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A81247 The morning exercise methodized; or Certain chief heads and points of the Christian religion opened and improved in divers sermons, by several ministers of the City of London, in the monthly course of the morning exercise at Giles in the Fields. May 1659. Case, Thomas, 1598-1682. 1659 (1659) Wing C835; Thomason E1008_1; ESTC R207936 572,112 737

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there is an unchangeable agreement between the will of the Creator and the creature so according to the same measure and degree wherein we conform our wills to Gods we proportionably enjoy the holinesse and blessednesse of that state THE TRINITY Proved by Scripture 1 JOHN 5.7 For there are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one IN the fifth verse of this Chapter the Apostle had laid this down as an Article of faith that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God Who is he that ovcrcometh the world but he that believeth that Jesus is the Sonne of God 1 John 5.5 Now for the proof of so glorious a truth the Apostle produces six witnesses and ranks them into two orders some bear record in heaven and some bear witnesse on earth some bear witnesse on earth as ver 8. Ver. 8. of this Chapter There are three that bear witnesse on earth the Spirit and the water and the blood and these three agree in one and some bear record in heaven in the words of my Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost and these three are one In the words you may take notice of these particulars 1. The number of the heavenly witnesses or the number of those witnesses that bear record in heaven viz. three 2. Their dignity or excellency they are in heaven 3. Their act they bear record 4. The names of the witnesses the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost 5. Their unity and these three are one I would observe from the context Observ That it is not an easie matter to believe that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Sonne of God Whence is it else that the Apostle so often urges this point in this Epistle whence is it else that whereas it is sufficient for any truth to be confirmed by the mouth of two or three witnesses here are no lesse than six witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus is the Sonne of God three heavenly and three earthly and indeed who can declare the great mystery of the eternal generation of the Son of God I will give five wonders in five words 1. God the Father communicates the whole divine essence unto the Sonne and yet hath the whole divine essence in himself If God communicates his essence it must be his whole essence for that which is infinite cannot admit of any division partition or diminution yet methinks we have a faint resemblance of this here below 'T is not with things of a spiritual nature as with things of a corporeal spiritual things may be communicated without being lessened or divided viz. when I make a man know that which I know my knowledge is still the same and nothing diminished and upon his account whether that Argument against the traduction of the soul that if the soul of the Father be traduced the Father is left soul-lesse be cogent I leave to the judgment of the learned 'T is to be granted that to communicate the notion is one thing and the faculty is another but both are things of a spiritual nature 2. God the Father and God the Sonne are one essence and yet though the Father begets the Sonne the Sonne doth not beget himself The Father and the Sonne are one God yet the Lord Jesus is the Sonne of God under that notion as God is a Father and not the Sonne of God under the notion as God is a Sonne and so not the Sonne of himself 3. God the Father begetteth God the Sonne and yet the Father is not elder than the Sonne nor the Sonne younger than the Father he that begetteth is not in time before him that is begotten if God was a Father from everlasting then Christ was a Sonne from everlasting for relata sunt simul natura an eternal Father must have an eternal Sonne 4. The Father begets the Sonne yet the Sonne is not inferiour to the Father nor the Father superiour to the Sonne The Lord Jesus Christ being in the forme of God thought it no robbery to be equal with God it was his right and therefore it was no robbery as he is coeternal so he is coequal with the Father 5. The Father begets the Sonne yet the Sonne hath the same numerical nature with the Father and the Father the same numerical nature with the Sonne an earthly sonne hath the same specifical nature with his Father but then though it be the same in regard of kinde yet it differs in regard of number but God the Father and God the Sonne have the same individual numerical nature Use Let me entreat you that you would attend unto the record and testimony that is given by those witnesses and for your encouragement consider the difference between these heavenly witnesses in the Text and earthly wi nesses and so I shall proceed to that which I mainly intend 1. On earth there may be some single or one witnesse but here are no lesse than three 2. Earthly witnesses are such as are lyable to exception but these are in heaven beyond all exception 3. As for earthly witnesses it may come to passe that their names may not be known these here are named the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost 4. Earthly witnesses when they are produced either may be silent or it may be bear false witnesse but these bear record and their record is true 5. Earthly witnesses may not agree in their witnesse as the witnesses brought against Christ but there is a sweet consent and agreement amongst these witnesses for these three are one 6. Whereas Earthly witnesses although they may be one in regard of consent yet they are not one in regard of essence every man hath one particular individual essence of his own but these are one in regard of essence Now pray mark this for if it be so then the Father is God the Son God and the Holy Ghost God And therefore the Socinian who denies the Deity of the Word and of the Holy Ghost will perswade you to believe that these words are to be expounded thus these three are one that is sayes he these three agree in one but that this is not the meaning of the phrase appears by the variation of it in the next verse the words are Ver. 8. There are three that bear witnesse on earth the Spirit the water and the blood and these three agree in one Now if both phrases note unity in consent here is an occasion of offence and falling administred by the variation of them in these two verses why is it not said the Father the Word and the Holy Ghost agree in one as well as the Spirit water and blood And suppose we should grant that the onenesse spoken of in the Text is to be expounded of consent in will and agreement yet it would prove the Godhead both of the Father and Spirit for in free Agents
called another Comforter now he who is distinguished from the Father and the Sonne in the manner as to be called another comforter is either distinguished in regard of his essence or in regard of his personal subsistence not in regard of his essence for then he would be another God and therefore he is another in regard of his personal subsistence 4. You have a clear proof for this doctrine in the words of the Text There are three that bear record in heaven the Father the Word and the holy Ghost and these three are one and to that purpose consider 1. You have mention here of three witnesses now three witnesses are three persons 2. The Word and holy Ghost are conjoyned in their Testimony with the Father which is not competible to any creature and lest we should doubt of this it is expresly said even by Saint John himself to be the witnesse of God Verse 9. If we receive the witnesse of men the witnesse of God is greater for this is the witnesse of God which he hath testified of his Son and concerning Christ it is said that he is the true God ver 20. This is the true God and eternal life let the Socinian shew me where any creature is called the true God Concerning the Spirit also in this Chapter it is said ver 6. that he is truth it self It is the Spirit that beareth Witnesse because the Spirit is Truth 3. If there be three witnesses whereof every one of them is God the one not the other and yet not many Gods but one true God the point is clear there are three distinct persons subsisting in one divine essence or which is all one there are three persons and one God 3. I am to speak something to the distinction of these three persons though they cannot be divided yet they may be they are distinguished many things in nature may be distinguished which cannot be divided for instance the cold and the moisture which is in the water may be distinguished but they cannot be divided Now that those three persons are distinguished appears 1. By what hath been already said the Father is not the Son nor the Son the Father nor the holy Ghost the Father or the Son 2. By the words of the Text here are three heavenly witnesses produced to prove that the Lord Jesus Christ is the Son of God namely the Father the Word and the holy Ghost now one and the same person although he hath a thousand names cannot passe for three witnesses upon any faire or reasonable account whatever you may be sure that God reckons right and he sayes John 8.13 Father Sonne and holy Ghost to be three witnesses there are three that bear record in heaven so in Saint Johns Gospel the Pharisees charge our Saviour that he bare record of himself say they thou bearest record of thy self thy record is not true now mark what Christ replies ver 17 18. It is written in your Law Ver. 17 18. that the Testimony of two men is true I am one that bear witnesse of my self and the Father that sent me beareth witness of me where you have our Saviour citing the Law concerning the validity of a Testimony given by two witnesses and then he reckons his Father for one witnesse and himself for another 4. I shall speak a few words to the order of these divine persons in order of subsistence the Father is before the Son and the Son before the holy Ghost The Father the first person in the Trinity hath foundation of personal subsistence in himself the Sonne the second person the foundation of personal subsistence from the Father the holy Ghost the third person hath foundation of personal subsistence from the Father and the Sonne Now although one person be before the other in regard of order yet they are all equal in regard of time Majesty glory essence this I conceive to be the reason why in the Scripture sometimes you have the Sonne placed before the Father as 2 Cor. 13.14 2 Cor. 13.14 The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and the communion of the holy Ghost be with you all Amen Gal. 1.1 So Gal. 1.1 Paul an Apostle not of men neither by men but by Jesus Christ and God the Father who raised him from the dead Sometimes the holy Ghost is placed before the Father as Eph. 2.18 Through him we have an accesse by one Spirit unto the Father Eph. 2.18 Rev. 1.4 5. Sometimes before Jesus Christ Rev. 1.4 5. John to the seven Churches in Asia Grace be unto you and peace from him which is and which was and which is to come and from the seven Spirits which are before the Throne by the seven Spirits there is meant the holy Ghost and from Jesus Christ who is the faithful witnesse c. The consideration of this caused that rule amongst our Divines ab ordine verborum nulla est argumentatio there is no argument to be urged from the order of words Now this shews that although one person be before another in regard of relation and order of subsistence yet all are equal one with another in regard of essence And therefore beware lest you derogate the least jota or tittle of glory or Majesty from any of the three persons As in nature a small matter as to the body may be a great matter as to the beauty of the body cut but the haire from the eye brow how disfigured will all the face look If you take away never so little of that honour and glory which is due to any of the divine Persons you do what in you lies to blot to stain to disfigure the faire and beautiful face of the blessed Trinity 5. I am to enquire whether the mystery of the Trinity may be found out by the light of nature Resol There are two things in the general that I would say in answer to this question 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it 2. That the light of nature after divine Revelation cannot oppose it 1. That the light of nature without divine Revelation cannot discover it and for that purpose take into your thoughts these following considerations 1. If that which concerns the worship of God cannot be found out by the light of nature much lesse that which concerns Gods nature essence or subsistence but the Antecedent is certainly true For 1. As for the part of the worship and service of God which is instituted and ceremonial it is impossible that it should be found out by the light of nature for instance what man could divine that the Tree of life should be a Sacrament to Adam in Paradise How comes the Church to understand what creatures were clean what were unclean that the Priesthood was setled in the Tribe of Levi and not in the Tribe of Simeon or the Trible of Judah certainly these lessons were not learned by the candle-light of nature 2.
