THE COVENANT OF LIFE OPENED: Or, A TREATISE of the COVENANT OF GRACE., Containing something of And especially of The nature of the Covenant of Works, The Sovereignty of GOD, The extent of the death of CHRIST, The nature & properties of the Covenant of Grace: The Covenant of Suretyship or Redemption between the LORD and the Son JESUS CHRIST, Infants right to JESUS CHRIST, and the Seal of Baptism: With some Practical Questions and Observations. By SAMUEL RUTHERFURD, Professor of Divinity in the University of S. Andrews. ZECH. 6.12. And speak unto him, saying▪ Thus speaketh the LORD of Hosts, saying, Behold the Man whose Name is the BRANCH, and he shall grow out of his place, and He shall build the Temple of the LORD. 13. Even He shall build the Temple of the LORD, and He shall bear the glory, and shall sit and rule upon His Throne, etc. EDINBURGH, Printed by Andro Anderson, for Robert Broun, and are to be sold at his Shop, at the Sign of the Sun, ANNO 1655. CHRISTIAN READER, MAny have written, to the edifying of the Godly, of this excellent Subject: It's not much I can do in this, but have added some thoughts to what is said, intending a more Practical way of the last Points▪ in another Treatise, to wit, of the application of Covenant-Promises, and of the influences of the Spirit under the Covenant of Grace▪ of which, especially of the latter of these two, few have practically written: And it is of much concernment, to make ou● the Union of our Duty and the breathe of the LORD, and what can be done under deadness, to either fetch the wind, or to be put in a spiritual condition, that the soul ●ay lie fair for the receiving of the influences of GOD. I desire in this to speak for Truth, not either for or against persons of whom I am silent, concealing the names of any Contradicent, judging Truth so much the more desirable, when it may possibly be had with peace, and as little blowing or stirring of the fire of contradiction as can be. What is here said in a way of Disputing, the Moderate Reader, who is not taken with that way, may pass by and read what is practical. The Author hath been (lest Truth should suffer by him) a little darkened, as report bears, with the name, I know not what, of a Protester, as one who hath deserted the Government and Discipline of the Church of GOD in SCOTLAND; But my humble thoughts are the same they were before: though I can add nothing to the Truth. I look on these men the world so names Protesters, Schismatics, Separatists, as sinful men who stand in need of a Saviour, and as such as desire to fear GOD and love His Name, and would gladly have our practice and walk come a little more near to the Rule of the Gospel, and that our Land might mourn for all the abominations committed therein, which I desire to be spoken without any reflection upon any of the Godly in the Land, who, in that point, are of another Judgement. It is my desire to the LORD, that he would let us hear experienced by the reality of that: Thus saith the LORD, Isa. 65.8. As the new wine is found in the cluster, and one saith, Destroy it not, for a blessing is in it: so will I do for my servants sake, that I may not destroy them all. The LORD JESUS be with your Spirit. Yours in the Lord Jesus S. R. Contents of the I. PART. CHAP. I. and II. THe four particulars of the Treatise. pag. 1. Propositions touching ADAM'S state. p. 1, 2. ADAM was predestinate to life eternal in Christ, and how. pag. 2. CHAP. III. What is the intent and sense of the threatening, Gen. 2.17. and Gen. 3.20. Dust thou art, etc. p. 3, 4, 5. threatenings of the Law reveal what the Lawgiver may jure inflict, by justice and Law deserving, not what shall come to pass. p. 4. Except it be both a threatening and a Prophecy. p. 5. What is carnal security. ibid. What Adam was to believe in that threatening. p. 5, 6. How the promises and the threatenings differ in this. p. 7. How Law threatenings to the Elect are Evangelick. p. 8. CHAP. IU. The Elect before Conversion bear no part of the Law-curse, nor is the Law-curse divided between them and Christ. p. 10.11. Faith is too near to be made a cause of satisfaction for sin by all who hold that Christ gave a satisfactory ransom for all and every one of mankind. p. 11. Accepting or not accepting satisfaction is▪ before faith, and so believing or not believing can be no ground of the sufficiency of the price paid for the Reprobate, or of the laying of the sins of all upon Christ. p. 11, 12, 13▪ God may accept the satisfaction of Christ without any condition required on our part. p. 13. CHAP. V. God intended a Law-dispensation, but for a time. 2. Adam how he was ordained for a Law life. 3. How predestinate to Glory, how not. 4. That the heathens have no more universal grace then Devils. 5. No ground for such grace. p. 13, 14, 15. CHAP. VI It was condiscension in the Lord to enter in Covenant with man. 2. Tempt●tions in fearing we are not chosen, discovered. 3. Being's and not-beings are debtors to God. 4. Self denial required in sinless nature, as in sinful. 5. Man considered three ways. How faith lays hold upon conditional promises, and temptations of unbelief thereabout. p 16, 17. O● the Covenant of nature. p. 18, 19, 20. CHAP. VII. It's not written in the heart of man by nature, that God should promise life Eternal to man, upon condition of obedience. 2. The debt of justice cannot tie God. 3. God punisheth not sin, by necessity of nature. 4. Nor defends he his own declarative Glory by necessity of nature. 5. Nothing can be given to God All sufficient. 6. No meriting of the creature. 7. We are to have humble thoughts of freegrace. 8. Low thoughts of ourselves. 9 Promises make no strict justice between the Lord and us. p. 20▪ 21. God falls in no sort from his natural dominion, though he impose not penal Laws upon the reasonable creature. p. 25, 26. God loves his essential Glory by necessity of nature, but not his declarative Glory, by any such necessity p. 28, 29▪ 30. In every Covenant there is some out goings of Grace. p. 35. The passage 1 Chron. 29.11, 12. cleared, and why none can give to God▪ p. 37, 38. Our vain boasting of self, my, and such proud pronouns. p. 39, 40. How excellent to obey. p. 45. Sanctified reason is not soft. p. 45, 46. How near are we to justification by Works, and to be sick of love for proud (1) p. 46, 47. CHAP. VIII. What place death hath in the Covenant. 2. What Reprobates and the damned are to do. p. 47, 48. What Adam was to do in the interval between the fall and the publishing of the Gospel. p. 48. How the Lord is adam's God. p. 49. What life is promised in the Covenant of Works. p. 47, 48. Wilfulness of unbelief, Some doubts are to be left to GOD only to solve. p 48, 49. How the Lord is the God of Adam. p. 49. No promise of influences is made to Adam. p. 49. CHAP. IX. What life is promised in the Covenant of Works. p. 49, 50 Whether or no did Adam and all the Reprobates in him lose all right to the creatures. p. 50, 51. A threefold right. 1. Natural. 2. providential. 3. Spiritual. What right Reprobates and unbelievers have to the living, ●a●ing▪ etc. p. 53, 54. What way God is ours. p. 55, 56. A furniture of Grace, and a want of Christ. p 56. CHAP. X. The Arminians ground that God was in a manner compelled to appoint the New Covenant. p. 56, 57 The natural antecedent love of God a dream. p 57 CHAP. XI. The threefold Covenant of some considered. p. 57, 58. And of the Arminians, p. 64▪ considered, and rejected. The Law as propounded to Israel was the very Covenant of Grace, p. 60, 61, 62. and the Covenant in the Old one with that of the New Covenant, but differenced ●n some accidents. p. 63▪ 64. CHAP. XII. Self-searching to know under what Covenant We are, a spiritual condition, and why? p 65, 6●. The threatenings under the New Testament more spiritual. p 67, 68 What it is to be under the Law. ibid. The combat between the flesh and the Spirit, and the combat in natural men differenced. p 68 Compelled convictions argue a Law Spirit. ibid. It's easier to be sound in the faith, then to be Godly. p. 69. Of the legal terrors. ibid. Of literal and legal convictions and these of the Gospel. p. 70. Marks of such as are under the Law. p. 70, 71. A sweetness in the hardest command, because holy. ib. An heaven in duties. p. 71. A new nature stands for a command. ibid. CHAP. XIII. Covenanting external, visible, professed, conditional, and Covenanting internal, invisible, real, absolute, and how they differ. p. 72, 73, 74. Infants are within the Covenant. p. 73, 74 75, 76. And to be baptised, and invested with Covenant privileges. p. 76▪ 77, 78, 79. It's false that none are in Covenant under the New Testament but converts. ib. The Covenant made with Abraham and us, the same. p. 80▪ 81. Nor is that Covenant a civil Covenant. p. 81, 82. The New Testament Kingdom is spiritual, though there be seals in it and external worship. p. 82, 83. Of federal holiness. ibid. external Church privileges of the Covenant are given to Nations and societies. p. 83, 84. It's not the Physical but the Moral root that is the first subject of the Covenant conditional, and external. p 84, 85. The formal ground of right to Baptism. p. 85, 86. The places Acts 8.37. Mark 16.16. opened, and are nothing for, but much against Anabaptists. p. 85, 86. The text, Acts 2.39. opened, is strong for Infant baptism. p. 86, 87. A conditional Covenant is properly a Covenant, though it be not ever a fulfilled Covenant. p 90▪ 91. No means are proved, by Law, or Gospel, to save infants by the opposers of infant Baptism. p 91, 92. Two divers considerations of the Covenant, one in abstracto as a simple way of saving sinners, and so all in the Visible Church are in the Covenant; another in concreto, as it contains the Lords will of pleasure, and as it is acted upon the heart, and so the Elect are only in Covenant. p 94. The new heart is only commanded to some, and to others it is both commanded and promised. p 95. CHAP. XIV. The place Gen. 17. opened. p. 95. Circumcision and Baptism compared. p 95 96 97. What blessings and privileges must infants want, if they be without the Covenant. p 98, 99 100 The place Mark 10.15, 16. Luke 18. Math. 19 Of such is the Kingdom of heaven, opened. p. 100.101.102. What blessing Christ bestowed upon the infants, whom he took in his arms. p. 102, 103, 104. A Covenanted seed is promised to be added to the Church of the Jews. 104.105 Considerable differences between external and internal Covenanting. 107.108 The place Rom. 11.6. If the root be holy, so are the branches. 110.111. By the holy Root cannot be meant the predestinate to Glory only. 113, 114. But visible Professors, fathers and children. p. 115, 116. The children are in Covenant not by birth, but by such a birth. p. 116, 117. Covenant holiness is not the complete and adequat cause of real engrafting in Christ. p. 116, 117, 118 CHAP. XV. Other considerable differences between external and internal Covenanting. p. 118, 119. There is no universal Grace subjective or objective given to all, Rom. 10.18. Psal. 19.3. p. 119, 120, 121, 122, 123, 124. Nor power of believing given to all. p. 124, 125, 126. CHAP. XVI. The judgement of men esteeming such visible Covenanters to be real converts before they can be admitted, makes all Egypt, Assyria, the Kingdoms of the world, all Judea Baptised, to be real converts in the judgement of john Baptist, Paul and the Apostles. p. 129, 130 The invisible Church is the first subject of the promises of special note, etc. p. 131, 132 Hypocrites have no warrant to challenge the seals from any command of God, as M. Thom. Hooker sayeth. p. 132 CHAP. XVII. Who are Hypocrites. p. 133, 134 What Hypocrisy is. p. 135 Parties in the Covenant of Grace as acted upon in heart. p. 137 The Word and the Spirit. p. 138 Of God speaking himself. ib. Prophecies that now are differ from Scripture Prophecies, and how. p. 139 Revelations made to the Godly, when they are in much nearness to GOD p. 140, 141 Marks of a spiritual disposition. p. 142, 143, 144, 145. To do a duty as a duty, and not as delightful is a spiritual disposition. p. 144 Not as successful, but as a duty. p. 145 CHAP. XVIII. The nature, characters, properties of the new heart and the new spirit of Covenanters. p. 145, 146. The heart, the man. p 146 The good heart. ib. How rare a piece the heart is. p. 147 Of the reigning evils of the heart. ib. Why we are more shamed of lying then of pride. p. 149 The concurrence of the Word to the act of infusion of a new heart a mystery. p. 149, 150 The Atheism and impossible lies of the heart. p. 150, 151 The signs of the new heart. p. 151, 152 CHAP XIX. The place of Evangelick Works in the Covenant. 2. Possession of glory and right to glory different. 3. A twofold right to glory. 4. We are not justified by Works. 5. The place of declarative justification by Works, Jam. 2. discussed. 6. Faith and Works different. 7. Possession of life and right to life cleared. 8. Faith and final believing both commanded in the Law. Final unbeleef not the sin forbidden in the Gospel only. 9 How life is promised to our Works Evangelic, p. 153, 154, 155, 156, 157, & seq. Our mistakes of God, p 15●, 152 The faith that James speaks of is not true faith, p●60 ●60 The acts of saving faith, p. 16● 162 James must speak of two sorts of faiths, p. 162, 163 The Arminian Argument to prove that James speaks of declared justification, answered, p. 165, 166 How faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only justifies, p· 170, 171 The Socinian and Arminian faith, and Papists form faith includes new obedience and repentance, p 172, 173 Contrary to the Scripture which differenceth between faith and new obedience, p. 174, 175, 176 Right to life eternal and possession of life eternal differ in their nature and causes, p. 176, 177 The necessity of Works, p. 177, 178 Possession of life and right to life differ, p 178, 179, 180 And contrare objections removed, ib. CHAP. XX. Whether or not suffered Christ for any sin against the Gospel only, su●h as final unbeleef, which is conceived to be the only sin against the Gospel. That Christ died not for all without exception. The unwarrantableness of that Doctrine, how the Law commands justifying faith and repentance, how not, p. 181, 182, etc. Sins against the Gospel are also sins against the Law, p. 188▪ 189 CHAP XXI. Whether the Lord Mediator as Mediator command the same good Works in the Covenant of Grace which are commanded in the Covenant of Works, p. 192, 193 Christ lays one way Evangelick commands upon the Elect, and another way upon the Reprobate, p. 198 How the Reprobate are still under the Covenant of Works, how not, p. 192 CHAP. XXII. No promise of perseverance to Adam, p. 194.195 Nor any promise to him of influences of Grace, p. 195, 196 4. Classes of obediences considerably compared among themselves▪ p. 196.197, 198 Christ's obedience most perfect, most of his own. p. 196 Most undue or least of debt coming from God man, & so most meritorious p. 197 Angels obedience. 2. Of their own, but not so as Christ's of his own, and so less meritorious, p. 198 3. The obedience of Adam more of his own, then that of Angels, yet less obedience, ibid. 4. Gospel-obedience hath least of the nature of obedience, p. 198, 199 CHAP. XXIII. The Law of Works required not simply doing, but doing to the end, p. 100L. 208 CHAP. XXIV. Whether faith as true, or faith as continuing to the end, be the condition of the Covenant of Grace, p. 201, 202. Faith which endures to the end, but not quatenus as it endures to the end is the condition of the Covenant of Grace, p. 201, 202 Faith in the first lively acts saves and justifies, p. 202, 203 CHAP. XXV. Whether is Christ's righteousness imputed and made ours, because we believe and apprehend it ours, or do we believe, because it is ours, because we believe, p. 206, 207 Faith presupposeth three unions. 1. Natural. 2. Legal. 3. Federal, and maketh a fourth, p. 208, 209 There be four or five sundry Adversaries against whom the holy Ghost in Scripture contends in the point of justification, p. 210, 211 The dominion of the Law, p. 211.212 What is meant by the oldness of the letter, p. 213 How we are freed therefrom, ib. A threefold bondage of the Law, ib. Of the dignity of the Gospel above the La● p. 213, 214 CHAP. XXVI. Of the perpetuity of the Covenant of Grace, and the considerable differences between it and the Covenant of Works, p. 214, 215, 216, 217. How it continues with these that are asleep in the Lord, Mat. 22. Exod. 3.6. p. 216 Of the graciousness thereof, p. 216, 217 CHAP. XXVII. Of Law-fear and Gospel-fear, p. 217, 218. Of the Law-fear of falling away, and the Gospel faith of persevering, p. 218, 219 Why feelings of sin seldom wants unbelief, and should have the faith of a paid ransom, p. 221, 222 CHAP. XXVIII. Christ died not to blot out all sense of sin, but rather to quicken a godly sense thereof, p. 221, 222, 223 Contents of the II. Part. CHAP. I. Christ's room in both Covenants, p. 225 Of Christ's active and passive obedience, how they concur as one satisfaction, p. 229, 230 CHAP. II. WHerein stands our right to Christ, and the satisfaction made for us by Christ? 2. Faith is not the cause of our right. 3. Christ's incarnation and dying are not favours merited by Christ. 4. How Adam's sin and Christ's righteousness are ours, p. 230, 238. CHAP. III. How Christ suffered for us in our room and place. 2. He died not for all and every one. 4. How many ways Christ may be said to die in our stead. 4. The Lords so dying for all makes not all saveable in Christ, nor the Gospel preachable to all Nations. 5. Christ died in the stead of the elect, p. 236, 237, 238, 239. Though we did not substitute him in our place, p. 249 250 The differences between Chr●sts dying and the punishment due to the Elect, p. 250, 251, 252 The legal oneness between Christ and us, p. 251 To die 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 & 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for us, is to die in our stead, in all eminent languages, p. 253 Christ died not for sins and in the stead of sins, as he died for sinners, p. 256 CHAP. IV. How we are in Christ dying, and crucified in him. 2. A twofold crucifying of us with Christ. 3. A discourse of mortification. 4. The actings of the mortified. 5. That we are to be mortified in our affections, p. 257, 258, 259. Though we die personally yet we died in Christ legally, p. 259 We are not to desire a Law-wakening, p. 259, ●60 What mortification is, p. 261 The influence of Christ's death on mortification, p. 262 Four sorts of actings in mortification, p. 265, 266 We must be mortified to all sort of created things, p. 268, 269 270.271 Forbidden desires. p 270.271 CHAP. V. The Covenant of Suretyship or of Redemption between God and the Mediator Christ. 2. Christ is not a mere witness, but the Author of the Covenant. 3. The Socinian way of Works cannot quiet the conscience. 4. Christ is upon both sides of the Covenant. 5. Justice mediates not. 6. Reasons of the entrance of sin. CHAP. VI That there is a Covenant of Suretyship between JEHOVAH and the Son, is proven by 11. Arguments, p. 290, 291, 292. Christ calling to the Lord his God proves this. 291.292 (2) Christ is a Servant, Messenger, Shepherd, not by nature, but free compact and agreement. p. 292 (3. Ar.) Christ offered his service freely. p. 293 (4. Arg.) There is giving and taking between God and Christ. p. 293.294 (5. Arg.) Christ received the seals whither he needed seals, or not. p. 29●. 296 (6) Christ with the Father dispensed with the Law. p. 296 (7. Ar.) Rich promises that speak a Covenant made to Christ. p. ●96 8. Ar. The Prophecies of Christ, and the promises of, and to him. p. 298 9 Ar. Ask of me▪ Ps. 2. 10. Arg. The work and wages of Christ prove it. p. 299 And, O how low a wager, and how high a design. p. 300 11. Arg. Christ is admitted by an oath and the use of it against Apostasy of Believers. p. 300.301.302 CHAP. VII. The Covenant of Redemption is explained in three eternal acts. 1. Designation of one. 2. Decree and destination. 3. Delectation in the work. p. 302, 303. The attributes of God declared herein. p. 304.305 The Fathers eternal delighting in the Son, 309 307 The strength of God's love to man. p. 306.307.308 CHAP. VIII. The differences between the Covenant of Suretyship made with Christ, and the Covenant of Reconciliation made with sinners. 2. The conjunction of the Covenants. 3. How the promises are made to the Seed. The place, Gal. 3.16. opened. 4. Christ suffered and acted ever as a public head, p. 308, 309, 310. CHAP. IX. The 13. Argument from the necessity of Gods call. 2. Of Typical sprinkling of the blood of the Covenant, and of the Testament. The place, Heb. 13.20. opened. Of the place, Heb. 7.22. the act of Suretyship, the assurance of our state, p. 316, 317, 318. How the promises are made to Christ, p. 317 The peculiar nature of Christ's Testament as such a Testament, p 318, 319 Of the Suretyship of Christ. p. 323, 324 Punishment suffered by the Surety can remove punishment from the guilty man but cannot remove formally the inherent guilt, and how this was done by Christ. p. 323, 324 Christ's undertaking for all. p. 326.327 Of the place, Prov 8.22, 23, 24, etc. p. 306, 307, 308, 327 Arminius yields a Covenant between the Father and the Son, p. 327, 328 And how, for Jehovah cannot promise a seed to Christ as a reward of his work by their way, having no Sovereign power over the will, p. 328, 329, 330 Of such as are his seed. O● the Covenant of the Lord with David, p. 836, 837 Ps. 89. opened, ibid. p. 338 339. Mic. 5.2. p 339 CHAP. X. Christ procures the Gospel to be Preached to Reprobates, but undertakes not for them. A necessary distinction of the Covenant as Preached according to the approving will of God, and as acted upon the heart according to the decree of God. The place, Jer. 31, Heb. 8. This is my Covenant, opened, p. 339, 340, 341, 342. The distinction of the approving will of God & of his will of pleasure, p. 342.343 Antinonians confound the efficient cause of the obedience and the objective cause or the rule of the Word, p. 345, 346 The purpose and scope of the Holy Ghost is not, Heb. 8. and Jer. 31. to speak or treat of the Covenant of Grace as Preache● in the 〈◊〉 but as acted upon the heart, that so Christ may be advance● as a more spiritual and effectual teacher and Priest, than Moses, Aaron, etc. p. 346, 347, 348 Which two are confounded by Antinom●ans. CHAP. XI. Of the promises made to Christ in the Covenant of Mediation, p. 349, 350. A twofold justification of Christ, p. 349 Christ had a promise of influences, Adam had none at all, p. 350, 351 Our mistake touching comforts and duties, p. 351 Christ's satisfaction, p. 351, 352 We may flee to the Covenant, because of Christ, p. 352, 353 Rods are booked in the Covenant o● Works, Deut. 28. and in the Covenant of Grace to both the Covenanters, Psal. 89.30; 31, etc. p. 353 CHAP. XII. The condition and properties of the Covenant of Redemption. p. 355, 356. No such condition is required of Christ, as of Adam, p. 356 The paying of the price of blood and dying is the formal condition of the Covenant of Redemption upon the part of Christ, p. 356, 357 The holy qualifications of Christ in the Covenant of Suretyship, p. 357, 358 These qualifications how to be followed by us, p. 354 Christ's Grace of headship what force it may have upon us, p. 360▪ 361 The properties of the Covenant of Suretyship. 1. Freedom. 2. graciousness. 3. Eternity, p. 361, 362, 363 The exposition of that place, 1 Cor. 15.28. p. 3●3, 364 Christ even after the universal judgement, a mediatory Head, King and Lord, p. 366, 367, 368 Errata. Pag. 2. lin. ●9. read Immortality. p. 15. l. 19 r. no-beings. p. 17. l. 29. r. no-beings. p. 2 r. l. 1, 2. r. God therefore. p. 22. l. 31. r. God it. p. 28. l. 26. r. Isa. 42. p. 39 l. 10. r. abiding. Life▪ p. 43. l. 24. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. p. 51. l. 27. r. is in the substance. p. 53. l. 2. r. no grinding of. p. 55. l. 16. r. floor. p. 70. l. ●. r. literally. p. 92. l. 10, 11. r. decreed. p. 96. l. 5. r. ground. p. 103. l. 13. r. as symbolic. p. 104. l. 36. r. that the. p. 134. l. 14. r. but cannot. p. 136. l. 21. r. here. p. 140. l. 13. r. seated no discursive. p. 141. l. 33. r. gnawing. p. 160. l. 26. r Menochius. p. 166. l. 26. in ma●. r. spectasset. p. 168 l. 17. r. it is not only. p. 169. l. 29. r. head. p. 186. l. 33. r. Gal. 14. p. 195. l. 1. r. thereof. p. 201. l. 20. r. partaker. p. 206. l. 11. r. have it so. p. 218. l. 29. r steep, for sharp. p. 221. l. 11. r. not only not quarrel. p. 239 l. 15. r. depends not upon. p. 249 l. 1. r. Arminius. p. 251. l. 29. r. acceptation. p. 269. l. 26. r. arts. p. ●. l. 3. r. who are not dead to opinions. p. 282. l. 14. gave thee. p. 299. l. 29. r. in his hand. p. 309. l. 36. deal Joh. 8. p. 314. l. 24. r. are. p. 316. l. 10. r. he that said. p. 333. l▪ 18. r. agrees to be. p. 344. l. 15▪ r. and will have. THE COVENANT OF LIFE OPENED. CHAP. I. What is to be spoken of the COVENANT of LIFE, shall be reduced to these Heads. 1. The nature and differences of the Covenant of Works, and that of Grace. 2. The Mediator of the Covenant of Life. 3. The application of Covenant-Promises. 4. Of Covenant-Influences of Grace under the Gospel. Of the latter, especially of the last, not much hath been spoken by any in a practical way. CHAP. II. Propositions touching ADAM'S Covenant-state. THe Apostle, 1 Cor. 15.47. The first man is of the earth, earthy, the second man is the Lord from Heaven, speaking of the two eminently public persons▪ the noble heads of great Families; makes the condition of the first Adam to be animal and earthly, The first and second Adam. & that of the second Adam to be spiritual and Heavenly. And without doubt, to be born of the house and seed of the second Adam, John 1.12, 13. must darken the glory of the first birth, so as there is no great ground to boast of the skin and empty lustre of Nobility and good blood; Nobility & self empty things. Although when the creature called (ay) and (self) do creep in to lodge in a poor feeble piece of clay, that clay so lustred must be some God. The flower and choicest of Adam his Paradise-state, is an earthly condition, as is evidenced by his eating, Gen. 2.9, 16. sleeping, 21, his being placed in a Garden, to dress it, 8, 16, 17, his marriage, 23, The first Adam earthly, we have more in the second. 24. his Lordship over birds, beasts, fishes, Gen. 1.28. But in the second Adam, besides all these, we are gifted with a life of more worth than many acres of Vineyards. They declare therefore that there is much of the first Adam in them, little of the second; Who would conquesse again the many lands, that our first father Adam sold, and join house to house, and lay field to field, till there be no place, and disinherit all others, as if they were bastard heirs, and themselves the only righteous heirs of Adam, that they may be placed alone in the midst of the earth, Isa. 5.8. And the more spiritual any be, the more are they above the nothing world. Mortality may be called supernatural to the earthy part of Adam, Mortality & immortality how due to Adam. since it is not naturally due to a body of earth, to claim life for ever. Though immortality be due to whole Adam consisting of soul and body and endued with the image of God. For the soul cannot die. But if we speak of such a life, to wit, of a heavenly communion with God, How life was due to Adam. as Adam was a comprehensor or one who is supposed now to have run well, and won the Gold, and the Crown, such a life was due to Adam, not by nature, but by promise. Adam in his first state was not predestinate to a law glory, and to influences of God to carry him on to persevere: Nor could he bless God, that he was chosen before the foundation of the world to be Law- holy, Adam was predestinated to life, and how. as Eph. 1.3. What? Was not then Adam predestinated to life eternal, through Jesus Christ? He was: But not as a public person representing all his sons, but as another single person, as Abraham, or Jacob: for Gospel predestination is not of the nature, but of this or that person: Therefore were we not predestinate to life eternal in him, but in Christ, Rom. 8.29, 30. Therefore Adam fell from the state of Law-life both totally and finally, but not from the state of Gospel election to glory. For the Lord ●ad in the Law-dispensation a love design, to set up a Theatre and stage of free grace; The Law a transient Court for a time. And that the way of works should be a time-dispensation, like a summer-house to be demolished again: As if the Lord had an aim that works and nature should be a transient, but no standing Court for righteousness: Hence it is now the relics of an old standing Court, and the Law, is a day of assize, for condemning of malefactors, who will acknowledge no Tribunal of grace, but only of works: And it is a just Court to terrify robbers, to awe borderers and loose men, but to believers it is now a Court for a far other end. CHAP. III. What is the intent and sense of the threatening, Gen. 2.17. In the day thou eats, thou shalt die. And Gen. 3.20. Dust thou art, etc. WE must distinguish between the intent of the threatener, and the intent and sense of the threatening. Law-threatning may be well exponed, by the execution of them, upon persons, against whom they are denounced: As, 1 King. 11.30. compared with 1 King. 12.15, 16. Ten Tribes are taken from David's house according to the Word of the Lord. Because therefore the threatening of death was executed upon Christ, 1 Pet. 3.18. Gal. 3.10, 11, 12, 13, 14. than must the threatening, Gen. 2.17. Deut. 27.26. have been intended against the Man Christ, and because believers die, as all do, Heb. 9.27. the threatening must have been intended against them also, The death threatened, Genes. 2.17. was according to the intent of the Threatener, partly legal, partly Evangelick. for that they sinned in Adam, and because it is out of question that the reprobate die the first and second death, the threatening must also have been intended against them. And therefore, in the intent of the threatener, the threatening was mixed, partly Legal, partly Evangelick; According to the respective persons, that the Lord had in his eye: He had therefore in his heart both Law and Gospel. It is therefore to no purpose to ask what kind of death, and whether purely legal, which the Lord threatened to Adam: For the Question supposeth that the Covenant of Works was to stand, and that the Lord was to deny a Saviour to fallen man. But we may say what death the Lord actually inflicts, that death he intended to inflict, nor did the Lord decree to inflict a merely legal death personal first and second, upon Adam and all his race. Obj. Adam was to believe he should certainly die; For so was the threatening, Gen. 2.17. if he should sin, or then we must say, that Adam was to believe he should not actually die, the latter cannot be said, for than he was to believe the contradicent of the Lords true threatening; which was the lie of the Serpent, Gen. 3. Ans. What threatenings are, and what sorts there be of them. He was to believe neither of the twain according to the event, for there are two sort of threatenings, some pure and only threatenings, which reveal to us, what God may, in Law, do, but not what he hath decreed and intended, actu secundo & quoad eventum, to do, and bring to pass; These threatenings contain some condition, either expressed in other Scripture, or then reserved in the mind of the Lord. 1. Because the Lord so threatened Adam, as he remained free and absolute either to inflict the punishment, or to provide an Evangelic remedy, even as Solomon, 1 King. 2.37. saith to Shimei (in the day thou passest over the brook Kidron, thou shalt surely die) that is, thou shalt be guilty of death, reus mortis: threatenings that are pure threatenings in law show what the Lawgiver may jure inflict, but not what he shall actually do, and what shall come to pass. Yet it cannot be denied, but Solomon reserved his own Kingly power, either to pardon Shimei, or to soften, or change the sentence. 2. The words of the Law do reveal, what the Magistrate may do, jure, and what the guilty deserves by the Law, but do not reveal the intention and absolute decree of the Lawgiver, and what punishment actually, & quoad eventum shall be inflicted upon the guilty, and what shall come to pass as a thing decreed of the Lord: So, Gen. 9.6. the Murderer shall die by the Sword of the Magistrate, and Exod. 22.18, 19, 20. the Witch, the man that lies with a beast, he that sacrifices to a strange god, shall die the death jure, merito, and by Law-deserving, but it followeth not, but such as commit these abominations, do live, as is clear in the Kings of Assyria, Chaldaea, and many of Israel, who were not put to death, but lived quoad eventum, though contrary to the Word of God. 3. The express Precepts of the Decalogue, Thou shalt have no other gods before me, etc. Thou shalt not kill, Thou shalt not steal, etc. do show what in Law we ought not to do, but not what actually shall come to pass: For there be not a few who do actually, & quoad eventum, worship strange gods, kill, and steal. threatenings that are both threatenings and also Prophecies, reveal both the deserving of the transgressor, and the event. But there are other threatenings which are both threatenings, and also Prophecies, and these reveal both the Law and the fact, and what the Lawgiver may, jure, and, in Law, inflict, and what shall actually come to pass upon the transgressors, if they continue in impenitency, Rom. 2.1.2, 3, Rom. 1.18. 1 Cor. 6.9, 10. Obj. Then in all threatenings and promises we are not to believe, that though we sin, we shall actually & quoad eventum die, and though we obey and believe, we are not to believe that GOD shall fulfil his promise, and that our salvation shall come to pass, only we are to believe jure, that we deserve to die, and that we shall have eternal life, jure promissionis, but not actually and according to the event. Answ. Something is to be said of the threatenings, then of the promises: As▪ touching the sense, we are to believe. In the threatenings conditional as (yet forty days and Nineveh shall be destroyed) and (in that day thou eats thou shalt surely die, in thy person and all thine the first and second death) we are not to believe the event, nor is it carnal security, not to believe such an event, What is carnal security in believing legal threaten what not. we are only to have a godly fear and to tremble, at the dreadful deserving of such threatenings legal, as always are to be exponed and believed by all within the Visible Church, with an Evangelic exception of repentance. If therefore Adam did believe that he and all his should in their own persons actually suffer the first and second death, and that irrecoverably, he had no warrant, for any such belief, and the like may be said of Nineveh. For when the Lord said, in the day that thou eats thou shalt die, the first and second death, thou and all thy children personally; His meaning was, except I provide an Evangelic remedy and a Saviour. Godly fear trembles more at the darkening of the glory of the Lord in a broken Law, then at the event of inflicted wrath, were it even Hell's fire. Obj. Adam was to believe no such exception. Answ. True. Because it was not revealed, nor was he to believe the contrary that he should irrecoverably and eternally perish, because that was not revealed: But the threatening of the Law doth not deny the Evangelic remedy, as it neither doth affirm it. What Adam was to believe in the threatening, what the lying Serpent would have him to believe. Obj. Then was Adam to believe, it was true which the Serpent said, ye shall not surely die, & quoad eventum, but ye shall be as Gods living and knowing good and evil. Ans. Neither doth that follow, for in the meaning of the liar, it was not true, that they should not die, either by deserving (for Satan brangles the equity and righteousness of the Law and threatening) or actually and in the event, for both were false and neither revealed, and faith is not to go beyond what is revealed of God. And Satan disputed against both the equity of the threatening, as if it had been unjust, in Law, and against the event, as a fiction and a thing that should not come to pass in the event, which indeed did not come to pass: but not according to the Serpents lying and false principles. Obj. Was then Adam to despair and to believe nothing of a Saviour. Ans. He was not obliged to despair, but to rely, by virtue of the first Commandment of the Decalogue, upon God infinitely powerful, merciful, gracious, and wise to save, for that was revealed and written in his heart, and that is far from despairing: But in the interval between the fall and the Lords publishing the blessed Gospel, and news of the seed to come, he was so to trust in God for possible deliverance in general (as the Law of Nature requireth) but he was to believe nothing of unrevealed particulars, far less of the mystery of the Gospel, which was kept secret, since the world began, Rom. 16.25. Obj. Then may also the damned in Hell, who are not loosed from their obligation to the Law of Nature, The damned in hell not loosed from the first Command are not obliged to despair, and yet are not to believe actual deliverance. and the first Command, be obliged to rely on an infinite and Almighty God, for their deliverance, for they are not obliged to despair, nor is there an obligation to any sin. Ans. There is not the like reason, for though the damned be not loosed from the Law of Nature, but are to rely upon God in his whole al-sufficiency, yet with exception of his revealed Justice and Truth: Now he hes expressly revealed, that their worm never dieth, and their fire never goeth out. And to believe that, is not to despair. Obj. What are then such Heathens to believe as touching that threatening, who never heard of the Gospel? What heathens are to believe. The Covenant of Works is not contrair to the Gospel. How the Gospel may be deduced from the Law, if an act of the freewill, grace and infinite wisdom of GOD be added to make good the assumption. How the promises are to be believed, and how in them, we are to believe both the equity and event of the promises, if the condition be performed, and how the difference must be made between them and the threatenings Ans. They are under the Law of Nature, and to believe that sin deserves wrath, according to the infiniteness of the Majesty, against whom it is committed, and to obey the Law of Nature, and read the Book of the Creation carefully: But and if the news and rumour of a Saviour come to their ears, their sin cannot but be Evangelic, in not pursuing the reality and truth of such a sovereign remedy. Yet it is not to be thought, that though the Gospel be come to all Nations, Rom. 16.26. that that is to be meant. 