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A51846 A second volume of sermons preached by the late reverend and learned Thomas Manton in two parts : the first containing XXVII sermons on the twenty fifth chapter of St. Matthew, XLV on the seventeenth chapter of St. John, and XXIV on the sixth chapter of the Epistle of the Romans : Part II, containing XLV sermons on the eighth chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, and XL on the fifth chapter of the second Epistle to the Corinthians : with alphabetical tables to each chapter, of the principal matters therein contained.; Sermons. Selections Manton, Thomas, 1620-1677. 1684 (1684) Wing M534; ESTC R19254 2,416,917 1,476

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called and justified they are children of wrath as well as others 2. The reply and answer 't is God that justifieth This implyeth two things first his finding out a way to acquit them according to the terms of the Gospel as when all men were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 obnoxious to Gods vengeance but now a clear and sure way of pardon Rom 3.19 20 21 22. Now we know that whatsoever things the law saith it saith to them that are under the law that every mouth may be stopped and all the world may become guilty before God Therefore by the deeds of the law there shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the law is the knowledge of sin but the righteousness of God without the law is manifested being witnessed by the law and the Prophets even the righteousness of God which is by faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all that believe There is mercy for all penitent believers to accept and bless them 2. He doth actually acquit all those that submit to these terms Eph. 1.6 Who hath accepted us in the beloved to the praise of his glorious grace The Covenant setteth down the terms and by performing them we are capable of this benefit of Absolution Doctrine That no charge or accusation will take effect to prejudice the acceptation of them whom God justifieth 1. What is justification It consisteth in two things first in the pardon of ●ll our sins secondly in the acceptation of us as righteous in Christ. The first is necessary for God doth not vindicate us as innocent but pardoneth us as guilty those that are imple●ded before his Tribunal are all sinners and sinners are not vindicated but pardoned and the Apostle describeth justification by the pardon of sin Rom. 4.6 7. As David describeth the blessedness of the man to whom the Lord imputeth righteousness without works saying Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven whose sins are covered God in justifying his people against the imputations of the world doth bring forth their righteousness as the noon-day but in justifying them against the accusations brought before his own Tribunal doth not vindicate our innocency but shew his own mercy in a free discharge of all our sins This is sometimes set forth in Scripture by the blotting out of all our transgressions as Isa. 43.25 I even I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for my own names sake and will remember thy sins no more As we are no more cha●ged with what is cancelled or blotted out of a debt-book so Isa. 38.17 Thou hast cast my sins behind thy back as men cast behind them such things as they list not to look on and Micha 7.19 Thou wilt cast our sins into the depth of the sea as that which is cast into the sea is lost forgotten and cannot be recovered so sin shall not be brought into the judgment against the pardoned sinner 2. In accepting us as righteous in Christ who dyed for our sins to reconcile us unto God and therefore sometimes he is said to be made righteousness to us 1 Cor. 1.30 and we are said to be made the righteousness of God in him 2. Cor. 5.21 that is we have the effect of his sufferings as if we had suffered in person for they were undergone in our stead and for our sakes and the fruit of it given to us by God himself 2. How many ways doth God justifie Four ways especially 1 By way of Constitution 2 Estimation 3 Sentence And 4 Execution 1. Constitutively by his Gospel-grant or the New Covenant in the blood of Christ. The Covenant of grace is Gods pardoning act and instrument by which we know whom and upon what Terms God will pardon and justifie namely all such as repent and believe the Gospel We are constituted just and righteous and exempted from the curse and penalties of the law We may know the true way of justification by its opposition to the false or pretended way Acts 13.38 39. Through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins and by him all that believe are justified from all those things from which they could not be justified by the law of Moses The Jews expected to be justified by the law of Moses but we are justified by the law of Christ that is this constituteth our right and herein justification and sanctification differ God sanctifieth by his Spirit but justifieth by the sentence of his word or promise of the Gospel Our right immediately results thence as by an act of indempnity we are freed from all the penalties which otherwise we might incur without any further act of the Magistrate We are constituted righteous by his deed of gift in the Gospel but made holy by his Spirit but if any quarrel at this term and say that God by the New Covenant doth declare who are justifiable but doth not justifie I answer further We are justified 2. By way of Estimation whereby God doth determine our right accept or deem and account them righteous who fulfil the terms of the Gospel and actually convey to them the fruits of Christs death This is spoken of 1 Cor. 6.11 And such were some of you but ye are washed but ye are sanctified but ye are justified once vile sinners now washed sanctified and justified as soon as they believe they are put into a state of acceptation 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is justifying he continueth to justifie them unto the death and he keeps them in that estate wherein they have exemption from the punishment of sin and a right to eternal life 3. By way of Sentence This is in part done here when God interpreteth our righteousness and sincerity Job 33.23 24. If there be a messenger with him an interpreter one among a thousand to shew unto man his uprightness then he is gracious unto him and saith Deliver him from going down to the pit I have found a ransom And doth by the Spirit of adoption assure us more and more of the pardon of our sins but more solemnly at the last day when the Judge doth sitting upon the Throne pronounce and declare us righteous before all the world and as those who are accepted unto life Acts 3.19 That your sins may be blotted out when the times of refreshing shall come from the presence of the Lord. Then the sentence is solemnly pronounced by the Judg sitting on the throne and we are justified before God Men and Angels There are two parts of judgment to condemn and to absolve or justifie Matth. 12.36 37. But I say unto you that for every idle word that a man shall speak he shall give account thereof at the day of judgment for by thy words thou shalt be justified and by thy words thou shalt be condemned then every mans doom shall be pronounced 4. By way of Execution when the sentence is executed This is in part done here as God taketh off the penalties and fruits of sin either in the way of
our salvation there is such a temperament of both that they shine with an equal glory 3. We are justified by faith Acts 13.39 And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the law of Moses certainly none are justified in a state of impenitency and unbelief 't is not enough to look to the first moving cause the grace of God or the impetration of it by the blood of Christ but how it is applied to our selves and what right we have For the righteousness of Christ is none of ours till we do repent and believe let us see how our title doth arise when we thankfully seriously and broken-heartedly accept Christ as our Lord and Saviour then we are found in him not having our own righteousness 4. We are justified by works and not by faith only by which are meant the fruits of sanctification for true faith and true holiness will shew its self by good works faith giveth us the first right but works continue it for otherwise a course of sin would put us into a state of damnation again therefore at the last judgment these are considered Revel 20.12 And the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Matth. 25.35 36. For I was an hungry and ye gave me meat I was thirsty and ye gave me drink I was a stranger and ye took me in naked and ye cloathed me I was sick and ye visited me I was in prison and ye came unto me Faith is our consent but obedience verifieth it or is our performance of what we consented unto the one as covenant making the other as covenant-keeping we are admitted by covenant-making but continued in our priviledges by covenant-keeping Psal. 25.10 All the paths of the Lord are mercy and truth unto such as keep his Covenant But yet a little more must be said to reconcile the two Apostles Paul saith A man is justified by faith without the deeds of the law Rom. 3.28 and James saith Chapt. 2.24 Ye see then how by works a man is justified and not by faith only There is a two-fold charge commenced against us as sinners and breakers of the law as hypocrites and unsound believers To the first we have nothing but the merits of Christ to plead to the second a fruitful obedience or else Paul in the opposition between works and faith meaneth by works legal observances by faith true Christianity The Jews boasted of their legal observances to the rejection of the faith of Christ and James by faith a dead faith and by works Christian duties or acts of obedience to God not external observances of the law of man 4. Why no charge or accusation can lie against them whom God justifieth 1. Because God is the supream law-giver to appoint the terms and conditions upon which we shall be justified and when he hath stated them and declared his will who shall reverse it or revoke it Heb. 6.17 18. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation No cause of revocation can be imagined in God or out of God within God not want of wisdom for nothing can fall out but what he foresaw at first Psal. 110.4 The Lord hath sworn and will not repent Not inconstancy of will for he is not as man that he should repent 1 Sam. 15.29 Nor can his will be frustrated through any defect of power for he is Almighty Nothing without God neither Devils nor Angels nor Men have power to null and frustrate the force of his constitutions The New Covenant is his resolved will and purpose not to be altered surely in making it God determineth of his own and not another's right 't is in his power to absolve or condemn upon what terms he pleaseth therefore if out of his Soveraign will he hath put our justification in such a course who can reverse it 2. Because the promise of justification is built upon Christs everlasting merit and satisfaction and therefore it will hold good for ever Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified Christ procured these promises for us and that by his death therefore everlastingly they hold good 2 Cor 1.20 For all the promises of God in him are yea and in him Amen and called the everlasting Covenant 'T is even become the interest of God to justifie us that he may not lose the glory of his grace and the merit and oblation of Christ Isa. 53.11 By his knowledge shall my righteous servant justifie many for he shall bear their iniquities He that hath born our sins all this cost would be in vain if he should not pardon and justifie There is such a value in the death and obedience of Christ that the Scripture puts a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon it compare it with the influence of Adam as a common root Rom. 5.17 18. For if by one mans offence death reigned by one much more they which receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life And with the legal sacrifices Heb. 9.13 For if the blood of Bulls and Goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh how much more shall the blood of Christ c. There is the same reason in both besides institution and appointment there is an intrinsick value 3. Because 't is conveyed by the solemnity of a Covenant now God by his Covenant hath made it our right his justice is ingaged 1 John 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins 2 Tim. 4.8 Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness which the righteous Judge shall give me at that day By solemn promise you convey a right to another in the thing promised so doth God 4. When we believe God as the supream Judge actually determineth our right so that a believer is rectus incuria hath his quietus est Rom. 4.1 Being justified by faith we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. And then who can lay any thing to our charge to reverse Gods grant 5. The Lord as the soveraign disposer of mans felicity doth many times uncontroulably give us the comfort of it in our own consciences Job 34.29 When he giveth quietness who can trouble and when he hideth his face who then can behold him whether it be done against a nation or against a man only None can obstruct the peace which he giveth Gods dispensations whether for good or evil are effectual
sinners is never seen in all its glory or graciousness till then 2. The good which the faithful do is very imperfect and mixed with many weaknesses and infirmities it may endure the touchstone but it cannot endure the balance as we shall find then when our Righteous Judge shall compare our best actions with his Holy Law After we repented and believed and returned to the obedience of God the Lord knoweth our Righteousness is as filthy rags and our best robes need to be washed in the Blood of the Lamb. Sin is our nakedness and graces are our garments 3. Though it were never so perfect yet it merits nothing by its own intrinsick worth at Gods hands when we have done all we are but unprofitable Servants Luke 17.10 And paying a due debt deserveth no reward 't is a grace bestowed upon us that we can do any thing for God 2 Cor. 8.1 And services and sufferings bear no equality with the reward Rom. 8.18 And all is done by those that did once deserve Eternal Death Rom. 6.17 18. And were redeemed and recovered out of that misery by an infinite grace 1 Pet. 1.18 19. And already appointed Heirs of Eternal Life before we serve him Rom. 8.17 by his precedent elective love In short they that continually need to implore the mercy of God for the pardon of sin and cannot oblige God by any work of theirs must needs admire grace and the more grace is discovered to them and they discovered to themselves the more they will do so 2. The other end of the Judgment is to convince the Creature and that is best done by bringing our works whether good or evil into the Judgment If only the purposes of God were manifested the condemned would have a just exception and their cavils would be justified that it was long of God they were not saved Man is apt to charge God wrongfully Pro. 9.3 The foolishness of man perverteth his way and his heart freteth against the Lord. What ever exceptions men have against God now then all is clear their works are produced their own evil choice and course if the grace of the Redeemer were only produced those who are excluded from the benefit might seem to tax the proceeding as arbitrary and the whole business would seem to be a matter of Favour and not of Justice But when their destruction is of themselves there is no cause of complaint if only the good estate of men were considered there would not be such an open vindication of Gods Righteous dealing In any Judgment all things are rightly and convincingly carryed when the Judge doth proceed secundum regulas juris secundum allegata probata according to the Law as a Rule and according to the things alledged and proved as to the application of the rule to the parties Judged Now the producing of the things done in the Body whether good or evil suiteth with both these and so in the day of Judgment there is a right course taken for convincing the Creature 1. The Judge must keep close to the Law as his rule for the absolving or acquitting of the parties impleaded So it belongeth to Christ as a Judge to determine our case according to the Law which we are under We Christians are under a double Law of Nature and Grace the Law of Nature bindeth us to love and serve our Creator but because of mans Apostacy the Law of Grace findeth out a remedy of repentance or returning to our duty after the breach and Faith or sueing out the mercy of God in the name of Jesus Christ. Now those who will not accept of the Second Covenant remain under the bond of the first which exacteth perfect obedience from them and the Judge doth them no wrong if he Judge them according to their works But now those who have accepted the Second Covenant and devoted themselves to God taking sanctuary at the mercy of their Redeemer they indeed have a plea against the first Covenant they are sinners but they are repenting sinners and believing in Christ. Now their claim must be examined by the Judge whether this penitence and acceptance of grace be sincere and real whether true Penitents and sound believers that must be seen by our works and the Judge must examine whether our repentance and returning to our duty be verified by our after obedience and our thankful acceptance of Christ and doth ingage us to constancy and cheerfulness in that obedience A double accusation may be brought against man before the Tribunal of God That he is a sinner and so guilty of the breach of the first Covenant Or that he is no sound believer Having not fulfilled the Condition of the Second As to the first accusation we are justified by Faith as to the Second by works and so James and Paul are reconciled Rom. 3.24 A man is justified by Faith without the deeds of the Law Jam. 2.24 A man is justified by works and not by Faith only Every one of us may be considered as a man that liveth in the World Or as a sinner in the State of Nature or as a man called to the grace of God in Christ or as a Christian professing Faith in the Redeemer According to this double relation there is a double Judgment past upon us According to the Law so condemned already according to the Gospel so accepted in the Beloved To this double Judgment there answereth a double justification Of a sinner by vertue of the satisfaction of Christ apprehended by Faith without the works of the Law Of a believer or one in the state of grace so justified by works for here 't is not enquired whether he have satisfied the Law that he may have Life by it but whether professing himself to be a Christian he be a true believer and that must be tryed by his works for as God in the Covenant of grace giveth us two benefits remission of sins and sanctification by the Spirit So he requireth two duties from us A thankful acceptance of his grace by Faith and also new obedience as the fruit of love Well then this being so to wit that Christs Commission and charge is to give Eternal Life to true believers and them only the only found mark of true believers is their works of new obedience These must be tryed in the Judgment 2. A Judge must proceed secundum alligata probata not to give sentence by guess but upon the evidence of the Fact Therefore Christ to convince men that they are sinners by the first Covenant or Hypocrites or sincere by the Second must consider their works Mens profession must not be taken in the case but their lives must be considered for there are Christians in the Letter and Christians in the Spirit some that have a Form of godliness but deny the Power thereof 2 Tim. 3.5 And God doth not respect the outward profession 1 Pet. 1.17 There may be a carnal Christian as well as a carnal Heathen
