfect gift comes from him Christ himself is the Jam. 1. 17. first Best Gift of God A Gift of Gifts and sanctification in or by Christ Jesus I take to Joh. 1. 10. be the next Best Now you that are righteous with this inherent Righteousness hold on 1 Cor. 1. 2. your way and prosper the Lord be with ye The Angel of his presence save ye The Spirit of Jesus guide ye to the Hill of holiness and help you to perfect holiness in the fear of God You are under the vertue of sure and sweet promises for your great encouragement in Heavens way The Righteous shall hold on his way and he that hath clean hands shall be stronger and stronger Job 17. 9. The Lord strengthen your hearts and quicken your See these Texts Isa 40. 2 last verses Phil. 1. 6. Heb. 12. 2. Ezek. 36. 27. speed by these powerful and precious Promises and give ye a prosperous arrival at the fair Havens of rest and peace Amen We come now to close the whole with these two uses 1. By way of Conviction 2. By way of Caution Though I know the Rules of Method and the exigence of the Subject Command me yet I shall not proceed directly by way of Examination because that hath been already done from that Text Rom. 1. 7. To all that be at Rome beloved of God called to be Saints from whence the doctrine of calling hath been discussed the nature of Saintship and the signs and tryals of Sanctification have been largely shewn We shall therefore God willing proceed to the next in order viz. the Use of Conviction Use 8. This Doctrine of Sanctification we have so long insisted on serveth for Conviction If those that are Gods and Christs are sanctified in Christ Jesus if God the Father hath given them Christ his Son for their sanctification to make them holy Then this Point brings doleful news sad tidings in the mouth of it to three sorts of Persons To the Prophane To the Persecutors To the Scorners 1. The profane who mock at sin and slight holiness are hereby convicted and condemned 1. The prophane God hath no Birthright for such profane Esaus The people who are the Lords portion are an holy Nation washed from their filthinesse If ye are converted ye are washed and sanctified in the name and by the spirit of the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 6. 11. but prophane ones have ● spot upon them which is not the spot of Gods Children Deut. 32. 5. see what St. John speaketh of such kinde of persons as wallow in their filthiness 1 John 3. 8. He that committeth sin is of the Devil for the Devil sinneth from the beginning he that tradeth in sin and maketh 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui operam dat peccato So Beza sin his constant businesse work or practise as a workman doth his calling and followeth the same daily and deliberately A godly man may slip into sin through humane frailty and in the hurry of temptation may be overtaken with a fault But it is the profane man that is a trader in sin and a constant worker of iniquity Though such men may presume that they belong to God yet our Saviour expresly speaks they are the Devils Children John 8. 44. Ye are of your father the Devil for his works ye do c. These men have not the least pretence of a claim to Heaven they come exceeding short of Hypocrites who pretend to holiness and seem to be so but the prophane are neither civil nor moral Such gross sinners are called Dogs and Swine They are wel●●ing in the gall of bitterness and bound fast with the bond of iniquity as Peter told Simon Magus Acts 8. 23. All that such kinde of sinners have to say for the most part for themselves is this 1. That God is merciful 2. That their hearts are better than their lives To the first I answer that God is holy and just as well as mercifull and gracious The Lamb will turn a Lion the Saviour of the world will come as a terrible Judge in flaming fire to render vengeance to the ignorant and disobediext 2 Thes 1. 8. And if the righteous scarcely be saved where shall the wicked and ungodly appear 1 Pet. 4. 18. They shall appear indeed but like as chaffe before the Whirl-wind and as stubble before the flames Sinners do little All the Attributes of God a● justice mercy c. do run in the channel of his Holiness think that Gods mercy is an holy mercy which in a saving manner he will dispence to none out of Christ Sinners do err exceedingly to think that God is prodigal either of his own mercy or of his Sons Blood 't is only the sanctified in Christ Jesus exclusively who shall be the objects of his saving mercy the mercy of God and the merit of Christ are most sacred and precious things 1 Pet. 1. 18. The former is bestowed on none the latter is spilt for none but an holy and a peculiar people Justice must be satisfied else mercy can be never 1 Pet. 2. 9. dispensed if the merit of Christ be thine then the mercy of the Father is thine otherwise though the Ocean of Gods pardoning mercy be boundless and bottomless thou shalt not taste one drop of it Well then wouldst thou know that God will be mercifull to thy soul at the last day it highly concerns thee to know Christ in the power of his Resurrection and in the fellowship of his sufferings in this thy Phil. 3. 10. Day 2. To the other Plea That their hearts are better than their lives I answer This is to appeal to a witness that cannot be found to a witness that is as to us invisible 't is as if a man should lay claim to another mans Land and pretend he hath lost the evidences the
their behalf with a commendation of them and his hearty desire for them carried on from the first to the tenth verse The second is a Proposition Dehortatory that 2 Propositio Dehortatoria they cherish not Schismes among themselves least Viper-like they eat out their own bowels whence he had information and what their Schismes or Divisions were he explains in ver 10 11 12. The third is a Confirmation of his Dehortatory 3. Confirmatio Proposition many of his Arguments are taken ab absurdo as they call it 1. Because to cherish Schismes is as it were to divide or tear Christ in pieces v. 13. 2. Because none of their Teachers was crucified for them v. 13. 3. Because they were not baptized in the name of any of their Teachers v. 13. Neque Baptizando nec praedi●ando Par. Non cum dicendi peritiá Beza 4. Because the Apostle had given them no occasion of abusing his name to Schismes neither by baptizing for he baptized but few of them v. 14 15 16. nor by his Preaching for he preached not with ostentation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not in the wisdome of speech not in quaint terms not with Rhetorical flourishes or Visus autem fuisset Christi crucifixi Spiritus nihil agere si humanae facundiae vi homines ad Christianismum essent adducti Beza 1 Ab effectu contrarii humane Eloquence lest the Cross of Christ should be made of none effect v. 17. that is lest the Doctrine of Christ crucified should become fruitless for as a learned Author well observes The Spirit of Christ crucified would have seemed to have done nothing if men should have been brought to Christianity by the force of Humane Eloquence 1. This is the first reason and 't is drawn ab effectu contrarii from the effect of the contrary Now least any should think that plainness of speech did render the Doctrine of the Cross contemptible a tacit Objection is answered in v. 18. by a distinction Though the Doctrine of the Cross be foolishness to the Reprobates yet 't is the Power of God to such as shall be saved 2. From the miserable condition of worldly 2. A conditione mundanae sapientiae wisdome it is an Enemy to God and God an Enemy to it and threatens to destroy it I will destroy the wisdome of the wise ver 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 tollam ● medio The Prophet Isa 29. 14. from whence these words are taken there useth a Verb Neuter which the Greeks have turned into a Verb Active 3. From the good pleasure of God willing to 3 A Beneplacito Dei save by the foolishness of Preaching them that believe and though the obstinate Jews and Philosophical Greeks reputed the Gospel foolishness for how can blind men distinguish colours yet 't is in very deed and truth infinitely wiser than humane wisdome and infinitely stronger than humane power for 't is the Wisdome and Power of God himself ver Psa 110. 2 The Lord shall send the Rod of thy strength out of Zion Rule thou in the midst of thine Enemies Here vocatio pro vocatis metonymicè ponatur sicut passim circumcisio pro circumcisis praeputium pro incircumcisis Beza in loc Marl. in loc to the same purpose A Fine ultima 21 22 23 24 25. The Publication of the Gospel is the Scepter by which the Lord Reigns the Rod of Christs strength by which he doth and shall rule in the midst of his Enemies 4. From the blessed effect of Gods good pleasure exprest in calling Not many wise not many Mighty not many Noble though some few of these in all Ages have been called but rather the poor the foolish persons and things that in the eye of the carnal world are contemptible and counted of no account meer nothings ver 26 27. Ye see your calling Brethren that is what way o● manner the Lord hath taken in calling you or rather quinam ex vobis sint vocati who or what kind of men among you are called not the wise and Mighty but commonly and generally the foolish and weak for the poor receive the Gospel as Christ speaks 5. From the ultimate or last end That no flesh should glory in his presence but in the Lord himself of whom we are in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption Thus by this Clue of five Threads I mean the five last Heads I have brought you to the Text. 1 Cor. 1. 30. But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us Wisdome and Righteousness and Sanctification and Redemption THe Sacred Scriptures do hold forth our Lord Jesus Christ to be both the Treasurer and the Treasury of all our blessedness both in this and in the other world all our Treasures are in him as well as from him 2 Col. 3. In him are hid all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge He is our life and our life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3. 3 4. The beloved Apostle that leaned upon Jesus his bosome tells us 1 Joh. 5. 11 12. This is the Record that God hath given to us eternal life and this life is in his Son Could we ever have wisht it in a surer or sweeter place than in the bosome of our blessed Saviour the Son of God and Prince of Life And farther He that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son of God hath not life c. Our life of righteousness our life of holiness our life of glory or our eternal life our spiritual life in these three considerations is wrapt or bound up in Jesus Christ the bundle of life As sin and death came by Adam so righteousness and life came by Jesus Christ according to that of the Apostle Rom. 5. 21. That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. This pregnant Text which I am now discoursing from more rich than Hermes Table bespangled with Emeraules presents ye with these four most Orient Jewels the Jewels of Heaven the choice blessings of the Covenant viz Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption and that which is the glory of all this Text acquaints ye with to your inexpressible comfort that Christ Jesus is all these in himself and by himself to ye and for ye God the Father hath made him your All in All Col. 3. 11. Christ is all in all all in all in Illumination all in all in Justification all in all in Reconciliation all in all in Adoption all in all in Sanctification all in all in Redemption all in all 2 Tim 4. 10. in preservation to his heavenly Kingdome And though it be said of the Saints enjoyment of God in heaven that God i. e. God the Father is all in all 1 Cor. 15. 28. yet certainly as God the Father is pleased to communicate himself in the