1. Of every Generation of all Nations. Or, 2. of the individual persons, either young, or come to age, of every Nation under Heaven, experience and Scripture speaketh against both. Obj. But is not the Covenant of Grace contrary to the Law and Covenant of Works? Answ. A diversity there is, but contrary wills in the holy Lord cannot be asserted. Yea the Gospel may be proven out of the Law, and from the first Commandment of the Decalogue, if any act of the Lords free will and infinite wisdom shall be added to prove the Assumption. So, If the first Command teach that God is infinitely wise, merciful, gracious, just, and able to save, then, if so it please him, he shall save; But the first Command teacheth the former: And the Gospel revealing the unsearchable riches of Christ, Eph. 3.8. expressly saith so much. Ergo. As to the promises, they contain not only the jus, equity and goodness of the thing promised, but also that the Lord shall actually perform, yea and intends to perform, what he hath promised upon condition that we perform the required condition. And in this the promises differ not a little from these threatenings, that are only threatenings, of what God may do in Law, but not from these threatenings which are both threatenings and also Prophetical predictions of what shall come to pass, therefore must we here difference betwixt threatenings, and such and such threatenings. The promises are considered as they are Preached and anunciated to all within the Visible Church, and as they are made in the intention of God with the Elect and Sons of the promise: The same way the threatenings admit of a twofold consideration. The promises to the Elect as intended of God, The promises as annunciated, and as made. The Gospel promises to the Reprobate are legal, & how. reveal that both the Lord minds to give the blessing promised, and the condition that is grace to perform the condition, and so they are promises Evangelic both in the matter, and in the intention of the Lord: But as proponed to the reprobate, who are always from their birth to their death under a Covenant of Works, really as touching the LORDS holy Decree, they are materially Evangelic promises, but formally and in the Lord's intention legal, as every dispensation to them is legal, forasmuch as the Lord hath decreed to deny the grace, by which they may or can fulfil the condition of the promise, which is proper to the Law, as it is peculiar to the Gospel, that the Lord both gives the mercy promised and also the grace to fulfil the condition of the promise. The threatenings to believers, especially such as are legal (if you believers fall away, The Law-threatning to the Elect are Evangelic, and how. ye shall eternally perish) are to believers, though materially legal, peremptory, and admit no exception, yet they are formally and in the Lord's intention directed to them upon an Evangelic intention, nor do they say that the Lord intends and decrees that they shall eternally perish, for he hath predestinate them to the contrary, to wit, to grace and glory, Ephes. 1.4. Nor that he wills that they should believe either their eternal damnation, or their final and total falling away, which inevitably leads thereunto. For they, knowing that they are in Christ, 2 Cor. 13.5. Rom. 8.16, 17. and freed from condemnation, Rom. 8.1. are to believe the contraire of the former, to wit, life eternal, John 4.24. 1 Thes. 5.9. John 3.16. and the contraire of the latter, to wit, the promise of perseverance made to them, Jer. 32.39, 40. Isa. 59.21. John 10.27, 28. John 17.20, 21. 1 Pet. 1.3, 4, 5. Mat. 16.16, 17, 19 Therefore these threatenings are not to be believed by the regenerate, as certainly to come to pass in their persons, but only as Law-motives to press them to work out their salvation in fear and trembling, and to cleave so much the closer to Christ, as the condition of such as are under the Law is apprehended to be dreadful. But reprobats and unbelievers are not to believe that God decrees and intends to them the thing promised, and grace to perform the condition, but only to believe their obligation to fiducial relying upon, and Gospel-faith in God, revealed in the Mediator; and that if they continue in a way of opposing Christ, they not only deserve by Law (which Law-deserving also believers are to apprehend) to be broken, but actually and quoad eventum shall eternally perish. Believers are to believe the Decree of God to save them, though they hear the threatenings, for it's revealed. But the Reprobate are to believe only the sense and Law-deserving and event of the threatening, if they repent not, but are to believe no decree to save them. CHAP. IU. The Elect non-converted are not under Law-wrath. 2. Faith is no cause of satisfaction. 3. Christ can not have satisfied for the sins of the Reprobate. WHether the Elect unconverted be under wrath is a doubt to many. It is true, they are servants of sin, Rom. 6.17. Blind, and under the power of Satan as Reprobats are, Acts 26.18. By nature children of wrath, even as others, Eph. 2.3. Ans. Their sins committed before their Conversion, The elect non-converted how they are not under Law-wrath. are according to the Covenant of Works, such as deserve everlasting condemnation, and they are jure and in relation to that Covenant, heirs of wrath, as well as others. 2. But we must distinguish between a state of election and everlasting, though unseen love, that they are under, as touching their persons: and a state of a sinful way that they are born in, and walk in as others do, until they be converted. As to the former state, it is true which is said, jer. 31.3. I have loved thee with an everlasting love. See also, Rom. 9.12, 13. Eph. 1.4. so that God never hates their persons. 3. The punishment of their sins and the wrath they are under is two ways considered. 1. Materially in the bulk, and so they are under Law-stroaks and Law-wrath, that is Law-punishment, as others are, Eph. 2.3. and so the other places are to be taken. 2. The wrath is to be considered formally, and so it is denied that the punishment of the non-converted elect, because of their sinful way is any part of the Law-vengeance or curse which Christ did bear for their other sins committed by them after conversion. 1. Because when Christ saith, john 5.4. The believer hath passed from death, as it is a curse, and shall never come to judgement and condemnation, he cannot mean that they have half passed from the curse, and half not. 2. Believers are delivered, in Christ, from the victory, sting, power of sin, curse of the Law, and every curse, that is in affliction, and from condemnation not in part only, but in whole: Else their triumph were but in part, contrair to, 1 Cor. 15.54, 55, 56. The Elect non-converted bear no part of the Law-curse, but CHRIST bore all. Host 13.14. Isa. 25.8. Nor should they be washen from all their sins and the spots thereof in his blood, if they might wash themselves from any spot, by bearing a part of the Law-curse in themselves, contrair to Can. 4.7. Jer. 50.20. Joh. 1.28. 1 Joh. 1.8. Rom. 8.1. 3. What ever Christ was made for the redeemed ones, that he was made fully for them, in part, and in whole, for he is their perfect Saviour. But Gal. 3.13. He is made a curse for us, and able to save to the outmost all that come to him. Heb. 7.25. Therefore the half or a part of satisfactory vengeance, cannot be upon us, and the other half on Christ, for this is to make men and Martyrs joint satisfiers of justice with Christ, by their own blood and sufferings, to prevent the scadding of purgatory; For though we teach against Antinomians, that the Godly are punished for sins according to Justice, yet that is Evangelick, not law-justice, for they bear not one dram weight of satisfactory wrath and curse jointly with Christ, Antinomians say that sin, root and branch is taken away in Justification, so that there is no sin nor punishment for sin in the justified man. 4. The believers are blessed through Jesus Christ, Gal, 3.10, 13. Psal. 32.1, 2. Rom. 4.6: Psal. 2.12. Psal. 119.1. Their afflictions and death blessed, precious in the eyes of the Lord, not qualified with any Law-curse, Job 5.17. Psal. 94.12. Mat. 5.6. Luk. 6.22. 1 Pet. 1.6. 1 Pet. 4.13. Psal. 21.3, 4, 5, 6. Psal. 34.17, 18, 19 Rev. 14.13. Psal. 116.15. Psal. 72.14. Psal. 37.37. and they are asleep in Christ, die in the Lord, 1 Thes. 4.14, 16. Nor can Antinomians and Socinians say this is under the New-Testament, Remission of sins and life eternal under the Old Testament. for dying Jacob saith▪ Gen. 49.18. Lord I have waited for thy salvation, Isa. 57.1, 2. When the righteous man is taken away, he shall enter into peace, the Lord is the God of Abraham, Isaak▪ and Jacob, when their bodies are rotten. Exod. 3.6. Mat. 22.32. (5.) This comes too near the opinion of these, who make faith a cause of satisfaction for sin, as they must teach who hold that Christ paid a ransom, on the cross, for the sins of all and every one. For that which added, Faith is made a cause of satisfaction for sin by all who hold that CHRIST gave a satisfactory ransom for all and every one, Elect and Reprobate maketh satisfaction to be counted and formally reckoned as satisfaction, in order to the expiation of the man's sins, so that by no justice he can suffer for them, and which being removed▪ maketh the paid satisfaction and ransom, though never taken back again by the payer, no more a satisfaction for that man, nor for Devils: Is too near to the nature and to being a part of the satisfaction. If one pay a sum that fully exhausts the debt of such a broken man, upon condition the broken man say Amen to the paying thereof, otherwise it shall be as not paid, he must take up the sum again, if the broken man refuse to say Amen to it, for if he take it not up again, but it be paid and fully satisfy for, and exhaust the debt, the man's debt is paid, and the Creditor in justice cannot exact one farthing from the broken man. Now nothing given to the Justice of God by way of satisfaction for the sins of unbelievers, was ever repeated or taken back again by Christ. Nay but, say they, the ransom was not paid at all for Judas, but only, upon condition that he believe: but he never believed, and therefore it was never paid for Judas. Answ. This is that we say, Conditional payment made for the sins of Judas, is no payment at all that Christ gave no real ransom at all, for the sins of Judas by way of satisfaction. But they say that there is as well a ransom paid for all the sins of judas (final unbeleef excepted) to free him, in justice from eternal strokes, as for all the sins of Peter to free him, only it is not accepted of by the Creditor, because Judas, by faith, assented not unto the bargain: But assenting or not assenting, accepting, or not accepting, Accepting or not accepting, assenting or not assenting to the payment, are not causes of the sufficiency of the payment made to justice. that are posterior to the payment, are nothing up or down to the completeness and perfection of the satisfaction made for the exhausting of Justice, for Justice receives not two satisfactions or ransoms for Judas, one upon the Cross from Christ, another in Hell, from judas, yea and it must follow, that real payment was made to Justice for all the sins of judas, upon the Cross, and that he suffers for none of them, in Hell, but for only final unbeleef, which is no sin against the Covenant of Works and the Justice thereof, but only and formally against the Covenant of Grace, so that as yet satisfying of Divine Justice for sins, must be halfed and parted between Christ, and judas, which the Scripture teaches not. Also the Father either accepts the ransom of Christ, because it is intrinsically, and of itself sufficiently satisfactory: or because judas does believe it is so; The latter cannot be said, for believing adds nothing to the intrinsical sufficiency of the satisfaction, as not believing diminishes nothing from the sufficiency thereof; Yea and so the Father's formal reason of accepting of the satisfaction of Christ▪ must be terminated upon our poor act of believing, whereas the formal ground of the acceptation thereof is the intrinsical excellency and worth of the Sacrifice, being an offering of a sweet smelling savour to God, The formal reason why God accepts of CHRIST'S satisfaction is the intrinsical sufficiency of it, and why he accepts it for Peter, not for another is the free election of grace. How the satisfaction of Christ is refuseable, how not. Faith a condition of applying the satisfaction only Eph. 5.2. And because he offered the ransom of the blood of God-man, of the Prince of life, Act. 20.28. 1 Cor. 2.8. and offered himself to God, Eph. 5.25, 26. Heb. 9.14. Mat. 20.28. 1 Tim. 2.6. Rev. 1.5. nor is there any sufficiency in his death from the worth of believing. And the reason why he accepts it for Peter, not for another, is the election of grace. It is true the blood is a price refuseable, but it is this way refuseable, because the Lord might have followed a Law-way with Adam, and all his sons, and have denied to give his Son a Ransom for us, but it is not refuseable, because of any insufficiency in the Ransom. Now faith is to satisfaction as the approximation of, and the laying on of dry fuel to the fire, which is only a condition of burning, but the fire is the formal cause of burning. Yea if we speak properly faith is not so much as a condition without the which offended Justice is not satisfied, nor is it a condition, by any Scripture of the world, without the which God laid not our iniquities on Christ, for whether we believe or not, God laid our iniquities upon him, and made him sin for us, Isa. 53.6. 2 Cor. 5.21. Therefore, by necessity of Justice, he must accept that Ransom intrinsically so sufficient, which did restore more glory to God, than the sins of all, for whom Christ died, took from him. Nor is it imaginable to say that any act of obedience or believing, can perfect the satisfaction of Christ, and make it sufficient, yea, or causatively make it ours. For God, by no necessity of Justice, but of his own free pleasure, requireth faith as a condition of our actual reconciliation; for beside, that he might have required any other act of obedience, as love, he might have accepted the Ransom without enquiring any act of obedience, on our part, as the Lord bestowed a calm Sea and deliverance from shipwreck, upon the Idolatrous Seamen, upon the very act of casting jonah in the Sea, without the intervention of any saving faith on their part; God may accept the satisfaction of Christ without any condition required on our part. As a gracious Prince may send a pardon to free a condemned Malefactor from death, and may command that it be valid in Law for him, without the man's knowledge, and far more without his acceptance thereof, upon his knees, especially since by a special paction between the Father and the Son, he restored abundantly more Glory to God by suffering for all, for whom he died, than they took from God by their sins, and that restitution was made to Justice without the interveening of any act of the creatures obedience. But the truth is, it is much to be doubted whether they, who hold such a satisfaction to be given of God, for the sins of all, Elect and Reprobate, but so as it shall not be valid in Law, nor effectual to quiet Justice, but they must all suffer eternal vengeance, and perform personal satisfaction, in Hell, to Justice, except there intervene an act of obedience of the creature, to make it effectual, do really and sincerely acknowledge, against Socinians, a real satisfaction and compensation made to offended Justice by Christ: For how is it real, and not rather scenical and formal, which may and should be null and in vain, if the creature make it not real, by believing. And especially, if God out of his grace which is absolutely free, work in us the condition of believing. Can God give his Son as a Ransom for us, upon condition that we believe, if he himself absolutely work the condition in us? They will not admit this. CHAP. V. God intended a Law-dispensation but for a time. 2. Adam, how he was ordained for a Law-life. 3. How predestinated to Glory in Christ, how not. 4. That the Heathens have no more Universal Grace then Devils. 5. No ground for such grace. IT is apparent that God intended not a Law-dispensation in Paradise to stand for ever. For 1. nothing is spoken of Adam, after the fall, but of his procreating of children, of the Patriarches, of Adam's dying and of his actings before the fall, the place of Paradise being scarce well known, which says the Lord had a farther design to lay aside the transient Law-dispensation and to set up Christ. 2. The Lord, of purpose, gave a positive Law, forbidding eating of such a Tree, added a threatening thereunto particularly, suffered the Serpent to tempt, and foresaw what frail nature would do, that he might deal with man, in a dispensation of free grace. Obj. Did not God ordain that Adam should have life and righteousness, The conditional decree of Adam's living, if he should do the Law, was not predestination to eternal glory. How Adam was chosen to glory in Christ, how not. if he should continue in obedience. Ans. That was a decree conditional of things, (the man that does these things shall live) and shows the equity and holiness of the Law, but it was not a decree of persons, by which God predestinated Adam to a Law-glory, as the end, and to Law-obedience as the effectual means leading to that end. Q. Was not Adam chosen? Ans. Adam, according to the Lords design, finaliter & objectiuè was created in the state of predestination to glory, and grace in Christ as touching his person, but according to his inherent condition, he was created in a legal dispensation, which was a gracious inlet to Christ; And according to his Law-state as he represented all mankind, he was Created as a lubric and frail Copy of weak nature. Many who are such as are not chosen are Created and live under a Covenant of Works, having only some concomitant favours of the Gospel, as the Preaching thereof. 2. Common grace, inward warnings. 3. Protections of providence and forbearance, in regard they are mixed with the Elect. The heathen have not universal Grace. The heathen cannot be said to have any inward calling to Grace and Glory, because there be some remanents of the Image of God left in them, which no more can be called universal Grace, than the same sparkles that are left in Devils can be called Gospel Grace, for they believe, There is one God and confess the Son of God, Jam. 2.19. Luk. 4.34. Mark 1.24. Only if this be called Grace, that the nature of man is so capable of Gospel mercy, and the nature of the fallen Angels morally not so. 2. The offer is made to them of Christ, not so to Devils, we shall not contend. Reason may seem to say that all should have a share of Gospel-Grace, but it may be replied to reason, why should it seem to be a part of the goodness and bounty of God to will and desire all and every one to be saved, and not to institute such a dispensation, as all and every one should actually be saved? 2. How should that stand, (he hath mercy on whom he will) if freewill of the creature absolutely dispose of Salvation and damnation? 3. How is it that the Calling, Adoption, The high and deep Sovereignty of God is against universal Grace. and the offer of mercy is restricted to few, and was confined to the Jews only of old? But we are more ready to call the Lord to a reckoning, for his dispensation of Grace to others, then to use our own, as becomes us. 2. We cannot judge aright of God and of his goodness, except he be God our very way. 3. It is a matter of no small difficulty to make right use of the Lords freedom of Grace, and for clay humbly to adore Sovereignty, and not to stumble at the highness of his ways, who, in these points, hath ways and thoughts above ours, as the heavens are above the earth, Isa. 55. CHAP. VI It was condescension in the Lord to enter in Covenant with man. 2. Temptations in fearing we are not chosen, discovered. 3. Being's and not beings are debtors to God. 4. Self denial required in sinless nature, as in sinful. 5. Man considered three ways. WHither was God under an obligation, to make a Covenant with man? Hardly can any maintain the dominion and Sovereignty of God, and also assert an obligation, on the Lord's part, of working upon the creature: The Lord is debtor to neither person nor things. God's Covenanting with us, is a gracious condiscension. He as Lord commands, but it is condescension that he commands covenant-ways, with promise of a reward to the obeyer. The Leviathan in strength is far above Job, he cannot command him. Job 14.4. Will he make Berith a Covenant with thee, wilt thou take him for a servant for ever? That is, the Leviathan will not engage as a servant to obey job as his master. A Covenant speaks something of giving, and taking, work, and reward, and mutual engagements, betwixt parties, though there be something in the Covenant between God and man, that is, not in the Covenants of men. The rational creatures owe suitable, that is, rational obedience to the Creator, but God is under no obligation to give life, especially so excellent a life as a communion with God, in glory, yet he does it. What a God must he be, who will come down and put himself in a lovely and gaining capacity to be a Covenanting debtor to our feeble obedience, whereas he owes nothing, and to make heaven and glory so sure to us, that the heavens should sooner break and melt, like snow before the Sun, than his promise can fail. Obj. True, but faith is fixed upon the new Covenant-promise, if I believe. Ans. Yea, but faith here is to believe, that the condition itself is promised, as well as the reward. Obj. The condition of a new heart and of faith is promised, but not to all, not to me, but to some few chosen only. Ans. There be here a number of errors. The errors in temptations which we create from surmises that we are not chosen to life eternal. 1. Unbelief foments' proud merit, that we are to believe as much of God promised, as there is conceived, to be worth in self, and in me to fulfil the condition; But true faith, contrare to self-unworthinesse, relies upon the Truth of God, the excellency of Christ, and the absoluteness of the promise. 2. Satan like a Sophist draws the dispute to the weakest conclusion from the strongest, to wit, from the promise of God, that is surer than heaven to the state, against which there is a greater number of Topick Arguments, than there can be against the promise of God. As 1. What am I? 2. Am I chosen or not? So Satan to Christ, if thou be the Son of God, command these stones to be made bread, in point of believing its better that faith expatiate in viewing God, Christ, the Ransom of the blood of God-Man, the depth of free grace, Better faith view God & Christ, as self. Unbelief quarrels at God, and but pretends self sinfulness. then upon self, and the state: in point of repenting and humble down-casting, we would read self, and our own estate. 3. It's Satan and the unbelieving heart that would have our faith's greatness rising from selfs' holiness, and goodness. Whereas the greatest faith that Christ finds, Mat. 8.10. looks away from self, v. 8. I am not worthy— and dwells much upon the Omnipotency of Christ in commanding diseases, as a Centurion his Soldiers. 4. When unbelief quarrels the Lord as untrue and weak, who faints and wearies, and one that is not the Creator of the ends of the earth, it alleges only and pretends self-guiltiness to justify unbelief: Yet Isa▪ 40.28. though God be reproached as weak, we seem to resolve all in this; our own unworthiness, but we cannot get our faith stately enough; and the truth is here, we quarrel with God and his decrees, under pretence of this, what if he have not chosen me? and I have no right to Covenant-mercies, except I take a Law-way to earn them, by fulfilling the condition. 5. When we believe a conditional promise (if I believe, How to believe conditional promises. I am saved) faith relies not fiducially upon the (if I believe) or upon the condition, It's a weak pillar to a sinner to stay his unquiet heart upon, to wit, his own believing, but faith rests upon the connexion (if thou believe thou shalt be saved) and it stays upon the connexion, as made sure by the Lord, who of grace gives the condition of believing, and of grace the reward conditioned, so that faith binds all the weight upon God only, even in conditional Gospel-promises. 1. Man is to be considered as a creature. 2. As such a creature, to wit, endued with reason and the Image of God, in either considerations, especially in the former all that are created, are obliged to do and suffer the will of God▪ though they never sinned. It's not enough to say, that Sun, Moon, Trees, Herbs, Vines, Earth, Beasts, Birds, and Fishes, cannot suffer the ill of punishment, which is relative to the break of a Law, for the whole Creation is subject to vanity for our sins, Rom. 8.20, 21. The Servant is smitten and sickened, for the Master's sake, and God may take from them what he gave them, their lives without sense of pain and dolour, for all beings, yea defects and privations are debtors to the glory declarative of God, Prov. 16.4. Rom. 11.36. yea and no beings are under this debt. God can serve himself of nothing, yea, that there are not created, Locusts, Caterpillars, more numerous, then that all the fruits of the earth can be food to them, Being's and not beings are debtors to the glory of God. Preach the Glory of the Lords goodness to man, and what are never to be, no less than all things, that have futurition, or shall come to pass either absolutely or conditionally, are under the positive decree of God, else we should not owe thanks to the Lord for many evils that never fall out, that the Lord turns away violent death, violence of men, and wild beasts, and many possible mischiefs, contrair to Deut. 28.11, 12. Leu. 26.6. Psal. 34.20, Psal. 91.5, 6, 7, 8. All not beings are under the positive decree of God And all these beings or no beings owe themselves to God to hold forth the glory of goodness, wisdom, mercy, justice, etc. suppone there had never been sin: Far more now, who wants matter of meditation, or can write a book of all the pains, a●kings, convulsions, pests, diseases that the Lord decreed to hold off? so that every bone, joint, lithe, hair, member, should write a Psalm Book of praises, Psal. 35.10. All my bones shall say, Lord, Who is like unto thee? Nor can any man write his debts of this kind. But we are little affected with the negatives of mercies, except we read them upon others, and little then also; Self-pain Preacheth little to us, far more▪ the borrowed experience of fallen Angels, of Sodom, of the old world, etc. leaves small impression upon stony spirits. 2. Complain not, that you have not that share of grace, another hath, if ye (you think) had it, you would be as useful to glorify God, as they, but ye know not yourself; swell not against him, that thou hast no grace, O vessel of wrath, thou owes that bit clay, and all thy wants to glorify his Justice. 3. My sickness, my pain, my bands owe themselves to God, and are debtors to his glory, I, and every one of men should say, O that my pain might praise him, and my hell, and flamings of everlasting fire, Our pains and sufferings are debtors to the glory of God. might be an everlasting Psalm of the Glory of his Justice; That my sorrow could sing the Glory of so High a Lord; But we love rather that he wanted his praise, so we wanted our pain. 3. God hath made a sort of natural Covenant with night and day, Jer. 31.35. For all are his servants, Psal. 119.91. that they should be faithful to their own natural ends to act for him, There is more self-denial in the lifeless and unreasonable creatures in their Covenant of nature, then in man. jer. 5.22. jer. 31.37. Psal. 104.1, 2, 3.4. and they are more faithful to their ends then men. Isa. 1.3. jer. 8.7. The ox and the ass being more knowing to their owner, and the swallow and the cran being more discerning of their times, than men are. 2. They so keep their line, that there is more self-denial in their actings, then in man's way: as if fire were not fire, and nature in it denied, the fire devours not the three Children, Dan. 3.27, 28 The Sun stands still, the Moon moves not, josh. 10.12, 13. The hungry Lions eat not Daniel, ch. 6.22. When the Lord gives a countercommand to them, and that is a clause in the Covenant, that the Lord entered with them, that they act or no act, as he shall be pleased to speak to them, John 2.10. Isa. 50.2. Mat. 8.16. It is a most humbling Theme, that an ass is more in denying nature, and the cran and the fire, than man, yea then a renewed man in some cases. 4. But if man be considered, as such a man, endued with the Image of God, and withal the Covenant be considered as such a Covenant, as is expressed in the Ten-Commandements, in which one of seven is a Sabbath to the Lord, it will be found that many positives Moral are in the Covenant of Works, that are not in natural Covenants. 5. So man must come under a threefold consideration. 1. As a creature. 2. As a reasonable creature. 3. As such a creature reasonable, endued with the image of God. In the first consideration, A threefold consideration of man in reference to a Covenant. man comes under the Covenant natural, common to all creatures; So is Peter's body carried above in the water as iron swims. 2. As a reasonable creature, he owes himself to God, to obey so far as the Law written in the heart carries him, to love God, trust in him, fear him. But this can hardly bear the name of a Covenant, except it be so called, in a large sense, nor is there any promise of life, as a reward of the work of obedience here. 3. But man being considered as endued with the Image of God, so the Holy God made with him a Covenant of life, The Covenant natural, & the Covenant in its positives of divers considerations. with Commandments, though positive and Moral, yet not deduced from the Law of Nature, in the strictest sense, as to observe such a Sabbath, the seventh from the Creation, the not eating of the forbidden tree, and with a promise of such a life. And therefore though Divines, as our solid and eminent Rollock, call it a Covenant natural, as it is contradistinguished from the supernatural Covenant of Grace, and there is good reason so to call it; Yet when it is considered in the positives thereof, it is from the free will of God, and though it be connatural to man, created according to the Image of God, yet the Covenant came so from the Lords wisdom and freewill, as he might have casten it in a new and far other frame: And it cannot be denied, though it be most suitable to man's entire nature to love God, yet to love him so and so, by obeying the command of not eating the fruit of the Tree of Knowledge, and some other Commands, is not so connatural, but God might have commanded the contrair, without any thing done contrair to man's nature. Yet from this it follows, no more that these are two Covenants, then that there be two Covenants of Grace, Because faith in God, and the Moral Law in an Evangelic way are therein commanded, and also some duties touching the seals by a positive Law are therein contained. CHAP. VII. It's not written in the heart of man by nature, that GOD should promise life eternal to man, upon condition of obedience. 2. And that the debt of Justice can not tie GOD. 3. GOD punisheth not sin, by necessity of nature. 4. Nor defends he his own declarative Glory by that necessity. 5. Nothing can be given to GOD all-sufficient. 6. No meriting of the creature. 7. We should have humble thoughts of freegrace. 8. How low thoughts of ourselves. 9 Promises make no strict justice between GOD and us. SUre, it is not repugnant to the yet innocent and entire nature of man, God neither by necessity of nature, either rewardeth obedience, or punisheth 〈◊〉. to know, that God may reward all such as seek and serve him, but that he must reward obedience either in the general, or so and so, is neither written in man's heart, nor hath it any truth: For it were nothing against justice, or bounty, or any attribute of God, not to reward his creature, which is obliged to serve him, and though there be a sort of quietness of conscience, which is the natural result of obedience in Adam, and of all men, yet it cannot infer, that there is an intrinsical connexion, ex naturâ rei, between our obedience and a reward to be given of God. Therefore, nor will it be a good inference, because there is disquietness in the conscience, after sin, and that it is natural to a sinner to apprehend a revenging power pursuing sin committed, that therefore it is natural an● essential to the Lord, to pursue sin with punishment in general. For a natural conscience may, and does know, that God doth freely create the world, and that he might not have created it, that he doth good freely to his creatures, and that he is not a debtor to his creatures; Will it follow by any Logic, that God creates the world by any natural obligation? A natural conscience may and doth know that GOD doth good freely to his creature, but it followeth not that God doth good to his creature for that by necessity of nature. And because by force of a natural conscience, all know that God is good and bountiful to his creatures, in giving▪ and doing good to them, we cannot therefore infer that actual beneficence is so essential to the infinite Majesty, as he should not be God, if he did not extend that goodness to them. Common sense will say no more followeth, but goodness and bounty intrinsecall are essential to God, and these attributes are essential to him, and were from eternity in him, and are his good and bountiful nature; Though not either man, Angel, or any thing else had been created, to which he doth actually extend his goodness. Ergo, this actual extension of goodness is not essential to God, so neither is the actual punishing of sin essential to God, but free, though Adam apprehended God would punish his eating of the forbidden tree; Yet if he apprehended that he should not be God, if he did not punish it, his apprehension was erroneous. And this only follows that there is an intrinsical and internal Justice in God, natural and essential in God, but so that the out-going of his Justice, the egressions are most free, and that is said by some without all reason, because the apprehensions we have naturally of God that he punisheth sin, Vniversales apprehensiones, nequaquam sunt eorum quae Deo vel adesse vel abesse possunt pro liberrimâ voluntate. Universal apprehensions, therefore they are not apprehensions of such things as may be, or not be in God, according to his free pleasure, if the apprehensions of Gods doing good to Angels, to men, to all his creatures freely, be in all by nature, and cannot be rooted out, and be universal, than these apprehensions cannot be of such things as are in God, according to his most free will, and may be in the Almighty or not be in him. But the conclusion hath neither reason nor sense; for there are universal apprehensions in all men, and they cannot be rooted out, that God does good to Angels, men, and creatures freely: Ergo; by this Logic the doing of good freely to Angels, men, and creatures is not a thing that is in God according to his freewill, and may be in the Almighty or not in him. Then the so doing must be in God essentially. 