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A28171 The common principiles of Christian religion clearly proved and singularly improved, or, A practical catechism wherein some of the most concerning-foundations of our faith are solidely laid down, and that doctrine, which is according to godliness, sweetly, yet pungently pressed home and most satisfyingly handled / by that worthy and faithful servant of Jesus Christ, Mr. Hew Binning ... Binning, Hugh, 1627-1653.; Gillespie, Patrick, 1617-1675. 1667 (1667) Wing B2927; ESTC R33213 197,041 290

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duration no end of his affection He can still say I am that I am What I was I am and I will be what I am men cannot say so they are like the Brooks that the companies of Teman looked after thought to have found them in Summer as they left them in Winter but behold they were dried up the companies ashamed God cannot make thee ashamed of thy hope because he is faithfull able Ability and Fidelity is a sure Anchor to hold by in all storms and tempests Such is God in himself now there are two manner of wayes he vents himself toward the Creatures In a comfortable way or in a terrible way This glorious perfection and Almighty power hath an issue upon sinners and it runs in a twofold channell of mercy and justice Of mercy towards miserable sinners that finds themselves lost and flee unto him and take hold of his strength and justice towards all those that flatter themselves in their own eyes and continue in their sinnes and put the evill day far off There is no mercy for such as fear not justice and there is no Justice for such as flee from it unto mercy The Lord exhibites himself in a twofold appearance according to the condition of sinners He sits on a Throne and tribunal of Grace mercy to make accesse to the vil est sinner who isafraid of his wrath and would 〈◊〉 be at peace with him and he sits on a Throne of justice and wrath to seclude and debar presumptuous sinners from his Holinesse There were two mountains under the Law one of cursings another of blessings These are the Mountains God lets his Throne upon and from these he speaks and sentences mankind From the Mountain of cursings he hath pronounced a curse condemnatory sentence upon all flesh for all have sinned therefore he concludes all under sin that all flesh might stop their mouth and the whole world become guilty before God Now the Lord having thus condemned all Mankind because of disobedience he sits again upon the Mountain of Blessings and pronounces a sentence of absolution of as many as have taken with the sentence of condemnation and appealed to his grace and Mercy and those which do not so the sentence of condemnation stands above their heads unrepealed He erects his Tribunal of Justice in the Word for this end that all flesh might once be convicted before him and therefore he cites as it were and summons all men to fift themselves and compear before his Tribunall to be judged he layes out an accusation in the Word against them he takes their consciences witnesse of the truth of all that is charged on them and then pronounces that sentence on their conscience Cursed is he that abides not in all things which the conscience subsumes and concludes it self accursed and subscribes to the equity of the sentence and thus the man is guilty before God and his mouth stopped he hath no excuses no pretences he can see no way to escape from Justice and God is justified by this means in his speaking and judging Psal. 51. 4. The soul ratifies and confirms the truth justice of all our threatnings judgements Rom. 3. 4. Now for such souls as joyn with God in judging and condemning themselves the Lord hath erected a Throne of grace Tribunall of mercy in the word whereupon he hath set his Son Jesus Christ Psal. 2. 6. and 89. 14. and 45. 6. Heb. 1. 8. And O this Throne is a comfortable Throne mercy and truth goes before the face of the King to welcome entertain miserable sinners to make access to them And from this Throne Jesus Christ holds out the Scepter of the Gospel to invite sinners self-condemned sinners to come to him alone who hath gotten all finall judgement committed to him that he may give eternall life to whom he will Ioh. 5. 21 22. O that is a sweet and ample Commission given to our Friend Brother Jesus Christ power to repeal sentences past against us power to loose them whom Justice hath bound power and authority to absolve them whom justice hath condemned and to blesse them whom the Law hath cursed to open their mouth to praise whose mouth sin and guiltinesse hath stopped power to give the answer of a good conscience to thy evill self-tormenting conscience in a word he hath power to give life to make alive and heal those who are killed or wounded by the Commandement Now I say seeing God hath of purpose established this Throne of mercy in the Word thou mayest well after receiving and acknowledging of the justice of the curse of the Law appeal to divine mercy and grace sitting on another Throne of the Gospel thou may if thy conscience urge thee to despair and to conclude there is no hope thou may appeal I say from thy conscience from Satan from Justice unto Jesus Christ who is holding out the Scepter to thee the Minister calls thee Rise and come stand no longer before that Bar for it is a subordinate Judicatory there is a way to redresse thee by a higher court of Grace Thou may say to justice to Satan to thy own Conscience It is true I confesse that I deserve that sentence I am guilty and can say nothing against it while I stand alone but though I cannot satisfie and have not yet there is one Jesus Christ who gave his life a ransom for many and whom God hath given as a propitiation for sins he hath satisfied and paid the debt in my name go and apprehend the Cautioner since he hath undertaken it nay he hath done it and is absolved Thou had him in thy hands O justice Thou had him Prisoner under the power of death since you have let him go then he is acquited from all the charge of my sins therefore since I know that he is now a King hath a Throne to judge the world and plead the cause of his poor sheep I will appeal to him refer the cause to his decision I will make my supplication to him and certainly he will hear and interpole himself between wrath and me he will rescind this sentence of condemnation since he himself was condemned for us and is justified it is Christ that died nay rather is risen again who shal condemn me He is near that justifies me Rom. S. 33. 34. Now i●… thou do indeed flee into him for refuge that City is open for thee and nothing to prejudge thy entry but no curse no condemnation can enter in it Rom. 8. 1. He will justifie absolve thee from all things whereof the Law could not justifie thee but condemn thee there is forgivenness with him that he may be feared David may teach thee this manner of appellation Ps. 130. 142. 2. of appealing from the deserved curse to free undeserved blessing mercy in Christ. Let us consider this Name of the Lord and it shall answer all our suspicions
long-suffering patient and if he had not been so we had been damned ere now patience hath a long term and we cannot out-run it out-weary it Why do we not wonder that he presently and instantly executed his wrath on angels gave them not one hours space for repentance but cast them down head-long into destruction as in a moment and yet his Majesty hath so long delayed the execution of our sentence and calls us to repentance and forgivenesse that we may escape the condemnation of Angels His patience is not slacknes and negligence as men count it 2 Pet. 3. 9. He sits not in heaven as an Idol and idle spectator what men are doing but he observes all wrongs and is sensible of them also And if we were mindfull and sensible of them also he would forget them He is long-suffering This is extended and stretched-out patience beyond all expectation beyond all deserving yea contrary to it Therefore as long as he forbears if thou apprehend thy misery and sin and continuance in it so not conclude that it is desperate Why should a living man complain As long as patience lengthens thy life if thou desire to come to him believe he wil accept thee But saith the doubting soul I am exceeding perverse and wicked there is nothing in me but wickednesse it so abounds in me that there is nothing in me but wickednesse it so abounds in me that there is none like me but saith the Lord I am aboundant in goodnesse Thy wickednesse though it be great it is but a created wickedness but my goodness is the goodness of God I am as abundant in grace goodnesse as thou art in sin nay infinitely more thy sin is but the transgression of a finite creature but my mercy is the compassion of an infinite God it can swallow it up suppose thy sin cry up to Heaven yet mercy reaches above Heaven is built up for ever Here is an invitation to all sinners to come and taste O come taste and see how good the Lord is goodnesse is communicative it diffuses it self like the Suns light There is riches of his goodnesse Rom. 2. 4. Poor soul thou canst not spend it though thou have many wants But I am full of doubtings fears and jealousies I cannot believe his Promises I often question them How then will he perform them I say saith the Lord I am abundant in truth He will certainly perform Shal our unbelief or doubting make the faith of God of none effect c. Rom. 3. 