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A65753 A vvay to the tree of life discovered in sundry directions for the profitable reading of the Scriptvres : wherein is described occasionally the nature of a spirituall man, and, in A digression, the morality and perpetuity of the Fourth Commandment in every circumstance thereof, is discovered and cleared / by Iohn White ... White, John, 1575-1648. 1647 (1647) Wing W1785; ESTC R40696 215,387 374

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Justified Rom. Historicall faith assents to the truth of Gods promises 3.24 In these Promises both generall and particular an Historicall faith may beleeve both the truth and the goodnesse of them But the goodnesse of them to himselfe in particular he beleeves not which a justifying Faith assents unto and embraceth Justifying faith embraceth the goodnesse of them to himselfe in particular That it is good to draw neere unto God Psal 73.28 that his Law is good Rom. 7.16 his Judgements good Psalm 119.39 yea his very chastisements Psalm 119.71 all working together to good Rom. 8.28 Not onely because God who is good doth good Ps 119.68 but besides because all is sanctified and made good in Christ for whom one findes it good to accompt all things losse not onely his owne righteousnesse Phil. 3.9 but his owne will and desires which he casts aside desiring to be guided by his Spirit which is good Psal 143.10 seeking Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption in Christ 1 Cor. 1.30 It is indeed impossible for any man to rely wholly on Christ Without which one can never be brought to affect Christ with all his heart unlesse his will be brought to choose and desire him for that excellency of goodnesse which is to be found in him seeing God hath planted in all Creatures man especially as strong desire of or propension to their owne chiefest good which cannot be destroyed without the destruction of Nature it selfe So that a man will never be brought to denie all things for Christ unlesse he be well assured that he shall finde in Christ that sufficiency that makes him more happy then all things can doe besides Now it may be easily Demonstrated that Historicall faith though it may assent unto the truth yet cannot embrace the goodnesse of the Covenant made by God with man in Christ For how can he who never yet learned to deny himselfe which no naturall man can doe thinke it good to abhor his owne righteousnesse or be pleased to have no ability in himself to any good no wisdome of his owne no will of his owne but to fetch all his Wisdome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption from Christ to take onely the Will of Christ for his Rule To referre the glory of his best works unto God alone and to his honour as our Saviour requires Mat. 5.16 and the Apostle 1 Cor. 10.31 So then howsoever Historicall and Justifying faith seeme to embrace the same object namely the promise of Salvation by Christ yet to speake properly it is the same onely Materially but not Formally because though they embrace the same promise yet they embrace not the same thing in that promise Historicall faith acknowledgeth it to be true but onely Iustifying faith beleeves it to be good at the least to be good in particular to himselfe that beleeves From this different apprehension of the object of Faith ariseth another difference between these two kinds of Faith in the Minde of him that beleeves As a true Beleever doth For a true Beleever having in himselfe by the Spirit a cleere Evidence not only of the truth but besides of the goodnesse of the Promise which he beleeves and that to himselfe in particular is strongly carried after it with all the desires and affections of his Soule closing not onely with the Promise but with Christ himselfe tendred unto him therein For in all Regular Motions of the Spirit of man such as were Adams in his innocency and such as are those that are in the regenerate as farre as they are regenerate the Will is so guided by the Understanding that when that judgeth any thing to be the chiefest good the other cannot choose but embrace it So that a man clearely apprehending and judging that there is no true happinesse to be found but in Christ the whole heart necessarily relieth upon him and closeth fully with him denying himselfe wholly both in opinion and judgement and in purpose and choice Thus farre a true Beleever goes in embracing Christ But a temporary Beleever cannot How neare one that hath no more but Historicall faith may come unto him we are now to enquire The comming on of such a person towards Christ our Saviour himselfe describeth unto us in that parable of the Sower Mat. 13.20 21 22. but more clearely the Apostle Heb. 6.4 5. who sets out before us the distinct steps and degrees by which one may advance forwards towards the entertaining of the Promises of Salvation and Life and yet fall short at the last To begin therefore with the Apostles expressions in that place he tells us that one which may afterwards fall away and therefore was never truly one of Christs 1 Iohn 2.19 may notwithstanding be inlightned Although he may may taste of the Heavenly gift may be Partaker of the Holy Ghost may taste of the good Word of God and Powers of the World to come These particulars it will be needfull to examine severally in their order That a naturall man may be the gift of Illumination Be inlightned understand more of the Mysteries of Godlinesse then his naturall reason could teach him no man can deny and we have already shewed that this may be done without any change of the heart onely by the Improvement of Naturall Reason by the light of the Spirit Now when a man is thus inlightned and convinced by reason of the truth of those divine Misteries 2. And may have some Taste of the Heavenly Gift he may very well have some