sweetly reposeth it self in the ●osome of God by love 1 John 4 7 8. Beloved let us love one another for love is of God and every one that loveth is born of God and knoweth God he that loveth not knoweth not God for God is Love You see love to God and to the Brethren is both a sure sign and a genuine effect of Regeneration which is synomminous with Sanctification This grace of Love is the very soul of all Religion the very life of the new Creature the closure of the soul with God in the sweetest manner he that hath most of this grace hath most of all graces This is one of the precious things promised in the new Covenant Deut. 30. 6. viz. An heart to love the Lord the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soul This is made a special effect and evidence of thy spiritual Circumcision or Sanctification In Sanctification as the understanding is enlightned to know God so the will and affections are renewed changed rightly ordered and enclined to love God as his chiefest good and as his utmost End Corn and Wine and Oyl and all the world is then counted nothing to the light of Gods countenance All other Beloveds are no body to Jesus Psalm 4. 6 7. Cant. 5. 10. Christ the chiefest of ten thousands A sanctified soul exactly viewing and well weighing the glittering pomp and splendor of this world all natural and moral excellencies on the one hand and Jesus Christ on the other cryes out with the Martyr Lambert None Foxes Acts and Monuments 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propter eminentiam cognitionis Christi Iesu Mo●● but Christ none but Christ Counts all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 dogs-meat garbage to the excellency of the Knowledge of Jesus Christ Phil. 3. 8. A Christian loves himself his Relations and worldly comforts with a common love but God and Jesus Christ with a special love He loves his temporal Enjoiments secondarily and subordinately but he loves God and Christ primarily intensively and superlatively yea so highly intensive is his love to God his Father to Christ his Saviour to the holy Spirit his souls Comforter to Heaven and heavenly things his only Treasure that his love to other things comparatively may be called an Hatred i. e. a much inferiour a far more remiss love See Luke 14. 26. more distinctly First A sanctified heart loves God with a Amore desideri● love of desire The strength of the heart goeth out in love this is called the breathing thirsting and panting of the heart after God Psalm 42. 1 2. The soul that loves God above all things desires God above all things both intensivè with the greatest vigor and Adequatè as its Adequate and compleat Object Whom have I in Heaven but thee and there is none upon earth that I desire besides thee 2. A sanctified heart loves God with a love of Union as the heart of Shechem Amore unionis clave to Dinah Gen. 34. 3. So an holy soul cleaves unto God in Christ Barnabas exhorted the Disciples that with purpose of heart they would cleave to the Lord Acts 11. 23. As the soul of Jonathan was knit with the soul of David 1 Sam. 1. 18. So this Love is as it were a knitting of the soul with God Faith makes a mystical union of Persons Love makes a moral union of affections This is the very essence of Gospel-love God bestows himself A●or ●o● est nisi d●num amantis in amatum on us and we freely surrender our selves to God Thirdly A sanctified heart loves God with a love of good will or Benevolence we wish and will give and ascribe all honour and 〈◊〉 Benevolentia praise all glory and dominion unto him This is the genuine product of his love in Christ to us as Revel 1. 5 6. Vnto him that loved us and washed us from our sins in his own blood and hath made us Kings and Priests unto God and his Father to him be glory and dominion for ever and ever Amen Lord saith an holy soul let all thine be mine and let all mine be thine and let thine be for thy glory let every person Cant ● 16 and creature and thing in Heaven above and in earth beneath be a shril Trumpet a loud Cymbal to sound forth thy praises Fourthly A sanctified heart loves God with Amore complacentiae acquiescentiae a love of Complacence and Rest Where we love the eye of the soul the mind is fixed with a delightful stay ubi amor ibi oculus the Object dwels in the 〈◊〉 we are still looking where we love When I awake saith the Psalmist Anima plus est ubi amat quàm ubi animat I am still with thee in my contemplations and affections My meditation of him shall be sweet I will be glad in the Lord Psalm 104. 34. Love goeth forth upon the feet of Desire and rests in the bosome of Delight There is an holy acquiescence of the heart in God God saith of his Saints This is my Rest for ever Psal 132. 14. Psal 116. 7. Psal 91. 9. Ephes 3. ult here will I dwell the Saint saith of God Return to thy rest O my soul A Saintt makes God the most High his Habitation and a Saints heart is the Habitation of God through the Spirit Here lyes the sweetness of holiness the marrow and fatness of Religion This World would be a Dungeon and Heaven it self a melancholly shade without the love of God 't is this that makes Heaven and Earth sweet unto the sanctified Heaven would be no Heaven God could not be the joy if he were not the love of Saints but there both love and Psal 16. ult joy shall be full But whilst the Saints are solacing themselves with Heaven and delighting themselves in God other men are following after other Lovers The covetous man makes Mammon his God the voluptuous man makes Pleasure his God the Ambitious man makes Honour his God the Formalist and Hypocrite makes Common grace self-righteousness a bare profession or the meer externals of Devotion his God and Saviour because every one of these make some of these their only Treasure and Happiness They dote upon them addict themselves to them trust to them and in them and love them more than God But a Saint that knows God makes Jehovah his God he hath but one the living and true God to honour love and serve who is the fountain of his life and blessedness Psal 36. 9. Psal 87. 7. Col. 3. 3. in whom all his springs are in whom with Jesus Christ all his Comforts live and from whom by Jesus Christ all his felicity is conveyed to make him happy in both worlds The new creature hath a new heart according to that full and free Promise Ezek. 36. 26. A new heart will
by Christs blood as influenced by Christs Spirit When ye come to this Pool of Bethesda there wait and wait earnestly for the Angels stirring of the waters as the impotent folk did John 5. 2 3 4. the Angel of the Covenant Christ in his Prophetical Office must stir in these waters of the Sanctuary manifest his Power and Presence in them and stir in thy heart also Open thy immortal Gates move and melt thy bowels for thee if ever they are effectual 'T is very observable that under the Law all the Cities of Refuge were Cities of Levites and Schools of Instruction And there the Man-Slayer must stay till the death of the High-Priest So in like manner if yee flie from the Pursuer of Blood the Law and Wrath of God to Jesus Christ for Refuge for Reconciliation for Justification as your High-Priest you must come to Christ also for teaching as your Prophet ye must learn the Trade of holiness in Christs School as well as look for reconciliation by Christs Crosse To conclude Your Head is holy so must the members be or else ye exceedingly dishonour your Head and disgrace his Glorie 3. 'T is for the honour of God the holy Spirit the Father and the Son have committed the Saints to the Spirits charge to this very end and purpose that they might be sanctified Sanctification is made the Spirits personal operation 2 Thes 2. 14. 1 Pet. 1. 2. The Spirit is to shape and fashion all the Vessels of Mercy and prepare them for Glory he is to deck the Spouse of Christ with the jewels of the Covenant 'T is the great advantage the Saints have in the Oeconomy or dispensation of Grace that they have the Father to purpose it the Son to purchase it and the Spirit to work it the Father Word and Spirit are all one and agree in one for our sanctification Now 't is a great grief to the Spirit when the work of Grace doth not go on and prosper in the soul for 't is he that worketh us to this very thing and therefore is called the Spirit of holinesse 'T is not for the Spirits honour that Gods Nursery or Plantation committed to his care and charge should not thrive and flourish 'T is not for the Spirits honour to dwell in defiled Temples nor to let the people go naked without their Ornaments 'T is not for the Spirits honour that any committed by the Father and the Son to his charge should perish or miscarry should fall away either totally from all Grace finally for all time for ever to miss of heaven in the end The Father hath left the Son in charge to be the Captain of our salvation and to bring many Heb. 2. children to Glory The Son hath left the Spirit in charge with all his Fathers children to guide them by his Counsel and to bring them to his Glory When Christ as man left earth and went to Heaven he comforts his Disciples by sending another Comforter and who he is Christ tels ye even the Spirit of truth to guide his people into all truth for he shall not speak from himself but whatsoever he shall hear that shall he speak and he will shew you things to come he shall glorifie me for he shall receive of mine and shall shew it unto you all things that the Father hath are mine therefore said I that he shall take of mine and shall shew it unto you John 16. 