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A26796 The harmony of the divine attributes in the contrivance and accomplishment of man's redemption by the Lord Jesus Christ, or, Discourses wherein is shewed how the wisdom, mercy, justice, holiness, power, and truth of God are glorified in that great and blessed work / by William Bates. Bates, William, 1625-1699. 1674 (1674) Wing B1113; ESTC R25864 309,279 511

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happy therefore he wishes there were no God to whom he must be accountable He is no more wrought on by the Divine perfections and beauties to love the Deity than a guilty person who resolvedly goes on to break the Laws can be perswaded to love the Judge for his excellent knowledg and his inflexible integrity who will certainly condemn him Besides the great and abundant blessings which God as Creator and Preserver bestows upon all cannot prevail upon guilty Creatures to love him Indeed the goodness that raised us from a state of nothing is unspeakably great and layes an Eternal Obligation upon us The whole stock of our affections is due to Him for conferring upon us the humane Nature that is common to Kings and the meanest Beggar All the Riches and Dignity of the greatest Prince whereby he exceeds the poorest Wretch compared to this benefit which they both share in have no more proportion than a Farthing to an immense Treasure The Innumerable Expressions of God's Love to us every Day should infinitely endear Him to us For who is so inhumane as not to love his Parents or his Friend who defended him from his deadly Enemies or relieved him in his poverty especially if the vein of his bounty be not dryed up but alwayes diffuses it self in new favours If we love the memory of that Emperour who reflecting upon one day that past without his bestowing some benefit with grief said Diem perdidi I have lost a day how much more should we love God who every moment bestows innumerable blessings upon his Creatures But sinful Man hath contracted such an unnatural hardness that he receives no impressions from the renewed Mercies of God He violates the Principles of Nature and Reason For how unnatural is it not to love our Benefactour when the dull Ox and the stupid Ass serve those that feed them and how unreasonable when the Publicans return love for love Now there is nothing that can perfectly overcome our hatred but the consideration of that Love which hath freed us from Eternal Misery for the guilty Creature will be alwayes suspicious that notwithstanding the ordinary benefits of Providence God is an enemy to it and till Man is convinced that in loving God he most truly loves himself he will never sincerely affect him This was one great design of God in the Way as well as in the Work of our Redemption to gain our hearts intirely to himself He saves us in the most endearing and obliging manner As Davids affection declared its self I will not serve the Lord with that which cost me nothing So God would not save Man with that which cost him nothing but with the dearest price hath purchased a Title to our Love God was in Christ reconciling the World to himself as well as through Christ reconciling himself to the World He hath propounded such Arguments for our Love so powerful and sublime that Adam in Innocence was unacquainted with He sent down his own Bowels to testifie His Affection to us And that should be the greatest indearment of our Love which was the greatest evidence of his And if we consider the Person of our Redeemer what more worthy object of our affection than Christ And Christ dying with all the circumstances of dishonour and pain and dying thus for Love and this Love terminated on Man If He had no attractive excellencies in himself yet his dying for us should make him infinitely precious and dear to our Souls He is more amiable on the Cross than in the Throne For there we see the clearest Testimony and the most Glorious Triumph of his Love There he endured the Anger of Heaven and the scorn of the Earth There we might see Joy sadned Faith fearing Salvation suffering and Life dying Blessed Redeemer what couldst thou have done or Suffered more to quicken our dead Powers and inflame our cold Hearts toward thee How can we remember thy bleeding dying Love without an Extasy of affection If we are not more insensible than the Rocks 't is impossible but we must be toucht and softened by it Suppose an Angel by special delegation had been enabled to have trod Satan under our feet our obligations to him had been inexpressible and our love might have been intercepted from ascending to our Creator For Salvation is a greater benefit than the meer giving to us our natural being As the privation of felicity with the actual misery that is joyned with it is infinitely worse than the negation of being Our Lord pronounced concerning Judas It had been good for that Man that he had never been born Redeeming Goodness exceeds creating Now the Son of God that he might have our highest Love alone wrought Salvation for us And what admirable Goodness is it that he puts a value upon our affection and accepts such a small return our most intense and ardent love bears no more proportion to his than a spark to the Element of Fire Besides His Love to us was pure and without any benefit to himself but ours to him is profitable to our Souls for their eternal advantage Yet with this He is fully satisfied when we love Him in the quality of a Saviour we give Him the Glory of that he designs most to be Glorified in that is of his Mercy to the miserable For this reason he instituted the Sacrament of the Supper the contrivance of his Love to refresh the memory of his Death and quicken our fainting love to him Now the Love that our Saviour requires must be 1. Sincere and Unfeigned This declares it self by a care to please Him in all things If a Man love me saith our Saviour he will keep my Commandments Obedience is the most natural and necessary product of Love For Love is the spring of Action and employs all the faculties in the service of the person loved The Apostle expresses the force of it by an emphatical Word The Love of Christ constrains us it signifies to have one bound and so much under power that he cannot move without leave As the inspired Prophets were carried by the Spirit and intirely acted by his motions Such an absolute Empire had the Love of Christ over him ruling all the inclinations of his Heart and actions of his Life 'T is this alone makes Obedience chearful and constant For Love is seated in the Will and the Obedience that proceeds from it is out of choice and purely voluntary No Commandment is grievous that is performed from Love And it makes Obedience constant that which is forced from the impression of fear is unsteadfast but what is mixt with delight is lasting 2. Our Love to Christ must be supreme exceeding that which is given to all inferiour Objects The most elevated and entire Affection is due to Him who saves us from Torments that are extreme and eternal and bestows upon us an Inheritance immortal and undefiled Life it self and all the endearments of it Relations Estates
Repentance and Faith which are humbling Graces to be the conditions of our obtaining Pardon By Repentance we acknowledge that if we are condemned 't is just severity and if we are Saved 't is rich Mercy And Faith absolutely excludes boasting For it supposes the Creature guilty and receives Pardon from the Sovereign Grace of God upon the account of our Crucified Redeemer The benefit and the manner of our receiving it was typified in the miraculous cure of the Israelites by looking up to the Brasen Serpent For the act of seeing is performed by receiving the Images which are derived from the objects 't is rather a Passion then an Action that it might appear that the healing Virtue was meerly from the Power of God and the Honor of it intirely his In short God had respect to the lowliness of this Grace in appointing it to be the qualification of a Justified person for the most firm reliance on Gods Mercy is alwayes joyned with the strongest renouncing of our own Merits Briefly to excite humility in us the Gospel tells us that the Glorious reward is from rich bounty and liberality The gift of God is Eternal Life through Jesus Christ our Lord. As the Election of us to Glory so the actual possession of it proceeds from pure Favour There is no more proportion between all our Services and that High and Eternal felicity than between the running a few steps and the obtaining an Imperial Crown Indeed not only Heaven but all the Graces that are necessary to purify and prepare us for it we receive from undeserved Mercy So that God crowns in us not our proper Works but his own proper Gifts 2. The Gospel strictly commands Self-denial when the Honor of God and Religion is concern'd Jesus tells his Disciples If any Man will come after me let him deny himself and take up his Cross and follow me Life and all the endearments of it Estates Honours Relations Pleasures must be put under our feet to take the first step with our Redeemer This is absolutely necessary to the being of a Christian In the preparation of his mind and the resolution of his will he must live a Martyr and whensoever his duty requires he must break all the Retinacula Vitae the voluntary bands that fasten us to the World and die a Martyr rather than suffer a divorce to be made between his Heart and Christ. Whatsoever is most esteem'd and lov'd in the world must be parted with as a snare if it tempts us from our Obedience or offered up as a Sacrifice when the Glory of God calls for it And this command that appears so hard to sense is most just and reasonable For God hath by so many titles a right to us that we ought to make an intire Dedication of our selves and our most valuable interests to him Our Redeemer infinitely denied himself to save us and 't is most just we should in gratitude deny our selves to serve him Besides an infinite advantage redounds to us for our Saviour assures us that whosoever will save his life when 't is inconsistent with the performance of his duty shall lose it and whosoever will lose his life for his sake shall find it Now what is more prudent than of two evils that are propounded to choose the least that is Temporal Death rather than Eternal and of two goods that are offered to our choice to prefer the greater a Life in Heaven before that on the Earth Especially if we consider that we must shortly yeeld the present life to the infirmities of Nature and 't is the richest traffick to exchange that which is frail and mortal for that which remains in its perfection for ever 3. The Gospel enjoyns Universal Love among Men. This is that fire which Christ came to kindle upon the Earth 't is the abridgment of all Christian perperfection the fulfilling of the Divine Law for all the particular Precepts are in substance Love He that loves his Neighbor will have a tender regard to his Life Honour and Estate which is the sum of the second Table The extent of our Love must be to all that partake of the same common nature The universal consanguinity between Men should make us regard them as our allies Every Man that wants our help is our Neighbour Do good to all is the command of the Apostle For the quality of our Love it must be unfeigned without dissimulation The Image of it in Words without real Effects provokes the Divine displeasure for as all falshood is odious to the God of Truth so especially the counterfeiting of Charity that is the impression of his Spirit and the seal of his Kingdom A sincere pure affection that rejoyces at the good and resents the evils of others as our own and expresses it self in all real Offices not for our private respects but their benefit is required of us And as to the degree of our Love we are commanded above all things to have fervent Charity among our selves This principally respects Christians who are united by so many sacred and amiable bands as being formed of the same Eternal Seed Children of the same Heavenly Father and joynt-Heirs of the same Glorious Inheritance Christian Charity hath a more noble Principle than the affections of nature for it proceeds from the Love of God shed abroad in Believers to make them one Heart and one Soul and a more Divine pattern which is the Example of Christ Who hath by his Sufferings restored us to the Favour of God that we should Love one another as He hath Loved us This Duty is most stricty injoyn'd for without Love Angelical Eloquence is but an empty noise and all other Virtues have but a false lustre Prophesie Faith Knowledge Miracles the highest outward Acts of Charity or Self-denial the giving our Estates to the Poor or Bodies to Martyrdom are neither pleasing to God nor profitable to him that does them Besides That special branch of Love the forgiving of Injuries is the peculiar Precept of our Saviour For the whole World consents to the returning evil for evil The vicious Love of our selves makes us very sensible and according to our preverse judgments to revenge an injury seems as just as to requite a benefit From hence revenge is the most Rebellious and Obstinate Passion An Offence remains as a thorn in the mind that inflames and torments it till 't is appeased by a vindication 'T is more difficult to overcome the Spirit then to gain a Battel We are apt to revolve in our thoughts injuries that have been done to us and after a long distance of time the memory represents them as fresh as at the first Now the Gospel commands a hearty and intire forgiveness of injuries though repeated never so often to seventy seven times We must not only quench the Fire of Anger but kindle the Fire of Love towards our greatest Enemies I say unto you Love your Enemies
was so fram'd as to make a visible discovery of the Prerogatives of his Creation And when he reflected upon his Soul that animated his dust its excellent endowments wherein 't is comparable to the Angels its capacity of enjoying God himself for ever he had an internal and most clear testimony of the glorious perfections of his Creator For Man who alone admires the works of God is the most admirable of all 2. The Image of God was resplendent in mans Conscience the seat of practical Knowledg and Treasury of moral Principles The directive faculty was sincere and incorrupt not infected with any disguising tincture 't was clear from all prejudices which might render it an incompetent Judg of good and evil It instructed Man in all the parts of his relative Obligations to God and the Creatures 'T was not fetter'd and confin'd fearfully restraining from what is Lawful nor licentious and indulgent in what is forbidden Briefly Conscience in Adam upright was a subordinate God that gave Laws and exacted obedience to that glorious Being who is its Superior 3. There was a Divine Impression on the Will Spiritual Reason kept the Throne and the inferiour Faculties observed an easy and regular subordination to its dictates The Affections were exercis'd with proportion to the quality of their Objects Reason was their inviolable Rule Love the most noble and Master-affection which gives being and goodness to all the rest even to hatred it self for so much we hate an object as it hinders our enjoyment of the good we love this precious Incense was offer'd up to the excellent and supreme Being which was the Author of his Life Adam fully obeyed the first and great Command of loving the Lord with all his heart soul and strength His love to other things was regulated by his love to God There was a perfect accord between flesh and spirit in him They both joyn'd in the service of God and were naturally mov'd to their happiness In short the image of God in Adam was a living powerful Principle and had the same relation to the Soul which the Soul hath to the Body to animate and order all its Faculties in their Offices and Operations according to the Will of his Creator 2. The Image of God consisted though in an inferiour degree in the happy state of man Herein he resembled that infinitly Blessed Being This happiness had relation to the two Natures which enter into Mans Composition 1. To the Animal and Sensitive and this consisted in two things 1. In the excellent disposition of his Organs 2. In the enjoyment of convenient Objects 1. In the excellent disposition of the Organs His body was form'd immediately by God and so not liable to those defects which proceed from the weakness of second causes No blemish or disease which are the effects and footsteps of sin were to be found in him His health was not a frail inconstant disposition easily ruin'd by the jarring elements but firm and stable The humours were in a just temperament to prevent any destemper which might tend to the dissolution of that excellent frame Briefly all rhe senses were quick and lively able to perform with facility vigour and delight their operations 2. There were convenient Objects to entertain his sensitive faculties He enjoyed Nature in its original Purity crown'd with the benediction of God before 't was blasted with the curse The World was all Harmony and Beauty becoming the goodness of the Creator and not as 't is since the Fall disorder'd and deform'd in many parts the effect of his Justice The Earth was liberal to Adam of all its Treasures the Heavens of their Light and sweetest Influences He was seated in Eden a place of so great beauty and delight that it represented the Celestial Paradise which is refresht with Rivers of Pleasure And as the ultimate End of the Creatures was to raise his mind and inflame his heart with the love of his great Benefactor So their first and natural use was the satisfaction of the Senses from whence the felicity of the Animal Life did proceed 2. His supreme Happiness consisted in the exercise of his most noble Faculties on their proper Objects This will appear by considering that as the spiritual Faculties have objects which infinitely excel those of the sensitive So their capacity is more inlarged their union with objects is more intimate and their perception is with more quickness and vivacity and thereby are the greatest instruments of pleasure to the rational being Now the highest Faculties in Man are the Understanding and Will and their happiness consists in union with God by Knowledg and Love 1. In the Knowledg of God As the desire of Knowledg is the most natural to the humane Soul so the obtaining of it produces the most noble and sweetest pleasure And proportionably to the degrees of excellency that are in objects so much of rational Perfection and Satisfaction accrues to the mind by the knowledg of them The discovery of the Works of God greatly affected Man yet the excellencies scatter'd among them are but an imperfect and mutable shadow of God's infinite and unchangable Perfections How much more delightful was it to his pure understanding tracing the footsteps and impressions of God in Natural things to ascend to him who is the glorious Original of all Perfections And although his finite understanding could not comprehend the Divine excellencies yet his knowledg was answerable to the degrees of Revelation wherein God was manifested He saw the admirable Beauty of the Creator through the transparent vail of the creatures And from hence there arose in the Soul a pleasure pure solid and satisfying a pleasure divine for God takes infinit contentment in the contemplation of Himself 2. The Happiness of Man consisted in the Love of God 'T was not the naked speculation of the Deity that made him happy but such a knowledg as ravisht his Affections For happiness results from the fruitions of all the Faculties 'T is true that by the mediation of the understanding the other Faculties have access to an object the Will and Affections can't be enclin'd to any thing but by vertue of an act of the mind which propounds it as worthy of them It follows therefore that when by the discovery of the transcendent excellencies in God the Soul is excited to love and to delight in Him as its Supreme Good 't is then really and perfectly happy Now as Adam had a perfect knowledg of God so the height of his love was answerable to his knowledg and the compleatness of his enjoyment was according to his Love All the Divine Excellencies were amiable to him The Majesty Purity Justice and Power of God which are the terrour of guilty creatures secur'd his happiness whilst he continued in his Obedience His Conscience was clear and calm no unquiet fears discompos'd its Tranquillity 't was the seat of Innocence and Peace Briefly His love to God was perfect without any
