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A30345 A treatise of the covenant of grace wherein the graduall breakings out of Gospel grace from Adam to Christ are clearly discovered, the differences betwixt the Old and New Testament are laid open, divers errours of Arminians and others are confuted, the nature of uprightnesse, and the way of Christ in bringing the soul into communion with himself ... are solidly handled / by that faithfull servant of Jesus Christ, and minister of the Gospel, John Ball ; published by Simeon Ash. Ball, John, 1585-1640.; Ashe, Simeon, d. 1662. 1645 (1645) Wing B579; ESTC R6525 360,186 382

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yet he had not the act and use of it That which some See Maldonat in Luk. 2 40. Quod voluntatem concernit omnes virtutes ta●e incrementum in ea accep●runt quale in creaturam cadere potest Jun. Th●ss Theolog. 29. answer that Christ by infused knowledge knew all things and after attained another kind of knowledge which they call acquisite is not so fit because knowledge acquired and infused of the same things is of the same nature and condition and two formes or qualities of one kind cannot be in the same subject The second thing implied in Christs sitting at the right hand of the Father is to be admitted into divine blessednesse setledly to enjoy it Christ as God ever had and could not but have that essentiall beatitude and that blessednesse which he receiveth as man is not to have end The good that is in an intellectuall nature is of two sorts the one of vertue the other of sweet joyfull and pleasing delight And though both these concurre sometimes as in the fruition of God in heaven wherein the perfection of vertue and fulnesse of joy and delight doe meet together yea and though every thing that is vertuous be delightfull yet it is not so much the height of vertue as of delight that is judged happinesse Now our Saviour Christ was joyned to God by the affection of vertue or justice and Vt mori corpus Christi potuit tamen cum unionem tum eff●ctus quosdam De●tatis participare Ita mori mortem suam derelinqui anima potuit tamen uni●ne sua hujus unionis effectis frui Can ●●● 〈◊〉 lib. 12. cap. 1● Ma●donat in Mat. 26. Isa 5● 4. Joh. 4 6. H●b 4. 15. Joh. 14. 23. Prov. ●5 ●5 Chamier tom 2. lib 5. cap 20. Nullus comprehensor est obnoxius ul●●s calamitatibus could not be devided or separated from him no not for a moment because he could not but love him feare him trust in him but by the affection that see●eth pleasing content in enjoying those ineffable delights and pleasures that are found in God our Saviour as man might and was for a time divided from God Moreover our Saviour Christ in his life time here on earth so restrained and kept within the closet of his secret Spirit the happinesse that he enjoyed in seeing God that it should not spread farther nor communicate it selfe to the inferiour faculties of his soule or impart the brightnesse of it to the body but it was subject to misery and passion The godly in this life doe tast not only some hope of heavenly life but the first fruits of this heavenly joy The Church and every Saint is heaven the soule of the righteous is heaven Our Saviour was both viator and comprehensor blessed in this life with that blessednesse which is not to be had but in heaven but now our Saviour advanced on the right hand of God is admitted into that incomprehensible glorious setled blessednesse never to suffer the least ecclipse for one moment which doth communicate it selfe to C ham panst tom 2. lib 4. cap 4 and 5. Ma● 17. 2. 1 P●t 1. 11. Heb. 12. 2 Phil. 3. 21. Verè contr●stari dolere pati non potest cui divina ●e●t●tud● impassibilitas verè reali●er communicata fuit Vrsin Tom. 2. co●f●ss de person Christ pag. 407. all powers of soule and body that it is and shall remaine for ever incorruptible impatible immortall encreased with strength and nimblenesse shining with brightnesse and glory celestiall and divine Thirdly our Saviour Christ as man is taken to have prerogative before every other creature For this phrase of setting at his right hand noteth the preheminence of him as next to God himselfe that looke as one made a King hath a dignity above all persons named in his Kingdome Dukes Earles Lords So our Saviour taken up as man to this kingly dignity must needs be in preheminence before them It is no wonder for this nature essentially appertaineth to that person which made all these things visible and invisible Againe every person the nearer he is in conjunction of bloud to an earthly King the more he hath prerogat●ve Col. 1. 16 Joh. 1. 3. Heb. 1. 2 3. Revel 4 ult above others more dis-joyned so this created nature seeing it is made one personally with God by how much it is more nearely united by so much it is fit that it should have prerogative before others Not to speake that being heire of all things it is meet that he should be before all who are but parts of his inheritance and having more excellent endowments I meane created gifts than any other it is meet he should have the first place before all other Christ is set farre above all principality and power and might and domination which words are commonly understood of the Angels but the two first words may fitly be interpreted as names of excellency found in this present world For principalities and powers when they are put for angelical natures they are not termed so simply but with an addition to the place but these words put for humane excellencies we reade them simply without any thing added And this distribution of power named in this world and in that to come Ephes 1. 20. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 principatus dicuntur Rom. 8 38. Luk. 12 ●● Significat etiam turmas 1 Sam. 11. 11. Eph 3. 10 Sept. Job 1. 17. and 6. 1● Sept 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aq. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Tit. 3 ● Col. 1. 16. Dr●s praeter in Rom. 8. 38. Deod ibid. respecteth something in this enumeration fore-named the former these two first named the latter the couple following Fourthly Christ not only as God but as man hath power above Heb. 1. 2. every creature As Mediatour he hath received a power imperiall over every creature which is apparant in this that the Apostle saith Christ is so placed above all that all are subject under Ephes 1. 21. Heb. 2. 8 9. Matth. 28. 19. Duplex est Christi dominium 1. Essentiale quod ab aeterno habet commune cum Patre 2. Vicarium seu Mediatorium quod habet a Patre in cujus locum quasi succedit Camer in Heb. 1. 2. his feet To me is given all power in Heaven and earth that is power whereunto every creature is subject He speaketh of it as done because it was immediatly to be performed This person as God receiving by voluntary dispensation this honour from the Father that he should in an immediate and appropriate manner execute government over all creatures in heaven and earth the same person as man participating in this Kingly divine authority so farre that he should instrumentally concurre in executing all that judgement which Christ according to his divine nature did principally effect Though the Father and the Spirit have a right and soveraignty over the creature yet they doe not immediatly
likewise in his calling to the participation of the Covenant For though this Vocation be every way free gracious and absolute as the Spirit worketh where he listeth yet in the Gospel which is the instrument of Vocation it pleaseth God to propound both the condition which he requireth and the promise which he hath made The promise as an argument to move us the rather to give our selves unto Christ and to doe what is required The prescription of what he requireth as that condition without which we cannot obtaine and by which most certainly we shall obtaine what good is promised Effectuall Vocation on Gods part is the powerfull invitation and assured drawing of the weary and thirsty soule unto Christ that in him it might finde refreshing and comfort The answer on our part is a free and willing comming unto Mat. 11. 28 29. Joh. 6. 44. and 6. 35 37. Christ that in him we might be satisfied the embracing of Jesus Christ and lodging him in our bosome And therefore that which first of all receiveth that Vocation is faith whereby we believe that if a man performe the condition he shall possesse the promise if he come unto Christ he shall be satisfied but if he performe not the thing required he shall not enjoy the promise he shall not be satisfied if he drinke not the water of life And not only so but he shall continue poore naked blinde miserable captive a prisoner an alien from the Covenant and without God in the world nay he shall be punished with contrary evils according to the nature of the Covenant divine where there is no promise without a commination contrary to it This faith is grounded upon the free and gracious Covenant whereby God is pleased to binde himselfe first unto us before he binde us unto himselfe that his promise might be apprehended as the ground of our faith upon which we should firmely beleeve And upon the Isai 55. 1 2. Joh. 7. 37. Rev. 22. 17. free and gracious invitation of Christ generally made to all and every poore thirsty languishing faintie soule parched with the sense of wrath and withered for lack of the sap or fruit of grace to come unto him for ease and sweet refreshing to the contentation and satisfying of their soules to come and drink of the waters of life freely Where let it be observed that Thirst and Drinesse in phrase of Scripture doth note the want of good things as Isai 29. 8. Psal 42. 1. Isai 32. 2. and 55. 1. Psal 143. 6. on the contrary absolute good whereby the desire of soule and body may be satisfied is usually compared to waters To thirst is from a totall defect of the Spirit of Grace or a defect of the whole Spirit of Grace tormenting the soule to desire it And so not to thirst for ever and the graces of the Spirit to remaine Joh. 4. 14. and 7. 38. in us for ever or that water to be in us a fountain of water springing up to life eternall is one and the same In Heathen authors to thirst is exceedingly to desire but for the most part that desire comes from some tormenting want Artemidorus 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 And Cyrus willing to declare his ardent desire of doing good to others saith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i. Sitio aliis gratificari In which signification it is used by the Latines also Cic. pro Planc Deinde sitientem me virtutis tuae deserüisti Apud Horat. Sitis argenti Apud Juvenal Sitis famae Apud Claudian Sitis praed● And the opposition that is betwixt thirst and water will evidence the same For water if we respect the use which it affordeth to the earth and to bodies doth make fruitfull barren fields purifie things polluted q●ench or water them that are drie and sweetly refresh them that boyle with heat And therefore if water metaphorically signifie comfort and refreshing wherewith the soul is recreated and rejoyced Thirst which is opposite to water doth denote a soul dried up with grief spent with the heat of Gods indignation and tormented with the vexing or molesting want of grace and consolation To be weary and heavie laden is to be faint or tired under some burden labour Deut. 25. 18. ● Sam. 17. 2. and 23. 10. Psal 6. 7. See there journey disease or work But tirednesse and fainting wearinesse and trouble are no parts of health or ●ase no more then the sight feeling or knowledge of the disease is any part of the cure wearinesse and fainting is neither part degree nor preparative to refreshing if in it self considered And here the doubt touching the precedency of faith and repentance may easily be determined For if faith be taken largely or generally for a beliefe of the promise if we repent and receive it then faith is before repentance for there can be no turning without hope of pardon nor comming home by hearty sorrow without some expectation of mercy Thus the Exhortations run Turn unto the Lord for he is mercifull and gracious Repent for the Kingdome of God is at hand But if faith be taken more strictly for that faith or beliefe whereby we receive embrace or rest upon the promise of God in Christ Jesus for pardon and forgivenesse then repentance goeth before pardon for no remission is promised to Mark ● 4. Luke 24. 47. be enjoyed but upon condition of repentance and if the penitent only be immediately capable of pardon then pardon is received by a penitentiall faith If repentance be necessary to Justification of necessity it must goe before justifying faith because faith and justification are immediately coupled together It is impossible to come unto Christ without repentance but to come unto Christ is to embrace or receive him soundly and effectually to the refreshing of the soul Comming unto Christ is a lively motion of the soul wherein arising from sin it draweth nigh or approacheth unto Christ that in him it might be satisfied The motion is one but the points are two For in drawing nigh unto Christ the soul ariseth from sin which may be called repentance Of the signification of the word I will move no question at this time but take repentance for a comming unto Christ by true godly sorrow from whom we had formerly departed by sin and wickednesse to the extreme hazard of our souls The Author of repentance is God in Jesus Christ Repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. Jer. 31. 18. is the gift of God but the act of man It is man that repenteth and not God but it is God that giveth repentance inableth and moveth man to repent Regeneration is the act of God repentance the act of man In subject they both agree for he that is Ezek. 36. 25. regenerate doth also repent and so on the contrary but in their formall consideration and peculiar nature they are distinct Christ also as Mediatour is the principall cause of repentance for him hath God exalted to give repentance
equall to us Christians in all substantiall graces of the Covenant Fourthly and from the same grounds we may conclude that the soules of the faithfull who departed this life before the comming of Christ in the flesh were immediately received into Heaven For they were taken to glory and saved as we Now such as are taken to glory are taken to Heaven For the Scripture knoweth Act. 15. 11. no place in which God doth ordinarily display his glory but Heaven And what should hinder their translation into the heavenly Jerusalem when they are removed out of this earthly tabernacle Not their sinnes for they which could not hinder them from Sanctification fitting them for Heaven could not hinder them from Heaven Not want of Faith who now have that faith which Abraham and many of them had No want of efficacie in Christ he was the Lambe slaine from the beginning of the world he was yesterday to day and for ever his death was effectuall to cause them to find pardon and the Spirit of Sanctification Not any priviledge of Christ for not simply to ascend into Heaven was Christs priviledge but to ascend soule and body as heire of all things and the Authour of Salvation to all that obey him David is said not to have ascended into Heaven but that is spoken Act. 2. 34. in respect only that he was not raised in body and gone into Heaven body and soule as the heire of all things and person who was to sit at Gods right hand It is also said The Fathers received Heb. 11. 39. not the Promise scil of Christs comming in the flesh to performe the worke of our Redemption but as they received the promise of forgivenesse and of the Spirit of Sanctification so after their death they were taken into Heaven They whose Pilgrimage and sojourning ceased with this life they could not but be in their Countrey at home after this life But Heaven is the Countrey of the Saints for where their Father is there is their Countrey Those who walked as strangers here on earth because they looked Heb. 11. 13 14 15 16. Heb. 11. 5. 2 King 2. 11. Luke 9. 31. for an heavenly Jerusalem a City whose Maker was God they leaving this earth were translated thither The translating of Enoch Moses and Elias seeme to figure out no other thing Christ was the fore-runner of Enoch not in act in respect of the assumption of his humanity into Heaven but in vertue and merit From the beginning of the world a place was prepared for all whom God had chosen in Jesus Christ Matth. 25. 31. and 20. 23. but a place was to be prepared of Christ for us in respect of the promised paiment by the force and efficacy whereof the effect was before obtained but with respect to future labours which were both certaine and present with God For a morall cause though it be not present in act if it be supposed as future may have its effect The faithfull before Christ when they removed out of these earthly tabernacles were received into everlasting habitations Luke 16. 9. Now if the godly at the instant departed were bestowed in any place but Heaven they then did goe to mansions which they were to leave in a short time even then when Christ did ascend Our Saviour promised to the penitent Theefe upon the Crosse This day shalt thou be with me in Paradise which if it was not Luke 23. 