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A10650 An explication of the hundreth and tenth Psalme wherein the severall heads of Christian religion therein contained; touching the exaltation of Christ, the scepter of his kingdome, the character of his subjects, his priesthood, victories, sufferings, and resurrection, are largely explained and applied. Being the substance of severall sermons preached at Lincolns Inne; by Edward Reynoldes sometimes fellow of Merton Colledge in Oxford, late preacher to the foresaid honorable society, and rector of the church of Braunston in Northhampton-shire. Reynolds, Edward, 1599-1676. 1632 (1632) STC 20927; ESTC S115794 405,543 546

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separate from sinners Heb. 7.26 Hee came not into the world but for us and therefore hee neither suffered nor did any thing but for us As the colour of the glasse is by the favor of the Sunne-beame shining through it made the color of the wall not inherent in it but relucent upon it by an extrinsecall affection so the righteousnesse of Christ by the favor of God is so imputed unto us as that wee are quoad gratiosum Dei conspectum righteous too In which sense I understand those words Hee hath not beheld iniquitie in Iacob neither hath he seen perversenesse in Israel Num. 23.21 Though it is indeed in him yet the Lord looketh on him as cloathed with the righteousnesse of Christ and so is said not to see it as the eye seeth the color of the glasse in the wall and therefore cannot behold that other inherent color of its owne which yet it knoweth to bee in it Now of this Doctrine of Iustification by Christs righteousnesse imputed wee may make a double use First it may teach us that great dutie of selfe-deniall wee see no righteousnesse will justifie us but Christs and his will not consist but with the deniall of our owne And surely what-ever the professions of men in word may bee there is not any one dutie in all Christian Religion of more difficultie than this to trust Christ onely with our salvation To doe holy duties of hearing reading praying meditating almesgiving or any other actions of charity or devotion and yet still to abhorre our selves and our workes to esteeme our selves after wee have done all unprofitable servants and worthy of many st●ipes to doe good things and not to rest in them to owne the shame and dung of our solemne services when we have done all the good workes wee can to say with Nehemiah Remember mee ô my God concerning this and spare me according to the greatnesse of thy mercie Nehem. 13.22 and with David To thee ô Lord belongeth mercie for thou renderest to every man according to his worke Psal. 62.12 It is thy mercy to reward us according to the uprightnesse of our workes who mightest in judgement confound us for the imperfection of our workes To give God the praise of our working and to take to ourselves the shame of polluting his workes in us There is no Doctrine so diametrally contrary to the merits of Christ and the redemption of the world thereby as justification by workes No Papist in the world is or can bee more contentious for good workes than wee both in our Doctrine and in our prayers and in our exhortations to the people We say no faith justifieth us before God but a working faith no man is righteous in the sight of men nor to bee so esteemed but by workes of holinesse without holinesse no man shall see God hee that is Christs is zealous of good workes purifieth himselfe even as hee is pure and walketh as hee did in this world Here onely is the difference we doe them because they are our Dutie and testifications of our love and thankfulnesse to Christ and of the workings of his Spirit in our hearts but wee dare not trust in them as that by which wee hope to stand or fall before the tribunall of Gods Iustice because they are at best mingled with our corruptions and therefore doe themselves stand in need of a high Priest to take off their iniquity Wee know enough in Christ to depend on we never can finde enough in our selves And this confidence wee have if God would ever have had us justified by workes hee would have given us grace enough to fulfill the whole Law and not have left a Prayer upon publike record for us every day to repeat and to regulate all our owne Prayers by forgive us our trespasses For how dares that man say I shall be justified by my workes who must every day say Lord forgive mee my sinnes and bee mercifull unto mee a sinner Nay though wee could fulfill the whole Law perfectly yet from the guilt of sinnes formerly contracted wee could no other way bee justified than by laying hold by faith on the satisfaction and sufferings of Christ. Secondly it may teach us confidence against all sinnes corruptions and temptations Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect It is God that justifieth who is he that condemneth It is Christ that died c. Satan is the blackest enemie and sinne is the worst thing hee can alleage against mee or my soule is or can bee subject unto for Hell is not so evill as sinne In as much as Hell is of Gods making but sinne onely of mine Hell is made against mee but sinne is committed against God Now I know Christ came to destroy the workes and to answer the arguments and reasonings of the Devill Thou canst not stand before God saith Satan for thou art a grievous sinner and he is a devouring fire But faith can answere Christ is able both to cover and to cure my sinne to make it vanish as a miste and to put it as farre out of mine owne sight as the East is from the West But thou hast nothing to doe with Christ thy sinnes are so many and so foule surely the bloud of Christ is more acceptable to my soule and much more honourable and pretious in it selfe when it covereth a multitude of sinnes Paul was a persecutor a Blasphemer and injurious the greatest of all sinners and yet hee obtained mercy that hee might be for a patterne of all long-suffering to those that should after beleeve in Christ. If I had as much sinne upon my soule as thou hast yet faith could unlade them all upon Christ Christ could swallow them all up in his mercy But thou hast still nothing to doe with him because thou continuest in thy sinne But doth hee not call mee invite me beseech mee command me to come unto him If then I have a heart to answer his call hee hath a hand to draw me to himselfe though all the gates of Hell and powers of darknesse or sinnes of the world stood betweene But thou obeyest not this call True indeed and pittifull it is that I am dull of hearing and slow of following the voice of Christ I want much faith but yet Lord thou dost not use to quench the smoaking flax or to breake the bruized reed I beleeve and thou art able to helpe mine unbeleefe I am resolved to venture my soule upon thy mercy to throw away all mine owne loading and to cleave onely to this planck of salvation But faith purifieth the heart whereas thou art uncleane still True indeed and miserable man I am therefore that the motions of sinne doe worke in my members But yet Lord I hate every false heart I delight in thy Law with mine innerman I doe that which I would not but I consent to thy Law that it is good I desire to know thy will to feare thy name to
a proclamation of the Gospell unto him Moses his prayer was I beseech thee shew me thy glory How doth the Lord grant this Prayer I will make all my goodnesse to passe before thee and then revealeth himselfe unto him almost all by mercy The Lord the Lord God mercifull and gratious long-suffering and abundant in goodnesse and truth keeping mercy for thousands forgiving iniquity transgression and sinne to note unto us that the glory of God is in nothing so much revealed as in his goodnesse Who is a God like unto thee that pardoneth iniquity and passeth by the transgression of the remnant of his people Besides though the Law be indeed from God as from the Authour of it so that in that respect there may seeme to be no difference of excellency betweene that and the Gospell yet wee must observe that by the remainders of Creation though God should not have revealed his Law againe unto Moses in the mount much of the Law and by consequence of God himselfe might have beene discover'd by humane industry as wee see by notable examples of the philosophers and grave heathen But the Gospell is such a mystery as was for ever hidden from the reach and very suspicion of nature and wholly of divine revelation Eye hath not seene nor eare heard neither have entred into the hearts of men the things which God hath prepared for them that love him the Apostle speaketh it of the mystery of the Gospell noting that it is above the observation or learning or comprehension of nature so much as to suspect it nay the naturall inquirie of the Angels themselves could never have discovered it even unto them it is made knowne by the Church that is if it had not beene for the Churches sake that God would reveale so glorious a mystery the Angels in heaven must have beene for ever ignorant of it So extremely desperate was the fall of man that it wanted the infinite and unsearchable wisedome of God himselfe to finde out a remedie against it If the Lord should have proceeded thus farre in mercy towards man and no farther Thou art a wretched Creature and I am a righteous God yea so heavy is my wrath and so wofull thy condition that I cannot choose but take compassion upon thee and therefore I will put the matter into thine owne hands requisite it is that my pitty towards thee should not swallow up the respects to mine owne justice and honour that my mercy should bee a righteous and a wise mercy Consult therefore together all ye children of men and invent a way to reconcile my justice and mercy to one another set mee in a course to shew you mercy without parting from mine owne right and denying the righteous demands of mine offended justice and I will promise you to observe it I say if the mercy of the Lord should have confin'd it selfe within these bounds and referr'd the method of our redemption unto humane discovery we should for ever have continued in a desperate estate everlastingly unable to conceive or so much as in fancy to frame unto our selves a way of escape As the Creatures before their being could have no thought or notion of their being educ'd out of that nothing which they were before So man fallen could not have the smallest conjecture or suspition of any feaseable way to deliver himselfe out of that misery into which he fell If all the learning in the world were gather'd into one man and that man should imploy all his time and studie to frame unto himselfe the notions of a sixth or seventh sense which yet are as expressely fashion'd amongst those infinite Idea's of Gods power and omniscience as these five which are already created he would be as totally ignorant of the conclusion he sought at last as hee was at first For all humane knowledge of naturall things is wrought by a reflexion upon those Phantasmes or Idea's which are impressions made from those senses wee already use and are indeed nothing else but a kinde of notionall existence of things in the memory of man wrought by an externall and sensible perception of that reall existence which they have in themselves And yet in this case a sixth or a seventh sense would agree in genere proximo and so have some kinde of Cognation with those wee already enjoy But a new Covenant a new life a new faith a new salvation are things toto genere beyond the straine and sphere of nature That two should become one and yet remaine two still as God and man doe in one Christ that hee who maketh should bee One with the thing which himselfe hath made that hee who is above all should humble himselfe that he who filleth all should emptie himselfe that he who blesseth all should be himselfe a curse that hee who ruleth all should be himselfe a servant that he who was the prince of life and by whom all things in the world doe consist should himselfe be dissolved and dye that mercy and justice should meet together and kisse each other that the debt should bee payed and yet pardoned that the fault should bee punished and yet remitted that death like Sampsons Lion should have life and sweetnesse in it and be used as an instrument to destroy it selfe these and the like Evangelicall truths are mysteries which surpasse the reach of all the princes of learning in the world It is to be beleeved by a spirituall light which was not so much as possible to a humane reason We may observe that every person in the Trinity setteth himselfe to teach the mystery of the Gospell The Father revealeth it unto men Flesh and bloud hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It is written in the Prophets They shall be all taught of God Every man therefore that hath heard and learned of the Father commeth unto mee The Son likewise teacheth it unto men therefore hee is called the Angell of Gods Covenant and Counsell that is the Revealer thereof because unto the world he made knowne that deepe project of his Fathers counsell touching the restoring of mankind No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Sonne which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him He only it is who openeth the bosome of his Father that is who revealeth the secret and mysterious counsels and the tender and compassionat affections for the bosome is the seat of secrets and of Love of his Father unto the world And therefore he is said to be a Teacher sent from God and to be the Lord which speaketh from heaven in the ministery of his Gospel and the doctrine which he teacheth is called a heavenly doctrin and a heavenly calling a high calling and oft by the Apost to the Hebrews 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 heavenly things to note that they are not of a naturall or earthly
of the Booke of God and he that obeyeth not doth despise for the Lord calleth disobedience rebellion stubbornenesse and a rejecting of his word 1 Sam. 15.22 23. He that persisteth in any knowne sinne or in the constant omission of any evident dutie fighteth against Christ himselfe throweth away his owne mercy stoppeth his eares at the entreaties of the Lord and committeth a sinne directly against Heaven And if he so persist God will make him know that there is flaming fire prepared for those that obey not the Gospell of our Lord Jesus Christ 2 Thes. 1.8 Therefore whensoever we come unto the Word read or preached wee should come with an expectation to heare Christ himselfe speaking from heaven unto us and bring such affections of submission and obedience as becommeth his presence Let him that hath an eare heare what the spirit saith unto the Churches I will heare what God the Lord will speake for he will speake peace unto his people Christs sheepe discerne his voyce in the dispensation of the Gospell and will not know the voice of strangers And this was the honour of the Thessalonians and the men of Berea that in the preaching of the Word they did set themselves as in Gods presence expecting in it his authoritie and receiving it in his name Dareth any man to rush with a naked weapon into the presence of his prince and with scorne to throw backe his owne personall commands into his face againe And shall wee dare to come armed with high thoughts and proud reasonings and stubborne resolutions against the majesty of the Lord himselfe who speaketh from heaven unto us Receive with meeknesse saith the Apostle the ingrafted Word which is able to save your soules The word doth not mingle nor incorporate and by consequence doth not change nor save the soule but when it is received with meeknesse that is when a man commeth with a resolution to lay downe his weapons to fall downe on his face and give glory to God he that is swift to wrath that is to set up stout and fretfull affections against the purity and power of the Word to snuffe against it and to fall backward like pettish children which will not be led will be very slow to heare or to obey it for the wrath of man doth not worke the righteousnesse of God A proud hearer will be an unprofitable liver Ever therefore come unto the word with this conclusion It may be this day will God strike me in my master veine I am an usuall profaner of his glorious name a name which I should feare for the greatnesse and love for the goodnesse and adore for the holinesse of it hee will peradventure lay close to my conscience that guilt which himselfe hath declared to be in this great sinne that whatsoever is more than yea and nay is sinne unto me and whatsoever is sin is Hell to my soule I am a vaine person a companion of loose and riotous men It may bee the Lord will urge upon my conscience the charge of his owne word not to companie with fornicators to have no fellowship with the unfruitfull workes of darkenesse not to follow a multitude to doe evill and that though hand joyne in hand yet sinne shall not goe unpunished I am unprofitable loose and rotten in my discourse and hee will ply mee with his owne authority that for every idle word I must render an account I am full of oppression and unjust gain and the Lord will now urge the instructions of Nehemiah the restitution of Zacheus upon me In these or any other the like cases if a man can come with Saint Pauls temper of hart not to consult with flesh and bloud but Lord what wilt thou have me to doe or with the answer of Samuel Speake Lord for thy servant heareth or with the resolution of Cornelius I am here present before God to heare all things that shall bee commanded of God I am come with a purpose of heart to cleave unto thy holy will in all things Here I am in my sinnes strike where thou wilt cut off which of mine earthly members thou wilt I will not arme it I will not extenuate it I will not dispute with thee I will not rebell against thee I will second thee in it I will praise thee for it This is to give God the glorie of his owne Gospell It is not to part from a little monie towards the maintenance of the word or to vouchsafe a little countenance to the dispencers of it and yet alas how few are there who repay unto the ministers of the Gospell that double honor which God and not they hath given unto them but to part from our lusts and to suffer our old man to be crucified which giveth honour to the Word If a man had thousands of rammes and tenne thousand rivers of oyle and would bee content to part from them all for Gods worship If a man had children enough and in a famine of the word would buy every sermon which hee heareth with the sacrifice of a Sonne yet all this would not give glorie enough to the ordinance of God Men naturally love their lusts the issue of their evill hearts better than their lands or the children of their body if Herods son stand in the way of his ambitious security it were better to be his Hog than his childe The losse of cattell and fruits and water and light and the first-borne of all the land was not enough to make Pharaoh let goe his sinne hee will once more rush into the midst of a wonderfull deliverance of Israel and venture his owne and his peoples lives for but the bondage of his enemies and the satisfaction of his lust To doe justly then to love mercy and to walke humbly before God to acknowledge his name in the voyce of the minister and to put away the treasures of wickednesse out of our hands this onely is to give God the glory which is due unto his Word Mic. 6.6 10. Secondly the Gospell is glorious in the promulgation publishing of it unto the world And this may appeare whether we consider the initiall Promulgation in Christs owne personall preaching Or the plenary Revelation thereof in the sending of the holy Ghost to those selected vessels who were to carry abroad this treasure unto all the world For the former wee may note that there was a resemblance of state and glory observ'd in the preaching of Christ. A Forerunner sent to prepare his way and to beare his sword before him as a Herald to proclaime his approach and then at last is revealed the Glory of the Lord. And thus we may observe how we sent his Harbingers before his face into every Citie and place whither he himselfe would come that so men might prepare themselves and lift up their everlasting gates against this Prince of Glory should enter in When one poore ordinary man
greater glory The Lord seemeth to neglect to breake up the hedge to sleepe while his Church is sinking as Christ to his Disciples seemed carelesse Mark 4.38 39. so frequently in Scripture the Saints expostulate with God in an humble and mourning debate Why sleepest thou O Lord Arise cast us not off for ever Psal. 44.23 Ier. 14.8 9. But God hath his quare against us too for this infirmitie and haste of ours Why sayest thou O Iacob and speakest O Israel my way is hid from the Lord and my judgement is passed over from my God That is he hath not taken notice of my calamitie Hast thou not knowne hast thou not heard that the everlasting God the Lord the Creator of the ends of the earth fainteth not neither is weary There is no searching of his understanding Esay 40.27 28. He is wonderfull in counsell and excellent in working and therefore he doth not slumber nor sleepe but only in wisdome ordereth times and seasons that there may in the end be the greater glory unto him and in the things done the more beautie Every thing saith Salomon is beautifull in its time if you gather it before it loseth both its beauty and vertue It would bee a madnesse for a man to mow downe his corne when it is in the greene blade Hee waiteth saith the Apostle for the precious fruit of the earth and hath long patience Iam. 5.7 Now the Prophet assureth us that Light that is comfort refreshment peace deliverance is sowne for the righteous Psal. 97.11 It was sowen for the people of God when they were in captivity though to themselves they seemed as dead men in their graves yet indeed they were dead but as seed in the furrowes which revived againe Psal. 126.5 6. and therefore the Lord likewise like Saint Iames his husbandman is said to wait that he may be gracious to his people Esay 30.18 Though a man suffer never so much injury and be most violently kept out of his owne right yet he must wait till time and mature proceedings have brought on his matters to a triall therefore the Lord calleth it The yeare of recompences for the controversies of Sion Esay 34.8 It is not for private men to order the periods or stints or revolutions of times wherein businesses are to be tried but publike authoritie constitutes that and every man must wait for the appointed time so the Church must not set God the times when it would bee heard or eased but must trust his wisedome and power Ier. 49.19 for there is a set time wherein he will have mercy upon Sion Psal. 102.13 Now this Time is ruled and bounded by these considerations First when the sinne of the enemie is growen ripe and his heart proud and insolent against God and his people when he trampleth upon the poore when he sacrificeth to his owne net when he adoreth his owne counsels when he deifieth his owne condition and thinketh that none can pull him downe then is it a time for God to shew himselfe and to stir up his glory It is time saith David for thee O Lord to worke for they have made void thy Law Psal. 119.126 So outragious they are that their fury runneth over from thy servants to thine ordinances to blot out the very records of heaven the name and feare of God out of the earth And this reason and period of time wee finde frequently in the Scriptures given In the fourth generation they shall come hither againe for the iniquitie of the Amorites is not yet full Gen. 15.16 It is not growen to that ripenesse and compasse as I in my wise secret and patient providence will permit O thou that dwellest upon many waters abundant in treasures saith the Lord to Babylon thine end is come and the measure of thy covetousnesse Ier. 51.13 when men have filled up the measure of their sinne then is their end come bee their wealth or safety or their naturall or acquired munition never so great Put you in the sickle saith the Prophet for the harvest is ripe come get you downe for the presse is full the fats over-flow for the wickednesse is great Ioel 3.13 When wickednesse is so great that it filleth all the vessels then is the Lord ready to put in his sickle and to cut it downe It is further demanded when sinne is full To this I answer that there are three things principally which set forth the fulnesse of sinne Vniversality Impudence and Obstinacy First when a whole Land is filled with it that there are none to intercede or to stand in the gap when from Streets to Palaces from Houses to Courts from Schooles to Churches from every corner sinne breaketh forth so that bloud toucheth bloud The Land is full of adulterers saith the Prophet because of swearers the Land mourneth for both Priest and Prophet are profane yea in my house have I found their wickednesse saith the Lord Ier. 23.10 11. when in every place and at every view there are new and more abominations Ezek. 8.17 Ier. 5 1-6 Secondly when sinne is impudent whorish and outragious when there is no feare modesty or restraint but it breaketh all bonds and like a raging sea overrunneth the bankes They declare their sinne as Sodome saith the Prophet and hide it not woe unto their soules Esay 3.9 it is so full that it breakes out into their countenance hypocrisie it selfe is too narrow to cover it This is that which the Apostle calleth An excesse of riot and the Prophet a rushing like an horse into the battell Now when God thus gives a man over sinne will not be long a filling up when lusts breake forth and throng together when from concupiscence sinne goes on to conception and delight to formation and contrivance to birth and execution to education and custome to maintenances and defence to glory and boasting to insensibilitie hardnesse and a reprobate sense then there is such a fulnesse in sinne as is neere unto cursing the very next step is hell Lastly when sinne holds out in stubbornenesse and is incorrigible when the remedy is refused the pardon rejected the peace not accepted Then is sinne come to its fulnesse The sinne of the Amorites was never quite full but when they rejected that peace mercy and subjection to Gods people which was offered them first But when men sinne against those meanes of grace which are sent unto them and leave no remedie to themselves no marvell if the Lord give them over and let in the enemie upon them 2 Chron. 36.16 Therefore we must take heed of finishing sinne for it is not sin but the consummation and finishing of sinne which condemnes a man Now when thus the sinne of the enemie is growne so ripe that it breaketh forth into pride and insultation against Gods people then is the Lords time to shew himselfe I will restore health unto thee saith the Lord to his Church and I will heale thee of thy wounds because
