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A29699 Paradice opened, or, The secreets, mysteries, and rarities of divine love, of infinite wisdom, and of wonderful counsel laid open to publick view also, the covenant of grace, and the high and glorious transactions of the Father and the Son in the covenant of redemption opened and improved at large, with the resolution of divers important questions and cases concerning both covenants ... : being the second and last part of The golden key / by Thomas Brooks ...; Golden key to open hidden treasures. Part 2 Brooks, Thomas, 1608-1680. 1675 (1675) Wing B4953; ESTC R11759 249,733 284

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Though he should meet with opposition from all hands yet nothing should daunt him nothing should dismay him no afflictions no temptations no sufferings should in the least abate his courage and valour 3. The Divine Assistance he should have from him that called him This is set down in two expressions vers 6. I will hold thy hand I will keep thee Divine Assistance doth usually concur with a divine call when God sets his servants on work he uses to defend and uphold them in the work 4. The work it self to which Christ was called This is expressed under divers phrases vers 6 7. To be a light to the gentiles to open the blind eys to bring out the prisoners from the prison and to be a covenant to the people In these last words you have two things observ●able The first is one special part of Christ's office He was given for a covenant 2. The persons in reference to whom this office was designed A Covenant of the people One end why God the father gave Christ out of his bosom was that he might be a Covenant to his people Christ is given for a Covenant both to the believing Jews and Gentiles As he is the glory of the people of Israel so he is a light to lighten the Gentiles In this Scripture last cited you have the father's designation and sealing of Christ to the Mediatorial imployment promising him much upon his undertaking it and his acceptation of this office and voluntary Heb. 5. 4 5. 〈◊〉 40. 7 8. Joh. 10. 17 18. submission to the will of the father in it Loe I come to do thy will And these together amount to the making up of a Covenant between God the father and his son for what more can be necessary to the making up of a Covenant than is here expressed But The Third proof This Prophe●y is applied to Christ 〈◊〉 2. 2● A● 13. 47. Gal. 3. 16. Heb. 3 4 5. And many of the Jews do conses●● that this pla●● i● to be un●erstood of Christ only 〈◊〉 1. ●1 22. 〈◊〉 2. 10 11. Heb. 1. ● The third Scripture is that Isa 49. 1. Listen Oh Isles unto me and hearken ye people from far the Lord God hath called me from the womb from the bowels of my mother hath he made mention of my name These words are spoken in the person of Christ he tells us how he is called by his father to be a Mediator and Saviour of his people Jesus Christ would not take one step in the work of our Redemption till he was called and commissionated by his father to that work God the father who from Eternity had fore-assigned Christ to this office of a Mediator a Redeemer did both while he was in the womb and as soon as he was come out of it manifest and make known this his purpose concerning Christ both to men and Angels Christ did not thrust himself he did not intrude himself at random into the office of a Redeemer No man takes Heb. 5. 4 5. this honour to himself but he that is called of God as was Aaron So Christ took not upon himself the office of a Mediator a Saviour but upon a call and a commission from God The summ is that Christ took up the office of a R●deemer● by the ordinance of his father that he might fulfil the work of our Redemption unto which he was destmated vers 2. And he made my mouth like a sharp sword in the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and made me a polished shaft in his quiver hath he hid me Christ having avouched his fathers calling of him to the work of man's Redemption he gives you a relation in this verse of God's fitting and furnishing of him with abilities sufficient for so important a work together with his sustaining and supporting of him in the performance of the same Here are two similitudes or comparisons 1. That of a sharp sword That of a bright and sharp arrow to See Eph. 6. 17. Heb. 4. 12. Rev. 1. 16. cap 6. 2. shew the efficacy of Christ's Doctrine The word of Christ is a sword of great power and efficacy for the subduing of the souls of men to the obedience of it and for the cutting off of whomsoever or whatsoever shall oppose or withstand it Christ was not sent of the father to conquer by force of arms as earthly Princes do but he conquers all sorts of sinners even the proudest and A● 2. 37 41. Act. 4. 1 2 3 4. Act 16. 29 35. 2 Cor. 10. 4 6. stoutest of them by the sword of the spirit which is the word of God as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the margin together Having spoken of the efficacy of Christ's Doctrine he tells us that he will take Joh. 7. 30 44. Luk. 22. 53. 〈◊〉 27. 62 to 6● and cap. 27. 2 6. A●t 2 23 24. or as some render the words thou art my servant to Israel or for Israel that is for Israel's good for my peoples behoof Few saith Sasb●nt to this day doe consider Christ's labour in preaching prayer fasting and suffering a cruel death for us for if they did they would he more affected with love towards him that loved them so dearly Isa 6. 13. cap. 8 18 c. care of the security of his person In the shadow of his hand hath he hid me and in his quiver hath he hid me God the father undertakes to protect the Lord Jesus Christ against all sorts of adversaries that should band themselves against him and to maintain his doctrine against all enemies that should conspire to suppress it God so protected his dear son against all the might and malice of his most capital enemies that they neither could lay hold on him or do ought before the time by God fore-designed was come Christ was sheltered under the wing of God's protection till that voluntarily he went to his passion neither could they keep him under when that time was once over though they endeavoured with all their might to do it Now in the the third verse God the father tells Jesus Christ what a glorious reward he should have for undertaking the great work of Redemption And said unto me thou art my servant O Israel in whom I will be glorified God having called Christ set him apart sanctified him and sent him into the world for the execution of the office of a Redeemer He doth in this third verse encourage him to set upon it and to go on chearfully resolutely and constantly in it with assurance of good and comfortable success notwithstanding all the plots designs and oppositions that Satan and his Imps might make against him vers 4. Then I said I have laboured in vain I have spent my strength for nought and in vain yet surely my judgment is with the Lord and my works with my God In these words Jesus Christ complains to his father of the incredulity wickedness and
is a foolish thing for any to think of keeping both Christ and their lusts too it is a vain thing for any to think of saving the life of his sins and the life of his soul too If sin escape your soul cannot escape if thou art not the death of thy sins they will be the death and ruin of thy soul Marriage is a knot or tye wherein persons are mutually limitted and bound each to other in a way of conjugal separation from all others and this in Scripture is Prov. 2. 17. called a Covenant So when any one marries Christ he doth therein discharge himself in affection and subjection from all that is contrary unto Christ and solemnly Covenants and binds himself to Christ alone he will have no Saviour and no Lord but Christ and to him will he cleave for ever Psal 63. 8. Acts 11. 23. But Secondly This marriage-union with Christ doth include John 1. 12. Acts 5. 31. Coloss 2. 6. Weigh well these Scriptures Psalm 1●2 3. Psalm 5. 5. Hosea 2. 7. and take in a hearty willingness to take to receive the Lord Jesus Christ for your Saviour and Soveraign Are you willing to consent to the match 't is not enough that Christ is willing to enter into a marriage-union with us but we must be willing also to enter Many can chuse Christ as a Refuge to hide them from danger and as a Friend to help them in their need who yet refuse him as a Husband into a marriage-union with him God will never force a Christ nor force salvation upon us whether we will or no Many approve of Christ and cry up Christ who yet are not willing to give their consent that he and he alone shall be their Prince and Saviour though knowledge of persons be necessary and fit yet it is not sufficient to marriage without consent for marriage ought to be a voluntary transaction of persons in marriage we do in a sort give away our selves and elect and make choice for our selves and therefore consent is a necessary concurrence to marriage Now this consent is nothing else but a free and plain act of the will accepting of Jesus Christ before all others to be its Head and Lord and in the souls choice of him to be its Saviour and Soveraign Then a man is married to Christ when he doth freely and absolutely and presently receive the Lord Jesus not I would have Christ if it did not prejudice my worldly estate ease friends relations c. or hereafter I will accept of him when I come to dye and be in distress but now when salvation is offered now while Christ tenders himself I now yield up my heart and life unto him But Thirdly This marriage union with Christ includes and takes in an universal and perpetual consent for all time and in all states and conditions There is you know a great difference between a wife and a strumpet a wife takes her husband upon all terms to have and to hold for better and for worse for richer and for poorer in sickness and in health whereas a strumpet is only for hire and lust when the purse is emptied or the body wasted and strength consumed the harlots love is at an end so here That acceptance and consent which tyes the marriage knot between Christ and the soul must be an unlimited and indefinite acceptance and consent● when we take the Lord Jesus Christ wholly and entirely without any secret reservations or exceptions That soul that will have Christ must have all Christ or no Christ For Christ is not divided That soul must entertain 1 Cor. 1. 