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A77775 The Gospel-covenant; or The covenant of grace opened. Wherein are explained; 1. The differences betwixt the covenant of grace and covenant of workes. 2. The different administration of the covenant before and since Christ. 3. The benefits and blessings of it. 4. The condition. 5. The properties of it. / Preached in Concord in Nevv-England by Peter Bulkeley, sometimes fellow of Johns Colledge in Cambridge. Published according to order. Bulkeley, Peter, 1583-1659. 1646 (1646) Wing B5403; Thomason E331_1; ESTC R200735 319,203 371

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it He can do it Jude 24. Jude 24. and he is faithfull and will do it 1 Thes 5.24 1 Thes 5.24 it being his covenant and promise and he cannot deny himself In the covenant of works Gods highest end is the glorifying of Differ 5 his justice In the Covenant of grace it is to glorifie his Grace In the Covenant of Works God reveales himself a just God rewarding good and punishing evill condemning sin but in the Covenant of Grace he shews himself a God gracious and merciful forgiving iniquity c. as Jer. 31.31 32. Jer. 31.31 32. I will be mercifull to your iniquity c. The Covenant of Works forgiveth no sin there is nothing but strict justice in that Covenant In this Covenant God looks not at any mans repentance and turning from sin but only considers whether he hath sinned As in Courts of Justice where there are tried matters of life and death there is no regard had whether the party be penitent or no but whether the fact be committed and if found guilty he is led to execution so in Gods Court of Justice which he keeps according to the tenor of the Covenant of Works Justice acts and doth all Justice indictes Justice examines Justice pronounceth sentence Justice executes the punishment and so whosoever hath sinned receives according to the evil that he hath done And hence it is that when Adam had sinned the inquisition is not whether he repented him of the evill that he had done but what hast thou done Hast thou eaten of the tree whereof I said unto thee thou shalt not eat And the Lord finding that he had offended pronounces curses and death But in the Covenant of Grace it is otherwise There God looks at the repentance of his people and accepts of humiliation and faith in Christ Hence is the counsell of the Apostle Acts 2.37 Acts 2.37 Repent and be baptized c. When they saw the horrible sin which they had done in killing the Lord of life they being the children of the Covenant he tels them that yet there was mercy for them they might obtain forgivenesse of sins Hence also Jonah 3.10 Jonah 3.10 when God saw their repentance and that they turned from their evill wayes he also turned from the evill which he said he would do to them and did it not The voyce of the Covenant of Works is like the first speech of Nathan to David Thou art a childe of death the voyce of the Covenant of Grace is like his after speech when he saw Davids humiliation and repentance The Lord hath put away thy sin In the Covenant of Works God speaks as Ezek. 18. Ezek. 18. The soul that sinneth it shall die In the Covenant of Grace he speaks as Ezek. 33.11 Ezek. 33.11 As I live saith the Lord I desire not the death of a sinner They are both expressed in one place Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 The Lord gracious and mercifull slow to anger yet not acquitting the wicked but visiting iniquitie c. In one Covenant God condemnes both sin and sinner in the other he condemnes the sin but spares and gives life to the sinner to glorifie his grace thereby In the Covenant of workes he aymes to make his power and justice knowne as Rom. 9.22 cap. 2.5 Rom. 9.22 cap. 2.5 But in the other to glorifie grace as Isa 48.9 Eph. 1.6 The reason of this difference is because God will be glorified in all his attributes as he is glorious in all so he will have the glory of all to be seene He will have his power and wisdome knowne in the creation of the world his goodnesse knowne in the continuance and preservation and ordering of it his faithfulnesse in keeping covenant with us according to the covenant made his justice in a covenant of works his grace in a covenant of grace which he makes with us in Christ Jesus Vse 1 This may smite feare and terrour into the hearts of all such as are strangers unto the Covenant of grace such as never yet entred into a new Covenant with God by that new and living way which is opened to them in Christ Let such consider what hath been said that in the covenant of workes under which yet they stand there is no grace shewed but strict justice without any mercy Let such therefore bethinke themselves what a God they must meet withall and with whom they must have to do even with a just God a God of judgement a God of vengeance that will not spare their misdeeds what ever justice can require of them they must satisfie to the utmost mite were it so that mercy and justice might sit on the bench together that justice might be tempered and mixt with mercy your sentence might be the more tolerable But these two sit in two severall Courts Justice without mercy and therefore when nothing but justice shall judge you who can stand what flesh may abide it In Psal 78.5 Psal 78.5 with the cup of the Lords wrath is said to be full mixt but in Rev. 14.10 Rev. 14 10. it is said to be pure wine unmixt both together imply that it is both mixt and unmixt how both mixt of all sorts of plagues but unmixt without any drop of mercy pure wrath without any dram of mercy to allay the bitternesse of the cup of wrath and how bitter then will this cup be more bitter then gall yet this must all the wicked of the earth drinke and wring out the very dregs of it Psal 78.5 Psal 78.5 This is an hard saying but a true saying as God is true Therefore Isa 27.11 Isai 27.11 God speaking of the wicked people of the Jewes saith he He that made them will not have mercy on them neither shew them any favour And in Ezek. 5.11 Ezek. 5.11 He threatens that his eye shall not spare neither will he have any pitie And Hos 1.6 Hos 1.6 I will no more have mercy c. And James 2.13 They shall have judgement without mercy As God will be made marveilous in his mercy toward those that are vessels of mercy prepared unto glory 2 Thes 1.10 2 Thes 1.10 so as men shall wonder at the aboundance of grace shewed towards them so on the contrary God will be admired and wondred at in his judgements upon all sinfull and ungodly ones he will make their plagues wonderfull Deut. 28.59 He will deale with his own servants onely in a way of grace with these onely in a way of justice And if so what will their end be Justice will spare neither high nor low it is impartiall and alike towards all Justice will passe by no transgression but will have an account for all greater or lesse wicked thoughts idle words foolish jests Justice will not remit any part of the punishment which the Law calls for but it will have the full to the utmost furthing Let this strike
all their hearts who are yet under a Covenant of workes with a feare of this just God who will judge them without mercy And let this cause them to fly to the throne of grace and there to enter into a new Covenant with God As the Angel counselled Lot so doe I counsell thee hasten to get shelter under the wing of grace that thou mayst be freed from the wrath of the just God Vse 2 Seeing Gods end in the Covenant of grace is to glorifie his grace in us we may by this in some measure discerne what part wee have in the grace of this Covenant And wee may doe it by this if our aymes and Gods aymes our ends and Gods ends meet in one when we come to seek grace in his sight Many an one comes before God begs mercy and yet obtaines it not as Prov. 1.28 Prov. 1.28 because they aske amisse they seek it not in Gods way Consider therefore what seekest thou in begging mercy at his hand Dost thou seek onely to have thy sin pardoned onely to be saved from wrath this will not argue thy peace that thou art under grace But dost thou as well seeke the glorifying of his grace towards thee as the obtaining of thine own peace with him if God have put this disposition of heart into thee that thou couldest be content to lie downe in the dust and to take shame for thy sin before Angels and men so that the aboundant riches of his grace may be glorified in taking away thy sinne if thy desire be not onely that thou maist see his salvation but that the Lord himselfe may be made marvellous and his grace magnified in thee then thou art herein another David a man after Gods own heart thy thoughts are as Gods thoughts thy intents and ends the same with Gods ends Take this therefore as a pledge of his grace towards thee Never couldest thou so desire the glorifying of that grace if God had not a purpose of grace towards thee Naturall desires of our own good may perhaps worke a desire to have our sin forgiven but nature though elevated to the highest cannot reach this to desire the glorifying of grace as our end Vse 3 For comfort unto such as see their own unworthinesse and are discouraged thereby from seeking after grace with God They are so vile in their own eyes that they thinke it is impossible that ever such as they are should find favour and acceptance with God But let me aske cannot the riches of grace when it shall set it selfe on purpose to glorifie it selfe to the full cannot such grace make thee accepted Thou darest not deny it Hold here then grace can make thee accepted if it will please to glorifie it selfe now then consider this is the very end which the Lord aymeth at in saving his people scil to glorifie his grace in such as seeing their owne unworthinesse doe fly to grace alone to be accepted in Christ Jesus I say more If thou wert not unworthy there could not be any communication of grace to thee for were there not unworthinesse in us there could be no grace shewen from God When God will glorifie himselfe in a way of justice he will abase all the haughtinesse of man no excellency of man can then stand in his presence so on the contrary when God will glorifie himselfe in a way of grace there is no unworthinesse of man can hinder it he will exalt the most vile the abject the most despised and contemptible that not we but grace it selfe may be glorified 1 Cor. 1.27 28. 1 Cor. 1.27 therefore doe not wrong the grace of God but fly thereto in the sense of thine own basenesse and this is the readiest way to find acceptance It may serve for direction unto all such as desire to enjoy the Vse 4 blessings of this grace which God offers in his Covenant let them seeke it with the same minde that God offers it with a purpose and desire to have grace exalted and magnified doe not onely seeke it that you may be exalted by grace but that grace may be exalted in you Goe to God for grace with the same minde as Moses did and then we shall obtaine it as he did Now Moses sought it for this end that his mercy might appeare Exod. 32.32 Exod. 32.32 If thou wilt pardon their sin thy mercy shall appeare this reading I chuse and embrace as the best as if he should say they have indeed committed a great sin but the greater their sin is the more shall thy mercy and grace appeare if thou wilt forgive Thus Moses prayes and see how it prevailes with God In ver 10. the Lord seemed to have been resolved to consume them and bids Moses let him alone that his wrath might wax hot against them I will destroy them saith God I will not be intreated for them yet Moses notwithstanding goes before God confessing their vile and hainous sin but withall prayes Oh yet forgive and then thy mercy shall be magnified And this prayer of his prevailed with God he stayed his hand he changed his minde as ver 14. and destroyed them not These are prevailing requests with God when wee plead for the glorifying of his owne grace In Joh. 12.28 Joh. 12.28 our Saviour prayes to his Father Father glorifie thy Name and there comes a voice out of the cloud I have glorified it and will glorifie it againe so let us seeke grace from God for this end that it may be glorified in us Father glorifie thy grace and then the Lord in his time will answer us I have both glorified it and will now glorifie it againe In this way wee cannot misse of obtaining the thing wee seeke for at Gods hand Differ 6 In the Covenant of workes God deales alike with all that are alike in themselves Looke how he deales with one so will he doe with another if they walke in the same way The same work shall have the same reward whether in good or in evill They that are alike in sin shall be alike in punishment Justice which is Gods rule in the Covenant of workes maketh no difference between persons that are equall in themselves It hath its ballance in its hand to give to every one according to their workes It is no respecter of persons Therefore God speaking of B●asha 1 Kings 16.2 3. 1 King 16.2 3 saith that because he walked in the wayes of Jeroboam the son of Nebat who made Israel to sin therefore God would make his house like the house of Jeroboam They both make Israel to sin and therefore they are both alike in punishment so also he speakes of Jerusalem Ezek. 23.31 Ezek. 23.31 that because shee walked in the way of her sister that therefore he would give her cup into her hand Hence saith the Apostle Rom. 2.6 to 17th Rom. 2.6 to 17 ●h That every soule that continues in well-doing shall have glory and honour
him or for him not for our selves but for him mourning that we have pierced him and grieved his Spirit by our sinnes 5. An heart willing to forgive and to doe good unto those that have done evill against us Mat. 6.14 Mat. 6.14 when wee cannot onely forbeare them but forgive them and beare a loving heart to them that have been unloving towards us This disposition of heart in us springs from an higher fountaine of grace which hath been shed downe upon us in forgiving our sinnes When the heart can reason with it selfe to suppresse revengefull desires when they are stirring in us and can argue as Mat. 18. and Eph. 4. Mat. 18. Eph. 4. the Lord is willing to forgive me my debts and ought not I also to forgive my fellow-servant that hath offended me Such a disposition of heart is a fruit and token of the forgivenesse of our sinnes Mat. 6.14 The grace that hath been shewed us in the forgivenesse of our sinnes workes an answerable disposition in us making us ready to forgive the sinnes of our brethren 6. A free and full confession of sinne when we deale openly with the Lord freely willing to open all our whole heart before the Lord discovering knowne sinnes secret sinnes the most prevailing beloved and inward corruptions willing to take the shame of all unto our selves and still to be more vile in our selves that mercy might be glorified in our forgivenesse When we can bring out the whole pack and not keepe a sin back so farre as wee know any thing by our selves but lay all open and naked before the face of God till there be no more to be found such confession hath a promise of forgivenesse 1 Joh. 1.9 1 Joh. 1.9 There may be a forced confession as was that of Saul when he was so fully convinced of his sinne that he would no longer deny it 1 Sam. 15. And of Judas who out of extremitie of horror and rage of conscience was made to confesse his wickednesse in betraying innocent bloud There may be also a formall superficiall and partiall confession when we doe in a generall fashion confesse our selves sinners which confession hath no promise of forgivenes because these confessions are ever accompanied first with a desire if possible to maintaine our own innocency secondly with a spirit of unbeliefe and misgiving heart fearing lest our own mouth should judge us and wee become witnesses against our selves Thirdly with a spirit of pride loath to confesse our selves to be so vile as we must acknowledge our selves to be if we should confesse all our sinnes against our selves But when a man is willing to search out all his sin unto the last that he may lay open all his heart and confesse all his iniquitie against himselfe before the Lord being vile in his own eyes and desiring to be more vile loathing himselfe for all his abominations of such an one that can thus come before the Lord in humble confession of his sinnes I doubt not to say unto him Goe thy way in peace thy sin is forgiven thee If God give us a heart thus humbly to confesse it is unto us a signe there is in God a heart mercifully to forgive Exhortation to all the Saints that have tasted of this rich grace Vse 6 in the forgivenes of their sinnes Let them ascribe glory unto him that hath shewed this mercy on them extolling that grace which hath forgiven them this the Lord lookes for he would have his grace glorified by us Eph. 1.6 Ephes 1.6 The Lord himselfe publisheth this as his own glory that he is a God forgiving iniquitie transgression and sin Exod. 34.6 Exod. 34.6 And the servants of God have herein given glory unto him as Micah 7.18 Micah 7.18 Who is a God like unto thee who passeth by the transgression of the remnant of thine heritage We should make the praise of this grace to ring through the whole world that heaven and earth may take notice of it and wonder at the grace that hath been shewed on us This grace can never be sufficiently glorified by us To teach us willingly to become servants unto this God of all Vse 7 Grace who dealeth thus mercifully with his people See Hos 14.5 Hos 14.5 When the Lord there promiseth to heale the rebellions of his people by taking away their iniquities from them marke what this workes in them ver 9. What have wee say they any more to doe with Idolls with our former sinnes we will serve them them no more we will henceforth serve thee our gracious God which promisest to heale all our backslidings His will wee be him will wee serve And thus much of the second Benefit The third Benefit of the Covenant is the renewing and sanctifying of our natures by the graces of the Spirit The Lord having first justified us by his grace in the forgivenesse of our sinnes he the● goes on to sanctifie us that we might be an holy people unto him to serve him in holinesse and righteousnesse all our dayes Luk. 1. Luke 1. When he hath made us imputedly righteous he will have us inherently righteous also And by the promise of this benefit the Lord answers another scruple which his people might be subject unto We might thinke with our selves this is indeed a great benefit which the Lord hath promised hith●rto namely to forgive all my sin But though the Lord should performe all this mercy unto mee forgiving unto me all my former sins unto this day yet I have such a vile sinfull nature within mee that I shall returne and sin againe as wickedly as ever I did before and so shall bring a new guiltinesse upon my self Hereto the Lord answers No it shall not be I will renew alter and change that sinfull and wicked nature that is in you I will make your heart a new heart so as you shall be enabled to doe my will and walk in my wayes I will sanctifie you to be an holy and pretious people to my self This renovation and sanctification of our nature stands first in cleansing away our sinfull corruption and then in an infusion and filling of us with the holy graces of the Spirit As a vessell which wee intend for any honourable use first wee scoure and rinse out the filth that is in it and then we sweeten it with other things and so make it fit for service and use Satan had defiled us with his loathsome filthinesse but so many as the Lord sets apart unto himselfe to be vessels of honour in his house those hee cleanseth from all filthinesse of flesh and spirit and seasoneth them with all the sweet and gracious gifts of his Spirit Hence it is that we are said to be made partakers of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1.4 2 Peter 1.4 and to be renewed with the ren●wing of the holy Ghost Titus 3.5 And we are said to be created new in Christ Jesus Eph. 2.10 because
unto him to bee kept by him unto salvation according to his Covenant and promise And thus is this part of the Covenant made up betwixt God and us and the soule now sayes within it selfe I that was sometimes an enemy he hath now reconciled unto himselfe I that was in times past without God without Christ without promise without Covenant without hope none of Gods people not under mercy yet now I have God for my God Christ is my peace in him I have obtained mercy and am now become one of Gods people the Covenant of his peace now belongs unto me the Lord also is become my salvation and here the soule rests and is satisfied as with marrow and fatnesse saying as Jacob The Lord hath had mercy on me therefore I have enough I have all that my heart hath desired Gen. 33.11 Thus we see how faith closeth with the first part of the Covenant that God will be a God of mercy unto us to blesse us with blessings of peace c. 2. Concerning the other part of it wherein God offers himselfe unto us to be a God over us to rule us and govern us in obedience to his will faith works the soule to a closing with this also The converting sinner having tasted the fruit of his own former wayes and finding how bitter and evill it is that he hath sinned doth now desire to resign up himself to the Lords government being willing to deny his own will and to take up the Lords yoke and to be subject thereunto he now sayes no more who is Lord over me Psa 12. He doth no longer look at himself as his own to live to himself after his own minde and will but being weary of his own wayes and finding it sufficient and too much that he hath spent the time past in the lusts of the flesh now he commits himselfe to the Lords government taking him to be a God over him to rule and order him in all his wayes The Covenant which passeth betwixt God and us is like that which passeth between a King and his people the King promiseth to rule and govern in mercy and in righteousnesse and they againe promise to obey in loyalty and in faithfulnesse faith sets up God upon his throne and sayes Let the Lord reigne for ever and ever reigne thou over mee O Lord and lead me in the way which leads unto thee And this doth faith work in us by these or the like meanes 1. Faith looks at the manner of Gods invitation and call when he invites us to come and enter into Covenant with him he doth not offer himselfe to be a God to us to blesse us without being a God over us to order and govern us but links these two both together If we will have his blessing his peace we must bee under his Dominion Look as in a Common-wealth or Kingdom none hath the benefit of the Law but those that subject themselves to the Law none have the protection of authority but those that obey it so here God doth not promise to pardon our sins leaving us still at our own liberty to live as we list but if he doe at all make a Covenant with us he will be a God to us as well to rule us as to save us To say live as yee will sinne as yee will and yet you shall be saved is the Devils Covenant not Gods and therefore it is that when the Lord calls us into a Covenant with himselfe he bids us come out from among the wicked separate your selves and touch no uncleane thing saith the Lord 2 Cor. 6.17 and in this way he promises to receive us and to be a God unto us How vile soever we have been before time it hinders us not from entring into Covenant with God but if we will now become his people we must henceforth walke no more as we had wont to doe we must henceforth be separate from our uncleannesse Ephes 4.17 Esay 1. ver 6.7 8. Come let us reason together let us make an agreement but withall wash you make you clean c. This is the Lords manner of invitation so that faith sees a necessity of submitting to Gods authority because it may not take hold of one part of the Covenant without the other If we will have God to bee our God to pardon us and to blesse us wee must have him a God over us to govern us after his own will 2. Faith opens the understanding convincing us by arguments how just how equall and reasonable it is that God should rule and we obey by faith we see the invisible things of God that is his eternall power and Godhead which before we saw not by faith we see him in his Excellency and Majesty cloathed with glory and honour riding upon the Heavens attended upon with thousand thousands of Angels ministring unto him By faith we see him moderating the whole world by his wisdome and power Psal 103. We look at him as King of Kings as Prince of all the Rulers of the earth Neither doe we by faith thus see God as he is in himselfe but as he is to us as having power in his hand either to save or destroy so that there is no resisting we know now that if we fall upon that stone by our rebellion it will grinde us to powder now there is no more question made who shall have the dominion though in times past we had said this man shall not reign over us Luk. 19. yet now it is our chiefe desire that his Kindome may come into us and beare sway in us Faith sets before us also the benefits and kindnesse of God towards us and so perswades us by those mercies of God to give up our selves as a sacrifice in humble obedience unto his will Rom. 12.1 Faith reasoneth in the heart as David did I will prayse thee O Lord with my whole heart yea I will glorifie thy name for ever for great is thy mercy towards me thou hast delivered my soule from the lowest grave Psal 86.12 13. Faith makes us speak to God as the Israelites did to Gideon when he had delivered them out of the hand of the Midianites Come say they unto him and reign over us both thou and thy son for thou hast delivered us out of the hand of Midian Iudg. 8.22 Now God is counted worthy of all honour and service Apoc. 4.7 5.12.13 Worthy to be exalted and glorified thus faith urgeth it as a thing most reasonable that God so glorious in himselfe having power over us to save or destroy and when he might have destroyed us yet hath saved us from so great a death and prepared for us so great salvation should be glorified by us wee submitting our selves unto the obedience of his will 3. Faith makes us look at the Lords government as a mercifull goverment bringing peace and blessing unto those that are under it it looks at this King of Israel as a mercifull King