Duties or the Legal administrations which are called carnal Ordinances Heb. 9.10 and Truth in opposition to them again as they are called shadows of good things to come Heb. 10.1 In this sense the Gospel or New Covenant might well be called the Law of the Spirit but not for this reason only but because of the power of the Spirit that accompanieth it as 't is said 2 Cor. 3.6 Who hath made us able Ministers of the New Testament not of the Letter but of the Spirit for the Letter killeth but the Spirit giveth life Lex jubet gratia juvat and the grace of the Gospel is the gift of the Spirit 3. 'T is called the Spirit of Life because through the preaching of the Gospel we are renewed by the Holy Ghost and have the new life begun in us which is perfected in Heaven and we are said Gal. 2.19 To be dead to the Law that we may live unto God that is that by vertue of the spirit of Christ dwelling in us we may live righteously and holily to the glory of God 4. 'T is the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus partly because he is the author and foundation of this new Covenant and partly also because from him we receive the Spirit as from our head we have the unction from the holy one 1 John 2.10 and the renewing of the Holy Ghost is shed upon us abundantly through Christ Jesus our Lord Titus 3.6 Thus I have plainly opened the first Law mentioned Let us address our selves to the second 2. The Law of Sin and Death Thereby is meant the covenant of works which inferreth condemnation to the fallen Creature because of sin and in part the legal Covenant not as intended by God but used by them it proved to them a Law of Sin and Death for the Apostle calleth it the ministration of Death 2 Cor. 3.7 and verse the 9th a ministration of condemnation Now because it seemeth hard to call a Law given by God himself a Law of Sin and Death I must tell you 't is only called so because it convinceth of Sin and bindeth over to Death and that I may not involve you in a tedious debate I shall expedite my self by informing you That the Law of works hath a twofold operation the one is about Sin the other about Wrath or the Death threatned by the Law 1. About Sin its operation is double First it convinceth of Sin as 't is said Rom. 3.20 By the deeds of the Law shall no flesh be justified in his sight for by the Law is the knowledg of Sin That is the use of it is to bring us to an acknowledgment of Sin and Guilt For when the Law sets before a man what God commandeth and forbiddeth and a mans Conscience convinceth him that he hath offended against it by Thoughts Lusts Words Deeds he findeth himself a sinner and his heart reproacheth him as one that is become culpable and guilty before God so that all are concluded under Sin by the services of that Covenant neither will the legal covenant help him for that is rather an acknowledgment of the Debt than a token of our Discharge a Bond rather than an Acquittance an hand-writing of Ordinances against us Col. 2.14 which did every year revive again the Conscience and remembrance of Sins Heb. 10.3 Secondly The other Operation of the Law about Sin is That it irritateth Sin and doth provoke and stir up our carnal desires and affections rather than mortify them For the more carnal men are urged to obedience by the rigid exactions of the Law the more doth carnal nature rebel as a Bullock is the more unruly for the yoking and a River stopt by a Dam swells the higher The Law requireth Duty at our hands but confers not on corrupt man power to perform it and denounceth a Curse against those that obey not but giveth no strength to obey that it is so is plain by that of the Apostle Rom. 7.5 When we were in the flesh the motions of sins which were by the law did work in our members to bring forth fruit unto Death While we were under the Dominion of corrupt nature Sins that were discovered by the Law were also irritated by the Law as ill vapours are discovered and raised by the Sun which were hidden in the earth before and so Sin brought forth those ill fruits the end whereof is Death but this is not to be charged on the Law of God but the perverseness of man for the proper use of the Law is to discover and retrain Sin and weaken it not to provoke and stir it up See how the Apostle vindicateth Gods Law Rom. 7.7 8. What shall we say then is the Law sin God forbid nay I had not known sin but by the Law for I had not known lust unless the Law had said Thou shalt not covet but sin taking occasion by the commandment wrought in me all manner of concupiscence Thus he answereth the Objection If Sin grow more powerful in us by the Law then is the Law Sin No far be it from our thoughts the Law is not the cause but the occasion only as Sin sheweth its power upon the restraint Well then the ceremonies of the legal Covenant do not mend the matter for these are but a weak fence about our duty and bridling more of our liberty stubborn man spurneth the more against the Law of God and will not be subject to it 2. The other operation of the Law is about Death or the Judgment denounced against Sin and so 't is said the law worketh wrath Rom. 4.15 as it bringeth punishment into the World and revealeth Gods wrath against the transgressions of men and raiseth the fears of it in our Consciences and 't is called the Law of Death because unavoidably it leaveth man under a Sentence of Death or in a cursed and lost estate by reason of Sin These are the two Laws 3. By one Law we are freed from the other the Apostle saith me but he personateth every Believer they are all freed by the Covenant of Grace from the bond and influence of the Covenant of Works so 't is a common Priviledg what belongeth to one belongeth to all 2. My second part is to suit the words as an Argument to confirm the former Proposition 1. They confirm the Priviledg There is no condemnation to those that are in Christ. They are free from the Law of Sin and Death he that is freed from the Law is acquitted from Condemnation it can have no power over him 2. The Description is double first from their internal estate they are in Christ Therefore they have the priviledges and advantages of his new Law of the Law of the Spirit of Life which is in Christ Jesus Secondly their external course They walk not after the flesh but after the spirit They have a spirit and a quickning sanctifying spirit grace given them in some measure to do what the Law injoineth being under
passed upon us by the law and acquitted and discharged from the guilt of sin and being justified by faith are made heirs according to the hope of eternal life Tit. 3.7 That I will not speak of now because before in the first Verse I now proceed to open unto you the last Thing at first propounded which was 3. The manner of getting our liberty There are three words in the Text Law Spirit and Christ Jesus Let us begin with the last Christ procureth this liberty for us by the merit of his death and intercession The Law or Gospel offereth this liberty to us and the Spirit first applieth it and sealeth it to the Conscience 1. Christ procureth and purchaseth this liberty for us both from the damning power of the Law and the slavery of corruption We were Captives shut up under Sin and Death and he paid our ransom and so obtained for us remission of sins and the sanctification of the spirit remission of Sins Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption by his blood the remission of sins That 's one part of our recovery highly necessary for guilty Creatures how else can we stand before the Tribunal of God or look him in the face with any confidence but his redemption did not only reach this but the sanctification of the spirit also Therefore 't is said 1 Pet. 1.18 Ye are not redeemed with corruptible things but by the precious blood of Jesus Christ. Thus Christ doth what belongeth to him and none can share with him in this honour 't is his merit that is at the bottom of the Covenant and procured for us both the favour and image of God that we might love him and be beloved by him 2. There is a Law or New Covenant which offereth this grace to us The law of nature concludeth men under Sin and pronounceth Death upon them Christ hath set up a new remedial Law of Grace by which we are called to submit to Christ and thankfully to accept of his merciful preparations even the great benefits of pardon and life The Gospel or New Covenant doth its part First There is Grace published or offered to us Luke 4.18 The Spirit of the Lord is upon me for he hath anointed me to preach deliverance to the captives 'T is not enough that our ransom be paid but the offer must be made or else how shall it be laid hold upon by faith and received with thankfulness and with a due sense of the benefit Now the Gospel sheweth liberty may be had upon sweet and commodious and easie terms 2. The terms are stated in the Covenant That we give up our selves to the Lord by Christ and be governed and ruled by the conduct of his Word and Spirit Gal. 3.2 Received ye the spirit by the works of the law or the hearing of faith And 2 Tim. 2.25 26. In meekness instructing those that oppose themselves if peradventure God will give them repentance to the acknowledging of the truth And that they may recover themselves out of the snare of the devil who are taken captive by him at his will The Covenant is not left to our humours and fancies to model and bring it down to our liking no nor are only the benefits offered but terms stated Isa. 56.4 That chuse the things that please me and take hold of my covenant When he hath stated his terms 't is too late for man to interpose his Vote or to imagine to bring down Christianity to a lower rate for we must not new model it but take hold of it as God hath left it Be in Christ and walk after his Spirit 3. This liberty is assured and established by the Covenant the Conscience of sin and the fears of condemnation are not easily done away and we are so wedded to our lusts that the power of reigning sin is not easily broken therefore we had need of a sure firm Covenant to ratifie these Priviledges to us because our fears are justified by a former Law made by God himself therefore God would not deal with us by naked Promise but put his Grace into a Covenant-form that we may have as good to shew for our Salvation as we had for our Condemnation yea and more And God hath added his Oath That the consolation of the heirs of promise might be more strong Heb. 6.18 And it being a latter grant former transactions cannot disannul it so that the Covenant doth its part also to free be●ievers from the power of Sin and the fears of Condemnation 4. The Spirit applieth this grace both as to the effects and the sense as to the effects he applieth it in effectual calling as this quickning spirit doth regenerate us and convert us to God and break the power and tyranny of Sin the wages whereof is Death the Gospel is the means but the blessing is from the Spirit John 8.32 Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free that is ye shall know it savingly so as to feel the power and efficacy of it To be set free to know love serve and delight in God is that liberty that we have by the free Spirit Psal. 51.12 Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me with thy free spirit 2. The spirit sealeth it as to the sense when we come to discern our freedom by the effects of it in our own souls Eph. 1.13 After ye believed ye were sealed with that holy spirit of promise And in the fruit of Christs purchase Gal. 4.4 5 6. But when the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the law to redeem them that were under the law that we might receive the adoption of sons And because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into your hearts crying Abba Father The Spirits seal is Gods impress upon our Souls left there not to make us known to God for he knoweth who are his from all eternity but for the increase of our joy and comfort not by guess but some kind of certainty 1 John 4.13 Hereby we know that we dwell in God and God dwelleth in us by his spirit that he hath given us by the Spirit dwelling and working in us we know our interest this is not so absolutely necessary as the former to our safety but very comfortable There is a Spirit that attendeth the Law reviving fears in men and a sense of Gods Wrath and there is a Spirit attending the Gospel inclining us to come to God as a Father Rom. 8.15 The one is called the spirit of bondage the other the spirit of Adoption Now because the law is so natural to us we the more need this liberty Vse 1. Since there is a Liberty by Christ and that wrought in us by the Spirit but dispensed by the Gospel let us seek it in this way Therefore consider 1. Your need since every man is under the power of Sin naturally and so under a sentence
word used and 't is here taken in a legal and judicial sense not for a disposition of mind or heart but for a ●tate of acceptation or the ground of a plea before the Tribunal of God So also 't is taken Rom. 5 19. As by one mans disobedience many were made sinners so by the obedience of one many shall be made righteous That is deemed and accounted so accepted as such In short sanctification is not here intended but justification Now this Forinsecal or Court righteousness may be interpreted either with relation to the precept or sanction 1. With respect to the Precept of the Law so 't is said Rom. 2.13 For not the ●earers of the Law are just before God but the doers of the Law shall be justified A man that exactly fulfilleth the Law of works is righteous but so by the deeds of the Law no flesh shall be justified in his sight Rom. 3.20 Let me instance in this kind of Righteousness with respect to the Law of grace 1 John 3.7 He that doth righteousness is righteous That is evangelically whil'st he doth it sincerely though not perfectly The legal righteousness is opposite to reatusculpae to the fault if that could be we might say he that fulfilleth the Law is righteous that is he is not faulty 2. There is a righteousness with respect to the sanction and so with respect either to the commination or the promise With respect to the commination so legal righteousness is not dueness of punishment he is righteous who is freed from the obligation to punishment This righteousness is opposite to reatus poenae and so a man is said to be justified or made righteous when he is freed from the eternal punishment threatned by God And thus by the Righteousness of Christ we are justified from all things from which we could not be justified by the Law of Moses Acts 13.39 Or rather see that place Rom. 1.17 18. For therein is the Righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith as it is written the just shall live by faith For the wrath of God is revealed from Heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who hold the truth in unrighteousness But before I go off in the commination two things are considerable sentence and Execution From the commination as it importeth a sentence or respects a sentence so we are justified or made Righteous when we are not liable to condemnation as Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation c. And Rom. 5.18 As by the offence of one Judgment came upon all to condemnation so by the Righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto Justification of life But as the commination respects the execution so to be justified or made Righteous is not to be liable to punishment So 't is said Rom. 5.9 Being justified by his blood we shall be saved from wrath through him Now this exemption is sometimes founded on the innocency of the Person but that is not our case sometimes it cometh to pass through free pardon as when the Law is suspended or penalty remitted by meer bounty as Joseph forgave his Brethren or David Absolom but that is not our case neither sometimes by satisfaction made as Paul would pay Onesimus his debt or by free pardon and satisfaction both together which was certainly our case For we are justified freely by his grace through the Redemption of Jesus Christ Rom. 3.24 There is a free pardon and a full compensation made to Divine Justice to satisfy for the breaches of the Law And so we are made the Righteousness of God in him Freely and by Gods grace finding out the remedy and yet securing the authority of his Law and the honour of his Justice upon the account of Christs satisfaction or his being sin for us That is freed from the sentence and execution of the Law or the eternal wrath of God 2. The other part of the sanction is the promise And so our Judicial or Legal Righteousness is nothing else but our right to the reward gift or benefits founded not in any Merit of our own nor yet in the bare gift of another but in the Merit of another conjoyned with his free gift So by Christs being made sin for us we have not only freedom from the curse but title to Glory 1 Thess. 5.9 10. ver And our estate in Heaven is called Redemption Eph. 1.14 Vntil the Redemption of the purchased possession Christs people are purchased by his blood and are his possession and his Peculiar People And they shall at length come to their full and final deliverance which is there called Redemption as also Eph. 4.16 chiefly because 't is a fruit of Christs death and something that accreweth to us by vertue of his laying down his Soul as an offering for sin 2dly The abstract is used concerning our priviledges as well as concerning Christs sufferings He made sin we made Righteousness Not only accounted or accepted as Righteous but made Righteousness which is more emphatical and doth heighten our thoughts in the apprehension of the priviledge as Christs Being made sin doth in the greatness of his sufferings 3. Observe this is called the Righteousness of God Why 1. Because 't is the Righteousness of that person who is God Jer. 23.6 The Lord our Righteousness There is an essential Righteousness which Christ as God hath in common with the Father and the Spirit and is incommunicable either as to men or Angels no more then God can communicate to his creatures any other of his Essential Attributes Omnipotency and Eternity But the Righteousness of Christ God-man is conditionary and Surety Righteousness which he performed in our stead his doing and suffering in our stead this may be communicated to us and is the ground of our acceptance with God and may be called the Righteousness of God because the person that procured it is God 2dly It may be called the Righteousness of God Because the only wise God found it out and appointed it 'T was not the device of man but the result of his eternal Counsels Col. 1.19 20. So when the Apostle had proved that Jews and Gentiles were under a deep guilt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 3.19 Liable to the challenges of the Law and the process of his revenging Justice and therefore needed a Righteousness to render them acceptable to God The light of nature and the Law of Moses could give them no Remedy but rather rendred them more miserable discovering sin and affording them no help against it but left them under uncertainty bondage and horrours of conscience what should the faln creature do The Lord in his mercy found out a Righteousness Even the Righteousness of God which is by Faith of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all them that believe for there is no difference Rom. 3.21 22 c. 3. Because 't is accepted by God A Righteousness wherein God acquiesceth and which he accepteth for our Absolution Matth. 3.17 God
any mixture of Errors that have any considerable Influence upon the main of Religion Others are in that Communion in which those Doctrines are as yet taught that are indeed necessary to Salvation but many things are added which are indeed pernicious and dangerous in their own nature So that if a Man should possibly be saved in that Profession he is saved as by Fire 1 Cor. 3.13 And 't is a strange escape as if one had Poyson mingled among his Meat the goodness of his Digestion and strength of Nature might work it out but the Man runneth a great hazard As the Papists acknowledge Christ for the Redeemer and Mediatour between God and Men They own his two Natures and Satisfaction though they mingle Doctrines that strangely weaken these Foundations The Turks deny not Christ to be a great Prophet but they deny him to be the Son of God and the Saviour of the World and the Redeemer of Mankind and wickedly prefer their false Prophet before him The Jews confess there was a I●sus the Son of Mary that gave out himself in their Country of Judea to be the Messiah and gathered Disciples who from him are called Christians But they call him an Impostor question all the Miracles done by him as done by the Power of the Devil Now all these shall be judged by the Gospel which is so proudly and obstinately rejected by them The Spirit shall convince the World of Sin because they believe not in me Joh. 16.9 he hath so proved himself to be the Christ the Son of God the great Prophet and true Messiah that their rejecting and not believing in him and his Testimony will be found to be a great and damning Sin both in its self and as it bindeth their other Sins upon them however their Judgment shall be lighter or heavier according to the diversity of their Offence and the invincible Prejudices they lie under The Corrupters of the Christian Religion because they have perverted the Truth of the Gospel to serve their Interests Ambition Avarice or any Humane Passion their Doom will be exceeding great 2 Thess. 2.10 11 12. And with all Deceivableness of Vnrighteousness in them that perish because they received not the Love of the Truth that they might be saved And for this cause God shall send them strong Delusions that they should believe a Lie That thy all might be damned who believed not the Truth but had pleasure in Vnrighteousness To poyson Fountains was the highest way of Murther to royle the Waters of the Sanctuary to mangle Christ's Ordinances is a Crime of a high Nature The Jews that rejected Christ in so clear Light of Miracles Joh. 8.24 Christ saith If you believe not that I am he ye shall die in your Sins it maketh the Judgment the more heavy upon them Others to whom Christ is less perspicuously revealed shall have a more tolerable Judgment For the clearer the Revelation of the Truth is the more culpable is the Rejection or Contempt of it For there is no Man that heareth of Christ's Coming into the World suffering for Sinners and Rising again from the Dead and Ascending into Heaven but is bound more diligently to enquire into it and to receive and embrace this Truth Carnal Christians their Profession condemneth them They are inexcusable they deny in Works what in Word they seem to acknowledge 3. Some lived under the Legal Administration of the Covenant of Grace To whom two things are propounded 1. The Duty of the Law 2. Some Scriptures and obscure Beginnings of the Gospel They shall be judged according to that Administration they are under either for violating the Law or neglecting the Gospel or those first Dawnings of Grace which God offered to their View and Study Indeed the Law was more manifest but the Gospel was not so obscure but they might have understood it Therefore God will call them to an Account about keeping his Law by which who can be Justified Or whether by true Repentance they have fled to the Mercy of God which by divers wayes was then revealed to them and have owned the Messiah in his Types Psal. 145.2 Enter not into Judgment with thy Servant for in thy Sight shall no Man living be Justified Psal. 130.3 4. If thou shouldst mark Iniquities O Lord who shall stand But there is Forgiveness with thee that thou mayest be feared Which if not clear they shall be condemned not only for not keeping the Law but also for neglect of Grace Though their Unbelief and Impenitency be not so odious as theirs is that lived under a clearer Revelation yet a grievous Sin it was which will bring Judgment upon them 4. There are some that have no other Discovery of God but what they could make from the Courses of Nature and some Instincts of Conscience as meer Pagans The Apostle having told us of the Righteous Judgment of God Rom. 2.5 and how managed Vers. 6 7 8. and how aggravated the Jew first and then the Gentile he then concludeth Vers. 12. For as many as have sinned without the Law shall perish without the Law but as many as have sinned in the Law shall be judged by the Law That is the Jews as the other is to be understood of the Gentiles To whose notice no Fame of Christ or the Law of Moses could possibly come To perish without the Law is to be punished and Punishment followeth upon Condemnation and Condemnation is in this Judgment Therefore Pagans and Heathens that lived most remote from the Tydings of the Gospel and Divine Revelation must appear before Christ's Tribunal to be judged But by what Rule He telleth us Vers. 14 15. For wh●n the Gentiles which have not the Law do by Nature the things contained in the Law these having not a Law are a Law to themselves Which shew the Work of the Law written upon their Hearts their Conscience also bearing Witness and their Thoughts th●m an while accusing or excusing one another They knew themselves to have sinned by that Rule by the natural Knowledge of God and some sense of their Duty impressed upon their Hearts Nature it self told them what was well or ill done The Law of Nature taught them their Duty and had some Affinity with the Law of M●ses And the Course of God's Providence taught that God was placable which hath some Affinity with these Gospel Rudiments and first Strictures Therefore the Goodness and Long-suffering of God should lead them to Repentance Rom. 2.4 Surely then the Impenitency of the Jews will meet with an heavy Condemnation according to the Proportion of Clearness in their Revelation 5. Men of all Conditions high and low rich and poor mighty and powerful or weak and oppressed Kings Subjects Revel 20.12 I saw the Dead both small and great stand before God No Rank or Degree in the World can exempt us These Distinctions do not ou●-live Time they cease at the Graves Mouth there all stand upon the same Level and are
