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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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people of Israel repenting of their transgressions and sinnes committed against God did oftentimes Josh 24. 22 23 24 25. Judg. 10. 16. 1 Sam 7. 3 4 5. 2 Chro. 15. 12. 2 Kin. 11. 17. 2 Chro. 23 16. 2 Ki. 23. 3. Neh. 10. 30 31. 2 Chro. 34. 31. renew their Covenant binding themselves to the Lord to be his people and to walke in Gods Law which was given by Moses and to observe and doe all the Commandements of God the the Lord and his Judgements and his Statutes with all their heart and with all their soule But Jehoshaphat Josiah Nehemiah and other godly Governours who were well acquainted with their infirmities and knew themselves utterly unable to fulfill the Law would never promise punctuall and exact obedience in hope thereby to deserve eternall life or to receive it from God as the reward of their perfect service nor flatter themselves as though they could stand before the Tribunall of Gods Justice in their own Righteousnesse when upon proofe sufficient they saw that no flesh could be justified in his sight Without question they understood that God of his free grace had promised to be their God and of his undeserved and rich mercy would accept of their willing and sincere obedience though weake and imperfect in degree which is in effect that the Covenant which God made with them and they renewed was a Covenant of grace and peace the same for substance that is made with the faithfull in Christ in time of the Gospell Sixthly the Covenant that God made with Abraham was the Gen. 17. 1. Covenant of grace as it is acknowledged but the Covenant made with Abraham is for substance the same with the Covenant made with Israel upon Mount Sinai the promise is the same and the things required the same For in that God promised that he would be God all-sufficient to Abraham to blesse him with all necessary blessings for this life and the life to come In Gal. 3. 8. this he promiseth freely and of his owne meere grace and favour to be their God and make them a Kingdome of Priests and an Exod. 19. 6 7. holy nation unto himselfe In that he requireth of Abraham that he walke with or before him in integrity In this he covenanteth that they should obey his voice and keep his commandements Deu. 26. 17 18. Jer. 7. 23. Deut. 10. 12. Jer. 11 3 4. 1 Ki. 8. 25. 2 Chron. 6. 16. 2 Chr. 17. 3 6. 2 Chr. 6. 14 16. Jer. 2. 2. And what is it to walk with God or before God but to walk in his Law Seventhly when God gave his Law unto Israel upon Mount Sinai he troth-plighted that people unto himselfe and himselfe unto them and that of his meere love not of any merit in them Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the love of thine espousals when thou wentest after me in the wildernesse in a Land that was not sowen Israel was holinesse unto the Lord and Ezek. 16. 8. the first fruits of his increase When I passed by thee and looked upon thee behold thy time was the time of love and I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakednesse yea I sware unto thee and entered into Covenant with thee saith the Lord God and thou becammest mine But if the Law were a perfect draught of the Law of nature Rainold Apol. Thes pag. 211. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Act. 15. 9. Rom. 10. 4. Gal. 3. 24. Christum vocat finem i. scopum legis quia lex sues sacrificiis ritibus c. Christum intendebat Zanch de Redem cap. 11. Thes 5. li. 1. The Decalogue written with Gods own hand upon two tables was an Epitome of all Ordinances appertaining to the Covenant exacting punctuall obedience in the least jot and title as necessary to Salvation and flashing out wrath against the least transgression without any intimation of repentance or hope of pardon the Lord did not at that time troth-plight himselfe unto them Eighthly the Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience and doth build these upon it as a foundation For the end of the Commandement is love love out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith unfained That love which the Law requireth either towards God or towards man must flow from a pure heart and faith it is that purifieth the heart Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse sake and the Law is a Schoole-master to bring us unto Christ But bring us unto Christ it could not if it did not point him out unto us or presuppose him as promised He is not the end of the Law if the Law did not direct to him and require faith in him He is the end of the Law as the Law leadeth and driveth us out of our selves and from all confidence in any works of the Law that by faith in Christ we might obtain righteousnesse It is not the property of a Schoole-master to beat and strike and not to direct or teach That the ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ direct unto him and require faith in him is a thing Exo. 34 27 28. confessed and acknowledged of all men Now the ceremonies are appendices of the Law especially of the first and second Commandements Exod. 24. 8. Heb. 9. 19 20 23. Pigh●disp Ratisp l. 2. as they were given to the Israelites And if they require faith in the Redeemer to come how should we thinke it to be a thing passed over in silence altogether in the Law The deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt was a type of our spirituall deliverance from the bondage of sinne and Satan by the power of Christ as appeares by the Ceremonie and Sacrament of that corporall deliverance the Passeover which was a Joh. 19. 36. 1 Cor. 5. 7. figure of Christ our Saviour Therefore in the first Precept the Mystery of our Redemption by Christ is taught and contained That particular mercy mentioned in that Precept taught the Israelites to expect spirituall Salvation in the Messiah promised In Psal 1. 1 2. Psal 119. 1 2. Scripture they are pronounced blessed who keep the Commandements and observe the Statutes and Judgements of the Lord but withall their blessednesse is said to consist in this that God Psal 32. 1 2. imputeth not sinne unto them that their sinnes be forgiven and transgressions covered The true worshippers of God then are happy not for their works but because God is pleased to accept them in Christ and to pardon their offences This is the true sense of those promises made to or spoken of them that walk in the perfect way and doe none iniquity And if life and Salvation be promised to them that observe and keep the Statutes Judgements and Ordinances of the Lord not for the dignity of the work but through the meere grace and mercy of God pardoning transgressions and sinnes then is faith in the
Messiah taught and commanded in the Law The true sense and meaning of the Law is to be gathered out of the writings of the Prophets for the same Spirit that breathed the Law informed them in what Jer. 4. 1 2 3. and 3. 13 14. c. Rom. 3. 21 22. The righteousnesse of the Law is testified by Moses and the Prophets c. Deut. 12. 32. and 31. 12. sense the Law was given and how to be understood But by the Exposition of the Prophets it is cleare that the Law as it was given by Moses did admit repentance and consequently require faith in Christ And if the Law did not command faith in Christ the Messiah then might not the Jewes beleeve in him for they were forbidden to adde any thing thereto or to take ought therefrom The Law was to the Jewes a rule according to which they ought both to live and worship God to which they might not adde the least ●ot or title of their owne heads so that either they must not worship praise pray unto and believe in God in and through the Messiah or else faith in him must necessarily be required The Decalogue if we precisely consider the things expressed therein doth not containe many things written of Moses but as it was a summe and abridgement of the whole Law whereunto every particular must be referred and from which as a fountaine it was derived it is a perfect rule whereunto nothing might be added And if without faith it be impossible to please God or to obtaine Salvation the Law which promiseth eternall life to them that keep it doth require faith as well as love or obedience For if faith be necessary to Salvation it cannot be that man a sinner should be justified if he could keep the Law because he cannot by future works purchase Redemption from former transgressions And from all this it followeth that the Law as it was given to the Jewes is for substance the Covenant of grace or a rule according to which the people in Covenant ought to walke The Law is and ever was a rule of life to men in Covenant Matt. 5. 18. One jot or title of the Law shall in no wise passe till all be fulfilled fulfilled in respect of unpartiall and sincere obedience for of that our Saviour speakes as is manifest by the words following He that shall breake the least of these Commandements and teach men so shall be called least in the Kingdome of Heaven except your righteousnesse shall exceed the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharisees that is righteousnesse of habite and practise which is that which the Law as it is taken in that place required Many things are objected to the contrary which must be cleared before we passe further As first it will be said that in the Law there is no mention made of Christ without which there is no faith And what the Law revealeth not that it commandeth not But in the Law there is frequent mention of the Messiah and perpetuall adumbration and representation of him and Heb. ●0 ●● and 8 5. his oblation in washings and sacrifices The Apostle Paul where he professedly handleth the chief heads of faith to wit that Christ ought to suffer and rise againe from the dead denieth that he Act. 26. 23. 1 Cor. 15. 3 4. said any thing besides that which the Prophets and Moses did foretell should come And our Saviour proved out of Moses that he must first suffer and then enter into glory And no marvell Luk. 24. 27 44 seeing Moses by divers types and figures shadowed forth the death and resurrection of Christ as shall be shewed after But in the Decalogue there is no mention of Christ Neither is Moses vvrote of Christ Act. 3. 2● and 7. 37. Joh. 1. 45. that they should beleeve in him Joh. 5. 4● Many Prophets just men desired to see his dayes Mat. 13. 17. Luk. 10. ●4 Iun. in Psal 122. ver 4. Abraham rejoyced to see Christ Joh. 8. 56. Gal. 6. 16. that absolutely true For when God saith he is their God who delivered them out of the Land of Egypt doth he not propound himself a Redeemer a spirituall Redeemer of them from the bondage of sinne and Satan whereof that deliverance was a type But he is not a Redeemer from spirituall bondage but in Christ Implicitely therefore in these words Christ is contained and proposed unto us which is done according to the condition of those times wherein as yet all things were infolded and wrapped up And it cannot easily be imagined how Christ should be revealed in the Ceremoniall Law if there be no mention of him expresse or implicite in these words As the Morall Law doth shew and discover sinne so was the Ceremoniall Law as a bill or bond put into the hand of God whereby they did acknowledge themselves indebted to his Divine Majestie and as the Ceremoniall Law was a Schoole-master to point out and direct us unto Christ so was the Morall a rule of obedience to them that be in Covenant with God which of necessity doth presuppose the revelation of Christ in some sort The Ninevites in the threatnings denounced against them by the Prophet Jonas did apprehend a promise of mercy to be implyed upon condition of their repentance which promise was made in Christ And is it any marvell then we should affirme the knowledge of Christ to be manifested in some sort in those words of the Law if we consider the words of the Law it doth command that we love God above all and our Neighbour as our selves but if we search out the meaning of the words we shall find it to be such a love as proceeds from faith and from what faith but in the Messiah That is the foundation upon which all works of love are builded In faith it self or with it there is a motion of the soule towards or a desire of the heart to obtaine the good promised joyned with an hatred of sinne and wickednesse which may be called inchoate love but true sound intire love whereby we affect God as our Father most neerely conjoyned to us and reverence him as the fountaine of all good things and benefits which of his meere grace he conferreth upon the children of his love and we daily expect from him even such as accompany life and salvation this is the effect of faith and followeth the apprehension and habitation of Christ in the heart Faith in Christ is not commanded in the Morall Law as it was engraven in the heart of Adam in the state of innocency but as it was given to Israel to be a rule of life to a people in Covenant it was presupposed or commanded For the generall substance of duty the Law then delivered and formerly engraven in the heart was one and the same but not in respect of the subject by whom the object to whom or the grounds whereupon obedience was required Confidence in God was required
is man intire and perfect made after the Image of God in Righteousnesse and true holinesse furnished not only with a reasonable soule and faculties beseeming but with divine qualities breathed from the whole Trinity infused into the whole man lifting up every faculty and power above his first frame and inabling and fitting him to obey the will of God intirely willingly exactly for matter and measure Whether this was naturall or supernaturall unto the first man is a question needlesse to be disputed in this place and peradventure if the termes be rightly understood will be no great controversie Only this must be acknowledged that this was Adams excellencie above all the creatures and that in the fallen creature this quality is supernaturall Unto this mutuall Covenant God added a seale to assure the protoplast of his performance and persisting in Covenant with him and further to strengthen his obedience with the obedience of his posterity which upon his breach with God was made void This Covenant of works made with Adam should have been the same unto his whole posterity if he had continued as in all after Covenants of God they are made with Head and Root reaching unto all the branches and members issuing from them Rom. 5. 17. 1 Cor. 15. 22 47. The proportion holding in Abraham to Christ till the Covenant be rejected in after commers But this Covenant was so made with Adam the root of all mankind that if transgressed his whole posterity should be liable to the curse temporall and eternall which entred upon his fall This Covenant was a Covenant of friendship not of reconciliation being once broken it could not be repaired it promised no mercy or pardon admitted no repentance accepted no obedience but what was perfect and compleat If Adam had a thought after his breach that he might have healed the matter it was but vaine presumption and least he should rely upon a vaine confidence in eating of the tree of life God drove him out of the Garden But this Covenant was not peremptory not the last nor unchangeable Woe to all the posterity of Adam if God should deale with them according to the sentence here denounced When man had plunged himselfe into misery it pleased the Lord to reveale his abundant Grace in the Covenant of Grace of which hereafter The end of this Covenant is the demonstration of Gods wisedome bounty goodnesse and justice both rewarding and punishing and it made way for the manifestation of his rich grace and abundant free mercy brought to light in the second Covenant Three questions may be moved here not unprofitable nor impertinent 1. Why in the Covenant of nature as it is called Quest. 1 God doth not expressely require Faith but Obedience and Love And the answer is That only by consequent Faith is required and not expressely in this Covenant because there was not the least probable cause or suspition why man should doubt of Gods love for sinne had not as yet entred into the world but in the Covenant of Grace it was contrary for that is made with a conscience terrified with sinne which could be raised up by none other meanes but by the free Promise of mercy and Faith imbracing the Word of Promise freely and faithfully tendered and to be received by faith only Againe in this Covenant is considered what in exact justice man doth owe unto God but he oweth justice and Sanctity but in the Covenant of Grace what God reconciled to man in his Sonne would offer and that is bountifully offered 2. How that Faith which presupposeth exact justice in the Quest. 