13. Rev. 14. 4. Psal 66. 12. him to all purposes and intents he must follow the Lamb wheresoever he goeth though it should be through fire and water over mountans and hills he must take him with his cup of affliction as well as his cup of consolation with his shameful cross as well as his glorious Heb. 2. 3. crown with his great sufferings as well as his great salvation with his grace as well as his mercy with his spirit to lead and govern them as well as his blood to redeem and justifie them to suffer for him as well as to 2 Tim. 2. 12. Acts 21. 13. Rom. 14. 7 8. reign with him to dye for him as well as to live to him Christianity like the wind Caecias doth ever draw clouds afflictions after it All that will live godly in Christ Jesus 2 Tim. 3. 12. shall suffer persecution A man may have many faint wishes and cold desires after godliness yet escape persecution yea he may make some assays attempts as if he would be godly and yet escape persecution but when a man is The common cry of Persecutors hath been Christianes ad I c●n●s within the first 300. years after Christ upon the matter all that made a profession of the Apostles Doctrine were cruelly murdered thorowly resolved to be Godly and sets himself in good earnest upon pursuing after holyness and living a life of Godlyness then he must expect to meet with afflictions and persecutions who ever escapes the Godly man shall not escape persecution in one kind or another in one degree or another He that is peremptorily resolved to live up to holy rules and to live out holy principles must prepare for sufferings All the Roses of holyness are surrounded with pricking Briars The History of the Ten Persecutions and that little Book of Martyrs the 11. of the Hebrews and Mr. Fox his Acts and Monuments with many other Treatises that are extant do abundantly evidence that from age to age and from one generation to another they that have been born after the flesh have persecuted them that hath been born after the Gal. 4. 29. spirit and that the seed of the Serpent have been still a multiplying of troubles upon the seed of the Woman But a Believers future glory and pleasure will abundantly recompense him for his present pain and ignominy But such as will have Christ for their Saviour and Soveraign but still with some proviso or other viz. That they may keep such a beloved lust or enjoy such carnal pleasures and delights or raise such an estate for them and theirs or comply with the times and such and such great mens humours or that they may follow the Lamb only in Sun-shine weather c. these are still Satans bondslaves and such as Christ can take no pleasure nor delight to espouse himself unto But The third word of Advice and Counsel is this viz. Put off the old man and put on the new Consult the Scriptures Col. 3. 9 10. Eph. 4. 22 23 24. Gal. 6. 15. 1 Pet. 2. 2. in the margin You must be new Creatures or else it had been better you had been any Creatures than what you are 2 Cor. 5. 17. If any man be in Christ he is a n●w Creature old things are past away behold all
But what amazing love what matchless love is this for a man to engage his person and life for his friend when as skin for skin and all that a man hath will he give for his life and yet according to the Covenant of Redemption Jesus Christ has done all this and much more for us as is evident if you will but cast your eye back upon the Articles of the Covenant or consult the Scriptures in the Margin If a friend to free a J●● 2. 4. Jo● 1● 11 15 17 18 28 R●m 5. 6 〈◊〉 Eph. 1. 5 6 7 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2. 13 14 15 Heb. 2. 13 1● 15. captive or one condemned to death should put himself into the state and condition of him whom he freeth that would be an evidence of love beyond all comparison But now if the dignity of Christ's person and our unworthiness if the greatness of the debt and kind of payment and if the benefit which we reap thereby be duly weighed we shall find these evidences of love to come as much behind the love of Christ as the light of a candle cometh short of the light of the Sun Christ's Suretiship according to the Covenant of Redemption is and ought to be a prop of props to our faith It is as sure a ground of confidence that all is well and shall be for ever well between God and us as any the Scriptures does afford by vertue hereof we have a right to appeal to God's Justice for this Surety hath made ful satisfaction and to exact a debt which is fully satisfied is a point of injustice Christ knew very well what the Redemption of fallen man would cost him he knew that his life and blood must go for it he knew that he must lay by his Robes of Majesty and be cloathed with flesh he knew that he must encounter S●lus Amo● nes●it difficultates men and Devils he knew that he must tread the Wine-press of his Father's wrath bear the Curse and make himself an offering for our sins for our sakes for our salvation yet for all this he is very ready and willing to bind himself by Covenant that he will redeem us whatever it cost him Oh what tongue can express what heart Eph. 3. 18 19. Look where thou wilt thou art surrounded with flames of his love and it were strange if thou shouldest not be set on fire if not sure thou must needs be a Diabolical Salamander say● Cu●anus can conceive what soul can comprehend the heights depths bredths and lengths of this love Oh blessed Jesus what manner of love is this that thou shouldest wash away my scarlet sins in thine own blood that thou shouldest die that I may live that thou shouldest be cursed that I might be blessed that thou shouldest undergo the pains of hell that I might enjoy the joys of heaven that the face of God should be clouded from thee that his everlasting favour might rest upon me that thou shouldest be an everlasting Skreen betwixt the wrath of God and my immortal soul that thou shouldest do for me beyond all expression and suffer for me beyond all conception and gloriously provide for me beyond all expectation and all this according to the Covenant of Redemption what shall I say what can I say to all this but fall down before thy grace and spend my days in wondering at that matchless bottomless love that can never be fathomed by Angels or men Oh Lord Jesus saith one plusquam B●rnard mea plusquam meas plusquam me I love thee more than all my goods and I love thee more than all my friends yea I love thee more than my very self 'T is good to write after this copy But The Eleventh and last Plea that a Believer may form up as to the ten Scriptures that are in the Margin that Eccles 11. 9. cap. 12. 14. ●●at 12. 14. cap. 18. 23. Luk. 16. 2. Rom. 14. 10. 2 Cor. 5. 10. H●b 9. 27. cap. 13. 17. 1 Pet. 4. 5. refer to the great day of account or to a man's particular account may be drawn up from the consideration of the Book of Life out of which all the Saints shall be judged in the great day of our Lord Rev. 20. 11. And I saw a great white throne and him that sat on it from whose face the earth and the heaven fled away and there was found no place for them Vers 12. And I saw the dead small and great stand before God And the books were opened and another book was opened which is the book of life and the dead were judged out of those things which were written in the books according to their works Vers 13. And the sea gave up the dead which were in it And death and hell delivered up the dead which were in them And they were judged every man according to their works Vers 14. And death and hell were cast into the lake of fire this is the second death And whosoever was not found written in the book of life was cast into the lake of fire In the 11. verse John describes the Judge with his preparation in the 12. verse he describes the persons that should be judged and then he describes the process and sentence and lastly he describes the execution of the sentence viz. the casting of the reprobates into the Lake of fire and the placing and fixing of the Elect in the heavenly Jerusalem vers 13 14 15. In the five last verses cited you have a clear and full description of the last General Judgment as is evident by the native Context and Series of this Chapter For having Rev. 2● 1 2 3. Jude vers 6. spoken of the Devil's last Judgment which by Jude is called The judgment of the great day It is consentaneous therefore to understand this of such a Judgment whereby he is judged And indeed the expressions are so full and the matter and circumstances so satisfying and convincing that they leave no place for fears doubts or disputes This Scripture that is under our present consideration runs parallel with that Dan. 12. 1 2 3. and several other places of Scripture where the day of Judgment is spoken of and let him that can shew me at what other Judgment all the dead are raised and judged and all Reprobates sent to hell and all the Elect brought to heaven and death and hell cast into the Lake all which are plainly expressed here He shall be an Apollo to me that can make these things that are hero spoken of to agree with any other Judgment than the last Judgment Let me give a little light into this Scripture before I improve it to that purpose for which I have cited it And I saw a great white throne and him that sat on it a lively description of the last Judgment A Great Throne Great because it is set up for the General Judgment of all for the universal judgment of the whole world Before