2. Then must God not be God, if he do not good freely to them. 3. Then must God not be God, except he create men, Angels, and creatures. 4. But since he is God everlasting, he must from everlasting have created men, Angels, and the creatures, and from everlasting he must punish sin; Life may be considered. 1. As life. 2. As such an excellent life, to wit, a communion with God. In the former consideration, life is either considered as the end, or secondly as a free reward. Communion with GOD in Glory, is a reward not due by nature, but by the free gift of GOD, to the most perfect law-obedience. In the former respect. To live an intellectual life in obeying God, was to Adam so created a connatural end, as to burn, is to fire, and to give light, to the Sun. And God may put the respect of a reward upon any obediential end. But that Adam should have such an eminent life, for the reward of his obedience as a communion with God, which is far above his obedience, is the free donation of God: nor is there any necessary connexion between Adam's perfect obedience, and so high and eminent a life, nor can this Covenant, as touching such a promise, be written in his heart. God than never loved to make any Covenant, yea even that of Works, without some acts and out-going of grace, and the hire was grace, how is he not to be served, who loves to hire and allure us to be happy? Arminius saith, the reward of keeping the Covenant of Works, cannot be spiritual, Arminius in Colla. cum Francis Junio, ad propos. ●2. pag. 547. nor can the punishment be spiritual, because you teach (saith he) that the obedience is natural. Ans. It followeth not, for the reward is spiritual, yea and supernatural from the free promise of God: It was, that God should recompense our natural obedience, coming from connatural principles, with so eminent a Crown as communion with God Creator, in a life of glory. And this came from no innate proportion between a natural work and supernatural reward; Otherwise we must say, first that there is such an intrinsical connexion ex naturâ rei between Adam's work and so high wages, as that glorious communion was, as the Lord could not but in justice, so have rewarded his obedience, except he would be unjust, but there is nothing in the creature, that can conclude, limit, or determine, his will 〈◊〉 wisdom, who is infinite. 2. It had been nothing against justice, if the Lord had followed Adam's obedience, with no reward at all; For man as a creature, owes himself to God, Anselmus de redemptione certe Domine, quia me fecisti debeo amori tuo meipsum totum, imo tantum debeo amori tuo plus quam me ipsum. Quantum tu es major me, pro quo dedisti teipsum & cui promittis teipsum. Anselm. Monolog. 40. quid enim summa bonitas retribuet ama●ti & desideranti se nisi seipsum. and as sweetly and pithily Anselm saith, as a redeemed one I owe myself and more than myself to thee, because thou gave thyself who art so far more than myself, for me, and thou promises thyself to me. Now God, who is more and greater than Adam, promised himself, to be enjoyed by Adam, if he should continue in obedience. For what can the highest goodness (sayeth he) give to one that loves it, but itself? 3. If God, of justice, give Adam life, Adam might compel God to pay, what he oweth him, else he should be unjust: But the creature can lay no necessity on the Creator, either to work without himself, nor can he cause him to will. No merit can won God, for he is greater nor our work. Bradward. de causa Dei lib. 1. c. 39 p. 343 lit. E. 4. The proper work of merit (saith great Bradwardine) and of him that works must go before the wages, in time, or in order of nature. And if the worker receive its operation, and working for wadge from God first, and by his virtue and help continue in operation and working, he cannot condignly merit at the hand of God, but is rather more in God's debt, after his working, then before his working, because he bountifully receives more good from God, then before, especially, because he gives nothing proper of his own to God, but gives to God his own good; But no man first acts for God, for God is the first actor and mover in every action, It is not just, that God should reward Adam's obedience, with life, before God made it just. and motion. As that saith, Who gave first to the Lord, and it shall be recompensed him? 5. If this was yesterday just, that life eternal is due to Adam for his work before God made it just and due, then from Eternity and before any decree of God it was just and due; Certainly, God, upon the same reason, was debtor, to make such a Covenant, that was just, before he made it just. And this is no Covenant of God, for God, not making the justice of the Covenant, and the ju●t connexion between work and wadge, he cannot be the Author of the Covenant: But neither is Adam the Author of the justice, nor of the just Covenant: Upon the same ground, it was then an everlasting justice without and before God from Eternity. Non datur justum prius primo justo. 6. If God did more for Adam, than he can recompense God for it, Man can never come from under an obligation to his Creator and Redeemer. as the Father hath done to the Son, than he could not merit at the hand of God: But God did more to Adam in giving to him being, faculties, mind, will, affections, power, habits, his blessed Image, than Adam can never be in a condition, in which he can recompense God, or give him more annual and usury, in his acting of obedience, than the stock was he received in proportion. As the Son can never give the Father, in recompense, so much or the captive ransomed from death, can never give to his ransom payer, who bought him so much, as the one and the other shall no more be under an obligation, and debt of love and service to father and ransomer▪ then to a stranger that they never knew: Nor could Adam thus be freed of God, so as he should be owing nothing to him. If any say, God may freely forgive all this obligation and debt: To which Bradwardine Answers well: 1. The forgiving of the debt, when the debtor hath nothing to pay is a greater debt taken on. 2. God (saith he) may forgive so in regard of actual obligation, that he is not obliged ad aliquid faciendum sub poena peccati, to do any thing under the pain or punishment of sin, as the hireling is obleiged to work, when he hath made a Covenant to work, and so we are not obliged to do, as much as we can for God. But in regard of habitual obligation, God cannot forgive the debt, that the reasonable creature owes to God, for so he might dispense with this, that the reasonable creature owe no obedience to God, suppose he should command it, which is impossible. They seem therefore, with eyes of flesh, to look upon God, who say that God by necessity of justice must punish sin, yea that the most High cannot be God, except he punish sin, and that he should not be God, if all his Laws imposed upon men, were only promissory and void of all threatenings. What? could not God have said, God falls in no sort from his natural dominion, though he punish not sin by necessity of nature. eat not of the tree of knowledge, for if ye eat not, your obedience shall be rewarded with life eternal, and no more? might he not have laid aside all threatening? What Scripture or reason teacheth to say, that God, if he create a reasonable creature, and under a moral dependency, which it hath and must have of God, then must God, by necessity of nature, punish the sinner, yea so as, if he punish not, he should not be God, nor just, but must fall from his natural dominion, except he make penal laws, and so he should not be God, except he say to Adam (if thou eat thou shalt die) or (shalt be punished for eating) but this is not proven by one word, except this, the reasonable creature is not, nor cannot be subject to God Creator, except God punish the sinner; But that is denied: Adam should have had a Moral dependence upon God, and God should have been God, and essentially just, if sin had never come into the World, and if God had kept Adam under a Moral Law, as he did the Elect Angels, who never felt or knew the fruit of a Moral Law broken and transgressed. And God, if he imposed any penal Law upon the Elect Angels as penal (which shall be an hard work to prove) yet had a natural dominion over the Elect Angels, God should have a perfect dominion over man, though he had imposed no penal, but only rewarding or remunerative laws, upon him. and suppose no Law, but only a rewarding and remunerative Law, had been over their heads, should God be no God, in that case? and if any deny, that God hath a perfect dominion over the Elect Angels, he is not worthy to be refuted. 2. Show me, in all the Old or New Testament, any penal Law of active obedienc● as penal, imposed upon the man Christ, or where is it written, If the Man Christ sin, he shall eternally die? I tremble at such expressions: Is the Lord therefore not the Lord, and hath the Lord fallen from his natural dominion over his Son, the Man Christ? Or (3) will any man deny, but the Lord might justly have laid upon all men and upon the Elect Angels a Law only remunerative, not penal at all, a Law only with the promise of a reward, and void of all threatening of death, first or second, or any other punishment, and yet he should have been the Lord, and had a natural dominion over Angels, the Man Christ, and all mankind? (3) Suppose the Lord had never imposed the Law penal forbidding the sin against the Holy Ghost, upon the Elect believers, nor any other penal Law, The Lord's dominion over man, is without Scripture or reason, restricted to penal Laws. but by virtue of the most sufficient ransom of the Blood of God paid for man, he had made them now after the fall▪ as the confirmed Angels, and holy as the Man Christ, and brought them so to glory, should he not have been God in that case, and should he have lost his natural dominion over men in that case? 4. The dominion of God over men is not only in one particular, of penal Laws, it is in remunerative Laws also, in giving predeterminating influences to obey and persevere in obedience, Si enim lex talis non seratur necessariò, possibile esset ut vel Deus jure suo naturali & Dominio in creaturas caderet, & sic non esset DEUS, vel stabilito isto jure, creaturam ci non esse subditam. Quod implicat contradictionem— nam intercisâ obedientiâ (quod fieri potuit & factum est) dependentia (moralis creaturae rationalis à Deo) illa nullo modo continuari potest, nisi per poenam 〈◊〉. in not leading into temptation, in hiring and alluring us to serve God, in terrifying men with examples of the Lords Judgements on others, he spared not the Angels, etc. 2 Pet. 2.4. Jud. 6. and therefore, to say, that God falls from his natural dominion over man, and leaves off to be God, except he impose penal Laws upon men, is first an error in Logic, à negatione speciei ad negationem generis, nulla est consequentia: If God have not a dominion over man, in one particular of penal Laws, he falls from his whole dominion natural, in other things: It is an undue inference. 2. It cannot be but too daring to tie the blessed Godhead, and his essential dominion over man, to only making of penal Laws: it smells of Scripturelesse boldness with the most High, and limits the Holy One, that he cannot be God, except he be God in our way: And saith, he hath no way to preserve his glory, but by creating a Hell: And therefore let that stand as an unproven position, since it hath no probation; The reason that is given is as weak as the weak conclusion; Though water may bear up water, yet it cannot support the earth. For 1. it saith, if man be created a reasonable creature under a Law, he may sin, intercidi potuit obedientiâ, and he may be created under a Law, with perfect moral dependence upon God Creator, as the Elect Angels and the Man Christ, and yet never sin, and yet God falls not from his dominion, and leaves not off to be God. (2.) This looks somewhat the Arminian way, that man cannot be under the subjection of, properly so called, Moral obedience, except his will be indifferent as adam's was, to stand or fall, to run to Heaven or Hell, which indeed saith, that the most perfect obedience of Christ, who was obedient to the death, Phil. 2.8. and delighted to do the will of God, Psal. 40.8. John 4.34. is no proper obedience, that is, perfect obedience is not proper obedience. And that obedience of Elect Angels the sampler of our obedience, Mat. 6.10. Isa. 6.2, 3. Psal. 103.20. is not proper obedience. 3. Whereas it is said, if man sin, his moral dependency cannot stand, except God punish him, but so not only God shall not be God, nor have dominion over man, except he impose a penal Law upon man, but he shall not be God except he actually punish man, or his surety Christ. Jam ver● egressus necessarios constituentes, non negamus Deum tamen eam libere exercere. But the same pen saith that the out-going of justice are free, that is to say, it is free to God to punish sin; and yet he falls from his natural dominion over man, and leaves off to be God, if he punish not sin. But we do deny that God falls from his natural dominion over man, though he never impose a penal Law upon him, and never punish, and desire that this may be proven, nor is it imaginable, how God by necessity of nature, must punish sin; And yet, in the way, measure, and degree of punishment, and in the time when, he can use moderation. It's not feasible, without a contradiction, to say God punisheth sin, by necessity of nature, and yet in the way, measure, and time of punishing, he is free. Which is as good as to say, the fire must, by necessity of nature, burn, the Sun cast light; But the fire hath free will to burn when it pleaseth, and at this time, and not at this time; and the Sun must shine, by necessity of nature, but it is free to shine at ten hours of the day, and not at twelve, and it may shine as bright as the Sun, or as dim as the Moon. Or God the Father loves himself, but it is free to him to love himself to day, not to morrow, and to love himself so much, not so much. And so he may say, God is so merciful and just to day, as he may be no merciful, no just, to morrow; and God is infinitely merciful and just, and yet he is less merciful and more merciful essentially according to his good pleasure, which are speaking contradictions. Yea this is that which misjudging Suarez saith, that the creature may do a real injury to God, Suarez in opusc. de justit. Dei, Sect. 2. 〈◊〉. 9 fig. 352. and take away from God jus Dei ad gloriam, his right to glory, but the truth is, the creature by sin darkeneth or overcloudeth his declarative glory, but can take away no essential glory, nor any real right or real good from God, so Elihu, Job 39.6. If thou sinnest, what dost thou against him? If thy transgressions be multiplied, what dost thou to him? To take his declarative glory from God, is no lose to him, no more than it is lose to the Sun, that ye hinder it to shine upon the wall, when yet ye take no light from the Sun, for it shines upon an interposed body. Job 35.8. Thy wickedness may hurt a man as thou art, and thy righteousness may profit the Son of man. It is needful (say some) that God preserve his own glory safe, but if sin be without infliction of punishment, it is impossible that he can defend his ow● glory. Ergo, of necessity he must punish sin. The proposition is out of controversy, for all confess that God must preserve his own glory, 〈◊〉 by necessity of nature he must do so; quoniam seipsum non potest non amare. Because he cannot but love himself, and he hath said, my glory will I not give to another. God loves & defends by necessity of nature his essential, but not his declarative glory. To this is answered, the glory internal, eternal, and essential to God, the Lord must defend and love as he loves himself, by necessity of nature; and if any say that the egressions and out-going of God to defend and love his own essential Glory, and his own holy Nature, so as he may use moderation in the degrees and time of these, and he may love himself and his own essential glory, more or less, and touching the time, he may delay to love himself, and he may love himself and his own essential glory to morrow, not to day, As the Author says, the out-going of revenging justice are moderated in punishing; he speaks wonders and things unworthy of God. The place, Isa. 42. speaks not of this glory, for no idol, no creature, God loves & defends the glory of his pardoning mercy, no less than the glory of his revenging justice, and if he love the one, by necessity of nature, he must also love the other. can more take away from the Almighty this essential glory of God, nor his blessed Nature can cease to be, but there is a glory declarative of pardoning mercy, as well, as of revenging justice; It must be a carnal conception and a new dream, that God by necessity of nature, loves himself as clothed with revenging justice, or as just, and his own glory of revenging justice, but that God loves himself as merciful and ready to forgive, or his own glory of pardoning mercy freely, and by no necessity of nature: Which the Author must say, for the place, Isa. 45. should otherwise bear this sense, my glory of revenging justice only, I will not give to Idol gods and creatures. But the place of Isa. ch. 42.8. should not conclude, but they might ascribe the glory of salvation and merciful deliverances and victories over Judah, the Temple, the Sanctuary to their idol gods, the contrair whereof is intended by the Prophet; But if the Lord, by necessity of nature, The place, Isa. 42.18. I will not give my glory to another, vindicated. love his declarative glory, as he loves himself, than he must love glory of one attribute, as well as of another, and so as his Nature, not freedom or sovereignty puts him to it, to defend the glory of justice, when man sins; Yea so as he cannot be God and essentially just, except he vindicat his glory of justice; Yea so he must love the glory of saving and pardoning mercy, as himself, for the one glory is no less essential to God (if it be essential at all) than the other. And by this means, God, by necessity of nature, to preserve safe the glory of saving mercy, must send his Son, and by the like necessity, by which he loves himself, he must redeem man; Now the Lord does not love himself, of free grace, for he every way, for the infinite excellency of his Nature is loveworthy, and there is no interveening of freedom, or free grace, or sovereignty in the Lords loving of himself and his own essential glory. There is a declarative glory, which is not essential to God, of which the Scripture, Prov. 16.4. The Lord made all things for himself, The Scripture speaks for the most part, of the Lords declarative glory. that is, for his glory, to be declared. Eph. 1.6. He hath chosen us to the praise of the glory of his grace, v. 11. In Christ we have obtained an inheritance. 1●. That we should be to the praise of his glory. Rom. 11.36. All things are to him, to his glory. Isa. 43.21. This people have I form for myself, they shall show forth my praise. All these are to be understood not of the essential glory of God, but of the declarative glory of God, that shines ad extra. God by necessity of nature, should procure his declarative glory, and so by that necessity, create the world, redeem man, if by that necessity, he should love and defend his declarative Glory. And this glory is not essential to God as so declared, for he was infinitely glorious from eternity, and should eternally be essentially glorious, though neither world, nor man, nor Angel, had been created. And the meaning of that, Isai. 42.8. is mistaken, the length of the Heaven, toto Coelo. It is not this, as I love myself, so by necessity of nature I will, and desire that my glory due to me, as God, be not given to idol gods, and creatures. 1. What by necessity of nature God wills, that certainly, and by necessity of nature is and existeth, as he loveth himself, and his Son by necessity of nature, and begets his Son by necessity of nature, so also by necessity of nature God is loved, and the Son of God is loved, and the Son is by necessity of nature, begotten of the Father. But it is most untrue, that by necessity of nature, the Glory of God is not transferred to Idol gods and creatures; The Scriptures cry the contrare. When ever Idolatry is committed, Isa. 40. and 41. Isa. 46. Rom. 1. Acts 17. his Glory declarative is given, most sinfully to another against his approving will. 2. What ever sin God forbids, he forbids the existence of it, by his approving will, not by necessity of nature, for if God essentially and by nature willed that sin and Idolatry should never be, he would efficaciouslie hinder it; But what God wills by his commanding will, we see he does not efficaciouslie hinder the existence thereof: For then sin and Idolatry should not be at all, nor have any existence, which is contrare to Scripture and experience; And surely, if God love his declarative Glory essentially as himself, he must essentially no less love to keep this glory, when Angels and men do obey him, and to hinder the taking away of this Glory by sin, then to revenge the taking away of this glory by punishment, for every sin against a positive Law, to eat of the tree of knowledge, or for the Jews to eat swine's flesh, before Christ abolished such Laws, as well as sins against the Law of nature, are contrare to the Glory of God, God must by necessity of nature hinder the existence of sin, and by the same necessity seek his legislative Glory, if he love it, as he loves himself by necessity of nature. and so contrare to that essential love that God hath to his Glory, and to the Glory of the Lord, the Lawgiver himself, Ergo, by necessity of nature, because he cannot but love himself. he should preserve his legislative Glory, (it is as properly and essentially the Glory of God, which he requires of us, in doing his will, as the Glory of suffering punishment for sin committed, is his Glory) therefore, by necessity of nature, because God cannot but love himself, he should essentially hinder sin: And if God absolve the guilty, where is the Glory of his justice? True, it should be lost, so when God suffers the Angels to fall, and Adam to sin, where is the Glory of his legislative Majesty? it is lost so far. God is obliged to defend the Glory of his Justice: say and prove that he is obliged by necessity of nature to defend the Glory of his Justice, more than by the same necessity he must defend his legislative Glory. 3. God must defend all his Glory with the same necessity, except the Scripture make some exception of some Glory which he must preserve, as dearer to him then some other Glory, which is unwarrantable to say, and if God must, by necessity of nature, and as God, because naturally he loves himself and his own Glory, defend his own Glory, then, by necessity of nature he must defend the Glory of all his Attributes, of Holiness, graciousness, Greatness, Omnipotency, Eternity, Infinite knowledge, etc. that the Glory of not one of these be taken from him by sin: And because the Lord maketh, and worketh all, that he doth without himself, in the creature, for his own Glory. Prov. 16.4. Rev. 4.11. Rom. 11.36. in all that he doth, he must by necessity of nature love his own Glory, quoniam seipsum non potest non amare, because he loves himself. Ergo, by this ground the Lord doth nothing freely without himself, and so the Lord makes not the rain to fall, the tree to bud, the sea to ebb, the wind to blow, the fowls to flee, the fishes to swim, for the declaration of the Glory of his goodness, or his power, or his mercy, his holiness, with any freedom, but all these he must do for Glory to himself by necessity of nature, which Glory he loves as himself, for his Glory in all he doth without, he loveth by necessity of nature, as he loves himself saith the Author. And therefore as he cannot preserve the Glory of his Justice, but by punishing sin, and that by necessity of nature, so he cannot preserve the Glory of the rest of all his Attributes (which Glory also he loves as himself) but by doing all without himself in like manner by necessity of nature, which utterly destroys the liberty and freedom of God in all his works of Providence and Creation, and so God shall be a natural agent in all his works without himself, God might never have intended his glory declarative because if so it had pleased him, he might never have made the world. not a free agent in Creating and Redeeming. 4. The Scripture says, he works all things according to the counsel of his will, for his Glory, and therefore he intends not his own declarative Glory as he loves himself: For by necessity of nature he loves himself, and cannot but love himself. But he might, if so it had pleased him, never have intended to show forth his own Glory, and does not show it forth by necessity of nature as he loves himself. Yea he might never have created the world, never have acted without himself: For he was sufficient within himself and stood in need of no declarative Glory: Gen. 17.1. Acts 17.25. 5. Yea if by necessity of Justice, God cannot but punish sin, especially this justice shall carry him to follow the Law of Works without any Gospel moderation, which is that the same person that sins, and the same soul, Ezek. 18. and no other, If God punish sin, by necessity of justice, he must punish Adam and all his sons in their persons, & by necessity of justice, deny them a Saviour. should die for sin: for all these. Thou shalt destroy all the workers of iniquity. Thou art of purer eyes than that thou can behold iniquity, and the like, are expressions of a pure legal proceeding in the Lord, against such as are out of Christ, under the Law, not under the Gospel, to wit, the workers of iniquity whom the Lord in justice shall punish in their person, not in their surety. And if there be such a connexion objective ex naturâ rei, between sin and punishment, it must be between punishment and the very person and none other, but the same that sinned: For among men this is justice. Noxa sequitur caput, so that by necessity of nature, God shall not be God, nor essentially just, if he punish not eternally Adam and all mankind in their own persons, and so by necessity of justice, he cannot punish Christ; And it cannot be denied but there is a dispensation of free Grace, and that it is no act of Justice but of Grace, that God make Christ sin, i. e. a sacrifice for sin for us, 2 Cor. 5.21. And that the Lord laid upon him the iniquities of us all, Isa. 53.6. and made him our surety. Nor let any man object, how could God make Christ a propitiation for sin to declare his righteousness? Or how could such justice, by that action be debarred? since justice did not exact such an action: If without violation of justice it might have been omitted, if God should have been infinitely just from Eternity, if he had done no such thing? Shall a Prince get himself glory in the name of justice, by doing that which, by his absolute Sovereignty, he may leave undone without hurt of justice. The necessity of declaring the righteousness of God in either punishing the sinner Adam, or the surety Christ, makes not God to punish, by necessity of nature. It is Answered, this is to measure God by mortal men: Shall an earthly father freely for no real good to himself beget hundreds of children, when he needs not, and yet he foresees the largest number of them shall perish eternally, and the eldest must die and be made a curse, to save the rest. The Lord punished Christ for us to declare the glory of his Justice in punishing sin in his own Son, who was the sinner by imputation, for out of the depth of infinite wisdom, the Lord freely imposes a law upon his creatures: He might have imposed no such law under such a punishment. By no necessity of nature did the Lord threaten death, for the eating the fruit of that tree, prove, that God should not have been God, except he had threatened death for the eating of that fruit, and except he had punished that eating with death, either to be inflicted upon the eater or his surety. Quid haeres? Prove that by the Word of God, it is sin to eat, when God forbids; but the Lords soul hates sin. True, but does the Lord's soul hate sin naturally, as he loves himself and by necessity of his essential justice as contradistinguished from his immutability, and his truth and faithfulness, according to which attributes, he decreed and said, that the soul that sins shall die, and (he that eats shall die) and he cannot change, nor alter, what he hath decreed, and cannot but be true in his threatenings. But the Question is, whether (laying aside the respect of God's unchangeableness and truth) there be such a connexion internal, between eating and dying, or between eating forbidden of God, and punishment, as God cannot be equally and essentially just, nor can he be God, except he punish forbidden eating; for sure eating of that fruit, is not of its nature, sin, but it is sin, from the only forbidding will of God, for the Lord had been no less essentially just, had he commanded Adam to eat of the Tree of Knowledge. Ergo, it is punished from the forbidding will of God, for say that to be punishable or to be punished be essential to sin, if eating of such fruit be sin from the forbidding will of God, the essence thereof must be from the same forbidding will, then must it follow that God hates not all sin, by necessity of nature; And that he hates such eating only conditionally, if he forbid it; but 〈◊〉 from his mere free will, did forbid it. So the Question shall not be, whether God in justice, punished Christ, and made him a propitiation to declare his justice, but what the relative justice ad extra is, by which God punisheth sin, and whether God should leave off to be God (hallowed be his high Name) if he should not make first penal Laws to threaten all sin with punishment. 2. Whether he should not be God, if he should not punish all sin, even the eating of the forbidden tree. The glory of God, & the manifestation of his glory to Angels and Men, are much different. 3. What can be said that is more weak and watery, to enervat the glory of free Grace, then to confound the Glory of God's Justice in giving Christ to die for sinners, and this glory as manifested and declared: For sure the manifestation of that glory is a work of free Grace, and most free, if God do any thing freely, he must freely, and by no necessity of Justice, Mercy, Omnipotency, Patience, Grace, etc. manifest the glory of all these to men and Angels, Declared glory and fundamental glory are different. and these attributes and the internal splendour, beauty, or (to speak so) the fundamental glory of all the attributes of God is essential to God, and his very Nature. And they deny the Lord, who teach that any attributes or such glory are in God freely or contingently (if I durst so speak) for then might we say, these may go and come, ebb and flow in the Lord, and he should be God, though Mercy, Omnipotency, gloriousness, graciousness, were now and then wanting in him, as he punishes not always, and yet he is eternally just, he saves not always, and yet he is eternally mighty to save, and abundant in compassions. but as to the manifestation of Power, Mercy, Justice, that is freely in God: He sent his Son, and gave his Son to death for us, out of love, john 3.16. But it is against common sense, to infer, Ergo, God sent his Son, by necessity of love, and mercy, and free Grace. So that he should not have been infinitely loving, merciful, gracious, if he had never sent him. And it is as poor Logic to say, because of grace and free-love he sent his Son, and so might not have sent him, as to say he loved where there was no need, Qualis enim amor iste esse potest, quem in ea re, qua nihil opus fuit, DEUS ostendit? & it is in vain to show the glory of Justice (saith the Author) when God can take away sin, out of free-pleasure, and why should he expose his Son to shame, death, and a curse, whereas he might have taken away sin freely, because it is his pleasure? This is the very thing that Socinians say, there is no need of blood, and satisfaction by blood, if God out of his absolute Sovereignty can take sin away without blood, and so there was no need of real satisfaction; The freedom of punishing sin is objected by Socinus, as contrair to the necessity of real satisfaction. This is against the Holy Ghost, and we may hear it. All the Scriptures cries that out of free grace the Lord sent his Son, and delivered him to death; By the grace of God He tasted death for every man, Heb. 2.9. Shall we infer there was then no necessity that he should die? It is safest to say the only wise God decreed that sin should be. 2. That the glory of his Justice should appear in taking away sin, not in our way, but in the way of God, to wit, in a way of justice, of mercy, of free grace, in incomparable love, of mighty power; and in all these so acts the Lord as he should not leave off to be the Lord, but acts most freely, though he had not taken that course. But far be it from the godly not to adore him in this, as the admirable way beyond the thoughts of men and Angels. It were safest to draw holy practices by way of use from this. Grace and the measure of it is to be humbly looked on. In all pactions between the Lord and man, even in a Law-Conant there is some out-breaking of Grace. It's true, there was no Gospel-Grace, that is a fruit of Christ's merit in this Covenant. But yet if grace be taken for undeserved goodness: There are these respects of grace. 1. That God might have given to Adam something inferior to the glorious Image of God, that consists in true righteousness, knowledge of God, and holiness, Gen 1.26. Eph. 4.24. Col. 3.10. It was a rich enough stock, this holy Image to be so badly guided. And who looks spiritually to their receipts? It's either too much of grace and holiness that another hath, and too little that I have, so arises virtual sighing and grudging at the dispensation. Or 2. a swelling that it is so much, as if it were not receiving. I am holier than thou, Isa. 65.5. a miskenning of him that makes me to differ, 1 Cor. 4.7. A blecking of others, Luk. 18.11. A secret quarrelling at God as too strike and hard in his reckoning, Mat. 25.24. And what pride is this, because I am a mere patient under gifted holiness, to usurp it as mine own? As if a horse should kick and fling, because he wears a borrowed saddle of silk for a day. 2. Being and dominion over the creatures is of undeserved goodness. Who looks to a borrowed body and a borrowed soul, Being, life, and self▪ are undeserved favours. yea and to self, and to that which is called I, as to a thing that is freely gifted? So that though thou be in an high opinion of self, self is self, and what it is, from God. And when thou rides, whence is it that I am the rider, and the wearied horse the carrier, but from God? 3. The Covenant of Works itself, that God out of Sovereignty does not command, is undeserved condescending; that God bargains for hire, do this and live, whereas he may bide a Sovereign Lawgiver and charge and command us, is overcoming goodness. Law is honeyed with love, and hire; it is mercy that for our penny of obedience, It is mercy that GOD rewards our obedience. so rich a wadge as communion with God is given. 4. The influences to acts of obedience, come under a twofold consideration. 1. As congruous and suitable concurrences of God to Adam's acts of obedience: And so they were free gifts to Adam not promised, as we shall hear in the New Covenant. 2. As such influences by which the standing Elect Angels (who were under this Covenant as well as Adam) were differenced from the Angels that fell, An admirable sovereignty in the standing of Angels and in the fall of man. and were confirmed that they should not fall, in this latter respect. Absolute Sovereignty shines in Adam's fall, so if a Sparrow cannot stir its wing without God, Mat. 10.29. nor a hair fall from our head, ver. 30. far less could Adam fall, and all his, without a singular providence; And far less could Adam go on and act without influences from God. And if strong Adam and upright, created in holiness, could not then stand his alone; Shall our clay legs now under the fall bear us up? What Godly trembling is required in us? Gifts and habits of saving grace cannot keep creatures on foot. 5. The gift of Prophecy, Gen. 2.23. seems to be freely given, besides the Image of God, and Adam's knowledge, Gen. 2.19. of every living creature, according to their nature may be proven, but it appears to be natural, and he is a lamentable example to us of abusing the Image of God, and good gifts; But no habit without the continued actings of God can keep us in a course of obedience: There is no ground to make habits of grace our confidence. 