2 Covenant of Nature differs from that Faith which is required in the Covenant of Grace Answ Faith which the exact righteousnesse of man in the Covenant of Nature doth presuppose agreeth with faith which is required in the Covenant of Grace in this that both are of God both is a perswasion concerning the love of God both begette●h in man mutuall love of God because if faith abounds love abounds languishing it languisheth and being extinct it is extinguished But they differ first in the Foundation For Faith which the Righteousnesse of nature presupposeth leaneth on the title of intire nature and therefore after the fall of Adam it hath no place for although God love the creatures in themselves yet he hates them corrupted with sinne No man therefore can perswade himselfe that he is beloved of God in the title of a creature for all have sinned nor love God as he ought But the Faith of which there is mention in the Covenant of Grace doth leane upon the Promise made in Christ Secondly when both are of God yes that faith which exact righteousnesse presupposeth is of God as they speake in Schooles per modum naturae But the Faith required in the Covenant of Grace is of God but per modum gratiae supernaturalis Thirdly the righteousnesse which the faith of nature begetteth was changeable because the faith whence it did flow did depend upon a changeable Principle of nature But the Sanctity which the Faith of the Covenant of Grace begetteth is eternall and unchangeable because it comes from an eternall and unchangeable beginning the Spirit of Grace But if the Faith and Holinesse of Adam was changeable how Object could he be secure or free from distracting feares the answer is the mind of Adam which was wholly fixed and set in the admiration and sense of Gods goodnesse could not admit of such thoughts such cogitations could not creep into it 3. Whether the Covenant of works stand on foot in the posterity Quest. 3 of Adam though not in respect of life and happinesse yet in respect of the things of this life To this some answer affirmatively because many of them from some remainders of the forementioned abilities did many good things for the good of bodies politicke wherein they lived Rom. 2. 13 14 15 16. which God retributes with good things in this life to some more to some lesse but to all some And it cannot be denied but some remainders of Gods Image or notions of good and evill are to be found amongst the Heathen and that these things in them who lived without the pale of the Church have been increased by culture of nature under Discipline by Arts and Exercises and might receive improvement by vicinity to the Church from which they might learne some things to enrich them in this trade And that God hath bestowed many and great blessings upon them pertaining to this life But it may be questioned whether these things come from the compact of workes or be gifts of bounty and Gods righteous administration for a time respiting the sentence denounced against man for breach of Covenant and vouchsafing unto him some temporall good things for the use and benefit of humane Society Yea it may be worthy consideration Whether these things be not granted unto them in Jesus Christ according to the Covenant of Grace which was made upon the very
at in all affaires great and small To walke with or before God then is to commit our selves wholly to his care and divine protection both in life and all our actions and assuredly to perswade our selves that he is the present and just beholder of all thoughts words and actions to reverence him as ever present and beholding all things to be ready at his beck and command studiously readily chearefully to receive his Commandements and at all times reverently to demeane and carry our selves before him to turne our eyes and fix all our senses upon the Lord and to attribute what good soever we enjoy to the Lord alone In briefe to walke before God is from a true and sincere heart to beleeve thinke and doe whatsoever God prescribeth and that in such manner as he prescribeth to attend upon the pure worship of God and to live holily justly unblameably as they are said to be just before God who are truly and sincerely just or such as be righteous by way of eminency Luke 1. 6. Luke 1. 15. in comparison of others what is done sincerely and elegantly is said to be done before the Lord. 1 Thess 1. 3. Luk. 1. 57. 1 Thess 3. 13. Thus Abraham was commanded and by the grace of God enabled to walke with or before God Gen. 24. 40. and 48. 15. But sometimes in a p●culiar sense to walke with God is to minister before God 1 Sam. 2. 32 33. and to walke before the face of God is to be understood in the same manner the Metaphor being taken as it seemes from two friends who well agree betwixt themselves and willingly take their journeyes together being at one and in good agreement And to goe before the Lord is spoken of John the Baptist in a peculiar sense Luke 1. 17. noting that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he went before him as an harbinger to prepare the way for the Lord as Kings and Princes have some that goe before them whom when we see presently we conceive the King himselfe is not farre absent In the old Testament there be two words translated perfect and they be much of the same use The first noteth that perfection to which nothing is wanting the other that which is compleat absolute The force of this word seemes to containe in it an heape of perfection but they are put promiscuously one for the LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 other as Josh 10. 13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a whole or perfect day is rendered by the Chaldee Paraphrast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lev. 23. 15. Septem Sabbatha 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Chaldee Paraphrast 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 They LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aq. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 are sundry wayes translated by the Seventy as simple or plaine Gen. 25. 27. Jacob was a perfect man that is simple without deceit blamelesse or without reprehension Gen. 17. 1. Be thou perfect LXX blamelesse Job 1. 7 8. and 12. 4. and 9. 20. without spot Psal 15. 2. Psal 119. 1 80. Lev. 1. 3. Psal 18. 24. to which 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is opposed Cant. 4. 7. Pro. 9. 7. Ezek. 43. 22. and 45. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 innocent without mulct or punishment Psal 18. 25. Just or righteous Prov. 28. 18. Josh 24. 14. 1 King 9. 4. Prov. 11. 1. whole or intire Ezek. 15. 5. Deut. 27. 6. Josh 8. 31. holy or godly Amos 5. 10. Prov. 2. 21. Prov. 29. 10. Prov. 10. 29. Innocent without fault or malice Psal 84. 12. Job 8. 20. Psal 37. 37. Psal 101. 2. Prov. 13. 6. pure Gen. 20. 5 6. single or sincere Prov. 10. 9. 2 Sam. 15. 11. true Deut. 32. 4. Prov. 28. 6. Isai 38. 3. Deut. 25 15. perfect Deut. 18. 13. Cant. 5. 2. 1 King 8. 61. and 11. 4. and 15. 3 14. and full 2 King 20. 3. 1 Chron. 29 9. and 2 Chron. 16. 9. and 19. 9. and 25. 2. 2 Chron. 15. 17. In the New Testament there be three words usually translated perfect The first signifieth that which doth consist of all its parts or members which are required to any worke so that nothing is wanting nor superfluous the Metaphor being taken from even or equall numbers which may be divided into equall parts 2 Tim. 3. 15 16 17. And the compound word signifieth ●o amend or repaire and set in joynt a part loose or slipped aside Matth. 4 21. Mark 1. 19. Gal. 6. 1. to fashion fitly and in comely order or proportion Heb. 10. 5. and 11. 3. Rom. 9. 22. to fulfill or furnish Act. 21. 5. Luke 6. 40. and to perfect and joyne or bind fast together 1 Cor. 1. 10. 2 Cor. 13. 11. 1 Thess 3. 10. 1 Pet. 5. 10. Ephes 4. 11 12. The LXX use this word to give the signification of two others that signifie to uphold or underprop and make equall Psal 17. 5. Psal 18. 34. The 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 second signifieth whole or intire 1 Thess 5. 23. Iames 1. 4. The third perfect Ephes 4. 12. Iames 1. 4 5. 1 Ioh. 4. 17 18. But all these in use import the same thing for substance A thing is said to be perfect three wayes 1. That is perfect which is intire in all integrall parts firmely knit together faculties and functions Animalia nascuntur 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Arist Hist Ani. l. 7. ca. 8. Psal 139. 16. Lev. 22. 21. Mal. 1. 14. Exod. 12. 5. when there is in all the parts of Sanctification something as lively creatures are brought forth perfect Infants compleat in all their parts and members are perfect In this sense perfect is opposed to that which is divided imperfect maimed as an Embryon not yet fashioned in the wombe is opposed to a perfect Infant Pharisaicall love as partiall lame and maimed extending it selfe to them that loved them only is opposed to perfect love which stretcheth it selfe to friend and foe Matth. 5. 47 48. an intire heart is opposed to an heart and an heart a double heart that makes a major part against it selfe 1 Chron. 12. 33 38. For in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that which is intire all things doe mutually answer one another doe conspire into one that is not intire which dissents from it selfe is not one and whole or in which there is division and disagreement Thus Christians sanctified by the Spirit of grace in every power of the soule the seeds of all vertues being ingrafted 1 Thess 5. 23. 1 Chron. 2● 9. in them and firmely compact and knit together so that freely willingly and upon advised deliberation they cleave unto the Lord and without partiality or willing neglect move to all duties of Piety Justice and Mercy are said to be perfect though they be not freed from manifold infirmities no grace of the Spirit in them be come to perfect growth An
word into the affections that it may sweeten their disposition and governe their motion 3. In all endeavours we must include prayer to God in the name of Christ as a chiefe associate for God ordinarily lets in sanctifying grace at the same gate at which honest hearted prayers goe out 4. The fourth meanes is for a man alwayes to possesse his heart with the apprehension of Gods presence and so to keepe it in his feare continually to walke with God as being in his eye and seeing him that is invisible This remembrance of Gods all-seeing presence will make men study to approve themselves before God in all their courses and to sticke unto him with their whole hearts Could the eye of a jealous husband prie into every privy corner of his wives heart she would be afraid to hide any strange lover in her secret affection If but a man nay if but a child could looke into our hearts we durst not deale doubly and deceitfully What God seeth us and shall we dare to dally with him Shall I give him part of my heart and reserve another part for the world for pleasure for sin How should not God find this out for he searcheth the heart and reynes and understandeth the secret cogitations of every soul 5. Another meanes is diligently to review all works of obedience and our affections in the doing of them and to observe what discomfort and trouble follows the maimed and defective performance of good duties And withall when we take our selves tardy in an holy in●●gnation to take revenge of our selves judging and condemning our selves before God The very thinking of the after reckonings we must come unto when we have done our work will make us take heed how we doe it The remembrance of the losse and punishment they shall sustaine whose works are not perfect before the Lord will stirre up respect to every Commandment For who is there that useth for all his actions at the dayes end to call himselfe to a severe examination as the hard Master doth his servants that must not needs in the very midst of his actions reason thus within himselfe anone all this which now I doe must very narrowly be looked over and if the reason why I doe it my affections in doing the worke it selfe be maimed halt or suffer defect in the parts thereof I shall smart for it O the wrings and secret pinches which mine owne guilty heart will give me yea the sentence which by Covenant I am tyed to passe upon my self in case my heart be partiall to the Lord and my work deformed If my worke be not perfect shall I not loose all my labour and be rejected with it Lastly It is good to meditate seriously on the joyes of heaven and the rich recompence of reward reserved for them that cleave unto the Lord with their whole hearts If the happinesse of Saints hereafter doe rightly affect and be soundly beleeved a man will be contented to part with all that he hath to purchase that treasure Whatsoever he hath laid next his heart he will abandon it with detestation rather then deprive himself of that eternall inheritance which God hath prepared To stirre up himselfe to strive after perfection more and more a Christian must first shame himself for his halting and make it odious ah the division of my heart the maimednesse of my service is so apparant that I cannot conceale it from my conscience I have lodged sinne vanity pleasure the world in the closet of my heart which should have been kept entire for the Lord. My purposes for good have been weake my resolutions variable oft-times by occurrences and occasions I have been drawn aside In holy performances I have served mine onw corrupt affections and doing what is right not done it with a perfect heart Mine affection to good hath been partiall base deformed In the greatest matters I have been remisse precise in lesser zealous in one carelesse in another ready to run according to inclination not looking to the direction of the truth I have sometimes been forward to heare not so carefull to meditate and make the word mine own eager and fiery against some particular notorious offences but not vigilant to bridle rash anger boysterous passions and indiscreet and idle speeches My love to the children of God hath neither been pure nor universall I have been apt to admire some dis-esteem others according as they carry themselves towards me and fit me in my humour If he be a cursed deceiver that having a male in his flock doth offer that which is halt and lame to the Lord how justly might I be confounded who have wickedly departed from my God and set my affections upon things of no value Will an husband accept of divided love in his wife will a Prince regard or take in good part that which is lame blind or sick for a present from his Subject O Lord I have dealt exceeding foolishly in tendering such spotted service unto thy Highnesse Secondly He must resolve to keepe himselfe more entirely to Psal 119. 69. 1 King 8. 48. the commandments of God for the time to come I have wickedly departed from my God but now I will returne and keepe his Commandments with my whole heart What can I tender unto They are blessed who have attained some perfection in the exercise of holines Every apprentice deemes him happie who hath the perfect skill of that trade wherein he is exercised 1 King 8. ●9 It is a great shame to leape from pale to sprig and with the moone to change our beliefs Thou art ashamed to be accounted an inconstant man his Majesty lesse then my selfe How can I for shame intreat his favour unlesse I cleave unto him with a perfect heart Can I desire God to be wholly mine unlesse I be wholly his Can I be so impudent as to intreat God to love me with a prime and conjugall love and give me leave to love sinne which he abhorreth to love other things above or equall with his Highnesse Can I looke to be married unto Christ in mercy truth and compassion if my heart doe not affect him above all and other things in and through him alone The Lord is a great King his service must be without spot or blemish His eye searcheth the heart and perfectly understandeth all secret motions a farre off and will give to every one as he knoweth his heart and according to his wayes Men of place looke to have their pleasure done in all things by such as attend upon them and shall I presume to call my selfe the servant of the living God when I doe his pleasure in part only and by halves My obedience cannot be perfect in degree so long as I live here but through the grace of God it shall be universall and that I might attaine absolute perfection in heaven I will strive after it in this life O Lord I have covenanted to sticke unto thy testimonies and by