23 26. can never be happy here nor blessed hereafter and yet it is possible for a man with Herod to reform many things Mark ●● 2● Mat. 26. 20 21. 22 1 The●s 5. 23. and yet be a lost and undone man for ever as he was Judas was a very reformed man but he was never inwardly changed nor throughout sanctified The Scribes and Pharisees were outwardly reformed but they were not inwardly renewed A man may be another man than what once he was and yet not be a new man a new creature When a sinner is sermon-sick O! then he will 2 Cor. 5. 17. 2 P●t 2. 20 22. D●st 5. 5 6 7 8. leave his sins but when that sickness is off he returns with the dog to his vomit and with the sow to her wallowing in the mire Sometimes conscience is like the hand-writing upon the wall it makes the sinners countenance to change and his thoughts to be troubled and the joints of his loins to be loosed and his knees to smite one against another and now the sinner is all for reforming and turning over a new leaf but when these agonies of conscience are over the sinner returns to his old courses again and often times is twofold more a Child of Hell than before There was a Matth. 23. 15. man in this City who was given up to the highest wickednesses on his sick bed conscience made an Arrest of him and he was filled with such wonderful horrour and terrour that he cryed out day and night that he was damned he was damned he was damned and when he had some small intervals O what large promises did he make what a new man a reformed man he would be but when in time his terrors and sickness wrought off he was seven-fold worse than before Sometimes the awakened Sinner parts with some sins to make room for others and sometimes the Sinner seems to give a Bill of divorce to this sin and that but it is only because his bodily strength fails him or because he wants an opportunity or because there is a more strict eye and watch upon him or because the sword of the Magistrate is more sharpned against him or because James 4. 3. he wants fuel he wants a purse to bear it out or because some Company or some Relations or some Friends lye between him and his sins so that he must either tread over them or else keep from his sins or because he has deeply smarted for this sin and that his name has been blotted his credit and reputation stained Prov. 6. 32 33 34 35. his Trade decayed his health empaired his body wasted c. By these short hints it is evident that men may attain to some outward reformation whose states and hearts were never changed and who were never taken into marriage union with Christ But Tenthly and lastly many take up in a party as of old some cryed up Paul as the only deep Preacher and others cryed up Apollos as the only eloquent Preacher and 1 Cor. 1. 10 11 12 13. many cryed up Cephas as the most zealous Preacher We are for the Church of England say some we are for the baptized People say others we are for the Presbyterian government cry some we are for the congregational way cry others I have so much ingenuity and charity as to judge that some of all these several parties and perswasions are really holy and will be eternally happy are gracious and will be glorious are sanctified and will be saved are now governed by Christ and will be hereafter glorified with Christ Judas was one of Christs party Mat. 26. 20. to the 26. if I may so speak and yet he had no part nor portion in Christ Demas was one of Paul's party and yet he 2 Tim. 4. 10. plaid the Apostat and turn'd an idolatrous Priest at 2 Tim. 1. 15. Thessalonica as Dorotheus saith And Phygellus and Hermogenes were of Paul's party but were only famous for 1 Tim. 1. 19 20. their recidivation and Apostasie Hymeneus and Alexander were of Paul's party but they made shipwrack of faith and a good conscience The five foolish Virgins Mat. 25. 1 2 12. were in society with the wise and were accounted as members of their association and yet the door of Heaven was shut against them Many light slight and vain persons went with the Children of Israel out of the Land Exod. 1● 38. Num. 11. 4. of Egypt even a mixt multitude that imbarkt in the same bottom with them and yet never arrived at the Land of promise O my Friends it is not a mans being of this party or that this Church or that this way or that this society or that that will bring him to Heaven without 1 Pet. 1. 4. He● 1. 2. 1 John 5. 12. a spiritual conjunction with Christ he that would enjoy the Heavenly inheritance must be espoused to Christ the heir of all things For he that hath the Son hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not life This marriage union between Christ and the soul is set forth to the life throughout that Book of Solomon's Song● though the marriage-union between Christ and the soul Cant. ● 16. 1 Cor. 6. 17. Eccl. 11. 6. be imperceptible to the eye of reason yet it is real things in nature work often insensibly yet really we do not see the hand move on the dial yet it moves the Sun exhales and drawes up the vapours of the Earth insensibly yet really Now this marriage-union between Christ and the soul includes and takes in these following particulars First This marriage-union between Christ and the soul does include and take in the souls giving a present bill of Divorce to all other lovers Sin the world and Consult these Scriptures Hosea 14. 8. Isa 2. 20. Cap. 30. 22. Psalm 45. 10. Exod. 12. 33. Isa 59. ●o C. 3. 3. Satan Are you seriously and sincerely willing for ever to renounce these and be divorced from these there is no compounding betwixt Christ and them sin and your souls must part or Christ and your souls can never meet sin and your souls must be two or Christ and your souls can never be one you must in good earnest fall out with sins or else you can never in good earnest fall in with a Saviour the heart must be separated from all other lovers before Christ will take the soul into his bed of loves Christ takes none into marriage-union with himself but such as are cordially willing that all old former leagues with sin and the world shall be for ever broken and dissolved your cordial willingness to part with sin is your parting with sin in Divine account you may as soon bring East and West together light and darkness together Heaven and Hell together as bring Christ to ●spouse himself to such a soul as has no mind no will no heart to be divorced from his former lovers 'T
lay them down for his sake and the Gospel's sake He that shall attempt to save his life by crossing his light by shifting off the truth or by forsaking of Christ shall lose it 'T is a gainful loss to suffer for the truth 't is a lossful gain by time-serving and base complying with the times the lusts the wills the humours of the men of this Age in whom the spirit of Cain and Fsau works so furiously to provide for our present safety security plenty peace and ease c. either by denying the truth or by betraying the truth or by exchanging the truth or by forsaking the truth Mat. 10. 39. He that findeth his life shall lose it This is a strange expression a riddle to the world a seeming contradiction such as natural reason can never reconcile He that 1 Tim. 1. 19 20 findeth his life that is redeemeth it with the forfeiture of his Faith with the shipwrack of his Conscience makes a loser's bargain he make● more haste than good speed whilst in running from death as far as he can he runs to it as fast as he can See it in some great instances when Henry the fourth of France French History had conquered his enemies he turned Papist and gave this reason of it That he might settle himself in peace and safety Ravillak who slew him as he was riding abroad in his Coach to refresh himself confessed that the reason why he stabbed him was because he was of two Religions as thus by his sinful endeavours to save his life he lost it There was one Philbert Hamli● in Non p●test qui pati timet ejus esse qui p●ssusest Tertul. France having converted a Priest to the profession of the truth was together with the Priest apprehended and cast into prison at Burdeaux but after a while the Priest being terrified with the prison and fear of death renounced Christ and was set at liberty Whereupon Philbert said unto him O unhappy and more than miserable man is it possible that to save your life for a few days you should so deny the truth Know therefore though A Prediction you have avoided the Corporal fire yet your life shall not be prolonged for you shall die before me and you shall not have the honour to die for the cause of Christ but you shall be an example to Apostates And accordingly as he went out of the prison two Gentlemen that had a former quarrel with him met him and slew him And thus also he lo●t his life by endeavouring sinfully to save it The Angrognian that yielded to the Papists Acts and Monuments Fol. 885. and complyed with them that they might sleep quietly in a whole skin were more sadly and cruelly l●ndled by the Papists than those that continued s●out couragious and resolute for the truth Under the fourth Persecution there were some Christians who for fear of torments and death denied their faith and sacrificed to Idols yet did not their bloody Persecutors spare them and i● was observed that being full of guilt they went to their deaths with dejected and ill-favoured countenances so that the very Gentiles took notice of it and reproached them as base Apostates and as such who were worthy to suffer as evil-doers 〈◊〉 that was Chaplain to Bishop P●dl●y refusing to die in Christ's cause with his Master said Mass against his Conscience and soon after pined away with sorrow and grief A Smith in King ●dward's the Sixth's days called Richard Denton was a forward Acts and Monuments third Volume pag. 960. Professor of Religion and by his Christian instruction the happy instrument of the conversion of a young man to the Faith afterwards in the Reign of Queen Mary this young man was cast in prison for his Religion who remembring his old friend and spiritual father the Smith to whom he always carried a reverend respect for the good he had received by him sent to know whether he was imprisoned also and finding that he was not desired to speak with him and when he came he asked his advice whether he thought it best for him to remain in prison and whether he would encourage him to burn at a stake for his Religion To whom the Smith answered that his cause was good and that he might with comfort suffer for it but for my part said the Smith I cannot burn But shortly after he that could not burn for Religion by God's just Judgment was burned for his Apostacy for his shop and house being set on fire and he overbusie to save his Goods was burnt in the flames They that will not burn for Christ when he calls them to it shall burn whether they will or no. He that will not suffer for Christ shall be sure to suffer worse things from Christ than ever he could have suffered for Christ And therefore Doctor Taylor the Martyr hit the nail Ibid. 1382. when he said If I shrink from God's truth said he I am sure of another manner of death than Judge Hales had who being drawn for fear of death to do things against his light and Conscience did afterwards drown himself Cyprian in his Sermon De Lapsis makes mention of divers who forsaking the Profession of their Faith were given over by God to be possessed by evil spirits and so died fearfully and miserably making good that word that is more worth than a world Joh. 12. 