something although 't is rather a Twilight than clear But when 't is brought from the narrow sphere of things sensible to contemplate the immensity of things Spiritual and Supernatural its light declines and is turn'd into darkness 2. The Pride of the Humane Understanding which disdains to stoop to the height of these mysteries 'T is observable that those who most excell'd in Natural Wisdom were the greatest despisers of Evangelical Truths The proud Wits of the World chose rather to be Masters of their own than Scholars to another They made Reason their Supreme Rule and Philosophy their highest Principle and would not believe what they could not comprehend They derided Christians as captives of a blind Belief and their Faith as the effect of Folly and rejected Revelation the only means to conveigh the knowledg of Divine Mysteries to them Therefore the Apostle by way of upbraiding enquires Where is the wise man Where is the Scribe Where is the Disputer of this world God hath made the wisdome of the world foolishness As those who are really poor and would appear rich in the Pomp of their Habits and Attendants are made poorer by that expence so those who were destitute of true Wisdom and would appear wise in making Reason the Judg of Divine Revelation and the last resolution of all things by that false affectation of Wisdom they became more foolish By all their Disputes against the appearing absurdities of the Christian Religion they were brought into a more learned Darkness 3. The prejudices which arose from Sensual Lusts hindered the Belief of the Gospel As the carnal Understanding rebels against the sublimity of its Doctrine so the carnal Appetite against the purity of its Precepts And according to the Dispositions of Men from whence they act such light they desire to direct them in acting The Gospel is a Mystery of Godliness and those who are under the love of Sin cherish an affected Ignorance lest the Light should enflame Conscience by representing to them the deadly guilt that cleaves to Sin and thereby make it uneasie This account our Saviour gives of the Infidelity of the world That men love darkness rather than light because their deeds are evil And that this was the real cause what ever was pretended is clear in that the Gentiles who opposed Christ adored those impure Deities whose infamous Lusts were acknowledged by them And with what colour then could they reject our Redeemer because crucified As if Vice were not more incompatible with the Deity than Sufferings Now though Reason enslav'd by prejudice and corrupted by Passion despises the Gospel yet when 't is enlightned by Faith it discovers such a wise oeconomy in it that were it not true it would transcend the most noble created Mind to invent it 'T is so much above our most excellent Thoughts that no Humane Understanding would ever attempt to feign it with confidence of persuading the world into a Belief of it How is it possible that it should be contriv'd by natural Reason since no man can believe it sincerely when 't is reveal'd without a supernatural Faith To confirm our Belief of these great and saving Mysteries I will shew how just it is that the Understanding should resign itself to Divine Revelation which hath made them known In order to this we must consider 1. There are some Doctrines in the Gospel the Understanding could not discover but when they are reveal'd it hath a clear apprehension of them upon a rational account and sees the characters of Truth visibly stampt on their Forehead As the Doctrine of Satisfaction to Divine Justice that Pardon might be dispens'd to repenting Sinners For our natural conception of God includes his infinite Purity and Justice And when the design of the Gospel is made known whereby he hath provided abundantly for the honour of those Attributes so that He doth the greatest Good without encouraging the least Evil Reason acquiesces and acknowledges this I sought but could not find Now although the primary Obligation to believe such Doctrines ariseth from Revelation yet being ratified by Reason they are embraced with more Clearness by the Mind 2. There are some Doctrines which as Reason by its light could not discover so when they are made known it cannot comprehend but they are by a clear and necessary connexion joyn'd with the other that Reason approves As the Mystery of the Trinity and the Incarnation of the Son of God which are the Foundations of the whole work of our Redemption The Nature of God is repugnant to Plurality there can be but one Essence and the nature of Satisfaction requires a distinction of Persons for he that suffers as guilty must be distinguish'd from the person of the Judg that exacts Satisfaction and no meer Creature is able by his obedient sufferings to repair the Honour of God so that a Divine Person assuming the Nature of Man was alone capable to make that satisfaction which the Gospel propounds and Reason consents to Besides 't is clear that the Doctrine of the Trinity that is of three glorious Relations in the Godhead and of the Incarnation are most firmly connected with all the parts of the Christian Religion left in the Writings of the Apostles which as they were confirmed by Miracles the Divine Signatures of their certainty so they contain such authentick marks of their Divinity that right Reason cannot reject them 3. Whereas there are three Principles by which we apprehend things Sense Reason and Faith these lights have their different objects that must not be confounded Sense is confin'd to things material Reason considers things abstracted from matter Faith regards the Mysteries revealed from Heaven and these must not transgress their order Sense is an incompetent judg of things about which Reason is only conversant It can only make a report of those objects which by their natural characters are exposed to it And Reason can only discourse of things within its sphere Supernatural things which derive from Revelation and are purely the objects of Faith are not within its territories and jurisdiction Those Superlative Mysteries exceed all our intellectual Abilities 'T is true the Understanding is a rational Faculty and every act of it is really or in appearance grounded on Reason But there is a wide difference between the proving a Doctrine by Reason and the giving a reason why we believe the truth of it For instance we cannot prove the Trinity by natural Reason and the subtilty of the Schoolmen who affect to give some reason of all things is here more prejudicial than advantageous to the Truth For he that pretends to maintain a point by Reason and is unsuccessful doth weaken the credit which the Authority of Revelation gives And 't is considerable that the Scripture in delivering supernatural truths produce God's Authority as their only proof without using any other way of arguing But although we cannot demonstrate these Mysteries by Reason yet we may give
manifested towards Man in that 1. considered in himself he is altogether unworthy of it 2. As compared with the fallen Angels who are left under perfect irremediable Misery First Man considered in himself is unworthy of the Favour of God The usual Motives of Love are 1. The Goodnels of things or persons This is the proper allective of the Rational Appetite There is such a ravishing Beauty in it that it powerfully calls forth Affection When there is an union of amiable qualities in a Person every one finds an attractive 2. A Conformity in Disposition hath a mighty force to beget Love Resemblance is the common Principle of Union in Nature Social Plants thrive best when near together Sensitive Creatures associate with those of their kind And Love which is an affectionate Union and a voluntary Band is best caused by a Similitude in inclinations The Harmony of Tempers is the strongest and sweetest tye of Friendship 3. Love is an innocent and powerful charm to produce Love 't is of universal Virtue and known by all the World None are of such an unnatural Hardness but they are softned and receive impression from it Now there are none of these inducements to encline God to love Man The first quality he was utterly destitute of Nothing excellent or amiable was in him Nothing but Deformity and Defilements The Love of God makes us amiable but did not find us so Redemption is a free Favour not excited by the worth of him that receives it but the grace of him that dispenses it Herein God commended his Love to us that while we were Sinners Christ died for us Our goodness was not the Motive of his Love but his Love the original of our goodness 2. There is a fixed Contrariety in the corrupted nature of Man to the Holy Nature and Will of God For which he is not only unworthy of his Love but worthy of his wrath We are opposite to Him in our Minds Affections and Actions A strong Antipathy is seated in all our Faculties How unqualified were we for his Love There is infinite Holiness in Him whereby He is eternally opposite to all Sin yet He exprest infinite Love to Sinners in saving them from Misery 3. There was not the least spark of Love in Man to God notwithstanding his infinite Beauty and Bounty to us yet we renewed acts of hostility against Him every day And it was the worst kind of hostility arising from the hatred of God and that for his Holiness his most amiable Perfection yet then in his Love He pitied us The same favour bestowed on an Enemy is morally more valuable than given to a Friend For 't is Love that puts a price on Benefits and the more undeserved they are the more they are endeared by the Affection that gives them Here is Love not that we loved God but that He loved us and sent his Son to be a Propitiation for our Sins We were Rebels against God and at enmity with the Prince of Life yet then He gave Himself for us It will further appear that our Salvation comes from pure favour if we consider Man not only as a rebellious enemy to God but impotent and obstinate without power to resist Justice and without affection to desire Mercy Sometimes the interest of a Prince may induce him to spare the guilty he may be compell'd to pardon whom he cannot punish The multitude is the greatest Potentate The Sons of Zerviah were too strong for David and then 't is not pity but policy to suspend the judgment But our condition is described by the Apostle that when we were sinners and without strength then Christ dyed for us Man is a despicable Creature so weak that he trembles at the appearance of a worm and yet so wicked that he lifts up his head against Heaven How unable is he to encounter with offended Omnipotence How easily can God destroy him when by his sole Word he made him if he unclasps his hand that suports all things they will presently relasp into their first confusion The whole world of sinners was shut up utterly unable to repel or avoid his displeasure And what amazing Love is it to spare Rebels that were under his feet When a man finds his enemy will he let him go well away but God when we were all at his Mercy spar'd and sav'd us Besides Rebels sometimes sollicit the favour of their Prince by their Acknowledgments their Tears and Supplications the testimonies of their Repentance but Man persisted in his fierce enmity and had the weapons of defiance in his hands against his Creator he trampled on his Laws and despised his Deity yet then the Lord of Host became the God of peace In short there was nothing to call forth the Divine Compassion but our misery The Breach began on Man's part but Reconciliation on God's Mercy open'd his melting Eye and prevented not only our desert but our expectation and desires The design was laid from Eternity God foresaw our sin and our misery and appointed a Saviour before the foundation of the World 'T was the most early and pure Love to provide a ransom for us before we had a being therefore we could not be deserving nor desirous of it and after we were made we deserv●d nothing but Damnation 2. The Grace of God eminently appears in Mans recovery by comparing his state with that of the fallen Angels who are left under misery this is a special circumstance that magnifies the favour and to make it more sensible to us it will be convenient briefly to consider the first state of the Angels their fall and their punishment God in creating the World formed two natures capable of his Image and Favour to glorifie and enjoy him Angels and Men and plac'd them in the principal parts of the universe Heaven and Earth The Angels were the eldest Off-spring of his Love the purest productions of that supreme Light Man in his best state was inferiour to them A great number of them kept not their first state of integrity and felicity Their sin is intimated in Scripture Ordain not a Novice lest being lifted up with pride he fall into the condemnation of the Devil that is lest he become guilty of that sin which brought a severe sentence on the Devil The Prince of darkness was blinded with the lustre of his own excellencies and attempted upon the Regalia of Heaven affecting an independent state He disavoued his Benefactor inricht with his benefits And in the same moment he with his companions in rebellion were banished from Heaven God spared not the Angels that sinned but cast them down to Hell and delivered them into Chains of Darkness to be reserv'd unto Judgment Mercy did not interpose to avert or suspend their Judgment but immediately they were expell'd from the Divine Pre●ence A solemn triumph in Heaven followed a voice came out of the Throne saying Praise our God all
His enjoyment was rais'd above what the most glorious Spirits are capable of All his Faculties were pure and vigorous never blunted with Sin and intimately united to the Deity How cutting then was it to his Soul to be suspended from the perfect vision of God To be divorc'd as it were from himself and to lose that Paradise He alwaies had within Him If all the Angels of Light were at once depriv'd of their glory the loss were not equal to this dreadful eclipse of the Sun of Righteousness As if all the Stars were extinguisht the darkness would not be so terrible as if the Sun the fountain of light were put out Whatever his Sufferings were in kind yet in degree they were answerable to the full and just desert of Sin and surpast the power of the Humane or Angelical Nature to endure In short His Sorrows were only equall'd by that Love which procured them And as the Sufferings infflicted by the hand of God so the Evils He endured from men declare the infiniteness of our Redeemers Love to us For the further discovery of it 't is necessary to reflect upon his Death which is set down by the Apostle as the lowest degree of his Humiliation in which the succession of all his Bodily Sufferings is included it being the complement of all And if we consider the quality of it the Goodness of our Redeemer will be more visible in his voluntary submission to it Two Circumstances make the kind of death which is to be suffered very terrible to us Ignominy and Torment and they eminently concur in the Death of the Cross. 1. The greatest Ignominy attended it and that in the account of God and Men. As honour is in honorante it depends upon the esteem of others so infamy consists in judgment of others Now in the acount of the World every Death inflicted for a Crime is attended with disgrace But that receives its degrees from the manner of it To be executed privately is a favour but to be made a spectacle to the multitude encreases the dishonour of one that suffers When Death is speedily inflicted the sence of shame is presently past but to be exposed to publick view for many Hours as a Malefactor whilst the Beholders detest the Crime and abhor the Punishment is an heavy aggravation of it Beheading which is suddenly dispatcht by a Sword a military Instrument and therefore more honourable was a Priviledg But to hang on the Cross was the most conspicuous mark of the publick Justice and Displeasure a special Infamy was concomitant with it Among the Jews hanging on a Tree was branded with the Curse Therefore God commanded that the bodies of those that were hanged on a tree should be taken down in the Evening that the Land might not be defiled with a Curse And the judgment of other Nations was answerable for it was only inflicted on the most infamous Offenders as Fugitives Slaves Thieves and Traitors such whom the lowness of their Quality or the height of their Crimes rendred unworthy of any respect Hence 't is that Cicero to aggravate the Cruelty of Verres in crucifying a Roman Citizen calls it an unnamed wickedness No Eloquence could equal the evil of it 2. The pain of that Death was extreme The Hands and Feet those parts wherein the complexion of the Nerves meet and are of exquisite Sence were nailed Crucified persons suffered a slow Death but quick Torments They felt themselves die Therefore in pity the Soldiers broke their Legs to put a period to their Misery And to compleat their Punishment they were judg'd unworthy of Burial the last consolation of the dead they were deprived of Repose in the bosom of the Earth our common Mother and exposed as a prey to Birds and Beasts Now the Son of God endured no gentler or nobler Death than that of the Cross. His pure and gracious Hands which were never stretcht out but to do good were pierced and those Feet which bore the Redeemer of the World and for which the Waters had a reverence were nail'd His Body the precious workmanship of the Holy Ghost the Temple of the Deity was destroyed He that is the Glory of Heaven was made the scorn of the Earth The King of Kings was crucified between two Thieves in Jerusalem at their Sacred Feast in the face of the World His naked Body was exposed on the Cross for three Hours only covered with a Veil of Darkness This was such a stupendious submission of the Son of God that his Death astonisht the Universe in another manner than his Birth and Life his Resurrection and Ascension Universal Nature relented at his last Sufferings The Sun was struck with horrour and withdrew its light it did not appear crown'd with beams when the Creator was with thorns The Earth trembled and the Rocks rent the most insensible creatures sympathis'd with Him and 't is in this we have the most visible instance of Divine Love to us The Scripture distinctly represents the Love of God in giving his Son and the Love of Christ in giving Himself to die for Man and both require our deepest consideration The Father exprest such an excess of Love that our Saviour himself speaks of it with admiration God so loved the world that He gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believes on Him should not perish but have everlasting Life If Abraham's resolution to offer his son was in the judgment of God a convincing Evidence of his Affection how much more is the actual sacrificing of Christ the strongest proof of God's Love to us For God had a higher Title to Isaac than Abraham had The Father of Spirits hath a nearer claim than the Fathers of the Flesh. Abraham's readiness to offer up his son was Obedience to a Command not his own choice 't was rather an act of Justice than Love by which he render'd to God what was his own But God Spared not his own Son in whom he had an Eternal Right And He was not only free from Obligation but not sued to for our Salvation in that wonderful way For what Love of Men or of the most charitable Spirits in Heaven could have conceived such a thought that the Son of God should die for our Redemption It had been an impious Blasphemy to have desired it so that Christ is the most absolute gift of God to us Besides The love of Abraham is to be measured by the Reasons that might excite it For according to the amiableness of the object so much greater is the love that gives it Many endearing cirumstances made Isaac the joy of his father yet at the best he was an imprafect mortal creature so that but a moderate affection was regularly due to him Whereas our Redeemer was not a meer Man or an Angel but God's only begotten Son which Title signifies his unity with him in his state and perfections and according to the Excellency of his Nature such
is said that His Blood cleanseth from all sin and that it purgeth the Conscience foom dead Works and that we are washt from our sins in His Blood The frequent Sprinklings and Purifications with Water under the Law prefigured our cleansing from the defilements of sin by the Grace of the Spirit but the shedding of the Blood of Sacrifices was to purge away sins so far as they made liable to a Curse Thirdly Our exemption from punishment and our restoration to Communion with God in Grace and Glory is the fruit of his expiating sin For this reason the Blood of the Mediator speaks better things then that of Abel For that cryed for revenge against the Murderer but his procures remission to Believers And as the just desert of sin is separation from the presence of God who is the fountain of felicity so when the guilt is taken away the person is received into God's favour and fellowship A representation of this is set down in the 24 of Exod. where we have described the manner of dedicating the Covenant between God and Israel by bloody Sacrifices after Moses had finisht the Offering and sprinkled the Blood on the Altar and the People the Elders of Israel who were forbid before to approach neer to the Lord were then invited to come into his presence and in token of reconciliation feasted before him Thus the Eternal Covenant is establisht by the Blood of the Mediator and all the benefits it contains as remission of sins freedom to draw near to the Throne of Grace and the enjoyment of God in Glory are the fruits of his reconciling Sacrifice The sum of all is this That as under the Law God was not appeased without shedding of Blood nor sin expiated without suffering the punishment nor the sinner pardoned without the substitution of a sacrifice so all these are eminently accomplisht in the Death of Christ. He reconciled God to us by his most precious Blood and expiated sin by enduring the Curse and hath procured our pardon by being made sin for us So that 't is most evident that the proper and direct end of the Death of Christ was that God might exercise his Mercy to the guilty sinner in a way that is honourable to his Justice 'T is objected that if God from infinite Mercy gave his Son to us then antecedently to the coming of Christ he had the highest love for mankind and consequently there was no need that Christ by his Death should satisfie Justice to reconcile him to us But a clear answer may be given to this by considering 1. That Anger and Love are consistent at the same time and may in several respects be terminated on the same subject A Father resents a double affection towards a rebellious Son he loves him as his Son is angry with with him as disobedient Thus in our laps'd state God had compassion on us as his creatures and was angry with us as sinners As the injured party he laid aside his anger but as the preserver of Justice he required satisfaction 2. We must dinstinguish between a love of good-will and compassion and a love of complacency The first is that which moved God to ordain the means that without prejudice to his other perfections he might confer pardon and all spiritual benefits upon us the other is that whereby he delights in us being reconciled to him and renewed according to his Image The first supposes him placable the latter that he is appeased There is a visible instance of this in the case of Job's Friends The Lord said to Eliphaz the Temanite My anger is kindled against thee and thy two Friends because ye have not spoken of me the things that are right as my Servant Job Here is a declaration of God's anger yet with the mixture of Love for it follows therefore take unto you now seven Bullocks and seven Rams and go to my Servant Job and offer up for your selves a burnt-offering and my Servant Job shall pray for you for him will I accept He loved them when he directed the way that they might be restored to his Favour yet he was not reconciled for then there had been no need of Sacrifices to atone his anger 2. T is further objected that supposing the Satisfaction of Christ to Justice both the freeness and greatness of God's Love in pardoning sinners will be much lessen'd But it will appear that the Divine Mercy is not prejudiced in either of those respects First The freenss of Gods Love is not diminished for that is the original mover in our Salvation and hath no cause above it to excite or draw it forth but meerly arises from his own will This Love is so absolute that it hath no respect to the sufferings of Christ as Mediator for God so loved the World that he gave his Son to die for us and that which is the effect and testimony of his Love cannot be the impulsive cause of it This first Love of God to Man is commended to us in Christ who is the medium to bring it honorably about Secondly Grace in Scripture is never opposed to Christs Merits but to ours If we had made Satisfaction Justice it self had absolved us For the Law having two parts the command of our Duty which consists in a moral good and the sanction of the punishment that is a physical evil to do or to suffer is necessary not both or if we had provided a Surety such as the Judge could not reject we had been infinitely obliged to him but not to the favour of the Judg. But 't is otherwise here God sent the Reconciler when we were enemies and the Pardon that is dispenc'd to us upon the account of his Sufferings is the effect of meer Mercy We are justified freely by his Grace through the Redemption that is in Jesus Christ. 'T is pure Love that appointed and accepted that imputes and applies his Righteousness to us And as the Freeness so the Riches of his Mercy is not lessened by the Satisfaction Christ made for us 'T is true we have a pattern of God's Justice never to be parallel'd in the Death of Christ but to the severity of Justice towards his only beloved Son his clemency towards us guilty Rebels is fully comensurate For He pardons us without the expence of one drop of our Blood though the Soul of Christ was poured forth as an Offering for Sin Thus in an admirable manner He satisfies Justice and glorifies Mercy and this could have been no other way effected for if He had given His Spirit alone to restore us to His Image His Love had eminently appeared but the honour of his Justice had not been secured But in our Redemption they are infinitely magnified His Love could give no more than the Life of His Son and Justice required no less for Death being the Wages of Sin there could be no satisfaction without the Death of our Redeemer CHAP. XIV The