pleasing taste of that Heavenly gift mentioned in the next place not onely the gift of tongues and Prophecying called the gift of the Holy Ghost Act. 2.38 whereof the Apostle acknowledgeth that men out of the state of Grace may be partakers 1 Cor. 13.2 But besides of Christ himselfe and the favours and free mercies of God bestowed in him called the gift of God Iohn 4.10 and things freely given us of God 1 Cor. 2.12 which the temporary beleever apprehending and observing that they promise much good unto man may easily be delighted withall But this delight which such a man hath in these heavenly gifts can be but a taste as the Apostle calls it such as one hath of things that he never takes down nor much lesse digests to receive any true strength thereby in the Inward man Which comes far short of that full content which true Beleevers finde in Christ Such a taste the Hearer had resembled by the stony ground Mat. 13.21 affecting him with a present Joy and Delight as those things doe that have a pleasant taste such the Iewes found in Iohn Baptists Doctrine wherein they rejoyced for a season Iohn 5.35 But this taste comes farre short of that satisfying content which Godly men find in God Psal 116.7 and in his Word Psal 119.103 which moves them to love them above all things ver 127. and to cleave to them for ever verse 111.112 For if it be well
by it to direct our practise and tender it unto God as a duty required and commanded in his owne law For which end both our Saviour Christ himself and the Apostles also after him even then when both the Judiciall and Ceremoniall laws were abolished yet upon all occasions presse the observation of the Morall Law And is therefore urged in the very letter of it by the Apostles and that too in all the duties thereof and that by vertue and from the letter of the commandement it self Rom. 13.8 9. Ephes 6.2 James 2.10 11. As for those who because the Apostle encourageth us to obedience Object 1 because we are not under the law but under grace Rom. 6.14 We are not under the Law but under Grace plead that we are therefore now no more under the command and rule of the law they mistaking the end and scope at which the Apostle aims put a sense upon his words Answer It is only an encouragement to mortifie our lusts which the Law forbade but brought us no power to subdue as Grace doth which he never intended For he makes use of this Position in that place only as a strong motive to encourage us to resist sin and not to suffer it to reigne in our mortall bodies to obey it in the lusts thereof Rom. 6.12 because we have now under the Gospel power to master and means to obtain victory over it which we may be assured of upon this ground that we are not under the Law which indeed forbids sin but in the mean time furnishing us with no power to resist it by the corrupt inclination of our rebellious spirits rather awakens and quickens our corrupt lusts by restraining them then subdues them but under Grace and consequently under the government of the Spirit which supplies us with ability to resist sinfull motions and to conform to the law that our thoughts may be brought under the obedience of Christ which the law of it self could not give us So that by that Spirit we have the fear of God planted in our hearts that we shall not depart from him Jer. 32.40 Yea but will some object the Apostle tels us Object 2 We are no longer under a School-master Gal. 3.14 15. that the law was our schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ but after faith is come we are no longer under a school-master To which we answer that the Apostle intending in that place to prove against those who pressed the observation of the law to establish their own righteousnesse for the obtaining of eternall life Rom. 10.3 and laying before himself this scope to make it evident that there can be no justification by the works of the law but only by the righteousnesse of faith because for want of ability to fulfill the law perfectly in every point vvhich is impossible to us through the vveaknesse of the flesh Rom. Answer 8.3 we are so far from being justified by it that it leaves us under a curse he takes in hand and hath just occasion to make it appear that one speciall use of the law is to drive us unto Christ The morall law drives to Christ for justistification in which respect he is said to be the end of the law to those that believe Rom. 10.3 Which is true indeed even of the Morall Law especially if we take in with it the promises and threats annexed thereunto vvhereof neither the one can be obtained nor the other escaped but by Christ alone But the Apostle speaks there of the ceremoniall law especially But in this place the Apostle especially points at the ceremoniall lavv vvhich under types and shadows represented Christ unto that Church of the Jewes vvhich now by the coming of the body of vvhom they were shadows are vvholly taken away Now whereas the same Apostle tels us 1 Tim. 1.9 Object 3 that the Law is not made for a righteous man The law is not made for a righteous man he meanes not that the Law was not made for such a man for his direction to be the rule of his life but seeing a just man voluntarily submits to the Law both desires endavours to walk according to it Answer that man needs not the Law as a bridle True as a b●idle because he hath a stronger means to hold him in a sanctified spirit within him to hold him in by way of restraint because he is kept within his bounds by his own spirit which inclines in it selfe unto Gods Testimonies Psal 119.112 chooseth the way of his Truth v. 99. vowes to keepe Gods judgements ver 106. makes them his desight ver 143. and finds delight in them ver 103. and therefore having within himselfe a principle that enforceth more strongly to the duties of obedience then the terrors of any law can doe the