is wrath in Domestique relations And wrath as terribly mixeth in Publick Relations Ministers preach not oversee not are not ensamples to the flock have not experience nor ability or care rightly to divide the Word of truth and muzzle the gain-sayer Misled themselves and mislead others c. Magistrates mind not the things of Christ are tight and vigilant over the good indulgent to the evil Beare the sword in vaine c. Such vials there is much wrath poured through 5. Upon the holy things of God and of his people Ours come not with acceptance to God The Lords not with savour closenesse authority c. to us The very book of the Covenant needs sprinkling Heb. 9.19 The Law which is pure and clean Psal 19.8 9. is made a killing letter 2 Cor. 3.7 The Gospel which is the grace of God bringing salvation Tit. 2.11 is made a savour of death unto death 2 Cor. 2.16 the Lords Supper an eating and drinking judgmsnt to our selves 1 Cor. 11.29 and Christ himself is made for falling Luke 2.34 and a stone of stumbling and rock of offence 1 Pet. 2.8 without Christs blood taking away sin the very book of grace had never been opened Rev. 5.4 and though the choicest in it self being opened would never have been useful unto us and sorer wrath cannot be than to curse our very blessings Mal. 2.2 and the very means of grace that they shall be uselesse and for judgment 6. Upon the whole man the person is under the effects of wrath 1. Inslaved to the Divel This is plain 1. From the Scriptures Else converting grac● could not a Col. 1.13 deliver from the power of darknesse nor men be said when b 2 Tim. 2.26 God gives repentance to recover themselves out of the snare of the Divel that were taken captive by him at his will 2. From the likenesse of mans work with Satans 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Men of a Trade are ordinarily of a company together but here the rule failes not 1 Joh. 3.8 He that committeth sin is of the Divel that is by doing the same work discovers himself of communion with and in thraldome to him The first finders of a Craft are Fathers and Successors and Imitators in the Craft are called children Gen. 4.20 we naturally and freely do the Divels work John 8.44 The lusts of your Father ye will do and have no minde to the Lords work nor can brook the same to be done circumspectly and exactly by others Acts 13.10 Thou child of the Divel enemy of all righteousness 3. From the community of principles the very mind and will of Satan is engraven upon our spirits and expresse themselves inefficacy and obstinacy of sinning These principles are Satans image instead of Gods 4. From the natural mans subjection to the guidance of Satan regenerate persons are led by the Spirit but Satan filleth the hearts of natural men He had possession of Judas his heart and by a piece of mony rides deeper into him and prevails to engage him to betray Christ This is a lamentable branch of the natural mans misery 2. He is banished and separated from God both from conformity to and communion with him and doth electively banish and cast himself forth of the Lords presence This appears 1. From the former point viz. mans fellowship with Satan there cannot be fellowship with God and with Satan together These communions are inconsistent in the same Spirit at the same time in a reigning intense degree 2. From Gods end and his Apostles and Ministers in the writing explanation and application of the Scripture 1 John 1.3 That which we have seen and heard declare we unto you that ye may have fellowship with us and truly our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son Jesus Christ. Were this fellowship already in the state of nature there needed not this means of rebringing into fellowship with God Defiers of the evil one with their mouths are not the lesse in league with him in their hearts 3. From the language of the carnal heart Job 21.14 Depart from us we desire not the knowledge of thee This they speak internally and the desire of their souls is to be rid of God notions of God are a saplesse and burdensome piece of knowledge Rom. 1.18 They did not like to retain God in their knowledge To banish our selves is the heighth of mans sin and folly and to be banished the heighth of the Lords wrath and of mans misery Now do we know what a man loseth in the losse of God that is impossible for any created understanding to conceive The world is a Dunge●n without the Sun the body a carrion without the soul but neither so necessary as God is to the soul A taste of the goodnesse of God made the world and the lives of the Martyrs nothing to them Psal 30.5 In thy favour is life Psal 63.3 Thy loving kindnesse is better than life The very heaven of heaven lies in the enjoyment of God and the hell of hell in the losse of him The losse of him is the losse of the Fountain from which all kinde of good doth or can come The losse of the cause is the losse of all the effects of all the blessed affections influences and promises of God The losse of all those blessed hopes that fill the soul with joy unspeakable and full of glory No prayer praises faith love fear or any spark of other grace are to be found in truth upon the hearth of that heart Now the person in league with the Devil and banished from and without God in the world must needs be miserable and accursed 3. He is discontented and unprofitable in every condition Rom. 3.12 They are altogether become unprofitable The Holy Ghost makes a natural man of no more use than rotten things which we cast forth to the dunghill for their unprofitablenesse This is a dreadful ruine that a creature so excellent should become unprofitable to others and very far from comfort to himself in any condition The wife having all for use and the husbands heart hath nothing because not the authority dominion and disposition which is proper to the husband Israel have bread and quailes from heaven and water from the Rock that followed them a table everywise furnished for need and for delight and yet grumble because not meat for their lusts Many have all things very good and the wisdome of heaven could not carve fitter and better things and yet all not good enough Let sin creep in and Adam will not be content in Paradise or the Apostate Angels in heaven but leave their own habitation Go from God and take thy leave and farewell of contentment and satisfaction 4. He is grown a Wolf and Devil to his brethren Biting and devouring Gal. 5.15 tearing pulling catching at advantage flying upon the necks of the weaker Men execute much of the wrath of God in these feuds among themselves so that the Caution is
we are as really united unto Christ as the members of the body are to the head Hence are we said to be h Ephes 5.30 members of his body of his flesh and his bones As the head communicates real influences to the body so doth Christ to Believers communicates to us his Sp●rit graces fulnesse spiritual light life strength comfort Joh. 1.16 4. A close near dear intimate union Like that of the food with the body which it nourisheth Hence Believers are said to eat Christs flesh and to drink his blood John 6.54 Such an intimate union as that one possessive particle is not sufficient to expresse it not said my Vineyard is before me but my Vineyard which is mine is before me Cant. 8.12 5. An inseparable perpetual indissoluble union A marriage knot which neither men sins sorrows death nor Divels are able to dissolve Who or what can separate us from the love of God The Apostle clearly resolves his own question i Rom 8 38 39 I am perswaded that neither life nor death c. Believers are held in Christs hand he that would break this union must first be too hard of fist for Christ yea and for his Father too No man shall pluck them out of my hand my Father is greater than all and no man can pluck them out of my Fathers hand Joh. 10.28 29. And thus we have dispatch't the second Question 3. What are the efficient causes of this union Sol. 1. The efficient causes of this union are either principal or less principal 1. Principal and so this great work of union being opus ad extra 't is indivisum and so ascribed 1. In common to the whole k 1 Pet. 5.10 John 6.44 45. Ephes 2 6 7. Godhead Hence we are said to be call'd by God the Father into the fell●wship of his dear Son 1 Cor. 1.9 So likewise this union is ascribed to the Sonne The dead shall hear the voice of the Sonne of God and live Joh. 5.25 Joh. 10.16 2. But more especially the Spirit of God in a more peculiar sense is said to be the principal Author of this union He it is that knits this marriage knot betwixt Christ Jesus and true Believers Look as l Acts 4.24 Creation in some respect is appropriated to the Father m 1 Pet. 1.18 Redemption to the Son so the Application of that Redemption to the Holy Ghost 'T is by one Spirit that we are all baptized into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 'T is by the Holy Spirit the Comforter That we are convinced of sin righteousnesse and judgment Joh. 16.7 8 9. 'T is by the Holy Ghost that we are renewed Tit. 3.5 2. Lesse principal or the means or instruments of union These are twofold outward inward 1. Outward Generally all the Ordinances of God by the Ordinances it is that we come to have n Job 22.21 acquaintance that is union and communion with Jesus Christ 'T is by these golden pipes that golden oyle is conveyed to us from that golden Olive Zech. 4.12 More especially 1. The Word read preach't meditated on believed improved 'T is by hearing and learning of the Father that we come to Christ Joh. 6.44 45. The Holy Scriptures were written for this end that through them we might have fellowship with the Father and his Sonne 1 Joh. 1.3 The way to have Christs company is to keep Christs words Joh. 14.23 2. The Sacraments those spiritual Seals and Labels which God hath fix't to his Covenant of Grace 1. Bapti me By one Spirit we are baptiz'd into one body 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence we are said to be buried with Christ by Baptisme into death Rom. 6.3 4. Baptisme styled the Laver of regeneration Tit. 3.5 By Baptisme we put on Christ Gal. 3.7 2. The Lords Supper this is a great means of strengthning and evidencing our union and advancing our communion with Christ Jesus We are all made to drink into one Spirit 1 Cor. 12.13 Hence that 1 Cor. 10.16 The bread which we break is it not the communion of means arg●ments evidences of our communion with the body of Christ The wine which we drink is it not the communion of the blood of Christ Thus much for the external means of union 2. Inward internal intrinsecal means of union on mans part i. e. faith Not a bare historical miraculous temporal dead faith No but a living working justifying saving faith Christ comes to dwell in our hearts by faith Ephes 3.17 'T is by faith alone that we receive Christ Joh. 1.12 That we come unto him and feed upon him Joh. 6.56 'T is by faith that a Believer lives in and to Christ and Christ lives in and for a Believer Gal. 2.20 Thus much for the Explication of the termes of our Proposition for the fixing of it on a right Basis I now proceed to the second part of my discourse viz. Now That there is such a spiritual mystical real close inseparable union betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers 2. Confirm appears three ways 1. From those many synonymical terms and equivalent expressions whereby the Scriptures hold forth this union Christ is said to be in Believers Col. 1.27 Rom. 8.10 To dwell in them Ephes 3.17 To walk in them 2 Cor. 6.16 So are Believers said to abide in Christ as he abides in them 1 Joh. 4.16 Joh. 15.17 To dwell in Christ as Christ in them Joh. 6.56 To put on Christ to be cloathed with him Gal. 3.27 Each of these expressions clearly import that near and intimate union that is betwixt the Lord Jesus and true Believers The King of Saints hath two Mansion houses one in heaven the Throne of his glory another on earth a Tabernacle of flesh the heart of a Believer which is the seat of his delight Prov. 8.31 his lesser Heaven Isa 57.15 66.1 2. 2. From those several similitudes by which the Scriptures shadow out this union Believers are said to be lively stones 1 Pet. 2.4 5 6. Christ the living foundation the chief corner-stone on which they are built Ephes 2.20 21. Believers are styled living branches Christ the true Vine into whom they are engraffed and in whom they bring forth fruit Joh. 15.1.5 Christ the faithful loving discreet Bridegroom Believers his Loyal Affectionate obedient Spouse Ephes 5.31 32. Cant. 2.16 5.1 Believers are intitled Christs body Ephes 1.23 Bone of his bone flesh of his flesh Ephes 5.30 Christ the Believers head Ephes 1.22 In a word the head and mystical body are call'd Christ 1 Cor. 12.12 In all these Resemblances he that runs may read the union betwixt Christ and Believers pourtrayed out to the life unto us 3. From that communion which there is betwixt Christ and true Believers Omnis communio fundatur in unione Communion where ever it is of necessity argues union as the effect necessarily implies the cause Believers they communicate with Christ in his fulness Joh. 1.16 In his o 2 Cor 5.21 Solus