Isa. 58.5 They afflict the soul for a day or bow down the head like a bulrush and so in the external actions of other Duties That this deceit may be more strong they exceed in outward Observances and that produceth Superstition or some by-Laws of our own by which we hope to expiate our sins as to whip and gash our selves Micah 6.6 7. Wherewithal shall I come before the Lord and ●ow my self before the high God shall I come before him with burnt-offerings with calves of a year old Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams or with ten thousands of rivers of oyl shall I give my first-born for my transgression the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul On the other side if mens Tempers Education and strain of Religion carry them to another way and they are all for the Grace of the Gospel without the Rudiments of men the Devil knows how to charm and lull Souls asleep in sin by that way of Profession also and so many take liberty to sin under the pretence that God may have more occasion to exercise his mercy and our proneness to please the flesh is countenanced by presumptions of Grace and the supposition of unreasonable Indulgences of God to the faulty Creature Psal. 50.21 These things hast thou done and I kept silence thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as thy self God will not be so severe as is commonly imagined and so lessening Gods Holiness they abate their Reverence of him Psal. 68.19 20 21. Blessed be the Lord who daily loadeth us with benefits even the God of our salvation Selah He that is our God is the God of salvation and unto God the Lord belong the issues from death But God shall wound the head of his enemies and the hairy scalp of such an one as goeth on still in his trespasses He seeketh to obviate their conceit how great soever the riches of his Bounty and Grace offered in Christ be yet he is irreconcileable to those that cease not to follow a course of sin 3. This conceit is strengthened in us because many that profess Christianity live licentiously All sins propagate their kind and among others abuse of Grace we see others have great hopes and confidence in Christ notwithstanding their carnal and worldly course of living and self-love prompteth us that we may hope to fare as well as they and so we leaven one another with a dead loose carnal sort of Christianity instead of provoking each other to love and good works Heb. 10.24 Self-love is very partial and loth to think evil of our condition now this cannot be justified by the Laws of Christianity yet it is often justified by the lives of Christians after this Rule they live in the World and we think we may do as others do 4. There is another cause that is Satan who abuseth the weakness of some Teachers and the ignorance of some Hearers to misapply the Grace of the Gospel and the comforts of Justification to countenance their sins The Devil knoweth we will not receive his Doctrine in his own Name and therefore doth what he can to usurp the Name of Christ and to obtrude his Commands upon us in the Name of Christ and so conveyeth poison to you by the Perfume of the Gospel and if he can set Christ against Christ his Merits and Mercy against his Government and Spirit his Promises against his Laws Justification against Sanctification he knoweth that he obtaineth his end and purpose that the Gospel which was set up to destroy the works of the Devil will be a means to cherish his Kingdom in the World And on the Hearers part he abuseth them also carnal hearts turn all into fuel for their lusts and with the more pretence if they can alledge a Dispensation from God himself to serve and please the flesh and no harm shall come of it A little trusting in Christ shall serve the turn though they live never so impure lives I ascribe all this to Satan because all Errour is from him who is the Father of Lyes who often obtrudeth upon the simple credulity of Christians his own Gospel instead of Christ's and by a partial representation of Christs Gospel destroyeth the whole II. I come now to make good the Charge First That this inference is very unjust and ill grounded The Pretence here are those words of the Apostle in the two last verses of the former Chapter Moreover the Law entred that the offence might abound but where sin abounded grace did much more abound That as sin hath reigned unto death even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord. These words yield no such consequence To evince which 1. I shall state the meaning of those words 2. Show the unjustness of this illation from them 1. For the meaning the Apostle sheweth the Law was given to the Israelites by Moses not that they might be justified thereby but that sin and punishment to which we are liable by reason of sin might the better be known and so the Grace of God in Christ which justifieth us notwithstanding the grievousness of sin might be the more esteemed and we might the more earnestly fly to it for Sanctuary and Refuge and the Curse might drive us to the Promise For there are two things which the Law discovereth 1. The multitude and hainous nature of our offences it entred that sin might abound not in our practice but in our sense and feeling as being more apparent and awakening more lively stings in our Consciences If a rugged and obstinate People sin the more that is not the fault of the Law but of our corrupt Nature which always tendeth to that which is forbidden it only took occasion from the commandment Rom. 7.8 The proper effect of the Law was to give us more convincing and clear knowledge of Duty and Sin or to be a means to aggravate sin to render it more exceedingly hainous as being against an express Law of Gods own giving with great Majesty and Terrour 2. The other use of the Law is to give us an awakening sense of the punishment due to sin as it exposes us to temporal and eternal death vers 21. and so our deliverance and life by Christ might be more thankfully accepted who by his Mercy hath taken away the condemning and reigning power of sin by granting pardon of it and power over it so that as a great and mortal disease maketh a Physician famous if he cureth it so sin maketh the Grace of Christ more conspicuous and glorious 2. The injustice of the Illation 1. There is a difference between causa per se and causa per accidens a Cause and an Occasion though the abounding of sin helpeth to advance Grace it is not of it self but by accident by Gods over-ruling Grace therefore it is a desperate Adventure to try Conlusions to drink rank Poison to experiment the goodness of an
Antidote or to wound our selves mortally to try the virtue of a Plaster God made advantage of the sins of the World for the honouring of his Grace in Christ but they that presume to sin greatly that God may pardon greatly run a desperate adventure whether God will pardon them or no. 2. There is a difference between the remission of sins past and allowance of sin future Our fixed purpose must be not to sin but if we sin we have the use of Gods remedy 1 Joh. 2.1 My little children these things I write unto you that ye sin not And if any man sin we have an Advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous If God made advantage of sins past to honour his Grace we also by sins past may make an advantage for a renewed use of Faith in our Redemeer and renewed desires and expectations of pardon by his Intercession but it is a wrong conclusion to think we may heap up new sins for time to come and still make more work for pardoning Mercy and be content to offend God again that he may still be pardoning and we never forsake sin In short we must not sin that grace may abound but when we have sinned we must make use of abounding grace Faith and Repentance may draw good out of sin it self to make the remembrance of it a means of our hatred and mortification of sin and of more gratitude to our Redeemer but not to take liberty to indulge sin antedating our pardon before the fact 3. It is contrary to all ingenuity and love to God or Christ. This is the difference between Faith and Presumption or a sound and a blind confidence of pardon by Christ namely that Faith maketh us hate sin and Presumption maketh us secure and bold in finning and slightly to pass it over with little remorse and reluctancy when we are guilty of it He who presumeth doth the work of an Age in a breath God is merciful Christ dyed for sinners and all our confidence must be in Christ But the true Believer is more affected with sin as she wept much and loved much to whom much was forgiven Luc. 7.47 and Ezek. 16.63 That thou mayest remember and be confounded and never open thy mouth any more because of thy shame when I am pacified towards thee for all that thou hast done They express their gratitude for remission of sin by a careful keeping from it pardoning Mercy maketh God amiable to us and his Laws acceptable our Duty sweeter and Sin more grievous Secondly It is absurd and contrary to the Doctrine of Grace true Christianity is of a far different make from this conceit 1. It is not consistent with the Grace that goeth along with Pardon for God sanctifieth all those whom he justifieth we receive together with the remission of sins the gift of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 1.30 Of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption 1 Cor. 6.11 But ye are washed but ye are justified but ye are sanctified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God these are inseparable the application of the Merit of Christ and the gift of his Spirit which reneweth us to the image of God and mortifieth the life of sin in us the heart broken with compunction seeketh this double benefit 1 Joh. 1.9 If we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness as a Malefactor that hath a Leprosie on him needs not only a Pardon but a Medicine and in a broken leg not only ease of the pain is desirable but that the bone be set right Therefore we are both justified and sanctified continuing in sin cannot consist with the truth of Regeneration 2. It is contrary to the order of Gods grace in the New Covenant who requireth of us Faith and Repentance if we would be partakers of Christ Now to continue in sin is to be under the bondage of it without restraint or any change of heart and life 1. It is against Faith take it for assent it is a belief that he will save all those that submit to be sanctified and ruled by him in order to their Salvation Heb. 5.9 Being made perfect he became the Author of eternal salvation to all them that obey him If you hope to be saved by him and will not be ruled by him you do not believe Christ but the Devil for if you believe Christ you must believe that you cannot be saved unless you be converted Mat. 18.3 Except ye be converted and become as little children ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven Take Faith for acceptance of Christ it is an hearty consent both of subjection to him and dependence upon him as the Saviour and Redeemer of the World the Mediator's blessing is to turn every one of you away from your iniquities Acts 3.26 he is a Saviour to save his people from their sins Mat. 1.21 to say nothing of receiving Christ the Lord which the Scripture presseth Col. 2.6 2. It is against Repentance which implieth a sorrow for sin with a serious purpose to forsake it 1. There is in it godly sorrow 2 Cor. 7.10 this is requisite to check the sensual inclination or love of pleasure which is the heart root and life of all sin it dyes when our affection to it dyes In Repentance with bitterness of Soul we bemoan our selves for offending God now if we lick up our vomit again and go round in a track of confessing sin and committing sin our hearts are not found with God we undo that which is done and so build again the things we have destroyed if while we seek to be justified by Christ we are still found sinners Gal. 2.17 18. a man that truly seeks after pardon seeks with it the ruine and destruction of sin Sin was his greatest trouble the burden that lay upon his Conscience the grievance from which he sought ease the wound which pained him at heart the disease that his Soul was sick of is all this real What will you say if this man should delight in his former trouble and take up his burden that he groaned under and prefer it before liberty to tear open the wounds which were in a fair way of healing willingly relapse into the sickness out of which he is recovered with so much ado if he should desire the bonds and chains again of which he was freed by infinite mercy Surely then you may question the reality of all that he hath done in the anguish of our Souls we groaned under sin as the heaviest and most intolerable burden we could ever feel now should we stoop to it and take it on again after it was lifted from our backs who would pity us 2. There is a renouncing and forsaking of sin it is called Repentance from dead works Heb. 6.1 not only Repentance for but from
sin and God being pacified in Christ doth restore it to us Man brought upon himself spiritual death by sin and the gift of the sanctifying Spirit is the great and first Act of Gods pardoning Mercy and a means to qualifie us for other parts of Pardon Though the thing be plain of it self yet to make it more clear to us 2. Let us distinguish of the kinds of Justification There is a twofold Justification it is either constitutive or executive First Constitutive Justification is by the new Covenant when those who submit to the Terms are constituted or made righteous Joh. 5.24 He that heareth my word and believeth in him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but is passed from death to life There is Gods Grant and whosoever can make good his Claim hath a right to Justification by Gods own Grant according to the Law of Grace he is one freed from sin Secondly Executive when God accordingly taketh off all penalties and evils and giveth us all the good which belongeth to the Righteous or Justified as in the case in hand when God giveth us the Spirit to break the power and reign of sin And therefore so often in Scripture is God said to sanctifie us as a God of Peace or as a God pacified and reconciled to us in Jesus Christ Heb. 13.20 21. Now the God of peace that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus that great Shepherd of the sheep through the blood of the everlasting covenant make you perfect in every good work to do his will working in you that which is well-pleasing in his sight 1 Thess. 5.23 And the very God of peace sanctifie ye wholly c. 2 Cor. 5.18 And all things are of God who hath reconciled us to himself by Jesus Christ. This God doth as a Judge acting according to the Rules of Government constituted in the new Covenant upon the account of the Merit of Christ and our actual interest in him II. As to the Degree how far we are freed from sin 1. All the justified and converted to God are freed from the Reign of it The flesh though it remaineth is made subject to the Spirit which by degrees doth destroy the reliques of sin For it is said of the justified Rom. 8.1 There is no condemnation to them that are in Christ Jesus who walk not after the flesh but after the Spirit 2. The more obedient we are to the motions of the sanctifying Spirit the more power we have against sin Gal. 5.18 If ye be led by the Spirit ye are not under the Law under the irritating Power and Curse of it Many sins are in a great measure left uncured as a part of our punishment We should have more of his Spirit and so more of his Grace to mortifie sin if we did mind more the Covenant we have made with God as our Sanctifier but degrees of Grace may be forfeited by our unworthy dealing with the Spirit Eph. 4.30 Grieve not the Spirit of God whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption He seeketh by degrees to fit us for our everlasting estate and final deliverance from all sin and the consequence of sin 2 Cor. 5.5 Now he that hath wrought us for the self same thing is God who also hath given to us the earnest of his Spirit And therefore he must not be obstructed in his work while he is preparing the Heirs of Promise afore-hand unto Glory lest we lose not only the comfort of our future Hopes but also be set back in the spiritual Life and so grieve both our Sanctifier and our Comforter 3. If we fall into hainous wilful sin God manifesteth his displeasure against the party sinning by withdrawing his Spirit This was the evil that David was so much afraid of Psal. 51.10 11 12. Create in me a clean heart and renew a right spirit within me Cast me not away from thy presence and take not thy holy Spirit from me Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation and uphold me by thy free Spirit In which expressions he desireth that God would not withdraw his Grace and the influence of his holy Spirit which by that hainous sin he had so justly forfeited This is the sorest Judgment on this side Hell to be deprived of Communion with God in point of Grace Though it may be not a total separation from his Presence and Grace yet it is a degree of it when God is strange to us and suspendeth all the Acts of his complacential Love leaving us dull and sensless that we have no heart or life to any thing that is spiritually good Yea if after such scandalous falls we repent not the sooner God may deliver us up to brutish lusts the evils are lesser and greater according to the rate of our sins or neglects of grace These penal withdrawings of his Spirit should therefore be observed for God sheweth much of his pleasure or displeasure by giving and withholding the Spirit His Blessing and Favour is shewed this way Prov. 1.23 Turn ye at my reproof behold I will pour out my Spirit upon you and I will make known my words unto you But when God is refused or neglected or highly provoked Psal. 81.11 12. My people would not hearken to my voice and Israel would none of me so I gave them up unto their own hearts lust and they walked in their own counsels This is more than all the calamities of the World 4. Where the work is really begun and duly submitted unto we have hopes of a better estate it still increaseth towards that perfect Blessedness when we shall be without spot and blemish or any such thing Eph. 5.27 What a life do Gods holy Ones live in Heaven who are wholly freed from sin There is no worldly mind nor pride nor passion nor fleshly lust to trouble them Here many wallow in their own dung others are in a great measure defiled and blemished but there they are freed not only from the Reign but Being of sin Hath God been so kind to them in glory And will he not do the same for us also There is none in Heaven by the first Covenant all that are there come thither as sanctified and justified by Jesus Christ and in the way of his pardoning grace Surely since we have the same Redeemer depend upon the Merit of the same Sacrifice and wait for the same Spirit in the use of all holy means and endeavours he will not be strange to us Christ is willing if we are willing there you will find it sticketh he came to take away sin but we will not give way to his Spirit we are neither sensible of our sickness nor earnest for a cure at least a sound cure We seek ease and comfort more than the removing of the distemper but if we were throughly willing will he fail a serious Soul It is Christs Office to expiate sin and destroy it his Blood was shed for his