law in that respect is not given to a righteous man who is a law unto himselfe and yet so that he guides himselfe by the rule of that Law alone Psal 119.24 105. But as he adds in the words that follow it is made for the lawlesse and disobedient and the like who need this Law both as a bridle to keepe them within their bounds by the terrors thereof and besides as a Judge to condemne them for their disobedience when they become transgressors and walke contrary thereunto It is true indeed Christ indeed freed us from the ceremonial Law that from the Ceremoniall law we are wholly freed by the comming of Christ into the world who is the body of those shadowes and it is as true that the Judiciall law is likewise made void to us And Judiciall as being given to the Iewes as such a State not as a Church and therefore cannot be continued not only because the State of the Iews to which it was given is and was shortly after Christs Ascension dissolved but besides because the Church being spred over so many different Nations and States it was impossible for them all to be grounded by the same rules of civill Policy Not from the Morall But for the Morall Law seeing it sets down rules of governing a man as a man it is communicable to all men of what Nation soever and is therefore universally and perpetually to be observed Notwithstanding even concerning that Law we gaine ease and reliefe by Christ three waies by which that yoke if we think fit so to tearme it is made easie unto us although to speake truly the Commandements in themselves are not grievous as the Apostle testifies 1 Iohn 5.2 First therefore we are by Christ freed from the rigour and curse of the Law Christ also hath freed us from the curse of that Law which required of us full and exact obedience thereunto in all things and that under the penalty of an everlasting curse to rest for ever upon our bodies and soules if we failed in the least duty required therein as it is denounced Deut. 27.26 Now Christ being
Which we must so apply as if we were named therein and to apply and take them home unto our selves in such sort as if we were specially named in any Precept Reproofe Promise Commination Consolation or the like which is the most effectuall meanes to awaken and stirre up affections and to set on our endeavours as manifestly appeares in good Iosiah his example 2 Chron. 34.20 21. For such particular applying of things to our selves Examples hereof we have in Scripture we have frequent precedents in Scripture For there we finde the promises made in such a time and to such persons applied both unto other times and persons As that promise made to the children of Israel Isa 49.8 is applied to us under the Gospell 2 Cor. 6.2 and a little after ver 16.18 is applied to us likewise the promise made to them Levit. 26.11 12. Ier. 31.1 The promise made to Ioshua cap. 1.5 and that upon which David buildes Psal 118.6 are both applied in like manner Heb. 13.5 6. So likewise the Prophet Isaiah his exhortation to the people of his time is pressed upon us Christians Eph. 5.18 and in like manner Davids caveat Psal We must looke upon the Law as a rule to guide us and a judg to try our actions by 95.7 8. is urged upon us Heb. 3.7 8. and the judgements threatned or executed on those under the Law the Apostle tells us happened to them for ensamples to us that we might beware of the like sinnes 1 Cor. 10.6 11. In applying the Law with the Sanctions thereof seeing it serves not onely for Direction to shew us what we ought to doe but for judgement to teach us what to thinke of what we have done we may easily mistake if we be not wise and therefore in judging of our selves and our workes by the Law Whether our conformity to the law be spirituall as the law is spirituall we need some caveats to keepe us from errour in our judgement First seeing the Law is spirituall and therefore requires the conformity of the spirit as well as the outward man to Gods will as appeares by our Saviours interpretation of it Mat. 5.22 28. a man must not onely bring his works but his thoughts to be tryed by the Law Whether our obedience be out of a sincere heart and a fruit of faith and love c. Which will make us abhor even our righteousnesse In judging our selves by the Law observe 1. Whether we sinne presumptuously or out of infirmity so that if one have done a worke answerable to the Law if it be not done in uprightnesse of heart with a cheerfull spirit which God requires Deut. 28.47 if it be not a fruit of our faith and love to God it is abominable 1 Cor. 13.3 A consideration that must make all our righteousnesse in his eyes like filthy raggs Isa 64.6 and move him to cry out Enter not into judgement with thy servant Psal 143.2 Secondly we must consider that the Law is not so much broken by slips and infirmities for in the middest of them one may and a Godly man alwayes doth justifie the Law Rom. 7.16 22. as by sinnes of presumption such as are mentioned Deut. 29.19 and Ier. 44.16 when a man sinnes wilfully and prepares not himselfe to doe according to Gods will Luke 12.47 48. wherefore a man hath no reason to apply to himselfe the curses of the Law for such slips of infirmity which are threatned onely against such as are wicked transgressors Psal 59.5 Thirdly 2. Whether our obedience be sincere though it be not perfect though it be true that the Law requires perfect obedience pronouncing a curse upon all that confirme not the words of the Law to doe them Deut. 27.26 yet being now delivered in the hand of a Mediator that condition is so farre moderated that sincerity of obedience is accepted in stead of perfection according to that of the Apostle's that where there is a willing minde one is accepted according to what he hath not according to what he hath not 2 Cor. 8.12 In the former of these David stands upright with God Psal 