Imaginations or when looking on Him through the appearing disorders of the World they thought Him unjust and cruel As the most beautiful Face seems deformed and monstrous in a disturbed stream But the most renowned Philosophers dishonoured Him by their base apprehensions For the true Notion of God signifies a Being Infinite Independent the universal Creator who preserves Heaven and Earth the absolute Director of all Events that his Providence takes notice of all Actions that He is a liberal Rewarder of those that seek Him and a just Revenger of those that violate his Laws Now all this was contradicted by them Some asserted the World to be eternal others that Matter was and in that denied Him to be the first Cause of all things Some limited his Being confining Him to one of the Poles of Heaven Others extended it only to the Amplitude of the World The Epicureans totally denied his governing Providence and made Him an idle Spectator of things below They asserted That God was contented with his own Majesty and Glory That whatever was without Him was neither in his thoughts nor care as if to be employed in ordering the various accidents of the world were incompatible with his Blessedness and He needed their Impiety to relieve Him Thus by confining his Power who is Infinite they denied Him in confessing Him Others allowed Him to regard the great affairs of Kingdoms and Nations to manage Crowns and Scepters but to stoop so low as to regard particular things they judged as unbecoming the Divine Nature as for the Sun to descend from Heaven to light a Candle for a Servant in the dark They took the Scepter out of God's hand and set up a foolish and blind Power to dispose of all mutable things Seneca himself represents Fortune as not discerning the worthy from the unworthy and scattering its gifts without respect to Vertue Some made Him a Servant to Nature That he necessarily turn'd the Spheres Others subjected Him to an invincible Destiny that He could not do what He desired Thus the wisest of the Heathens dishonoured the Deity by their false imaginations and instead of representing him with his proper Attributes drew a picture of themselves Besides their impious fancies had a pernicious influence upon the lives of Men especially the denial of his Providence for that took away the strongest restraint of corrupt nature the fear of future Judgment For humane Laws do not punish secret crimes that are innumerable nor all open as those of persons in power which are most hurtful Therefore they are a weak instrument to preserve Innocence and Virtue Only the respect of God to whom every heart is manifest every action a Testimony and every great Person a Subject is of equal force to give check to sin in all in the dakrness of the night and the light of the day in the works of the hand and the thoughts of the heart 2. Philosophy is very defective as to Piety in not injoyning the Love of God The first and great Command in the Law of Nature the order of the Precepts being according to their dignity is Thou shalt love the Lord with all thy Heart Soul and Strength 'T is most reasonable that our Love should first ascend to Him and in its full vigor For our Obligations to him are infinite and all inferior objects are incomparably beneath him Yet Philosophers speak little or nothing of this which is the principal part of natural Religion Aristotle who was so clear-sighted in other things when he discourses of God is not only affectedly obscure to conceal his ignorance as the Fish which troubles the Water for fear of being catcht but 't is on the occasion of speculative Sciences as in his Phisicks when he considers him as the first cause of all the motions in the World or in his Metaphysicks as the supreme Being the knowledg of whom he saith is most noble in it self but of no use to Men. But in his Morals where he had reason to consider the Deity as an object most worthy of our Love Respect and Obedience in an infinite Degree he totally omits such a representation of him although the Love of God is that alone which gives price to all moral Virtues And from hence it is that Philosophy is so defective as to Rules for the preparing Men for an intimate and delightful Communion with God which is the effect of Holy and Perfect Love and the supreme Happiness of the reasonable Nature If in the Platonical Philosophy there are some things directing to it yet they are but frigidly exprest and so obscurely that like Inscriptions in ancient Medals or Marbles which are defac't they are hardly legible This is the singular Character of the Gospel that distinguishes it from all humane Institutions it represents the infinite amiableness of God and his goodness to us to excite our Affections to him in a Superlative manner it commands us to follow him as dear Children and presses us to seek for those Dispositions which may qualifie us for the enjoyment of him in a way of Friendship and Love 3. The best Philosophers laid down this servile and pernicious Maxime That a wise Man should alwayes conform to the Religion of his Country Socrates who acknowledged one Supreme God yet according to the counsel of the Oracle that directed all to Sacrifice according to the Law of the City he advised his Friends to comply with the common Idolatry and those who did otherwise he branded as superstitious and vain And his practice was accordingly For he frequented the Temples assisted at their Sacrifices which he declares before his Judges to purge himself from the Crime of which he was accused Seneca speaking of the Heathen worship acknowledges 't was unreasonable and only the multitude of fools rendered it excusable yet he would have a Philosopher to conform to those customs in Obedience to the Law not as pleasing to the God's Thus they made Religion a dependance on the State They performed the Rites of heathenish Superstition that were either filthy phantastical or cruel such as the Devil the master of those Ceremonies ordain'd They became less than Men by worshipping the most vile and despicable Creatures and sunk themselves by the most execrable Idolatry beneath the Powers of darkness to whom they offered Sacrifice Now this Philosophical Principle is the most palpable violation of the Law of Nature for that instructs us that God is the only object of Religion and that we are to obey him without exception from any inferior Power Here 't was Conscience to disobey the Law and a most worthy cause wherein they should have manifested that generous contempt of Death they so much boasted of But they detained the truth in unrighteousness and although they knew God they glorified him not as God but chang'd the Glory of the Incorruptible God into an Image made like to a corruptible Man and to Birds and Beasts and creeping
THE HARMONY OF THE Divine Attributes IN THE Contrivance and Accomplishment of Man's Redemption by the Lord JESUS CHRIST OR DISCOURSES Wherein is Shewed How the Wisdom Mercy Justice Holiness Power and Truth of God are glorified in that Great and Blessed Work By William Bates D. D. Which things the Angels desire to look into 1 Pet. 1.12 Nihil tam dignum Deo quam salus Hominis Tertul. LONDON Printed by J. Darby for Nathaniel Ranew and Jonathan Robinson at the Kings Arms and Golden Lyon in St. Pauls Church-Yard and Brabazon Aylmer the at three Pigeons in Cornhil 1674. THE PREFACE THe Subject of the ensuing Discourses is of that inestimable excellency and importance that it deserves our deepest reflections and care to consider and apply it 'T is the great Mystery of Godliness the design of Eternal Wisdom the chiefest of all Gods Works that contains the Glorious Wonders of his Mercy and Power wherein he renders himself most worthy of our Supreme Veneration and Affection Our most raised Thoughts are infinitely beneath its Dignity Although the Light of the Gospel hath clearly reveal'd so much of it as is requisit to be known in our earthly state yet the sublimer parts are still secret and reserv'd for a full discovery by the brightness of our Saviour's Appearance Now if the Excellency of things excites our Spirits to be attentive in searching into their nature this Divine Object should awaken all our Powers and arrest our Minds in the serious steady contemplation of it being alone capable to satisfy their immortal appetite The Importance of it is correspondent to its excellency for 't is no less than the recovery of us from extream and eternal misery and the Restoring of us to the enjoyment of the Blessed God a felicity without comparison or end If we have any regard to Salvation and who would be so unhappy as to neglect it for unconcerning frivolous Vanities it will be delightful to know the means by which we may obtain it and to employ the flying moments of our short time in those things that are profitable for our last End that we may not lose Temporal and Eternal Life together Many of the Ancient and Modern Divines have written of this noble Argument from whom I have received benefit in the following composure But none as I know hath considered all the parts together and presented them in one view There still remains a rich abundance for the perpetuall exercise of our Spirits The Eternal Word alone was able to perfect all things by once speaking Humane words are but an Eccho that answers the Voice of God and cannot fully express its Power nor pass so immediately through the sence to the Heart but they must be repeated May these Discourses be effectual to inflame us with the most ardent Love to our Saviour who ransom'd us with the unvaluable price of his own blood and to perswade us to live for Heaven the purchase of that Sacred Treasure I shall for ever acknowledge the Divine Grace and obtain my utmost aim W. B. CHAP. I. The Introduction A short view of Mans primitive State His Conformity to God natural moral and in Happiness and Dominion over the Creatures The moral resemblance as it refers to all the faculties The happiness of Man with respect to his sensitive and spiritual Nature Of all sublunary Creatures he is onely capable of a Law What the Law of Nature contains God entred into a Covenant with Man The Reasons of that Dispensation The Terms of the Covenant were becoming God and Man The special clause in The Covenant concerning the Tree of Knowledg of Good and Evil. The Reasons of the Prohibition THe felicity which the Lord Jesus procured for Believers includes a perfect freedom from Sin and all afflictive evils the just consequents of it and the fruition of Righteousness Peace and Joy wherein the Kingdom of God consists In this the second Covenant excels the first the Law supposes Man upright and the happiness it promises to exact Obedience is called Life it rewards Innocence with Immortality but the Blessedness of the Gospel is stil'd Salvation which signifies the rescuing of lapsed Man from a state of misery and the investing of him with unperishing Glory In order to the Discovery of the excellency of this Benefit and the endearing Obligations laid on us by our Redeemer 't is necessary to take a view of that dreadful and desperate Calamity which seiz'd upon Mankind the wretchedness of our Captivity illustrates the Glory of our Redemption And since the misery of Man was not the original condition of his nature but the effect of his guilty choice 't is requisite to make some reflection upon his first state as he came out of the pure hands of God that comparing our present misery with our lost happiness we may revive in our breasts the affections of Sorrow Shame and Indignation against our selves and considering that the Heavenly Adam hath purchased for us a title to a better Inheritance than was forfeited by the Earthly one we may with the more affectionate gratitude extol the Favour Power of our Redeemer God who is the living Fountain of all Perfections spent an intire Eternity in the Contemplation of his own Excellencies before any creature was made In the moment appointed by his Wisdom he gave the first Being to the 〈◊〉 Three distinct orders of Natures He form'd the 〈◊〉 purely Spiritual the other purely Materiall and between both one mixt which unites the 〈…〉 in it self This is Man the abridgment of the 〈◊〉 verse ally'd to the Angels in his Soul and to material things in his Body and capable of the Happiness of both By his internal Faculties enjoying the felicity of the Intellectual and by his external tasting the Pleasures of the Sensitive World Man's greatest excellency was a perfect Conformity to the Divine Patern God created Man in his own Likeness in the Image of God created he him This includes First The Natural Similitude of God in the substance of the Soul as it is an intelligent free spiritual and Immortal Being This is assigned to be the Reason of the Law That Whoso sheds Mans Blood by Man shall his Blood be shed for in the Image of God made he Man Secondly A moral Resemblance in its Qualities and Perfections Thirdly That Happiness and Dignity of Mans state which was the consequent and accession to his Holiness The Natural resemblance I shall not insist on for the distinct Illustration of the other we must consider God in a threefold respect 1. In respect of his absolute Holiness unspotted Purity infinite Goodness incorruptible Justice and whatever we conceive under the notion of moral Perfections 2. With respect to his compleat Blessedness the result of his infinite Excellencies as he is perfectly exempt from all evils which might allay and lessen his felicity and enjoys those pleasures which are worthy of his pure Nature and glorious State 3. In regard of
for ever and is not compleated Secondly Faln Man considered only in his corrupt and miserable state is incapable of real Repentance which is a necessary Condition to qualifie him for Pardon For whereas Repentance includes an ingenuous sorrow for Sin past and a sincere forsaking of it he is utterly indispos'd for both 1. He cannot be ingenuously sorrowful for his offence 'T is true when the circumstances are changed that which was pleasing will cause trouble of Spirit As when a Malefactor suffers for his Crimes he reflects upon his Actions with Sorrow But this hath no moral worth in it For 't is a forc'd act proceeding from a violent Principle and is consistent with as great a love to Sin as he had before and is intirely terminated on himself But that grief which is divine and is accompanied with a change in heart and life respects the stain more than the punishment of Sin and arises from Love to God who is disobeyed and dishonored by it Now 't is not conceivable that the guilty Creature can love God whilst he looks on him as an irreconcileable enemy Distrust of the favour of a person which is a degree of fear is attended with coldness of affection a strong fear which still intimates an uncertainty in the event inclines to hatred But when fear is turn'd into despair it causeth direct hatred An instance of this we have in the Devils who curse the Fountain of Blessedness If the Evil be past Remedy the sence of it is attended with rage and transports of blasphemy against God himself A despairing Sinner begins in this life the gnashing of teeth against his Judg and kindles the fire that shall torment him for ever 'T is for this reason the Scripture propounds the Goodness of God as the most powerful persuasive to lead men to Repentance There can be no kindly relentings without filial Affection and that is alwaies temper'd with the expectation of favour Without hope of Pardon all other motives are ineffectual to melt the heart Now the first Covenant obliged Man to Obedience or Punishment It required Innocence and did not accept of Repentance The final voice of the Law is Do or Die Guilty Man cannot look on God with comfort under the notion of a Holy Creator that delights to view his own resemblance in the innocent creature nor of a compassionate Father that spares an offending Son but he apprehends him to be an inexorable Judge who hath Right and Power to revenge the Disobedience He ●an find no expedient for his Deliverance nor conceive how Mercy can save him without the violation of Justice an Attribute as essential to the Divine Nature as Mercy And what can induce him to make an humble confession of his fault when he expected nothing but an irrevocable Doom An instance of this we have in Adam who being under the conviction of his Sin and an apprehension that God would be severe did not sollicite for Mercy but endeavour'd to transfer the guilt on God himself The woman thou gavest me she gave me of the tree and I did eat As if she had been design'd for a snare and not to be an aid in his innocent state 2. A sincere Resolution to forsake Sin is built on the hopes of Mercy Till the reasonable Creature know that Heaven is open to Repentance to his second and better thoughts he is irreclaimable He that never hopes to receive any good will continue in doing evil Despair of Mercy causeth a despising of the Law The Apostate Angels who are without the reserves of Pardon are confirm'd in their Rebellion their Guilt is mixt with Fury they persist in their war against God though they know the issue will be deadly to them And had there not been an early revelation of Mercy to Adam he had been incorrigibly wicked as the Devils For despair had inflam'd his hatred against God which is of all the Passions the most incureable Those vicious Affections that depend on the humours of the Body which are mutable alter with them But Hatred is seated in the superiour part of the Soul which is of a Spiritual nature and Diabolical in obstinacy In short When the reasonable Creature is guilty and vitious and knows that God is Just and Holy and that He will be severe in revenging all Disobedience he hath no Care nor Desire to reform himself He will not lay a restraint on his pleasing Appetites when he expects no recompence he esteems it lost labour to abstain And all his design is to allay and sweeten the fear of future Evils by present enjoyments When he is scorcht with the apprehensions of wrath to come he plunges himself into sensual excesses for some relief He resolves to make his best of Sin for a time according to the Principle of the Epicures Let us eat and drink while we may to morrow we shall die The Sum of all is this that an unrelenting and unreformed Sinner is incapable of Pardon For unless God should renounce his own Nature and deny his Deity He cannot receive him to favour And it is inconceivable how the rational Creature once lapsed should ever be encourag'd to Repentance without the expectation of Mercy And there being an inseparable alliance between the integrity and felicity of Man by the terms of the first Covenant the one failing he could not entertain the least degree of Hope concerning the other By all which it appears he is under an invincible necessity of sinning and suffering for ever his Misery is compleat and desperate CHAP. V. Of the Divine Wisdome in the contrivance of Man 's Redemption Understanding agents propound an End and choose Means for the obtaining it The End of God is of the highest consequence his own Glory and Man's Recovery The difficulty of accomplishing it The Means are proportionable The Divine Wisdome glorified in taking occasion from the Sin and Fall of Man to bring Glory to God and to raise Man to a more excellent State It appears in ordaining such a Mediator as was fit to reconcile God to Man and Man to God 'T is discovered in the designation of the Second Person to be our Saviour And making the Remedy to have a proportion to the cause of our Ruine 'T is visible in the manner whereby our Redemption is accomplisht And in the ordaining such contemptible means to produce such glorious effects And laying the design of the Gospel so as to provide for the comfort and promote the holiness of Man GOD by his infallible Prescience to which all things are eternally present viewing the Fall of Adam and that all Mankind lay bleeding in him out of deep compassion to his Creature and that the Devil might not be finally victorious over him in his Councel decreed the Recovery of Man from his languishing and miserable state The design and the means are most worthy of God and in both his Wisdom appears This will be made visible by considering that