sin some pleasureable Lure represented by Sense awakeneth the Lust that draweth off the heart from God and heavenly things then Lust conceiveth by Thoughts as the Eggs are hatched by Incubation then it is a full-grown sin and so they go on to the very last till they drop into Hell O then suppress the musings the vain and sinful thoughts for whilst you dandle sin in your minds with a secret consent liking or a pleasing musing the mischief increaseth the stranger becometh your Master Secondly You must watch against Occasions It is ill sporting with Occasions or playing about the Cockatrices hole or standing in harms way Many say their infirmities make them run into such or such sins but if they were minded to leave their sin they would leave off evil company and all occasions that lead to it We are often warned of this Prov. 4.14 15. Enter not into the path of the wicked and go not in the way of evil men Avoid it pass not by it turn from it and pass away Prov. 5.8 Remove thy way far from her and come not nigh the door of her house The Wisdom of God thought fit to give us these directions they that think they have so good a command of themselves that they shall keep within compass well enough though they venture upon the occasions of sin converse with vain company frequent the haunts of the wicked go to Plays and entertain themselves with Dalliances refuse none of the blandishments of Sense surely they are not acquainted with the slipperiness and infirmity of humane Nature know not what the new Creature meaneth nor what a tender thing it is to preserve it in strength and vigour Is sin grown less dangerous Or have men gotten a greater command of themselves than they were wont to have when the Scriptures were first written Surely man is as weak as ever and sin as dangerous Why then should we venture upon evil company and the places where they resort and go too near the pits brink and freely please our selves with the Allectives of Sin and Apostasie from God such as are wanton Plays idle Sports Is there no infection that secretly tainteth our hearts Thirdly Against all appearance of Evil 1 Thess. 5.22 Abstain from all appearance of evil Some things though not apparently evil yet they have an ill aspect as being unsuitable to the gravity of our holy Calling or the strictness of our Baptismal Vow and Covenant made with Christ or as being things not practised by good men who most seriously mind heavenly things or have been usually abused to sin and so are not of good report to be sure do rather blemish Religion than adorn it Christs Worshippers should be far from Scurrility Lightness Vanity in Apparel Words Deeds and they should avoid all things that look towards a sin It is notable under the Law that the Nazarite who was not to drink Wine was not to eat Grapes moist nor dry nor to taste any thing that was made of the Vine-tree from the kernels even unto the husk Numb 6.3 4. A Christian that hath consecrated himself to God and hath made such a full and whole renunciation of all sin should exactly take care to avoid every occasion and provocation to evil every appearance of evil not only the pollution of the flesh but the garment spotted with the flesh Jude 23. Fourthly Watch to prevent the Sin it self The actual reign of sin maketh way for the habitual The progress is this Temptations lead to sin for there are few of us but discover more evil upon a Tryal than ever we thought we should before as the piercing and broaching of a Vessel sheweth what liquor is in it and small sins lead to greater as the small sticks set the greater on fire and greater sins lead to Hell except God be the more merciful and we stop betimes Well then watch against the sin it self for every foil maketh you suffer loss sin cometh to reign by degrees and a man setleth his neck to the yoke by little and little it is not easie to fix bounds to sin when it is once admitted and given way to water when once it breaketh out will have its course and the gap once made in the Conscience will grow wider and wider every day a little rent in the cloth maketh way for a greater so if we do not take heed of small sins worse grow upon us the fear of God and sense of sin is lessened by every sinful act and Conscience loseth its tenderness and our feeling decayeth The best stopping of the stone is at the top of the Hill when it beginneth to fall downward it is hard to stay it The deceived heart thinketh I will yield a little and the Devil carrieth them further and further till there is no tenderness left in the Conscience As in Gaming there is a secret Witchery a man will play a little venture a small summ but he is wound in more and more and intangled So men think it is no great matter to sin a little a little sin is a sin against God an offence to him and therefore why do not you make Conscience of it And it will bring other mischiefs along with it as it disposeth the heart to sin again Fifthly Watch against the mischief of heinous or presumptuous sins When you venture to do any foul thing against apparent checks of Conscience any small sin may get the upper hand of the Sinner and bring him under in time after it is habituated by long custom so that he cannot easily shake off the yoke and redeem himself from the Tyranny thereof but these steal into the Soul insensibly and inslave us as they get strength by multiplied acts But presumptuous or heinous sins by one single act bring a mighty advantage to the Flesh and weaken the Spirit or better part and advance themselves suddenly into the Throne Psal. 19.13 Keep back thy servant also from presumptuous sins let them not have dominion over me Then shall I be upright and I shall be innocent from the great transgression The Regenerate if the Lord do not keep them from temptations or do leave them in temptations may fall into most scandalous sins against the Light of their Consciences and for the present are under woful slavery and inconvenience David representeth the utmost mischief of these kinds of sins as afraid with the fear of caution it might tend thereto Now if a Man nay a Child of God may possibly fall into scandalous sins being inticed by the pleasure or profit of them and for the present be blinded then after any heinous fall there should be a special mortification or weakening of sin because when we are gotten to that height sin will break out again in the same or other kind as a venemous humor in the body heal one sore and it breaketh out in another place After some notable fall or actual Rebellion against God it is good to come in speedily to
instruments of Righteousness unto God Secondly Among other the means required by God there are these two things to be considered Fear of Falling and the Danger of Backsliding 1. Fear of Falling Heb. 4.1 Let us therefore fear lest a promise being left us of entring into his rest any of us should seem to come short of it 1 Pet. 1.17 Pass the time of your sojourning here with fear Phil. 2.12 Work out your own salvation with fear and trembling Fear is careful and solicitous what Fear is this a Fear of Caution 1 Cor. 10.12 Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall Of Reverence Jer. 32.40 I will put my fear in their hearts that they shall not depart from me 2. The Danger of Backsliding is often represented to Believers to increase their caution as Christ said to his own Disciples Joh. 15.6 If a man abide not in me he is cast forth as a branch and is withered and men gather them and cast them into the fire and they are burned The danger of Apostasie is represented to them to confirm their standing or laid before them to make them afraid of defection So Heb. 10.26 27. If we sin wilfully after we have received the knowledge of the truth there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins But a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation which shall devour the adversaries 3. The Promise and Exhortation go together that we may carry an even hand between Despair and Presumption Compare vers 12. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal bodies that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof with the Text Sin shall not have dominion over you we must not presume because of the filthiness of our hearts and the number of the snares that are still before us we must not despond because of the unchangeableness of Gods Covenant-love Let us improve the Grace we have received that we may continue in it The Act is ours but the Help is Gods To sin upon a confidence that we are sure to persevere is to cease persevering and to fall away because we are sure not to fall away which is a contradiction Vse of Information It informeth us 1. No Doctrine is so sound but a corrupt heart will abuse it therefore as much as in us lies we must prevent these mis-interpretations 2. How prone sinful men are to take all occasions to indulge liberty to sin being naturally bent to Licentiousness they pervert Christs holy Doctrine to this end 3. With what abhorrence we should entertain any thing that lessens the necessity of the Creatures subjection to God or doth befriend sin or inticeth you to make light of Obedience yea though this should be done with the most glorious pretences of Grace it is but Poison ministred by a Perfume 4. What caution and watchfulness we should use over our own thoughts and inferences Every one draweth one Conclusion or other from the Gospel What use do you make of it Many that will not say so that we should sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace are apt to think and do so And since it is natural to us we should be provided of a remedy 1. Let every Sacred Truth be digested into holy Love and Practice Love 2 Cor. 8.1 2. Knowledge puffeth up but charity edifyeth And if any man think that he knoweth any thing he knoweth nothing yet as he ought to know Practice 1 Joh. 2.4 He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandments is a lyar and the truth is not in him When Truth is turned into Love it is turned into a new Nature and deeds discover the reality of our opinions more than words 2. Let no mystical Truth be set up to avoid Gods unquestionable natural Right to govern his Creature or to infringe the Rights of the Godhead as to set up Christ against the Moral Law as if that were abrogated and if no Law no Transgression no Sin no Duty no Judgment no Punishment no Reward 3. Do not set up Christ against Christ Heb. 5.9 And being made perfect he became the Author of eternal Salvation to all them that obey him Do not set up his Merits against his Law he is Saviour but to those that obey him SERMON XVII ROM VI. 16 Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are to whom ye obey whether of sin unto death or of obedience unto righteousness IN this Verse the Apostle proveth that it is unreasonable and absurd to conclude That we may sin because we are not under the Law but under Grace Why Because it destroyeth the state to which we pretend for men cannot be under Grace that serve sin He proveth it by a general Maxim evident by the common Reason of Mankind Know ye not that to whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are c. So that in the words we may observe two things 1. A general Maxim evident by the Light of Nature 2. The Application of it to the matter in hand 1. The general Maxim That whatsoever or whomsoever a man voluntarily obeyeth he maketh it or him his proper Lord and Master There take notice of the evidence of it Know ye not q. d. you may easily know this by the common course of affairs of the World Here four things are evident First That omnis servus est alicujus Domini servus that every Servant hath some particular Lord and Master Secondly That the interest of this particular Lord and Master is grounded upon some special Title Thirdly This Title as matters are carried in the World is either voluntary Contract or Consent or plain Conquest getting another into his Power By voluntary Contract one is a Servant that bargaineth with another to serve him either wholly that selleth himself as a Slave or in part for such services and ministeries the one is Servus a Bondman or a Slave the other is Famulus an Attendant or Apprentice not absolutely but for such a time and for such ends By Conquest 2 Pet. 2.19 While they promise themselves liberty they themselves are the servants of corruption for of whom a man is overcome of the same is he brought into bondage Fourthly Where a Master hath such a legal Title every Servant is bound to obey his Master Aristotle maketh it the property of a Servant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to live not as himself listeth but as his Master pleaseth All these things are plain and obvious to every mans understanding 2. The matter of it there are two things observable 1. Yielding our selves to obey 2. Actual Obedience 1. Consent To whom ye yield your selves servants to obey his servants ye are as a man contracts with another to serve him 2. The Act His servants ye are to whom ye obey whether there hath been a formal Contract yea or no. He that actually obeyeth another is to be accounted his Servant and becometh his Servant The first Notion
of condemnation to Death if you be not sensible of the evil and burden of Sin yet surely you should flee from wrath to come Is that a slight matter to you our first and quickest sense is of wrath when our hearts are made more tender we feel the burden of sin fear worketh before shame and sorrow Therefore surely he that considereth his deep necessity should cry our Oh wretched man that I am who shall deliver me from this body of death Rom. 7.24 2. Consider the possibility of your delivery from this bondage by the law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus Surely the Blood of Jesus can purge your consciences from dead works that you may serve the living God Heb. 9.14 There is a Covenant all the promises of which in Christ are Yea and Amen 2 Cor. 1.23 The Covenant of night and day may sooner be dissolved than this Covenant broken or repealed There is the Spirit also who can subdue your strongest lusts and is ready to help you to mortifie the deeds of the body and to reclaim you from your vain pleasures 3. How comfortable it will be for you when once this work is in progress and you begin to pass from Death to Life every step will be sweet to you and as you grow in grace you do apace advance to Heaven Prov. 3.17 All her ways are pleasantness and all her paths are peace 2 Vse Let us examine whether we have received this regenerating grace to free us from the reign of sin Some are free in shew but others are free indeed John 8.36 Some have the outward badges of Liberty are Christians in name receive Sacraments and enjoy the Ordinances but not the grace in and by the Ordinances You may know the state of your service by the course of your life are you as ready to do any thing for God as before for sin Rom. 6.18 3 d Vse If we be free let us not return to our old slavery again Gal. 5.1 Stand fast in the liberty wherein Christ hath made you free and be not intangled again in the yoke of bondage Especially that chief part of freedom from the dominion of sin Rom. 6.12 Let not sin reign in your mortal bodies that ye should obey it in the lusts thereof And the 14 verse For sin shall not have dominion over you for ye are not under the law but under grace SERMON IV. ROM VIII 3 For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh HERE the Apostle explaineth himself and sheweth how the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus doth make us free from the law of sin and death In the words observe three things 1. The deep necessity of mankind For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the Flesh. 2. The means of our deliverance or Gods merciful provision for our relief The means are two First Christs incarnation Secondly His Passion 1. His incarnation in these Words and God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh 2. His Passion and for sin or by a Sacrifice for Sin 3. The end or benefit accruing to us thereby Condemned Sinint he Flesh. Doct. from the whole That when man could by no means be freed from Sin and Death God sent his Son to be a sacrifice for sin that our liberty might be fully accomplished The Apostles method is best I shall therefore follow that 1. The deep necessity of mankind is argued and made out by this reason That it was impossible for the Law to do away Sin and justifie man before God so he saith For what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh That is through the corruption of our natures we being Sinners and unable to perform the Duty of the Law To understand the force of this reason take these considerations 1. That it was necessary in respect of Gods purpose and decree that we should be freed from Sin and Death For God would not have mankind utterly to perish having chosen some to Salvation and Repentance and so leaving others without excuse therefore the strict Judgment of the Law is debated upon this Argument Psal. 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant O Lord for in thy sight shall no man living be justified And again Psal. 130.3 If thou Lord shouldst mark iniquity Lord who shall stand According to the first Covenant none can escape Condemnation now this consisted not with the purposes of the Lords Grace who would not lose the whole Creation of mankind God hath shewed himself placable and merciful to all men and hath forbidden despair and continued many forfeited mercies and did not presently upon Sinning put us in our everlasting estate as he did the fallen Angels but rather is upon a Treaty with us 2. God resolving to restore and recover some of mankind it must be by the old way of the Law or by some other course The old way of the Law claimeth the first respect and precedence of consideration for take away Christ and the Gospel nothing more divine and perfect was given to man than the Law this was first intended by God for that end as the Scriptures every where witness and God will not depart from his own institutions without evident necessity for he doth nothing in vain or without necessary cause and reason Gal. 3.21 If there had been a law given which could have given life verily righteousness had been by the Law God would have gone no further than his first transaction with man Again 't is said Gal. 2.21 If righteousness had been by the Law then Christ is dead in vain If there had been any other way possible in Heaven or in earth than the death of Christ by which the salvation of lost sinners could have been brought about Christ would not have died no our disease was desperate as to any other way of cure before this great Physitian took our case in hand Christ is of no use till our wound be found incurable and all other help in vain 3. The Law coming first into consideration as our remedy its impossibility to justifie and give life needs to be sufficiently demonstrated for till we are dead to the law we shall but carelesly seek after the Grace of God in Jes●s Christ therefore doth the Scripture travel so much in this point and sheweth us we must not only be dead to sin and dead to the world but dead to the law before we can live unto God Gal. 2.19 I through the law am dead to the law that I may live unto God and again Rom. 7.4 Ye are become dead to the law by the body of Christ that ye may be married to another even to him that was raised from the dead that ye may bring forth fruit to God These two places shew the means how we become dead