18.20 21. and offers himselfe to triall Psal 139.23 In the latter he dares not lift up his face Psal 130.3 Lastly 3. Whether we conforme to the law in the maine course of our way though we swarve in our steps we must consider that although the Law censure every action or thought of the heart and approves or condemnes every one of them as farre as it is agreeable or contrary thereunto yet the person is censured rather according to his way then according to his steps that is according to the maine course or scope of his life then according to his particular acts Thus a man may judge himselfe to be an observer or keeper of the Law though he faile in many actions as David is approved as one that did that which was right in the eyes of the Lord notwithstanding the matter of Vriah because the maine course of his life was holy 1 Kings 15.5 and on the other side one is condemned as a transgressor of the Law if the course of his life be wicked though he doe many things according to the Law as Iehu is 2 King 10.30 31. The want of the due observation of those rules causeth many a hypocrite to promise himselfe Peace and many a Godly man to afflict his spirit without sufficient cause Our third labour after we have read the Scriptures must be to worke into our hearts by meditation those things which we finde most profitable for our own use so long till our affections begin to kindle and our hearts to wax warme as Elisha stretched himselfe often upon the Shunamites child till he first waxed warme and then neesed and opened his eyes 2 King 4.34.35 So that our delight in those divine and heavenly truths and desire after them discover themselves as they doe in holy David Psal 119.5.20 40 97 103 111 and 131 c. This is best done by appropriating them unto our selves for that which affects us is that which most neerely concernes us without this meanes of quickening our hearts they remaine dead and senseless and the Word becomes utterly unprofitable Againe because we are little affected with those things which we beleeve not as Iacob was with his sons words till he saw the Chariots which assured him of the truth of what they affirmed Gen. 45.26 27. our chiefest care must be to bring our hearts to beleeve what we read as undoubtedly true as David beleeves Gods Law to be faithfull Psal 119.138 True from the beginning ver 160. truth it selfe ver 151. as being the word of that God that cannot lye Tit. 1.2 nor change his minde Numb 23.19 nor be hindered in whatsoever he purposeth to doe Dan. 4.35 but he doth whatsoever he will Psal 135.6 Withall Our next care must be to work our hearts to a love of the law and delight
made a curse for us hath taken off from us and redeemed us from this curse of the Law Gal. 3.13 and seeing this exact obedience which the strictnesse of the Law required is now made impossible unto us by reason of the weaknesse of our nature corrupted by Adams fall God through Christ hath been pleased to moderate unto us the rigour of the Law in respect of the obedience required therein and is pleased to accept our sincere constant and faithfull endeavours to performe to the uttermost of our power what we are able to doe although we come short of what the Law requires and are accepted where there is a willing mind according to that which we have and not according to that which we have not 2 Cor. 8.12 The Second benefit which we have by Christ in relation to the Law 2. And from exacting our obedience to Justification is that whereas the Law requires of us perfect obedience to every commandement thereof to be performed by us in our owne persons for the attaining of eternall life as our Saviour implies in his answer to the young man Mat. 19.19 Now Christ having in his own Person perfectly fulfilled the whole Law Mat. 3.15 his Righteousnesse apprehended by Faith is imputed to us and accounted ours as if we our selves had performed it is accepted by God for the justifying of us before him Phil. 3.9 Rom. 5.18 19. so that we have thereby a just title to eternall life which otherwise we could have laid no claime unto by any righteousnesse of our own which is so farre from justifying of us before God that the best of it before him is no better then filthy rags Jsa 64.6 rendring us abominable in his eyes which are purer then to behold evill So that in his sight no man living in himselfe can be justified Psal 143.2 Lastly 3. And from that ill effect of the Law to quicken our lusts by Christ we are freed from an ill effect which the Law wrought in us yet only occasionally not properly by it selfe for the Commandement is holy just and good Rom. 7.12 But sinne taking occasion by the Commandement slew us so that the Commandement which was ordained to life we find unto us to be unto death Rom. 7.10 11. because the Law laying a restraint upon our corrupt lusts but bringing with it no power of the Spirit to enable us to subdue and conquer them by making a barre against them caused them to swell the higher and to rage the more violently as waters doe when they are penned by a damme that is made against them which the Apostle calls the reviving of sinne when the Commandement came Rom. 7.9 But Christ bringing with him the Spirit of grace and Sanctification by which those corrupt lusts are in some measure mortified and subdued the Spirit of Christ taking away that enmity and contrariety of the flesh against the Law and working our hearts to a complyanie therewith By giving his Spirit to work us to a compliance with Law causeth it to work in us a quite contrary effect to that which it hath in naturall men an exceeding love unto Gods Testimonies Psal 119.167 an holy delight in them ver 77. Rom. 7.22 for the sweetnesse which we find in them Psal 119.103 so that our hearts incline to performe them alwaies even to the end v. 112. This gracious effect of the Spirit