Attributes seem'd to be attendants on Justice The Wisdom of God enforc'd its Plea it being most indecent that Sin which provokes the execution should procure the abrogation of the Law this would encourage the commission of Sin without fear The Majesty of God was concern'd for it was not becoming his excellent Greatness to treat with defiled dust and to offer Pardon to a presumptuous Rebel immediately after his Offence and before he made Supplication to his Judge The Holiness of God did quicken his Justice to execute the threatning For he is of purer eyes than to behold Iniquity As Goodness is the essential object of his Will which he loves unchangeably wherever it is so is Sin the eternal object of his hatred and where 't is found in the love of it renders the subject odious to him He will not take the wicked by the hand The Law of contrariety forbids Purity and Pollution to mix together And the veracity of God requir'd the inflicting the punishment For the Law being a declaration of God's Will according to which He would dispense Rewards and Punishments either it must be executed upon the Offend●r or if extraordinarily dispens'd with it must be upon such terms as the honour of Gods Truth may be preserved This seeming conflict was between the Attributes The sublim●st Spirits in Heaven were at a loss how to unravel the difficulty and to find out the miraculous way to reconcile infinite Mercy with inflexible Justice how to satisfie the demands of the one and the requests of the other God was to overcome Himself before He restored Man In this exigence his Mercy excited his Wisdom to interpose as an Arbiter which in the Treasures of its incomprehensible Light found out an admirable expedient to save Man without prejudice to his other Perfections That was by constituting a Mediator both able and willing between the guilty creature and Himself That by transferring the punishment on the Surety he might punish Sin and pardon the Sinner And here the more severe and rigorous Justice is the more admirable is the Mercy that saves In the same stupendious Sacrifice he declared his respect to Justice and his delight in Mercy The two principal relations of our Redeemer are the one of a gift from God to man the other of an oblation for men to God By the one God satisfies his infinite Love to Man and by the other satisfies his infinite Justice for Man Neither is it unbecoming God to condescend in accepting the returning Sinner when a Mediator of infinite dignity intercedes for favour The Divine Majesty is not lessen'd when God is in Christ reconciling the world unto himself Neither is the Sanctity of God disparag'd by his Clemency to Sinners for the Redeemer is the principle and pattern of Holiness to all that are saved The same Grace that enclin'd God to send his Son to die for us gives his Spirit to live in us to renew us in the inward Man that by conformity to God we may be prepared for communion with him Here is a sweet concurrence of all the attributes Mercy and Truth are met together Righteousness and Peace kiss each other Who can count up this heap of wonders Who can unfold all the treasures of this mysterious Love The tongue of an Angel cannot explicate it according to its dignity 'T is the fairest copy of the Divine Wisdome the consummation of all God's Counsels wherein all the Attributes are displayed in their brightest lustre 'T is here the manifold wisdome of God appears The Angels of Light bend themselves with extraordinary application of Mind and ar●ent Affections to study the rich and unsearchable variety that is in it only the same Understanding comprehends it which contriv'd it But as one that views the Ocean although he cannot see its bounds or bottom yet he sees so much as to know that that vast collection of waters is far greater than what is within the compass of his short sight So although we cannot understand all the depths of that immense Wisdom which order●d the way of our Salvation yet we may discover so much as to know with the Apostle that it surpasses knowledg He that is the Brightness of his Father●s Glory and the Light of the World so illuminate our dark Understandings that we may conceive aright of this great Mystery The First thing that offers it self to Consideration is the compass of the Divine Wisdome in taking occasion from the Sin and Fall of Man to bring more Glory to God and to raise him to a more excellent state Sin in its own nature hath no tendency to good 't is not an apt medium to promote the Glory of God so far is it from a direct contributing to it that on the contrary 't is the most real dishonour to Him But as a black ground in a Picture which in it self only defiles when plac'd by Art sets off the brighter colours and heightens their beauty So the evil of Sin which considered absolutely obscures the Glory of God yet by the disposition of his Providence it serves to illustrate his Name and to make it more glorious in the esteem of reasonable Creatures Without the Sin of Man there had been no place for the most perfect exercise of his Goodness O foelix culpa q●ae tantum talem meruit habere Redemptorem Happy fault not in it self but by the wise and merciful Counsel of God to be repair'd in a way so advantageous that the Salvation of the Earth is the Wonder of Heaven the Redemption of Man ravishes the Angels The Glory of God is more visible in the recovery of laps●d Man than if the Law had been obeyed or executed If Adam had persever'd in his Duty the Reward had been from Gaace for owing himself to God he could receive nothing but as a gift from his Bounty so that Goodness only had then been exerci'sd and not in its highest and most obliging Acts which are to save the guilty and the miserable for Innocence is incapable of Mercy If the Sentence had been inflicted Justice had been honour'd with a solemn Sacrifice but Mercy the sweet tender and indulgent Attribute had never appear'd But now the Wisdom of God is eminent in the accord of both these Attributes God is equally glorious as equally God in preserving the authority of his Law by an act of Justice upon our Surety as in the exercise of Mercy by remitting the punishment to the Offender And 't is no less honourable to God's Wisdom to restore Man with infinite advantage 'T is a mystery in Nature That the corruption of one thing is the generation of another 't is more mysterious in Grace that the Fall of Man should occasion his more noble Restitution Innocence was not his last End his supreme felicity transcends the first The holiness of Adam was perfect but mutable But Holiness in the Redeemed though in a less degree shall be
is insufficient to restore man to his original integrity and felicity Reason sees that Man is ignorant and guilty mortal and miserable that he is transported with vain passions and tormented with accusations of Conscience but it could not redress these evils Corrupt Nature is like an imperfect Building that lies in rubbish the imperfection is visible but not the way how to finish it for through ignorance of the first design every one follows his own fancy whereas when the Architect comes to finish his own project it appears regular and beautiful Thus the various directions of Philosophers to recover fallen Man out of his ruines and to raise him to his first state were vain Some glimmerings they had that the happiness of the reasonable nature consisted in its union with God but in order to this they propounded such means as were not only ineffectual but opposit Such is the pride and folly of carnal wisdom that to bring God and Man together it advances Man and depresses God The Stoicks ascribed to their Wiseman those prerogatives whereby he equall'd their Supreme God They made him the architect of his own vertue and felicity and to vie with Jupiter himself to be one of his Peers Others reduced the Gods to live like Men and Men like Beasts by placing happiness in sensual pleasures Thus instead of curing they fomented the hereditary and principal Diseases of mankind Pride and Concupiscence which at first caus'd the separation of man from God and infinitely increas'd the distance between them For what sins are more contrary to the Majesty and Purity of God than Pride which robs him of his Excellency and carnal lust which turns a man into a beast Besides all their inventions to expiate sin to appease the Deity and make him favorable to calme the Conscience were frivolous and unprofitable And their most generous principles and accurate Precepts were short of that purity and perfection werewith moral duties are to be perform'd to God and men Briefly they wasted their Candle in vain in searching for the way to true happiness But God who created Man for the enjoyment of himself hath happily accomplisht his eternal Decree by the work of our Redemption wherein his own Glory is most visible And the Gospel which reveals this to us humbles whom it justifies and comforts those that were condemned it abases more then the Law but without dispair and advances more then Nature could but without presumption The Mediator takes away the guilt of our old sins and our inclination to new sins we are not only pardoned but preferred made Heirs of God joynt-Heirs with Christ. For these reasons the Apostle sets so high a value upon the Heavenly Doctrine that reveals a Saviour to the undone World He desired to know nothing but Jesus Christ and him Crucified He despised all Pharisaical and Philosophical Learning in comparison of the Excellency of the Knowledge of Christ Jesus Other knowledge swells the mind and increases the esteem of our selves this gives us a sincere view of our state It discovers our misery in its causes and the Almighty Mercy that saves us Other knowledge inlightens the understanding without changing the heart but this inspires us with the love of God with the hatred of sin and makes us truly better In seeking after other knowledge the mind is perplext by endless inquiries here 't is at rest as the wavering Needle is fixt when turn'd to it s beloved Star Ignorance of other things may be without any real damage to us for we may be directed by the skilful how to preserve Life and Estate But this Knowledge is absolutely necessary to Justifie Sanctifie and Save us All other knowledge is useless at the hour of death then the richest stock of Learning is lost the vessel being split wherein the treasure was laid but this Pearl of inestimable price as 't is the ornament of our prosperity so 't is the support of our adversity A little ray of this is infinitely more desirable then the light of all humane Sciences in their lustre and perfection And what an amazing folly is it that men who are possest with an earnest passion of knowing should waste their time and strength in searching after these things the knowledge of which can't remove those evils which oppress them and be careless of the saving knowledge of the Gospel Were there no other reason to diminish the esteem of earthly knowledge but the difficulty of its acquisition that error often surprises those who are searching after truth this might check our intemperate pursuit of it Sin hath not only shortned our understandings but our lives that we cannot arrive to the perfect discovery of inferior things But suppose that one by his vast mind should comprehend all created things from the Centre of the Earth to the Circumference of the Heavens and were not savingly inlighten'd in the Mystery of our Redemption with all his knowledge he would be a prey to Satan and increase the triumphs of Hell The Historian upbraids the Roman luxury that with so much cost and hazzard they should send to foreign parts for Trees that were beautiful but barren and produc'd a shadow only without fruit With greater reason we may wonder that men should with the expence of their precious hours purchase barren curiosities which are unprofitable to their last end How can a condemned Criminal who is in suspence between Life and Death attend to study the secrets of Nature and Art when all his thoughts are taken up how to prevent the execution of the Sentence and 't is no less than a prodigy of madness that men who have but a short and uncertain space allowed them to escape the wrath to come should rack their brains in studying things impertinent to salvation and neglect the Knowledg of a Redeemer Especially when there is so clear a Revelation of him The righteousness of Faith doth not command us to ascend to the Heavens or descend into the deep to make a discovery of it but the Word is nigh us that discovers the certain way to a happy immortallity Seneca a Philosopher and a Courtier valued his being in the world only upon this account that he might contemplate the Starry Heaven He only saw the visible beauty of the Firmament but was ignorant of the Glory within it and of the way that leads to it yet to our shame he speaks that the sight of it made him despise the Earth and without the contemplation of the Celestial bodies he esteem'd his continuance in the World not the life of a Man but the toil of a Beast But what transports had he been in if he had been acquainted with the contrivance of our Redemption the admirable order of its parts and the beauty that results from the composition of the whole But we that with open face may in the Glass of the Gospel behold the Glory of the Lord turn away
interest he could by one act of Power conquer the obstinacy of his fiercest Enemies If he require subjection from his creatures 't is not that he may be happy but liberal that his Goodness may take its rise to reward them Now this is the special commendation of Divine Love it doth not arise out of indigency as Created Love but out of fulness and redundancy Our Saviour tells us there is none good but God not only in respect of the perfection of that Attribute as it is in God in a transcendent manner but as to the effects of his goodness which are meerly for the benefit of the receiver He is only rich in Mercy to whom nothing is wanting or profitable The most liberal Monarch doth not always give for he stands in need of his Subjects And where there is an expectation of Service for the support of the giver ●tis trafique and no gift Humane affection is begotten and nourisht by something without but the Love of God is from within the misery of the Creature is the occasion but the reason of it is from himself And how free was that Love that caus'd the infinitely blessed God to do so much for our recovery as if his felicity were imperfect without ours It doth not prejudice the freeness of redeeming Mercy that Christ's personal Glory was the reward of his Sufferings 1. 'T is true that our Redeemer for the Joy that was set before him endured the Cross despising the shame and is set down at the right hand of the throne of God but he was not first drawn to the undertaking of that hard service by the interest of the reward For if we consider him in his Divine Nature he was the second Person in the Trinity equal to the first he possest all the Supreme Excellencies of the Deity and by assuming our Nature the only gain he purchas'd to himself was to be capable of loss for the accomplishing our Salvation Such was the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that being rich yet for our sakes he became poor that we through his poverty might be made rich And although his humane Soul was encouraged by the Glorious recompence the Father promised to make him King and Judge of the World yet his Love to Man was not kindled from that consideration neither is it lessened by his obtaining of it For immediately upon the union of the humane Nature to the Eternal Son the Highest Honour was due to him When the first-begotten was brought into the World 't was said Let all the Angels of God worship him The Sovereign Power in Heaven and Earth was his inheritance annext to the dignity of his Primogeniture the Name above every name was a preferment due to his Person He voluntarily renounc'd his right for a time and appear'd in the form of a Servant upon our account that by humbling himself he might accomplish our Salvation He entred into Glory after a course of Sufferings because the Oeconomy of our Redemption so requir'd but his original title to it was by the personal union To illustrate this by a lower instance the Mother of Moses was call'd to be his Nurse by Pharaohs Daughter with the promise of a reward as if she had no relation to him Now the pure love of a Mother not the gain of a Nurse was the motive that inclin'd her to nourish him with her Milk Thus the Love of Christ was the primary active cause that made him liberal to us of his Blood neither did the just expectation of the reward take off from it The Sum is the essence of Love consists in desiring the good of another without respect to our selves and Love is so much the more free as the benefit we give to another is less profitable or more damageable to us Now among Men 't is impossible that to a vertuous benefactour there should not redound a double Benefit 1. From the Eternal Reward which God hath promised And 2. From the Internal Beauty of an honest action which the Philosopher affirms doth exceed any loss that can befal us For if one dyes for his Friend yet he loves himself most for he would not chuse to be less vertuous than his Friend and by dying for him he excels him in Vertue which is more valuable than Life it self But to the Son of God no such advantage could accrue for being infinitely holy and happy in his Essence there can be no addition to his Felicity or Vertues by any external emanation from him His Love was for our profit not his own 2. The freeness of Gods Mercy is evident by considering there was no ●ye upon him to dispence it Grace strictly taken differs from Love for that may be a Debt and without injustice not denied There are inviolable obligations on Children to Love their Parents and duty lessens desert the performance of it doth not so much deserve praise as the neglect merits censure and reproof But the Love of God to Man is a pure free and liberal Affection no way due The Grace of God and the gift by Grace hath abounded unto many The Creation was an effusion of goodness much more Redemption Thou art worthy O Lord to receive Glory and Honour and Power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created 'T is Grace that gave being to the Angels with all the prerogatives that adorn their Natures 't is Grace confirm'd them in their original integrity For God ows them nothing and they are nothing to him 'T was Grace that plac't Adam in Paradise and made him as a visible God in the lower World And if Grace alone dispensed benefits to innocent Creatures much more to those who are obnoxious to justice the first was free but this is merciful And this leads to the second consideration which exalts redeeming Love The object of it is Man in his lapsed state In this respect it excels the goodness that prevented him at the beginning In the Creation as there was no object to invite so nothing repugnant to mans being and happiness the dust of the Earth did not merit such an excellent condition as it received from the pure bounty of God but there was no moral unworthiness But the Grace of the Gospel hath a different object the wretched and unworthy and it produces different operations 't is healing and medicinal ransoming and delivering and hath a peculiar character among the Divine Attributes 'T is goodness that crowns the Angels but 't is Mercy the Sanctuary of the guilty and refuge of the miserable that saves Man The Scripture hath consecrated the name of Grace in a special manner to signifie the most excellent and admirable favour of God in recovering us from our justly deserv'd misery We are justified freely by his Grace By Grace we are saved Grace and Truth is come by Jesus Christ 't is the Grace of God that brings Salvation And this is gloriously
of God's Love is in the Sufferings of Christ. The description of them with respect to his Soul and Body The Sufferings of his Soul set forth from the Causes of his Grief The Disposition of Christ and the Design of God in afflicting Him The sorrows of his forsaken state All comforting Influences were suspended but without prejudice to the Personal Union or the perfection of his Grace or the Love of his Father towards Him The Death of the Cross considered with respect to the Ignominy and Torment that concurr'd in it The Love of the Father and of Christ amplified upon the account of his enduring it THe next Circumstance to be considered in the Divine Mercy is the degree of it And this is described by the Apostle in all the dimensions which can signifie its greatness He prays for the Ephesians that they may be able to comprehend with all Saints the breadth and length and depth and height of the love of God in Christ which passes knowledge No language is sufficient to express it if our hearts were as large as the Sand on the Sea-shore yet they were too straight to comprehend it But although we cannot arrive to the perfect knowledg of this excellent Love yet 't is our duty to study it with the greatest application of mind for our happiness depends upon it and so far we may understand as to inflame our hearts with a superlative Affection to God And the full discovery which here we desire and search after in the future state shall be obtained by the presence and light of our Redeemer Now the greatness of the Divine Love in our Redemption appears 1. By reflecting on the mighty Evils from which we are freed 2. The means by which our Redemption is accomplisht 3. That excellent State to which we are advanced by our Redeemer 1. If we reflect upon the horrour of our natural state it will exceedingly heighten the mercy that delivered us This I have in part opened before therefore I will be the shorter in describing it Man by his rebellion had forfeited Gods favour and the honour and happiness he injoyed in Paradise And as there is no middle state between Sovereignty and misery he that falls from the Throne stops not till he comes to the bottom so when Man fell from God and the dignity of his innocent state he became extreamly miserable He is under the servitude of sin the tyranny of Satan the bondage of the Law and the empire of Death 1. Man is a captive to sin He is fallen from the hand of his counsel under the power of his passions Love Hatred Ambition Envy Fear Sorrow and all the other stinging Affections of which is true what the Historian speaks of the several kinds of Serpents in Africa Quantus nomiuum tantus mortium numerus exercise a tyranny over him And if no man can serve two Masters as the Oracle of Truth tells us how wretched is the slavery of Man whose passions are so opposit that in obeying one he cannot escape the lash of many imperious Masters He is possest with a Legion of impure lusts And as the Demoniac in the Gospel was sometimes cast into the fire and sometimes into the water so is he hurried by the fury of contrary passions This servitude to sin is in all respects compleat For those who serve are either born servants or bought with a price or made captives by force and sin hath all these kinds of title to man He is conceived and born in sin he is sold under sin and sells himself to do evil As that which is sold passes into the possession of the buyer so the sinner exchanging himself for the pleasures of sin is under its power Original sin took possession of our nature and actual of our lives He is the servant of corruption by yeilding to it for of whom a man is overcome of the same he is brought in bondage The condition of the most wretched bond-●lave is more sweet and less servile than that of a sinner For the severest tyranny is exercised only upon the body the soul remains free in the midst of chains but the power of sin oppresses the Soul the most noble part and defaces the bright character of the Deity that was stampt upon its visage The worst slavery is terminated with this present life In the grave the Prisoners rest together they hear not the voice of the Oppressor The small and the great are there and the Servant is free from his Master But there is no exemption from this servitude by death it extends its self to Eternity 2. Man since his fall is under the tyranny of Satan who is call'd the God of this World and is more absolute then all temporal Princes his dominion being over the will He overcame man in Paradise and by the right of War he rules over him The soul is kept in his bondage by subtile Chains of which the spiritual nature is capable The understanding is captivated by ignorance and errors the will by inordinate dangerous lusts the memory by the images of sinful pleasures those mortal visions which inchant the soul and make it not desirous of liberty Never did cruel Pirat so incompassionately urge his Slaves to ply their Oares in charging or flying from an enemy as Satan incites those who are his captives to do his will And can there be a more afflicting calamity then to be the slave of ones enemy especially if base and cruel This is the condition of man he is a captive to the Devil who was a Liar and a Murderer from the beginning He is under the rage of that bloody Tyrant whose ambition was to render Man as miserable as himself who in triumph upbraids him for his folly and adds derision to his Cruelty 3. Fallen Man is under the Curse and Terrors of the Law For being guilty he is justly exposed to the punishment threatned against transgressours without the allowance of repentance to obtain pardon And Conscience which is the Ecch● of the Law in his bosom repeats the dreadful sentence This is an Acouser which none can silence a Judge that none can decline and from hence it is that Men all their life are subject to bondage being obnoxious to the wrath of God which the awakened Conscience fearfully sets before them This complicated Servitude of a Sinner the Scripture represents under great variety of Similitudes that the defects of one may be supplied by another Every Sinner is a Servant now a Servant by flight may recover his Liberty But he is not only a Servant but a Captive in chains A Captive may be freed by laying down a Ransom but the Sinner is not only a Captive but deeply in debt Every Debtor is not miserable by his own fault it may be his Infelicity not his Crime that he is poor but the Sinner is guilty of the highest offence A guilty Person may enjoy