2. 6. reason from those words to disprove the former limitation I see not For this word man designes the nature of man in generall but with relation to the person of Christ and is spoken of the nature of man as to be united to the person of Christ and alleadged by the Apostle to prove that the world to come is put in subjection unto him as man And if it be extended further then to Christ as man it must be restrained unto the faithfull to whom that which followeth may be applied by communication and fellowship with Christ Againe it is objected that Christs dominion over all is grounded on his death but if that be granted it is not necessary his death should be simply for all men For the Apostle speaks of Heb. 2. 6 7. Phil. 2. 9. Joh. 3. 35. Mat. 11. 27. Christs dominion not only over all men but over all things the Angels themselves not excepted but it was not requisite Christ should die for all things even for the Angels as they themselves confesse His power extendeth it selfe unto all creatures to whom he can command obedience at his pleasure and unlesse they performe it inflict punishment For he is made Lord of the world and all power is given unto him in heaven and earth Christ hath Soveraignty over all things and doth rule over all men the faithfull to life the unfaithfull to death Corvin in Molin cap. 12. § 26. This dominion of Christ stands well with reason is consonant to the Scripture but was not purchased by his death simply for them Lastly It will be said the Apostle threatneth punishment for not receiving or retaining Christ and exhorteth to care of it which argueth generall purchase or else such exhortations and threatnings would be without force Touching the thing it selfe it is freely acknowledged that the sufficiencie of Christs death and greatnesse of the price was such that God might salva justitia not only invite all man-kind to come unto Christ but also bring them unto faith and salvation by him if it had seemed good unto him in his infinite wisdome and the efficiencie of it so great that God doth seriously invite many that live in the visible Church to come unto Christ and bestow many spirituall gifts and graces upon them by their own fault unavaleable to whom he doth not give grace to repent and believe unfainedly But exhortations and threatnings argue not that generall purchase in question For the obstinate and rebellious they whose eyes are closed and hearts hardened least seeing they should see or hearing they should heare and be converted even they are exhorted to repent and threatned for their impenitencie but I have not found that the purchase was made absolutely for all such as such For some rebellious I can beleeve that Christ hath purchased not salvabilitie alone but faith regeneration pardon and salvation because it is written of Christ That he is ascended on high and hath led Psal 68. 18. Atque etiam rebelles captiv●● duxisti ut habitent eum I●h Deo captivity captive and hath received gifts for men yea for the rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell among them or as Piscator renders it thou hast led captive the rebellious that they might dwell with the Lord God But the maintainers of universall redemption have not undertaken as yet to proove generall purchase for all and every obstinate rebellious and treacherous revolter from the Lord. In this place the objection is more vaine for the Apostle might well speake of the application and possession of the fruits of Christs death when he exhorteth them that had heard and received the word of truth to retaine and keepe that which they had heard Exhortations and threatnings both are usefull to them who have not received the truth for God is pleased by such means to worke what he doth exhort men unto and to them who have received the truth and doe possesse the benefits of Christs death that they might continue and persevere And may we not argue more probably that seeing they are exhorted to take heed to the things they had heard therefore salvation had been preached unto them and in some sort received by them God so Joh. 3. 16 17. loved the world as we reade in the Evangelist that he gave his only begotten sonne that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life For God sent not his Sonne into the world to condemn the world but that the world through him Joh. 1 ● 47. might be saved And I came not to judge the world but to save the world Here the motive from which the gift of Christ is derived is The particle Who is not ever distributive of the subject to which it is attributed See Rev●l 2. 25 26. 2 Cor. 5. 15. common love The word World cannot be taken for the elect only for then it will be as if it had bin said God so loved the elect that he gave his only Sonne that whosoever of them believed in him should not perish The world that Christ came to save was that world into which he came and that comprehended both beleevers and unbelievers and in the same place it is divided into them that shall be saved and them that shall be damned and there should be no force of reasoning in the latter place if the world did not comprehend unbelievers under it Thus these passages are urged for universall redemption But the principall texts speake plainly Isa 54. 5. De●● totius terrae vocabitur Vt 1 Joh. 2. 2. Joh. 4. 42 Rupert Tuit in Joh. Mundum ●anè quem dilexit Deus humanum genus accipim●● id est vivos mortuos mortuos scil qui venturum in fide expect averint vivos qui in illum sive ex Iudaeis five ex Gentibus credituri erant of the daies of grace when God sent his Sonne into the world and when according to the prophesies and promises made before the Gentiles were to be called to the faith added to the Church and received into Covenant And the world is taken communiter indefinitè for the world as it is opposed to the Jewish Nation alone not universaliter pro singulis for every man in the world of what time or age soever or of this time in speciall The sence then is In the fulnesse of time God manifested so great love unto the world of Jew and Gentile not of the Jew alone That he gave his only begotten Sonne and in the Ministery of the Gospel seriously invited them to beleeve and entered into Covenant to bestow life and happinesse upon condition of their unfained faith on Jesus Christ As God loved Israel whom he chose to be his peculiar people under the old Testament so in the times of grace he extended his love to the world of Jew and Gentile And as amongst the Jews God manifested so much love to the body of that Nation as to enter
and charge which was now greater then God laid upon the first Adams shoulders To have put the prime right of the Covenant upon every particular had left occasion to infinite fals and withall opened a g●p to dis-union which the Lord abhorreth To have chosen out a meere creature and under the fall how could he have made satisfaction for sinne formerly committed or free himselfe from the bondage of Satan Therefore that the Promise might be sure to the Heires of Promise God puts this honour and charge upon Jesus Christ who was the seed to come to whom the Promises were made and in whom all the Promises for all his brethren are Yea and Gal. 3. 19. 2 Cor. 1. 20. Amen The parties who are to partake of the benefits promised are inclosed in the woman as the Mother of the good or rather under the former terme the womans seed For the word seed Gen. 4. 25. and 21. 13. is sometimes taken for one but often collectively which must be judged by the circumstances of the place Now in this Text by the woman is meant Eve and by the seed of the woman the posterity of the woman those scil which degenerate not into the seed of the Serpent which is proved The Papists reade it Ipsa contrary to all Hebrew copies and all circumstances of the Text. The Septuagint translates it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ch●ysast Hom. 17. in Gen. ha●h 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 though his Latine Interpreters hath made him say Ipsa Iren l. 3. advers haeres c. 38. seem●s to have read it Ipsum Andradius def l. 4. Comas l. 2. c. 15. Cajetan Steuch●● Cosmop in Gen. ● 3. Pagnine Ar. Montan●● Sacraboscus Francis Georg. tom 1. Pathemat probl 15. Felisius e●ucidat Gen. 17. 2. Gal. 3. 16. Decal praec 1. c. 49. Riber in Heb. 1. 15. de Tempt l. 2. c. 2. Perer. in D●● cap. Lindan de opt genere interpretandi l. 3. pag. 126 127. dislike the reading S●e Cypr. sect Adversus Iudaeos l. 2. c. 9. Panel Leo. Sermo 2. de Nativ Dom. Rainold praefat de Idol Rom. §. 6 by the opposition of seeds there made For as the seed of the Serpent must be taken collectively so also the seed of the woman that the opposition may be fit But by the Serpents seed are meant not only venomous beasts but wicked men 1 Joh. 3. 12. And the enmities fore-spoken of do pertaine to all the godly posterity of Eve even from the beginning so that the faithfull who lived before the manifestation of Christ in the flesh cannot be excluded but they must be understood under the name of the seed Christ peculiarly was the seed of the woman but the faithfull are comprehended under that title also the seed of the woman is to be taken collectively but so as it doth comprehend them only who are not the Serpents seed but opposite to them Christ properly is the seed by which the Promise is to be fulfilled the faithfull are the seed to whom the Promise is made The Promise is made to the faithfull and they are and shall be partakers of the Promise● but Christ only is the cause of the blessing to be communicated Christ and the faithfull are comprehended under one kind of seed spirituall not carnall but Christ the principall who in that seed doth so excell that in him he doth bring all the seed of Abraham according to the Spirit unto unity the faithfull are the seed also as they shall inherit the Promise in and through Jesus Christ The worke of Christ the womans seed is to bruise the Serpents head which is a phrase of speech fitted to the condition of the Serpent which is obnoxious to this hurt when he is compelled to creep on the ground that his head should be crushed and bruised by the feet of men And thereby is signified that Christ should destroy death and him that had the power of death that is the devill Heb. 2. 14. that he should destroy the workes of the devill Joh. 12. 3● 1 Joh. 3. 8. And this is true of the faithfull al●o by communication with Christ Christ hath bruised the Serpents head by his owne power but the faithfull overcome by the power of Christ The victory is common to all the seed but the author of victory in the seed is he who is the Head and chiefe and to whom as to an Head the unity of all the rest is reduced Ye have overcome the evill one Rom 16. 20. Luk. 11. 21. 1 Joh. 2. 13. By bruising the Serpents head we must not only understand the deadly wound given to the actors person and his instruments but the desolation of those workes which the Tempter had by the fall planted in the nature of the fallen creature as pride vanity ignorance lust c. 1 Joh. 3. 8. Ephes 2. 15. Now the nature of the fallen creature is such that if you continue his being and remove off him the workes of the Serpent you must necessarily bring in the contrary habits of Grace and goodnesse as of knowledge faith love feare and other Graces of the Spirit So that under this one blessing is comprehended whatsoever is necessary to spirituall blessednes For if Sathan be vanquished the curse of the Law is removed sinne is pardoned the Image of God repaired spirituall freedome and adoption obtained and everlasting happinesse shall in due time be possessed All these blessings which concurre to make up perfect happinesse are inseparably linked and the possession of any one is an undoubted pledge of the rest in due season to be injoyed So the Apostle saith God that cannot lie promised eternall life before the world began or rather Tit. 1. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mead. in Ap. 14. 6. ante tempora saecularia that is from the beginning of ages scil in that famous promise of the blessed seed It seemes somewhat harsh to interpret the word promised by decreed to promise and therfore it is better to referre it to this promise made from the beginning of the world And it is manifest by this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he meaneth nothing but what the same Apostle signifieth by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 15. 25. and nothing is signified thereby but what elsewhere the same Apostle doth intimate by this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ephes 3. 9. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 1. 26. and that notes the same that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 15. 18. as Ier. 28. 8. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 7. 24. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 13. 8. are the same But this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in it owne force and propriety doth not signifie from eternity Luk. 1. 70. Act 3. 21. But how must the Serpents head be bruised even by Christs suffering death to satisfie revenging Iustice which was offended by transgression under the former Covenant This is expounded under this terme of bruising his heele by the
that they believe in him that justifieth the ungodly and walke before him in all wel-pleasing This may be gathered because the promise of forgivenesse cannot be received but by faith and by faith it is that we overcome the world and vanquish Sathan the enemy of our soules Thus we reade that by faith the Elders obtained a good report and that by faith Heb. 11. 2 4 6 Abel offered unto God a more excellent Sacrifice then Caine by which he obtained witnesse that he was righteous and that by faith Enoch was translated that he should not see death and that Noah became heire of the righteoussnesse which is by faith which is an argument sufficient that they understood how faith was required in this Covenant or promise And seeing it is the property of faith to worke by love and to be fruitfull in all good workes of necessity if faith be commanded obedience is required though not as the cause of life yet as the way to life and the fruit of faith If we must beleeve in God we must also walke with God and worke righteousnesse To whom God gives to believe in him to them he gives to obey and doe all his Commandements as he doth to all that be effectually and internally in Covenant with his Highnesse and of whom he requireth faith in his Promise of them he exacteth obedience to his Commandement scil of all them that be outwardly in Covenant Thus we find that by faith Enoch walked with God or walked before God in all well-pleasing Heb. 11. 5. 6. Gen. 5. 22 24. And to what end is remission from sinne promised that man set free from the curse of the Law and stroke of revenging justice should wallow in profanenesse No but that he should serve God in holinesse and righteousnesse all the dayes of his life But how doth God require these things at the hand of the reasonable creature fallen unlesse he give them sufficient grace to beleeve if they will The answer is man in the state of Innocency being made after the Image of God had power both to beleeve and obey which being lost by sinne God is not bound to repaire And though he had not justifying faith because it argueth imperfection and sinne and could not loose what he had not yet by transgression he brought himselfe into such a state of bondage and wrath which could not be removed but by faith in Christ 2. When God in justice doth shut men up in ignorance and unbeliefe and with-hold from them both the graces of his Spirit and the meanes thereof his judgements are just though secret And if for the sinne of man God may justly cast off millions and not vouchsafe so much as outward meanes of Salvation unto them he may also exact faith and obedience upon promise of pardon and eternall happinesse when he doth not deliver them from thraldome and bondage spirituall whereunto they plunged themselves Was it injustice in God t●●●●mise acceptance to Cain if he did well when as yet he was not set free from the bondage of Sathan 3. God doth deny nothing to them that be outwardly in Covenant with his Highnesse that he is bound to give either in justice or by promise so that it will be in vaine for them to plead with God for if they come short of mercy promised it is through their own wilfull neglect or contempt 4. No man is hindred from beleeving through the difficulty or unreasonablenesse of the command or through his owne simple infirmity as being willing and desirous to beleeve but not able which inability deserves pitty but his inability is of corruption and wilfulnesse he doth not beleeve because he will not he is unable because he doth not covet or desire which is inexcusable 5. His inability to beleeve is joyned with the wilfull refusall of mercy promised and voluntary pursute of some inferiour good as more to be desired then Gods favour But of this more in the next degrees of the Covenant Under this Covenant outwardly administred were comprehended both Adam and his posterity even so many as he should dedicate unto God or should accept of the Covenant untill by wilfull departure from the faith and worship of God they discovenanted themselves and their posterity As the Covenant was after made with Abraham and his seed and is now made with beleeving Parents for themselves and their children after them so was it with Adam and those that should descend from his loynes They that lived under this administration of the Covenant did offer sacrifice unto God by divine institution and appointment as is manifest in the example of Abel and Noah We reade not Quemadmodum in terris quum famulu● aliquid agit quod non potest nisi juss● Domini n● est stultus omnes intelligunt eum habere mandatum etiamsi non dicat Bell. de Sacr. Conf. l. 2. c. ● indeed that God gave any Commandement touching burnt offerings or sacrifices but without question what they did was done by divine prescription What a faithfull servant doth on earth which he cannot doe but by command and appointment of his Master for that if he doe it we presume he hath the Commandement of his Master although he doe not say so But Abel and Noah faithfull Servants of God offered sacrifice which they could not well doe but by the Commandement of God therefore they were so commanded though so much be not expressed All Ceremonies which signifie grace are ordained of God or they be unlawfull But the Sacrifices were Ceremonies which signified grace It is written of Abel that by faith he offered a better sacrifice then Cain and that God had respect unto Abel and his sacrifice Of the sacrifice of Noah it is said that God smelled a savour of rest but in faith the sacrifice could not have been offered if it had not been prescribed it should not have been accepted if it had not carried the stamp of God For those Sacrifices were the types of Christ and seales of propitiation and remission of sinnes in and through the bloud of Jesus which must be perscribed or they cannot be accepted These Sacrifices then were instituted of God and may well be called seales of the Covenant as they did signifie remission of sins in and through the bloud of Christ our true Priest and Sacrifice Whether God was pleased to confirme his Covenant by any other visible signes or seales in that state of the Church is more then the Scripture hath revealed One question remaineth to be discussed scil Whether this Covenant of Promise was made in Adam with all and every Infant that should afterwards be born into the world There be some that hold the affirmative part viz. That all Infants whether borne of beleeving or infidell parents are comprehended under the Covenant of Grace according to the internall efficacy though not according to the externall administration so as they be truly and effectually partakers of the benefits promised therein