13 14 15. The Spirit of Christ is Christs Pro-rex or Viceroy by Commission from his Father and himself to rule and govern the affairs of his providential Kingdom Ezek. 1. 20 21. The spirit of the living creature was in the wheels The Spirit acts the Angels called living Creatures and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aux viae vobis erit in omnem veritatem So Beza in John 16. 13. the living creatures or Angels act and move the wheels that is the Transactions of divine Providence in the world and Christ by the Spirit governs and guides his Subjects in his spiritual Kingdome * the Spirit is Dux via the Captain of the way to lead his people into all truth their Glorious Guest to dwell with them and to abide with them for ever John 14. 16 17. and by his inhabitation and constant influence and operation to perfect his own work in them and ripen their souls for Heaven Thus our sanctification is absolutely necessary for the honour of the Father Son and Spirit 2. Our sanctification is absolutely and indispensibly needfull as for the honour of God so also for our attainment of true happines● Grace and Glory holiness and happiness sanctification 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hom. Negat queaqua posse vi● re Deum sine sanct●●●o●a 〈…〉 oc●●is v●debimus Deum quam qui reformati fu●rint ad ejus imaginem Calv. and salvation individuo nexu coh●rent These are tyed and twisted together with a knot inseparable and indissol●ble There is no going to Heaven without holiness no man shall see the Lord Heb. 12. 14. Some there are which ignorantly and fondly do restrein the word Saints to the Saints departed the Saints in Heaven but we must be Saints here or else can never expect to be Saints hereafter The Apostle denyes saith Calvin that any one can see God without holiness because he shall see God with ●o other eyes than those which shall be renewed according to his Image The Image of God is but begun on earth 't is perfectly and compleatly drawn by the Vision of God in Heaven Be sure you are real Saints sanctified in Christ Jesus and not only nominal and notional as too many are your Saintship is all the evidence you have to shew for your inheritance be sure then you keep your evidence fair and clear without blots and blurs Unless ye are begotten again unto a lively hope what have ye to do with that inheritance gilded with so many glorious Epithets 1 Pet. 1. 2 3. How can 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Math. 5. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they see God that have not a pure heart nor a pure eye indeed the pure heart is the pure eye The Degree of Vision will be according to the degree of sanctification the more gracious we are in this the more glorious wee shall be in the other world The Apostle tels us Col. 1. 12. we must be made meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saints in light What should a carnal heart do with Heaven that knows no other heaven but to eat drink and wallow in sensual delights as the Glutton at a feast cryed There 's no heaven like to this We must not look for a Turkish Paradise in Heaven but for a pure sin less state not to bathe our souls in carnal pleasures but to be Consorts of the immaculate Lamb and Competitioners with the Angels Perfection of Grace and fulness of joy in the presence As one saith Consortes Agni
riches of his grace through the Son to his Saints here so he will everlastingly communicate himself in the treasures of his glory through the Son to his Saints in heaven as Christ is the Medium of your spiritual union with God here so he will continue the eternal Medium of your glorious communion with God hereafter in his light ye shall see light The Soul-ravishing Vision of Jesus the Mediator Heb. 12. 24. ●omine fecistinos pro te cor irrequic●um est donec veniat ad te Aug. of the New Covenant and the Beatifical Vision of ever-blessed and glorious Deity in and through the Mediator is no small part or portion of the Saints Coelestial happiness God indeed is the Essence of the Soul the Eternal Entity of our happiness the Father of Spirits is the only rest and centre of our immortal Spirits for 1 Pet. 3. 18. Christ once suffered for sins the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God our approximation or drawing nigh to God being the ultimate end as to us of Christs passion yet the seeing of Christ as he is when he shall appear in his Fathers glory when he shall come in power and great glory to see him as he is in his greatest glory and fullest Majesty sitting at the right hand of the Father and to see our humane nature in him as far exalted above so far more glorious than those glittering morning stars the Angels will be no small part or measure of our blessedness though not the quintessence compendium or complement thereof 1 Joh. 3. 2. Beloved now are we the Sons of God and it doth not yet appear what we shall be But we know that when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is But to return Our Lord Christ is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by way of Eminency called that one Pearl of great price Mat. 13. 46. which the wise Merchant-man sold all that he had and bought This Pearl eminently and virtually contains all other Pearls in it is comprehensive of all excellent and Soveraign good which our souls stand in need of infinitely more precious and excellent than the rest and infinitely to be prized and preferred above the rest Christ not only hath but is wisdome to the simple rayment to the naked riches to the poor rest to the weary bread of life to the hungry water of life to the thirsty righteousness to the guilty sanctification to the filthy redemption to the captive peace and reconciliation to the enemy power to the faint a rock and refuge to the afflicted a shineing Sun to the disconsolate a saving shield to the assaulted in a word a full fons of living water of rich supply to those that labour under any distress or misery whether inward perplexity or outward calamity Philosophers brag much of their Elixir Naturalists boast much of their Panaecea and Catholicon and they would bear the world in hand as though these were Soveraign remedies against all maladies good against all diseases but these and all other whether natural artificial or moral excellencies are less than Cyphers to Jesus Christ compared with him they are less than nothing and vanity Isa 40. 17. 1. As Christ is God the worlds were made by him and for him by his power and for his glory Heb. 1. 2. Col. 1. 16. 2. As Christ is Mediator God-man so he is Heir of all things Heb. 1. 2. whom he that is the Father hath appointed heir of all things by whom also he made the worlds Now can he want light that lives in the midst of the Sun Can he want air that lives upon the top of the highest Mountain Can he want water that lives at the Well head No more can he want light life grace strength comfort or any good thing that lives in union and communion with Jesus Christ in whom dwelleth all the fulness of the Godhead bodily Col. 2. 9. * Qui habet habentem omnia habet o●nia He that hath him that owneth and possesseth all things hath all things 'T is an old and true saying Si Christum noscis nihil est si caetera nescis Si Christum nescis nihil est si caetera noscis Hath the Father given us the Son the Son of his eternal love of his eternal bosome then we may safely make with the Apostle this sweet inference How shall he not with him freely give us all things Rom. 8. 32. All things pertaining to life and godliness as the Apostle expresseth and explaineth it elsewhere 1 Cor. 3. 21 22 23. presents ye with a Christians Inventory and with a Christians tenure 1. A Christians Inventory All things A Christian hath a large dominion a great possession all things are yours 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for all things are yours Descend from generals to particulars then all things must be referred to or subdivided by persons and things All persons are yours that is for your good and benefit whether Paul or Apollo or Cephas whether Ecclesiastical or secular persons whether godly or ungodly whether spiritual men or carnal men therefore v. 22. he adds the world the wicked world or rather the wicked of the world who ere long shall be judged by the Saints as Assessors with Jesus Christ the Supreme Judge 1 Cor. 6. 2. shall be subservient to Gods glory and to the Saints good Those Slaves and Scullions that rub off the rust and scoure and cleanse the Vessels of Honor by temptations afflictions imprisonments persecutions c. though not intentionally as to them yet accidentally and eventually by the blessing of God shall really promote and carry on their spiritual and eternal interest 2. As all persons so all things are theirs whether life or death or things present or things to come all are yours ver 22. What can a soul either have or wish for more for a man not only to enjoy the comforts of life but also to find sweetness in death to find meat in this Eater to find honey in this Lyon to live in the midst of death to lie down in peace in the arms or rather Jaws of the King of Terrors for this deadly Enemy by the death of Christ to be made one of our best friends Again For a man to be rich in possession and rich in reversion too for a man to have an interest in all things present and an interest in all things future also to have Territories as broad as the earth and a treasure as high as heaven and returns of glory coming in unto him and upon him to all eternity this is an incomparable rich person and an incomparable blessed estate indeed 2. Note the Tenure Ye hold all in Caepite in and by union with him who is Gods Heir and your Head Ephes 1. last and ye are Christs and Christ is Gods v. 23. Ye are the Bride Christ is the Bridegroom ye are the Body Christ is the Head as the Head