3. God forbid His faithfulnesse reaches unto the Clouds he will keep Covenant with thee whose soul hath chosen him though thou often question and doubt of him Indeed thou would not give indulgence to thy doubtings jealousies but look on them as high provocations for what can be more grievous to fervent love than to meet with jealousie jealousie would quench any creatures love but though it grieve provoke him yet he will not change he will not diminish his only do not think your disputings quarrellings innocent and harmlesse things no certainly they grieve the Spirit stir up the Beloved to go away as it were before he please make thee walk without comfort without fruit yet he will bear with quench the smoaking flax of a Believers desires though they do not arise to the flame of Assurance But the wounded spirit hath one or two burdens more I have abused much mercy How can mercy pitty me I have turned grace into wantonnesse so that when I look to mercy and grace to comfort me they do rather challenge me the sins of none are like mine none of such a hainous presumptuous nature But let us hear what the Lord speaks I keep mercy for thousands and forgive iniquity transgression and sin Thou hast wasted much mercy but more is behind all the treasure is not spent though there were many thousand worlds beside I could pardon them all if they would flee unto my mercy thou shalt not be straitned in me mercy will pardon thy abuse of mercy it will forgive all faults thou dost against it self Thou that sins against the Son of man the Redeemer of the World remedy of sin yet there is pardon for thee what ever thy quality condition or circumstance of thy sin be whoever convinced of it and loadned with it desires rest to thy soul thou may find it in Christ whose former kindnesse thou hast answered with contempt many sins many great sins and these presumptuous sins cannot exclude nay no sin can exclude a willing soul. Unbelief keeps thee unwilling and so excludes thee Now as the Spider sucks poyson out of the sweetest Flower so the most part of souls suck nothing but delusion and presumption and hardening out of the Gospel Many souls reason for more liberty to sin from mercy but behold how the Lord backs it with a dreadful word who will by no means clear the guilty As many as do not condemn themselves and judge themselves before his Tribunall of Justice there is no rescinding of the condemnatory Sentence but it stands above their heads He that believes not is condemned already Justice hath condemned all by sentence he that doth not in the sense of this flee into Jesus Christ from sin and wrath is already condemned his Sentence is standing there needs no new one since he flees not to mercy for absolution the sentence of condemnation stands unrepealed Yo●… guilty souls who clear your selves God will not clear you alas How many of you do clear your selves Do you not extenuate and mince your sins How hard is it to extort any confession of guilt out of you but in the general If we condescend to particulars many of you will plead innocency almost in every thing though ye have like children learned to speak these words That ye are sinners I beseech you consider it it is no light matter for God will by no means clear the guilty by no means by no intreaties no flatteries What will he not pardon sin Yes indeed His Name tells you he will pardon all kind of sins absolve all manner of guilty persons but yet such as do condemn themselves such as are guilty in their own conscience their mouths stopped before God you who do not enter into the serious examination of your wayes and no not arraign your selves before Gods Tribunal daily till you find your selves loathsome and desperate and no refuge for you you who do flatter your selves alwaies in the hope of heaven and put the fear of hell alwayes from you I say God will by no mean no prayers no intreaties clear or pardon you because you come not to Jesus Christ in whom is preached forgivenesse and remission of sins You who take liberty to sin because God is gracious and delay repentance till the end because God is long suffering know God will not clear you he is holy and just as he is mercyfull If his
of him all our objections against coming to him believing in him it is certain Ignorance is the mother of unbelief together with the naturall perversenesse of our heatts if wee knew his Name we would trust in him if his Names were pondered and considered wee would believe in him Satan knowes this therefore his great slight and cunning is to hold our minds fixed on the consideration of our misery and desperate estate he keeps the awakned conscience still upon that comfortlesse sight he labours to represent God by halfes that it is a false representation of God he represents him as clothed with justice and vengeance as a consuming fire in which light a soul can see nothing but desperation written and he labours to hold out the thoughts of his mercy and grace or diverts a soul from the consideration of his promises whence it comes that they are not established that though salvation be near yet it is far from them in their sense and apprehension therefore I say you should labour to get an intire sight of God and you shall see him best in his word there he reveales himself and there you find if ye consider that which wil make you fear him indeed but never flee from him that which may abase you but withall embolden you to come to him though trembling what ever thought possesse thee of thine own misery of thy own guiltinesse labour to counterpoise that which a thought of his mercy and free promises what ever be suggested of his holynesse Justice hea●… himself speak out his own Name and thou shalt hear as much of mercy and grace as may make these not terrible unto thee though high and honourable The Lord hath so framed the expression and proclamation of his name in this place that first a word of Majesty and power is premised The Lord The Lord God that it may compasse our hearts in fear and reverence of such a glorious One make a preparatory impression of the Majesty of our God which indeed is the foundation of all true faith It begins to adore and admire a Deity a Majesty hid from the world the thoughts of his power and glory possesses the soul first and makes it begin to tremble to think that it hath such a high and Holy One to deal with But in the next place you have the most sweet alluring comforting styles that can be imagined to meet with the trembling and languishing condition of a soul that would be ready to faint before such a Majesty here mercy takes it by the hand gives a cordial of grace pardon forgivenesse c. to it which revives the soul of the humble and intermingles some rejoycing with the former trembling Majesty and greatnesse goes before to abase and humble the soul in its own eyes and mercy and goodnesse seconds them to lift up those who are low and exalt the humble and in the description of this the Lord spends more words according to the necessity of a soul to signifie to us how great and strong consolation may be grounded on his Name how accessible he is though he dwel in inaccessible light how lovely he is though he be the high and the lofty one how good he is though he be great how merciful he is though he be majestick In a word that those that flee to him may have all invitation all encouragement to come nothing to discourage to prejudge their welcome that whoever will may come and nothing may hinder on his part then after all this he subjoynes a word of his Justice in avenging sin to shew us that he leaves that as the last that he assayes all gaining wayes of mercy with us and that he is not very much delighted with the death of sinners that so whosoever perishes may blame themselves for hating their own salvation and forsaking their own mercy Now whoever thou art that apprehends a dreadful terrible God and thy self a miserable and wretched sinner thou canst find no comfort in Gods highnesse power but it looks terrible upon thee because thou doubts of his good-will to save and pardon thee thou sayest with the blind man if thou wilt thou can do it Thou art a strong God but what comfort can I have in thy strength since I know not thy good-will I say the Lord answers thee in this name I am mercifull saith the Lord if thou be miserable I am mercifull as well as strong if thou have sin misery I have compassion pitty my mercy may be a coppy patern to all men to learn it of me even towards their own brethren Luk. 6. 36. Therefore he is called the Father of mercies 2 Cor. 1. 3. Misericors est cui alterius miseria cordi est Mercy hath its very name from misery for it is no other thing than to lay anothers misery to heart not to despise it not to adde to it but to help it it is a strong inclination to ●…uccour the misery of sinners therefore thou needs no other thing to commend thee to him art thou miserable knows it indeed Then he is mercifull and know that also these two suit well Nay but saith the convinced soul I know not if he will be mercifull to me for what am I There is nothing in me to be regarded I have nothing to conciliat favour all that may procure hatred But saith the Lord I am gracious and dispenses most freely without respect to condition or qualification say not If I had such a measure of humiliation as such a one if I loved him so much if I had so much godly sorrow and repentance then I think he would be mercifull to me Say not so for behold he is gracious he hath mercy on whom he will have mercy and there is no other cause no motive to procure it it comes from within his own breast It is not thy repentance will make him love thee nor thy hardnesse of heart will make him hate thee or obstruct the vent of his grace towards thee no if it be grace it is no more of works no works in that way that thou imagines it is not of repentance not of faith in that sense thou conceivest but it is freely without the hyre without the price of repentance or faith because all those are but the free gifts of grace thou would have these graces to procure his favour and to make them the ground of thy believing in his promises but grace is without money it immediatly contracts with discovered misery so that if thou do discover in thy self misery and sin though thou find nothing else yet do not cast away confidence but so much the more adresse thy self to mercy and grace which doth not seek repentance in thee yet there is something in the awakened conscience It have gone on long in sin I have been a presumptuous sinner can he endure me longer well hear what the Lord saith I am