43. into Heaven but into Limbus it was but for a short time for that was to be broken up within a few houres space But to returne to the matter in hand The Covenant of Promise and the new Covenant are so one for substance that what is in the first for weight and essentiall is in all the degrees following and to be understood though not mentioned and whatsoever in any after degree appeares as substantiall to the Covenant that was included in the first propounding of it but in sundry accidents which nothing hinder their substantiall unity they are distinguished First on the part of the Object Christ exhibited in the New 1 Ioh. 1. 1 2. 4. 14. Mal. 3. 1. Isai 59. 15. Covenant is promised as to come in the Covenant of promise For it was meete the promise should goe before the Gospell and be fulfilled in the Gospell that so great a good might earnestly be des●red before it was bestowed and that the expectation of them that waited for the consolation of Israel might not be frustrated Secondly In the manner of administration and measure of faith For the knowledge of Christ and faith in him to come was more obscure and darke then the knowledge of him already come and faith which doth behold him present The manner of Christs Mediation was more sparingly and obscurely revealed his person the manner of execution of the office of Mediatour and the benefits that we receive in him more darkly unfolded sometimes propounded in generall words sometimes shadowed in types and figures seldome more specially described And the reason why these things at first were more darkely delivered may be first because things present or past are seene more clearely then things to Heb. 11. 17. come prophesies be obscure before the accomplishment 2. The Church was then in her Infancy and rude not come to her ripe age the Lord in his infinite wisdome so disposing the matter 3. It was meete the cleare and full revelation of this mystery should be reserved to Christ the chiefe Prophet The Authour of life was to lay open and make manifest the way to life Till the way into Heaven was really entred by the true high Priest after the order of Melchisedech it was not fully manifested Heb. 9. 8. Under the Old Testament the way into the Holiest was not absolutely shut but vailed not altogether untraced but not fully laid open because our true and reall high Priest had not made satisfaction by the offering up of himselfe a sacrifice once for all nor consecrated that new and living way through the vaile that is to say his flesh 4. The minds of men were to be held in a longing desire and expectation of Christ and the obscure revelation of Christ and his benefits did serve to raise their hearts to an earnest desire of his comming in respect of the cleare revelation and great and glorious blessings they might then expect But in this obscurity we may observe some degrees Before the Law given by Moses the promise was more obscure the Law being given even to the times of the Prophets lesse cleare in the times of the Prophets even to Iohn the Baptist more cleare Even from the first giving forth of the promise untill the comming of Christ in the flesh the revelation was more cleare distinct ample as the comming of the Messiah did approach neerer and neerer For the Church by how much it was neerer to her beginnings by so much it was the ruder and therfore to be instructed
intire holy blamelesse conversation directed according to the will of God in every place state and condition of life is said to be perfect Blessed are the perfect in the way Psal 119. 1. Keepe thy servant from presumptuous sinnes then shall I be perfect Psal 19. 13. I was also perfect before him and I kept my selfe from mine iniquity Psal 18. 23. It is recorded of Asa that his heart was perfect with the Lord all his dayes though in the same booke many infirmities are noted in him 1 King 15. 14. 2 Chron. 15. 17. Thus Noah Gen. 6. 6. Joh 1. 1. Hezekiah 2 King 20. 3. are said to be perfect David to walke in his integrity Psal 26. 1. yet these examples must not be referred to the second degree of perfection The body is intire when all parts are so knit together that each is preserved and fit for his office the soule is intire when all the parts of righteousnesse are rivetted together amongst themselves and in the whole the conversation is intire when no office of life is neglected no precept carelessely forgotten or sleighted when no occasions or occurrences can remove men from their holy purposes undertaken according to Gods word This perfect man is set as opposite to the Jam 1. 6. unstable double minded perverse froward and restlesse who are off and on turned upside downe with every contrary wind divided He that can be contented to be naught in any thing is naught in every thing and at odds with themselves who loppe and straiten the Commandements as will best stand with their occasions take and leave at pleasure rest in the externall acts of piety or justice or cleane depart from Gods Commandements The integrity of the upright shall guide him but the perversenesse of transgressors shall destroy them Prov. 11. 3. If I say I am perfect mine own mouth shall prove me perverse Job 9. 20 21 22 Who so walketh intirely shall be safe but he that is perverse in his double wayes shall fall in one Prov. 28. 18. So it is noted of Abijam that his heart was not perfect with the Lord his God 1 King 15. 3. of Amaziah Vzziah Jotham they did that which was right in the sight of the Lord but not with perfect hearts 2 Chron. 25. 2. 26. 4. 27. 2. 2 King 14. 3. 15. 3. and of Solomon that when he was old his wives turned away his heart after other gods and his heart was not perfect with the Lord as was the heart of David his father 1 King 11. 4. 2. That is said to be perfect which hath obtained an high degree of perfection not simply but in comparison of that which is beneath when a man is so habituated in his course that he hath attained a facility and constancy in well doing Children new borne are perfect that is intire but when they be come to ripe age they are perfect in comparison of thēselvs as new born babes But every growth argueth not comparitive perfection but that only which is so great that it may seeme to introduce a new forme or when by long practice a man is so habituated in his course that he hath attained a facility and constancy in well doing Children are more perfect then Infants new borne and Striplings then Children but they are not said to be perfect because the growth is but small but when they are come to ripe age although as age encreaseth much may be added they may be called perfect because then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they have attained as it were a new forme So to be perfect and absolute the Philosopher doth attribute to men of ripe age Arist Hist Ani. l. 2. cap. 1. de part Animal lib. 4. cap. 10. Strong meate saith the Apostle belongeth to them that are perfect or of full age Heb. 5. 14. those that have left the Rudiments of Christian Heb. 6. 1 ● Eph. 4. 11 12 13. Religion are called perfect perfect in respect of them that be babes in understanding and stand in need of milke 1 Cor. 14. 20. The Law makes nothing perfect Heb. 7. 19. because it was a rudiment only which was delivered to children so that he that is seasoned with the knowledge of the Gospell is perfect in respect of them that be instructed only in the Law We speake wisdome amongst them that are perfect 1. Cor. 2. 6. here some understand men and by perfect they understand all Christians in generall who are perfect in respect of them that knew not the Gospell Others them that in speciall had made greater progresse in the faith others understand the word things or somewhat that this sence should be that this wisedome doth consist in perfect things But however this text be interpreted the Apostle elsewhere manifestly confirmeth this point shewing that some were perfect in comparison of others who had not yet attained to perfection Here it must be remembred that howsoever the word perfect be referred to knowledge in the mysteries of Religion in the writings of the Apostles yet it is not seldome referred to practice and manners In the first reference they are said to be perfect who have obtained an high degree of knowledge in heavenly and divine mysteries In the second they that teach in deed and fact that they have learned what they professe Let patience have its perfect work Jam. 1. 4. that is let it shew its sincerity and constancy in works that not in words and gestures but in deed and truth it be approved that it cannot be overcome in the greatest evils but doth hould out and remaine invincible He that can bridle his tongue is a perfect man indeed Jam. 3. 2. that is he is not one that is in exercise to learne which is the meane to perfection but hath learned indeed what he professeth He calleth that perfect which is performed in truth and deed and is not counterfet and so ●in is said to be finished when it is committed Jam. 1. 15. and every sound solid operative grace is called a perfect gift Jam. 1. 17. and sincere unfained love is said to be perfect love 1 Joh. 4. 18. Christ was made perfect through sufferings Heb. 2. 10. as he learned obedience by the things which he suffered Heb. 5. 8. for there is an experimentall learning And to this purpose belongs that speech of our Saviours upon the crosse It is finished for hereby was signified that he had fulfilled all things which he was to doe upon earth Luk. 13. 32. and they that shed their bloud for Christs sake and for the Gospels are said to be perfected Thus the patient are called perfect because patience is a document of a mind most exercised in piety and godlinesse So the power of God is perfected in our weakenesse 2 Cor. 12. 9. for the vertue of Christ is not perfected in weakenesse as in the subject not by infirmity as by the effect but when it sheweth it selfe in the greatest and
eye endure she retaineth and bringeth up as her owne the rest that cannot brooke it and winke at it she rejecteth and casteth off as a bastardly brood Others thinke it rather taken from the usuall practise of Chap-men in the view and choice of their wares A wise wary Chap-man that hath to doe with a deceitfull Merchant Draper or other one that keepeth his wares in obscure places where the defects of them cannot so easily be discerned or hath false lights that may helpe to give a counterfeit glosse to them he will take no ware of him upon his word but he will first diligently view it tosse it and turne it to and fro over and over try how it is in the midst as well as at both ends bring it forth into the light hold up his cloth against the Sun see if he can espie any defect or default in it he knoweth he may easily else be over-reached The like must be our practise in all matters of faith and 2 Cor. 2. 17. manners and this is to walk in the truth when we have our conversation honest and hold the truth of Doctrine purely as we may endure the tryall of the light Thus the Apostle joyneth sincerity and truth together as one and the same or as the speciall 1 Cor. 5. 8. 2 Cor. 1. 12. and generall sincerity being a branch of truth This is our comfort that in simplicity and sincerity of God that is godly sincerity we have had our conversation 5. Firmenesse and constancy in every holy duty of our generall or personall calling of piety or righteousnesse A faithfull spirit is stedfast with God the ground of declining is lacke of truth Their heart was not right with him neither were they stedfast in Psal 78. 8. Psal 78. 37. his Covenant If the heart be not true what shew soever a man makes he is but like an Apple rotten at the coare or as an house built upon the sand the one of which though beautifull will soon putrifie the other though fairly set will quickly fal A man may have many worthy gifts but if he want sincerity upon a sudden may be taken from him both that which he hath and that which he seemeth to have his end be as the fig-tree which making only a shew with leaves having no fruit being cursed lost even those also and withered away by degrees being good for nothing but the fire For as a stomack ill affected with choller though never so wholesome meats be received into it yet it cannot hold them but is provoked so where there is this obstruction of the soul the wilfull love of any sinfull course or subordination of grace to boisterous distempered earthly passions pleasures or profits whatsoever grace is received into the heart it will not let it rest but maketh the soul cast it up upon all occasions Truth and soundnesse is the preserver of grace received an honest and sound heart is as a vessel well closed it will keep and hold the liquour of grace that is powred into it The course of a true Christian is permanent and continueth unto the end This truth or sinceritie is the girdle whereby all other graces are tied close unto us So the Apostle in the description Eph. 6. 14. of the spirituall armour calleth it the girdle of truth And therefore here also that is true of all men which we say of children in the Proverbe Vngirt unblest This girdle hath these uses First It doth adorne us for this was the use of the studded belt which the Souldiers did weare to hide the gaping of the joynts of their armour which would have been unseemly and nothing doth more adorne a soule beautifie our actions or raise admiration in them then sincerity as our Saviour commending Nathaniel gave this speech of him Behold a true Israelite in whom Joh. 1. 47. there is no guile Secondly A girdle doth tie other clothes about us which otherwise the winds would blow abroad and would hang but loose upon us so this girdle of truth doth containe and hold together all other graces wherewith the soule is arraied and unlesse truth doe keepe them together in time all of them will be blowne away with the wind of temptation That grace which was not knit together with honesty of heart came to nothing in the end as appeares in the Parable The body when the soule is once gone may not long stay above ground it must needs be buried The hypocrites graces are but the body of grace they want the soul and life which is sincerity and we cannot thinke they should long endure An unsound horse that hath some secret fault may carry as good a shew as the soundest and at first for a mile or two trav●ll as freshly and cheerfully as the best but at length he tires and shews what he is so it is with an unsound Christian notwithstanding all his shews fair beginnings and hopefull entrances he continueth not Thirdly A girdle trussing up the loins moderately doth strengthen a man a girdle is put for strength and ornament Isa 23. 10. for in the loines is the seat of strength and might and with a girdle the loines are girded whence are these phrases I will strengthen him with thy girdle Isa 22. 21. Justice shall be the girdle of his loynes Isa 11. 5. He girdeth their loynes with a girdle Job 12. 18. and looseth the girdle of the strong Job 12. 21. She girdeth up her loynes with strength Prov. 31. 17. And the exhortation so often used Gird up thy loynes Jer. 1. 17. Job 38. 3. 40. 7. 2 King 4. 29. 2 King 9 1. So this grace addeth great strength to the inner man as we may see in Job who when God seemed and men did fight against him when heaven and earth seemed to conspire against him yet this did stick by him Vntill I die I will never take away mine innocency from my selfe Job 27. 5. Fourthly In the Easterne Countries where they were accustomed to weare long garments down to the ancles they used to gird them close unto their body when they had any journey combate Exod. 12. 11. or labour in hand least they should be an impediment unto them So they were commanded to eat the Passeover with their loines girded because they had a journey to goe and Elias girded up 1 King 18. 46. his loines and ran before Ahab And so to have loynes girt is to be fitted and prepared for any service travell or conflict Let Joh. 13. 4. Luk. 17. 8. Luk. 12. 35 37. 1 Pet. 1. 13. Act. 12. 8. your loynes be girded about and your lights burning Gird up the loynes of your mind and be sober Gird thy selfe and bind on thy sandales Thus Christians girded with truth are in readinesse for any spirituall duty and to encounter with whatsoever adversary power shall with-stand them in the course of godlinesse Peradventure at the first putting on this