of his workes of mediation on earth and that he is now in the execution of those other offices which remaine to bee fulfilled by him in heaven for the application of his Sacrifice unto us for having in the resurrection justified himselfe hee thereby rose for our justification likewise Rom. 4.25 For if the debt had not been taken quite off by the suretie it would have lien upon the principall still And therefore the Apostle proveth the resurrection by this that Gods mercies are sure Act. 13.34 Whereas if Christ were not risen from the dead wee should bee yet in our sinnes and so by consequence the mercies of David should have failed us 1 Cor. 15.17 18. And for this reason it is as I conceive that the Lord sent an Angell to remove the stone from the mouth of the sepulcher not to supply any want of power in him who could himselfe have roled away the stone with one of his fingers but as a Iudge when the Law is satisfied sendeth an officer to open the prison-doores to him who hath made that satisfaction so the Father to testifie that his Iustice was fully satisfied with the price which his Sonne had paid sent an officer of heaven to open the doores of the grave and as it were to hold away the hangings while his Lord came forth of his bed-chamber Secondly it assureth us of our resurrection for as the head must rise before the members so the members are sure to follow the Head The wicked shall rise by his Iudiciary power but not by the vertue and fellowship of his Resurrection as the faithfull who are therefore called Children of the Resurrection Luk. 20.36 1 Cor. 15 20-23 Thirdly it doth by a secret and spirituall vertue renew and sanctifie our Nature Rom. 6.4 For the acts of Christs mediation in his sufferings and victories are spiritually appliable and effectuall in us unto answerable effects His death to the mortification of sinne Heb. 9.14 1 Ioh. 1.7 And his resurrection to the quickning of us in holinesse Eph. 2.5 Col. 2.12 Fourthly it comforteth us in all other calamities of life which may befall us hee that raised up himselfe from the dead hath compassion and power to deliver us from all evill and to keepe us from falling This is the summe of Iobs argument God will raise me up at the last day therefore undoubtedly hee is able if it stand with my good and his owne glory to lift me up from this dunghill againe Iob 19.27 And this is Gods argument to comfort his people in patient waiting upon him in their afflictions because their dead bodies shall live and they that dwell in the dust shall awake and sing Esai 26.19 Lastly it serveth to draw our thoughts and affections from earth unto heaven Because things of a nature should move unto one another Now saith the Apostle Our conversation is in heaven from whence wee looke for a Saviour even the Lord Iesus Christ who shall change our vile Body and make it like unto his glorious Body according to the working whereby hee is able to subdue all things unto himselfe To him with the Father and the Holy Ghost three persons and one God bee all honor glory Majesty and thanksgiving for ever Amen FINIS Errata PAge 16. line 2. for rejoyceth reade rejoycest p. 31. l. 30. for That r. The. p. 43. l. 7. for that r. the. p. 49. l. 6. dele Our p. 52. l. 23. for world r. word p. 64. l. 25. for to give r. not to give p. 65. l. 2. dele At. p. 82. l. 35. for wrested r. rested p. 148. l. 3. for deliberation r. deliberating p. 154. l. 21. for stones r. stones p. ●59 l. 22. for acquit r. acquaint p. 191. l. 11. for exhaleth r. extracteth p. 195. l. 21. dele onely p. 197. l. 18. for Heralds r. Harbingers p. 221. lines 21.25 for matter r. master p. 225. l. 28. for And r. An. p. 261. l. 15. for world r. word p. 327. l. 24. for frequenting r. frequent p. 387. l. 28. for us r. it p. 388. l. 29. for he r. heed p. 399. l. 1. for reconciliation r. revocation l. 12. r. leaveth it not p. 444. l. 2. for because r. but because A Table of such places of Scripture as are by the way briefly opened or paraphrased in this Exposition and the former three Treatises T noteth the Treatise and P the Psalme GEn. 3.15 T. 439 Gen. 6.5 6. T. 274 Gen. 8.21 T. 274 Exod. 15.3 P. 493 Numb 14.17 T. 274 Numb 20.12 P. 190 Numb 23.21 P. 450 Deut 4.19 T. 284 Deut. 6.5 T. 202 2 Sam. 3.25 P. 400 1 King 21.20 T. 278.279 2 Chron. 6.41 P. 163 Iob 21.16 T. 51 Psal. 2.9 10. P. 12 13. Psal. 37.16 T. 77.369 Psal. 37.25 T. 26 Psal. 62.10 T. 98 Psal. 78.37 T. 110 Psal. 87.4 P. 372 Psal. 89 27. P. 17 Psal. 89.35 P. 80 Psal. 109.6 P. 486 Psal. 119.18 19. T. 435 Psa. 119 64-125 P. 308 Psal. 126.1 P. 209 Psal. 132.8 P. 163 Psal. 144.11 P. 23 Eccles. 1.15 T. 68 Eccles. 5.10 17. T. 72. Eccle. 6 1-3.7-10 T. 73. Eccles. 7.29 P. 354 Eccles. 10.2 P. 484 Esay 13.7 8. P. 498 Esay 28.16 T. 484 Esay 33.22 P 94 Esay 53.10 P. 31 Esay 57.20 P. 138 Ier. 1.11 12. T. 49 Ier. 2.13 T. 16 Ier. 3.19 P. 233 Ier. 8.8 P. 215 Lam. 3.39 40. T. 176 Ezek. 3.3 P. 162 Ezek. 18.20 P. 444 445 Ezek. 33.31.32 P. 68 Hos. 5.11 P. 59 Hos. 5.12 T. 42 Hos. 7.14 T. 311 Hos. 7.16 T. 302 Hos. 8.7 T. 302 Hos. 8.14 T. 426 Hos. 9.8 P. 251 Hos. 9.11 T. 43 Hos. 10.11 T. 422 Ioel 3.17 T. 50 Amos 8.2 T. 49 Mic. 7.19 20. P. 122 Nahum 1.10 P. 493 Habak 3.9 P. 387 Zeph. 1.8 P. 149 Hag. 2.7 T. 389 Hag. 2.14 T. 307 Zech. 5 6-11 T. 49 Mal. 4.2 P. 51 Matth. 4.4 P. 6 Matth. 6.24 P. 21 Matth. 9 15-17 P. 43 Matth. 11.11 P. 178 Matth. 13.22 T. 59 Matth. 15.28 T. 489 Matth. 23.29 P. 56 Matth. 26.5 P. 316 Matth. 26.39 P. 426 Matth. 10.21 T. 413 Luke 1.36 P. 384 Luke 2 40-52 T. 423 Luke 22.32 T. 351 Luke 24.46 P. 30 Iohn 1.16 T. 400 Iohn 1.17 P. 183 Iohn 1.18 P. 169 Iohn 3.18 T. 131 Iohn 4.22 P. 136 Iohn 6.44 P. 12 Iohn 7.38 P. 40 178 Iohn 7.39 P. 37 Iohn 8.56 T. 57 Iohn 10.4 P. 257 Iohn 11 48-50 T. 219 Iohn 13.27 T. 267 Iohn 14 20-23 T. 487 Iohn 15 1-5 T. 464 Iohn 16.7 P. 236 Iohn 16.10 P. 30 Iohn 16.21 P. 50 Iohn 17.4 T. 420 Iohn 17.13 P. 437 491 Iohn 17.15 P. 434 435 Act. 9.7 P. 381 Act. 28 28. P. 136 Rom. 5.10 P. 430 Rom. 5.13 T. 370 Ro. 5.14 T. 136 137 370 Rom. 6.3 T. 144 Rom. 6.11 T. 144.275 Rom. 7.8 T. 131 Rom. 7.12 T. 133 Rom. 7.14 15. T. 278 Rom. 8.29 30. T. 447 Rom. 8.32 T. 485 Rom. 13.9 T. 414 Rom. 13.10 P. 328 1 Cor. 2.14 T. 118 1 Cor. 3.21
enriched to be stedfast unmoveable abundant in the worke of the Lord to doe his will as the Angels in heaven doe it yet in many things they faile and have daily experience of their owne defects But here is all the comfort though I am not able to doe any of my duties as I should yet Christ hath finished all his to the full and therefore though I am compassed with infirmities so that I cannot doe the things which I would yet I have a compassionate advocate with the Father who both giveth and craveth pardon for every one that prepareth his heart to seeke the Lord though he be not perfectly cleansed 1 Ioh. 2.2 2 Chron. 30.18 19. Secondly Against the pertinacie and close adherence of our corruptions which cleave as fast unto us as the very powers and faculties of our soule as heat unto fire or light unto the Sunne Yet sure we are that he who forbad the fire to burne and put blacknesse upon the face of the Sunne at midday is able likewise to remove our corruptions as farre from us as he hath removed them from his owne sight And the ground of our expectation hereof is this Christ when he was upon the earth in the forme of a servant accomplished all the Offices of suffering and obedience for us Therefore being now exalted farre above all heavens at the right hand of Majestie and glory he will much more fulfill those Offices of Power which he hath there to doe Which are by the supplies of his Spirit to purge us from sinne by the sufficiencie of his grace to strengthen us by his word to sanctifie and cleanse us and to present us to himselfe a glorious Church without spot or wrinckle He that brought from the dead the Lord Iesus and suffered not death to hold the head is able by that power and for that reason to make us perfect in every good worke to doe his will and not to suffer corruption for ever to hold the members It is the frequent argument of the Scripture Heb. 13.20 21. Col. 2.12 Eph. 1.19 20. Rom. 6.5 6. Rom. 8.11 Thirdly against all those firie darts of Satan wherby he tempteth us to despaire and to forsake our mercie If he could have held Christ under when he was in the grave then indeed our faith would have been vaine we should be yet in our sinnes 1 Cor. 15. 17. But he who himselfe suffered being tempted and overcame both the sufferings and the temptation is able to succor those that are tempted and to shew them mercie and grace to helpe in time of need Heb. 2.17 18. Heb. 4. 15 16. Lastly against death it selfe For the Accomplishment of Christs Office of redemption in his resurrection from the dead was both the Merit the Seale and the first fruits of ours 1 Cor. 15.20 22. Thirdly The sitting of Christ on the right hand of his Father noteth unto us the actuall Administration of his Kingdome Therefore that which is here said sit at my right hand untill I make thine enemies thy footstoole the Apostle thus expoundeth He must raigne till he hath put all enemies vnder his feete 1 Cor. 15.25 And he therefore died and rose and revived that he might be Lord both of dead and living namely by being exalted unto Gods right hand Rom. 14.9 Now this Administration of Christs Kingdome implies severall particulars First 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The publication of established Lawes For that which is in this Psalme called the sending forth of the rod of Christs strength out of Sion is thus by the Prophets expounded Out of Sion shall goe forth the Law and the Word of the Lord from Ierusalem Esai 2.3 Mich. 4.2 Secondly The conquering and subduing of subjects to himselfe by converting the hearts of men and bringing their thoughts into the obedience of his Kingdome Ministerially by the word of reconciliation and effectually by the power of his Spirit writing his Lawes in their hearts and transforming them into the image of his word from glorie to glorie Thirdly Ruling and leading those whom he hath thus converted in his way continuing unto their hearts his heavenly voice never utterly depriving them of the exciting assisting cooperating grace of his holy Spirit but by his divine power giving unto them all things which pertaine unto life and godlinesse after he had once called them by his glorious power Esai 2.2 Ioh. 10.3 4. 1 Cor. 1.4 8. Esai 30.21 1 Pet. 2.9 2 Pet. 1.3 Fourthly Protecting upholding succouring them against all temptations and discouragements By his compassion pittying them by his power and promises helping them by his care and wisedome proportioning their strength to their trials By his peace recompencing their conflicts by patience and experience establishing their hearts in the hope of deliverance Heb. 2.17 Ioh. 16.33 1 Cor. 10.13 2 Cor. 1.5 Phil. 4.7 19. Rom. 15.4 Fifthy Confounding all his enemies First Their projects holding up his Kingdome in the midst of their malice and making his truth like a tree settle the faster and like a torch shine the brighter for the shaking Secondly Their Persons Whom he doth here gall and torment by the Scepter of his word constraining them by the evidence thereof to subscribe to the Iustice of his wrath and whom he reserveth for the day of his appearing till they shall be put all under his feete In which respect he is said to stand at the right hand of God as a man of warre ready armed for the defence of his Church Act. 7.56 Fourthly the sitting of Christ on the right hand of God noteth unto us his giving of gifts and sending downe of the Holy Ghost upon men It hath been an universall custome both in the Church and elsewhere in dayes of great joy and solemnitie to give gifts and send presents unto men Thus after the wall of Ierusalem was built and the worship of God restored and the Law read and expounded by Ezra to the people after their captivitie it is said that the people did eate and drinke and send portions Nehem. 8. 10 12. The like forme was by the people of the Iewes observed in their feast of Purim Ester 9.22 And the same custome hath bin observed amongst heathen Princes upon solemne and great occasions to distribute donations and congiaries amongst the people Thus Christ in the day of his Majestie and Inauguration in that great and solemne triumph when he ascended up on high and led captivity captive he did withall give gifts unto men Eph. 4.10 Christ was notably typified in the Ark of the Testament In it were the Tables of the Law to shew that the whole Law was in Christ fulfilled and that he was the end of the Law for Righteousnesse to those that beleeve in him There was the golden pot which had Manna to signifie that heavenly and abiding nourishment which from him the Church receiveth There was the Rod of Aaron which budded Signifying either the miraculous incarnation of Christ in a Virgin or
the rage of hell the persecutions and policies of wicked men the present immunity of desperate sinners are evidences that Christ hath yet much worke to doe in his Church But doth not the Apostle say that all things are put under his feete Eph. 1.22 It is true quoad judiciariam potestatem but not quoad exercitium potestatis Hee shall not receive any new power to subdue his enemies which hee hath not already but yet hee can execute that power when and how hee will And hee is pleased to suffer his enemies in this respite of their reprivall to rage and revile and persecute him in his members Every wicked man is condemned already and hath the wrath of God abiding upon him Iob. 3.18.36 Onely Christ doth suspend the execution of them for many weighty reasons As first to shew his patience and long suffering towards the vessels of wrath for hee ever comes first with an offer of peace before hee drawes the sword Rom. 2.4 Rom. 9.22 Deut. 20 10-13 Luk. 10.5 11. Secondly to magnifie the power of his protection and providence over the Church in the midst of their enemies for if the Lord were not on the Churches side when man riseth up against it if hee did not rebuke the proud waves and set them their bounds how farre they should goe there could bee no more power in the Church to withstand them than in a levell of sand to resist an inundation of the Sea Psal. 124.1.5 Thirdly to reserve wicked men unto the great day of his appearing and of the declaration of his power and righteousnesse wherin all the world shall bee the spectators and witnesses of his just and victorious proceedings against them Act. 17.31 Fourthly to shew forth his mighty power in destroying the wicked all together They who here carried themselves with that insolence as if every particular man meant to have plucked Christ out of his throne shall there all together bee brought forth before him That as the righteous are reserved to have their full salvation together 1 Thess. 4.17 so the wicked may bee bound up in bundles and destroied together Psal. 37.38 Esai 1.28 Fifthly to fill up the measure and to ripen the sinnes of wicked men for the Lord puts the wickednesse of men into an Epha and when they have filled up their measure he then sealeth them up unto the execution of his righteous judgements And hence it is that the Scripture calleth wicked men Vessels fitted for destruction for they first fill themselves with sin and then God filleth them up with wrath and shame Sixthly to fill up the number of his Elect for hee hath many sheepe which are not yet within his fold and they many of them the posterity of wicked men Ioh. 10.16 Seventhly to fill up the measure of his owne sufferings in his members that they may follow him unto his kingdome through the same way of afflictions as he went before them Col. 1.24 Revel 6.11 Eighthly to exercise the faith of his Church to drive the faithfull with the Prophet Habakuk into their watch-tower and with David into the Sanctuary of the Lord thereto waite upon him in the way of his judgements to consider that the end of the righteous man is peace and that the pride and prosperity of the wicked is but as the fat of Lambes and as the beauty of grasse that God hath set them in slippery places and will cast them downe at the last Hab. 2.1 3. Psal. 37.2.10.20 Psal. 73.18 Lastly to weane the faithfull from earthly affections and to kindle in them the desires of the Saints under the altar How long O Lord holy and true dost thou not judge and avenge our bloud on them that dwell on the earth Revel 6.10 Secondly as donec notes the Patience of Christ towards his enemies so it notes likewise that there are fixed bounds and limits unto that patience beyond which he will no longer forbeare them There is an appointed day wherein hee will judge the world with righteousnesse Act. 17.31 There is a yeere of vengeance and of recompences for the controversies of Sion Esai 34.8 The wilde asse that sucketh up the winde at her pleasure may be found in her moneth Ier. 2.24 The Lord seeth that the day of the wicked is comming It is an appointed time though it tarry yet if we waite for it It will surely come it will not tarry Psal. 37.13 Hab. 2.3 Well then let men goe on with all the fiercenesse and excesse of riot they will let them walke in the way of their heart and in the sight of their eyes yet all this while they are in a chaine they have but a compasse to goe and God will bring them to judgement at the last When the day of a Drunkard and riotous person is come when he hath taken so many hellish swallowes and hath filled up the measure of his lusts his marrow must then lie downe in the dust though the cup were at his mouth yet from thence it shall be snatch'd away and for everlasting hee shall never taste a drop of sweetnesse nor have the least desire of his wicked heart satisfied any more A wicked mans sinnes will not follow him to hell to please him but onely the memory of them to bee an everlasting scourge and flame upon his conscience O then take heed of ripening sinne by custome by security by insensibility by impudence and stoutnesse of heart by making it a mocke a matter of glory and of boasting by stopping the eare against the voice of the Charmer and turning the backe upon the invitations unto mercy by resisting the Evidence of the Spirit in the Word and committing sinne in the light of the Sunne for as the heat of the sunne doth wither the fruit which falls off and ripen that which hangs on the tree so the Word doth weaken those lusts which a man is desirous to shake off and doth ripen those which the heart holds fast and will not part with When was Israel overthrowne but when they mocked the Messengers of God and despised his Word and misused his Prophets and rejected the remedy of their sinne and when was Juda destroyed but when they hardened themselves against the Word and would not take notice of the day of their peace Alas what haste doe men make to promote their owne damnation and to goe quickly to hell when they will breake through the very Law of God and through all his holy Ordinances that they may come thither the sooner as if the gate would bee shut against them or as if it were a place of some great preferment as if they had to doe with a blinde God which could not see or with an impotent God which could not revenge their impieties Well for all this the Wise mans speech will prove true at the last Know that God will bring thee unto judgement Thirdly donec notes the infallible accomplishment of Christs victories and triumph over his enemies at the last