yet alive the man was to lay his hand on the head of the Sacrifice confessing his sins Lev. 16.21 and putting them on the Sacrifice Secondly the sacrifices were substituted into the place of the offender and the beasts died for him so did Christ die not only in bonum nostrum for our good but loco vice omnium nostri in our stead and room Isa. 53.4 surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows he was wounded for our transgression Thirdly The offerings offered to God in our stead were consumed and destroyed If things of life killed or slain other things were either burnt as frankincense or spilled and poured out as wine There was a destruction of the thing offered to God for sin in mans stead so Christ was to die or to shed his blood to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself Heb. 9.26 He appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself All the Offerings typified Christ but more strictly the sacrifices which were of living beasts some whereof were killed slayed burnt some rosted and fried on coals some seethed in pots all which were shadows of what Christ endured who is the only true propitiatory sacrifice wherein provoked Justice rests satisfied 4. The effects of the sacrifices all either respect God or sin or the sinner God was pacified or propitiated the sin expiated the sinner reconciled that is to say justified sanctified 1. God was pacified propitiated or satisfied the law being obeyed which he had instituted for the doing away of sin not satisfied or propitiated as to the eternal punishment by the mere sacrifice but so far as to prevent many temporal Judgments which otherwise would fall upon them for the neglect of Gods Ordinances but the true propitiation is Christ 1 John 2.2 Who gave himself to be a propitiation for our sins Propitiation implieth Gods being satisfied pacified appeased to us so as to become merciful to us Secondly The sin for which the sacrifice was offered was purged expiated as to the legal guilt there was no more fault to be charged on them as to the remedy which that Law prescribed but the true purgation of the conscience from dead works belongeth only to the Son of God Heb. 9.14 Thirdly The effect on the sinner himself was the sinner coming with his sin offering according to Gods institution was pardoned or justified so far as to quit him from temporal punishment both before God and man The Magistrate could not cut him off he having done what the law required for his sin or trespass nor would God he having submitted to his ordinance yea he was sanctified so far as to be capable of legal worship Heb. 9.13 for if the blood of bulls and goats and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh c. but now as to Christ the sinner is justified by the free and full remission of all his sins Matth. 26.28 For this is my blood of the new testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins and sanctified with an internal and real holiness Heb. 10.10 We are sanctified by the offering of Jesus Christ once for all perfectly justified and perfectly sanctified Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified That is with a perfection opposite to the legal institution not with a perfection opposite to the heavenly estate that cometh afterwards The ordinances of the legal covenant did what belonged to them but as to the removing of the internal guilt and eternal punishment they were not perfect without looking to Christ. 3. I come to the end and benefit When God sent his own Son surely he designed some great thing thereby what was his end and design He condemned sin in the flesh Two things must be explained first what is meant by condemning of sin Secondly what is meant by these words in the flesh 1. What is meant by condemning of sin To condemn is to destroy it because execution ordinarily followeth the sentence Therefore the sentence is put for the execution and the word condemn is used for weighty Reasons The Gospel is speaking of Justification or our not being cendemned Christ condemned that which would have condemned us by bearing the punishment of it in his own Person sin had conquered the world or subjected man to condemnation therefore Christ came to condemn sin that is to destroy it The Question then is Whether the Apostle doth hereby expound the Mystery of Sanctification or Justification I answer both are intended as they are often in these words which express the great undertaking of the Mediator which is to take away sin there is a damning Power and a reigning power in sin now if condemning sin be destroying of sin or taking away its power by his expiatory Sacrifice then not only the pardon of sin but the mortification of the flesh is intended 2. What is the sense of those Words in the flesh Is it meant of the flesh of Christ or our flesh Both make a good sense I prefer the latter First he condemned sin in the flesh or by the crucified body of Christ exacting from him the punishment due to sin Secondly in our flesh that is sin which by our flesh rendreth us uncapable of fulfilling the law of God or obnoxious to his Vengeance This was destroyed by the death of Christ Our old man was crucified with him Rom 6.6 and in conversion the vertue is applied to us when sin received its Deaths Wound by Vertue of Christs Death or Sacrifice 1. VSE is Information To shew the hainous nature of sin God hath put a brand upon it and shewed how odious it is to him nothing short of the Death of Christ could expiate such a breach between God and his creatures Christ must die or no Reconciliation Christs Death doth lessen and greaten sin it greatens the nature of it to all serious beholders it lesseneth the damning effect of it to the penitent believer 2. If Christ came to destroy sin accursed are they that cherish it These seek to put their Redeemer to shame tie the cords the which he came to unloose 1 John 5.8 Christ came to destroy the works of the Devil 3. Christ did not abrogate the law but took away the effects and consequents of Sin committed against the law The sinner was obnoxious to the Justice of the Lawgiver and Judge the law could not help him but the Son of God came to fit us again for our Obedience 2. VSE is To exhort us to consider first our misery how unavoidably our perishing was had not God found out a remedy for us In our corrupt estate we neither could nor would obey the Law the duty became impossible both as to the tenor of the law and the temper of our hearts and then the penalty is intolerable 2. Our remedy lies in the Incarnation and Passion of the Son of God that in so intangled a case he could
find out a ransome for us The Goodness of God that he sent his own Son The Power of God that by this means the guilt and power of sin with all the consequents of it are dissolved 3. VSE is Direction in the Lords Supper First here is the flesh of Christ which is food for souls John 6.51 The bread that I shall give is my flesh which I shall give for the life of the world In it he hath purchased grace and pardon of sin which are the foundations of Immortality 2. The Lords Supper is a feast on a sacrifice a commemoration of Christs sin-offering or a standing memorial of his Passion a Table spread for us in the sight of our enemies how must we be conversant about it as the Jews about the sacrifices First there is required an humble broken and contrite heart confessing our sins Psal. 46.17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and contrite heart O God thou wilt not despise Secondly sensible thankful and comfortable owning of Gods love in Christ. When they had eaten the Passover they were to rejoice before the Lord Deut. 16.11 So should we after this feast prepared by God to feed and nourish our souls to eternal life SERMON V. ROM VIII 4 That the righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk not after the flesh but after the spirit HERE is the second end of our deliverance by Christ That we might have Grace to keep the Law of God The first was That sin might be condemned in the flesh In the words we have 1. A Benefit 2. The persons that receive it First the Benefit That the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us How is this to be understood of Justification or Sanctification They that expound it in the former way make this the sense That Christ's active Obedience or fulfilling the Law might be imputed and reckoned to us as if done by us But I cannot like this Interpretation First because 't is contrary to the Apostle's scope who speaketh not of Christ's active obedience but the fruits of his Death or his being made a 〈◊〉 Offering for us Secondly the words will not bear it For the Apostle doth not say that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled for us but fulfilled in us Thirdly the Doctrine its self is not 〈◊〉 unless rightly interpreted For tho God upon the account of Christ's passive obedience and satisfaction doth forgive our sins and his active obedience as well as his passive is the meritorious cause of our Justification as being a part of his Humiliation yet that cannot be said to be fulfilled in us which was done by Christ for God cannot be mistaken and reckon us to fulfil the Law which we have not and will not lie and say we did it when we did it not 'T is enough to say Christ obeyed and suffered for our sakes so as we might have the fruit and benefit of it Fourthly the Consequent is pernicious to say the Law is fulfilled in us as obeyed by Christ for then we needed not to fulfil it our selves 't is done to our hands already and needeth only to be imputed to us by Faith but Christ who suffered that we might not suffer yet did not obey that we might not obey but his Obedience being part of his Humiliation is an Ingredient into his satisfaction for our sins Christ fulfilled all righteousness and suffered that our imperfection of obedience might not be our ruin 2. It must be meant then of Sanctification That by the merit of Christ's Death we are freed not only from the Guilt but Tyranny of sin that we might obtain Grace to obey the Law or live holily which will appear by the answering of Two Questions 1. What is meant by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the righteousness of the Law I answer the Duty which the Law requireth or any thing which God seeth fit to command his people The Law is holy just and good and certainly was not given in vain but to be a Rule to Believers in Christ. 2. How is it fulfilled in us For there is the difficulty that pincheth Can we fulfil the righteousness of the Law The Law may be said to be fulfilled Two ways 1. Legally as a Covenant of Works 2. Evangelically as the Rule of Obedience 1. Legally No man that was once a sinner and is still a sinner can possibly fulfil the Law for he cannot be a sinner and no sinner at the same time nor fulfil the Law to a tittle He that hath broken with God cannot continue to be innocent and he that hath flesh and spirit in him cannot be absolutely perfect That was determined before ver 3. what the law could not do in that it was weak through the flesh and this is directly opposed to that 2. Evangelically And so the Law can and may be kept or fulfilled sincerely tho not perfectly The prevalency of the better part constituteth our sincerity Justified Souls have flesh and spirit but they walk after the spirit The mixture of infirmities sheweth it is not done perfectly for the corrupt Principle hath some influence yet not a prevailing influence and God counteth that as done which is sincerely done Rom. 13.8 He that loveth another hath fulfilled the law And Gal. 6.2 and so fulfilling the law of Christ And Gal. 5.14 For all the law is fulfilled in one word Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thy self So the Apostle supposeth the Gentiles might in a Gospel-manner fulfil the Law Rom. 2.27 And shall not uncircumcision which is by nature if it fulfil the law judg thee who by the letter and circumcision doest transgress the law So that in our measure we do fulfil the Law by the Grace of Christ not perfectly for he supposeth them to have flesh or sin in them but sincerely as they obey the inclinations of the better part Walk not after the flesh but after the spirit Doct. That Christ was made a Sin Offering for us that the righteousness of the Law might be fulfilled in us I shall prove it by these Considerations 1. That Christ came not only to redeem us from wrath but also to renew and heal our Natures 2. That our Natures being renewed and healed we are to walk in newness of life according to the directions of the Law of God 1. That Christ came not only to redeem us from wrath but to renew and sanctify us I prove it 1. From the con●tant drift and tenor of the Scriptures From his Nature and Office Mat. 1.21 He sh●ll be called Jesus for he shall save his people from their sins Denominatio est a potioribus From his chief work which is to save his people from the guilt and power of sin Guilt inferreth damnation which is the evil after sin but he hath his Name from saving us from the evil of sin its self For the great promise made to Abraham was in that Gen. 12.3 In thy seed shall all
themselvs exactly to keep it they can from experience speak much of the gracious reward of obedience Psal. 119.56 This I had because I kept thy precepts Yea in the state of Heavenly Glory the law as purely moral is still in force for we are everlastingly bound to love God and one another 3. That the righteousness of the law may be fulfilled in us I prove it by this Argument One of these Three Things we must say Either first that no obedience is now necessary to Salvation or that the perfect obedience is still necessary or some measure of obedience to the law by the ordinary aids of Grace vouchsafed to us in the new Covenant is possible and sufficient The first we cannot say for then there would be no necessity of new obedience or holiness But the Scripture condemneth that every where shewing us that we are Gods workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works Eph. 2.10 and purified to be a peculiar people zealous of good works Tit. 2.14 The second we cannot say that a whole perpetual perfect personal obedience to the law is still necessary for then there would be no hope for them that cannot perfectly fulfil the law which no man living can do Psal. 143.2 Enter not into judgment with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living be justified Therefore the Third Thing we must say That there is such a Measure of obedience necessary as is sufficient to salvation and possible by grace and they that attain to it the Scripture pronounceth them blessed Luke 11.28 Blessed are they that hear the word of God and keep it and John 13.17 If ye know these things happy are you if you do them 4. That the righteousness of the law not only can but must be fulfilled in us or else we are yet in our sins and have no portion and interest in Christ 2 Cor. 5.17 Whosoever is in Christ is a new creature And a new creature must have a new conversation for all old things are passed away and all things are become new They are inabled in some measure to fulfil the law of God Christ being the Lawgiver of the Church or renewed state of mankind hath set down the terms of life and death to his terms we must stand or fall now he is the author of eternal salvation to them that obey him Heb. 5.9 Therefore every one that would be delivered from wrath to come must look after holiness and obey God according to his will declared in his law Certainly Christ died not to purchase an indulgence for us to live in sin the law hath not its right it looketh like a law given in vain if it be not obeyed 5. This fulfilling of the righteousness of the law is wrought in us by the spirit as the fruit of Christs purchase this real solid Righteousness is wrought in our hearts by the operation of the Spirit For those that have it are described to be Those that walk after the spirit and not after the flesh Therefore do not resist his work nor grieve the spirit of Christ nor quench his motions when he cometh to work it in you but submit to all his healing methods And this spirit we have from Christ as the fruit of his sin-offering Titus 3.5 6. Not by works of righteousness which we have done but according to his mercy he saved us by the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy-Ghost which he shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour He obtained that Grace whereby we may keep the law having satisfied for us as a Mediator he becometh an Author and Fountain of Life Upon him must you depend and to him must you look for it 2. VSE ●s Reproof to two sorts of People 1. To the carnal World who think that the Children of God are too strict and precise and make more a-do about Salvation than needs Certainly if we consider the tenor of God's Law and the exactness of Divine Justice what Rule and Law we must live by and to whom we must give an account the best of God's Children do no more than needeth as the wise Virgins could not spare one jot of their Oyl Mat. 25.9 Not so lest there be not enough for us and you David admireth the brightness of the Sun first and then the purity of the Law and how doth he close up that Meditation See Psal. 19.12 Who can understand his errors cleanse thou me from secret sins 2. Professing Christians are also to be reproved for that lazy and cowardly spirit that is in them and because they are so impotent and feeble and backward to their duty By their backwardness they wrong the Law for they do not give it its due Christ hath indeed freed us from the curse of the Law but not from the obedience of it And by this feeble and dastardly Spirit they wrong the Grace of the Redeemer and the New Covenant Obedience to the Law is most strongly enforced out of the Grace of the Gospel for thereby we are enabled to perform it Christ did not only fulfil the Law for us but doth also fulfil it in us by his Spirit and shall we after such provision sit down lazily and be discouraged with every difficulty and have our resolutions broken with every assault of temptation Men spare their pains and do not improve the Grace offered and then cry out they are weak and unable This is like lazy Beggars that personate and act Diseases because they would not work Set your hearts thoroughly to obey God and see what he will do for you VSE 3. If this were the end of Christ's coming and dying then let us be exhorted to seek after sanctifications by the Spirit of Christ. 1. This is one part of our salvation as well as remission of sins We often consider Christ as dying for our pardon we should as much consider him as dying to renew and heal our Natures that we may be recovered to our obedience to God to crucifie the Old Man to give us the Spirit of Holiness Surely he is made sanctification to us as well as righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 But of him are ye in Christ Jesus who of God is made unto us wisdom and righteousness and sanctification and redemption If Christ should abolish wrath and let alone sin it were to take away the lesser evil that the greater may remain 2. It is not only part of our deliverance but the better part Pardon giveth us an exemption from punishment but sanctification giveth us freedom from a corrupt heart Surely sin is worse than pain a moral evil is worse than a natural evil vice than misery Once more By holiness we more resemble God for holiness and goodness is his very Nature 1 Pet. 1.4 He hath given us precious promises whereby we are made partakers of the divine nature 3. Holiness is a means to the rest Pardon and life are the great blessings of the Covenant Now there is no
exercised with many vexations and sorrows But the relicks of the corruption were his greatest burden not when shall I come out of these afflictions but who shall deliver me from this body of death 2. By endeavours and striving against it There may be some dislike of sin in a natural heart for conscience will sometimes take Gods part and quarrel against our lusts otherwise a wicked man could not be self-condemned and hold the truth in unrighteousness but checks of conscience are distinct things from the repugnancies of a renewed heart a wicked mans conscience telleth him he should do otherwise when his heart inclineth him to do so still But a renewed heart hateth sin and therefore there is a constant earnest endeavour to get it subdued and doth watch pray plead for God use means dare not rest in sin or live in sin Yea 3. Prevail against it so far that the heart is never turned away from God to sin 1 John 3.9 Whosoever is born of God doth not commit sin for his seed remaineth in him and he cannot sin because he is born of God His heart cannot easily be brought to it he looketh upon it as a monstrous incongruity Gen. 39.9 How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God! 2 Cor. 13.8 For we can do nothing against the truth and Acts 4.20 For we cannot but speak the things which we have seen and heard There is a natural cannot and a moral cannot the natural cannot is an utter impossibility the moral cannot is a great absurdity the new life breedeth such an aversion of heart and mind from sin such constant rebukes and dislikes of the new nature A Child of God is never in a right posture till he doth look upon sin not only as contrary to his duty but his nature they have no satisfaction in themselves till it be utterly destroyed 3. As a spirit of love the great work of the spirit is to reveal the love of God to us and to recover our love to God for the spirit cometh to us as the spirit of Christ by vertue of his redemption now the infinite goodness and love of God doth shine most brightly to us in the face of our Redeemer in the great things which he hath done and purchased for us and offered to us we have the fullest expression and demonstration of the love of God which we are capable of and which is most apt to kindle love in us to God again Rom. 5.8 God commendeth his love to us that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us and 1 John 2.1 2. My little children these things write I unto you that ye sin not and if any man sin we have an advocate with the Father Jesus Christ the righteous And he is the propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but also for the sins of the whole world and Eph. 3.18 19. That you may be rooted and grounded in love and comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and may know the love of Christ which passeth all knowledg Now the spirit attending this dispensation surely his great work and office is to shed abroad the love of God in our hearts Rom. 5.5 and Gal. 4.6 And because ye are sons God hath sent forth the spirit of his son into our hearts crying Abba Father That being perswaded of Gods fatherly love we may love him again and study to please him Therefore nothing doth stir us up against sin so much as the sense of Gods love in Christ shall sin live which is so contrary to God Shall I take delight in that which is a grief to his Holy Spirit cherish that which Christ came to destroy Live to my self who am so many ways oblged to God displease my father to gratify the flesh Alas how many read and hear of this who are no way moved into an indignation against sin 'T is not the love of God called to mind by a few cold thoughts of ours that worketh so but the love of God shed abroad in our hearts by the spirit that melts the heart maketh us a shamed of our unkindness to God and stirreth up an hatred against sin 6. After conversion and the spirits becoming a spirit of light life and love to us after grace is put into our hearts to weaken sin still we need the help of the spirit partly Because habitual grace is a created thing and the same grace that made us new creatures is necessary to continue us so For no creature can be Good independently without the influence of the prime good all things depend in esse conservare operari on him that made them In him we live and move and have our being Acts 17.28 If God suspend his influence natural agents cannot work as the fire cannot burn as in the case of the three Children much less voluntary and if there be this dependance in natural things much more in supernatural Phil. 2.12 13. Will and Deed are from God first principles of operation and final accomplishment Partly because in the very heart there is great opposition against it there is flesh still the warring law Rom. 7.23 gratia non totaliter satiat The cure is not total as yet but partial therefore they need the spirit to guide and quicken and strengthen them Partly as it meeteth with much opposition within so it is exposed to temptations without Satan watcheth all advantages against us and the soul is strangely deluded by the treachery of the senses and the revolt of the passions and our corrupt inclinations when temptations assault us so that unless we have seasonable relief how soon are we overtaken or overborn Adam had habitual Grace but gave out at the first assault A City besieged unless it be relieved compoundeth and yeildeth so without the supply of the spirit we cannot stand out in the hour of trial Eph. 3.16 That he would grant you according to the riches of his glory to be strengthned with might by his spirit in the inner man Secondly The necessity of this Concurrence and Co-operation 1. Of the Spirt with us 2. We by the Spirit 1. Of the spirits work we cannot without the spirit mortifie the deeds of the body 1. From the state of the person who is to be renewed and healed A sinner lying in a state of defection from God one that hath lost original Righteousness averse from God yea an enemy to him prone to all evil weak and dead to all spiritual good and how can such an one renew and convert himself There is no sound part left in us to mend the rest 'T is true he hath reason left and some confused notions and apprehensions of good and evil but the very apprehensions are maimed and imperfect and we often call evil good and put good for evil Isa. 5.20 However to chuse the one and leave the other that is not in their power We may have some loose desires of