the way Ah the frowardnesse of my heart how crooked have my wayes been in the sight of the Lord I have regarded vanity doted upon transitory pleasures and profits undervalued the true treasure The streames of mine affections have been driven with full saile to that which is little worth but ebbe to what they should covet above measure My whole soule all that is within me should have looked continually upon God and my conversation directed towards him but my thoughts desires affections words and actions have looked ordinarily very often another way How farre am I from that truth which God requires in the inward parts what a masse of wicked fraud and deceit is heaped and piled up within me what rottennesse doth lodge still in my breast what am I but a shop of lies and vanities Easier it is a great deale to know the number of my haires then the running motions of my heart and affections Oh the blind corners the secret turnings and windings the close lurking holes that are therein upon examination I have found a world of falshood in my soul more then ever I suspected or imagined My cogitations are vaine if not wicked and ungodly mine affections unsound mine aimes indirect my course of life palpably grosse in dissimulation before God and towards men If the members of my body were crooked and deformed my mouth face eyes drawne awry or squint if one part did swell another wither and pine away I should esteeme it an heavy crosse But the distemper of the soule is much more dangerous as the safety of the soule is more precious then of the body If in a journey I chance to strike out of the way or fetch compasse about when I might have gone a shorter cut how am I grieved at my ignorance that I knew not or negligence that I enquired not the right way in time But in the course of Christianity I have turned aside and stepped out of the right path to my great losse and prejudice Did I stand convicted before men for some notorious coozener or deceiver I could not but take it grievously but many times I have played fast and loose in the presence of the all-seeing God pretending his service when I have done mine own will offering him the body when the soule hath been let loose after vanity I have too long wandered and gone astray like a l●st sheep but now I will keep the testimonies of my God For the Commandement is a lamp and the Law is light and reproofes of instruction are the way of life The Commandements leade directly to that life which deserves the name of life eternall life The Traveller takes the next way to his Journeyes end No wise man will willingly step one foot out of the way to Heaven If our limmes be crooked we omit nothing that Art or Exercise can doe to set them strait and shall not I take care to rectifie my soul and bring it into right order Deceit and falshood is the Image of Satan who abode not in the truth most unmeet to be borne by him that is by adoption the sonne of God The charge of God is Be ye holy for I am holy be ye perfect as your heavenly Father is perfect and hereby may we assure our hearts that we are the children of God if we be true as he is true Truth is the Image of God stamped upon their hearts whom the Lord hath called to be his peculiar people What soundnesse is to the body that is sincerity to the soule a grace of singular excellency and excellent use pleasing to God and profitable to man Wise men delight in sound and faithfull friends the Lord takes pleasure in them that be true hearted to his glory A sound body is fit for labour a true heart is ready prepared for any service that God requires The way is not tedious to men they halt not in it but through weaknesse and imperfection O my soule the way of life would be most pleasant and delightfull crosses easie to be borne the comforts of grace most sweet and admirable were it not that corrupt humours causing distempers did still breed in thee Earthly desires vain delights unruly lusts are great impediments to the quicke and easie dispatch of the Christian Pilgrimage Sincerity is the girdle of the mind to tr●ffe up these strengthen our loynes and tie the heart to the work commanded We buy girdles for the body and if costly ones we keepe them charily I will seek to Heaven for this girdle of grace for it is woven there no shop can serve me with it but that only O Lord thou that delightest in the simple and true hearted that cleave unfainedly unto thy testimonies create in me a true heart and sincere spirit that without guile I may stick unto thy testimonies and doe what is acceptable in thy sight Naturally I am full of falshood and guile oh thou that a●t the God of truth who at the first didst create me after thine Image make me every day more and more like unto thy self in true holinesse and righteousnesse Then shall I be true indeed when Christ the giver of truth dwelleth in my heart Lord strengthen my faith that being knit unto Christ the way the truth and the life more and more I may partake of his fulnesse grace for grace CHAP. I. Of the New Testament or Covenant and how God hath revealed himself therein IN Scriptures New is put for admirable unusuall not before In ●mnibus linguis penè id novum dicitur quod aliis succedit u● n●vus rex novu● maritus Exod. ● 8. Sept. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Aq. Theod. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Act. 7. 18. heard of as Jer. 31. 22. The Lord hath created a new thing in the earth Isai 42. 9. Behold the former things are come to passe and new things doe I declare Isai 48. 6. I have shewed thee new things And for necessary noble illustrious excellent to admiration or astonishment as new doctrine Mark 1. 27. is wonderfull excellent doctrine a new Commandement Joh. 13. 34. that is a necessary and excellent Commandement new wine Matth. 26. 29. that is wine which by reason of its excellency is had in admiration And so we reade a new Name Rev. 2. 17. Isai 62. 2. and my new name Follio est ips● facit nova carmina Virg. Eccl i. magna miranda Serd Rev. 3. 12. and a new song Psal 33. 1. which by some is interpreted an excellent song and a new work or a new thing Isai 43. 19. Behold I will doe a new thing The Apostle John saith I write no new Commandement unto you 1 Joh. 2 7. but that hinders not the former interpretation of the word new because it is usuall with that Apostle to use the same word in divers manners That is said to be new also which is another or divers from that which was before Christ came into the world or which was granted to
Him hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour for to give repentance to Israel Christs naturall Kingdome doth belong unto him as God coeffentiall and coeternall with the Father Christs dispensatory Kingdome is his by donation as Mediatour Matt. 18. 19. Rev. 1. 1. Dedit autem haec Iesu Christo quatenu● Med●atori nou ut coessentiali filio Joh. 17. 5. Haec ordinem magi● docent quo Deus cognitione● Ecclesi● impertit quam origi●em scienti● respe●●●ilii Act 5. 31. He hath ordained him to be a Iudge of quick and dead Act. 10. 4● He hath appointed him over his own house Heb. 3. 2 6. He hath crowned him and put all things in subjection under his ●●it Heb. 2. 7 8. He hath highly exalted him and given him a name above every name Phil. 2. 9. Therefore he calleth him my King set up by him upon his own holy hill and that in the vertue of a solemne decree Psal 2. 6 7. Therefore to sit on the right hand of the Father doth not note glory and dominion properly divine which doth belong to the Sonne as coessentiall and coeternall with his Father and is his by nature but glory and dominion next unto that which is essentially divine which belongeth to Christ as Mediatour and which is his not by nature but by donation and unction from his Father being made the Head of his Church a Prince of Peace and King of Righteousnesse This glory and dominion was given unto Christ and so was not that eternall glory naturall and essentiall which he had with his Father before the foundations of the world This glory Christ had not before his ascension into heaven but the other as it is naturall so it was from everlasting Saint Paul and Peter doe construe it by raigning immediately over every creature till the Mysterie of our redemption shall be finished 1 Cor. 15. 25. Psal 110. 1. The setting Christ in the throne of Majestie Heb. 1. 3. and 8. 1. and 12. 2. at the right hand of the throne of God the making of him Christ and Lord Act. 2. 35 36. and 5. 31. It is not then Si sessionen● Christi non pro jure tantum regende ecclesiae sed pro ipso regnandi actu accipiamu● cooperatio illo de qua agit●r par● ipsius sessionis rectè vo●●bitur Mart. de person Christ p. 11 87. Psal 110. 1. Joh. 5 27. the might of divine soveraignty over the creatures which is given unto him for this doth so follow the nature of God that it is necessary with every person that hath this nature This the Son could not relinquish this he cannot be taken unto as which doth necessarily agree to him as God blessed for evermore What is it then A right of executing immediately and in a manner appropriate to this person the soveraigne dominion of God over every creature This soveraignty is given to the person of the Sonne both as God and man now ascended as God for it is a power which none that is a pure creature can take or execute As man because it is given him now ascended into heaven with his humane nature and is to be executed by him as man for his man-hood doth concurre as an instrument working with his God-head in the administration of it The meaning then of this phrase is not to be admitted to Neque per ejusdem essentiae communicationem neque per physicam aliquam transfusionem se● transitionem ●e subjecto in subjectum sed per solam ejusdem personae 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 equality to the divine nature for this Christ ever had as God and could not but have neither to be admitted into the divine blessednesse setledly to injoy it for Christ as God ever had and could not but have that essentiall beatitude Neither doth it import thus much That the humane nature of Christ is elevated to this honour that it may freely use the divine Attributes omniscience omnipresence omnipotency so as to become by them omniscient omnipresent omnipotent no lesse properly then the divine though after a manner farre otherwise the divine nature being thus by naturall necessity the humane being thus by union with the divine by gracious communication of these unto it with liberty to Non essendo sed habendo non 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non per naturam sed per gratiam non in seipsa sed persona 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. use them for the perfecting of it selfe So that according to this opinion the humane nature of Christ is made omnipresent with the omnipresency of the divine nature not as a thing subjectively inhering in it but so really communicated with it that it is made truly omnipresent by it though the divine Attribute never goe forth of the nature of God in which as the proper subject they grant it immoveably inherent The ground of this errour is that they suppose upon the union of the two Vrsin tom 2. de lib Concord cap. 8. p. 598. Inseparabilis unio non inducit coextensionem duarum in Christo naturarum quippe quarum una finita est altera infinita T●t● Christ●● sed non totum Christi est ubique Sicut caro habet immensitatem i. arctè c●pulata est immenso verbo non minus verbum habet finitionem i. arctè unitum est carni fiaitae Martia de person pag 637. Dici de ●liquo requirit inesse ergo si verè praedica●tur de humana natura verè etiam eide● inesse ●p●rtet sive per naturam sive per gratiam sive ut in subjecto primario sive secundari● natures in Christ a reall communication of divine Properties to follow as that the humane nature is made truly omnipotent or omniscient not by any confusion of Properties nor yet by any bare communion and concourse of it to the same effect each nature working that which belongeth to it with communion of the other but by a reall donation by which the divine omnipotency doth so become the omnipotency of the humane nature that it may work omnipotently with it no lesse then the divine nature doth it selfe But the union cannot cause the humane nature partake more in the Properties of the divine then it causeth the divine partake in the Properties of the humane Againe if a true and reall communication did follow of divine attributes it must needs be of all as eternity and infinitenesse seeing these are the divine essence which can no way be divided Beside in the union of soul and body which is personall the life of the soul is not communicated with the body but an effect of it only And to what end should created gifts serve when now more noble Properties doe enter Not to mention that infinite perfections cannot perfect finite natures no more then reasonable perfections can make perfect unreasonable creatures Finally this opinion maketh the divine Properties become instrumentary
to love them saith Moses and he chose their seed after them Deut. 10. 15. When I passed by thee and saw thee polluted in thine owne blood I said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood live Ezek. 16. 6. See Ezek. 36. 32. Luk. 1. 54 55 72 78. This Covenant was made in Christ in and through whom we are reconciled unto God for since God and man were separated by sinne no Covenant can passe betwixt them no reconciliation can be expected no pardon obtained but in and through a mediatour Sinnes were never remitted unto any man no man was ever adopted into the place and condition of a sonne by grace and adoption but in him alone who is the same yesterday to day and for ever Jesus Christ true God and true man Act. 4 12. Heb. 13. 8. The fall of our first parents was occasion of this Covenant for Actus nostrae liberationis divinam bonitatem causam habet Sed aliter actus exactio nimirum paenae per modum satisfactionis ca●sam eam habet quae ad paenam exegendam irritat id autemest peccatum God suffered him to slip that he might manifest the riches of his mercy in mans recovery Mercy freeing man from misery possible might have taken place before transgression and have discovered it selfe in the preventing of sinne and so of misery but it seemed good unto Almighty God to suffer misery to enter upon man through sinne that he might make knowne the infinite riches of his mercy in succouring and lifting him up being fallen and plunged into a state remedilesse and desperate for ought he knew Besides we may conceive that Almighty God upon just grounds disdaining that such a base creature falne by pride should thus upon advantage of the mutability of his reasonable creature ruinate the whole frame of the Creation and trample the glory of his name under foot and withall looking upon the Chaos which sinne had brought and would further make if some speedy remedy was not provided did out of his infinite and boundlesse love to man though in the transgression and just and dreadfull indignation against Sathan give forth this gratious and free Covenant The forme of this Covenant stands in gratious and free promises of all good to be repaired restored augmented and a restipulation of such duties as will stand with free grace and mercy For the Covenant of Grace doth not exclude all conditions but such as will not stand with grace The Covenant which was made of free love when we lay wallowing in our blood and which calls for nothing at our hands but what comes from and shall be rewarded of meere grace is a Covenant of grace though it be conditionall So the pardon of sinne is given of grace and not for workes though pardon be granted only to the penitent and faith on our part a lively unfained and working faith be required to receive the promise The parties covenanting are two and so are the parts of the Covenant the one in respect of God the other in respect of man A Covenant there is betwixt God and man but no mutuall obligation of debt for such mutuall obligation is founded in some equality but there is no equality between the Creator and the creature much lesse betwixt the Lord most high and man a sinner If man had never offended God almighty who gave him his being and perfection could not have been indepted unto him but as he was pleased to recompence the good of obedience in the creature that never deserved punishment much lesse can God be indepted to the creature that hath offended who can neither endure his presence nor beare the weight of his wrath nor satisfie Justice nor deliver his soule from the thraldome of sinne The obligation of man to God is of double right and debt but it is of rich grace and abundant love that God doth bind himselfe unto man God doth promise in this Covenant to be God and Father by right of redemption and Christ to be Saviour of them that beleeve in God by him and in faith do yeild sincere uniforme willing upright and constant obedience unto his Commandements Jer. 31. 31 32 33 Deut. 31. 6. Ezek. 36. 25 26. Gen. 15. 1 4 5. Jer. 32. 40. 33. 9. Heb. 8. 10 11 12. Isa 54. 7. Hos 2. 19. The stipulation required is that we take God to be our God that is that we repent of our iniquities believe the promises of mercy and embrace them with the whole heart and yeeld love feare reverence worship and obedience unto him according to the prescript rule of his word Repentance is called for in this Covenant as it setteth forth the subject capable of Salvation by faith but is it selfe only an acknowledgement of sinne no healing of our wound or cause of our acquittance The feeling of Luke 13. 5. Act. 11. 18. 2 Cor. 7. 10. Ezek. 18. 27● paine and sicknesse causeth a man to desire and seeke remedy but it is no remedy it selfe Hunger and thirst make a man to desire and seeke for food but a man is not fed by being hungry By repentance we know our selves we feele our sicknesse we hunger and thirst after grace but the hand which we stretch forth to receive it is faith alone without which repentance is nothing but darknesse and despaire Repentance is the condition of faith and the qualification of a person capable of Salvation but faith alone is the cause of Justification and Salvation on our part required It is a penitent and petitioning faith wherby we receive the promises of mercy but we are not justified partly by prayer partly by repentance and partly by faith but by that faith which stirreth up godly sorrow for sinne and enforceth us to pray for pardon and Salvation Faith is a necessary and lively instrument of Justification which is amongst the number of true causes not being a cause without which the thing is not done but a cause wherby it is done The cause without which a thing is not done is only present in the action and doth nothing therein But as the eye is an active instrument for seeing and the care for hearing so is faith also for justifying If it be demanded whose instrument it is It is the instrument of the Soule wrought therin by the Holy Ghost and is the free gift of God In the Covenant of workes workes were required as the cause of life and happinesse but in the Covenant of grace though repentance be necessary and must accompanie faith yet not repentance but faith only is the cause of life The cause not efficient as workes should have been if man had stood in the former Covenant but instrumentall only for it is impossible that Christ the death and blood of Christ and our faith should be together the efficient or procuring causes of Justification or Salvation When the Apostle Rom. 3. ●● 22 28 30. Gal. 2. 16. 17. Rom. 4. 2 3. writeth that man