the promise of Christs comming yet their damnation sleepeth not but shall come upon them soone enough even like an armed man Be not ye mockers saith the Prophet lest your bands be made strong Atheisme and scorne of Gods judgements will make him binde them the faster upon us he will get the better of the proudest of his enemies Wee may mocke but God will not be mocked Hee that shooteth arrowes against the Sunne shall never reach high enough to violate it but the arrowes shall returne upon his owne head Contempt of God and his threatnings doth but tye our damnation the faster upon us and make our condition the more remedilesse The rage and wrestling of a beast with the rope which bindes him doth make the knot the faster Nay there is no Atheist in the world but some time or other feeleth by the horrours of his owne bosome and by the records of his owne conscience that there is a consumption decreed and a day of slaughter comming for the buls of Bashan Againe others I have knowne acknowledge indeede the terrour of the Lord but yet goe desperately on in their presumptions and that upon two other dangerous downefals First they thus argue peradventure I belong to Gods Election of Grace and then he will fetch me in in his time and in the meane time his mercy is above my sinnes and it is not for me to hasten his worke till he will himselfe O what a perversenesse is this for the wickednesse of man to perturbe the Order of God His Rule is that we should argue from a holy conversation to our Election and by our diligence in adding one grace unto another to make it sure unto our selves not to argue from our Election to our calling nor to neglect all diligence till our Election appeare It is true the mercy of Christ is infinitely wider than the very rebellions of men and it may be hee will snatch such a wicked disputer as this like a brand out of the fire But then know withall that every desperate sin thou dost now wilfully run into will at last cost thee such bitter throwes such bloudy teares as thou wouldest not be willing with the least of them to purchase the most sweete and constant pleasure which thy heart can now delight in And in the meane time it is a bloody adventure upon the patience of God for any man upon expectation of Gods favour to steale time from his service and to turne the possibilitie of the mercy of God into an occasion of sinning The Ninivites gathered another conclusion from those premises Let man and beast be covered with sackecloth and cry mightily unto God yea let them turne every one from their evill way and from the violence which is in their hands and the ground of this resolution was this Who can tell if God will turne and repent and turne away from his fierce anger that wee perish not And the Prophets teach us to make another use of the possibility of Gods mercy Rent your hearts and not your garments and turne unto the Lord your God for he is gratious and mercifull slow to anger and of great kindenesse and repenteth him of the evill Who knoweth if he will returne and repent and leave a blessing behinde him c. and againe Seeke ye the Lord all ye meeke of the earth seeke righteousnesse seeke meeknesse it may be ye shall be hid in the day of the Lords anger But then secondly there are not wanting desperate wretches who will thus hellishly argue against the service of God It may be the decree is gone forth and I am rejected by God and why should I labour in vaine and goe about to repeale his will and not rather since I shall have no heaven hereafter take the fill of mine owne wayes and lusts here Thus we finde the wicked Epicures conclude Wee shall dye tomorrow and therefore let us eate and drinke to day Nay but who art thou O man who disputest against God who rather choosest to abuse the secrets of God that thou maiest dishonour him than to bee ruled by his revealed will that thou maist obey him Let the potsheards strive with the potsheards of the earth but let not the Clay dash it selfe against him that made it Remember and tremble at the difference which our Saviour makes even amongst the wicked in hell It shall be easier for Sodome and Gomorrah and for Tyre and Sidon in the day of judgement than for those cities which have heard and despised him Wicked men are treasuring up of wrath and hoording up of destruction against their owne soules every new oath or blasphemie heapes a new mountaine upon their conscience every renewed act of any uncleannesse plungeth a man deeper into hell giveth the divell more hold fast of him adds more fuell unto his Tophet squeezeth in more dregges and woefull ingredients into the cup of astonishment which he must swallow Doubtlesse a sinner in hell would account himselfe a blessed creature if hee did not feele there the weight and worme of such and such particular sinnes which with much easinesse he might have forborne nay which without paine and labour hee could not commit We see Dives in hell begg'd for but a drop of water to coole his tongue in that mightie flame Now suppose a man in a burning fornace what great comfort could he receive from but a drop of water against a fornace of fire Certainely the abatement of so much paine as the abiding of one drop would remove could in no proportion amount to the taking away the punishment of the smallest sin of the least idle word or unprofitable thought and yet in that extremity there shall not bee allowed a drop of refreshment against a lake of fire O that men would therefore in time consider what a woefull thing it is to fall into the hands and to rowze up the jealousie of the living God that because he will doe thus and thus unto obdurate sinners they would therefore in time humble themselves under his mightie hand and prepare to meete him in the way of his judgements For certainely no sooner doth the heart of a Sinner yeeld to God but hee meeteth him in his returne and preventeth him with goodnesse his heart likewise is turned within him and his repentings are kindled together With much more delight will he put a man into the armes of Christ than for●e him under his feet He doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men he taketh no pleasure in the death of a sinner but he delighteth in mercy The last thing observed was the Manner of this victory expressed in those words Ponam and ponam scabellum To put and to put as a stoole under Christs feet Now this expression that the conquest of Christs enemies shall bee but as the removing of a stoole into his place noteth unto us two things First the easinesse of Gods victory over the
the land of Canaan which was a type of Christs Church which he should conquer unto himselfe if any people accepted of the peace which they were first to proclaime they were to become tributaries and servants unto Israel So it is said of Salomon whose peaceable kingdome was a type of Christs after his many victories that he bond-service upon all the nations about Israel and that those princes with whom he held correspondence brought unto him presents as testimonies of his greatnesse and wisedome So when the wise men the first fruits of the Gentiles after Christ exhibited came to submit unto his kingdome they opened their treasure and presented him with gifts gold frankincense and myrrh Againe Monetarum leges valores the authorizing and valuations of publike coines belong unto the prince onely it is his image and inscription alone which maketh them currant Even so unto Christ onely doth belong the power of stamping and creating as it were new ordinances in his Church nothing is with God nor should be currant with us which hath not his image or expresse authority upon it Neither can any man falsify or corrupt any constitution of his without notable contempt against his royall prerogative Againe Iudicium or potestas judiciaria a power of judging the persons and causes of men is a peculiar royalty the administration whereof is from the prince as the fountaine of all humane equitie under God deposited in the hands of inferiour officers who are as it were the mouth of the prince to publish the lawes and to execute those acts of justice and peace which principally belong to his owne sacred breast And so Christ saith of himselfe The Father hath committed all judgement unto the Sonne and hath given him authority to execute judgement Againe Ius vitae necis A power to pardon condemned persons and deliver them from the terrour of the Lawes sentence is a transcendent mercie a gemme which can shine only from the diadems of Princes Now unto Christ likewise belongeth in his Church a power to forgive sinnes it is the most sacred roialty of this prince of peace not onely to suspend but for ever to revoke and as it were annihilate the sentence of malediction under which every man is borne There are likewise Ornamenta Regia regall Ornaments a Crowne a Throne a Scepter and the like Thus we finde the Romanes were wont to send to those forraine kings with whom they were in league as testimonies and confirmations of their dignity scipionem eburneum togam pictam sellam curulem an ivorie scepter a roiall robe and a chaire of state And the like honours wee finde in the Scriptures belonging unto Christ that hee was crowned with glory and honour and that hee had a Throne and righteous scepter belonging to his kingdome Thus we have seene in severall particulars how Christ hath his Royalties belonging to his kingdome Some principall of them we finde in this place A throne a scepter ambassadours armies for the right dispensing of his sacred power We will first consider the words and then raise such observations as shall offer themselves First what is meant by the Rod of Christs Strength or his Strong Rod It notes a thing which a man may leane upon or lay the whole weight of his body on in his wearinesse But being spoken of Christs kingdome wee take it for a scepter or rod of majestie I will not hold you with the variety of acceptions in Expositors Some take it for the branch that groweth out of that roote of Iesse Some for the wood of the crosse Some for the body of Christ borne of a Virgin Some for the kingdome of Christs power taking the signe for the thing signified Some for the power of his mightie workes and preaching That of the body and of the crosse of Christ except by them wee understand the vertue of Christ crucified I conceive to be not so pertinent to the purpose of the Prophet The rest agree in one But for the more distinct understanding of the words wee may consider out of the holy Scriptures what things were sent out of Sion And we finde there two things First the word of the Lord or his holy Gospell The Law shall proceed out of Sion and the word of the Lord from Ierusalem Mic. 4.2 Secondly the spirit of the Lord which was first sent unto Sion for at Hierusalem the Apostles were to wait for the promise of the Father Act. 1.4 and from thence was shed abroad into the world upon al flesh Act. 2.17 and both these are the power or strength of Christ. His word a Gospell of power unto salvation Rom. 1.16 2 Cor. 4.7.10.4 and his spirit a spirit of power 1 Cor. 2.4 2 Tim. 1.7 which is therefore called the finger and the arme of the Lord Luk. 11.20 Matt. 12.28 Esai 53.1 so by the Rod is meant the Gospell and the Spirit of Christ. Secondly what is meant by Gods sending this Rod of Christs strength It notes the manifestation of the Gospell we knew it not before it was sent The donation of the Gospell we had it not before it was sent the invitations of the Gospell we were without God in the world and strangers from the Covenant of promise before it was sent The Commission of the Dispensers of the Gospell they have their patent from heaven they are not to speake untill they be sent Thirdly what is meant by sending it out of Sion It is put in Opposition to mount Sina from whence the Law was sometimes sent with thunders and fire and much terrour unto the people of Israel Ye are not come saith the Apostle unto the mount that burned with fire nor unto blacknesse and darknesse and tempest c. but yee are come unto mount Sion and unto the City of the living God the heavenly Ierusalem and to an innumerable company of Angels and to Iesus the Mediator of the new Covenant c. Heb. 12.18.24 and the Apostle elsewhere sheweth us the meaning of this Allegoricall opposition betweene Sina and Sion betweene Sarah and Hagar namely the two covenants of the Law and of Grace or of bondage and liberty Gal. 4.24 25. Sion was the place whither the tribes resorted to worship the Lord the place towards which that people praied the place of Gods mercifull residence amongst them the beauty of holines the place upon which first the gift of the holy Ghost was powred forth and in which the Gospell was first of all preached after Christs Ascension We may take it by a Synechdoche for the whole Church of the Jewes unto whom the Lord first revealed his Covenant of Grace in Christ Act. 3.26 Act. 13.46 Rom. 2.10 Rule Thou that is Thou shalt rule which is a usuall forme to put the Imperative for the future Indicative It is not a command which hath relation unto any service but it is a promise a commission a dignity conferred
soule did before shelter whole flocks of evill affections when hee came out the tide was driven back the streame turned the center of his heart altered his forrest discovered his lusts scattered and subdued What ailes this man Hee hath but heard an houres discourse the same which others heare and their tide riseth the higher by it Certainly these Devils were not cast out these streames were not turned back but by the finger of God himselfe When the minister of Christ shall whisper in the ears of a dead man whom no thunder could have awakened and hee shall immediatly rise up and give glory to God when Christ shall call men to denie themselves to get above themselves to hate Father and Mother and Wife and Children and their owne life to sell all that they have to crucifie and be cruell to their owne members to pull out their right eyes to cut off their right hands to part from those sinnes which before they esteemed their choicest ornaments and from those too which before they made their chiefest support and subsistence to stand at defiance with the allurements or discouragements of the world to bee set up for signes and wonders for very proverbs of skorne and objects of hatred to those of their owne house to receive persecutions as rewards and entertaine them not with patience onely but with thankfulnesse and rejoicing to bee all their life long in the midst of enemies put to tedious conflicts with the powers of the world and of darknesse to beleeve things which they have not seen and to hope for things which they doe not know and yet maugre all this to refuse to consult with flesh and bloud to stand still more in awe of Gods word than of any other thing certainly that which with the voice of a weake man bringeth such great things to passe must needs bee Virga virtutis a Rod of strength A Rod like the Rod of Moses which can lead us through such seas as these to one whom wee have never seen nor knowen before Esai 55.5 Secondly the Gospell of Christ is a Rod of strength in the justification of men as it is Sceptrum Iustitiae a Scepter of Righteousnesse a word of reconciliation a Gospell of salvation a Law of the Spirit of life a ministration of the Spirit of life and of Righteousnesse an opening of prisons and a proclaiming of liberty unto captives in these respects likewise it is full of power There was a mighty power in the Law of God typified in those thundrings and terrors with which it was administred upon mount Sina the Apostle calleth it a Schoolmaster to scourge and drive us unto Christ and the Psalmist an iron Rod able to breake in pieces all the potsherds of the earth And we know boies in a Schoole doe not apprehend so much terror in the King as in their Master Yet in comparison of the Power of the Gospell the Law it selfe was very weake and unprofitable able to make nothing perfect The Power of the Law was onely to destruction the Power of the Gospell for edification The Law could onely hold under him that was downe before it could never raise him up againe Now the power is farre greater to raise than to kill to forgive sinnes than to bind them Herein is the mighty strength of Gods mercy seen that it can passe by iniquities transgressions and sinnes To preach the Gospell of Christ in his name and authority is an evident argument of that plenary power which is given unto him both in heaven and earth And the very dispensing of this word of reconciliation which is committed unto the Ministers of the Gospell how basely soever the ungratefull world may esteeme of them hath honored them with a title of as great power as a man is capable of to bee called Saviors to have the custodie of the keyes of heaven ministerially and instrumentally under Christ and his Spirit to save the soules and to cover the sinnes of men Now then that word which from the mouth of a weake man is able to reconcile a child of wrath unto God and by the words of one houre to cover and wipe out the sinnes of many yeares which were scattered as thick in the soules of men as the starres in the firmament must needs bee virga virtutis a Rod of strength Thirdly the Gospell of Christ is a Rod of strength in the sanctification of men as it is Sceptrum cum unctione a Scepter which hath ever an unction accompanying it As it is a Sanctifying Truth an heavenly teaching a forming of Christ in the soule a making of the heart as it were his Epistle by writing the Law therein and manifesting the power and image of Christ in the conscience If a man should touch a marble or adamant stone with a seale and taking it off should see the print of it left behinde hee could not but conceive some wonderfull and secret vertue to have wrought so strange an effect Now our hearts are of themselves as hard as the nether milstone when then a holy word so meekly and gently laid on upon them shall leave there an impression of its own puritie when so small a thing as a graine of mustard-seed shall transforme an earthy soule into its owne nature when the eyes and hands and mouth of Christ being in the ministerie of his word spread upon the eyes and hands and mouth of a Childe shall revive the same from death when by looking into a glasse wee shall not onely have a view of our owne faces but shall see them changed into the image of another face which from thence shineth upon us how can wee but conclude that certainly that word by which such wonders as these are effected is indeed virga virtutis a Rod of strength Fourthly the Gospell of Christ is a Rod of strength in the Perservation and Perseverance of the Saints as it is Virga germinans a Rod like Aarons Rod which blossomed and the blossomes perished not but remained in the Ark for a Testimony of Gods power For as those buds or the Manna in the Ark did not perish so neither doth the word of the Gospell in the hearts of the faithfull The Apostle saith that wee are kept by the power of God unto salvation and S. Iude that Gods power keepeth the Saints from falling and presenteth them faultlesse before the presence of his glory and what is this power of God whereby hee doth it but the Gospell of Christ which S. Peter calleth semen incorruptibile uncorruptible seed and the Spirit of Christ which S. Iohn calleth semen manens an abiding seed If I should see a tree with perpetuall fruit without any variation from the difference of seasons a tree like that in S. Iohns Paradise which every moneth did bring forth fruite of twelve severall kindes I should conclude that it had an extraordinary vitall power in it so
generall motion from the supreme so in the motions of grace in the soule the proportion of all the rest a riseth frō the measure of our spirituall and saving light The more distinctly and throughly the spirit of a mans mind is convinc'd of the necessity beauty and gloriousnesse of heavenly things the more strong impressions therof wil be made upon all subordinate faculties for we move towards nothing without preceding apprehensions of its goodnes which apprehensions as they more seriously penetrate into the true and intimate worth of that thing so are the motions of the soule thereunto proportionably strengthen'd As the hinder wheeles in a Coach ever move as fast as the former which leade them so the subordinate powers of the soule are overrul'd in their maner measure of working towards grace by those spirituall representations of the truth and excellency thereof which are made in the understanding by the light of the Gospel Thus the Apostle telleth us that the excellency of the knowledge of Christ was that which made him so earnest to winne him the knowledge of the power of his resurrection and fellowship of his sufferings was that which made him reach forth and presse forward unto the marke and price of that high calling which was before him Thirdly the Glory of the Gospell of Christ with his Spirit may be considered in regard of the matters which are therin contain'd namely the Glory the Excellencies the Treasures of God himselfe We all saith the Apostle with open face behold as in a Glasse that is in the spirituall ministration of the Gospell having the veile of carnall stupidity taken away by the Spirit The glory of the Lord. What glory doe we here behold but that which a glasse is able to represent Now in speculo nisi imago non cernitur nothing can be seene in a glasse but the image of that thing which sheddeth forth its species thereupon and therefore he immediately addeth we are changed into the same image from glory to glory and he elsewhere putteth these two together Man is the image and the glory of God for nothing can have any thing of God in it any resemblance or forme of him but so farre it must needs be glorious But how doe we in the Gospell see the Image of God who is invisible The Apostle expresseth that else-where God who commanded the light to shine out of darknesse hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Iesus Christ. Christ is the Image and expresse Character of his Fathers glory as the impression in the wax is of the forme and fashion of the seale there is no excellencie in God which is not compleatly adequately and distinctly in Christ so that in that glasse wherin we may see him we may likewise see the glory of the Father Now the Gospell is the face of Iesus Christ that which as lively setteth forth his grace and Spirit to the soule as if he were present in the flesh amongst us Suppose we that a glasse could retaine a permanent and unvanishing species of a mans face within it though hee himselfe were absent might we not truly say this glasse is the face of that man whose image it so constantly retaineth So in asmuch as Christ is most exactly represented in his Gospell so that when we come into his personall and reall presence to know even as we are knowne we shall be able truely to say this is indeed the very person who was so long since in his Gospell exhibited to my faith sic ille manus sic ora gerebat it is therefore justly by the Apostle called the face of Iesus Christ and therefore the Glasse wherein we see the Image and glory of God as it is the same light which shineth from the Sunne upon a glasse and from a glasse upon a wall so it is the same glory which shineth from the Father upon the Sonne and from the Sonne upon the Gospell so that in the Gospell we see the unsearchable treasures of God because his treasures are in his Sonne Therefore that which is usually called Preaching the Gospell is in other places called Preaching the Kingdome and the riches of Christ to note the glory of those things which are in the Gospell revealed unto the Church It containeth the glory of Gods wisdome and that wisdome is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a manifold and various wisdome as the Apostle speaketh who therefore calleth Christ and his Gospell by the name of Wisdome wee preach Christ crucified to those that are called the power of God and the wisdome of God and we speake wisdome amongst them that are perfect wisdome to reconcile his owne attributes of mercy and truth righteousnesse and peace which by the fall of man seemed to be at variance among themselves wisdome in reconciling the world of obstinate and rebellious enemies unto himselfe wisdome in sanctifying the whole creation by the bloud of the crosse and repairing those ruines which the sinne of man had caused wisdome in concorporating Christ and his Church things in their owne distinct natures as unapt for mixture as fire and water in their remotest degrees wisdome in uniting the Iewes and Gentiles and reducing their former jealousies and disaffections unto an intimate fellowship in the same common mysteries In one word wisdome above the admiration of the blessed Angels in finding out a way to give greater satisfaction to his offended justice by shewing mercie and saving sinners than he could ever have received by either the confusion or annihilation of them It containeth the Glory of Gods goodnesse and mercy of that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 good-will towards men which brought glory to God and to the earth peace for the Gospell is as it were a Love-token or commendatory Epistle of the Lord unto his Church God left not himselfe without witnesses of his care and evidences of some love even to those whom he suffered to walke in their owne wayes without any knowledge of his Gospell he did them good he gave them raine from heaven and fruitfull seasons so even they had experience of some of his goodnesse the goodnesse of his providence for hee is the Saviour of all men but the Gospell containeth all Gods goodnesse as a heape and miscellany of universall mercy I will make all my goodnesse passe before thee and I will proclaime the name of the Lord before thee and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious and I will shew mercy to whom I will shew mercie Gods speciall and gracious mercy the mercy of his promises in Christ doth convey unto the soule an interest in all his goodnesse nay it maketh all things good unto us so that we may call them ours as gifts and legacies from Christ. He hath given to us all things that pertaine to life and godlinesse the world and life and death and things