3. There can be no giving and taking between the creature and the Creator. Elihu pleads well for him, Job 35.7. If thou be righteous what gives thou to him? Or what receiveth he of thy hand, v. 1. Thy wickedness may hurt a man, as thou art, and thy righteousness may profit the Son of man. The humbling thoughts that God needs not men, nor their service, nor any creature, should take us up. Job 22.2. Can a man be profitable unto God, as he that is wise may be profitable to himself? Is it pleasure to the Almighty that thou art righteous? Or is it a gain to him that thou makest thy ways perfect? So Eliphaz. And David, Psal. 16.2. My goodness extendeth not to thee. Acts 17.25. Neither is the Lord worshipped with men's hands, nor with their spirits: as if he needed any thing, seeing he giveth to all life & breath and all things. What then is the glory of the creatures obedience to him? It is some shining of the excellency of God upon men and Angels, from the works of God, and our obedience to him. But suppose there were no creature to pay the rent of this glory to him, is the Lord a loser therefore? Hath he need of our songs of glory? Or that creatures should be Heralds of his praise? Or needs he the workmanship or structure of Heaven, Sun and Moon to be a Printed Book to spell and sound his glory? If he need not the Book (as he needeth nothing created. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Who sayeth I am the Lord all-sufficient) he needs not one letter, nor any sense of the Contents of the Chapters of that Book. There is a secret carnal notion of God in us, when we act and suffer for God, that brings a false peace, Secret in us after actings of Grace. and some calms of mind, we have pleased him once, and beside that peace, a scum and a froth smokes up unsensible in the heart, we are profitable to God, it would be the worse with him, if he wanted our prayers and service: but had the Lord any missing of Heaven and of Angels and Men, in these infinite and innumerable ages of duration, that went before any created being? When he was upon these infinite and self-delighting thoughts, solacing himself in that infinite substantial fairness and love his Son Christ, Prov. 8.89.30. No creature can give to God (2.) You can give nothing to God Creator of all, but it must be either an uncreated Godhead, but he who perfectly possesseth himself, will not thank you for that, or your gift most be a created thing: But how wide is his universal dominion? can you give to one that, of which he was absolute Lord before? all the Roses are his, all the Vineyards, all the Mountains, he is the owner of the South and the North, of the East and the West, and infinite millions of possible Worlds, beyond what Angels and all Angels can number, for eternity of ages, are in the bosom of his vast Omnipotency; He can create them if he will. And what ye give to another, it was out of his dominion, but all things are in his dominion, for who spoilt him of what he had? David blessed the Lord, when the people gave for the Temple, excusing himself and the people, that they took on them to give to the great Lord-giver: 1 Chro. 29.11. Thine, O Lord, Reason's why none can give to GOD from that excellent passage of David, 1 Chro. 29. 1● 12. is the greatness, and the power and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty, for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is thine, thine is the Kingdom, O Lord, and thou art exalted as head above all. vers. 12. Both riches and honour come of thee, and thou reignest, and in thy hand it is to make great, and to give strength unto all. 14. But who am I, and what is my people, that we should be able, so willingly, to offer after this sort? for all things come of thee, and of thine own have we given thee. Hence, none can give to Gd. 1. Because he is JEHOVAH the Eternal God, than he gives all and nothing can be given to him. 2. Because of the greatness and infiniteness of God. Giving is an adding to him, to whom we give. But nothing can be added to him, for thine is the greatness, the power, and the majesty. 3. Nothing can be given to him who is universal and full Lord and Possessor of heaven and earth, and all things therein, for all that is in the heaven &c▪ are thine. 4. Nothing can be given to him, who is so Lord, that he is exalted as Head, Prince and King, above all created Kings, and their dominions over their own. 5. But all the goods of the Subjects are the Princes, or the Commonwealths. The Jurists distinguish as the Schoolman Theod. Smising, Tom. 1. de Deo, tractat. 3. disp. 4. q. 5. fig. 65. a twofold jus, What dominion the state or community hath over private men. jus altum & jus bassum: The Prince and Commonwealth, have a sort of eminent right to the goods of the Subjects, to dispose of them for the public good, as they may demolish a castle belonging to a private man in the frontiers of the enemy's land, because it hurts the country, and may be better made use of by enemies against them for the country; And they may compel him to sell it, but this hinders not, but every Subject hath a dominion and right to his own goods, to use them at his pleasure, which the Prince cannot do. Ahab the King hath no right nor dominion over the vineyard of Naboth to compel him to sell it or give it against his will to his Prince; For the earthly Prince, nay the man himself, the just Proprietor before men cannot bear that, so as it may be said of God, vers. 12▪ both riches and honour come of thee, and thou reignest over all: For God created the being of gold and of every thing, that we can give to God, which no earthly Prince can do. 6. Nothing can be given to him, in whose hand is power and might, and to make great and to give strength: For 1. Riches and things we give are of him. 2. Power, might and strength to give, either Physical, to bear a burden to his house: Or, 2 Moral, a willing mind and heart to give is in his hand: Or, 3. A mixed power, the being of the act of giving is his. v. 7. Of thine own we give thee. Can we give to any that which is his own already? Can ye give to a Crowned King over such a Kingdom his own Crown? Can ye give to the righteous owner of his own lands, his own Garden, and his own vineyard, in gift? but every being created is the Lords. 8. Saith David, v. 15. We are strangers before thee, and sojourners as all our fathers were: And that saith, the Lord is the only Heritor, and we but Tenants at will, and strangers both fathers and sons, though for five hundreth or a thousand years' fathers and sons have lineally and in heritage before men possessed such lands: yet before thee (saith he) we and our fathers have but Tennent-right, and are strangers from thee. And what can a mere stranger to life and being give to the just Heritor and Lord of life and being? 9 And our days (saith David) on the earth are as a shadow, and there is none abiding life, and being is a shadow of being, and God is the only first excellent being: and suppose we should give life and being to and for him, it is but a borrowed shadow that we give him; And we are not lords of our own being, we have not absolute right over ourselves to give ourselves to him. If Do●g will not give himself to God, and act for God, Psal. 51.2. Such as refuse to give self for God, shall be plucked out of their place. God shall take thee away and pluck thee out of thy dwelling place, and root thee out of the land of the living. Job 27.21. the east wind of God carrieth him away, and as a storm hurleth him out of his place. Ye shall bestow life and being worse than upon God. God shall make mortar of thee, O fool! who makes a god of borrowed I, great I and poor Nothing-self: Nay if there be a Pronoun in thee O let it be this: Oh if my separation from Christ and the blotting ●f my name out of the Book of Life, and my heaven might be a footstool to heighten the glory, the high glory of the Lord in the salvation of many. The unity of such as boast of the proud pronouns, my, and self. 2. This Pronoun self and mine is a proud usurper against God. Was he not an Atheist or a churl, and his name folly, who said, 1 Sam. 25.11. and breathed out so many my's? Shall I take my bread and my waters, and my flesh which I killed for my hearers, and give it to men whom I know not whence they be? And he was as mad a fool who thus speaks, Isa. 10.13. By the strength of my hand have I done it, and by my wisdom, for I am prudent: & I removed the bounds of the people— 14. And my hand hath found as a nest the riches of the people, and as one gathereth eggs that are left, so have I gathered all the earth, and there was ●one that moved the wing, or opened the mouth, or peeped. This 〈◊〉 the fool-axe boasting against him that heweth with it. And another fool said: Make an agreement with me by a present, and come out to me, Isa. 36.16. And this mad-nothing is above God, chap. 37.10. Let not thy God in whom thou trustest deceive thee. The Tyrant of Egypt, the great Dragon that lieth in the midst of the river said, My river is mine own, and I have made it for myself, Ezek. 29.3. God made the Sea and all the Rivers. There be three Pronouns in the mouth of another proud Monarch, Dan. 4.30. And the King spoke and said, Is not this great Babylon that I have built for the house of the Kingdom, by the might of my power and the honour of my Majesty? So soon as there falls from the great Lord of being a chip or shadow of created being, especially where being is rational and under a Law, there follows and results (the Lord withdrawing) a proud supposed I and a vain conceit of self, Created sinless self, is to be denied. and a dream of Godhead comes in with borrowed being; And therefore created sinless self is to be denied. Adam denied not himself and thought in his sick imagination he should be like God knowing good and evil, Gen. 3. Christ the more excellent Adam pleased not that noble self, Rom. 15.3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. He denied himself as man, as a gracious mere man, to be God or more than a man. And this self-denial is in elect Angels, who blush and are sinlesly ashamed of self, and cover their faces with wings before shining Infiniteness of Glory, and proclaim him thrice Holy, holy, holy, Isa. 6.2, 3. And who knows not we own grace as our own? my prayers, my faith, my holiness, my tears, as if grace had a relish from self, not from God: but Paul, 1 Cor. 15.10. Not I, but the grace of God (not my grace in me) that was with me, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 4. But is there no paction between GOD and the creature? Surely we must say that the covenant between GOD and Adam is of another nature, yea and promises also, than these that are between man and man; The Covenant between God and man is of a far other nature, than the Covenant between man and man. for there is proper giving and taking betwixt the creature. 2. The proper covenants between man and man require that both parties be free and independent one of another, there may intervene a jus, a right and a debt upon the promissor to him to whom the promise is made. Omne promissum ex ore fideli cadit in debitum. Jurists say there is no proper binding Covenants between the father and the son, the lord and the servant; for the son and the servant are not lords of themselves nor sui juris. The father by no paction can remove the foundation of the debt of nature that the son oweth to the father: for impossible it is, but if such a man be son to such a man, but he owe to his father as to an instrument, quod sit & vivat, being and living, and the son can not satisfy by paying the father for that sum, and the father can not cancel the band nor give him an acquittance. Far less can any recompense the Lord for life and being. The fallen Angels and damned in hell and all wicked men are in the Lord's Compt-book everlasting debtors to him for being. But God who is more than a Father (to whom men are but painted fathers) may thus far lose the bond, as he may command the son to sacrifice the father, as well as once he commanded the father Abraham to offer up his son to God. But God cannot resign his right that he hath over the creature to a creature, because he cannot leave off to be Creator, and so cannot lay aside or make over Creator-right, jus Creatoris, to any. God cannot quite or part with Creator-right & universal dominion over all things that may be given, and therefore nothing can be given to him. 2. Say that a creature had a jus or right over the Creator, it is either an uncreated right or a created right, so to pursue God by Law, as to cause him do him justice; it cannot be an uncreated right; for that were near to blasphemy: For no created head can bear the royal Crown of the King of Ages. If it be a created right, this created right must be under the dominion of him who is universal Lord of all: then may the Lord make use of it at his pleasure; then may not the man make use of it at his pleasure: for an absolute dominion of one and the same thing cannot be in the hands of two absolute Lords, who may have contradictory desires concerning the same thing: such as the holy Lord and sinful men often are. Let us correct the bold plead and the daring charges that our vain hearts put upon the Lord: Why dost thou strive against him (saith Elihu, Job 33.13.) for he gives not account of any of his matters? Men dare say, when they are under the vengeance of ordinary sufferings, The ways of the Lord are not equal, Ezek. 33.10. If our transgressions and our sins be upon us, and we pine away in them, how shall we then live? But upon whom should sins and transgressions and the punishment thereof be, We are not to strive with the gracious Lord. if not upon the carcases of the Authors? Will ye raise letters to summoned him? Where is the judge? Where is the Tribunal? But he promised so and so; But this is not the Question of strict justice: that saith something against the veracity and faithfulness of God, but nothing against the justice. But neither doth a promise as a promise raise a plea of unjustice against the holy and glorious Lord, suppose he should not fulfil his promise. For 1. A paction by promise creates no equality of justice between thing and thing, between wage and work: otherwise he that is called to the Vineyard, and labours from the third hour, hath a just plea: for he should have more wages than a penny, which he gets who labours but one hour. The Covenant, but not the proportion betwixt works and wage is the Lords rule in rewarding our labour, nor should we be gainers, if the Lord should so deal with us. But the Lord makes not the equality or proportion between much labouring for many hours, and the quantity and degree of the wage his r●le. But the Lord pleads the free Covenant for his standing rule. Mat. 20.13. Friend, I do thee no worng: didst thou not agree with me for a penny? And vers. 15. Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own? Hence read our sickly queroulus nature. 1. Naturally we argue from much working, and would conclude God, much running, long swea●ing, and pains in keeping the Covenant of Works should bind God, except he be unjust, to give me as many ounces and pound weights of Glory everlasting, as I have fasted moments, and told over prayers upon beads, and uttered sighs: Wherefore have we fasted and thou sees● not? We work and keep the Covenant of Works, but God pays us not our wage. Though it be a doubt to me, if the Covenant of Works had stooden, and Adam and all his had fulfilled it perfectly; if the Lord should weigh in an even balance, by ounce weights, our poor labour, and great reward of Glory, for had he entered such a market, the loss had been ours; we could not have obtained life eternal that way, for our stock of time-working should have dried up. There is a commutative and a distributive justice, between God & us, the former hath no place in the absolute Lord. The virtue of justice stands in the equality of that which is given and received. Now there is a twofold equality, one rei ad rem between thing and thing, ane Arithmetic justice, so many ounces of natural actings, and the same number of ounces of grace and glory: This commutative justice is not in God, as the soundest and learned'st School men teach. There is another justice of proportion duarum rerum ad duas alias res, of two things proportionally answering to two things, distributive justice is this, and it keeps a Geometrical proportion, Augustine with Scripture saith, God is become our debtor not by receiving any thing from us, August. serm. 16. de verb. Apostol▪ debtor nobis factus est Deus, non aliquid accipiendo, sed quod e● placuit promittendo. but by promising what he pleaseth. 2. It follows from the Parable, that Gods bargaining with us depends not upon the equality between thing and thing, the work and the wage; But upon his own free pleasure of disposing of his own: And it is the froathinesse of our nature to judge the penny of Glory, that we get by labouring to be our own, whereas after the promise, and after we have fulfilled the condition, it is not ours, but Gods, and he calls it his own, and it is to be disposed on by the Lord's freegrace. Friend, may not I do with mine own, what I please? Mat. 20.15. Glory is not our own after we have wrought for it. 2. No promise as a promise can give us a proper right, by way of strict justice, to plead with God. 1. A promise of grace is a free promise, and no man can say, because God promises the new heart to most undeserving men, that are of a stony heart, and do profane his holy name, amongst the Gentiles, that therefore it is just by condignity of the thing, A promise as a promise can give us no right of strict justice to any reward. that a new heart should be given to them, that are foolish, disobedient, and serving divers lusts. The farrest that hard faced Jesuits go in this, is to tell us of the poor penny of the merit of congruity, for the right weight of the sum and thousands of saving grace which Papists have refused as ashamed thereof. 3. If a promise as a promise should make an equality between one thing and another, and so lay a band of strict commutative justice upon God, then should every promise do the like, quod convenit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 convenit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, but that cannot be said: For then if God should promise glory of ten thousand millions of degrees above the glory that Angels and men now enjoy, for speaking one good word, that should be a free promise, but that promise should not make an equality between so huge and rich a reward of glory, and so hungry and poor a work as the speaking of a good word, so as God should fail of justice, if he should deny a reward so great, for so small a work: For the denying thereof should be against the veracity and faithfulness of God, if he should not fulfil his promise, but he should not fail against strict justice either in not rewarding the work with a condign reward, or in not giving to the man that spoke the good word his own. For there is no just equality between work and wage here. Nor can ever so feckless a work, or all the works of men and Angels, make the glory of life everlasting our own. For glory remains ever the proper gift of God, and under his dominion. 4. A promise is, by order of time or nature, latter and posterior to the good thing promised, as words of truth are latter to things, and things have the same valour and worth, before and after the promise, A promise being posterior to things promised, cannot alter the worth or value of things. yea if one promise to give for a plot of ground, a sum of money of value, five hundred times above the worth of that plot of ground, that promise can not make the unequal and unjust price to be a just and equal price. Even so the promise of God to give eternal life to the obedience of Adam can make no equality of strict justice between the reward and the wage; For the reward promised for the wages is equal and just before the promise, and ex naturâ rei; and so must lay bands on the Lord, so as he cannot do contrair unto it, which is against all reason. And who gave first to the Lord, and it shall be recompensed to him, None gave first to the Lord, men or Angels. and he that gave first to him, man or Angel, must give his own (or than it is no giving) which he received not from God, either created being, or gift, or work (for any uncreated gift none can give to him) as is said. 2. What is given is amongst the all things that are of him, as the efficient, and to him, as the last end, and through him, as the conserver of all, and so can be no gift to him, Rome 11.36. And what God of free goodness, decrees to do, that he may decree not to do; and things falling under his decree, are not necessary, he cannot decree that man should be a reasonable creature▪ for it involves a contradiction to be a man, and not to be a reasonable creature. But no shadow of contradiction there is for the Lord to forbid to eat; and to forbid to eat under a punishment: And the not created world (it being from eternity nothing and a non ens) could not have any jus or right to plead that God would stand to what he decreed, God was no debtor ●o Justice to give being to the world. and give being and create a world, for if the Lord should not give being to it, and create what he had decreed from eternity to create, he should fail against his own unchangeable Nature, but should do no unjustice to an uncreated world, except we say God should be unjust, if he had not created the world▪ For being of justice is due to the world, and God refuses to pay the debt of being to the uncreated world, Non entis nulla sunt accidentia. which is nonsense. And upon the same ground, if he should annihilat the world or take away life from living things, he should be unjust; It is safer therefore to say that God oweth the creature nothing, but we are his debtors, for service and praises, while we have any being. 4. Use. If God, of his free will, so placed Adam to reward his obedience: We think hard to serve God for wages, We should not take ill to obey & serve God, who hath so noble servants. and to be placed in a condition of obedience. Evah, and we with her, sucking the same milk, thirst after such lawless Independency to be from (Gen. 3.5, 6.) under God; Whereas Adam and Angel-courtiers that have wings to obey, and the Noble and High Heir who learned obedience through the things he suffered were in this condition, and Christ a King in the shape of a Servant was obedient to death, to the death of the Cross, Phil. 2. Hence, to weary of submitting to God, speaks much unnatural pride, yea will not be under God. 2. There is little of Christ in such, for it was life to Christ and meat and drink, Psal. 40.8. Heb. 10.8. John 4.34. Act. 10.38. to obey, and it is the Angel's life, Jsa. 6.2, 3. Psal. 103.20. Rev. 4.8. and they are near him, who both at once serve and Reign, Rev, 22.3, 5. much delight to obey, speak much of God in the heart. Tyre not of your Master; examine more, The beasts and lifeless creatures shall depon in judgement against us who break Covenant with God▪ untowardness to pray, to confer, to give, etc. if it be not a cause of deadness and be not a way of backsliding. 5. Use. If creatures keep their Covenant-naturall with God, shall not the ox, the cran, Isa. 1.3. Jer. 8.7. the ass, 2 Pet. 2.16. who never had a design of rebellion, depon against us in Judgement? Ah! what an unnatural policy, the first evil wit of him that sinned from the beginning, John 8.44. and whom we follow at the heels, it is to please our own wit, in Covenant breaking. Such as are sick of love for their own wily time-serving custom; Our soft nature is too soon broken with poor rewards, and too little moved with great things. If all natural men in their death bed damn not this folly, ask them and they shall speak. 6. Use. If God Covenant with us for hire, when his absoluteness may bear him to command, how sinfully soft are our spirits, and weak is reason, that is broken with a straw, when an apple conquers Evahs' eye and heart? Talents of Silver, and a wedge of Gold Achan, and Gehazi; A drink of water, if not at hand, in time of thirst, make the people murmur against God; the more sanctified, defecat and spiritual reason be, the farther it is above that which crusheth Balaam and Judas; The first heaven's motion, the primum mobile, which draws all the rest, must be the most excellent, and the moving power must be most spiritual; it's neither heaviness which is in stones or clay, nor lightness in the air and fire, but a more heavenly force, which throws about that body, so the motions of sanctified reason which is sweyed and driven by no Argument, but from eternity, communion with God, a Kingdom above time, must be most spiritual. The dog is moved with a bone, the ox with hay. 7. If no law and poor obedience of ours can buy a communion with God, let us examine the peace that flows from obedience; It's purer and more solid peace, Justification by works is our own element, Christ and his righteousness strangers to us. that flows from Justification, and more immediately removes the war between God and us, Rom. 5. 1. and comes by a purer and nearer emanation from God and from the ransom of Redemption that is in Christ, then that which flows from created acts of inherent holiness. (2.) Our first adam's Element is Justification by works, in which we love to live and die. The Law is an home-born Idol in us: Our apprehensions of our own actings are lively and vigorous, the 3000. Acts 2.37. Saul, Acts 9.6. and the Jailer, Acts 16.30. ask what we shall do? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. But it is not the law word of working, Rom. 4.2, 4, 5, 6. Rom. 3.20▪ 28. It's much to be dead to the Law, and to law-righteousness: Gal. 2.19, 20. I live not, but Christ lives in me. Christ (2.) is a stranger to us, and comes from without, gifted righteousness comes from heaven. Grace only makes us willing debtors to grace. The pride of self, will neither beg nor borrow from, nor be debtor to a Crucified Saviour, when it despiseth him until the roof of the house fall. 3. Seldom do these two concur, deadness to works of grace, Seldom deadness to works, and lively activity in works is one. and lively activity in the doing of them. Paul attained to both (but every man is not Paul) 1 Cor. 15.9, 10. I laboured more abundantly than they all. But fearing and trembling at at that (ay) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, he strikes sail to Christ, yet not I, but the grace of God in me. This pride Paul notes in the Jews, they stooped not, nor bowed (as inferiors to their Master, King, or Lord, or Father and Husband, Rom. 10.3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. so the word) to the righteousness of God. When (ay) (self) or nature meets with working, yea with grace often, there follows some loftiness, except it be humbled and mortified (ay) which can weep and say. Lord what am I? CHAP. VIII. What place death hath in the Covenant. 2. What such as Cain and Judas are to do in their desperate state. 3. And why the LORD is no where called the GOD of Adam. Q. WHat room hath death in the Covenant? A. Death hath room in the broken Covenant of Works, as the Pursuivant and Sergeant of revenging justice. Hence deaths reign, [I must die whether I will or not] Unwillingness to die and bondage through fear of death is the Law-sting in death, from which Christ hath delivered us, Heb. 2.15. The room of death in the two Covenants. The change that Christ hath made in death. Original sin and death came and entered the world by the Covenant of Works. The Covenant of Grace made not death, but found it in the world, Christ made of an old enemy death a new servant: it's now the King's ferry-boat to carry the children over the water. It's a suitable condition to a spiritual state to die being sent for, not legally summoned, and to die, because I desire to be dissolved, Ph. 1.23. not because I must. And better it is to summon ourselves then to be summoned. Though we love heaven too much as a place of pleasure, rather than a place of holiness, yet most men would wish a better causey to it then to sleep through th● cold grave or a dark hole in the earth. Q. What room hath life in the Covenant? Ans. The Administration of the Law-Covenant is first habitual holiness of works, and then a crown. The Administration of grace is first faith and a title to Christ our life and hope of glory, and then habitual holiness, begun here and perfected hereafter. The Gospel-life is both a reward and a duty of praising and loving eternally in place of all the ten Commands, yea of Law and Gospel. The Law-life (for aught that is revealed) is a reward to be purchased by our legal obedience. Q. If Adam in the interval betwixt his fall and the publishing of the blessed Seed, was not to despair, but to rely upon God as mighty to save; What should such as Judas or Cain do? A. The conscience of Cain and of despairers, being no authentic Bible nor Judge, What Judas & Cain in their despairing mood, are to do. which can carry the controversy between them and God, so long as they are in the way, or are viators, the Gospel treaty betwixt them and Christ yet standing and not broken off upon the part of Christ, they are to cherish and hold up the Treaty, and (as it were) to force speech out of Christ, and to pursue the news of an offered salvation. 2. There is no Spirit of God that suggests to them despair, and bids them write themselves in the black roll of Reprobates, for though they believe hell, as the Devils haply believe there is a God, yet they blow the coals of that hellish furnace, and kindle a fire before night. 3. They being under the Law of Nature, are to rely on infinite mercy able to save. Their witty darkness of unbeleef saith they believe, but they hate mercy in the general toward others, as to themselves. 2. For a doubting child of God, because the light of evidence (which to them, in that case is dim) comes nearer to the natural light of reason, What weak doubters are to do. then to spiritual light, therefore faith must be set on work to act as faith, and faith acts most strongly when reason is weakest. Natural causes work more strongly under opposition, the fire burns most vehemently in winter frost, When faith acts most strongly. and the internal heat of the body is most mighty for concoction, when the coldness of the air is most piercing without, faith sees God most piercingly at midnight in Job, when rottenness and deadness speaks the contrair, Job 19 I know surely (so the word, Exod. 8.1. Psal. 31.8. that my Redeemer lives. Isa. 50.10. He that walks in darkness, and hath no light (of evidence) let him trust on the Name of the Lord, and let him stay himself upon his God, Rom. 4.19, 20. (2.) There is a piece of unseen wilfulness in unbeleef, Wilfulness in unbeleef. and two refusals in it, as we see in Thomas, Joh. 20.25. as there is a mass of sanctified will required in sincere faith, Rom. 10.9, 10. Mark. 9.24. and so resistance must be made to that blind impulsion of will in unbeleef, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. by which we please ourselves in doubling our doubting. (3.) Should the commanding of killing the Son, Gen. 22.2. seem to contradict the whole Gospel of the promised Seed, Gen. 15.4. yet knowing both to come from God, We are to obey, and leave supposed contradictions to God in time of darkness. Abraham did well to leave the supposed contradiction to be solved by God, and believe both as we are to believe food, in no food, and in famine. Q. Where was there a word that God was Adam's God? Ans. Not directly. For 1. that Covenant was like Letters of the King raised to such a day, and the date being expired, the Letters cease to be in force. 2. Adam was to win and purchase (as it were) God to be his God, by consummate obedience. God never said that he would be Adam's God by giving him influences to obey, Why it is not said, that God was the God of Adam. and to obey to the end, all influences granted to Adam, to will and to do, were granted to him. 1. By God Creator, not by the grace of a Redeemer, as in the Covenant of Grace, to walk, Ezek. 36.27. to love, Deut. 30.6. to persevere, Jer. 32.39, 40. 2. These influences were free gifts, but not promised. 3. They seem to be ordinis naturalis, natural, though they did bow and previously inclince the will, but not so in the New Testament, for the whole Covenant is called by the promise of the giving of a new heart, Heb. 8.10. Isa. 54.9.13. Jer. 31.31, 32, 33. Ezek. 11.19, 20. Host 2.18, 19 And therefore better it is that God be Lord of my heart, and it be his, then that I be lord of it, Better our hearts be the Lords than our own. and my heart be mine own heart, the less of our heart be upon our heart, the more upon God, the better. Ah! we cannot skill to guide a heart. 3. The threatening of death to Adam, if he should sin, Gen. 2.17. may infer a Covenant of life, and that God should be Adam's God, if he should obey. CHAP. IX. What life is promised in the Covenant of Works. 2. Whether all we, especially the Reprobate, by the fall, lost all right to the creatures. 3. How the Lord is our God. Q. WHat is meaned by life promised in the Covenant of Works! What a life was promised to Adam. A. 1. Not a life in Christ and the fruit of the merit of blood, as our life is in the New Covenant, Joh. 10.11. Joh. 3.16. For Adam was not Mediator of reconciliation here, he was a sort of public Law-head in whom he was to stand or fall, if any please to call him so a Mediator 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but it is a Law-life happily a communion in glory. 2. But the life he lived, and the creatures for his service seems not to belong to this life, for the creatures were given to Adam, he not working for them. Yet I should not oppose, if any say that earthly blessings were given to Adam, as a reward of an actual obedience, as they are given to such as keep the Law, Deut. 28. But sure our gain in Christ of such a life, bought by so noble a Ransom as the Blood of God-man, is not little. It's rawness and greenness of wit, to value it so low as we do. Children see not what a hireing and taking apple Heaven is. Q. Whether or no did Adam and all the Reprobats in his loins, by sin, Of our ●ight to the creatures. loss right to the creatures? A. There is a threefold right. 1. Natural. 2. providential. 3. Spiritual. A natural right may be conceived two ways. 1. Absolutely, A threefold right, natural, providential, spiritual. so creature, and man not created, can have no jus or claim to being or life, the Creator's free gift is our best Charter to life and being. 2. This right may be conceived, conditionally, as if God create the Sun, a power to give light is congruous, and debita naturae Solis suitable to the nature of the Sun, nor can the creature plead for this, as debt: but if the Lord give being, to enjoy this being can not be sin, There is no law to have being and living, and so no sin in having it. because there is no law and command to nothing to receive or not to receive being and life from the Creator: And where there is no Law, there is no transgression. And therefore to have being and life cannot be in itself a sin. 2. providential right is but a continuating of life and being, until the same power that gave it, shall remove it, by way of punishment; What a providential right 〈◊〉. For God as Creator, of his Sovereignty, gives being and life, and the comfortable use of the creatures; but as a Judge ordinarily for sin he removes it, though he, I deny not, out of his Sovereignty, may, and possibly doth, annihilate the meat that the Angels in assumed bodies, and which the Man Christ, after the Resurrection, did eat. 3. The spiritual right is that new supernatural Title, which the Elect believers have, in order to a supernatural end, and all these being made theirs, to promove their salvation, 1 Cor. 3.21. All things are yours. Rev. 21.7. What a spiritual right is, & how excellent. He that overcometh shall inherit all things, by Covenant-right, so: he adds, And I will be his God, and he shall be my Son, Psal. 37 10. A drink of cold water, by this Charter, is better than a King's Crown, and hath refreshed some more than all the choice wine the earth yields. The love of the Giver is better than wine, Cant. 1.2. and here the Charter is, by many thousands, more precious than the Land. For nature common to all is overgilded with freegrace. And the natural life and being, and the material heavens we shall enjoy, are blessed in another manner to the glorified, than these they now enjoy, 1 Cor. 15.40, 41, 42, 43, etc. 2 Pet. 3.13. Rev. 21.1. Isa. 65.17. and they shall be above the heavens that are, when the mystical body shall be perfected, yea, and the dust into which the bodies of the Saints are resolved, keeps a spiritual Covenant relation to God in Christ: As Exod. 3.6. Mat. 22.32. Joh. 6.39. Rom. 8.21, 22, 23. for no joint or part of the body, but it must share of Covenant glory. We look little to any thing but to have and enjoy the dead lump and body of Gold, dead lands without Christ. See Host 2.18.22. Ezek. 34.25.27. Ezek. 36.29. Leu. 26.6. Psal. 37.9, 11, 29. 