principall things The power of God is not encreased nor diminished but then it is said to be perfected when in the judgement of man it doth that which is most hard and difficult For we live and die in God and this is of the power of God but when in the greatest streights and even in death it selfe we live and breathe the power of God doth after a speciall manner shew forth it selfe and is perfected in us that is doth shew it selfe to be exceeding great which cannot be conquered or overcome In the same manner as the Apostle saith Fath is perfected by works Jam. 2. 21. not that works doe perfect faith but that faith whilest it brings forth good works doth manifest how perfect it is it borroweth not force from workes but in works doth declare what force it hath Thus the graces of the Spirit are perfected whilest by the effects it is made manifest how perfect they are Psal 19. 7. Mat. 5. 48. Psal 18. 30. Heb. 12. 23. 3. That is perfect which is every way absolute and compleate to which nothing is wanting nothing superfluous and so the soules of the just are made perfect in Heaven In the first degree perfection is necessary to salvation without which we cannot be partakers of the eternall inheritance in the second and third degree it is to be striven after though the latter cannot be obtained in this life The greatest measure of perfection attaineable in this present life is an imperfect perfection but that imperfection is sin and therefore though we come short we must strive forward towards perfection that we might be perfect hereafter Integrity is necessary because the most holy God will never give himselfe to be possessed and enjoyed to a spirituall adultresse who doth affect any other lover more or besides him A woman Rev. 14. 3 4. may have many friends but one as an Husband Conjugall love of it own nature is of that kind that it must be of one and cannot be communicated to many If God be wholly ours we must be wholly his And if we joyne ought with God or take in ought with him we doe not we cannot cleave to him alone When there are two objects upon which the heart is set it is divided and men of divided hearts can have no fellowship or communion with him We cannot serve God unlesse we serve him intirely he cannot be our Master if we have any other Matth. 6. 24. God heares them that pray with their whole heart Jer. 29. 12 13. is found of them that seeke him with their whole heart Psal 119. 2. Deut. 4. 29 30. takes pleasure in them that be intire in their way Prov. 11. 20. and accepts their work Deut. 33. 11. If a Christian be not intire he can never be perfect in degree for what is defective in parts can never be made up by any growth He can never come to be a perfect man in Jesus Cerist and every way compleate in whom the work of grace is imperfect and maimed in the parts essentiall or integrall If a plant be imperfect it will never be a perfect tree If a Child be borne maimed or imperfect no growth of parts received can restore what is defective in nature If a Christian be sanctified in mind only or in some affection only and not in every part no growth in what he hath obtained can ever make his sanctification perfect and compleate Integrity is the qualification of a subject capable of finall pardon and eternall blessednesse through grace Remission of sins is received by faith but faith that embraceth pardon doth unite and knit the soule inseparably to God and to the word of his grace it seasoneth every affection and stirreth them up to their proper functions according as the word directeth Blessed is the man whose iniquity is forgiven and whose sin is covered Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth no sin and in whose spirit there is no guile God will passe by the imperfections which he espieth in the best service of his children when once he seeth their hearts to be intire and perfect towards him Hypocrisie drowneth many excellent graces and causeth God to take no notice of them but integrity is so well pleasing to his Majesty that if it be not shaken he will not see many other infirmities This is the chalenge against the Church of Sardis I have not found thy works perfect before God Rev. 3. ● David had many imperfections and did often step aside in the way but he is not accused to breake the whole Law in any thing save in the matter of Vriah 1 King 15. 5. The Holy Ghost hath noted sundry defects in Asa but addeth this of him by way of conclusion yet his heart was perfect towards the Lord all his dayes 1 King 15. 14. Contrarily in Jehu after a large description of many excellent things it is observed But Jehu regarded not to walke in the Law of the Lord with all his heart and so his service in destroying Ahabs house rewarded with a temporall blessing 2 King 10. 31. Hose 1. 4. 2 Chron. 30. 15 19. to the fourth generation was reckoned murder Hezekiah is bould to pray in behalfe of them that came unprepared to the Passeover The good Lord be mercifull unto him that prepareth his heart to seeke the Lord God though he be not cleansed according to the purification of the Sanctuary An Husband will beare with many aberrations in the behaviour of his Wife so long as he is perswaded of the intirenesse of her heart towards him and so dealeth the Lord with them that feare before him with all their hearts Great is the excellency many the priviledges of the intire and perfect man Better is the poore that walketh in his integrity Prov. 28. 6. 19. 1. Psal 1 19. 1. Causall blessednesse is the pardon of sin but perfection is blessednesse in order to the execution and fullnesse thereof The perfect man is actually blessed but the cause of blessednesse is the free mercy of God Psal 119. 80. Job 8. 20. Psa 37. 18 19. 2 Chron. 16. 9. then he that is perverse in his wayes turning away now on this side now on that though he be rich Integrity advanceth the poore man above the wealthy and yeeldeth him more sound comfort and profit both then all the riches in the world can They are blessed that walke in the perfect way Not they that walke in the way of the Ministery or of the Magistracy but indefinitely they which walke in any way allowable by the word with a perfect heart be it never so meane or simple they are blessed Blessed are the undefiled in the way whatsoever it be be it to be the scowrer of Channels drudge in a Kitchen or to serve in the Gallies More particularly The perfect shall not be confounded Let my heart be intire in thy statutes that I be not ashamed For God will not cast away the perfect
people of Israel repenting of their transgressions and sinnes committed against God did oftentimes Josh 24. 22 23 24 25. Judg. 10. 16. 1 Sam 7. 3 4 5. 2 Chro. 15. 12. 2 Kin. 11. 17. 2 Chro. 23 16. 2 Ki. 23. 3. Neh. 10. 30 31. 2 Chro. 34. 31. renew their Covenant binding themselves to the Lord to be his people and to walke in Gods Law which was given by Moses and to observe and doe all the Commandements of God the the Lord and his Judgements and his Statutes with all their heart and with all their soule But Jehoshaphat Josiah Nehemiah and other godly Governours who were well acquainted with their infirmities and knew themselves utterly unable to fulfill the Law would never promise punctuall and exact obedience in hope thereby to deserve eternall life or to receive it from God as the reward of their perfect service nor flatter themselves as though they could stand before the Tribunall of Gods Justice in their own Righteousnesse when upon proofe sufficient they saw that no flesh could be justified in his sight Without question they understood that God of his free grace had promised to be their God and of his undeserved and rich mercy would accept of their willing and sincere obedience though weake and imperfect in degree which is in effect that the Covenant which God made with them and they renewed was a Covenant of grace and peace the same for substance that is made with the faithfull in Christ in time of the Gospell Sixthly the Covenant that God made with Abraham was the Gen. 17. 1. Covenant of grace as it is acknowledged but the Covenant made with Abraham is for substance the same with the Covenant made with Israel upon Mount Sinai the promise is the same and the things required the same For in that God promised that he would be God all-sufficient to Abraham to blesse him with all necessary blessings for this life and the life to come In Gal. 3. 8. this he promiseth freely and of his owne meere grace and favour to be their God and make them a Kingdome of Priests and an Exod. 19. 6 7. holy nation unto himselfe In that he requireth of Abraham that he walke with or before him in integrity In this he covenanteth that they should obey his voice and keep his commandements Deu. 26. 17 18. Jer. 7. 23. Deut. 10. 12. Jer. 11 3 4. 1 Ki. 8. 25. 2 Chron. 6. 16. 2 Chr. 17. 3 6. 2 Chr. 6. 14 16. Jer. 2. 2. And what is it to walk with God or before God but to walk in his Law Seventhly when God gave his Law unto Israel upon Mount Sinai he troth-plighted that people unto himselfe and himselfe unto them and that of his meere love not of any merit in them Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the love of thine espousals when thou wentest after me in the wildernesse in a Land that was not sowen Israel was holinesse unto the Lord and Ezek. 16. 8. the first fruits of his increase When I passed by thee and looked upon thee behold thy time was the time of love and I spread my skirt over thee and covered thy nakednesse yea I sware unto thee and entered into Covenant with thee saith the Lord God and thou becammest mine But if the Law were a perfect draught of the Law of nature Rainold Apol. Thes pag. 211. 1 Tim. 1. 5. Act. 15. 9. Rom. 10. 4. Gal. 3. 24. Christum vocat finem i. scopum legis quia lex sues sacrificiis ritibus c. Christum intendebat Zanch de Redem cap. 11. Thes 5. li. 1. The Decalogue written with Gods own hand upon two tables was an Epitome of all Ordinances appertaining to the Covenant exacting punctuall obedience in the least jot and title as necessary to Salvation and flashing out wrath against the least transgression without any intimation of repentance or hope of pardon the Lord did not at that time troth-plight himselfe unto them Eighthly the Law requireth faith as well as love and obedience and doth build these upon it as a foundation For the end of the Commandement is love love out of a pure heart a good conscience and faith unfained That love which the Law requireth either towards God or towards man must flow from a pure heart and faith it is that purifieth the heart Christ is the end of the Law for righteousnesse sake and the Law is a Schoole-master to bring us unto Christ But bring us unto Christ it could not if it did not point him out unto us or presuppose him as promised He is not the end of the Law if the Law did not direct to him and require faith in him He is the end of the Law as the Law leadeth and driveth us out of our selves and from all confidence in any works of the Law that by faith in Christ we might obtain righteousnesse It is not the property of a Schoole-master to beat and strike and not to direct or teach That the ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ direct unto him and require faith in him is a thing Exo. 34 27 28. confessed and acknowledged of all men Now the ceremonies are appendices of the Law especially of the first and second Commandements Exod. 24. 8. Heb. 9. 19 20 23. Pigh●disp Ratisp l. 2. as they were given to the Israelites And if they require faith in the Redeemer to come how should we thinke it to be a thing passed over in silence altogether in the Law The deliverance of the children of Israel out of Egypt was a type of our spirituall deliverance from the bondage of sinne and Satan by the power of Christ as appeares by the Ceremonie and Sacrament of that corporall deliverance the Passeover which was a Joh. 19. 36. 1 Cor. 5. 7. figure of Christ our Saviour Therefore in the first Precept the Mystery of our Redemption by Christ is taught and contained That particular mercy mentioned in that Precept taught the Israelites to expect spirituall Salvation in the Messiah promised In Psal 1. 1 2. Psal 119. 1 2. Scripture they are pronounced blessed who keep the Commandements and observe the Statutes and Judgements of the Lord but withall their blessednesse is said to consist in this that God Psal 32. 1 2. imputeth not sinne unto them that their sinnes be forgiven and transgressions covered The true worshippers of God then are happy not for their works but because God is pleased to accept them in Christ and to pardon their offences This is the true sense of those promises made to or spoken of them that walk in the perfect way and doe none iniquity And if life and Salvation be promised to them that observe and keep the Statutes Judgements and Ordinances of the Lord not for the dignity of the work but through the meere grace and mercy of God pardoning transgressions and sinnes then is faith in the
of Adam by the Law of nature written in his heart Confidence in God through Christ or the Messiah was required of the Israelites by the Law published upon the Mount Adam was to performe obedience to the Lord immediately without a Mediatour being himselfe pure and innocent But the Israelites being in themselves sinner● ●ould not in their own names performe service pleasing and acceptable unto the Lord. Adam knew he was beloved of the Lord so long as he continued in obedience but had no warrant to wait upon his mercy when he had broken the Covenant of works But to the Israelites God bound himselfe in Covenant upon Mount Sinai promising to be their God and take them for his people notwithstanding they were sinners in themselves which could not be without forgivenesse and this Covenant they might and did renew by repentance after transgression The Law is not to be confounded with the Gospell but the sacred and inviolable knot of the one with the other is to be maintained unlesse we shall make God contrary to himselfe The Law doth not so directly and expressely teach faith in When Paul saith Faith came by the Gospell it is to be understood of the manner of propounding vvithout the invvrappings of types that the Doctrine vvas ● taught plainly vvithout types and figures Rom. 8. 3. Christ but require obedience yet doth it leade us to Christ and more obscurely command faith in him The Gospell doth more fully reveale Christ and the grace of God in him commanding faith by name but it doth also urge presse and exact obedience Thus sweetly doe the Law and Gospell consent together But here it is to be noted that faith is commanded in the Law which exacteth every thing that is good but it is given to us not by the Law but of the holy Ghost The distinction of the Law and Gospell as they are opposed one to another is cleare and evident but as the Law was given to the Jewes it is not opposite but subordinate to the Gospell The Law in it selfe considered exacted perfection of works as the cause of life but when that was impossible to man by reason of the infirmity of his flesh it pleased the Lord to make knowne to his people by the ministery of Moses that the Law was given not to detaine men in confidence of their own works but to leade them unto Christ Whatsoever the Law teacheth whatsoever it promiseth whatsoever it commandeth alwayes it hath Christ for the scope thereof For though the Law of righteousnesse promise a reward to the keepers thereof yet after it hath shut up all men under sinne it doth substitute another righteousnesse in Christ which is received by faith not purchased by the merit of works And therefore the Apostle doth reprehend the Jewes as perverters of the true sense and meaning Rom. 10. 