his Health but the Sinner is sick of a deadly Disease an incurable wound He that is sick and wounded may send for the Physician in order to his Recovery But the Sinner is in a deep sleep He that is asleep may awake But the Sinner is in a state of Death which implies not only a Cessation from all vital Actions but an absolute disability to perform them The Understanding is disabled for any Spiritual Perception the Will for any Holy Inclinations the whole Man is disabled for the sense of his wretched state This is the spiritual Death which justly exposes the Sinner to Death temporal and eternal 4. Every Man as descending from Adam is born a Sacrifice to Death His condition in this world is so wretched and unworthy the original excellency of his Nature that it deserves not the name of Life 'T is a continual exercise of sinful Actions dishonourable to God and damning to himself and after the succession of a few Years in the defilements of Sin and the accidents of this frail state in doing and suffering evil Man comes to his fatal Period and falls into the bottomless Pit the place of Pollutions and Horrors of Sin and Torments 'T is there That the wrath of God abides on him and who knows the power of his wrath According to his fear so is his wrath Fear is an unbounded Passion and can extend it self to the apprehension of such Torments which no finite Power can inflict But the Wrath of God exceeds the most jealous fears of the guilty Conscience It proceeds from infinite Justice and is executed by Almighty Power and contains eminently all kinds of evils A Lake of flaming Brimstone and whatever is most dreadful to Sense is but an imperfect Allusion to represent it And how great is that Love which pitied rescued us from Sin and Hell This Saving Mercy is set out for its tenderness and vehemence by the commotion of the bowels at the sight of one in misery especially the working of the Mother's when any evil befals her Children Such an inward deep resentment of our distress was in the Father of Mercies When we were in our blood He said to us Live And that which further discovers the eminent degree of his Love is that He might have been unconcerned with our Distress and left us under despair of Deliverance There is a Compassion which ariseth from Self-love when the sight of anothers Misery surprises us and affects us in such a manner as to disturb our Repose and imbitter our Joy by considering our liableness to the same troubles and from hence we are enclin'd to help them And there is a Compassion that proceeds from pure love to the miserable when the Person that expresses it is above all the assaults of evil and incapable of all Affections that might lessen his Felicity and yet applies himself to relieve the afflicted and such was Gods towards Man If it had been a tollerable Evil under which we were faln the Mercy that recovered us had been less For Benefits are valued by the necessity of the receiver But Man was disinherited of Paradise an Heir of Hell his Misery was inconceivably great Now the measure of God's Love is proportionable to the Misery from whence we are redeemed If there had been any possible Remedy for us in Nature our engagements had not been so great But only He that created us by his Power could restore us by his Love Briefly it magnifies the Divine Compassion that our Deliverance is full and intire It had been admirable Favour to have mitigated our Misery but we have perfect Redemption sweetned by the remembrance of those dreadful evils that opprest us As the three Hebrew Martyrs came unhurt out of the fiery Furnace The hair of their heads were not singed nor their coats changed nor the smell of the fire had passed on them So the Saints above have no marks of Sin or Misery remaining upon them not the least spot or wrinkle to blast their Beauty nor the least trouble to diminish their Blessedness but for ever possess the Fulness of Joy and Glory a pure and triumphant Felicity 2. The Greatness of the Divine Love towards faln Man appears in the means by which our Redemption is accomplisht And those are the Incarnation and Sufferings of the Son of God The Incarnation manifests this Love upon a double account 1. In regard of the essential condition of the nature he assum'd 2. It s Servile state and meanness 1. The essential condition of the humane nature assum'd by our Redeemer discovers his transcendent Love to us For what proportion is there between God and Man Infinite and Finite are not terms that admit comparison as Greater and Less but are distant as All and Nothing The whole World before him is but as the drop of the Bucket that hath scarce weight to fall and the small dust of the Ballance that is not of such moment as to turn the scales 't is as nothing and counted less then nothing and vanity The Deity in its own nature includes Independence and Sovereignty To be a Creature implys dependence and subjection The Angelical Nature is infinitely inferior to the Divine and Man is lower then the Angels yet the Word was made Flesh. Add to this he was not made as Adam in the perfection of his nature and beginning the first step of his life in the full exercise of Reason and Dominion over the Creatures but he came into the World by the way of a natural birth and dependance upon a mortal Creature The Eternal Wisdom of the Father stoopt to a state of infancy which is most distant from that of Wisdom wherein though the Life yet the Light of the reasonable Soul is not visible the mighty God to a condition of indigence and infirmity The Lord of Nature submitted to the Laws of it Admirable Love wherein God seemed to forget his own Greatness and the meanness of the Creature This is more indeared to us by considering 2. The Servile state of the Nature be assumed An account of this we have in the Words of the Apostle Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ who being in the form of God that is injoying the Divine Nature with all its Glory eternally and invariably As to be in the form of a King signifies not only to be a King but to have all the conspicuous marks of Royalty the Crown Scepter Throne the Guards and State of a King Thus our Saviour possest that Glory that is truly Divine before he took our nature The Angels adored him in Heaven and by him Princes reigned on the Earth 'T is added he thought it no robbery to be equal with God that is being the essential Image of the Father he had a rightful possession of all his perfections Yet he made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a servant and was
is his Fathers Love to him In this was manifested the Love of God to us because that God sent his only begotten Son into the world that we might live through Him The Love of God in all temporal blessings is but faint in the comparison with the Love that is exprest in our Redeemer As much as the Creator exceeds the creature the gift of Christ is above the gift of the whole world Herein is Love saith the Apostle that is the clearest and highest expression of it that can be God sent his Son to be a Propitiation for our Sins The Wisdom and Power of God never acted to the utmost of their efficacy he could frame a more Glorious World but the Love of God cannot in a higher degree be exprest As the Apostle to set forth how sacred and inviolable Gods promise is saith that because he could swear by no greater he sware by himself so when he would give the most excellent testimony of his favour to mankind he gave his Eternal Son the Heir of his Love and Blessedness The giving of Heaven it self with all its Joys and Glory is not so perfect and full a demonstration of the Love of God as the giving of his Son to die for us According to the rule of common esteem a greater Love was exprest to wretched Man than to Christ himself for we expend things less valuable for those that are more precious so that God in giving him to die for us declar'd that our Salvation was more dear to him then the life of his only Son When no meaner Ransom than the Blood Royal of Heaven could purchase our Redemption God delighted in the expence of that sacred Treasure for us It pleased the Lord to bruise him Though the Death of Christ absolutely consider'd was the highest provocation of God's displeasure and brought the greatest guilt upon the Jews for which Wrath came upon them to the uttermost yet in respect of the end namely the Salvation of Men 't was the most greatful Offering to him a Sacrifice of a sweet smelling savour This is an endearing circumstance of Gods Love to us God repented that he made Man but never that he redeem'd him And as the Love of the Father so the Love of Christ appears in a superlative manner in dying for us Greater Love hath no Man than this that a Man lay down his life for his Friend There is no kind of Love that exceeds the affection which is exprest in dying for another but there are diverse degrees of it and the highest is to die for our enemies The Apostle saith perhaps for a good man some would dare to die 'T is possible gratitude may prevail upon one who is under strong obligations to die for his benefactor Or some may from a generous principle be willing with the loss of their lives to preserve one who is a general and publick good But this is a rare and almost incredible thing 'T is recorded as a miraculous instance of the power of Love that the two Sicilian Philosophers Damon and Pithias each had courage to die for his Friend For one of them being condemn'd to die by the Tyrant and desiring to give the last farewel to his Family his Friend entered into Prison as his Surety to die for him if he did not return at the appointed time And he came to the amazement of all that expected the issue of such a hazardous caution Yet in this example there seems to be in the Second such a confidence of the fidelity of the first that he was assured he should not die in being a pledge for him and in the first 't was not meer friendship or sense of the obligation but the regard of his own honour that made him rescue his Friend from Death And if Love were the sole motive yet the highest expression of it was to part with a short life which in a little time must have been resigned by the order of nature But the Love of our Saviour was so pure and great there can be no resemblance much less any parallel of it For he was perfectly Holy and so the priviledge of immortality was due to him and his life was infinitely more precious than the lives of Angels and Men yet he laid it down and submitted to a cursed Death and to that which was infinitely more bitter the Wrath of God And all this for sinful men who were under the just and heavy displeasure of the Almighty He loved us and gave himself for us If he had only interposed as an Advocate to speak for us or only had acted for our recovery his Love had been admirable but he suffered for us He is not only our Mediator but Redeemer not only Redeemer but Ransom 'T was excellent goodness in David when he saw the destruction of his People to offer Himself and Family as a Sacrifice to avert the Wrath of God from them But his pride was the cause of the Judgment whereas our Redeemer was perfectly innocent David interceeded for his Subjects Christ for his Enemies He receiv'd the Arrows of the Almighty into his Breast to shelter us He bore our griefs and carried our sorrows he was wounded for our transgressions he was bruised for our iniquites the chastisement of our peace was upon him and with his stripes we are healed Among the Romans the Despotick power was so terrible that if a slave had attemped upon the Life of his Master all the rest had been crucified with the guilty person But our gracious Master dyed for his slaves who had conspir'd against him He shed his Blood for those who spilt it And the readiness of our Lord to save us though by the sharpest sufferings magnifies his Love When the richest Sacrifices under the Law were insufficient to take away sin and no lower price then the blood of God could obtain our pardon upon his entering into the World to excute that wonderful Commission which cost him his Life with what ardour of affection did he undertake it Lo I come to do thy will O God When Peter from carnal affection deprecated his sufferings Master spare thy self he who was incarnate goodness and never quench'd the smoking flax expresses the same indignation against him Get thee behind me Satan as he did formerly against the Devil tempting to worship him He esteemed him the worst adversary that would divert him from his Sufferings He long'd for the Baptism of his Blood And when Death was in his view with all the circumstances of terrour and the supreme Judge stood before him ready to inflict the just punishment of sin though the apprehension of it was so dreadful that he could scarce live under it yet he resolved to accomplish his Work Our Salvation was amiable to him in his Agony This is specially observed by the Evangelist that Jesus having loved his own he loved them to the end When the Souldiers
came to seize upon him though by one word he could have commanded Legions of Angels for his rescue yet he yeilded up himself to their Cruelty 'T was not any defect of power but the strength of his Love that made him to suffer He was willing to be Crucified that we might be Glorified our Redemption was sweeter to him than Death was bitter by which it was to be obtained 'T was excellently said by Pherecides that God transformed himself into Love when he made the World but with greater reason 't is said by the Apostle God is Love when he redeemed it 'T was Love that by a miraculous condescension took our Nature accomplishing the desire of the mystical Spouse Let him kiss me with the kisses of his Mouth 'T was Love that stoop't to the form of a Servant and led a poor despised life here below 'T was Love that endur'd a Death neither easie nor honourable but most unworthy the glory of the Divine and the innocency of the Humane nature Love chose to die on the Cross that we might live in Heaven rather than to enjoy that blessedness and leave Mankind in misery CHAP. X. Divine Mercy is magnified in the excellency of the state to which Man is advanced He is inricht with higher Prerogatives under a better Covenant entitled to a more glorious Reward than Adam at first enjoyed The Humane Nature is personally united to the Son of God Believers are spiritually united to Christ. The Gospel is a better Covenant than that of the Law It admits of Repentance and Reconciliation after Sin It accepts of Sincerity instead of Perfection It affords supernatural Assistance to Believers whereby they shall be victorious over all opposition in their way to Heaven The difference between the Grace of the Creator and that of the Redeemer The stability of the New-Covenant is built on the Love of God which is unchangeable and the Operations of his Spirit that are effectual The mutability and weakness of the Humane Will and the strength of Temptations shall not frustrate the merciful Design of God in regard of his Elect. The glorious Reward of the Gospel exceeds the Primitive Felicity of Adam in the place of it the highest Heaven Adam's life was attended with innocent Infirmities from which the glorified Life is entirely exempt The Felicity of Heaven exceeds the first in the manner degrees and continuance of the fruition THe Third Consideration which makes the Love of God so admirable to lapsed Man is the excellency of that state to which he is advanc'd by the Redeemer To be only exempted from Death is a great favour The grace of a Prince is eminent in releasing a condemned Person from the punishment of the Law This is sufficient for the Mercy of Man but not for the Love of God He pardons and prefers the guilty He rescues us from Hell and raises us to Glory He bestows Eternity upon those who were unworthy of Life The excellency of our condition under the Gospel will be set off by comparing it with that of innocent Man in Paradise 'T is true he was then in a state of Holiness and Honour and in perfect possession of that Blessedness which was suitable to his Nature yet in many respects our last state transcends our first and redeeming Love exceeds creating If Man had been only restor'd to his forfeited Rights to the enjoyment of the same Happiness which was lost his first state were most desirable And it had been greater Goodness to have preserv'd him innocent than to recover him from ruine As he that preserves his Friend from falling into the hands of the Enemy by interposing between him and danger in the midst of the Combat delivers him in a more noble manner than by paying a Ransom for him after many daies spent in woful Captivity And that Physician is more excellent in his Art who prevents Diseases and keeps the Body in health and vigour than another that expels them by sharp Remedies But the Grace of the Gospel hath so much mended our condition that if it were offer'd to our choice either to enjoy the innocent state of Adam or the renewed by Christ it were folly like that of our first Parents to prefer the former before the latter The Jubilee of the Law restor'd to the same Inheritance but the Jubilee of the Gospel gives us the Investiture of that which is transcendently better than what we at first possest Since The Day-spring from on High hath visited us in tender mercy we are enricht with higher Prerogatives and are under a better Covenant and entitled to a more glorious Reward than was due to Man by the Law of his Creation First The Humane Nature is raised to an higher degree of Honour than if Man had continued in his Innocent state 1. By its intimate Union with the Son of God He assum'd it as the fit Instrument of our Redemption and preferr'd it before the Angelical which surpast Man 's in his Primitive State The Fulness of the God-thead dwells in our Redeemer bodily From hence it is that the Angels descended to pay Him homage at his Birth and attended his Majesty in his disguise The Son of Man hath those Titles which are above the Dignity of any meer Creature He is King of the Church and Judg of the World he exercises Divine Power and receives Divine Praise Briefly The humane Nature in our Redeemer is an associate with the Divine and being made a little lower then the Angles for a time is now advanced far above all Principalities and Powers 2. In all those who are partakers of Grace and Glory by the Lord Jesus Adam was the Son of God by Creation but to be joyned to Christ as our head by a union so intimate that he lives in us and counts himself incompleat without us and by that union to be adopted into the line of Heaven and thereby to have an interest in the exceeding great and precious promises of the Gospel to be constituted Heirs of God and coheirs with Christ are such discoveries of the dignity of our supernatural state that the lowest Believer is advanced above Adam in all his honour Nay the Angels though superior to Man in the excellency of their nature yet are accidently lower by the honour of our alliance Their King is our Brother And this relative dignity which seems to eclipse their Glory might excite their envy but such an ingenuous goodness dwells in those pure and blessed Spirits that they rejoyce in our restoration and advancement To this I shall add that as the Son of God hath a special relation to Man so the most tender affections for him To illustrate this by a sensible instance Angels and Men are as two different Nations in Language and Customs but under the same Empire and if a Prince that commands two Nations should employ one for the safety and prosperity of the other it were an Argument of special
