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A44137 A discourse of the knowledge of God, and of our selves I. by the light of nature, II. by the sacred Scriptures / written by Sir Matthew Hale, Knight ... for his private meditation and exercise ; to which are added, A brief abstract of the Christian religion, and, Considerations seasonable at all times, for the cleansing of the heart and life, by the same author. Hale, Matthew, Sir, 1609-1676. 1688 (1688) Wing H240; ESTC R4988 321,717 542

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Covenant on the Peoples part was an Obedience to the whole Law given by Moses the Covenant on God's part was to be their God and bless them And this as it was never a Covenant between God and other Nations till incorporated into that Society so also as a Covenant it was abrogated by Christ who came to make a New Covenant between God and Man New not in the purpose of God for it was his purpose from all Eternity nor yet in the Substance and Efficacy of it for the whole Frame of the Law and of all those Ceremonies were in order to Christ and the Obedience to them received their acception in him but New in the manner of the exhibition the Substance it self was unvailed viz. Christ the manner of partaking of his Benefit more clearly discovered viz. Faith so then the substantial Covenant with the Jews under the Law and since the coming of Christ is one and the same Christ Jesus the manner of the exhibition or external manifestation thereof under the Law was as a Covenant of Works which is since rather expired than abolished for the prefixed time which God in his Wisdom and Providence had pre-determined expired by the promulgation of that substantial Sacrifice Christ Jesus 2. The Moral Law as it was promulged and given to that People doth not bind farther than any other part of the Judicial or Ceremonial Law and therefore extends not farther than the Jewish Commonwealth But as that Law so promulged did include that Natural Rectitude which was once given unto all Mankind so it binds us and is a Rule of Righteousness to us and though that enacting of it among the Jews is not the formal cause of its Obligation upon us Gentiles yet it doth serve as a promulgation or manifestation of it and leaves even that part of the Gentiles unto whom it came more unexcusable in its disobedience because by a Revelation from Heaven and by the Dispensation of his Providence it is most clearly manifested unto them So then questionless the Moral Law though given to the Jews is a Rule of Righteousness to all because it contains those Precepts that are naturally and intrinsecally Good and Right and Just for all Men to observe And though Christ came to take it away as a Covenant of Works and consequently the condemning power of it which was the Enmity Ephes 2.17 yet he came not to take it away as a Rule of Righteousness Thus Heaven and Earth shall first pass away before one jot or tittle of the Law shall pass away Matth. 5.18 And we see plainly that the Saviour of the World his Prescriptions of Holiness doth not only reinforce the Law but superadds a more spiritual pure and high Observation than the Letter it self injoyns Matth. 5. He came to abolish the Ceremonies of the Law not as things unholy in their Institution but as useless because the Substance was come He came to take away the Curse of the Law from such as believe by satisfying for it and the Condemning Power of the Law in case of default of an exact Obedience by fulfilling it for us But he took it not away as a Rule to guide us for thus the Apostle witnesseth to it Rom. 7.12 that it is Holy Just and Good and disobedience to it is a mortal sin in it self though by the Satisfaction of Christ it is become not deadly to them Every Sin we commit against this Righteous Rule even after our Conversion requires the Blood of the Son of God to wash it away otherwise it were deadly We have a double Obligation to the Moral Law as a Rule of our Obedience 1. As it is a Rule of natural Justice 2. As it is inforced and as it were re-enacted by the Command of our Saviour Now as touching the Ceremonial Law though in particular and the matter of it it be so far from a Rule of Righteousness to us that it were an act of highest injury to our Saviour to practise it yet there wants not an use of it especially amongst others in these particulars 1. That an exact precise Obedience is required where God commands though we see not it may be the particular Reason the very Snuffers and Coverings and Times and all other Circumstances must be exactly observed When God commands there is no disputing of or varying from his Injunctions 2. That in all our approaches to the most holy God we must endeavour to bring our Consciences and Hearts and Lives as clean as may be he is a holy God and will be sanctified by all them that draw near to him And this was meant by their washings and purifyings and cleansings in cases of even natural defilements 3. That he is a God that is pleased with Order Decency and Comeliness in his Service so as it be agreeable to his own Word and Will without Idolatrous Superstitions or Will-worship And as to the Judicial Law though in the Letter of it it was the Law for that People yet it doth doth contain an exemplary Wisdom and Justice so that these Laws that were not particularly fitted for that Nation and the Circumstances of their Condition may be Examples and Patterns for the Laws of other States and do include a great deal of natural Justice and Righteousness yet the express Text of the Judicial Law did not serve in all cases emergent in that Common-Wealth especially concerning translations of Properties and Interest And in these the Civil Magistrate did determine according to the Rules of natural Justice and Convenience of the Common-Wealth and by the extraordinary direction and assistance of God vide Exod. 18.26 And as thus the Laws of the Jews contained Rules and Directions in Natural Justice between Man and Man so the sacred History the Directions of the Prophets supply us with farther manifestation of the Will of God in the matters of Justice between Man and Man and do enforce them home upon the Conscience When we see that great observation the Almighty God takes of the just or unjust Conversation of Men by his imminent Judgments and Rewards which we find in the sacred History attending either practice whereby he owns even Civil Justice to be as it were his Creature and doth Patronize and maintain it such were his Animadversions upon breach of Covenant with the Gibeonites 2 Sam. 21. upon Murder and Oppression in Ahab and in his House 1 Kings 21.19 upon Cruelty and Ambition in the Posterity of Jehu Hos 1.4 of Adultery and Murder in David 2 Sam. 11. with divers other instances of the like kind do practically convince that Righteousness between Man and Man is a thing required asserted maintained and the breach thereof avenged by the hand of God himself when the Potency of the Offenders seem to exempt them from his instrumental Vindication exercised by Men in an ordinary course of Justice The Gospel contains a most excellent Rule of Righteousness 1. In the Example of Christ one of whose Ends in assuming of