of Christ is God so the Head of the Church is Christ The Father in an ineffable manner communicated as of old the Divine Essence and Nature so at his Incarnation an unmeasurable measure an overflowing fulness of the Spirit and Grace to the Son yea it pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell even as Mediator Col. 1. 19. And the Son by the Ordination and appointment of the Father communicates derives and by his Spirit imparts unto his Saints all those spiritual Eph. 1. 3. Eph. 3. 8. blessings all those unsearchable riches all those riches of glory or glorious riches Ephes 3. 16. which he hath received of his Father for them Some of which heavenly and choicest treasures we find lying in the field or rather Mine of this Text viz. Wisdome Righteousness Sanctification and Redemption I shall now Deo juvante consider the Text it self open the sense of the words and draw some practical conclusions from the whole The Apostle having humbled and dejected the Corinthians ver 26 27. of this Chap. in calling upon them to see or consider their calling for ye see your calling Brethren c. where calling is put metonymically for the persons called that is what manner of men they themselves were and generally are which God calls by the Gospel not the wise after the flesh not the Mighty not the Noble but commonly the foolish weak and base for the poor receive the Gospel Now in this verse the Apostle comforts and cheers them and lifts up their heads Quos antea dejecerat nunc supra omnes mortales evehit sed ita ut omnem ipsorum dignitatem doceat non ab ipsis sed à Christo emanare idque à Deo id est Dei unius vi ac beneficio Beza in loc above all other mortals by informing them of their Origination from God their Vnion with Christ their spiritual descent from him in Christ Jesus But of him are ye in Christ Jesus Here the Apostle shews them the true rise of true honour and of divine dignity Corinthiorum animos dejecerat revo●ando eos ad intuendam suam ipsorum vocationem quod fuit propemodum acsi dixisset eos insipientes ignobiles infirmos omnes fuisse quasi non essent quum ad Christum vocarentur Quare nunc illos erigit pulchrè consolatur dicens licèt ex vobis ipsis tales fueritis ut modò estis à me descripti Attamen jam ex Deo estis P. Martyr in loc not springing from noble birth or liberal breeding not from any natural moral or secular accomplishments or considerations whatsoever But from the special grace of God the Father in Christ Jesus manifested and put forth in a double act of divine love 1. In Election 2. In Regeneration 1. In Election God the Father did chuse all believers in Christ before the foundation of the world Ephes 1. 4. in that eternal compact or Foederal transactions between the Father and the Son commonly called the Covenant of Redemption Ye are of God in Christ Jesus viz. Emphasis est in verbo estis q. d. à Deo vobis est principium qui ea quae non sunt vo●at in Christo verò subsistentia c. Calvin by vertue of the Eternal Purpose and Decree of God The gracious purpose of God the Father in Christ is the beginning of the wayes of God the Original and highest Well-head of all our holiness and happiness as appears 2 Tim. 1. 9. where ye shall find that both our Salvation and Calling are no other than the genuine efflux and products of Gods purpose and grace given us in Christ Jesus before the world began So Tit. 1. 2. In hope of eternal life which God that cannot lie promised before the world began D. Jacomb in his Sermon upon Isa 55. 10. How was this life promised before the world began but in this everlasting Covenant wherein the Father promised unto Christ eternal life for all his Seed Though the Decrees of God are immanent Decreta Dei nihil ponunt in Actu and not transient acts abiding with reverence in the Mind or Breast of God and not actually passing upon the creature yet Gods eternal purpose in electing us in Christ is the primum mobile the great wheel that sets all the other inferiour wheels at work that animates quickens and actually moves and influenceth and constantly carries on and perfects all other intermediate acts of grace in order to our Salvation Gods blessing us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly things and places is said to be in relation unto in correspondence with in pursuance of his electing us in Christ according as he hath chosen us in Christ Ephes 1. 3 4. They are all Emanations from this Fountain Thus in the first place and I think not improperly we may be said to be of God in Christ Neque hoc intelligit quoad creationem sed ait de eo quod per gratiam Regenerationem consequuti erant P. Martyr Jesus viz. of God originally and primarily in Christ Jesus vertually and radically by vertue of Gods electing love to us in Christ before the world began 2. More principally according to the purport of this place we are of God in Christ Jesus by the grace of Regeneration we are Gods workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works Ephes 2. 10. Believers are of God i. e. born of God in Christ Jesus for the Father of our Lord Jesus as our Spiritual Father is said to have begotten us again unto a lively hope by the Resurrection of Jesus from the dead 1 Pet. 1. 3. Eadem sententia est cum illa qui non ex sanguinibus neque ex voluntate carnis c. Pomeran By vertue of his Will we are elected and by the Power of the same Will we are called and regenerated Jam. 1. 18. Of his own will begat he us by the word of truth c. One saith This sentence is the same with that Joh. 1. 13. which were born not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Let it not grieve the Saints in that they are not born of Nobles nor descended of the blood of Princes but rather rejoyce and raise up their spirits in the midst of all reproaches and sufferings in that they are the Sons of God by faith in Christ Jesus a Divine Off-spring of an heavenly Extraction rejoyce in this that your names are written in heaven Ye are wise noble honourable every way glorious creatures in Christ Jesus in Christ Jesus that is by Eph 1. 6. In Christo Jesu id est per Christum Jesum propter Christum Jesum nam per Christum propter Christum accepti grati sumus Patri Christ Jesus and for Christ Jesus for indeed we can be no way amiable or acceptable to the Father but in the beloved We are said not only to be Elect
called a Royal Priesthood 1 Pet. 2. 9. To be sanctified is more than to be purified for besides the expulsion of sin in Sanctification there is an infusion of grace a new disposition and frame of soul called a new heart and a new spirit Ezek. 36. 25 26 27. i. e. a new mind new apprehensions a new will new desires new affections from whence there follows newness of life and conversation 1. There is a new heart that is conformity to Gods Nature when the heart of man is like the heart of God as David is said to be a man after Gods own heart Conformity to the 2 Pet. 1. 4. Divine Nature is this new heart The Nature of God is the pattern of that Sanctification which is wrought in the heart of man 2. There is a new life that is our conformity to Gods Law or revealed Will whose will is our Sanctification 1 Thes 4. 3. An holy heart breathes and breaks out into an heavenly conversation Phil. 3. 20. Our conversation is in heaven The first is our habitual holiness the second is our actual The sum is this our habitual conformity to the Nature or Image of God and our actual conformity to the Will of God thereon depending is formally our Sanctification Thus I have shewed what it is to sanctifie and have opened the more eminent acceptations of it We come now to the fifth thing propounded 5. The Spirit of Christ is the efficient cause of our Sanctification The work of Creation is commonly ascribed to God the Father the work of Redemption to God the Son and the work of Sanctification to God the Holy Spirit yet Sanctification being a work ad extra is common to all the persons 1. It is ascribed to God the Father Jude 1. to them which are called and sanctified of God the Father 1 Pet. 1. 3. Blessed be God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to his abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope c. 2. Christ is said to sanctifie us He is made of God to us Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 2. To the Church of God which is at Corinth to them that are sanctified in Christ Jesus Heb. 13. 12. Wherefore Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate 3. The Spirit is said to sanctifie Hence these phrases the sanctification of the Spirit 1 Pet. 1. 2. 2 Thes 2. 13 14. and the spirit of holiness Rom. 1. 4. The Sanctification of the Spirit is as necessary as the mercy of the Father or the sprinkling of the blood of Jesus Christ by the redundancy of his Merit hath impetrated and obtained the Spirit of the Father to sanctifie those whom he means to save to purifie and make them meet for glory whom he died for and justified by his blood The Inchoation is from the Father the Dispensation is by the Son the Consummation by the Spirit 'T is from the love of the Father and by vertue of the Merit of the Son that we are sanctified but 't is properly the Office and the distinct personal operation of the spirit of holiness to sanctifie and it must be the mighty power of the eternal spirit that converts or sanctifies because 't is such a power as is commensurate and proportionate to the raising of the dead Ephes 1. 19 20. called the exceeding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Supereminens magnitudo Montan. greatness of his power c. We are not sanctified or converted as the Papists and Arminians say by a moral suasion or by the bare improvement of our own free will nor by the accession of some additional help to Nature but by the most strong and yet most sweet efficacy of the Almighty Spirit Psa 110. 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power or as some render it in the day of thy Armies 't is therefore called a Regeneration a begetting In die Copiarum So M. Ainsworth a soul again 't is a new Creation 't is a Vivification or quickning a man before dead in sins and trespasses not languishing and declining but in a moral sense stark dead nay 't is a Resurrection a rising out of the grave of sin and death All these works of wonder or rather this one mysterious work of Sanctification illustrated by these Metaphors bespeaks no less than the Almighty power of a God who is able to subdue all things to himself Phil. 3. 