1 Tim. 4.8. Heb. 13.5, 6. Math. 6.25, 26. Psal. 34.10. O fair inheritance. 4. As to the second (which is the main controversy) to enjoy life and being, is the substance of the act, no sin. Men contraveen a Law to be so and so born, to wit, in sin, for it's forbidden by a Law: But to be born and live, is no sin, To live & to enjoy the creatures is not in itself sin. but by order of nature, before Original sin. Nor is it forbidden more to man to be born and live, than its forbidden to beasts, nor to eat, sleep, wake, then to them: So neither is it commanded by a Law to die, but it is commanded and commended to die well, to fall asleep in Christ, 1 Thes. 4.14.16. to be faithful to the death, Acts 7.60. Rev. 2.10. Rev. 14.13. (2.) The Elect who are born heirs of wrath, as others, Eph. 2.3. And all the Reprobate should kill themselves, or be killed, from the birth, if to live and eat were sin, in itself. But only the Lord of life and death, and his Minister, the Magistrate hath power to take away life and being, no man can be his own burrio. But if it were sin in itself to live, they ought to expire and restore an usurped life, which they possess, malâ fide, to the owner the Lord, as a thief is obliged to restore stolen goods (3.) The dominion of Reprobats over the creatures, is a part of the good Image of God, Gen. 1.26, 27. and they breath, live, ride, sail, and are no more than the Elect to lay these aside, than they are to lay aside the natural knowledge of God, by which they are to glorify God as God, Rom. 1.19, 20, 21. Rom. 2.14, 15. Act. 14.16, 17. Now the Reprobates have not utterly lost the Image of God, as to know there is a God, to honour their parents, to hurt no man. 4. This opinion looks the rather like a fancy, that it is a temptation in weak ones, under a sad desertion, Satan riding upon their Melancholy (a complexion not sanctified, useful to Satan, and if sanctified, Their temptation, who think they should not eat, nor pray. a seat of mortification and humble walking) for they judge it sin to eat, and drink, and sleep, they having no right thereunto, but so they have no right to live, and are obliged to kill themselves, and upon the same ground, it was sin to Adam to speak, to answer God, to breath, to hear the news of the blessed seed, which all are acts of life, and so acts of sin, and upon the same ground, that they cannot perform these without sin, they should not pray, for in praying, they cannot but take the Name of God in vain. For we are not to abstain from a duty, because of the sinfulness, which adheres to the duty, by reason of our corruption, for in Christ the sinfulness is pardoned, and the duty accepted. 5. It necessarily must follow, if it be sin to eat, because the non-converted have no right spiritual in Christ, to bread, the converted may spoil by their grounds, If the non-converted, have no right to any thing, than we may spoil & deprive them of life and all they have. all the non-converted, of their goods, houses, gold, gardens, vineyards, lands, and upon the same ground, for the crime of non-regeneration, they must also deprive them of their lives, and kill them; For they have alike right, that is, no right (these men being Judges) to either life or goods. And so, Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, must be meant of the converted neighbour: but with fire and sword all other neighbours may be killed and spoiled, and so there should be no stealing, no oppressing, no crushing of the widow, the stranger, the fatherless, the weaker; not grind the faces of the poor, though their Redeemer be strong, contrair to the Scripture, Prov. 23.11. Jer. 50.33, 34. Psal. 94.5, 6, 7, 8. Psal. 14.4. Exo. 22.26, 27. Isa. 3.12, 13, 14, 15. Mic. 2.3. and so it were lawful to take Crowns, Kingdoms, inheritances, lands, dignity, and honour, from all the unregenerate Princes, powers, and rulers on earth, to cut off with the sword all the heathen Nations who as yet know not Christ, and it were lawful for the regenerate sons and brethren to kill and spoil Father, Mother, Brethren, Sisters, Kings, Potentates, Countrymen▪ strangers, Orphans, exiled, captives, prisoners, sick, weak, imprisoned, all infants that are by nature the heirs of wrath, upon this ground, the converted ones judge all non-converts to be void of all due right to life▪ or goods, and so in these men, the societies, Churches of Christ must cease. Obj. These who enjoy that of which they deserve to be deprived, have no due right to that of which they deserve to be deprived; but are usurpers, and so sin. But all the non-regenerated are such, or, they who use that to which they have no right, do sin in the act of using it. Ans. 1. They who enjoy that of which they deserve to be deprived, they sin, and have no due right to use it; Is not universally true. They who enjoy that which they may and aught by their own private power, restore, such as ill conquished goods. How true it is, that these who enjoy that, of which they deserve to be deprived, they have no right to that and sin in using i●. They sin in using that, true, Prov. 3.27. Exod. 22.26, 27. Luke 19.8. It's a sin to withhold the raiment though laid in pawned, which should cover the poor man's skin in the night, and they have no right to enjoy that. But they who enjoy that, what ever it be, of which by sin, they deserve to be deprived, they have no due right to that, it is denied: For if it be life, being, eating, sleeping, and such things, as only can be taken away, by a judicial power, and by God the Lord of life and death, and cannot be taken away by themselves, (for it is lawful for no man to punish himself and take away his own life) nor by any other, except for capital crimes, they have due providential right to keep and enjoy all such things until the same power that gave them remove them, nor do they sin in using them. Living in the devils and damned and Reprobate is no usurping of life. And it is most dangerous to say, that Devils and the damned in Hell who dishonour the Majesty of God by their living and being, and so by sin, deserve to be annihilated and deprived of their being, do sin, in that they live and are not annihilated, and that all the Elect before their conversion, sin in that they enjoy being and life. A judge sentenceth a man to die for killing his father within 24. hours, but by invincible providence he is rescued out of the hand of the Magistrate, Simile. and lives divers years after, the sentenced man sins not before God nor against the law of the land, in that he lives, nor can he be called an usurper and unjust, malae fidei, possessor of his life: For the sentence was not that he should take away his life with his own hand, but that it should be taken away by the judicial hand and executioner of the Magistrate. Nor is this providential right, a right of mere permission but of positive donation and free-gift, for than we might by the same reason, say that Reprobate men have a right of mere permission to keep and enjoy the knowledge of these, that God is: Superiors, Parents are to be honoured: the whole is more than the part; The Reprobate & non-converted, in the Visible Church, want all spiritual right by faith in Christ to life and the creatures, and they sin in the manner of living, eating, etc. Yea they have the same natural and providential right by nature that other sinners have to the one as to the other. 2. These who enjoy that, of which they deserve to be deprived, they sin in the act of using, as touching the substance of the act of living, being, eating, drinking: That is most false. These who enjoy that, of which they deserve to be deprived, they, in modo, in the way, manner, and end of living, eating, etc. do sin: It is true: and such have not spiritual and supernatural right in Christ (which they ought to have, if they be in the Visible Church and hearers of the Gospel) to life, being and the creatures, and they sin in not believing, Rom. 14. not eating for the Glory of God, 1 Cor. 10.31. Natural men care not if they have and enjoy things so they have them: They have being, so have earth, stones, etc. they live, so do trees and herbs, they have health, so have beasts and birds, they swallow up many years, so do Ravens, and Hearts and other beasts, a long lump, How woeful to have a lump of life & time & no right to life. many thousand yairds and miles of life are sought, diu sunt, non diu vivunt. But who lives for God, who sleeps, who wakes, who eats for God and his Glory? and they who make themselves their last end, Idolatrously put self in the room of God, who only is the last end of all, Rom. 11.36. Rev. 4.11. Prov. 16.4. and as good make self the first Author of Heaven and Earth and Creator as the last end. Ye who eat and drink, who pays your reckoning? Christ? Or are you usurpers? Have you any Charter? Or do ye rob the Lord? Q. What way is God ours? A. By Covenant, Ezek. 34.24. Genes. 17.7. Jere. 32.38. Zech. 13.9. But he is not ours as if we had some gifted right and dominion over him, as we have over the creatures. 2. Nor is he ours as we are his, the clay hath no sovereignty over the Potter. Nor 3. is God simply as God ours, but God as it were coming down in Christ to us covenant-ways as God incarnate, How God is our●▪ to make out his goodness, grace, mercy to and for us. 4. It's true God incarnate, Christ, is principally Gods, 1 Cor. 3.21. not ours. He is all for God, he is Immanuel, our Immanuel in order to save us, and so is more ours then the God of Angels. 2. God is the fluier of the Saints desire, more to them then all heaven in the length and breadth thereof, God to the Saints and to the Man CHRIST a heaven. and all the inhabitants thereof, Psal. 73.25. Isa. 63.16. more than all the Angels and Saints, 1 Thes. 4.16. (2.) There is no hell to Christ but afar off God, Psal. 22.1. Math. 27.45. no heaven but the glory he had with the father, John 17.5. (3.) There is nothing more like a spiritual disposition then when the Spouse, Cant. 3. hath soul-love to Christ: I sought him whom my soul loved. (2.) She hath an ardent desire after him, I sought him but I found him not. 3. There could not be such diligent search after she found him, if there had not been strong faith. There may be a train of graces, & yet unquietness for the want of Christ. 4. And her conference with the watchmen, Saw ye him whom my soul loveth? saith, She enjoyed Ordinances and means, yet there may be (which is to be observed) a furniture of grace and a want of Christ, I went a little further, I found him whom my soul loveth, Cant. 5. There is 1. a waking heart. 2. A discerning of the Beloved, and a telling over again of his words, Open to me, my sister, etc. 3. A stirring of Christ's hand upon the keyhole of the heart. 4. A moving of the bowels for him. 5. A seeking of him and a praying, but no finding nor answer. 6. A love-sickness for him, and yet a missing of himself, I sought him but I found him not. So compare Cant. 1.1, 4. with Cant. 2, 3, 4. with v. 6, 8. and other places, it will be clear a Godhead can only quiet the spirit, and that its a question whether we know the field where the Pearl is, and the Rubies, Saphires, precious stones that are hid here, which do in worth exceed the capapacity of Angels and Saints. Therefore should his glory be the last end and stirrer of us in all our actings, A spiritual soul acts in God, and grace the only efficient in all, and so much of God (if he be ours by Covenant) as our ways, intentions may smell of him. But there is much of the creature, of self, of gain, of empty glory, in our spiritual actings. God weighs not down the creature nor heaven and union with Christ: as Exod. 32.32. Rom. 9.3. (2.) It's a spiritual soul that misseth God, rather than the train of all the graces of faith, And misses God rather than any created saving grace. love, hope, d●si●e of and joying in him. And know he is away though heaven were in the heart, and can discern when the Ordinances are empty. 3. It engages all we are, hands, knees, body, Exo. 20.5. Psal. 44.20. 1 Cor. 6.19. self to be for God, and to live wholly in him, not in ourselves. 4. We are not to believe in believing, nor to be sick of love with the love of Christ, nor to make a god of faith or love. It's a spiritual condition to have grace and to miss Christ. CHAP. X. Cotvin. cont. Molin. c. 8. §. 7. Primo foedere per inobedientiam primi hominis rupto, cessabat etiam obligatio ad eam obedientiam lege praescriptam. Ibid. c. 9 §. 5. Remonstr. in Scrip Synod. Dored. 4. ●a. 145. Q. WHat are the false grounds of the Lords making the Covenant of Grace? A. There are two bastard grounds devised by Arminians. 1. Because the Covenant of Works cannot oblige both to active and passive obedience, but to one of them only (say they) and the Covenant of Works was so rigid, that God could not follow it out, and cast infants in hell for a sin which is theirs, only by imputation, and was pardoned to the first man that committed it. Therefore he was necessitated to make a Covenant of Grace with all mankind, none excepted. But the Covenant of Works is broken, and can now be a way of Justification and salvation to none, but yet it oblidges all. And sin cannot make us lawless, for the spiritual Law is of an eternal obligation. 2. They that never heard of Christ, perish by the Law, and not by the Covenant of Grace of which they never heard, The Law & the ●●rst Covenant is holy, and oblidgeth all to acti●● obedience always. and the Gospel is written in the heart of none. 3. The first Covenant was holy and spiritual, and God should unjustly threaten death upon infants, if they be not guilty of eternal condemnation, as Arminius, disp. pub. 7. th'. 16.3. and the Scripture saith, infants are guilty of this sin, Eph. 2.3. Rom. 5. Psal. 51.5. Job 14.4. As also Christ must not have died for the sins of Infants, if there be no sin in them, they need not the ransom of Christ's Blood. The other bastard ground is, There is sin in Infants. the natural antecedent desire and love of God to have all saved, moved him (say they) to make this Covenant of Grace with all. But this makes away freegrace, and changes God as the blind Talmud, The natural antecedent love of GOD, which is fancied to be the ground of the Covenant of Grace, is as what the Jews in t●e Talmud, & the Koran say of God. Doctrine. fidei Judai●. 〈◊〉. 5. trac. 8. ib ord. 1. disp. 7. Alcar. c. 43. which saith God hath a secret place in which he afflicts himself, because he burned the Temple, and delivered the Jews to captivity. As also, the Lord remembering the captivity of the Jews, and their desolation, he pours out two tears every day in the Sea or Ocean, and for grief, smites his breasts with both his hands. And the Alcoran saith, that God and the Angels wish well to Mahomet, but cannot free him from death. So made the Heathen their Jupiter to deplore the destinies which he could not amend. And what is this, but to say, God hath passionate desires to have all, Elect, and Reprobat, Men, and Angels, to obey and be eternally saved, but he cannot help the matter; and therefore must upon the same account, be sorrowful and mourn that he cannot get all saved, which destroys the power of grace and restrains the out-going of free-love. CHAP. XI. The threefold Covenant considered. 2. The Law pressed upon Israel was not a Covenant of Works, but a darker dispensation of Grace. 3. The threefold Covenant of Arminians refuted. 4. Divers considerations of the Law and the Gospel. THere be who hold that there be three Covenants. 1. The Covenant of nature. 1. A Covenant of Nature, whereby God as Creator required perfect obedience from Adam in Paradise, with promise of life, and threatening of death. 2. Of Grace. 2. The Covenant of Grace, whereby he promises life and forgiveness in Christ's Blood to believers. 3. The subservient Covenant & the differences between it and the Covenant of nature, which hold not. 3. A subservient Covenant, made 1. With Israel, not wit● Adam, and all mankind. 2. For a time with Israel, not for ever, as the natural Covenant. 3. In Mount Sinai, not in Paradise. 4. To terrify and keep in bondage (the other from an inward principle required, obedience.) 5. To restrain Israel from outward sins, to prove the people, that the fear of God might be before their eyes, that they should not sin. So they expound Exo. 20.20. the other Covenant was to restrain from all sin. Yea and so was that on Mount Sinai, to do all that are written in the Book of the Law, Deut. 27.26. Deut. 28.1, 2, 3, 4. etc. to that same end, to love God with all the heart, and with all the soul, Deut. 10.12. Deut. 5.1, 2, 3. Deut. 6.1, 2, 3. Deut. 5.29. Deut. 6.5. With all the heart, with all the soul, with all the might, which is expounded by Christ, Mat. 22.37. Luke 10.27. in as full a height of perfection as ever was required of Adam. 6. It was written to Israel in Tables of stone: The natural Covenant was written in the heart; so was there a circumcised heart promised to Israel, Deut. 30.6. though sparingly. 7. It was (say they) given by the Mediator Moses, as that of nature was without a Mediator. Yea, Moses was the Typical Mediator of the young Covenant of Grace. The differences between the subservient Covenant, and that of Grace. The differences between the Covenant subservient (as they call it) and that of grace are ●ull. 1. In the subservient, God only approves righteousness and condemns sin; in that of Grace he pardons and renews. Ans. Acts 15.11. We believe through the Grace of the Lord Jesus, we shall be saved even as they under that Covenant. Acts 10.43. To him gave all the Prophet's witness, that through his Name, whosoever believeth in him, shall receive remission of sins. Abraham and David were justified, in that sin was not imputed to them, not by works, Rom. 4.1, 2, 3,— 6, 7, 8, 9, etc. Gen. 15.6. Psal. 32.1.2.5. I said I will confess my transgression, and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. Isa. 4325. ay, even I am he that blots out thy transgressions for my own sake, Righteousness and forgiveness under that subservient Covenant. and I will not remember thy sins. So David was a man according to the heart of God, So Asa, Josiah, Jehoshaphat, Samuel, Baruch, Gedeon, Daniel, the Prophets, under that subservient Covenant (except they be under a fourth Covenant) were renewed, justified, saved by faith, Heb. 11. as under a Covenant of Grace. 2. The former was, do and live, this was, believe and live. Ans. Doing and living was but a shuting them up under the Law, that they might flee to Christ in whom they believed; else the fathers must be saved and justified by works contrair to Rom. 2. Rom. 4. Heb. 11. 3. In antiquity, the former came in as added 430. years after the promise of grace, Gal. 3.17. Ans. True, but he speaks of the Covenant in Sinai, according to the strict Law part, which could not save, and so its different. But that proves not two Covenants. 4. In the former is compulsion and the Spirit of bondage, in this heart inclining freedom and the Spirit of Adoption. Ans. Yet the differences are accidental, there was a legal awing of the hearts, as if they had been Servants, yet Heirs and Sons they were, Gal. 4.1, 2. The whole Book of the Proverbs spoke to the Godly as to Adopted Sons. They were believers, Heb. 11. Rom. 4. Acts 10.43. and so Sons as touching a spiritual state, John 1.11, 12. In regard of Oeconomie, it was somewhat more rigid and legal, they were restrained as servants; Yet it was the Covenant of Grace, by which believing Jews were justified and saved, Acts 15. v. 11. Acts 10.43. 5. In the former man is dead, in this man is humbled for sin? Answ. Legally dead, except they would flee to Christ, and legally condemned, but there was true humiliation for sins under that Covenant: As David, Josiah, Hezekiah, and all believers then, as now, were pardoned and justified. 6. In the former there are commands, not strength, but here there be promises and grace given? Ans. The full abundance of grace and of a new heart, was reserved until now. And the Law could not make perfect nor give pardon, in the blood of beasts; as touching that legal dispensation: But both grace, the Spirit, pardon, righteousness and life were received and believed; by looking on Christ to come. 7. In the former, Canaan was promised, in this, Heaven. Ans. Canaan is promised only but sacramentally, and that was a poedagogicall promise for the infancy of that Church, but a type which was then in that Covenant, and is not now, make not two Covenants, one then, and another now? Except ye say, there was then a Lamb in the Passeover, which was a Type of Christ to come, and there is now no such Type, because the body is come, and Christ the true High Priest offered himself. Therefore there are two Christ's, one then to come, another now who hath come already. The Lord's dispensation with Israel is often called a Covenant, now it must either be a Covenant of Works, or of Grace, or a third Covenant. But the truth is, the Law as pressed upon Israel was not a Covenant of Works. 1. The Law as the Law or as a Covenant of Works is made with perfect men who need no mercy; But this Covenant is made with sinners, with an express preface of mercy: I am the Lord thy God that brought thee out of the land of Egypt, etc. It is made with stiffnecked Israel, The Law as proponed to Israel was the very Covenant of Grace. Deut. 29. Deut. 30. c. 31. c. 32. and that is called a Covenant from the end and object, as motions are denominate from their end: for the end of the Lords pressing the Law upon them was to bring them under a blessed necessity to seek salvation in their true City of Refuge Christ Jesus, who redeemed them out of the spiritual bondage of sin. 2. It was the Covenant made with Abraham, which was a Covenant of Grace: and though it be called, The Covenant made at Horeb, was the same which God made with Abraham. Deut. 29.1▪ a Covenant beside that which was made in Horeb: Because 1. Renewed again after their breach. 2. Repeated a little before the death of Moses, Deut. 31.28.29.30. (3.) Because there were some additions of special blessings, cursings, Ceremonial Commands, that were not in the formerly proposed Covenant, Exod. 20. yet the same it was in substance, to love the Lord with all the heart, Deut. 2.10, 12, 13, 14. The same with that of Abraham, Deut. 8.18. That he may establish his Covenant, which he swore unto thy fathers, as it is this day, When he is to deliver them out of Egypt, Exod. 2.24. And God heard their groaning, and remembered his Covenant with Abraham and Isaak and Jacob. So the Lord expones it in his appearing to Moses, Exod. 3.6. Jer. 31.32. Not according to the Covenant which I made with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the Land of Egypt. Now that was the Covenant which God made with Abraham, of which Circumcision was a seal, Gen. 17. not of a temporary Canaan only, but of heart Circumcision, Col. 2.11. For the Lord expressly tells th●●, when he took them by the hand as his married people, to bring them out of the Land of Egypt, and out of the house of bondage, Exod. 20. He meant no other Covenant than he made with Abraham, of believing, Gen. 15. and of walking before him and being perfect, Gen. 17.1, 2. which is somewhat more legal, as Moses▪ and the Lord himself expones it, Exod. 2.24. Exod. 3.6. Exod. 20.1, 2. And he shows them, Leu. 26. if in their enemy's land they repent and shall come out and meet the rod, and their uncircumcised hearts shall willingly accept of the punishment of their iniquity: 42. Then (saith the Lord) I will remember my Covenant with Jacob, and also my Covenant with Isaac, and also my Covenant with Abraham will I remember, Beside there are not here three Covenants, but one, there is no word of the subservient Covenant with Israel in Sinai. Except that when he mentions the one, he excludes not the other. For to walk before the Lord required in Abraham's Covenant Gen. 17.1. is to walk in all the ways of the Lord, to fear and love him, Deut. 10.12, 13. and Samuel, 1 Sam. 12.22. Joshua, Josh. 24.22, 23, 24, 25. And Marry, Luke 1.55. And Zacharie, ver. 70, 72, 73. refer to the Covenant made with Abraham, and Deut. 6. the Covenant at Horeb, the Lord made with Abraham to give Canaan to his seed, ver. 10. Deut. 7.12. If thou harken to these judgements to do them, it shall come to pass that the Lord thy God will keep unto thee the Covenant of mercy that he swore unto thy fathers, etc. 3. This Covenant hath the promise of a circumcised heart, Deut. 30.6. and of the word of faith that is near in the mouth, and of the righteousness of faith clearly differenced from the righteousness of the Law by doing. For so Paul, Rom. 10.5, 6, 7, etc. expones, Moses, Deut. 30.11, 12, 13, 14. 4. The Covenant of Works taught nothing of the way of expiation of sin by blood typifying the Ransom of blood that Christ was to pay for our sins, as this Covenant, all along had sacrifices and blood to confirm it. Exod. 24.8. And Moses took the blood and sprinkled it on the people, and said, behold this is the Blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you, concerning all these words. Now the words were the ten Commandments. See Heb. 9 v. 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24. (5.) This Covenant is made with Israel only, Exod. 20. Deut. 5. c. 6. Deut. 6.5, 6, 7.12. The Covenant of Works is made with all mankind. (6.) No people under the Law can be justified and saved thereby, nor have their sins pardoned, Rom. 3.9, 10, 11.— 19, 20. Rom. 4.1, 2, 3, 4. Rom. 9 Rom. 10. Psal. 130 3. Psal. 143.2. Gal. 3.1, 2, 3.— 10, 11, 12, 13. But in this Covenant, Abraham, David, Gen. 15. Psal. 32. Rom. 4.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 And the Jews by faith, have remission of sins and salvation, as also the Gentiles have, Acts 10.43. Acts 15.11. (7.) The Lord minds to lay aside the Law as inconsistent with the Covenant of Grace, Gal. 3.18. If the inheritance be by the Law, than it is not by promise, but God gave it to Abraham by promise: For to live by this Covenant, is a life of promises, all being here promised, The new Covenant a life of promises: both faith the condition, and perseverance therein, and a new heart, righteousness, pardon, and life. A man that hath his estate in papers and in good words that are transient things, may seem a poor man, but to live by promises here is the rich life of the heirs of hope, this is strong consolation under deadness, absence, faith working underground in the dark, Gal. 3.21. If there had been a Law which could have given life, verily righteousness should have been by the Law. How God commands what. Though he commanded them to do the Law, it was not that they should live thereby, and though he commanded us the same, it is another command, as it were, it is not so much now that we obey from the Authority of God Lawgiver under pain of damnation (though that be not laid aside, but urged in a Gospel intention upon heirs) as from the love of God, Grace-giver; as also there is an intrinsical amaenitie in Christ drawing, and obedience now becomes connatural, free, delightful. Let these consider, to whom the yoke of obedience is a torment and a man-mill. 8. The Passeover and Circumcision, Gen. 17.7. all along were seals of the Covenant, as Baptism one with Circumcision in substance, Col. 2.11. is the seal of the same Covenant, The Law as the Law required no Circuncision, no sacrifice nor any Type representing Christ. Acts 2.39, 40, 41. Now the Law required no Circumcision, no shedding of blood, no Repentance, no new heart, but eternal condemnation followed the least breach thereof. Paul saith indeed, Gal. 5.3. If ye be Circumcised (as the false Apostles would have, that thereby you may be justified & saved) you are debtors to keep the whole Law perfectly, as the only way to life, and by no other Covenant can you be justified and saved, now Abraham was not circumcised that way, circumcision did bind Abraham to keep the Law, as a Ceremony and Seal of the Covenant of Grace commanded of God. But the Law as a Covenant of Works doth command no Ceremony, no Sacrifice, no Type of Christ Mediator at all. It's true that first Covenant had Moses for its mediator, but as he was a Type of Christ, The first Covenant had the Mediator Christ as this hath, but vailed in the one, revealed in the other. How the first Covenant is faulty. so Christ yesterday and the day was the real Mediator, but vailed. The New Covenant hath better promises, Heb. 8.6. Heb. 7.22. it's a better Covenant, Heb. 7.22. hath a better real, not a Typical surety, a better Priest who offered himself through the eternal Spirit, Heb. 9.14. a better Sacrifice, because of the plainness, john 16.29. 2 Cor. 3.18. because the real promises are made out to us, because of a larger measure of Grace, 2 Cor. 3.1, 2, 3, 4. And the first Covenant is faulty, Heb. 8.7. not because there was no Salvation by it, the contrare is Heb. 11. but that is comparatively spoken: because the blood of beasts therein could not take away sins, Heb. 10.1, 2, 3, 4. because forgiveness of sins is promised darkly in the first Covenant, but plainly in the other, because Grace is promised sparingly in the former, but here abundantly, the Law being written in the heart, John 7.39. Esa. 54.13. And it is true, Gal. 4.22, 23, 24, etc. they seem to be made contrare Covenants: But Paul speaks, Gal. 3. of the Law as relative to that people, and so it pressed them to Christ, and keeps them as young Heirs under nonage. How Paul speaks of the Covenant, Gal, 3. and how Gal. 4. 2. He speaks of the Law absolutely, as contradistinguished from the Gospel, Gal. 4.21. so it is a Covenant of Works begetting children to bondage: 2. Who come short of righteousness and the inheritance, and shall not be saved. 3. Who are casten out of the Kingdom of Grace. 4. Who persecute the Godly the Sons of promise, so is the Law as it was in Adam's days, and is now to all the Reprobate; so the Godly are not under the Law and the Covenant of Works. The Covenant urged upon Believers is to prove them, when they stand afar off and tremble, Exod. 20.20. Fear not (saith Moses) God is come to prove you (not to damn you) and therefore Calvine solidely observeth that Paul, Calvin. Instit. l. 11. ●. XI. Sect. 7, 8. 2 Cor. 3. speaks with less respect of the Law then the Prophets do, for their cause, who out of a vain affectation of the Law-Ceremonies, gave too much to the Law and darkened the Gospel, and sayeth the one was 1. Literal. 2. Written in stone. 3. A Sermon of death and wrath. 4. To be done away and less glorious, whereas the Gospel is Spiritual. 2. Written on the heart. 3. The Ministry of life. 4. And glorious: and praises put upon the Law, agree not to it of its own nature, but as it was used by the Lord to prove them, Exod. 29.20. and chase them to Christ. The Arminians also (especially Episopius) make three Covenants. Epist. par. 3. disp. 12. 1. One with Abraham, in which he requires sincere worship and putting away strange gods: Beside 2. Faith and Universal obedience, and promised Canaan to his seed and Spiritual blessings darkly. 2. One in Mount Sinai in these three Laws Moral, Ceremonial and Judicial, The Arminians three Covenants, dis. 14. with a promise of Temporal good things, but to no sinners promise of life Eternal. 3. A Covenant of Grace, with a promise of pardon and life to all that believe and repent, to all mankind, but he denies 1. All infused habits, contrare to Isa. 44.1, 2, 3. Isa. 59.20, 21. Zach 12.10. Joh. 4.14. Joh. 7.37. John 16.7, 8. 1 John 3.9. he sayeth that 2. all commands are easy by Grace. 3. That the promise of earthly things in their abundance is abolished, in that we are called to patient suffering. 4. That there is no threatening in this Covenant, but that of Hell fire. But the Covenant made with Abraham is that of Grace made with all the Seed, Deut. 30.6. Deut. 7.5, 6, 7, 12. Leu. 26.40, 41. and made with all Believers, who are Abraham's children, Gal. 3.13, 14, 18, 19 Rom. 4.1, 2, 3, 4. Luke 19.9. yea with the whole race of man without exception. (2.) The second Covenant which promiseth only blessings is made rather with beasts, that well fed, then with men, contrare to Psal. 73.25. Isa. 57.1.2, 3. Psal. 37.37. and it must build some Chalmer in hell, where the fathers were before Christ, a dream unknown to Scripture. The third Covenant makes the Covenant of Grace a Covenant of Works, and holds out life and pardon, upon condition that freewill repent and believe and stand on its own feet, for there is neither faith, nor a new heart nor repentance promised contrare to Deut. 30.6. Ezek. 11.19, 20. Ezek. 36.26, 27. Isa. 59.19▪ 20, 21. Isa. 44.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Zech. 12.10. CHAP. XII. 1. All are to try under what Covenant they are. 2. threatenings under the New Testament are more spiritual 3. Desertions under both are compared. 4. Considerable differences of such as are under the Covenant of Works, and such as are under the Covenant of Grace. 5. Of legal terrors. 6. Of convictions compelled, free, legal, etc. Quest. 1. WHether should not all try under what Covenant they are. Answ. Self-searching is a reflect act upon the state (and such acts are more spiritual, then direct acts) and therefore it should be the work of all, to try, under what reign they are, whether of the first or second Adam. And where●s Angels cover their faces and their feet with wings, Self searching necessary. Isa. 6. before God and are full of eyes, as without, so also within R●v. 4.8. We may hence learn, such come nearest to the nature of these pure and heavenly Spirits, who have eyes within to see what they are, and their blackness of face and feet, when they compare themselves either with the Holy God, or his Holy Law. 2. The Carnal man is a beast, Psal 49.20. and beasts have no reflect acts upon their own beastly state. Reflect acts are more spiritual than direct acts. 3. The more of a spiritual life is in any the more stirring in communing with their own heart, the Law makes, the more of life that is in the worm when tramped on, the more stirring it makes: deadness and stupidity in not being versed and well read and skilled in ourselves and our own heart, argues little of the Spirit, and estrangement to a spiritual Covenant, nor can any lay hold on the Covenant of Grace in a night dream. Quest. Whether are there rarer threatenings of Temporal evils under the New Covenant, then under the Old? Answ. It cannot be denied, except the threatenings of the Sword, Famine Pestilence on Jerusalem, and the desolation upon the Jews, Math. 23. Math. 24. but in place of all the diseases of Egypt, threatenings under the New Testament more spiritual, then under the Old. Levit. 26. and the long Roll of dreadful judgements and curses temporal, Deut. 28. denounced against the transgressors of the former Covenant, Christ and the Apostles are more sparing in denouncing temporal plagues in the New Testament. Christ sayeth the worm never dieth, the fire never goeth out, the Hypocrite is to be bound hand and foot and cansten into utter darkness, Math. 22.12. and the Holy Ghost such shall not inherit the Kingdom of Heaven, 1 Cor. 6 9 Eph. 5.5. the Apostate is near a curse, his end burning, Heb. 8.6. he is to look for judgement and fiery indignation, Heb. 10.27. to some is reserved the blackness of darkness for ever, Judas 7. the lake that burneth with fire and brimstone, which is the second death, Rev. 21.8. Because 1. Temporal blessings and curses are more legal, and more easily believed, when the light was dimmer than now, when light is larger, convictions stronger, and men are more ap● to believe Everlasting wrath. Desertions under the Old and New Testament compared. 