he doth first and so some do rank his decrees that he had first a thought of glorifying men and to attain this end he purposed to give him grace and for this purpose to suffer him to fall for all to create him But we must not look thus upon it either it were a foolish rediculous counsell unbeseeming the poor wisdom of man to purpose the glorifying of man whom he had not yet determined to create therefore we should alwayes have in our mind that the great end and project of all is the glory of his mercy and justice upon men and this we may conceive is first in order neither mens life nor death but Gods glory to be manifested upon men Now to attain this glorious end with one inclination or determination of his will not to be distinguished or severed he condescends upon all that is done in time as one compleat and intire mean of glorifying himself so that one of them is not before another in his mind but all together for attaining this he purposes to create man he ordains the fall of all men into a state of sin and misery some of these upon whom he had resolved to shew his mercy he gives them to Christ to be redeemed restored by grace Others he fore-ordains them to destructions all this at once without any such order as we imagine Now though he intend all this at once and together yet it doth not hence follow that all these must be executed together as when a man intends to build a house for his own accommodation there are many things in the house upon which he hath not severall purposes But yet they must be severally and in some order done First the foundation laid then the Walls raised then the roof put on yet he did not intend the foundation to be for the walls or the walls for the roof but altogether for himself Even so the Lord purposes to glorifie his mercy and justice upon a certain number of persons and for this end to give them a being to govern their falling into misery to raise some out of it by a Mediator and to live some into it to destruction all this as one intire mean to illustrate his glorious mercy and justice but these things themselves must be done not all at once but one before another either as their own nature require or as he pleaseth the very nature of the thing requires that man be created before he sin that he sin and fall before a Mediator suffer for his sin and that he have a being before he have a glorious being and that he have a sinfull and miserable being before he have this glorious and gracious being which may manifest the grace and mercy of God But it is the pleasure of the Lord that determines in what time and order Christ shal suffer either before or after the conversion of sinners or whether sinners shal presently be instated in glory and perfectly delivered from all sin at their first conversion or only in part during this life Seeing then this was his Majesties purpose to make so many vessels of honour upon whom he might glorifie the riches of his grace end mercy And so many vessels of wrath upon whom he might shew the power of his anger You may think what needed all this businesse of mans redemption might not God have either preserved so many as he had appointed to glory from falling into sin and misery or at least have freely pardoned their sin without any satisfaction and out of the exceeding riches of his mercy and power have as well not imputed sin to them at all as imputed their sins to Christ who was not guilty What needed his giving so many to the Son and the Sons receiving them What needed these mysteries of Incarnation of Redemption seeing he might have done all this simply without so much pains and expence why did he choose this way Indeed that is the wonder and if there were no more end for it but to confound mortality that dare ask him what he doth it is enough Should he be call●… down to the Bar of Humane Reason to give an account of his matters Who hath known the mind of the Lord or being his counsellour hath taught him That is in the depths of his unsearchable understāding that he chose to go this round to compasse his end by such a strange circuit of means when he might have done it simply and directly without so much pain yet it is not so hidden but he hath revealed as much as may satisfie or silence all flesh For we must consider that his great project is not simply to manifest the glory of his goodnesse but of his gracious and mercifull goodnesse the most tender and excellent of all therefore man must be miserable sinfull and vile that the riches of his grace may appear in choosing and saving such persons But that it may appear also how excellent he could make man and how vain all created perfections are being left to themselves therefore he first made man righteous and being fallen into sinne and misery he might straight way have restored him without more ado but his purpose was to give an exact demonstration of mercy tempered and mixed with justice and therefore he finds out the satisfaction in his eternall Counsell I have found a ransome and so he chooses Jesus Christ to be the head of these chosen souls in whom they might be again restored unto eternal life and these souls he in his everlasting purpose gives over to the Son to be redeemed and these the Son receives And thus the glory of mercy and justice shines most brightly yea more brightly than he had at first pardoned O how doth his love and mercy appear that he will transfer our sins upon his Holy Son and accept that Redemption for us and his Justice that a Redemption price he must have even from his Son when once he comes in the stead of sinners and in this point do the Songs of Eternity concenter Rom. 9. 22. and Eph. 1. 11. WE are now upon a high subject high indeed for an eminent Apostle much more above our reach the very consideration of Gods infinite wisdome might alone suffice to restrain our unlimited thoughts and serve to sober our minds with the challenge of our own ignorance and darknesse yet the vain and wicked mind of man will needs quarrell with God enter the lists of disputation with him about his righteousnesse and wisdome in the Counsel of Election and Reprobation But who art thou O man that replyest against God or desputes ver 20. This is a thing not to be disputed but believed and if ye will believe no more than ye can comprehend by sense or reason then ye give his Majesty no more credit than to weak mortall man Whatever secret thoughts do rise up in thy heart when thou hearest of Gods fore-ordaining men to Eternall life
not his whole soul to God cannot truly ingage any part of it to him p. 23. SERMON III. 2 Tim. 3. 16. Of the Scriptures THat which most men seek is not true happiness p. 24 The principles of reason and light of nature are become so dark that they cannot direct us in the path-way to everlasting blessedness p. 25 The authority of the Scriptures divine p. 26 How the Apostles and Prophets knew that they spake truth and how men may be perswaded that the Scriptures are the Word of God ibid. The simplicity and plainness of the Scripture p. 27 The Spirit of God must open a mans eyes before he understand the Scriptures p. 28 The Utility of the Scriptures p. 29 The Scriptures a Doctrine of Eternal life p. 30 The sharpness of the Scripture mingled with sweetness p. 31 Some cannot hear the word of reproof others prefer their own vain imaginations to the Word of God p. 32 33 SERMON IV. Joh. 5. 39. Eph. 2. 20. Of the Scriptures THe Lamp of the Word without and the light of the Spirit within necessary for directing us in the way to eternal life p. 34 Why the multitude find no sweetnes in the Scriptures p. 35 How eternal life is to be found in the Scripture p. 36 It may commend the Scriptures to us that Eternal life is to be found in them p. 37 We are to lay this present perishing life in the ballance with eternal life and compare both the happiness and miseries of this life with eternal blessedness p. 38 Many groundlessely fancy that they have a right to everlasting life p. 39 Most of the Hearers of the Gospel have either to knowledge at all or nothing but knowledge p. 40 Life Eternal is no where to be found out but of Jesus Christ. p. 41 42 Some foolishly think that if they do all they can then God ought to be pleased p 43 Christ the only pacificatory sacrifice p. 44 Christ is either the subject or end of all that is in the Scriptures p. 45 The march which divides between heaven and hell is coming to Christ. p. 45 46 The necessity of searching the Scriptures and what search it must be p. 47 The Rule whereby to measure our profiting in the Scriptures p. 48 49 SERMON V. Eph. 2. 