2● 1. 'T is a Regeneration or a begetting again 1 Pet. 1. 3. Jam. 1. 18. 2. 'T is a Creation Ephes 2. 10. We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works 2 Cor. 5. 17. He that is in Christ is a new creature Behold saith Christ I make all things new 3. 'T is a vivification or quickning Eph. 2. 1. You hath he quickned who were dead in sins and trespasses A natural man is both legally an morally dead till the Spirit of Life breaths upon him and quickens him Joh. 5. 25. That promise is still in fulfilling now that the dead shall hea● the voice of the Son of God and they that hea● shall live 4. 'T is a Resurrection Col. 3. 1. If ye then ●● risen with Christ seek the things that are above yea 't is more a kind of con-session or sitting together with Christ Eph. 2. 6. And hath raised us up together and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus If we live to God we live the life of heaven Now to regenerate to create to make all things new to revive a m●● dead to raise up a man out of the grave ● Lazarus both dead and buried all these ar● the Acts of Omnipotency the works of ● God and all those works are done in this o●● work by the invincible efficiency of the Spirit 6. The word and faith are the Ministring are Instrumental causes of our Sanctification The Spirit is called the Spirit of Faith Aristotle calls the hand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the instrument of instruments Faith being the gift of God and wrought by the operation of the Spirit unites the soul to Christ the Fountain of Holiness and Hea● of Influence and having united the soul ●● him continually receives supplies from him 'T is the hand of the soul that useful instrument whereby we apprehend Christ and whereby we draw down vertue from Christ Hence as an Organ or Instrument it is said to purifie Acts 15. 9. Having purified their heart by faith As Faith hath the Noblest Objects so Faith for its use and ●ffice here is the Noblest grace Faith indeed infused and created in us by the Spirit is commonly called the See Dr. Owens death of death p. 126. Simile Mother grace and is it self formally a great part of our sanctification As the woman sick of the Bloody Issue put forth her hand and touching the Hem of Christs garment drew vertue from him and was healed So that soul to whom
Heb. 5. 2. or Standard-bearer among Ten thousand as the most mighty merciful and every way glorious and compleat Saviour God hath made him your All in All He is of God made unto us wisdome righteousnesse c. Now God requires you should honour the Son as he hath honoured him for in honouring the Son you honour the Father and that in the highest manner God expects you should receive him as he hath offered him Oh then give glory to him by receiving him * Justifying faith is defined in short to bee a Cordial accepting of Christ as Lord Saviour in all his Offices c. So Dr. Preston Mr. Wil. Strong Mr. Baxter c. by accepting of him for your Lord and Saviour Embrace your blessed Saviour in the armes of Faith vail your souls to him close with him cling and cleave to him glory and rejoice in him draw down vertue daily from him lay all your wants upon him the oftner you come to him the more welcome and the fuller and richer you shal go from him As God hath made him your All in All so believe Joh. 1. 16. in him and make use of him as your All i● All. Now is this precious faith this faith unfeigned this faith of Gods Elect wrought in your souls yea or not Know assuredly if you are sanctified in Christ J●sus if you are God● workmanship created in Christ Jesus c. Ephes 2. 10. This precious grace is wrought in yo● called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the work of God * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 6 29. This is the work of God that you believe in him whom he hath sent Where this precious Faith is 't is alwayes found with these precious principal properties or vital operations 1. It Animates 2. It Purifies 3. It Fructifies 4. It Pacifies 5. It Operates 6. Amplifies 7. It Corroborates 8. It Exhilarates 1. Faith Animates enlivens and quickens the soul of man it is such a principle of spititual Life that a Believer doth not so much live as Christ by faith lives in him The spirit of Faith I am certain if not faith it self which of all graces leads the Chorum is the forma informans whereby a man before both legally and morally dead is now enlivened and lives to God Gal. 2. 20. Hab. 2. 4. Rom. 1. 17. Heb. 10. 38. Our whole life here is a life of Faith our life hereafter is a life of Vision or Sight here we walk by faith and not by sight 2 Cor. 5. 7. How sweet and heavenly is that Life which is derived from and maintained by the life of Christ himself 2. Faith purifies where there is life there is motion where faith is there is purification A Believer having a vital principle like a living Fountain labours to work out the mud of sin to cleanse and purge it self from inward filthinesse so as not to approve it allow it or mingle with it Acts 15. 9. having purified their hearts by faith as sicknesse is poyson to the blood and spirits so is sin to the soul now as all the spirits in their natural motions tend to self-preservation so the spirit of faith or the spirit by faith musters together and stirs up all the powers of the Inner-man for self-purification without purification there can be no preservation and Faith is the principal grace that purifies 3. Faith fructifies a living faith is a working a fructifying or a fruit-bearing faith as the Apostle James demonstrates James 2. 14 to the end They that are purified by faith in the blood of Christ are zealous of good works Tit. 2. 14. How many Believers at large are there that look green and fair and make a brave flourish afar off but come near them and well observe them view their hearts and their lives or their hearts by their lives and works and you shall finde them like the barren Fig-tree which Jesus saw full of leaves but without fruit to relieve him in his hunger the Curse of barrenness will strike to the hearts of such Professors as it did to the heart of that Fig-tree By Faith we have Union with Psal 36. 9. Jer. 2. 13. Joh. 15. 1. Rev. 22. 2. Christ the fountain of Life the fountain of living waters the True Vine and Tree of Life that grows in the midst of the Paradise of God All these Metaphors bespeak abundant fruitfulness and that of the choicest fruit The grapes of Canaan the graces of the Spirit the works of Righteousness and Acts of charity and mercy to the praise and glory of God by Jesus Christ In a word have you faith in Christ Jesus and hope in Heaven why then yee bring forth fruit as they do all the world over that have recieved the grace of God in truth Consider well 1 Col. 4. 5 6. 4. Faith pacifies as well as fructifies as it fructifies a barren Desart and makes the wilderness and solitary place to blossom as the Rose as Lebanon Sharon and Carmel so it pacifies Isa 35. 1 2 a troubled Conscience it stils the rage and surges of this Sea As once Christ said to the Winds and Waves so faith in the name and power of Christ speaks to the perplexed soul peace and bee still and there is a great calm Christians would live more the life of peace if they lived more the life of Faith the more of faith the less of servile fear being justified by faith we have peace with God c. Rom. 5. 1. Phil. 4. 7. And this peace of God passeth all understanding When the Clouds of Temptation Dr. Tho. Goodwin in his Vanity of Thoughts and the winds and waves of passion are up a few thoughts of Faith will quiet all as * a worthy Man observes There is no peace saith my God to the wicked Isa 57. 21. but a true Believer hath peace with God through Jesus Christ the Prince of peace he hath peace in Heaven and peace on Earth peace with God and peace with his own conscience for the Kingdome of God is righteousness peace and joy in the Holy Ghost Rom. 14. 17. 5. Faith operates it acts and works by love Gal. 5. 6. for in Jesus Christ neither Circumcision availeth any thing nor uncircumcision but Magnes amoris amor faith which worketh by love Faith worketh love wee love God when by faith wee apprehend that God loveth us first 1 John 4. 19. we love him because hee first loved us and as faith works love so it works by love Faith is the great Wheel the principal Grace that animates actuates moves influences love patience zeal and every other grace that sets all other wheels a going that quickens and strengthens all other graces in their proper respective motions and operations In the 11 Chapter to the Hebrews Faith is represented as the principle of Obedience The words of Dr. Bates in his Sermon upon Heb. 11. 6. conveying vigor and strength to other graces whereby they