that which is her Enemy 3. Stablish thy mind in the knowledge of God and of his Goodness and this being laid in the bottom will keep thy Ship from uncertain giddy floating The knowledge and Sense of the chiefest Good will carry the chiefest Motions of thy Will towards it and against all that is contrary to it and by this means the Motions of thy Will will be certain steddy uniform and regular the inclination of thy Will to any thing else will be measured by this and subordinate unto it if the Good propounded consist not with the Fruition of thy chiefest Good thy Will will reject that Good propounded and if it consist with it it will measure a Motion of the Will towards that Good proportionable to it and the want of the Knowledge or Sence of this Good sends the Motions of thy Will on gadding after every Vanity stedfast in nothing willing what it hath not and weary of what it hath pursuing a Butter-fly or a Glow-worm with the same eagerness and intention of Soul as it would do a substantial and satisfactory Good when thou seest a Child fixing the intention of his mind upon a Rattle or a Hobby-horse more than upon a goodly Mannour or upon a Feather or a Riband more than upon a Title of Honour conjoyned with Power and when he hath these Toys to be weary of them and pursue something else thou canst easily see the ground of this Errour in his Valuation to arise from his Ignorance of the true difference between them and this unstability in his content in them doth arise from the emptiness and unusefulness of them and that disproportion which he finds in them to his expectation his infant reason being yet better able to value in Fruition than in expectation And yet thou dost not consider that the disproportion of those things which thy riper Will pursues as Good as to the chiefest Good is infinitely greater than that of the most Childish enjoyment to those things wherein the most and wisest of Men place their chief expectation and that the Errour of the most childish Judgment laid in the Ballance with the Judgment of the wise Men of the World wants fewer Grains to make it equal than that of the wisest Man in the World not having his Soul ballasted with the Love and Knowledge of God laid in the Scales with one that makes his Creator his chiefest hope and expectation Keep a Guard upon thy Conscience The chief work of Conscience in the Soul consists in these things 1. The reception of sound practical Principles this is the Foundation of all its subsequent working the Major proposition 2. The discovery of those Actions or purposes which are in the Soul 3. The comparing of those Actions or purposes with those former practical grounds 4. The Conclusion or Judgment upon those Actions and Principles thus compared of Absolution or Approbation or of Condemnation and Rejection 5. The Motion of the Conscience towards the Soul upon this conviction viz. Perswasion or Dissuasion to or from the Act in question if future stirring or comforting the Soul in reference to the Act if past Thy Conscience is that Cart by which thou dost or shouldest steer thy Course in this World towards the other and therefore it is of highest Concernment to have an eye upon it and therefore 1. Learn to furnish it with practical Principles of Truth and Soundness These Principles are for any thing that appears to me extrinsecal to the Soul the Dictates of the Divine Law and Will conveyed into the Conscience either by the immediate Revelation and Demonstration of God unto the Soul thus to Adam in a perfect measure and to those Holy men of God the Patriarchs Prophets and Apostles or by the Course and way of his Providence either by unwritten Tradition Rom. 2.15 and this was a more uncertain Dispensation because more easie to be corrupted by the Practices and teachings of Men which were so mingled with it that it was very hard to discover the Wheat from the Chaff so that if we should now go to gather up Principles for the Conscience out of the Practices of Men or Nations or the Collections of humane Laws or Authors we should gather up Principles full of uncertainty contrarieties and inconsistencies among themselves and such of them as had any sound Conformity to truth were so general that several Men or the same Man at several times or upon several occasions would deduce from them a justification of contrary Practices as we see is done among divers Men that admit the same general Principles of Practice and yet upon the same Principles their Consciences when they come to particular Actions act quite contrary one to the other the great and merciful God hath therefore by a wonderful Course of his Providence conveyed unto us a Collection of practical Principles made by himself even the Word of his Truth admirably adequated to our use especially in two things 1. Of their Truth and Infallibility we cannot mistake them for they are the very Revelations of the God of Truth unmingled with the Sophistications and Corruptions of Men Gold seven times tryed 2. Their Particularity and Certainty there is scarce an Action in a Mans whole life but a Man shall find a Rule fitted for it David that had but a part of it and a small and a dark part of it in Comparison of what we have c●lls it a Perfect Law converting the Soul a sure Testimony making wise the Simple Psal 19.7 a Commandment exceeding all other perfection Psal 119.95 that made him wiser than his Enemies and Teachers Ibid 98. a Word able to make the Man of God pe●fect throughly furnished to all good Works 2 Tim. 3.17 and though the very words of the Book are full of admirable Truth and Conviction infinitely out-going all the writings of Men yet there is more in it than this even a Promise of a Blessing of it to as many as seriously make it their study and Rule of Life and Faith and a fulfilling of that Promise the Son of God sending his own Spirit along with the use of that Word Life with the Letter into the Soul And this was that which made this Law of God though comprised in a little Volume to be so exceeding wide and precious to David there went along with it and with his Meditation of it a Spirit of Life and Light that shewed him larger Dimensions of it than could be found by the bare strength of his natural Understanding 2. Take leisure upon all thy Actions and purposes to acquaint thy Conscience with them that so thy Conscience may have time to deliberate and to compare it with its Principle the Word of God. Precipitancy and Hastiness in Actions robs the Conscience of that employment which God hath given to it and as it is the Mother of all sin so it brings a double inconvenience to a Man even from his Conscience viz. 1. A deadness and