and graciously to reward it As God was pleased freely to make these promises to Abraham so also to confirme the same unto him by Oath By my selfe have I sworne saith the Lord. Wherein God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heires of Promise the immutability of his counsell confirmed it by an Oath that by two immutable things in which it was impossible for God to lie we might have strong consolation who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us Abraham was strong in faith yet was it not superfluous or altogether needlesse that God of his superaboundant love and mercy should adde his Oath to the former promise for the further setling and assurance of his servant Here that common saying may be of use Aboundant cautelousnesse doth not hurt nay it is of great profit and behoofe But this is to be further noted that God had respect to the posterity of Abraham For Isaack was present then to whom the promises were confirmed in his father which when both the one and the other ought to inculcate to their posterity it was a matter of no light moment that they might holily affirme that God hath confirmed them both by word and Oath In this passage Abraham believed God and it was imputed to Gen. 18. 6. Rom. 4. 3. Gal. 3. 6. Jam. 2. 23. him for righteousnesse both the spirituall good things promised on Gods part in the Covenant and the condition required on mans part are implied For the Apostle hence concludes that Abraham was freely justified by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus and in this is included all eternall and spirituall blessings which doe accompany each other For whom God doth justifie them he glorifieth In the first expression the thing required on our parts was obscurely implied and we had much to doe to find it out but in this passage it lieth bare Abraham believed c. This condition in Abraham the Apostle fully followeth against the Justiciaries of his and our times opposing it to the condition of works in attaining the blessings of Abraham strongly proving that this faith made Abraham the friend of God and a justified person having nothing to glory in this kind before God from any worke But seeing this text is so oft alleadged and pressed by the Apostles and so much controverted among men it is not amisse to handle the words more at large In the Originall word for word they run thus He beleeved the Lord or in the Lord and he imputed that to him righteousnesse The Sptuagint render it and the Apostles alleadge it thus Abraham beleeved God and it was imputed to him for righteousnesse The word believed imports he thought the words of God to be sure certaine stable and constant and signifieth such a beliefe as is opposed to fainting as it is said of Jacob when he heard the report of his sons that Joseph was alive his heart fainted because he believed not but when he believed his heart revived Gen. 45. 25 26. And David saith of himselfe I had fainted unlesse I had beleeved Psal 27. 13. So that it is a lively motion of the heart or soule assenting unto and trusting in the word of God as firme and stedfast Now whether you reade the word following in or upon God as Arias and Pagnine or God as the Apostles alleadge it it is all one for here to believe God as all circumstances doe shew is to put trust and confidence in God or with lively adherence to sticke or cleave Joh. 5. 24. unto the word of God And he imputed sc God or he in whom Abraham believed as the construction it selfe and words following manifestly convince or it was imputed as a Isa 22. 8. Mich. 1. 7. Ezek. 23. 47. Gen. 50. 20. 1 S●m 18. 15. Jer. 18. 7 8. 49. 30. 2● 11. Exod. 26 1. 39 32. Psal 40. 17. active verbes amongst the Hebrewes are expounded passively The word translated imputed is of large signification and imports to thinke reckon Rom. 6. 11. Psal 44. 22. Rom. 8. 36. devise purpose conclude Rom. 3. 28. resolve plot esteeme fore-see reason Mark 11. 31. consult of a matter how it may be brought to passe looke unto and take care of But more properly to the matter in hand it is to account unto a man or repute unto a man or reckon unto a man any thing to be his or to be good paiment and satisfaction for him in his accounts And that we may the better conceive the meaning of it in this text let us consider some other passages in which it is used Bloud shall be imputed unto that man he hath Gen 38. 15. 1 Sam. 1. 13. Lev. 17. 4. 25. 5● Numb 18. 27. 2 Sam. 19. 19 20. shed bloud This your heave offering shall be reckoned unto you as though it were the corne of the threshing floore Let not my Lord impute iniquity to me Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sinne Phineas stood up and executed judgement and so the plague stayed and that was counted to him for righteousnesse If the uncircumcised keepe the ordinance of the Law Psal 32. ● Psal 106. 31. Rom. 2. 26. Rom. 4. 11. 5. 18. Rom. 9. 8. 1 Cor. 4. 1. 2 Cor. 5. 19. ● Cor. 12. 6. 2 Tim. 4. 16. shall not his uncircumcision be counted for circumcision That righteousnesse might be imputed to them also Sinne is not imputed when there is no Law The children of the promise are counted for the seed Let a man so account of us as of the Ministers of Christ God was in Christ reconciling the world to himselfe not imputing their sinnes unto them I refraine lest any man should account of me above that he seeth in me At my first answering no man assisted but all forsooke me I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge Even as David also describeth the Rom. 4. ● blessednesse of the man unto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without works If he hath wronged thee or oweth thee ought put Philem. v. 18. Rom. 4. 4. that on mine account Now to him that worketh the wages is not counted by favour but by debt Here it hinders nothing that righteousnesse imputed should simply note out a righteousnesse of grace and acceptation whenas the word imputed joyned with others noting desert and debt may signifie the cleane contrary For example when it is said that God gives gifts unto the sonnes of Psal 68. 18. Eph. 4. 8. men all understand a free bestowing of good things amongst them but when he saith he giveth them the spirit of slumber Rom. 11. 8. eyes that they should not see eares that they should not heare then albeit the word giving in it selfe promiseth some grace yet being matched with such words it hath a contrary signification to that which naturally it signifieth when mention is simply of violent men and of raveners or
it can hardly be questioned whether that Covenant wherin we are bound to take God to be our Father King and Saviour be the Covenant of grace or no And by the same reason it is manifest that the Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience and doth build these upon it as a foundation It prescribeth faith in the first place and throughout namely that we acknowledge God the Law-giver to be the Lord our God the only true God and testifie that faith unto him by an universall and uniforme obedience to that whole Law and every title thereof The Law was given for this end that it might instruct us in faith which is the mother of a good conscience and of love Christ and faith is the end and soule of the Law not understood of the Jews The summe of the Law is faith or love and both these carry the same sence because though Moses Rom. 10. 4. Deut. 10. 12. Calv. on Deut. 10. 12. Rom. 14. 23. make mention of love and Paul of faith yet that love doth comprehend faith and this faith doth contain love Certainly Whatsoever is not of faith is sinne even all works though good in shew and for substance seeming agreeable to the rule of the Law if they issue not from faith they are vaine and hypocriticall if they be not quickned and enlivened by faith they are but the carkasse of a good worke And then if God command not faith in the Law in some sort why doth he command other things which without it are frivolous Our best works are unsavoury before God if they be not seasoned with faith For without Heb. 11. 6. faith it is impossible to please God Therefore the Lord in Covenant commanding the observation of his Law exacteth faith also without which the Law cannot be obeyed in an acceptable manner For when the Law is spirituall and commandeth true worship and invocation how can it be observed without faith Would the Lord have the Israelites remaining in infidelity to observe the Law Or did he ever allow man since the fall of Adam to come or have accesse unto him but only in the name of a Mediatour Or was life and salvation ever promised to man since the fall but upon condition of faith in the Messiah Indeed the condition of obedience which God requireth and man promiseth is the chiefest thing urged in the Law but free and gracious pardon wherein consisteth the happinesse of the Saints is therein promised and proclaimed They under the old Testament lightly following the letter mistooke the meaning not looking to the end of that which was to be abolished whereunto Moses had an eye under the vaile For they perceived not so well the grace intended by the legall Testament which the perfection of the morall Law whereof they could not but faile should have forced them to seeke and the imperfection of the typicall Law which made nothing perfect should have led them to find but they generally rested in the worke done as was commanded by either Law when as themselves were unable to do the one and the other was in it self as unsufficient to help them Fourthly after the giving of the Law a Covenant betwixt God and Israel was established by mutuall and willing consent Deut. 4. 31. Exod. 24. 3 4. the people promising to obey and doe whatsoever the Lord commanded In the Land of Moab Moses was commanded by the Deut. 29. 1 9. Lord to make a Covenannt with the children of Israel beside the Covenant which he made with them in Horeb. This Covenant they entred into was the same that God made with them upon Mount Sinai even the same that did containe the blessings and curses before pronounced But this Covenant was a Covenant of Grace not of works for God never commanded his people that he might set them on high above all people of the earth and that they might be an holy people unto him to avouch him to be their God by a Covenant of works Moses would Deut. 29. 12. never have exhorted the people by Oath to bind themselves unto the Lord in a Covenant of works for that had been to bind themselves unto the most dreadfull curses whereas they were to enter into this Covenant that they might prosper in all that they Deut. 29. 9. doe That Covenant is of Grace wherein the good things promised are all free and gratious but it was of grace that God promised Deut. 7. 12. 2 Chro. 6. 14. to be the God of Israel and therefore the Lord when he keepeth Covenant with Israel is said to keep the mercy which he swore unto their Fathers and when he established them for a people unto himselfe and is their God he is said to performe the Oath which he swore unto their Fathers to Abraham to Isaac and to Jacob. Deut. 29. 13. The Legall Covenant or Covenant of works cannot be renewed after it is once broken seeing it admitteth not repentance of sinne past but exacts perfect and perpetuall obedience But this Covenant made with the Israelites might be renewed after transgression did admit repentance When thou art in tribulation and Deut. 4. 30 31. all these things are come upon thee even in the latter dayes if thou turne to the Lord thy God and shalt be obedient unto his voice for the Lord thy God is a mercifull God he will not forsake thee neither destroy thee nor forget the Covenant of thy Fathers which he swore unto See Deut. 30. 1 2 3. 1 Ki. 8. 34 35. Psal 106. 45. Eze. 16. 61 6● Deut. 30. 11 12 13 14. Rom. 10. 6 7. them And if the Covenant after transgression may be renewed it is of grace The Law which is written in the heart of the spirituall seed is part of the Covenant of grace for the righteousnesse of faith speaketh on this wise This Commandement which I command thee this day it is not hidden from thee neither is it farre off It is not in heaven that thou shouldest say Who shall goe up for us to heaven and bring it unto us that we may heare it and doe it Neither is it beyond the sea that thou shouldest say Who shall goe over the sea for us and bring it unto us that we may heare it and doe it But the word is very nigh unto thee in thy mouth and in thy heart that thou maist doe it But the Law given by Moses is engraven in the heart of the spirituall Isai 51. 7. Psal 37 31. seed or people effectually in Covenant as they are called a people in whose heart is the Law No man will deny the Covenant which God keepeth with them that love him and keepe his Commandements to be the Covenant of Grace But the Covenant which Israel entred into is that which the Lord Dan. 9 4. Nehem. 1. 5. Deut. 7. 12. keepeth with them that love him and keepe his Commandements Fifthly the godly Kings and
people and languages are taken to be federates Eighthly The Law was weake unable to give life to purge Gal 3. 21. 4. 9. Heb. 8. 7. 9. 13. the conscience to pacifie the wrath of God and therefore to be abrogated when Christ was come whereunto it pointed and the new ordinances were set up and established but the Gospel containeth the unsearchable riches of God is the power of God Eph. 3. 8. Rom. 1. 16. Mat. 26. 28. ● Heb. 9. 14 15. 12. 24. to Salvation to continue for ever and the blood of the new Testament doth expiate sin purge the conscience and speak better things then the bloud of Abel Ninthly The federates under the old Covenant are compared unto an heire under age needing a Guardian Tutour or Schoolemaster little differing from a servant subject to the bondage of Gal. 4. 1 2 3 4. Gal. 4. 23 24 25. the Ceremoniall Law and servitude of spirit because the curse of the Law was more severely pressed and the bloud of Christ whereby freedome was purchased more covertly and sparingly revealed but the federates under the new are growne up unto a ripe age in Jesus Christ freed from the bondage of Ceremoniall ordinances endued with holy liberty partakers of the spirit of adoption whereby they cry Abba Father But of the priviledges of the federates under the new Covenant and the excellency of that Covenant in the Chapters following CHAP. XI Of Truth and Vprightnesse IT hath often been said that God accepteth true unfained and upright obedience and when the servants of God intreat mercy we find they alleadge the truth uprightnesse and integrity of their hearts to shew they were rightly qualified to make a faithfull plea for mercy therefore I conceive it will not be out of place here to shew what Truth and Uprightnesse is and then proceed to the doctrine of the new Covenant Truth the Septuagint renders righteousnesse for uprightnesse Gen. 24. 49. Isa 38. 19. 39 8. Josh 24. 14. Isa 45. ●9 Pro. 28 6. Pro. 8. 20. and integrity they put truth and for the paths of judgement they have it the paths of truth And in this sence to doe truth Joh. 3. 21. is not to doe perversly to doe right justice integrity as to deale perversly or unjustly Isa 26. 10. they translate not to doe truth In like manner lies or false-hood deceit and fraud they translate injustice as a false-witnesse is in them Job 27. 4. Deu. 19. 18. Levit. 5. 22. Psal 44. 17. Jer. 5. 31. Amos 8. 5. Hos 12. 7. Luk. 16. 9 11. Mal. 2. 6. 1 Pet. 2. 22. a witnesse of injustice or an unjust witnesse they sweare falsely is they sweare unjustly the Prophets prophecy false things unjust things they render it a false ballance is a deceitfull ballance or unjust ballance or ballance of injustice And injustice is opposed to truth and iniquity or unrighteousnesse put for falshood or deceit the Mammon of iniquity that is deceitfull riches is set against the true treasure which will not deceive Iniquity was not found in his mouth saith the Prophet that is guile or deceit The deceitfull the Septuagint translates the unrighteous and guilefull man Psal 43. 