25. He that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is here used of excessive and preposterous love He that so loveth his life that out of a desire to save it he denieth me and my Gospel so this Greek word is used Mat. 10. 37. loveth his life shall lose it and he that hateth his life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal A man that is sparing of his life when Christ calls for it doth take the ready way to lose it and he that doth hazard it for him at his call is sure to live eternally Christ approves of no followers who are not resolved on the loss of what is dearest to them yea even of life for his sake therefore doth he mention our life to be hated which is not to be understood absolutely as if it were a sin to love life as it is the gift of God or that they should be weary of it but comparatively that they should not love it more than Christ his Word his Worship his Ways He that resolves to save his temporal life upon any terms he takes the shortest cut to lose both temporal and eternal life also He that loveth his life shall lose it He that prefers the honour and service of Christ above his own life he takes the surest way to preserve both body and soul unto eternal life for he that hates his life in this world shall keep it unto life eternal Though life be sweet and every creature makes much of it from the highest Angel to the lowest Worm yet wo wo to him that
us our sins our burdens and such constant ailments as takes away all the pleasure and comfort of life Here both our outward and inward conditions are very various sometimes heaven is open and Lamen 3 8 44 54 55 56 57. Psal 30. 7. 1 Thes 4 17 18. Isa 35. 10. sometimes heaven is shut sometimes we see the face of God and rejoyce and at other times he hides his face and we are troubled O but now death will bring us to an invariable Eternity It is always day in heaven and joy in heaven Sixthly and lastly You shall gain a clear distinct and full knowledge of all great and deep Mysteries the Mystery 1 Cor. 13. 10 12. of the Trinity the Mystery of Christ's Incarnation the Mystery of Man's Redemption the Mysteries of Providences the Mysteries of Prophecies and all those Mysteries that relate to the Nature Substances Offices Orders and Excellencies of the Angels If you please to consult my String of Pearls or the best thing reserved till last with my Sermon on Eccles 7. 1. Better is the day of death than the day of ones birth which is at the end of my Treatise on Assurance both which Treatises you have by you There you will find many more great and glorious things laid open that we gain by death And to them I refer you But Sixthly Look upon death as a sleep the Holy Ghost hath phrased it so above twenty times in Scripture to 1 Cor. 11. 30. cap. 15. 51. Joh. 11. ●● Mark 5. 39. The Greeks call their Church-yards Dormitories sleeping places and the Hebrews 〈◊〉 ●●●●im the house of the living shew that this is the true proper and genuine notion of death When the Saints die they do but sleep Mat. 9. 24. The maid is not dead but sleepeth The same phrase he also used to his Disciples concerning Lazarus our friend Lazarus sleepeth Joh. 11. 11. The death of the Godly is as a sleep Stephen fell asleep Act. 7. 60. And David fell asleep Act. 13. 36. And Christ is the first fruits of them that sleep 1 Cor. 15. 20. Them which sleep in Jesus will God bring with him 1 Thes 4. 14. The Saints of God do but sleep when they lay down in the Grave that which we call death in such is not death indeed it is but the image of death the Shadow and Metaphor of death death 's younger Brother a mere sleep and no more I may not follow the Analogy that is between death and sleep in the latitude of it the Printer calling upon me to conclude Sleep is the Nurse of Nature the sweet Parenthesis of all a man's griefs and cares But Seventhly Look upon death as a departure 2 Tim. 4. 6. For I am now ready to be offered and the time of my departure is at hand He makes nothing of death It was Deut. 32. 49 50. no more betwixt God and Moses but go up and die and so betwixt Christ and Paul but launch out and land immediately at the fair Haven of heaven Phil. 1. 23. For I am in a strait betwixt two having a desire to depart and to be with Christ which is far better Paul longed for that hour wherein he should loose Anchor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 solv●r● Anch ram Or it may be rendered to return home or to change roo●s ●t is a similitude ●aken from those that depart out of an I●n to take their journey towards their own Countrey and sail to Christ as the Greek word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 imports It is a Metaphor from a Ship at Anchor importing a sailing from this present life to another Port. Paul had a desire to loose from the shore of Life and to launch out into the Main of Immortality The Apostle in this phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath a reference both to his bonds and to his death and his meaning is I desire to be discharged and released as out of a common Goal so also out of the prison of my body that I may presently be with Christ my Saviour in heaven in rest and bliss After Paul had been in the third heaven his constant song was I desire to be with Christ Nature teacheth that death is the end of misery but grace will teach us that death is the beginning of our felicity But Eighthly and lastly Look upon death as a going to Bed The Grave is a Bed wherein the body is laid to rest with its curtains close drawn about it that it may not be disturbed in its repose So the Holy Ghost is pleased to phrase it He shall enter into peace they shall rest in their beds every one walking in their uprightness Isa 57. 2. As the souls of the Saints pass to a place of rest and bliss so their bodies are laid down to rest in the Grave as in a Bed or Bed-chamber there to sleep quietly until the morning of the Resurrection Death is nothing else but a Writ of ease to the weary Saints 't is a total cessation from all their labour of nature sin and affliction Blessed are the dead that die in the Lord that they may rest Rev. 14. 13. from their labours c. Whilst the souls of the Saints do rest in Abraham's bosom their bodies do sweetly sleep in their beds of dust as in a safe and consecrated Dormitory Every sincere Christian may like the weary child call and cry to be laid to bed knowing that death will send him to his everlasting rest Now you should always look upon death under Scripture Notions and this will take off the terrour of death yea it will make the King of Terrours to be the King of desires it will make you not only willing to die but even long to die and to cry out O that I had the wings of a dove to fly away and be at rest At death you shall have an eternal Jubilee and be freed from all incumbrances Now sin shall be no more nor trouble shall be no more nor pain nor ailments shall be no more Now you shall have your Quietus est now the wicked shall cease from Job 3. 17. troubling and now the weary shall be at rest now all Rev. 7. 17. tears shall be wiped from your eyes now death shall be the way to bliss the Gate of Life and the Portal to Paradise It was well said of one so far as we tremble at death so far we want love it 's sad when the contract is made between Christ and a Christian to see a Christian afraid of the making up the Marriage Lord saith Austin one I will die that I may enjoy thee I will not live but I will die I desire to die that I may see Christ and refuse to live that I may live with Christ The broken Rings Contracts and Espousals contents not the true Lover but he longs for the Marriage day It is no credit to your Heavenly Father for you to be loth to
two chosen parties or more whereby with mutual free and full consent they bind and oblige themselves one to another A Covenant is Amicus status interf●derates so Martin a friendly state between Allies times Though then some few Saints had much of the spirit and much of grace and holiness both in their hearts and lives but now the generality of the Saints have more of the spirit and more grace and holiness than the generality of the Saints had in those times But Fourthly premise this with me that a right notion of the Covenant according to the Originals of the Old and New Testament will conduce much to a right understanding of God's Covenant The derivation of the Hebrew word and of the Greek may give us great light and is of special use to shew the nature of the Covenant which they principally signifie and what special things are therein required The Hebrew word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith a Covenant is by learned men derived from several roots First some derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barar to purifie make clear and to purge out dross chaff and all uncleanness and to select and chuse out and separate the pure from the impure the gold and silver from the dross and the pure wheat from the chaff The reasons of this derivation are these two 1. Because by Covenants open and clear amity is confirmed and faithfulness is plainly and clearly declared and ratified without deceipt or sophistication betwixt covenanters And things are made plain and clear betwixt them in every point and article 2. Because God in the Covenant of works did chuse out man especially with whom he made the Covenant and because in the Covenant of grace he chuseth out of the multitude his Elect even his Church and faithful people whom he did separate by predestination and election from all Eternity to be an holy people to himself in Christ Eph. 1. 