End which may be had by them if pursued with due subordination to my great End. By what hath been premised we see a double difference 1. between bare Knowledge and Wisdom 2. between that Wisdom which is particular and that which is the Supream Wisdom The difference between the two former is 1. In their Object though every Scibile is the Object of Knowledge it is not of Wisdom 2. In the Use Many things are known only that they may be known but Wisdom is in order to Action and Motion to the thing known as profitable or from it as hurtful it is an act of practical Understanding not purely speculative The difference between the two latter that which is particular Wisdom is but temporary subservient principally to the Body subordinate and when it wants its due subordination proves irrational but the other is perpetual because fixed upon a perpetual End principally concerning the Soul supream and simple without mixture of any thing in it below Reason 3. Conscience Which is a high act of the Understanding for as Wisdom looks and moves forward by the right Rule or Principle to the right End so Conscience looks backward and measures the acts and motions of the Soul by these Rules or Principles and consists of three Propositions 1. It doth of necessity presuppose a Rule or Principle given unto Man directing him in his motion to his Supream End. We see all things natural have some Principle Instinct or Law whereby they are carried to their several Ends and Operations That which is in them an Instinct was to Man a Law because being indued with Understanding and Will he was susceptible of a Law which inferiour Creatures were not Now as the interruption of that Law or Rule in Natural things brings an Obliquity and Irregularity in their motions and so diverts them from that End to which otherwise they would arrive so the Violation of this Law or Rule given to Man doth at once subject him to a threefold Mischief 1. A Loss of that End which the regular motion according to that Rule which God gave him would have carried him unto for the Wise God having disposed all things to their Ends hath done it in and according to those ways which he hath prescribed them to move in to those Ends. 2. A Deformity and Vncomeliness contracted by the violation of that Rule When the Creatures came out of God's hands they were Good and Beautiful that Beauty and Goodness consisted in nothing else but a Conformity to the Will of God in their Beings Motions and Ends if any of that Conformity be altered there ariseth presently a Deformity uselesness and uncomeliness in the Creature The same it is with Man he received questionless a Rule to live and move to a most suitable End and conformable to the Will of the First Cause that ordered him to that End as long as he moves conformable to that Rule he moves according to the Will of his Maker to a most suitable End but when once he violates that Rule he contracts a Deformity Ataxy and Uncomeliness by such violation 3. An Obligation to some Positive Punishment annexed to the violation of that Law for let us suppose any Creature wanting Will and Understanding that did notwithstanding not move according to this Rule by this he would most clearly contract the two former viz. Loss and Deformity but where a Law is given to a Creature endued with these Faculties the violation of the Law so given includes in it not only a Privative Offence as I may call it to which a Privative Punishment may be answerable but a Positive Rebellion Rejection and Disobedience to that Duty and Subjection he owes and is enabled to perform to his Maker and therefore it is most just and rational that there should be added as a Sanction to that Law some Positive Penalty to revenge such a violation that as the Obedience to that Rule would carry a Man to a Positive Good so the Disobedience thereunto should be followed with more than a bare privation of that Good. This then is the first Proposition that is laid in the Understanding or Conscience this or that is Commanded to be done or omitted as the Rule or Law given by God to carry me to my supream End and Happiness the violation whereof subjects me to Loss of that Happiness to a Deformity and Discrepance to the Will of my Maker to the Curse or Sanction of that Law. Without the knowledge of this Proposition the great work or act of Conscience is asleep therefore it is necessarily to be presupposed for it is the supream Resolution of all Obligation in the World both of Laws Contracts and Oaths as appears before And according as this Principle is either true or false clear or dubious so are the actings and conclusions of the Conscience true or erroneous quick or dull It concerns us therefore to enquire How these Principles come into the Vnderstanding We find in the Creatures several Instincts incident almost to every Creature which are connatural with it We may observe likewise in Man dispositions and inclinations of several kinds common to whole Nations Climates Families which though they incline the Men to actions and carriages suitable to those several dispositions yet are not Laws or Principles of Nature These Principles therefore of the Divine Law called Natural Principles of Conscience are in the Understanding these ways 1. Supernaturally Thus Almighty God did at first give Man a Copy of his Will shewed to his Understanding and Will commanded him to obey it and this perfect discovery he made at first and when it decayed after the Fall of Man it is evident he did by Divine Inspiration and Revelation reinforce and discover it as appears by the holy History 2. Artificially by Tradition from the first Man to his Posterity and from one Man to another For though the first Man lost much of his Light and Knowledge by the Fall yet he was not without divers of those Principles which God at first shewed him 3. Naturally viz. by the help of Reason and Discourse for although if a Man were bred up from his Infancy without any manner of Instructions it would be very difficult for him to take up of himself any sound Principles of Nature yet I do believe that the Divine Law given to Man hath that Justice and agreeableness to right Reason that when once the motions of Reason had any materials of Observation to work upon it would incline such a Man though weakly to some though not all of those Divine Laws which were first perfectly written in the Heart of the first Man. The Precepts of the Divine Law though they be not congenite with us yet many of them are so rational and hold such a conformity with right Reason that Reason exercised would light upon some of them Hence several Nations that we know not ever to have had correspondence one with another yet agree in many Natural