working with the Law in the hearts of the godly is part of that new Covenant which God promiseth to make with his people unlike the Covenant which he made with their fathers which they brake to write his Law in their inward parts Ier. 31.32 33. and 32 40. A DIGRESSION CONCERNING THE MORALITY OF THE Fourth Commandement BY Iohn White Master of Arts and Preacher of Gods word in Dorchester in the County of Dorset LONDON Printed for Richard Royston A Digression concerning the Morality of the Fourth Commandement SECT I. That the Law of the Sabbath in the fourth Commandement is Morall and therefore perpetuall FOr the evidencing of this truth The first Argument it was given to the whole nature of man in Adam our first Argument shall be drawn from the Institution of this day of holy Rest immediately upon mans creation recorded Gen. 2.3 which upon the examining thereof will appeare so strong and cleare in it selfe that it might be sufficient to convince any man that is not forestalled before-hand by too much prejudice And it may be thus framed What Law soever was given to our first Parents in the beginning without relation to their present state bindes all mankind to the worlds end But such was this Law of the Sabbath It is true that there happened upon the fall of our first Parents a change in the Law Two changes of the Law given to Adam occasioned by his fall which was given them by God in the beginning The First change happened to the whole Law in respect of the conditions and in part of the use of it For whereas of man in the state of innocency and perfection full and perfect obedience to the whole Law was required 1. In respect of the whole Law perfect obedience thereunto being then possible to be performed by him in his own Person whereunto he was sufficiently enabled by the perfection of his nature in which he was created but by the fall of Adam that ability was so farre weakned that such obedience was made impossible to him or any of his posterity after him But by his fall made now impossible the righteousnesse of Christ is accepted for us now in stead of our personall obedience the Righteousnesse of Christ who in our nature fulfilled the whole Law is imputed to us for our justification and our obedience is required only as a fruit of that faith by which we are justified This makes so great a change in the Covenants made betweene God and man before and since the Fall that they are usually esteemed to be two diverse Covenants the former before the Fall we call the Covenant of workes and this latter since the Fall we tearme the Covenant of Grace The Second change which happened in the Law 2. In respect of some Laws given Adam in respect of his condition rather then of his nature by occasion of Adams fall was in respect of some duties commanded in the Law the Sacramentall tree of life and the whole use thereof were of necessity taken away because the promise whereof that tree was the Seale was voide by Adams breach of the Covenant to which it was annexed And the charge of keeping and dressing Paradise was by like necessity utterly voide when man for his rebellion was cast out of that Garden Other commandements as those concerning mans labour and womens subjection to their husbands were made straighter then they were before but the substance of these Laws remained still And these changes happened only in such particulars as respected rather the state of mans
in all things else respect to his own glory For the advancing of his own glory 1. Our faith bearing witnesse to his Al-sufficiency Truth 2. Our obedience to his Authority Righteousnesse Yet are not all things in Scripture alike necessary which is testified at least by our faith and obedience For our relying on him by faith bears witnesse to his sufficiency faithfulnesse truth as our obedience in submitting chearfully to his will in all that he commands acknowledgeth his Authority Wisdome and Holinesse So then this will of God in requiring of us these conditions is every way just as well as free Now when wee say the grounds and rules of faith and obedience contained in Scripture are necessary to salvation we mean not that all are of like necessity Ignorance or unbeleef in God or Christ excludes absolutely from salvation John 3.18 so doth not ignorance or unbeleef in some temporall promise although it cannot be excused from sinne In brief then when we say all things necessary to salvation are contained in Scripture we mean both that the things written therein are necessary to that end although not alike necessary and that there is nothing necessary to that end that is not to be found there We are next to shew what we understand by this tearm containing Scriptures containe things 1. In expresse tearms 2. By necessary consequence Now things may be contained in Scripture either expresly and in plain tearms or by consequence drawn from some grounds that are delivered in Scripture and one of these two ways all grounds of faith or rules of practise are to be found in these holy writings It is no where affirmed in Scripture in expresse tearms that the holy Ghost is God but we read 1 John 5.7 that the Father the Word and the holy Ghost are one and from thence infer by necessary consequence that the holy Ghost is God because he is one with the Father who is God We are no where in precise words commanded to baptize infants but from the precept given to the Fathers to circumcise them we take our selves to be warranted to baptize them because Baptisme and Circumcision are in substance one Sacrament Wee are no where expresly commanded to discover the fault of what we sell or to give a just value for that which we buy But we have generall rules commanding us to speak the truth from the heart Ps 15.2 To doe as we desire to be done unto Mat. 7.12 and forbidden to defraud our brother in any matter or