will I remember no more 2. The excellency of the Evangelical Covenant above the Legal is in that supernatural Assistance which is conveyed by it to Believers whereby they shall be certainly victorious over all opposition in their way to Heaven 'T is true Adam was endued with perfect holiness and freedom but he might intangle himself in the snares of Sin and Death The Grace of the Creator given to him was alwaies present but it depended on the natural use of his Faculties without the interposing any extraordinary operation of God's Spirit The Principle of Holiness was in himself and 't was subjected to his Will He had a power to obey if he would but not that actually determined his will for then he had persevered But the Grace of the Redeemer that flows from Christ as our quickening Head and is conveyed to all his Members enclines the Will so powerfully that 't is made subject to it God works in us to will and to do of his good pleasure The use of our Faculties and the exercise of Grace depends on the good pleasure of God who is unchangeable and the operations of the Spirit which are prevailing and effectual And upon these two the stability of the New Covenant is founded 1. On the Love of God who is as unchangable in his Will as in his Nature This Love is the cause of Election from whence there can be no separation This gives Christ to Believers and Believers to Him Thine they were saith our Saviour and thou gavest them me Which words signifie not the common title God hath to all by Creation for Men thus universally consider'd compose the world and our Saviour distinguishes those that are given him from the world but that special right God hath in them by election And all those are given by the Father to Christ in their effectual Calling which is exprest by his drawing them to the Son and are committed to his care to lead them through a course of Obedience to Glory For them Christ absolutely praies as Mediator Father I will that those whom thou hast given me be with me where I am and see my Glory And he is alwaies heard in his requests 'T is from hence that the Apostle challenges all Creatures in Heaven and Ear●h with that full and strong persuasion that nothing could separate between Believers and their Happiness For I am persuaded that neither Death nor Life nor Angels nor Principalities nor Powers nor things present nor things to come nor heigth nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate us from the Love of God in Christ Jesus our Lord. His assurance is not built on the special Prerogatives he had as an Apostle not on his rapture to Paradise nor Revelations nor the Apparition of Angels for of these he makes no mention but on that which is common to all Believers the Love of God declar'd in the Word and shed abroad in their hearts And 't is observable that the Apostle having spoken in his own person changes the number I am persuaded that nothing shall separate us to associate with himself in the partaking of that blessed Priviledg all true Believers who have an interest in the same Love of God the same Promises of Salvation and had felt the sanctifying work of the Spirit the certain proof of their Election For how is it possible that God should retract his merciful purpose to save his People He that chose them from Eternity before they could know Him and from pure Love there being nothing in the Creature to induce Him gave his Son to suffer Death for them will He stop there without bestowing that Grace which may render it effectual What can change his Affections He that prevented them in his Mercy when they were in their pollutions will He leave them after his Image is engraven upon them He that loved them so as to unite them to Christ when they were strangers will He hate them when they are his Members No His loving kindness is everlasting and the Covenant that is built on it is more firm than the Pillars of Heaven and the Foundations of the Earth This supported David in his dying hours that God had made with him an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things and sure for that was all his Salvation 2. The New Covenant is secur'd by the efficacy of Divine and Supernatural Grace This is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel saith the Lord I will put my Laws into their minds and write them in their hearts and I will be to them a God and they shall be to me a People The Elect are enabled to perform the conditions of the Gospel to which Eternal Life is promised Our Redeemer blesses us in turning us from our Iniquities And although the instability of the humane Spirit by reason of remanent Corruptions and those various Temptations to which we are liable may excite our fear lest we should fall short of the high prize of our Calling yet the Grace of the Gospel secures true Believers against both 1. Whilst we are in the present state our Corruptions are not perfectly healed but there are some remains which like a Gangrene threaten to seize on the vital parts wherein the spiritual Life is seated But the divine Nature which is conveyed to all that are spiritually descended from Christ is active and powerful to resist all carnal desires and will prevail in the end For if sin in its full vigor could not controul the efficacy of converting Grace how can the reliques of it after Grace hath taken possession be strong enough to spoil it of its conquest There is a greater distance from Death to Life than from Life to Action That Omnipotent Grace that visited us in the Grave and restored life to the dead can much more perpetuate it in the living That which was so powerful as to pluck the heart of stone out of the Breast can preserve the Heart of Flesh. 'T is true the Grace that is given to Believers in its own nature is a perishing quality as that which was bestowed on Adam Non only the slight superficial tincture in hypocrites will wear off but that deep impression of sanctifying Grace in true Believers if it be not renewed would soon be defaced But God hath promised to put his Spirit into their hearts and to cause them to walk in his Statutes and they shall keep his Commandments He is a living reigning Principle in them to which all their faculties are subordinate The Spirit infused Grace at first and enlivens it daily he confirms their Faith inflames their Love encourages their Obedience and refreshes in their minds the Idea's of that glory which is invisible and future In short his influence cherishes the blessed beginnings of the spiritual Life So that sincere Grace though weak in its degree yet 't is in a state of progress til it come
O Lord God and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto and this was yet a small thing in thy sight O Lord God but thou hast spoken of thy Servants house for a great while to come and is this the manner of Man O Lord God if such humble and thankful acknowledgments were due for the Scepter of Israel what is for the Crown of Heaven and and that procured for us by the sufferings of the Son of God Briefly Goodness is the foundation of Glory therefore the most solemn and affectionate Praise is to be rendered for transcendent Goodness The consent of Heaven and Earth is in ascribing blessing and honour and glory to him that sits on the Throne and the Lamb for ever 2. The Love of God discovered in our Redemption is the most powerful persuasive to Repentance For the discovery of this we must consider that real Repentance is the consequent of Faith and always in proportion to it Therefore the Law which represents to us the Divine Purity and Justice without any allay of Mercy can never work true Repentance in a Sinner When Conscience is under the strong conviction of guilt and of Gods Justice as implacable it causes a dreadful flight from him and a retchless neglect of means Despair hardens Neither is the discovery of God in Nature prevailing over the impenitent Hearts of men 'T is true the visible frame of the World and the continual benefits of Providence instruct Men in those prime Truths the Being and Bounty of God to those that serve Him and invite them to their Duty God never left himself without a witness in any age His Goodness is design'd To lead men to Repentance And the Apostle aggravates the obstinacy of Men that render'd that method entirely fruitless But the Declaration of Gods Goodness in the Gospel is infinitely more clear and powerful than the silent revelation by the works of Creation and Providence For although the Patience and general Goodness of God offered some intimations that he is placable yet not a sufficient support for a guilty and jealous Creature to rely on The natural notion of Gods Justice is so deeply rooted in the Humane Soul that till He is pleased to proclaim an Act of Grace and Pardon on the conditions of Faith and Repentance 't is hardly possible that convinced Sinners should apprehend Him otherwise than an Enemy and that all the common Benefits they enjoy are but Provisions allowed in the interval between the Sentence pronounc'd by the Law and the Execution of it at Death Therefore God to overcome our fears and to melt us into a compliance hath given in the Scripture the highest assurance of his willingness to receive all relenting and returning Sinners He interposes the most solemn Oath to remove our suspicions As I live saith the Lord I delight not in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live And have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die saith the Lord God And not that he should return from his ways and live The majesty and ardency of the Expressions testifie the truth and vehemency of his desire so far as the Excellency of his Nature is capable to feel our Affections And the Reason of it is clear for the Conversion of a Sinner implies a thorough change in the Will and Affections from Sin to Grace and that is infinitely pleasing to Gods Holiness and the giving of Life to the converted is most suitable to his Mercy The Angels who are infinitly inferiour to Him in Goodness rejoyce in the Repentance and Salvation of Men Much more God doth There is an eminent difference between his inclinations to exercise Mercy and Justice He uses expressions of regret when He is constrained to punish O that my People had hearkned to me and Israel had walked in my wayes And how shall I give thee up Ephraim how shall I deliver thee Israel mine heart is turned within me As a merciful Judg that pities the Man when he condemns the Malefactor But He dispenses Acts of Grace with pleasure He pardons Iniquity and passes by transgressions because He delights in Mercy 'T is true when Sinners are finally obdurate God is pleased in their Ruine for the honour of his Justice yet t is not in such a manner as in their Conversion and Life He doth not invite Sinners to transgress that He may condemn them He is not pleased when they give occasion for the exercise of his Anger And above all we have the clearest and surest discovery of pardoning Mercy in the Death of Christ. For what stronger evidence can there be of God's readiness to pardon than sending his Son into the World to be a Sacrifice for Sin that Mercy without prejudice to his other Perfections might upon our Repentance forgive us And what more rational argument is there and more congruous to the Breast of a Man to work in him a serious grief and hearty detestation of Sin not only as a cursed thing but as 't is contrary to the Divine Will than the belief that God in whose Power alone it is to pardon Sinners is most desirous to pardon them if they will return to Obedience The Prodigal in his extream distress resolved to go to his Father with penitential acknowledgments and submission and to use the words of a devout Writer His guilty Conscience as desperate asks him Qua spe with what hope He replies to himself Illa qua Pater est Ego perdidi quod erat filii ille quod patris est n●n amisit Though I have neglected the duty and lost the confidence of a Son he hath not lost the compassion of a Father That Parable represents Man in his degenerate forlorn state and that the Divine Goodness is the Motive that prevails upon him to return to his duty 3. The transcendent Love that God hath exprest in our Redemption by Christ should kindle in us a reciprocal affection to him For what is more natural than that one flame should produce another We love him because he loved us first The original of our Love to God is from the evidence of his to us this alone can strongly and sweetly draw the heart to him 'T is true the divine excellencies as they deserve a superlative esteem so the highest affection but the bare contemplation of them is ineffectual to fire the Heart with a zealous Love to God For Man in his Corrupt state hath a Diabolical Seed in him he is inclined not only to Sensuality which is an implicit hatred of God for an eager Appetite to those things which God forbids and a fixed Aversation from what He commands are the Natural effects of Hatred But to malignity and direct hatred against God He is an enemy in his mind through wicked Works and this enmity ariseth from the consideration of Gods Justice and the effects of it Man cannot Sin and be
are to be disvalued when set in comparison with Him Nay if by an impossible supposition they could be separated our Saviour should be more dear to us than Salvation For He declared greater Love in giving Himself for our Ransom than in giving Heaven to be our Reward When we love Him in the highest degree we are capable of we have reason to mourn for the imperfection of it In short A Superlative Love as 't is due to our Redeemer so 't is only accepted by Him He that loveth father or mother son or daughter more than Him is not worthy of Him And He tells us in other places that we must hate them to shew that this Love should so far exceed the Affection that is due to those persons that in all occasions where ●hey divide from Christ we should demean our selves as if we had only for them an indifference and even an aversation Indeed the preferring of any thing before Him who is altogether desirable in Himself and infinitely deserves our Love is brutishly to undervalue Him and in effect not to love Him For in a Temptation where Christ and the beloved object are set in competition as a greater weight turns the Scales so the stronger Affection will cause a person to renounce Christ for the possession of what he loves better 'T is the Love of Christ reigning in the Heart that is the only Principle of Perseverance 4. What an high Provocation is it to despise Redeeming Mercy and to defeat that infinite Goodness which hath been at such expence for our Recovery The Son of God hath emptied all the Treasures of his Love to purchase Deliverance for guilty and wretched Captives He hath past through so many pains and thorns to come and offer it to them He sollicits them to receive Pardon and Liberty upon the conditions of Acceptance and Amendment which are absolutely necessary to qualifie them for Felicity Now if they slight the Benefit and renounce their Redemption if they sell themselves again under the Servitude of Sin and gratifie the Devil with a new conquest over them what a bloody Cruelty is this to their own Souls and a vile indignity to the Lord of Glory And are there any servile spirits so charm'd with their misery and so in love with their chains who will stoop under their cruel Captivity to be reserved for eternal Punishment Who can believe it But alas Examples are numerous and ordinary The most by a Folly as prodigious as their Ingratitude prefer their Sins before their Saviour and love that which is the only just object of Hatred and hate Him who is the most worthy object of Love 'T is a most astonishing consideration that Love should persuade Christ to die for Men and that they should trample upon his Blood and choose rather to die by themselves than to live by Him That God should be so easie to forgive and Man so hard to be forgiven This is a Sin of that transcendent height that all the abominations of Sodom and Gomorrah are not equal to it This exasperates Mercy that dear and tender Attribute the only Advocate in God's Bosom for us This makes the Judge irreconcilable The rejecting of life upon the gracious terms of the Gospel makes the condemnation of Men most just certain and heavy 1. Most Just for when Christ hath performed what was necessary for the expiation of sin and hath opened the Throne of Grace which was before shut against us and by this God hath declared how willing he is to save Sinners if they are wilful to be damned and frustrate the blessed methods of Grace 't is most equal they should inherit their own choice They judge themselves unworthy of Eternal Life Conscience will justifie the severest doom against them 2. It makes their condemnation certain and final The Sentence of the Law is reversible by an appeal to an Higher Court but that of the Gospel against the refusers of Mercy will remain in its full force for ever He that believes not is condemn'd already 'T is some consolation to a Malefactor that the Sentence is not pronounced against him but an unbeliever hath no respite The Gospel assures the sincere Believer that he shall not enter into Condemnation to prevent his fears of an after sentence but it denounces a present doom against those who reject it The Wrath of God abides on them Obstinate infidelity sets beyond all possibility of Pardon there is no Sacrifice for that Sin Salvation is self cannot save the impenitent Infidel For he excludes the only means whereby Mercy is conveyed How desperate then is the case of such a Sinner To what Sanctuary will he fly all the other Attributes condemn him Holiness excites Justice and Justice awakens Power for his destruction and if Mercy interpose not between him and ruin he must perish irrecoverably Who ever loves not the Lord Christ is Anathema Maranatha He is under an irrevocable Curse which the Redeemer will confirm at his coming 3. Wilful neglect of Redeeming Mercy aggravates the Sentence and brings an extraordinary damnation upon Sinners Besides the doom of the Law which continues in its vigour against transgressors the Gospel adds a more heavy one against the impenitent because he beleives not in the name of the only begotten Son of God Infidelity is an outrage not to a Man or an Angel but to the Eternal Son For the Redemption of Souls is reckoned as a part of his reward He shall see of the travel of his soul and be satisfied Those therefore that spurn at Salvation deny him the honour of his sufferings and are guilty of the defiance of his Love of the contempt of his Clemency of the provocation of the most sensible and severe Attribute when 't is incensed This is to strike him at the Heart and to kick against his Bowels This increases the anguish of his sufferings and imbitters the Cup of his Passion This renews his Sorrows and makes his Wounds bleed afresh Ingrateful Wretches that refuse to bring Glory to their Redeemer and blessedness to themselves that rather chuse that the accuser should triumph in their misery then their Saviour rejoyce in their felicity This is the great condemnation that Christ came into the World to exempt Men from Death and they refuse the Pardon 'T is an aggravation of sin above what the Devils are capable of for Pardon was never offered to those rebellious spirits In short so deadly a malignity there is in it that it poysons the Gospel it self and turns the sweetest Mercy into the sorest Judgment The Sun of Righteousness who is a reviving light to the penitent Believer is a consuming Fire to the obdurate How much more tolerable had been the condition of such Sinners if saving Grace had never appeared unto Men or they had never heard of it for the Degrees of Wrath shall be in proportion to the riches of neglected goodness The refusing Life from Christ
Persecutors he had certainly obtained it He tells his Disciples that upon his request his Father would send twelve Legions of Angels for his rescue But he resigned the whole Power of his Will to his Fathers not my will but thy will be done was his Voice at his privat Passion in the Garden He submitted the act and exercise of his will not what I will but what thou wilt he saith in another Evangelist he yielded not only the faculty and exercise of his will to do what God enjoyned but in that manner which was pleasing to Him Not as I will but as thou wilt he expresses in the words of a third Now what is there in Heaven or Earth that can move our Wills to entire Obedience if this marvellous Pattern doth not affect us Let the same Mind be in you that was in Christ saith the Apostle How glorious is it to do what he did and what a reproach to decline what he suffer'd who had the Holiness of God to give excellency to the Action and the infirmity of Man to endure the sharpness of the Passion 3. Love to Mankind is exprest by our Saviour in a peculiar manner For although God is Infinitely Good to us yet he doth not prefer the happiness of Man before his own Blessedness The Salvation of the whole World were not to be purchas'd with the least diminution of the Divine Felicity But the Son of God suffer'd the extremest Evil to procure the most sovereign Good for us who were in Rebellion against his Laws and Empire Briefly The Life of Christ contains all our Duties towards God and Man exprest in the most perfect manner or Motives to perform them We may clearly see in his deportment innocent Wisdom prudent Simplicity compassionate Zeal perfect Patience the courage of Faith the joy of Hope the tenderness and care of Love incomparable Meekness Modesty Humility and Purity He spent the night in Communion with God and the day in Charity to Men. He perfectly hated Sin and equally loved Souls The nearest and readiest way to Perfection is a serious regard to his Precedent For the causes of all Sin are either the desire of what he despised or the fear of what He suffer'd He voluntarily deprived himself to Riches Honours Pleasures to render them contemptible and endured outrages of all sorts the contradiction of Sinners and the sharpest Sufferings to make them tolerable He ascended Mount Calvary to his Cross before he ascended from Mount Olivet to his Throne He was naked before He was cloathed with Light and crowned with thorns before with Glory And thus he powerfully teaches us to follow his steps who suffered for us If a Physician of great esteem in a Disease takes a bitter Potion it would perswade those who are in the same danger to use the same Remedy Since the Son of God to purchase our Happiness denied himself the enjoyment of worldly delights and endured the worst of temporal Evils nothing can be more effectual to convince us that the Pleasures of the world are not considerable as to our last end and that present Afflictions are so far from being inconsistent with our supreme Blessedness that they prepare us for it In short His excellent Example not only enlightens our Minds to discover our Duty but inables and excites to perform it As the Eye in beholding visible objects receives their Image so by contemplating the Graces that are conspicuous in our Redeemer we derive a similitude from them We all saith the Apostle with open face beholding as in a glass the Glory of the Lord that is by viewing in the Gospel the Life of Christ which was glorious in Holiness We are changed into the same Image from ●lory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord that is gradually fashioned in Grace according to his likeness And what can more powerfully move and perswade us to Holiness than to consider the President that Christ hath set before us For how honourable is it to be like the Son of God By conformity to Christ we partake of the Divine Perfections The King of Heaven will acknowledge us for his Children when we bear the resemblance of our elder Brother Besides the motive of Honour Love doth strongly incline to follow Holiness in imitation of our Redeemer This is one difference between Knowledge and Love the understanding draws the object to it self and transforms it into its own likeness Thus material objects have an immaterial existence in the mind when it contemplates them But Love goes forth to the object loved the Soul is more where it loves than where it lives that is there is more of its intellectual presence its thoughts and desires and it always affects a resemblance to it Thus Love humbled God and made him like to us in Nature and Love exalts Man by making him like to God in Holiness for it excites us to imitate and express in our actions the Vertues of him who hath called us to his Kingdom and Glory 3. In order to the restoring of Holiness to lapsed Man the Lord Christ purchas'd and conveys the Spirit to them A state of Sin includes a total privation of Holiness and an active contrariety against it The Sinner is dead as to the Spiritual Life and a●●●nable to revive himself as a carcase is to break the gates of Death and return to the light of the world but he lives to the Sensual Life and expresses a constant opposition to the Law of God He is without strength as to his Duty not able to conceive an holy thought or to excite a sincere and ardent desire towards Divine things but hath strong inclinations of Will and great Power for that which is evil Now to restore Spiritual Life to the dead Soul and to conquer the living enmity that is in it against Holiness no less than the Divine Power was requisite And the effecting this is peculiarly attributed to the Spirit Our Saviour tells Nicodemus Except a man be born of water and of the Holy Ghost he cannot see the Kingdom of God And the Apostle saith That according to his Mercy He saves us by the washing of Regeneration and by the renewing of the Holy Ghost As in the Creation where all the Persons concurr'd 't was the motion of the Spirit that conveyed the Life of Nature So in the Renovation of the World where they all cooperate 't is the powerful working of the Spirit that produces the Life of Grace He visits us in the grave and inspires the breath and flame of Heaven to animate and warm our dead hearts 'T was requisite not only that the Word should take Flesh but that Flesh should receive the Spirit to quicken and enable it to perform the acts of the Divine Life 'T is for this reason the third Person is frequently stiled in Scripture the Holy Spirit That Title hath not an immediate respect to his Nature but to the Operations which are assign'd to