Observations and Customs as agreeing to the common Reason of both and the Wise God having so ordered the Business of this World that those Laws which he gave to Man best and most rationally conduce to his Good here as well as hereafter as is most evident in the Precepts of the First and second Tables Thus much for the first Proposition of Conscience 2 The second or Minor Proposition of Conscience is the stating of what I have done whether in Conformity or Violation of that Law which is nothing but a Reflex act of the Soul looking into the Intellectual Memory and impartially stating what I have done And by this a Man may see that the Divine Law doth not look at all upon the outward act as the violation or performance of it but so far sorth only as it is an effect of the Soul and Will. And hence it is that the judgment of the Conscience looks upon the work within It is true when the act of the Will is full and compleat it is testified by the outward action but it is not the outward action that makes the violation or performance This then is the second Proposition or Assumption This or that I have done or omitted 3. The third Proposition is the Conclusion either of acquittal or condemnation of obligation to that Guilt which ariseth upon the breach of that Law Loss of my End Deformity and liableness to the Curse Thus far concerning the Understanding and the Acts of it the second great Faculty is the Will whereby the Soul is moved to the Desire and Prosecution of that which is Good. It is true that all Powers carry with them a Natural Appetite or Motion to that which is the Object of that Power and consequently comes under the Name and Notion of Good the Understanding naturally moves to know its Object as to a Good suitable to that Power the Senses move to their Objects the Eye is not satisfied with Seeing nor the Ear with Hearing the Natural Appetite moves to the enjoyment of such a Good as may fill and answer the want or exigence of the thing that hath that Appetite But the difference between the Motions of the Will and other Faculties is considerable in two things 1. In the object Generally the Object of the Will is Good and this distinguisheth it from the Understanding whose Object is Truth so that though the same thing is the Object of both yet those Faculties fasten upon it under several Notions as the same body may be the object of my Eye as coloured and of my Touch as hard and though Good and Goodness is an Object of my Understanding as a Scibile whereby my Understanding examines the Truth the Nature the Circumstances the Degrees the Suitableness of it yet it is an Object of my Will as appetible or desirable which is nothing else but the motion of the Soul to Union with that it concludes to be Good and such a Good hath these Qualities 1. It must be ● Possible Good and this hath a double Reason 1. Because this is an Inclination put into the Soul by the Wise Maker of the Soul who never did any thing in vain and therefore never put any motion in any thing to such a thing which is unattainable ex natura rei It is true de facto it may fall out that Good to which the Soul is moved may not be attained by reason of some extrinsecal intervenience and yet ex natura rei the Good may be attainable 2. Because the Will is a Rational Faculty and though of it self it moves indeterminately to all Good yet when it moves to any determinate Object it moves upon the predecision of the rational Understanding Now it were a mere irrational act to move and impossible thing that it should move to that which the Understanding doth not in some sort conclude possible to attain for the end of Desire is union to the thing desired and were there not a Possibility of Union concluded in the Understanding there would be an impossibility to will it or move after it 2. It must be a Suitable Good to the Exigence Nature and Condition of the Subject that desires it 1. To the Exigence of the Subject And this is evident in all motions of all things they move to that which is apt to fill up and supply that vacuity which is in the thing desiring it even in natural as well as rational Appetites the Hungry Man his Appetite is not for Clothes but Food 2. According to the Condition of the Subject A Sensitive Appetite moves to a Sensitive Good and a Rational to a Rational Good and an Immortal to an Immortal Go●● And although Man consists of several Pieces and therefore hath several Exigences and Conditions and consequently moves to several Ends answerable thereunto and the Will is carried to those Ends yet when the Will is rationally and regularly moved it moves to the Inferiour Ends or Good with subordination to that whch is the Greatest Good and therefore rests not in them nor is satisfied with them Nay though by reason of Ignorance or other Accident it mistake or know not or forget its Supream End it takes no full Satisfaction in those Inferiour Goods Though it know not what to desire yet in all the Enjoyments of these inferiour Desires it finds that it hath not what it should and that breeds discontent weariness and changeable pursuits of empty and unsatisfying pleasures and profits and contentments Now the Will is carried to its Object by a double Principle of Motion 1. Original That Great and Wise God that hath put in all things Inclinations to their several Ends hath put this will in Man to move to his End wherein he hath at once fulfilled his own Will He did it because it pleased him and led Man to his Happiness for this we may most clearly see in the Frame of all things His Wisdom and his Goodness is such that the Duty and the Happiness of his Creature are never severed When the Creature moves to the fulfilling of his Maker's Will he moves in the same act to his own Perfection and Happiness 2. Immediate The Understanding is the Seat where God hath set his Light the Light of Reason the Decision or Determination of Reason is or should be the Guide of our Will Now the Determination of Reason and Vnderstanding is twofold 1. General That whatsoever tends to the Good of the Subject is to be desired and prosecuted and that according to the several degrees of that Good accordingly ought the desire and prosecution to be if there be two Goods propounded the one more perfect universal c. than the other then though both may be pursued yet this with subordination to that 2. Special Specificating and determining this or that to be Good and giving the degrees thereof which is or should be the measure of the motion of the Will. This is the last act of the Practical Understanding For