glory of God be it spoken since this Exercise was first set up such a moneth hath not been known in this City A word of Exhortation What now remaineth men and brethren but that the Ministers of the * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros praef Cat. Nostrum est dicere vestrum vero agere Dei autem perficere Gospel having done their work in holding out unto you a Form or Model of sound words you stir up your selves in the strength of Jesus Christ to do yours and what is that but that which is commended here to Timothy That you hold fast the form of sound words which you have received of them They have held it forth it concerns you to hold it fast First see therefore that you hold it fast in your understandings My brethren in this Moneths Exercise you have had many of the chief Heads and Points of the Christian Faith unvailed to you * 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Idem ut supra Non existimes institutiones istas homiliis esse similes c. Sed haec quae per ordinem tradimus documenta c. not only as so many single truths and several precious Jewels to lie by you but that to which possibly most of you have been strangers hitherto as far as the design could well suffer Methodized as it were into a Chaine of Pearls to weare about necks truths fitly joyned together and compacted into a body by that which every joynt supplyeth Now your duty is to wear this Chain or Bracelet carefully that it may not be broken Your labour must be to imprint this Method of truth in your mindes and judgements by vertue whereof you may be able to know them in their Series and Connexion and when you hear any of these Points handled in Sermons you may be able to know one truth from another where they are to be fixed in the Orb of Divinity and so to refer them to their own proper place and station which will prove to be a greater advantage to your proficiency in the knowledge of Christ then you can easily believe It is observable Rom. 8.28 when the Holy Ghost having hinted effectual calling as the ground of that blessed truth that all things work for good to those that love God yet he mentions it again in the very next verse and why but to shew us what place it obtains in the golden chain of salvation how it takes its room between Predestination and Justification Whom he did predestinate them also he CALLED and whom he CALLED them he justified of so great moment it is not onely to know Gospel-truths but how to posture them in their proper rank and file where every truth is to stand This advantage in a great measure you have had by this Moneths Exercise see that you improve it to the clearing of your understandings in the Method of Gospel Doctrines Secondly Hold them fast in yor Memory Truely the Order of this Moneths Exercise if you be not wanting to your selves will not contribute lesse strength to your memories than light to your understandings The truths themselves have been a Treasure given you by your heavenly Father and the Method will serve you for a sack or purse to keep them in and truely it would be a labour neither unprofitable nor uncomely to take so much paines your selves and to teach your Families to do so too scil to Conne this Model without book and the Lord teach you to get them by heart You may once a week or so revolve them thus in your minds I. There is a God II. The Scriptures are the Word of God III. In the God-head there be three Persons or Subsistencies Father Son and Holy Ghost God blessed for ever IV. God Created man in a perfect but in a mutable estate V. The Covenant of works God made with man in his innocency VI. Original sin in the first spring of it in Adams first transgression VII Original corruption derived from thence into mans nature VIII Mans liablenesse to the curse or the misery of mans state by nature IX Mans impotency to help himself out of this estate X. The Covenant of Redemption or the transaction between God and Christ from all Eternity about mans salvation XI The Covenant of Grace revealed in the Gospel XII Christ the only Mediatour between God and man considered in his Person Natures and Offices XIII Christs state of Humiliation XIV Christs state of Exaltation XV. Christs satisfaction to Divine Justice XVI Effectual calling XVII Vnion with ●hrist XVIII Justification by Christs Righteousnesse XIX Son-ship to God consisting in Adopition Regeneration XX. Saving Faith XXI Repentance XXII Holinesse XXIII The Resurrection XXIV The last Judgement XXV Hell XXVI Heaven Christians this and other such like Catalogues or Formes of the Articles of Christian Faith imprinted upon your memories will be of great benefit and service to you Do ye serve your memories and your memories will serve you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cyril Hieros praef Catechis labour to get them so imprinted upon your memories that they may never be blotted out Thirdly Hold fast yea hold forth these precious Truths delivered to you in your lives and conversations Christians let it be your care and behold it shall be your * Deut. 4.6 wisdom in the eyes of all the beholders to live this morning Exercise the glory whereof hath filled this Assemblie for a moneth together To engage and quicken you herein let me mind you of one rare advantage this Model carrieth with it above most of the acute and learned Treatises of Schoolmen or solid Tractates of Catechetical Divines who have taken great paines in opening and stating the Principles of Christian Religion The Reverend Divines who have travelled in this service of your Faith have in their several Sermons with singular skill and piety brought down Principles unto practice and improved all their Doctrines to Vse and Application wherein they have shewed themselves Workmen that need not be ashamed wise Builders that know how to handle the Trowel as well as the Sword and that made it their design to build up their hearers in holinesse as well as in knowledge The School and the Pulpit met together the Doctor and the Pastor have kissed each other Omne tulit punctum qui miscuit utile dulci. They have not discust the Doctrines of Faith in a jejune frigid speculative way only but what they cleared to the judgment they wrought it home upon the heart and affections with such warmth and sweetnesse as that the hearers seem'd for the present to be carried into the mountain of transfiguration where they cryed out with Peter It is good for us to be here So that although their Sermons were very large yet the greatest part of their Auditories thought they had done too soon and went away praising God that had given such gifts unto men Oh let it be your care dearly Beloved that as this Model hath been
to disobey him this renders them inexcusable at the last Secondly To those who are Atheists voto in desire Psal 14. The fool hath said in his heart there is no God the heart is the Fountain of desires he wishes there were no God this Atishem springs from the former men live as if there were no God and then wish there were none guilt always begets fear and fear hatred and that strikes at the being of the object that is hated as Malefactors desire there were no Law nor Judge that they might escape deserved punishment Well their desires are as visible to God as their actions are to men and in the day of Revelation there will be a proportion of Wrath answerable to the Wickednesse of their hearts Thirdly To those who are Atheists judicio in opinion these low running dregs of time afford us many of these Monsters for many to reconcile their principles with their practices that they may undisturbedly enjoy their lusts take this as an Opiate potion that there is no God but this is the most irrational and impious blasphemy 1. Irrational for the Name of God is written in so fair a Character upon this universal frame that even whil'st men run they may read it and therefore God never wrought a miracle to convince Atheisme because his ordinary works convince it Moreover the notion of a Deity is so deeply imprest on the Tables of all mens hearts that to deny God is to kill the soul in the eye to quench the very principles of common nature to leave never a vital spark or seed of humanity behinde 't is as if an ungracious soul should deny he ever had a Father He that does ungod God does unman himself 2. 'T is the most impious 't is formally Deicidium a killing of God as much as in them lies but there are no Atheists in hell the Divels believe and tremble he that willingly quenches that light which is planted in his breast he is passing from that voluntary darknesse to a worse like an offender on the Scaffold he doth but blinde his eyes to have his head cut off he goes from inward darknesse to utter darknesse Use 2 Vse 2. Let us stablish our hearts in the belief of Gods Being in the latter times the World is wholly disposed to Atheisme as the Scripture attributes the ruine of the Old World to their Atheisme and Profanesse so it foretells the universal disease of the last Age will be Atheisme and Infidelity Luke 18.8 Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh shall he finde faith on the earth it were impossible there should be such a palpable contradiction between the lives of men and this fundamental of Religion did they with assurance and certainty believe it Psal 14.1 The fool hath said in his heart there is no God they are corrupt they have done abominable works there is none that doth good Atheisme is the root of Profanesse moreover the spiritual mysteries of Religion which exceed the flight of reason are opposed by many upon the account of their Atheisme they question the truth of Gods Being and therefore disbelieve supernatural Revelations let us then treasure up this truth First As the foundation of faith for all the truths of Religion spring from this as their common principle the watering of the root will cause the branches to flourish so the confirming of this will render our assent to the doctrine of the Gospel more clear and strong Secondly As the fountain of obedience the true and sound belief of every holy truth always includes a correspondency in the believer to the thing believed and this must descend from the understanding to the affections and the conversation Now the fundamental duties which we are to pay to God are love fear dependance and submission to the will of his Law and of his Providence 1. Love He is the supreme object of love for his excellencies and benefits Psal 5.11 Let them also that love thy Name rejoyce in thee the Name of God imports those glorious Attributes whereby he hath exprest himself to us all the excellencies of the creature meet eminently in him and all their imperfections are removed in him there is nothing unlovely in worldly things how refined soever they be there is an allay of dregs the all that is in them is mixed with corruption but in God the all that he is is perfection in the most glorious creature as a creature there is aliquid nihili some imperfection it is not exactly fitted for the soul but God is the Adequate and compleat object of our love There is such an infinite eminency in God that we are obliged to a proportionable affection the first and great Commandment is Matth. 22.36 Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy strength all the kinds and degrees of our love are due to him we must put no bounds nor limits to it in him it must begin in him it must end a remisser love is a degree of hatred we disparage his excellencies by the coldnesse of our affections O had we but eyes to see his beauty how would all the excellencies of the creatures become a very Glow-worme that only glitters in the night Moreover God planted this affection in the nature of man that it might be terminated upon himself as its centre and treasure as our natural faculties are fitted for their several objects the eye for colours the ear for sounds the palate for tasts so love is fitted for God that being as the Soveraign which sways all our powers Love is called pondus animae that sets all the wheels in the clock of the soul a going this sets the understanding a work in the serious contemplation of the Divine excellencies it diverts the thoughts from other things and fixes them on God it excites strong desires and earnest aspirings after him it stirs up zeal which is flamma amoris love in a flame to remove all obstacles which hinder the most intimate union with him it produces joy when the soul reposes its self in God and with infinite sweetness possesses him it causes the greatest diligence alacrity and resolution in all our ways to please him for love is ever the spring and rule of all our actions such as it is such likewise will they be thus we may see that God as there is in him a union of all excellencies challenges the most intense and vehement degree of our love he being only fitted for it and that our love being a superlative affection is only proper to God and therefore to love any creature without God or in an equal manner to him is to Deify the creature to place it in the room of God and so it renders us guilty of Idolatry in a spiritual sense But such is the ignorance of mens minds and the depravednesse of their wills that few there be who love God 't is true there may be something like love in natural men to