2. It's a more Gospel way to bear in the threatening of Everlasting wrath then of Temporal rods. 3. Desertions and trials under the Law were more legal and sharp and sad upon David, Ezekiah, Job, Jeremiah, Heman. Psal. 6. Psal. 38. Psal. 77. Psal. 102. Psal. 88 Isa. 38. Jer. 20. But it is to be thought, that in regard the day now hath dawn, the Gospel desertions coeteris paribus for the abundance of light, are more sharp nearer to despair, see 2 Cor. 1.8. We were pressed out of measure above strength, in so much that we despaired even of life, having received the sentence of death. It's a doubt if Paul should be so pressed by a sentence of temporary death. Though there be a larger measure of faith, to bear up the soul under the New Testament: but it would appear there is more of hell now then under that dispensation, and that the Gospel despair of Judas and of these that cry for mountains and hills, to cover them, Luke 23.29, 30. is more intolerable under the Gospel. The Saint are stronger to suffer under the New Testament then under the Old. (4.) There is a more numerous company of these who have not loved their lives to the death, and the Martyrs that suffered more exquisite torments for Christ, under the persecuting Emperors and reign of Antichrist, then ever before; the constraining love of Christ, which is stronger than death or hell hath so swallowed up all temporary sufferings, the Spirit hath such influence on the flesh. (5.) When the world seeks wisdom, 1 Cor. 1. and Rabbis of the Jews and learning and arts abound all the world over, A larger number of Godly, of the rude & unlearned, th●n of the wise and learned according to the flesh. as the profound Philosophers of the Gentiles, the wonders of nature prove, yet not many wise are called, 1 Cor. 3.21, 26, 27. and unlettered and ignorant, are, in number, for Godly spiritual knowledge, far beyond the Godly learned; and make that true, Esa. 11.9. The earth shall be filled with the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the Sea, and Isa. 30.26. And the light of the Moon shall be as the light of the Sun, and the light of the Sun shall be as the light of seven days, so hath the Lord darkened carnal learning, though of itself the good gift of God, with the shining of spiritual wisdom in the fools of the world, for so are they judged, 1 Cor. 1.27. Q. 3. What are the special differences of one under the Covenant of Works, and of one under the Covenant of Grace? It's a Law-state to be under the dominion of sin, the nature of this dominion. Answ 1. The dominion and kingly power of sin, to condemn and judge to eternal wrath, and also to command against all shadow of reason, such crying sins, 1 Cor. 6.9, 10. Rom. 1.29, 30. Gal. 5.20, 21. Eph. 4.17, 18, 19 Col 3.5. 1 Tim. 1.9. Rev. 21.8. Rev. 22.15, 16. without exception makes an universal slave; for as far as the lusts of sin go, as far goes the dominion of sin, and this is to be under the Law, Rom. 6.14. (2.) There is subjection to the Law when men are agents in resigning and giving themselves over, or offer themselves as sacrifices at the altar, or servants that tender their service to their masters, Rom. 6.16. to sin, which hath strength from the Law to condemn, 1 Cor. 15.56. and to be a captive is not intended, but comes on by occasional force, Rom. 7. such are patients as it were. But 3. Then they are sins servants, when there is a Law of sin and a Covenant, as there is between a master and a servant, And 2. full consent, and men give themselves, and willingly commit and deliver themselves (the word spoken of Christ's willingness to offer himself for us, Eph. 5.25. and to God the Judge, 1. Pet. 2.23.) to commit filthiness 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in abundance, The difference between the wrestling and protesting of a natural conscience against the flesh, and between the flesh & the Spirit. with greediness, Esa. 9.19. when the renewed part enters not a spiritual protestation on the contrare, see Rom. 7.19. the carnal protestation entered by natural reason is not the protestation of the renewed will and affections against the will and affections, but will against will makes a division of the practical act, and division weakens, the half is less than the whole, especially when half and half are contrare, half fire and half water makes the burning less, half light, half darkness makes twilight, it's not perfect day light, yea and it not only lesseneth, but weakeneth, yea and altars the kind of the moral act, no reason can admit that when a merchand casts his goods in the sea for fear of shipwreck, that he does an act of prodigality or wastrie: It wants delight and full consent. Herod's killing of John Baptist, though he did it with sorrow, yet was no compelled nor divided action between renewed affection and unrenued affection. And so it was no protestation in favour of the Law of God, for he was not grieved, because murdering of the man of God was against the honour of God, but because not murdering of him was against his supposed credit, he should appear before men perjured, and to kill was a torment of conscience, it was then a protestation in favour of his own credit and conscience natural. Hence the formal objects of action and action, show the clear difference between the combat between sense and reason, or between a natural conscience and the flesh, (for a natural conscience cannot plead for, and protest in favour of the spiritual Law of God) and the combat between the flesh and the Spirit. 2. The second special difference is in the Law convictions and the Gospel convictions, Compelled convictions argue a Law-Spirit, convictions under the Gospel, are stronger and more solid, for they have more of sanctified reason: 2. Will. 3. Inclination of heart and affection: A believer accuseth himself and joins actively with the Spirit to convince himself, and heightens his own guiltiness, Psal. 51.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. Dan. 9.5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 20. but a Law conviction comes upon Devils and they tremble, John 2.19. and upon such as are under the Law, and are unsent for, by resultance from a natural conscience, as heat from fire, light from the Sun: Compelled convictions speak a Law-state. 2. It is easier to be found and Orthodox, then to be Godly, It is easier to be found then to be Godly. Satan in a manner fondly believes there is one God, Jam. 2.19. and that Christ is the Son of God, Luke 4.34. and so doth the carnal Jew teach that it is not lawful to steal, to commit adultery, Rom. 2.21, 22. But in the Old and New Testament, Devils never accuse themselves of sin, but tempt to it, and challenge the Law and God. Gen. 3.4, 5. of unjustice, never themselves; Devils are most properly under the Covenant of Works, and by no command is the Gospel Preached to them, and next to them are such as are found in the letter of the Gospel, but never convinced of sin: Such are most under the Law, as have least Law-work and Law-condemnation upon their Spirits, these that are under the Law most, as touching their state, are most under the letter, lest under the Spirit, as touching any penal awaking. Legal terrors convert none. To be under Law-bondage is, a more punishment to Devils and men under a Law state, for legal terrors are upon Devils, Math. 8.29. Jam. 2.19. and Cain Gen. 4.14. punishment as such neither maketh, nor denominateth any gracious, it is but accidental to prepare any for Christ, Legal terrors may be mistaken and conceived to be the child birth of Regeneration many tormented with the Law have believed such a case to be the pain of the second birth, when it was but a mere Law-feaver, and have returned to their vomit and become more loose and profane. 1. Because the Law as the Law can convert none. 2. Wrestling with Law-bondage without any Gospel-Grace is but a contradicting of God, and his justice; and God recompenseth opposing and blaspheming of him in hell, with more sinful looseness. 3. Law-light under legal terrors shines more clearly, and the guiltiness in not making use of rods of that nature is so much the more grievous. Ye that have been scadded and burnt in this furnace, and are come back from hell, are taught by sense to believe there is a hell, and though hell torment can convert no man, yet it renders men more unexcusable: Humbling, wakning, and sanctifying Law-bondage is more than a work of the Law when it brings forth confessing, praying, believing, humble submitting to God, in Job, David, H●zekiah, Heman, and what a Physician is Christ who can heal us with burning and coals of hell. Literal and legal conviction on the mind, and Gospel conviction on the affection. 3. A man under a Law-work may give a legal and dead assent, to both the truth and goodness of the promises liberally conceived, as temporaries do, and Simon Magus wonders, but Saul, Acts 9 the Jailor trembles, Acts 16. but that is in regard of the conviction not of the mind only, but of the conviction of affection and the yielding to what shall I do? But Foelix trimbleth, but only in regard of literal conviction on the mind, but neither he nor Magus comes to what shall I do? they differ as the burning light of a fire, which both casts light and with it shi●ing heat also, and the light that precious stones cast in the night, which is both little and hath no heat. Fiery and piercing convictions are good, there is a dead conviction of the letter that doth not profit. Natural and supernatural convictions, the danger of the latter, if they be fiery, and not tempered with grace. 4. There is a strong Law-conviction that vengeance followeth the scadding of Sodomy, and the kill of parents, because natural instinct kindles and fires the soul with Law-apprehensions, when the mind hath engraven sharpness to discern undeniable principles, but the conscience is more dull in apprehending that spiritual vengeance followeth such spiritual sins as unbelief, because until there be some supernatural revelation, we are dead to the Gospel truths, and Gospel sins, but when a common Grace heightens the soul to a supernatural assent, that Christ is a Teacher sent of God, Joh. 7.28. Joh. 3.2. the conviction is more strong: But because it is more supernatural, and in stead of kindly affection of love which it wants, it is mixed with hatred and anger and so degeners into fiery indignation against the Holy Ghost, as Joh. 15.24. compared with Math. 12.15, 26.31. cleareth. 5. Conviction which is no more but conviction, ●are conviction is no Godly principle. is no godly principle, nor makes any heart change, yea it goes dangerously on to wonder and despise, except it send down coals of fire to the affections. 6. He who is under the Covenant of Grace finds a threefold sweetness in obedience. A sweetness in the hardest command, because it is the holy will of God, in a child under grace. 1. An inbred sweetness in the command. 2. In the strength by which he acts. 3. An inbred sweetness in a communion with God. No man is any other way under the Law, then under a yoke, what is only written seems the oldness of the letter, Rom. 7. and is dead of itself, and lays on a burden, but gives no back to bear. He that is under Grace finds sweetness of delight in a positive Law though the thing commanded be as hard to flesh and blood as to be crucified, Joh. 10.18. yet it obtains a sweetness of holiness from God's will, Psal. 40.8. I delight to do thy will, O God, (even to be made a curse and crucified) Thy Law is within my heart, and he would but fulfil all righteousness, even that which seems to be the outside of the Gospel, to be sprinkled with water, Math. 3.15. and this Christ would do as under the Covenant of Grace. 2. The stir and breathe of the Spirit makes the work sweet, hearing brings burning of heart, Luke 24.32. willing gladness, A sweetness of communion with God an abundant hire for a duty to a child under Grace. Acts 2.41. and some sweetness of stirred bowels comes from the Lords putting in his hand through the Keyhole of the door of the heart, Cant. 5.4. where as to an natural man under the Law, to lift up a Prayer is to carry a millstone on his back, every syllable of a word is a stone weight which he cannot bear. 3. Were there no more in praying, but a communion with God, how sweet is it? when Christ prayeth, the fashion of his countenance is changed, Luke 9.29. There is a heaven in the bosom of Prayer, though there were never a granting of the suit, sure there is a sin in making heaven a hire, and in making duty a relative thing, a horse for a journey, a ship for a voyage to fetch home gold, where as there is heaven in praising God before the Throne, such as is both work and wages, and so in spiritual duties here. 7. Suppose there were no letter of a command, because there is suitableness between the Law engraven in the heart, and the spiritual matter commanded, a child of Grace under Grace sets about duties, How an inward principle of a new nature stands (as it were) for a command, and yet the Word and Spirit must not be separated. so that (in a manner) there is no need to say to David, Get thee to Jerusalem and to the house of God, for he sayeth, Psal. 122.1. I was glad when they said, let us go to the house of the Lord. As there needs no command that the Father love the child, nor is there need to exhort the Sea to ebb and flow, or the Sun to shine: nor are many arguments useful to press the mother to give suck to the child, nature stands for a Law here, the strength of the engraven Law in the heart, overpowreth the letter. So the new nature, the indwelling anointing, as a new instinct putteth the child of Grace to act. But here we are to beware, that we separate not the Word and the Spirit, the Father of Spirits loves to work with his own tools, and sow with his own seed the Word of God, these three agree in one 1. The Spirit acting. 2. The habit of Grace acted upon by the Spirit, who blows away the ashes, and 3. The word of exhortation: nor do we extol dead letters and liveless forms, as Libertines say, for we take in with the letter the quickening sense and convincing meaning of the Word, and its considerable that the Spirit draws sweetly after him, the nature, faculties of will, mind and affections, and they need no other allurement but the Word, the Spirit, and the new nature: But when they barbarously slew their children and made them pass through the fire, they must put out of their ears and hearts the crying and howling of the murdered Babies, with the noise of the beatting of drums; nature serves the Devil often weeping, and Satan deadenes nature, Grace so mortifies as the consent of delegation goes alone, Psal. 1.2. Psal. 119.72.97. CHAP. XIII. There are two sorts of Covenanting, on external, professed, visible, conditional, another internal, real, absolute and the differences betwixt them. 2. Infants externally in Covenant under the New Testament 3. Some Questions touching infants. Person's are two ways in Covenant with God, externally by Visible profession, and conditionally, not in reference to the Covenant, but to the thing promised in Covenant, which none obtains, but such as fulfil the condition of the Covenant: For consent of parties, promise and restipulation whether express, by word of mouth, Deut. 5.27. We will hear and do, Josh. 24.24. And the people said unto Joshua, the Lord our God will we serve and his voice will we obey. Or yet tacit and implicit by profession. I will be thy God, and the God of thy seed, makes parties in Covenant. The keeping or breaking of the Covenant, must then be extrinsecall to ones being confederate with God. And 2. Infants born of Covenanted Parents are in Covenant with God, because they are born of such Parents, as are in Covenant with God, Gen. 17.7. I will be a God to thy seed after thee. (2.) The Covenant choice on God's part is extended to the seed, The s●ed & Infants of Covenanting parents are in Covenant with God under both Old and New Testament. Deut. 4.37. And because he loved thy Fathers, therefore he choice their seed after them. Deut. 10.15. Only the Lord had a delight in thy Fathers, to love them, (and) he choice their seed after them, (even you (Fathers and Children) above all people, (as it is) this day. And the Covenant choice of seed is extended to the seed in the New Testament. Act. 2.39. For to you, and to your children is the promise made. He speaks in the very terms and words of the Covenant, Gen. 17.7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, every one of you be baptised, he saith not every one of you, old and young, Parents and Children, repent. For that command of Repentance is given only personally to them who moved the Question, What shall we do, Men and Brethren? 37. For we are under great wrath, and crucified the Lord of Glory. The Answer is, you aged, Repent. 39 True. But ah, we prayed, his blood be upon us and our Children. He Answers to that, every one of you be baptised. Why, The promise of the Covenant must be made to infants▪ Acts 2.39. else the sense of the words cannot stand. that must be every one of you who are commanded to repent? No. It must be every one of you to whom the promise is made, but the promise is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Observe the very two Pronouns that are, Gen. 17.7. Deu. 4.37. Deut. 10.15. to thee and thy seed. To you and your seed, and children. Now the Answer had been most impertinent, if he had mentioned their children, except in order to their Baptism, and their being in Covenant. For 1. their Children crucified not the Lord Jesus; Nay by Anabaptists grounds, their Children not being visibly in Covenant with their Parents, and not capable of actual hearing the Word, of actual mourning for, and repenting of their sins, as Zech. 12.10. Mat. 3.8, 9, 10. they were not concerned either in the evil of their Parents, who crucified the Lord of Glory, nor in the good of their Repentance more than stones. So that (every one of you be baptised, Infants in Covenant under the New Testament. for the promise is to you and to your Children) should be impertinent, and also false; for Covenant promises are no more made to Children, then to stones, say the opposites of Infant Baptism. Yea also, as the Lord in the Old Testament, calls Israel his people. My people old and young. Saul shall be Captain of my people. David shall feed my people, old and young, and shall punish with the sword the murdering of Infants. 2. Because he choice (with a Covenant choice) the Jews and their seed, Deut. 4.37. Deut. 10.15. Gen. 17.7. than he must be the God of their seed. But he choiseth with a Covenant choice, and calling all the Nations, Isa. 2.2, 3. All the kindreds of the earth under the New Testament, Psal. 22.27. All Egypt and Assyria under the New Testament. Blessed be Egypt my people, and Assyria the work of my hand, Isa. 19.29. All the Kingdoms of the world are the Lords, and his Sons, and he reigns in them, by his Word and Gospel, as the seventh Angel soundeth, Revel. 11.15. Old and young of Nations under the New Test. are in Covenant externally, as Israel was. All the Gentiles are his, Isa. 60.1, 2, 3, 4. Mal. 1.11. All the ends of the earth, and the heathen, Psal. 2.8, 9 Psal. 72.7, 8, 9, 10. Now if they be not his by visible and externally professed Covenant, they must be the Lords Kingdoms only, because some in these Kingdoms. 1. Are come to age. 2. Profess the truth. 3. Give a signification that they are converted and chosen, and so baptised. But so infants and all the rest of these Kingdoms who fixedly, in a Church, hear the Word, profess they are followers, and by so doing are witnesses against themselves that they have chosen the Lord to be their God, and have consented to the Covenant, as Joshua saith, Josh, 24.22. must be under the New Testament cut off from the Covevant, and a place must be shown where God hath now under the New Testament, broken the staves of beauty and bands, and hath laid this curse upon all the Infants of Egypt, Assyria, of all the Kingdoms of the earth, that the Lord is now no God to them, and feeds them no more, and therefore that which dies, let it die, and that which is cut off, let it be cut off, as it is, Zech. 11.9. And the like must be said of all that are come to age, and not baptised, or as good as not baptised. And Covenant promises are not to the Children of Believers, contrair to Acts 2.39. nor to the aged, until they be converted visibly and Baptised; This than hath never yet been fulfilled, that the Gentiles and Heathen are become the Lords people. Sure, it is (2.) and was a mercy for the seed to be in Covenant, Exod. 20.6. I am the Lord showing mercies unto thousands of them that love me, and keep my Commandments. Psal. 89.28. My mercy will I keep with David and his seed. What mercy? My Covenant shall stand fast with him. Hence they are called the sure mercies of David. Isa. 55. The Lord following the seed of the Godly with real mercies (so that it cannot be called the favour of a ceremony and instituted or positive privilege belonging only to the Jews) as that his seed is blessed, Psal. 37.26. Psal. 112.2. This mercy must be taken away either in mercy or in wrath: but that a real mercy of a blessing should be taken away in mercy, except a spiritual mercy of saving grace in Christ were given in place thereof, cannot be said, far less hath it any truth that a real mercy can be removed in wrath from Infants in Jesus Christ, in whom the Nations are blessed. And we see, Deut. 28. the blessing of an observed Covenant, and the curses of a broken Covenant are extended to the fruit of the body to the sons and the daughters, v. 418.32. Job 21.19. Job 29.14. Job 18.15, 16, 17. And that this is not a New Testament dispensation, who can say? And that outward positive favours are bestowed on Infants, is clear. (1.) That Christ laid his hands on them and blessed them, making them a fixed copy of the indwellers of his Kingdom. (2) The promises of the Covenant are made to them, Act. 2.39. (3.) They are clean and holy by Covenant holiness, 1 Cor. 7.14. which cannot be meant of being born of the marriagebed. For Paul, Rom. 11.16. saith the same of the Jews, root and branches, Fathers and Children: And no man dreamt that Paul, Rom. 11. intends to prove that the Jews shall be insert in again, because they are free of bastardy Father and sons. Now Infants understand no more any of rhese to be blessed by the laying on of the hands of Christ, and to be such as have title to the promises, Acts 2.39. and to be Covenant-wise holy, 1 Cor. 7. then they understand Baptism. (4.) The same Covenant made with Abraham is made with the Corinthians, 2 Cor. 6.16. I will be their God, and they shall be my people. Which is Prophesied of the Gentiles under the New Testament, Ezek 11.17, 18, 19, 20. Ezek 34.23, 24, 25. Jer. 31, 31, 32, 33, 34, 35, 36. Jer. 32.36, 37, 38, 39, 40. Zech. 13.9. Host 1.10, 11. 1 Pet. 2.9, 10. And it is made to the Gentiles with an eke of a new heart, and a larger extent of the Covenant under the New Test. for which cause it is called a better Covenant, hath better promises, Heb. 7.22. Heb. 8.6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12. Now that were a strange eke and excellency of the New Testament Covenant above the Old, to forfeit, without farther process, all Infants under the New Testament of all Covenant-right, which was due to them of old under the Covenant which the Lord calls faulty: Egypt shall be my people, except their 1. Infants. 2. And except their aged, and their non-Saints. (5.) Infants in the former Covenant had right by birth to the means of salvation, to be taught and Catechised in the Law of the Lord, because born of Covenanting Parents within the Visible Church, and so had title to Covenant-calling, and GOD'S Covenant-choising, Mat. 22.4. as is clear, Gen. 18.19. I know Abraham will command his Children and his household after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, Exod. 20.10. Deut. 6, 6, 7. And thou shall teach them diligently unto thy Children, Exod. 12▪ 26, 27. Ps. 78.4, 5, 6. Now if Infants be without the Covenant as the Infants of Pagans, than they have no more Covenant-right to the hearing of the Gospel, and a treaty with Christ, and Covenant, than Pagans have. It's not enough to say their Fathers owe that much natural compassion to their souls, as to teach them, it being a Parent's duty; Yea, but what warrant hath a Father as a Father to make offer of a Covenant of Grace in the Name of GOD to one Pagan more then to another, since all are equally without the Covenant, if there be a Covenant-call warranted to them, where is the Father's command to propone and engaged the Covenanters consent, if the Children be Pagans? but as they have a right by birth to the call, they being born where the call soundeth, they must have some visible right to the Covenant itself, more than other Pagans. It's but of small weight to say that, Rom. 9 Paul expoundeth that in the New Testament, I will be thy God, and the God of thy seed, only of the spiritual seed, such as Jacob, who was predestinated to Glory, not of those that are carnally descended of Abraham, otherwise it should follow, that these that are in the Covenant, might believe that they should be saved, though void of Faith and Repentance. The place, Rom. 9.6. vindicated from the unsound gloss of opposers of Infant Baptism. Answ. The purpose of the Apostle, Rom. 9 is to Answer a sad Objection: if the Jews be cast off, and rejected of God, as Paul, by his extreme desire to have them saved, insinuates, than the Word of God takes no effect, and his calling and choising of them for his people, takes no effect, v. 6. He Answers, it is not failed, though the body of Israel be rejected. For there are two kinds of Israelits, some only carnal and born according to the flesh: Others sons of promise, and chosen of God. Now the word of promise takes effect in the latter sort, to wit, in the chosen, and in the sons of promise, for they are not cast off of God, and so the Word of God takes effect, v. 6. (2.) But the truth is, if there be none Covenanted with God, but the chosen under the New Testament, than there is no such thing as an external and visible Covenanting with God, under the New Testament, then must all the Nations, Isa. 2.1, 2. Kingdoms of the World, Rev. 11.15. all Egypt, Assyria, Isa. 19.25. all the Gentiles, Isa. 60. be internally Covenanted and sons of promise, and predestinated to life? And that, 2 Cor. 6.16. I will be your God, and ye shall be my people, under the New Testament, must infer, that all in Covenant under Christ must be spiritually in Covenant, and the Visible Church of Corinth, and of all the Kingdoms of the world, Rev. 11.15. must be the invisible and chosen Church, and as many as are called, must be chosen, contrair to Mat. 22.14. Hence. Children must have from their being born of believing Parents, under the N. Test. some Covenant privileges Q. 1. Have Infants now under Christ no privilege nor Covenant Grace external by their birth and descent from believing Parents? Ans. Sure they have. For Acts 2.39. the promise is to you and to your children. Either to all children or to some, the Text makes no exception. If it be said to all conditionally, if they believe, not absolutely? Ans. That must be an internal covenanting proper to the elect, and the promise is not made to the aged but conditionally, so they believe. And yet the promise shall be made to Infants and Children, but not while they come to age. 2. To be cut off and casten out of Covenant is a dreadful Judgement, Zecha. 11.9. Host 2.3, 4, 5. Rom. 11.20. well, because of unbeleef they are broken off. Then because the Jews believe in Christ already comed, all their children, for no fault, but for the belief of their Parents, must be cut off▪ (3.) Whereas Paul makes it a misery that the Ephesians, 2.12. were strangers from the Covenants of promise, ●aving no hope and without God, without Christ. And Peter, that the Gentiles were no people, 1 Pet. 2. then that misery lies upon the Infants of Christians and all within the Visible Church, until they be converted and baptised, and the Gospel is no favour to them, that they are within the net, and in the office house of Grace the Visible Church, where the word is Preached to children, who are to be taught, Gen. 18.19. Deut. 6.7. Exod. 12.26, 27. Psal. 78.1, 2, 3▪ 4.5, 6, 7. 2 Tim. 3.15. and the Lord reckons it among the favours, that he bestows not on every Nation, but only on his own Covenanted Israel, that the Word of the Gospel to gather them and their Children, Math. 23.37. 2 Tim. 3.15. Psal. 78.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. and his Statutes and his Judgements are declared and Preached to them, Psal. 147.19, 20. Deut. 5.1, 2, 3, 4. c. 6.1, 2, 3, 4, 6, 7. Psal. 81.4. and that the Oracles of God, and the promises are committed to them, Rom. 3.1, 2. Rom. 9.4. the promises and the giving of the Law, and the Covenants and the service of God. And that this is a special blessing in the New Testament to old and young is clear from Acts 13. when Paul turns from the blaspheming Jews to the Gentiles. It is a Covenant mercy to fathers and children that the Word of the Covenant is preached to them. 47. I have set thee to be a light to the Gentiles, that thou shouldest be for salvation to the end of the earth. Now this Covenant salvation is, Isa. 49.6. I will give thee to restore the preserved of Israel.— 8. I will give thee for a Covenant to the people to establish the earth.— 9 That thou mayest say to the prisoners go forth, etc. Now if it be said, it was indeed a singular privilege to the Jews, but what places of the New Testament make it a Covenant privilege to the Gentiles and their seed, if the Word of the Covenant Preached to the aged under the New Testament, can the same ways, by accident, be Preached and promises come to the ears of the unbaptised Children, now growing to be capable of hearing the Gospel, Acts 2.39. 2 Tim. 3.15. as to Pagans, and such as are no less stranges to the Covenant, and void of all right by the Covenant made with their Parents, than Indians and their children who worship Satan? Paul not without a command Preacheth the Word of the Covenant to the discerning Gentiles, Acts 13.47. from Isa. 49.6, 9, 10. must not the fathers have command to speak the Gospel to their children? Or doth not the warrant that Parents and Pastors have to take within the Covenant the fathers, warrant them to preach the same Covenant to the children? where as, otherwise the Apostles should have said, we have no warrant to offer the Covenant to any or to Preach Christ a given Covenant to any: But 1. To such as are come to age. 2. Such as are Converts. 3. To such as can give signification by confession, that they are not only visible but also invisible and chosen confederates, and they should have said all children are now by Christ excluded as profane Gentiles and heathen from the Covenant of Grace, because there can be none (say Anabaptists) but real Believers under the New Testament in Covenant with God. Yea but the New Testament offers Christ a Covenant, in the preached promises, alike to fathers and sons. Math. 4.16. The people (fathers and sons) that sat in darkness saw great light, etc. Math. 19.43. Therefore I say unto you, the Kingdom of God shall be taken from you and given to a nation bringing forth the froots thereof. And is it not a punishment to be deprived of the Kingdom? If the Kingdom of God come where the Preached Covenant is, Math. 3.2. Math. 12.28. and the Bridegroom among them, and so cause of joy, Math. 9.15. and the Golden Candlesticks be there and the Son of God walking in the midst of the Golden Candlesticks, Rev. 1.20. c. 2.1. sure this is much to children. If it be said, it is very nothing, for children understand nothing of this. What then is meant by the Prophecy of the incoming of the Gentiles, Psal. 87.3. Glorious things are spoken of thee, O city of God. It is a mercy to be born in Zion. 4. I will make mention of Rahab and Babylon to them that know me; behold Phylistia and Tyre, with Aethiopia, that man was born there. 5. And of Zion i● shall be said, this and that man was born in her. 6. The Lord shall count, when he writeth up the people, that this man was born there. And Christ Prophesying of the desolation extends the judgement of a despised Covenant to the children and the house, Math. 23.37.38. Luke 19.44. Luke 22.24. how should there be under the New Testament Covenant wrath, for the father's Covenant breaking derived to the children, if in their fathers the sucking children broke not the Covenant, than they have been in Covenant with their parents, especially since a Visible Covenanting, by borrowed allusions to altars, speaking the language of Canaan, offering incense, swearing by the Lord, is spoken of Egypt and of five, that is, of many cities of Egypt, and of all the Gentiles, Esa. 19.18, 19, 20. 21. Mal. 1.18. and Covenant blessings shall be derived from fathers to children. The Lord shall say, 25. Blessed be Egypt my people, and Assyria the work of my hands, and Israel mine inheritance. It must be a narrow blessing of Covenanted Egypt, Assyria, Israel, if it be a blessing of these come to age. 2. Professing the faith. 3. And baptised. How can the Lord say, blessed be Egypt, and though the whole seed be visibly in Covenant, old and young, yet it followeth not that therefore every promise that is absolute, that is, that of a new heart is made to all and every one within the Visible Covenant: for it is promised, Deut. 30.6. to the Jews, and was given to them and undeniably the visible body of the Jews and their seed were the chosen and externally Adopted and Covenanted people of God, Deut. 29.10, 11, 12, 13. Deut. 7.6. Deut. 10.19. and the Lord calls them those whom he delivered out of Egypt, his people, Exod. 3.7. I have seen the affliction of my people▪ Ezek. 37.12. O my people, I will open your graves, as many as Saul and David did feed, whether they have a new heart or not, the Lord calls them his people, 1 Sam. 9.16.2. 2 Sam. 7.8. See Psal. 50.7. Hear O my people, Psal. 81.13. Jer. 9.26. and so the Church of Corinth, 2 Cor. 16. is called his people, and the Kingdoms of the world the Lords Kingdoms in Covenant, Rev. 11.15. and there were many of them uncircumcised in heart, Jer. 9.26. Isa. 1.10. Amos 9.7. and with many of them▪ God was not well pleased, 1 Cor. 10.5. and so it is most false that none are in Covenant under the New Testament, but only Believers; For Judas, Demas, Simon Magus, and all the externally called (for they cannot be baptised but as in Covenant with God) Math. 22.10. are by their profession in Covenant externally, as the Jews profession sayeth they accepted of, and consented unto the Covenant of Grace, for 1 Cor. 10.7. Be not ye Idolaters, as some of them, commit not fornication, tempt not Christ, murmur not, as some of them, v. 8.9. th●se and the like say we are the same way in Covenant as they were and our Visible Church, now, and the Visible Church then are of the same constitution. Q. And may we not say, that the same Covenant of Grace, we are under, is the same in nature and substance with that Covenant made with Abraham? Ans. The same Christ was their Mediator, as ours, Heb. 13.8. their Rock and our Rock, Christ. 1 Cor. 10.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. joh. 8.56. (2.) We are justified as Abraham, and David. Rome, 4.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Gen. 15.6. Ps. 32.1, 2. 3. They were saved by Grace, the Gentiles as well as they, Acts 15.11. by faith, Acts 10.43. Heb. 11.1, 2, 3, 4.13. etc. 4. There is no more reason to say, it was a civil Covenant made with Abraham, There is no ground to say that the Covenant made with Abraham, and with u● under the N. Test. are different Covenants because it distinguished Abraham's seed from other Nations, and an earthly Covenant, because Canaan was promised to them, not to us, then to say there be two Covenants of Works, one made to Adam, with a promise of an earthly Paradise, and another Covenant of Works to the Jews, with an earthly Canaan; And a third to these who in the Gospel time are under a Covenant of Works. Yea upon the same account, the Covenant of Grace made, Psal. 89. 2 Sam. 7. with David, having a Throne promised to him, should be yet another Covenant different from the other two; And since a Covenant here is a way of obtaining salvation upon condition of obedience, John Baptist should be under another Covenant of Grace▪ then the Apostles: For to their faith is promised the working of miracles, Mark 16.16, 17, 18. But John wrought no miracles, and many thousands of believers work no miracles, and they must be under a third Covenant: For though Canaan was promised to Abraham's seed, there is no reason to call it an earthly Covenant, or another different covenant, for to all believers the blessings of their land are promised, Ezek▪ 36.25, 26, 30, 31. Jer. 31.31. compared with 38, 39, 40, 41, 42, 43. Mat. 6.33. Luke 12.31. 1 Tim. 4.8. Heb. 13.5, 6. 5. What if we say the Covenant made with Abraham, Exod. 3. proves by our Saviour's reasoning, Ma●. 22.31, 32, 33. that Infants shall not rise again and be in Angel-state and saved, To children no Covenant-resurrection nor any Covenant-salvation can be given or promised, if they be not in Covenant. otherwise if Infants and all believers in the Saduces time be not under the same Covenant with Abraham, no Infants shall have a Covenant-Resurrection, nor a Covenant-Salvation; Or then there is some other salvation for Infants that are saved, to wit, some Pagan heaven without the Covenant, and without Christ, and if Infants be Pagans without the Covenant, either none of them are saved and chosen to life. Contrair to Christ, Mat. 18.2, 3, 4. Mark 10.13, 14, 15, 16. and the Anabaptists grant. Or there is a salvation 1 without a Covenant, and so without the New and Old Testament. 