goe beyond him in bargaining which imports as much Thus where all things needfull to be beleeved or done are not clearly expressed in Scripture yet they are implied and drawn out from thence by necessary consequence This truth that the Scriptures contain whatsoever is necessary to salvation is sufficiently ratified by evident testimony of the Word it self which sends us to the Law and to the Testimony Isa 8.20 tels us that in them we have eternall life John 5.39 that they alone are able to make the man of God perfect to every good work 2 Tim. 2.17 and wise to salvation ver 15. that the Law of God is perfect Psal 19.7 and though there be an end of all other perfections yet the commandement is exceeding broad Psal 119.96 that is comprehends all needfull things so that nothing is wanting in it Whence proceeds that curse upon every one that addes as well as upon them that take away from that Book Rev. 22.18 Yea besides this truth is consonant to all grounds of reason whatsoever our adversaries alledge to the contrary For first we have reason to presume It was fit that God should deliver his will in writing 1. As the most easie way to make it publike that God would take the easiest way for the instruction of his Church now it is evident that it is more easie to leave things upon record in writing then to charge them upon mens memories especially when they are many and consequently must burthen the memory whereas lying before mens eyes in writing they may easily be overlooked at all times without trouble If it be replied that traditions are few and may therefore be easily remembred VVe answer first they may bee infinite for ought we know seeing no man ever took upon him to tell us how many they are And secondly be they more or fewer yet they are more easily preserved by writing then by tradition as all men know Again it was fit that in teaching his Church 2. As the safest way to prevent corruption God should take the safest way and freest from errour as well for his own honour as for his peoples good both which must needs be extreamly hazarded and hindered by corrupting the truth with errours which lead men into perdition and can hardly be prevented by delivering the word by tradition partly because many mens memories are weak and a great part are negligent especially in things of this nature and lastly because many are maliciously bent against the law which the wisdome of the flesh cannot admit Rom. 8.7 whereas the word written being an unerring record easily helps the weak and convinceth the refractary by setting the undoubted truth before mens eyes Farther 3. As the best way to win credit to his Word seeing the word is the ground of faith it is fit that it should be so delivered as might win most credit and estimation amongst men Now we know that written records are most authenticall and of most accompt with men and therefore are fittest to work men to assent unto the truth of God It is true I grant that mens faith depends neither upon wirting nor tradition but upon the testimony of the Spirit that dwels within the godlies hearts manifesting that the truth proposed is the word of God Notwithstanding the outward credit which the Scriptures carry amongst men by which such as are won afterwards to beleeve beginne at first to think reverently of them and others that beleeved not are restrained from scorning or opposing them seems to be much furthered by the Authority that the writing brings unto those records which are received and submitted unto by the Church and commanded and countenanced by the testimony thereof Lastly 4. And as most honourable whereas there is so much honour done to all humane laws by which States are governed that they are composed into one body and preserved in books written or printed for that purpose it seems absurd that God should deliver his law thus by patches part by writing and part by tradition resembling the feet of Nebuchadnezzars image Dan. 2.33 part of iron and part of clay and unworthy both of the Majesty of him that gives the law and of the law it self that is given And if we may take precedent from former times we may say with our Saviour from the beginning it was not so For when God left the law to be delivered by tradition he delivered it
119.140 of the absolute perfection Psal 19.78 119 96. yea farther of the goodnesse of those Laws and judgements Rom. 7.12 16. Psal 119.39 Thirdly this obedience must be constant 3. Constant and perpetuall both in the duration of it for ever Psal 119.112 and in the continuation of it without interruption Psal 119.117 and that not onely in our steps which yet we must desire to have well ordered Psal 119.133 but in the whole course of our waies 4 Exercised 1. With all our strength 2. Mixed with faith and spring from love Psal 119.5 59. Fourthly our obedience to this Law if it shall be accepted requires two qualifications first that in the practice thereof we put forth the uttermost of our strength and abilities of our soules with holy David Psal 119.34 106.131 which God requires Deut. 10.12 11.13 Secondly that we mixe it with faith without which it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 and love which is the fulfilling of the Law Rom. 13.10 Now let all that we have spoken be laid together first that the Law is of so large extent that it regulates not only mens outward actions but besides the very inward thoughts of the heart and that so far that it prescribes a rule to the very first motions that arise therein though they be not seconded either with deliberation or consent nay beyond all that it exacts rectitude uprightnes in the very frame and disposition of the heart commanding not only consent unto the law but withall practice answerable to the rules thereof Secondly that it strictly requires the putting forth of all the strength and the utmost