that will have life and wring it out of the hand of justice in stead of life shall have the wages of death as his deserved and just reward See 2 Tim. 1.18 It is mercy which the best must look for at that day Vse 2. This may be a ground of incouragement to such as are or at least seem to themselves to be afar off aliens to God strangers to his Covenant let them draw neer and seek to be partakers of this grace so freely offered the blessings whereof are great of infinite value yet are they as free as great in respect of greatnes they might seem to be above hope but in respect of the freenesse of them they are under hope by this consideration the Lord encourageth his people to seek unto him for acceptance Receive us graciously Hos 14.2 and if any say but alas how can we which have forsaken our God and gone after our Idols and done such abominations be accepted by him hereto the Lord answers I will love them freely he looks for no worth in us for which he should shew grace unto us but only that we must accept that which is so freely offered It s usuall with such as most desire and long after grace to be most fearfull and doubtfull of obtaining Oh there is so much unworthinesse in them how can they hope to finde acceptance with God they can see nothing in themselves for which God should accept them and t is true but though you can see nothing in your selves yet you may see enough in God Looking downward you see unworthinesse in your selves but look upward and then behold riches of free grace in God Grace is never the further off because you can see no worthinesse in your selves nay the more you discerne your selves unworthy the more neer is the aboundance of grace to be manifested in you if ye trust unto it say not therefore you are unworthy thereby nourishing distrust in your selfe but say rather though I be unworthy yet I will commit my selfe to that free grace of God which is vouchsafed to unworthy ones nay I say more such as are not unworthy shall never taste of this mercy and grace of God it s given to none but to unworthy ones The very thought and opinion of our own worthinesse dwelling in us excludes us and cuts off from grace here is then a prop to our weak faith this puts a plea into the mouthes of all dejected souls let them look to this sweet name of grace here take hold here rest here cast anchor in this harbour we shall be safe in the midst of all stormes and as the Church in Lam. 3.8 considering the greatnesse of her affliction shee said Her hope was perished from the Lord yet considering again how her heart was humbled within her she re-assumes her hope which before was perished my soule saith she is humbled within me therefore have I hope shee hoped then even when her hope was perished so let us do when our hope is perished in respect of any goodnesse in our selves yet considering the free kindnesse and grace of God let us stir up our hopes and say as she did I have hope because the Lord is gracious freely offering grace to the unworthy were it not for this Name of grace we should never tell how to open our mouthes before the Lord If he should say unto us what can you say for your selves why I should not condemne you We must answer truly nothing Lord nothing in our selves onely thou art gracious who freely pardonest the sins of thy people I cannot desire to be accepted of thee for any thing that is in me but I commit my selfe to thy free and rich grace which is able to do for me abundantly above that I can aske or thinke And here to adde a word more concerning the absolute promises of which I have spoken something before we may by that which hath been spoken discerne the right use of those promises they are to be incouragements or attractives to draw us to rely upon free grace in such times when we are most discouraged in our selves there be severall seasons in which both kinds of promises both absolute and conditionall are of speciall use there is a time wherein the soule is apt to slumber being overtaken with a spirit of security apt to presume and to walke negligently there is a time also of dismayednesse and dejection of Spirit every thing causing feare though we walke in conscionable care before God Now when that security and carelesness prevails in us then is a time for us to look unto the conditionall promises and the qualifications expressed in them not giving rest unto our selves untill we finde them in our selves contrariwise when the soule lyes under fear pressed downe with sence of our owne vile unworthinesse then is a time to looke unto the absolute promises considering with our selves though we be poore lost wretched miserable yet the Lord hath promised for his own sake to succour us and to do us good To apply absolute promises to one of a loose carnall and sensuall spirit it is as if you should give him a cup of poison to drink but to apply the same to a poor dejected spirit sensible of its owne vilenesse here it is as new wine which glads the heart of man Every thing is beautifull in its season as Solomon speaks so are these promises in their severall seasons the absolute promises to incourage the weak and dejected the conditionall to search to waken and stirre up the secure Vse 3. To exhort us to honour this free grace of God by which we are taken into Covenant with him all that God doth towards us being done for the praise of this glorious grace of his Ephes 1.6 This is Gods end and this was Pauls practice 1 Tim. 1.13 14. ever seeking to magnifie this grace and Ephes 2.4 and Isai 63.7 where there is mention of rich mercy great love exceeding riches of grace great goodnes tender love great mercy multitude of loving kindnesses Reserve we therefore the whole glory of our salvation intire unto grace alone mixe nothing with it adde nothing to it adding and mixing debaseth it as water mixed with wine or copper with gold It was Davids expression which he used when he had received those ample promises from God for thy words sake and according to thine own heart saith David hast thou done all these great things unto thy servant 2 Sam. 27.21 so thinke we all that mercy and goodnesse which the Lord hath done for us he hath not done it for our sakes or according to our worthinesse but according to his owne heart according to the purpose of his grace towards us say therefore Not unto us O Lord not unto us but to thy Name be the praise it is enough for us that we have life the blessing the comfort let grace alone have all the glory Vse 4. To stir us up to imitate this free grace of God
were mighty and the people of God thought it impossible that they should be redeemed out of Captivitie God taketh a resemblance from the worke of Creation and applyes it to the worke of their redemption that as he stretched out the heavens alone and spread abroad the earth by himselfe so by himselfe alone he would worke out salvation for his people So Isai 59.16 Isai 59.16 God speaketh like a man that looketh that others should come and helpe him but none came therefore his owne arme brought salvation and sustained his people Israel The Lord alone will be a sufficient blessing to his people Hence Isai 45.7 Isai 45.7 The Lord saith that he formes light and creates darknesse he makes peace and creates evill Sometimes God so creates evill that if it be asked whence it comes or what is the originall of it we must answer as Isai 47.11 we cannot tell whence it cometh but onely from the Lords immediate hand The Lord makes it evident that it cometh from him that men are forced to say as Jehoram 2 Kings 6.33 2 King 6.33 This evill is of the Lord or as the Magicians Exod. 8.19 This is no other but the finger of God So on the contrary the Lord so workes from himselfe in the communicating of his goodnesse and mercy to his people that they may see and plainly perceive that it is the immediate hand of God that hath wrought all This may be made manifest both first in the want of outward meanes and secondly in the injoyment of them First In the want of meanes here God steps in and makes a supply and becomes all things unto his people sometimes God withholds from his people the meanes of life and yet they live that it may appeare that our life is not in the meanes but in God that he is our life and the length of our dayes as Deut. 30.20 Deut. 30.20 And that in him we live and move and have our being Acts 17. Thus Moses when he had neither bread nor water for fortie dayes yet he lived and was as strong as though he had daily eaten his appointed food So also was it with Elijah and our Saviour Christ Mat. 4.2 So also with the people of Israel God suffered them to be hungry and yet they did not famish that it might appeare that man lives not by bread onely but by every word of God Deut. 8.3 Hence is that in Isai 41.17 18.20 Isai 41.17 18.20 The Lord will open rivers in the high places and fountaines in the valleyes for the poore and needy c. And for what end will the Lord doe this that they may know and consider that the hand of the Lord hath done this c. Thus was the Lord good to the Israelites in the wildernesse he was all things to them First they had no setled habitation but the Lord was an habitation unto them Psal 90.1 Psal 90.1 Againe they had no ordinary bread for fortie yeares together and yet they were preserved alive that they might know that the Lord was the God of their welfare as Moses saith Deut. 29.6 Deut. 29.6 Againe they had no meanes of renewing their cloathing and yet they wanted not as Deut. 29.5 Their cloathes waxed not old upon them nor their shooes upon their feet Againe they were often to journey and travell by night as well as by day and they knew not one foot of the way they should goe therefore the Lord himselfe was a guide unto them He went before them by day in a pillar of a cloud and in a pillar of fire by night Exod. 13.21 Exod. 13.21 Therein the Lord fulfilled that which he speakes Isai 48.17 Isai 48.17 I the Lord thy redeemer lead thee in the way wherein thou shouldest goe Hence is that in Deut. 32.10.12 The Lord alone led him and there was no strange God with him He alone provided for them he alone fed them he alone conducted them he alone did all for them As it is thus in temporall benefits so also in spirituall blessings the Lord is from himselfe all in all unto his people In Ezek. 11.16 Ezek. 11.16 the Lord tells them that he would carry them into captivitie and now lest they should be discouraged for want of the Temple and Ordinances therefore the Lord promises that he will be a Sanctuary unto them he will supply unto them the want of publique ordinances from himselfe Hence is that in Isai 54.17 Isai 54.17 it is said that they shall be taught of God and Rom. 8.26 Rom. 8.26 that the spirit helpes the infirmities of Gods people when the servants of God would pray but they cannot the Spirit himselfe maketh up their wants and fills their hearts with groanes which pierce the heavens So when they are to speake before the adversaries of Gods truth and they know not how to answer then the Lord puts an answer into their mouthes as Mat. 10.20 Mat. 10.20 So also in the preaching of the Word the Lord himselfe puts words into the mouthes of his servants that whereas they may say as Moses Exod. 4.10 I am of a stammering tongue and cannot speake or as Jer. cap. 1.6 I am a childe c. yet the Lord is a mouth unto them and they speake words not which mans wisdome teacheth but which the Holy Ghost teacheth 1 Cor. 2.13 1 Cor. 2.13 that they which heare them are forced to say God is in you of a truth So also in the comfort and peace that God giveth unto his servants he giveth it not as the world giveth by abundance of earthly comforts and outward prosperitie but when all things threaten trouble yet then he gives peace from himselfe Joh. 14.27 Joh. 14.27 Secondly Consider how God is all to his people from himselfe even in the possession enjoyment of his good blessings sometimes the Lord continues to us the meanes of life and yet so workes and orders all that the benefit and blessing is evidently seene to come not from them but from the Lord alone And this he maketh to appeare divers wayes First Sometimes God lets us enjoy the creature and yet wee want the blessing for a season till he command a blessing to come Sometimes we have raine but not the raine of blessing yet afterwards he causeth it to come in mercy and to become a blessing The Sunne shineth in the firmament but we want the heat of it the warmth and quickning power of it is withheld to let us see that it is not the Sunne but the Lord by which we doe enjoy the blessing We cast our seed into the ground but it doth not prosper afterward it growes and flourisheth Sometimes we carry out much and bring in little what is the reason It is to let us see the truth of that 1 Cor. 3.7 1 Cor. 3.7 that it is the Lord which giveth the increase Sometimes we carry out little and bring in
see that we abiding with him in the places he hath set us in he will be with us and blesse us so as we shall want nothing that is good For direction to all such as desire to find the accomplishment Vse 3 of this gracious promise of God to his people that God will be from himselfe an all-sufficient good to them this is to teach them how to walk that they may find this blessing performed to th●m let them betake themselves to God alone and cast themselves wholly upon him Let them make him all unto them let them make it appeare that they look after nothing in heaven but him nor desire any thing in the earth in comparison of him as Psal 73.25 Psal 73.25 And then when th●ir hearts are taken off from these r●eds and broken staves which they r●sted on when it is with th●m as the Prophet speaketh Isai 17.7 8. that they look unto t●eir maker and not to the creature not to th●ir own devices and projects but onely to the holy One of Israel then will the Lord appeare in his glory and will make it manifest that from himselfe he will be an all-sufficient good to his people Let all other things be to us as though they were not use them as though we used them not see a fulnesse of all things in God Let us cast our selves upon the bounty kindnesse and all-sufficiency of the Lord And then will he arise and help us and doe for us according to our need Imitate the practise of Jehoshaphat 2 Chron. 20. when hee saw himselfe destitute of help Our eyes saith he are unto thee O Lord we know not what to doe Let the Lord s●e that our hearts are withdrawn from the creature and those helps which we leaned upon and that we doe faithfully relie upon him and then will hee ride upon the heavens for our help as Deut. 33.26 Deut. 33.26 and say This is a people that will not lie they have cast themselves upon mee and therefore I will not faile them nor forsake them I will be an all-sufficient good unto them For comfort unto godly and faithfull parents that having Vse 4 come over hither have here spent their estates by which they might have provided comfortably for their children they have come hither for the name of Christ that they might enj●y him in the means of his worship and though they doe here find grace and mercy from the Lord and a spirituall advantage to their souls yet they meet with losses troubles and straits for the outward man that they can now doe little for them What shall parents now doe What shall children doe Here is comfort look to the all-sufficient God that from himselfe will be all in all to his people Though there bee no blessing in the hand of the Parent yet there is in the hand of the Lord. What hee would have done for the children by the hand of the Parents he wil now doe it from himselfe by his own hand It is said of Isaac that after the death of Abraham God bl●ssed him Gen. 25.11 Gen. 25.11 If Isaac prosper whiles Abraham lives he might seem to be upholden by the substance of his father But when Abraham was d●ad then it was evident that the blessing upon Isaac came from the Lord So whiles the Parents estates continue children might seem to bee enriched by them but when their fathers estates are wasted and come to nothing and yet the children are provided for and prosper then it appeares to bee from the Lord. L●t therefore both parents and children depend up●n him and live by faith in him who wil be a Father to them an all-sufficient good to those that trust in him 3. Now to the third and last particular in this promise I will be your God To be God implies soveraignty and superiority over all To be over all as Rom. 9.5 Rom 9.5 and above all a● Ephes 4.6 Ephes 4.6 This therefore is also comprehended in the promise That hee wil bee God over us and above us to rule us to command us to direct and order our wayes for us That though he doe advance and set us up on high when he takes us into covenant with himselfe as Deut. 26.18 19. yet so as that he wil be Lord and G●d over us as Pharaoh said to Joseph when he advanced him to that high honour Yet saith he on the Kings Throne I will bee above thee So though God do lift up his people by entring into covenant with them so that all the world are but servants to minister unto them for their good yet will the Lord still retain his soveraignty over them and bee exalted above them As he wil be above all his ●nemies in that wherein they deale proudly as hee was above the Egyptians Exod. 18.11 to breake them in peeces with a rod of Iron So hee will bee above his owne people to rule them with a golden Scepter And this is a blessing of the covenant of grace Now this benefit implies these things First that the Lord will bring his people from under the power and dominion of other Lords which have gotten the superiority over them and bring them into subjection unto himselfe alone so that whereas they might say concerning the time before as Isai 26.13 Other Lords have had dominion over us besides thee yet now they shall rule over them no more but they shall be subject to him only Hence saith the Lord Joel 3.3 4 Joel 3.3 4. c They have cast lots for my people c. And what have you to doe with me O Tyre and Zydon and all the coast of Palestine will you render mee a recompence c. The meaning is as if God should speak to the enemies of his Church You have trampled upon my people and dealt cruelly with them and this you have done in revenge against me because I have plagued you Will you thus recompence me I will break you in peeces and deliver my p●ople from under y●ur power As a King when he make●h a covenant with a people to be King over them he then covenants with them to save them out of the ha●ds of all their enemies to suffer no foraigne power to tyrannize over th●m So it is here the Lord promiseth that no tyrant shall rule over his people neither sinne nor Satan nor the world nor the lust of their own hearts but he himselfe will rule over them 2. When he hath delivered us from our enemies then he will be God over us to command us and appoint us what wee shall doe to please him Though he communicate himselfe to us in all his goodnesse grace and mercy yet he will not lose his soveraignty over us In Exod. 4.16 Exod. 4.16 Moses was called a God unto Aaron because he was to command appoint and direct Aaron in all and Aaron was to execute all according to the direction received from Moses So the Lord
Chron. 2.11 So because the Lord loveth his people that hee taketh into covenant with himselfe therefore he will be King over them to rule and govern them Hence the Prophet joynes these two together Isai 49.10 Isai 49.10 God that hath compassion upon them will lead them hee out of compassion taketh the guidance of his people upon himselfe When hee will manif●st his wrath against a people then hee suffers them to walk after their own wills but here is infinite grace and mercy when hee taketh them into his owne government Consider this in a few particulars First consider what power we are under by nature we are under the dominion of cru●ll tyrants Satan the God of this world is Lord over us and we are holden under his power who labours to make a prey of our souls Ephes 2.2 Ephes 2.2 Acts 26.18 Now what a blessed change is this to be brought from under his p●wer and to be translated under the government of the gracious God Secondly consider how unable we are to guide and governe our selves as Jer. 10.23 Jer. 10.23 It is not in man to guide his own way The best souls would wander into the way of eternall perdition if they were left unto themselves And therefore when the Lord will become our guide to lead us in the way of life what a benefit and mercy is it It is a benefit to a traveller that when he is ready to misse his way then he meets with a guide to direct him how much more when we are ready to misse the way to eterna●l life We are as sheep a foolish creature which is apt to wander and this David found Psal 119.178 Psa 119.178 and therefore prayes to the Lord to lead him Thirdly as wee are not able to guide our selves so there is no other creature that can guide us aright unto life as the Lord speaks Isa 51.18 There is none to guide her among all the sons which she hath brought forth c. They may perh●ps guide our feet but our hearts will bee erring and wandring still As the Israelites though they had Moses himselfe that great Prophet to guide them and shew them the good way yet they erred in their hea●ts Psal 95.10 Fourthly consider the peace accnmpanying and following the guidance of the Lord Jer. 6.16 Ask for the old paths saith the Lo●d which is he good way and you shall find rest to your soules Who can expresse the sweet peace of the people of God when their hearts are framed to a willing obedience to the guidance and government of the Lord Whereas when they are led by themselves and their own hearts then there is nothing but confusion and disturbance It is a misery that cometh upon a people when God will not guide them but withdrawes his government over them When there was no King in Israel then they had many miseries many troubles much more is it so in spirituall regards when God leaves us to the wandrings of our own hearts how many miseries and sinnes are we subject unto This was their curse Rom. 1.24 Rom. 1.24 to be given up unto themselves and then they ran into all manner of wickednesse And this was the misery of the Gentiles Acts 14.17 Acts 14.17 that God suffered them to walk in their own wayes Hence the Church complains Isai 63. last Isai 63. last Wee are as they over whom thou never barest rule as it is in the old translation when they had complained before how they had erred from the wayes of God their hearts had been hardened from Gods feare now they shut up all in this Wee are as they over whom th●u never barest rule there is the misery they complaine of Or if wee read the words as the new translation renders them it is all one in effect We are thine therefore bow our hearts to the feare of thy Name They that is our adversaries as verse 18. are a people over whom thou never barest rule they are a forlorne and forsaken people this the Church lookes at as their enemies misery Therefore it is the blessing of the people of God when God will take them into his government Vse 1 Seeing this is one of the blessings of the Covenant of grace to have God above us and over us to guide and rule us this must teach us when we enter into Covenant with God not to count our condition then a state of libertie as if wee might then walke after our owne desires and wayes as if there were none to command us and rule over us Indeed there is a spirituall liberty from our enemies but there is subjection required to the Lord. Wee must not looke onely after gifts mercies kindnesses pardon and such tokens and pledges of grace but looke also for this to be under God and to set up him on high to be a God and Lord over us And let us not count this our misery but our blessednesse that wee are brought under his gracious government Herein the Lord sheweth his marvellous kindnesse that he will take the care of us Would wee not wonder to see such a Prince as Solomon to take his subjects children to tutour them and traine them up under him Now wee are but poore ants and worms upon earth but the Lord of heaven offereth to take the government of us upon himselfe This is infinite mercy whither would our unruly hearts carry us if he should leave us to our selves Who is there that hath any experience of the sinfull evills that are in his heart but will acknowledge this to be a benefit that the Lord should rule over him with an out-stretched arme If God leave Hezekiah but a little how is his heart lift up with pride so that he must have a Prophet sent to him on purpose to humble him If God leave David to himselfe to what evills is he not ready to fall And is there not the same spirit in us The more contrariety and opposition that there is in us to the will of God the greater mercy it is that he will be King over us Learne therefore to count it no small blessing and when God beginneth with us to over-rule the rebelliousnesse of our hearts and to bring ●hem into order take heed that we spurne not with the heele nor lift up our selves But let us humble our selves and submit our selves to him that he may take the guidance of us into his owne hands Heare the rod and kisse it and take it as a mercy that he is pleased to take the care of us to correct our wandrings and bring us back into the wayes of our owne peace Take heed of walking contrary lest he say to us as to the Israelites that he will reigne over us no more For tryall and examination whether we be a people in Covenant Vse 2 with God and have taken him to be our God For if God be our God then he must be God over us