it First This book presses holinesse and godlinesse so as never did any in the world before nor since and gives such Arguments for it as never was heard of nor the wit of man could ever have thought of He that would walk in the Wildernesse of Paganism might hear and there spy a flower growing amongst many weeds now and then a Philosopher that gives you some good directions that concern righteousnesse and external behaviour but the Scripture is a garden wherein whatsoever hath been recommended by all the sober men in the world is put together and wherein they were defective that 's there made up for they were defective especially in this one great point deep humility and though you shall finde many things that concern the exercise of some Christian graces yet in the real practice of humility a man would wonder how incredibly they fell short But as for the Scripture what would you have it bids you live soberly righteously godly Tit. 2.12 it bids you lie at Gods feet as his creature to do with you what he will it would have you like God himself that 's the end of the promises that we should partake of the Divine nature 2 Pet. 1.4 it bids you be holy as God is holy 1 Pet. 1.15 it charges upon you whatever thing is good is just is lovely Phil. 4.8 it commands your very thoughts it 's so far from suffering you to do hurt to your brother as not to suffer you to think hurt it 's so far from allowing to act rapine and injustice as not to allow to do any thing that savours of coveting it binds the very heart and soul O what a place of universal calmnesse would this world be should all serve one another in love should all study each others good we should never do injury if any did we should forgive him we should endeavour to be perfect as God is Trypho calls them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 therefore the Jew could not but say the precepts of the Gospel were wonderful great excellent and transcendent indeed Behold the Scripture is a doctrine according to godlinesse 1 Tim. 6.3 truth according to godlinesse Tit. 1.1 the mystery of godlinesse 1 Tim. 3.16 so that in one word whatever God would think fit for man to do to that God that made him whatever is fit for a sinner to do to a holy God against whom he hath trangressed and between man and man all that is the designe of the Scripture And what the Scripture thus commends it presses by incomparable Arguments shall I name a few 1. Behold God is manifested in the flesh for this purpose 1 Tim. 3.16 Is it nothing sinner that thou wilt live foolishly vainly what wilt thou think to see God dwelling in humane nature to see God live a poor scorned reproached contemned life intimating this great truth that it 's not so unseemly a thing for the Sonne of God himself to live a poor miserable life as 't is for a man to be an impenitent sinner if you remain a wilful and impenitent sinner thou wouldst in thy pride be like God and have no Superiour above thee Behold God condescends and becomes like to thee that if possible he might bring thee back again thou that art a sinner suspectest whether God will do thee good behold how close he comes to thee he dwells in thy own nature 2. Behold the beloved Sonne of God dying upon the Crosse for thee What would you think if any of your Parents should suffer their childe to dye on the behalf of an enemy would you not think it should move that enemy Behold my Sonne in whom I am well-pleased methinks God takes not a quarter of that content in the whole Creation which he does when he speaks of his Sonne yet this Sonne suffered for sinne the just for the unjust that he might bring us to God 1 Pet. 3.18 methinks this love should constrain us 2 Cor. 5.14 Poor soul thou art ready to think God is become thine enemy when sicknesse and death comes thou art ready to say hast thou found me O mine enemy here 's trouble in the world how shall I know whether God intends good Behold it 's beyond peradventure God intends good to a sinner because he dwelt in our nature and his Sonne dyed for us and his Sonne felt pain and infirmity and therefore he may love thee and you need not question any thing of this nature is a hindrance of Gods love the case of a sinner is not so desperate but that a man may be accepted and loved of God for Christs sake will not this move you 3. You have promises of eternal life and threatnings of eternal misery Never did any Philosopher or any other man threaten If you will not observe such and such precepts I l'e throw you into eternal torments nor never did any man say I will give you such glory in heaven but the Scripture does behold life and immortality are brought to light by Christ there 's a future resurrection and this body is like an old house pull'd down by and by it will be a brave building again a spiritual body and we shall shine like the Sunne in the Firmament and be equal to the Angels of God Matth. 13.43 and he like God and Christ Now we know not what we shall be but when he shall appear we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 1 Joh. 3.1 2. And having this hope who would not purifie himself even as God is pure who would not live soberly righteously and godly looking for that blessed hope c If you did but apprehend this glory Tit. 2 13 were not your minde senselesse its impossible you could be quiet without getting an interest in it And how great the day of judgment will be it tells you how our thoughts words and actions and every thing we go about shall come under a severe scrutiny 4. The worth of our souls we minde our bodies but a soul is better than a world The Scripture saith the Sonne of God dyed for souls we never understood so much what souls were wor h as now we do when we see God taking such care and having such designs and thoughts from all eternity 5. The fairest and the most reasonable condition of eternal happinesse and the greatest strength to perform it that 's offer'd in the Gospel Suppose we were sensible we were liable and obnoxious to Gods wrath and could go to heaven and beseech God that he would be pleased not to execute that wrath upon us do but think what terms you would be willing to propose to God would you come and say Lord punish me not for what is past though I intend to do the same thing but he that should say Lord forgive me I am sorry for that which is done and it shall be the businesse of my life to live more circumspectly to thee this is the great thing the Scripture proposes
in his creation with a perfect and universal rectitude 2. That mans defection from his primitive state was purely voluntary and from the unconstrained choice of his own mutable and self-determining will Though the latter part of the Text would afford a sufficient ground to treat of the state of man now fallen yet that being by agreement left to another hand I observe no more from it then what concerns the manner of his fall and that only as it depended on a mutable will In handling these truths I shall 1. Open them in certain explicatory Theses 2. Improve them in some few praictcal and applicatory inferences 1. About the former that God endued c. take these Propositions for explication Prop. 1 1. All created rectitude consists in conformity to some rule or Law Rectitude is a meer relative thing and its relation is to a rule By a rule I here mean a law strictly taken and therefore I speak this only of created rectitude A law is a rule of duty given by a Superiour to an Inferiour nothing can be in that sense a rule to God or the measure of increated rectitude Prop. 2 2. The highest rule of all created rectitude is the will of God considered as including most intrinsecally an eternal and immutable reason justice and goodness 'T is certain there can be no higher rule to creatures than the divine Will Rom. 7.12 Rom. 12.102 Ezek. 18.25 ch 33. and as certain that the government of God over his creatures is alwayes reasonable and just and gracious and that this reasonablenesse justice and goodnesse by which it is so should be subjected any where but in God himself none that know what God is according to our more obvious notions of him can possibly think Prop. 3 3. Any sufficient signification of this Will touching the reasonable creatures duty is a law indispensably obliging such a creature A law is a constitution de debito and 't is the Legislatours will not concealed in his own breast but duly expressed that makes this constitution and infers an obligation on the Subject Prop. 4 4. The Law given to Adam at his creation was partly natural given by way of internal impression upon his soul partly positive given as is probable by some more external discovery or revelation That the main body of laws whereby man was to be governed should be at first given no other way than by stamping them upon his mind and heart was a thing congruous enough to his innocent state as it is to Angels and Saints in glory it being then exactly contempered to his nature highly approvable to his reason as is evident in that being faln his reason ceases not to approve it Rom. 2.18 fully sutable to the inclination and tendency of his will and not at all regretted by any reluctant principle that might in the least oppose or render him doubtful about his duty Yet was it most reasonable also that some positive commands should be superadded that Gods right of dominion and government over him as Creatour might be more expresly asserted and he might more fully apprehend his own obligation as a creature to do somethings because it was his Makers Will as well as others because they appeared to him in their own nature reasonable and fit to be done for so the whole of what God requires of man is fitly distinguished into some things which he commands because they are just and some things that are just because he commands them Prop. 5 5. Adam was indued in his creation with a sufficient ability and habitude to conform to this whole Law both natural and positive in which ability and habitude his original rectitude did consist This Proposition carries in it the main truth we have now in hand therefore requires to be more distinctly insisted on There are two things in it to be considered The thing it self he was endued with The manner of the endowment 1. The thing it self wherewith he was endued that was uprightnesse rectitude otherwise called the image of God though that expression comprehends more than we now speak of as his immortality dominion over the inferiour creatures c. which uprightness or rectitude consisted in the habitual conformity or conformability of all his natural powers to this whole Law of God and is therefore considerable two wayes viz. In relation to its Subject Rule 1. In relation to its subject that was the whole soul in some sense it may be said the whole man even the several powers of it And here we are led to consider the parts of this rectitude for 't is coextended if that phrase may be allowed with its subject and lies spread out into the several powers of the soul for had any power been left destitute of it such is the frame of man and the dependance of his natural powers on each other in order to action that it had disabled him to obey and had destroyed his rectitude for bonum non oritur nisi ex causis integris malum vero ex quovis defectu Davenant de justitia habituali i. And hence as Davenant well observes according to the parts if I may so speak of the subject wherein it was Mans original rectitude must be understood to consist of 1. A perfect illumination of mind to understand and know the Will of God 2. A compliance of heart and will therewith 3. An obedient subordination of the sensitive appetite and other inferiour powers that in nothing they might resist the former That it comprehends all these appears by comparing Col. 3.10 where the image of God wherein man was created is said to consist in knowledge that hath its seat and subject in the mind with Ephes 4.24 where righteousness and holiness are also mentioned the one whereof consists in equity towards men the other in loyalty and devotedness to God both which necessarily suppose the due framing of the other powers of the soul to the ducture of an inlightened mind And besides that work of sanctification which in these Scriptures is expresly called a renovation of man according to the image of God wherein he was created doth in other Scriptures appear as the forementioned Authour also observes to consist of parts proportionable to these I mention viz. illumination of mind Ephes 1.18 conversion of heart Psal 51.10 victory over concupiscence Rom. 6.7 throughout 2. Consider this rectitude in relation to its Rule that is the Will of God revealed 1 John 3.4 or the Law of God sin is the transgression of the Law and accordingly righteousnesse must needs be conformity to the Law viz. actual righteousnesse consists in actual conformity to the Law that habitual rectitude which Adam was furnished with in his Creation of which we are speaking in an habitual conformity or an ability to conform to the same Law This habitual conformity was as of the whole soul so to the whole Law i. e. to both the parts or kinds of it natural and positive