ability of all the faculties of soule and that in every part of obedience yea and so far that it requires that both in the substance of the duty and in the manner of performance and in the end at which we aime we come fully home to that measure of perfection that the law requires And lastly that it laies an everlasting curse upon every one that comes short of the full performance of every thing contained in the law Let I say all these be laid together and seriously pondered in the heart and it will easily be discovered that considering the weaknesse of our present condition by which the fulfilling of the law is made utterly impossible to us one of the principall uses of the law must needs be that which the Apostle saies before us Gal. 3.24 to be a Schoolmaster to lead us and drive us to Christ to seek from him that righteousnesse which may justifie us before God which we have not in or of our selves and that satisfaction by which he fully discharged our debt which he took upon himselfe when he made his soule a sacrifice for our sinnes and thereby wholly freed us from that curse of the law which our disobedience thereunto had brought upon us So then wee see that the morall law hath a double use unto us A double use of the morall law 1. To be our guide and rule to walk by The first to serve for a rule to guide us in the whole course of our practice in which respect holy David used it as a lanthorn to his feet and a light unto his steps Psal 119.105 unto which we are to come as neare as possibly we are able considering our waies that we may turne our feet to Gods testimonies Psal 119.59 and using our uttermost endeavours to make our practice fully conformable thereunto laying those judgements alwaies before us Psal 119.30 calling our selves daily to account and laying all our actions to that perfect rule which will easily discover unto us our errours and failings in all the course of our conversation which when we have bewailed in the bitternesse of our spirits and taken shame to our selves for our grosse and manifold neglects our hearts are kept in a low frame and we are fitted to walk humbly before our God with reverence and holy feare and in all meeknesse towards our brethren and are withall moved to engage our selves by new purposes and promises to walke more faithfully and watchfully with God for time to come 2. To shew us the great need of Christ and to drive us to him The second use of the Morall law unto us is to shew us the great need of Christ by whose righteousnesse only and not by our own we are justified before God and by his satisfactions and sufferings are delivered from the wrath to come By the consideration whereof we are brought to prize and value Christ above all things in the world to use all endeavours to get a sure interest in him although it should be with the losse of all things besides and to cleave fast unto him who is our life living in him by faith as the Apostle speaks Gal. 2.20 giving up our selves to live wholly to him who hath died for us and redeemed us unto himselfe that we might serve him in holinesse all our daies Thus farre then of the Morall law and the use thereof Of Laws ceremoniall the next kind of laws which we are to consider are those which we call Ceremoniall because they prescribed the rules of those ceremonies which God appointed to be used in his worship by the Jews untill the coming of Christ of whom many of them were shadows Now wholly taken away in use of them Now although all those rites and ordinances are by Christs cōming wholly taken away so that we are no longer obliged to observe any of them in the worship of God nor indeed can use many of them without the denying of Christs comming in the flesh notwithstanding seeing it hath pleased the Lord to leave both them and the Judiciall laws upon record amongst those holy writings which he hath thought fit to preserve and to commit unto the Church to be kept for posterity to the end of the world we cannot conceive that he hath taken so much care to preserve them in vaine nor indeed for any other end then that which is the scope of the rest of the Scriptures Yet may they be of use to us in reading them that they might be for our learning and instruction What instructions therefore we may gather to our selves by reading these laws we are now to consider And that the rather because many men upon this opinion and supposition that these laws are now utterly abolished to us Christians either totally neglect the reading of those books 1. In that they were shadows of Christ it proves that from the beginning there was no salvation but in his name as containing those things that concerne them not or at least read them in such a perfunctory manner without searching into them that they receive no profit nor instruction by them at all That we may therefore shew what instructions the reading of the ceremoniall law may yeeld us we must first take notice that these ceremonies may be ranked under two heads For they are either figures that