of ours cannot be received into Heaven till they be changed and immortalized vers 53. This corruptible must put on incorruption and this mortal must put on immortality As a man to build his house better razeth it to the very bottom so God will have the body resolved into dust before he will set it forth in this new fair Edition As the creature is dissolved that is delivered from the Bondage of Corruption first the creature is set free and discharged from being obnoxious to change and alteration so we must first die then be raised in Incorruption which should make us the more ready and willing to submit to the appointed course and not only even dare to die but to be willing to dye since Death puts an end to sin and all our calamities and is the gate and entrance by which we pass into Glory 2. Doct. That the liberty to which Gods people are reserved is a glorious liberty Here I shall first speak of the liberty of Gods children in this life 2. The glorious liberty in the world to come for the one is a step to the other for 't is called a glorious liberty to distinguish it from the liberty of Gods children here in this world which is not glorious but gracious to shew how it exceedeth this estate in glory Therefore I must shew 1. What is the liberty of Gods children in this world 2. What in the world to come 1. What is the liberty of Gods children in this world There are three practical notions in which man is greatly mistaken Misery and Happiness Wisdom and Folly Liberty and Bondage Misery and Happiness Men count none miserable but the afflicted none happy but the prosperous because they judg by the present ease and commodity of the flesh Wisdom and Folly we all affect the repute of Wisdom Job 11.12 Please our selves with a false shew of wisdom neglecting what is true and solid which is to be wise to salvation Liberty and Bondage Man accepteth of a false liberty rather than none every man would be at his own dispose live as he list whereas the true liberty must be determined by our condition as creatures by our end as creatures that are in pursuit of true happiness To think the only true liberty is to be at the command and controul of none above our selves or to live at large according to our hearts desire is to affect a thraldom and bondage instead of liberty therefore it concerneth us to state exactly what is the liberty of Gods children now it either relateth to our duty or to our felicity 1. To our duty and so our liberty must he stated by these four Things 1. It must be such a liberty as becometh a creature who is in subjection to God 'T is not a power to live as we list but a power to live as we ought to affect a power to live as we list and to be accountable to none is to revive the arrogancy of Adam and to sup up again the poyson of the old Temptation ye shall be as Gods Gen. 3.5 'T was mans Original Ambition to be at his own dispose and Lord of his own Actions to think and speak and do as he pleaseth Psal. 12.4 Our tongues are our own who is Lord over us And the Rebellion of the Libertine World is set forth by casting off the Yokes and Cords of Duty Psal. 2.3 Let us break their ●ands asunder and cast away their cords from us Meaning there the Laws of God and Christ who are impatient of any restraint But this is a liberty cannot be justified for since man hath principium finem A principle upon which he dependeth in his Being and Operations and an end unto which he is appointed he must wholly give up himself to the will of another and his liberty lyeth in a readiness to comply with Gods commands who is his proper Lord to whom he is to subject himself and to give an account of all his Actions So that mans true liberty is Gods Service Psa. 119.45 I will walk at liberty for I seek thy precepts To will and do things pleasing to our Creator is the only liberty proper to us 2. It must be such a liberty as will leave us in a capacity to pursue our chief good and last end For all creatures are by natural instinct carried to their last end and the more fettered and restrained from this the more they are in Bondage the less the more free which holdeth good in all creatures but principally in the reasonable Certainly the reasonable nature is dishonoured and debased and under a defect as 't is disabled from the fruition of God or seeking after it we are in Bondage as we are captivated and intangled with the love of inferior things and so perverted and diverted from the pursuit of true happiness The restraining of our irregular desires is not Bondage but the gratifying of them for that is a snare to us Men live in sin with as much delight as Fishes in their own Element yet they are in bonds still as they are detained from God and turned aside from him our liberty is our power over inferior things and our Bondage is their power over us 1 Cor. 6.12 When we love God with all our hearts and serve him with all our minds we are free Liberty in the root implyeth an inclination to God as the supream Object of our love In the first Act In a power of chusing the means whereby we may injoy him In the second Act in an exercise of this power or in an actual pursuing the end by these means The elective power and a governing our Actions in order to our great end is our liberty the Angels that immutably and indeclinably adhere to their last end are freer than us who may err from it Well then None are such slaves as they that cannot use the means which should make them happy but imploy their whole time in seeking after Pleasures and Honours and Profits like dissolute Servants who being sent by their Masters to a Mart or Fair to buy Commodites spend their time and money in some Inn or House of Entertainment by the way and neglect their Fair or Mart to which they were sent to imploy their Money to the best advantage So we are inslaved by the way and neglect our main business 3. It must be such a liberty as will suit with the dignity of a rational creature as man is For that is the liberty of a man when he acteth with a condecency to the reasonable nature Man was at first made to be happy his happiness consisted in the Fruition of God and his subjection to him was no captivity and restraint but rather a part of that blessedness but we became bondmen not only by breaking the Law of God but by disordering the constitution of our Souls by submitting conscience and reason to our lusts so suffering the beast to ride the man for the rule of
have found a ransom From the beginning of the world Christ was known to be a Redeemer who saved the world by a ransom paid no other way could the effects of the Lords grace be communicated to us we receive mercies freely but they were dearly purchased by Christ. The second notion is that of a Mediatorial Sacrifice Isa. 53.10 He shall make his soul an offering for sin So Eph. 5.2 He gave himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Sin is a wrong done to God and therefore there must be something offered to God in our stead by way of satisfaction before he would quit his controversie against us this Christ hath done all that was signified by the Ancient Sacrifices and offerings was accomplished by him They were flayed killed burned all which are but shadows of what our Lord endured He is the true and real Sacrifice wherein provoked justice doth rest satisfied his wrath appeased and we that were loathsome by reason of sin made acceptabl●●nd well-pleasing unto God The third notion is that of a propitiation 1 John 2.2 He gave himself a propitiation for our sins and not for ours only but for the sins of the whole world And Rom 3 25. Whom God set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood This implyeth Gods being pacified and appeased so as to become propitious and merciful for ever to sinful m●● in which sense he is also said to make reconciliation for the sins of his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2.17 whereby is meant Gods being reconciled to us This was the great end why Christ dyed for us to appease Gods wrath and displeasure and to reduce us into grace and favour with him again by tendering a full compensation to God for all our sins 2. The effects ascribed to it 1. Sin is expiated or purged out Heb. 1.3 When he had by himself purged our sins he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high As God would not be appeased without a Ransom Sacrifice or Satisfaction so could not sin be purged out without bearing the punishment so the conscience is said to be purged from dead works by the blood of Christ Heb. 9 4. and Revel 1.5 He hath washed us from our sins in his blood That is done that which will remove the guilt and pollution of it when 't is rightly applyed to us and so he is said to finish transgression and make an end of sin Dan. 9.24 That is to destroy the reign of sin and to seal up the role and hand-writing that was against us that it may not be imputed and brought into the judgment 2. The sin is pardoned and the sinner justified Eph. 1.7 In whom we have redemption in his blood the forgiveness of sins That 's the great benefit which floweth from the death of Christ which is offered in the New Testament Acts 10.41 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins And 't is sealed and represented in the Lords Supper Matth. 26.28 This is my blood of the New Testament which was shed for the remission of sins 3. The sanctifying the sinner to God Heb. 13.12 Jesus that he might sanctifie the people with his own blood suffered without the gate Heb. 10.10 By the which will we are sanctified by the offering of Jesus Christ once for all So Eph. 5.26 That he might sanctifie and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word So John 17.19 That they also might be sanctified through the truth In these and many other places is meant both our dedication to God and the renovation of our natures that qualifieth for communion with him 4. The consummation or the perfecting of the sanctified as Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected the sanctified for ever The priests of the law were forced to renew their Sacrifices because they could not compleatly take away sin for the law made nothing perfect Heb. 7.19 Could not yield us sufficient expiation for sin to justifie and sanctifie the person so as to open Heaven to him and a free access to God but Christ hath fully done this perfected us for ever by one offering There needeth no other Sacrifice no other satisfaction to remove the guilt and eternal punishment John 19.30 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all is finished or perfected all is undergone that was necessary for the redemption of the Elect there needed no more to satisfie justice or procure salvation for us 3. The sufficiency of it to these ends and effects 1. From the Dignity of the person He had all fulness in him a fulness of holiness Col. 1.9 a fulness of the Godhead Col. 2.9 He was holy and innocent and also God and will not the blood of God cleanse us from all our sins 2. The unity of his office and Sacrifice There is but one Redeemer and one Sacrifice and if but one this is enough 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediator between God and Man the Man Christ Jesus One Sacrifice Heb. 10.12 But this man after he had offered one Sacrifice for sins for ever sat down at the right hand of God Heb. 9.26 But now once in the end of the world hath he appeared to put away sin by the Sacrifice of himself And Rom. 5.18 The free gift came upon all to the justification of life The Scripture much insists upon this 3. The greatness of his sufferings Isa. 53.4 5 6. Surely he hath born our griefs and carried our sorrows yet did we esteem him stricken smitten of God and afflicted but he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquities the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed All we like sheep have gone astray we have turned every one to his own way and the Lord hath laid on him the iniquities of us all Phil. 2.7 8. But made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and was made in the liken●●● of men and being found in fashion as a man ●e humbled himself and became obedient unto death even the death of the cross And Gal. 3.13 Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law being made a curse for us for it is written cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree Now Christians all this is offered to our Faith The notions the effects or ends the sufficiency of it to these ends and purposes The price is paid by Christ and accepted by God We partake of these benefits as soon as we perform the conditions of the Gospel but we triumph when more explicitely we declare our selves to be true and sound Christians God doth not look for an Expiatory Sacrifice at our hands but a thorough application of what he hath found out for us This broad foundation laid is not only free for God to build upon but for us to build
Excellencies of this inheritance Page 177 178 Holiness distinct from Godliness Page 16 The better part of our deliverance Page 38 Holiness and Goodness is the very nature of God Page 38 Holiness compleated ere we enter Heaven Page 38 Holiness visible to be charitably judged Page 77 Wherein it now consisteth Page 300 Honesty binds us to obey God Page 104 Hope and fear motives to duty Page 105 Saving Hope Page 230 Twofold of expectation and experience Page 165 Great and glorious Page 202 Saveth Page 222 What 't is Page 223 Its object Page 223 Ground Page 224 Very necessary Page 225 Vanquishes Page 225 Respect between Faith and Hope Page 226 May every one Hope for Salvation Page 227 Distinguisht into its kinds Page 229 May be interrupted Page 232 Mercy object of Hope Page 232 So is the promise Page ib. 233 How we brought to Hope Page 233 234 How increased Page 234 235 Brings Heaven to us on earth Page 235 Proper object Page 237 Built on promises Page 238 These confirmed sufficiently Page 239 How far seen Page 239 Real Page 240 Should over-rule our Hearts Page 241 Its qualifications Page 242 Humiliation what where begins and ends Page 145 I IGnorant we may be of some thing without danger Page 201 Incarnation of Christ with the ends and frui●s of it Page 28 29 30 Immunnities we have by Christ Page 205 Inclination of the flesh what Page 41 Not alike to all sins Page 121 Indulgence to the flesh what Page 43 44 Image of God None so fit to restore as Christ Page 300 301 Image of God Must be restored ere we can have communion with God Page 34 35 It is mans glory Page 300 Immensity of God thence Omniscience Page 257 Immutability of God and eternal merit of Christ foundation of our eternal glory Page 183 Immortality known or guessed at by nature Page 141 Impotency of mind is from unmortified heart Page 130 To prayer without the spirit Page 251 Impeccable no Saint on earth is Page 148 Infirmities in Believers and occasions to the World to misjudge them and the spirit Page 77 They sin but design it not Page 103 Innocent Creatures punisht for mans sin and why and how Page 198 Impossibilities may be imagined not hoped Page 237 Interests of flesh what Page 41 Prevails in some without any controul Page 103 Our true Interest by God made motive to our duty Page 140 Intercession of Christ and of the spirit Page 244 How these differ Page ib. Invisible World to be sought Page 241 Joys of good conscience are foretasts of Heaven Page 148 Judgment to come not so generally known as Immortality and a state of Eternity Page 141 Yet known and own'd by some Page ib. Presag'd by fears of guilty conscience Page 240 Justice of God joins sin and punishment Page 22 60 Justification excludes not Mortification Page 125 What it implyeth Page 333 How many ways this done Page 334 How consistent with Gods Justice c. Page 334 335 336 Sinner Repenting and Believing is justified Page 335 336 Shall not be reversed Page 336 And why Page 336 337 Justified ones are Sanctified Page 335 K KIndness to be shewed to the creature subjected to vanity by our sin Page 199 Kingdom of God some far off Page 47 Knowledge of our selves and our state how to be obtained Page 43 44 That carnal men have of God is cold and lifeless Page 55 Knowledge of sin by the spirit necessary to mortification Page 133 L LEadings of God by which Saints are kept in their way Page 146 147 To be Led what Page 148 Its branches Page 148 149 Great mercy Page 151 It is through all duty Page 152 Legality partial or predominant and what each is Page 158 Law of spirit of Life what Page 8 Of sin what Page 9 Why so called Page 9 Its effects Page ib. Of God constitutes and directs duty Page 11 Given to man in innocence Page 11 And what Page ib. Of nature left in fallen man Page 11 Its effects Page ib. 155 Of man what tends to Page 11 Law what it includes Page 12 The New Covenant or Law of God and man differ and in what Page 13 Law could not put away sin Page 26 Nor justifie us ib. and Page 27 Was next to Christ and the Gospel most Divine Page 26 Cannot sanctifie us Page 28 Nor save Page 154 Irritates sin Page ib. Is not abrogated Page 35 36 37 Hath twofold office Page 154 Continues in force in Heaven Page 37 How fulfilled by a Believer Page 37 Law pretended against persecuted Christians Page 363 Law ceremonial what Page 206 Law-giver God Page 101 Legal spirit what and its operations Page 154 155 158 'T is timerous towards God and for truth Page 158 159 How removed Page ib. Liberty from sin and death by Christs merit and intercession Page 23 On what terms to be had Page 24 These terms cannot by man be changed Page 24 Of Gods children what now Page 201 Liberty mistaken Page ib. 'T is not to live as corrupt nature listeth Page 204 205 Liberty future glorious what Page 206 207 Compar'd with our present Liberty Page 207 Light and Life brought to Light by the Gospel Page 360 Life natural Beast-like Rational Spiritual Page 75 What this is Page ib. Of Grace vigorous as sin languisheth Page 126 Grieved with opposite sins Page 133 Spiritual both beginning and pledge of Life eternal Page 139 What it is Page ib. Natural and eternal compared Page 144 Eternal and Spiritual compared Page ib. Life must be ventured for Christ and why Page 363 Love of God to Believers engaging motive to love him and obey Page 330 To suffer also Page 369 Love of God to what Page 36 Lesser love to God is accounted hatred Page 62 And why Page ib. Love or hatred as we respect Gods Law Page 63 Love to God is principle of mortification Page 128 Surest way to assurance Page 160 Love that you may Live Page 140 And go possess the blessed hopes Page 242 Longings spiritual shall not be frustrated Page 140 For God giveth them that he may satisfie them Page ib. The objects of them Page 219 Lusts contrary to each other Page 48 Love to God what Page 280 281 282 Its properties Character of such as God will benefit by all and why Page 284 285 Best seen in sufferings for God Page 285 Twofold sincerity of Love and what each is Page 286 God Lovely for himself Page 286 For his Love to us Page 286 M MAn subject to God and on what grounds Page 10 11 Owes him a voluntary obedience Page ib. and 71 Men are of two sorts different in original principles c. Page 39 Discover what they are by respect to different objects Page 42 Three sorts of Men in the World Page 46 Mankind fallen under Gods displeasure Page 69 Corrupted wholly Page 106 Of two sides Page 314 315 Man pleasing what c. Page 72 Master sins like great diseases
