Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n let_v lord_n name_n 9,327 5 5.7485 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
B10086 The safety of appearing at the day of judgement, in the righteousness of Christ: opened and applied. By Solomon Stoddard ... Stoddard, Solomon, 1643-1729. 1687 (1687) Wing S5709; ESTC W22065 210,940 366

There are 4 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Massachusetts Historical Society FROM THE BEQUEST OF GEORGE EDWARD ELLIS Seventh President of the Society Received September 1● 1895. THE Safety of Appearing at the DAY OF Judgement In the Righteousness of Christ Opened and Applied By Solomon Stoddard Pastor to the Church of North-Hampton in New-England Phil. 3.8 9 Yea doubtless and I do count all things but less for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord for whom I have suffered the loss of all things and do count them but dung that I may win Christ and be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law but that 〈…〉 To the Church of Christ in North-Hampton A Main part of the Work which the Lord Jesus has committed to me at present is to be doing service to your Souls and the Souls of your Children to be directing quickening and encouraging of you in the way unto eternal life which work requires the utmost care and diligence not only in respect of the necessity that you stand in of that blessedness which is the design and tendency thereof but also in respect of that difficulty that you will unavoidably meet withal in your pursuit of that blessedness however many men that know not their own hearts and are utterly unexperienced in the way of life may fancy it to be a matter of ease to go to heaven as if there were but a step between them and heaven and upon that account are bold to cast off all care about it at present yet such as have tried it and are walking in that way can upon plentiful experience witness to what Christ has taught us That strait is the Gate and narrow is the Way that leadeth unto Life every thing in corrupt nature is opposite to it and upon this account he requires Ministers to use their utmost industry in their work Luk. 14.23 Compel them to come in I have travelled in this work among you for many years and I may say without ostentation that I have obtained mercy of the Lord to be faithful I have made it my business to gain Souls to Christ and build them up in Faith and holiness principally insisting upon such things as have reached the heart of Religion and I reckon it one of the choicest mercies of the Lord towards me that I have not run in vain nor laboured in vain I have great cause to bow my knee to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ and bless his Name that he has made me an instrument of bringing many among you into saving acquaintance with himself and I count it worth the while to spend the residue of my dayes in promoting the welfare of your Souls It is in pursuance of this design that this small Treatise is published not that my care is confined to your selves I owe a regard to the prosperity of other places the scope of this Discourse is to clear up the way of Salvation by Christ I meddle not with those false Doctrines that have been invented by men in opposition to this truth the Lord hath been pleased to keep these Churches sound in the Faith and does not yet lay a necessity upon his Ministers here to spend their time in the confutation of such erronions Opinions but I have made it my work to establish your hearts in this Truth to satisfie your Consciences from the Scripture in the safety of your reliance upon Christ vindicating the same from those secret workings of unbelief that are wont to rise up in the hearts of men that you and others may grow up unto all the riches of the full assurance of understanding and the acknowledgment of the misteries of God even of the Father and of Christ That you may be armed against those temptations wherewith your Faith is wont to be assaulted and learn to live in all conditions upon the righteousness of Christ If the Lord please to bless this Discourse together with other endeavours of his Servants in the Countrey both in Preaching and Writing to be a means to bring many Souls to an hearty closing with Jesus Christ that will be the great security of the Countrey against that degeneracy that is begun and against those superstitious practises that are entertained in other professing places the life of Religion takes beginning in the spiritual knowledg of Christ and is maintained by the same as long as we are built upon this Rock the Gates of Hell will not prevail against us The Lord who has watched over you in the time of dayes when you lay open to the fury of the Heathen and that has given special tokens of his Presence with you in his Ordinances both in the dayes of your former Pastor and also in late times continue to own and bless you and enrich you with all the Graces of his Spirit and give you Faith to sit under the shadow of Christ with great delight Which is the Prayer of Him who is Your Servant for Jesus sake Solomon Stoddard The Safety of Appearing in the Righteousness of Jesus Christ CHAP. I. The Introduction shewing the Difficulty of Believing this Truth THere is such Light remaining in the Conscience of fallen Man as has made him inquisitive after a way of acceptance