20. Of the Scriptures BElievers the Temple of the living God p. 50 Christ in the Scriptures a sure foundation to build upon all other foundations sandy and unsure p. 51 How firm and stable a foundation the Word of the Lord is p. 52 A Promise layes an obligation on the Promiser which a command doth not on the commander p. 53 All the Promises are Yea and Amen in Christ. ibid The chief point of Obedience is faith and what that is p 54 Christ is the Corner-stone as well as the foundation which should strongly perswade Christians to an union in Affection p. 55 What kind of foundation Christ is ibid. Some prefer their own imaginations to the Word of the Lord under the dark notion of new light p. 56 Many have nothing but the word of man for the foundation of their Faith p. 57. SERMON VI. 2 Tim. 1 13. Of the Scriptures ALL Religion may be reduced to these two what we are to believe and what we ough to do p. 58 God manifests himself differently to Man according to his different state p. 59 60 The marvellousness of mercy in saving of lost sinners p. 61 62 What manner of Persons Believers ought to be p. 63 64 ●…belief ruined man at first p. 65 A twofold mistake of the nature of Faith ibid. What course a soul is to take who questions its interest p. 66 67 The mistake of the nature of Faith leads many well-meaning persons into labyrinth p. 68 What Faith is p 69 What a soul ought to do that is sentenced by the law ibid. The faith of a Christian no fancy p. 70 71 Love is unitive and operative ibid. Love is put for all obedience and how it is the fulfilling of the. p. 72 God is pleased with no service that proceeds not from love and why p. 73 74 How to attain to the distinct knowledge of our love to God and the way to increase it p. 75 Who cannot hold fast the truth p. 76 When man lost his holiness he could not retain his happiness ibid. The necessity of holding fast the form of sound words and of forbearing strange words p. 77 SERMON VII and VIII Exod. 3. 13 14. Of the Name of God IT is impossible to declare what God is p. 78 How we may know that there is a God ibid. Naturall men are Atheists p. 79 God's Name a mystery that cannot be conceived or expressed p. 80 81 82 83. This name I AM THAT I AM imports his unsearchableness p. 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 His absolutness and soveraignity p. 94 His unchangeableness and Eternity p. 95 96 97 How impossible it is for a mortall creature to find out God to perfection yet so much may be known of him as is sufficient to teach us our duty and ma●… us happy in obedience p. 98 99 The saving knowledge of God a self-emptying and self-abasing thing p. 100 101 Why God hath called himself by so many names ibid. SERMON IX Exod. 24. 5 6 7. What God is to us GOD is loath to depart even when he is provoked to go away p. 102 103 114 Infirmity and iniquity puts us into an incapacity of nearness with God p. 105 106 It is God himself who only can teach a soul to know what he is p. 107 One who considers how al-sufficient God is how empty and insufficient all other things are must needs cleave to him p. 108 God vents himself towards the creatures either in a way of Justice or Mercy p. 109 There is a Tribunall of Justice and a Throne of Mercy erected in the word so that every sentenced sinner may appeal from the Bar of Justice to Christ Jesus sitting on the Throne of Mercy p. 110 111. The Name of the Lord rightly considered is sufficient to answer all possible objections that a sinner can make against coming to Christ and what those objections are p. 112 113 114 115 116 117 Many souls suck delusion and destruction out of the sweet and saving Promises of life which are held forth in the Gospel p. 118 119. SERMON X. Joh. 4. 24. What God is THe knowledge of what God is presupposed to all true worship Christian walking p. 120 How mishapen apprehensions we have of God p. 121 That God is a spirit shews us that he is not like any visible thing p. 122 That he is invisible dwels in light inaccessible ib. That he is most perfect most powerful p. 123 124 That he cannot be circumscribed by any place p. 125 And there is no comprehension of his knowledge p. 126 127 It were of excellent use and advantage for us to be all the day in the faith of Gods infinite
other units it and holds it together These two parts of this spiritual building are here pointed at the foundation of every particular stone and of the whole building is the Doctrine of the Prophets and Apostles as holding out Jesus Christ to souls the Rock on which our house shal be builded Not the Apostles or Prophets far lesse Pastors and Teachers since for they are but at best workers together with God and imployed in the building of the house not yet their Doctrine but as it holds out that true foundation that God had laid in Sion Isa. 28. which is Jesus Christ for other foundation can no man lay And then the Corner-stone is that same Jesus Christ who reaches from the bottome even to the top of the building immediatly touches every stone and both quickens it in it self and unites them together Well then here is a sure foundation to build our eternal happinesse upon the word of God that endures for ever holds it out to us all men are building upon something every man is about some establishment of his hopes layes some foundation of his confidence which he may stand upon They are one of the two that Christ speaks of Luk 6. 46. One builds on the Rock another on the Sand now as the foundation is so is the house a changeable foundation makes a falling house a sure foundation makes an unchangeable house a house without a foundation will prove quickly no house Now whatsoever men build their hope and confidence upon beside the word of God his sure Promise and sure Covenant and Jesus Christ in them they build upon no foundation or upon a sandy foundation All flesh is grasse and the flower and perfection of it is as the flower of the field here is the name and character of all created perfections of the most excellent endowments of mind of all the specious actions of men it s all but vanishing and vanity every man at his best estate is such yea altogether such You who have no more to build upon but your prosperity and wealth O that is but sand and dung would any man build a house upon a dung-hill You who have no other hope but in your own good prayers and meanings your own reformations repentances your professions and practises know this that your hope is like a spiders house like the web that she hath laboriously exercised her self about all the week over and then when you lean upon that house it shal fall through not sustain your weight whatsoever it be beside this living stone Jesus Christ who is the very substance of the Word and Promises it shal undoubtedly prove thy shame and confusion But behold the opposition the Prophet makes between the word and these other things the word of our God shal stand for ever Isa. 40. 6 7 8. And therefore Peter makes it an incorruptible seed of which Believers are begotten 1 Pet. 1. 23. It is the unchangeable truth immutable faithfulnesse of God that makes his word so sure it s builded up to the Heavens Therefore the Psalmist often commends the Word of the Lord as a tryed word as purified seven times it hath endured the tryal proof of all men of all tentations of all generations it hath often been put in the furnace of questions doubtings it hath often been tryed in the fire of afflictions but it came forth like pure Gold without drosse This is faiths foundation God hath spoken in his holiness and therefore though all men be liars yet God will be found true he deceives none and is deceived of none The Lord hath taken a Latitude to himself in his working he loves to shew his Soveraignty in much of that and therefore he changes it in men and upon men as he pleaseth yet he hath condescended to limit and bound himself by his word and in this to shew his faithfulnesse And therefore though heaven and earth should pass away though he should innihilate this world and create new ones yet not on jot of his world shal sail The earth is established sure though it hath no foundation for the Word of his command supports it And yet a Believers confidence is on a surer ground Though the earth should be removed yet it cannot pass or fail saith our Lord And therefore the Psalmist useth to boast in God That though the earth were moved and the flouds lifted up their voice yet he would not fear because his foundation was unshaken for all that the word is not removed when the world is moved the fore he was not moved The worlds stability depends upon a word of cōmand but our salvation depends on a word of promise Now you know promises put an obligation upon the person which commands do not a man may change his commands as he pleases to his children or servants but he may not change his promises therefore the promises of God put an obligation upon him who is truth it self not to fail in performance or rather he is to himself by his unchangeable will good pleasure by his faithfulnsse and truth an oblidging and binding Law When no creature could let bounds to him he incloses himself within the bounds of promise to us and gives all flesh liberty to challenge him if he be not faithfull Now all the promises of God are yea Amen in Iesus Christ that is established and confirmed in him Christ is the surety of them and so the certainty and stability of them depends upon him at least to our sense for God in all his dealing condescends to our weaknesse that we may have stronge consolation A Promise might suffice to ground our faith but he addeth an Oath to his promise he takes Christ surety for the performance and therefore Christ may be called the Truth indeed the substantial Word of God for he is the substance of the written and preached Word and then he is the very certainty and assurance of it the Scriptures testifie of him and lead us to this Rock higher than we to build upon and against this the gates of hell cannot prevail If the Word lead not a soul unto Christ himself that four hath no foundation though thou hear the Word though thou know the Word yea suppose thou couldst teach others and instruct the ignorant yet all that will be no foundation as good as none except thou do it And what is it to do the Word but to believe in him whom the Word testifies of this is the work of God to resign thy soul to his mercies and merits and have no confidence in the flesh To scrape out all the rubbish of works and performances and parts out of the foundation and singly to roll thy souls weight upon Gods promises and Christs purchase to look with Paul on all things beside in thee and about the as dung and drosse that thou can lean no weight upon and to remove that dung-hill from the foundation of thy hope