on earth yet we shall see that there is help in heaven though none in our selves yet there is in God and in his faithfull Covenant Vse 5. To stirre up those that doe yet finde themselves destitute of all Grace not able to discern the least spark of goodnesse in themselves let them notwithstanding consider what God hath promised in his Covenant He hath therein promised a new heart a new spirit to create us anew in Christ Jesus He hath promised to poure out waters upon the dry ground Esay 44.3 where there is no sap no moisture no goodnesse but their moisture is turned into the drought of Sommer yet upon such dry grounds on such dry trees the waters of the Spirit shall be poured out and they shall be made to bring forth fruit The wilde forrest of Lebanon shall become as Carmell the Desart a fruitfill Field goe therefore thou poore lost creature thou sinfull soule who never yet to this day hadst one drop of Grace wrought in thy heart goe thou to the Throne of Grace lament thy sinfull and wicked heart before God begge this mercy of him say unto him Lord thou hast promised to give thy Spirit unto such as aske him of thee Now Lord give it unto me a poore sinfull creature make me even me also a partaker of this bless●ng Object But here perhaps you will say these promises are made only unto those that are in Covenant with God but alas thou art a stranger and an alien and hast ever so been unto this day thou hast no part in these promises Answ They belong to all that either are in Covenant with God or ever shall be though they be not as yet fulfilled in thee yet they may be intended unto thee these promises may be thine in respect of Gods purpose of grace and intention though not as yet in respect of actuall performance and execution To encourage all to seek after this blessing Consider with your selves three things 1. The extent of these promises I will poure out my Spirit upon all flesh Joel 2.28 Whosoever is thirsty come and drink of the waters of life freely yea turne you saith Christ to scornfull sinners at my correction and then behold I will poure out my Spirit upon you And in Ezek. 36. compare verse 20. with 25 26. There you may see that those upon whom he promiseth to poure his Spirit they were such as had polluted Gods name among the Heathen and made it to be blasphemed and yet even to those the Lord promiseth that when the time of Grace was come for mercy to manifest it selfe in them upon them hee would poure out his Spirit and cleanse them from all their uncleannesse 2. Consider the freenesse of these promises come and buy without money or money-worth Isai 55.2 drink of the waters of life freely Apoc. 22.17 3. Consider Christ forwardnesse and readinesse to give to every one that askes hadst thou but asked saith Christ to the woman in Ioh. 4.20 I would have given thee the water of life Mark the place and occasion of Christs words Christ being then weary and thirsty by reason of his journey he askes of the woman a cup of water to drink no great matter to give bring but a cup of water and being by the well side where was water enough and ready at hand yet she gives it not but stands wondering that he being a Iew should aske water of her that was a Samaritane well saith Christ thou denyest me a cup of cold water to drink being weary and thirsty but hadst thou asked of me I would have given thee the water of life Nay and did give it unto her though shee denyed him a cup of water out of the well yet Christ gave her the water of life What would the Lord Iesus have us to take notice of in this his speech unto her and her dealing towards him but that he is more forward to give that water of life his holy Spirit to a poore sinner then we are to give a cup of common water to a thirsty soule O blessed redeemer who would not come unto thee Goe therefore thou that hast denyed the least mercy and kindnesse to Christ in any of his members though thou hast thought a cup of water too much for them yet seek grace from him Aske his Spirit intreat him to make thy heart new within thee doe but aske and seek and he will doe more then thou canst hope or think plead the promise of his Covenant and wait in hope Thus much for the third benefit 4. The fourth benefit which God promiseth unto his in his Covenant is our preservation in the state of Grace to which we are called This is a part of his Covenant with us that he once taking us to be a people unto him in Christ he will never forsake us any more but keep us in that estate for ever And by this promise the Lord takes away that last great scruple which the soule is apt to make in this manner although may one think the Lord hath shewed mercy unto me thus farre that he hath given me hope of the forgivenesse of my sinnes past and hath changed my heart in some measure so as it is my desire to do his will yet for all this I finde still such strong opposition against mee by enemies within and without so many corruptions within and temptations from without that I shall never be able to hold out unto the end but as David said I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul so thinks the soule here in mids of many pursuits by the enemy I shall one day perish by the hand of Sathan I shall not be able to withstand him Now to this feare of our heart the Lord answers by this promise and benefit which he hath Covenanted to make good unto us he undertakes to keep us in the same estate of Grace to which he hath brought us he tells us no yee shall never perish feare it not he which hath begun the work will perfect it in us and for us And as God said unto Iacob in Gen. 28.15 I am with thee I will keep thee saith the Lord I will not forsake thee till I have performed unto thee all that I have promised thee So he saith unto us I will keep you till I have perfected towards you all the good pleasure of my goodnesse 2 Thes 1.11 I will keep you in my own hand I will guide you by my councell and afterward will bring you to glory Psal 73. This blessing we have promised to us in Ier. 32.39.40 They shall fear me for ever and I will make an everlasting Covenant with them that I wil never turn away from them to doe them good but I will put my feare into their hearts that they shall not depart from me and in Isai 54.8 With everlasting mercy have I had compassion on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer For this is unto me as the waters
acceptance with him so it is no lesse vigilant and watchfull in observing and taking notice what answer comes from the Lord how he answers the desires we have presented before him As the prisoner at the barre not only cries for mercy but marks every word which falls from the Judges mouth if any thing may give him hope and as Benhadads servants lay at catch with the King of Israel to see if they could take occasion by any thing which fell from him to plead for the life of Benhadad so doth the poore soule that is now pleading for life and grace it watcheth narrowly to see if any thing may come from God any intimation of favour any word of comfort that may tend to peace thence it is that the Saints have so often called upon God for answer of their prayers they thought it not enough to pray but they would see how the Lord answered them Psal 102.1 2. Thus Psal 51.8 O let me heare joy and gladnesse c. David did not only pray for mercy but desires to heare from heaven a word spoken to his conscience by which he might know he was accepted though David was not in the beginning of that work we now speak of yet the case is alike he was now in his own sence as if he had been to begin anew and thus in Psal 85.8 I will heare what the Lord will say for he will speak peace unto his people c. 7. As faith doth thus wait for an answer from God so likewise according as the Lord doth either answer or not answer so doth faith demeane it selfe First Sometimes he answers not to our sence I mean and discerning as we see in Davids case he felt himselfe as one forsaken and prayed unto God but found no audience Psal 22. What doth faith in this case it followes God still and cryes after him with more strength and earnestness as resolving never to give over till the Lord either save or destroy if the Lord will destroy yet the soule chuseth to die at Gods foot as Joab did at the hornes of the Altar when he was bidden to come forth from thence to take his death in another place Nay saith Ioab but I will die here Here the humbled soule doth as that woman did in Mat. 15. shee sues to Christ but Christ seemes to have no regard of her gives her not one word but shee seeks still still she cryes after him and though still repulsed yet shee comes a third time and cryes Lord help me and though still the Lord gives her another repulse yet still she hangs upon him and follows him for mercy and would never give over till she he had gotten even what shee desired Even as Christ in his agony when he saw deliverance came not he prayed more earnestly Luk. 22.44 so doth the poore sinner in the time of his agony when he is striving as for life and death if help come not at first call he prays againe and that more earnestly faith will be urgent with God with an humble importunity and the more slack the Lord seemes to be in answering the more instant is faith in plying God with prayers It will be wrastling with God as Iacob did with the Angel it will not rest without a blessing it will take no denyall but will crave still as hee did blesse me even me also send me not away without a blessing it resolves to wait and look up untill the Lord shew mercy Psal 123.2 Lament 3.49 50. Secondly Sometimes againe the Lord doth answer but yet he speaks but as out of the dark cloud giving som● little ease but not speaking full peace much like as he spake to the woman Ioh. 8.11 Goe thy way and sinne no more saith Christ he doth not say goe in peace thy sinne is forgiven thee that had been a word of full comfort but goe thy way and sinne no more a middle kind of expression neither assuring her that her sinne was pardoned nor yet putting her out of hope but it might be forgiven And hereby faith gets a little strength and looks after the Lord with more hope and begins to plead with God as Moses did Lord thou hast begun to shew grace unto thy servant goe on Lord to manifest in me all thy goodnesse here faith takes a little hold on the Covenant though with a feeble hand as yet shaking and trembling for want of strength and yet now it begins to follow the Lord with more encouragement as finding that its former seeking hath not been wholly in vaine Thirdly Sometimes againe the Lord speaks more fully and satisfactorily to the soules of his people applying some promise of Grace to the conscience by his own spirit letting the soule feele and taste the comfort of such a promise more effectually then ever it could before it hath often heard and thought on such a promise but could never feele any peace in it because it could never apply it to its own particular but now being applyed by the help of the Spirit it finds and feeles peace Here then the Lord doth not any longer hold the soule in suspence and doubting by propounding unto it such promises of hope as I may so call them It may be yee shall bee hid in the day of wrath Zeph. 2.3 but he speaks full peace as Esay 41.10 Feare not for I am thy God I will subdue your iniquities and cast all your sinnes behind my back and I will remember them against you no more I have received a reconciliation Iob 33. Goe in peace Here ●aith waxeth bold and with a glad heart entertaineth the promise thus brought home unto it the Apostle expresseth this with a word very significant calling it an embracing of the promise Heb. 11.13 embracing implyes an affectionate receiving with both armes opened to shew an heart enlarged to those that come unto us and now the soule having thus embraced the promise and the Lord Iesus Christ in the promise and having him like Simeon in our armes it layes him in the bosome and having before gone forth to meet him hee being now come it brings him into the chamber of the heart there to rest and abide for ever now the soule possesseth him as her own rests in him and is satisfied with him layes it selfe down in a holy rest after all its former troubles praysing God for his mercy as Simeon did when he had Christ in his armes and committing it selfe for ever to that mercy and goodnesse which hath been thus revealed unto it And thus the poor soul which hath been at emnity with God comes by little and little to touch the top of the golden Scepter and to enter into a Covenant of peace with the high God now the hand is given to the Lord as Hezekiah spake 2 Chron. 30. As God reacheth out to us the hand of Grace and of saving help so doe wee give unto him the hand of faith yeilding up our selves unto him committing our selves
not regarded It 's a thundering speech of the Apostle in Heb. 10.29 where he saith That those that sinned under Moses Law dyed without mercy and yet much sorer vengeance shall be unto those that despise the Gospel of Christ Can any thing be worse then to dye without mercy Yes saith the Apostle those shall have sorer vengeance It shall be vengeance that they suffer yea sore vengeance and sorer then those suffered which under Moses law dyed without mercy and yet more it shall be much sorer yea so much sorer as cannot be uttered but is left to our consideration to thinke How much sorer vengeance saith the Apostle and it must needs be such when the Lord himselfe professeth he will laugh at such mens destruction and mocke when their misery comes Prov. 1. And saith that he will rejoyce over them in destroying of them Deut. 28.63 No plagues like the plagues of such as reject the Gospel of Christ Reason 1 This sin sets more of God against us then was before before the Gospel came unto us we had justice against us armed with power both which were provoked by us but yet mercy was ready to save us if we would come in and accept of the grace offered mercy was not yet become our enemy as not yet being provoked by us but when it is brought to us by the Gospel and is despised by us now mercy and grace it selfe also is against us and is made our enemy now mercy joynes with justice and increased wrath Reason 2 There is in this sin a speciall indignitie offered unto Christ himselfe the Son is despised in it which the Father will not suffer It is one great part of the Fathers counsell to honour and advance his Son for the Father loveth the Son and will have all men to honour the Son as they honour the Father Joh. 5.23 As the Son did all things to honour the Father Joh. 8.49 Joh. 17.4 So it is the Fathers purpose and will to honour the Son Acts 3.13 2 Pet. 1.17 This contempt therefore which is offered unto Christ when he is offered in the Gospel and is set light by God the Father will avenge to the full As the bloud of Abel cryed to God for vengeance against Cain so doth the contempt done to the bloud of Christ cry to heaven against the despisers of it much more Christs bloud hath a double cry and it will prevaile both wayes First To prevaile for mercy towards those that count it precious and trust in it for them it saith Father forgive them But it cryes also for judgement against the despisers of it that God would avenge the contempt of it upon them and this bloud will be heard whatsoever it calls for whether for mercy or judgement Vse This may serve to be a warning to all such people to whom the Gospel of Christ is come let them in the feare of God take heed lest they neglect so great salvation Heb. 2. and let them with thankfulnesse and love entertain the grace which is brought unto them by the revelation of Jesus Christ 1 Pet. 1. If you become despisers God will work such things among you as who so heareth them his eares shall tingle Acts 1. and your hearts shall ake in the suffering of them much more Heb. 2. for if every transgression and disobedience committed against the Law or against the dim light of nature doe receive a just recompence of reward if those which are without the Law perished in those sinnes which they committed without the Law and if those which are without the Gospel perish in their ignorance because they know it not how then shall those escape which have both law of grace and Gospel of grace revealed unto them and yet doe neglect those great things Be warned and take heed It will be your wisdome now in this your day to consider the things which concern your peace 2 Cor. 6.1 feare lest you should receive the grace of God in vaine take heed of despising and setting light by the tydings of your salvation lest the same things which were ordained to be unto life be found to be unto you unto death Rom. 7. and then the greater meanes you have had to bring you to life the more bitter will your death be This is the great condemnation of the world that when grace is revealed and tendered unto men yet it is not received with love that they might be saved by it Joh. 3.19 It 's put away and is not esteemed lamentable is the case of such people This made Christ to weep over Jerusalem Luk. 19.41 42. because they knew not they regarded not the things of their peace no peoples case more to be pitied and mourned for then theirs that injoy the Gospel but esteeme it not Let such consider what is said of the Jewes when they put away the Gospel from them they did thereby judge themselves unworthy of eternall life Acts 13.46 Not that they did thinke themselves unworthy of life nor did they with their mouthes speake any such thing but as a man may shew h●s judgement of a thing as well by his fact as by his words so did they by their fact in that sinfull rejecting of the Gospel of salvation they did as it were pronounce a sentence against themselves by which all men might see that they were unworthy of the salvation preached to them such therefore as do reject the Gospel do by that contempt testifie and pronounce judgement against themselves that they are unworthy to be saved These as they love not the blessing of the Gospel so it shall be farre from them and as they choose the wayes of sin and death so it shall come unto them they shall dye in their sinnes with a double destruction And heare O England my deare native Countrey whose womb bare me Admonition to England whose breath nourished me and in whose armes I should desire to dye give eare to one of thy children which dearely loveth thee Be thou exhorted thankfully to accept the grace which is now ready to be revealed unto thee The way is now preparing the high mountaines which with their shadowes caused darknesse are now a laying low and the low valleys ready to be exalted the crooked things to be made straight that all flesh that lives within thy borders may see the salvation of our God Thy light is now coming and the glory of the Lord is now rising upon thee though darknesse hath covered a part of thee hitherto through the wickednesse of those that hated light yet now the Lord himselfe I trust will rise upon thee and the glory of the Lord shall be seene upon thee Now therefore stirre up thy selfe with thankfulnesse and joy of heart to embrace the things of thy peace which shall be brought unto th●e See that thou love the Gospel not in word and in shew onely but in deed and in truth and not for novelties sake
consider is this sc That all the deliverances and salvation Doctr. 4 which the Lord communicates to his people he doth it by vertue of and according to his Covenant So in the Text by the blood of thy Covenant I have c. He doth not say by blood simply but by the bood of the Covenant because the blood goes with the Covenant betwixt God and us Hence it is that we reade in 2 Sam. 23.5 when David looked at the Covenant which God had made with him he makes that the ground and foundation of all the mercy and deliverance which he obtained Herein saith he is all my salvation that God hath made with me a sure Covenant Consider the truth of this point both in temporary deliverance and spirituall salvations as the Text points at both as we shewed before First concerning temporall deliverances see what God saith unto Noah concerning his deliverance from the flood Gen. 6.18 with Chap. 8.1 With thee will I establish my Covenant c. and then God remembers Noah and all that was with him in the Ark and brought them to dry land again his deliverance was given him by covenant See also Exod. 6.4 5 6. God promises to bring his people from under the Egyptian bondage and why so because he remembred his Covenant with their fathers in Lev. 26.25.44 45. The Lord tells them vers 25. that if they sinned against him he would avenge upon them the quarrell of his Covenant but yet in vers 44 45. if they returned to him he would remember the Covenant which he had made with them and deliver them out of their captivity Secondly all spirituall salvation is communicated by Gods Covenant Psal 111.9 he sent redemption to his people because he was ever mindfull of his Covenant he commanded his Covenant for ever as the word is there i. e. he commanded it to stand fast for ever So in Mic. 7.17 18. he will return and have compassion upon us and forgive our iniquities what is the foundation of this he will remember his Covenant which he hath made with us Luke 1.74 that he might shew himself mindfull of his holy Covenant therefore he sent the Lord Jesus to perform the work of redemption for his people as in the beginning when God first promised life to Adam it was not without a covenant made with him though not the same that we must look for life by as we shall see more afterwards yet God made a covenant with him Do this and live so it is now with us it is by vertue of the Covenant that we must expect life and salvation from Gods hand the beginning of our salvation which is begun in the first grace given to us in our conversion and turning unto God is given unto us according to the covenant begun with us in Christ and the end of our salvation is according to the covenant which he makes with our selves in our own persons The grounds and reasons why the Lord taketh this course to convey life and blessednesse to us by covenant are these Reason 1 God doth herein wonderfully glorifie himself in the manifestation of his faithfulnesse and truth in keeping covenant with his people God saith in Scripture sometimes he will do this or that and you shall know that I am the Lord Gods glory is in being known Rom. 2.5 and 9.22 God will have his wrath and power known and so also his faithfulnesse for that is a part of his name whereby he is made known unto us and he is not fully known neither can be glorified till his faithfulnesse be made known In Apoc. 19.11 God is called faithfull and true and that is his name now we could never have known Gods faithfulnesse and truth if he had not entred into covenant with us God might have shewed forth his power mercy and goodnesse without any promise or covenant but his faithfulnesse could not be known and therefore saith Moses Deut. 7.9 The Lord hath set his love upon you and chosen you above any other people that you might know he is the Lord the faithfull God c. therein God shewes his faithfulnesse in performing his covenant with their fathers by choosing their seed to be a people unto him And the Apostle also when he speaks of Christs coming in the flesh attributes it to Gods truth and faithfulnesse in keeping covenant with their fathers Rom. 15.8 9. It was mercy to the Gentiles as he saith that the Gentiles might glorifie God for his mercy but it was truth and faithfulnesse to the Jews if he had never entred into covenant with us he might have manifested mercy unto us but he could never have made known his faitfulnesse The Lord doth it to this end to bind his people the faster to himself Reason 2 that he might keep them in more faithfull dependance upon him and constant walking with him A covenant binds on both parts the Lord doth not binde himself to us and leave us free the confederacy is mutuall In Gen. 31.44 saith Laban to Jacob Let us make a covenant I and thou c. not I alone with thee nor thou alone with me but I and thou both one with another so it is betwixt the Lord and us there is a mutuall tie the Lord is pleased to tie himself to us and we are bound also and tied to him hence saith the Lord in Jerem. 13.11 I have tied the whole house of Israel to me In what bond were they tied in the bond of the covenant as it is Ezek. 20.37 The Lord sees how slippery and unstable our hearts are how apt we are to start aside from our duty towards him as Jer. 14.10 we love to wander like sheep that straggle from the fold and therefore to prevent this unconstancy and unsettlednesse and to keep our hearts more stable in our obedient walking before him therefore he bindes us in the bond of the Covenant Hence saith the Lord to Abraham Gen. 17.7 I will stablish my Covenant with thee and then in vers● 9. he addes thou shalt therefore keep my Covenant Abraham must keep covenant with God as he looks for blessing from him The Lord doth it for the stronger consolation of his people that Reason 3 in all their distresses and difficulties they might ever have recourse to the faithfulnesse of the covenant which the Lord hath made with them he is a God that cannot lie nor alter the things which have gone out of his lips and therefore we have the stronger consolation Heb. 6.17 18. his promises beings yea and Amen which cannot fail 2 Cor. 1.20 This was Davids stay 1 Chron. 17. ult though friends be unfaithfull and many deceive yet the Lord is faithfull and cannot fail his people this is the foundation of their comfort a rock for them to stand upon when the storms blow and the waters beat and they finde themselves destitute of all other comfort and help Reason 4 The Lord doth hereby put an honour upon his people