1. So that these foure Truth Uprightnesse Righteousnesse and Integrity doe signifie the same thing for substance 1 King 3. 6. and most certaine it is they be so conjoyned that where one is the other cannot be wanting But though the thing be one for substance that is signified by all these and they be sometimes used indifferently yet they note formall and distinct conceits and so may be considered Truth implieth or presupposeth these things 1. Knowledge of Gods will Truth of judgement goeth before Mat. 16. 12. truth of heart for corrupt doctrine is as sowre leaven that leaveneth the whole masse maketh the whole to savour of it 2. Soundnesse or solidity in grace opposite to those superficiall and shallow-planted graces that may be found in temporary Christians enduring but for a time This is truth in the reines or Psal 51. 6. inward parts which seasoneth the heart throughout and makes it true whereas the heart of the temporary is false and unsound because his graces are superficially or sleightly rooted 3. Sincerity or godly simplicity without fraud craft or guile where the in-side and out-side are one the heart and mouth equall and well consenting Truth is an ingenuous life without deceit and dissimulation Ephes 4. 15. Holinesse of truth is true or sincere holinesse Ephes 4. 24. To keepe the truth Isa 26. 2. is to imbrace true piety and true vertue without hypocrisie without lying or perfidiousnesse To serve God in truth Josh 24. 14. 1 Sam. 12. 24. is to serve God unfainedly from the heart according to his 1 King 2. 4. will To walke in the truth Joh. 3. 3 4. is to walke sincerely or in godly simplicity For truth is ingenuous void of simulation And in this sence some understand that of the Apostle Love rejoyceth in the truth that is love sincerely or in truth rejoyceth 1 Cor. 13. 6. with them that rejoyce Truth is opposed to lying and falshood and to empty shadows and rites and thus it may be applied to Eph. 4. 25. Joh. 4. 23 24. this purpose as noting a plaine simplicity contrary to lying and emptie shews To stay upon God in truth Isa 10. 20. is unfainedly and not in word to stay upon him To preach Christ in truth Phil. 1. 18. is sincerely to preach him A true heart is single Act. 2. 46. resolved not in some things but in all to walk with God or as the Lord hath appointed Thus a true Christian hath but one mind one intention one delight one face one tongue he is all but one man all the powers of the soule goe but one way 4. Purity or cleare shining innocency in all things free from the mixture of leaven in manners or doctrine The Apostle Peter writeth to the dispersed Jewes to stirre up their pure minds 2 Pet. 3. 1. what is that but minds furnished and seasoned with an holy perspicuity of truth Paul prayeth for the Philippians that they Phil. 1. 9. 10. might abound in all knowledge and in all judgement that they might be able to discerne things that differ that they might be sincere And the same Apostle testifieth to the Corinthians he was afraid of them lest their mind should be corrupted from the ● Cor. 11. 3. simplicity that is in Christ The word used by the Apostle in all three places signifieth properly something tried by the light of the Sunne And it is a Metaphor as some suppose taken from the custome of the Eagle whose manner is if we may beleeve those that write the naturall story to bring her young out of the nest before they be full fledge and to hold them forth against the full sight of the Sun the sight whereof those of them that can with open
to be in carriage and that behind his back which he is before his face A Christian man will be simple plaine and just in all his dealings inoffensive in matters of Religion loving and courteous in all his behaviour and what he would seeme to be towards others in their presence that he is inwardly and in their absence Ninthly True grace is permanent and sound Christians are constant in their course not shrinking in temptation not starting aside like a broken bow An hypocrite is wavering in respect of occurrences halting and divided in respect of objects in subjection to inordinate passions powerlesse in the performance of holy duties wise to hide and cover sinne glorious in empty shewes of Religion apt for advantage to swallow lesser sinnes without straining slippery in earthly dealings aiming at wrong ends in the profession of the truth indulgent to his beloved and darling sinnes desirous to seeme religious though he much neglect the power of godlinesse But the true Christian is unlike him in all these respects He is sound and constant a master of his affections a bungler to colour or guild over sinne desirous to be good and in every thing answerable to his profession faithfull in his place plaine in his dealings innocent and harmelesse as becomes the child of God the same man at home and abroad within and without openly and in secret in thought and discourse This is that truth and sincerity which the Lord accepteth and the godly strive after and obtaine in some measure There be three words in the Originall translated Right or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jer. 18. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Targ. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Upright The first comes of a root that signifieth to be right or prosper or to direct Eccles 11. 6. and 10. 10. and it is translated Uprightnesse Equitie Industry and Profit of the Septuagint Valour or Fortitude Sym. Swiftnesse or speed Eccl. 2. 21. and 4. 4. and 5. 11. Esth 8. 5. But it is not to be referred to the act of the mind or heart but to some externall work or deed which is so cunningly polished and skilfully contrived that nothing can more be desired in it or justly be thought wanting The second 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 word comes of a root that signifieth before or in presence as Prov. 4. 25. Let thine eye-lids look a Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aq. Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 straight before thee Prov. 5. 21. For the wayes of man are b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 before the eyes of the Lord. See Gen. 25. 21. And it is translated right equity and uprightnesse Prov. 8. 9. They are right to them that find knowledge Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 al. interp 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 better 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Amos 3. 10. They know not to doe right Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isai 59. 14. Equity cannot enter Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isai 30. 10. Prophesie not unto us right things Isai 26. 10. In the Land of uprightnesse he will deale unjustly LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Isai 57. 2. Each one walking in his uprightnesse or before him 2 Sam. 15. 3. Thy matters are good and right LXX 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The third word comes of a root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that signifieth to goe strait Prov. 15. 21. 1 Sam. 6. 12. Psal 5. 8. or to direct Prov. 3. 6. And this is the most usuall and common Thus God is said to be upright Thou most upright dost weigh the path of the Just Isai 26. 7. To shew that the Lord is upright Psal 92. 15. The word of the Lord is uprightnesse Eccl. 12. 10. Psal 33. 4. His Judgements are right or strait Neh. 9. 13. Psal 119. 128 137. God made man upright Eccl. 7. 29 and they that walk according to the word though they have their infirmities are said to be 1 King 22. 43. upright Psal 33. 1. Prov. 29. 10. It is diversly rendred by the Greeke Interpreters most commonly right or upright Psal 7. 11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Sym. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Dan. ●1 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 19. 9. Isai 40. 4. Mic. 2. 7. Prov. 11. 6. and 12. 6. Prov. 8. 9. Just Job 1. 1. Prov. 3. 32. Prov. 17. 20. Numb 23. 10. Pure Job 33. 3. Good or what doth please Deut. 12. 28. and 6. 18. and 13. 18. True or unblameable Job 2. 3. and 1. 8 Job 8. 6. and 41. 7. and 17. 8. Holy Deut. 32. 4. He that directeth his way aright Mic. 7. 2. Prov. 14. 11. and 15. 8. Prov. 2. 7. Valiant or couragious Prov. 15. 19. Holinesse Deut. 9. 5. Righteousnesse and simplicity 1 Chron. 29. 17. and Truth Isai 45. 19. And every where true and upright or upright and perfect and truth uprightnesse and integrity Deut. 9. 5. 1 Sam. 12. 23. Iob 1. 1 2. Psal 33. 1. 1 Ki. 3. 6. are joyned together as in substance noting the same thing So that uprightnesse cannot be taken negatively for the want of unrighteousnesse only but positively for truth and righteousnesse or rather that which is equivalent to both For the Greeke straight Luke 3. 4 5. the Syriac Interpreter useth a word that signifieth equall polished smoothed made even or pure comming of a root that is to polish or make smooth as Masius in Peculio and David de Pomis in his Dictionary teach And Ferrarius turneth the word pure sincere plaine which answereth to that of the Prophet Isai 40. 4. In Luke 8. 15. for a good and honest it hath the same word as if it was a polished heart made even and smooth or if you will a sound heart intire and well constituted and set in frame as amongst the Arabicks the root is to heale or restore whole or intire Upright or strait is opposed to crooked and oblique but to this present purpose That is upright which doth answer to the rule of the divine Law concerning the love of God and our Neighbour An upright man is he who by faith working by love doth study to conforme himselfe to the Law in all duties of holinesse sobriety justice or mercy An upright man is he who doth not writhe or bend himselfe nor as we say serve the time or humours of men but God and his conscience though nothing forbids him who serves God and his conscience to serve the time when it may be done without detriment to the glory of God or to his conscience A straight way is shortest betwixt the points Now the Word of God directeth the shortest and next way to Heaven and the man that walkes in that path doth walk uprightly And here it may be noted that to doe what is right 1 Joh. 3. 22. Joh. 8
● 29. 1 Thes 4. 1● Rom. 12. 1. in the sight of the Lord and what is pleasing in his sight are for substance one and the same and so a Exod. 15. 26. Deut. 6. 18. and 12. 25. and 13. 18. and 21. 9. 1 King 9. 12. Numb 23. 27. 1 King 9. 12. 2 Chro. 14. 15. translated by the Seventie The Scriptures mention an uprightnesse of heart and uprightnesse of life and conversation Uprightnesse of heart is an holy conformity of heart and soule to the good will and pleasure of God Thus we reade God saveth the upright in heart Psal 7. 10. The ungodly shoot privily at the upright in heart Psal 11. 2. Shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart Psal 32. 11. O continue thy righteousnesse to the upright in heart Psal 36. 10. All the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64. 10. Doe good O Lord unto them that be good and to them that are upright in their hearts Psal 125. 4. Good and upright is the Lord. Psal 25. 8. His will is the most certaine rule of equity and rectitude and our hearts are then upright when they stand in an holy conformity to the good pleasure of God This is sometimes expressed by the phrase of preparing the heart to seeke God 2 Chron. 19. 3. 2 Chron. 17. 6. or lifting up the heart in the wayes of God And herein is implied 1. An holy disposition of mind will and affections bending themselves to the good pleasure of God approving affecting exercising readily whatsoever he requireth I know also my God that thou tryest the heart and hast pleasure in uprightnesse As for me in 2 Chr. 29. 17. the uprightnesse of mine heart I have willingly offered all these things 2. A godly fervency of heart which maketh that in choosing and embracing good things it is equally more remisse or fiery and strong as the goodnesse of the things be greater or lesse of greater or lesse necessity and importance Thus an upright heart hath respect to every Commandement but his greatest care is about the weightie matters of the Law holinesse and justice and the more excellent the duty the more circumspect and forward is he in the performance of it The upright love thee or they love thee in uprightnesse Cant. 1. 4. that is with a strong and vehement love which is without dissimulation or guile Therfore saith David I esteeme all thy precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way Psal 119. 128. 3. An upright mind in all purposes and actions doth aime directly at the right marke and propose the true end by just and approved meanes A right end never hath a crooked rule leading unto it and a right heart doth neither look awry nor goe by a crooked rule Thus it is said of Ezra that he had prepared his heart to seeke the Law of the Lord and to doe it and to teach in Israel Statutes and judgements Ezra 7. 10. Act. 8. 21. And on the contrary when Simon Magus would have bought the gifts of the holy Ghost with mony Peter rebukes him saying Thy heart is not right in the sight of God Uprightnesse of life is a conversation way or course of life agreeable to the word of God in that calling or vocation wherein God hath placed us Thus it is said of David That he walked psal 37. 14. 1 King 3. 6. Prov. 14 2. Pro. 29. 27. Isa 26. 7. with God in truth and uprightnesse of heart And he that walketh in his uprightnesse feareth the Lord. He that is upright in the way is an abhomination to the wicked The way of the just is uprightnesse He that speaketh uprightnesse shall dwell with the everlasting burning This is expressed by the phrase of going with a right foot Gal. 2. 14. of ordering our steps aright Prov. 4. 26. and making even pathes for our feet Heb. 12. 13. Uprightnesse is an universall and constant cleaving to the Lord notwithstanding all occurrences that might divert or turne us out of the way All the upright in heart shall follow it or shall follow Isa 33. 14 15. him that is they shall cleave to the Lord and goe after him continually and never forsake him although they endure many and great evils for his names sake An upright heart is an heart fixed and established in respect of the object or maine businesse Psal 94. 15. Psal 78. 37. Jam ● 6. 7. opposite to a double divided mind wavering between two different objects unstable inconstant turned with every blast resolving now this anon that one thing to day another to morrow this in one company that in another And the pathes of uprightnesse are contrary to all crooked wayes which leade unto death Doe good O Lord unto those that be good and to them that are Pro. 21. 8. Prov. 2. 13 15. Psal 25. 4 5. upright in their hearts As for such as turne aside unto their crooked waies the Lord shall leade them forth with the workers of iniquity We may take the description of an upright man from the Psalmist in other words He hath cleane hands and a pure Psal 24. 4. heart and hath not lift up his soul unto vanity A pure heart is the foundation of an holy life and words and works as it were the building setled upon it Uprightnesse is chiefly commanded most highly esteemed and principally commended in the Saints For this cause Israel was called Jeshurun Deut. 32. 15. 33. 5 26. Isa 44. 2. because uprightnesse is the thing which God requireth in every true Israelite God that trieth the hearts of all th● sons of men taketh pleasure in uprightnesse The froward and unstable are abomination to his highnes 1 Chro. 29. 17. but such as are upright in their way are his delight The offerings of an upright heart are free and voluntary which God graciously tendreth lovingly accepteth The Sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination Prov 15. 8. Job 8. 6. Psal 25. 21. to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight God will not cast off the upright nor leave his soul in adversity If thou wert pure and upright surely now he would awake for thee and make the habitation of thy righteousnesse prosperous God will make it known that he doth regard the upright though for a time they be in affliction they shall not be forsaken or left desolate Marke the Psal 37. 37. end of the upright for the end of that man is peace The wicked may flourish for a time like the Bay-tree but suddenly they shall wither The upright may be kept under for a time but he shall bud and blossome apace in his season and his prosperity shall endure The upright shall dwell in the Land and the perfect shall Prov. 2. 21. Psal 37. 29. Prov. 14. 11. remaine in it The righteous shall inherit the Land and dwell therein for ever The Tabernacle of the upright