therefore must needs take up the highest and choicest Desires to attain and keep him God is pleased to communicate himself to these Desires his acceptation of them and intimate Expressions of Love to his Creature This as it is the highest Happiness and the Rest of the Creature so it cannot chuse but ingage the Soul to return Love and Obedience to the Will of his God especially when all those Engagements to Obedience are likewise presented to the Soul that it owes its Being to him that his will is most righteous and fit to be obeyed And this Obedience arising from these Principles of Love to God as it was without all Hypocrisie so it was without all pain and tediousness for it did arise from an inward and active Principle and was acted by most obedient and active Faculties Man took no less delight in his Obedience which was the fruit of his Love and Duty to his Maker than he did in the knowledge of the Beauty and Goodness of his Maker which was the cause of that Love and Duty And as the actings of the natural Appetite upon a proper and seasonable Object when they exceed not their proportion are delightful so the actings of the rational Appetite consisting in Love and Obedience to God wherein they could not exceed their just proportion were the delight of the Soul his Holiness consisting in the returns to his Maker of Love and Obedience and the Goodness of his God in communicating himself and his favour exciting and accepting those returns did both conduce to the fulfilling of his Blessedness All this as it was derived from the Blessing of God 1 Gen. 28. so it ended in the Perfection of the Creature And God saw all that he had made and behold it was very Good. Ib. Ver. 31. 2. The Means whereby he attained or rather preserved this state of Happiness which was in effect congenite with though not essential to his Being This was only Obedience to the Will of his Maker In all inferiour Creatures we see a kind of inclination or instinct to follow the Rule of their Nature This conducts them to that degree of Felicity and Beauty which is commensurate to their Nature herein though they follow the Will of their Creator in the Law of their Creation it is not properly Obedience nor that instinct properly a Law the latter is only given and the former only performed by such a Creature as hath Liberty and Choice and consequently Knowledge and Understanding without which it is impossible to have the other Man alone of all visible Creatures is endued with both and so fitted to receive a Law and to obey it Being thus fitted he hath a double ingagement of Obedience viz. of Duty and of Profit 1. Of Duty he received his Being from his Maker and that Being furnished with Happiness This is an infinite and boundless engagement of Duty even to the utmost of his Being 2. Of Profit or Advantage this stock of Happiness that was but now freely conferred upon him is put into his hands under this Condition if he break his Condition he forfeits and that most justly his Happiness But yet if this Law were beyond the capacity of his Nature then there might be some excuse of his Disobedience But as this Happiness was fully commensurate to his Nature so was this Law which was the subject of his Obedience We shall therefore consider these three things 1. What was the Law of Man's Creation 2. Whence the Obligation of it 3. What the Sanction or Penalty 1. What the Law was Obedience was the Duty of Man to the Will of his Creator the Law was the Specification of that Will in this or that particular Command or Prohibition The Laws that God gave to Man therefore were of two kinds 1. Such as did bear a kind of proportion or convenience to the Nature of Man such are all those moral Dictates which we call Laws of Nature as keeping of Faith worshipping God and most if not all those Precepts in the Decalogue are but Expressions of these Laws These though they have no Obligation but by the Command of God yet they have a kind of Congruity with the very Nature of Man. 2. Such as though they have their original Justice of Obligation upon the same ground as the former hath viz. The subordination of the rational Creature to the Will of God yet in hoc individuo there doth not appear that Congruity of Nature of Man with this Command such was the Command of forbearing the forbidden Fruit and answerable to this in all times God hath been pleased to give Commands of these two several kinds Gen. 9.14 At the same time God forbids Murder which holds Congruity with Humane Nature and eating of Blood which doth not appear to hold such Congruity Gen. 17.2 to Abraham Walk before me and be perfect which is a Rule of natural Justice and a Command of Circumcision the reason whereof doth not so naturally appear so to the Jews not only the Moral Law but divers Ceremonial Rites which have no such necessary conformity to Reason The reason of this and why the first Man's Obedience was tried upon this Precept was because that in the Obedience to such a Command is given the clearest and most free Obedience to God for we hereby acknowledge his Freedom to command what he pleaseth and our just Obligation to obey what he commands meerly because he commands Now because it is impossible that any Law can bind unless it hath some Promulgation or discovery from him that gives it or somewhat equivolent unto it we are to consider How these Laws came to be published As for the latter it is most certain and clear that it was by express injunction from God. And the Lord God commanded Man saying c. Whether this was by an audible Voice or by an immediate infusion of the knowledge of it into the Mind it will not be material to enquire But certain it is that in as much as the Obligation of this Precept doth not arise from any intrinsecal conformity of the thing to Humane Nature there was an express injunction and command of God in it But as touching the former though they were discovered to Man to be the Will of God yet they did hold a kind of intrinsecal proportion and conformity to the very Nature of Men. And hence it is that though by the Fall a general deficiency was in Man yet the tracks and foot-steps of those Laws remain in his very constitution Though this cannot be the cause of their Obligation yet questionless this was part of the means of their Publication to Man Rom. 2.14 The Gentiles not having the Law do by nature the things contained in the Law. And although much were due to Education and Tradition and the course of God's Providence in propagating the Knowledge of the Moral Law yet such a convenience it hath with the nature and use of Men that when they once come to