4 5 6 c. of the Law when they sought to be justified by their works and sheweth that Moses taught them to look for Salvation in the Messiah and seek for that righteousnesse which is by faith Whereby it is manifest that the Law was given 〈◊〉 be a manuduction unto Christ in whom we have Redemption from all things from which by the Law of Moses we could not be justified and a rule to the faithfull according to which they must frame their conversation For what word was that which Moses saith was neere even in their hearts but the Law which the Lord gave upon Mount Sinai and promised to write in the hearts of his people under the Covenant of Grace And from this ground it is not hard to answer what is further objected against this truth as If faith be commanded in the Law then being justified by faith we are justified by the works of the Law For faith is not a work of the Law nakedly and absolutely considered as it exacteth perfect obedience of man in his own person but of the Law as it was given to the Jewes to direct them unto Christ who is the soule and life of the Law And though it be commanded in the Law as it is in the Gospel or new Covenant yet it justifieth not as a part of Regeneration or an act of obedience and work of Grace by it worth or dignity but in respect of that office whereunto it is assigned of God and as it receiveth the promises of mercy It is a s●phisticall forme of reasoning to say Faith is commanded in the Gospell therefore if we be justified by faith we are justified by the works of grace The arguments are like and both faultie For justification by faith in Christ is opposed to justification by the works of the Law because he only is justified before God by the Law whose acts being examined by the Law are found just and righteous according to that which the Law requireth but he is justified by faith who being in himself ungodly believeth in Christ for salvation So that according to the Apostles meaning wheresoever faith be commanded he is justified by faith without the works of the Law who is acquitted from sin by the meer and rich grace of God in Jesus Christ received by faith And to seek justification by works is to rest upon our works for salvation as they that answer in all things to that righteousnesse personall which the Law requireth Justification by faith and justification by workes are opposite and so is faith and workes but faith is not opposed to one act commanded whereby the promise is received for then it should be contrary to it selfe but to works whereby the Law is fulfilled in our owne persons to workes I say not to one work because no one worke can justifie but all are necessary If it be said the Apostle doth every where oppose the Law and the Gospel or the old and new Testament The answer is from the same ground that in the Scriptures of the new Testament the Law as well Ceremoniall as Morall is opposed to faith or the Gospel and yet the Ceremonies of the Law did prefigure Christ as all men acknowledge Therefore the Apostle doth not perpetually and absolutely oppose the Law and the Covenant of grace for he teacheth expresly that faith establisheth Rom. 3. 31. the Law For he understood the force and sentence of the Law to consist in faith but because the Jews addicted to the latter of the Law did pretermit the force and life of it Paul proves the Law so taken and separated from faith to be the cause not of life but of death as that which did not only want Christ who is the soul of the Law but is opposite to him And therefore Paul doth this because the Jews faith being let passe did seek righteousnesse in the dead works of the Law and did oppose the Law to the Gospel and Christ who was the end and scope of the Law This will be more plain if we shall examin the particular passages of Scripture wherein this matter is handled
that cleaveth unto their best works being graciously pardoned I have sworne and I will performe it that I will keepe thy righteous Psal 119. 106. judgements Did the Prophet think himself able punctually to fulfill the Law How will that stand with his Prayer Enter not into judgement with thy servant for in thy sight shall no man living Psal 143. 2. be justified No but he knew sincere and willing obedience which he promised and would performe should be taken in good part And this is further apparent by the prayers of the faithfull Judge me O Lord for I have walked in mine integrity Remember Psal 26. 1 11. Isai 38. 3. Neh. 1. 5 9. Psal 25. 10. Dan. 9. 4. Jer. 31. 32. how I have walked before thee in truth and with a perfect heart and have done that which is good in thy sight It never came into the heart of these Worthies to conceit they had been able to justifie themselves before the barre of Gods justice in any particular action great or small as if it had been without all defect or staine being tried in the rigour of justice nor could their integrity ought availe them if no obedience did find acceptance with God but that which is every way compleat It is said of Josiah that he turned 2 Kin. 23. 25. to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses that he declined not to the right hand or to the left Of David that he kept the Commandements 2 King 21. 3. of God and his Statutes that he kept the Commandements of 1 Kin. 11. 34. 1 King 14. 8. 1 King 15. 5. God and followed him with all his heart to doe that only which was right in his eyes that he did that which was right in the sight of the Lord and turned not aside from any thing that he commanded him all the dayes of his life save only in the matter of Vriah the Hittite and 1 King 22. 43. of Jehoshaphat that he turned not aside from doing that which was right in the eyes of the Lord Of Asa that his heart was perfect before the 2 Chro. 15. 12. Lord all his dayes Of Asa and the people that they sought the Lord with all their heart and all their soule From these passages we cannot prove either that these servants of God did or that it is possible for men in this life to fulfill the Law exactly or that the Law is given with such moderation as that the imperfections which did cleave unto these and the best servants of God were no sinnes because in phrase of Scripture the words will not beare that weight it may be confuted by Text it selfe setting down severall imperfections even in them who are said not to have turned aside from the Commandements and it is directly contrary to divers other passages of holy writ But thence we may soundly gather that the Law as it was given to Israel doth admit and allow of sincere and unpartiall obedience though it be imperfect and answer not to that exactnesse which is required These words Doe this and live must not be interpreted as if they did promise life upon a condition of perfect obedience and for works done in such exactnesse as is required but they must be expounded Evangelically describing the subject capable of life eternall not the cause why life and salvation is conferred and by doing sincere uniforme unpartiall obedience not exact fulfilling of the Law in every title is to be understood Doe this and live what is it more then this If ye will obey my voice and doe my Commandements Psal 112. 1. ye shall be to me a peculiar treasure Blessed is the man that feareth the Lord and delighteth greatly in his Commandements Psal 106. 3. Blessed are they that keep judgement and he that doth righteousnesse at all times Blessed are the undefiled in the way who walk in the Law of Psal 119. 1 2. the Lord. Blessed are they that keep his testimonies and that seek him with the whole heart Who so looketh into the perfect law of liberty Jam. 1. 25. and continueth therein he being not a forgetfull hearer but a doer of the worke this man shall be blessed in his deed To them who by patient Rom. 2. 7. continuance in well-doing seeke for glory and honour eternall life which passages are to be understood of sincere and upright walking and shew who are justified and to whom the promises of life pertaine but not why they are justified And in like manner that of the Apostle The doers of the Law are justified may be expounded Rom. 2. 13. Evangelically not of them that fulfill the Law which should be justified by their works but of them that soundly obey who are justified of grace by faith not for their works And hence it appeares what works the Apostle opposeth to faith in the matter of justification not only perfect works done by the strength of nature of which sort there be none at all but works commanded in the Law as it was given to Israel such as Abraham and David walked in after they were effectually called such as without whose presence faith it self could not be existent such as are necessary in the person justified these works are opposed to faith in the matter of justification not that faith can be without them but because they cannot be causes together with faith in Justification And of necessity if faith be opposite to works exactly perfect it must be opposite to them that are imperfect and stained in part that be impurely pure because the Covenant of Grace calleth for perfection though it accept sincerity and in all reason perfect righteousnesse should rather be accepted for righteousnesse unto life than that which is imperfect and falleth short of that which is required For the better administration of this state and nationall Covenant it pleased God to ordaine sutable Ordinances for the teaching and applying of this Covenant scil of Ministery and Priesthood The first of these the Apostle openeth setting down the state of the Gentile and Jew before Christ came compared both together and how both stood in comparison to the Church after Christ in regard of this Ordinance of teaching As the Gentile Gal. 3. 23 24 25. before Christ was a man constrained to live without a shelter the Jew at the same time is better provided for for he had the Law taught to cover his head in a storme that it be not too violent But we after Ch●ist dwell in well-grounded yea seiled roomes that we need not to feare the blowing beating or flowing in of the Sea raine or wind for we have the Ordinances of the Gospell The Gentiles before Christ ran wild like beggarly bruits without all schooling the Jew a great deale better for the time being he had a Schoole-master to teach and nourture him even
● 29. 1 Thes 4. 1● Rom. 12. 1. in the sight of the Lord and what is pleasing in his sight are for substance one and the same and so a Exod. 15. 26. Deut. 6. 18. and 12. 25. and 13. 18. and 21. 9. 1 King 9. 12. Numb 23. 27. 1 King 9. 12. 2 Chro. 14. 15. translated by the Seventie The Scriptures mention an uprightnesse of heart and uprightnesse of life and conversation Uprightnesse of heart is an holy conformity of heart and soule to the good will and pleasure of God Thus we reade God saveth the upright in heart Psal 7. 10. The ungodly shoot privily at the upright in heart Psal 11. 2. Shout for joy all ye that are upright in heart Psal 32. 11. O continue thy righteousnesse to the upright in heart Psal 36. 10. All the upright in heart shall glory Psal 64. 10. Doe good O Lord unto them that be good and to them that are upright in their hearts Psal 125. 4. Good and upright is the Lord. Psal 25. 8. His will is the most certaine rule of equity and rectitude and our hearts are then upright when they stand in an holy conformity to the good pleasure of God This is sometimes expressed by the phrase of preparing the heart to seeke God 2 Chron. 19. 3. 2 Chron. 17. 6. or lifting up the heart in the wayes of God And herein is implied 1. An holy disposition of mind will and affections bending themselves to the good pleasure of God approving affecting exercising readily whatsoever he requireth I know also my God that thou tryest the heart and hast pleasure in uprightnesse As for me in 2 Chr. 29. 17. the uprightnesse of mine heart I have willingly offered all these things 2. A godly fervency of heart which maketh that in choosing and embracing good things it is equally more remisse or fiery and strong as the goodnesse of the things be greater or lesse of greater or lesse necessity and importance Thus an upright heart hath respect to every Commandement but his greatest care is about the weightie matters of the Law holinesse and justice and the more excellent the duty the more circumspect and forward is he in the performance of it The upright love thee or they love thee in uprightnesse Cant. 1. 4. that is with a strong and vehement love which is without dissimulation or guile Therfore saith David I esteeme all thy precepts concerning all things to be right and I hate every false way Psal 119. 128. 3. An upright mind in all purposes and actions doth aime directly at the right marke and propose the true end by just and approved meanes A right end never hath a crooked rule leading unto it and a right heart doth neither look awry nor goe by a crooked rule Thus it is said of Ezra that he had prepared his heart to seeke the Law of the Lord and to doe it and to teach in Israel Statutes and judgements Ezra 7. 10. Act. 8. 21. And on the contrary when Simon Magus would have bought the gifts of the holy Ghost with mony Peter rebukes him saying Thy heart is not right in the sight of God Uprightnesse of life is a conversation way or course of life agreeable to the word of God in that calling or vocation wherein God hath placed us Thus it is said of David That he walked psal 37. 14. 1 King 3. 6. Prov. 14 2. Pro. 29. 27. Isa 26. 7. with God in truth and uprightnesse of heart And he that walketh in his uprightnesse feareth the Lord. He that is upright in the way is an abhomination to the wicked The way of the just is uprightnesse He that speaketh uprightnesse shall dwell with the everlasting burning This is expressed by the phrase of going with a right foot Gal. 2. 14. of ordering our steps aright Prov. 4. 26. and making even pathes for our feet Heb. 12. 13. Uprightnesse is an universall and constant cleaving to the Lord notwithstanding all occurrences that might divert or turne us out of the way All the upright in heart shall follow it or shall follow Isa 33. 14 15. him that is they shall cleave to the Lord and goe after him continually and never forsake him although they endure many and great evils for his names sake An upright heart is an heart fixed and established in respect of the object or maine businesse Psal 94. 15. Psal 78. 37. Jam ● 6. 7. opposite to a double divided mind wavering between two different objects unstable inconstant turned with every blast resolving now this anon that one thing to day another to morrow this in one company that in another And the pathes of uprightnesse are contrary to all crooked wayes which leade unto death Doe good O Lord unto those that be good and to them that are Pro. 21. 8. Prov. 2. 13 15. Psal 25. 4 5. upright in their hearts As for such as turne aside unto their crooked waies the Lord shall leade them forth with the workers of iniquity We may take the description of an upright man from the Psalmist in other words He hath cleane hands and a pure Psal 24. 4. heart and hath not lift up his soul unto vanity A pure heart is the foundation of an holy life and words and works as it were the building setled upon it Uprightnesse is chiefly commanded most highly esteemed and principally commended in the Saints For this cause Israel was called Jeshurun Deut. 32. 15. 33. 5 26. Isa 44. 2. because uprightnesse is the thing which God requireth in every true Israelite God that trieth the hearts of all th● sons of men taketh pleasure in uprightnesse The froward and unstable are abomination to his highnes 1 Chro. 29. 17. but such as are upright in their way are his delight The offerings of an upright heart are free and voluntary which God graciously tendreth lovingly accepteth The Sacrifice of the wicked is an abomination Prov 15. 8. Job 8. 6. Psal 25. 21. to the Lord but the prayer of the upright is his delight God will not cast off the upright nor leave his soul in adversity If thou wert pure and upright surely now he would awake for thee and make the habitation of thy righteousnesse prosperous God will make it known that he doth regard the upright though for a time they be in affliction they shall not be forsaken or left desolate Marke the Psal 37. 37. end of the upright for the end of that man is peace The wicked may flourish for a time like the Bay-tree but suddenly they shall wither The upright may be kept under for a time but he shall bud and blossome apace in his season and his prosperity shall endure The upright shall dwell in the Land and the perfect shall Prov. 2. 21. Psal 37. 29. Prov. 14. 11. remaine in it The righteous shall inherit the Land and dwell therein for ever The Tabernacle of the upright