with God and though several particular persons do not ordinarily concern themselves about it yet in all Nations and Ages there have been those that have made it matter of solemn search the abundant evidence that men have of the being purity justice and greatness of God in conjunction with the testimony of their own hearts concerning their guilt has made them restless till they can come at some satisfaction in this point men have been studious in many other points from a thirst after knowledg and to gratifie their curiosity but in this enquiry they have been much influenced by the cryes and disquietness of their own burdened Consciences the fearful apprehensions of Gods anger have spurred them on to discover a way of reconciliation they have not been able so to stupifie their hearts with worldly occasions and carnal delights as to let fall the consideration of this but have been compelled from their own terrors to make that enquiry as they Mich. 6.6 7. Wherewith shall I come before the Lord c. Many men who have busied themselves in this enquiry have not been advantaged to attain a right resolution thereof the Heathen Nations had lost the knowledg of the way of Salvation something in Religion was handed down to them by tradition and something particularly that had a reference unto Jesus Christ especially Sacrifices but the knowledg of the respect they had to him was quite worn out among them and the light of nature is utterly deficient in this particular that light is sufficient to discover to us that God is provoked with us that knowledg flows from our understanding of the nature of God and the experience which we have of our own sinfulness but the way of reconciliation does exceed the
nature that does compel him to shew mercy to any man God had been infinite in mercy if it had pleased him never to exercise any there are voluntary inclinations in God to exercise mercy but no natural inclinations but his merciful nature is that whereby he can find in his heart to exercise mercy God is not of such a nature as to be uncapable of pitying and being kind there is no opposition in the nature of God unto acts of mercy his nature is such as that he can be willing to shew kindness and do good the merciful nature of God is a power to be willing to deal graciously with with his creatures God is of such a nature as that he can be willing to do good to those that are unworthy willing to pardon those that are guilty c. and this is called his merciful nature the words of Moses serve to clear up this Numb 14.17 18 19. Let the power of my Lord be great according as thou hast spoken saying the Lord is long suffering and of great mercy forgiving iniquity transgression and sin pardon I beseech thee the iniquity of this people according to the greatness of thy mercy And the greatness of Gods mercy or merciful nature consists in this that he can find in his heart to do any thing that is an act of mercy his merciful nature reacheth to every thing that is an object of mercy there is nothing which it would be an act of grace or mercy to do be it never such wonderful grace but God can find in his heart to do it 't is true he can't pardon sin in a way contrary unto Justice for that would not be an act of grace but of injustice nothing that is an act of grace does exceed the grace of God and herein lies the greatness of his mercy the greatness of Gods power lies in this that he can do whatever is possible whatever is an act of power so the greatness of his Wisdom lies in this that it extends it self to every thing that is known the greatness of his Justice lies in this that he can find in his heart to do every thing that is an act of Justice so the greatness of his grace consists in this that there is no gracious act but it falls within the reach of his gracious nature and herein the grace of God doth exceed the grace of any man or angel is it an act of grace to send a Mediator for lost Sinners to bring worthless man to eternal glory to pardon multitudes of sins sins against light love covenant to convert all a mans children these and whatever else of the like nature may be thought on fall within the reach of divine mercy yea the reason why he does not pardon the sin against the Holy Ghost the sins of devils and reprobates is not for want of mercy but because of the soveraign determinations of his own will Rom. 9.15 That God is thus great in mercy may be made manifest from those two considerations First That there is no corruption in God to make him uncapable of performing any act of grace men can't find in their hearts sometimes to do acts of mercy because their lusts are too strong for them it will not suffer them their corruptions bear such sway that they cannot be willing sometimes mens covetousness is such that they cannot shew acts of mercy so it was with Nabal 1 Sam. 25. sometimes pride and passion so prevail that they cannot forget an injury they have a spirit of reverge and cannot satisfie their hearts without avenging themselves but God is altogether free from corruption there is no evil disposition in him to hinder him from doing good Mat. 7.11 he has no evil properties to be an impediment unto him men are ill conditioned which makes them unwilling to do good but God is of unsported purity and holiness Isai 6.3 God is not subject to any wrongful passions the