would againe receive us graciously Hosea 14.2 And thus by meanes of this our blessed Mediator and Advocate wee are holden and continued in Covenant with God so as the Covenant of his grace peace made with us stands fast through Christ notwithstanding our manifold declinings and turnings backe from him Differ 3 The third difference between the Covenant of workes and of grace is this That in the covenant of workes Gods acceptation begins with the worke and so goes on to the worker or person working But in the covenant of grace his acceptation begins with the person and so goes on unto the worke In the one God accepts the person for the workes sake In the other God rewards the worke for the persons sake Hereof it is that the life promised in the Covenant of workes Rom. 4.4 is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a debt as due unto the worke unto which it is promised But that which is promised in the covenant of grace is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a gift as being freely given to the person without respect to any worke or if to the work yet for the persons sake This word gratis freely puts the difference between the covenant of workes and of grace In the covenant of work God justifies the doers of the Law but not gratis freely but in the covenant of grace God justifies freely without respect to the worke out of love to the person This is noted in the speech of Moses concerning Abel Gen. 4.4 God had respect to Abel and to his sacrifice Abel being a believer and under grace God had respect to his sacrifice but it was because he first had respect to Abel himselfe Hence also is that argument of theirs in Judges 13.23 Judg. 13.23 If say they the Lord would slay us he would not have accepted an offering at our hands They reason from the acceptance of their service to the acceptance of their person because the person is accepted first and therefore if the offering be accepted then the person much more But on the contrary the Lord threatneth that when he tooke no pleasure in their persons Mal. 1.10 then their offerings should not be regarded And so when Elijah and the Priests of Baal offered the same kinde of sacrifice God accepted the sacrifice of Elijah but not of the other because his person was accepted but theirs were not In 1 Kings 8.52 1 King 8.52 God is said to have his eyes open to heare the prayers of his people it is not the eye which heares but the eare yet God is said to have his eyes open to heare our prayers because there is something first in Gods eye which makes his eare to listen unto our cry First he looks favourably upon our persons and hath a gracious respect unto our selves and then he bowes his eare to the prayer which we make before him According to that Psal 34.15 Psal 34.15 The eyes of the Lord are upon the righteous and his eare is open to their prayers Thus it is in the Covenant of grace Gods acceptance beginneth first with the person And hence it is that when God hath cast favour upon the person then he accepts weake services from them A cup of cold water is better accepted from such an one Mat. to last Micah 6.6 7. then a thousand rivers of oyle from another hand yea though there be imperfections and weaknesses in the thing done yet God passeth by the weaknesses for the favour he beares unto the person As wee may see in Jacob he seekes the blessing but mixeth so much imperfection and sin in it that if God had not accepted his person he might have brought a curse upon himselfe in stead of a blessing but God had said Jacob have I loved and therefore though he liked not his dissembling yet he passed by his infirmitie and Jacob got the blessing And so David 1 Sam. 11. ult though the thing which he had done displeased the Lord yet God tooke not his mercy from him as he tooke it from Saul for Saul was under a covenant of workes and David under a covenant of grace Herein the Lord would shew that it was the person not the worke which he had respect unto But Adam being under a covenant of workes he finds acceptance with God no longer then his worke is found perfect before him All his personall indowments excellent gifts and the Image of God which was stamped upon him by which he was but little inferiour to the Angels all these could procure him no favour or acceptance any longer then his worke was right because he was under the Covenant of workes his person is accepted according to his worke Vse 1 For all such as are under the Law and have not yet made their refuge unto grace to finde acceptance in Christ nothing that they do hath any acceptance with God Tit. 1. last Themselves are abominable and so are all their workes abominable Psal 14.1 And till they come to have their persons accepted in Christ it 's in vaine to tell God of their services and what great things they have done he regards none of their workes they are to him as the filthinesse of a menstruous woman Though they doe such things as are highly esteemed amongst men yet they are but abomination in the sight of God In Luk. 18. Luke 18. the Pharisee tells the Lord what a number of good workes he had done fasting praying paying tithes dealing justly c. But what doth all this availe him he goes away without any acceptance before God So Mat. 7.22 Mat. 7.22 and Luk. 13.26 Luke 13 26. they shall come and say unto Christ Wee have eaten and drunke in thy presence and prophesied in thy Name and done many great workes But see what the Lord saith Depart away from me I know you not Their persons were never accepted by grace in Christ and therefore all that they had done was but as if they had brought a carrion for sacrifice or had offred swines bloud before the Lord. Here therefore begin if wee would have our workes accepted come before God in humilitie and sense of our owne vilenesse as the Publican did and seeke to be accepted through grace in Christ and then come and offer thy gift and so coming both thou and thy sacrifice shall finde acceptance with God But as in his own might shall no man prevaile 1 Sam. 2.9 1 Sam. 2.9 so now in this state of sin and corruption in his own worke shall no man finde acceptance in Gods sight Vse 2 For singular comfort unto all such as having made their refuge unto grace have found acceptance through faith in Christ Be herein comforted that the weakest and poorest services that you put up to God in Christ are accepted of him These are many times discouraged by reason of their weake performances Oh! there is so much deadnesse coldnesse dulnesse so many by-thoughts
but unto the disobedient shall be tribulation and wrath whether Jewes or Gentiles c. Where actions are alike God will deale alike with all such as are under the Covena●t of workes What is just towards one is just towards another when actions and workes are alike Now God will deale justly with all He that commands us to give to every man his due Rom. 13.7 will not himselfe withhold due from any here therefore God will deale alike with all Let one fulfill the Law and he shall live thereby Let another fulfill it and he also shall have the same life Let one breake it and he shall dye and as many as breake it shall lye under the same condemnation But now it is otherwise in the Covenant of grace grace deales diversly with men that are equall in themselves where there was no difference before grace makes a difference as Rom. 3.23 24. Rom. 3.23 24 All have sinned c. there is no difference in our selves wee are all shut up in condemnation by sin but are all justified No but onely those that are of the faith of Jesus Hence saith the Apostle Rom. 9.10 11 12 13. that when Jacob and Esau were both in the same condition neither of them having done either good or evill yet grace put a difference betwixt them and preferred one before the other They were alike in themselves but yet they had not the like grace vouchsafed to them from God Justice is due but grace is free Justice must doe right but grace may communicate it selfe to whom where and in what measure it will Hence is that in Rom. 9.15 Rom. 9.15 I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy c. He doth not say I will deale justly with whom I will he cannot deale unjustly with any But concerning grace he saith I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Therefore to manifest the freenesse of his grace the Lord sometimes preferreth those that seeme least worthy he sets the younger before the elder Jacob before Esau Ephraim before Manasseh and the Gentiles which were aliens from God before the Jewes which counted themselves to be the onely people Consider those two speeches in Mat. 20. Mat. 20.14 15 The one ver 14. Take that which is thine owne and goe thy way the other ver 15. I will doe with mine owne as I will Here is our owne and Gods owne our owne is that which we looke for according to our agreement which wee have made with God for the worke done As those hyred into the Vineyard they agreed with the Master of the Vineyard for so much and that which they so agreed for for their worke that was their owne due by Justice But that which was not by agreement nor for worke but comes by grace that is Gods owne with which he may doe even as he will our owne is that which is due from Gods justice Gods owne is the gift of his free grace To every one God will say take thine owne And where there is no difference in worke Justice will make no difference in wages And if any begin to complaine that others are better dealt with then they the Lord answers to such I will doe with mine owne as I will Grace is mine owne and I owe it to none I will shew it where I will It is grace which makes the difference herein may God deale diversly giving more to one lesse to another as pleaseth him And hereto agrees that in ver 16th He that is first shall be last and the last first He that should be last in a way of Justice shall become first in a way of grace Those that Justice would set last and lowest Grace will advance and set highest This may serve to stop every mouth that is ready to open it selfe Vse 1 against God and apt to wrangle against the dispensation of his grace you have your owne therefore complaine not you have what you can require in a way of Justice and more and therefore let God doe with his owne what he will What if God will shew more grace to another then to you Is he therefore unrighteous you your selves will take the same liberty to shew the fruits of your kindnesse and courtesie where you will And will you be more free then God Let not your eye be evill because his is good murmure not against God repine not against men if they have received more if God have given them more gifts then unto you grudge not The spirit that is in us lusteth after envie James 4.5 James 4.5 And the Jewes were moved with envie when they saw the Gentiles preferred before themselves But learne to submit to the Lords dispensation neither murmure against him nor envie against men remembring grace is free to give to whom and w●●re he will Vse 2 For incouragement to such as are yet under the condemnation of the Law though you have deserved to perish and have been as deepe in sin as many of those that are now in hell so as Justice can make no separation no difference between you and them yet grace may Consider how it was with those two malefactors Luk. 23.39 to 44. Luke 23.39 to 44. they were both in the same condemnation yet one flying to grace found mercy with the Lord one went to Paradise the other to hell Though you are as vile as the damned in hell yet grace may save you Vse 3 For all such as goe on in their sinne in an impenitent course marke what you must looke for what ever plagues or judgements have befell any sinner you going on in the same sinnes must looke for the same judgements Except you repent you shall likewise perish Luk. 13.2 3. Luk. 13.2 3. God is the same his justice the same now as before It followes the same rule to judge by therefore where the sinnes are the same if you be not under grace you must look for the like vengeance Consider what the Apostle saith 1 Cor. 10.7 8 9 10. Be not you murmurers idolaters fornicators as they were lest you meet with the same judgements as befell them Therefore take heed how you goe on in an impenitent course in any sinne lest the same plagues be inflicted on you Take heed of the covetousnesse of Judas the hypocrisie of Ananias the obstinacy of the Jewes the pride of Nebuchadnezzar the murmurings of the Israelites the lukewarmnesse of Laodicea lest yee taste of the same miseries Justice can make no difference The seventh difference is this That the Covenant of workes is Differ 7 disanulled and broken by one transgression never to be made up any more But the Covenant of grace is not broken asunder by many transgressions so long as wee follow God in a way of faith and repentance After many offences the Covenant of grace may stand firme still This difference is made by the Apostle Rom. 5.16 Rom. 5.16 The guilt came of one offence unto
a type of one under the covenant of works I have served thee these many years never brake thy comandment c. Hence is that in Rom. 11.4 To him that works the wages is counted a debt Man might have required life from God as a due debt But in the covenant of grace a man hath nothing left him of his own to glory in before God But all his glorying is in the grace of God as 1 Cor. 1.30 31. 1 Cor. 1.30 31. Christ is made unto us wisdome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption that wh●soever glories should glory in the Lord. The covenant of grace teacheth us to look at our selves as lost and undone creatures but withall to look at the riches of grace and to glory in Christ As Paul 1 Tim. 1.13.14 I was a blasphemer c. But the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ was aboundant towards me This difference the Apostle layes down on both parts both in respect of the covenant of works and of grace Rom. 3.27 Rom. 3 27. Where is boasting then It is excluded By what law Of works No the law of works doth not exclude boasting but it is excluded by the law of faith which is the summe of the covenant of grace And so Ephes 2.9 Ephes 2.9 We are saved by grace and not by works Why so lest any man should boast as implying that there is matter of boasting if saved by works but not in b●ing saved by grace It is with us now as with a company of condemned prisoners all have received the sentence of death but tho●gh some be executed yet others are spared by favour from the Prince what have those that are saved to glory in more then the other Nothing in themselves onely in the favour of the Prince As in Pharaohs two officers whereof one was restored the other hanged so it is with us we are all condemned all have received a sentence of death in our s●lves and in some God will shew forth his wrath and make his power known Rom. 9.22 Rom 9.22 others he will spare reserving them as vessels of mercy prepared unto glory But nothing hath one to glory in more then the other but onely in the riches of grace which was shewed to the one and not to the other They that are saved may say I was in the same condemnation but the Lord hath had compassion on me because it so pleased him Here is that which grac● teacheth us to glory in Hee that is under the Law if hee fulfill the Law may say as Deut. 9.4 Deut 9.4 For mine own righteousnesse c. But he that is under grace must say as Deut. 9.6 Deut. 9.6 Not for mine own righteousnesse but according to his great mercy Tit. 3.4.5 Tit. 3.4 5. Object But Gal. 6.4 Paul who taught a covenant of grace no where more then in that Epistle yet wisheth a man to prove his own work that so he may have matter of rejoycing in himself and not in another Therefore it may seem that even the covenant of grace teacheth a man to glory in himselfe There is a twofold glorying one of confidence Answer the other of a good conscience First there is a glorying of confidence in regard of our righteousnesse and justification by it before God And this the Apostle wholly excludes Rom. 3.27 Rom 3.27 Ephes 2.9 Ephes 2.9 as was shewed before n ither doth he give any allowance to this in the place alledged Gal. 6.4 Secondly there is the glorying of a good conscience before men and this is allowed unto the Saints Thus Paul himselfe 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Cor. 1.12 My rejoycing is the testimony of a good conscience and 1 Cor. 9.15 And this glorying is either sincere and upright or hypocriticall and unsound Sincere glorying is when a man being privie to his own integrity pleads his own faithfulnesse against the calumnies and accusations of men As Job when he was accused to be an hypocrite was forced to plead the uprightnesse and holinesse of his former conversation chap. 30. 35. And so Paul when hee began to bee vilified among the Corinthians was constrained to plead his own faithfulnesse and diligence and great labours in the work of Christ which hee did in the integrity of his conscience lest the Gospel should be despised Hypocriticall glorying is when a mans glorying in himselfe ariseth not from the soundnesse of grace and the uprightnesse of his own conversation but from a vain proud comparing himselfe with other men as b●ing more excellent then they in his own eyes like the Pharis●e Luke 18.11 Luke 18.11 I am not as other men c. Now the Apostle speaks of this last kind of glorying whereas some had fallen by infirmity v. 1. others were ready to please themselves that they had not discovered so great weaknesse as others had done and so were apt to think better of themselves and therein to boast The Apostle therefore exhorts them not to glory in this that they were stronger then such as had so fallen but to examine whether all were well with themselves and sound within because otherwise the matter and ground of their rejoycing is in anothers weaknesse and not in their own goodnesse rather in anothers falling then in their own sure standing by grace and so they glory in another not in themselves which is but an unsound and vain kind of rejoycing and this the Apostle condemnes But Hezekiah glories even before God Isai 33.3 Isaiah 33.3 Remember Object O Lord saith he what I have done c. Answer He glories not of his merit and worth unto justification but of his uprightnesse and good conscience As if hee should say Thou hast been wont to shew favour to thy servants that have walked faithfully before thee therefore doe the like unto me and so us●th it as an argument to encourage himselfe to seek and hope for favour from the Lord. Vse Hereby we may see of what spirit wee are whether it bee the spirit of grace or of the law that dwels or works in us There is a spirit or the law and there is a spirit of grace The spirit of the law may teach us and inform us of the duties we ought to walk in and also stirre up to a l●gall performance of them by the light which it hat wrought and yet the spirit of grace may still bee wanting Would wee know then whether the spirit which is in us be a spirit of the law or of grace the point in hand will shew it The spirit o● the law fills a man with rejoycing and glorying in himselfe and in that which he hath done it makes him to boast of his own righteousnesse as the Pharisee Luke 18.11 12. Luke 18.11.12 he is full of his own goodnesse and as the Church of Laodicea Rev. 3. The spirit of the law maketh a man to say as the proud King of Ashur Isai 37.24 25. Isaiah