4. 2. Some derive it from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And verily the Lord when he makes a Covenant with any he doth separate them from others he looks on them and takes them and owns them for his peculiar people 1 Pet. 2. 9. for his peculiar treasure Exod. 19. 5. and agrees with them as the chosen and choicest of all others The first staff in Zach. 11. 10. is called Beauty and this was the Covenant and certainly it must be a high honour for a people to be in Covenant with God for by this means God becomes ours and we are made nigh unto him Jer. 31. 38 40 41. He is ours and we are his in a very peculiar way of relation and by this means God opens his love and all his treasures of grace unto us In his Covenant he tells us of his special care love kindness and great intentions of good to us and by this means his faithfulness comes to be obliged to make good all his Covenant relations and engagements to us Deut. 7. 9. Now in all this God puts a great favour and honour upon his people Hence when the Lord told Abraham that he would make Gen. 1● 2 3. a Covenant with him Abraham fell upon his face he was amazed at so great a love and honour Secondly some derive the word from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barah comedit to eat because usually they had a feast at the making of Covenants in the Eastern Countreys they commonly established their Covenants by cating and dringing together Herodotus tells us that the Persians were wont to contract Leagues and friendship inter vinum epulas in a ful feast where whereat their wives children and friends were present The like Tacitus reports of the Germans amongst the Greeks and other nations the Covenanters ate bread and salt together The Emperour of Russiah at this day when he would shew extraordinary grace and favour unto any sends him bread and salt from his table And when he invited Baron Sigismond the Emperour Ferdinand's Ambassador he did it in this form Sigismunde comedes sal panem nostrum nobiscum Sigismond you shall eat our bread and salt with us Hence that Symbol of Pythagoras 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 break no bread is interpreted V●de ●urcium ●itum ●pu● Busbeq●ium Epist 1. 11 by Erasmus and others to mean break no friendship Moreover the Egyptians Thracians and Libyans in special are said to have used to make leagues and contract friendship by presenting a cup of wine one to another which custom we find still in use amongst our western Nations It has been the universal custom of Mankind and still remains in use to contract Covenants and make Leagues and friendship by eating and drinking together When Isaac made a Covenant with Abimelech the King of Gerar the Text saith He made him and Gen. 26. 30 31. those that were with him a feast and they did eat and drink and rose up betimes in the morning and sware one to another When Jacob made a Covenant with Laban after they had sworn together he made him a feast and Gen. 31. 54. called his brethren to eat bread saith the Text When David made a League with Abner upon his promise of bringing all Israel unto him David made Abner and the 2 ●am 3 20. men that were with him a feast saith the Text. Hence in the Hebrew tongue a Covenant is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barah To eat as i● they should say an eating which derivation is so natural that it deserves say some to be preferred before that from the other signification of the same verb which is to chuse of which before Now they that derive Berith from Barah which signifies to eat and refresh ones self with meat They give this reason for that derivation viz. Because the old Covenant of God made with man in the Creation was a Covenant wherein the condition or Law was about eating That Gen. 2. 16 17. man should eat of all the trees and fruits except of the tree of knowledg of good and evil And in the solemn making and sealing of the Covenant of grace in Christ the blessed seed the publick Ceremony was slaying and sacrificing of beasts and eating some part of them after the fat and the choice parts were offered up and burn'd on the Altar For God by vertue of that Covenant gave man leave to eat the flesh of beasts which he might not D●u● 12. ●7 Gen. 1 29. Gen. 31. 46. do in the state of innocency being limited to fruits of trees and herbs bearing seed for his meat so also in solemn Covenants between men the parties were wont to eat together Thirdly others derive the word Berith from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Bara or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Barah to smite strike cut or divide as both these words signifie the word also signifies to elect or chuse and the reasons they give for this derivation are these two First because Covenants are not made but
wooes him by love by the second he frights him by the terrour of his justice and bids him touch and taste if he durst The Faederati were God and Adam God the Creator and man the creature made after Gods image and likeness and so not contrary to God nor at enmity with him but like unto God though far different and inferiour to God in nature and substance Here are also terms agreed on and matters covenanted reciprocally by these parties Adam on his part was to be obedient to God in forbearing to eat of the tree of knowledg only God's charge to our first parents was only negative not to eat of the tree of knowledg the other to eat of the trees was left unto their choice Eve confesseth that God spake unto them both and said ye shall not eat of it And God speaks unto both of them Gen. 3. 2. together in these words Behold I have given unto you every Gen. 1. 19. herb and every tree c. At which time also it is very like that he gave them the other prohibition of not eating of that one tree for if God had made that exception before he would not have given a general permission after or if this general grant had gone before the exception coming should seem to abrogate the former grant The Septuagint seem to be of this mind that this precept was given both to Adam and Eve reading thus So doth Gregory read as the Septuagint does Gr ● l. b. 35. moral ● 10 in the plural number In what day ye shall eat thereof ye shall die And though in the Original the precept be given in the name of Adam only that is only 1. Because Adam was the more principal and he had the charge of the woman And 2. Because that the greatest danger was in his transgression which was the cause of the ruine of his posterity 3. Because as Mercerus well observes Adam was the common name both of the man and woman Gen. 5. 2. and so is taken vers 15. And God on his part for the present permits Adam to eat of all other trees of the Garden And for the future in his explicite threatning of death in case of disobedience implicity promiseth life in case of obedience herein Secondly the promises of this Covenant on God's part were very glorious First that heaven and earth and all creatures should continue in their natural course and order wherein God had had created and placed them serving always for man's use and that man should have the benefit and Lordship of them all Secondly As for natural life in respect of the body Adam should have had perfection without defect beauty without deformity labour without weariness Thirdly as for spiritual life Adam should never have known what it was to be under 〈◊〉 18. 1. ● terrours and horrours of conscience nor what a wounded spirit means he should never have found the arrows of 〈◊〉 6. 4. the Almighty sticking fa●l in him nor the poyson thereof drinking up his spirits nor the terrours of God to set themselves in array against him nor he should never have tasted of death Death is a fall that came in by a fall had Adam never sinned Adam had never died had Adam stood fast in innocency he should have been translated to glory without dissolution Death came in by sin and sin goeth out by death As the worm kills the worm that bred it so death 〈◊〉 sin that bred it Now where there are parties covenanting promising and agreeing upon terms and terms mutually agreed upon by those parties as here There 's the substance of an express Covenant though it be not formally and in express words called a Covenant This was the first Covenant which God made with man and this is called by the name Berith Jer. 33. 20. where God saith If you can break my Covenant of the day and night and that there shall not be day and night in their season vers 21. Then may also my Covenant with David be broken In these words he speaks plainly of the promise in the Creation That day and night should keep Gen. 1. 14 15 16. their course and the sun moon and stars and all creatures should serve for man's use Now though man did break the Covenant on his part yet God being immutable could not break Covenant on his part neither did he suffer his promise to fail but by vertue of Christ promised to man in the new Covenant he will keep touch with man so long as mankind hath a being on the earth In this first Covenant God promised unto man life and happiness Lordship over all the creatures liberty to use them and all other blessings which his heart could desire to keep him in that happy estate wherein he was created And man was bound to God to walk in perfect righteousness to observe and keep God's Commandments and to obey his will in all things which were within the reach of his nature and so far as was reveiled to him In the first Covenant God reveiled himself to man as one God Creator and Governour of all things infinite in power wisdom goodness nature and substance God was man's good Lord and man was God's good servant God dearly loved man and man greatly loved God with all his heart there was not the least shadow or occasion of hatred or enmity between them there was nothing but mutual love mutual delight mutual content and mutual satisfaction between God and man Man in his primitive glory needed no Mediator to come between God and him man was perfect pure upright and good created after God's own image and the nearer he came to God the greater was his joy and comfort God's presence now was man's great delight and it was man's heaven on earth to walk with God But Thirdly Consider the intention and use of the two eminent Trees in the Garden that are mentioned in a more peculiar manner viz. The tree of life and The tree of knowledg The intended use of these two Trees in Paradise was Sacramental Hence they are called Symbolical Trees and Sacramental Trees by learned writers both ancient and modern By these the Lord did signifie and seal to our first parents that they should always enjoy that happy state of life in which they were made upon condition of obedience to his Commandments i. e. in The Tree of life was the 〈◊〉 and ●eal which God gave to man for confirmation of this first Covenant and it was to man a Sacrament and pledge of eternal life on earth and of all blessings needful to keep man in life eating of the tree of life and not eating of the tree of knowledg The Tree of life is so called not because of any native property and peculiar vertue it had in it self to convey life but symbolically morally and sacramentally It was a sign and obsignation to them of life natural and spiritual to be continued to them as