sanctified is now made Membra sunt Arma ready for every good work to which before sanctification it was altogether reprobate Beloved Friends are your souls thus well and healthy are they recovered to their right temper are ye sound in the faith are ye sincere at heart is the habitual frame of your hearts right with God and for God or not deal impartially with your own souls 'T is true a man that is generally lively and healthy may now and then by accident get colds and surfets have fits of weakness and for some time labour under some infirmities but a strong Constitution will ●ub along wear off and cast out the disease at last so an holy a spiritually healthy man through humane frailty and strong temptation may for a time decay in grace yea languish very much hee may get cold his love to God his zeal for God may chil and cool his faith may weaken his hope may almost fail his patience may tire c. And through the immoderate cares of this life and inordinate affection to the Creature he may get a Surfet he may fall into sin yea fowly fall into great sins and labour Nemo esse sine delicto potest quamdiù indumento carni oneratus est Lactant. de vero cultu under the sense of a wounded spirit a long time Notwithstanding all this the immortal seed of God in him of which he is begotten by the supplyes of the Spirit of Life will revive and conoborate the man again The divine Nature in him will get head exert its influence and repair the man again Grace like Leaven will ferment the whole lump the whole soul and work out the disease of sin in a word the withering stock of Grace within like a Psalm 1. 3. Rev. 22. 1. Tree planted by the River of Life will spring and flourish scent and bud again 8. Blessed effect or Priviledge If thou art sanctified or regenerated thou hast a true and undoubted Title to the Kingdome 3 Joh. 3. 5. Except ye are born again ye cannot see ye cannot enter into the Kingdome of God This Negative is inclusive of the Affirmative If ye are born again ye shall both see and enter into Gods Kingdome This Kingdome of God if born again is thy Inheritance If thou hast the sanctification of the Spirit thou art begotten again unto a lively hope this lively is also a most glorious hope here hope is put for the object hoped for and what is that the 3d. v. informs ye an inheritance incorruptible undefiled which fadeth not away reserved in hea-for ye The children of Regeneration are most certainly and unquestionably the children of the Kingdome Sanctification is the Genuine and Evangelical Title to salvation see 2 Thes 2. 14. When ye are born from above ye are at that instant born for above ye are born children of God brethren of Christ Companions with Angels and heirs of Glory Nay let me tell ye more Sanctification is the very entrance into the Kingdome Sanctificatio est Ingreslus in Regnum Dei Ca●v Phil 3. 20. of God Holinesse is not only the way to Heaven but it is Heaven it self A sanctified person lives the life of Heaven * his conversation is in Heaven he lives the Life of God whilst his body is here on earth it is life eternal in the present tense in specie and in primitiis in the kind and first-fruits of it to know God in Christ John 17. 3. When ye begin to be holy ye then begin to enter into the white cloud of Glory Ah then seeing every one would be happy who would not be holy Holinesse becometh thine House O Lord for ever Without holinesse no man shall see the Lord that is with joy here●ft●r Heb. 12. 14. No nor any enjoyment of the favour and fellowship with God here An unsanctified person is very miserable he misseth heaven in both Worlds he hath nether holiness nor happiness he hath neither the seed nor the flower neither the first-fruits nor the Vintage he hath not a grain of saving Grace no sweet dews falling from heaven on him not a drop of the water of Life to comfort him But his soul is like the Heath in the Desart and shall not see when good cometh but shall inhabit the dry and parched places in the wildernesse in a salt land and not inhabited Jer. 17. 6. A most dismal state saltness and barrenness is his doom here fire and brimstone is his portion for ever Certainly an unholy man must needs be very miserable Lastly True sanctification is an abiding flourishing progressive Principle 1. It is an abiding Principle it lives and abides in it self and it also quickens the soul Semen manen● in the life and keeps the soul in the love of God for ever 1 Pet. 1. 23. A man externally sanctified may fall away and come to nothing like a barren Tree he may lose in time both leaves and fruit but a man internally sanctified can never fall away neither totally nor finally for the Name and Nature of God the Mark and Seal of God the Image and Seed of God is in him And this is incorruptible and immortal * 1 Pet 4. 14. the spirit of Glory and of God rests upon him the sp●rit of Holiness dwels and abides in his soul for ever the Father Son and Spirit according to their omnipotency faithfulness and immutability will never suffer their seed seal nature image to be lost Though Hymen●●● and Philetus hypocrites and hereticks may err concerning the truth overthrow the faith of some and throw themselves and others down to Hell Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure having this seal the Lord knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2. 17 18 19. The love of God in Election and in Vocation or Sanctification is like himself unchangeable The Gifts and Calling of God are without Repentance Joh. 13. 1. Rom. 11. 29. There may be partial and gradual Apostacy in some of the Saints of God they may backslide in their apprehensions in their affections and in their conversations as is too too manifest by the Scripture-evidence and by sad experience but to backslide totally from all the truths of God and from all the profession of the Gospel and with the mind and will with the consent of the whole soul and finally to fall away bid an eternal farewell or depart from God for ever This cannot shall not be Among others consult these Texts Heb. 12. 6 2. He that is the Author will also be the Finisher of our faith 1 Phil. 6. Hee that hath begun the good work in ye will also perfect it And Jer. 32. 40. And I will make saith God an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turn away from them to do them good but I will put my fear in their hearts and they shall not depart from me Here God in the Riches of his Grace through Christ undertakes both for himself and his
four weighty Reasons Reas 1. Because all grace begins with the Father he is the first in order of Being and the first in order of Working the Fountain of the Trinity as we may conceive 't is the Father that floweth out to us in Christ by the Spirit he is the Father of lights Jam. 1. 17. And the Text tells ye we are of God in Christ Jesus 't is true Christ as the second Person is coequal with the Father in power and glory but Christ as Mediatour must be considered as the Fathers Servant as his elect or Isa 42. 1. chosen Instrument Reas 2. Glorifie the Father for whatsoever good Christ hath done for you or in you all is done with respect to the Fathers love and grant God hath saved us according to his own Purpose and Grace given us in Christ Jesus God 2 Tim. 1. 9. Joh. 17. 2. gave Christ power over all Flesh that he should give eternal life to those God had given him Righteousness Holiness Heaven and Happiness is the Fathers free Grant or Donat●ve To her it was granted to be covered with fine Linnen the Rev. 19. 18. Rithteousness of the Saints and fear not little Flock 't is your Fathers good pleasure to give you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Kingdome Luke 12. 32. or that Kingdome 'T is very observable that in all Christs expressions of love to us he still expresseth obedience to his Fathers Will there is a double ground of hope as Stella speaks the Son loveth See Stella at large de amore Dei cap. 18. us because the Father requireth it and the Father loveth us because the Son asketh it Reas 3. It is a great support and comfort to a Believer in the act of believing to consider the Love of the Father as well as the Merit of the Son Two are better than one 't is 1 Joh. 2. 23 24. 2 Ep. Joh. 9. often made a great priviledge to have both the Father and the Son The Fathers love the Sons Merit severally and apart considered will not yeild that full joy and peace in believing as both conjoyned There 's no coming to God but by Christ for God out of Christ is consuming fire Again Christ separated from the Father doth not yeild so firm a ground of confidence The Fathers Act with the Sons Merit gives us full security Christ and the Father also are a Believers Guardians John 10. 28 29 30. a double cord is not broken easily this two-fold custody is the best security The Father is represented as the offended Party by mans sin Conscience quakes and trembles now for a soul to know that God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself and that Christ came from Heaven to do his Fathers Will and that the Father hath made him over to us in all his fulness as wisdome righteousness sanctification and redemption This settles the soul in peace Thou wilt keep him in peace peace so it is in the Hebrew whose minde is stayed on thee Isa 26. 3. It pleased the Father that in him should all fulness dwell peace in perfect peace Isa 26. 3. Reas 4. Because in the Fathers love there are many engaging Circumstances not to be found in the other Persons 1. In the Fathers Love and Acts of Grace there is an Original fulness Christs fulness as Mediatour is but drawn out of the Fathers plenty Col. 1. 19. 2. The fulness of the Son in the dispensing of it is limited by the Fathers will all that Christ dispensed was according to the charge and commandment of the Father Mat. 20. 23. To sit on my right-hand and left is not mine to give saith Christ save to those for whom it is prepared of my Father Christ as Mediatour was limited by the Fathers Will To what end did God give Christ power over all Flesh but to give eternal life to as many a God had given him to none other Now it is sweet to Joh. 17. 2. think that the Father himself loveth us who is first in Order and whose Will is absolute and that he hath laid up an inexhaustible treasure in his Son for us 3. In the Fathers Acts you have the purest and freest apprehensions of love 'T was the Father that began and as we conceive broke the business of our Redemption and that sent his Son into the world to accomplish it The Son as Mediatour can have an higher motive than his own love viz. the Fathers Will but the Father can have no higher motive than his own Love After the Apostle had treated of Election Predestination to Adoption Remission of sins c. he concludes all under the Will of God The Eph. 1. 11 12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the good pleasure of the Fathers Will was the Well-head or Fountain Cause of all those acts of Grace that passed out unto the creature by the personal operations of the Son and Spirit The love of the Father was antecedent to the merit of Christ and to the operation of the Spirit therefore in the Fathers Acts of Grace ye have the apprehensions of the first and freest love you have great reason therefore from Spiritual Scriptural Considerations to glorifie and praise the Father as the original Authour of all your holiness and happiness Thus much for the second Use Use 3 If Jesus be given of God for our Sanctification then we may safely infer that Sanctification is neither an easie nor a common work 1. Sanctification is no easie work God takes it to be his prerogative I am the Lord that sanctifies you Levit. 21. 8. Grace is his own proper immediate creature mans Will contributeth nothing to the worke but resistance and rebellion wherefore God makes the Domine errare per me potui redire non potui Aust Meditat. soul willing in the day of his power Psal 110. 3. and outward means work not unless the mighty power of the Spirit works with them or else why should the same Word Preached by the same Minister mollifie some and harden others Christ must come from Heaven and open a Fountain in his own side and heart Zech. 13. 1. for our purification Nothing but the blood of Christ can purge your Consciences from Heb. 9. 14 dead works If any other means had been effectual Christ had never been made of God Sanctification to us 'T is observable Sanctification is not onely expressed by a Creation i. e. a making of things out of nothing but Luke 11. 21 22. 1 Joh. 4. 4 also by a victory or a powerful overcoming of opposition In Creation as there was nothing to help so there was nothing to resist or hinder but when God comes to sanctifie or convert a soul besides a Death in sin God finds a strength of resistance against Grace Therefore Sanctification is wrought by the power of the Almighty We deserve it not it comes from the Fathers Good-will and Christs Merit and we work it