truth thy word is truth This is Joh. 17. 17. that which begets faith and faith is that which purifieth the heart How came the Romanes to that heartinesse and sincerity of obedience which Paul commends so much was it not by that forme Rom. 6. 17. of holy Doctrine which was delivered Or as we reade it sometimes unto which they were delivered wherein the truth of God is compared unto a mould into which they were cast and by which they were transposed into a new forme enabled to walke sincerely and without halting before the Lord. The mind must be truly informed or the heart can never move aright But there is no meanes to come to the knowledge of the truth but by the word of God which is the word of truth and Gospell of salvation It is truly said the heart can never be sincere till it be humbled and broken and brought to abasement and deniall of it selfe and what means hath God ordained so effectuall as his word to worke this humiliation of spirit Is not this the hammer which Jer. 23. 2● Act. 2. 37. 2 King 22. 19. breaketh the stone Is not this that which pricketh the heart and maketh it to melt and sometimes wringeth teares from the eyes of them that heare it Besides what hope that ever any mans disease of a false heart should be cured untill he be brought to the sight of it Who seeks for health till he know himselfe to be diseased And shall ever any man be brought to the understanding of his defect in this untill he hath been made to see it by the word What health is to the body that truth and uprightnes is to the soul now bodily health ariseth from the seed is preserved by sound and good diet But the word of truth is the wholsome food wherby the soul is nourished The word is a word of uprightnesse or rectitude and when it is well learned and throughly digested safe lodged and Jam. 1. 20. close applied it doth season and regulate the heart and affections and change them into the nature of it If we bind our crooked affections close to the word of truth they will become strait agreeable unto the word whereunto they are bowed And the same word truly embraced doth enflame the heart with a fervent desire to walke with God in all duties of holinesse and righteousnesse 2. Thornie cares vaine pleasures sinfull delights must be stocked up and digged out of the heart Weeds will grow of themselves if the roots be not plucked up good corne requireth tillage and sowing both Perversenesse is naturall to man corrupt and sinfull and will encrease of it selfe but uprightnesse will not prosper if the fallow ground of the heart be not ploughed and the rootes of worldlinesse and voluptuousnesse killed in them If the world be our treasure our heart cannot be true and upright with God for where our treasure is there will our hearts be 3. A third meanes is to possesse our hearts with this and to have it ever in our thoughts that in all things especially in matters of Religion we have to doe with God and are ever in his sight and presence In our common daily duties to labour thus to performe them with our heart as in the sight of God to his glorie is a ready way to get this grace of truth deeply rooted It is the very maine ground of all hypocisie that this one thing is not duly thought on Men forget him that seeth in secret whose eyes are as a flame of fire wherewith he pierceth further then the outward face and hereupon they are not to imagine that when they have carried the matter smoothly and fairly before men all is well The world either applauds them or accuseth them not and hereupon they flatter themselves as if nothing more were to be looked after Let us then remember this if we would be true and sincere in our hearts The waies of man are before the eyes of Prov. 5 21. the Lord and he pondreth all his paths This kept the Church and people of God of old in their sincerity and preserved them from dealing falsely concerning his Covenant they thought with themselves If we doe thus and thus shall not God search it out Psal 44. 17 21. for he knoweth the secrets of the heart And this consideration moved Paul to faithfulnesse in his Ministerie We make not merchandize of the word but as of sincerity but as of God speake we in 2 Cor. 2. 17. Christ See what things goe together doing a matter in sincerity and doing it as in the sight of God 4. Society and fellowship with the faithfull is a signe of uprightnesse and a meanes of continuance and encrease therein For he that setteth his heart upon heaven will be carefull to draw on and encourage his companion in the same way Coales laid together kindle each other and preserve heate the longer So it is with the faithfull linked together in holy communion 5. It is good to call our selves to a frequent reckoning touching our carriages binding our selves to an examination of them He that hath a servant of whose fidelity he maketh some doubt and whom he desires if it might be to reclaime both for the good of the party and for his owne particular also that he may be usefull to him he will not let him run on too long before he call him to an account he considers that to be the next way to make him carelesse and secure If he expect ever and anon to be reckoned with it will cause him so much the more carefully to looke unto his businesse It is so in this case The word of God telleth thee that thou hast with thee a false coosening deceitfull heart an heart that will beguile thee to thine utter ruine it is ever ready to practise with Satan the professed enemie of thy soule to worke mischiefe against thee Wouldst thou reforme this heart that it might become usefull and serviceable for thee in the great and important businesse of Salvation be sure to call it often to account It will be good to reckon with it once a day to see what hath passed it to examine what thoughts have been framed in it what purposes what intents what acts have been done as effects and fruits of these inward purposes surely this tying of thy selfe to such an often survey and looking back upon thy heart will keepe it in so much the more awe and when it is once accustomed to the sweetnesse which will be felt when it can give account of care and of obedience and to the smart and punishment which followeth the remembrance of failing in holy duties it cannot but be kept in so much the better tune And to finde out the better the guile of our spirit and crookednesse of affection First consider what ignorance vanitie folly infidelity doth still remaine in the mind what stubbornnesse in the will benummednesse in the conscience disorder
world should thereby be saved and by no other meanes he most willingly accepted of them Between these desires there was a diversity but no contrariety a subordination but no repugnance or resistance Consider Christ in private as a man of the same naturall affections desires and abhorrencies with other men and the cup as it was very bitter and grievous and so most justly he feared and declined it and could not but decline it unlesse he had put off the nature and affection of man But consider him in his publike relation as a Mediatour a suretie a mercifull and faithfull high Priest and so he most willingly and obediently submitted unto it And this willingnesse in respect of his office was much the greater and the comfort we may draw from thence the sweeter because in respect of nature his will could not but shrinke for it If nature had not necessarily shrunke sweat startled and stood amazed at that service Christ had not manifested so much love and free submission to the command of grace nor could we have had so much comfortable assurance of the truth of our redemption thereby for it is impossible the nature of man should conflict with the terrible wrath of God and not dread and tremble The Apostle saith Christ in the dayes of his flesh offered up prayers and supplications with strong crying and Heb. 5. 7. teares and was heard in the thing he feared In the New Testament the word signifieth reverence Luke 2. 25. Act. 2. 5. and 8. 2. Heb. 12. 28. or circumspect caution joyned with feare Heb. 11. 7. Act. 23. 10. but feare is most fit to this place as it signifieth commonly in good Authours and by the phrase it selfe may be confirmed for he was heard from his feare as he was delivered from death The second effect of this Agonie was a bloudie sweat In a cold night when our Saviour lay upon the ground in the open aire no man being neere unto him no violence offered unto his body he did sweat clotted bloud in such abundance that it streamed through his apparell and wet the ground Never was there sweat like this sweat nor anguish of soul like this anguish that ●e then endured But these I may call the beginnings of sorrow Upon the crosse he uttered that dolefull complaint My God my Matth. 26. God why hast thou forsaken me He complaineth not that his heavenly Father had forsaken his but him Formerly he had wept over Jerusalem and commended his Disciples unto the custody Joh. 17. of his Father being assured they should be gathered though for the time dispersed But the cause of this lamentation was that being now in the hands of his cruell bloudy mercilesse enemies left to endure the extremity of their rage and fury his Father for a time withdrew from him that solace he was wont to find in him The unity of his person was never dissolved his righteousnesse or graces were never either taken away or diminished neither is it possible he should want assurance of future deliverance and present support but for a time the Father did with-draw the sense of favour and comfort that his humane nature might suffer what our sinnes deserved This dereliction was altogether without sin because Christ our Saviour brought it not upon himselfe but was called unto it and in the conflict his faith was most firm not shaken with any degree of unbelief in which cases only the want of comfort is a fault scil when we bring it upon our selves or stain it with infidelity It is here objected that an innocent person ought not to suffer for a nocent for guilt is inseparable from sin The sonne shall not beare the iniquity of his Father neither shall the Father beare the iniquity of the son the soul that sinneth the same shall die Ezek. 18. 20. For the clearing of this objection we must note that there is a two-fold manner of guilt either such as growes out of sin inherent which is the deserving of punishment as it is in us or such as growes out of sin imputed and that not by reason of union naturall as the guilt of Adams sin is imputed unto us which manner of imputation likewise is the foundation of punishment deserved but voluntary by way of vadimonie and susception And so guilt is only a free and willing obnoxiousnesse unto that punishment which another hath deserved In an ordinary course of providence it is true the sonne shall not beare the punishment of the Fathers sin because he is altogether personally distinct he is not appointed so to doe as Christ was he is not able to bear them so as to take them off from his Father as Christ did ours and already hath too many of his own to beare but this was no naturall or unchangeable Law and if the will of the Sonne go along with the Father in sinning it is not strange not unusuall for him to suffer for his Fathers and his own sin together as for the continuation of the same offence More particularly for resolution of the question whether an innocent person may suffer for the guilty we must note first that God out of his dominion over all things may cast paines upon an innocent person as it is manifest he did upon Christ who suffered most grievous things and death it selfe And what ground of complaint could any creature have against God if he should have created it in fire and made the place of its habitation the instrument of its pain Do not we our selves without cruelty upon many occasions put creatures that have not offended us unto pain Secondly it is not universally against equity for one to suffer the punishment of anothers sin We see the Infants of Sodome Babylon Egypt of Corah Dathan and Abiram were involved in the punishment of those sins of which themselves were not guilty The Lord reserveth to himselfe the punishment of the Fathers upon the children Exod. 20. 5. and 34. 7. He punished the sinnes of three hundred and ninetie yeares all together Ezek. Lam. 5. 7. 4 2 5. C ham committed the sinne and yet Canaan was cursed 2 Sam. 1● 13 14. for it Gen. 9. 22 25. The sin was Gehezi's alone and yet the Leprosie cleaved not to him only but to his posterity 2 King 5. 27. For the sin of Saul his sons are hanged up before the Lord. 2 Sam. 21. 8 14. Achan trespassed alone but he perished not alone but his sons and his daughters and all that he had with him Josh 7. 24. The sin of crucifying Christ was the sin of the Jewes in that age alone and yet wrath is come upon them to the uttermost even unto this day Matth. 27. 25. 1 Thes 2. 16. vid. 1 King 21. 21. and 14. 10. Judg. 9. 56. 1 King 2. 33. Jer. 22. 30. And if it be not unjust to punish one for anothers fault and grant impunity to the offendour it is not unjust to punish the innocent for
execute this in such manner as the Sonne doth who hath received a right of executing immediatly and in a manner appropriat to his person the soveraigne dominion of God over every creature The Sonne by voluntary dispensation sent by the Father did emptie himselfe of exercising and shewing forth his right and dominion over every creature and the Father by voluntary dispensation doth resigne to the Sonne the immediate execution of all power over every creature till that time that all things be subdued under him This the Scripture doth lay downe as in regard of earthly powers Rev. 1. 5. they are subject for he is ruler of the Kings of the earth He hath this royall state written on his thigh as it were King of Kings Lord of Lords Rev. 19. 16. That he hath power over the Heb. 1. 4 6. col 2. 10. Angells is plaine both by the reverence they doe him and their obedience towards him Every knee boweth unto him the evill Angells yeeld signes of subjection either deceitfully to wrong ends or by force compelled though their state is such they cannot doe it religiously as the other And if Christ have power to send forth dispose of and imploy the Angells he hath power to take account how that he setteth them about is dischardged The evill Angells could not enter the Swine without his leave and they are subject to his judgement when the Saints shall judge the Angells what power hath Christ himselfe this way And as for the excellencies on earth they all receive their power from Christ and are at his dispose yea the Apostle saith He is crowned with glory and honour and all things are put under his feet Heb. 2. 7 8. Joh. 17. 2. Camer in Heb. 7 8. Par Ibid. Antithesis est inter Christi statu● sedentis a● dextram Patris expientu in cruce peccata nostra The Apostle speakes of that dominion which Christ received over all the creatures of God none excepted but if all things be subjected to the feet of Christ is not the humane nature every where No for the phrase in Scripture is not to be understood of subjection locall or corporall but imperiall sc that the man Christ is King of heaven and earth having all things subjected to his command This power and glory which Christ as man received is not infinite simply for then it should be the deity it selfe which he should not have had in the state of humiliation but the deity he had before not by habituall infusion but by personall union And if Christ by vertue of the hypostaticall union had received all fulnesse of the God-head that is all divine Properties as some interpret it it is not possible he should have received greater or more ample glory for greater then that which is infinite cannot be bestowed But the Scripture speaketh expressely that Christ as man was truly and really glorified or that he obtained that glory and Majesty which before he had not sc as man And if the humane nature be infinite or eternall of necessity the Incarnation of Christ and sitting at the right hand of the Father must be really the same if they be not abolished and the humane nature made equall unto if not the same with the divine The right hand of God absolutely considered must not so be interpreted as if it was all one with the phrase of sitting at the right hand of God For by the right hand of God is signified his power wisedome protection providence c. but by the other the exaltation of Christ and communication of Majesty and rule which he may exercise and shew forth every where without the omnipresence of his humane nature Neither are we to imagine that Christ hath all things or places or times so subjected to himselfe that he doth forth-with change their natures by this subjection Col. 1. 19. ● ● Vorst Deo placuerit in Christo ● per Christum i●habitare totam pleni●udinem be totam ecclesiam much lesse that he doth make them to be and not to be at the same time as to make all places to be one indivisible title or all times to be one point for so it should be divisible and indivisible the same and not the same together It is objected that the fulnesse of the God-head dwelleth bodily in Christ that is the whole essence Majesty and glory of God dwelleth in the humane nature And we are to conceive the person there spoken of sc the beloved Sonne as man as incarnate The reason is because the second person in Trinity the Sonne of Tota Dei plenitudo est universa Dei voluntas Majestas quatenus a nobis cognosci potest debet Id. Vrsin Vbi supra Pag. 601. Omnis plenitudo Deitatis inhabitat in Christo homine non sicut in alijs sanctu gratia tantum in habitationis seu assistentiae nec reali communicatione seu confirmatione se● reali un●one cum humanitare sic ut unitae sint duae naturae inseperabiliter personaliter 2 Cor. 6. 16. God absolutely considered hath all fulnesse not by voluntary dispensation but by naturall necessity in as much as the eternall Father never was nor could be without his eternall Sonne God with himselfe In Christ his person there is a threefold fulnesse the first fundamentall sc the fulnesse of the divine nature which doth personally dwell with that man-hood in Christ whence it comes to passe that this man is truly called God that is the manhood taken into fellowship of the selfe perfect and eternall person of the Sonne of God so that it is become as a part of his person The second is the fulnesse of office to which even Christ man is called For in regard of his humane nature now united to the second person he is man called to be the Christ of God that is annointed our Prophet Priest and King The third the fulnesse of created or habituall graces wherewith the soule of Christ is filled which are not divine properties for no created gift can be a Propertie divine but effects which the God-head worketh distinct from it as the soule giveth life to the body Now for the dwelling of all fulnesse in Christ man the latter two are in him subjectively the former that as the God-head doth dwell in Christ man not as in the Saints by relation of love and communion of the effects of it in grace nor as in the glorified Saints in regard of aboundant love manifested in the gift of glory nor any such simple cohabitation but it dwelleth in the manhood as with a nature which is taken to unity of person in the Sonne of God and so is through grace become of the substance of the second person So that Christ as man hath the second person of Trinity God with the Father and Spirit dwelling personally in it so that this manhood is essentially and substantially coupled with the deity in unity of one self●-perfect and