Him in the admirable Oeconomy of our Redemption 'T is not upon the account of his essential and eternal Purity which is common to all the Persons but in regard of his Office to infuse Holiness into the depraved Soul and renew the Divine Image that he is so call'd Now Jesus Christ purchased the Spirit by his Humiliation and Sufferings and conveys Him to us in his Exaltation and Glory 1. He purchas'd the Spirit by his Sufferings For since Man fell from his original Innocence he is justly depriv'd of special Grace that is necessary to heal and recover him And till by a perfect Sacrifice Divine Justice was appeased that had shut the Treasury of Heaven and the Forfeiture taken off he could not obtain the eternal Riches God must be reconciled before He will bestow the Holy Spirit a Gift so great and so precious the earnest of his peculiar Love and special Favour to us Therefore our Saviour tells his Disciples who were extremely afflicted for his departure from them That it was expedient he should go away for otherwise the Spirit would not come whose Office was to convince and convert the World The departure of Christ implied his Death and Ascension both which were requisite in order to the sending of Him If the Blood of Christ had not been shed on the Cross the Spirit had not been poured forth from Heaven The effusion of the one was the cause of the effusion of the other The Rock that refreshed the Israelites in the Desert did not powre forth its miraculous waters till it was struck by the Rod of Moses to instruct us That Christ our Spiritual Rock must be struck with the Curse of the Law the mystical Rod of Moses to communicate the Waters of Life to us that is the Spirit who is represented in Scripture under that element 2. Our Redeemer confers the Spirit after his glorious Exaltation When he ascended on high he led Captivity captive and gave gifts unto men After his triumph over Principalities and Powers He dispenc'd his Bounty in this rich Donative For the Holy Spirit was first given to Christ as the reward of his excellent Obedience in dying that was infinitely pleasing to God to be communicated from him to Men. And he received the Spirit in the quality of Mediator upon his entrance into Heaven The Psalmist declares this Prophetically Thou hast ascended on high thou hast led captivity captive thou hast received gifts for Men yea for the rebellious also that the Lord God might dwell among them He acquired a right to those Treasures by dying but he takes possession of them after his Ascension Now He is Crown'd He holds forth the Scepter of his Royalty Therefore 't is said that when Christ was upon the Earth the Holy Spirit was not given because Jesus was not Glorified If it be objected that Believers before the Ascension of Christ were partakers of the Spirit the answer is clear 1. It was upon Christ's interposing in the beginning as Mediator and with respect to his future Death and Ascension that the Spirit was given to them 2. The degrees of communicating the Spirit before and after the Ascension of Christ are very different whether we consider the gifts of the Spirit those extraordinary abilities with which the Apostles were endued or the fruits of the Spirit the Sanctifying Graces that are bestowed on Believers the measure of them far exceeds what-ever was conveyed before The Spirit Descended as in a dew upon the Jewish Nation but 't is now powred forth in showers upon all flesh Now in the stile of Scripture things are said to be when apparently and eminently they discover their being So that comparatively to the Power and Virtue of the Spirit discovered in the Church since the Glorification of Christ he was not given before All the former manifestations are obscured by the excess and excellency of the later And not only the Decree of God which is sufficient to connect those things that have no natural dependence but there are special reasons for the order of this Dispensation for the great end of the Spirit 's coming was to reveal fully to the World the way of Salvation to discover the unsearchable riches of Grace to assure Men of happiness after this Life that they might be reduced from a state of Rebellion to Obedience and their affections be refined and purified from all Earthliness and made Angelical and Heavenly Now the Principal demonstrations which he used to perswade Men of these things are the Death and Resurrection of Christ without which these Mysteries had been under a cloud That the Instruction therefore of the Spirit might be clear and effectual it was necessary Christ should Suffer and enter into Heaven and accomplish those things he was to teach And from hence we may observe that the Sanctifying Grace of the Spirit is only the concomitant of the Evangelical Mercy The Gospel and the Spirit are the Wings by which the Sun of Righteousness brings healing and life to the World The declaration of the Law from Mount Sinai was Divine but not accompanied with the efficacy of Grace Therefore 't is called the ministration of Death It conveyed no Spiritual strength as delivered by the hands of Moses considering him precisely in the quality of the legal Mediator but threatned a Curse to the breakers of it All the promises of Mercy scattered in the Books of Moses belong to the Covenant of Grace The Gospel is called the Law of the Spirit of Life and the Ministration of the Spirit that is the Spirit of Holiness and Comfort from whom true and Eternal Life proceeds 〈◊〉 is solely communicated by it The discovery of the Divine Goodness in the Works of Creation and Providence is natural and without the renewing power of the Spirit There is a correspondence between the external Revelation of Mercy and the internal Grace of the Spirit in their Original as the one is supernatural so is the other Not but that the Heathens had some fainter beams of the Sun of Righteousness for he inlightens every man that comes into the World and some lower operations of the Spirit whereby they were reduced from Intemperance Incontinency and other gross Vices to the practice of several Vertues that respect the Civil Life And of this we have an eminent instance recorded by Diogenes Laertius That Polemo half-drunk crown'd with Roses and in the dress of a Harlot rather than of a Man coming into the School of the severe Zenocrates hearing him discourse of Temperance as by a Charm was so perfectly changed that casting away the Garland from his Head and the lascivious Ornaments that were about him and which was more considerable his vicious Habits from his Soul he that entered in a Reveller come forth a Philosopher so corrected and composed in his manners that he was called the Dorick tone which of all others was the most solemn and majestical in the Musick of
those times Now this alteration was wrought by the force of natural Reason which prevailed on him to renounce those sensual and base lusts that were inconsistent with the Honour and Peace of a Man in this present Life But still he was exceedingly distant from the Purity of a true Saint who partakes of the Divine Nature and is inclin'd in all his motions to God All the Precepts of Morality to use the Similtude of Plutarch are like strong Perfumes that sometimes revive those that are in a Swoon by the Falling-Sickness but never heal them So they may recover those that are debaucht from the outward practice of those ignoble Vices which violate Natural Conscience but they cannot rectifie and cure the corrupt Nature The highest Philosophical Change was onely from those Vices which were scandalous in the view of men but consisted with those which were though more subtile yet not less sinfull and discernable by the pure Eye of God 'T was from one kind of Sin to another from sensual to spiritual Satan cast out Satan or from higher to lower degrees of Sin but not from Sin to Holiness And although the same good Works as to the external substance were performed by the Heathens as by Christians yet they vastly differ in their Principle and End A Brute performs all the acts of Sense that a Man doth but 't is meerly from the sensitive Soul that is of a lower order than that which animates a Man So in the Heathen 't was only the humane Spirit excited by Secular Interests Self-love servile Fear that performed Moral Actions But the Holy Spirit who infuses Grace that is as it were a second Soul to elevate that which before quickened the Body is the true Principle of Christian Vertues This sanctifying Spirit who transforms us into the Divine Nature and makes an entire and thorow Change in the Heart and Conversation they did not receive in the way of Nature Of this we have a convincing proof in the Example of the best Masters of Morality who by their Discourses or Writings rais'd it to the point of its perfection Socrates the Father of Philosophy to whom this honour is ascribed among the Grecians that he first made Wisdom descend from Heaven to earth because he left the study of Astronomy in which the Philosophers before him were most conversant and applied himself to that which was useful for the Government of Life and Reformation of Manners He that is propounded by Celsus as an unparallel'd Pattern as one that discovered to what degree of excellency Vertue might raise the humane Spirit yet was guilty of great immorality and impiety Those who pretend to have known the retirements of his Life accused him of impure commerce with Alcibiades He betrayed the Chastity of his Wife by giving her to his Friend Plato and Xenophon his admirers declare his compliance with the common Idolatry which is justly aggravated by St. Austin being against the Convictions of his Conscience For although in private Discourse with his Friends he acknowledged but one God and considered the Sun and Moon only as the works and instruments of the Divine Power and in the rank of other Creatures yet in his Apology before his Judges to prevent the fatal Sentence he charged his enemies to be guilty of impudent falshood who accused him that he did not believe the Gods since he believed as all other men that the Sun and Moon were Gods And during the time of his imprisonment he never addrest one Prayer to God for the pardon of his Sins for he had so high an opinion of his own Vertues that he was insensible of his Vices And dying he commanded a Cock to be offer'd to Aesculapius that is to the Devil under the disguise of that famous Physician To Socrates I shall add Seneca Never any excepting the Sacred Writers and those who are instructed by them hath writ more excellently He describes Vertue as if the living Original were in his Breast but how dull a Copy was drawn in his Life There is as great a difference between the expression of it by his Pen and by his Actions as between the lively Picture of a Face by a rare Pencil and the rude Draught of it with a Coal What a villainous part did he act in exciting Nero to murder his Mother and after in writing an Apology for it employing the colours of his Rhetorick to cover one of the foulest blots which hath appeared in the succession of all Ages His Philosophy was not a powerful Antidote against the Contagion of the Court What just excuse can there be of his Cruelty to his Wife in cutting her Veins that she might die with him from a vain-glorious desire to eternize their Reputation And whereas among the whole Chorus of Vertues he in a special manner exalts Magnanimity in the contempt of earthly things and determines that the necessities of Nature are the just measures of ●●ches and Delights and all other things which the irregular Appetites of men pursue So that one would think him an Angel in flesh conversing below to instruct the world how to be happy yet the Historians of those times tax him for insatiable Avarice that in a little time by unworthy arts he rak'd up an incredible Sum of Money Supposing it a Calumny that he forged many Wills to seize upon the Inheritance belonging to others what excuse can there be for his excessive Usury his forcing the Britains to borrow a Million of Sesterces and calling for it in so much to their prejudice as was likely to have caused their Rebellion What for his sumptuous Palaces and Gardens of Pleasure exceeding the Luxury of Nero And all these possest by a man who had no Son to inherit a Philosopher a Stoick the great commender of blessed Poverty All the Apology he makes is that a Wise man that is himself Non amat Divitias sed mavult non in animum illas sed in domum inducit non respicit possessas sed continet Agreeing with Aristippus a Philosophizing Animal who being reproved for his intanglement in bruitish love with a famous Harlot replyed I possess her not she me The only difference is in the matter of their Affections the one was Riches the other Pleasure By these instances we may judg of the rest of the Philosophers Although a Vein of Gold appear in their Writings yet their Lives were full of Dross The best of them are charged to have practised vice with those to whom they commended the Precepts of Vertue The foulest Actions were approv'd by some and the most excellent condemned by others that pretended to Philosophical Perfection Unnatural Lust was allowed as indifferent by Zeno and Chrysippus And the noblest Love in giving Life it self for the Glory of God in Martyrdom is censured by Epictetus and Antoninus as the effect of foolish and incurable Melancholy in Christians who were disgusted with the World and
world When our Saviour was on the Earth the End of his Sermons as appears in the Gospel was to regulate the lives of Men to correct their vicious Passions rather than to explicate the greatest Mysteries Other Religions oblige their Disciples either to some external actions that have no moral worth in them so that 't is impossible for any one that is guided by Reason to be taken with such vanities Or they require things incommodious and burthensome The Priests of Baal cut themselves And among the Chineses though in great reputation for wisdome their Penitents expose themselves half naked to the injuries of the sharpest Weather with a double cruelty pleasure of the Devil who makes them freez here and expects they should burn for ever 'T is not the most strict observance of serious Trifles nor submitting to rigorous Austerities that ennobles the humane nature and commends us to God The most zealous performers of things indifferent and that chastise themselves with a bloody Discipline labour for nothing and may pass to Hell through Purgatory But the Religion of Christ reforms the Understanding and Will and all the actions depending on them It chases away Errour and Vice and Hatred and sheds abroad Light and Love Purity and Peace and forms on Earth a lively representation of that pure Society that is in Heaven The End of it is to render men like the Angels in Holiness that they may be so in Blessedness This will render it amiable to all that consider it without Passion And 't is worthy of observation that although many Heathens and Hereticks have contradicted other parts of the Christian Religion yet none have dar'd openly to condemn the Moral part of it The Effect of the Gospel hath been answerable to the Design One main difference between the old and new Law is that the old gave the knowledg of Rules without power to observe them the new that is attended with the Grace of Christ enables us by a holy Love to perform that which the other made men only to understand Of this we have the most sensible Evidence in the Primitive Church that was produc'd by the first beams of the Sun of Righteousness had received the first fruits of the Spirit What is more wonderful and worthy of God than that perfect Love which made all the first Believers to have one Heart and one Soul What greater contempt of the World can be imagined than the voluntary parting with all their Goods in consecrating them to God for the relief of the Poor And the Churches of the Gentiles while the Blood of Christ was warm and His Actions fresh in the memories of men were exemplary in Holiness They were as Stars shining in a perverse generation There was such a brightness in their Conversations that it pierc'd through the darkness of Paganisme and made a visible difference between them and all others Their words and actions were so full of zeal for the Glory of God of Chastity Temperance Justice Charity that the Heathens from the Holiness of their lives concluded the Holiness of their Law and that the Doctrine that produc'd such fruits could not be evil The first light that discovered the Truth of the Christian Faith to many was from the Graces and Vertues that appear'd in the Faithful The Purity of their Lives their Courage in Death were as powerful to convert the World as their Sermons Disputations and Miracles And those who were under such strong prejudices that they would not examine the Doctrine of the Gospel yet they could not but admire the Integrity and Innocency that was visible in the conversation of Christians They esteem●d their persons from the good qualities that were visible in them when they hated the Christian name for the conceal'd evil they unreasonably suspected to be under it This Tertullian excellently represents in his Apology The most part are so prejudic'd against the Name and are possest with such a blind hatred to it that they make it a matter of reproach even to those whom they otherwise esteem'd Caius they say is a good man he hath no fault but that he is a Christian. Thus the excellent Holiness of the Professors of the Gospel forc'd a veneration from their Enemies But we are fallen from Heaven and mixt with the dust Our conversation hath nothing singular in Holiness to distinguish us from the World The same corrupt Passions reign in Professors of Christianity as in those who are strangers from the Sacred Covenant If we compare our selves with the Primitive Church we must confess our unworthiness to be call'd their successors Sixteen hundred years are run out since the Son of God came down to sanctifie and save the World which are so many degrees whereby we are descended from the first Perfection We are more distant from them in Holiness than in Time So universal and great is the Corruption that 't is almost as difficult to revive the dying Faith of Christians and to reform their Lives according to the purity of their Profession as the Conversion of the World was from Heathenism to Christianity 'T is true In every Age there are some Examples of the Vertue of the Gospel that reflect an honour upon it And this last Age which we may call the Winter of the World in which the Holy Spirit hath foretold That the love of many shall grow cold by a marvellous Antiperistasis hath inflam'd the hearts of some excellent Saints towards God and Religion But the great number of the wicked and the progress of Sin in their Lives there is no measure of Tears sufficient to lament Fourthly I shall press Christians to walk as becomes the Gospel of Christ answerably to the Holiness and Purity of that Divine Institution and to those great and strict Obligations it laies upon us The Gospel requires an entire Holiness in all our Faculties an equal respect to all our Duties We are commanded to cleanse our selves from all pollutions of flesh and spirit to be holy in all manner of conversation We are enjoin'd To be perfecting Holiness in the fear of God To be holy as He that hath called us is Holy A certain measure of Faith and Love and Obedience a mediocrity in Vertue we must not content our selves with 'T is not a counsel of Perfection given only to some Christians of a peculiar order and elevation But the command of a Law that without exception binds all Be perfect as your Heavenly Father is perfect The Gospel gives no Dispensation to any Person nor in any Duty The Doctrine that asserts there are some excellent works to which the lower sort of Christians is not obliged is equally pernicious both to those who do them by Presumption as if they were not due and were therefore meritorious and to those who neglect them by a blind Security as if they might be saved without striving to reach the highest degrees of Obedience 'T is a weak pretence that because the