to be enlarged by another 5. The fifth thing to be considered in the Gospel-Covenant is the efficacy of it I did not so much as mention the efficacy of the former Covenants for there was never so much as any one made happy by them 't is sadly true that the threatnings of punishment for the neglect of duty took hold of them the threatnings seemed plainly to belong to the nature of those Covenants but in the Gospel Covenant 't is otherwise for it is said John 3.36 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abides which shews that the wrath was brought upon them by the violation of the former Covenant he speaks as of that which was upon them already But yet mistake not as if refusing the Gospel were no sin or not punished they sin more grievously that sin against Gospel love than they that sin only against Legal goodness but wrath doth not properly belong to the Essence of the Gospel Thus you have the first thing I undertook namely the nature of the Covenant positively considered the second is the comparative excellency of the New Covenant above others I will be brief in shewing its excellency above the Covenant of Works more large in shewing you how 't is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Only suppose to prevent mistakes that each Covenant is in its own kind most perfect and most accommodated to the state of the people and to the purposes for which they were instituted This premised First The New Covenant of Grace is better than the Covenant of Nature I forbear to speak of the agreement and diff●rence of them I shall speak only of the excellency of this better Covenant 1. The Covenant of Works was a Declaration of Gods Justice than which nothing can be more terrible to a guilty sinner but the Covenant of Grace is a Declaration of Gods mercy in Christ and let the overwhelmed conscience speak is not this better 2. The Foundation of the Covenant of Works was the Creation of man and the integrity of his nature the Foundation of the Covenant of Grace is mans Redemption by Jesus Christ 3. The Promise of the Covenant of Works was eternal life in Paradise the Promise of the New Covenant is eternal life in Heaven 4. The Covenant of Works had no Mediator no possibility of recovering the least slip the New Covenant is ratified in the blood of the Son of God 't is composed on purpose for our relief * Camero Thus the New Covenant is better than the Covenant of Works Secondly The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Old Covenant of Grace Beloved you may observe I do not say better than the Covenant strictly Legal but better than the whole Dispensation which the Jews and all other Believers lived under before Christs Incarnation better than the Old Doctrine of spiritual grace delivered by Moses and the Prophets openly promising Eternal life unto the Fathers and the Dull people of the Jews under the condition of perfect obedience to the Moral Law together with the intolerable burdens of Legal rights and yoke of most straight Mosaical policy but covertly under the condition of repentance and faith in the future Messiah prefigured in the shadowes and types of Ceremonies that by this forme of Divine worship and policy a stiffe-necked people might partly be tamed and partly be brought to Christ that lay hid under those Ceremonies So that in short you see the Old Testament or the Old Covenant for by a Metonymie they are chiefly one and the same thing and the Apostle plainly so expresseth himself 2 Cor. 3.14 Untill this day remaineth the same vaile untaken away in the reading of the Old Testament which vaile is done away in Christ and this contains these three things 1. The old kind of doctrine which was openly and principally Legal covertly and lesse principally Evangelical 2. The old way of worship and Legal Priest-hood 3. That Mosaical policy which was tyed to one people * Paraeus This Covenant was made by God to Adam presently after the fall G n. 3.15 afterward to Abraham and his posterity Gen. 17.1 2 7 8. The symbole of this Covenant was circumcision from verse 10. to the 14. I forbear further particularising to whom it was often renewed and confirmed whereupon it is called the Covenants Rom. 9.4 Ephes 2.12 Now the New Covenant of Reconciliation to God by Christ exhibited in the flesh is the better Covenant The Gospel is the Table of the New Testament longè divinio● quam smaragdina Hermetis far beyond the Emerauld Table of Hermes which the Chymists vainly boast to yield the Philosophers stone to enrich all persons and the Panacea that cures all diseases here 's the elect and precious stone 1 Pet. 2.6 * Crocii Syntag. But I will come to particulars only premising this Caution Caution Let not any thing I shall say be interpreted as if I put an hostile contrariety between the Old Covenant and the New in spiritual practice they yield spiritual help to each other Justin Martyr saith that grace is not according to the Law nor against the Law but above the Law therefore they are not adversa but diversa the Gospel in Scripture is called the Law Isa 2.3 only 't is the Law of faith Rom. 3.27 and the Law of the Spirit Rom. 8.2 therefore when we advance the Gospel Rom. 3.31 do we then make voide the Law through faith God forbid yea we establish the Law Gal. 3.21 Is the Law then against the promises of God God forbid for if there had been a Law given which could have given life v●rily righteousnesse should hav● been by the law The believers in the Old Testament were saved by the free mercy of God in Christ Gerhar l. c. Heb. 9.15 He is the Mediator of the New Testament and by means of death for the Redemption of the transgressions that were under the first Testament they which are called might receive the promise of eternal inheritance And their Sacraments and ours Maccov l. c. sealed the same ●hing 1 Cor. 10.3 4. They did all eat the same spiritual meat and did all drink the same spiritual drink for they drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them and that Rock was Christ. This premised I shall now shew you the excellency of the Gospel-Covenant 1. The Gospel-Covenant is a better Covenant than the Legal in respect of its Original and manner of patefaction 't is true they have both one principal efficient cause but the Law may in some sort be known by nature it was written in mans heart at the first and the character is not wholly worne out Rom. 2.15 The Gentiles shew the work of the Law written in their hearts but now the Gospel was immediately manifested from God to the Church alone Joh. 1.18 No man hath seen God at any time the only begotten Son which is in the bosome of the Father he hath declared him Mat. 16.16 17. And Simon Peter answered
and said Thou art Christ the Son of the living God and Jesus answered and said unto him Blessed art thou Simon Bar-Jona for flesh and blood hath not revealed it unto thee but my Father which is in heaven It so farre transcends the capacity of humane reason that reason cannot so much as approve of it Gerhard Alting when it was revealed without inward illumination and perswasion of the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 2.9 10 14 15. Eye hath not seen nor ear heard neither hath it entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for them that love him but God hath revealed them unto us by his Spirit for the Spirit searcheth all things yea the deep things of God but the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned but he that is spiritual judgeth all things and hereupon it is called the N●w Covenant not in respect of the time that it had no being before the incarnation of Christ but in respect of the knowledge of it the knowledge of the Legal Covenant was born with us and it was fore-known to nature but the Gospel-Covenant was who●ly new revealed from the bosome of the Father it was administred by new Officers confirmed by new Sacraments let into the hearts of people by new pourings out of the Spirit therefore the Apostle prayes Ephes 1.17 18. * Maccovius That the God of o●r Lord Jesus Christ the Father of glory may give unto you the Spirit of wisdome and revelation in the knowledge of him the eyes of your understanding being enlightened that ye may know what is the hope of his calling and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the Saints God would never have instituted the Legal Covenant but for the Gospels sake Galat. 3.24 Wher●fore the Law was our School-master to bring us unto Christ The Law was a sharp School-master by meanes whereof the refractory and contumacious minds of the Jewish people might be tamed for Rom. 10.4 Christ is the end of the Law for righteousness to ev●ry one that believeth 2. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of it the Law was a Doctrine of works commanding and prescribing what we should be and what we should do Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them But now the Gospel requires faith in Christ for righteousnesse and salvation Rom. 3.21 But now the righteousnesse of God without the Law is manifested therefore saith Augustine faith obtaines what the Law commands we have no help from the Law * Gerhard the condition of the Law is simply impossible it finds us sinners and leaves no place for repentance * Camero and notwithstanding the sprinkling of Gospel that there was with the Law yet it was but obscure And that shall be the next particular 3. The Gospel-Covenant is better than the Legal in respect of the manner of holding forth Christ in it though the Gospel is one and the same whereby all Saints are saved in all times for there was not one way of salvation then and another since Acts 10.43 To him give all the Prophets witness that through his Name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sinnes Yet the Doctrine of the Gospel was more obscure in the Old Testament Umbratili per se inefficaci ceremoniarum observatione c. Amyrald partly through Prophesies of things a great way off and partly through types Christ was wrapt up in shadowes and figures in the Gospel the body of those shadowes and the truth of those types is exhibited the Land of Canaan was a type of heaven Israel according to the flesh was a type of Israel according to the Spirit the spirit of bondage of the spirit of Adoption the blood of the Sacrifices of the blood of Christ the glory of divine grace was reserved for Christs coming they had at most but starre-light before Christs coming * When Christ first came it was but day-break with them Christ was at first but as a morning starre 2 Pet. 1.19 though soon after he was as the sun in the firmament Mal. 4.2 The Apostle saith Heb. 10.1 The Law having a shadow of good things to come and not the very image of the things and in this respect it was that the Apostle saith the Gospel was promised to the Fathers but perform'd to us Rom. 1.1 2. It was hid to them and revealed to us Rom. 16.25 26. and not only by fulfilling of Prophesies which we may see by the comparing of Scripture but by the Spirit Ephes 3.5 The mystery of Christ in other ages was not made known unto the Sons of men as it is now revealed unto his holy Apostles and Prophets by the Spirit They had but a poor discovery of Christ but we have the riches of this mystery made known unto us Col. 1.26 27 * Alting The old Covenant leads to Christ but 'tis a great way about the Gospel Covenant goeth directly to him their Ceremonies were numerous b●rdensome and obscure those things that represent Christ to us are few easie and cleare * Synops pur Theol. 4. The Gospel-Covenant is the better Covenant in respect of the form of it the promises are better promises the promises of the Law are conditional and require perfect obedience Lev. 18.5 Ye shall therefore keep my statutes and my judgements which if a man do he shall live in them the condition you see is impossible Beloved 'pray ' mistake not there is expresse mention of eternal life in the Old Testament Isa 45.17 Israel shall be saved in the Lord with an everlasting salvation ye shall not be ashamed nor confounded world without end Dan. 12.2 Many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall awake some to everl●sting life and some to shame and everlasting contemp and that the Law cannot save us that is accidental in respect of our d●filement with sin and our weaknesse that we cannot fulfill the condition Rom. 7.12 The law is holy and the Commandment holy and just and good and it is the Word of life Acts 7.38 Who received the lively Oracles to give unto us and the Apostle brings in Abraham and David for examples of Justification by faith Rom. 4.6 13. but yet their promises were chiefly temporal we have the promise of temporal good things in the New Testament as well as they in the Old only with the exception of the Cross Mark 19.29 30. Verily I say unto you There is no man that hath left house or brethren or sisters or fathers or mother or wife or children or lands for my sake and the Gospels but he shall receive an hundred fold now in this time houses and brethren and sisters and mothers and children and lands with persecutions that was the exception with persecution