37.24.25 It 's I that have done all this c. But the spirit of grace is another spirit as it is said of Caleb and Joshua that there was another spirit in them Numb 14.24 Numb 14.24 whatsoever such an one doth as hath the spirit of grace working in him hee is still in himselfe as nothing as Paul saith of himselfe 2 Cor. 12.11 2 Cor. 12.11 that though hee was not behind the chiefe Apostles in the labour of the Gospel yet hee was still as nothing in his own eyes Had Paul been of a Pharisaicall legall spirit we should have had other language from him then to say I am nothing He would have had his trumpet blown before him to sound out his excellency and worth he would have gloried of his goodnesse not onely before men but before God But Paul had the spirit of grace in him and that made him to see that hee had nothing in himselfe to glory in but onely in the grace of Christ The spirit of the law will magnifie the works of the law and will cause us to magnifie our selves because of them but the spirit of grace will make us vile in our own eyes and our works to bee but as a spotted garment Isai 64. leaving us nothing in our selves that is of worth to glory in before God But may not a child of God rejoyce and take comfort in his obedience and fruit of holinesse which he bringeth forth Quest He may as is evident 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Cor. 1.12 Gal. 6.4 but how Answer Not as in that which justifies him or is his righteousnesse before God but as in the fruits which follow and flow from his justified estate so testifying unto him that he is under grace as also opp●sing his integrity against the calumnies and suspicions of men But how may I know that the comfort which I take from them is fro● the spirit of grace and not from the spirit of the law Quest The spirit of the law makes a man goe no further then himself Answer 1 looking at himselfe as the whole author and worker of all the good which he hath done and therefore it is that such despise others in comparison of themselves if they see that they come short of themselves as he did Luke 18.11 Luke 18.11 But the spirit of grace teacheth a man to lo●k at all he doth as wrought in him by the power of Christ as the Apostle saith 1 Cor 15.10 1 Cor. 15.10 By the grace of God I am what I am And so ascribes no more to himselfe though he hath done more then he doth to others that have done lesse The spirit of the Law hardens the heart against grace keeps Answer 2 the heart aloft so that it cannot submit and come down so low as to see that infinite need of mercy and grace that it stands in as Rom. 10.3 Rom 10.3 they being led by ●he spirit ot the law and glorying in their own righteousnesse they could not submit to the righteousnesse of faith it was too great a submission for them But the spirit of grace teacheth a man so to see his own uprightnesse and to take comfort in it that withall it makes him in lowlinesse and humility of spirit to flie to grace for acceptance of his best performances and to get pardon for the defect of them as we may see in Nehemiah chap. 13.22 Nehem. 13.22 Remember mee O Lord saith he and pardon me according to thy great mercy And so Paul 1. Cor. 4.4 1 Cor. 4.4 he knew his own faithful●esse yet he durst not adventure himselfe to come before God to be justified thereby Let such therefore as glory in themselves and in their own works see by what spirit they are led even by the spirit of the law these are under the covenant of works Those that glory in grace and in Christ alone these are under the covenant of grace The covenant of works rested in and trusted unto can never Differ 9 in this state of corruption that we are now in work setled comfort peace and quietnesse of heart Let a man walke as exactly as flesh and bloud can attaine unto and let him withall build as confidently on this foundation as he possibly may yet the heart will be still in suspicion in doubt in feare uncertain what to trust unto doubtfull what his estate is But the Covenant of grace rested in and trusted unto doth settle the soule in peace Let a man renounce his own righteousnesse and fly to the free covenant and promise of grace and stay wholly upon it here is a sure anchor for the soule to rest upon Let waves swell and windes blow yet he hath built himselfe on a sure rock which cannot faile and the more confidently that a man adheres to the Covenant of grace the more assured peace he will finde This difference the Apostle lays down Rom. 10. from the 5th ver to 10. Rom. 10. from ve● 5. to 10. where having before in the third verse laid downe a distinction of a two-fold righteousnesse one of workes the other of faith then next he commends the righteousnesse of faith which is by the covenant of grace above that which is by the covenant of workes and perswades to cleave to the one before the other by this Argument namely because the righteousnesse which is by workes leaves a man full of scruples and doubts making a man to be doubtfully enquiring who shall ascend up into heaven to tell him whether there be a place for him there or who shall goe downe into the deepe to tell him that he is saved from that infernall misery This dubious anxiety doth the Doctrine and Covenant of workes leave a man in but the Covenant of grace takes away all these scruples It saith not Who shall goe up into heaven c. It tells us that Christ is ascended to prepare a place for us nor saith it Who shall descend c. It teacheth us to believe that Christ is descended for to deliver us So that this doctrine of grace frees the minde of those scruples and perplexities which the doctrine of workes leaves a man intangled in He that rests on workes is like a wave of the Sea tossed and tumbled up and down and finds no rest he that rests on grace is like one built upon a rock and therefore cannot be shaken The reason of this difference is Because the Law which containes the summe of the Covenant of workes doth discover the perfect holinesse of God the puritie of his nature his hatred against sinne his strict justice and judgement so as the soule that is but in the least measure privie to his own impurity and sinfulnesse can never grow up to any confidence before God by any thing which he hath done When we have done the best we can reach unto yet the heart will still be doubtfull whether that which we have done be fully answerable to the
Jewes but now it is extended to the Gentiles also and free to bee revealed to all nations There was a long time wherein the Gentiles knew nothing of this covenant between God and man but walked in darknesse and in the vanity of their mind and therefore they are called The Gentiles which knew not God 1 Thess 4.5 1 Thess 4.5 And Gentiles in the flesh Ephes 2.11 Eph. 2.11 And said to be without Christ without promise without covenant yea to be without hope Ephes 2.12 Eph. 2.12 For being without Christ who is our hope they must needs bee without hope also We may see in the Scripture how that during all the time of the old Testament all the holy things of God by which life and salvation are conveyed are appropriated to the Jewes alone The law is called their Law John 8.17 John 8.17 And the inheritance of the children of Jacob Deut. 33.4 Deut. 33.4 To them were committed the Oraccles of God Rom. 3.2 Rom. 3.2 To them pertained the covenants and the promises c. Rom. 9.4 Rom 9.4 Thence also the Gospel in the first dispensation of it was promised unto them and also preached unto them and from them came to the Gentiles Salvation is from the Jews Ioh. 4. Hence also the spirituall things of the Gospel are called their spirituall things Rom. 15.27 Rom. 15 17. The calling of the Gentiles was such a mystery to the Jews though beleevers that when Peter preached to Cornelius and his family they contend earnestly with Peter about it Acts 11.2 Acts 11.2 And the Apostle himselfe durst not adventure to goe unto them till confirmed in the thing by vision and voyce from heaven The Jewes before Christs comming were the onely people of God except some few gleanings of the rest of the nations as the first fruits of the rest that should be called The Jews onely were the children the Gentiles were counted but as swine and dogges as our Saviour calls the Syrophanician woman Matth. 15. Matth. 15. The Jewes were the righteous Nation Exod. 19.6 Exod. 19.6 The Gentiles called Sinners of the Gentiles Gal. 2. Gal. 2. They were carried to serve dumb Idols in stead of the true and living God yea they sacrificed to Devils and not to God 1 Cor. 10.20 1 Cor. 10.20 Thus before Christs comming in the flesh the covenant of grace was dispensed onely unto the Jewes but now it is published to every creature or is free so to be Matth. 28.19 Goe and preach to all nations c. Now it is made manifest though before it was kept secret Before God was known in Israel but now his name is great in all the world Rom. 16.25 26. The Gentiles that were farre off are now made nigh by the bloud of Christ Eph. 2.13 Ephes 2.13 Hence also saith the Apostle Rom. 3.29 Hee is the God of the Gentiles also and not of the Jewes onely The covenant is now revealed unto all Quest When began the separation between Jew and Gentile Answer It was foretold by Noah Gen. 9.27 Gen. 9.27 God shall inlarge Japhet and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem but the accomplishment of it was long after and that in two degrees First the foundation of it was laid in Abrahams calling out of Vr where hee worshipped strange Gods Joshuah 24.2 into the land of Canaan Secondly the full accomplishment of it was at the bringing up of the children of Israel out of Egypt when he gave them the ceremoniall law When Abraham was brought forth of Vr then was the foundation laid of that partition wall and when God brought them forth of Egypt then was the wall fully finished and set up Quest How long continued this separation Answer This separation lasted till the time of Christs ascension and therefore it is that though Christ came and preached the Gospel of peace amongst men yet he did it only to the Jewes as he speaks Matth. 15.24 Matth. 15.24 I am not sent but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel Thence also is Christ called a Minister of Circumcision Rom. 15.8 But afterward Paul calls himselfe a Minister of the Gentiles Rom. 15.8 Rom. 15.8 This separation lasted long from Abrahams calling to Christs ascension was about a thousand eight hundred yeares and from the Israelites going out of Egypt was above a thousand foure hundred yeares Why did not God reveale the covenant of his grace as generally before Christ as since Christs comming Quest It was so because it so pleased him Matth. 11. Answer It was his good will to reveale it to any And if any ask Why not to all It was to shew the freenesse of his grace in which he is not bound to any he may shew mercy where he will shew mercy Rom. 9.15 Rom 9.15 he may reveale his grace to whom he will and conceale it from whom hee will In the Jewes therefore whom God chose to manifest his grace unto the Lord would shew forth a pattern of his free election of grace chusing them rather then any other people On the contrary on the Gentiles hee would shew forth an example of his just rejection leaving them to deserved wrath Why did God at last reveale his covenant to the Gentiles Quest To make his grace and goodnesse the more conspicuous and Answer 1 glorious in extending it selfe to such a rejected and forsaken people Rom. 11.32 He hath shut up all under unbelief that he might have mercy upon all That God should look upon such a people as they were this setteth forth the riches of his grace more abundantly For the further glorifying of Christ that his Name should bee Answer 2 more glorified Psal 2.8 Psalm 2.8 Isai 66.19 To teach us a double lesson First Humility secondly Vse Thankfulnesse First Humility the doctrine of grace is revealed to us that were Gentiles in the flesh without Christ without hope wee were aliens an abject a base and rejected people not the posterity of Abraham or Isaac Let us remember our base estate remember the rock whence we were hewen the wild nature of that Olive which wee grew upon and let this make us humble and lowly in our own eyes We are ready to think we are the onely people If we begin to be arrogant then call to minde what we were strangers from God and aliens from the Common-wealth of Israel This we had need to remember our selves of Paul thought it needfull to put the Ephesians in mind of it Ephes 2.11 Ephes 2.11 and the Romans cap. 11. and the Corinthians 1 Cor. 6.11 there is the same spirit in us we had need therefore to looke back to what we were that so we may not be high minded but feare least for our pride and unprofitablenesse we be left in the same estate we were in Secondly Thankfulnesse unto God that whereas our Fathers sate in darknesse for many hundred yeares
greater then that which was made to Christ Mat. 4. if he that made it had been able to have performed it But this promise passeth them all If wee had a promise of an hundred worlds or of ten heavens this is more then all When God said to Abraham I will be thy God what could he give or say more As Heb. 6.13 God having no greater to sweare by swore by himselfe so God being minded to doe great things for his people and having no greater thing to give giveth them himselfe well therefore might the Apostle 2 Pet. 1. 2 Pet. 1. looking at these promises call them exceeding great and precious promises This is the greatest promise that ever was made or can be made to any creature Angels or men Herein God giveth himselfe to be wholly ours all his glory power wisdome goodnesse grace holinesse mercy kindnesse all is ours for the good of his people that are in Covenant with him Quantus quantus est he is all ours Hence saith the Lord to Moses Exod. 33.19 Exod. 33.19 I will make all my goodnesse to passe before thee And the Apostle 1 Cor. 3.19 All things are yours and all shut up in this I will be thy God When a man taketh a wife into the Covenant of marriage with him what ever he is he is wholly hers he gives himselfe and that which he hath to her so when the mightie God of heaven and earth taketh his people into covenant with him he is an husband to them and marries them to himselfe and therefore what ever he is in the glory and excellency of his nature it is all for the good and comfort of his people Consider God essentially or personally all is theirs God in his essence and glorious attributes communicates himselfe to them for their good And God personally considered as Father Sonne and Holy-Ghost they all enter into Covenant with us Isai 54.5 The Father enters into a Covenant with us he promises to be a Father to us 2 Cor. 6.17 Hence saith the Lord Exod. 4.22 Exod. 4.22 Israel is my sonne my first-borne and Jer. 31.9.20 Jer. 31.9.20 Is Ephraim my deare sonne is he my pleasant childe The Lord speaketh as though he were fond of his children delighting in them as Psal 147.11 Psal 147.11 pitying of them Psal 103.13 As a Father hath a care for his children to lay up something for them so the Lord hath a care to provide both heavenly and earthly inheritance for his children he hath a care to nurture and instruct them in his wayes Deut. 32.10 Deut. 32.10 2. Christ the Sonne is in Covenant with us and speakes to us as Isai 43.1 Isai 43.1 Thou art mine and Hosea 13.14 I will redeeme them I will ransome them O death I will be thy death Thou hast destroyed my people but I will destroy thee There is the Covenant of the Sonne with us He brings us back to his Father from whose presence we were banished and sets us before his face for ever He undertakes with us to take up all Controversies which may fall between God and us He promiseth to restore us to the Adoption of sonnes and not onely to the title but also to the inheritance of sonnes that wee might be where he is Joh. 17.24 3. The Holy Ghost makes a Covenant with us as Heb. 10.15 16. Heb. 10.15 16 Whereof the Holy Ghost also is a witnes to us testifying of this Covenant which he makes with us For after that he had said before This is the Covenant that I will make with them I will put my Law into their hearts and in their minds will I write them c. Though the Father be implyed in it yet here is the proper worke of the Holy Ghost What the Father hath purposed to his people from all eternitie and the Sonne hath purchased for them in time that the Holy Ghost effects in them He applyes the bloud of Christ for the remission of sinnes he writes the law in our hearts he teacheth us he washeth us from our filthinesse and comforteth us in our sadnes supports us in our faintings and guides us in our wandrings He that effects these things for us is there said to make a Covenant with us Thus God personally considered Father Sonne and Holy Ghost are in Covenant with us 2. As there is sufficiency in this promise so also a propriety to all the faithfull Therefore it is said not onely I will be God but I will be thy God and so every faithfull soule may say God is my God 1. They have a right in him 2. They have a possession of him First They have a right in him The name God in the promise is a name or title of relation as the words 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vir which signifie not onely a man in generall but a man with speciall relation to such a woman as he hath by Covenant betrothed to himselfe So here the name God it notes forth the relation in which God stands to us Hence it is said he is not ashamed to be called their God Heb. 11.16 Therefore when he had made a Covenant with Abraham he called himselfe the God of Abraham and afterwards the God of Isaac the God of Jacob the God of Israel As a woman may say of him to whom shee is married this man is my husband so may every faithfull soule say of the Lord he is my God Secondly They have possession of him He doth impart and communicate himselfe unto them in his holinesse in his mercy in his truth in the sense of his grace and goodnesse He doth not onely shew himselfe unto them but communicate himselfe unto them Hence it is said 1 Joh. 1.3 1 Joh. 1.3 Wee have fellowship with the Father c. and Christ is said to come and sup with them Rev. 3.20 Rev. 3.20 and to kisse them with the kisses of his mouth Cant. 1.1 2. And to be neare to them in all that they call upon him for Deut. 4.7 Deut. 4.7 It is true we have here but the first fruits the earnest peny a little part of that fulnesse which shall be revealed because we live by faith and by promise more then by sense and sight And thence it is that sometimes Gods owne people seeme to feele God departed from them as Isa 45.15 Isai 45.15 65.15 Yet they enjoy God still even in such desertions First In regard of his Grace pardoning their failings Secondly In his power sustaining Thirdly In his grace sanctifying them Fourthly In all these they have a sure pledge of a more full communion with him when the fulnesse of time is come Reason The reason why the Lord promiseth to give himselfe to his people is because a reasonable creature can be made blessed no other way then by enjoying of God himself It is not all the other things of the world that can make man happy but onely
the fruition of the blessed God Vse 1 This may let us see the abundant grace of God towards us in this promise of the covenant that hee is pleased to become our God this may be the wonder of the whole world that which Heaven Earth Angels and Men may stand astonied at that the high God should enter into a covenant with us to become our God There are divers things that manifest the riches of grace in this blessing First it we consider what it is that is given it is no lesse then the great mighty and infinite God Secondly unto whom he hath given himselfe even to us a generation of sinfull men the wretched children of apostatizing Adam that he should give himselfe to us though we had forsaken him and cast him off this is wonderfull grace It was no small thing that the Lord would at first enter into covenant with Adam though carrying upon him then the lively image and representation of Gods holinesse yet this was lesse wonderfull a righteous God to be in covenant with righteous man the holy God to be in covenant with man indued with the like holinesse But this is the wonder of grace that the just and holy God should enter into covenant with and communicate himselfe to such sinfull polluted loathsome and unclean creatures as the sonnes of men be We might justly have been left to the God of this world 2 Cor. 4.4 2 Cor. 4.4 because we had preferred him before the true God But God is pleased to give himselfe to us to become our God This Angels may stand and wonder at here is infinite grace Justice can lay no claim to this blessing well therefore m●y we say unto it Grace Grace Thirdly it is more grace still because his entring into this covenant with us his bestowing of this grace is of himselfe onely of his own good will and pleasure without our seeking or enquiring for him Indeed before wee get full interest in the covenant we are glad to seek and sue but the Lord begins and offers himself unto us as 2 Cor. 6.17 2 Cor 6.17 Come out from amongst them saith the Lord and I will be a Father unto you Men seek not after God as Psalm 14.2 but the Lord takes them by the hand and saith as Psalm 81.11 12. O Israel I will bee thy God So also he tells his people Ezek. 16.6 8. that when they lay in their bloud them he said unto them Live and sware unto them and entred into a covenant with them And yet here is more grace stil unto those that God enters into covenant with in that he is not the God of the whole world but of a remnant a little handful of people whom God hath chosen Out of the whole masse of sinfull men the Lord picks out a few base poore despised ones things of no account as 1 Cor. 1.27 28. and gives himselfe to such passing by those that count themselves Gods in comparison of other men passes by Saul that sits on the throne and chuses David that followeth the sheep here is the grace of the covenant this may cause us to wonder and say as Judas John 14.22 What is the cause that thou wilt shew thy self to us and not to the world To teach us all that doe heare of the covenant and of the rich Vse 2 and abundant blessing that is enjoyed thereby to give up our selves wholly and onely unto God who hath given himselfe wholly and onely to those that are in covenant with him Mete unto God as hee metes to you As hee maketh a covenant with you to give himself wholly to you so doe you devote and consecrate your selves your wit strength gifts and all to be wholly for him Doe not as the Israelites Psalm 81. God offered himselfe to them but they would have none of him God is a God to us and not to the world let us be a people unto him and not to the world The covenant between God and us must bee as the covenant between man and wife Hosea 3.3 Thou shalt be for me and I will be for thee The Lord takes it ill when as Isai 57.8 his people run after other lovers and commit fornication with Idols and with the world Live therefore unto him who lives and works all things for us and for our salvation To teach us in all our straits and necessities to flie unto this Vse 3 covenant that the Lord hath made with us to claim the right and interest that we have in him and to look unto him for succour in all the distresses that we meet withall Goe unto him and say Thou art our God now we stand in need of thy help all creatures cannot yeeld it doe not thou therefore faile us Look unto this promise I will be a God unto thee This course the Church taketh Isai 63.15.16 Isai 63.15.16 and by vertue of his covenant they plead for mercy in their great misery Doubtlesse thou art our Father look down c. This also the Church pleads with God in time of famine Jer. 14.21 Jerem. 14.21 Break not covenant with us it is thou the Lord our God that must give rain c. This is a sweet plea for every child of God to plead with the Lord by Vse 4 To teach us how we ought to walk in an holy fellowship with God without estrangednesse seeing he hath made a covenant with us and given himselfe to us Take heed of causing estrangednesse between God and us As friends that are in covenant the one with the other are carefull to shun all offences whereby they might grieve one another or cause any alienation of affection between them so should it be with us God doth nothing to grieve us he deales lovingly kindly and mercifully with us and therefore expostulates with his people Micah 6.3 Wherein have I grieved thee Lay against me the matter of accusation Oh that we could say the like unto him But let us labour so to walk in all holy fellowship and care to please him in reverence and feare of him that we may not doe any thing but that which is acceptable in his sight It may also direct us how to walk towards every person in the Trinity seeing they all enter into covenant with us Let us carry our selves to the Father as children in feare of him with faith depending upon him walk before him in child-like obedience Let us labour to honour the Son who hath abased himselfe to redeem us unto himselfe 1 Cor. 6. last 1 Cor. 6. last And seeing the holy Ghost is our Sanctifier and Comforter labour to walk as the Temples of the holy Ghost keeping our vessels in holinesse and honour that he may delight to dwell in us and take heed of grieving the holy Spirit of God whereby you are sealed to the day of redemption and submit your selves to his gracious directions in all things Vse 5 A ground of infinite comfort