thee Though huge mountains should remove which is not probable or though heaven and earth should meet which is not likely yet his Covenant shall stand immoveable and his mercy and kindness to his people shall be immutable This new Covenant of grace is like the new heavens and new earth which will never wax old or vanish away Isa 66. 22. But Secondly The Covenant of grace is called an everlasting Covenant ●x parte confaederatorum in respect of the people of God who are brought into Covenant and shall continue in Covenant for ever and ever You have both these expressed in that excellent Scripture Jer. 32. 40. M●● 3. 6. H●● 2 19. Gen. 17. 7. I will make an everlasting Covenant with them Heb. I will cut out with them a Covenant of perpetuity that I will not turn away from them to do them good but Heb. and I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me Seriously dwell upon the place it shews that God will never ●●rcease to pur 〈…〉 and follow his Covenant-people with 〈◊〉 and blessings i●cess●●● the Covenant is everlasting on God's part and also on our part On God's part I will never turn away from them to do them good and on our part They shall never depart from me How so I will put my fear into their hearts that they shall not depart from me That they may continue constant with me and not constrain me by their Apostasie to break again with them I will so deeply riv●t a reverend dread of my self in their souls as shall cause them to cling and cleave and keep close to me forever In the Covenant of grace God undertakes for both parts For his own that he will be their God i. e. that all he is and all he has shall be employed for their external internal and eternal good And for ours that Jer. 32. 38. we shall be his people i. e. That we shall believe love E●●k 36. 26 27. fear repent obey serve him and walk with him as he requires and thus the Covenant of grace becomes an everlasting Covenant yea such a 〈◊〉 as hath the sure o● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Covenant of grace 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈…〉 ment which God hath made with sinful man out of his mere mercy and grace wherein he undertakes both for himself and for fallen man and wherein he engages himself to make fallen man everlastingly happy In the Covenant of Grace there are two things considerable First the Covenant that God makes for himself to us which consists mainly of these branches 1. That he will be our ult 〈◊〉 9. 1● 17 18. God that is as if he said you shall have as true an interest in all my attributes for your good as they are mine for my own glory My grace saith God shall be yours to pardon you and my power shall be yours to protect you and my wisdom shall be yours to direct you and my goodness shall be yours to releive you and my mercy shall be yours to supply you and my glory shall be yours to crown you This is a comprehensive promise for God to be our God it includes all Deus meus omnia said Luther 2. That he will give us his spirit 〈◊〉 44. ● 〈◊〉 31. 33. 〈◊〉 2. 28. 〈◊〉 14. 16 20. 〈◊〉 ● 23. 〈◊〉 2● 4● 〈◊〉 15. ●6 cap. 16. 7. hence the spirit is called the holy spirit of promise The giving of the Holy Ghost is the great promise which Christ from the father hath made unto us It is the spirit that reveils the promises that appli●s the promises and that helps the soul to live upon the promises and to draw marrow and fatness out of the promises The great promise of the Old Testament was the promise of Christ Gen. 3. 16. and the great promise of the New Testament is the promise of the spirit as you may see by the Scriptures in the margent That in this last Age of the world there may be a more clear and full discovery of Christ of the great things of the Gospel of Antichrist and of the glorious conquests that are in the last days to be made upon him the giving of the spirit is promised as the most excellent gift 3. That he will take away the heart 〈◊〉 36. 26. J●r ●2 40. 〈◊〉 36. 25. Jer. 33. 9 10. Jer. 32. 41. of stone and give a heart of flesh i. e. a soft and tender heart 4. That he will not ●u●n away his ●a●e from us 〈◊〉 doing of us good and that he will put his fear into our hearts 5. That he will cle●●se us from all our ●ilthiness and f●om all our Idols 6. That he will r●j●yce ouer us to do us good The second thing considerable in the Covenant of Grace is the Covenant which God doth make for us to himself which consists mainly in these things 1. That we shall Jer. 32. 38 40. Ezek. 36. 27. Job 17. 9. Prov. 4. 18. Psal 1. 3. ●●●s●a 14. 5 6 7. Za●h 12. 18. Mal. 4. ● Jer. 24. 5. R●m 8. 28. Luk. 12. 3● Rev. 2. 10. Psal 84. 11. John 10. 28. See the truth of this fully evidenced in 12 particular● in my box of precious ●vnt●n●nt 〈◊〉 364 365 366 367 be his people 2. That we shall fear him for ever 3. That we shall walk in his Statutes keep his Judgments and do them 4. That we shall never depart from him 5. That w● shall persevere and hold out to the end 6. That we shall grow and ●lourish i● gr●●e 7. A true right to the creatures 8. That all providences changes and conditions shall work for our good 9. Vnion and communion with Christ 10. That ●● s●all 〈◊〉 Kingdom a Crown and glory at last and wh● would w● have more By these short hints 't is most evident that the Covenant of Grace is an entire Covenant an everlasting Covenant made by God both for himself and for us Oh sirs this is the glory 〈…〉 the Covenant of Grace That whatsoever God r●qui●●s of us that he stands engaged to give unto us whatever in the Covenant of Grace God requires on 〈◊〉 's put that he undertakes to perform for man That this Covenant of Grace is an everl●●ing Covenant may be mad● further clear from God's denomination who hath 〈◊〉 stiled it an everlasting Covenant In the Old Testament he frequently calls it in Heb. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Berith ●●olam A Covenant of ●ternity In the New Testament he calls it in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Diatheke Aioni●s The eternal Covenant or the everlasting Covenant And those whom God has taken into Covenant with himself they have frequently acknowledged it to be an everlasting Covenant as is evident up and down the Scripture The Covenant of works was not everlasting it was soon overthrown by Adam's sin but the Covenant of grace is Is● ●5 10. D●● 9. 24. everlasting The joy
help the truth in necessity and to clear men's innocency O sirs God doth Exod. 22. 11. not only make his Covenant but swears his Covenant My covenant saith the Psalmist will I not break nor alter Psal 89. 34 35. the thing that is gone out of my lips once have I sworn by my holiness that I will not lie unto David This is as great and deep an Oath as God could take for his holiness is himself who is most holy and the foundation of all holiness See my Treatise of Holiness pag. 585. to pag. 595. God is essentially holy unmixedly holy universally holy transcendently holy originally holy independently holy constantly holy and exemplarily holy Now for so holy a God to swear once for all by his holiness that he will keep covenant that he will keep touch with his people how abundantly should it settle and satisfie them Ah my friends hath God said it and will he not do it Yea hath he sworn it and will he not bring it to pass Dare we trust an honest man upon his bare word much more upon his Oath and shall we not much more trust a holy wise and faithful God upon his word upon his Covenant when confirmed by an oath The Covenant of Grace is sure in it self it is a firm Covenant an unalterable Covenant an everlasting Covenant a ratified Covenant so that heaven and earth may sooner pass away than the least branch or word of his Mat. 5. 18. Covenant should pass away unfulfilled Let us but cast our eyes upon the several springs from whence the Covenant of Grace flows and then we cannot but strongly conclude that the Covenant of Grace is a sure Covenant Now if you cast your eye aright you shall see that the Covenant of Grace flows from these three springs First From the free grace and favour of God There was nothing in fallen man to invite God to enter into Covenant with him yea there was every thing in fallen man that might justly provoke God to abandon man to abhor man to revenge himself upon man It was mere grace that made the Covenant and it is mere grace that makes good the Covenant Now that which springs from mere grace must needs be inexceptionably sure The Love of God is unchangeable whom he loves he Jo● 13. 3. Mal. 3. 6. James 1. 17. loves to the end whom God loves once he loves for ever he is not as man soon on and soon off again soon in and as soon out as Joab's dagger was Oh no! his love is like himself lasting yea everlasting I have loved thee with an everlasting love Jer. 31. 3. Though we 2 Tim. 2. 13. break off with him yet he abides faithful Now what can be more sure than that which springs from free love Rom. 4. 