Scripture does often attribute anger unto him but that must be understood so as is agreeable unto the nature of God whatever injuries God receives he never is transported with passion he can overlook millions of offences his grace is such as can prevail over all our guilt hence his grace is said to reign it overcome all those objections that are in the way of the exercise of it Rom 5.21 there is nothing of any unruly passions in God 1 Joh. 4.8 God is not subject unto envy he can find in his heart to advance his creatures unto eternal felicility he does not soorn or disdain that dust and ashes should have fellowship with him God is not of such a spirit that he can't bear that man should be happy but he can delight to make him so Mic. 7.18 By this we have gained one step namely that the grace of God does exceed the grace that is in sinful man which may be of advantage to us for there is that vanity in the heart that we are prone to measure the mercy of God by our own and to allow him no more grace than we find in our selves and others like our selves which God witnesses against when he tells us That his thoughts are not as our thoughts Isai 55.8 but there is a further consideration that will make it appear that the Grace of God does exceed the grace of the most glorious angel in heaven which is the unlimited perfection of Gods nature the Angels have a stinted measure of perfection the excelling of their nature is not sufficient in order to some acts of grace as in other respects they are not sufficient so they have not grace enough to pardon such wrongs as God pardons to be at such cost for mans salvation as God has been at 't is true that they do approve of and rejoice in all those acts of Grace that God does but such actions do exceed the grace that is in their hearts they have such imperfection of grace and mercy that they can't perform those acts of mercy that God does therefore where God would shew his sufficiency to pardon the iniquities of his people he tells them that he is God Hos 11.6 this infiniteness of Gods grace is the foundation of our faith for such things as we are utterly unworthy of Psal 36.7 how excellent is thy loving kindness O Lord therefore the Sons of men put their trust under the shadow of thy wings There is an infinite Ocean of grace in the heart of God whereby he can bestow the greatest gifts upon his creatures that their natures are capable of this is plain from that absolute liberty which the Scripture does ascribe unto God in all his actions he does all things after the counsel of his own Will Eph. 1.11 I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy Rom 9.15 which shews there is no limitedness in his perfection to be any restraint unto him or a reason why he does not pardon and save these and those his glorious excellency is
not answer the demands of the Law there is a necessity of the righteousness of Christ which is legal righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 and indeed Faith could not have been the condition of salvation had it not interested us in the righteousness of the Law the covenant of Works and covenant of Grace also must be fulfilled or we cannot be saved Christ fulfilled the covenant of works for us and gives us Faith in his righteousness whereby we fulfil the covenant of Grace 5. Whereas it is added to stengthen the Objection that Faith under the Gospel comes in the room of works under the Law and therefore as works under the Law were to be the matter of justification so is Faith under the Gospel I Answer Faith does not under the Gospel properly come in the room of works for works are necessary under the Gospel unto Justification works are the purchasing cause of life only God has found out another way of performing those works than the Law speaks of namely by a Surety but yet perfect Obedience is as necessary as at first for our Justification the Gospel does not justifie us in any way of contradiction to the Law works now are the legal condition of Justification but Faith is the evangelical condition of Justification and every Believer does fulfil both those conditions one in his Surety the other in his own person Faith is the condition of the covenant of Grace and Faith interests us in the righteousness of Chrst whereby the covenant of works is also fulfilled and when the Apostle does oppose Faith and the works of the Law he does not oppose Faith to the works of the Law as performed by Christ for they work together for our Justification but he opposes it to our works that our works in obedience to the Law can never justifie us works under the Law were the purchasing cause of Justification and so they are still works under the Law were the condition of Justification and they only but now they are the legal condition and Faith is the evangelical condition Faith is all the condition required to be performed by us in our own persons Objection 2. God has made many promises of forgiveness of sins unto Obedience and so also of Salvation whereby it seems that it is not safe relying upon Christs righteousness but upon our own there be many promises of forgiveness Isai 1.16 17 18. Wash you make you clean put away the evil of your doings c. come and let us reason together saith the Lord though your sins be as scarlet they shall be as white as snow though they be red like crimson they