more than men and by relying on him against the power and confederacies of men Esay 8.12 13. And therefore in the same argument touching the happinesse of the Saints if they suffer for righteousnesse sake or be reproched for the name of Christ Saint Peter useth in one place sanctifying of the Lord in our hearts and in another glorifying of him as termes equivalent And therefore unbeleefe is said to make God a lyar that is to dishonour him and to rob him of the glory of his truth And despaire to rob God of his mercy and to make the guilt of sinne greater than the power of God And therefore murmurers and unbeleevers are said to speake against God and to grieve him to tempt to limit him that is to call into question the glory of his power and truth Herein then consisteth another glorious effect of the Gospell of Christ that being a ministration of righteousnesse it is a glasse of that power truth mercy and fidelity of God which by faith we rest upon for the forgivenesse and subduing of sinne Thirdly another glorious end of the Gospell is to be a ministration and a law of life If the ministration of death saith the Apostle were glorious how shall not the ministration of the Spirit be rather glorious 2 Cor. 3.6 7 8. The Law alone by it selfe is towards sinners but a dead letter onely the rule according unto which a man ought to walke not any principle enabling him to walke If Moses alone should speake unto men he could onely tell them what they ought to doe hee could in no wise enable them to doe it nay further the Law hath occasionally from the sinne of man a malignant propertie in it to irritate and exasperate lust the more to beget an occasionall rage and fiercenesse in our nature As the Sunne shining on a dung-hill exhaleth noysome vapours and maketh it stinke the more But now the Gospell by the Spirit doth not onely teach but helpe too sheweth us what wee should doe and giveth us strength to doe it we doe not onely therein see the glory of God but are withall changed into the same Image even from glory to glory that is as I conceive from that allusion to a glasse the glory of the Lord shining upon the Gospell and from the Gospell shining upon our hearts doth change them into the Image of the same glory even as the glory of the Sunne shining upon a glasse and from that glasse reflecting on a wall doth therein produce a more extraordinary image of its owne light so that the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the same with the Poets è speculo in speculum from the glory of the Gospell which is one glasse of Gods Image there is sh●ped the same glory in the heart which is another glasse of his Image This is that which the Apostle calleth the forming of Christ in the soule and the planting of it into the likenesse of his death and resurrection Fourthly it is a glorious Gospell in the Iudicature thereof The Spirit i● the Gospell doth convince not of righteousnesse onely but of Iudgement too that is the Spirit shall erect a throne in the hearts of men shall pull downe the prince of this world and dispossesse him shal enable mens owne hearts to proceed like upright Iudges with truth and with victory which are two of the principall honours of judgement against their owne lusts to censure to condemne to crucifie them though before they were as deare as their owne members to throw all their idols away as menstruous rags and to judge and revenge themselves Ephraim shall say what have I to doe any more with idols In that day saith the Lord every man shall cast away his idols of silver and his idols of gold which your owne hands have made unto you for a sin I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himselfe After that I was turned I repented and after that I was instructed I smote upon my thigh Thus the government of the Gospell in the heart makes a man severe to sentence every sinne to hang up his Haman his favourite lusts to give up himselfe to the obedience of Christ and to have his conversation his trading his treasure his priviledges his freedome his fellowship in heaven as being now constituted under the gracious and peaceable government of an heavenly Prince Fifthly it is a glorious Gospell in that it was to be a continuing ministration and an Immortall seed If that which was done away saith the Apostle was glorious much more that which remaineth is glorious 2 Cor. 3.11 Now the Gospell is able to preserve a man blamelesse unto the comming of our Lord Jesus it will not suffer a man to be shaken nor overturn'd by all the powers of darknesse there is strength enough in it to repell and wisdome to answer all the temptations and assaults of the enemies of our salvation If the world set upon us with any temptations on the right hand or on the left with disgraces persecutions discomforts exprobrations l●e this was the man who made God his helpe and would needs be more excellent than his neighbours the Gospel furnisheth us with sure promises and sure mercies this is answer sufficient against all the discouragements of the world I know whom I have beleeved I know that hee hath overcome the world I know that he is able to keepe that which I have committed unto him untill the last day and in the meane time the world is crucified unto me and I unto the world that is we are at an equall point of distance and defiance the world contemnes me and I am as carelesse of the world If with pleasures honours and gilded baites to draw us away from God Faith in the Gospell easily overcommeth the world for it giveth both the Promises and first-fruits of such Treasures as are infinitely more pretious and massie than all the world can affoord the very reproches of Christ how much more his Promises how infinitely more his Performances at the last are farre greater riches than the treasures of Egypt The daily sacrifice of a godly life and the daily feast of a quiet conscience put more sweetnesse into the afflictions of Christ than is in all the profits pleasures or preferments of the world being made bitter with the guilt of sinne If Satan or our owne reasonings stand up against the kingdome of Christ in us the Gospell is a store-house which can furnish us with armorie of all sorts to repell them Faith can quench firie darts the weapons of the spirit can captivate the very thoughts of the heart unto the obedience of Christ no weapon which is formed against it can prosper and every tongue which riseth up against it in judgement it shall condemn it is a staffe which can carry a man over any Jordan and can support comfort him in any shadow of death This is the honour of the Word
they may blaspheme the name of God and his doctrine Fourthly the Gospell of Christ is honoured by the unitie of the Spirit and concurrent judgements and affections of men toward● it When all the sincere prosessors thereof doe unanimously strive together and earnestly contend for it when all that ever have been or are acquainted therewith doe glorifie it with their suffrages and subscription Nemo omnes neminem omnes fefellere it must needs be a glorious Gospell if all that ever looked on it doe so conclude Nothing was ever able to deceive all men neither did so many ever combine to deceive others When the Philosophers severally strove for the precedence of their severall sects and every man after his owne order gave the next place unto Plato it was undoubtedly concluded that his was the most excellent because after their owne prejudice and personall respects it was honoured by the equall suffrages of all the rest How much more must the Gospell needes bee glorious which hath the joynt attestation of Angels and all holy men since the world began to honour it withall Therefore when the Apostle proveth the greatnesse of this heavenly mystery he useth a word which importeth the consent of men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without any doubt or by an universall confession Great is the mysterie of Godlinesse Doth it not much set forth the Glory of a Law that there should be so much wisedome power equitie majestie beautie in the face of it that every true subject in a Realme should concurre in a constant and uniforme love and obedience to it Let us therfore expresse the glory of the Gospell not only in our joynt confessions but in our united obedience thereunto and in our unanimous zeale and contention for it in our brotherly affections and compassions to one another therby for the schismes and disaffections of Christians bring much dishonour upon their holy profession which in all their miscariages doth ever by occasion of the unreasonablenesse of wicked men suffer together with them Therefore the Apostle from the unitie of Christ in himselfe concludeth that such he should be in his members too Is Christ divided hath he divers opinions or hath he the truth of God in respect of persons such as he is such should you bee likewise lest by your contentions you seeme to make another Christ or another Gospell than that which you have received Fifthly the Gospell of Christ is honoured in our studying of it and digging after it in our serious and painefull enquiries into the mysteries of it Saint Paul despised all other knowledge and shooke off every weight that he might presse forward with the more unwearied affections towards so excellent a treasure Surely if men had the spirit of the Apostle or of those blessed Angels which desire to pry into the Gospel of Christ they would not misse-spend so much pretious time in frothy and fruitlesse studies nor waste away that lampe of reason in their bosomes in empty and unnourishing blazes but would set more houres apart to looke into the patent of their salvation which is the booke of God and to acquaint themselves with Christ before-hand that when they come into his presence they may have the entertainement of friends and not of strangers Men that intend to travaile into forraigne kingdomes with any advantage to their parts or improvement of their experience doe before-hand season and prepare themselves with the language with some topographicall observations of the Countrey with some generall notions of the ingenie manners formes civilities entertainements of the natives there doe delight to converse with those men who are best learned in these or the like particulars Surely we al professe a journey to heaven a pilgrimage in this present world to have our conversation now where wee looke to have our everlasting abode with the Lord hereafter Now in the Gospell of Christ we have as it were a map a topographicall delineation of those glorious mansions which are there prepared for the Church we have a taste and description of the manners of that people we have some rudiments of the heavenly language in one word wee have abundantly enough not onely to prepare us for it but to enflame all the desires of our soule unto it even as exiles or captives desire to returne to their native Countrey Now then if wee no way regard to study it or acquaint our selves with it if wee seeme to desire the sight of Christ in heaven and when we may every day have a most blessed view of his face in the Glasse of his Gospel we turne away our eyes and regard it not we doe as good as proclaime to all the world that either our hopes of heaven are very slender or our care thereof little or none at all And this I take for a most undoubted truth that there is so much of the knowledge grace and spirit of Christ and through him of the Father in the holy Scriptures and those onely are the things which make heaven to bee the home and the hope of men as that whosoever neglecteth the study of them and suffereth the Scriptures to lye by him as a sealed booke would bee every whit as unwilling if heaven gates were wide open unto him to relinquish his portion in the earth and to spend his time in the fruition or contemplation of that glorious Countrey Lastly wee honour the Gospell when in our greatest distresses we make it our Altar of refuge our doore of escape the ground of all our hope and comfort the only anchor to stay our soules in any spiritual tempest the only staffe to leane upon in our greatest darkenesse What ever other carnall comforts men may for a time rejoyce in they will all prove but as a fire of sparkes or as a blaze of thornes which can yeeld no solid or abiding light unto the soule When sinners in Sion begin once to be affraid and to be surprized with the fearefulnesse of a guilty soule when the affrighted conscience shall put that dreadfull question in the Prophet to it selfe How can I dwell with devouring fire how can I dwell with everlasting burnings there will no other answere allay the scorching terrour thereof but that in the end of the same Chapter The people that dwell therein shall be forgiven their iniquity A man may as soone drinke up the water of the sea with spunges or remove mountaines with one of his fingers as be able to draine out these close and incorporated sorrowes which together with sinne doe soake through the whole substance of the soule with vaine companie worldly imployments or youthfull pleasure All these doe but respite them for a time that they may returne the stronger But if thou wilt indeed be comforted sue out thy pardon flye to the court of mercy which is erected in the Gospell This was our Saviours argument to the man that was sicke of the Palsie Sonne be of good cheere thy sinnes be
wisdome more various and admirable curiositie more filling and plentifull satisfaction more proportion to the boundlesse desires of a soule once rectified more fruit and salvation which should bee the end of every Christian mans learning than in all other knowledge which either past or present ages can afford In one word every where and in all things I am there taught how to want and how to abound and how to do all things through Christ that strengthens me A Christian can be set in no estate wherein the abundant Care of Christ over him is not in the Gospell wonderfully magnified And commonly in the greatest straits he sheweth the greatest care as waters runne strongest in the narrowest passages when we walk in darknesse and have no light when we seeke water and there is none and our tongue faileth for thirst then is his fittest time to helpe us and then is our fittest time to stay upon him Israel were deliverd by miracles of mercy from their Egyptian bondage and in the wildernesse conducted by a miraculous presence and fed with Angels food Isaak was upon the Altar and then in the mount was the Lord seene and his mercy stepped in betweene the knife and the sacrifice Iacob in great feare of his brother Esau and then comforted by prevailing with an Angell which was stronger than Esau. Peter in sorest distresse for denying Christ and he the first man to whom Christ sent newes of his Resurrection Paul in the shippe visited by an Angell Peter in prison delivered by an Angell The distressed woman at Christs Sepulcher comforted by an Angell Such as the extremities of the Saints are such is Christs care for their deliverances And this Care is further commended that it proceedeth solely from the grace and compassion of Christ there is no affection naturally in us to desire it there is no vertue in us to deserve it when we were in our bloud well pleased with our owne pollution hee doubled his goodnesse and used a kinde of violence and importunitie of mercy to make us live when we did not seeke after him when wee did not so much as aske whether hee were fit to bee sought when wee were aliens from his Covenant and strangers to his name hee even then multiplied his invitations unto us I said behold mee behold me unto a people that were not called by my name When we were weake full of impotencie when wee were sinners full of antipathy when we were enemies full of obstinacie and rebellion when wee cared not for him but turned our backes and stopped our eares and suffered him to throw away in vaine so many Sermons so many Sacraments so many mercies so many afflictions upon us when we cared not for our selves no man repented or said what have I done even then did hee magnifie his compassion towards us hee cared for us when we neglected our selves and despised him he bestowed his mercy not onely upon the unthankfull but upon the injurious But then a little compassion is enough for those that had deserved none for those that had provoked scorne and displeasure against themselves but herein is the care and tendernesse of Christ abundantly magnified that it hath in it all the ingredients of a most soveraigne mercy that nothing more could have beene done than he hath done for us First for the foundation and original of al mercy there is in him an overflowing of love without stint or measure a turning of heart a rouling and sounding of bowels a love which surpasseth all knowledge which is a● much beyond the thoughts or comprehensions as it is above the merits of men Secondly there is a studie and inquisitivenesse how to doe good a debating within himselfe a consulting and projecting how to shew mercy an arguing as it were of his grace with mans sinne and his owne severitie How shall I give thee up Ephraim How shall I deliver thee Israel How shall I make thee as Admah How shall I set thee as Zeboim mine heart is turned within me my repentings are kindled together True it is thou hast beene unto me as the Rulers of Sodome and as the people of Gomorrah But shall I be unto thee as I have beene unto them Am I not God and not man shall I change my Covenant because thou hast multiplied thy backslidings The Lord useth such humane expressions of his proceedings with men as if their sinnes had put him to a stand and brought him to difficulties in shewing mercy I said how shall I put thee amongst the children and give thee a pleasant Land c. Thy case is very desperate and thou hast stopped up the courses of my mercy towards thy selfe how then shall I make good my resolutions of compassion towards those that reject and nullifie it to themselves surely there is no way but one to over-rule the hearts of obstinate sinners that they may not turne away any more Thou shalt call mee my Father that is I will put filial affections awful thoughts constant resolutions into thy heart and thou shalt not turne away from mee I will melt them and trie them saith the Lord for how shall I doe for the daughter of my people The Lord setteth himselfe to study and contrive mercie for his people that as they set up their sinnes as it were in pride to pose his Covenant so he gathereth together his thoughts of mercy as it were to conquer their sinnes Thirdly there is constancie and continuance in this his Care His mercy endureth his compassions faile not but are renewed every morning And therefore the mercies of David that is of Christ for so he is called or the mercies of the Covenant made with David are called Sure mercies they have a foundation the everlasting love and counsell of God upon which they are built they have many seales by which they are confirmed the faithfulnesse the immutabilitie and the oath of God If there were not continuance in his mercies if he were not the same yesterday and to day and for ever in his truth and fidelitie to his Church if hee should change and turne from us as oft as we forsake him if he should leave us in the hand of our owne counsell and not afford us such daily supplies of his Spirit as might support us against the ruinous disposition of our owne nature wee should be children of wrath every day anew But herein doth the abundant care of Christ in the Gospell declare it selfe unto us that though we are wormes in our selves full of weaknesse and of earthly affections yet God hath a right-hand of righteousnesse which can uphold us that though we are bent to back-sliding yet he is God and not man unchangeable in his Covenant with the Persons almighty in his power and mercy towards the sinnes of men both to cover them with his righteousnesse and to cure them by his Spirit both to forgive for the time past
dispensation toward one and other the giving of saving knowledge to one people and with-holding it from others was not grounded upon any preceding differences and dispositions thereunto in the people but onely in the Love of God The Lord thy God hath chosen thee to bee a speciall people unto himselfe above all people that are upon the face of the earth The Lord did not set his love upon you nor choose you because yee were more in number than any people for ye were the fewest of all people but because the Lord loved you c. The Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possesse it for thy righteousnesse for you art a stiffe-necked people Your Fathers dwelt on the other side of the flood mold time and they served other gods There was no difference betweene them and the Gentiles from whom I gathered them Fiftly that the Gospell was hidden from others in God his owne will and counsell was the cause of it Hee forbad men to goe into the cities of the Gentiles neither were they to goe unto them without a speciall gift and commission The same Beneplacitum was the reason of revealing it to some and of hiding it from others Even so ô father for so it seemed good in thy sight If all these particulars bee true needs must we both admire the inscrutablenesse of Gods judgments towards the Gentiles of old for no humane presumptions are a fit measure of the wayes and severities of God towards sinners And also everlastingly adore his Compassions towards us whom hee hath reserved for these times of light and out of the alone unsearchable riches of his grace hath together with principalities and powers in heavenly places made us to see what is the fellowship of that great mysterie which from the beginning of the world was hidden in himselfe Thirdly in that the Lord doth send forth the Gospell of Christ out of Sion into the world wee may further observe that the Gospell is a Message and an invitation from heaven unto men For for that end was it sent that thereby men might bee invited and perswaded to salvation The Lord sendeth his Sonne up and down carrieth him from place to place he is set forth before mens eyes he comes and stands and calls knocks at their doores and beseecheth them to bee reconciled Hee setteth his word before us at our doores and in our mouths and eares He hath not erected any standing sanctuary or city of refuge for men to fly for their salvations unto but hath appointed Ambassadors to carry this treasure unto mens houses where hee inviteth them and intreateth them and requireth them and commandeth them and compelleth them to come into his feast of mercy And this must needs bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an unsearchable riches of grace for mercy pardon preferment life salvation to goe a begging and sue for acceptance and very unsearchable likewise must needs bee the love of sinne and madnesse of folly in wicked men to trample upon such pearles and to neglect so great salvation when it is tendered unto them O what a heavy charge will it bee for men at the last day to have the mercy of God the humility of Christ the entreaties of his Spirit the proclamations of pardon the approches of salvation the dayes the years the ages of peace the ministers of the word the booke of God the great Mysterie of Godlinesse to rise up in judgement and to testifie against their soules Lastly in that the Gospell is sent from God the Dispencers thereof must looke unto their mission and not intrude upon so sacred a businesse before they are thereunto called by God Now this call is twofold Extraordinary by immediate instinct and revelation from God which is ever accompanied with immediate and infused gifts of this wee doe not now speake And Ordinary by imposition of hands and Ecclesiasticall designation Whereunto there are to concurre three things First an Act of Gods providence casting a man upon such a course of studies and fashioning his minde unto such affections towards learning and disposing of him in such Schooles and Colleges of the Prophets as are congruons preparations and were appointed for nurseries and seminaries of Gods Church It is true many things fall under Gods providence which are not within his allowance and therefore it is no sufficient argument to conclude Gods consent or commission in this office because his wisedome hath cast mee upon a collegiate education But when therewithall hee in whose hands the hearts of all men are as clay or wax to bee moulded into such shapes as the counsell of his will shall order hath bended the desires of my heart to serve him in his Church and hath set the strongest delight of my minde upon those kindes of learning which are unto that service most proper and conducent when measuring either the good will of my heart or the appliablenesse of my parts by this and other professions of learning I can cleerly conclude that that measure and proportion which the Lord hath given mee is more suteable unto this than other learned callings I suppose other qualifications herewith concurring a man may safely from thence conclude that God who will have every man live in some profitable calling doth not onely by his providence permit but by his secret direction lead him unto that service whereunto the measure of gifts which he hath conferred upon him are most suteable and proper And therefore secondly there is to bee respected in this Ordinary mission the meet qualification of the person who shall bee ordained unto this ministerie For if no Prince will send a mechanick from his loome or his sheers in an honorable Embassage to some other forraigne Prince shall wee thinke that the Lord will send forth stupid and unprepared instruments about so great a worke as the perfecting of the Saints and Edification of the Church It is registred for the perpetuall dishonor of that wicked King Ieroboam who made no other use of any Religion but as a secondary bye thing to bee the supplement of policie that he made of the Lowest of the People those who were really such as the Apostles were falsly esteemed to be the scumme and offscouring of men to bee Priests unto the Lord. Now the Qualities more directly and essentially belonging unto this office are these two Fidelitie and Abilitie The things saith the Apostle which thou hast heard of amongst many witnesses the same commit thou to Faithfull men who shall bee able to teach others also Wee are stewards of no meaner a gift than the Grace of God and the Wisedome of God that grace which by S. Peter is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a manifold Grace and that wisedome which by S. Paul is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the manifold wisedome of God Wee are the depositaries and dispencers of the most pretious treasures which were ever opened unto the