16. from everlasting love Hence the Covenant must be sure The former Covenant was not sure because it was of Works but this Covenant is sure because it is of Grace and rests not on any sufficiency in us but only on Grace Secondly The Covenant of Grace springs from the immutable counsel of God Heb. 6. 17. God willing more abundantly to shew unto the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel confirmed it by an oath Times are mutable and all sorts of men are mutable and the love and Isa 40. 6. Psal 146. 3 4. Jer. 33. 14. favour of the creature is mutable but the counsel of God from which the Covenant of Grace flows is immutable and therefore it must needs be sure The manifestation of the immutability of God's counsel is here brought in as one end of God's Oath God swears that it might evidently appear that what he had purposed counselled determined and promised to Abraham and his seed should assuredly be accomplished there should be there could be no alteration thereof His counsel was more firm than Dan. 6. 13. the Laws of the Medes and Persians which altereth not certainly God's counsel is inviolable My counsel shall stand Isa 46. 10. Psal 33. 11. The counsel of the Lord standeth for ever the thoughts of his heart to all generations Prov. 19. 21. Nevertheless the counsel of the Lord that shall stand The immutability of God's counsel springs from the unchangeableness of his essence the perfection of his wisdom the infiniteness of his goodness the absoluteness of his sovereignty the omnipotency of his power God in his essence being unchangeable his counsel also must needs be so can darkness flow out of light or fulness out of emptiness or heaven out of hell No no more can changeable counsels flow from an immutable nature Now the Covenant of Grace flows from the immutable counsel of God which is most firm and inviolable and therefore it must needs be a sure Covenant But. Thirdly The Covenant of Grace springs from the purpose of God resolving and intending everlasting good unto us Now this purpose of God is sure so the Apostle 2 Tim. 2. 19. The foundation of God standeth sure Our graces are imperfect our comforts ebb and flow but God's foundation stands sure That foundation of God is his election which is compared to a foundation because it is that upon which all our good and happiness is built and because as a foundation it abides firm and sure The gracious purpose of God is the fountain-head of all our spiritual blessings It is the impulsive cause of our vocation justification glorification it is the highest link in the Golden chain of salvation what is the reason that God has entred into a Covenant with fallen man it is from his eternal purpose What is the reason that one man is brought under the bond of the Covenant and not another it is from the E●ek 20. 37. eternal purpose of God In all the great concerns of the Covenant of Grace the purpose of God gives the casting voice The purpose of God is the sovereign cause of all that good that is in man and of all that external internal and eternal good that comes to man Not works past for men are chosen from everlasting not works present for Jacob was loved and chosen before he was born nor works fore seen for men were all corrupt in Adam All a believer's present happiness and all his future happiness springs from the eternal purpose of God as you may see by comparing the Scriptures in the margin together This Rom. 8. 28. cap. 9. 11. Eph. 1. 11. cap. 3. 11. 2 Tim. 1. 9. purpose of God speaks our stability and certainty of salvation by Christ God's eternal purpose never changes never alters Surely as I have thought so shall it come to pass and as I have purposed saith God so shall it stand God's purposes are immutable so is his Covenant God's purposes are sure very sure so is his Covenant The Covenant of Grace that flows from the eternal purpose of God is as sure as God is sure for God can neither deceive nor
be deceived That Covenant that is built upon this rock of God's eternal purpose must needs be sure and therefore all that are in covenant with God need never fear falling away there is no man no power no devil no violent temptation that shall ever be able to overturn those that God has brought under the bond of the Covenant Joh. 10. 28 29 30 31. 1 Pet. 1. 5. But Secondly Consider that the Covenant of Grace is confirmed and made sure by the blood of Jesus Christ Heb. 13. 20. Heb. 9. 16 17. The main point which the Apostle intended by setting down the inviolableness of men's last Wills after their death is to prove that Christs death was very requisite for ratifying of the New Testament consult these scriptures Mat. 16. 21. Luk. 24. 26. Heb. 2. 10. cap. 2. 17. which is called the blood of the everlasting Covenant Christ by his irrevocable death hath made sure the Covenant to us The Covenant of Grace is to be considered under the notion of a Testament and Christ as the Testator of this will and testament Now look as a man's will and testament is irrevocably confirmed by the Testator's death For where a Testament is there must also of necessity be the death of the Testator For a Testament is of force after men are dead otherwise it is of no strength at all whilest the Testator liveth These two verses are added as a proof of the necessity of Christ's manner of confirming the new Testament as he did namely by his death The Argument is taken from the common use and equity of confirming Testaments which is by the death of the Testator A Testament is only and wholly at his pleasure that maketh it so that he may alter it or disanul it while he liveth as he seeth good but when he is dead he not remaining to alter it none else can do it In the seventeenth verse the Apostle declareth the inviolableness of a man's last will being ratified as before by the testator's death This he sheweth two ways 1. Affirmatively in these words A Testament is of force after men are dead 2. Negatively in these words otherwise it is of no strength Now from the affirmative and the negative it plainly appears that a Testament is made inviolable by the Testator's death so Jesus Christ hath unalterably confirmed this Will and Testament viz. The New Covenant by his blood and Heb. 9. 15. death That by means of death for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance Christ died to purchase an eternal inheritance and on this ground eternal life is called an eternal inheritance for we come to it as heirs through the good will grace and favour of the purchaser thereof manifested by the last Will and Testament Hence you read This is my blood Ma● 26. 28. of the new testament which is shed for many for the remission of sins Again This cup is the new testament in my ●uk 22. 20. 1 Cor. 11. 25. blood which is shed for you The Covenant is called both a Covenant and a Testament because his Covenant and Testament is founded established ratified and immutably sealed up in and by his blood Christ is the faithful and true witness yea truth it self his word shall not Rev. 3. 14. Joh. 14. 6. Mark 13. 31. pass away If the word of Christ be sure if his promise be sure if his Covenant be sure then surely his last Will and Testament which is ratified and confirmed by his death must needs be very sure Christ's blood is too precious a thing to be spilt in vain but in vain is it spilt if his Testament his Covenant ratified thereby be altered If the Covenant of Grace be not a sure Covenant then 1 Cor. 1● 14. Christ died in vain and our preaching is in vain and your hearing and receiving and believing is all in vain Christ's death is a declaration and evidence of the eternal counsel of his father which is most stable and immutable in it self but how much more is it so when it is ratified by the death of his dearest son In whom all the promises are yea 2 Cor. 1. 20. and Amen that is in Christ they are made performed and ratified By all this we may safely conclude that the Covenant of Grace is a most sure Covenant there can be no addition to it detraction from it or alteration of it unless the death of Jesus Christ whereby it 's confirmed be frustrated and overthrown Certainly the Covenant is as sure as Christ's death is sure The sureness and certainty of the Covenant is the ground and bottom of bottoms for our faith hope joy patience peace c. take this corner this foundation stone away and all will tumble were the Covenant uncertain a Christian could never have a good day all his days his whole life would be filled up with fears doubts disputes distractions c. and he would be still a crying out Oh! I can never be sure that God will be mine or that Christ will be mine or that mercy will be mine or that pardon of sin will be mine or that heaven will be mine Oh! I can never be sure that I shall escape the great damnation the worm 2 Thes 1. 9. that never dies the fire that never goes out or an eternal separation from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power The great glory of the Covenant is the certainty of the Covenant and this is the top of God's glory and of a Christian's comfort that all the mercies that are in the Covenant of Grace are the sure mercies of David and that all the Grace that is in the Covenant is sure Grace and that all the glory that is in the Covenant is sure glory and that all the external internal and eternal blessings of the Covenant are sure blessings I might further argue the sureness of the Covenant of Grace from all the attributes of God which are deeply engaged to make it good as his wisdom love power justice holiness faithfulness righteousness c. And I might further argue the certainty of the Covenant of Grace from the seals which God hath annexed to it You know what was sealed by the Kings Ring could not be altered God hath set his seals to this Covenant his Est 8. 8. broad seal in the Sacraments and his privy seal in the witness of his spirit and therefore the Covenant of Grace is sure and can never be reversed But upon several accounts I may not now insist on these things And therefore Eighthly and lastly the Covenant of Grace is stiled a well ordered Covenant 2 Sam. 23. 5. He hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure Oh the admirable counsel wisdom love care and tenderness Rom. 11. 33 34 35 3● 1 C●● 2. 7. Eph. 1. 8.