in this nature only Heb. 4.14 15 16. 2. His Names Christ Jesus this was his proper Name Jesus Christ his appellative Name Jesus that denotes the work and businesse for which he came into the world as appeares from the reason which the Angel that came from heaven as an Herauld to proclaim his incarnat●on gives of the imposition of this Name Thou shalt call his Name J●sus f●r he shall save his people from their sins This Name though it be given to others in Scripture yet to him eminently to them as types of that compleat Saviour who should come after them and save his people from their sinnes Christ that denotes the several Offices in the exercise whereof he executes this work of salvation Christ in the Greek being the same with Messiah in the Hebrew i. e. anointed Under the Law the solemne ordination or setting apart both of things and persons to special services was by anointing thus we read of three sorts of persons anointed Kings Priests Prophets and in respect of all these Offices Jesus is called Christ From the words thus briefly explained arise these two Observations 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator 2. That there is no other Mediator between God and man but Jesus Christ Doctr. 1. That there is now no other way of friendly communion between God and man but through a Mediator and indeed considering what God is and withal what man is how vastly disproportionable how unspeakably unsuitable our very natures are to his how is it possible there should be any sweet communion betwixt them who are not only so infinitely distant but so extreamly contrary God is holy but we are sinful Isa 6.3 with Gen. 3.5 1 Joh. 1.5 with Eph. 5 8. Rom. 7 1● in him is nothing but light in us nothing but darknesse in him nothing that 's evil in us nothing that 's good he is all beauty we nothing but deformity he is justice and we gui●tinesse he a consuming fire and we but dried stubble in a word he an infini●ely and incomprehensibly glorious Majesty and we poor sinful dust and ashes who have sunk and debased our selves by sin below the meanest rank of creatures and made our selves the burthen of the whole Creation and can there be any communion any friendship between such Can too walk together Amos 3.3 except they be agreed And what agreement can there ever be but through a Mediator If ever God be reconciled to us it must be through a Mediator because of that indispensible necessity of satisfaction Rom. 8.7 and our inability to make it If ever we be reconciled to God it must be through a Mediator because of that radicated enmity that is in our natures to every thing of God and our impotency to it and thus in both respects that God may be willing to be a friend to us and that we may not be unwilling to be friends to him there needs a Mediatour 2 Cor. 5.19 compared with Joh. 14.6 Doctr. 2. That there 's no other Mediator betwen God and man but Jesus Christ And one Mediator i. e. but one Opus est Mediatore ad Mediatorem istum Bernard p. 262 Leo. 1. Papa Roman Epist. 83. ad Palestinos Episcop c. 4. The fondnesse of Papists in their multiplicity of Mediators not only unto God but to our Mediator himself having no other foundation than only their superstition cannot be of moment with them who labour to be wise according to Scripture That those members of the Church who are contemporary here on earth do indeed pray for one another cannot be denied but that they are therefore Mediators of Intercession hath been denied by the more Antient Papists themselves This Title of Mediator is throughout the New Testament appropriated unto Christ Heb. 8.6 H●b 9.15 Heb. 12.24 and indeed there 's none else fit for so high a work as this but only he Resol 1. The singular suitablenesse of his person to this eminent employment To interpose as a Mediator betwixt God and men was an employment above the capacity of men Angels or any creature but Jesus Christ in respect of the dignity of his person was every way suited for this work Which you may take in these four particulars 1. That he was truly God equal with the Father of the same nature and substance not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of the like nature but of the same nature as is excellently cleared by that famous Champion for the Deity of Christ against the Arrians Athanasius Col. 2.9 In him dwelleth the fulness of the God-head bodily Non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non divinitatis sed deitatis D. Prideaux fasc p. 76. 't is not the fulnesse of the Divinity but of the Deity thereby intimating an identity of essence with God the Father and holy Ghost Though the Divine essence be after a several manner in the several Persons of the blessed Trinity in the Father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without receiving it from any other in the Son by an eternal generation and in the holy Ghost by proceeding yet 't is the same essence of God that is in all three persons Tylen Syntagm p. 401. Lysord his plain mans senses exercised p. 82. because such is the infinite simplicity of this essence that it cannot be divided or parcelled Thus Christ not to speak any thing concerning the other persons is stiled so the Son of God as one equal with the Father for upon this it is that the Jews ground their charge of blasphemy against him that he said God was his Father making himself equal with God Joh. 5.18 The force of their reason lies in this the natural Son of God is truly God and equal with God as the natural son of man is man equal and of the same substance with his father Angels and men are the Sons of God by Adoption Lyford p. 93. but Christ is the natural Son of God the only Son of God and therefore truly God I and my Father are one Joh. 10.30 he thought it no robbery to be equal with God Phil. 2.6 For the further confirmation of this take these Arguments 1. He whom Scripture honours with all those Names which a●e peculiar unto God must needs be God That Christ hath these Names ascribed to him appeares from these instances He is not only stiled God the Word was God Joh. 1.1 but God with such additional discrimination● 〈◊〉 neither Magistrates who because they are Gods Depu●ies and Vicegerents here on earth Psal 82 6. are sometimes called Gods nor a●y creature is capable of The great God Tit. 2.13 The true God 1 Joh. 5.20 The mighty God Isa 9.6 Over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9.5 The Lord of glory 1 Cor. 2.8 The Lord from heaven 1 Cor. 15.48 Yea that great Name Jehovah the Lord or Jehovah our
respect Christ abased himself to look like a sinner Humbled himself and became obedient to death the death of the Crosse In the further Amplification of this I shall endeavour to shew three things 1. What kinde of death Christ humbled himselfe unto 2. In what manner Christ underwent that death 3. Upon what grounds Christ thus humbled himself to death 1. What kinde of death Christ humbled himself unto and this I cannot omit the Apostle having added such a remarkable Emphasis by way of reduplication Death even the death of the Cross It was not only a violent death and there 's much in that that he dyed not a natural but a violent death Nor indeed could he both because there was no sin in him to be the in-let of a natural death nor would that have been satisfactory for the sin of others It was not only I say a violent death but such a violent death as had in it a more than ordinary violence a death by crucifying which hath these three imbittering Circumstances 1. Pain 2. Shame 3. Curse 1. Pain The easiest death is painful a death-bed though a down-bed is for the most part a little ease Oh my gowty feet saith Asa O my cold benum'd body saith David O my leprous skin saith Uzziah O my pained a king head cryes the son of the Shunamite but in the death of Christ there was the pain of many deaths put together in the very dawning of the Gospel the very first time we finde the death of Christ mentioned it is set out by bruising Gen. 3.15 It shall bruise the head and thou shalt bruise his heel Isa 53.10 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 26.39 viz. his humane nature that which could be bruised It pleased the Lord to bruise him he hath put him to grief bruised him as with a Pestel in a Mortar hence was it he prayed so earnestly that the Cup might passe it was so full of worme-wood and gall and the pain so violent which he was to encounter that he screwed up his request to the highest pin if it be possible wise and resolute men do not use to complain of a little they will not cry oh at a flea-bite or the burning of a finger and some of the Martyrs have born up with such Christian courage and gallantry in death that being on the Rack they would not be loosed they were tortured Heb. 11.35 not accepting deliverance saith the Apostle the incomes and supports of Divine Grace made an abatement of their pains oh but what shall we say of the bitternesse of that death where the Author of all their strength God and man bewrayes passions how much dregs was there in that Cup which Christ was so loth to drink of Three things made Christs death so exceeding painful Optime complexionatus Aquin. 1. The piercing his hands and feet those sinnews and sensitive parts Christs body was all over excellently well tempered and so his sense admirably acute but to be pierced and digg'd through hands and feet parts so full of nerves and sinnews must needs aggravate and augment the smart They have pierced my hands and my feet Psal 22.16 was the Prophetical complaint of the Psalmist fulfilled in Christ 2. Another thing that addeth much to the pain of Christs death was the extension and distortion of his body the Crosse was a rack to him and he was stretch't as upon the Tenters for when any persons were to be crucified the Crosse you must understand l●y all along upon the ground till the party was nailed to it and stretch't out at his full length and afterward erected and to this the Psalmist had respect in that sad complaint of his I may tell all my bones Psal 22 17. he was so rack't that his bones were almost ready to start out of the skin 3. The death of Christ was more painful by reason of its slownesse and gradual approach Christ was from the third Compare Mar. 15.25 with 34. to the ninth houre in dying from nine in the morning till three in the afternoon six compleat houres When bloody Tyrants would make any mans death more than ordinarily painful they have devised wayes to cause a lingring death and when news was once brought to one of them that such a one was dead suddenly he cryed out Evasit he hath made an escape When death comes the slower its pace the heavier its tread the longer the Seige the fiercer the storme but this is true of Christ more than others for when they are long in dying they usually faint and their spirits abate they are brought step by step to deaths doore and dead before death but with Christ it was otherwise he stood all that while in perfect strength the vigour and acutenesse of his senses was no whit blunted or made lesse sensible of paine That is a notable Scripture Mark 15.37 39. Jesus cryed with a loud voice and gave up the Ghost and when the Centurion which stood ov●r against him saw that he so cryed out and gave up the Ghost he said Truly this man was the Son of God a very strange inference this man dyes and gives up the Ghost and therefore he is the Son of God The Argument one would think were strong to the contrary but here lies the strength of his reason When he saw he so cryed out and died he said he was the Son of God He very well knew that in other men strength abated leisurely their speech grew low and they used to fumble and falter and rattle in the throat but as for this man he gave such a cry at the last gasp as he never heard and thereupon infers Truly he was the Son of God 2. Another bitter ingredient unto the death of Christ was shame and this was much more than the former There is nothing so sharp and cutting so intolerable to an ingenuous and noble spirit as shame The paine of an hundred deaths is more easily undergone by such than the reproach of one Now in this respect the thieves fared much better than he did we read of no irrision no inscription no taunts or sarcasms cast upon them they had only paine to encounter Christ both pain and scorne the souldiers the Jews the very thieves flouted him He endured the Crosse Heb. 12.2 saith the Apostle and despised the shame The Crosse was it self a● ignominious death the death of a slave Fecinus est vincire civem Romanum scelus verbera e quid dicam in crucem tollere Cic. Zach 11.13 no Free man or man of fashio● was ever put to it and to this day we say of one that is hang'd He dyes like a dog yea but Christ did not only dye such an ignominious and reproachful death as this but he was sold to it and a goodly price that he was prized at the death it self was shameful the death of a slave and this was an aggravating circumstance of ignominy that he