himself thus and sought out to himself such sad inventions Eccles. 7. 29. and having destroyed himself Hos. 13. 9. What think ye Should any pity him If he had fallen in such a pit of miserie ignorantly and unwillingly he had been an object of compassion but having cast himself headlong into it who should have pity on him Or who should go aside to ask how he doth or bemoan him Ier. 15. 5. But behold the Lord pities man as a Father doth his Children Psal. 103. His compassions fail not He comes by such a loathsome and contemptible object and casts his skirts over it and saith Live Ezek. 16. And maketh it a time of love I say no flesh could have expected any more of God than to make man happy and holy to promise him life in well-doing But to repair that happinesse after it's wilfully lost and to give life to evil doers sinners O how far was it from Adams expectation when he fled from God Here then is the wonder that when men Angels were in expectation of the revelation of his wrath from heavē against their wickednesse the execution of the curse man was concluded under that even then God is pursuing man pursues him with love and opens up to him his very heart and bowels of love in Jesus Christ Behold then the second revelation manifestation of God in a way of grace pure grace of mercy pity toward lost sinners The kindnesse of God hath appeared not by Works but according to his abundant mercy shewed in Christ Iesus Tit. 3. 4. 5. So then we have this purpose of Gods love unfolded to us in the Scriptures and this is the substance of them both Old and New Testament or the end of them Rom. 10. 4. Christ is the end of the Law to all sinners concluded under sin and a curse by it our Lord Jesus the good Ebedmelech comes and casts down a cord to us draws us up out of the pit of sin and misery he comes to this prison and opens the doors to let captives free so then we have holden out to us a Redeemer as a repairer of our breaches God in Christ reconciling the world O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy Help found Hos. 13. 9. He finds to himself a ransome to satisfie his justice Job 33. 24. He finds a propitiation to take away sin a sacrifice to pacifie and appease his wrath he finds one of our Brethren but his own Son in whom he is well pleased And then holds out all this to sinners that they may be satisfied in their own consciences as he is in his own mind God hath satisfied himself in Christ you have not that to do he is not now to be reconciled to us for he was never really at odds though he covered his countenance with frowns threats since the Fal hath appeared in fire and hunders and whirlwind which are terrible yet his heart had alwayes love in it to such persons and therefore he is come near in Christ about reconciling us to himself Here is the business then to have our souls reconciled to him to take away the enmity within us and as he is satisfied with his Son so to satisfie our selves with him be as wel pleased in his Redemption and purchase as 〈◊〉 ●…er is and then you believe indeed in him Now if this were accomplished what have wee more to do but to love him and to live to him when you have found in the Scripture and believed with the heart what Man once was and what he now is what God once appeared and what hee now manifests himself in the Gospel ye have no more to do but to search in the same Scriptures what ye henceforth ought to be Ye who find your estate recovered in Christ ask what manner of persons we ought to be And the Scripture shal also give you that form of sound words which may not only teach you to believe in him but to love him and obey his cōmands The Law that before condemned you is now by Christ put in your hands to guide you and conduct you in the way teacheth you to live henceforth to his glory The grace of God that hath appeared to all men Tit. 2. 12. teacheth us that denying ungodlinesse and worldlie lusts we should live godly and righteously and soberly in this present world Here is the summe of the rule of your practise and conversation piety towards God equity towards men and sobriety towards our selves self-denyal and world-denyall and lust-denyal to give up with the world and our own lusts henceforth to have no more to do with them to resign them not for a time not in part but wholly and for ever in affection and by parts in practice and endeavour and then to resign and give up our selves to him to live to him and live in him Thus we have given you a summe of the Doctrine of the Scriptures of that which is to be believed and that which is to be done as our duty Now we shall speak a word of these two Cardinall Graces which are the compend of all Graces as the objects of them are the Abridgement of the Scriptures Faith Love these sound words can profite us nothing unlesse wee hold them fast with Faith and Love Faith is like the Fountain-grace streams come out of it that cleanseth the Conscience from the guilt of sin and purifieth the heart from the filth of sin because it is that which cometh to the Fountain opened up in the house of David draweth water out of these Wells of Salvation If you consider the fall and ruine of Mankind you will find infidelity unbelief the fountain of it as wel as the seal of it Unbelief of the Law of God of his promises and threatning This was first called in Question and when once called in Question it is half denied Hath God said so that you shal die It s not far off you shall not surely die Here then was the very beginning of mans ruine he did not retain in his knowledge and believe with his heart the truth and faithfulnesse and holinesse of God which unbelief was conjoyned intermingled with much pride you shal be as Gods he began to live out of God in himself not remembring that his life was a stream of that Divine Fountain that being cut off from it would dry up Now therefore our Lord Jesus Christ an expert Saviour and very learned and compleat for this work he brings man up out of this pit of misery by that same way he fell into it he fell down by unbelief and he brings him up out of it by faith This is the cord that is cast down to the poor Soul in the Dungeon or rather his Faith is the dead grip of the cord of Divine Promises which are sent unto the captive prisoners and by vertue thereof he is drawn out into the light
which he chiefly aims at Shal we not then conceive that the Lord who instructs every man to this discretion teaches him Isa. 28. 26. Is himself wise in his Counsel and hath some grand project before him in all this Fabrick of the World and the upholding of it since it was made Certainly he hath and if you ask what it is the wise man will teach you in the general He made all things for himself even the wicked for the evil day Pro. 16. 4. Here then is his great design and purpose to glorifie himself to manifest his own Name to men Angels Now his Name comprehends Wisdome Goodnesse Power Mercy and justice the first three he declares in all the works of his hands all are well done wisely done the excellency of the work shews the wonderfull Counsellour the wise Contriver the goodnesse of any creature in its kind declares the inexhausted spring of a selfe-being from whom it proceeds the bringing all these out of nothing and upholding them is a glorious declaration of his power But yet in all the works of his hands there is nothing found to manifest his glorious mercy and justice upon which are the flower and garland of his Attributes and unto which wisedom and power seems to be subservient Therefore his Majesty in that one entire purpose of his own glory resolves to manifest his wrath and his mercy upon men and Angels subjects capable of it which two Attributes are as the Poles about which all the Wheels of Election and Reprobation turns as you see in that place Rom. 9. 22. 23. Let this then be established as the end of all his works as it is designed in his Counsell and nothing else It is not the Creature nor any thing in the Creature which is first in his mind but himself and therefore of him and for him are all things Here they have their rise thither they return even to the Ocean of Gods eternall glory from whence all did spring The right establishing of this will help us to conceive aright of his Counsell of Predestination It is a common cavil of carnall reason How can the Lord reject so many persons foreordain them to destruction It seems most contrary to his goodnesse and wisedom to have such an end of eternall Predestination before him in the creating so many thousands to make men for nothing but to damn them Here carnall reason which enmity to God triumphs But consider I say that this is not the Lord's end and chief design to destroy men even as it is not his Majesties first look or furthest reach to give unto others eternal life so it is not his prime intent to sink them in eternal death as if that were his pleasure delight no indeed neither is the creatures happinesse nor its misery that which first moves him or is most desired of him but himself only and he cannot move out of himself to any businesse but he must return it unto himself therefore the wise Preacher expresses it well He made all for himself even the wicked for the day of evil It was not his great end of creating wicked men to damn them or creating righteous men to save them but both are for a further and higher end for himself and his own Glory All