not 't is wrought in us by the power of the Holy Ghost 2. Sanctification is not a common work the making of man at first was not a Common but a special work let us make man after Gen. 1. 26 our own likenesse the making of other creatures was by the word of power but the making of man was an act of counsel And sure I am the forming of Christ in the soul the new workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good Ephes 2. 10 works is one of the greatest and most glorious works of God farre surpassing the Creation of Heaven and Earth Wherein God shews himself an Artist to the uttermost Sanctification is the decking of the soul with Christs Image a representation of God in his highest Excellency and this is not a common but a special Priviledge a divine Ornament which God bestows on none but upon his choice Favourites a special and peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. Use 4 Let all such that are in some measure sanctified or that truely desire to be sanctified wait on God till the work be accomplished Though your wills be perverse and obstinate God can bend and bow them God never made a Creature too strong for himself he that hath begun the good-work in you will Phil. 1. 6. perfect it he is able to do this thing in us and for us and he is faithful in the performance of his Promises to us 1. He is able Who hath resisted his will His Rom. 9. 19 Isa 59. 1 Phil. 3. 21 1 Thes 5. 24. Heb. 10. 23 hand is not shortned He by the mighty power of his Spirit can subdne us and all things to himself 2. He is faithful Faithful is he that hath promised who also will do it Believe O ye doubting desponding Souls in the veracity fidelity and immutability of the great and good God Hear what God and not what the Tempter speaks God hath promised to work in you to will and to do Phil. 2. 13. That Assertion carries along with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Et velle perficere These words are a Meiosis it the nature of a Promise Hath not the living and true God Promised in the New Covenant to sprinkle you with clean water to circumcise your hearts to put his Law into our mindes to write his Law in our hearts to take away the heart of stone to give us the ministration of his Spirit not to quench the smoaking Flax that is to kindle it not to break the bruised Reed that is to strengthen it and to send forth Judgement unto Victory that is to carry on the work of Sanctification in the Soul in spight of all opposition till it be compleat in Glory Oh then What remains but that we should all act Faith upon Gods power and faithfulness in making good his Promises or else wee shall discomfort our selves needlesly and dishonour God exceedingly And withal remember 't is very expedient to turn these Promises into Prayers and act Faith on them in Prayer The Promises are as so many Bills under Gods own hand which in the name of Christ we ought to present to the Father and to put them in suit at the throne of Grace Thus come in Faith and ye shall go away with Comfort Use 5 As a consequent of the former let such as are distressed through the sense of Sin and for want of holiness look up to Christ Jesus for Sanctification he of God is made unto us Sanctification believe in the Joh. 6. Joh. 14. 1 Mediatour in him whom God hath sent honour the Son as ye honour the Father God hath so appointed it Look up to him all ye the ends of the Earth and be saved so look Isa 45. 22 up to him and ye shall be also sanctified be daily looking up to Jesus the Author and Finisher of your Faith the Alpha and Omega of your holiness Heb. 12. 2. Look up to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aspicientes in illum Isa 61. 1. 1 Joh. 1. 7 Christ for the Spirit of Sanctification from Christ if ever ye would partake of his Unction The Christal stream wherein we are washed and made clean flows out of Christs own heart The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin Faith makes Application of this blood and so it purifies you may be poring long enough on your own filthiness and be filthy and dejected still unless you look up to this Fountain and see Christ given of God for your Sanctification you must apprehend him as the Lord your Righteousness and also as the High-Priest of your holiness else your Consciences will never be pure nor peaceable Naaman by the Prophets order was to go down and dip himself seven times in Jordan if he would be cured 2 Kings 5. 10. So by Gods order and appointment you must go down daily by the renewed Acts of believing to this Fountain and bathe and wash thy unclean Soul in the streams of this Jordan I mean Christs blood if ever thou wouldest be healed of thy sinful Leprosie Use 6 My sixth Use shall be to press us all to a serious sense of our absolute need of holiness Sanctification is not a thing indifferent which a man may have or not have and yet be happy no such matter You must be holy if ye will be happy 't is the unum necessarium the one thing needful Luk. 10 42 Prov. 4. 7 Sanctification is the principal thing Sanctification is the Wedding-Garment which renders ye amiable in the eyes of the King of Heaven without this the King will say Binde him hand and foot and cast him into outer darkness Mat 22. 12 13. Certainly this Wedding-garment is woven of the glorious beams of the Sun of Righteousness 't is both the Righteousness of Christ imputed and imparted Christs Righteousness say others with Faith and Holiness So Calvin and other Modern Writers The Graces of the Spirit are as Parliament Robes The Peers say some by rule of Peereage are not to sit in Parliament without their Robes The Graces of the spirit are the Jewels of the Covenant and Robes of Heaven No living or reigning there no sitting in Heaven as Peers of State as Kings and Priests without these Robes of Glory the Righteousness of Christ for Justification and the Graces of Christ for S●nctification without all this white Linnen the Righteousness of the Saints Sanctification is the Seal or Mark of Heaven There is a Necesse est put upon Sanctification 1. For the honour of God of each Person in the Trinity ● For our own happiness 1. For the honour of the Father that his choice be not disparaged 2. For the honour of the Son that his Members be not deformed nor polluted 3. For the honour of the Holy Spirit that his charge may not miscarry or fall short of Glory 1. For the Honour of the Father whose choice we are we are chosen in Christ to be holy Ephes 1. 4. and
cultrix manifostat Athan in his Ep. ad Solitar 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Epiphan punishments concludes of that Sect it evidently declares it self thereby to be neither pious nor to have any reverence of God Epiphanius gives this as the Character of the semi-Arrians they persecute them that teach the truth not confuting them with words but delivering them that believe aright to hatred wars and swords having now brought destruction not to one City or Countrey alone but to many Again The Councel of Sardis Ep. ad Alexand expresly affirms that they disswaded the Emperour from interposing his secular power Praecipit sancta Synodus Nemini deinceps vim infer●e Cui enim vult Deu● miseretur quem vult indu rat to compel them that dissented And the Councel at Toledo by one of their Canons condemned the ugly trade of persecution The holy Synod commandeth that none hereafter shall by force be compelled to the faith for God hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth These instances among many more producible I have named whereby 't is evident that persecution was long since condemned as wicked both by Fathers and Councels Ye shall ever finde it the black mark of the Beast and false Prophet to persecute the Image of Jesus 2. As it is a wicked so it is a fruitlesse Practice The silly persecutor doth but beat the air plow the sand and kick against the pricks his work is senslesse and fruitlesse though he may bring others to the fire he doth but labour in the fire as the Prophet speaks his work will be burnt up and come to nothing as with the Children of Israel in the Land of Aegypt the more they were afflicted the more Exod. 1. 