faine to confesse and declare to the world in their Councell of Trent Onely herein is the difference The Councell pretended a Reformation in points of Discipline and manners and wee made a Reformation in points of Doctrine too When Christ purged the Temple of buyers and sellers it was the same Temple after which before When a man separateth the wheate from the chaffe it is the same corne which before In these corrupter ages then the pure Professour of Christ who denied not his faith did dwell where Satan had his seate The members of Christ were amongst the Rulers of Antichrist Wee are not another Church newly started up but the same which before from the Apostles times held the common and necessarie grounds of Faith and Salvation which grounds being in latter ages perverted and over-turned by Antichristianisme have beene by valiant Champions for the faith of Christ therefrom vindicated who have onely pruned the Lords Vine and picked out the stones and driven out the bores out of his Vineyard but have not made either one or other new Now this point that Christ ruleth in the midst of his enemies is ground of great confidence in his Church in as much as shee subsisteth not upon any corruptible strength of her owne but upon the Promise decree oath power and love of God things invincible by all the Powers of darkenesse Let the enemies rage never so much they cannot dis-throne Christ nor extinguish his Gospell for it is an everlasting Gospell It is but as the comming forth of a Shepheard against a Lion as the Prophet compareth it For either Christ is unable to protect his people and that is against Saint Iude Hee is able to keepe you from falling and to present you faultlesse c. or else he is unwilling and that is against Saint Paul This is the will of God even your sanctification Or else both his Power and his will are suspended upon expectation of humane concurrence or nullified and disappointed by us and that is against the influence of his Grace which giveth us both the will and the deed against the mercie of his gracious promise I will be mercifull to their unrighteousnesse and their sinnes and their iniquities will I remember no more I will heale their back-slidings I will save them freely against the immutabilitie of his Covenant and holy nature I am God and not man I change not therefore the sonnes of Iacob are not destroied Now besides this generall observation the words afford some particular notes which I will but briefly touch As first That Christs kingdome in this world is Regnum Crucis a Kingdome beset with enemies of all other the most hated and opposed They that submit unto it must resolve to be herein conformable to their head a Crosse was his Throne and Thornes were his Crowne and every one which will live godly must suffer persecution and through many afflictions enter into his Masters Kingdome Quod erat Christus erimus Christiani No marvell if the world hate the Church of Christ for it hated him first In his word he is resisted disobeyed belied and if it were possible silenced and corrupted in his officers mocked and misused in his subjects persecuted and reviled in his Spirit thrust away and grieved in his worship neglected and polluted in all his wayes slandered and blasphemed The Reasons of which strange entertainement of the Kingdome of Christ are first because it is a New Kingdome which enters into the world by way of chalenge and dispossession of former lords and therefore no wonder if it finde opposition Secondly it is an invisible unconspicuous unattended desolate and in appearance ignoble kingdome It began in the forme of a servant in the ignominie of a Crosse none of the Princes of this world none of the learned of this world to countenance or helpe set it up but amongst them all esteemed as an offensive and foolish thing Thirdly it is an universall kingdome Nec parem patitur nec superiorem Christ will admit of no Consorts or Corrivals in his Government Body and Soule and Spirit hee will have wholly and throughout unto himselfe And this amongst others is given for the reason why when Tiberius proposed Christ unto the Romane Senate with the priviledge of his owne suffrage to be worshipped they rejected him because hee would be a God alone If hee would exempt some of the earthly members from his subjection let lust have the eye or folly the eare or violence the hand or covetousnesse the heart or any other evill affection share with him he would be the easier tolerated but when he will be absolute and nothing must remaine in our hearts but as his vassall to be spoiled subdued condemned and crucified by him if the whole state of sinne must bee ruined and the body destroied no wonder if the world cannot away with him Fourthly which is the Summe of all It is a heavenly Kingdome a spirituall Kingdome My Kingdome is not of this world and therefore no marvell if the divels of hell and the lusts of the flesh doe set themselves against him Note secondly even there where Christs Throne and Kingdome is set up hee hath enemies Satan hath his seate even where Christ dwelleth Men may say they are Jewes and are not but of the Synagogue of Satan and men may say they are Christians and are not but of the kingdome of Satan too A Wenne in the body seemeth to belong unto the integrity of the whole when indeed it is an enemie and thiefe therein Ivie about a tree seemeth to embrace it with much affection when indeed it doth but kill and choake it Men may take upon them the profession of Christians and like a Wenne bee skinned over with the same out-side which the true members have may pretend much submission worship and ceremony unto him and yet such is the hellish hypocrisie of the heart the same men may haply inwardly swell and rancle against the power of his truth and Spirit This people saith the Lord draw neere me with their mouth and honour mee with their lips but have removed their heart farre from me and their feare towards mee is taught by the precepts of men In the Apostles times there were false brethren and false teachers who crept in to spie out and betray the libertie of the Church and privily to bring in damnable heresies and to speake lies in hypocrisie that is under the pretext of devotion and carnall humilitie to corrupt the Doctrine of Christ and under a forme of Godlinesse to denie the Power thereof Therefore Antichrist is called a Whore because hee should seduce the Christian world with much expression of love and creepe peaceably and by flatteries into the kingdome of Christ of these severall enemies of Christ under the profession of his name and worship some are Christians but not in purity as heretikes some not in unity as schismatikes some not
constant to any rules Now this division of the minde stands thus The heart on the one side is taken up with the pleasures of sinne for the present and on the other with the desires of salvation for the future and now according as the workings and representations of the one or other are at the time more fresh and predominant in like maner is sinne for that time either cherished or suppressed Many men at a good Sermon when the matter is fresh and newly presented while they are looking on their face in the glasse or in any extremitie of sicknesse when the provisions of lust doe not relish for the present when they have none but thoughts of salvation to depend upon are very resolute to make promises vowes and professions of better living but when the pleasures of sin grow strong to present themselves again they returne like a man recover'd of an ague with more stomacke and greedinesse to their lusts againe As water which hath been stop'd for a while rusheth with the more violence when its passages are opened A double heart is like the boles of a Scale according as more weight is put into one or other so are they indifferently over-rul'd unto either motion up or downe When I see a vapour ascend out of the earth into the aire why should I not thinke that it will never leave rising till it get up to heaven and yet because the motion is not naturall but caused either by expulsion from a heat within or by attraction from a heat without when the cause of that ascent is abated and the matter gathers together into a thicker consistence it growes heavie and fals downe againe Even such is the affection of those faint unresolved desires of men who like Agrippa are but halfe-perswaded to believe in Christ. But now lastly wee must observe that in the day of Christs power when he by his word and Spirit worketh effectually in the hearts of men they are then made free-will offerings Totally willing to obey and serve him in all conditions The heart of every one stirreth him up and his Spirit maketh him willing for the worke and service of the Lord Exod. 35.21 They yeeld themselves unto the Lord and their members as weapons of righteousnesse unto him 2 Chron. 30.8 Rom. 6.19 They offer and present themselves to God as a living Sacrifice and therefore they are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an oblation sanctified by the Holy Ghost Rom. 12.1 Rom. 15.16 Therefore they are said to come unto Christ by the vertue of his Fathers teaching Ioh. 6.45 To runne unto him Esai 55.5 To gather themselves together under him as a common head and to flow or flock together with much mutuall encouragement unto the mountaine of the Lord Hos. 1.11 Esai 2.2 3. To waite upon him in his Law Esai 42.4 To enter into a sure covenant and to write and seale it Nehem. 9.38 In one word To serve him with a perfect heart and with a willing minde 1 Chron. 28.9 when the heart is perfect undivided and goeth all together the minde will bee willing to serve the Lord. This willingnesse of Christs people sheweth it selfe in two things First in begetting most cordiall and constant Enmitie against all the enemies of Christ never holding any league or intelligence with them but being alwayes ready to answere the Lord as David did Saul Thy servant will goe and fight with this Philistime Hee that is a voluntary in Christs armies is not disheartned with the potencie policie malice subtlety or prevailing faction of any of his adversaries Hee is contented to deny himselfe to renounce the friendship of the world to bid defiance to the allurements of Satan to smile upon the face of danger to hate father and mother and land and life to be cruel to himselfe and regardlesse of others for his masters service Through honor and dishonor through evill report and good report through a Sea and a wildernesse through the hottest services and strongest oppositions will hee follow the Lambe whither soever he goeth though he receive the word in much affliction yet hee will receive it with joy too Secondly in begetting most loving constant and deare affections to the mercy grace glory and wayes of God an universall conformity unto Christ our head who was contented to take upon him the forme of a servant to have his eare bored and his will subjected unto the will of his Father I delight to doe thy will ô my God yea thy Law is within my heart Psal. 40.8 And as hee was so are all his in this world of the same minde judgement Spirit conversation and therefore of the same will too Now this deare and melting affection of the heart toward Christ and his wayes whereby the soule longeth after him and hasteth unto him is wrought by severall principles First by the Conviction of our naturall Estate and a through humiliation for the same Pride is ever the principle of disobedience They were the proud men who said unto Ieremie thou speakest falsly the Lord hath not sent thee Ier. 43.2 And they were the proud men who hardned their necks and withdrew the shoulder and would not heare and refused to obey Nehem. 9.16 17 29. A man must bee first brought to denie himselfe before hee will bee willing to follow Christ and to lug a crosse after him A man must first humble himselfe before he will walke with God Mic. 6.8 The poore onely receive the Gospell The hungrie onely finde sweetnesse in bitter things Extremities will make any man not onely willing but thankfull to take any course wherin hee may recover himselfe and subsist againe when the soule findes it selfe in darknesse and hath no light and begins to consider whither darknesse leads it that it is even now in the mouth of Hell under the paw of the roaring lion under the guilt of sinne the curse of the Law and the hatred and wrath of God it cannot chuse but most willingly pursue any probability and with most inlarged affections meete any tender of deliverance Suppose wee that a Prince should cause some bloudy malefactor to bee brought forth should set before his eyes all the racks and tortures which the wit of man can invent to punish prodigions offenders withall and should cause him to tast some of those extremities and then in the middest of his howling and anguish should not onely reach out a hand of mercy to deliver him but should further promise him upon his submission to advance him like Ioseph from the iron which enters into his soule unto publike honor and service in the state would not the heart of such a man bee melted into thankfulnesse and with all submission resigne it selfe unto the mercy and service of so gracious a Prince Now the Lord doth not onely deale thus with sinners doth not onely cause them by the report of his word and by the experience of their own guilty hearts to feel the weight fruitlesnesse
enabled unto this great function Esay 61.1.42.1 Matth. 3.16 17. Heb. 1.9 If then God call Christ unto his Priesthood by a solemne Oath and make him surety of a better covenant we ought to take the more especiall notice thereof for when God sweares he must be heard The more excellent any thing is the more earnest hee should bee given unto it for how shall we escape saith the Apostle if wee neglect 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 so great Salvation so sure a covenant Heb. 2.1 3. This is the onely rocke on which we may cast anchor in any trouble doubt or feare of Spirit It is not our owne will or strength that holds us up from ruine but onely Gods Oath by which Christ is made a Priest Able to save to the uttermost all that come unto God by him Saint Paul and his company were in a great tempest all hope that they should be saved was taken away Act. 27.20 yet he exhorts them to bee of good cheere because there should not bee the losse of any mans life amongst them and the ground hereof was Gods promise which he beleeved verse 24 25. The case is the same with us we are compassed about with infirmities with enemies too hard and with sinnes too heavie for us with feares and doubting that we shall lose all againe how can wee in such tempests of Spirit be cheered but onely by casting anchor upon Gods covenant which is established by an oath by learning to hope above hope Rom. 4. 18. to be strong in him when we are weake in our selves to bee faithfull in him when wee are fearefull in our selves to be stedfast in him when we stagger in our selves in the midst of Satans buffets and our owne corruptions to finde a sufficiencie in his Grace able to answer and to ward off all 2 Cor. 12.10 To catch hold of his covenant and to flie to the hope that is set before us as to the only refuge and sanctuary of a pursued soule when wee are not able to stand by our selves Esay 56.6 Heb. 6.18 It is hard very thing when a man hath a distinct view of his filthinesse and guilt by reason of time not to give over himselfe and his salvation as desparate things It is nothing but ignorance and insensibilitie which makes men presume of the pardon of sinne In this case then we must consider Gods Oath and Covenant with his people First not to reject them for their sinnes Israel hath not beene forsaken nor Iudah of his God though their land was filled with sinne against the holy One of Israel Ier. 51.5 My People are bent unto backsliding c. and yet I will not execute the fiercenesse of mine anger I will not return to destroy Ephraim For I am God and not Man c. Hos. 11.7 9. Secondly not alwayes to suffer them to lie under sin but in due time to heale their backeslidings Hos. 14.4 he will not onely remove our transgressions from himselfe but he will remove them from us too and that so farre as that it shall be as possible for the East and West to meet together as for a man and his sin Psal. 103.12 Though we have made him to serve with our sinnes and wearied him with our iniquities yet Hee will not remember against us our sinnes past Esay 43.25 neither will hee see against us the sinnes which remaine Numb 23.11 These he will forgive and these he will subdue and all this because of his Truth unto Iacob and his mercy unto Abraham which he sware unto our fathers from the dayes of old Micah 7.18 19.20 Hee hath given us ground for both our feete to stand upon and hold fast for both our hands to cleave unto A Promise and an Oath that by two immutable things wee might have strong consolation Heb. 6.18 So the Apostle saith that all the promises of God in Christ are yea and amen yea to note their Truth and amen to note their certainty and stability being confirmed by the Oath of Christ. For so that word may be conceived either as an Oath or at least as a very strong and confident affirmation which is equivalent unto an oath 2 Cor. 1.20 except happily we will understand 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee the same thing expressed in severall tongues as Abba Pater in other places thereby noting not onely the stabilitie but the universalitie of Gods promises Many things there are in this call of Christ unto his Office to confirme this consolation and upon which the troubled soule may cast Anker First from the Father he hath received a command and call unto thy service and so as a Servant he hath fidelity for God choseth none but faithfull servants Hee was an Apostle and high Priest sent to preach the Will and to pacifie the wrath of God and he was faithfull to him that appointed him as Moses was Heb. 3.11.2 And if he be faithfull we may trust him for he will doe the worke which is given him to doe Faithfull is he that calleth you who also will doe it 1 Thes. 5.24 Secondly from himselfe there is a voluntarie submission whereby he gives himselfe for his Church and layes downe his owne life Eph. 5.25 Tit. 2.14 Ioh. 10.11 for being of himselfe equall with the Father he could not be by him commanded ordained or overruled to any service without a voluntary concurring to the same decree emptying himselfe and taking on him the forme of a servant making himselfe lesse than his Father and in some sort for a while lower than the Angels that so he might be commanded So that besides his fidelitie to rest on as a servant here is his especiall mercy as a concurring agent in the decree whereby he was ordained unto this office He is not onely a Faithfull but a mercifull high Priest to make reconciliation for the sinnes of men Heb. 2.17 But a man may both by his Fidelitie as a servant and by his Mercy as having the same tender compassion with him that sent him be willing to helpe another out of misery and yet may not be able to effect his owne desires for want of Power And therefore Thirdly by the Vnction of the holy Spirit who proceedeth from the Father and himselfe hee is said to bee sanctified by the Father Iohn 10.36 and to sanctifie himselfe Iohn 17.19 To have received power and authority from his Father Matth. 28.18 Iohn 5.27 Iohn 17.2 and to have power likewise within himselfe Iohn 10.18 That spirit which for the discharge of this office hee brought with him in fulnesse and unto all purposes of that service into the world is a Spirit of Power 2 Tim. 1.7 whereby he is enabled perfectly to save all commers Heb. 7.25 so that unto his Fidelity and Mercy here is added Abilitie likewise Fourthly as he received an office and a service so hee received a Promise from his father likewise which did much encourage him in