seem to agree about this That the great end of all the Lords Counsels and decrees is his own glory to be manifested on Men Angels and that this must be first in his mind not that there is first or last with him but to speak after the manner of men if he had many thoughts as we have this would be his first thought and in this one purpose this end is chiefly aimed at and all other things are by the Lords counsel subordinate to this as means to compasse that But as concerning the order of these means and consequently of his Majesties purpose about them men by examining his Majesty according to the creatures Rules or according to sense bring him down far below his own infinite greatnesse Some conceive that that was first as it were in his mind which is first done looking upon the execution of his purpose in the works of his power they imagine that as he first created man righteous so this was his first thought concerning man to creat man for the glory of his goodnesse power without any particular determination as yet of his end and I conceive this is the thoght of the multitude of people they think God was disapointed in his work when they hear he created such a glorious creature that is now become so miserable they cannot believe that his Majesty had all this sin and misery determinated with him when he purposed to create him but look upon the emergement of mans Fall into sin and misery as a surprisal of his Majesty as if he had meant another thing in creating him so was upon this occasion of man's sinne driven to a new consultation about the helping of the businesse making the best out of it that might be Thus through wisdome the world knows not God They think God altogether like themselves and so liken him to the builder of an house who let nothing before him in doing so but to build it after that manner for his own ends but thē being surprised with the fall and ruine of it takes a new advisement and builds it up again upon another surer foundation but because they cannot say that God takes any new advisements in time but must confesse that all his Counsels are everlasting concerning all the works of his hands therefore they bring in fore-knowledge to smooth their irreligious conceit of God as if the Lord upon his purpose of creating man had foreseen what should befall him and so purposed to permit it to be so that out of it he might erect some glorious Fabrick of mercy and justice upon the ruines of man And that little or nothing may be left to the absolute Soveraign will of God to which the Scripture ascribes all things they must again imagine that upō his purpose of sending Christ to save sinners he is yet undetermined about the particular end of particular men but watches on the tower of fore-knowledge to espie what they will do whether men will believe in his Son or not whether they will persevere in faith or not and according to his observation of their doings so he applies his own will to carve out their reward or portion of life or death These are even the thoughts which are imbred in your breasts by nature that which the learned call Arminianism is nothing else but the carnal reason of mens hearts which is enmity to God it is that very Disputation which Paul in this Chapter exclaims against Who art thou O man that disputes But certainly all this contrivance is nothing beseeming the wisdome of Soveraignity of God but reflects upon both upon his wisdome that he should have
foreseen did move him to such love and hatred It is all alike of works of men whether these works be present or to come Therefore I would advise every one of you what ever ye conceive of his Judgement or Mercy if he have shewed mercy to you O then rest not in thy self but arise and ascend till thou come to the height of his eternal free purpose and if thou conceive thy sin misery and judgement thou may go up also to his holy counsels for the glory of his Name silence thy self with them but it shal be most expedient for thee in the thought of thy miseries to return alwaies within and to search the corruption of thy nature which may alone make thee hatefull enough to God ●…f thou search thy own conscience it will stop thy mouth make thee guilty before God Let not the ●…hought of his eternal counsels diminish the convi●…tion of thy guilt or the hatred of thy self for sin and ●…orruption but dwel more constantly upon this because thou art called and commanded so to do On●… thing remaines fixed though he hath fore-orda●… men to death yet none shal be damned till his co●… science be ●…orced to say that he is worthy of it a thousand times There is another whispering and suggestion of the wicked hearts of men against the Predestination of God which insinuates that God is an accepter of Persons so accuses him of partiall and unrighteous dealing because he deals not equally with all men do ye not say this within your selves ●…f he find all guilty Why does he not punish all Why does he spare some And if he look upon all men in his first and Primitive thought of them as neither doing good nor evil Why does he not have mercy on all But is thy eye evill because he is good May he not do with his own as he pleases Because he is mercifull to some souls shal men be displeased do well to be angry Or because he of his own free grace extends it shall he be bound by a Rule to do so with all Is not he both just and merciful and is it not meet that both be shewed forth If he punish thee thou canst not complain for thou deserves it If he shew mercy why should any quarrel for it is free undeserved grace by saving some he shewes his grace by destroying others he shews what all deserve God is so far from being an accepter of persons according to their qualifications conditions that he finds nothing in any creature to cast the ballance of his choice if he did choose men for their works sake or outward priviledges 〈◊〉 others for the want of the●…e then it might be charged on him but he rather goes over all these nay he finds none of these in his first view of men he beholds them all alike and nothing to determine his mind to one more nor another so that his choice proceedeth wholly from within his own breast I will have mercy on whom I will But then thirdly our hearts object against the righteousnesse of God that this fatall chain of Predestination overturns all exhortations perswasions to godlinesse all care diligence in well-doing For thus do many profane souls conceive If he be in one mind and who can turn him Then What need I pray since he hath already determined what shal be and what shal become of me his purpose will take effect whether I pray or pray not my prayer will not make him change his mind and if it be in his mind he will do it If he have appointed to save saved we shal be live as we list if he hath appointed us to death die we must live as we can Therefore men in this desperate estate throw themselves head-long into all manner of iniquity and that with quietnesse peace Thus do many souls perish upon the stumbling stone laid in Sion and wrest the Truths and Counsels of God to their own destruction even quite contrary to their true intent meaning Paul Eph. 1. 4. speaks another language He hath chosen us in him that we should be holy and without blame His eternall Counsell of life is so far from loosing the reins to mens lusts that it is the only certain foundation of holinesse It is the very spring and fountain from whence our sanctification flowes by an infallible course This chain of God counsels concerning us hath also linked together the end and the means glory grace happinesse and holinesse that there is no destroying of them Without holiness it is impossible to see God so that those who expect the one without any desire of endeavour after the other they are upon a vain attempt to loose the links of this eternal chain Rom. 8. It is the only eternall choosing love of God which separated so many souls from the common misery of men it is that only which in time doth appear rise as it were from under ground in the streams of fruits of sanctification and if the ordinance of life stand so shal the ordinance of fruits Ioh. 15. 16. Eph. 2. 9. If he have appointed thee to life it is certain he has also ordained the●… to fruits and chosen thee to be holy so that what ever soul casts by the study of this there is too grosse a brand of pe●…dition upon its fore-head it is true all is already determined with him he is incapable of any change or shadow of ●…urning nothing then wants but he is in one mind about it and thy prayer cannot turn him Yet a godly soul will pray with more confidence because it knows that as he hath determined upon all its wants and receipts so he hath appointed this to be the very way of obtaining what it wants this is the way of familiarity and grace he takes with his own to make them call and he performes his purpose in answer to their cry But suppose there were nothing to be expected by prayer yet I say that is not the thing thou shouldest look to but what is required of thee by thy duty to do that simply out of regard to his 〈◊〉 though thou should never profit by it this is true obedience to serve him for his own pleasure though we had no expectation of advantage by it certainly he doth not require thy supplications for this end to move him and incline his affections toward thee but rather as a testimony of thy homage subjection to him therefore though they cannot make him of another mind than he is or hasten performance before his purposed time so that in reality they have no influence upon him yet in praying praying diligently thou declares thy obligation to him and respect to his Majesty which is all thou hast to look to and to commit the event solely to his good pleasure The 2. Objection Paul mentions tends to justifie men Why then doth ye yet find fault who hath resisted