promised Were the believers of the Old Testament deceived that expected his coming in the flesh Surely Christ never meant to deceive us when he said John 14.2 3. I will come again if it were not so I would have told you See Serm. on Matth. 25 th v. 6. 2. The types shew it I shall instance in one which is the High Priest's entring with Blood into the Holy place within the vail and when he had finished his Service and Ministration there he came forth to bless the people which the Apostle explaineth and applyeth to Christ Heb. 9. from 24. verse to the 28. 3. There are Ordinances appointed in the Church to keep afoot the remembrance of his promise the Lords Supper 1 Cor. 11.26 For as often as ye eat this bread and drink this cup ye do shew forth the Lords death till he come He hath left it as a monument of his faithfulness that upon all occasions we may renew our hopes and expectations of it 4. We have an inward pledge his Spirit and the visits of his grace He hath taken our flesh and left with us his Spirit He went not from us in anger but in love to set all things at rights and to bring us there where he is 5. Christs interest is concerned in it that the Glory of his Person may be seen His first coming was obscure and without observation Then he came in the form of a Servant but now he will come as the Lord and Heir in Power and Glory Then John Baptist was his forerunner now an Archangel Then he came with Twelve Disciples men of mean Condition in the World a few poor fisher men now with Legions of Angels Jade 14. Then as a Minister of Circumcision now as the Judge of all the World Then he invited men to repentance now he cometh to render vengeance to the neglecters and despisers of his grace Then he offered himself as a Mediator between God and Man as an high Priest to God and an Apostle to men Heb. 3.1 But vailed his Divinity under the infirmities of his flesh now he cometh in Gods name to Judge men and in all his Glory Then he wrought some Miracles which his enemies imputed to Diabolical Arts and Magical Impostures at the day of Judgment there will be no need of miracles to assert the Divinity of his person because all will be obvious to sense Then he prepared himself to suffer death now he shall tread death under his Feet Then he stood before the Tribunals of men and was condemned to the cursed death of the Cross now he shall sit upon a Glorious Throne all Kings and Potentates expecting their doom and sentence from his mouth Then he came not to Judge but to save now to render unto every one according to their works Then he was scorned buffeted spit upon Crowned with Thorns but now Crowned with Glory and Honour Then he came to bear the sins of many now without sin not bearing our burden but our discharge not as a Surety but as a pay Master not as a Sufferer but a Conqueror triumphing over Death Hell and the Devil He cometh no more to go from us but to take us from all misery to himself 2. That he may possess what he hath purchased He bought us at a dear rate and would he be at all this loss and preparation for nothing Surely he that came to suffer will come to Triumph and he that purchased will possess Heb. 2.13 3. With respect to the wicked 'T is a part of his office to Triumph over them in their final overthrow All things shall be put under his feet Isa. 45.23 Rom. 14.10.11 Phil. 2.10 4. To require an account of things during his absence what his Servants have done with their Talents Matth. 25. What his Church have done with his Ordinances how things have been carryed during his absence in his house 1 Tim. 6.14 Keep this Commandment without rebuke unto the appearing of Jesus Christ. Whether men have carryed themselves well or beaten their fellow Servants and eaten and drunk with the Drunkard whether they have strengthned the hands of the wicked oppressed with censures the most serious of his Worshippers what disorders in the World what violation of the Law of Nature 2 Thes. 1.8 2. The Vniversality Who must be judged we must all All mankind which ever were are and shall be No Age no Sex no Nation nor Dignity nor Power nor Wealth nor Greatness can excuse us In the World some are too high to be questioned others too low to be taken notice of But there all are taken notice off by head and pole not one of the Godly shall be lost but will meet in that general assembly Nor shall any of the wicked shift the day of his appearance as we may obey in every state and sin in every state so in every state we must give an account All that have lived from the beginning of the World till that day shall without exception appear from the least to the greatest before the Tribunal of Christ. This will be illustrated by considering the several distinctions of mankind 1. The first and most obvious distinction is into grown Persons and Infants 2. Distinction is those whom Christ shall find dead or alive at his coming 3. Distinction is of good or bad 4. The next distinction of men whom Christ shall Judge are believers and unbelievers 5. Men of all Conditions high and low rich and poor of these see Matth. 25. v. 33. Ser. 3. 6. Men of all callings in the Church Apostles and private Christians Ministers and People for the Apostle here in the text joineth himself with others and saith We must all appear before the Judgment seat of Christ. Besides the Law of Christianity by which all shall be Judged the Officers and Guides of the Church must give an account of their faithfulness in their ministration There is much spoken in Scripture of their account 1 Cor. 4 4.5 I know nothing by my self yet am I not thereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord therefore Judge nothing before the time until the Lord come who both will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and shall make manifest the Counsels of the heart and then shall every man have praise of God He speaketh there of the execution of his Apostolical Office though he was Conscious to himself of no fault in it yet this was not the clearing of him only God that searcheth and seeth all must do this 'T is a great matter to clear a mans fidelity first as a Minister then as a private Christian. Paul would not venture it upon the single Testimony of his own Conscience So again Heb. 13.17 They watch for your Souls as they that must give an account Their work is to watch over Souls for their Eternal Salvation if Souls miscarry through their negligence they are answerable to God for it but if they miscarry through their own willfulness the
a man may talk well from his convictions or a meer disciplinary knowledge but to do well there needeth a living principle of grace The Scriptures still set forth graces by their operations works or fruits For a dead sleepy habit is worth nothing The working Faith carryeth away the prize of justification Gal. 5.6 Honoureth Christ 2 Thes. 1.11 12. The labouring love is that which God will regard and reward Heb. 6.10 The lively hope is the fruit of regeneration 1 Pet. 1.5 That which sets a doing Acts 24.15 16. And Acts 26.7 8. Grace otherwise cannot appear in the view of Conscience The apples appear when the sap is not seen 't is the operative and lively graces that will discover themselves A man may think well or speak well but that grace which governeth his conversation sheweth its self God knoweth what is in man whether faith be sound in the first planting before any fruit appear But this Judgment is to proceed not only by the knowledge of the Judge but the evidence of our own Consciences the observation of others and what openly appeareth in our lives 2. How these works are considered with respect to our sentence and doom 1. Our actions are considered here with respect to the principle from whence they flow a renewed heart God doth not look to the bare work but to the spring and motives and ends Pro. 16.2 He weigheth the Spirits quo animo not only the matter and bulk of the action but with what Spirit and from what principle it is done Eph. 5.9 For the fruit of the Spirit is all goodness Righteousness and truth Whether we act from a principle of grace in the Heart A violent motion differeth from that which floweth from an inward principle Christ first giveth a disposition to obey before there is an actual sincere obedience And living in the Spirit goeth before walking in the Spirit Gal. 5.25 The principles are infused and then the action follows 'T is said John 3.21 He that doth truth cometh to the light That his deeds may be made manifest that they are wrought in God A Godly man cannot satisfy himself in some external conformity to the Law but he must know that the actions come from God from his Grace and Spirit in us and tend to him that is to his Glory and Honour and are directed according to his will a little outside holiness will not content Christ. 2. With respect to the state in which they are done A justified estate and a state of reconciliation to God for the Sacrifices of the wicked are an abomination to the Lord. Gal. 2.19 I through the Law am dead to the Law that I might live unto God And Rom. 7.4 Marryed to Christ that I may bring forth fruit unto God The Children born before marriage are not legitimate 2 Pet. 3.11 What manner of persons ought ye to be in all holy conversation and godliness We ought to look to the Qualification of our persons that we be reconciled with God through Christ daily renewing our friendship with him by sorrow for sin by suing out our pardon and acceptance in the Mediatour The apostle doth not say how holy ought our conversation to be but what manner of persons ought we to be 3. They are considered with respect to their correspondency No man is judged by one Single act we cannot pass judgment upon our estate before God whether good or evil by a few particulars but by our way or the ordinary strain of our life and conversation and our course Rom. 8.1 Who walk not after the Flesh but after the Spirit A man may occasionally set his foot in a Path which he meaneth not to walk in God in reviewing his work considered every days work apart it was good and considered altogether Gen. 1.31 The whole frame and all very good all the work together was correspondent and all suitable to the rest in a due proportion so should we endeavour to imitate God that all our works every one of them and our whole course considered together may all appear to be good answerable to one another in order and proportion that our whole conversations may be a perfect frame of unblameable holiness There are some amongst men which do some things well to which their order and carriage is not suitable The difference between a godly mans work and an hypocrites lyeth in this an Hypocrites work is best considered apart a good mans works are best and most approved when they are laid together 4. These works are considered with respect to their Aim and Scope Phil. 1.11 12. That we may be sincere and without offence unto the day of Christ being filled with the fruits of righteousness which are by Jesus Christ unto the praise and glory of God As it is not the doing one good work or some few which will Qualify a man for the day of Judgment but being filled with the fruits of righteousness So 't is necessary also that our aim be every way as good as our action and Gods glory be propounded as our great scope An action in its self good and Lawful may be reckoned unto the worker as sin or duty as the end is and the scope which he propoundeth unto himself 5. That none of our actions are lost but stand upon record that we may hear of them another day and tend to increase the General sum whether good or evil An Impeni●ent man his account riseth Rom. 2.5 He treasureth up wrath against the day of wrath like Jehojadas chest the longer it stood the more Treasure was in it Sins that seem inconsiderable in themselves yet are the acts of one that hath sinned greatly before A cipher put to a Sum that is fixed increaseth it every drop helpeth to fill the Cup. So in the sincere Phil. 4.17 Fruit abounding to your account Every sincere action makes it abound more some actions are more inconsiderable than others yet if done for Christs sake shall be taken notice of though small in themselves Math. 10.42 And whosoever shall give to drink unto one of these little ones a cup of cold Water only in the name of a disciple verily I say unto you he shall in no wise lose his reward 3. What room and place these works have with respect to punishment and reward There is a plain difference as appeareth Rom. 6.23 The wages of sin is death but the gift of God is eternal life The works of the wicked have a proper meritorious influence upon their ruine and destruction wicked men stand upon their own bottom and are lest to themselves we do evil of our own accord and by our own strength but the good we do is neither our own nor is it purely good Besides there is this difference between sin and obedience that the heinousness of sin is always aggravated and heightned by the proportion of its object but the merit and value of obedience is still lessened thereby sin and an offence is aggravated as
the presence of God who is the fountain of all peace and joy And therefore how miserable will their Condition be Besides the pain will be Eternal as well as the loss not one kind of misery only shall light upon wicked men The Scripture representeth it by every thing which is terrible sometimes by Death which is so much feared sometimes by Fire and Brimstone which are so terrible in burning sometimes by Chains and Darkness and Prisons and Dungeons Because men in extremity of pain and misery do use to weep and wail and gnash their teeth sometimes by that All these dreadful expressions give us some crevise light into the state of the other World Now these things shall be without ceasing for neither Heaven nor Hell have any period there is no time set when the fire shall go out or these Chains be loosed or these wailings cease But how can it stand with the Justice of God for a momentany action to cast men into Everlasting Torment I Answer 1. God will govern the World by his own reasons and not by our fancies for we are told he giveth no account of his matters he hath made an Holy Law and that Law hath a Sanction 't is established by penalties and rewards Now if God make good his threatnings and bring the misery upon the Creature which he hath foretold where lyeth the injustice What part of the punishment would you have relaxed the loss or the pain The loss is double of Gods favour and of his natural comforts would you have God admit those to the sight and fruition of himself who never cared for him Or to return to their natural comforts that they may again run riot with them and abuse them to an occasion of the flesh and to quiet and beguile his Conscience with the injoyments of the World that he may the better bear the loss of these or to lessen the pain when the sin and impenitency obstinatly doth still continue 2. 'T is meet for the Government of the World that the penalties should be thus stated to give us the more powerful argument against fleshly lusts which being more pleasing and suitable to corrupt Nature need to be checked by a severe commination Man is a very slave to sensitive pleasure which being born and bred with him is not easily renounced therefore God hath told us aforehand that if we live after the flesh we shall die The pleasing of the flesh will cost us dear the sinners Paradise is guarded with a flaming Sword and delight ballanced with fear that by setting Eternal pains against momentany pleasures we may the better escape the Temptation The pleasures of sin which are for a season Heb. 11.25 bring Torments which are Everlasting The fearful end of this delightful course may deter us from it Rom. 8.13 If ye live after the flesh ye shall die God hath so proportioned the dispensation of joy and sorrow pleasure and pain that 't is left to our own choice whether we will have it here or hereafter whether we will injoy pleasure as the fruit of sin or as the reward of obedience both we cannot have And 't is agreeable to the wisdom of our law-giver that things to come should have some advantage in the proposal above things present that the joy and pain of the other World which is a matter of Faith should be greater than the joy and pain of this World which is a matter of sense Things at hand will certainly more prevail with us than things to come if they be not considerably greater Therefore here the pain is short and so is the pleasure but there it is Eternal Well then it becometh the Wisdom of God that those who would have their pleasure here should have their pain hereafter and that Eternally And those that will work out their Salvation with fear and trembling and pass through the difficulties of Religion should have pleasures at his Right Hand for evermore Jam. 5.5 Ye have lived in pleasure upon earth And Luke 16.25 Remember that thou in thy life time receivedst thy good things You must not think to pass from Dalilahs lap to Abrahams Bosom 3. No Law observeth this that the mora poenae the continuance of the punishment should be no longer then the mora culpae than the time of acting the offence Amongst all the punishments which Humane Laws inflict there is no punishment but is longer Loss shame exile bondage imprisonment may be for Life for a Fact done in a day or hour punishment doth not repair so easily as offence doth pervert publick right and good Therefore the punishment may continue longer then the time wherein the crime was committed 4. There are many reasons in the cheap Commission of sin which justify this appointment As 1. A majestate Dei against whom the sin is committed and who is depreciated and contemned by the Creatures offence What base things are preferred before God and the felicity we might have in the injoyment of him At how vile a price is his favour sold 2. A natura peccati which is a preference of a sensitive good before that which is Spiritual and Eternal Men refuse an Eternal Kingdom offered to them for a little carnal satisfaction Heb. 12.25 And if they be eternally miserable they have but their own choice 3. A voluntate Peccatoris he would continue his sin everlastingly if he could They are never weary of sinning nor ever would have been if they hade lived eternally upon Earth they desire always to injoy the delights and pleasures of this Life and are rather left by their sins than leave them Well then since they break the laws of the Eternal God and the very Nature of the sin is a despising his favour for some temporal pleasure or profit and this they would do everlastingly if they could subsist here so long This doth sufficiently justify this appointment 5. Both are the result of a foregoing Judgment wherein the cause had been sufficiently tryed and cleared and sentence passed In all regular Judgment after the tryal of the cause there is sentence and upon sentence execution So 't is here there is a discussion of the cause and then a sentence of absolution to the godly Matth. 25.34 Come ye Blessed of my Father Inherit the Kingdom prepared for you of Condemnation on the wicked verse 41. Depart ye Cursed into Everlasting Fire Then what remaineth but that the sentence should be executed This being the final sentence which shall be given upon all men and all their works the end of this Judgment is to do Justice and to fulfil the will and truth of the Law-giver Now the Execution is certain speedy and unavoidable 1. Certain when the matter is once tryed there will be sentence and sentence once past there will be execution We often break up court before things come to a full hearing so delay the sentence if we cannot delay the sentence we seek to delay the execution But sentence
means to our perfect injoying pleasing and glorifying of God Acts 26.18 when we are made capable of the Blessed Inheritance 2. The manner how this priviledge is brought about and applyed to us by these steps 1. The first stone in this building was laid in Gods Eternal decree and purpose to reconcile sinners to himself by Christ not imputing their trespasses to them I cannot pass over this consideration because 't is of principal importance in this place God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself not imputing their trespasses to them Then he was thinking of a sufficient sacrifice ransom and satisfaction for all the World of sinners and that he would not deal with them according to the desert of their sin but in mercy and provided a sufficient remedy for the pardon of sin for all those who would or should accept of it in time The Covenant of grace is founded upon the Covenant of redemption Isa. 53.10 11. And the plot and design for our reconciliation pardon adoption was then laid according to the terms agreed upon between the Father and the Son what the redeemer should do for the satisfying of his wrath what sinners should do that they may have pardon in the method which God hath appointed and so God should be actually reconciled to us and sinners actually pardoned in time when we submit to the terms 2. The Second step towards this Blessed effect was when Christ was actually exhibited in the flesh and paid our ransom for us For then he came to take away sin 1 John 3.5 The Son of God was manifested to take away sin and in him was no sin So John 1.29 Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the World And 't is said Heb. 1.3 When he had by himself purged our sins he sate down on the right hand of Majesty And Heb. 10.14 By one offering he hath perfected for ever them that are sanctified There needed no more to be done by way of merit and satisfaction and sacrifice We must carefully distinguish between impetration and application Christs acquiring and our applying As also between Gods purposing and our injoying pardon or actual interest in it God purposed it from all eternity but we are not actually reconciled and pardoned from all eternity no more than we were actually created sanctified and glorified from all eternity So Christ purchased it when he died and therefore the Apostle saith we were reconciled by the death of his Son Rom. 5.10 Then all was done on Christs part which was necessary to our reconciliation and pardon by vertue of the satisfaction made by Christ he was pleased to profess to us free and easie Conditions of mercy in the Gospel by which it might be actually applyed to us 3. The next step was when Christ rose from the dead for then we had a visible evidence of the sufficiency of the ransom sacrifice and satisfaction which he made for us Therefore 't is said Rom. 5.25 That he died for our offences and rose again for our justification As he dyed for our release and pardon and to make Expiation for our sins so he rose again to convince the unbelieving World by that supream act of his power that all was finished which was necessary to our pardon and reconciliation with God For Christs Resurrection was the acquittance of our Surety Rom. 8.34 yea rather that is risen again God hath received a sufficient ransom for sins and all that believe in him shall find the benefit and comfort of it 4. We are actually justified pardoned and reconciled when we repent and believe What ever thoughts and purposes of grace God in Christ may have towards us from all Eternity yet we are under the fruits of sin till we become penitent Believers For we must distinguish between Gods looking upon the Elect in the purposes of his grace and in the sentence of his Law In the purposes of his grace so he loved the Elect with the love of good will in the sentence of his law so we were under wrath Eph. 2.3 And John 3.18 Condemned already and wrath remaineth on us till believing and repenting That these are conditions which only make us capable of pardon is evident 1. Repentance Acts 5 31. Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour to give repentance and remission of sins Christ purchased pardon and absolution into his own hands as King and Judge or Head of the renewed state to be dispensed according to the Laws of his mediatorial Kingdom and so he giveth both these together So he grants pardon by his new Law by which he requireth and giveth repentance and remission of sin so he sent forth his Messengers into the World Luke 24.47 And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all Nations Well then none but the penitent are capable 2. Faith Acts. 10.43 To him gave all the Prophets witness that through his name whosoever believeth on him shall receive remission of sins And Acts 13.38 39 Be it known unto you therefore men and brethren that through this man is preached unto you the forgiveness of sins And by him all that believe are justified from all things from which ye could not be justified by the Law of Moses It belongeth to the power and office of our Lord Jesus to forgive sins And it must be forgiven according to the terms of his New Covenant or Law and that is when men obediently receive his Doctrine and by their Prayers offered in his name do in a broken hearted manner sue out their pardon and remission of their sins they are justified and accepted with God and freed from his wrath and punishment which attend sin in another World Well then none are actually and personally pardoned but penitent Believers This benefit is bestowed upon sinners but sinners repenting and believing a person abiding in his sins and persisting in his Rebellion cannot be made partaker of this priviledge repentance qualifieth the subject Faith immediately receiveth it as having a special aptitude that way That I may not nakedly assert this truth but explain it for your edification I shall suggest two things 1. As to the nature of these graces that the reference of repentance is towards God and faith doth especially respect the Mediator So I find them distinguished Acts 20.21 Repentance towards God and Faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. All Christianity is a coming to God by him Heb. 7 25. Repentance towards God noteth a willingness to return to the duty love and service which we owe to our Creator from whence we have faln by our folly and sin This must be for Christ died not to reconcile God to our sins or which is all one to pardon our sins while we remain in them but to bring us back again to the service love and injoyment of God Faith respects the Redeemer for by dependance upon his merit and the sufficiency of his