can doe no lesse then endeavour to bring our Civill Government as neere as may be unto that in all Cases wherin our State 4. We must endeavour to bring our civill government as neere as we can to that pattern and theirs agree As for instance whereas the Lord thinks it sufficient to punish simple theft with restitution of double or foure fold Exod. 22.1 we may doe well to consider whether our laws be not too strict in punishing bare theft at least in women with death without remedy On the other side seeing God appoints death to be the punishment of adultery Levit 20.10 Deut. 22.22 we have just cause to think our laws defective that passe it over with a lighter censure For who can better judge of the quality of offences and punishments fit for the restraint of them then God himselfe Neither can we excuse our selves by this that those laws being Judiciall are now taken away and made voide unto us seeing where our case is the same as adultery and theft are the same in what state so ever there our rules of judgement in all equity ought to be the same In generall it will be very needfull to observe carefully the equity and righteousnesse of all these laws as well Judiciall as Morall 5. In those as well as in the Morall laws we must take notice of Gods equity and justice as the Psalmist acknowledgeth that all the Testimonies which God hath commanded are righteous and very faithfull Psal 119.138 Right concerning all things ver 128. that we may thence conclude that he is a righteous God whose judgements are upright Psal 119.137 a God without iniquity just and upright Deut. 32.4 and may with the more care and diligence endeavour to bring both our hearts and practise to a full conformity to those just and equall Commandements both in our generall and particular callings seeing the Lord in all his ordinances aimes only at that end as is evident by all those Laws wherein there is nothing prescribed but equity and justice Of those subjects or matters which the Scripture handles we have hitherto considered what observations we may gather unto our selves out of the works and laws of God which are recorded therein The rest of the matters which these holy writings hold out unto us are either principles of faith or Prophesies of the events which were to befall the Church or histories either of the state of the Church in generall or particularly of mens lives and actions either good or evill All which we are to take notice of and of the instructions which may be gathered out of them for use Now for the first of these which are the principles of faith The principles or faith are plaine they describe unto us both God himselfe and his Sonne Jesus Christ and the things which are freely given unto us by God in him as the Apostle tearmes them 1 Cor. 2.12 and are for the most part of them expressed in so cleare and plaine tearmes and therefore so easily understood according to the literall sense of them that being in themselves rules of faith as the Commandements are rules of practise any man that reads and observes them carefully may easily without further direction discover what they teach us Only because they are in themselves of a spirituall nature things that neither eye hath seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the heart of man 1 Cor. 2.9 he meanes a naturall man who can neither comprehend nor much lesse approve them 1 Cor. 2.14 they need a light above nature to enable us to comprehend them as we ought But being spirituall in reading them we must 1. Deny our own wisdome Wherefore we are seriously to be exhorted to come to the reading of them with humble minds wholly laying aside and denying our own wisdome and with earnest prayers begging at Gods hand the light of his Spirit for the revealing unto us those wonderfull Mysteries as David prayes that God would open his eyes 2. Beg the help of the Spirit to reveale them to us spiritually that he might behold wondrous things out of his Law Psal 119.18 and that not only to discover them unto us in a rationall way but to manifest them unto us spiritually that we may tast and see the things that God hath given us as the Psalmist speakes Psal 34.8 which is the only means to affect the heart as the sight of Christs day filled Abrahams heart with joy John 8.36 In the next place for the Prophesies In the Prophesies observe in which the Law with the Sanctions thereof is applied to the state of the Church as it was in the times of those Prophets the first thing to be observed in them is the answerableness of Gods dispensations in the Government of his people 1. That Gods dispensations to his Church are answerable to his Law to the Law that he gave them whereof the Prophet Daniel takes speciall notice Dan. 9.13 This observation both justifies God when he is found not to goe beyond the conditions of the Covenant which he hath made with his people and consequently to be just even in his chastisements and judgements which he brings upon his own Neh. 9.33 And besides is a great means to awe the hearts of his servants the more with the terror of Gods judgements when they observe that Gods threatnings are not vaine words but are made good in reall performances as the treading down and putting away of the wicked like drosse caused David to be afraid of Gods judgements Psal 119.118 119 120. Secondly in reading those Prophesies take speciall notice of Gods care of his people 2. Gods unwillingnesse to grieve his people forewarning them of the evils to come and tendernesse of their good and unwillingnesse to grieve them Lam. 3.33 Hos 11.8 9. manifested by sending his Prophets both to reduce them to obedience by counsell and faire means from their wicked waies wherein they walked contrary to God as Moses tearmes it Levit. 26.23 40. and withall to warne them of the danger that hung over their heads if they persisted in their rebellious courses And indeed upon this ground God justifies both his compassion towards his people and the righteousnesse of his judgements in taking vengeance even upon his own people for their rebellions from which neither experience nor advice and counsell could reclaim them nor any other means but the powring out of the fury of his wrath upon them 2 Chron. 36.15 16 17. And aiming at their good in the judgements that he brings upon them which yet withall he doth both in respect to their good and purging out of their drosse in the furnace of afflictions Isa 1.15 as also to his own honour much impeached by his peoples evill courses 2 Sam. 12.14 for which if he should forbeare to take vengeance on them he might be judged partiall or an approver of evill like unto wicked men as God himselfe speaks Psal