12. they multiplied So the more the Saints are persecuted the more they are augmented this is a strange yet a true Paradox the more they are depressed and oppressed the more Depressa resu●go they grow like Camomile the more they rise up like the Palm-tree 't is apparent by all stories in all Ages that the more precious blood hath been spilt the more precious seed Sanguis Ma●tyrum semen Ecclesiae multiplying into an innumerable off-spring hath been sown All along the Blood of the Martyrs hath been the seed of the Church This not only the Pagan Emperours of old notwithstanding all the havock they made of the Lambs of Christ but also the mightiest Christian Emperour that ever sweyed the Western Scepter had experience of Charles the fifth son of Pepin King of France Emperour of Germany after all his Warrs Slaughters stirs and B●zzles in the world to extirpate the Protestant faith at last was weary and left the matter much as he found it and betook himself to a private life And when in his retirement he came to dye he dep●●ted in the same faith as the renowned Historian Thaanus relates which in his life-time he had persecuted Casting himself with Se quidem indignum esse qui prop●●is meritis regnum coelorum obtineret sed dominum Deum suum qui illad duplici jure obtinuit Patris haereditate passionia merito altero contentum esse alterum sibi donare ex cujus dono illud sibi merito vindicet h●●què ●●duciá fretus minimè confundatur c. ●huan Hist lib. 21. his whole soul upon God he thus reasoned That for his part he was on the account of any merits of his own unworthy to obtain the Kingdome of Heaven but his Lord and God who had a double right unto it one by inheritance of his Father the other by the merit of his own Passion Contented himself with the one Granted the other unto him by whose Grant he rightly laid claim thereunto and resting in this faith or Confidence he was not confounded c. Another instance is out of Sulpitius Severus * Non expressa est hae●esis sed confi●mata latius propagata in the end of his second Book Ithacius with some other Bishops his Associates procured Maximus the Tyrant to put Priscillian●s a Grostick with some others to death and to banish some of their followers what follows † Inter nost●o● perpetuum discordiarum bellum exa●si● q●od jam per quindecim annos foedis dissentionibus agitatum nullo modo sopiri poterat Sulp. Severus thereon Hoc modo saith the Historian homines luce indignissimi pessimo exemplo necati aut exiliis mulctati On this manner were those most unworthy wretches either slain or punished by banishment by a very bad precedent and what was the success of this Fury He tels us the Heresie was so far from being expressed by it that it was the more confirmed and propogated And what ensued hereupon in the Church it self the Author tels us in the end of his Ecclesiastical story Amongst ours a lasting war of discord was kindled which after now it hath been carried on for fifteen yeares with shameful Contentions could by no means be allayed Those that have read the Germane French and Brittish Annals will set to their seals that this is true that persecution hath ever been a vain unprofitable Work a beggatly poor Trade none have thriven by it that have followed it yea a most destructive Trade How have Countreys and Kingdomes been inveloped in blood and war in confusion and distraction where this phrensie hath reigned and raged 3. Persecution of the Saints of God for Conscience-sake is not only a most wicked and fruitlesse but also a most dreadful practise and that for two Reasons to name no more 1. Christ espouses his Saints injuries he takes them as done unto himself Saul Saul why persecutest thou me said Christ to Saul As a Christian shares with Christ in all his dishonours Acts 9. 4. Psal 69. 9. He that toucheth you toucheth the Apple of mine eye Zech. 2. 8. The reproaches of them that reproach thee are faln upon me so Christ partakes with Christians in all their persecutions he accounts himself concern'd in all their injuries Now is it not dreadfull to be an enemy to Jesus Christ Is it not dreadfull to be found a fighter against God Is it not dreadful to war against Heaven to pull down Almighty and eternal Vengeance on a mans head 2. As the Persecutors ordain their Arrows against the Saints their cruel Laws Edicts Fines Pains Penalties as they have done in one part of the world or other in all Ages so God hath by way of requital ordained his Arrows against the persecutors if they turn not God hath prepared for them the instruments of Death the Scripture speaks expresly he ordaineth his Arrows against the Persecutors Psalm 7. 13. And those Arrows viz. divine judgments shall be sharp in the hearts of Christs Enemies 'T is confessed an ignorant persecutor may be pardoned upon great Videtur innuere Paulus nullum esse veniae locum nisi ubi suppet●t ignorantiae excusatio Calvin his verbis neque Paulus
divine Justice in finishing Transgression in making an end of sin in bringing in everlasting Righteousnesse and so in bringing us to God 1 Pet. 3. 18. Now as he is our merciful and faithful High Priest so he is our Righteousnesse 1 our Justifyer endowing us with a perfect Righteousness Justitia hoc est justificator noster donans nos vera justitiâ coram Deo per fidem Ad sacerdotale munus Christi hoc pertinet Pareus in 1 Cor. 1. 30. before God through faith this belongs to the Priestly Office of Christ Jesus Christ is the Author or the procuting cause of our justification as he is the Author of our eternal Salvation And this he Heb. 5. 9. doth two wayes 1. By making an Atonement for us on Earth 2. By making intercession for us in Heaven He hath made reconciliation for us by his blood upon the Crosse Rom. 5. 10. and he doth continue to make intercession for us by the prevalent and loud cryes of the same blood in Heaven Heb. 12. 24. He is gone up to Heaven to appear in the presence of God for us just as Aaron a type of Christ Exod. Heb. 9. 24. 28. 12 29. and 30. verses was to bear the name of the children of Israel a figure of all the Elect of God engraven in precious stones upon his Shoulders and upon his Heart when he went into the holy Place for a memorial before the Lord continually So our Lord Christ is entred into the Heavens with red and glorious Garments to appear in the presence of God for us there is not the least Believer but his name is as it were engraven upon the Shoulders Breast-plate and Heart of Christ Of all cryes the cryes of blood are the strongest the loudest whether for or against a guilty person Abels blood cryed aloud to God for vengeance but this blood of Gen. 4. 10. sprinkling speaketh better things than that of Abels it pleads sues presses hard for a discharge from all thy sins and enemies it cryes aloud for mercy peace and pardon Lord saith Christ here is my price and my purchase my Redemption and my redeemed Ones here is my Righteousness and here are the persons justified by it whatever charge or guilt lyes upon them here are the shoulders that have sustained the weight of thy wrath which was their due upon these shoulders and in this heart thou mayest behold all their names engraven acquit and absolve them for my sake Father I will that they be righteous by my Righteousness and glorious with my Glory My tears my stripes my wounds my groans my anguish my Blood the tortures of my Body the torments of my Soul do all pray and plead prevailingly that all believing sinners be justified and saved Thus Christ appears in Heaven with red Garments with Garments rolled in blood and with the whites of peace pardon justification and absolution upon the red with all the names of his justified sanctified ones engraven upon his shoulders and upon his heart before the Lord continually to present his everlasting Righteousness to the Father for us to present our persons as righteous and spotless enwrap'd in that glorious Robe of Righteousness and to impropriate and apply his everlasting Righteousness to us Thus I have proved that Christ is our Righteousness 2. We come in the next place to open the Vox justificandi 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inde justificationis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 propriè fere semper forinseca forensis actio est judicis judicii scilicet in rei absolutione condemnationi opposita Synop. Pur. Theol. p. 434. Justificare absolvere à est morte non condemnare Syntag. Polan p. 455. meaning of the word justifie Justification is a Law-state and the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are verba forensia or judicial or Court-Terms taken from Courts of Justice It imports the absolution of a guilty person the word justification is in holy Writ opposed to condemnation To justifie saith Polanus is to absolve from death not to condemn Though justificare sometimes may note as much as justum facere if you respect the notation of the Latin word as magnificare importeth to magnifie or make great neither is it to be doubted but that the Lord doth constitute or make those just whom he justifieth they are just both by the imputation of Christs Righteousness which is out of them in Christ as being his personal righteousness and by infusion of righteousness as it were by influence into them from Christ their Head to the faithful belongs a two-fold Righteousness the one of Justification the other of Sanct●fication I shall make it evident saith the Reverend Downam's Treatise of Justification p. 2 3. learned Bishop Downame that the Hebrew Hitsdique and the Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is verbum forense a judicial word taken from Courts of justice which being attributed to the Judge is opposed to Condemnation and signifieth to absolve or to give sentence with the party Justificare est justum reputare justum pronunciare questioned Thus far he So that to justifie both from Scriptures and the writings of the Fathers is as much as to absolve or a quit a believing sinner from guilt and condemnation and to accept him as righteous through the righteousness of Jesus Christ To justifie is to repute and pronounce a man just or righteous Justification is opposed to Condemnation Rom. 8. 33. it is God that justifies 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not one condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus Rom. 8. 1. i. e. acquits absolves who shall condemn so the word is taken Deut. 25. 1. The Judges are commanded to justifie the righteous and to condemn the wicked likewise Prov. 17. 15. he that justifies the wicked and condemns the righteous they are both an abomination to the Lord. So also is this word taken in a Law sense Psalm 143. 2. Lord enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man be justified Rom. 5. 16. Judgment was by one to condemnation but the free Gift is of many offences to justification Now the Scripture speaks of a righteousness of the Cause and of a righteousness of the Person 1. Of the Cause When a man in other 1. Justitia Causae respects sinful may be said in this or that particular cause or matter to be innocent or just as in the case of Abimelech touching the Gen. 20. 5. matter of Sarah he pleads the integrity of his heart and the innocency of his hands c. 2. Of the Person That is the universal 2. Justitia Personae conformity of the whole man and of all his actions to the holy Law of God and this twofold 1. Legal 2. Evangelical 1. Legal By the Law and the works thereof hereby the Man Christ Jesus and none Hac justificatione Angeli sancti fruuntur