comes to his Creator the last and supreme refuge of Man God himself shall write bitter things against him and eternally reject him Here is the Death of Deaths This and much more than this is included in that Sanction Thou shalt surely die And this appears to be a most just and righteous Sanction 3. Thou But we are taught Rom. 5.12 By one Man sin entred into the World and Death by sin so Death passed upon all Men for that all have sinned Here it is inquirable 1. Whether the Guilt of Adam 's sin did extend farther than Adam's Person and by what means or Rule of Justice that came to pass We must conclude in Adam all sinned Rom. 5.19 By one Mans disobedience many were made Sinners and as Sin passed over all so Death passed over all And this the Apostle useth as the Argument of the Universality of sin in the same place and 1 Cor. 15.22 For as in Adam all died so in Christ all shall be made alive The sin of Adam was the sin of his Posterity by a double Means 1. For that he contracted with God for him and his Posterity and as in Nature including so in Law personating them all And in this respect Rom. 5.14 he is stiled the Figure of him that was to come As Christ contracted for his Seed by Faith so Adam contracted for his Seed by Nature It is true regularly the personal sin of the Father or of any Person is not charged upon his Posterity Ezek. 18.20 The Soul that sinneth it shall die the Son shall not bear the iniquity of the Father conform to that Law of God Deut. 24.16 The Children shall not be put to Death for the Father But yet by way of Covenant or Contract the Child as it may be interessed in the benefit of Obedience may contractively be sharer in the Guilt and Punishment of the Father's disobedience 2. For that by this his offence he contracted a Loss of that natural Disorder and Deformity which he propagated to his Posterity and the Constitution of Adam's posterity after his fall was of the very same Distemper and Corruption that Adam himself had contracted by his Fall. And herein the Case of Adam differed from all Mankind besides The best of men born of Adam hath the very same natural obliquity that the worst of Adam's Children hath and if he traduce his Nature to his Child he traduceth as good as he hath or ever had But that Nature which Adam had and was traducible to his Posterity before his fall though the same essentially which it was after in specie rationali yet by the Will and Dispensation of God had been accompanied with those Qualifications that had put them in the same Degree of Blessedness and Power of conserving it that Adam had So then the Sin of Adam ingaged his Posterity in the Guilt 1. By his personating of them 2. By his traducing Corruption to them hence Gen. 6.5 every imagination of the Heart of Man was only evil continually And as we by this see how Adams sin was the sin of his Posterity so upon the same ground we see the Justice of traducing the Punishment to his Posterity By the Law of Nature and Reason the power of the Father over his Child especially unborn is the most absolute and natural power under God in the World so that even by the Universal Rule among men especially where another Government is not sub-induced he had the power over his Life his Liberty and his Subsistence Man contracts for him and his Posterity in a part of loss and benefit his Posterity had a share in the latter in case of Mans Obedience and it is reason he should bear a part in the former in Case of Disobedience the sin of a publick Person draws a Punishment upon those whom he represents politically as David's sin in numbring the people much more when to the political Representation is added a natural inclusion And thus he visits the iniquity of the Fathers upon the the Children viz. when the Father contracts for him and his Children in a Covenant of benefit and loss as he shews Mercy unto thousands in them that love him the Children of Abraham notwithstanding their own personal Sins had the benefit of that Promise which was made to Abraham because by way of Covenant Gen. 17.2 Further the ingagement of the Creator to his Creature could not be farther than he himself pleased neither could Man or his Posterity challenge any farther degree or perfection of Being than God gave and upon those terms only upon which he gave it If he had resumed it of his own Will from Man or his Posterity after a day or a month Man had had that for which to be thankful in the enjoyment not to murmur in the loss But it was not so here the stock of Blessedness for Man and his Posterity is put into the hands of the Father while he had his Posterity within himself and not only so but put into his hands with a power to keep it for him and his Posterity the Father proves prodigal and spends his stock and if the Child was so he hath none to blame but the immediate Author of his Being This is enough most clearly to interest the Posterity of Adam at least in the Punishment of Loss of Happiness and Immortality and those outward Curses which followed upon Adam's Nature and the Creatures by Adam's Sin. 4. The time In the day thou eatest And this was put in Execution the same day as well as Sentenced the same day Shame and Guilt and Fear fell upon him Gen. 3.10 I heard thy Voice and was afraid because I was naked The same day shut out from the Vision of God and the place of his Happiness Verse 24. the same day set to his work to Till a cursed Ground with Labour and Sorrow Verse 23. So now we have seen Man what he was and what he lost The next thing considerable is How it could come to pass that Man having such a portion of Perfection both in his Faculties and Fruitions could be drawn to commit this Sin upon terms of so great and visible disadvantage to himself and his Posterity Negatively we say it was not any inherent Corruption or Malignancy in the Nature of Man or any defect of what was necessary to his perseverance in his Original righteousness for he was very created good Neither was it any Predetermination that did necessitate him to fall for God as he gave him a Power to obey his Will and a Law wherein to exercise that power did leave him in the hands of his own Will As to suppose him necessitated to obey what God commanded could not stand with Mans Liberty nor with the true Nature of Obedience which doth necessarily suppose an intrinsecal power not to obey so to suppose him constrained to disobey could neither consist with that Liberty nor the Purity or Justice of God God did foresee the fall of