the world was made by God then it relyes with confidence upon that same word of God as a word of power and hopes against hope There are many things in the Christians way betwixt him and glory which look as insuperable thou art often emptied into nothing and stript naked of all encouragements and there is nothing remaining but the word of Gods promises to thee and to the Church which seems contrary to sense and reason Now I say if thou do indeed believe that the world was made by God then out of all Question thou may silence all thy fears with this one thought God created this whole frame out of nothing he commanded the light to shine out of darknesse then certainly he can give a beeing to his own promises is not his word of promise as sure and effectuall as his word of command This is the grand incouragement of the Church both offered by God from Isa. Chap. 40. and made use of by his Saints as David Hezekiah c. What is it would disquiet a soul if it were reposed on this Rock of creating power and faithfulnesse This would alwayes sound in its ears faint not weary not Iacob I am God and none else the portion of Iacob is not like others be it inward or outward difficulties suppose Hell and Earth combined together let all the enemies of a soul or of the Church assemble here is one for all the God that made the Heaven and the Earth can speak and it is done command and it stands fast He creates peace and who then can make trouble when he gives quietnesse to a Nation or to a person Almighty power works in Saints and for Saints let us trust in him Gen. 1. 26 27. And God said Let us make man after our own Image with Eph. 4. 24. and Heb. 3. 10. WHile we descend from the meditation of the glory of God shining in the Heavens in Sun Moon and Stars unto the consideration of the Lords framing of Man after this manner we may fall into admiration with the Psalmist Psalm 8. Lord what is man that thou art so mindful of him or the Son of man that thou shouldest remember him It might indeed drown us in wonder and astonish us to think what speciall notice He hath taken of such a creature from the very beginning and put more respect upon him then upon all the more Excellent works of his hands you find here the Creation of man expressed in other tearms than was used before He said let there be light and it was let there be dry land c. But it is not such a simple word as that but let us make man according to our image as if God had called a consultation about it what was there any more difficulty in this then the rest of his works Needed he any advisement about his frame and constitution No certainly for there was a great work of power as curious peeces of Art wisdome which were instantly done upon his word He is not a man that he should advise or consult as there is no difficulty nor impediment in the way of his power He doth all that he pleases ad nutum at his very word or nod so easie are impossibilities to him so there is nothing hard to his wisedom no knot but it can loose nothing so curious or exquisite but he can as curiously contrive it as the most common and grosse peeces of the creation and therefore He is wonderful in counsell excellent in working But ve have here expressed as it were a Counsell of the Holy and Blessed Trinity about Mans Creation to signifie to us what peculiar respect He puts upon that Creature and what speciall notice he takes of us that of his own free purpose and good pleasure he was to single and choose out man from among all other Creatures for the more eminent demonstration of his glorious attributs of grace mercy and justice upon him and likewise to point out the excellency that God did stamp upon man in his Creation beyond the rest of the creatures as the Apostle showes the excellency of Christ above Angels To which of the Angels said he at any time thou art my Son Heb. 1. 5. So we may say of which of the creatures said he at any time come let us make them in our image after our likenesse O how should this make us listen to hear earnest to know what man once was how magnified of God and set above the works of his hands There is a great desire in men to search into their Original and to trace backward the dark footsteps of antiquity especially if they be put in expectation of attaining any honourable or memorable extraction How will men love to hear of the worth of their Ancestors But what a stupidity doth possesse the most part in relation to the high fountain and head of all that they do not aim so high as Adam to know the very estate of humane nature hence it is that the most part of people ly still astonished or rather stupid and senselesse after this great fall of man because they never look upward to the place and dignity from whence man did fall It is certain you will never rightly understand your selves or what ye are till ye know first what man was made You cannot imagine what your present misery is till you once know what that selicity was in which man was made let us make man in our image some have called man a little world a compend of the world because he hath heaven and earth as it were married together in him two most remote and distant natures the dust of the earth and the immortall Spirit which is called the breath of God sweetly linked and conjoyned together with a disposition and inclination one to another The Lord was in this piece of workmanship as it were to give a narrow and short compend of all his works so did associate in one piece with his marvelous wisdome being living moving sense and reason which are scattered abroad in the other creatures so that a man carries these wonders about with him which he admires without him At his bare and simple word this huge frame of the world started out of nothing but in this he acts the part of a cunning Artificer let us make man he makes rather than creats first raises the walls of flesh buildeth the house of the body withall its Organs all its Rooms and then he puts in a noble divine guest to dwel in it He breaths in it the breath of life he incloseth as it were an Angel within it and marrieth these two together into the most admirable union and communion that can be imagined so that they make up one man But that which the Lord looks most into is this work and would have us most to consider is that Image of himself that he did imprint on man let us make man in our own Image there was no
that God As his authority should imprint reverence so his goodnesse thus manifested should engrave confidence And thus the life of man vvas not only a life of obedience but a life of pleasure and delight not only a holy but a happy life yea happy in holinesse Now as it was Pauls great businesse in preaching to ride marches between the covenant of grace and the covenant of works to take men off that old broken ship to this sure plank of grace that is offered by Jesus Christ to drowning souls So it would be our great work to shew unto you the nature of this Covenant and the terms thereof that you may henceforth find and know that salvation to be now impossible by the Law which so many seek in it We have no errand to speak of the first Adam but the better to lead you to the second Our life was once in the first but he lost himself and us both but the second by losing himself saves both We have nothing to do to speak of the first Covenant but that we may lead you or pursue you rather to the second established upon better tearms and better promises The tearms of this covenant are Do this and live perfect obedience without one jot of failing or falling an intire and universall accomplishment of the whole will of God that is the duty required of Man there is no latitude left in the bargain to admit endeavours in stead of performance or desire in stead of duty there is no place for Repentance here if a Man fall in one point he falls from the whole promise by the tenour of this bargain there is no hope of recovery If you would have the duty in a word It s a love of God with all our heart and soul our Neighbour as our self that testified verified in all duties offices of obedience to God love to men without the least mixture of sin infirmity Now the promise on Gods part is indeed larger then that Duty not only because undeserved but even in the matter of it it 's so abundant Life eternal life continuance in a happy estate There is a threatning added In what day thou eatest thou shalt die that is thou shalt become a mortall and miserable creature subject to misery here and hereafter which is more pressingly set down in that Word Cursed is he that abides not in all things written in the law to do them It is very peremptory that men dream not of escaping wrath when they break but in one suppose they did abide in all the rest Cursed is every man from the highest to the lowest the Lord Almighty is engaged against him his countenance his Power is against him to destroy him make him miserable whoever doth fail but in one jot of the commands he shall not only fall from that blessed condition freely promised but lose all that he already possessed fall from that image of God dominion over the creatures and incur in stead of that possessed and expected happinesse misery here on soul body in pains sicknesses troubles griefs c. And Eternal misery on both without measure hereafter Eternall destruction from the presence of the Lord the glory of his power Now This Law is not of Faith saith the Apostle This opens up the nature of the bargain and the opposition between the present Covenant that which is made with lost sinners in a Mediator This Covenant is called of Works Do this and live To him that worketh is the promise made though freely too It