procured purchased the price paid received God cannot now recall it Use 5. Study the death of Christ and eye it as the great pillar of your faith in troubles of conscience and settle your selves upon it OF EFFECTUAL CALLING ROM 8.28 To them who are called according to his purpose THe sacred Scriptures are a Paradise or Garden of delights This Epistle to the Romans is a most curious and artificial knot in that Garden this Chapter is the richest division in that knot furnished with sweetest flowres of Consolation antidoting the remnants of corruption that there are in our hearts and the various afflictions that we meet with in the World This Verse that I have read unto you is the fairest flowre in that Division for what can sooner revive a drooping soul than to be assured that all things shall work together for good We saith the great Apostle do not think imagine conjecture but know partly by Divine Revelation partly by our own experience that all things not only all Gifts Graces Ordinances but all Creatures all Providences all Changes Events Occurrences even those things that appear most formidable Homo oppugnans Ferus Diabolus insidians the persecutions of men the temptations of the Divel shall work not singly and apart it may be but together for good For good Yes but it is unto those that be good Hands off wicked and profane wretches you have no part nor lot in these heavenly consolations Away base Swine to your sties to your muck and mire these pearls are not for you Out ye Dogs to the garbidge that lieth upon the Dunghill the childrens bread is not for you We know that all things shall work together for good unto those that love God why so because they are called according to his purpose so Paraeus expoundeth the place and with him I perfectly agree Isa 14.27 That which God hath purposed shall not be frustrated The Lord of Hosts hath purposed and whe shall disannul it his hand is stretched out and who shall turn it back What man will suffer his purposes those purposes that he taketh up with best advice and most mature deliberation to be disappointed if he have power to accomplish them the holy purposes of God as they are ordered and directed by infinite Wisdome so they have infinite power to bring them to passe so that if I can say God hath a purpose to save me I may securely smile at all the attempts of men and devils against me and if I can say God hath Effectually Called me I may be sure God hath chosen me and hath a Purpose to save me for all the links in the golden Chain of salvation are even wrought not one of them wider or narrower than another if God have Chosen he will Call if God Call he hath Chosen Once more if I can say I love God I may be sure I am Called for I cannot love God except I have some acquaintance with him some sense and experience of his love towards me So then all our consolations are ultimately resolved into the Purpose of God this is the basis and foundation of them all that Purpose appeareth by our Effectual Calling and that Calling appeareth to be Effectual by our love to God Hence the conclusion is certain That all things shall work together for good to them that love God to them that are Called according to his Purpose But I forget my self you have heard in former Discourses under what a sad soul-killing disease poor man laboureth in his natural condition you heard likewise of a Soveraign remedy provided in the blood of Christ I am now engaged to speak to the application of that remedy in our Effectual Calling This Effectual Calling according to Saint Augustine is ingressus ad salutem our entrance into a state of salvation the first step whereby God his predestination descendeth to us and we again ascend to the glory predestinated The Doctrine I present from my Text may be this There are some persons in the World that are Effectually Called or which is all one which are Called according to the Purpose of God There is a Call of the Gospel that is not Effectual of this our Saviour speaketh when he saith Many are Called but few are Chosen How many of the poor Ministers of the Gospel may complain of multitudes in this generation saying with the children that sate in the Market place Luke 7.32 We have piped unto you and ye have not danced we have mourned to you and ye have not lamented Neither the delightful airs of mercy nor the doleful dities of judgement have moved you but the Election will certainly obtain and the Call that is according to Gods Purpose reacheth not ears only but hearts also The houre is coming and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God John 5.25 This work of grace is presented to our view in a various dresse of words in the Scriptures it is sometimes a teaching sometimes a drawing sometimes a conversion sometimes a regeneration and all these in divers respects which I cannot stand to unfold Gratia prima Praeveniens Operans In the Schools it is the first grace preventing grace operating grace among Divines of the Reformed way it is an Internal and Effectual Call Vocatio Alta Efficax after the minde of St. Augustine When it is offered to our consideration under this notion it presupposeth two things 1. That natural men stand at a distance from God we do not use to call those that stand hard by us this was once the condition of the Ephesians Ye sometimes were far of sometimes Ephes 2.13 when surely in the time of their unregeneracy far off from whom from Christ from the Church from God and consequently from themselves but how could they be far off from God Zanchius not in spaces of place for God filleth all places with his presence as to his Essence and providential works he is not far from every one of us Acts 17.27 for in him we live and move but as to their hearts and affections all natural men are far from God God is not in all their thoughts they do not know him fear love and delight in him they do not breath after communion with him even when they draw nigh unto him with their lips their hearts are far from him If it sometimes happen that we call those that are at hand then usually they are such as are asleep sin is a deep sleep of the soul and as sleep bindeth all the senses of the outward man so sin all the powers of the inward a man under the dominion of sin can do nothing for God neither can he enjoy any thing from God it may be he dreams of great satisfactions he receiveth from the worlds dainties but when he awaketh his soul is empty Or further if they be not asleep they are such as mind something else than he would have them All
Promises of the Gospel In which are two things formally constitutive of Saving Faith 1. Acceptation of Christ and the Promises Faith is that hand which doth touch the top of the golden Scepter or that closeth with and entertaineth what God offereth receiving Christ hence a weak Faith is true Faith and saving Joh. 1.12 as well as strong because it indeed receiveth the gift though with a trembling hand This is the coming unto Christ Joh. 6.35 and appropriating what before lay in common the applying what before was only applicable making the soul to say with Thomas believing Joh. 20.28 My Lord and my God Zanch. in Coloss 2.6 Sicut accepistis quomodo accipitur Fide So the good things purchased by Christ and following upon our receiving of Christ are said to be received as the atonement abundance of grace the gift of righteousness Ro. 5.11.17 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 fidei videl manu oblata 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and expresly remission of sin is said to be received by Faith Act. 26.18 2. Innitency recumbency of soul upon a Christ received entrusting him entirely with 2 Tim. 1.12 Isa 50.10 Cant. 8.5 and committing to him the care of Soul and salvation staying the soul upon him leaning upon the beloved rouling the soul upon him resting with whole weight upon him as faithful able loving and this is truly fiducia this is truly Credere in Christum To believe in or upon Christ more than Credere Christum Christo to believe a Christ that he is and to believe Christ or his word It is a phrase in Prophane writers unusual as the thing it self salvation by Faith was unknown To this belong those expressions of the eyes being toward God 2 Chron. 20.12 Psal 123.2 Isa 45.22 Joh. 3.14 15. and looking to him even as the Serpent was lifted up to be looked upon with expectation of healing vertue so Christ to be looked unto by the Soul with a longing expectation and confident dependance The End of Faith is the glory of God in mans salvation Final Cause the one as supream and ultimate the other as subordinate that God might save his Creature to whom he wished well in a way of demonstration and exaltation of his glorious justice and mercy therefore was Saving Faith and Salvation by Faith ordained Justice that he might be just Rom. 3.26 that is demonstrated and declared to be just as Psal 51.6 both in not pardoning without satisfaction and therefore punishing sin upon the Surety and then in pardoning the sinner through faith uniting to and interesting in the Surety therefore saith the Apostle God is faithful and just to forgive Me●cy in that he accepteth the satisfaction of another and imputeth his righteousness to the sinner by Faith receiving it and that he found out and provided alone this way of salvation by Faith It was of Faith that it might be of Grace Rom. 4.16 Ephes 2.8 for by Grace are we saved through faith and thereby works as meriting and so mans confidence in and boasting of himself are excluded Rom. 27. and Gods glory entirely secured and advanced by mens submit●ing to the righteousness of God by Faith Rom 10.3 Hab 2.4 Faith and Pride being utterly inconsistent Indeed trusting God upon his bare word not having merit nor humane probability Rom 4.20 Heb 10.39 1 Pet 1.9 giveth great glory to God That Mans Salvation is an end of Faith all the New Testament witnesseth even that we believe to the saving of our souls and receive the end of our Faith in the salvation of our Souls 4. Effects The Effects more proper or less proper and Consequents of true Faith Col 3.4 1. Union with Christ who is our life and so we live by Faith What can more necessarily and immediately follow upon the offer on Gods part in the Gospel of Christ to be ours and our receiving him by Faith than union to his person though no personal union 2 Cor 13.5 Ephes 3.17 Hence having Christ in us and our being in the Faith are made the same because Christ dwelleth in our hearts by Faith Whatever the Spirit on Christs part doth before by way of uniting us to Christ apprehending us for Christ Jesus as some understand Phil. 3.12 Faith is the hand on our part that receives and the band that fastneth Christ to us This I take to be the fruit of the first consummate Vital act of the quickned soul and then is the mariage knot tied 2. Hence follow Remission of sins and justification of the person through Christ and his righteousness apprehended and appropriated This Peter testifies to be the witness of the Prophets Act 10.43 even that through his name whosoever believeth in him shall receive remission of sins The pardoned alone live for the guilty are dead in Law which the people sensibly bewailed in saying if our iniquities be upon us Ezek 33.10 and we pine away in them how shall we then live Joyn this with our living by Faith and you see Faiths necessity and efficacy towards pardon It was St. Pauls ardent desire that he having won Christ got him been united to him might be found in him having the righteousness which is of God through faith in Christ. Nothing more frequent than the assertions and demonstrations of Justification by Faith in S. Pauls Epistles especially to the Romans and Galatians The manner of Faiths efficacy wherein is by a judicious person of our own well expressed for the cutting off those two eager controversies about the Instrumentality and conditionality of Faith It is saith he the general opinion of the Orthodox wherein all agree That Faith is a means appointed by God in the use whereof the chi dr n of men are made partakers of Justification 3. Adoption That our receiving into the number and having a right to the Priviledges of the Sons of God the Spirit of Adoption boldness at the Throne of Grace present supply future inheritance is the fruit and product of Faith appears from Scripture and consequence To as many as received him Joh. 1.12 or believed on his name gave he power to become the Sons of God For indeed we being by Faith united to Christ and the faultiness of our persons taken away through Christ what more immediately follows from this loveliness in him and oneness with him than communication of Sonship which cannot be in that way that Christ is a Son Ephes 1.5.6 and therefore is by the Adoption of children by Jesus Christ Adoption therefore is the effect of Faith through union to and Justification through Christ intermediately caused thereby Causa causae est causa causati 4. Audience and answer of prayer Our Lord hath given universal proof to this Mat. 21.22 in assuring that all things whatsoever shall be asked in prayer believing shall be received By St. James Jam. 1.6 7. asking