eternall person Christ man is fitly called God and therefore in Christ man the God-head is said to dwell properly but Christ his humane nature may not be said to be God and therefore the God-head is not so fitly said to dwell in the humane nature as in the person denominated after it that is in Christ man It will be said if Christ rule in the midst of his enemies then it must follow that he is every where present But that is spoken of the person and not of the man-hood alone Psal 120. 2 and what is said of the person doth not necessarily belong to both natures And Christs dominion over all things doth not require his corporall presence with all things According to his divine nature he is every Joh. 8. 58. Christ in respect of his divine nature is every where present without addition and by the spirituall and effectuall presence of his body he entreth the soules and strengtheneth the hearts of all the faithfull by the power of his grace and truth of his promise Ephes 1. 22. Col. 2. 10. 1 Cor. 11. 3. Christ is the first-borne Col. 1. 18. Heb. 1. 2 4. and heire of all things 2 Cor. 4. 5. where present according to the effects of his providence wisdom power grace c. according to his humane nature he is essentially in heaven and now only in heaven but his dominion is over all things which doth not denote soveraignty power or omnipresence essentially divine but glory and Majesty next to divine as was said before The fift thing implied in Christs sitting at the right-hand of the Father is that in speciall he is the head of his Church The word Head is used sometime for one who in any kind is before or above other and in this large sence Christ is the Head of the Angels that is their ruler or governour one that is above them man is the Head of the woman Christ of man God of Christ But here it signifieth that Christ is so over his Church that he is in a more neare and communicative sort conjoyned with it as the head is with the body and members Looke as the King hath a more intimate and aimiable superiority over his Queen than over any other subjects so it is here in Christ our King whose dominion towards his Church who is his Spouse and Queen is more aimiably tempered and nearly affected then is his government over any other Christ hath taken the selfe same holy and spirituall nature with his Church standing as well of that which is outward and sensitive as of that which is inward and intellectuall The faithfull are united to him here by knowledge of faith and love such as Christ himselfe by his Spirit begettet● in them as hereafter by glorious light and love He doth communicate unto them that whole life of grace and glory which they have or shall receive direct and move them outwardly by his signifying will and inwardly by sending his Spirit which moveth with efficacy to that which he sheweth and followeth them with aides inward and outward least their faith should be prevailed against Though betwixt the faithfull and Christs naturall body there be a bodily distance yet the Spirit which commeth from Christ doth so joyne them with him that nothing commeth twixt him and them The same life of grace for kind which is in Christ is in every faithfull soule as fire Caro Christi no● vivificare dicitur quatenus pro mundi vit● data est fide a nobis manducatur hoc est per modum merite simul ejusmodi efficaciae quae Mediatoris personae propriè conveniat Regnat ubique Deus homo divina humana volunta●e ac nutu Filius vivit prop●●r Patrem Joh 6. 57. F●lius à Patre habet aeternam increatam vitam ut homo quoque ab codem beatam cre●tam v●●am habetiut Mediator vitam beatam nobis carnis suae troditione in mortem acquisivit divina sua virtue in nobis effccit Gal. 3. 14. See Field of the Church 1● 5. cap. 16. Sobin art 3. de person Christ p. 316. Petimus ut Christus nobis velit dare spiritam idque●am humana quam divina sua voluatate tamen non petimus ut secundum humanam naturam ab ipso procedat incorda nostra Sp S seu ut humana per ipsum operetur nam etiam processio Sp. S. operatio per●psum est proprium Dei talis opus alterum ad intra alterum ad extra sed ut etiam humana voluntate velit hanc operationem Dei tatis suae in nobis Heb. 1. 6. Ps 9. 7. Phil. 2. 10. Rò 14. 11. Isa 45. 23 Joh. 5. 22. Psal 2. 12. Joh. 3. 15 16 17 18 36. Joh. 6 29 12. 36. Joh. 14. 1. Rom. 15. 12. Mat. 12. 21. Act 7. 50 60. 2 Joh. 3. Rev. 1. 4 5. Ro. 1. 7. Syr. 1 Co. 1. 3. 2 Co. 1 2. Gal. 1. 3. Ephes 1. 2. 2 Tim. 1. ● kindled fire kindling is of the same nature And Christ having fulnesse of grace and glory for all his he cannot be but most ready to communicate with them every thing for their good Christ is the Head of his Church both as God and man our Mediatour For did not the divine nature which is the fountaine of all life naturall and supernaturall dwell with this man or humane nature we could not be enlightned or quickned by it He that eateth my flesh saith Christ hath life in him not that this nature of it selfe can doe these things but because the Deity dwelleth with it and by it as by an instrument joyned personally with it doth properly and efficiently worke these things The omnipotent power of creating spirituall graces is not in the humane nature nor the omnipotent actions which doth produce them doe or can proceed from the humane nature but they are in God only and from God in and with the humane nature working to the same effects according to its property Christs humane nature hath both understanding and will whereby he worketh and is an internall instrument united within the person of God the Son as a part of his person in a sort yea more neerly but these divine works which Christ the Mediatour worketh the chiefe vertue and action which properly effecteth them is in God not communicated really with the other nature though it doth worke them in this humane nature with it yea and by it as a most nearly conjoyned instrument which within the person of God the Son hath his proper actions concurring in an inferiour degree of efficiency to that which the divine nature properly and principally worketh God worketh graces Christ man worketh the same the divine nature createth them and infuseth them into this or that man through Christ man being as a common conceptacle or conduit-pipe The humane nature worketh them not by powerfull creating them but by taking away sin and the cause that so way
might be made for this promised Spirit by interceding Mediator-like for them and by willing the going of such graces from him as who is with God the Son but one worker though a distinct principle of working that is though distinct in nature yet the same person He therefore worketh them as his own workes from his owne power for Gods power is by unity of person made his the divine power not being without him as the power of another person then he is but being personally with him And those things which his humane nature worketh which are wrought after his humane nature the workes not of an humane but a divine person for though the nature according to which they are wrought be humane yet the person working is the person of the Sonne of God Hence it is that Christ-man doth give graces authoritativè effectivè yea according to humane action doth effect them in the highest degree that an instrumentall operation can effect any thing St Paul gives graces by laying on of hands with prayer ministerialiter not as his worke but as intreating it from God in Christ and signifying what God doth in Christ not from any power any way within his person but the power of another not as conjoyned with God as the body with the soule but as an instrument with God Christ the Head of his Church is over all to whom all things are subject He who must be a saving head to us there is great need he should be over all Could he not bind that strong one and cause him re-deliver his possession how should we ever be set at liberty Could he not dissolve the worke of Satan swallow up death create life and quickning in us our case were lamentable The sixt thing implied is That Christ God and man is the object of divine odoration Let all the Angels of heaven worship him All knees shall bow unto him All shall honour the Sonne as they honour the Father Yee believe in God believe also in me saith our Saviour In him shall the Gentiles trust So Steven called upon the Lord Jesus saying Lord Jesus receive my spirit And the Apostles in the entrance of their Epistles desire grace and peace from God the Father and from our Lord Jesus Christ not the Lord of Jesus Christ as some Heretikes would corrupt the text and so in the shutting up of their Epistles The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ 1 Cor. 15. 23. Gal. 6. 18. 2 Cor. 13. 13. Phil. 4. 23. 1 Thess 5. 28. 2 Thess 3. 18. Philem. v. 25. 2 Tim. 4 22. But some object that if adoration be due to Christ God and man then it will follow that the humane nature is omniscient and almighty which followeth not because that which is spoken of the concrete or whole person is restrained to the one nature which should not be The person adored or called upon is man but the humanity it selfe only or solely or in it selfe properly taken is not the proper subject or object of that worship Albeit we may and should adore the man Christ with divine worship yet may we not adore his man-hood or his flesh and bloud Because though the man Christ be God yet his man-hood is not God and by consequence not to be worshipped with that worship which is properly and essentially divine Againe if adoration agree to the humanity of Christ then may his humanity helpe and save us But the humanity of Christ cannot helpe and save us because omnis actio est suppositi whereas the humane nature of Christ is not suppositum None of those who defend the adoring of the humanity of Christ with divine worship doe well and warrantably expresse their opinion First Some of the Schoole-men have found none other respect Aquin. 3. q. 25. Art 2. wherefore the man-hood of Christ can be said to be adored except this that the flesh of Christ is adored by him who adoreth the word incarnate even as the Kings cloathes are adored by him who adoreth the King And thus they make the flesh of Christ to be adored only by accident Ego vero saith the Arch-bishop of De Rep. Eccl. lib. 7. cap. 12. n. 43. Spalato non puto à quoquam Regis vestimenta quibus est indutus adorari And why doth he that worshippeth the King worship his cloathes more then any other thing that is about him or beside him perhaps a Hawke upon his hand c. There is no more but the Kings owne person set by the worshipper to have any state in the worship and therefore no more worshipped by him Others devise another respect wherefore the man-hood of Christ may be said to be worshipped namely that as the divine worship agrees only to the God-head and not personis praecisè sumptis i. Fr. S. Clara Expos art confess Angl. art 28. sub ratione formali constitutiva personarum quae est relatio but only as these relations identificantur with the essence of the Godhead so the man-hood of Christ is to be adored Non per se praecisè sed prout suppositatur à Deo But if by suppositatur they meane as they must meane that the man-hood is assumed into the unity of the person of the Sonne of God for otherwise if they meane that the man-hood is made a person they are Nestorians that which they say cannot warrant the worshipping of the manhood with divine worship because the man-hood even after this assumption and hypostaticall union is still for all that a creature and a distinct nature from the God-head so that it cannot yet be said to be worshipped with divine worship Dr Field layeth out a third way for whiles he admitteth the phrase of the Lutherans who say not only concretively that the Of the Church lib. 5. cap. 15. man Christ is omnipotent but the humanity also he thus distinguisheth when we speake saith he of the humanity of Christ sometimes we understand only that humane created essence of a man that was in him sometimes all that that is implied in the being of a man as well subsistence as essence But this distinction is as if a man should say sometimes by blacknesse I understand blacknesse and sometimes the subject wherein it is together with the blacknesse it selfe An abstract is no more an abstract if it have a subsistence It is the tenet of the Schoole that though in God Aqu. ●qu 13. art 1. the concrete and the abstract differ not because Deus Deitas are the same yet in creatures whereof the man-hood of Christ is one they are really different For the concrete signifieth something compleat subsisting but the abstract such as humanity signifieth something not as subsisting but as that whereby something is Wherefore when some say the flesh of Christ is to be adored the speech is not proper but figurative because properly Polan Syntag. lib. 6. cap 16. the flesh secundum se is not adored because it is a creature but