of reconciliation and calling in his patent and shutting up his office of mercy againe How then comes it that this covenant is immutable and Christs Priesthood of everlasting and unchangeable vigor to all ages and generations of men That there shall never be erected in the Church any other forme of Gods worship or any other instruments of Mans salvation than those which we now enjoy The Apostle groundeth it upon two reasons Heb. 6.17 18. The Promise and the Oath of God First The Promise putteth a right in the creature which he had not before and that Promise determineth the Will of God to the being and leave not that indifferent to the being or not being of the Covenant For it is the foundation of a just claime which wee by faith may make upon the Fidelity Iustice and Power of God to make it Good He is faithfull and just to forgive us our sinnes 1 Iohn 1.9 The righteous God shall give unto mee a Crowne of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4.8 righteousnesse and justice as well as mercy is the ground of forgivenesse of sinnes and salvation not in relation or respect to merit in us but to promise in God Onely mercy it was which moved him to promise and having promised onely truth and fidelity and righteousnesse bindeth him to performe As impossible it is for God to breake any promise and to lie unto David as it is to bee an unholy God or to deny himselfe Psal. 89.35 2 Tim. 2.13 1 Thes. 5.24 Secondly the Oath of God for that pawnes his owne Being Life Power Truth Holinesse to make good that which he hath so ratified and upon these two doth the immutability of the second Covenant and of Christs Priesthood depend Here then wee see upon what ground all our comfort and assurance subsisteth not upon any strength power libertie or inherent grace already received which wee of our selves are every day apt to waste and be cheated of by Satan and the world but upon Gods unchangeable mercy and covenant This was all Davids salvation and desire all that his heart rested upon that though his house were not so with God that is did faile much of that beautie and puritie which therein God required and therefore did deserve to be cast off yet God had made with him an everlasting covenant ordered in all things and sure 2 Sam. 23.5 When the conscience is afflicted with the sense of sinne with the feare of its owne slipperinesse and unstedfastnesse in Gods covenant this is all it hath to support it That God is one Galath 3.19 That Christ is the same yesterday and to day and for ever Heb. 13.8 that he is where he ever was ready to meet those that returne Esay 64.5 Luke 15.20 If I should doe to men as I have done to God they would despise forsake revenge themselves on me I should never receive grace nor favour againe But God is not as man Hos. 11.9 the whole cause of his compassion is in and from himselfe and therefore he doth not take the advantage of our failings and exasperations to alter the course of his dealing towards us Psalm 103 8-14 Though we faile every day yet his compassions faile not and therefore from his immutable mercy it is that wee are not comsumed Lam. 3.22 Mal. 3.6 His blessing of an adopted people is an irreversible thing because he is God and not man and therefore cannot repent nor call in the promise which he hath made for which purpose hee doth not behold iniquitie i● Iacob nor perversenesse in Israel Numb 23.19 20 21. If the Sunne should be alwayes immoveably fixed in one place as it was a little while in Ioshua's time at the destruction of the Kings Iosh. 10.12 13. though I might shut out the light of the Sunne from me yet as soone as I remove the curten the Sunne is still where it was readie to be found and to shine upon me The case were lamentable with us if so often as man provokes Gods justice he should presently revoke his mercy if the issue of our salvation should depend upon the frailty and mutability of our owne nature and our life should be in our owne keeping If the pure Angels of heaven fell from their created condition to be most blacke and hideous adversaries of the God that made them if Adam stood not firme with all that stocke of strength and integrity of will which he had in Paradise how can I who have so many lusts within so many enemies without such armies of feares and temptations round about mee bee able to resist and stand Grace inherent is as mutable in me as it was in Adam Satan as malitious and impetuous against me as against Adam Propensions to sinne and falling away strong in me which were none in Adam snares as many weaknesses more enemies as many temptations more from the grace which is deposited in mine own keeping I cannot but depart daily if the Lord should leave me in the hand of mine owne counsell even as water though it could be made as hot as fire yet being left unto it selfe will quickly reduce and work it selfe to its own originall coldnesse againe We have grace abiding in our hearts as we have light in our houses alwayes by emanation effusion and supportance from the Sunne of righteousnesse which shines upon us Therefore this is all the comfort which a man hath remaining that though I am wanting to my selfe and doe often turne from God yet he is not wanting to mee nor returnes from me for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 The heart of the best man is like the wheeles in Ezekiels vision Ezek. 1.16 As mutable and moveable severall wayes as wheeles as perplexed hindered and distracted in it selfe as crosse wheeles in one another grace swaying one way and flesh another who can expect stabilitie in such a thing Surely of it selfe it hath none but the constancie and uniformitie of motion in the wheeles was this that they were joyned to the living creatures who in their motion returned not when they went vers 17-21 such is the stability of the faithfull in the covenant they have it not from themselves for they are all like wheeles but from him unto whom by the same Spirit of life they are united who cannot repent nor returne from the covenant of mercy which he hath made Thou art a Priest for ever after the order of Melchisedech We now come to speake of the Priesthood of Christ it selfe which is thus sealed and made immutable by the oath of God Every high Priest saith the Apostle is ordained for men in things pertaining to God that he may offer both gifts and sacrifices for sinnes Heb. 5.1 These sacrifices are of two sorts some Eucharisticall as testifications of homage subjection duty and service as the dedication of the first fruits the offerings of Abel and Cain the meat and drinke offerings c. some Ilasticall or expiatory for the washing away
Secondly God did purpose not to suffer sinne to passe utterly unrevenged and that for these reasons First because of his great Hatred thereunto He is of purer eyes than to behold evill he cannot looke on iniquitie Hab. 1.13 it provoketh a nauseousnesse and abhorrencie in him Psal. 5.6 Zech. 8.17 Revel 3.16 Amos 5.21 22. Esay 1.13 14. Secondly because of his Truth and the Law which he had established against sinne which he will in no wise abolish one jot or tittle shall in no wise passe from the Law till all be fulfilled Matth. 5.18 for it is altogether undecent especially to the wisdome and righteousnesse of God that that which provoketh the execution should procure the abrogation of his Law that that should supplant and undermine the Law for the alone preventing whereof the Law was before established Thirdly because of his terrour and fearefull Majestie for God will have men alwayes to tremble before him and by his terrour to bee perswaded from sinning 2 Cor. 5.10 11. God will for this cause have men alwaies to feare before him because he reserveth to himselfe entire the punishment of sinne Feare him who is able to destroy both bodie and soule in hell I say unto you feare him saith our Saviour Matth 10.28 Luke 12.4 for it is a fearefull thing to fall into the hands of the living God and therefore we ought to serve him with reverence and godly feare because he is a consuming fire Hebr. 10.30.12.28 29. Thirdly adde unto all this the everlasting Impotency which is in man either to satisfie God or to repaire himselfe Gods justice is Infinit which is wronged his glory infinite of which man had attempted to spoile rob him and man is both finite in himselfe and very impotent by reason of sin for to be a sinner and without strength are termes equivalent in the Apostle Rom. 5.6.8 Now then betweene finite and infinite there can be no proportion and therefore from the one to the other there can be no satisfaction man is utterly unable to doe any of Gods will because he is altogether carnall Rom. 8.7 1 Cor. 2.14 and he is utterly unable either to suffer or to breake thorow the wrath of God because he hath not strength enough to endure it nor obedience to submit unto it Now then joyne all these things together and wee shall see the absolute necessity we had of a Priest God will not execute the severity of his Law for thereby the creature should everlastingly lose the fruition of him and he should likewise lose the service and voluntary subjection of his creature And yet he will not abolish his Law neither lest thereby his justice should be the more securely abused his hatred against sinne the lesse declared his truth in all his threatnings questioned and his dreadfull Majesty by men neglected as the woodden king by the frogs in the fable hee will not punish those persons whom he loves because he is pitifull to them he will not passe over the sinnes which he hates because he is jealous towards himselfe Man and sin are as inseparably joyned together since the fall as fire and heat yet God wil have mercy on the man he wil take vengeance of the sin Some course then or other must there be found out to translate this mans sins on anothers person who may be able to beare them and to interest this mans person in anothers righteousnesse which may bee able to cover him Some way must be found out that things may bee all one in regard of man as if the Law had beene utterly abrogated and that they may be all one in regard of God too as if the creature had beene utterly condemned And all this is done in our High Priest On him was executed the curse of the Law by him was fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law for him was remitted the sin of man and through him were all things made new againe The world was in Christ as in its suretie making satisfaction to the justice of God and God was in Christ as in his Ambassadour reconciling the world unto himselfe againe By all which wee see the necessitie which man lapsed had of a Priest to restore him Hence then we may learne first how much we ought to hate sinne which armes the Law Justice and power of God against us As hatefull as it is unto God so hatefull it is in it selfe for hee judgeth uprightly hee seeth things just as they are without passion prejudice or partialitie and as hatefull as it is in it selfe so hatefull should it be unto us as the onely ground of our misery of the creatures vanitie and of Gods dishonour Wee see it is so hatefull unto God that he will most certainly be avenged of it If he spare me yet he will not spare my sin though his owne beloved Son must be punished for it O then why should that be light to mee which was as heavie as a milstone to the soule of Christ Why should that bee my pleasure which was his passion Why should that be in a throne with me which was upon a crosse with him Why should I allow that to be really in me which the Lord so severely punished when the guilt thereof was but imputed to his Sonne Many sinnes there are which others in their practice aswell as Papists in their doctrine and profession esteeme for light and veniall sinnes And veniall indeed they are per exoratorem Patris Christum as Tertullian states the question by Christ who is a prevailing Advocate with the Father But however let not us dare esteeme that a light thing for which Christ died And woe had it beene for men if Christ had not in his body on the tree carried as well the guilt of our idle words our vaine thoughts our loose and impertinent actions as of our oaths execrations and blasphemies If great sinnes were as the speare and nailes certainely small sinnes were the thornes which pierced his head And therefore we should learne with David to hate every evill way because God hates it and suffers it not to passe unpunished to revenge the quarrell of Christ against those lusts of ours which nailed him to his crosse and to crucifie them for him againe for for that end was Christ crucified that our old man might be crucified with him that the body of sin might be destroyed that hence-forth we should not serve sin Rom. 6.6 Againe wee see by this necessitie of a Priest how deepely we stand engaged to our mercifull God who hath vouchsafed to helpe us in our greatest necessitie How we ought to love him who hath first of all loved us How wee ought in our bodies and in our spirits to glorifie him who hath so dearely bought us How we should like Voluntaries fight for him who overcame for us How thankfull we should be to him who was so compassionate unto us How wee should admire and adore the unsearchable riches of his wisdome and
goodnesse who when wee were desperately and incurably gone had found out a way of escape and deliverance for us God stood not in need of us or any service of ours he could have glorified himselfe in our just destruction Who then can enough expresse either the mercy of God or the dutie of man when hee considers that God should call together all the depths of his owne wisdome and counsell to save a company of desperate fugitives who had joyned in combinations with his greatest enemies to resist and dishonour him It would have posed all the wisdome of the world though misery be commonly very witty to shape and fashion to it selfe images of deliverance to have found out a way to heaven betweene the wrath of God and the sinne of man It would have posed all the heavenly intelligences and the united consultations of the blessed Angels to have reconciled Gods mercy in the salvation of man and his justice in the condemnation of sinne to have powred out hell upon the sinne and yet to have bestowed heaven upon the sinner If God should have instructed us thus farre you are miserable creatures but I am a mercifull God the demands of my justice I must not deny neither will I deny the entreaties of my mercy finde me out a sacrifice answerable to my justice and it shall be accepted for you all O where could man have found out a creature of capacitie enough to hold or of strength enough to beare the sinnes of the world or the wrath of God Where could he have found out in heaven or earth amongst men or Angels a Priest that durst accompany such a sacrifice into the presence of so consuming a fire Or where could he have found out an Altar whereon to offer and whereby to sanctifie so great a sacrifice No no the misery of man was too deepe and inextricable for all the created counsell in the world to invent a deliverance Now then if God himselfe did studie to save me how great reason is there that I should studie to serve him How ought all my wisdome and counsell and thoughts and desires be directed to this one resolution to live acceptably and thankfully unto him who when hee might have produced glory to himselfe out of my confusion chose rather to humble and as it were for a while to unglorifie himselfe for my salvation Certainly that man did never rightly understand the horrour of sinne the infinite hatred of God against it the heavinesse of his wrath the malediction of the Law the mystery and vast dimensions of Gods love in Christ the preciousnesse of his sacrifice the end purpose or merit of his death any of those unsearchable riches of God manifested in the flesh who will not crucifie a vanitie a lust a pleasure an earthly member unto him againe who findes more content and satisfaction in his owne wayes of sinne and death more wisdome in the temptations and deceits of Satan and his owne fleshly minde than in those deepe mysteries of grace and contrivances of mercie which the Angels desire to prie into Therefore in the last place wee should labour to feele this necessitie we have of such a Priest This is the only reason why so few make use of so pretious a fountaine because they trust in their owne muddie and broken cisternes at home and are never sensibly and throughly touched with the sense of their owne wants for it is not the saying and confessing ore tenus that I have nothing nor the knowing in speculation only that I have nothing but the feeling and sm●rting by reason of my want which will drive me to seeke for reliefe abroad If a man did seriously consider and lay together such thoughts as these I am very busie for the affaires and passages of this present life which will quickely vanish and passe away like a Weavers shuttle or a tale that is told I have another and an abiding life to live after this is over All that I toile for here is but for the backe the belly the bagge and the posterity And am I not neerer to my selfe than I am to my money Am I not neerer to my soule than I am to my carkasse or to my seed Must I not have a being in that when neither I nor my posterity have either backe to be clothed or belly to bee fed or name to be supported O why am I not as sadly imployed why spend I not some at least as serious and inquisitive thoughts about this as about the other Doe I not know that I must one day stand before him who is a consuming fire that I must one day be weighed in the ballance and woe be unto me if I am found too light Appeare before him I dare not of my selfe alone without a Priest to mediate for me to cover and protect me from his fury and to reconcile me unto him againe My person wants a Priest it is clogg'd with infinite Guilt which without him cannot bee covered My nature wants a Priest it is overspred with a deepe and universall corruption which without him cannot be cured My sinnes want a Priest they are in number and in quality above measure sinfull which without him cannot bee pardoned My services want a Priest they are blemished and poisoned with many failings and corruptions without him they cannot be accepted I say if men did seriously lay together such thoughts as these it could not be that rationall and sad men men of deepe thoughts in other matters who love to boult out things to the bran and to be very solicitous for evidence and certainty in them should suffer such a businesse as this their interest in that Priest who must alone clothe their persons with his righteousnesse and cleanse their nature with his Spirit and wash away their sinnes with his bloud and sanctifie their prayers and almes and all religious devotions with his incense and intercession or else all of them must passe thorow the triall of such a fire as will consume them all to be slubber'd over with loose and slender thoughts and to bee rested in and resolv'd upon rather by the lying presumptions of a deceitfull heart than by the evidences and testimony of Gods holy Spirit Consider what I say and the Lord give you understanding in all things The second thing proposed to bee considered in the Priesthood of Christ was the qualification of that person who was to be a fit High-Priest for us Legall sacrifices would not serve the turne to purge away sin because of their basenesse They were not expiations of sin Heb. 9.9.12 but were onely remembrances and commemorations of sinne Heb. 10.3 necessary it was that heavenly things themselves should be purified with better sacrifices Heb. 9.23 for they of themselves without that typicall relation which they had unto Christ Gal. 3.23 and that Instrumentall vertue which in that relation they had from him Heb. 9.13 were utterly weake and unprofitable Heb. 7.18 as the
and victorie to encourage him none of which shall be allowed the wicked in hell who shall not onely bee the vessels of his vengeance but which will bee as grievous as that the everlasting objects of his hatred and detestation which made I say even the Sonne of God himselfe notwithstanding all these abatements to pray with strong Cries and bloudy drops and woefull conflicts of soule against the Cup of his Fathers wrath and to shrink and decline that very worke for which onely hee came into the world Thirdly to praise God for that great honour which hee hath conferred upon our nature in the flesh of his Sonne which in him is anointed with more grace and glory and filled with more vast and unmatchable perfections than all the Angels in heaven are together capable of for though for a little while hee was made lower than the Angels for the purpose of his suffering yet hee is now sat downe on the right hand of the Majesty on high Angels and Authorities and Powers being made subject unto him Heb. 2 6-9 1 Pet. 3.22 Heb. 1 4-13 And for the infinite mercy which hee hath shewed to our soules bodies and persons in the sacrifice of his Sonne in our reconciliation and favour with him in the justification of our persons from the guilt of sinne in the sanctification of our nature from the corruption of sinne in the inheritance reserved in heaven for us in the Communion and fellowship wee have with Christ in his merits power Priviledges and heavenly likenesse Now saith the Apostle wee are Sonnes and it doth not yet appeare what wee shall bee but wee know that when hee shall appeare wee shall bee ●ike him for wee shall see him as hee is 1 Ioh. 3.2 From these things which have been spoken of the Personall Qualifications of our High Priest it will bee easie to finde out the third particular inquired into touching the Acts or Offices of Christs Priesthood or rather touching the parts of the same Action for it is all but one Two Acts there are wherein the execution of this office doth consist The first an Act of Oblation of himselfe once for all as an adequate sacrifice and full compensation for the sinnes of the whole world Heb. 9.14.26 Our Debt unto God was Twofold As we were his Creatures so wee owed unto him a Debt of Active Obedience in doing the Duties of the whole Law and as wee are his prisoners so wee owed unto him a Debt of passive obedience in suffering willingly and throughly the Curses of the Law And under this Law Christ was made to redeeme us by his fulfilling all that righteousnesse who were under the precepts and penalties of the Law our selves Therefore the Apostle saith hee was sinne for us that is a Sacrifice for sinne to meete and intercept that wrath which was breaking out upon us 2 Cor. 5.21 Herein was the great mercy of God seen to us that hee would not punish Sinners though he would not spare Sinne. If hee should have resolved to have judged Sinners wee must have perished in our owne persons but being pleased to deale with sinne onely in abstracto and to spare the sinner hee was contented to accept of a Sacrifice which under the Relation and Title of a Sacrifice stood in his sight like the body of sinne alone by it selfe in which respect hee is likewise said to bee made a Curse for us Gal. 3.13 Now that which together with these things giveth the complete and ultimate formality of a Sacrifice unto the death of Christ was his owne willingnesse thereunto in that hee offered himselfe And therefore hee is called the Lambe of God that taketh away the sinnes of the world because hee was dumbe and opened not his mouth but was obedient unto death even the death of the Crosse Phil. 2.8 Christs death in regard of God the Father was a necessary death for hee had before determined that it should bee done Act. 4.28 Thus it is written and thus it behov'd Christ to suffer Luk. 24.46 The Sonne of Man must bee lifted up Ioh. 3.14 And therefore hee is said to bee a Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world in regard of Gods Decree and preordination But this gave it not the formality of a Sacrifice for God the Father was not the Priest and it is the Action of the Priest which giveth the being of a Sacrifice to that which is offered Againe Christs death in regard of men was violent They slew him with wicked hands and killed the Prince of life Act. 2. ●3 3.15 And in this sense it was no Sacrifice neither for they wer●●ot Priests but butchers of Christ. Thirdly his death in regard of himselfe was voluntarie I lay down my life no man taketh it from mee but I lay it downe of my selfe I have power to lay it downe and I have power to take it againe Ioh. 10.17 18. And this oblation and willing obedience or rendring himselfe to God is that which gives being to a Sacrifice Hee was delivered by God Act. 2.23 Hee was delivered by Iudas and the Iewes Matth. 27.2 Act. 3.13 and hee was yeelded and given up by himselfe Gal. 2.20 Eph. 5.25 In regard of God it was Iustice and mercy Ioh. 3.16 17. Rom. 3.25 In regard of man it was murther and crueltie Act. 7.52 In regard of Christ it was obedience and humility Phil. 2.8 And that voluntary act of his was that which made it a Sacrifice Hee gave himselfe for us an offering and a Sacrifice to God for a sweete smelling savor Eph. 5.2 His death did not grow out of the condition of his nature neither was it inflicted on him by reason of an excesse of strength in those that executed it for he was the Lord of glory but onely out of mercy towards men out of obedience towards God and out of power in himselfe For omnis Christi infirmitas fuit ex potestate By his power hee assumed those infirmities which the oeconomic and dispensation of his Priesthood on the earth required and by the same power hee laid them aside againe when that service was ended And this I say was that which made it a Sacrifice As martyrdome when men lay down their lives for the profession of the truth and the service of the Church is called a Sacrifice Phil. 2.17 If it bee here objected that Christs death was against his owne will for hee exceedingly feared it Heb. 5.7 and prayed earnestly against it as a thing contrary to his will Matth. 26.39 To this I answer that all this doth not hinder but commend his willingnesse and obedience Consider him in private as a Man of the same naturall affections desires and abhor●encies with other men and consider the cup as it was calix amaritu●●●●s a very bitter cup and so hee most justly feared and declined it as knowing that it would bee a most woefull and a heavy combate which hee was entring upon but consider