be greatly accepted and highly esteemed of by my heavenly father Artaxerxes the King of Persia lovingly accepted of the poor man's Present of water because his good will was in it and put it into a golden vessel and gave him the vessel of Gold accounting it the part of a truly noble and generous spirit to take in good part small presents offered with an hearty affection Oh how much more will God the father kindly accept of Jesus Christ in Jer●m saith that the Jews cursed Christ in their Synagogues three times a d●y they so greatly abhorred the name Jesus that they would not pronounce it but if they did unawars happen to pronounce it then they would punish themselve with a blow on their faces c. his Mediatory office vers 7. Thus saith the Lord the Redeemer of Israel and his holy One to him whom man despiseth to him whom the nation abhorreth to a servant of rulers Kings shall see and arise Princes also shall worship because of the Lord that is faithful and the holy one of Israel and he shall chuse thee God the father comforting of Christ tells him that though he were contemptible to to many yea to the Nation of the Jews and used basely like a servant by their Princes Herod Annas Caiphas and Pontius Pilat yet other Kings and Princes should see his dignity and glory and submit to him and honour him as the Saviour and Redeemer of the world God the father chose Jesus Christ to his servant and to be a Mediator for his Elect he designed him to that office of being a Saviour both to the Jew and Gentile and accordingly he accepted of him Thus saith the Lord In an acceptable time have I heard thee and in a day of salvation have I helped thee and I will preserve thee and give thee for a covenant of the people to establish the earth to cause to inherit the desolate heritage Here you see that God the father still goes on to speak more and more comfortably and encouragingly to Jesus Christ for he tells him that he will be at hand to hear and help and assist him and he tells him that he will preserve him both in his This Jerom applies to the time of Christ's hanging on the Cross he cried out My God my God why hast thou forsaken me for God made it appear that he heard him and forsook him not in that he raised him from the dead c. See Heb. 5. 7. person and in the execution of his office and he tells him that he will accept of his person and of his services and of his suits and intercession for himself and his people So Mat. 3. 17. And lo a voice from heaven saying This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased The voice from heaven was doubtless the voice of his father in that he saith This is my beloved Son my natural son by eternal and incomprehensible generation and therefore dearest to me and most acceptable with me my judgment is satisfied in him my love is settled upon him and I have an inestimable value for him and therefore I cannot but declare my approbation and acceptation both of him and his work I am well pleased in him I am infinitely pleased in him I am only pleased in him I am at all times pleased in him I am for ever pleased in him I am so well pleased in him that for his sake I am fully appeased with all them whom I have given him and who come unto him Joh. 6. 37 38 39 40. But Seventhly God the father promiseth highly to exalt Jesus Christ and nobly to reward him and everlastingly to glorifie him And nations that knew not thee shall run Isa 49. 4 5 6. Isa 40. 10. unto thee because of the Lord thy God and for the holy One of Israel for he hath glorified thee These are the words of God the father to his son promising of him to set such a Crown of glory upon his head as should make the nations of the world run unto him God the father made Christ glorious in his birth by the Angel's Doxology Glory be to God on high in his baptism by his speaking Luk. 2. 1● 14. Mat. 3. ult cap. 17. 1 2 3 4 5. R●m 1. 4. Act. 1 9 10 11. of him from heaven as his beloved son in his transfiguration on the mount in his resurrection and in his ascension into heaven So Isa 53. 12. Therefore will I divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the spoil with the strong because he hath poured out his soul unto death and he was numbered with the transgressors and he bare the sin of many and made intercession for the transgressours The meaning is this I will impart saith God the father to my son such honour glory renown and riches after his sufferings as Conquerours use to have and he shall have them as a glorious reward of all his conflicts with my wrath with temptations with persecutions with reproach with contempt with death yea and with hell it self The words are a plain allusion to Conquerours in War who are commonly exalted and greatly rewarded by their Princes for venturing of their lives and obtaining of Conquests as all Histories will tell you And indeed should not God the father reward Jesus Christ for all his hard services and his matchless sufferings he would express less kindness to him than he has done to heathen Princes for he gave Egypt to Nebuchadnezzar as his hire for his service at Tyre and to Cyrus Ezek. 29. 18 19. Isa 45. 1 2 3. he gave hidden Treasure But alas what were their services to Christ's services or their sufferings to Christ's sufferings I have read of Cyrus how that in a great expedition against his enemies the better to encourage his souldiers to fight in an Oration that he made at the head of his Army he promised upon the victory to make every foot-souldier an horse-man and every horse-man a Commander and that no officer that did valiantly Col●s 2. 14 15. should be unrewarded And will God the father let the son of his dearest love who has fought against all infernal powers and conquered them go without his reward surely no. So in Psal 2. 7. I will declare the decree the Lord hath said unto me Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee David was God's son by Adoption and acceptation Psal ●9 26 27. Prov. 8. Heb. 1. 5. but Christ was his son 1. By eternal Generation 2. By hypostatical union and so God had one only son as Abraham had one only Isaac though otherwise he was the father of many nations some by this day do understand the day of Eternity where there is no time past nor to come no beginning nor ending but always one present day Others by this day do understand it of the day of Christ's incarnation and coming into the world some again do
us not shrink nor saint nor grow weary under our greatest sufferings for Christ when sufferings multiply when they are sharp when they are more bitter than Gall or Wormwood yea more bitter than death it self then Remember the Covenant of Redemption and how punctually Christ made good all the Articles of it on his side and then saint and give out if you can Well may I be afraid but I do not therefore despair for I think Austin upon and remember the wounds of the Lord saith one Nolo vivere sine vulnere cum te video vulneratum Ob my God as long as I see thy wounds I will never live without wound saith another Crux Christi clavis Paradisi The Damas●●n Cross of Christ is the Golden Key that opens Paradise to us saith one I had rather with the Martyrs and Consessors have my Saviour's Cross than with their Persecutors the worlds Crown the harder we are put to it the greater shall be our reward in heaven saith another Gardius the Martyr hit the nail when he said it is to my loss if you Chrysost●m ab●●e me any thing in my sufferings If you suffer not for Religion you will suffer for a worse thing saith one V●n●●mi●s Never did any man serve me better than you serve me said another to his Persecutors Adversus gentes gratias agimus quod à molestis dominis liberemur We thank you for delivering us from hard Task-masters that we may enjoy more sweetly the bosom of our Lord Jesus said the Martyrs 'T was a notable saying of ●●●her Ecclesia totum mundum convertit sanguine oratione the Church converteth the whole world by blood and prayers They may kill me said Socrates of his enemies but they cannot hurt me so may the redeemed of the Lord say they may take away my head but they cannot take away my Crown of life of righteousness of glory of immortality The Lacedemonians Rev. 2. 10. 2 lim 4. 8. 1 Pe● 5. 4. 5. were wont to say it is a shame for any man to fly in time of danger but for a Lacedemonian it is a shame for him to deliberate Oh what a shame is it for Christians when they look upon the Covenant of Redemption so much as to deliberate whether they were best suffer for Christ or no. Petrus Blesensis has long since observed that the Courtiers of his time suffered as great trouble and as many vexations for vanity as good Christians did for the truth the Courtiers suffered weariness and painfulness hunger and thirst with all the Catalogue of Paul's afflictions and what can the best Saints suffer more Now shall men that are strangers to the Covenant of Redemption suffer such hard and great things for their lusts for very vanity and will not you who are acquainted with the Covenant of Redemption and who are interested in the Covenant of Redemption be ready and willing to suffer any thing for that Jesus who according to the Covenant of Redemption has suffered such dreadful things for you and merited such glorious things for you But Thirdly From this Covenant of Redemption as we have opened it you may see what infinite cause we have to be swallowed up in the admiration of the Father's love in entring into this Covenant and in making good all the Articles of this Covenant on his side When man was fallen from his primitive purity and glory from his holiness God so loved his Son that he gave him all the world for his possession Psal 2. 8. But he so loved the world that he gave Son and all for its Redemption Bernard and happiness from his freedom and liberty into a most woful gulf of sin and misery when Angels and men were all at a loss and knew no way or means whereby fallen man might be raised restored and saved that then God should firstly and freely propose this Covenant and enter into this Covenant that miserable man might be saved from wrath to come and raised and settled in a more safe high and happy estate than that was from which he was fallen in Adam Oh what wonderful what amazing love is this Abraham manifested a great deal of love to God in offering up of his only Isaac but God Gen. 22. 12. has shewed far greater love to poor sinners in making his only Son an offering for their sins for 1. God loved Christ with a more transcendent love than Abraham could Joh. 10. 18. Heb. 10. 10 12. love Isaac 2. God was not bound by the commandment of a superiour to do it as Abraham was 3. God freely and voluntarily did it which Abraham would never have done without a commandment 4. Isaac was to be offered after the manner of holy Sacrifices but Christ suffered an ignominious death after the manner of Thieves 5. Isaac was all along in the hands of a tender Father but Christ was all along in the hands of barbarous enemies 6. Isaac was offered but in shew but Christ was offered indeed and in very good earnest Is not this an excess yea a miracle of love 'T is good to be always a musing upon this love and delighting our selves in this love But Fourthly From this Covenant of Redemption as we have opened it you may see what signal cause we have to be deeply affected with the love of Jesus Christ who roundly and readily falls in with this Covenant and who has faithfully performed all the Articles of this Covenant had not Jesus Christ kept touch with his Father as to every Article of the Covenant of Redemption he could never have saved us nor have satisfied Divine Justice nor have been admitted into heaven That Jesus Christ might make full satisfaction for all our sins He was made a curse Gal. 3 13. for us whereby he hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law All his sufferings were for us All that can be desired of God by man is mercy and truth mercy in regard of our misery truth in reference to God's promises That which moved Christ to engage himself as a Surety for us was his respect to God and man To God for the honour of his Name neither the mercy nor the truth nor the justice of God had been so conspicuously manifested if Jesus Christ had not been our Surety To man and that to help us in our succourless and desperate estate No creature either would or could discharge that debt wherein man stood obliged to the justice of God This is a mighty evidence of the endless love of Christ this is an evidence of the endless and matchless love of Christ We count it a great evidence of love for a friend to be surety for us when we intend no damage to him thereupon but if a man be surety for that which he knoweth the principal debtor is not able to pay and thereupon purposeth to pay it himself this we look upon as an extraordinary evidence of love