grace and love of God is the sole cause of what the Lord hath promised in this new Covenant and doth give according to promise And though the old and new Covenant be of the same nature and from the same fountaine yet the new Covenant is preferred above the old as farre as Sunne-light before Torch light in this that God who makes the Covenant hath more fully manifested the riches of his grace and superaboundant love in Jesus Christ the brightnesse of his glory and engraven forme of his person to the federates of the new Testament In the old Covenant the Lord had made it knowne that he was mercifull and gracious slow to anger aboundant in goodnesse But in the new Covenant he doth most familiarly reveale himself to be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus and in him the Father of the faithfull which most sweet and pleasant name doth breathe out unspeakable love and tendernesse Again though the ancient federates had some knowledge of Gods Attributes as an introduction to the Covenant of Grace yet they never knew that transcendency of Gods love which is brought to light in the new mentioned in these and such like passages of Scripture Behold what manner of love the Father hath 1 Joh. ● 1. bestowed upon us that we should be called the Sonnes of God God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Sonne that whosoever Joh. 3. 16. beleeveth in him should not perish but have everlasting life He spared Rom. 8. 3● not his own Sonne but delivered him up for us all how shall he not with him freely give us all things Who will have all men to be saved and to come unto the knowledge of the truth For there is one God 1 Tim. ● 4 5. and one Mediatour betweene God and man the man Christ Jesus They that seek to stretch this speech of the Apostle to the furthest doe yet confesse it is spoken of the times of the Gospell and that appeareth evidently by the reason of the Apostle confirming that saying that God will that all men be saved from this that God is the God of all men by Covenant and Christ the Mediatour of all men in Covenant and by the Gospell the Word of truth the saving truth of God was brought unto all in Covenant Besides in the old Testament the Doctrine of the Trinity of persons in the unity of the God head was more obscurely taught but in the new Testament we are clearely and most comfortably assured that the Father Son and holy Ghost do sweetly conspire to perfect the Salvation of the Faithfull and confirme unto them the promises of the Covenant There be three that beare record in 1 Joh. 5. 7. Heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one Goe ye therefore and teach all Nations baptizing them into the Matth. ●8 19. Name of the Father and of the Sonne and of the holy Ghost If in the mouth of two or three witnesses every word must stand why should a Christian question or doubt of the promises of mercy made in the Covenant assured unto him by the Father Sonne and holy Ghost God the Father promiseth that in his only begotten Sonne he will be a mercifull Father to all Believers that he will give him to them for a Redeemer accept his satisfaction for them give them his Spirit and bestow upon them righteousnesse and salvation The Sonne doth promise that he will be Redeemer of the faithfull by doctrine merit and efficacy that he will deliver them from the power of Satan bring them into perpetuall favour with God wash them from all the filthinesse of their sins and be unto them as he is made of the Father Wisedome Righteousnesse Sanctification and Redemption The holy Ghost doth promise that being redeemed by the bloud of Christ by the presence of his grace he will cleanse them from all inherent sinne and repaire the Image of God in them leade them into all truth and holinesse inable them to cry Abba Father seale them for the Lords and abide with them by his grace and comfort as an earnest of the inheritance untill the redemption of the purchased possession This Covenant was stricken with all Nations or the world in opposition to the Jewish Nation for now the promise made Gal. 3. 8. to Abraham was fulfilled In thee shall all Nations of the earth be blessed now the prophecies touching the calling of the Gentiles Isai 44. 6 and bringing them to the Sheep-fold of Christ were accomplished now the Apostles were sent forth to preach the Gospell to Matth. 28. 19. Mar. 16. 13. Rom. 1. 16. Col. 1. 6 23. Act 10. 45. every creature and God gave such a blessing unto the Word that by their preaching a great part of the habitable world was converted unto the faith Now upon the Gentiles was powred out also the gift of the holy Ghost Christ having broken down the partition wall betwixt Jew and Gentile and abolished in his flesh the enmity even the Eph. 2. 14 15. law of Commandements contained in Ordinances for to make in himselfe of twaine one new man so making peace The Covenant of promise was first made with Adam and his posterity not with him as the common parent of all mankind and so with every man that should come of his loines howsoever in all generations but with Adam as a beleever and his posterity untill by wilfull departure from the faith they should discovenant themselves and those that did proceed from them In like manner it was made with the Patriarchs with Noah and his posterity then with Abraham and his family afterwards with one selected Nation but under the Gospell all Nations are brought into the bond of the Covenant All nations I say but not every one in every nation nor every nation in all periods of that time For many nations have lived we know for a long time in infidelity without the Gospell without God in the world aliens from the Common-wealth of Is●ael and strangers from the Covenant of Grace And we find the Apostles to make a manifest 2 Cor. 6. 14 17. difference betwixt the people of God and unbelievers so that all in their dayes were not admitted into Covenant though the Gospell was preached unto them For they that be in Covenant are in phrase of Scripture the people of God that is such with whom God hath contracted Covenant and who in like manner have sworne unto the words of the Covenant God stipulating and they accepting the condition God as an absolute Soveraigne hath right and authority over all men but in a certaine and peculiar reason they are called his people who receive his Commandement and acknowledge him to be their Lord and Saviour And these be of two sorts for God doth make his Covenant with some externally calling them by his Word and sealing them by his Sacraments and they by profession of faith
into Covenant with them and vouchsafe unto them the meanes of grace but unto some he shewed more speciall love so as to call them effectually and make them heires of salvation In like manner in the last times or daies of the new Testament God manifested so much love to the world as it is opposed to the Jewish Nation as that in the ministery of the Gospell he entreated them to be reconciled and entered into a Covenant of peace with them but unto some he bare and manifested more peculiar love in that he called them effectually and made them heires of life Neverthelesse when these Texts be expounded of the daies of grace or times of the new Testament we must not conceive that all men now called Gentiles were in former ages of the Church utterly cast off and shut out of Covenant or that the gift of Christ to Jew and Gentile is so restrained to the daies of grace as that he was not given to the faithfull whether Jew or Gentile in all ages but that the transcendent love of God in giving his Sonne to die and in him receiving the world of Jew and Gentile into the new Covenant is peculiar specially after the distinction of Jew and Gentile to the times of the Gospel This might easily be confirmed both for the substance of matter and the sence of these passages out of their writings that be the stiffest maintainers of the point in hand See Vorst Parasc cap. 4. 7. Corv. in Mol. cap. 31. § 33. Exam. censur cap. 8. Vorst de Deo not ad disput 1. Now then let us compare their position and those texts together and see whether they consent or dissent one from another First The love wherewith God so loved man fallen as to give his Sonne to die I speake according to their opinion is common to all men an incompleate will and affection whereby God loved them as men or a volition and intention of being reconciled But the love mentioned in this text is a love speciall to some ages and some men not common to every man in all ages It was a speciall love whereby the Lord loved the Jewes as his peculiar treasure above all Nations of the earth in the time of the Law Deut. 7 6. 10. 14. 26. 6. 32. 8. 2 Sam. 7. 23. 1 King 8. 53. Psal 33. 12. 100. 3. 143. 5. And it is a speciall love not common to all ages much lesse to every man in every age whereby the Lord hath loved the world of the Gentiles in the daies of the Gospell to take them for his people And this love is true love though many pervert the grace of God to their owne destruction Secondly The world for which Christ died was man-kind considered as fallen in Adam for unbeliefe followeth the death of Christ cannot be precedent to it But here the world comprehends unbeleevers and impenitent in respect of their present state and not such only as may fall into unbelief and impenitencie even such impenitent and obstinate as the Scripture saith could not believe Joh. 12. 39. Thirdly The world for which Christ died as they teach doth comprehend every particular man of what estate or condition soever in what age of the world soever But the world in the text doth not comprehend all men of all ages nor every man of any age yet passed but the world as it is set against the Jewish Nation only not comprehending every particular man of the Jewes or Gentiles but so many and so considered as they give reason of that opposition Looke in what respects God is said to have chosen the Jewes to be his peculiar people in the time of the Law but now in times of the Gospell to love the world in opposition to that peculiar favour at that time manifested to them alone in that sence is the world of Jew and Gentile to be understood and so many comprehended under it Fourthly They say Christ died for the world in respect of impetration or acquisition of righteousnesse not of the application of his death But this world which God so loved was called by the Gospell and did enter into Covenant with God and God with them The world which Christ came to save was a world in Covenant and whereunto he preached peace and so the death of Christ was applied unto them by the word and Sacraments and received by them in respect of faith temporary and profession For when God enters into Covenant with a people and they accept the conditions and give up their names unto God they doe in a sort apply the death of Christ unto themselves and possesse some fruits and benefits thereof And therefore either these passages must be interpreted of Gods giving Christ to die for the world in a speciall manner or from them it may undeniably be concluded that he died not for all man-kind For that which in speciall love was given in peculiar manner to the world of Jew and Gentile in the times of the new Testament that is not the effect of common love given to all and every man in all ages but God of his speciall love to the world of Jew and Gentile in the daies of the new Testament gave Christ to die for them therefore of common love he did not give him to die for all man-kind of every age and condition And seeing God loved some and but some according to the true sence of these places so as to give Christ to die that whosoever believeth in him should not perish c. Yea some considered for the present in the state of impenitency unbelief and obstinacy and it may be given up unto a reprobate sence Deut. 9. 9. 32 28. whereas he cast off many Nations in former ages much more particular persons who never proceeded so farre continued so long Josh 24. 2. Psal 100 3. Isa 43. 8. 65. 1. Ezek. 16 3. in these sins as this world had done must we not of necessity acknowledge some free election or choice according to the good pleasure of God Certainly it cannot be concluded hence that Christ did equally lay down his life for all men without exception to purchase for them actuall reconciliation on Gods part It is here objected that this world doth comprehend many impenitent Synod de●ens sent Remonst circ Art 2 pag. 301. and unbelievers that shall not be saved and if Christ died for one that shall not be saved it followeth à pari that he died for all And it is true as many be externally in Covenant and have all out ward things common with the faithfull who be not true members of Jesus Christ so also this world opposed to the Jewish Nation called of God and admitted into Covenant doth comprehend many which in deed and truth be not lively members of Jesus Christ In like manner many indeed wicked men and ungodly living in the visible Church and under the externall Covenant are called the chosen
17. of John ver 21. That the world may beleeve that thou hast sent me Some by the world in that place understand the elect who then were dispersed abroad or them that were to be converted from infidelity to the faith But because the word world in the whole Chapter is taken in another sence it is most naturall in this place to understand it as before for men that be of the world not illightened or converted to the faith and the word Beleeve to be put improperly for to acknowledge or confesse The sense is that the world although unbeleeving although Maldonat in Joh. 17. 21. Iansen hac 136. an adversary to me yet seeing the great love and concord of my Disciples may be compelled to beleeve that is to acknowledge and confesse that I was sent of God that is that I am not as now it thinketh a seducer but that I am truly sent of the Father or that the Infidels may by experience be convinced to confesse my glory and be compelled to acknowledge and confesse that thou hast sent me a Saviour into the world This sense is so plain and easie that we need not seek any further for the meaning but if we grant it to be meant of true and sound faith it will not follow thence that Christ made intercession for every man in the world that he might beleeve For the world is usually taken for men in the world indefinitely and not simply for every man nor yet for the greater part of men in the world There went out a decree from Cesar Augustus that all the world should be taxed Luk 2. 1. but this cannot be extended to every nation much l●sse to every man The Vide Psal 118. 10. 1 Chro. 14. 17. Jer. 27. 7. Dan. 2. 38. Matth. 10. 22. Rom. 15. Rev. 18. 3 23. impure spirits goe forth unto the Kings of the earth and of the whole world Rev. 16. 14. All the world wondred after the beast Rev. 13. 3. The whole world lyeth in iniquity 1 Joh. 5. 19. He was in the world and the world knew him not Joh. 1. 10. Behold the world is gone after him Joh. 12. 19. The Syriacke Interpreter vulgar Interpreter and Mannus the Greeke Paraphrast adde the universall particle and reade it the whole world But if the world be taken for every man in the world we must conclude that every man in the world did follow Christ and that no man in the world did know him They aske again what is it the Intercession of Christ required Psal 2. 8. Aske of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine Inheritance Is it not for unbeleevers to bring them to the faith and doth not Christ intercede for the comming of Gods Kingdome as he taught his Disciples to doe There is therefore an Intercession of Christ for them that beleeve But here we cannot find that generall Intercession of Christ they speake of that every man might come to the faith by fitting meanes but for the most part ineffectuall The prayer required in the second Psalme Arminius Armin. Orat. de Sacerdot Chr. referreth to the prayer which Christ offered to the Father for himselfe according to the commandement and promise of the Father Aske of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine Inheritance to which Promise of the Father Christ having respect said Father glorifie thy Sonne that thy Sonne also may glorifie thee as thou Joh. 17. 2. hast given him power over all flesh that he might give eternall life to as many as thou hast given him And from this prayer are to be distinguished saith he those supplications which with strong cries and teares he offered to his Father in the dayes of his flesh by those he craved to be freed from his Agony by this he prayeth that he might see his seed and that the will of God might prosper in his hand But howsoever it be the prayer spoken of in that place is absolute certain and effectuall for what God there promised Christ prayed for in particular and he was heard therein and therefore it cannot be applyed to that generall Intercession of Christ which they would maintaine as every man may plainly see They further reply that this Intercession of Christ Joh. 17. pertaineth to the application of Christs death that Christ maketh Intercession for beleevers and by the world they are signified who did or would contemne and reject Christ offered to them in the word of his Gospell as the word world is used in many other places Joh. 1. 10. and 3. 19. and 14. 17. 16. 8 9. 14. 22. But if it pertain to the application of Christs death it followeth thence that the death of Christ shall be applyed to them who were given unto him of the Father that in speciall manner he might lay down his life for them seeing Christ offered up himselfe a sacrifice to the Father for them and them only for whom according to his office of Mediatorship he made speciall Intercession If by the world obstinate contemners of the Gospell be understood what shall we thinke of them to whom the word of reconciliation was never sent or Christ offered in the Ministery of the Gospell are they partakers of the benefits of Christs speciall Intercession or is the death of Christ applyed unto them If only contemners of the Gospell be meant by the world for which Christ would not pray why should it be interpreted of speciall Intercession seeing our Saviour as they confesse neither laid down his life nor made generall Intercession for such as such that they might be brought to the faith or be partakers of the merits of his death Our Saviour in that his prayer opposeth the world to them that are given unto him of the Father and as to be given unto him of the Father notes somewhat precedent to effectuall vocation and lively faith though every one that is given unto him doth or shall beleeve so the world notes a state antecedent to wilfull contempt though they that be of this world if they live under the Gospell will prove themselves contemners Joh. 6. 37. All that the Father giveth me shall come unto me and him that commeth unto me I will in no wise cast out saith Christ But to come unto Christ is to beleeve in him by effectuall vocation Joh. 1. 10. The world knew not Christ but they were the world before they shut their eyes against the light and refused Christ offering himselfe unto them Joh 3. 19. They are the world who are not given unto Christ are not his sheep his people his brethren believe not in him be disobedient cast out though they never stubbornly contemned the Gospell because the sound therof never came into their eares that light never shined amongst them And now for conclusion of this argument let this one thing be added that if we search the Scripture we shall find no mention of this two-fold Intercession of Christ properly