sins Mat. 26.28 In whom we have redemption through his bloud the forgivenesse of sinnes according to the riches of his glory Ephes. 1.7 Heb. 8.12 And this must needs be a wonderfull mercy to have so many thousand talents forgiven us such an infinite weight taken off from our consciences the penaltie and curse of so many sinnes removed from us our naturall condition is to be an heire of everlasting vengeance the object of Gods hatred and firy indignation exiles from the presence of his glory vessels fit and full of misery written within and without with curses to be miserable to be all over miserable to be without strength in our selves to be without pity from other to be without hope from God to be without end of cursednesse this is the condition of a sinner and from all this doth the mercy of God deliver us The manner whereby the satisfaction of Christ becomes profitable unto us unto the remission of sinne and righteousnesse is by Imputation Rom. 4.3.5.8.5.19 No man is able to stand before Gods justice for hee is a consuming fire Heb. 12.29 No flesh can be righteous if he enter into judgement He is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity Hab. 1.13 for his eyes are not eyes of flesh Iob 10.4 Now all the world is guilty before God and commeth short of his glory 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it lieth in mischiefe 1 Ioh. 5.19 and therefore must be justified by a forren righteousnesse and that equall to the justice offended which is the righteousnesse of God unto us gratiously imputed Wee are justified freely by his grace through the ●edemption that is in Jesus Christ Rom. 3.19 24. To open this point of Iustification by imputed righteousnesse We must note that two things are pre-required to denominate a man a righteous man First there must be extant a righteousnesse which is apt and able to justifie Secondly there must be a right and propriety to it wherby it commeth to passe that it doth actually justifie We must then first inquire what the righteousnesse is whereby a man may be justified Righteousnesse consisteth in a relation of rectitude and conformitie God made man upright but they have sought out many inventions and turned into many crooked diverticles of their owne Eccles 7.29 Deut. 32.5 A wicked man loveth crooked wayes to wander up and downe in his owne course Ier. 31.22 Hos. 4.16 whereas a righteous man loveth strait wayes Heb. 12.13 Psal. 5.8 because righteousnesse consisteth in rectitude and this presupposeth some Rule unto which this conformitie must referre The primitive and originall prototype or Rule of holinesse is the righteousnesse of God himselfe so farre-forth as his Image is communicable to the creature or at least so farre forth as it was at the first implanted in man Be yee perfect as your father which is in heaven is perfect Matth. 5.48 It is not meant of his infinite perfection for it was the sin of Adam to aime at being as God in absolutenesse and independent excellencie but of that perfection of his which is in the Word set forth unto us for an Image and patterne whereunto to conforme our selves Therefore the secondary rule of righteousnesse or rather the same rule unto us revealed is the Law of God written in his Word in the which Gods holinesse so farre as it is our example exhibiteth it selfe to the soule as the Sun doth communicate its light thorow the beame which conveyes it Now in the Law there are two things one principall Obedience the other secondary Malediction upon supposition of disobedience Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are written in the booke of the Law to doe them Gal. 3.10 So then upon supposition of the sinne of man two things are required unto Iustification the expiation of sin by suffering the curse and the fulfilling of righteousnesse de novo againe Man created might have beene justified by obedience onely but man lapsed cannot otherwise appeare righteous in Gods sight but by a double obedience the one passive for the satisfaction of his vindicative justice as wee are his prisoners the other active in proportion to his remunerative justice as we are his creatures But besides this that there must be a r●ghteousnesse extant there is required in the person to be justified or denominated thereby a propriety thereunto that it may be His righteousnesse Ier. 33.16 Now there may be a two-fold proprietie to righteousnesse according to a two-fold manner of unitie Vnitas enim praestantis est fundamentum proprietatis ad officium praestitum First there is a personall and individuall unity whereby a man is unus in se one in and by himselfe and so hath proprietie to a dutie performed because it is performed in his owne person and by himselfe alone Secondly there is a common unity whereby a man is unus cum alio one with another or whereby many are unum in aliquo primo one in and with some other thing which is the fountaine and originall of them all And this is the ground of Righteousnesse imputed for in the Law a man is justified by performing intire obedience in his owne person for the Law requireth righteousnesse to be performed by a created and implanted strength and doth not put suppose or indulge any common principle thereof out of a mans selfe Therefore legall righteousnesse is most properly called Our owne righteousnesse and is set in opposition to the righteousnesse of God or that which is by grace imputed Rom. 10.3 Phil. 3.8 9. Wee see then that in this matter of imputation either of sinne or righteousnesse for the cleering of God from any injustice or partiality in his proceedings there must ever bee some unity or other betweene the parties he whose fact is imputed and the other to whom it is imputed It would be prodigious and against reason to conceive that the fall of Angels should be imputed unto men becau●e men had no unity in condition either of nature or covenant with the Angels as we have in both with Adam This common unity is two-fold either naturall as betweene us and Adam in whom we were seminally contained and originally represented for otherwise than in and with Adam there could at the beginning be no covenant made with mankinde which should ex aequo reach unto all particular persons in all ages and places of the world Or Voluntary as betweene a man and his suretie who in conspectu fori are but as one person And this must be mutuall the one party undertaking to doe for the other and the other yeelding and consenting thereunto as betweene us and Christ for Christ voluntarily undertooke for us and we by the Spirit of Christ are perswaded and made willing to consent and by faith to cast our sins upon Christ and to lay hold on him And besides the will of the parties who are the one by default the other by compassion and suretiship engaged in the debt there is required
fitted it to the manifestation of his glory and mercy to the reconciliation of him and his creature and to the exaltation of his Sonne secondly the Sonne is willing hee chearfully submitted unto it Heb. 10.9 and freely loved us and gave himselfe unto us Gal. 2.20 thirdly the sinner is willing and accepteth and relieth upon it as wee have seene at large before in the third verse so that there can bee no injury done to any party where all are willing and where all are glorified Fourthly that an innocent person may thus in Iustice and equity suffer for a nocent there is required besides these acts of ordination in the supreme of submission in the surety and of consent in the delinquent first an intimate and neere conjunction in him that suffereth with those that should have suffered Severall unions and conjunctions there are as Politike between the members and subjects in a state and thus is a commonwealth universally sinfull a few righteous men may as parts of that sinfull society be justly subject to those temporary evils which the sinnes of the society have contracted and the people may justly suffer for the sinnes of the Princes 2 Sam. 24.17 and hee for theirs 1 Sam. 12.25 secondly Naturall as betweene parents and children so the Lord visited the sinnes of Dathan upon his little ones Numb 16.27.33 thirdly Mysticall as betweene man and wife so the Lord punished the sinnes of Amaziah the priest of Bethel by giving over his wife unto whoredome Amos 7.17 and wee see in many cases the husband is liable to be charged and censured for the exorbitancies of his wife fourthly Stipulatory and by consent as in the case of fidejussores or obsides who are punished for the sinnes of others whom they represent and in whose place they stand as a caution and muniment against injuries which might be feared as we see in the parable of the prisoner committed to the custody of another person 1 King 20 39-42 fifthly Possessory as betweene a man and his goods and so wee finde that a man was to offer no beast for a sinne offering but that which was his owne Levit. 5.6 7. Now in all these respects there was in some manner conjunction betweene us and Christ He conversed amongst men and was a member of that Tribe and society amongst whom he lived and therefore was together with them under that Romane yoke which was then upon the people and in that relation paid tribute unto Caesar hee had the nature and seed of man and so was subject to all humane and naturall infirmities without sinne Hee was mystically married unto his Church and therefore was answerable for the debts and misdemeanours of the Church He entred into covenant and became suretie for man and therefore was liable to mans engagements Lastly hee became the possession in some sort of his Church whence it is that we are said to receive him and to have him 1 Ioh. 5.12 not by way of Dominion for so we are his 1 Cor. 6.19 but by way of communion and propriety and therefore though wee cannot offer him up unto God in sacrifice for our sinnes yet we may in our faith and prayers shew him unto his Father and hold him up as our owne armour and fence against the wrath of God Rom. 13.14 Secondly there is required in the innocent person suffering that he have a free and full dominion over that from which hee parteth in his suffering for another As in suretiship a man hath free dominion over his money and therefore in that respect he may engage himselfe to pay another mans debt but he hath not a free dominion over himselfe or his owne life and therefore he may not part with a member of his owne in commutation for anothers as Zaleucus did for his sonne nor be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lay downe his owne life for the delivering of another from death except in such cases as the Word of God limiteth and alloweth But Christ was Lord of his owne life and had therefore power to lay it downe and to take it up And this power he had though he were in all points subject to the Law as we are not solely by vertue of the hypostaticall union which did not for the time exempt him from any of the obligations of the Law but by vertue of a particular command constitution and designation to that service of laying downe his life This commandement have I received of my Father Ioh. 10.18 Lastly it is required that this Power be ample enough to breake thorow the sufferings he undertaketh and to re-assume his life and former condition againe I have power to lay it downe and I have power to take it up So then the summe of all is this by the most just wise and mercifull will of God by his owne most obedient and voluntary susception Christ Jesus being one with us in a manifold and most secret union and having full power to lay downe and to take up his life againe by speciall command and allowance of his Father given him did most justly without injury to himselfe or dishonour to or injustice in his Father suffer the punishment of their sinnes with whom he had so neere an union and who could not themselves have suffred them with obedience in their owne persons or with so much glory to Gods justice mercy and wisdome If it be here againe objected that sin in the Scripture is said to be pardoned which seems contrary to this payment and satisfaction To answer this wee must note first that in the rigour of the Law N●xa seq●itur caput the delinquent himselfe is in person to suffer the penaltie denounced for the Law is In the day that Thou eatest thou shalt dye and the soule that sinneth it shall die Every man shall beare his owne burthen Gal. 6.5 So that the Law as it stands in its owne rigour doth not admit of any commutation or substitution of one for another Secondly therefore that another person suffering may procure a discharge to the person guilty and be valide to free him the will consent and mercy of him to whom the infliction of the punishment belongeth must concurre and his over-ruling power must dispence though not with the substance of the Lawes demands yet with the manner of execution and with that rigour which bindes wrath peremptorily upon the head onely of him that hath deserved it So then wee see both these things doe sweetly concurre first a precedent satisfaction by paying the debt and yet secondly a true pardon and remission thereof to that partie which should have paid it and out of mercy towards him a dispencing with the rigor of that Law which in strictnesse would not admit any other to pay it for him Thus wee see how Christ hath suffered our punishment Secondly hee did all obedience and fulfilled all actions of righteousnesse for us for such an high Priest became us who is holy harmelesse undefiled
follow thee whithersoever thou leadest mee But these are but emptie velleities the wishings and wouldings of an evill heart Lord to me belongeth the shame of my failings but to thee belongeth the glory of thy mercy and forgivenesse Too true it is that I doe not all I should but doe I allow my selfe in any thing that I should not doe I make use of mine infirmities to justifie my selfe by them or shelter my selfe under them or dispence with my selfe in them though I doe not the things I should yet I love them and delight in them my heart and Spirit and all the desires of my soule are towards them I hate abhorre and fight with my selfe for not doing them I am ashamed of mine infirmities as the blemishes of my profession I am weary of them and groane under them as the burdens of my soule I have no lust but I am willing to know it and when I know to crucifie it I heare of no further measure of grace but I admire it and hunger after it and presse on to it I can take Christ and affliction Christ and persecution together I can take Christ without the world I can take Christ without my selfe I have no unjust gaine but I am ready to restore it No time have I lost by earthly businesse from Gods service but I am ready to redeeme it I have followed no sinfull pleasure but I am ready to abandon it no evill company but I mightily abhorre it I never sware an oath but I can remember it with a bleeding conscience I never neglected a duty but I can recount it with revenge and indignation I doe not in any man see the Image of Christ but I love him the more dearly for it and abhorre my selfe for being so much unlike it I know Satan I shall speed never the worse with God because I have thee for mine enemie I know I shall speed much the better because I have my selfe for mine enemie Certainly hee that can take Christ offer'd that can in all points admit him as well to purifie as to justifie as well to rule as save as well his grace as his mercie neede not feare all the powers of darknesse nor all the armies of the foulest sinnes which Satan can charge his conscience withall The second great vertue and fruit of the Priesthood of Christ was ex redundantia meriti from the redundancy and overflowing of his merit First hee doth merit to have a Church for the very being of the Church is the effect of that great price which he payed therefore the Church is called a purchased people 1 Pet. 2.9 Ask of mee and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance Psal. 2.8 when hee made his soule an offering for sinne hee did by that meanes see his seed and divide a portion with the great Esai 53.10 11 12. The delivering and selecting of the Saints out of this present evill world was the end of Christs Sacrifice Gal. 1.4 Secondly hee did merit all such good things for the Church as the great love of himselfe and his Father towards the Church did resolve to conferre upon it They may I conceive be reduced to two heads First Immunitie from evill whatsoever is left to bee removed after the payment of our debt or taking off from us the guilt and obligation unto punishment Such are the Dominion of Sinne. Sinne shall not have dominion over you Rom. 6.14 The Law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Iesus hath made mee free from the Law of Sinne and of Death Rom. 8.2 He that committeth sinne is the servant of sinne but if the Sonne shall make you free you shall bee free indeed Ioh. 8 34-36 Hee that is borne of God doth not commit sinne 1 Ioh. 3.9 That is he is not an artificer of sinne one that maketh it his trade and profession and therefore bringeth it to any perfection Hee hath received a Spirit of Iudgement that chaineth up his lusts and a Spirit of burning which worketh out his drosse Esai 4.4 Mal. 3.2 3. Matth. 3.2 Such is The Vanity of our Minde whereby wee are naturally unable to thinke or to cherish a good thought 2 Cor. 3.5 Eph. 4.17 The Ignorance and hardnesse of our hearts unable to perceive or delight in any spirituall thing Eph. 4.18 Ioh. 1.5 Luk. 24 25.45 The Spirit of disobedience and habituall strangenesse and aversenesse from God Eph. 4.18 Iob 20.14 Such are also all those slavish affrightfull and contumacious effects of the Law in terrifying the conscience irritating the concupiscence and compelling the froward heart to an unwilling and unwelcome conformitie The Law is now made our counseller a delight to the inner man that which was a lion before hath now food and sweetnesse in it Secondly Many Priviledges and dignities in the vertue of that principall and generall one which is our unitie unto Christ from whence by the fellowship of his holy and quickning Spirit wee have an unction which teacheth us his wayes and his voyce which sanctifieth our nature by the participation of the divine nature that is by the renewing of Gods most holy and righteous Image in us Which sanctifieth our Persons that they may bee spirituall Kings and Priests Kings to order our owne thoughts affections desires studies towards him to fight with principalities powers corruptions and spirituall enemies Priests to offer up our bodies soules prayers thanksgivings almes spirituall services upon that Altar which is before his mercy-seate and to slay and mortifie our lusts and earthly members which sanctifieth all our actions that they may bee services to him and his Church acceptable to him and profitable to others Secondly from this unity with him growes our adoption which is another fruit of his Sacrifice Hee was made of a woman made under the Law that wee might receive The Adoption of Sonnes Gal. 4.5 By which wee have free accesse to call upon God in the vertue of his Sacrifice sure supplies in all our wants because our heavenly Father knoweth all our needs a most certaine inheritance and salvation in hope for we are already saved by hope Rom. 8.24 and Christ is to us the Hope of Glory Col. 1.27 Lastly there is from hence our exaltation in our finall victory and resurrection by the fellowship and vertue of his victory over death as the first fruits of ours 1 Cor. 15.20.49 Phil. 3.21 And in our complete salvation being carried in our soules and bodies to be presented to himselfe without spot and blamelesse Eph. 5.26 27. and to bee brought unto God 1 Pet. 3.18 Now to take all in one view what a summe of mercy is here together Remission of all sinnes discharge of all debts deliverance from all curses joy peace triumph security exaltation above all evils enemies or feares a peculiar purchased roiall seed the gift of God the Father to his Sonne deliverance from the dominion and service of all sinne vanity ignorance hardnesse disobedience bondage coaction terror sanctification