he is to be God over us that wee must neither sp●ak nor do but according to the command of God As a man when he maketh a covenant of marriage with a woman he covenants with her to be her head to rule her that she shal be subject to him to please him or as when a man hires a servant c. So when the Lord takes us into covenant with himselfe it is that we shall bee his servants to doe his will pleasure and commandement When Isaac sent away his son Jacob to Padan Aran hee blessed him but withall he g●ve him a charge Gen. 28.1.6 Gen. 28 1.6 in both verses the blessing and the charge are m●ntioned tog●ther So wh●n the Lord giveth this blessing to us That hee will bee our God the charge goeth with it see th●t you keep the charge of the Lord your God and that you do whatsoever I comm●nd you 3. B cause the Lord knows as he speaks himself Isai 48.4 Isai 48.4 that we are obstinate and our neck is an Iron sinew c. and are r●ady to say as Jer. 2.31 Wee are Lords wee will not come at thee we will have none to command us Therfore the Lord promiseth this al●o when he saith That I will be a God over you that hee will subdue the rebelliousnesse of spirit that is in us and the stoutnesse of our hearts that he will bend and bow these stiffe necks of ours and make us pliable to his will in all things He will subdue our rebellions Micah 7.19 He will over-rule our unruly proud and presumptuous spirits and cause us to keep his Statut●s and Commandements to doe them This the Lord promiseth Ezek. 20.33 As I live saith the Lord surely with a mighty hand and wi●h a stretched out a●m and with fury powred out will I rule over you These words are a promise of grace that though they had other purposes in their minds they were thinking to goe after their Idols and to become as other countries serving wood and stone as verse 32. yet saith the Lord it shall not bee so I will over-rule these sinfull Idolatrous hearts of yours and you shal not serve these false Gods which you are doting upon but I will bring you unto my selfe and you shall serve me And this exposition is confirmed by the 34 37 38. verses compared together I will bring you into the wildernesse and there plead with you face to face and th●re make you ashamed and I will make you passe under the rod and bring you into the bond of the covenant and purge out from among you the rebels c. This is therefore a promise of grace There is indeed one word which seems to favour another interpret●tion given by some as if God did herein threaten a judgement because he saith I will rule you with wrath powred out verse 33. But this doth not hinder but the words may bee taken up as a promise of grace For the wrath here threatned may bee intended against the coun●ries into which they were scattered a d who held them in bondage as verse 34. or else it may be extended to the hypocrites and reprobates amongst themselves whom the Lord would separate and cut off from them as verse 37.38 God might threaten wrath to them though he extend grace and mercy to his own people Or if it be understood of the judgements which he would execute upon his owne people taken into covenant with him yet this makes nothing against the interpretation before given Because the Lord doth by his corrections in which he shewes himselfe angry with his people subdue their stout hearts and over-power their rebellious natures and make them submit themselves unto him hee maketh those messengers of his wrath to become meanes of good unto his people he layes his yoak on them to tame their unruly spirits Thus saith the Lord concerning Solomon 2 Sam. 7.14 That if he did sin against him he would correct him And it is said 1 Kings 11.9 that God was angry with Solomon and he powred out wrath against him stirring up adversaries to trouble him A father rules over his child●en in love and tender compassion and yet by reason of their unruly disposition hee is sometimes forced to shew himselfe angry with them by some sharp corrections So it is with the Lord in the rule that he exerciseth over his people Therefore though we do restraine the wrath powred forth to be upon his own children yet it may bee a promise of grace that the Lord will by meanes thereof bring under and over-rule the stubbornnesse of their hearts and governe them with a mighty hand whether they will or no. Thus hee over-ruled the spirit of the Prophet Ezek. 3.14 Ezek. 3.14 that though hee had no mind to preach to the Jewes being such a rebellious people yet the hand of the Lord carried him to the performance of it with indignation of his own spirit which was against it 4. When he hath subdued our spirits unto him and brought us to submit unto his will then he will be God over us to teach instruct and direct us in the way wherein we should walk that if either ignorance or heedlesnesse doe turn us out of the way then the Lord guides us into the right way wherein we ought to walk as Isai 48.17 And this he promiseth to doe Isai 30.21 You shall heare a voyce behind you c. we are apt to heare and passe by as though we heard not therefore the Lord is said to call after us as one that speaks behind us and cries to us Ho Ho you are out of your way this is the way c. This also h●e promiseth Psalm 25.9.12 Psal 25.9.12 that when he hath once meekned our crosse spirits and made us willing to obey him then he will guide us in judgement and teach us the way which himself chuseth for us And thus the Lord will be God over his people a God above them as a Prince is ov●r his p●ople an husband over his wife a father o●e his children a master over his servants or a shepheard o er his flock to rule and order them according to his owne mind And this is no small benefit and blessing of the covenant For look as it is for the good of a people to be under the government of a gracious King the good of the wife to bee under the government of a prudent husband the good of a child to be under the government of a godly father and for the good of the fl●ck to be under the guidance of a skilf●ll shepheard So it is for the good of the people of God that hee will bee pleased to bee a God over them and that he will not leave them to the rebellious lusts of their own hearts This is a rich blessing of the covenant of grace As it is said of Solomon that because the Lord loved Israel therefore he gave them such a King 2
taken away from us Thirdly it is sin which brings all sorrowes and miseries upon us this is that which brings sword famine pestilence nakednesse and all such outward calamities sin i●●he true cause of all these These spring not out of the dust nor come by chance but are the fruit which growes upon the forbidden tree of sin but let sin once be forgiven then are these things which are in themselves evill turned unto good unto us Affliction is good when the sin which causeth it is gone and done away one that hath his sin forgiven may rejoyce in affliction Rom. 5. Romans 5. yea hee may be exceeding joyous in all tribulations 2 Cor. 7.4 2 Cor. 7.4 When sin which is the sting of every crosse is removed is pulled out then may we take up that crosse which before we fled from as from a serpent and put it in our bosome and not be hurt by it Fourthly it turns good things into evill unto us sometimes God gives good things even to wicked and evill men making his Sunne to shine and rain to fall upon the wicked and unjust Matth. 5.45 Matth 5.45 But so long as sinne is unpardoned though the things be good in themselves yet they are not good unto them sin corrupts the good things they enjoy it turns blessings into curses as the Lord saith in Malachi 2.2 Malachi 2.2 I will curse their blessings th●ir health wealth peace and prosperity are as snares unto them to work their ruine Psal 69 22. Psalm 69.22 But where sin is pardoned there is no more curse Apoc. 22. Apocal 22. Then the blessing returnes to the creature and is in the creature the rain is a rain of blessing Ezek. 34.26 Ezek. 34.26 our meat and our talk a blessing our prosperity a blessing we are then blessed in all we enjoy in all we put our hands unto Fifthly what an evill sin is and what a benefit forgivenesse is we may conceive if we doe but look on such men as have felt the sting of sin in their own consciences and have felt the burthen of it ●ying on them Look upon Cain crying out in the horror of his conscience My sin is greater then can bee forgiven Gen. 4. Genesis 4. Look upon Saul complaining that God was departed from him I am saith he in great distresse 2 Sam. 28.15 Look upon Judas when his sin pressed upon his conscience how unable he was to beare it very anguish of conscience on earth makes him cast himselfe into the gulfe of hell Prov. 18.14 The spirit of a man will beare his infirmity all outward sorrowes so long as his conscience is at peace free from the trouble of sin but when sin comes and burdeneth the conscience of a man this none can beare This David found to bee a burthen beyond his strength he was not able to beare it Psal 38.3 Psalm 38.3 A stone is weighty and the sand is heavie but sin upon the conscience is heavier then them both Pro. 27.3 Prov. 27.3 This burthen makes the whole creation to groan under it Rom. 8. Romans 8. And whosoever hath felt the guilt of his own sin lying upon him such an one wil easily conceive what a blessing this is to have sinne forgiven By forgivenesse the burden is lightned the wound is healed the soule is eased of that anguish and bitternesse which it was in before While our sin was unpardoned we looked at God as an enemy to condemne us but now we have peace towards God we are reconciled the cause of the enmity being taken away All this considered well might D●vid say as he did Blessed is the man whose sin is forgiven and iniquity covered Psal 32. Psalm 32. Now this great blessing God hath promised in his covenant he will forgive the sin of his people which give up themselves to walk in covenant with him Hee will not remember against them their former iniquities their sins shall be as if they had never been hee will see no iniquity in Jacob nor transgression in Israel he will passe by the sin of the remnant of his heritage he will remember their sins no more yea though their sins be great yet hee will forgive them though they abound yet his grace shall abound much more in the forgivenesse of them Rom. 5.20 See Isai 43.25 And this the Lord will doe First because mercy pleaseth him Micah 7. It is a pleasure to him to shew mercy to his covenanted people Never did we take more pleasure nor so much in the acting and committing of our sins as he doth in the pardoning of them Hee is the Father of mercy 2 Cor. 1. 2 Cor. 1. And therefore delights in mercy as a father delighteth in his children It doth him good to see the fruit of his own mercy in the taking away of the sins of his people Secondly it is the purpose which he hath everlastingly purposed within himselfe to make his grace glorious in those whom he hath by covenant given unto Christ to be saved by him he will have the praise of the glory of his grace Ephes 1.6 Ephes 1 6. Hee will not lose this glory he will be admired in the Saints 2 Thess 1.10 2 Thess 1.10 Hee will make the world to wonder when it shall bee known what sin hath been committed by them and pardoned by him Gods people are called vessels of mercy Rom. 9. Rom. 9. As those therefore which are vessels of wrath shall be full of the wrath and indignation of the Almighty to make his wrath known in them so the vessels of mercy shall be filled with mercy filled up to the brim God will have no empty vessels all shall be full one sort filled with wrath the other with mercy Thirdly The Lord hath received a satisfaction to his Justice in Christ what ever Justice could require at our hand Christ hath satisfied for us to the utmost farthing So that now Justice cannot complaine though that sin be forgiven unto us because it was fully punished in Christ Fourthly If the Lord should not forgive the sinnes of his people which believe on Christ Christ his sufferings should be in vaine To what end was it for him to suffer the just for the unjust Why was the chastisement of our peace laid upon him if wee should also suffer for our owne sinnes God would never have laid our iniquities upon him but that he intended to forgive them unto us Fifthly There is no other way to have sinne done away no other meanes to get free from sin but by forgivenes Either God must forgive sin or all the world must be condemned and lie under his curse for ever But there are a remnant that God will save from perishing in the condemnation of the world c. Sixthly The Lord hath not onely promised forgivenes and spoken it with his mouth but his act and deed gives us assurance that he will
I will forgive let every soule say within it selfe Surely then I will try I will seeke I will sue for mercy that I may be forgiven But what should I doe that I may be forgiven Quest 1. Enter into thine owne heart Answ and search out all the sinnes of heart and life which thou art privie unto Lament 3.40 Lam. 3.40 This is the Lords owne direction Jer. 3.12 13. Jer. 3.12 13. when the Lord first promised that he would shew himselfe mercifull and not let his wrath fall upon them yet presently addes But know thou thine iniquitie for thou hast fallen by rebellion c. 2. When thou hast found out thy sin goe then before the Lord and confesse and judge thy selfe before him as Ezra 9.6 Ezra 9.6 Confesse thy selfe worthy to be destroyed Doe as the Prodigall did Luke 15. Luk. 15. I am no more worthy to be counted thine 3. Present before the Lord the sacrifice of the Lord Jesus bring no satisfaction of thine owne make no mention of thine own righteousnesse or good deservings but fly onely to the bloudy sufferings and sacrifice of Christ to find acceptance reconciliation through him without that bloud there is no forgivenesse Heb. 9. Heb. 9. 4. Come not before God with an heart purposing still to continue in thy sinne but together with prayer for pardon joyne prayer for a spirit of grace and holinesse to make thee a new heart and a new spirit that sin may live in thee no more be willing to bind thy selfe by Covenant to the Lord to glorifie that grace shewed on thee if he will please to be gracious towards thee in taking away this sin Hos 14.3 with 9. Hos 14.3 with 9. Thus come before the Lord and then as men that have any great legacy left them by the will of another they will intreat for it they will plead the Testament of the Testatour and if that will not prevaile they will bring it into the Court of Justice and there sue for it So let us doe beg intreat require the performance of this legacy of the new Testament which grace hath bequeathed unto us and if this obtaine not then bring our cause into the Covenant of grace and there sue and plead before the throne of grace There bring out the words of the Testament and say Lord here is thine owne Covenant and promise hold the Lord fast to his promise which he hath made and plead with him and say Lord why are thy mercies restrained from me where is thy faithfulnesse why dost not thou pardon mine iniquitie Though I be worthy to perish yet remember thy Covenant make good thy promise in which thou hast caused thy servant to trust Such importunitie the Lord will not take ill he delights thus to be overcome by the pleas of his people Doe thus and he that hath promised will also fulfill and will take away all thine iniquitie and receive thee graciously Hos 14.3 Vse 5 For singular comfort to all the people of God who doe in any faithfulnesse and truth of heart endeavour to walke according to the Covenant they have made with him To all such this word of Consolation doth belong that their iniquitie is pardoned their sin is forgiven It was a word of comfort Christ spake to the palsie man Mat. 9.2 Mat. 9.2 Sonne be of good comfort thy sinnes are forgiven thee So Isai 40 1 2. Isai 40.1 2. And thence was that speech of Christ to Mary in Luke 7.48.50 Thy sinnes are forgiven thee goe in peace There is peace indeed when Christ promiseth sin to be forgiven Now so it is to all the covenanted people of God their sin is forgiven here is their comfort See Psal 103.17 18. Psal 103.17 18. If wee keepe his Covenant his loving kindnesse and mercy is ours to forgive us our sinnes Shall man saith Eliphaz be more just then God shall man be more pure then his maker Job 4.17 Job 4.17 So may we say in this case Shall man be more faithfull then God more mindfull of his Covenant and promise then his Maker No God is the faithfull God keeping Covenant and mercy with those that feare him If we then which are so apt to breake our Covenant with God and men if wee be carefull to keepe Covenant with him how much more will God performe this promise of his Covenant towards us to pardon our sinnes If wee be not unfaithfull towards him he cannot be unfaithfull towards us Nay though we were in part unfaithfull yet cannot he deny himselfe 2 Tim. 2.13 2 Tim. 2.13 Quest But how may I know that my sinnes are forgiven me Answ 1. A plainer evidence I cannot give then this before named scil a carefull conscionable and constant endeavour to walke in Covenant with God Psal 103.17 18. Psal 103.17 18. But I have many failings in the keeping of my Covenant Object Yet so long as you doe not renounce your Covenant Answ and breake the bond till you doe agree to the loosing of the knot in which you have bound your selfe chusing to turne back after your former liberties the substance of the Covenant is not yet broken though some article of the Covenant may be violated There be some trespasses against some particular clauses in Covenants which though they be violated yet the whole Covenant is not forfeited 2. An affectionate and cordiall love to the Lord Jesus who hath washed us from our sinnes in his bloud is a sure signe that our sins are forgiven us Luk. 7.47 when wee so thinke of Christ as that nothing is too much for him nothing enough all we doe or can doe is too little for him and as nothing to that which our soule desireth this love never goes alone but is accompanied with this blessing of forgivenesse And sure thus it is with those that feele in any measure the efficacy of Christs bloud easing their consciences from the guilt of sin They could be content to wash Christs feet not with teares onely but with their hearts bloud and to dye for love of him who hath loved them and given himselfe for them to save them from their sinne 3. The mortification and dying of sinne in our hearts is a signe that our sinnes are forgiven us When Christ takes away Jacobs sinnes he also turnes away ungodlinesse from Jacob Rom. 11.26 27. Rom. 11.26 27. If sin live in us the guilt of it remaines still upon us I meane if it live in us in full strength 4. If we have a tender heart to mourne over Christ whom wee have pierced Time was when we could tread under feet that precious bloud by which we are sanctified But now it melts the heart to thinke that that bloud which wee have so despised should yet be sprinkled upon us to wash us from our sinne This kindnesse of Christ towards us makes our hearts to mourne over him Zach. 12.10 Zach. 12.10 They shall mourne over
of Noah for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah shall no more goe over the earth so have I sworr that I would not be angry with thee The mountaines shall remove and the hills shall fall down but my mercy shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my peace fall away saith the Lord that hath compassion on thee Plentifull is the Scripture in such promises as these In Hos 2.19 20. I will marry thee unto my selfe c when the Lord marrieth us to himselfe he doth it with a purpose to be ours for ever whom God loves once with this conjugall love hee loves them for ever unto the end Ioh. 13.2 And thence it is that those that are truly regenerate and sanctified are compared to Mount Sion which cannot be removed Psal 125.1 And to a tree planted by the river of water which continually flourisheth and withers not c. Psal 1.3 and to an house built upon a Rock Matth. 7. And hence is that glorious triumph of the Apostle setting all contrary power at a defiance Who shall separate us from the love of God c. Rom. 8.33 Neither heigth nor depth nor things present nor things to come shall ever separate us from the love of God wherewith he hath loved us in Christ Jesus and in 2 Tim. 4.8 Hence forth is laid up for me a crown of righteousnes And thence was that confident speech of the Prophet in Psal 73. Thou wilt guide me by thy counsell and afterward bring me to glory This benefit the Lord will fulfill unto his people when he hath begun the work of his Grace he will finish it unto the day of Christ Phil. 1.6 he will shew himselfe to be both the author and finisher of our salvation H●b 12. Arminians and Papists which reach a falling away from Grace know not the difference between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace Their Doctrine of the Apostacy of the Saints that those that are adopted sanctified and planted into Christ may fall away and perish is a doctrine contrary to the whole tenour of the Covenant of Grace injurious unto God and uncomfortable unto the Saints It is true that there is a kinde of seeming holinesse which may be lost a forme of godlinesse which may vanish and come to nought Heb. 6.4 6. 10.29 It s true also that Gods own people called and chosen may much damp quench the Grace of God which is in them and may shew much infirmity in particular falls which they are subject unto being sometimes so farre left unto themselves as we see in David and Solomon Peter c. Acts of grace may be interrupted in them for a season sense of it may be much lessened power of it weakned the degree of it abated but the habit cannot be utterly lost the life of it never goes out a man may be in a swoun and yet his life be in him still The certainty of the Saints perseverance is built upon these foundations 1. God is able to stablish them and therefore they shall be established He is able to keep us Iude 24. He is able to make us stand Rom. 16.25 and therefore we shall never be removed nor overthrown Object But this is a weak argument to reason from Gods power to his will Answ Then the Apostle himselfe argues weakly in Rom. 14.4 where speaking of the weak believer hee saith that such an one shall bee established and how proves he that because God is able to make him stand This is the Apostles Argument Indeed its true God will not doe all things which he can doe he can out of the stones and rocks raise up children unto Abraham but he neither doth it nor will doe it But though God will not doe all things which he can yet he will doe all things which he hath promised to doe Now this is Gods promise as we have seen before that he will preserve his people and therefore if he can doe it surely he will doe it because he hath promised it And hence it is that in Ioh. 10.28 29. Christ argues from the power of God doth by that argument prove the undoubted salvation of those that believe namely because God is in power greater then all and none is able to pull them out of his hand Indeed till we have a promise there is no arguing from Gods power no man can groundedly argue that God will out of stones raise up children to Abraham because he never promised it but when we have the promise then we may reason from his power And thus did Abraham reason I shall have a Sonne saith Abraham because though my body bee as good as dead yet God is able to doe it The argument was good because God had before promised to doe it So in the case in hand God hath said that he will keep us to his heavenly Kingdome and therefore if he can doe it he will doe it he hath engaged all his power and goodnesse to be for our salvation God is ours his power is ours to stablish and strengthen us that we fall not yea here are two immutable things to support us the power and will of God These two are as the two pillars before Salomons Temple Jachin and Boaz Boaz signifying in him is strength and Iachim he will stablish these two pillars stand together to establish all those that are ready to fall if there be strength in him he would have us to know that he will put it forth for our establishment that we might bee supported by his power his power and will stand together to support us 2. All the gifts of God which accompany salvation are given without repentance Rom. 11.29 Hos 13.14 God never repents him of the Grace he hath shewed to his people that he knew before Hence is that in 2 Sam. 7.14 when God promiseth to David that he would take of his seed and set upon his Throne after him and then saith the Lord I will be his Father and he shall bee my Sonne and my mercy will I not take away from him as I took a from Saul to teach us when hee hath once brought us into the state of Adoption to be his sonnes he will never cease to follow us with Fatherly love he will never take away his Fatherly mercy from us adde hereto that in Isai 46.3.4 and Mal. 3.6 3. It would shake the foundation of Gods election if those that are once sanctified should fall away and perish for those onely whom he knew before those onely doth he sanctifie If he hath in mercy drawn us unto himselfe it s a sign he hath loved us from everlasting Ier. 31.3 our calling and sanctification is according to his purpose Rom. 8.28.30 2 Tim. 1.9 Those that are sanctified justified and called are all first chosen And thence faith is called the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1. and those that are sanctified are said to be chosen unto it Eph. 1.3