that the very consideration of this Counsel of God is a means to effect its Execution in putting the Heart into such a frame as is fit to receive the impressions of God's Grace 2. In respect of those that are omitted The freedom of the Choice doth not in the least degree reflect upon the Justice of God He had no engagement to chuse any but might most justly have let all lie under that sin and misery into which we had cast our selves If God be pleased to chuse any it is the meer act of his Grace if he leaves any he leaves them but in that condition not in which he made them but in which they made themselves The act of his Bounty to the Elect is without any Injury to those he leaves for neither could challenge any thing but Misery as their Right 2. The Object of this Choice 1. Some are chosen from all Eternity The Elect according to the foreknowledge of God the Father 1 Pet. 1.2 The foundation of God standeth sure having this Seal The Lord knoweth who are his 2 Tim. 2.19 These are those for whom a Kingdom was prepared from the Foundation of the World Matth 25.34 These are they which by an eternal Contract between God the Father and his Son were given unto Christ I pray for them which thou hast given me for they are thine John 17.9 24. 2. But some and not all Many there are that are not so much as called and of those that are called yet few are chosen Matth. 22.14 And this preterition of God putteth them not in any worse Condition than it finds them And indeed this Counsel of God is not so much as the Potter's making some Vessels to honour some to dishonour he made all Vessels of honour and Men made themselves all Vessels of dishonour God in his mercy to restore some to become again Vessels of honour and this is without any injury to those that are omitted because they are continued to be but what they made themselves and what they most freely desire still to be Thy destruction is from thy self O Jerusalem 3. To what this Election or Choice is or what is the End of this Counsel of God There is a twofold End in the Counsel of God. 1. The End of Intention subordinate the good of his Creature adequate the good pleasure of his own Will or his own Glory as to shew his wrath and make his power known towards the Vessels of wrath fitted for destruction so to make known the riches of his Glory in the Vessels of Mercy which he had before prepared unto Glory Rom. 9.23 2. The End in Execution or rather the subject matter of this Counsel of God it is the whole Series and all the Conjunctures of all things conducing thereunto wherein the Counsel of God doth not per saltum step from the Fall to Glory but doth take in all those intermediate passages which he hath by the same Counsel appointed to be the Means of effecting it 1. The great Mystery of the Incarnation which is the Cardo negotii 1 Pet. 1.20 Who was fore-ordained before the foundation of the world but was manifested in these last times 2. Effectual calling by the Word and Spirit of God Rom. 8.28 Who are called according to his purpose 3. The effectual Assistance of the Spirit of God without which it were impossible these dry Bones should live Jer. 31.33 I will put my Law into their mind and write them in their hearts 3. Holiness and Sanctification John. 15.16 I have chosen you and ordained you that ye should bring forth fruit Ephes 14. Chosen to be holy Epes 2.10 Created in Christ unto good works which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them Rom. 8.29 30. Conformity unto Christ and all linked together Glory to Justification Justification to Calling Calling to Election 4. In whom or by whom he hath elected us Christ In this Consists the greatest Mystery that ever was and of most concernment to Mankind And because it is impossible to attain to the knowledge of it but by Revelation from God himself we must in this keep precisely to the Word of God where alone this Mystery is by God ordinarily discovered which is briefly thus much Almighty God in the Creation of Man did primarily intend the Glory of his own Goodness and the Happiness of his Creature and to that End furnished him with such Faculties and Rules as might conduct him to that Happiness Man being seduced abused his Liberty and by his Disobedience violated that Rule and consequently in himself lost the acquisition of that Happiness to which he was created Yet this could not disappoint the Purpose of God who with an eternal and indivisible act did foresee all Mankind in this miserable and lost Condition and appoint a way for his Recovery The way of Man's Recovery was by the Eternal Purpose Consultation or Contract as I may call it between the Father Son and Eternal Spirit resolved to be that the Son of God should assume the Nature of Man into one Person by an ineffable Generation and that he should Satisfie for the Guilt of Man's Sin by his Death And because that the bare Satisfaction for Sin could only exempt Man from the deserved Punishment of his Sin but could not restore him to that Happiness which he lost by the same Eternal Covenant the Righteousness and Obedience of Christ was to be accepted by God as the Righteousness of Man that as in his Sufferings he did bear the Sin of Man to make Satisfaction for the Curse deserved so by his Obedience imputed unto Man Man might acquire that Happiness that he lost To the end that this Satisfaction and Righteousness might be effectually applied for the Purposes above-mentioned Christ must after this Righteousness fulfilled and this Satisfaction made by his Death rise from Death ascend into Heaven and so continue as well the Mediator of Intercession as he was before of Satisfaction Though this Righteousness and Satisfaction were sufficient for the Sins of all Mankind and accordingly freely propounded yet it was effectual only for such as should according to those immediate Means that God had fore-appointed to be useful for that Purpose sue forth the benefit of it This is the sum of that great work of Man's Redemption which the Angels desire to look into 1 Pet. 1.12 and is discovered to Principalities and Powers by the Church Ephes 3.10 and therefore called The manifold Wisdom of God The Mystery of Christ Ephes 3.4 Ephes 6.19 The Mystery hid in God from the beginning of the world Ephes 3.9 The Mystery of God and of the Father and of Christ Colos 2.2 Colos 1.27 The Mystery hid from ages and generations but now made manifest to his Saints Colos 1.26 The Wisdom of God in a Mystery The Mystery of his Will 1 Cor. 2.7 The Revelation of the Mystery kept secret since the world began Rom. 16.25 The great Mystery of Godliness God manifested in