talis de persona peccatori● in per sonam aliam transire Neque etiam sapientia Dei quae in boc negotio max●mè elucet locum babitura videtur si per naturam nequisset Deu● aliter ●gere sapientia enim est electrix mediorum Luk. 24. 26 27. Joh. 10. 18. weighty For hereby God manifesteth his just indignation against sin and magnifieth the riches of his grace and tender compassion towards the sinner whom he is pleased to save from deserved wrath Seeing then God decreed not to deliver man from the sentence of death contracted by sin but upon satisfaction made to divine justice and the punishment of sin borne by his surety of necessity if Christ become a Mediatour to intercede for us he must undertake to pay our debts and in our roome and steed to suffer what we deserved And as he undertook so he hath borne the chastisement of our peace and by bearing the punishment hath taken away our sins That Christ did under-goe the punishment due to sinners as their surety is evident in this that he died for us For the wages of sinne is death Rom. 6. 23 5. 12. which God inflicteth upon none but either a sinner or him that beareth the person of a sinner 2 Cor. 15. 21 22. Col. 1. 14. Eph. 1. 7. Heb. 12. 2. Act 20. 28. Col. 1. 20. Rom. 3 25. Gal. 3. 13. Heb. 12. 24. wherefore seeing Christ in himselfe most innocent did suffer death it necessarily followeth that he suffered not in his owne but in our name and satisfied the Father for us Hitherto it makes that he suffered not any kind of death whatsoever but ignominious violent judiciall and accursed such as had the sence of Gods wrath adjoyned For no reason can be imagined why Christ should so much dread death which the Martyrs endured without feare but that for the time he was deprived of that refreshing of divine grace and favour wherewith they were sustained and confirmed 2 Cor. 4 8 9. in the midst of the fire Nor is there any thing whither we can referre those tremblings of Christ those groanes and teares in which he was heard that desire that the cup might passe from him but to the imposition of our sinnes and that conflict with the wrath of God which followed from it The death of our Saviour is referred to his unspeakeable love towards us Joh. 14. Rev. 1. 5. Gal. 2. 20. 13. Gal. 2. 20. Ephes 5. 2 23. But if he could not but I de because he was man he shewed his infirmity in dying rather then the fervour of his love For though Christ had loved us unto death Soc. lib. 3. de Serv. c. 5. yet had he not commended his love in dying if he dyed by condition of nature and had not being innocent laid downe his life for us mortall because sinners In like manner Christ is said to have Lev. 5. 1. 10. 17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gal. 5. 10. Ezek. 18. 20. 2 King 7. 9. Syr. portavit et ascendere secit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sursum serre Luk. ●4 51. sursum ducere Matth. 17. 1. Mar. 9. 2. Heb. 7. 27. Jam. 2. 21. Heb. 13. 15. 1 Pet. 2. 24. carried our sinnes and that in his body upon the tree which in usuall phrase of Scripture is to be punished for our sinnes and pay the punishment of our sinnes Isa 53. 11. 1 Pet. 2. 24. Lev. 19 8. 20. 17. 24 15. Numb 14. 23. 30. 16. Lam. 5. 7. Ezek 18. 20. And such a carrying is described to which smiting is adjoyned and the chastisement of our peace from the translation of all our iniquities upon Christ Isa 53. 5. For as it followeth in the same place immediately He was afflicted that is with the punishment due to sinne which was laid upon him Isa 53. 6 7. Whereunto those passages of Scripture might be referred which say that Christ made his soule an offering for sinne Isa 53. 10. that he that knew no sinne was made sinne for us 2 Cor. 5. 21. that he hath redeemed us from the curs of the Law being made a curse for us Gal. 3. 13. in which he must of necessity be understood who bears the punishments of sinne And it is against reason that he should be said to beare the sinnes of others who suffers by occasion of sin only unlesse he beare the punishment of sinne and take it upon himselfe For who will say he that suffers losse or dammage from the fault of a thiefe doth beare his sinne when he doth not beare the punishment of theft nor is punished for it The Evangelist translates this saying of the Prophet to corporall diseases which Christ did not receive upon himselfe it is by way of similitude and Math. 8. 16 177 agreement in the thing it selfe although the manner of the thing be diverse as also by such miracles Christ declared himselfe to be that Messiah who was to beare and by bearing to take away our sinnes Moreover the Scripture saith Christ died for our sinnes 1 Cor. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 15. 3. Gal. 1. 4. Heb. 10. 12. 1 Pet. 3. 18. and was delivered to death for our offences Rom. 4. 23. and for sinners and wicked Isa 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 53. 6. Rom. 5. 6. 2 Cor. 5. 21. to be made sinne for us 1 Pet. 3. 18. to suffer the just for the unjust which import that sinne was the efficient meritorious cause of the death of Christ for sinne cannot Psal 39. 12. Psal 73 18 19. 10● 17. Ephes 5. ● otherwise be the cause of punishment but by way of merit nor can any man be said to be punished for sinne but the meritorious cause of punishing is noted thereby And those particles applied to other things may note the finall cause applied to sufferings they point out the efficient or meritorious only and sinnes deserve affliction per modum paenae Lev. 26. 39. Deut. 18. 12. 1 King 14. 16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5. 38. Luk. 11. 11. Rom. 12. 17. 1 Cor. 11. 15. Heb. 12. 16. 1 Pet. 3. 9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth the impulsive cause Rom. 15. 9. 2 Cor. 1. 11. Ephes 1. 16. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 7. 4. 9. 2. 12. 5. 2 Cor. 12. 10. 1 Cor. 1. 4. Jud. ver 15. Sic Latini pro beneficijs gratias agere ulcisci pro injurijs c. Christ is said to die not only for our sinnes but for us not for our good alone but in our roome and steed as the phrase importeth and the one particle used signifieth opposition or subrogation and commutation Mat. 20. 28. Mar. 10. 45. Joh. 11. 50. Rom. 5. 7 8. 2 Cor. 5. 15. Heb. 2 9. 1 Pet. 2. 2. and the latter though sometimes it admit a different sence in this matter must be expounded by the former Rom. 9. 3. 2 Cor. 5. 20. 2 Cor. 5. 14. Christ
eternall person Christ man is fitly called God and therefore in Christ man the God-head is said to dwell properly but Christ his humane nature may not be said to be God and therefore the God-head is not so fitly said to dwell in the humane nature as in the person denominated after it that is in Christ man It will be said if Christ rule in the midst of his enemies then it must follow that he is every where present But that is spoken of the person and not of the man-hood alone Psal 120. 2 and what is said of the person doth not necessarily belong to both natures And Christs dominion over all things doth not require his corporall presence with all things According to his divine nature he is every Joh. 8. 58. Christ in respect of his divine nature is every where present without addition and by the spirituall and effectuall presence of his body he entreth the soules and strengtheneth the hearts of all the faithfull by the power of his grace and truth of his promise Ephes 1. 22. Col. 2. 10. 1 Cor. 11. 3. Christ is the first-borne Col. 1. 18. Heb. 1. 2 4. and heire of all things 2 Cor. 4. 5. where present according to the effects of his providence wisdom power grace c. according to his humane nature he is essentially in heaven and now only in heaven but his dominion is over all things which doth not denote soveraignty power or omnipresence essentially divine but glory and Majesty next to divine as was said before The fift thing implied in Christs sitting at the right-hand of the Father is that in speciall he is the head of his Church The word Head is used sometime for one who in any kind is before or above other and in this large sence Christ is the Head of the Angels that is their ruler or governour one that is above them man is the Head of the woman Christ of man God of Christ But here it signifieth that Christ is so over his Church that he is in a more neare and communicative sort conjoyned with it as the head is with the body and members Looke as the King hath a more intimate and aimiable superiority over his Queen than over any other subjects so it is here in Christ our King whose dominion towards his Church who is his Spouse and Queen is more aimiably tempered and nearly affected then is his government over any other Christ hath taken the selfe same holy and spirituall nature with his Church standing as well of that which is outward and sensitive as of that which is inward and intellectuall The faithfull are united to him here by knowledge of faith and love such as Christ himselfe by his Spirit begettet● in them as hereafter by glorious light and love He doth communicate unto them that whole life of grace and glory which they have or shall receive direct and move them outwardly by his signifying will and inwardly by sending his Spirit which moveth with efficacy to that which he sheweth and followeth them with aides inward and outward least their faith should be prevailed against Though betwixt the faithfull and Christs naturall body there be a bodily distance yet the Spirit which commeth from Christ doth so joyne them with him that nothing commeth twixt him and them The same life of grace for kind which is in Christ is in every faithfull soule as fire Caro Christi no● vivificare dicitur quatenus pro mundi vit● data est fide a nobis manducatur hoc est per modum merite simul ejusmodi efficaciae quae Mediatoris personae propriè conveniat Regnat ubique Deus homo divina humana volunta●e ac nutu Filius vivit prop●●r Patrem Joh 6. 57. F●lius à Patre habet aeternam increatam vitam ut homo quoque ab codem beatam cre●tam v●●am habetiut Mediator vitam beatam nobis carnis suae troditione in mortem acquisivit divina sua virtue in nobis effccit Gal. 3. 14. See Field of the Church 1● 5. cap. 16. Sobin art 3. de person Christ p. 316. Petimus ut Christus nobis velit dare spiritam idque●am humana quam divina sua voluatate tamen non petimus ut secundum humanam naturam ab ipso procedat incorda nostra Sp S seu ut humana per ipsum operetur nam etiam processio Sp. S. operatio per●psum est proprium Dei talis opus alterum ad intra alterum ad extra sed ut etiam humana voluntate velit hanc operationem Dei tatis suae in nobis Heb. 1. 6. Ps 9. 7. Phil. 2. 10. Rò 14. 11. Isa 45. 23 Joh. 5. 22. Psal 2. 12. Joh. 3. 15 16 17 18 36. Joh. 6 29 12. 36. Joh. 14. 1. Rom. 15. 12. Mat. 12. 21. Act 7. 50 60. 2 Joh. 3. Rev. 1. 4 5. Ro. 1. 7. Syr. 1 Co. 1. 3. 2 Co. 1 2. Gal. 1. 3. Ephes 1. 2. 2 Tim. 1. ● kindled fire kindling is of the same nature And Christ having fulnesse of grace and glory for all his he cannot be but most ready to communicate with them every thing for their good Christ is the Head of his Church both as God and man our Mediatour For did not the divine nature which is the fountaine of all life naturall and supernaturall dwell with this man or humane nature we could not be enlightned or quickned by it He that eateth my flesh saith Christ hath life in him not that this nature of it selfe can doe these things but because the Deity dwelleth with it and by it as by an instrument joyned personally with it doth properly and efficiently worke these things The omnipotent power of creating spirituall graces is not in the humane nature nor the omnipotent actions which doth produce them doe or can proceed from the humane nature but they are in God only and from God in and with the humane nature working to the same effects according to its property Christs humane nature hath both understanding and will whereby he worketh and is an internall instrument united within the person of God the Son as a part of his person in a sort yea more neerly but these divine works which Christ the Mediatour worketh the chiefe vertue and action which properly effecteth them is in God not communicated really with the other nature though it doth worke them in this humane nature with it yea and by it as a most nearly conjoyned instrument which within the person of God the Son hath his proper actions concurring in an inferiour degree of efficiency to that which the divine nature properly and principally worketh God worketh graces Christ man worketh the same the divine nature createth them and infuseth them into this or that man through Christ man being as a common conceptacle or conduit-pipe The humane nature worketh them not by powerfull creating them but by taking away sin and the cause that so way