shall be as wool Mat. 6.14 for if you forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you 1 John 3.9 if we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins Isai 55.7 let the wicked forsake his way and the righteous man his thoughts and let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our God for he will abundantly pardon So there are many promises of Salvation made unto Obedience Rom. 8.13 if ye by the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the flesh ye shall live Mat. 5.8 Blessed are the pure in heart for they shall see God and to like purpose eternal life in spoken of as the reward of Obedience Hebr. 11.1 26. He had respect to the recompence of reward Col. 3.24 knowing that of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance for ye serve the Lord Christ Answer To the first part of the Objection from promises of forgiveness made to Obedience I Answer 1. That forgiveness is not alwayes taken in Scrpture for the act of Justification whereby God does take off the sentence of eternal condemnation but many times it is taken for Gods overlooking sin so as not to bring that temporal calamity that he might have done so when God removes a temporal judgment he is said to forgive their sins Mich. 7.18 so when he forbears to destroy a people that have deserved it and only brings some less judgments on them he is said to forgive them Psal 99.8 Thou wast a God that forgavest them though thou tookest vengeance on their inventions Psal 78.38 He forgave their iniquity and destroyed them not Numb 14.20 21 22 23. And the Lord said I have pardoned according to thy word c. but they shall not see the Land that I sware unto their Fathers and sometimes he bestows this pardon upon them whom he does not deliver from the sentence of condemnation and sometimes he denies this unto them whom he does deliver from a sentence of condemnation Moses's sin shall not be so forgiven but that he must dye in the Wilderness for his trespass at the waters of Meribah Eli shall not be so forgiven but that sore judgment shall come upon his Family the preventing or removing of temporal calamities whether in ward or outward is called forgiveness and this is the very thing is intended by forgiveness sometimes when God makes promises of forgiveness unto obedience and reformation the meaning is that God will prosper them and bless and not pursue them with Judgments and calamities this is evident because sometimes God promises forgiveness to a Nation in a way of obedience it is promised as a National blessing so in that Isai 1.16 17 18. therefore it does not intend deliverance from eternal condemnation for God does not promise that as a publick blessing depending upon publick reformation 2. Sometimes when God promises forgiveness unto Obedience the meaning is that if the soul do return unto God by a true work of conversion he shall be justified when men are converted they are brought into a state of acceptance with God God is reconciled unto them so that place is to be understood Isai 55.7 let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy upon him Act 3.19 repent therefore and be converted that your sins may be blotted out and the reason why God promises forgiveness upon conversion is because Faith which is the condition of the covenant is included in conversion converted persons have Faith in Christ Jesus 3. Sometimes when forgiveness is promised unto particular acts of Obedience the meaning is that those acts of obedience are a sign that a man is in a justified condition so that is to be understood Mat. 6.14 for if you forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will forgive you and that 1 John 1.9 if we confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive our sins these things are not the condition of forgiveness much less the meritorious cause of forgiveness but they are a sign that a man is such an one to whom the promise of forgiveness does belong so any one upright act of obedience is a sign that a mans sins are forgiven and shall be forgiven in the day of Judgment because they are things that do accompany Faith in Christ though they have
conclude there is some strong current that men are carried away with some great intanglements that men are thus ensnared with though many are not aware of it yet there are mighty temptations to lead them into this mistake and we may reduce them to these Heads 1. The pride of mans heart fallen man is a proud creature tho he has so much to bring down his spirit yet he is extreamly addicted to magnifie himself Job 11.12 vain man would be wise though man be born like a wild Asses colt self-love which is the very root of original sin runs principally in this channel men are miserably devoted to this way of sinning though men have extreamly debased themselves and degraded themselves from that excellency which God bestowed on them yet they are exceeding prone to swell with pride pride is thought to be the first sin of the devil and we are sure there was a great deal of pride in the first sin of man that temptation of being like Gods knowing good and evil had a principal influence into the apostacy of our first Parents and this spirit runs through the life of man from his child-hood to old age therefore called the pride of life 1 Joh. 2.16 how many methods have men found out to gratifie their