declared to be the Son of God with Power Rom. 1.4 And this Resurrection of Christ must of necessity follow his Satisfaction he had taken upon him our Sin and therefore must undergo the Wages due unto it viz. Death in the very instant of his Death he had compleated his Sacrifice and Satisfaction when he said upon the Cross It is finished John 19.30 Yet as it was necessary for him to lie under Death so long as might convince the Reality of it so it was impossible for him to lie longer the Debt was paid and he could be no longer detained Prisoner Acts 2.24 Whom God hath raised up having loosed the pains of death because it was not possible he should be holden of it And this Resurrection of Christ as it was by the Power of God 2 Cor. 13.4 He liveth by the Power of God Ephes 1.19 The working of his mighty Power or by the Eternal Spirit Rom. 8.11 The Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead so it was the effect of his Justice the Price of Man's Redemption being paid he was now by the Eternal Covenant of God to prolong his days And hence he is said to be justified in the Spirit 1 Tim. 3.16 Even that Spirit that raised him up from the dead did at the same time proclaim the compleatness of his Satisfaction and justifie the fulfilling of his Undertaking If Christ had not risen there had of necessity followed these two Consequences either of which had left us in as bad case as he found us 1. It had been then impossible that his Death had been a sufficient Sacrifice If he had been detained under Death the Guilt had still continued undischarged And hence 1 Cor. 15.17 If Christ be not raised your faith is vain ye are yet in your sins As if he should have said If there be no Satisfaction made for your Sins ye are still in them If Christ be detained under Death it is evident the Satisfaction is not made for the Curse of the Law continues undischarged and consequently the Guilt continues unacquitted and hence Christ's Sacrifice was justified by his Resurrection so are we Rom. 4.25 Who was delivered for our offences and raised again for our justification And this Resurrection of Christ was his Victory over Guilt and Death and Hell. 1 Cor. 15.57 The Victory given through Christ Colos 2.15 Having spoiled Principalities and Powers he then made a shew of them openly 2. It had been impossible that the Members of Christ could have the benefit either of the first or second Resurrection for by reason of that Union with their Head they partake of all those conditions whereof their head participates Crucified with him Gal. 2.20 Dead to sin and buried with him Rom. 6.3 6 8. Live with him Galat. 2.20 Rise together with him to newness of Life Rom. 6.4 Rom. 8.11 12. Planted unto the likeness of his Resurrection Rom. 6.5 Ascended with him Ephes 2.6 and shall rise again to eternal Happiness by virtue only of his Resurrection 1 Cor. 15. 1 Thes 4.14 9. That Christ after his Resurrection did Ascend up into Heaven where his humane Nature is cloathed with Power and Glory and Immortality The Death of our Saviour was attested by his three days keeping his Grave and the Resurrection was attested by all the Evidences that incredulity it self could require for satisfaction because the matter of the greatest difficulty to believe and which being admitted made the whole truth concerning him easily credible Therefore for the clearing of this truth as he spent forty days to conquer the Temptations of the Devil in the Wilderness so he spent forty days after his Resurrection to subdue the infidelity of mankind to the belief thereof And during that time used all the sensible Convictions that might be for the confirming of their belief that the very Body of Christ re-assumed his Soul and Life 1. The Body removed out of the Sepulchre Luke 24.5 Why seek ye the Living among the Dead 2. He appeared unto them and because those appearances were accompanied with some Circumstances that might breed jealousie that it was a finer substance than a Body as his sudden vanishing out of their sight Luke 24 3● His sudden presenting of himself among them when the Doors were shut Luke 24.36 John 20.19 Yet to convince that suspicion he exhibits his hands and his side eats with them converses with them about forty days Acts. 1.3 The Body of Christ being by the power of God made of an Angelical though not spiritual substance is taken up into Heaven Mark 16.19 Luke 24.57 Acts 16.9 where he sits at the right hand of Glory Acts 3.21 Heb. 10.12 Heb. 12.2 This was that which was figured by the High Priest's entring into the Holy of Holies Heb. 9.24 and extended to the very whole humane Nature of Christ the same that ascended is he that descended Ephes 4.9 This was the saying of Christ himself John 20.17 I am not yet ascended to my Father but go tell my Brethren I ascend unto my Father and your Father c. And this is that that our Saviour so often inculcates That the Son of Man shall come in his Glory c. Matth. 25.31 Matth. 26.64 To insinuate that that very humane Nature by which he is denominated Man should continue in immortality and appear the last day for the judgment of the World. And as by the power of God Man in his purity had been perpetuated to immortality and so he shall be in his Resurrection so by the power of God the Life of Christ's humane Nature shall be perpetuated to everlasting 2 Cor. 13.4 He liveth by the power of God. And this Body of Christ as it is filled with immortality so it is filled with Glory we shall be made like unto his glorious Body Phil. 3.21 10. That Christ having perfected the work of Man's redemption and ascended into Heaven exerciseth a threefold Office for the benefit of his Church and People 1. Of Power of Dominion This was that Inauguration of Christ in his Kingdom Psal 110.1 Sit thou at my right Hand Isaiah 53.10 Therefore will I divide him a Portion with the great c. because he hath poured out his Soul unto Death And therefore after his Resurrection he tells his Disciples Matth. 28.18 That all power is given him both in Heaven and in Earth and is that which is so often called his sitting at the right hand of his Father Ephs 1.20 and his making both Lord and Christ Acts 2.36 And this Kingdom Dominion and Power of Christ shall continue until the end when he shall deliver up the Kingdom to his Father that God may be all in all 1 Cor. 15.24 27. 2. The Communication of his Spirit The Power of the Spirit of God is in all his Creatures and especially in Men and all Creatures in their actings are but instrumental to the Spirit of God But by Christ the Power of that Spirit is communicated in a more