a little season but for evermore Psal 16. ult Whiles we are here we enjoy life here is glory also in a degree and here are pleasures too but here they are not full there is some death mixed with our life some basenesse with our glory some sorrowes with our pleasures And though they were full which they are not yet they last but for a time But there and then they shall be full and for evermore I cannot passe by that admirable expression of the Apostle in 2 Cor. 4.17 where speaking of the blessed estate of Gods people in the life to come he calls it a farre more excellent eternall weight of glory 1. There is glory 2. A weight of glory as much as we are able to beare 3. There is an excellency in it and excellent weight of glory 4. There is one excellency added to another 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a most excellent glory 5. and lastly all this eternall a most excellent eternall weight of glory here is a large expression in few words This is the hope of Gods people which they wait for And for this they have Gods faithfull word and promise his Covenant and Testament and for our assurance he hath already given us the earnest of it in our hearts even the Spirit of Grace and the Spirit of glory which by guiding of us in the wayes of Grace here leads us on day by day to come nearer to our salvation then when we first believed till at last he bring us to glory even to the full end of our faith and hope the salvation of our soules And thus much of the benefits of the Covenant The fourth Part. THE CONDITION OF THIS COVENANT IT remaines now that we come to consider the condition of the Covenant in which we must walke that the Lord may performe unto us the mercy which he hath promised us There is a way of the Covenant in which the Lord conveyes his blessings as we may see in that expression used by the Lord himselfe concerning Abraham Gen. 18.19 I know Abraham saith the Lord that he will teach his houshold c. that I may bring upon Abraham that which I have spoken unto him The Lord fully intended to doe to Abraham as he had promised but yet the Lord will have Abraham to walk so and so before him and then God will bring upon Abraham the blessing which he had promised the like we have in Ier. 11.5 6. Great are the blessings which God hath promised to those which are the faithfull seed of Abraham and therefore as we desire to enjoy the blessing promised so we must see also what he requires of us that he may performe unto us what he hath promised and this is called the stipulation or condition of the Covenant And concerning this I will shew these foure things 1. That there is a condition required 2. Why the Lord hath put a condition to the promise of life 3. What the condition is 4. Whether the putting of such a condition doth or can stand with the free Grace of the Covenant yea or no. First That there is a condition of the Covenant The Lord doth not absolutely promise life unto any he doth not say to any soule I will save you and bring you to life though you continew impenitent and unbelieving but commands and works us to repent and believe and then promises that in the way of faith and repentance he will save us He prescribes a way of life for us to walk in that so wee may obtaine the salvation which he hath promised he brings us first through the doore of faith Act. 14. And then carries us on in the way of faith till he bring us to the end of our faith the salvation of our soules There are indeed some promises which seeme so absolute as to exclude all condition on our part as that promise in Esay 43.25 For mine own sake will I put away thy transgressions c. and so Ezek. 36.22 Where there is no mention made either of faith or any other Grace in us as a condition required on our part But if any shall hence argue that the promise of life is so absolute as to exclude all respect unto faith in those to whom the promise is made and because there is no mention made of faith in such promises therefore there is no intendment of it as if it were not understood but wholly excluded I may as well argue against the merits of Christ also and exclude them by the like reason because there is no mention of them no more then of faith in those absolute promises But as there is no remission without the blood of Christ Heb. 9.22 So neither is there without faith in that blood Rom. 3.25 as God never promised to forgive us our sins without respect to Christ though Christ be not alwayes mentioned in every such promise so neither doth he promise to save without faith though it be not alwayes mentioned particularly To prove that there is a condition in the Covenant of Grace it may be made evident sundry wayes 1. From the nature of a Covenant which is an agreement between severall parties Covenanting together upon mutuall conditions required on both parties Foedus saith Rollock is promissio sub certa conditione Roll. de vocatione efficaci A man may make a promise alone without any condition But a Covenant properly binds both parties and hath a condition annexed Abraham and Abimeleck promise one to another in their Covenant made betwixt them they mutually binde themselves Gen. 20. And so it is betwixt God and Abraham Gen. 17.27 I grant that the word Covenant is sometimes used concerning such promises as are without condition as in Gen. 9.9 Where the Lord speaking of his purpose and promise never to destroy the earth any more he calls that promise his Covenant though there be no condition there annexed But the Question is not how a word may be used upon some speciall occasion but what is the proper nature of a Covenant which doth require mutuall stipulation or condition on both parties This is but one place where the word Covenant is taken for a promise without a condition more such places I know not any in Scripture and besides there was speciall reason of calling it a Covenant namely to shew the unchangeablenesse of his purpose touching the mercy promised that it is as sure as if we had tyed him thereunto by Covenant upon some condition performed by us before hand But this is not properly a Covenant where there is not a mutuall obligation and binding of the parties one to another by condition Hereto agreeth that saying of Beza in 2 Tim. 1.12 Mutua est inquit depositi obligatio inter Deum Sanctos ipsius Though on Gods part this obligation is prorsus gratuita wholly free as hee there speaks though Gods binding of himselfe to us bee free yet ours is not so to God But concerning the freenesse of the Covenant
but legall Christians and legall Preachers as allowed this way All her assurance was from revelation it was revealed unto her that shee was one of the Elect of God and shee knew all things by immediate revelation from above but I fear she knows not that her glorious revelations were but Satanicall delusions Let her damned heresies shee fell into denying the resurrection c. and the just vengeance of God by which she perished terrifie all her seduced followers from having any more to doe with her leaven which shee spred among them Beware of her sinne least yee perish in her plague Vse 2. Is there a condition of the Covenant Then let this provoke us all who look for the blessing which it brings to be faith●ull with God in keeping our Covenant with him take heed we fall not short of the condition least we be deprived of the blessing this is that which the Apostle teaches us Heb. 4.1 Seeing we have a promise left us of entering into his rest there is the blessing promised let us feare least through unbeliefe any of us should be deprived there is the condition required The words through unbeliefe are not in the Text expressed but they are evidently implyed as appears both by the coherence with the third Chapter and by that which followes Chap. 4.2 To be deprived of such a blessing is a heavy losse such as can never be recompenced and the preventing of this losse so far as concernes us is by keeping of our Covenant which the Lord commands us to walk in If we forsake the condition we forsake the promise and therefore it is also that when God took Abraham into a Covenant with him he did not only tell Abraham what he would be unto him a God to blesse him but he brings Abraham to walk in Covenant with him Thou also shalt keep my Covenant saith the Lord Gen. 17.9 Thou shalt walk before me and bee upright Gen. 17 1. When God takes us into Covenant with him we are said to be brought into the bond of the Covenant Ezek. 20. to teach us that now we must look at our selves as tyed and bound unto God in a Covenant never to be broken we are not now any longer at our own liberty to walke as we list but must observe our Covenant to walk therein when we walk so that we may truly say before the Lord our heart is not turned back from thee neither have we dealt falsely with thee in thy Covenant as it in Psal 44.17 18 this keeps the heart in a comfortable expectation of the blessed hope which is set before us Thus Paul I have kept the faith I have finished my course and now henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousnesse 2 Tim. 4.7 8. Let us carefully walk in the condition and then the promise will be sure not only sure in it self but su●e to us 2 Pet. 1.10 These bonds of the Covenant are not like the fetters of a prison they are like the pleasing bonds of wedlock vincula nuptiarum which every one gladly enters into Oh let us love these bonds give up both our hands unto the Lord yea and our hearts also to be bound in them for ever these are sweet bonds they work no griefe seek not therefore to break them Psal 2. nor cast them from you say not we will be our own and walk by our will such lawlesse and licentious spirits as will be at liberty they shall be at liberty to their wo they shall have such a liberty as Jeremy threatned to the rebellious Jewes a liberty to the sword to the famine and to the pestilence Jer. 34. a liberty to goe to hell to their eternall destruction a liberty with a curse granted unto them in wrath which shall end in chaines of everlasting darknesse and bring them into that prison from whence there is no going out Therefore let all such as look for the blessing and life promised in the Covenant Let them walk faithfully in the condition of it and in this way expect the mercy which is promised Thus wee have shewed First That there is a condition of the Covenant Secondly Why the Lord hath put a condition unto it 3. The third point follows to shew what the condition is which though it hath been obiter mentioned before yet is now to be spoken of more particularly The condition then of the Covenant of Grace is faith Rom. 4.16 Rom. 10.9 10. If thou believest in the Lord Jesus thou shalt be saved so Acts 18.31 Joh. 3.16 hence in Rom. 3.27 The Gospel is called the Law of Faith because as the Law of works doth put works as the condition of that Covenant so the Gospel puts faith as the condition of the new Covenant Quest But why is faith made the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. The blessing of life promised is not in our selves but in Christ Christ is life and he which hath the Sonne hath hath life and he which hath not the Son hath not life 1 Joh. 5.12 We are dead Colos 3.3 and our Works are dead Heb. 9.14 there is no life in them they cannot bring life unto them that doe them nor can wee quicken our own soules but Christ is the life of men Joh. 1.4 Colos 3.4 and the way to receive Christ and the life which is in him is only by faith Ioh. 1.12 unbeliefe rejects Christ and puts him away But faith as an hand puts forth it selfe to receive him in whom our life is If we had life in our selves and could have found it in our own works it had then been needlesse to appoint faith as the condition of the Covenant but being that both we our selves are dead in sinne and our works are dead works nothing but death to be found in either therefore it s required that wee believe in Christ that we may receive life from him 2. The condition of the law is now become impossible unto us through the infirmity of our flesh Rom. 8.3 and therefore the Apostle saith that the Law cannot possibly give life Gal. 3.21 Therefore the Lord would go that way with us no more the Lord saw by Adam what would be the fruit of that condition if we had been put upon the same as Adam was we should have done as he did we should have shewed our selves men like men transgressing the Covenant as Hoseah speaks Hos 6.7 This condition being above our ability to performe the Lord hath in goodnesse appointed another which is possible through grace to be fulfilled by us having now received a spirit of faith 2 Cor. 4.13 It is now given us to believe Phil. 1.29 this is possible 3. It is by faith that it might be by grace Rom. 4.16 The Covenant is stablished upon the condition of faith that it might appeare to be by grace that wee obtain the blessing the condition must answer the nature of the Covenant therefore being a Covenant of grace the
and Christ in the promise Joh. 1.12 Heb. 11.13 A man may have an hand and yet not have the gift which is offered him unlesse hee put forth his hand to receive it faith is the hand of the soule and the putting of it forth is the act by which wee receive Christ offered 2. Look as it was with Adam in that Covenant made with him he had an habituall righteousnesse within him but that was not the condition of the Covenant betwixt God and him but the acting of that inward habit in acts of obedience was the condition of the Covenant so here in the Covenant of grace first God puts into us the habit of faith and then requires of us act of faith to lay hold of the promise and to receive the grace which i● offered in the Covenant 3. It is not an habit of faith but a life of faith which is required of the Saints that are in Covenant with God it is the habit which enables and fits us to live by faith but the life of faith consists in the acts of faith put forth according to the severall occasions we meet withall Gal. 2.20 2 Cor. 5.8 Heb. 11. 4. There must needs be a difference betwixt that which God promiseth as a part of the Covenant on his part and that which he requires of us on our part now the habit is that which God promiseth to us when he saith I will give you a new heart c. and this he worketh in us in our effectuall calling and then the acting of that faith received is that which is required on our part Quest But what is that act or acts of faith by which we perform the condition of the Covenant Answ 1. First there is an act of faith by which we doe as it were first close with the Covenant revealed and offered unto us 2. There is also another act of it by which we are carried on to an answerable walking before God according to the Covenant made with him 1. For the former before we give a direct answer we must lay down these two grounds First That in the making up of the Covenant betwixt God and us God is first with us he is the first mover he begins with us before we begin with him we should never seek to be in Covenant with him if he did not allure us and draw us unto him Thus in Ezek. 20.37 I will bring them saith the Lord into the bond of the Covenant It is the Lord which brings them they doe not first offer themselves And first God prepares his own way for entering into Covenant with us and then he finisheth the work and in this preparation he doth these three things 1. He breaks us off from our Covenant with Hell and Death makes us sensible of our undone estate makes us see that we are without God without Christ without hope Ephes 2. that we are not under mercy that wee are not of his people 1 Pet. 2. 2. He opens unto us his minde and will shewing himselfe willing to receive us to grace and to enter into a new Covenant with us yet againe to take us to be his people and hee to be our God he goes into the streets and open places as it is in Prov. 1.20 21. and there makes publike proclamation Ho ho every one that will Come yee unto me and I will make an everlasting Covenant with you Esay 55.3 Esay 65.1 yea more he comes and beseeches us to be reconciled unto him 2 Cor. 5.20 and speaks to us as pittying us Jer. 3.12 and lamenting over us Ezek. 33.11 thereby to perswade us to come into a Covenant with him 3. By the hearing of these promises and offers of grace the Lord usually scattereth some little seeds of faith in the hearts of those that he will bring unto himselfe which seed being sown doth sometimes quickly put forth and acts towards the Covenant propounded and layes hold of it as we see in Lydia the Jaylor Zacheus and such others but sometimes and that most usually before that faith hath done any great thing in seeking after God to make a Covenant with him the Lord doth againe withdraw himselfe and goes away as Hoseah 5. end hiding himselfe as if he would regard us and look after us no more so that now if we will get into Covenant with him we must seek after him as he before sought after us and must sue unto him for grace to take us into Covenant with himselfe and herein faith begins to shew it selfe beginning to work and move towards the Covenant which the Lord offereth to make with us For though the Lord hath withdrawn himselfe yet he hath left such a touch of his Spirit upon the heart as makes the soule affectionate towards him so as now it cannot rest but feeling its own wo being without God and without Covenant and having heard of the Lords willingnesse to enter into a Covenant with us it now begins to seek after the Lord to be in Covenant wirh him This is the first ground that God is first he begins with us Secondly The second is that whatsoever faith doth in seeking to enter into Covenant with God it doth it alwayes in that way and according to that order in which the Lord hath gone before us in the offer of his Covenant unto us faith doth alwaies follow the Word and doth nothing but as it hath a word of Faith to guide its way it goes step by step as it hath the light of the word directing and going before faith doth not prescribe unto God it will not presume to appoint the conditions of the Covenant onely it answers and applyes it selfe to Gods offer taking conditions of peace but giving none It doth not seek to wind about the promise of grace to our own minde and will It doth not say I will have it thus thus it shall be or else I will admit of no conditions of peace but the soul now finding that the everlasting estate of it for weal or woe life or death stands at the meer good pleasure and mercy of God and knowing that either it must submit to that way of the Covenant and to those conditions which the Lord is pleased to set down or it must perish for ever it gladly comes in humbly accepting the offer of grace in the same way as it is tendred and offered unto us of God Here then that we may see how faith closeth with the Covenant propounded we must see first how God offers himselfe in his Covenant unto us Now in that main promise of the Covenant which is indeed the sum of all I will be thy God God offers himself unto us two wayes as hath been before shewed in the opening of that promise First he offers himselfe unto us as a God of mercy to pardon us as a God of blessing to blesse us with all sufficient blessings 2. As a God over us and above us to order us and to rule us
in all our wayes to governe us according to his owne will that he may be glorified in us Thus God offers himselfe unto us in his Covenant c. Now the answer is ready to the question propounded how faith doth act in closing with the Covenant the work of faith herein is to carry the soule towards the Covenant in the same order and way as it is propounded First accepting the grace offered resting upon God for all the mercy which he hath promised 2. Taking God to bee a God over us submitting to his government and authority to command us and to rule us in all things according to his own will these two things faith doth and so takes hold of the Covenant in the same way and order as God offers it 1. God makes himself known to us as a God of mercy gracious long-suffering pardoning iniquity transgression and sin he offers himselfe to be reconciled unto us though we have rebelled against him promising to be a Father unto us and to accept of us as his sons and daughters in his beloved Now the worke of Faith in respect of this offer of grace is only to accept the grace offered to lay hold on it and take it unto our selves being so freely offered Faith brings nothing to God of our owne it offers nothing to stand in exchange for the mercy offered it receives a gift but giveth no price The Lord holds out and offers the free grace of the Covenant faith receives it and makes it our owne Hence is that expression used by the Prophet in Esay 56. where we are said to lay hold of the Covenant God holds it forth and we take hold of it the hand of grace offers it and the hand of faith receives it and makes it our owne and this it doth by such steps and degrees as these that follow wherein though I should not limit the Lords dealing with all his yet I will shew what I conceive is the most usuall and ordinary course of Gods dispensation towards those whom he brings into Covenant with himselfe Here then faith closeth with the Covenant in this manner 1. By hearing the great things proposed in the Covenant it stirs up in the heart a deep and serious consideration of the blessed condition of those people that are in Covenant with God Oh what a blessed estate is it thinkes such a one to be in favour with God to be one of his covenanted people It makes him say with Moses Blessed art thou O Israel a people saved by the Lord Deut. 33. It saith with David No people O Lord is like thy people Israel whom thou hast redeemed unto thy selfe 2 Sam. 7.23 Time was when we counted the proud blessed and placed our felicity in other things as in riches preferments favour and credit with men c. but now these are become vile and things of no value faith makes us change our voice and to speake with a new tongue and to say not Blessed are the people that be so but Blessed are the people whose God is the Lord Psal 144. ult This high esteeme of grace being accompanied with a sence of the want of it wee seem unto our selves as undone men lost wretched miserable The poor soul thinkes with it selfe no sin like my sin no misery like my misery I am separated from the Lord an alien from his people Oh blessed are they that are are at peace and in covenant with him this is now the onely pearle of price the rich treasure in the field for which such a one is content to give all the substance of his house In the prodigall when he began to thinke of returning to his father these two things were found in him First a deep sence of his owne misery I die for hunger Secondly a consideration of the wellfare of those that were in his Fathers house they have bread enough So it is with those poor soules in which faith begins to work to draw them back into Covenant with God sensible are they of their own woe highly also doe they prize the excellency of grace if by any means they might attain to have a part in it 2. This high esteem of grace and being in Covenant with God begets a longing desire of it good being beleived cannot but be desired and longed for and therefore faith now beleeving the benefit of being in favour and Covenant with God it cannot but work desires after it desire naturally springeth from the apprehension of any good made knowne Faith is both in the understanding and in the will as it is in the understanding it opens the eye to see and clearly to discerne the blessing of the Covenant and then stirs up the will to pursue and desire the attaining of the grace revealed Never did David more long for the waters of the well of Bethlehem then such a soul touched with the sence of sin doth desire to be at peace with God and in covenant with him and therefore it is that they are said to thirst after the the Lord Psal 42.2 to pant after him Psal 42.1 to gaspe after him Psal 119. longing for communion and peace with him Thus in Esay 26.9 with their soules they desire him in the night and with their spirit in the morning the desire of their soul is set upon him and cannot be satisfied by any thing without him peace with him is their life and to be separated from him is unto them as the shadow of death 3. Faith being yet weak and but as in the bud or in the seed and being yet unacquainted with the Lords dealing with his people not knowing how he useth by terrors of death to bring them to life and peace hence it comes to passe that the soule being pressed with sence of sin therefore though its desires be strong yet hope of obtaining is but feeble and vveak vve seeming to our selves utterly unworthy as indeed we are and uncapable which we are not of so high a priviledge as this is to be in favour and Covenant with the most high God Here therefore faith is taken up with many thoughts thereby to support and keepe up the heart in hope carrying the eye of the soul towards God though as beholding him afarre off faine would the poor soul be joyned to the Lord Isai 56. but being as yet dismayed with the sence of sin he stands like the poor Publican afar off as one afraid to come neere into the presence of the holy God as yet faith can scarce speak a word to God it cannot come neer to call upon him only it can with Ionah look towards his holy Temple as being like the poor weak babe which lies in the cradle being both sick and weak and speechlesse and can onely look towards the mother for helpe the cast of the eye after a sort expressing and signifying what it would say Thus doth faith being yet weak it would speak unto God but cannot onely it hath its eye towards