pride what cost are men at what pains do they take what hazards do they run that they may satisfie this lust of pride men are proud of every thing all natural excellencies acquired endowments external enjoyments are fewel to pride men are proud of their duties and graces yea proud of their sins too proud of the mercies that God bestows on them and proud of the afflictions that they have or have had pride is deeply rooted in the heart of man and hence it is that he is so addicted to seek salvation by his own righteousness the spirit of a self-righteous man is to exalt himself setting up a mans own righteousness is directly contrary to the work of humiliation and the grace of humility a Pharisaical spirit is a proud spirit Luk. 18.14 pride is the reason of mens setting up their own righteousness and it has an influence these two wayes 1. Pride makes men desirous to live upon themselves and to be beholden to the grace of God no more than needs must proud man had rather be the author of his own happiness than to have it in a way of free gift most men had rather earn their living with their fingers end than live upon the charity of other men so in this case men had rather compound with God for heaven upon the account of their own services than be beholden to free grace it would please the haughty heart of man exceedingly to have the honour of saving himself that he might have that to boast of that he had heaven as the fruit of his own labours Boasting is excluded by the law of Faith Rom. 3.27 and therefore the heart don't like that way mens spirits will very hardly come down to take life as a gift from a provoked God men can hardly stoop to it to come to the door of mercy if they can make any other shift they will not do it it is exceeding cross to flesh and blood to have nothing of his own to glory in and to yield himself to be a poor vile and unworthy creature to be altogether helpless in himself man was once set out with a good stock and might have earned heaven and t is very hard to him to yield himself a prodigal he stomacks it to come for alms it would be hard to one especially that has been rich so to do this we may see in the Prodigal Luk. 15.14 15. he began to be in want and went and joyned himself to a Citizen of that Countrey nothing but extremity would bring down his spirit so as to make him return to his Father he had rather work hard than come a begging to his Father 2. Pride makes men conceited of their own Righteousness proud men are wont to have an high opinion of their own things they set an high rate on their own excellencies and so do men of their Righteousness pride makes men unreasonable in their esteem of it they magnifie it beyond all bounds pride hinders them from passing an unpartial judgment upon what they do and are they think their hearts are a great deal better than they be when Hazael was told what he should afterward do he answers the Prophet Is thy Servant a Dog that he should do this thing 1 Kings 8.12 13. they imagine that their corruptions are mortifyed that they love God and Jesus Christ Prov. 30.12 There is a generation that are pure in their own eyes yet not cleansed from their filthiness pride makes them take up a good opinion of their own hearts upon small appearances and when they have only a few pangs of affection presently they are conceited that they have sincere desires after holiness and faith or at least that there is such an inclinableness to the ways of God which will with diligence grow up to be love to God and his Wayes They think they shall bring their hearts to it after a while and are conceited that their services are very pleasing and acceptable to God they think there is worthiness in them that they deserve to be accepted they think they carry it better than others pride makes men to admire their own excellency to fall in love with their own beauty they extol the services that they do because they are their own Luke 18.12 I fast twice in the week and give tithes of all that I possess 2. Another temptation is that God in the Scripture does manifest and testifie his great approbation of holiness and obedience prayer and repentance God gives great encouragement unto men to walk in ways of holiness He bears witness often to his acceptance of the obedience of his people God is all along in the Scripture witnessing the regard that he has unto holiness sometimes he tells us that he does delight in it Psal 15.8 The prayer of the upright is his delight that he loves it Psal 11.7 the Righteous Lord loveth Righteousness that he loveth the Righteous Psa 146 8. The Lord loveth the Righteous that he is reconciled to such as do amend their ways Isai 55.7 let him return unto the Lord and he will have mercy on him and God makes promises of all sorts of blessings unto holiness of outward blessings peace and plenty and honour and long life and of spiritual mercies of the manifestation of himself and communion with them and of eternal life you have your fruit unto holiness and the end everlasting life Rom. 6 22. men meeting with abundance of such passages in the Scripture are greatly strengthened in their apprehensions of the efficacy of their own righteousness to procure their justification such passages of Scripture are strained by them and they grow up thereby into a more established opinion of their safety upon