2. Without the Name of Jesus and the Blood of the Covenant: Contrair to Acts 4.12. 1 Joh. 1.8. Rev. 1.5. (3.) they shall be saved without the Visible Church, the way that Pagans are saved. Q 3. Are they not saved all of them? Is not this enough? But because the Kingdom of Christ is spiritual, the Element of water can do them no good, except they believe? Ans. If his Kingdom be not spiritual, because his wisdom hath appointed external signs, than no promise (which is but good words) shall be made to Children, contrair to Acts 2.39. for they can do them no good until they believe. The New Test. Kingdom of CHRIST is spiritual, though there be in it external signs and seals. 2. Then should there be no Preaching of the Gospel to all Nations, as Mat. 28.20. for impossible it is that all Nations can be profited by the Gospel. 3. The doubt suppones that it is legal servility and Jewish to be under the Gospel Preached and the dispensation of signs and seals, even to the aged, such as are Baptism, the Supper, rebukes, censures. 4. To be a visible member, and visibly in Covenant, and to be baptised, except all be sound believers, must be Jewish Now certain, it is a new Testament Ordinance that Ministers Preach and baptise all nations, though the greatest part believe not. Q. 4. If faith sanctify as faith, than an unbelieving whore might be sanctified by a believing fornicator: How faith does sanctify the unbelieving wife to the believing husband. For faith will do its formal work in every subject? Answ. Paul never meant that faith doth sanctify in every subject, but in subjecto capaci. Faith sanctifieth not incest and sin, they are not capable to be separated to a holy use: If fire as fire burn, than might all the water in the Ocean be dried up with the least sparkle of fire. If prayer as prayer obtain all things, shall it obtain that the sacrificing of your son to God, shall be accepted of him as holy and lawful worship? Mr. Baxter saith excellently upon this subject. A thing must be first lawful, before it be sanctified; Mr. Rich. Baxter, plain Scripture proof for Infant Baptism. 4 Arg. on ● Cor. 7. p. ●8, 99 God sanctifieth not sin in, or to any. See the Argument 1 Cor. 7. learnedly and solidely vindicated by him, so as the dispute is at an end now. Q. 5. What holiness is it that is called federal, or Covenant holiness which is in Infants? Ans. It is not so much personal holiness (though it may so be called, because the person is a Church member, Of federal holiness. separated from the world to God) as holiness of the seed, Society, Family, or Nation, which is derived from father to son, as if the father be a free man of such a City, that privilege is so personal, as it is by the Law hereditary freedom derived from father to son, if the father have jus ad media salutis right to the means of salvation, so hath the son. Hence this was first domestical, God made the Covenant with Abraham and his family: I will be thy God, and the God of thy seed, Gen. 17. it was extended to him, not as a father only, but as to the head of the family; the children of Servants born in Abraham's family were to be circumcised and to be instructed as having right to the means of salvation. Gen. 17.12. He that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, every manchild in your Generations (so it is Generation-holinesse) he that is born in the house, or bought with money of any stranger, that is not of thy seed. So God shows clearly that in Abraham he choosed the Nation and the house, Gen. 18.19. I know Abraham, that he will command his children (that is too narrow a Church Visible) and his household after him, that they shall keep the way of the Lord. 2. Afterward he choosed the Nation to be a peculiar people holy to himself, The Covenant external is made with a society or visible Church that out of them God may gather heirs of glory. Deut. 7.6, 7. but not with another new distinct Covenant, but in the same Covenant. 8. But because the Lord loved you, and would keep the oath that he had sworn to your fathers, to wit, to Abraham. Deut. 10.15. He chose their seed after them, even you, above all people, not above all houses. Amos 3.2. You only have I known of all the families of the earth. So the external Church Covenant and Church right to the means of grace is given to a society and made with Nations under the New Testament, Isa. 2.1, 2, 3. Psal. 2.8, 9 Psal. 22.27. Psal. 87.2, 3, 4. Rev. 11.15. Matth. 28.19, 20. And not any are baptised in the New Testament, (except the Eunuch, and Saul, Acts 8.39.) who were baptised firstly, but they were baptised as public men representing a seed; also, societies are baptised. All Judea, Mat. 3.3. All the land of Judea, Mark 1.5. All the multitude, all the people, Luke 4.7.21. Sure the fathers were so Christianed and Baptised as their children had right to the same seal. So Joh. 3.22, 23, 26. Cornelius his house and all with him were baptised, Acts 10.33▪ 47. Three thousand at once, Acts 2.39, 40, 41. The Jailer and his house, Acts 16.33. servants and friends. The household of Stephanas, 1 Cor. 1.16. was Baptised. And this 3. is holden forth as the Church, What federal holiness is. as the household of Narcissus which are in the Lord, Rom. 16.11. Aquila and Priscilla, and all the Church at their house. v. 5. The Church at the house of Philemon, Phil. v. 2. which teacheth that the Covenant holiness is of societies and houses under the New Testament as in Abraham's house, and as Abraham's house was Circumcised, so are whole houses under the New Testament Baptised. 4. Paul aptly calls it the holiness of the lump, or Nation, and the first fruits, root-holinesse, the holiness of the root and the branches. Of the Olive Tree and the branches, Rom. 11.16, 17. (5.) The special intent of God in sending the word of the Covenant must evidence this; he sends not the Gospel unto, and for the cause of one man, to bring him in, but to gather a Church and his elect ones, by a visibly and audibly Preached Covenant to a society, to a City; to Samaria. Acts 8. To the Gentiles, Acts 13. To all Nations, Mat. 28.19, 20. that they and their children may have right to salvation and to the means thereof, and to the Covenant, and therefore we are not curiously to inquire whether the faith of the father be real or not, if the Gospel be come to the Nation, to the House, to the Society. The Lord in one Abraham, in one Cornelius, in one Jailer, (whom he effectually converts as far as we can gather from the Scriptures) choises the race, house, society, nation, and gives them a covenant-holiness, the man's being born where the call of God is, does the turn, as much as the faith of the Parent. For by the root is not necessarily meant the Physical root the father. For Abraham was not the Physical root and father, The being born where the Gospel sounds, of that nation & race, is the ground of Covenant-holines as well as the faith of the nearest parents nor Cornelius of all the servants and friends in the house. But if a friend be in the house, or society, and profess the Gospel, he and his obtain right to Baptism and the means of salvation. But as touching real holiness, it is not derived from a believing father, to make the son a believer, Scripture and experience say the contrair. Nor 2. is internal and effectual confederacy with God, that, by which one is a son of promise, Rom. 9 and predestinate to life, a national favour. For 1. no man is chosen to life in his father, because the father is chosen: A chosen father may have a reprobate son. 2. Election to life is not of nations or houses or societies, but of single persons. It is not said, before the nation had done good or evil, I choosed this nation all and whole, not this, but I loved this man, not this man. Q. What is the formal reason and ground that any hath right to Baptism? Ans. If we speak of a passive right, if the Eunuch believe, Act. 8. and if such have received the Spirit, Acts 10. they may receive baptism, The Eunuch moves not the Question whether Philip should sin in baptising him or not. The Eunuch was troubled to make sure his own, not Philip's Conversion. The faith required of these to be baptised, Act. 8.37. Mar. 16.16 is real saving faith, not visible only. They who bring that Argument, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 8. and that, Mark 16. to prove that only such should be baptised, who believe actually and are come to age: They prove that the Church sinneth, if they baptise any, but such as are predestinated to life and really believe. For the faith that Philip asked for, was real, with all the heart, not as the faith of Simon Magus▪ And the faith, Mark 16.15. is real saving faith, that brings salvation; he that believes is saved. 2. It can not be visible faith only, for that is in Simon Magus, he doth visibly so believe and is baptised. Yet upon that faith he was not saved, being in the gall of bitterness (3.) He that believes not, is damned. The meaning must be, he that believes not savingly is damned: Or then he that believes not visibly, as Magus, and Judas, is damned, but this is most false, for Peter believes not as Judas, and yet he is not damned: Or then the meaning must be, he that believeth both really, savingly, and also professedly and visibly, is saved. And that is true, but it concludes that none are to be baptised, but both real and visible believers. 4. If it be true that none are to be baptised but Covenanted ones, as Acts 2.39. And if none be Covenanted ones under the New Testament, but real believers and such as are predestinated to life, as our Anabaptists teach from Rom. 9 than must the Church without warrant of the Word baptise Magus, Demas, Judas. (5.) Then must also all Judea, all the Generations of vipers baptised have been both real and visible believers, for they were all baptised, Mat. 3.3, 4. Mark 1.5. Luke 1.7.21. Let Independents consider this, and what D. Fuilk, and Mr. Cartwright, Paraeus, Calvin, Beza; and our Divines speak on these places against the auricular confession of all the huge multitude. (6.) It is a wonder that any man should dream that the Eunuch made a case of conscience, Acts 8. whether it was lawful to Philip to baptise, and not whether he himself did believe and could worthily receive the seal, Act. 8.36. here is water (saith he) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. (7.) So none can warrantably baptise any but persons dying in faith, and it's not certain these have the faith that is, Acts 8.37. Mar. 16.16. But for the formal warrant of such as baptise: The formal ground of baptising. neither are the aged as the aged, nor Infants as Infants to be baptised; for so all the aged and all Infants even of Pagans are to be baptised. Nor 2. are all in Covenant, to be baptised: For such as are only really and invisibly in Covenant, and do make no profession of Christ at all, are not warrantably by the Church to be baptised. Only these whether old or young that are, tali modo visibili federati, such as professedly and visibly in Covenant, and called, Acts 2.39. are warrantably baptised. Hence they must be so in Covenant, as they be called by the word of the Covenant, for they cannot be baptised against their will, Luke 7.29.30. Q. What warrant is there, Act. 2.39. for Infant Baptism? Ans. I shall not contend for the actual baptising of them at that instant. But every one of you be baptised 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 father and sons. Why? the promise is to you and to your children, break the Text into an hundred pieces, and blood it as men please, the Genuine Thesis which cannot be neglected, is, These to whom the promise of the Covenant does belong, these should be baptised, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But the promise of the Covenant is to you and to your children. Ergo, you and your children should be baptised. The assumption is the express words of Peter and the Proposition is Peter's. These to whom the promise is made should be baptised. But the promise is made to children, Act. 2. Every one of you be baptised, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for to you is the promise of the Covenant. Calvin, Bullinger, Brentius, Gualther clear it. 2. Who they are, who are in the nearest capacity to be baptised, he explains, when he showeth, that the Covenant promise is made to these who are far off, to the Gentiles, whom the Lord shall call, than all that are under the call and offer of Christ in the Preached Gospel, as Prov. 9.1, 2, 3, 4. Math. 22 bid them come to the wedding, Luke 14.16, 17, 18. etc. are externally in Covenant, and such to whom the Covenant is made, and should be baptised, it's presumed they give some professed consent to the call and do not right down deny to come, else they should be baptised against their will. 3. Calvine shows Acts 2.39. that the Anabaptists in his time, said, the promise was made to Believers only, but the Text saith, it is made to you and to your children, to infants, to the children of the Prophets and of the Covenant made with the fathers, Acts 3.25. Now what ground do Anabaptists give that all infants believe, or that some believe, since to them, their children were as Pagans without Christ, without the Covenant? if to the children when they come to age and shall believe? but what need to add, and to your believing Children? for these are not children but men of age, their fathers and they both being believers. Now Peter sets down two ranks, the aged who heard the word with gladness, and were pricked in heart, v. 37.41. and the children, and to both the promise is made, and what ground is their to exclude sucking children? for the word, Acts 2.39. is Math. 2.18. 1 Cor. 7.14. where sure the word is taken for sucking children of whose actual faith the Scripture speaks not. 2. The promise is to you and to your children, can have no other sense then, The sense of the words, the promise is to you and to your children. the promise and word of the Covenant is preached to you and to your children in you▪ and this is to be externally in Covenant, both under the Old and New Testament. If it have another sense it must be this, the Lord hath internally Covenanted with you the 3000. who have heard the word and with your children, and you are the spiritual seed, and sons of promise, predestinate to life eternal: as Rom. 9 they expone the seed in Covenant: But 1. Were all the 3000. Ananias and Saphi●a and their children the spiritual and chosen seed? for he commands all, whom he exhorts to repent, to be baptised: And 2. Now to Simon Magus and Demas, and numbers of such, Peter could not have said, the promise is made to you and to your children; if it be only made to real and actual believers, as they say, Peter therefore must own them all whom he exhorts to repent, as the chosen seed. But if the former sense be intended (as how can it be denied?) to wit, the word of the Covenant is preached to you, an offer of Christ is made in the preached Gospel to you. Then it cannot be denied, but the promise is to all the Reprobate in the Visible Church whether they believe or not, for Christ is preached and promises of the Covenant are preached to Simon Magus, to Judas and all the Hypocrites who stumble at the Word, to all the Pharisees, as is clear, If all be really believers that are in Covenant with God, under the New Testament▪ all the Kingdoms of the world, which are the Lords and Christ's, Rev. 11.15. must be believers & internally in Covenant with God. Math. 13.20, 21, 22, 23. Acts 13.44, 45. Acts 18.5, 6. Math. 21.43. 1 Pet. 2.7, 8. (3.) The promise, I will be your God, and ye shall be my people, must be one way expounded in the Old Testament, to wit, you are externally only in Covenant with God. But in the New Testament, it must have this meaning, I will be your God, 2 Cor. 6.16. that is, you are all predestinate to life, and the sons, by promise, and the spiritual seed, to whom I say, I will be your God: But so it may well be said, there were no internal Covenanters in the Old Testament, and there be none but only internal Covenanters in the New Testament, so that when the Lord sayeth, Rev. 11.15. The Kingdoms of the earth are mine, and my sons. He must say, the Kingdoms, Egypt, Assyria, Tyrus, Ethiopia, etc. are chosen and the spiritual seed, and these Covenanted Nations and the Kingdoms of the Gentiles are all internally and effectually called, and there are no Visible Churches in the New Test. but only all invisible and saved. 4. If these words, The promise is to you, and to your children, be limited, to as many as the Lord shall effectually call, either fathers or children. But Mr. Stev. Marshel judiciouslie observes; How these words, and to your chil●dren are not limited. there is no more a Covenant-favour holden forth to their children, then to the children of Pagans; for the children of Pagans, if God effectually call them, have the promises made to them. 5. It's clear that external covenant-holiness, is to these men ceremonial holiness now out of date; and then external calling the only means of internal and effectual calling, Math. 22.14. 1 Cor. 1.18.23, 24. Luke 15.1, 2. and the fixed Church-hearing of the Preached Gospel is a ceremony. 2. That God should be the God of Infants of the seed of the Jews, external Covenanting & the blessing of the Gospel Preached to the Nation, is but a Ceremony to the opposers of Infant baptism, contrair to all ancient Prophecies, Isa. c. 2. c 19 Jer. 23. Isa 11▪ etc. a mercy to fathers and sons coming from free love, Deut. 10.15. Gen. 17.7. Deut. 7.6.7.8. and Prophesied as a mercy to the Gentiles by all the Prophets was a ceremony removed now in Christ. Yea 3. external Covenanting, and adopting, and choising of Israel is no mercy, except that a pedagogy of the Law is a mercy for a time. 4. The promise is to you and to your children, must be in a contradictory way expounded, to wit, the promise is no more made to your children so long as they are Infants, then to Devils. Yea fathers and children not believing, though chosen to life, are excommunicated from Visible adoption, calling, hearing the Gospel promises, for there is no Covenanting now under the New Testament, but only internal Covenanting of the elect. 5. Young Timothy and children of believing Parents, and all the aged within the Visible Church, If there be no Covenanting under the N. T. but that of real believers, there can be no Covenant obligation upon the non-converted to hear, to believe the Gospel, to receive the seals. have no right to hear the Preached Gospel, before they believe and be the holy seed, more than Pagans. Yea 6. they can have no command of God, to hear the Gospel, nor any Covenant or Gospel warrant, until they be believers, for if there were no promise made to hearing and considering the word, if they shall believe, while as yet they believe not, and until they be effectually called, there can be no command, and no Law, to hear the Gospel and the Covenant-offer made in Christ. It shall then be no more sin for unconverted persons to turn away their ears from the Law, and not to hear the Gospel. 7. It were nonsense to say to men under the externally proposed Covenant, repent, hear the Gospel, use the means, receive the seals, and yet you have no right to hear, nor have we any warrant to baptise you, until ye believe; for there is no promise made to you, nor to your seed and children, until first you believe. And it must say there was no threatening to Adam, Gen. 2.17. before he sinned, and no promise to Adam nor to any now, do this and live, until Adam first sinned, and first obeyed the Covenant; and so, if John Covenant to labour in Peter's Vineyard, and Peter promise to him four pence, so he work twelve hours, otherwise he shall not pay him four pence, though John accept of the Covenant, and work but one hour, whereas his Covenant is to work for twelve hours, than no man can say to John (work, for there is a promise made of four pence to you) the other might deny; no such promise was made to me, except I work twelve hours. It were, sure, unfaithful dealing to John to say so. For the four pence ought not, by this Covenant, to be given to him, except he work twelve hours: but he cannot, without palpable falsehood, say, I have broken no Covenant, in not working twelve hours: For though I consented to the Covenant, and began to work an hour, yet the promise was not to me simply, but to me as working twelve hours; A conditional Covenant hath the complete essence & nature of a Covenant, and they are truly in Covenant that are under it. but there is neither face nor faith in this Answer: For the fulfilling of the Covenant is only to give four pence to John, if he work twelve hours; But the promise and Covenant was made to him, and he hath foully broken. Yea a conditional Covenant agreed unto and accepted, is a Covenant, if we shall (as in reason we ought) distinguish between a Covenant, in its essence and nature, and a Covenant broken or fulfilled, a Covenant or threatening, is a Covenant and threatening obliging Adam, if it shall be agreed unto, by silence, as Adam accepted the threatening, Gen. 2.17. by silence, and Professors within the Visible Church, by their professing of the Doctrine of the Gospel or Covenant of Grace, their receiving of the seals and professed hearing of the Word, are under the Covenant of Grace, and engage themselves to obey commands, promises, threatenings, and therefore promises are as properly made to them, Acts 2.39. as commands, and threatenings, exhortations, invitations, and Gospel requests are made to them. But though the Anabaptists ignorantly confound the promise, and the thing promised; the Covenant, and benefits Covenanted. The promise is to you, and so are the commands, & threatenings, whether ye believe or not, the command is to you, and lays an obligation on you, whether ye obey or obey not, and the threatenings are to you, whether ye transgress, or transgress not. It is true, indeed, the promise, that is, the blessing promised, righteousness and eternal life is not given to you, until ye first believe. Object. Is not the promise made the same way to the aged as to the children, and the same thing required of both: The promise is to you and to your children. But the promise is made to the aged only, if they actually believe. Ergo, the promise is made to the children only, if they actually believe, and so not to Infants. Answ. Neither proposition nor assumption can bear weight. For the proposition, when God saith, I will be thy God O Abraham, and the God of thy seed. Is it needful that God require the same conditions, that is actual believing, that he may save Father Abraham, and also actual believing from hearing the word of the Covenant Preached from all Infants born of Abraham and dying in Infancy, or then all these Infants so dying must be eternally damned? Nay. We believe many Infants (we reserve to the Holy and Glorious Lord his liberty of election and reprobation, Rom. 9.11, 12.) among the Jews were saved by the Covenant of Grace, though they died Infants. And this we condemn in Anabaptists, that they show no revealed way of God of saving Infants of believing Parents dying in Infancy, more than of saving Pagans and their Infants, Anabaptists provide no s●lvation by Law or Gospel, or by JESUS CHRIST, for the saving of Infants born of believing parents, more than for saving of Pagans and their Infants. for to them both are alike without the Covenant of Grace and without Christ; and therefore believing Parents have no word of faith or of the Gospel to pray for the salvation of their Children dying in Infancy, for such prayers have neither warrant in the Covenant of Works, nor in the Covenant of Grace, by their way. And yet that we are to pray, is to be gathered from Gen. 19 ●8. 2 Sam, 12.16. Job 1.5. Mark 10.16. Psal. 28.9. and if we pray for their salvation, they must be saved by either Law or Gospel. It's not enough, to say that we may pray for savages that never heard of the Gospel, nor of the Covenant of Grace, that they may be saved. For seeing there is no name under Heaven by which men may be saved, but by the Name of Jesus, Acts 4.12. Joh. 14.6. There is no other warrant of praying for such, then that God would send them the Gospel; and since Christ prayed for Infants and blessed them, which is a praying for them, Gen. 48.15, 16. Deut. 33.1.6, 7, 8. etc. Eph. 1.2. Gal. 1.3. 1 Cor. 1.3. 1 Tim. 1.2. 2 Tim. 1.3. See Mar. 10.16▪ he must own them as blessed in Christ in whom all the Nations of the earth are blessed▪ and so Covenanted with God in Christ. 2. It is false that the promise is made only to the aged, upon condition of actual believing. It's false that the promise is made to infants & to the aged only upon condition of believing. 1. It is made to their children expressly in the Text, and for the way of their believing, we leave it to the Lord. Nor is it true, that the promise is made to the aged, upon condition of believing. The promise is made to them absolutely, whether they believe or not. But the blessing of the promise and Covenant of Grace is given and bestowed only conditionally, if they believe. The promise is absolutely made: it's called conditional from the thing conditionally given. Obj. But is not this an approven distinction, that persons are within the Covenant, either externally, professedly, visibly, or internally, really, or according to the intention of God? Ergo, such as are externally within the Covenant, are not really & indeed within the Covenant of Grace. Ans. The Adverbe (really) relates to the real fruit of the fulfilled Covenant, and so such as are only externally within the Covenant, How visible professors are really within the Covenant, & not really within it. are not really within the Covenant, for God never directed, nor intended to bestow the blessing Covenanted, nor grace to perform the condition of the Covenant upon them? But they are really Covenanted and engaged by their consented profession to fulfil the Covenant. And as the commands and threatenings of the Covenant of Grace lay on a real obligation, upon such as are only externally in Covenant, either to obey or suffer, so the promise of the Covenant imposes an engagement and obligation upon such to believe the promise, but some times, we say the promises of the Covenant of Grace are not really made to the Reprobate within the Visible Church, because God intends and decrees to, and for them, neither the blessing promised, nor the saving grace to fulfil the condition or to believe. And therefore these words are figurative, Heb. 8.10. This is the Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel, I will write my Law in their minds, etc. that is, this is the special and principal Covenanted blessing, I will give them a new heart: which must not be called a simple prediction, though a prediction it is, but it is also a real promise made absolutely to the elect, which the Lord fulfils in them: And this is called the Covenant. Because 1. they are no better than non-Covenanters upon whom the Lord bestows not this part and blessing of the Covenant. 2. The truth is, the promise of a new heart is not made to the Visible Church, which is only Visible: but to the Elect and Invisible Church. And if Anabaptists shall expone these words, Acts 2.39. The promise of a new heart is made to you and to your children, upon condition that you and your children believe, which they cannot do until first they have a new heart, it's as good as Peter had said, God promiseth to you and to your children grace to believe, and a new heart to obey him, upon condition that you first believe. And that is, The new heart is not promised to all, who ought to repent and to be baptised. God's promise to you to believe upon condition that ye believe, which is ridiculous, and therefore we cannot say that this promise of a new heart is made to all that are commanded to believe and repent and be baptised. For Elect and Reprobate and all are under these commands, if they be members of the Visible Church: But the promise of a new heart is not made to all within the Visible Church. Quest. How then? Must the promise of a new heart be here excluded? And shall nothing be meant in the Word, What is promised, Act. 2.39. whether a new heart be therein promised, or excluded. but a promise of forgiveness and life is made to you and your Children. Ans. I should judge it hard, to say, that were the only promise here made, the promise of a new heart is made to you all, therefore repent and be baptised. The Antecedent is not true. 2. Therefore because Peter speaks unto, and of a mixed multitude, Fathers, Children, Elect and Reprobate, who must first understand, the promise of life and forgiveness is made to you. Ergo, all come to age, repent and be baptised. And because the promise is made to your children, therefore let them be baptised. And 3. the promise of new heart is not to be excluded, because there were in the company to whom, and of whom the Apostle Peter speaks, many Elect, in whom the old Prophecy, Jer. 31. Ezek. 11. was to be fulfilled; For he saith, The promise is made to as many as the Lord shall call; to the Gentiles, it were a sense too narrow, to exclude that promise, and therefore, as the great promise, I will be thy God, and the God of thy seed (which chiefly is meant, Acts 2.39.) requires not the same condition in fathers and infants, nor the same condition in fathers, wives, hewers of wood, Officers and Commanders, little ones, and such as were not born, Deu. 29. with whom the Covenant is made. For the same faith in faith is and in infants, and faith working in the same duties cannot be required of husbands, wives, Magistrates, and hewers of wood) so neither is the promise made the same way to fathers, children, Jews near hand, and Gentiles far off, to Elect and Reprobate. Q. How can the promise of the Covenant, to write the Law in the heart, be made absolutely, and not to the Reprobate, but to the Elect only? For the Elect are only these to whom that promise is made, and yet the Reprobate are really in the Covenant of Grace, and the promise is made to them, as hath been said. Answ. It is no inconvenient that the Reprobate in the Visible Church, Mercies of the Covenant, are not alike and the same way promised to the Parents in covenant, to wit. Elect and Reprobate. be so under the Covenant of Grace, as some promises are made to them, and some mercies promised to them conditionally, and some reserved special promises of a new heart, and of perseverance belong not to them. For all the promises belong not the same way, to the parties visibly and externally, and to the parties internally and personally in Covenant with God. So the Lord promiseth life and forgiveness shall be given to these who are externally in the Covenant, providing they believe, but the Lord promiseth not a new heart and grace to believe, to these that are only externally in Covenant. And yet he promiseth both to the Elect. Hence the Covenant must be considered two ways, in abstracto and formally, The Covenant of Grace is considered two ways, in abstracto, & in conc●●to. in the letter as a simple way of saving sinners, so they believe, so all within the Visible Church are in the Covenant of Grace, and so it contains only the will of precept. 2. In the concrete, as the Lord caries on the Covenant in such and such a way, commensurably with the decrees of Election and Reprobation; As the Lord not only promises, but acts and engraves the Law in the heart, commensurably with his decree of Election, so the Elect only are under the Covenant of Grace. The word tells of no condition or work, The new heart is promised to such special Covenanters, not to Covenanters in general, and as Covenanters. or act to be performed by any, which if he do he shall have a new heart: and therefore the promise of the engraven Law in the heart, is not a simple promise made to the Covenanters as Covenanters, for so it should be a promise to all visible Covenanters (for visible Covenanters are essentially Covenanters) but it is both a promise and a prediction, yea a real execution or an efficacious way of fulfilling the decree of Election to such and such chosen, and specially loved of God Covenanters. 2. A new heart hath a twofold consideration, one as a duty commanded. 2. As a blessing promised, as to the former, Ezech. 18.31. make you a new heart and a new spirit, Jer. 4.4. Circumcise your heart to the Lord, take away the foreskin of your heart, ye men of Judah, The new heart is considered as a duty commanded. And 2. as a blessing freely promised. Eph. 4.23. be renewed in the Spirit of your mind, Eph. 4.14. Awake thou that sleeps and rise from the dead, these are either bare commands, without any Gospel strength given to obey, and so they are legal commands in the letter oboblidging all visible Covenanters to obedience, and so, all Letter all Law, no Gospel strength to perform speaks poor unmixed Law. In this case, God repeats and craves back again from broken men a sound heart, which they sinfully lost in Adam, and may justly seek heart conformity to his holy Law from all men. Or then these commands are backed with Gospel strength to obey, and so they are both commands and blessings promised, as Jer. 31.33. This my Covenant (a Covenant and something more) shall be— I will put my Law in their inward parts, The Reprobate are not in the Covenant of Grace as touching some special promise. and write it in their hearts— 34. Ezech. 11.19. Ezech. 36.26. Heb. 8.6, 10, 11.12. so the more strength promised the more Gospel. Neither is there any inconvenience, to say that the Reprobate visible Covenanters are not thus, as touching the special promises of a new heart and perseverance of the Saints, really in the Covenant of Grace. Q. Who are they, who are to believe God shall give them a new heart Ans. No man is positively to believe it while God work it in him, for no man is to believe that he is predestinated to Glory, while he first have the effects thereof in him, the hid Manna, the white Stone, the new Name. But no man is to despare or to create fatal inferences that he is Reprobate, since God begins kindly with him with a Gospel call. CHAP. XIIII. Considerations of the Arguments from Gen. 17. Mark 10.15, 16. Luke 18. Math. 19 Rom. 11. for Infant Baptism. IF God be the God of Abraham and of his seed, Gen. 17. therefore every male child shall be entered in the Covenant, by the initial seal of Circumcision, and so women also who eat the Passeover, which the uncircumcised might not do: and Peter was sent to the Circumcision, that is, to all the Jews men and women, and so the women is some way in the men, and they might be circumcised in them upon the same gound, because the same promise is made to fathers and to children, How the Lords Argument for Circumcision fits us for Baptism. must infants be baptised, Acts 2.39. 1. This is the Lords own Argument, Gen. 17.7. there were multitudes of differences between Circumcision and Baptism as we grant, but in the substance nature and Theologicall essence, and in the formal effects they are the same. We grant that Christ revealed in Types, Sacrifices, to come, darkly offered may differ from Christ as clearly offered Preached without these already abolished shadows and who is now come. Yet he is the same Saviour to them who believed in him then and now, Act. 10.43. Act. 15.11. And we 2. argue not simply from the letter of the Covenant. I am your God. Ergo, be baptised, for one might reply. I am your God. Ergo, offer such beasts to me, it shall not follow, But I am your God, and the God of your seed offering to you the same Christ and righteousness that was offered to Abraham in the same Covenant: Ergo, all of you be baptised who are under the same Covenant. For, 1. Circumcision of the flesh was a seal of the Circumcision of the heart promised in the Covenant of Grace, Deut. 30.6. and of the cutting of the foreskin thereof, Jer. 4.4. Jer. 9.26. Ezech. 36.26, 27. and baptism is the same, Col. 2.11, 12. Tit. 3.5. 2. Circumcision is a seal of the righteousness of faith, Rom. 4.11. so is baptism, as 1 Pet. 3.21. Rom. 4.24. 3. Circumcision is a seal of the Covenant, and by a metonymy called the Covenant of God in the flesh, Gen. 17.7, 13. so is baptism a solemn installing of all Samaria, Acts 8. in the Christian Covenant, and so Acts 2.39. 4. Circumcision is a solemn way of instituting any in the Church of Israel, so we are by one Spirit baptised into one body, 1 Cor. 12.12, 13. 