heaven looking for grace and mercy according to Iehoshaphats speech Our eyes are towards thee 2 Chron. 20. It hungers and thirsts after grace but feares it shall never be satisfied it feeles a need and faine would have but sence of unworthinesse consciousnesse of manifold sinnes the sentence of the Law like the thundering and lightning at Mount Sinai all of them being sharpned by Satans working in them and with them doe strike such a fear into the heart as was in Israel then that though desires be stirring and working yet hope is very feeble causing us to doe as Israel did there who though they heard the Lord say I am the Lord your God yet the terror of the thunder made them to stand afar off and so we we hear the Lord offering to be our God in covenant with us but such are the discouragements that we dare not come near to seek after the grace which is revealed Hitherto therefore the mind of the poor sinner desiring to bee in Covenant with God is unquiet within it selfe hurried too and fro finding no rest it heares of peace with God but feels it not but in stead of peace finds trouble feare doubtings discouragements to keep it off from the way of peace faith being yet yong and faint hath much adoe to sustain the heart in any hope that it sink not down in discouragement But yet though it bee weak it will be doing what it is able setting the minde to consider the promises and encouragements which God hath given us in his word how hee invites all to come unto him even every one that thirsts Esay 55. telling us That whosoever comes unto him he will not cast away Joh. 6.37 And hence while the minde is possessed with these things because so great a businesse as making a Covenant of peace with the high God and about so great an affaire as the life and salvation of our soule cannot be transacted in a tumult Therefore 4. In the fourth place faith takes the soule aside and carries it into some solitary place that there it may be alone with it selfe and with God with whom it hath to doe This businesse and multitude of other occasions cannot be done together and therefore the soule must be alone that it may the more fully commune with it selfe and utter it selfe fully before the Lord Thus the poore Church in the time of her affliction when the Lord seemed to hide himselfe from her shee sate alone as she speaks Lament 3.28 29. and Jer. 15.17 I sate alone because of thy plague The way of the Lord is prepared in the Desert Esay 40.3 when the Lord will come to the soule and draw it into communion with himselfe he will have his way hereto prepared in the Desert not in the throng of a City but in a solitary Desert place he will allure us and draw us into the Wildernesse from the company of men when he will speak to our heart and when he prepares our heart to speak unto him Hoseah 2. Not that such a one doth despise or neglect the fellowship of Gods people but he now sees and knows full well that his help is not in man and therefore waits not upon the sonnes of Adam Mich. 5.7 He is glad to hear of any hope and how others have beene succoured and pulled out of the like distresse c. but though he hath an eare open unto these and the like helps yet the soule cannot rest in them but must retire it selfe and get alone where it may think its full and satisfie it self e in thoughts of its own estate and of the offers and promises of Grace which God hath made to such lost sinners And whiles the soule is thus alone with it selfe and with God sometimes thinking of its own misery and sinne sometimes of the Lords mercy now presented in such and such promises sometimes calling to minde how others have found favour with God notwithstanding their sinnes sometimes thinking what should move the Lord thus to invite us and call us unto him and to give us these desires after him why thinks the soule should the Lord doe thus if there were no hope that he would receive me whiles I say the soule being alone is thus exercised in these thoughts at length the fire kindles so as the soule can now rest no longer but a spirit of faith being within like fire in the bones the heart hitherto having beene as a Wine-vessell which hath had no vent yet now the spirit within compels him to open his lips and to utter before the Lord the meditations of his heart And therefore 5. In the fifth place the soule resolves now to go to the throne of Grace suing for Grace proving whether the Lord will bee gracious and mercifull to accept of a reconciliation faith speaks within as they did in Jonah 3.9 who can tell whether the Lord will return c. and as Amos 5.15 It may be the Lord may yet be mercifull such an one cannot yet say that he will yet knowes not but he may be gracious and therefore doth as those lepers in 2 King 7.3 who knowing that they were sure to perish if they sate still resolved to try what might befall them in going into the Camp of the Aramites and as Esther who would try whether the King would hold out his golden Sceper towards her yea or no so the poore sinner knowing how it is with him and thinking hee must perish if he thus continue and hearing also such gracious invitations c. thereupon resolves to goe and seek the Lord begging Grace and acceptance before him Doth the Lord say seek yee my face the heart answers within Lord I will seek thy face Doth the Lord say Come unto me the heart answereth Behold we come unto thee for thou art the Lord our God Ier. 3.22 And now the soule betakes it selfe unto God sending up complaints against it selfe with lamentations for its own sinfull rebellions accompanyed with strong cryes to heaven with sighes and groanes of Spirit which cannot be expressed it confesseth with grief and bitter mourning all former iniquities smites upon the thigh with repenting Epharim lies down at Gods foot-stoole putting its mouth in the dust acknowledging Gods righteousnesse if he should condemn and cast off for ever and yet withall pleads for Grace that it may be accepted as one of his It sayes unto God Lord I have nothing to plead why thou maist not condemn me but if thou wilt receive me thy mercy shall appeare in me thou maist shew forth all thy goodnesse take away therefore all mine iniquities and receive mee graciously Hoseah 14.3 It pleads Gods promise Lord thou hast said thou wilt be gracious Lord make good this word to the soule of thy servant be my God my mercifull God and make me thy servant thus the soule lies at the throne of Grace and pleads for Grace 6. As faith is thus earnest in suing to God for Grace and
should have said unto us you have once broken my Covenant and yet if you will at last fulfill my Law which I gave unto you I will yet accept you as just unto life yet we could not have done it the condition was too hard for us to perform If we had been held close to this condition of fulfilling the Law we should have missed of life for ever The Lord therefore seeing and pittying of our infirmity was pleased to propound unto us another condition saying unto us only beleive Beleive on my son trust on my grace and thou shalt be saved herein the Lord hath condescended to our weaknesse taking compassion of our infirmities laying upon us no other burthen but this Beleeve my promise accept my grace and rest upon it and this thy faith shall save thee Thou shalt never perish 3. It serves for comfort to all Gods faithfull ones that have beleived through grace if you have received this first gift if it be given you to beleeve you shall not fail of a second gift even the gift of eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Though your repentance be lesse then to equall the measure of your sins though your obedience be imperfect yea though your faith it selfe be weak also yet if it be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 unfained syncere and sound this your faith is accepted of God and is imputed to you for righteousnesse Those that are of faith are blessed with faithfull Abraham saith the Apostle Gal. 3.9 Blessed is shee that beleeveth saith the Angell Luke 1.45 and the Son of God comes in as a third witnesse testifying that whosoever beleeveth in him shall not perish but is passed from death to life Iohn 3. Here are three witnesses from heaven and earth all witnessing the blessed estate of such as do beleive Faith is well termed precious faith 1 Pet. 1.2 Pet. 1.1 because it makes us partakers of all the precious blessings of grace which are contained in the Covenant The faithfull are inheritours of all the priviledges which God hath promised to his chosen and therefore it is that they are called heires of promise Heb. 6.17 and heires of blessing 1 Pet. 3.9 You beleevers be exhorted to see and owne your blessednesse take notice of the great things the Lord hath done for you he hath made a covenant with you even a Covenant of peace and blessing and life for ever God is become your God he will be all things unto you and when all helpes under heaven fail you yet from himselfe he will do you good all your sins are forgiven you his spirit is yours to lead you to sanctifie you and to heal the evils that be in you he will uphold you in that state wherein you stand and will keep you that you shall never perish and will at last bring you to a full injoyment of himselfe in his heavenly Kingdome where you shall for ever blesse him and be made blessed by him and shall rejoyce before him with joy unspeakable and glorious pluck up your hearts therefore and be glad lift up your heads strengthen the weak hands and the feeble knees serve the Lord with gladnesse and joyfulnesse of spirit considering the day of our salvation draweth neer though now for a time you may be in heavinesse through manifold temptations and afflictions in this evill world yet faint not you being partakers of that precious faith you have the holy and faithfull God in Covenant with you to love you to blesse you and to save you and yet a little while and he that shall come will come and receive you to himselfe and then you shall fully know what it is to have beleived and to have been in Covenant with God what it is to have God to be your God when you shall see him and enjoy him as he is Only nourish your faith and live by faith make much of this precious grace cherish it by thinking often on the promises and of that grace which hath been shewed upon you from on high study to walke worthy of that mercy received and in so doing wait for the end of your faith the salvation of your soule 4. If faith be the condition of the Covenant then woe to all unbeleevers that go on in their impenitency and unbeleife Their unbeleife deprives them of that good which the Lord hath by his Covenant promised to his people they have no part nor portion in God they are without God without Christ without Covenant without promise without mercy their sins are unpardoned they are under the curse the wrath of God abides upon them there is nothing to take it away from them but if they abide in unbeleif wrath abides upon them for ever There is a wrath wherby God is angry with his own people but that anger lasts but for a little season it is but for a moment Isai 4.7 8. it passeth away and abides not upon them but the unbeleiver hath wrath abiding on him for ever John 3.36 In Iude 5. it is said that God afterwards destroyed those Israelites that beleived not when once they had had the means of grace made known then not beleiving God afterwards destroyed them you that tread in the steps of their unbeleif you are little troubled to thinke what misery is comming upon you as not knowing that you are in danger but you are under wrath your judgement hastneth and your damnation sleepeth not be awakened therefore be thinke your selves and consider what your end will be by your unbeleif you put a bar to exclude your selves from the blessing of life promised to Gods people you thus continuing the Lord neither will nor can save you You will thinke this an hard saying but you will finde it too true God cannot lye Titus 1.2 much lesse can he forswear but God hath sworne this that such shall never enter into his rest Psal 95. and Hebr. 3. ult In Mat. 13. ult It s said Christ did not many great works in his owne country for their unbeleifes sake But in Marke 6.5 it s said hee could not doe them he neither did them nor could do them unbeleif stops the course and diverts the stream of Gods goodnesse from comming unto us Christs usuall speech to those that expected any blessing from him was this According to your faith be it unto you faith makes all things possible Marke 6.23 It will reverse the sentence of death which is passed upon us and bring us back unto life but unbeleife makes it impossible so that we cannot be saved The Lord can do nothing against his own counsell and will and he hath concluded this with himselfe to save none but such as beleive and that whosoever beleeveth not shall perish all you unbeleevers consider this your unbeleefe will bee your destruction Secondly Is there such a work of faith in bringing us into Covenant with God and in enabling us to walk in Covenant with him 1. This serves to direct all the people of God
and so it was with those mockers Act. 2.13 37. here were no dispositions and preparations before on their part but tree and unexpected grace from God 5. Compare those that are taken into Covenant with other that are left out for all are not taken in Ephes 2.12 there be that are without God without Covenant and this will also make it manifest it is free grace by which any are taken in For 1. If we look upon those that are taken into Covenant and those that are left we shall finde that there is no difference in themselves betwixt one and other we have all sinned and there is no difference saith the Apostle Rom. 3.22 23. No reason therefore in us why one is taken into Covenant and not another but only free grace in God for if it be not free grace towards them that are taken in then there is injustice and wrong done to those that are left If there were any worth in those that are taken there was as much in those that are left and therefore either it must be free grace towards the one or there is injustice and wrong towards the other but what blasphemous mouth dare impute unrighteousnesse and wrong to the righteous God he owes nothing to any he may truly say to all men I doe thee no wrong Matth. 20.13 Thou hast as much as I owe thee Both sorts therefore being in themselves alike and no wrong done to those that are left it must needs be free grace in those that are taken in apply Ioh. 14.22 Matth. 11.25 2. As sometimes there is no difference betwixt one and other so sometimes God chuseth the worse takes in the more unworthy and leaves those that are better then they Paul a chiefe of sinners 1 Tim. 1. Publicans and Harlots Matth. 21. Mary Magdalene possessed with seven Devills these were taken in and the righteous generation as they were reputed which justified themselves and were justified by others were left and passed by In Ezek. 3.7 8. The Lord tells the Prophet that if he would have sent him to another strange people as he sent Jonah to the Ninevites they would have hearkned unto him and obeyed him but the house of Israel will not obey thee and yet for all this God sent his Prophet to them and not to the other to the worse and not to the better and so Matth. 11.23 Thus it is in the communication of himself in the Covenant of grace he sometimes passeth by such as seeme better and takes the worse to the end that it might appeare that he respects none for any thing that is in them but that the freenesse of his grace might be seene in those whom he takes unto himselfe This is that which the Apostle points at 1 Cor. 1 27 28 29. God chuseth the foolish things of the world the weak things base and despised things things which are not passing by the wise the mighty and things which are in esteeme that all might see it is nothing in man but the grace of God by which we are taken into communion and Covenant with him c. 2. As the grace of the Covenant is thus free in the making of it so it is also in the accomplishment of it the blessings of the Covenant are as free grace in the bestowing as they were in the promising Not that God is now free to performe or not to performe for he cannot but performe that which he hath promised but yet he owes the blessing to us in regard of his own promise faithfulnesse and goodnesse not in regard of any worth that is in us for though there be our obedience of faith intervening and comming between Gods promise and between his performance yet the performance is as free grace as is the promise because there is no such worth in any of our obedience as to which the blessing should be done in a way of justice He cannot deny himselfe 2 Tim. 2. nor can he alter the thing which is gone out of his lips Psal 89.34 otherwise the blessing of the Covenant is as well freely given as it was freely promised And therefore it is that the Prophet speaking of the performance of the Covenant which God made with Abraham but was to be performed to his seed he speaks in this manner Thou wilt performe truth unto Jacob and mercy unto Abraham as thou hast sworn unto our Fathers in old time Micah 7.20 Gods truth gives assurance that hee will doe it thou wilt performe truth unto Jacob but yet its mercy when it s performed thou wilt performe mercy unto Abraham c. and thence it is that in Iude v. 21. the Apostle speaking to the Saints exhorts them to wait for the mercy of the Lord unto eternall life and in Rom 6.23 Life eternall is called a gift freely given by free grace and in 1 Pet. 3.7 we are said to be heires of the grace of life because grace is the cause as well of our inheriting life as of Gods promising for though we have received a Spirit of grace to renew and sanctifie us yet in many things we offend still standing in need of forgivenesse from day to day and where there is need of forgivenesse there life must needs be of grace and not of merit or works The Reasons why the Lord would have his Covenant to stand upon this foundation of free grace are these 1. To be a ground of hope to such as see themselves unworthy of acceptance with God If the grace of the Covenant were not free such unworthy ones could have no hope 2. It is the glory of grace to be freely communicated Esay 55.1 Come and buy without money It darkens the glory of grace when it is vouchsafed for any benefit received as Potiphar favoured Ioseph because he saw God prosper the things that were under his hand Gen. 39.3.4 but where favour is wholly free there it shines forth in the glory of it and thence it is that when the Lord had made his promise to the dispersed Jewes concerning their gathering in againe he tells them that it is not for their sakes but for his own name sake thereby to maintaine the glory of his free grace towards them 3. The Lord would have his Covenant to be a Covenant of free grace that the blessing of it might be sure unto those to whom the promise is made The Lord saw the unstability of the former Covenant of works the promise being made with respect to that which was in us or to be done by us and so would this new Covenant have been also if it had been built upon the like foundation therefore that the blessing of it might be sure the promise is made to depend not upon any thing to be done by us but upon the free grace of God Rom. 4.16 Vse 1. To enforme us from what hand to expect the blessing of life promised to us in this Covenant even from mercy and from grace not from justice he
stands firme betwixt him and us he mediates with the Father for us when he sees him provoked by our sin he mediates with us also by his Spirit bringing us back to God in a way of repentance so renewing our Covenant towards him and helping us to take new hold of his Covenant towards us Christ is a Priest for ever to be Mediator of an everlasting Covenant Vse 1. Here is a spring of everlasting consolation to those that are in Covenant with God this fountaine of comfort will never be dryed up Let other things end or change as they will yet God is ours in an everlasting Covenant never to be broken off death may put an end to other Covenants betwixt man and man but this Covenant betwixt God and us stands fast for ever Though Abraham be dead yet God is Abrahams God still and by vertue of this Covenant betwixt God and him Abraham shall be raised up and live againe This may stay the minds of weak ones in time of desertion when they seem to be dead livelesse lost and cast off as if God would remember them no more yet then consider Gods Covenant is an everlasting Covenant so that if ever you gave up your selves to God by Covenant to be one of his this Covenant shall continue and abide for ever If ever you found your selves infolded in the bands of this Covenant know for certaine the Lord will not loose you he will remember his Covenant and promise and will return and love you again and that with an everlasting love what he hath been unto you the same he will be for ever and ever You will say perhaps you have sinned and now he is angry with you for your sin suppose it be so he may be angry with his dearest ones as he was with Moses Deut. 1.37 but he will not alwayes chide Psal 103.9 nor will he cast off for ever Lament 3.31 he will be pleased againe and will love you with an everlasting love see Psal 89.28 29. to 38. Here is a ground of everlasting consolation in this everlasting Covenant Vse 2. For exhortation First Let this stirre us up for ever to magnifie that riches of mercy which hath taken us into the bond of this everlasting Covenant There is no end of this mercy and goodnesse Oh that there might be endlesse prayses sounding from us with enlarged desires to publish this grace shewed on us If this Covenant had been for a little season it had been the lesse mercy but that we should have the High God to enter into an everlasting Covenant to be our God for ever who can sufficiently admire this goodnesse When God had made that large promise to David concerning his House and Kingdom for ever 2 Sam. 7.16 See how David was taken up with admiration Lord saith he who am I and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto namely to the Kingdom And yet this was but a smal thing in thy sight O Lord God and therefore thou hast spoken of thy servants house for a great while vers 19. This enlargement of Gods love to Davids house for a great while even to stablish it for ever this enlarged Davids heart and mouth towards God as not knowing how sufficiently to set forth the praise of his goodnesse Truly such is the mercy shewed us in making this Covenant with us that if we might live unto eternity we should think we never had day enough or time enough to magnifie this everlasting mercy shewed on us 2. Let it admonish us to be constant in our Covenants and in all duties of love according to what we have Covenanted and promised It s mentioned as one of the sinnes of the Gentiles that they were Covenant-breakers Rom 1.30 Let it rest with Gentiles let it never be said that it is the sinne of those that professe themselves the children of an everlasting Covenant 3. Let all those that are as yet without and have no part in this Covenant of God Let them seek to partake in it come within the bond of it it brings an everlasting blessing which failes not In the things of the world the more continuance any thing is of the more esteem it is of Inheritances are preferred before leases c. All the things of the world are but temporal the things of God which he passeth over to his by his Covenant are eternal ● Cor. 4.1 the things which are temporal please us so long as they last but when they are past the comfort of them is vanished with them and many times it irkes us that we had them and now have them not but the things of this Covenant are everlasting if we be once possessed of them we shall never grieve for the losse of them they shall never be taken away because they are given to us by an everlasting Covenant Come off therefore from the dying and perishing things of the world and seek the things of this everlasting Covenant in them is continuance and we shall be saved Esay 64. 4. The fourth property is that it is a holy Covenant Deut. 19.24 Luke 1.72 And it is so called an holy Covenant in these respects 1. In respect of the parties contracting and entering Covenant one with another which are the holy God and his holy Saints First the holy God that God to whom the Seraphins cry Holy Holy Holy Esay 6. he is one party that is confederate in this Covenant Secondly his holy Saints are the other party in it Psal 50.5 For God doth not take the wicked by the hand as Job speaks Iob 8.20 to enter into Covenant with them He doth not allow them so much as to take his Covenant into their mouths Psal 50.17 He is the God of the just of the righteous and holy people he is the King of Saints Apoc. 15. he will have no fellowship with the wicked 2. In regard of the parts of the Covenant whether we look at the promise on Gods part or at the condition on our part First the promise on Gods part is holy Psal 105.42 he remembers his holy promise he hath spoken it in his holinesse Psal 60.6 And the substance of his promise is holinesse which he hath promised to work in the soules of his people he hath promised to sanctifie us to take away the stony heart to poure clean water upon us to cleanse us from all our filthinesse and to make us holy Ezek. 36.25 26. Zach. 3.3.4 Secondly the condition on our part which i● faith by which we lay hold of the Covenant is holy also therefore called by the Apostle holy faith Iude 20. It is a most holy grace of the Spirit purifying both heart and hand not daring to touch or lay hold of the Covenant with unwashen hands 3. In respect of the Commandement it commands holinesse Be ye holy saith the Lord for I the Lord your God am holy Levit. 11.44 19.2 20.7 and therefore it is that Gods calling is termed