Isa 11. 9. 54. 13. 1 Cor. 1. 7. 2. 10. Joh. 6. 45. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Gen. 32. 28. 1 Sam. 8. 7. Eph. 6. 12. We wrestle not against flesh bloud i. only Act. 16. 14. 2 Cor. 3. 3. 1 Pet. 1. 22. God would pour upon his Church in the times of the new Testament leading the true children of the Church by his blessed Spirit into all truth necessary to Salvation The like phrases are often found in the Scriptures and the adversitive particle but is not put as exceptive But the anointing i. e. except as Internall Vocation is by the operation of the holy Spirit effectually inabling and drawing us unto Christ enlightening the minde and affecting the heart seriously to attend unto those things which are spoken and by faith to receive and embrace them The principall effectuall help which maketh us come to God by belief is the efficacy of Gods Almighty power put forth to such a purpose It is the effectuall working of Gods Almighty Col. 2. 12. 2 Cor. 4. 6. power which worketh faith in us to Salvation For the creating us anew in Christ is a greater work then giving us our naturall being in Adam and therefore may not be ascribed to any power Eph. 2. 1 ● Luk. 11. 20 21. 2 Tim. 2. 26. that is not almighty We are by nature dead in trespasses held in bondage by strong powers whom none but the strongest can over-master and by believing we are lifted up to an estate without comparison more excellent then that we formerly received Now to bring us from death under which so mightie ones held us captive to such a life so unutterably glorious must needs be the working of a power almighty Besides so farre as God doth intend to work so farre he putteth forth his omnipotent power to accomplish but God doth intend to make some before other some come unto him and therefore he doth stretch out the arme of his power to effect this A second helpe is the inward illumination and inspiration wrought in us by which as the internall Word God speaketh in the minde The conversion of sinners is called a conviction because it is ever wrought in us as we are reasonable and intelligent creatures the judgement going before is a directour what to chuse And if the minde of man were once throughly and in a spirituall manner as it becommeth such objects as are altogether spirituall Saepe fit intellectus haefitanter suadeat langu●de tractet habenas aut serò se ad judicandum applicet Ex adverso autem app●titus sensitivi saepe tam subitò tam ve●ementèr concitantur ut voluntas ab apperitu impulsa jubeat intellectum judicare ex appetitus imperio possessed of the adequate goodnesse and truth which is in grace and glory and did consider it deliberately both simply and in comparison with all circumstances and occurrences and did apply it selfe to the serious study and thought thereof the heart could not utterly reject them For humane liberty is not a brutish but a reasonable thing it consisteth not in contumacy and head-strongnesse but in such a manner of working as is apt to be regulated varied or suspended by the dictates of right reason and sound judgement if things be distinctly and certainly apprehended seriously weighed and pondered and the thought thereof preserved and kept in minde The only cause why men are not willing to submit unto Christ is because they are not throughly and in a manner sutable to the excellency of the things inlightened in their minde or they do not keep in minde and thought that which they are taught in the Word of God and cannot but know in some sort Sinners in Scripture are said to be blinde simple fooles brutish inconsiderate that remember not that God seeth them consider not their latter end Sinne is naturall not as nature is opposed to liberty but as nature is opposed to grace 1 Cor. 2. 14. Rom. 8. 5 6. 2 Cor. 11. 3. 1 Tim. 2. 14. And so without Christ and the holy Spirit miserable naturall or mortall men would sinne necessarily The first sinne of our first parents was an errour for whatsoever a man doth will that he doth will being led by certaine reason true or in appearance The act of willing hath in it power whatsoever is subject to it but it selfe is not in it own power but in the power of reason whose prescript it doth follow whether right or corrupt Necessarily good is preferred before evil and the greater good certainly and distinctly knowne before the lesser but not knowne it is not preferred with equall necessity The will is not enforced of it selfe either of it selfe resting or forcing it selfe for then it should be in act and not in act at one and the same time The will cannot bend into the direct contrary for then it might most willingly desire that condition which it certainly knew to be most miserable and refuse that condition which it most certainly and distinctly knew to be most blessed Nor suspend of it selfe without the intervention of the understanding because the will is not the mistresse of it selfe but of the act which depends upon the inferiour faculties They that know the gift of God they desire and aske it They that know God they will trust in him and keep his Commandements They that are taught of God they will come unto Christ and faith is lively and operative to draw men to the love of God and obedience to his precepts The act of judgement is two-fold 1. Naturall which ariseth from the sharpnesse or dulnesse of the wit 2. Morall according to which we are said to be good or evil There be two degrees of light 1. Directing and warning what is to be done 2. Perswading and effectually moving forward the will This perswasion is when with such force the holy Spirit doth accompany the Gospell that it doth not only move the will but move it effectually or throughly and beget faith lively and well rooted What the minde judgeth best the will followeth as best what lesse good the minde judgeth the will lesse followeth What the In singulis quidem actionibus vo●unt as regitur ab intellectu in genere tamen volu●tas ī aperat intellectui nec intellectus fe applicat ad intelligendum nisi jussut à voluntate 1 Cor. 8. 2. Joh. 17. 3. minde judgeth the greatest evil the will doth specially avoid what it judgeth a lesse evil it doth lesse flee from Unlesse the minde should either wax idle or loose the reines to the affections which must needs proceed from a most grievous and most perverse errour of the minde right reason would obtain not only by right but in deed and fact the command and rule Knowledge is either prescribing or perswading true and solid either of the thing simply considered or of the thing considered with all his circumstances certaine just
fall by whom not only the Elect but the whole frame of nature received benefit In the Creation God raised up a great Family wherein he made Adam the head and all his posterity inhabitors the frame of Heaven and Earth his domicile the creatures his servants this Family upon the fall was broken up the present Master turned out of his imployments the children beggered the servants returning to God their Soveraigne and the whole frame of the creature under attainder God thus defeated if I may so speake sets up a second Family called the Family of Heaven and Earth wherein Jesus Christ the womans seed Gen. 3. 19. is the Head Matth. 28. 18. Ephes 1. 22. Col. 1. 19 20. stiled the second Adam Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth and that with more soveraignty and amplitude of injoyment then ever the first Adam had the whole creature being put under his feet The children of this Family are the faithfull who be the adopted Brethren Rom. 8. 15. sometimes called the seed The servants be the wicked and those of two sorts either such as attend in the Church neerer about Christs person or further off as in farme-houses for baser offices The creatures by a second ordinance from their former Master free are stated upon Christ though they beare some brands of evill from the sinne of their former Master the domicile though not so beautifull returnes to Christ So the Covenant of Grace entring upon the breaking up of the former Family investeth Christ with all as purchaser of the lost creature from revenging justice and as Lord of all things in Heaven and Earth who freely conferreth the heavenly inheritance upon the adopted sonnes and brethren and vouchsafeth earthly blessings and some spirituall common gifts to the wicked which may be called servants both those that more neerly attend his person and those that be further off But of this more hereafter CHAP. III. Of the Covenant of Grace in generall THe Covenant of Grace is that free and gracious Covenant which God of his meere mercy in Jesus Christ made with man a miserable and wretched sinner promising unto him pardon of sinne and eternall happinesse if he will return from his iniquity embrace mercy reached forth by faith unfained and walke before God in sincere faithfull and willing obedience as becomes such a creature lifted up unto such injoyment and partaker of such pretious promises This Covenant is opposite to the former in kind so that at one and the same time man cannot be under the Covenant of workes and the Covenant of grace For he cannot hope to be justified by his perfect and exact obedience that acknowledging himselfe to be a miserable and lost sinner doth expect pardon of the free mercy of God in Iesus Christ embraced by faith The condition of the Law as it was given to Adam excludes the necessity of mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne and the necessity of making a new Covenant argues the former could not give life Heb. 8. 7. He that is under grace cannot at the same time be under the law and he that waites for Salvation of meere and rich grace to be vouchsafed cannot expect it as the deserved wages of his good worke from justice and not of mercy What then may some say is the Law abolished or is it lawfull for Christians to live as they list because they be not under the Law Not so but the Law hath a double respect one as the unchangeable rule of life and manners according to which persons in Covenant ought to walke before and with the Lord and in this sense it belongs to the Covenant of grace The other as it is propounded in forme of a Covenant as if he must necessarily perish who doth neglect or breake it in the least jot or tittle and in this sense the Covenant of grace and workes are opposite The matter of Evangelicall precepts and of the Morall Law is the same but the forme of promulgation is not the same the rule is one but the Covenants differ Materialy the Law that is the matter and argument of the Law as a rule stands in force but if formally it did continue as a Covenant there could be no place for repentance nor for the promise of forgivenesse or mercy reaching to the pardon of sinne or the quickning of them that be dead in trespasses The Covenant of workes is of justice the Covenant of grace is of grace and mercy which cannot agree and take place in one and the same subject for he that try●th justice perceiveth not the force of mercy è contra This might be common to both Covenants that God doth freely give reward because he was not bound unto it by any Law and that is done of grace which we are not tied unto by Law but in the Covenant of Grace he gives the reward of meere and rich grace and that to the creature which hath deserved Hell This Covenant entered immediately upon the fall and so may be called a Covenant of Reconciliation not of friendship At the very instant when God holy and true was pronouncing judgements upon the severall delinquents in the fall setting downe his sentence against the Tempter both in his instrument the Serpent and the maine Author Sathan he brings in the party who should execute the same in which execution is unfolded the Covenant of grace for the Salvation of the creature that the Serpent had destroyed that God might be knowne in wrath to remember mercy At the very fall and before judgement was pronounced upon the delinquents that were tempted the Covenant of mercy was proclaimed that by vertue of this Covenant God might prevent further waste of his creature which Sathan might haue wrought upon his new advantage in following his good successe and that the tempted might have some comfort before their judgement least they might have been swallowed up of wrath The Authour of this Covenant is God considered as a mercifull and loving Father in Iesus Christ as a Creator he strooke Covenant with Adam in his integrity as a Saviour he looked upon the poore creature plunged into sinne and misery by reason of sin The cause that moved the Lord to make this Covenant was not any worth dignity or merit in man for man never had ought which he had not received and now by his disobedience had deserved to be cast off for ever neither was the present misery into which he had cast himselfe the cause that moved the Lord to receive man into favour for the Angels more excellent by creation as miserable by their fall he hath reserved in chaines of darknesse The sole moving cause why God made this Covenant Bonitatis Dei donumest quod liberare nos voluit quod verò aliter quam tali modo liberare nos noluit p●ccatorum nostrorum est meritum was the love favour and mercy of the Lord. Deut. 7. 7 8. Only the Lord had a delight in thy fathers
to love them saith Moses and he chose their seed after them Deut. 10. 15. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine owne blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live Ezek. 16. 6. See Ezek. 36. 32. Luk. 1. 54 55 72 78. This Covenant was made in Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sinne no Covenant can passe betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected no pardon obtained but in and through a mediatour Sinnes were never remitted unto any man no man was ever adopted into the place and condition of a sonne by grace and adoption but in him alone who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Jesus Christ true God and true man Act. 4 12. Heb. 13. 8. The fall of our first parents was occasion of this Covenant for Actus nostrae liberationis divinam bonitatem causam habet Sed aliter actus exactio nimirum paenae per modum satisfactionis ca●sam eam habet quae ad paenam exegendam irritat id autemest peccatum God suffered him to slip that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery Mercy freeing man from misery possible might have taken place before transgression and have discovered it selfe in the preventing of sinne and so of misery but it seemed good unto Almighty God to suffer misery to enter upon man through sinne that he might make knowne the infinite riches of his mercy in succouring and lifting him up being fallen and plunged into a state remedilesse and desperate for ought he knew Besides we may conceive that Almighty God upon just grounds disdaining that such a base creature falne by pride should thus upon advantage of the mutability of his reasonable creature ruinate the whole frame of the Creation and trample the glory of his name under foot and withall looking upon the Chaos which sinne had brought and would further make if some speedy remedy was not provided did out of his infinite and boundlesse love to man though in the transgression and just and dreadfull indignation against Sathan give forth this gratious and free Covenant The forme of this Covenant stands in gratious and free promises of all good to be repaired restored augmented and a restipulation of such duties as will stand with free grace and mercy For the Covenant of Grace doth not exclude all conditions but such as will not stand with grace The Covenant which was made of free love when we lay wallowing in our blood and which calls for nothing at our hands but what comes from and shall be rewarded of meere grace is a Covenant of grace though it be conditionall So the pardon of sinne is given of grace and not for workes though pardon be granted only to the penitent and faith on our part a lively unfained and working faith be required to receive the promise The parties covenanting are two and so are the parts of the Covenant the one in respect of God the other in respect of man A Covenant there is betwixt God and man but no mutuall obligation of debt for such mutuall obligation is founded in some equality but there is no equality between the Creator and the creature much lesse betwixt the Lord most high and man a sinner If man had never offended God almighty who gave him his being and perfection could not have been indepted unto him but as he was pleased to recompence the good of obedience in the creature that never deserved punishment much lesse can God be indepted to the creature that hath offended who can neither endure his presence nor beare the weight of his wrath nor satisfie Justice nor deliver his soule from the thraldome of sinne The obligation of man to God is of double right and debt but it is of rich grace and abundant love that God doth bind himselfe unto man God doth promise in this Covenant to be God and Father by right of redemption and Christ to be Saviour of them that beleeve in God by him and in faith do yeild sincere uniforme willing upright and constant obedience unto his Commandements Jer. 31. 31 32 33 Deut. 31. 6. Ezek. 36. 25 26. Gen. 15. 1 4 5. Jer. 32. 40. 33. 9. Heb. 8. 10 11 12. Isa 54. 7. Hos 2. 19. The stipulation required is that we take God to be our God that is that we repent of our iniquities believe the promises of mercy and embrace them with the whole heart and yeeld love feare reverence worship and obedience unto him according to the prescript rule of his word Repentance is called for in this Covenant as it setteth forth the subject capable of Salvation by faith but is it selfe only an acknowledgement of sinne no healing of our wound or cause of our acquittance The feeling of Luke 13. 5. Act. 11. 18. 2 Cor. 7. 10. Ezek. 18. 27● paine and sicknesse causeth a man to desire and seeke remedy but it is no remedy it selfe Hunger and thirst make a man to desire and seeke for food but a man is not fed by being hungry By repentance we know our selves we feele our sicknesse we hunger and thirst after grace but the hand which we stretch forth to receive it is faith alone without which repentance is nothing but darknesse and despaire Repentance is the condition of faith and the qualification of a person capable of Salvation but faith alone is the cause of Justification and Salvation on our part required It is a penitent and petitioning faith wherby we receive the promises of mercy but we are not justified partly by prayer partly by repentance and partly by faith but by that faith which stirreth up godly sorrow for sinne and enforceth us to pray for pardon and Salvation Faith is a necessary and lively instrument of Justification which is amongst the number of true causes not being a cause without which the thing is not done but a cause wherby it is done The cause without which a thing is not done is only present in the action and doth nothing therein But as the eye is an active instrument for seeing and the care for hearing so is faith also for justifying If it be demanded whose instrument it is It is the instrument of the Soule wrought therin by the Holy Ghost and is the free gift of God In the Covenant of workes workes were required as the cause of life and happinesse but in the Covenant of grace though repentance be necessary and must accompanie faith yet not repentance but faith only is the cause of life The cause not efficient as workes should have been if man had stood in the former Covenant but instrumentall only for it is impossible that Christ the death and blood of Christ and our faith should be together the efficient or procuring causes of Justification or Salvation When the Apostle Rom. 3. ●● 22 28 30. Gal. 2. 16. 17. Rom. 4. 2 3. writeth that man