and reall conveying the blessing it selfe desired without all contradiction saith the Apostle the lesse is blessed of the greater Hebr. 7.7 and such was this of Melchisedek Benedictio obsignans a seale assurance and effectuall confirmation of the promise before made Gen. 12.2 3. Sixthly in what manner he received Tithes I answer with Calvin that he had Ius decimarum and received them as testifications of homage duty and obedience from Abraham for the Apostle useth it as argument to prove his greatnes above Abraham which could be no argument in the case of pure gift Since gifts qu●tenus gifts though they prove not a generall inferioritie in him that receives them yet they prove that in that case there is something which may be imputed and which deserves acknowledgement But in this particular all the acknowledgements are from Abraham to Melchisedek Besides nothing was here by Abraham or Melchisedek done after an arbitrary manner but Extraordinario spiritus afflatu ex officio on both sides as learned Cameron hath observed Lastly in what sense hee was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. without father mother or genealogie I answer with Chrysostome that it is not meant literally and strictly but onely the Scripture takes notice of him as an extraordinary man without signifying his line beginning end or race as Tiberius said of Rufus that he was Homo ex se natus that so he might be the fitter to typifie Christs person and excellencie in whom those things were really true which are onely quoad nos spoken of the type of whose beginning end or parentage wee neither have nor can have any knowledge These things thus premised it will bee easie for you to preoccupate those observations which grow betweene the Type and the Antitype which therefore I will but cursorily propose Note first that Christs Priesthood is such as did induce a kingdome with it for Melchisedek was King of Salem and Priest of the most high God This Saint Hierom and from him Ambrose report to have been meant by the order of Melchisedek namely Regale Sacerdotium that Christ was to be a Royall Priest By way of merit purchasing a kingdome of his Father and by way of conquest recovering it to himselfe out of the hands of his enemies this mystery was obscurely intimated in the marriages allowed between the regall and sacerdotall tribes of Iuda and Levi which confusion was in the other Tribes interdicted as I have before observed Note secondly that Christ by offering up himselfe a Sacrifice unto God is become unto his people a King of Righteousnesse or the Lord our righteousnesse in which sense he is called The Prince of life Act. 3.15 that is he hath all power given him as a Prince to quicken and to justifie whom hee will Ioh. 5.20 21. And this comes from his Sacrifice and perfect obedience to us imputed and by us with faith implyed and apprehended for having fulfilled the righteousnesse of the Law and justified himselfe by rising from the dead he became being thus made perfect the Author of righteousnesse and salvation to us Heb. 5.9 We had in us a whole kingdome of sin and therefore requisite there was in him that should justifie us a kingdome of Grace and righteousnesse That as sinne raigned unto death even so might Grace through righteousnesse raigne unto eternall life by Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 5.21 and therefore wee are said to be justified by the righteousnesse of God Rom. 3.21 22. that is such a righteousnesse as is ours by gift and grace not by nature Rom. 10.3 and such a righteousnesse as God himse●fe did performe though in the humane nature in our behalfe Act. 20.28 Phil. 2.6 7 8. And this is the ground of all our comfort the best direction in all our miseries and extremities whither to flie A King is the greatest officer amongst men and his honour and state is for the supply defence and honour of his people He is Custos Tabularum the Father and the Keeper of the Lawes If I want any of that justice and equity of which his sacred Bosome is the publike treasure I may freely beg it of him because he is an Officer to dispence righteousnesse unto his subjects so also is Christ unto his Church I finde my selfe in a miserable condition condemned by the conscience of sinne by the testimony of the Word by the accusations of Satan full of discomforts God is a God of justice and all fire my selfe a creature of sin and all stubble Satan the accuser of the brethren who labours to blow up the wrath of God against me In this case what shall I doe Surely God hath set his King on Sion and he is a King that hath life and righteousnesse to give to mee that hath grace enough to quench all sin and the envenomed darts of Satan in whom there is erected a court of peace and mercy whereunto to appeale from the severity of God from the importunity of the Devill and from the accusations and testimonies of our owne hearts And indeed he had need be a King of righteousnesse that shall justifie men for our justification is in the remission of our sins and to pardon sins and dispence with Lawes is a regall dignitie and God taketh it as his owne high and peculiar prerogative I even I am he who blotteth out thine iniquity for mine owne sake and will not remember thy sinnes Esay 43.25 No man or Angell or created power no merit no obedience no rivers of oyle nor mountaines of cattell no prayers teares or torments can wipe out the staines or remove the guilt of any sinne I onely even I and none else can doe it None but a Divine and Royall Power can subdue sinne Mica 7.18 And this is a ground of a second comfort that being a King of righteousnesse he is rich in it and hath treasures to bestow that as we have a kingdome a treasure and abundance of sin so we have a King that hath alwayes a residue of spirit and grace that hath a most redundant righteousnesse from faith to faith Rom. 1.17 A mans faith can never over-grow the righteousnesse of our King If we had all the faith that ever was in the world put into one man all that could not over-claspe the righteousnesse of Christ or be too bigge for it As if a man had a thousand eyes and they should one after another looke on the Sunne yet still the light would be revealed from eye to eye or as if a man should goe up by ten thousand steps to the top of the highest mountaine yet he could never over-looke all the earth or fix his eye beyond all visible objects but should still have more earth and heaven discovered unto him from step to step so there is an immensitie in the righteousnesse and mercy of God which cannot be exhausted by any sins or overlooked and comprehended by any faith of men As God dot●
is to deny our selves and all we doe to doe no good thing for this end that we may rest in it or rely upon it when we have done but after all to judge our selves unprofitable servants when wee have prayed to see hell betweene heaven and our prayers when wee have preached to see hell betweene heaven and our sermons when we have done any worke of devotion to see hell between heaven and all our services if God should marke what is amisse in them and should enter into judgement with us In one word to see hell betweene heaven and any thing in the world else save onely betweene Christ and heaven Till in this manner men be qualified for mercy they will have no heart to desire it and God hath no purpose to conferre it Christ must be esteemed worthy of all acceptation before God bestowes him and the way so to esteeme of him is to feele our selves the greatest of all sinners And when the soule is thus once humbled with the taste and remembrance of that worme-wood and gall which is in sinne there is then an immediate passage unto hope and mercy Lament 3.19 22. and that hope is this That Christ hath drunken up and dried that torrent of curses which was betweene us and heaven and hath made a passage through them all by himselfe unto his Fathers Kingdome He was made sinne and a curse for us that so hee might swallow up sinne and death and might bee the destruction of hell Hos. 13.14 I will here but touch upon two things First What Christ suffered Secondly why he suffered for understanding of the first we must note first that Christ Humane nature was by the hypostaticall Vnion exalted unto many dignities which to all the Creatures in the world besides are utterly incommunicable as the communication of properties the adoration of Angels the primogenitu●e of the Creatures the cooperation with the Deitie in many mighty workes the satisfaction of an infinite Justice by a finite passion c. Exalted likewise it was by his spirituall unction above all his fellowes with that unmeasurable fulnesse of grace as wonderfully surpasseth the united and cumulated perfections of all the Angels in heaven Secondly wee must note likewise that all these things Christ received for the worke of mans Redemption and therefore he had them in such a maner as was most suteable and convenient for the execution of that worke Now Christ was to fulfill that worke by a way of suffering and obedience by death to destroy him that had the power of death as David by Goliahs sword slew him that was master of the sword As there fell a mighty tempestuous winde upon the red sea whereby the passage was opened for Israel to goe out of Egypt into Canaan so Christ was to be torne and divided by his sufferings that so there might be a passage for us to God through that sea of wrath which was betweene our Egypt and our Canaan our sinne and our Salvation Here then are two generall Rules to be observed concerning the sufferings of Christ. First that the Oeconomie or dispensation of his Mediatorship is the measure of all that he suffered So much as that required he did suffer and more he did not for though he suffered as man yet he suffered not because he was a man but because he was a Mediator Secondly in as much as a Mediatour betweene God and sinners was to be holy and separate from sinners for if he should have beene a sinner he had beene one of the parties and not a Mediator therefore none of those sufferings which are repugnant to his holinesse and by consequence unserviceable to the administration of his office could belong unto him Such things then as did no way prejudice the plenitude of his grace the union of his natures the quality of his mediation such things as were suteable to his person and requisite for our pardon such as were possible for him and such as were necessary for us those things he suffered as the punishments of our sinnes Now punishments are of severall sorts some are sins some onely from sinnes Some things in severall respects are both sinnes and punishments In relation to the Law as Deviations so they are sinne in relation to the order and disposition of Gods providence so they are punishments As hardnesse of heart and a reprobate sense Other punishments are from sinne and in this regard sinne is two wayes considerable either as inherent or as imputed from sinne as inherent or from the consciousnesse of sinne in a mans selfe doth arise remorse or torment and the worme of conscience Againe sinne as imputed may be considered two wayes either it is imputed upon a ground in nature because the persons to whom it is imputed are naturally one with him that originally committed it and so it doth seminally descend and is derived upon them Thus Adams sinne of eating the forbidden fruit is imputed unto us and the punishment thereof on us derived namely the privation of Gods Image and the corruption of our nature Or else it is imputed upon a ground of voluntary contract vadimonie or susception so that the guilt thereupon growing is not a derived but an assumed guilt which did not bring with it any desert or worthinesse to suffer but onely an obligation and obnoxiousnesse thereunto As if a sober and honest person be suretie for a prodigall and luxurious man who spending his estate upon courses of intemperance and excesse hath disabled himselfe to pay any of his debts the one doth for his vitious disability deserve imprisonment unto which the other is as liable as he though without any such personall desert Now then the punishments which Christ suffered are onely such as agree unto sinne thus imputed as all our sinnes were unto Christ. Againe in punishments we are to distinguish betweene punishments inflicted from without and punishments ingenerated and immediately resulting from the condition of the person that suffereth Or betweene the Passions and Actions of the men that are punished Punishments inflicted are those paines and dolorous impressions which God either by his owne immediate hand or by the ministery of such instruments as he is pleased to use doth lay upon the soule or body of a man Punishments ingenerated are those which grow out of the weakenesse and wickednesse of the person lying under the sore and invincible pressure of those paines which are thus inflicted As Blasphemie despaire and the worme of conscience In one word some evils of punishment are vitious either formally in themselves or fundamentally and by way of connotation in regard of the originals thereof in the person suffering them Others are onely dolorous and miserable which presse nature but doe no way defile it nor referre to any either pollution or impotency in the person suffering them and of this sort onely were the punishments of Christ. Now these punishments which Christ thus suffered are either inchoate or consummate
inchoate as all those penall defects of our nature which neither were sinnes nor grounded upon the inherence of sinnes for hee tooke not our personall but onely our naturall defects And these were either corporeall as hunger thirst wearinesse and the like or spirituall as feare griefe sorrow temptations c. consummate were those which he suffered at last And these likewise were either corporeall as shame mockings buffets trials scourgings condemnation an ignominious and a cursed death Or spirituall and those were principally two First a punishment of Dereliction My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Matth. 27.46 There was some kinde of separation betweene God and Christ during the time of his sufferings for sinne in that cursed manner For understanding wherof we must note that he had a fourfold Vnion unto God First In his humane Nature which was so fast united in his person to the divine that death it selfe did not separate it either from the person or from the deitie It was the Lord that lay in the grave Secondly In Love and so there was never any separation neither but when hee hanged on the Crosse hee was still the beloved Sonne of his Father in whom hee was well pleased Thirdly In the Communion of his Spirit and Holinesse and in that regard likewise there was no disunion for hee was offered up as a lambe without spot or blemish Lastly In the fruition of the light of his countenance and of his glory and favor and in this respect there was for the time of his sufferings a dereliction subtractione visionis non dissolutione unionis by the withdrawing of his countenance not by the dissolving of his union Hee looked upon Christ as a God armed against the sinnes of the world which were then upon him Secondly There was a punishment of malediction Hee did undergoe the curse of the Law hee did graple with the wrath of God and with the powers of darknesse hee felt the scourges due unto our sinnes in his humane nature which squeezed and wrung from him those strong cries those deepe and woefull complaints that bloudy and bitter sweate which drew compassion from the very rocks And surely it is no derogation to the dignity of Christs person but on the other side a great magnifying of the Iustice of God against sinne of the power of Christ against the Law and of the mercy of them both towards sinners to affirme that the sufferings of Christ what-ever they were in specie in the kinde of them were yet in pondere in their weight and pressure equally grievous with those which we should have suffered for being in all things save sinne like unto us and most of all in his liablenesse to the curse of the Law so farre as it did not necessarily denotate either sinne inherent or weaknesse to breake through in the person suffering why hee should not bee obnoxious to as great extremities of paine I see no reason for no degree of meere anguish and dolor can bee unbefitting the person of him who was to bee knowne by that Title A man of sorrowes And surely farre more indignity it was to him to suffer a violent death of body from the hands of base men than to suffer with patience obedience and victorie farre sorer stripes from the hand of God his Father who was pleased upon him to lay the iniquity of us all For the second thing proposed Why Christ suffered these things The Scripture giveth principally these five reasons First to execute the decrees of his Father Act. 4.27 28. Secondly to fulfill the prophesies prefigurations and predictions of Holy Scriptures Luk. 24.46 Thirdly to magnifie his mercy and free love to sinners and most impotent enemies Rom. 5.8 Fourthly to declare the Righteousnesse and truth of God against sinne who would not bee reconciled with sinners but upon a legall expiation Rom. 3.25 For although wee may not limit the unsearchable wisedome and wayes of God as if hee could no other way have saved man yet wee are bound to adore this meanes as being by him selected out of that infinite treasure of his owne counsell as most convenient to set forth his wonderfull hate of sinne his inexorable Iustice and severity against it his unsearchable riches of love and mercy towards sinners and in all things to make way to the manifestation of his glory Lastly To shew forth his owne power which had strength to stand under all this punishment of sinne and at last to shake it off and to declare himselfe to bee the Sonne of God by the resurrection from the dead Rom. 1.4 For though Christ did exceedingly feare and for that seeme to decline and pray against these his passions yet none of that was out of jealousie or suspicion that hee should not breake through them But hee feared them as being paines unavoidable which hee was most certainly to suffer and as paines very heavie and grievous which hee should not overcome without much bitternesse and very woefull conflict Now for a word of the last Clause Therefore shall hee lift up the Head Wee may hence observe that Christ hath conquered all his sufferings by his owne power As in his passion when hee suffered hee Bowed downe his head before-hand and gave up the ghost with a loud voice to note that his sufferings were voluntary Ioh. 19.30 So in his resurrection hee is said to lift up his head himselfe to note that hee had life in himselfe that hee was the Prince of Life that it was impossible for him to be held under by death as we were by the Law Rom. 7.6 And that his exaltation was voluntary likewise and from his owne power for he was not to have any assistant in the worke of our redemption but to doe all alone Ioh. 2.19.5.26.10.17 Act. 3.15 If it bee objected that Christ was raised from the dead by the Glory of his Father and that hee raised him up Rom. 6.4 Act. 13.33 To this I answer that this was not by way of supplement and succor to make up any defect of power in Christ but onely by way of consent to Christs owne power and action that so men might joyntly honour the Sonne and the Father Ioh. 5 19-26 Or by the Glorie of the Father wee may understand that glorious power which the Father gave unto his Sonne in the flesh to have life in himselfe Ioh. 5.26 annexing thereunto a command to exercise the same Power Ioh. 10.18 Or hee is said to bee raised by himselfe and his Father both because that Holy Spirit which immediatly quickned him Rom. 1.4 1 Tim. 3.16 1 Pet. 3.18 was both his and his Fathers It was not any personall thing wherein the Sonne differ'd from the Father which raised Iesus from the dead but that Spirit which was common to them both To conclude then with the consideration of those great benefits and that excellent use which this resurrection of Christ doth serve for unto us First it assureth us of the accomplishment
and shame of sinne and the first fruits of that eternall vengeance which is thereunto due not onely set forth Christ before them as a rock of redemption reaching out a hand to save and offering great and pretious promises of an exceeding eternall abundant weight of glory but besides all this doth inwardly touch the heart by the finger of his Spirit framing it to a spirituall and divine conformity unto Christ. How can the soule of such a man in these present extremities of horror which yet are but the pledges of infinite more which must ensue and in the evidence of so wonderfull and sweete promises the seales of the eternall favor and fellowship of God choose but with much importunity of affection to lay hold on so great a hope which is set before it and with all readinesse and ambition of so high a service yeild up it selfe into the hands of so gracious a Lord to bee by him ordered and over-ruled unto any obedience Secondly this willingnesse of Christs People is wrought by a spirituall illumination of minde And therefore the Conversion of sinners is called a Conviction because it is ever wrought in us Secundum modum judicii as wee are reasonable and intelligent creatures I take it under favor and submission to better judgements for a firme truth that if the minde of a man were once throughly and in a spirituall manner as it becommeth such objects as are altogether spirituall possessed of the adequate goodnesse and truth which is in grace and glory the heart could not utterly reject them for humane liberty is not a brutish but a reasonable thing it consisteth not in contumacie or headstrongnesse but in such a manner of working as is apt to bee regulated varied or suspended by the dictates of right reason The onely cause why men are not willing to submit unto Christ is because they are not throughly and in a manner suteable to the spirituall excellency of the things illightned in their minde The Apostle often maketh mention of fulfilling and making full proofe of our ministery and of preaching the Gospell fully namely with the evidence of the Spirit and of power and with such a manifestation of the truth as doth commend it selfe unto the conscience of a man The Word of God saith the Apostle is not yea and nay that is a thing which may bee admitted or denied at pleasure but such a word as hath no inevidence in it selfe nor leaveth any uncertainty or hesitancie in a minde sitted to receive it And as wee may thus distinguish of preaching that there is an imperfect and a full preaching so may wee distinguish of understanding the things preached in some it is full and in others but superficiall for there is a Twofold illumination of the minde the one Theoreticall and meerly Notionall consisting in knowledge the other Practicall Experimentall and spirituall consisting in the irradiation of the soule by the light of Gods countenance in such an apprehension of the truth as maketh the heart to burne therby when we know things as wee ought to know them that is when the manner and life of our knowledge is answerable to the nature and excellencie of the things knowne when the eye is spiritually opened to beleeve and seriously conclude that the things spoken are of most pretious and everlasting consequence to the soule as things that concerne our peace with God This is the Learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge the setting to the seale of our owne hearts that God is true the evidence of spirituall things not to the braine but to the conscience In one word this is that which the Apostle calleth a spirituall Demonstration And surely in this case the heart is never over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truths unto a practicall judgement Therefore the Apostle saith that Eve being Deceived was in the transgression and there is frequent mention made of the deceitfulnesse of sinne to note that sinne got into the world by error ●nd seduction For certainly the will is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Rationall Appetite and therefore as I conceive doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented thereunto as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of a humane soule for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to bee free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally secundum modum sibi competentem in a manner suteable to its owne condition If it bee objected that the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good and therefore is not likely to bee made willing by the illumination of the minde To this I answere that it is true the will must not onely bee mov●d but also renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ. But withall that God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner of which I have spoken without a speciall worke of grace thereupon opening the eye and removing all naturall ignorance prejudice hesitancie inadvertency misperswasion or any other distemper of the minde which might hinder the evidence of spirituall truth By which meanes hee also frameth and fashioneth the will to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed Thirdly this willingnesse of Christs people is wrought by the Communion and adspiration of the spirit of Grace which is a free spirit a spirit of love and a spirit of liberty a spirit which is in every faculty of man as the soule and principle of its Christianity or heavenly being and working And therefore it makes every faculty secundum modum sibi proprium to worke unto spirituall ends and objects As the soule in the eye causeth that to see and in the eare to heare and in the tongue to speake so the spirit of Grace in the minde causeth it rightly to understand and in the will causeth it freely to desire heavenly things and in every facultie causeth it to move towards Christ in such a way and maner of working as is suteable to its nature Fourthly this willingnesse of Christs people ariseth from the apprehension of Gods deare love bowels of mercy and riches of most unsearchable grace revealed in the face of Iesus Christ to every broken and penitent spirit Love is naturally when it is once apprehended an Attractive of love And therefore it is that the Apostle saith Faith worketh by love that is By faith first the heart is perswaded and affected with Gods Love unto us in Christ. I live by the faith of the Son of God who loved me and gave himselfe for me Gal. 2.20 Eph. 3.17 18. Being thus perswaded of his love to us the heart is framed