as to violate the Fidelity of Marriage without the wounding of Chastity or to poison a Parent without failing in the duty that is owing to them And to express his indignation he tells them Sic ergo ipsi salva venia in Gehennam detruduntur dum salvo metu peccant Let them expect that God will cast them into Hell without prejudice to their Pardon as they pretend to Sin without prejudice to the respect they bear him To sum up all Jesus Christ as by his Doctrine and Life he clearly discover'd our Duty so he offers to us the Aid of his Spirit for our assistance by which the Commands of the Gospel are not only possible but easy And to enforce our obligations he hath threatned such Vengeance to the rebellious and promised such a Reward to those that obey the Gospel that it is impossible we should not be deeply affected with them if we seriously believe them and He hath given such evidence of their truth that 't is impossible we should not believe them unless the God of this world hath blinded our minds 'T is matter therefore of just astonishment that Christians should not express the efficacy of the Gospel in their actions How can a reasonable Creature believe that eternal Damnation shall be the Punishment of Sin and yet live in the wilful practice of it The Historian speaking of Mushroms that somtimes prov'd deadly to whole Families asks with wonder What pleasure could allure them to eat such doubtful Meat Yet they may be so corrected as to become innocent But when 't is certain that the Pleasures of Sin are mortal Can any one be tempted by those attractives to venture on that which will undoubtedly bring Death to the Soul Let Sense itself be Judg and make the comparison between whatsoever the present Life can afford for delight in Sin and what the future Death will bring to torment it Let the Flesh see into what torments all its delights shall be changed and with what other fire than of impure Lust it shall burn for ever Besides We are encouraged to our Duty with the assurance of a Happiness so excellent that not only the enjoyment of it in the next World but the just expectation of it here makes us truly blessed If the Reward were small or the Promise uncertain there might be some pretence for our not performing the Conditions to obtain it but when the one is infinitely great and the other as true as the God of truth what more powerful motive can be conceiv'd to make us holy 'T is the Apostles chosen Argument that We should walk worthy of him who hath call'd us to his Kingdom and Glory The Heathens were in a great measure strangers to the Secrets of another World they had but a shadow of probability we have the Light of Truth brought down from Heaven by the Son of God that reveals to us a Blessedness that deserves our most ardent active Affections But if Men are not wrought on by natural Reason nor divine Faith if neither the Terrours of the Lord nor the blessed Hope can perswade them from Sin to Holiness their condition is irrecoverable In this the Rules of Natural and Spiritual Healing agree Where neither Corrosives nor Lenitives are successful we must use the Knife if cutting off be unprofitable we must fear the part if the Fire is ineffectual the Ulcer is incurable If the threatning of Hell-fire through Unbelief and Carelesness is not fear'd and hath no efficacy to correct and change Sinners what remains but to make a presage of eternal Death that will unavoidably and speedily seize on them And if so clear a discovery of the Heavenly Glory doth not produce in men a living Faith that works by Love and a lively Hope that purifies the Heart and Conversation what can be concluded but that they are wholly sensual and senseless and shall be for ever deprived of that Blessedness they now despise and neglect CHAP. XX. The Divine Power is admirably glorified in the Creation of the World in respect of the greatness of the effect and the manner of its production T is as evident in our Redemption The Principal Effects of it are considered The Incarnation of the Son of God is a work fully responsible to Omnipotence Our Redeemers Supernatural Conception by the Holy Ghost The Divine Power was eminently declared in the Miracles Jesus Christ wrought in the course of his Ministry His Miracles were the evidence of His Celestial Calling they were necessary for the conviction of the World their Nature considered The Divine Power was Glorified in making the Death of Christ Victorious over all our Spiritual Enemies The Resurrection of Christ the effect of Glorious Power The Reasons of it from the quality of his Person and the nature of his Office that he might dispense the Blessings he had purchased for Believers His Resurrection is the foundation of Faith It hath a threefold reference to his Person as the Son of God to his Death as an Alsufficient Sacrifice to his Promise of raising Believers at the last day THE Divine Power is admirably glorified in the Creation of the World not only in regard of the greatness of the Effect that comprehends the Heavens and Earth and all things in them but in regard of the marvelous way of its Production for He made the great Universe without the concurrence of any material cause from nothing For this reason the raising this glorious Fabrick is produc●d as the distinctive character of the Deity from the troop of false gods The Psalmist declares The Lord is to be fear●d above all gods for all the gods of the Nations are Idols but the Lord made the Heavens And as He began the Creation by proceeding from nothing to real existence so in forming the other parts He drew them from infirm and indisposed matter as from a second nothing that all his Creatures might bear the real testimonies of Infinite Power Thus He commanded Light to arise out of Darkness and sensible Creatures from an insensible Element He created Man the accomplishment of all his Works from the lowest and grossest Element the Earth Now although at the first view we might conceive that the visible World is the greatest Miracle that ever God performed yet upon serious reflection we shall discover that the works of Grace are as wonderful as the works of Nature and that the Power of God is as evidently exprest in our Redemption as in the Creation For the fuller understanding of this I will consider some of the principal Effects of the Divine Power in order to our blessed Recovery 1. The Incarnation of the Son of God in accomplishing whereof such Power was exercis'd as no limited Understanding is able to comprehend The Word was made Flesh. This signifies the real Union between the Humane Nature and the Divine in our Redeemer Before his Incarnation he appeared in an humane form to the Patriarchs and
Injur'd and Incensed to forgive their Enemies and all this for Love to God an affection unknown to all other Laws and Institutions Where-ever it came it miraculously transform'd Pagans into Christians which was as truly Wonderful as for the Basilisk to part with its Poison for a Wolfe to be chang●d into a Lamb nay for Dogs such were the Gentiles in our Saviours Language to be chang'd into Angels of light and purity An eminent instance we have of its efficacy in the Corinthians who in their Heathen-state were guilty of the vilest enormities But after their receiving the Gospel the Apostle testifys they were washed sanctified and Justified in the Name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God Justine Martyr tells Triphon that those who had been stain'd with all filthiness and enslav'd by charming imperious lusts yet becoming Christians they were purified and freed and delighted in those Vertues that were most contrary to their former Vices This Alteration was so visible that the lives of the first Christians were an Apologie for their Faith And 't is strongly urged by Origen Tertullian Lactantius and others as a convinceing proof of the Divinity of the Christian Doctrine that it made the Professours of it Divine in their conversations The Creation of Grace was like the Creation of Nature when trees sprang up in an instant laden with fruits so in the converted all the blessed fruits of the Spirit Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Gentleness Goodness Faith Meekness Temperance abounded This testimony even a Pagan Persecutor gives the common sort of Christians that they assembled to sing Hymns to Christ that they obliged themselves solemnly to injure no Person to deceive none to preserve faithfully what was committed to them to be alwayes true And as in obedience to the Gospel they gave a divorce to all the sinful delights of sense so which was incomparably more difficult they embrac't those things which Nature doth most abhor no Religion in the World ever exposed its followers to such Sufferings nor inspir'd them with such resolution to sustain them All other Religions were productions of the flesh and being allyed together if any time jealousy caused a discord between them yet an open Persecution was unusual But when Christianity first appear'd they all turn'd their Hatred and Violence against it as a foreigner of a different extraction How many living Martyrs were Exiles for the Faith and depriv'd of all humane consolation yet they esteem'd themselves more blessed in their Miseries than others in their Pleasures How many thousands were put to Death for the honour of our Redeemer yet the least thing is the number in comparison of the manner of their Sufferings If they had suffer'd a mild Martyrdome an easie sudden Death wherein the Combat and Victory had been finisht at a Blow their Love and courage had not been so admirable but they endur'd torments so various and terrible that had they not been practis'd upon them by their enemies it were incredible that ever Malice should be so ingenious to invent or cruelty so harden'd to inflict them If all the Furie of Hell had come forth to suggest new Tortures they could not have devised worse Neither was their mere suffering such Torments so astonishing as their readiness to encounter them and their behaviour under them They maintained their Faith in the presence of the most formidable Princes Some who might by favour were afraid to escape the common Persecution esteeming no Death precious but Martyrdom They contended earnestly to suffer and envied others the honourable Ignominy and happy Torments that were endur'd for their beloved Redeemer We have an instance of their Courage in Tiburtius who thus spake to his Judges Bind me to Racks and Wheels condemn me banish me load me with Chains burn me tear me omit no kind of Torment If you banish me the smallest corner of the Earth shall be to me as the whole World because I shall find my God there If you kill me by the same act you will give me the happy Liberty I sigh after and deliver me from a Prison on Earth to reign in Heaven If you condemn me to the fire I have quencht other flames in resisting Concupiscence Ordain what Torment you please it shall not trouble me since my Heart is fill'd with Love to suffer and desire it They were thankful to those who condemned them and regarded their Executioners with the same eye as St. Peter did the Angel that brake off his Fetters to restore him to Freedom They chearfully received them as those who brought the keys of Paradise in the same hands wherewith they brought their Swords They enter'd into the Fire with joy and were not only patient but triumphant in their Sufferings as if they had been glorified in their Souls and impassible to the Sufferings of their Bodies I have seen saith Eusebius the Executioners tired with tormenting them lie down panting and breathing and others not less fierce but more fresh succeed in their cruel Service But I never saw the Martyrs weary of Sufferings nor heard them desire a Truce much less Deliverance from them If the Judges were softened with their Blood and by the force of Nature were compell'd to be compassionate so as to offer them a release if they would but feign to deny Christ They were fill'd with indignation esteeming it the worst injury that their Persecutors expected they would be guilty of but the shadow of Infidelity to their dear Saviour They were ambitious of the longest and most terrible Sufferings for His sake to be Martyrs in every member They sang the Praises of Christ their Tongues being harmonious with the affections of their Hearts in the Flames they preach'd Him from the Crosses they rejoiced in him as their only Good in the midst of devouring Beasts Briefly They preserved an inviolable Faith to Him notwithstanding the most furious Batteries against them The barbarous Enemy might tear their Hearts from their Breasts but never Christ from their Hearts to whom they were inseparably united by Love stronger than the most cruel Death Now what less then the Divine Power could support them under those Torments which 't is almost incredible a Body made of flesh could endure I wil not Dispute whether it exceeds all Natural force to suffer such from a vitious Affection of Pride or obstinacy but the frequency of it exceeds all Natural Possibility 'T was not impossible for one of the Romans to hold his Right Hand unmoved over a burning Torch to extinguish in the King their Enemy all hopes 〈◊〉 drawing 〈◊〉 him the Secrets of his Country by the force of Torments but it was not Possible that many thousands such should have been in Rome For then that single Example had not been so wonderful in all Antiquity But the Noble Army of Martyrs who overcame in the most bloody battels was numerous beyond account and compos'd of all sorts of Persons of
Ascension of Christ are in the Types and Prophecies of the Old Testament as Corporeal beings are in the darkness of the Night they have a real existence but no Eye is so clear as to enlighten the obscurity The most sharp-sighted Seer might say I shall see him but not now The Ministry of the Law is compar'd to the Light of a Candle that is shadowy and confin'd to a small place That of the Gospel is like the Sun in its strength that enlightens the World The Prophets who were nearer the coming of Christ had clearer Revelations but did not bring perfect Day As some new Stars appearing in the Firmament increase but do not change the nature of the Light Isaiah who is so exact in describing all the Circumstances of our Saviours Death and his Innocence Humility and Patience that he seems to be an Evangelist rather than a Prophet ●et the Ethiopian Proselyte who certainly was a proficient in the Jewish Religion understood not of whom the Prophet spake We see what they were ignorant of not that our sight is stronger but our light is more clear The full discovery of these Mysteries was reserved as an honour to our Saviours Coming He is the Sun of Righteousness and the Light that He hath shed abroad excels that of all the Prophets in brightness as well as his Person transcends theirs in dignity And how should the Evangelical Light warm our hearts with thankfulness to God for this admirable Priviledg The dim foresight of the Messiah two thousand years before his Coming put Abraham in an extasie of Joy how should the full Revelation of Him affect us Many holy Prophets and Kings desired to see the things that we see They embraced the Promises we have the blessed effects They had the Shadows we have the Light They only saw the veiled face of Moses We all with open face as in a glass see the Glory of the Lord Now what is our Duty becoming this Priviledg But to be transform'd into the same Image from Glory to Glory as by the Spirit of the Lord The Life of every Christian should be a shining Representation of the Graces and Vertues of Christ that are so visible in the Gospel Their Holiness and Heavenliness their Hopes and Joy should as much exceed the Graces and Comforts of Believers under the Legal Dispensation as their Knowledg is incomparably more clear and perfect To conclude From the accomplishment of the ancient Prophecies in the first Coming of the Messiah we may confirm our Faith in those glorious Promises that are to be fulfill'd at his second For 't is the same Divine Goodness the same Fidelity the same Power still upon which we are to build our Hopes And the Consideration that the Perfection of our Happiness is reserved till that time should enflame our desires after it 'T was the character of Believers of the Old Testament They waited for the consolation of Israel 'T is the description of the Saints in the New they love the Appearance of Christ. If they long'd for his Coming in the Flesh though it was attended with all the circumstances of Meanness and Dishonour the effects of our Sins with what ardent and impatient Desires should we hasten His Coming in Glory when He shall appear the Second time to them that look for him without Sin unto Salvation Then He will put an end to all the disorders of the World and begin the glorious State wherein Holiness and Righteousness shall be crown'd and reign for ever The Christian Church joyns in that ardent Address to our Saviour Oh that thou wouldst rent the Heavens and wouldst come down that the mountains might flow down at thy Presence As when the melting fire burneth the Fire causeth the waters to boile to make thy Name known to thine adversaries that the Nations may tremble at thy Presence Although the Beauty and Frame of this visible World shall be destroyed yet that dreadful Day shall be joyful to the Saints For then all the Preparations of Infinite Wisdom and Goodness The things that Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither have entered into the heart of man shall be the everlasting portion of those who love God Come Lord Jesus FINIS ERRATA PAge 48. l. 23. r. desipiendum P. 85. l. 26. r. Causality P. 111. l. 1. f. and. r. ar● P. 251. l. 23. f. their r. the. P. 249. l. 7. r. revenge P. 264. after person dele h● P. 317. l. 31. f. lust r. taste P. 374. l. 2. after proceeds dele and. P. 356. after necessity dele of it P. 453. l. 31. f. from r. of Other smaller faults are left to the Candor of the Reader to mend Joh. 8.36 Rom. 14.17 Gen. 9.6 Col. 3.10 Eph. 4.24 Luke 1.73 Gen. ● 19 Rom. 4.17 Psal. 33.6 Rom. 1.20 Prov. 8.27 28 29. Psa. 104.24 Difficile est expedire utrum species an utilitas major sit Lact. de opif● Hom. Miratur ali● homo cum sit ipse mirator maximum miraculum Aug. 1 Joh. 4.18 Psal. 8.5 6. Prov. 16.4 Rom. 11.36 Psal. 145.10 Rom. 12.1 Rom. 11.35 Isa. 45.12 Psal. 100.3 Isa. 44.21 Plato Rom. 7.12 1 Pet. 1.15 Psal. 19.11 Gen. 2.17 Gal. 3.10 Ezek. 18.4 Gen. 2.17 In minimis obedientiae periculum faciunt Legislatores quia Legislatoris ad Obedientiam obligantis potius habenda est ratio quam rei de qua lex lata est Gen. 3.6 Lactan. Obsequii gloria est in eo major quod quis minus velit Plin. Rom. 12.1 Tertul. 1 Tim. 2.14 Primi in homine moriuntur oc●li Plin. 1 Joh. 5.16 The promise of the Tempter that they should not die encouraged him to believe that he should enjoy an Immortality not depending on Gods Will but absolute which is proper to God alone Rom. 5.19 Psal. 49.12 Deseruit desertus est Aug. In meritò examinanda veniunt Causa quae impulit causa quae retrahere debuit personae idonietas ad utrumque Grot. Quantò potestas vitandi fuit facilior tantò contumaciae crimine oneratur Difficilium facilis venia Tertul l. 2. ad uxor Jam. 1.14 Gen. 3.6 Job 36.21 Rom. 8.20 Gen. 3.10 Gen. 3.17 18. Ferar●m 〈…〉 inter se placidae sunt morsuque similium abstinent hi mutuâ laceratione satiantur Seneca de Ira. Acts 17.26 Rom. 5.19 2 Cor. 5.15 Rom. 5.14 Eph. 2.3 Ut non fit aestimare Parens melior homini an tristior noverca fuerit Plin. Pr●l l. 7. Rom. 6.23 Rom. 5.12 14 17. Mat. 7.18 John 3.6 Rom. 8.7 Psal. 51.5 Gen. 6.5 Job 14.4 Rom. 3.23 Quando Anima tanta satiabitur visione tanta inflammabitur Charitate superioris boni ut ad seipsam sibi placendo deficere ab illius dilectione non possit Aug. Lib. 4. cont Jul. 1 Cor. 15.46 Psal. 50.21 Contra adver ●eg Proph. Lib. 1. c. 14. Vid. Ward de Peccat origin Salv. lib. 3. De Prov. Psal. 145.17 Ephes. 4.24 Mat. 6.23 Ephes. 4.23 Rom. 11 7. Ephes. 4.11
allay of tormenting fear and Delight its inseparable attendant was pure without the least mixture of Sorrow 3. There was in Mans dominion and power over the Creatures a shining part of God's Image He was appointed God's Lieutenant in the world and adorn'd with a Flower of his Crown God gave him the solemn Investiture of this dignity when he brought the Creatures to receive their names from him which was a mark of their homage and a Token of his supreme Empire to command them by their names As this Dominion was establisht by the order of God so 't was exercised by the mediation of the Body In his Face and Words there was something so powerful as commanded all the hosts of the lower world And as their subjection was most easie without constraint or resistance so 't was most equal without violence and oppression Thus holy and blessed was Adam in his Primitive state And that he might continue so he was obliged for ever to obey the Will of God who bestowed upon him Life and Happiness By the first neglect of his Duty he would most justly and inevitably incur the loss of both This will appear by considering the design of God in the Creation God did not make the World and Man for the meer exercise of his Power and so left them but as the production of all things was from his Goodness so their resolution and tendency is for his Glory He is as universally the final as the efficient cause of all creatures For that which receives its being from another can't be an end to it self for the prevision of the end in the mind of the Creator sets him a work and is antecedent to the being of the creature Therefore the Wiseman tells us that God made all things for himself And the Apostle that Of him and to him and through him are all things to whom be glory for ever The lower rank of Creatures objectively glorifie God as there is a visible demonstration of his excellent Attributes in them Man is only qualified to know and love the Creator And as the benefit of all redounds to him 't is his duty to pay the tribute for all By his mouth the world makes its acknowledgment to God He is the Interpreter of the silent and uninterrupted Praises which the full Quire of Heaven and Earth renders to him O Lord all thy works praise thee from the most noble to the least worthy thy Saints bless thee Thankfulness is the homage due from understanding Creatures And from hence it follows that Man was only in a state of moral dependance and capable of a Law For a Law being the declaration of the Superiours Will requiring Obedience and threatning Punishment on the failure thereof there must be a principle of Reason and choice in that nature that is govern'd by it 1. To discover the Authority that enjoins it 2. To discern the matter of the Law 3. To determine it self out of judgment and election to Obedience as most excellent in it self and advantageous to the performer Now all inferiour Creatures are moved by the secret force of natural inclinations they are insensible of moral engagements and are not wrought on in an illuminative way by the foresight of rewards and punishments But Man who is a reasonable creature owes a reasonable service And it is impossible that Man should be exempt from a Law For as the notion of a God that is of the first and supreme Being excludes all possibility of obligation to another Who hath first given to the Lord and it shall be recompensed to him again And of subjection to a Law for supremacy and subjection are incompatible so the quality of a Creature includes the relation of dependance and natural subjection to the Will of God This is most evident from that common Principle which governs the intelligent Creation 'T is a moral Maxime to which the reasonable nature necessarily assents That the dispensing of benefits acquires to the Giver a Right to command and lays on the Receiver an Obligation to obey and these rights and duties are measured by the nature of the benefits as their just Rule This is visible in that Dominion which is amongst men If we ascend to the first Springs of Humane Laws we shall find the original Right of Power to arise either from Generation in Nature or Preservation ●n War or some publick Good accruing to the Society by the prudent care of the Governor Now the being and blessedness of the creature are the greatest and most valuable benefits that can be received and in the bestowing of them is laid the most real foundation of Power and Authority Upon this account Man who derives his life and felicity from God is under a natural and strong obligation to comply with his will From this right of Creation God asserts his universal Dominion I have made the Earth and created Man upon it even my hands have stretcht out the Heavens and all their hosts have I commanded And the Psalmist tells us Know ye that the Lord he is God it is He that made us and not we our selves we are his people and the sheep of his pasture His Jurisdiction is grounded on his propriety in Man and that arises from his giving being to him Remember O Israel for thou art my servant I have formed thee From hence he hath a supreme Right to impose any Law for the performance of which Man had an original Power Universal Obedience is the just consequent of our obligations to the Divine Goodness Suppose that Man were not the work of God's hands yet the infinite excellency of his nature gives him a better title to command us than Man hath upon the account of his reason to govern those Creatures that are inferiour to him Or suppose that God had not created the matter of which the Body is compos'd but only inspir'd it with a living Soul yet his right over us had been unquestionable The Civil Law determines that when an Artificer works on rich materials and the engraving be not of extraordinary value that the whole belongs to him who is the owner of the materials But if the matter be mean and the workmanship excellent in which the price wholly lies as if a Painter should draw an admirable Picture on a piece of Canvas the Picture of right belongs to him that drew it So if according to the errour of some Philosophers the matter of which the World was made had been Eternal yet God having infused a reasonable Soul into a piece of clay which is the principle of its life and gives it a transcendent value above all other beings which were made of the same element it is most just he should have a property in him and dominion over him The Law of Nature to which Man was subject upon his Creation contains those moral Principles concerning good and evil which have an essential equity in them