is grace that once a reward should be promised to obedience but having once resolved to give it herein justice appears in an equall and uniform distribution of the reward according to Works So that where there is an equality of works there shall be an equality of reward and no difference put between persons equall Which is the very freedome of the Covenant of grace that it passes overall such considerations and deals equally in mercy with unequall sinners unequally it may be with them that are equall in nature You may ask was not Adam to believe in God did not the Law require faith I answer Christ distinguishes a twofold faith You believe in God believe also in me No question he was called to believe in God the Creator of the VVorld and that in a three-fold consideration First to depend on God the self-beeing and fountain-good his own goodnesse was but a fluxe and emanation from that Sun of righteousnesse so was to be perpetuated by constant abiding in his sight the interposition of mans self between him and God did soon bring on this eternal night of darknesse Nature might have taught him to live in him in whom he had life beeing and motion and to forget look over his own perfections as evanishing shadows But this quickly extinguished his life when he began to to live in himself Next he was obliged to believe in Gods word both threatning and promise to have these constantly in his view And certainly if he had kept in his serious consideration the inestimable blessing of life promised and the fearful curse of death threatned if he had not been induced first to doubt and then to deny the truth and reality of these he had not attempted such a desperate rebellion against the Lord. Then thirdly he was to believe and perswade himself of the Lords fatherly love and that the Lord was well pleased with his obedience and this faith would certainly beget much peace quietnesse in his mind and also constrain him to love him and live to him who loved him and gave him life and happinesse out of love yet this holds true that the Apostle saith the law is not of faith to wit in a Mediator and Redeemer it was a bond of immediate friendship there needed none to mediate between God and man there needed no reconciler where there was no ods nor distance But the Gospell is of Faith in a Mediator it s the souls plighting its hope upon Jesus Christ in its desperate necessity so supposes man sinfull and miserable in himself and in his own sense too and so putting over his weight burden upon one whom God hath made mighty to save The Law is not of Faith but of perfect works a watch-word brought in of purpose to bring men off their hankering after a broken and desperate Covenant It admits no repentance it speaks of no pardon it declares no Cautioner or Redeemer there is nothing to be expected according to the tenor of that Covenant but wrath from Heaven either personall obedience in all or personall punishment for ever that is the very tearms of it it knows no other thing Either bring compleat righteousnesse and holinesse to the promise of life or expect nothing but death This may be a sad meditation to us to stand and look back to our former estate compare it with that into which we
without previous fore-sight or consideration of their doings preparing men to eternall wrath for the praises of his Justice without previous consideration of their deservings passing a definitive sentence upon the end of all men before they do either good or evil When ever any secret ●…urmises rise in thy heart against this learn to answer this enter not the lists of disputation with corrupt reason but put in this bridle of the fear of Gods greatnesse and the conscience of thy own basenesse labour to restrain thy undaunted wild mind by it Ponder that well who thou art who disputes who God is against whom thou disputes if thou have spoken once thou wilt speak no more what thou art who is as clay formed out of nothing what he is who is the former and hath not the Potter power over the clay Consider but how great wickednes it is so much as to question him or ask an account of his matters after you have found his will to be the cause of all things then to enquire further into a cause of his wil which is alone the self-rule of righteousnesse it is to seek something above his will and to reduce his Majesty into the order of Creatures it is almost abominable usurpation and sacriledge for both it robes him of his royall prerogative and instates the base foot-stoole in his Throne But know that certainly God will overcome when he is judged Psa. 51. 6. If thou judge him he will condemn thee if thou opug●… his absolute and holy Decrees he will hold thee fast bound by them to thy condemnation he needeth no other defence but to call out thy own conscience against thee bind thee over to destruction therefore as on saith well Let the rashnesse of men be restrained from seeking that which is not lest peradventure they find that which is Seek not a reason of his purposes lest peradventure thou find thy own death and damnation infolded in them Paul mentions two Objections of carnal fleshly wisdome against this Doctrine of Election and reprobation which indeed contain the sum of all that is vented and invented even to this day to defile the spotlesse truth of God all the whisperings of men tend to one of these two either to justifie themselves or to accuse God of unrighteousnesse And shal any do it and be guiltlesse I confesse some oppose this Doctrine not so much out of an intention of accusing God as out of a preposterous ignorant zeal for God even as Iobs friends did speak much for God nay but it was not wel spoken they did but speak wickedly for him some speeak much to the defence of his righteousnesse and holynesse and under pretence of that plea make it inconsistent with these to fore-ordain to life or death without the fore-sight of their carriage But shall they speak wickedly for God or will he accept their person He who looks into the secrets of their heart knows the rise and bottome of such defences and appologies for his Holinesse to be partly self-love partly narrow and limited thoughts of him drawing him down to the determination of his own greatest enemy carnall reason Since men will ascribe him no righteousnesse but such a one of their own shaping conformed to their own modell do they not indeed rob Him of His Holinesse and Righteousnesse I find two or three Objections which it may be reduced to this Head First it seems unrighteousnesse with God to predestinate men to eternal death with out their own evil deserving or any fore-thought of it that before any man had a being God should have been in his Counsel fitting so many to destruction Is it not a strange mocking of the creatures to punish them for that sin and corruption unto which by his eternal Counsel they were fore-ordained This is even that which Paul objects to himself is there unrighteousnesse with God Is it not unrighteousness to hate Esau before he deserves it Is he not unrighteous to adjudge him to death before he do evill vers 14. Let Paul answer for us God forbid VVhy there needs no more answer but all thoughs or words which may in the least reflect upon his holinesse are abomination though we could not tell how it is righteous and holy with him to do it yet this wee must hold that it is It is his own property to comprehend the reason of his Counsels it is our duty to believe what he reveals of them without further enquiry he tells us that this it is clearly in this Chapter this far then we must believe he tells us not how it is then further we should not desire to learn God in keeping silence of that may put us to silence make us conceive that there is a depth to be admired not sounded Yet he goeth a little further and indeed as high as can be to Gods will he hath mercy on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth now further he cannot go for there is nothing above this we may descend from this but we cannot ascend or rise above it But is this any answer to the Argument A Sophister could presse it further and take advantage from that very ground What is not this to establish a meer tyranny in the Lord that he doth all things of meer will and pleasure distributes rewards punishments without previous consideration of mens carriage But here we must stand and go no further than the Scriptures walks with us what ever reasons or causes may be assigned yet certainly we must at length come up thither All things are because he so willed and why he willed we should not ask a reason because his will is supream reason and the very self-rule of all Righteousness Therefore if once we know his will we should presently conclude that it is most righteous and holy If that evasion of the fore-knowledge of mens sins and impenitency had been found ●…id certainly Paul would have answered so not ●…ve had his refuge to the absolute will and pleasure ●…f God which seems to perplex it more but he knew well that there could nothing of that kind whether good or evill either actually be without his wil or be to come without the determination of the same will and so could not be foreseen without the Counsel of his will upon it and therefore it had been but a poor shi●… to have refuge to that starting hole of fore-knowledge out of which he must presently flee to the will pleasure of God so he betakes him straight way to that he must hold at and opposes that will to mans doings It is not of him that willeth c. If he had meant only that Iacob and Esau had actuallie done neither good nor evill he needed not return to the sanctuary of Gods will for still it might be said it is of him ●…hat runs and wills and not of Gods will as the first Original because their good and evill