these do not consider the strictness of the Law Covenant nor the purity of God nor themselves or their own defects A Broken hearted sense of sin would make us prize Christ 1 Cor. 4.4 I know nothing by my self yet am I not thereby justified but he that judgeth me is the Lord. FINIS ERRATA Page 3. line 8. read shed p. 7. l. 2. r. speaketh of it as already past p. 15. l. 14. r. He hath p. 16. l. 53 54. r. Is it not strange Things that are afar off and about which they have no present exercise They strongly believe p. 18. l. 2. r. Surety p. 19. dele 1. p. 23. l. 23. after long r. In the Lord's Supper we have a foretast of that New Wint that is in our Fathers Kingdom p. 26. l. ult p. 27. l. 1. r. T is our Ornament a beautiful Vesture to the Soul p. 43. l. 14. after comfort add is p. 47. l. 24. r. Therefore p. 53. l. 1. r. go p. 58. l. 41. r. Here is neither all evil p. 59. l. 39. r. worketh upon p. 60. l. 26 27. r. and be like him p. 61. l. 38. r. on our part l. 44. for of our way r. of Faith p. 62. l. 16. after self-denying r. r. or having and p. 65. l. 14. dele and report dele This p. 67. l. 7. r. when the body is weakest p. 73. l. 27 28. r. The being reconciled to him is his great care the pleasing of him his most industrious Imployment His life is nothing else c. p. 74. l. 215. a Carnalist p. 76. l. 39. dele is p. 107. l. 1. dele cheap p. 118. l. ult r. hating p. 121. l. 18. r. the difficulties of Obedience p. 151. l. 40. dele our p. 154. l. 43. r. intensivè l. 44. r. appretiativè l. 54. for secure r. severe p. 156. l. 25. for air r. awe l. 30. for alter r. of p. 159. l. 51. r. degree p. 163. l. 27. r. partialities p. 175. l. 9. r. increase of grace p. 177. l. 29. after nakedly add sin p. 181. l. 12. r. for sincers p. 187. l. 32. r. But according p. 188. l. 54. for men r. way for seek r. check l. 55. for his r. our for he r. we p. 203. l. 3. r. his Soul p. 207.l 40. for neither r. will then p. 211. l. 16. r. unregenerate p. 223. l. 57. for profess r. propose p. 232. l. 12. after with add God by p. 241. l. 20. for Abner r. Hanan A TABLE OF THE Principal Matters contained in the SERMONS On 2 CORINTH 5. A. ABsent how ae Believer is absent from the Lord in this World Page 54 Acceptation with God must be our great scope Page 72 And our great work Page 74 It will be our advantage and comfort Page 72 73 To be laboured after not only when we die but in this life Page 75 Why we should labour after it Page 76 v. Pleasing of God Afflictions why a burden Page 32 Approbation of God how Believers come to have it and why Page 119 Why it should be lookt after Page 120 Approbation of God to be lookt after before the Approbation of Conscience and the Approbation of Conscience before the Approbation of Men. Page 122 Assurance may be had Page 6 Why we should look after it Page 12 How it is wrought Page 7 v. Confidence Certainty Authority of Christ. Page 85 B. BOasting what the false Apostles boasted in Page 116 Body of Man compared to a House Page 2 Why called an Earthly House Page 3 Boldness holy wherein it appears Page 46 Boldness in Expectation of Heaven the grounds of it Page 29 Burden of Believers in this World for Sin and Misery v. Affliction and Sin Page 21 32 Burden of Sin felt by a tender and by a wounded Conscience Page 233 v. Sin C. CErtainty of Heaven the grounds of it Page 17 25 The degrees of it Page 11 How it is confirmed to us Page 37 Change there is a great Change wrought at Conversion Page 201 The Change that Grace makes in a Man Page 130 Moral Change what it is Page 201 This doth not amount to the New Creature Page ib. Sudden Changes may be soon worn off Page ib. Outward Change may be without change of heart Page 202 Partial Change not sufficient to denominate the New Creature Page ib. Christ delights to be with Men. Page 54 Christ Spirit Ministry must not be separated Page 239 Christ was made Sin and a Curse for us Page 171 Though he was made Sin yet not a Sinner Page 252 What in the punishment due to Sin Christ was freed from Page 172 Commendation how Paul commends himself to the Corinthians Page 118 Communion with Christ difference between it here and in Heaven Page 54 64 Confession of Sin hath a promise of pardon Page 96 Confidence of Heaven both of the Thing and of the Person Page 8 44 Of Faith and of Assurance Page 63 The Nature of it Page 45 The Kinds of it Page ib. The Opposites of it Page 46 The Properties of it Page 47 The Effects of it Page 46 The Force and Vertue of it Page 12 How it ariseth from the Earnest of the Spirit in our hearts Page 48 Conscience its Work and Office with respect to Sin Page 231 Checks of Conscience to be regarded and why Page 232 Believers have a Testimony in their own Consciences of their Sincerity Page 119 This must be regarded and why Page 121 They have a Testimony in the Consciences of others Page 120 This is to be regarded and how far Page 121 Consideration sets home Spiritual Truths on the Soul Page 175 Conversion Power of Man to convert himself the Absurdities that follow it Page 210 God's working all in Conversion is no ground for looseness or laziness to the Regenerate or to the Vnregenerate Page 211 212 Yet Exhortations to press us to become New Creatures are not in vain Page 212 The true Vse of this Doctrine of Man's Insufficiency to convert himself Page ib. Why the actings of Love are more vigorous at our first Conversion Page 157 Conviction How a good Life convinceth wicked men Page 120 How the Creature shall be convinced at the day of Iudgment Page 99 Covenant why we should often renew Covenant with God Page 250 Curse Christ was made a Curse for us Page 171 Objections answered Page 171 What there was in the Curse or Punishment due to Sin that Christ was freed from Page 172 D. DEath no Extinction Page 36 Desire of Death v. Desire Death of Christ. Christ died as a common Head or publick Person Page 179 Christ died as a Surety Page ib. Christ died not only for our good but in our stead Page 170 How the Love of Christ appeared in his dying for us Page 173 The End of Christ's Death Page 174 The Consequent Benefits of it Page 148 Death of Christ discovers the heinousness of Sin Page 174 181 What use the Death of Christ hath to make us die to
we repent and believe in Christ. Page 218 224 Directions to those that are Reconciled Page 24 250 They that are Reconciled had need beg pardon of sin v. Pardon Page 225 Redeemer The necessity of a Redeemer Page 163 Religion must be our Business and Recreation Page 74 Renovation the Nature of it Page 207 The Object of it Page ib. That it is the work of God's Spirit Page ib. The Effects of it Page 208 Its Connexion with Reconciliation Page ib. v. New Creature Repentance what it includes Page 243 v. Faith and Repentance Respect to Christs Person in the days of his flesh was not all he looked for Page 196 Religiously to respect men for external carnal advantages condemned Page 194 Respect Civil due to carnal men Page ib. Respect of persons not with God Page 110 199 Resurrection of the Body Reasons of it Page 36 Resurrection of Christ the Example Pledge and Cause of the Spiritual Life Page 189 The likeness between Christ's rising from the dead and Christians rising from the death of Sin Page ib. Rewards Sinful respect to the Rewards of Religion how it bewrayeth it self Page 151 Right God hath a Right to us Page 186 Righteousness Why men are prone to establish a Righteousness of their own Page 257 Gospel-Righteousness what it is Page 72 Gospel-Righteousness a Garment to cover our nakedness Page 28 Righteousness as it respects the precept or the sanction of the Law opened Page 252 Why the Righteousness by which we are justified is called the Righteousness of God Page 253 What is that Righteousness by which we are justified Page 253 254 257 Christ is made sin for us and we are made the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 In what this exchange doth agree in what it differs Page ib. The Love of God herein Page 256 This Righteousness of Christ is made ours when we believe in him Page 254 The Priviledges depending on our being made the Righteousness of God in Christ. Page 257 S. SAcrifices were offered by Adam Page 28 Satisfaction of Christ the truth of it Page 170 The Sufficiency of it Page 171 Scope of a Christians Life Page 71 72 v. End Self-Love only cured by the Love of God Page 230 Sight what Sights we shall have in Heaven Page 60 In what manner shall we Behold Christ. Page ib. v. Faith and Sight Sin a wrong to God how to be understood Page 86 Sin and shame always go together Page 28 The greatness of the Burden of Sin Page 257 Why Sin is a Burden Page 33 In what manner Sin is to be checked Page 205 The aggravations of Secret Sins Page 95 Secret Sins to be avoided because of future Iudgment Page 95 In what sense Christ was said to be made Sin Page 252 Sin taken for a Sacrifice for sin and for Punishment of sin Page ib. Christ was made sin but not a Sinner Page ib. Christ was made sin for us and we the Righteousness of God in him Page 254 Christ being made Sin is the cause of our being made the Righteousness of God in him Page 255 Sincerity how evidenced Page 102 Paul's Testimony of his Sincerity Page 118 Soul that it is distinct from the Body proved Page 66 It can live apart from the Body Page 67 The Souls of the Saints at Death immediately go to God Page 67 Spirit How he dwells in us Page 42 Strangers how to carry our selves as Strangers in this World Page 52 Sufferings of Christ what they were Page 256 They show the heinousness of sin Page 174 How we are to be affected when we read the story of Christ's sufferings Page 198 Suitableness between Christ and Believers Page 190 Surety Christ the Surety of Believers Page 171 Christ dyed as a Surety Page 179 T. TAbernacle our frail Condition set forth by a Tent or Tabernacle Page 2 Terror of the Lord is ground of Fear Page 110 How it is so to the godly Page 113 The Terror of the Lord should have an influence on us while in the flesh Page 113 V. VEracity and Faithfulness of God manifested at the Day of Iudgment Page 98 Union to Christ Internal and External explained Page 203 How the New Nature flows from our Union with Christ. Page 203 W. WAlking by Faith those who have Faith must walk by it Page 61 Reasons of it Page ib. Will God will not do any man good against his will Page 235 Nor doth he force man's will but deal by Persuasion Page 236 Wisdom wherein Wisdom lyes Page 128 Wherein the Wisdom of a godly man appears Page 128 Evidences of Spiritual Wisdom Page 129 How Wisdom is to be justified by her Children Page 128 Wisdom of Christ. Page 83 Word of God is an Instrument fitted to gain the consent of man's will Page 236 Work the Work of a Christian. Page 72 74 Why Works are produced at the Day of Iudgment Page 97 What room and place Works have with respect to our final sentence and the Rewards and Punishments that follow it Page 100 101 Works good the Principle of them Page 101 Good Works cannot be performed by men in a state of Nature Page ib. The aim and scope of them Page ib. Good Works Imperfect Page 99 They merit nothing Page ib. What respect Good Works have to our future Reward Page 102 Worship External Pomp in the Worship of God is not that he looks after Page 198 A TABLE OF SCRIPTURES EXPLAINED In the SERMONS on 2 CORINTHIANS 5.   Chap. Verse Page GEnesis 1 31 216 3 11 28 4 7 252   13 252 Exodus 32 25 28 Deuteronomy 6 5 163 30 6 167 1 Kings 5 26 95 Psalms 1 5 92 27 4 64 31 1 233 33 15 93 51 4 92 115 1 133 130 3 92 Proverbs 16 14 112 29 27 246 Ecclesiastes 3 21 129 5 6 93 12 7 66 Canticles 8 6 146 Isaiah 56 4 76 65 17 200 66 22 200 Jeremiah 23 6 253 Hosea 2 3 28 4 8 252 6 7 96 10 1 183   11 152 Amos 6 3 112 Habakkuk 2 11 96 Malachy 2 15 168 Matthew 3 11 112 Matthew 11 19 128 20 23 40 22 37 163 250 24 12 160 25 31 78 Mark 6 11 94 9 44 105 Luke 2 40 191 10 27 250 12 20 4 16 9 68   22 68 20 37 38 68 23 43 67 John 2 24 25 84 5 45 93 7 ●4 63 14 2 4 15 2 203 20 27 197 Acts 16 14 175 20 21 224 Romans 5 14 171   25 223 6 3 4 5 180   6 177 179   13 180 6 19 131 8 2 164 9 3 141 11 36 134 14 7 8 183 15 3 187 1 Corinthians 3 8 40 1 Corinthians 4 4 5 82 11 22 195 15 21 179   45 179 16 32 169 2 Corinthians 1 12 117 4 7 238   16 60 5 21 171 6 11 12 13 145 Galatians 2 20 178 3 1 59   20 80 4 14 ●41 5 17 180 Ephesians 1 3 51 4 18 190 Philippians 1 23 67 2 13 209 Colossians 1 20 68   21 217 3 3 5 179 180 191 1 Thessalonians 1 10 112 1 Thessalonians 2 12 39   13 241 1 Timothy 6 12 19 6 2 Timothy 2 21 204 Hebrews 3 1 235 4 13 84 7 22 179 9 28 252 10 31 111 13 4 95 James 4 1 195 1 Peter 1 17 110 2 9 129 157 4 1 178 2 Peter 1 3 39 3 14 29 1 John 2 5 145 3 19 45 Revelations 2 5 162   3 4 38   5 9 76   12 12 93 FINIS Secondly Fourthly Thirdly Secondly Secondly ☞ That which follows being Printed Sermon XXX is the Conclusion of this 29 th Sermon
by all posts for the destruction and extermination of the Jews the City Shushan was perplexed 5. Tho we cannot absolutely determine of the success as to particular events yet this giveth good hope and confidence towards God 1. As to particular events no absolute certainty For God promiseth not all that you desire or think that ye want in bodily things 2. Many things are necessary to serve the order and harmony of his Providence in the communities and societies wherein we live And God may deliver his people in such a way and by such means as they never dreamt of as Pauls going to Rome therefore for the way his Wisdom must be the Judg not our partial conceits 3. As to temporal events we must pray with submission 1 John 5.14 And this is the confidence that we have in him that if we ask any thing according to his will ●e heareth us 'T is not always necessay for us that we should have love and respect from men and never be tried and exercised with want or pain or suffering 2. This giveth good hope 1. Because it is for Christs sake that he fulfilleth all promises to us and so giveth us deliverance in any strait or present exigence 2. Because we are heard in what we ask for Gods glory and our own good so our prayers are accepted 1. Gods glory but he must chuse the means the end is granted the prayer is not lost but rewarded as an act of our sincerity 2. For our good that is the chiefest good Rom. 8.28 All things shall work together for good to them that love God The great promise is eternal salvation all things else subordinated to it if you beg ease for the flesh merely for its own sake or worldly prosperity to please the flesh you bespeak your own denial Christ puts no such dross in his golden Censer 3. USE is to perswade you to get an actual interest in Christ By receiving him when God offereth him and is willing to give him to you John 1.12 Faith is a broken-hearted and thankful acceptance of Christ and a giving up our selves to him by an intire and unbounded resignation 2 Chron. 30.8 Yield up your selves to the Lord to be sanctified and governed by him SERMON XLIII ROM VIII 33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect 't is God that justifieth WE have done with the general triumph of believers and considered what supported them against the fear of evil and the fear of death viz. the hope of good Now the Apostle descendeth to particulars and the first ground of a believers trouble is sin the guilt of which raiseth many doubts and fears within us all which are removed by Justification now Justification is opposite to two things Accusation and Condemnation the one maketh way for the other for those that are justly accused are also condemned as 't is opposite to accusation so to justifie is the part of an advocate as to condemnation so to justifie is the part of a Judg A believer is upon good terms in both respects there are no accusers before God that we need to be afraid of and they may with comfort appear before the bar of their Judg if we are impleaded we may stand in the judgment as to accusation here and as to condemnation hereafter accusation may seem to infringe our present comforts condemnation make void our future hopes But things present and to come are both ours The Apostle beginneth with the accusation in this verse and speaketh of condemnation in the next Who shall lay any thing c. In which Words observe 1. A question or bold challenge of faith Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect 2. The reply or answer 'T is God that justifieth The question or interrogation intimateth the matter of our trouble something that may be laid to our charge the answer the ground of our support and comfort which is Gods free Justification by Christ In the challenge or question First What is denied having any thing laid to our charge Secondly The persons concerned Gods elect Both must be explained 1. The question implieth a denial not simple and absolute but in some respects not as if no accuser for the Devil accuseth us Rev. 12.10 He is called The accuser of the brethren who accuseth us before God day and night And the world accuseth us It accused Jeremiah Jer. 37.13 as a revolter to the Caldeans Amos 7.10 as a mover of sedition Paul as a pestilent fellow and a mover of sedition and in general all Christians 2 Cor. 6.8 As deceivers and yet true Our own consciences accuse us Rom. 2.15 1 John 3.20 For if our hearts condemn us And David Psal. 25.7 saith Remember not the sins of my youth 2. Nor is it to be understood as if there were no ground for the accusation the Devil is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not a whisperer or a slanderer but an impleader in a Court of J●stice before the Tribunal of God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That 's an adversary in law one that joyneth with us in plea of law he may slander us as he did Job that he was a mercenary man tho perfect and upright Job 1.8 11. But too often there is too much ground for the accusation The world accuseth us but we often give them too great occasion 2 Cor. 11.12 That I may cut off occasion from them that desire occasion our hearts accuse us for committing and omitting many things contrary to the law of God James 3.2 in many things we offend all so that 't is not an absolute denial of a legal accusation How then can the Apostle say Who shall lay any thing to our charge I answer 't is to be interpreted as to the success they cannot prevail in the plea if they charge Go I will discharge The Devil is often a slanderer the world raileth conscience may give a wrong judgment but when the accusation cannot be wholly denied yet there is a remedy for the penitent believer 't is in vain to accuse those whom God upon just reasons acquitteth God is not in danger to be mistaken by false accusation or to do us any injustice but when our real guilt is before our face and the malice of Satan will seek thereupon to procure our condemnation yet there are just reasons to be presented before him to procure our pardon 2. The persons God's elect who in justification are considered not as elect but as effectually called for the order is set down verse the 30 th whom he did predestinate them he called and whom he called them he justified Those whom God hath chosen before the foundation of the world and now truly believing in Christ these are justified for otherwise they are condemned already John 3.18 Children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.3 for we must consider the elect as to the purpose of his grace or the sentence of his law for till the elect are effectually