God manifested in the flesh But here it is to be noted that the Scripture speaketh of worship which is graciously communicated of the Father to Christ as Mediatour and not simply of that which is given unto him as the only begotten Sonne of God As God Phil. 2. 9. J●h 5. 26. hath exalted him so he hath graciously communicated this honour and dignity of worship unto him as God and man The adoration of Christ may be considered two wayes either as it doth respect Chemnit harm cap. 46. the essentiall properties of the God-head alone or the properties of both natures and the office of Christ If it respect the properties of the God-head alone adoration is pred●cated of the person denominated from either or both natures and is understood to be true of that person according to the divine nature as the essential properties themselves are understood to be true of that persō according to the divine nature But if adoration respect the properties of both natures and the office of Christ it is spoken of the person according Solmius art 3. de person Christ pag. 3. 6. to both natures and is understood to be true but the difference of both natures being kept For we aske blessings of Christ God and man in performing whereof we desire and understand that he doe what is proper to the Deity according to the Divine and proper to the humanity according to the humane nature For as the office so adoration respecting the office doth not take away the difference of natures that is doth not confound or equall the natures or the properties of the natures So we crave of God that he would intercede for us which he doth according to both natures because Intercession is the office of the whole person which parts in this office he performes one way according to his Deity another according to his humanity and so of the rest CHAP. IIII. How Christ doth bring his people into Covenant or fellowship with himselfe CHrist being appointed of the Father the King and Head of his Church and after a most excellent manner thereunto annointed and advanced of the Father and having subjects given unto him it cannot be but he must have his Kingdome and subjects He is a King as in personall right so in act He hath his Kingdome and territories wherein he exerciseth his regall power He is a King as to punish enemies so to feed and governe his people Joh. 17. 6. which are given unto him to be made obedient unto his Scepter The way whereby Christ enters upon his kingdome is ever by Conquest For though the soules of the Elect are his given by free donation purchased with a great price yet his enemies have Psal 68. 28. Rom. 8. 7 8 10. Joh. 3. 5 6. As for the works of the Spirit the fruits of faith c. if he have any at all in him they proceed only of the holy Ghost Hom. 2. part for W 〈…〉 s the first possession which must be cast out by strong hand and his people themselves by nature rebellious unwise disobedient untill they be subdued and brought into subjection High imaginations must be abated and proud rebellious lusts battered and beaten downe before Christ come to rule and reigne in the soule The conversion of the nations to the faith of Christ is made by an holy warre destruction and desolation wherein the King of kings fighteth against subdueth and bringeth under the disobedient which formerly did rise up against him But this wasting or desolation is not the losse of temporall life or spoiling of corporall goods or any outward desolation which is seen with the eyes or heard with the eares but a most happy desolation whereby pride and haughtinesse of minde is depressed and the minde lifted up to things above the power of the flesh is quelled and the Spirit doth gather strength the edge of vices is dulled and all kinde of vertue doth bud and blossome and where the flesh did rule the Spirit doth rule But what then doth Christ compell men to subject themselves unto him In no sort but of unwilling he makes them willing totally or throughly willing The people of Christ are free and Psal 110. 2. Exod. 35. 21. 2 Chro. 30. 8. Joh. 6. 45. Isai 55 5. 1 Chron. 28. 9. voluntary who offer themselves willingly unto the Lord and yeeld themselves unto his service Therefore they are said to come unto Christ to runne unto him to serve him with a perfect heart and a willing minde Men are gathered into the Kingdome of Christ by effectuall holy vocation whereby Christ doth not only invite them by his Word to repent and beleeve but by his Spirit doth assuredly bring 2 Tim. 1. 9. them unto himself or unto the participation of the Covenant of mercy Vocation according to the purpose of God is free not Rom. 8. 28. depending upon any precedent condition on our part required or whereby we are fitted or prepared to receive grace offered nor upon the good use of any naturall gift vouchsafed Justification is of grace by faith in Christ and so is Salvation but Vocation is of free grace without any condition at all It is not of him that Rom. 9. 16. willeth nor of him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercy who of his rich mercy quickneth them that are dead in sinne and Eph. 2. 4 5. Isai 65. 1 2. Mat. 11. 25 26. saith Behold me to them that inquire not after him and hideth the great things of the Gospell from the wise and prudent but revealeth them unto babes according to that good pleasure of his will Thus Abraham was called when he served other gods Josh 24. 2. Act. 9. 6. Matt. 9. 9. and Paul when he breathed out threatnings against the Saints and Matthew when he sate at the receipt of custome The persons called into fellowship with Christ are all and only they that are given unto him of the Father To these Christ Mat. 11. 27. Rev. 3. 20. Joh. 10. 11 15 16. Joh. 17. 9 20. Joh. 10. 28. and 17. 2. revealeth the Father these open unto Christ and he commeth unto them for them he hath laid downe his life they shall heare his voyce for them he hath prayed that they might beleeve through the Word and unto them he will give eternall life The Subjects called in the Kingdome of grace or under the new Covenant are Jewes and Gentiles both neere and farre off but specially the Gentiles when the Jewes were broken off Matt. 8. 11 12. Act. 2. 39. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 idem est quod 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Constat enim praep●sitionem 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ejusmodi adverbiis adjunctam saepè vacare tali● junt 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sta●● subitò 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 adbuc 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 semel Act. 17. 30. and 28. 28. and 13. 46 47. Rev. 5. 9. for a time Many shall come from the
profitable and pleasant answerable in some sort to the nature excellency and use of the thing known And in this case the heart is not over-ruled contrary to the full spirituall and infallible evidence of divine truth seriously thought upon unto a practicall judgement This is the learning of Christ the teaching of the Father the knowing of things which passe knowledge Christ is not known if he be not acknowledged as he is propounded what perfect Si ignorare accipitur pro non attendere dici potest voluntatem humanam vix unquam peccare sine aliqua ignoratione quia quando vo●untas peccat intellectus ut plurimum aliud agit nec attendit ad regimen voluntatis knowledge doth perfectly that imperfect knowledge doth imperfectly As the end acknowledged cannot be refused by like right neither can the meanes acknowledged the meanes I say necessary only necessary and without which there is no possibility or likelihood to obtaine the end For will is a reasonable appetite and therefore doth not stirre from such a good as is fully and spiritually represented unto it with evidence certainty profit and delight as the most universall adequate and unquestionable object of the desires and capacities of an humane soule and that both simply and in comparison for the freedome and willing consent of the heart is not lawlesse or without rules to moderate it but it is therefore said to be free because whether out of a true judgement it move one way or out of a false another yet in both it moveth naturally in a manner sutable to its owne condition If it be objected the heart being unregenerate is utterly averse unto any good The answer is that it is true the will must not only be moved but renewed and changed before it can yeeld to Christ But withall God doth never so fully and spiritually convince the judgement in that manner without a speciall work of grace upon the soule whereby the will is framed and fashioned to accept embrace and love those good things of which the minde is thus prepossessed The third help is a formall cause a free gracious disposition or Scimus non impetrari remissionem ante prece ●ed dic● decretam esse ante preces eam peti precibus quamvis sit decreta P. Malin de e●ect ex fide pag. 316. habite of faith by which the will is inclined agreeable to the disposition of it to come unto God This habite is necessary because without it the will being in bondage stained and defiled it is altogether unable to will or desire that which is spiritually good If there could be a will without such habite man might performe the act of a man spiritually alive before he was made alive So that the full answer to this question viz. what is that effectuall help whereby I come to God is this It is a mixt thing standing partly of that almighty power of his put forth for my good partly of that inward Word and inspiration by and with which his power is put forth partly in that spirit of faith and supernaturall life which his almighty power through his Word bringeth forth in my soule What was that help whereby Christ made Lazarus able to come to him out of the grave of naturall death The principall was Christs power the instrumentall his voyce the formall cause immediately helping to it or working it was the spirit of naturall life which the power of Christ by his Word restored to this dead corps which now was fallen And thus we have the effectuall help or grace by which we come actually to convert which are all given from Gods free grace and favour towards us And when God doth infuse the habite of faith into the minde of one of ripe age he doth cause him actually to beleeve as the nature of the thing it selfe and condition doth manifest For if the Spirit by inlightening the minde and renewing the heart doe perswade and move the soule effectually to embrace adhere unto and love the Lord Jesus Christ then the condition of the thing will not beare that grace should be given effectually but the act and motion of the soule must necessarily follow But though the connection of these two be indivisible yet the flexion or turning it selfe is not indivisible or in a point or moment but it may be sooner or slower more speedy in one more remisse in another The will is necessarily bowed or bended but more vehemently in one more slackly in another freely or willingly in all that are turned and yet necessarily And this first thing is well to be noted for from hence we may gather in what standeth the efficacy of grace effectuall to Conversion viz. In Gods effectuall power put forth to execute his intention which he hath of converting some actually before other some It Quaestio non est de irresistibilitate sed de insuperabilitate finali Nam quomodo traberemur gratia irresistibili cum id ipsum quod nolumus Deo resistere ●it ipsa Deigratia Illud ipsum velle resistere nihil ali●d est quam resistere doth not stand in any congruity or temperature of grace correspondent to our nature For this doth argue there is inward an incorrupted connaturall disposition to receive grace This maketh the effect of Conversion as much if not more to depend on the active capacity of the will as on the grace of God For it maketh the grace of God worke it morally and externally by perswasion only and the will of man from a power within it selfe which doth more inwardly enter the effect of Conversion then the other It may be questioned in what order doth the Spirit make us come unto God whether immediately or by some preparation going before wherein it is further to be considered what that preparation is or wherein it consisteth To the first branch of the Question it is truly answered that God doth use so to worke our comming to him by beliefe that he doth first for the most part prepare us thereunto As before we engraffe a Sciens we cut it and set it for incision and if a Timberlogg lie sunke in mudd men set to their tacklings first to draw it out of the mire before they lay it on a Cart to carry it away Thus God doth by his power often worke some preparative change in a sinner before he doth by his power and word worke the spirit of faith in them and make them come unto him So God by afflictions is said to boare the eare and prepare to conversion 2 Chron. 33. 11 12. Act 2. 37. When Manasseh was humbled in great misery he sought the Lord. Thus by conviction of sin others were pricked in heart and said What shall we doe to be saved and then speedily they received the Gospel beleeving Sometimes by extraordinary terrours rising from externall accidents yea hidden naturall causes God is pleased to bring men nearer unto him Thus the Jaylor Act. 16.
his Word and Spirit as he knoweth it becommeth both his justice Rom. 9. 24 25 26. 10. 17 18 19 20. Rom. 11. 25 29 30 32 33. and mercy in Christ alwayes reserving to himselfe full and free power to call whom he please according to the good pleasure of his will But this distribution of vocation into externall and internall is not a distribution of the kinde into its specialls but shewes rather what doth concurre to that worke of vocation 1 Cor. 3 5 6. Rom. 1. 5. whereunto obedience is willing and freely yeelded This vocation is instituted and administred according to the eternall decree and purpose of God for knowne unto God are all Act. 15. 18. his workes from eternity and God doth nothing in time which he decreed not to doe from all eternity Whosoever therefore is Ephes 3. 5 6 9 11. Jam. 1. 18. 2 Tim. 1. 9. called in time he was predestinated from eternity that he should be called and in what state place time manner meanes soever a man is called he was predestinated to be called in that state at that time by those meanes and neither sooner nor later nor otherwise for the execution cannot vary from the decree but the note of changeablenesse must be ascribed unto God The company of them that are called effectually is the Church which is visible and invisible as this vocation is inward and outward Rom. 10. 10. visible which doth professe with the mouth and invisible which doth believe with the heart as man is distinguished 1 Cor. 4. 16. into inward and outward And as vocation inward and outward are not two callings but one and the same so the Church visible and invisible are not two Churches but the same Church differently considered Christ hath not two Kingdomes but There is but one Lord one Temple one Ministery Hieron ad Nepotian de vit Cler. Bilson Perpet govern cap. 11. one Kingdome one body one Church whereof every one that is savingly called is a living member The work of grace and heavenly calling is that which giveth being to the Church and make it a different society from all other companies of men whatsoever By effectuall calling and the answer of the soule unto God calling men are admitted into the Kingdome of Christ or Church of God every one that is thus called is of the Church and every one of the Church is thus called He that is not thus called is not of the Church and he that is not of the Church is not thus called He cannot be out of the Church who is in Covenant with God nor can he be a member of the Church who is not in Covenant The sheepe of Christ by predestination and eternall purpose are gathered into this fold some sooner others later some after one Joh. 10. 16. Mat. 20 3. 5. Act. 11. 18. Gal. 3. 28. Rev. 5. 9. Psal 68. 18. manner some after another of all nations kinreds and ongues Jewes and Gentiles bond and free male and female neere and farre off such as haue lyen longer and ●●●ke deeper into sinne and such as have beene preserved from the pollutions of the world The end of this vocation as it is the worke of God calling is that they who are given unto Christ of the Father should freely and willingly answer to God and Christ calling and so become the confederates of God by Christ the Mediatour of the New Testament and being faithfull and confederate they should love feare honour worship and obey God in Jesus Christ In respect Pro. 1. 24. Heb. 3. 7 8. Rev. 3. 20. Eph. 2. 11 12 13. Jer. 32. 38 39. Luk. 1. 74 75. Deut. 6. 4 5. Phil. 2. 12. Ephes 1. 6. Act. 13. 47 48. of the outward invitation it is their office and duty to answer to the call In respect of the inward and powerfull worke of the holy Ghost they are certainly inabled and drawne to come unto Christ and give up themselves unto him Another end remote is the Salvation of the elect and the glory of God in which respect calling to grace is a meanes ordained of God and according to the ordinance of God necessary to the communication of Salvation and the answer of the called is a condition requisite and necessary for the obtaining of that end according to the ordinance and appointment of God The glory of God most wife good mercifull just and powerfull doth so Rev. 4 8 9 10. 5. 8. 9 10. brightly shine forth in the communication both of grace and glory that it doth worthily draw the mindes of men and Angels into admiration and loose their tongues into the praise and magnifying of God E● si respect● singulorum qui pe●e●nt optabile esset ut homo non peccasset respectu tamen universalis boni c●jus potius habenda fuit ratio non debuit Deus potentiam suam ex●rere ad impediendum ne peccaretur Opposite unto this vocation is 1. That God doth suffer some to walke after the vanity of their owne hearts and blindnesse of their mindes and doth not invite them to come unto him or exhort them to repent Thus God regarded not the Gentiles in the dayes of their ignorance but gave them up to the lusts of their owne hearts And at this day many nations are shut up in ignorance and have not heard so much as the sound of the Gospell for many generations It is true the Lord calleth them in a sort by his long-suffering and patience and by the workes of providence in that he filleth their hearts with food and gladnesse but by the promise of mercy he is not pleased to speake unto them 2. Some that be outwardly called they contemne the counsell Luke 7. 30. Act. ●3 46. Act. 7. 51. Psal 81 12 13. Isai 63. 10. and 6. 9 10. Joh. 12. 37 38 39 40. Ezek. 20. 25. Per statuta m●la intelligi possunt leges Ethnicorum vel lex Dei quae ipsis in perniciemcessit of God put away from them the Word of grace resist the Spirit of God speaking unto them in the mouth of his Prophet whence followeth blindnesse of minde hardnesse of heart efficaciousness of errour that men should beleeve lies a reprobate sense and delivering into the power of Satan Jer. 4. 20. Thou hast seduced this people scil by false prophets promising them peace which God promised not and giving them up to the efficacy of errour as a punishment of former transgression 3. God doth call some by the Gospell and bestow upon them divers spirituall good things though not such as accompany Salvation And thus some doe heare and receive and rejoyce in the Word and bring forth some fruit but not to ripenesse or perfection CHAP. V. How Christians answer to the call of Christ and so come to have Fellowship with him IN the matter of Salvation it pleased God to deale with man by way of stipulation and promise and so