requir●ng sometimes the one sometimes the other when Repentance is the duty to be discharged calling sometimes for fasting weeping and walking in sackcloth and ashes nay the rending of the heart and not the garmen●s Joel 2.11 12. and sometimes and that very commonly for turning to the Lord nay the whole work of Repentance is in Scripture expressed by Humiliation in the promise of pardon to the penitent their Repentance is described to be an humbling of the uncircumcised heart and acceptance of the punishment of their sin Lev. 26.41 So when Rehoboam and Manasseh Repented they are only said to humble themselves 2 Chron. 12.6 33.2 And under the Gospel we read of Repentance for sin as well as from sin and 't is denominated godly sorrow which worketh Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 Working not only as a cause but complement perfecting finishing and compleating Repentance and therefore the Apostle James requires them that draw nigh to God and clean their h art and purifie their hands that they be afflicted mourn and weep and humble themselves under the hand of God James 2.8 9 10. And the Covenant of Grace promising Repentance doth expresse it self by these two acts you shall see the evil of yo r wayes and loa h y●ur selves because of your iniquities and ab●minations And I w●ll put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my ways Ezek. 36.27 31. So that according to the expressions of Scripture as well as the experiences of the Saints Humi●iation of the s●ul is an essential act and eminent part of Repentance and this is that which I in the description do denominate sense of and sorrow for sin as committed against God thereby intending to note unto you that the soul must be humbled that will be lifted up by the Lord and his humiliation doth and must consist of these two parts Conviction and Contrition sight of and sorrow for sin The first part of humiliation is A Spirit of Conviction First part of humiliation or sight of sin in every penitent soul which is no other than the operation of the Holy Ghost opening the blinde eye to see the deviations of the soul and the destruction inevitably attending the persistance in it this act of Repentance and Humiliation is no other but the Prodigals return to himself in sense of his own starving condition whil'st his fathers servants have bread enough Luke 15.17 Rom. 7.9 the arrival of the Law unto the reviving of sin in Pauls sense and feeling the communing with our hearts that we may tremble Psal 4.5 and not sin a searching and trying our ways that we may return unto the Lord a smiting on the thigh with a What have we done Lam. 3.39 the smiting of Davids heart 2 Sam 24.10 with an I have sinned against the Lord the judging of our selves that we may not be judged of the Lord the Spirit of bondage which goeth before the Spirit of Adoption In a word it is the souls serious erection of a Court in its own breast and setting conscience in the Throne and making a judicial processe to descry and determine its eternal condition in order to which 1. It spreads before it self the Law of God as that wh●ch must be the Rule of life and reason of death and condemnation the will of God dictating duty and disswading iniquity awarding recompence according to obedience or disobedience In a word determining of men Thus do and live or thus do and dye thus I will be worshipped and you shall be rewarded in this if you transgresse you shall be thus punished the soul seeth clearly that the Law is in nature and necessity a Schoolmaster to bring us unto Christ whil'st by serious consideration of its genuine sense and due extent the soul standeth convinced this is du y enjoyned this is sin inhibited herein if I offend not only in deed and word but thought or imagination I am a Transgressor bound under guilt and the expectation of judgment thus the coming of the Law into Pauls minde becomes the revival of sin and Josiah his reading in the Law of Moses led him to the tremblings of heart and renting his garment before the Lord 2 Chron. 34.18 19. For as indeed wi●hout the Law there is no transgression so without the knowledge of the Law there can be no conviction ignorance of Divine pleasure is the great obstruction of Repentance and therefore the Prince of this world doth daily endeavour to blow out the light of the Word or to blinde the eyes of the sons of men that they may not see and be converted but God sends his Prophets rising up early and sending them to read the Law in the ears of men that Israel may see his sinne and Judah her transgression The first act of Repentance is the falling of the scales from off the sinners eyes the first language of a turning soul is Lord what wouldest thou have me to do So that the soul humbling self-examinant seeing the Law to be holy just and good that which must be the rule and reason of its condition it being to arraign and condemn it self becomes studious of the Law in its full sense and due extent in commands prohibitions promises and threats and sets before its eye every particular precept and pondereth the righteousnesse of that God who hath declared a curse against every one that continueth not in the Law to do it and so by the justification of and insight to the Law of God exciteth the soul to self-reflexion and is constrained to cry out What have I done whereupon it 2. Surveigheth the past course of his own life summoneth together all faculties powers and members of both soul and body to make rehearsal of his past conversation in word thought and deed and to give an exact account of their conformity or disagreement with the Law of God established and rule by which it must be judged and now he communeth with his hear● considereth his ways examineth him ●l● makes an exact comparison of his life with Gods Law layeth the li●e close to h s carriage and so convinceth himself of his deviations and ●rregularities insomuch that sin reviveth and he dyeth guilt appeareth and grief and shame aboundeth his own heart condemns him as disobedient and a Transgressor of the Law that he is constrained to c●y out What I sh●uld do I have not done and I have left undone what I ought to have done Rom. 7.19 I have sinned against the Lord if God be severe to mark what is amisse I cannot abide in his presence for I have not only offended in part of his holy Law and broken the least of his Commandments but I have violated the whole Law and am a Transgressor against every Command nay he cometh on this consideration to be convinced of his anomy and ataxy the pravity of his nature that enmity to the Law which is implanted in his very being and that irregularity whereby
of A BETTER COVENANT This done it was very seasonable to let you hear of the Mediatour of the Covenant which was performed by the Subject 12 Twelfth Minister who preached to you JESUS CHRIST in his PERSON NATVRES and OFFICES from that Scripture 1 Tim. 2.5 There is one God and one Mediatour between God and man the man Christ Jesus Next to his Natures and Offices it was proper to treat of the two states of Jesus Christ and therefore the Subject 13 Thirrteeth Preacher opened to you Christs state of Humiliation out of Phil. 2.7 8. He made himself of no reputation and took upon him the form of a Servant and being found in fashion as a man he humbled himself and became obedient to death even the death of the Crosse Subject 14 The fourteenth CHRISTS STATE OF EXALTATION out of the ninth verse Wherefore God hath highly exalted him and given him a Name which is above every Name c. Time not allowing a more copious and distinct enquiry into this great Mystery God manifested in the flesh that which came in the Subject 15 Fifthteenth place under consideration as most proper was THE SATISFACTION WHICH CHRIST MADE TO DIVINE JVSTICE and that was done on that Text Col. 1.20 And having made peace through the blood of his Crosse by him to reconcile all things unto himself I say whether they be things in earth or things in heaven And because the Redemption made by Christ upon the Crosse signifieth nothing in effect without the Application of it to the conscience The Minister to whom the Subject 16 Sixteenth turn fell Treated of EFFECTUAL CALLING from Rom. 8.30 Moreover whom he did predestinate them he also called In and by which Call the soul being really but yet Spiritually joyned and united to Jesus Christ that which fell next under consideration in the Subject 17 Seventeenth Course of this Exercise was that exceding precicious Mystery The SAINTS UNION WITH JESVS CHRIST His Scripture was 1 Cor. 6.17 He that is joyned to the Lord is one Spirit And inasmuch as Vnion is the Foundation of Communion Interest in Christ the Fountain and Spring-head of Fellowship with Christ the Subjects which followed naturally to be handled were Justification and Filiation Subject 18 JVSTIFICATION in the eighteenth Course out of Rom. 5.1 Being justified by Faith we have peace with God And the Nineteenth Subject 19 FILIATIN or Divine Son-ship to God which branching it self into these two great priviledges of the Covenant ADOPTION REGENERATION the one whereby out State is changed by the other our Natures they were twisted together into one Sermon on that portion of Scripture John 1.12 To as many as received him to them he gave power to become the SONNES of God even to them that believe on his Name In which Filiation it being evident by the Scripture quoted that Faith hath such a special ingrediency therefore it was seasonable in the next place to speak of SAVING FAITH which was the Subject preacht on in the Subject 20 Twentieth morning of this Moneths Exercise the Text being Acts 16.31 Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved and thy house And although Repentance be usually before faith in the order of sense and feeling yet faith being before Repentance in the order of Nature and operation it being the primum mobile in the orbe of grace as unbelief in the orbe of sins Heb. 3.12 hence it was proper next after Faith to speak to you of REPENTANCE Subject 21 which was handled by him that preached the one and twenty Lecture his place of Scripture being Acts 5.31 Him hath God exalted to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance and remission of sins Matth. 3.8 And because true repentance is alwayes accompanied with fruits meet for Repentance therefore as the great and comprehensive fruit thereof Subject 22 the twenty second Exercise was spent in setting forth the Nature necessity and Excellency of HOLINESSE from these words of the Apostle Heb. 12.14 Follow peace with all men and holiness without which none shall see the Lord. This giveth the Believer a capacity though not a merit of a joyfull resurrection and the next Preacher took therefore the RESURRECTION Subject 23 for his Subject upon the Twenty third morning and for his Text those words of St. Paul Acts 26.8 Why should it be thought a thing incredible with you that God should raise the dead And as upon the Resurrection follows the day of Judgement in the same Method the discourse of the LAST JVDGEMENT succeeded and was the work of the Subject 24 Twenty fourth day the Preachers Text was Acts 17.31 G●d hath appninted a day in the wich he will judge the world in Righteousness by that man whom he hath ordained Subject 25 The sentence of that day was the next thing in order to be considered and although the sentence of the Elect be first in the processe yet because it is last in the execution as appeareth in comparing the 34. verse of the 25. of Matth. with the 46. therefore the TORMEMTS of HELL was the sad and startling Subject which the twenty fifth Preacher insisted on from Math. 25.41 Everlasting Fire prepared for the Divell and his Angels c. And when the Righteous have had the honour as Assessors with Christ to behold with their eyes that sentence executed upon the Reprobate and their persons dragged away into everlasting burnings by the Ministry of the infernal Angels Then the joyful sentence shall be accomplished upon the Elect of God and they shall ride in triumph with Jesus Christ the King of Saints into the gates of the New Jerusalem and so the Subject 26 Twenty sixth and most blessed Subject with wich the last Minister did most sweetly close this morning Exercise was the JOYES of HEAVEN and his Text was Matth. 25.34 Receive the Kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world And thus honourable and beloved I have prese ted you with the Epitomy or Compendium of sound words which hath Methodically been delivered in the course of this moneth in divers of the chief Heads and Points of Gospel-D●ctrine There is no man that is acquainted with the Body of Divinity but may easily observe this Method or S●st●me to have been in some Points possibly redundant but in more defective He that will object the former may consider that eve●y man sees not by the same light insomuch as if twenty Divines should have the drawing up of twenty several Models of Divinity not two of them would meet exactly in the same heads or order in this case therefore veniam p●timusque damusque vicissim And he that will object the latter must also remember that if we had taken in more Points there must have been more dayes which the course of this Exercise doth not allow Sufficient to the dayes hath been the labour thereof and when we cannot do all we would it his honourable to do what we can To the