1. The command of Circumcising is as large as Covenanting, but that is with Abrabam the father, and his seed, Acts 2.39. make the command of being Baptised, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 every one of you be Baptised, as large as the promise of the Christian Covenant, and call: For the promise is to you and to your children, and to as many as the Lord shall call. 2. The command supposes that all the Circumcised, the males of eight days old understand not the promise of the Covenant, the nature, use, signification, and end of the seal, A comparing of the command of Circumcision, and of the command of baptism in three. and the command to be baptised, supposeth that the children to whom the Covenant promise is made do not understand the same as touching baptism and the Covenant promise, Acts 2.39. 3. If the positive command be general that all these in Covenant should be marked with the initiatory seal of the Covenant: As Gen. 17.7, 8. I am thy God, and the God of thy seed: Therefore old and young be Circumcised, then there was no other command in particular, to baptise old or young, but the institution of Baptism in place of Circumcision needful. As touching the application of it to persons, old or young, except the ground of external Covenanting stand as warranting to administrate the seal to all, so Covenanted; Yea, and if there be a positive command and warrant in the New Testament to tender the Seal of Baptism to none but to the aged, that can give an account of their faith, and do actually believe; then should there be an express command in the New Testament concerning Baptism as concerning the Lords Supper▪ that every one before they be Baptised, If actual faith be required in all to be baptised, there should be a command of self-examining in the N. T. of all before they be baptised. try and examine themselves whether they savingly believe or not, before they be Baptised, otherwise they receive their own damnation, as in the Lord's Supper, for self judging and self examination, if actual believing and being internally in Covenant, as these in whose heart and inward part the Law of Grace must be engraven, be the necessary condition required in all these to whom the Church can warrantably tender Baptism as the seal of the Covenant: And we require a positive command in the New Testament, see that ye Baptise none though they profess they be in Covenant, except such as can try and examine whether they savingly believe or not: and here Anabaptists must flee to the consequences of the Word and reasons drawn from the Covenant of Grace, as well as we, and an express command they cannot flee unto, nor is it in Old or New Testament: It should not move us, that Infants understand neither command nor seal, nor Covenant, for the Argument is against the Holy Ghost, and they are obliged to answer it; for Infants are as ignorant of the promises the special mysteries of the Gospel, as of Precepts of the Gospel. And yet the promises of the Covenant of Grace are expressly to Infants of the New Testaments Acts 2.39. promise, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, The Gospel promise made to Abraham, Gal. 3.16. The Gospel and promise of righteousness of the Spirit of Life, Gal. 3.17, 18, 22, 29.23.28. Gal. 6.2. Rom. 4.13.16.20. Rom. 9.8. 1 Tim. 4.8. Heb. 4.1. Heb. 6.12.15. Heb. 8.6. Heb. 9.14. 1 John 5.1. is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to your children of the New Testament, to your Infants, if they believe (say they) 1. Can Infants actually believe? 2. Is not the promise so made to Turks, if they believe? But it were an easier way to Anabaptists to say, infants under the New Testament are externally in Covenant, where as Parents believe, and members of the Church are followed with Covenant mercy, only because they understand not, and the administration is more spiritual under the New Testament, and faith more urged, God requires not the dipping of Infants in Rivers (a ceremony more onerous, How many wicked absurdities must follow the excluding of Infants from the Covenant of Grace. more, truly, in women with child, virgins, diseased persons, in winter, in cold countries, against the word, the second Command, the third, the fourth, the sixth, the seventh, then that it needs to be refuted) it being only a ceremony which they may well want. But now Infants of believers are casten out, for no fault, of the Covenant of Grace. (2.) From Covenant mercy to the thousand Generation. Contrair to Gen. 17.7. Exod. 20.5. (3.) From Covenant-prayers and Church-prayers: Contrair to 1 Sam. 12. Ps. 28.9. Ps. 67.1, 2. Ps. 103 4, 5. (4.) From the blessing of the Lords Covenant-presence, who dwells in the Nation, in the Kingdom, Ps. 135.21. Ps. 132.13, 14. Rev. 11.15. Isa. 19.25. Isa. 2.1, 2, 3. 2 Cor. 6.16. I will dwell in them, and walk in them, and be their God, and they shall be my people. 18. And I will be a father to you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord God Almighty. Though this be spoken to▪ all the Covenanted people of God, yet are Infants casten out of the bosom of a Covenant Father and God? (5.) Infants are debarred from Covenant-calling and gathering in under the wings of Christ: Contrair to Matth. 28.19, 20. Matth. 23.37. Psal. 147.19, 20. and excluded from God's Covenant-choise: Contrair to Deut. 7.6, 7, 8, 9, 13, 14. Deut. 10.15. and left being heirs of wrath, a prey to Satan. (6.) They are Excommunicated from Covenant-blessings earthly, and the Tabernacle-protection promised in the Old and New Testament: Contrair to Deut. 28.4. Leu. 26.6, 7, 8, 9 Psal. 37.18.22.25, 26. Psal. 92.10. Psal. 112.1, 2, 3. Ezech. 34.24, 25, 26. Ezech. 36.29.35, 36, 37. Ezech. 8.7, 8. And in the New Testament, Matth. 6.27, 28.33. 1 Tim. 4.8. Heb. 13.5, 6. which were nothing if our Heavenly Father provide bread, protection, safety, dwelling in the land, and our houses, to the fathers, but the children had no charter but to beggary, to the sword, to be devoured by wild beasts and the diseases of Egypt: And the Infants have nothing from the Covenant but what Infants of Amaleck, and Babylon, 1 Sam. 15.1, 2. Ps. 137.5. and of Sodom have, Gen. 19 (7.) They are members of Satan, of the Kingdom of the Prince of darkness, not members of Christ's Body, since there be but two Kings, two Gods, Satan, 2 Cor. 4.4. Eph. 2▪ 1, 2. Eph. 6.12. Matth. 12.29. and Christ the King and Head of his body. And it is known that Infants within the Visible Church, suffer incursions of Devils, dreadful diseases, death; and being without the Covenant, as Pagans; these evils must either be acts of revenging justice, and preparatory to the judgement of eternal fire, or blessed in Christ: But if the former, they are damned, if the latter, what blessing is there without Christ? (8.) Being without the Covenant. Remonstrant Scrip. Synod are 1. p. 2. Thes. 9, 10. 1. Infant's cannot be chosen and predestinate in Christ to salvation, as Eph. 1.4. Rom. 9.11. nor given to Christ to be saved covenant-ways, as John 17.2. John 6.39. nor loved from eternity, nor in time, as Arminians teach, and so must be carried in Christ to Heaven or Hell, or rather to a mid place, without God or providence, or decrees, Infants not predestinate to life in CHRIST, not redeemed in CHRIST or foreknowledge, or counsel of God. 2. They being without the Gospel-Covenant, cannot be redeemed by Jesus Christ his Blood, but some other way: Contrair to Acts 4.12. 3. If Infants be born without sin, as Anabaptists teach, they die, and go either to Heaven, and so Christ took not on him their nature, Infants neither capable of heaven or hell by this way. and is not their Saviour: or they go to everlasting torment, and yet never sinned, which is repugnant to Divine Justice: Or to some third place of which the Scripture speaks not. And yet the word saith, Rev. 20.12. that the dead small and great shall stand before God, and shall be judged. And the Scripture saith Infants are capable of punishment, and of being cut off, and the Parents punished in them, and they bear Covenant-wrath in their Parents: As is clear in the seed of Jeroboam, Infants saved without Christ, not capable of Grace, of remission, justification of Achab, of others, Ezod. 20.5. Gen. 17.14. 4. Neither remission of sins, Justification, nor life eternal, nor Sonship, nor Adoption in Christ's suffering death, and in the Blood of the everlasting Covenant, can belong to Infants if they be without the Covenant. 9 Nor can children be capable of being blessed of Christ, or of his laying on of hands. As Mark 10. if they be not under the N. Test. capable of Covenant-grace: And it is to be minded, that Covenanting Parents, Luke 18. 1. Such as came to him to be cured of their diseases, and believed him to be the Messiah, the Son of David, as the blind call him, Mat. 20. and the woman of Canaan, Mat. 15. Luk 18.15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 brought to him little Children, as Mat. 8.16. Mat. 9.2. Luk. 4.40. they brought the sick. 2. The children were not diseased, nor possessed: And the Parents being desirous they might be blessed, as the event proved, it is clear they were not children of heathen, but members of the Visible Church. Of the children brought to Christ. 3. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of such is the Kingdom of God, Luk. 18.16. we cannot think that his meaning is of such as such, is the Kingdom of God, as if all Infants of Jew and Heathen, belonged as subjects to the Visible Church, for then the Infants of all Heathen should be Covenanted members of the Visible Church, and yet their Parents are without the Visible Church, and when they grow to age, they should without any scandal be Excommunicate, which were monstruous, nor can the Invisible Kingdom of God be of such, as if all Infants, Of infants as infants, the Kingdom of God is not. because Infants were saved. Nor, 4. Can the taking of them be a mere Emblem that such were blessed, for so, beside that Doves and Lambs, for meekness are capable of being taken in the arms of Christ and blessed, Christ bids them, in all times coming, be suffered to come, and not forbidden. v. 16. which saith he desired the whole spece of Infants of the Visible Church to be brought to him. Nor doth Christ make acts of Emblems ordinary, but he will have children at all time to come to him: forbid them not; He once cursed the fig tree, that was an Emblem: and did but once wash his Disciples feet, and that was an Emblem. And, 5. He could not mean, that only Infants predestinate to glory, should be suffered to come: For he saith indifferently 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suffer little children to come: Now he should then have given marks to discern predestinate children and suffer them. (2.) And receive them only as Disciples, in my Name, Mar. 6.36, 37. (3.) He should have laid his hands upon some Infants, as predestinate to glory, and forbidden others to come. And the Parents should have known what children are predestinate to life, and should come, and what not. 6. The Text evidences that the Disciples had a prejudice and a carnal one, at infants, thinking, they understood nothing of Christ and of the Kingdom of Grace. The Disciples 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rebuked these that brought them: as Anabaptists do. And Christ rebukes them and instates infants of believing Parents as members of the Visible Church. 7. Nor was it extraordinary, when Christ said suffer little Children to come, but he would have the spece instated members of such a Kingdom. Ergo, some of the kind must be saved and examples must be verified (saith Mr. Cobbet judiciously) in some particulars. 8. Of such is the Kingdom of God, of such in Covenant relation is the Kingdom of God, of such subjects. For if Christ's reason be, of such for humility, meekness, want of malice, and invy, as 1 Pet. 2.1, 2, 3. Math. 18. Psal. 131.1, 2▪ is the Kingdom of God: he must mean by the Kingdom of God, the Kingdom of Glory and the triumphing Church, this sense is refused by Anabaptists. 2. The Infants of Pagans and of all men, by nature, within and without the Church are as well marked resemblances of converts, as they. And we must say that Christ would have taken in his arms, and blessed all the Pagan Infants, and when they grow to age they should be for no fault, but for age only, Excommunicate from the blessing, for Pagan Infants as well resemble humility and harmlessness (if only the personal qualifications of converts, and heart-converts, not the Covenant and church-holiness of visible Professors, Hyeronymus increpant▪ non quia nollent iis salvatoris & manu & voce benedici: sed quod non dum habentes plenissimam fidem putarent eum in similitudinem aliorum hominum importunitate lassari. be here meant) as Infants within the Visible Church. 9 There was no other design and purpose in Christ, in that emphatic expression, forbid them not to come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Math. 19.14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 18.16. to me their Saviour, as well as the Saviour of the aged, but to hold forth the common interest of the whole spece of infants (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) within the Visible Church, their Covenant interest in Christ, for there is no imaginable reason, but the conceit of want of understanding (the prejudice of Anabaptists only) why the Disciples should have aimed to debar them or any poor sinners from access to the Saviour of sinners. 10 Christ took them in his arms, laid his hands on them, blessed them. Now this was a personal real favour bestowed upon infants, had infants been mere symbolic and doctrinal resemblances of the humility of real converts, and the young ones as much without the Covenant as Pagans, Chryso. Hom. discipuli expellebant pueros causa dignitatis Christi. and as uncapable of Covenant grace and Covenant seals, because void of actual faith now under the new Gospel administration, as horses or beasts, let the opposites of their Baptism show what sort of blessing it was, that Christ bestowed upon them, if it be not: 1. Of more value than jacob's blessing of Ephraim and Manasseh, Christ's taking in his arms the children & blessing them, did not act mere resemblances and Emblems. The efficacy of Christ's blessing the children. or at least as real, and certain, Christ the Lord from heaven must as Sovereign, who had power to curse the fig tree and it withered, by his Sovereign power have blessed, in them, the whole race of infants in the Visible Church, and declared them Covenanted Church members under the New Testament in this eminent act of blessing the children and in commanding that all such might have free access to him as King, since the young ones were Subjects of the Kingdom of God, as well as the aged, and expressly forbids, that in time to come, they be hindered to come to him, Mark 10.14. Luk. 18.16. Math. 19.14. and three Evangelists are three sufficient witnesses. (2.) Christ the Lord is the Supreme and Sovereign Lord of blessing and cursing: for in him all the Nations of the earth, and with them, young ones a considerable part of the Covenanted Nations, must be blessed. (3.) If Isaac blessed Jacob, and he must be blessed, Gen. ●7. 29.33. and Jacob blessed the twelve Tribes, Gen. 49.28. and Moses the man of God blessed Israel, before his death, Deut. 33.1, 2. etc. with Covenant blessings, and they were really blessed, Christ must as really with Covenant blessings, have, in this, blessed the whole race of infants of Covenanting parents, except Anabaptists say that it was some complemental salutation, for the fashion that Christ bestowed upon infants, when the Evangelists say, he blessed them, They came that he should pray for them. Math. 19.13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mark 10.16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 4. by the gloss of the Adversaries. Christ blessed them symbolic and doctrinal resemblances of the humility and docility of real converts, and they were blessed as mere signs, as the Elements in the Sacraments are blessed, or as new made crucifixes are blessed and dedicated to divine worship, Christ's blessing of the children not as when the elements are consecrate. as resemblances of Christ crucified; and as Popish Images are symbolicallie blessed, a strange devise are rather a strong delusion. 4. If Christ prayed for infants as Matthew sayeth the mothers or parents sought that of him, Math. 19 13. his prayers must be grounded upon the word of the Covenant, and what could he seek for infant's peace in these, but Covenant mercies and salvation: for Christ was not to work a miracle upon them, and he satisfied the desires of these, who brought them on their arms, and therefore could not go on their feet nor give a confession of their faith, they were born as the man sick of the palsy, Math. 9.2. (5.) Now as Christ is always hard in his preys, His blessing either a Law blessing, or a blessing of the Covenant of Grace. Joh. 11.42. so his blessing he bestowed upon them (though Anabaptists will have them without Christ and the Covenant and under the curse of God) must either be a blessing of the Covenant of Grace, or of the Covenant of Works, for a third sort of blessing the Scripture knows not: Moses takes all blessings up in these two. Deut. 27.12, 15, 16. Deut. 28.2, 3, 15, 16. Deut 30.19. I set before you life and death, blessing and cursing, and so doth Paul, Gal. 3.10, 13, 14. Heb. 6.7, 8, 14, 15. But Christ could not bestow the Law blessing of Works upon these infants, for they had not fulfilled the Law in their persons, nor can infants or any flesh be justified by the Law, Rom. 3.20. therefore must Christ have bestowed upon them the blessing of the Covenant of Grace, Gal. 3.14. Heb. 6.14. let it be the blessing of remission and life, or real right to the Kingdom of God, it is a blessing of the Covenant. 6. The faith of the parents that brought them is holden forth, Math. 19.13. Then were little children brought unto him, that he might lay his hands on them and pray: then had they faith in Christ, that his praying and blessing should be available to infants, it's a conjecture that they came with a may be, or as Mr. Cobbet well sayeth, a faith grounded upon a possibility of Election separated from the Covenant, that is secret, and the Covenant revealed, and so this, not election abstracted from that, can be the ground of faith, Deut. 29.29. and when Christ saith, Math. 18.4, 10. that little ones Angels behold the face of his Father, and the Holy Ghost saith, Heb. 1.13. that Angels are Minstring Spirits, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. For these that shall by heritage or lot enjoy salvation. It's clear infants have their share of salvation, and by Covenant it must be. As also the blessed seed is promised to Adam before he have a child, and to his seed: To Seth, Japhet, Isaac, Jacob, Abraham, when Cainan, Cham, Ishmael, Esau, Abraham's Idolatrous house, to David, when his brethren are refused, and to these as heads of Generations, when contrare Generations, and the houses of Cainan, Cham, Ishmael, are rejected: Hence the house of Israel, the seed of Israel, the seed of Jacob, and there shall be added to the Gentiles, Isa. 49. who shall bring in to the Church their sons and their daughters upon their shoulders, A Covenanted seed is prophesied to be added to the jews under the New Testament. 22. Isa. 54.1. Sing O barren— for more are the children of the desolate then of the married wife saith the Lord, Isa. 60.4. Lift up thine eyes round about, and see, all they gather themselves about, they shall come to thee: thy sons shall come from far, and thy sons shall be nourished at thy side. Israel marrying and Israel according to the flesh is the holy seed, Neh. 7.61. Neh. 9.2. the holy seed have mingled with the heathen. 1 Chron. 16.13. O ye seed of Israel his servants, ye children of Jacob whom he hath chosen, be mindful of his Covenant. And this holiness by external Covenanting is extended to the Gentiles, 1 Cor. 7.14. But now are your children holy; and its holiness the Jews to be called in, Rom. 11.16. If the first fruit be holy, the lump is also holy: and if the root be holy 〈◊〉 also the branches. So it is prophesied, Isa. 61.9. Their seed shall be known among the Gentiles, and their offspring among the people: All that see them shall acknowledge them, that they are the seed that the Lord hath blessed. 6. But ye shall be named the Priests of the Lord, (holy by Covenant as was Aaron's house, because in Covenant visibly with God) men shall call you the Ministers of our God: Ye shall eat the riches of the Gentiles; and in their glory shall ye boast yourselves, Isa. 62.2. Thou shalt be called by a new name, which the mouth of the Lord hath named. v. 12. And they shall call them the holy people, the Redeemed of the Lord: And thou shalt be called, Sought out, A City not forsaken. Isa. 65.22. As the days of a tree, are the days of my people: and mine Elect (by calling) shall long enjoy the work of their hands. Sure he Prophecies of a visibly Covenanted people under the New Testament: For he adds, v. 23. They shall not labour in vain, nor bring forth in trouble: for they are the seed of the blessed of the Lord, and their offspring with them. Now to any Godly Reader, there is here. 1. ● Prophesy to be fulfilled of the Gentiles brought in, as is clear, Isai. 6●. 1, 2▪ 3, 4. Christ, Luke 4. applies that Text to himself. And 9 Their seed shall be known among the Gentiles. Isa. 62.2. There is Covenanted visible seed prophesied to be under the N. T. The Gentiles shall see thy Righteousness. And for Chapter 65.1, 2, 3, 4. Paul expounds it of the incoming of the Gentiles, Rom. 9.24.26. Rom. 10.20. Eph. 2.12.13. Rom. 15.20. (2.) He speaks of a Visible Church and of their seed, known among the Gentiles, all that see them shall acknowledge them, that they are the seed which the Lord hath blessed, Isa. 5●. 9. But they did not see the white Stone (the seal of their election) and a new Name which none can read but he that receives it, Rev. ●. 1●. And they see them a seed and offspring of the Covenanted people of God. Isa. 62.12. They shall call them the holy people: then they must judge them a Visible Church. But a Church of such as are predestinate to glory, they cannot see them to be. (3. Isai. 55. They are a Visible Church. 21. They shall build houses and inhabit them— 22. They shall not build and another inhabit, They shall not plant and another eat. And the reason is, 23—] Because they are (they shall be, it's a Prophecy under the New Testament) the seed of the blessed of the Lord, and their offspring with them. Jer. 23.22. As the Host of Heaven cannot be numbered, neither the sand of the sea measured, so will I multiply the seed of David. What seed? The visible seed: And the Levits that Minister unto me, will I multiply: He alludes to the promise made to Abraham, Calv. in loc. Haec promissio Abrahae data ad totum populi corpus spectabat. of multiplying his seed, Gen. 13.15. Gen. 15.5. Gen. 2.17. And this promise made to Abraham (saith Calvin) belongs to them all, and he would have them not to doubt of the restitution of the people to their own Land. Now the people and Levits, and house of David were never so multiplied in the Jews, after the deliverance from Babylon, and therefore must be extended to the New Testament. And if God establish David's seed for ever, Psal. 89.4. And the seed of his people shall possess the gates of their enemies, Gen. 24.60. And if he pour his Spirit upon the seed of Jacob, Isai. 44.3. and Circumcise the heart of the seed of his people, Deut. 30.6. and put his words in the mouth of the seed of his people, and their seeds seed for ever, Isai. 59.21. And the seed of the righteous be blessed on earth, Psal. 37.26. not simply because they are a seed (for the whole seed of man should be blessed, The Covenant promise is prophesied to belong to such a certain seed if so) but because they are the seed of his servants, Psal. 69.36. of the Jews, Esther 6.13. the Children of his Servants, Psal. 102.28. See Jer. 31.35, 35, 37. Isa. 6.13. because the seed of Abraham, and in the Covenant made with Abraham, Exod. 2.24. 2 Kings 13.23. Psal. 105.8, 9 Psal. 111.5, 9 Gen. 17.2, 7, 9 Leu. 26.42, 45. Ezek. 16.60. Luke 1.72. Exod. 6.4. Deut. 8.18, etc. Then must the Covenant be established under the New Testament with the Visible seed; and if there were an abridging and contracting of this favour to the Elect only, it would have been showed, and the Charter of reservation and exception must have been penned in the Old or New Testament. If there be not a Covenanted seed under the New Test. the children of believers under the New Test. must be a cursed seed 2. Otherwise the seed of all Gentiles called in to Christ by the Preached Gospel, must be visibly cursed of God, cut off from the people of God, separated from the Lord, from the Congregation of his people, not to the tenth Generation only as the Ammonite, the Moabite, the Bastard, Deut. 23.1, 2, 3. and Excommunicated out of the Camp as unclean, nor should Christians marry or Covenant with them: As Deut. 23.14. Leu. 13.43, 44, 45, 46. Deut. 7.1, 2, 3. Exod. 34.15, 16. 1 King. 11.2. Ezra 9.2, 12. Nehem. 13.23. Judg. 3.6, 7. Judg. 4.2. 3. Except there be some middle between a cursed and a blessed seed, a seed in the Church, and in Covenant, and the seed of the Serpent, of Heathen, without the Covenant. 2. A middle between the Kingdom of darkness, of Satan, and the Kingdom of God of his dear Son: Contrair to Eph. 2.2, 3, 4. Acts 26.18. Col. 1.13, 14. 1 Pet. 2.9, 10. Eph. 5.8. which is unknown to Scripture. Yea the Covenant is made to Christ and his seed, Gal. 3.16. and the same blessings of Abraham, comes on us Gentiles, Gal. 3.13, 14. But he and all his seed were blessed and in grace by the external call of the Covenant. Ezek. 16.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8. Deut. 7, 7, 8. Rom. 10.25. It's a state of common grace to be within the Visible Church. I will call them my people that were not my people, and her beloved which was not beloved. And this external calling is of Grace and so Grace, no merit, as well as predestination to life is grace, or for grace. For whosoever are called, not because Elect, but because freely loved of such a God and without merit called, Father and Son, they are in a state of grace● But so are all within the Visible Church. If any object, by Christ's coming all the Nations old and young are not become the Nations of the Lord and of his Christ, but only true Believers, even by our Doctrine. Answ. They are become the Kingdoms of the Lord, not only because they are truly converted, but because they are the chosen of God in the Office-house of Christ, and Christ reigns over them by the Sceptre of his Word whom he is to convert. And external Covenanting with God is of itself free Grace and a singular favour bestowed of God, Psal. 147.19, 20. Deut. 5.1, 2. Mat. 21.42, 43. Luke 14.16.21. 2. It is free Grace that God will have hypocrites and real infidels to beget children to him that are internally in Covenant with him; It's grace that Reprobats are instrumental to the incoming to the world and to the Visible Church of the heirs of glory. and fills up the number of the Elect by Reprobate Parents who are instrumental to the incoming in the world, and into the Visible Church, of many Heirs of Glory: and in so doing there is a Church right communicated from Reprobate Parents to their Children, that are Heirs of Glory. 3. external Covenanting goes before internal Covenanting, as the means before the end, and the cause before the effect: For faith comes by hearing of a sent Preacher, Rom. 10.14. and the Preaching of the Gospel is a saving means of begeting a new heart and of a new spirit: Hence 1. All must be first externally in Covenant, before they can be internally and really in Covenant. 2. God is a God simply to some, and no more but a God to them in regard of outward Church privileges, as the Word, Seals, Protection, Peace, Hedge of Discipline, his planting and watering by a Ministry. But he is, to speak so, more than a God to others, Host 2.19. I will betrothe thee unto me for ever, yea I will betrothe thee unto me in righteousness, God is a God in truth to some, and how to others. in judgement, and in loving kindness, and in mercy. Now the Lord is joined to back-sliding Israel, in an external marriage Covenant: But Jer. 3.14. not in righteousness, in loving kindness and mercy, in reference to the rotten party. In regard of which he saith, v. 2. Plead with your mother, plead: for she is not my wife, neither am I her husband. Zech. 8.7. Thus saith the Lord, I will save my people from the East Country, and from the West Country. 8. And I will bring them, and they shall dwell in the midst of Jerusalem, and they shall be my people, and I will be their God, in truth and in righteousness. Then he is not to all a God in truth and righteousness, fulfilling the first and substantial promise of engraving the Law in the heart, not that he keeps not Covenant even to external confederate, to wit, the conditional Covenant, for if they should believe they should be saved; but he promised not a new heart, and faith to them. 3. Because he is a God external to the Elect, and that of free Grace, therefore he is a God in truth and righteousness, to engrave his Law in their heart. But external confederation is not the adequate cause, for than he should give a new heart to all, with whom he externally Covenants, but the adequate cause is confederation external tali modo, out of his discriminating love and free grace he is a God to some. The cause why we believe, is because God is thus and thus, in Covenant with us. 4. He is a God to his Elect that he may engrave his Law in their heart and inward parts; so that the promising to be a God tali modo, is the cause, and the engraving of a new heart is the effect. Jer. 31.33. Jer. 32.38. And they shall be my people, and I will be their God. That is the cause. 39 I will give them one heart, and one way, that they may fear me for ever; for the good of them and of their children after them. See the same order, Ezech. 11.19, 20. though the words lie not in that order there and here. And Heb. 8.10.5. God is not then a God to any, because they have a clean heart, and the Law engraven therein, for than they should be in Covenant, before they be in Covenant; And so this is true (because he is our God in truth and righteousness, therefore we believe) but this is not true (because we believe, therefore he is our God) except we argue from the effect to the cause. But to return: Calvine on Matth▪ 19.14. We hence gather that the grace of Christ is extended to Infant age, Calvin. unde Colligimus ad hanc quoque aetatem extendi ejus gratiam. Quid vero il●is precatus est nisi ut reciperentur inter Dei filios? for whole mankind had perished. Beza, Infants are also comprehended in the free Covenant. Pareus, its unlawful to ●●barre these from baptism and the Church, whom Christ ●●ds come to him, etc. Obj. But Christ commands not they be baptised. Answ. Nor doth Christ in this place command the Parents to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord: Nor speak the Evangelists of any parental duty; shall we from that conclude, it was not Christ's mind that the Parents take care of the fourth & fifth Command? Pareus saith, it was neither time nor place. Mat. 28.19. he bids baptise all. 3. He who prayed for them, blessed them, laid his hands upon them, invited them to bring Infants to him (of all which Infants were as uncapable, Beza, Ipsi quoque Infantes in gratuito Dei foedere comprehenduntur. as of the use and ends of Baptism and of actual confession of sin and of believing) judged they ought be Baptised. 4. It's never to be found where any are Baptised, but the Head of the Family is Baptised: And when we read that houses were Baptised, 1 Cor. 1.16. Acts 16.33. There is no more ground to say Infants are not Baptised, then to say when the Lord saith to Abraham, Gen. 12.2. I will bless thee, The Covenant blessing of the house, is the Covenant blessing of the seed. and make thy name great. And 22.17. in blessing I will bless thee. And when the Lord saith, Isai. 19.25. blessed be Egypt my people; he should mean, he would bless Abraham, not his seed, and that he minds to bless the aged of Egypt, and of Assyria, but not their seed and infants, because they understand no● what a blessing of God means; and yet the fruit of the womb and the seed are said to be blessed, Psal. 37.26. Deut. 7.13. and God so entreated to bless Israel, and to bless David's house, Psal. 28.9. Psal. 67.1 Deut. 26.16. 2 Sam. 7.29. the meaning should not be that God would bless the young Infants and Children in Israel and in David's house: And when Jacob is said to provide for his own house, Gen. 30.30. And the believer to provide for his Family, 1 Tim. 5.8. the meaning should be that they should provide for the aged of the house, who understood what provision is, but should not provide for the young ones, who can not know what it is to be hungry to morrow. To say young ones are not capable of Baptism, is to beg the Question. For (1.) all Israel were Baptised in the Sea and in the Cloud, old and young, 1 Cor. 10.1, 2. (2.) All Israel old and young are capable of the blessing Covenanted, Psal. 28.9. Psal. 67.1, ●. and so of the seal: Anabaptists grant (as they must) if Infants be in Covenant, they ought to receive the Seal of the Covenant. Lastly, how is it that by baptised houses, must be meant only these come to age who can actually believe? The Jews, Rom. 11.16. are holy root and branch, first fruit and lump, fathers and children, and the Jews shall be brought in again. Why? The Generation to come in is holy, for the Covenant made with their fathers. Well say Anabaptists, but notwithstanding of the federal holiness you talk of, The place, Rom. 11.16. if the root be holy, so is the branches, opened. Rom. 11.16. that gives not right to the casten off to be Baptised, and admitted to Church privileges; for the casten off are no Church, and have no Church privilege, your federal holiness than must be a dream? Ans. But these to come in, and to be reingrafted are holy, intentionally, The Jews to be born are intentionally holy in the root and when they are born, they shall be actually holy. in the decree of God, because of their beloved fathers, and when God shall call them, the same Covenant made with Abraham gives them right; and these branches not in being, and the unborn Generation are only intentionally holy by this federal holiness, and they shall be actually holy, when they shall be born, but it followeth not, but the present Generation not broken off through unbeleef, as Paul and others called by the name of election, Rom. 11.7. have right, because of their fathers. For God hath not cast off his people, whom he hath fore-known For I am an Israelite (saith Paul, v. 1, 2.) of the seed of Abraham, and there are thousands of Jews now hid▪ as in Elias his time, who bowed not their knee to Baal; but the body of them, the great bulk is fallen away and cut off. Hence the Jews are holy federally▪ and not holy, beloved of the fathers federally, and not beloved federally, holy and keep Church right to Baptism, and Ordinances, in regard of the founder and invisible part: And not holy federally nor having any Church right to Baptism, in regard of the wilfully broken off body, that crucified Christ and stand to their father's bloody deed, these have no more Church-part nor portion to Ordinances, than Simon Magus, Acts 8. notwithstanding of their carnal descent from Abraham. And when God made the Covenant with Abraham, Gen. 17. and renewed the same, Deut. 29. he made it with these who were not there standing, v. 14, 15. not with you only, &c, but virtually, radically with us Gentiles, who were not then born, as touching the substantials, for Priesthood, Law-service, Types, Sacrifices, The same Covenant in the substantials, is in the Old and New Test. Circumcision, yea Baptism, the Lords Supper, Pastors, Teachers, Elders to rule, Deacons, were all accidents, to the substance of the Covenant, to wit, to believe in Christ and to obtain righteousness and life by Christ: As the same way to the same City hath other hedges, way-marks, bridges, this year which it had not 500 years ago. And look as a father that knows he shall beget so many hundreth sons who shall all be Kings, and have the same royal inheritance, writeth a Charter intituling them all, before they be born, to the same inheritance: They have all virtual and radical right, ere they be born, with the first heir; And when they are born, he makes not another Covenant with them. So Deut. 29.14, 15. he sayeth not, He shall make another Covenant with these when they shall be born: but I make a Covenant with you, and with these that are not here, not born. Hence by way of excellency he calleth it the Covenant, the Covenant of the Lord, Jer. 2●. 9. Deut. 4.23. Josh 23.11. My Covenant, saith the Lord, Gen. 17.7, 9, 10. Exod. 19.5. Psal. 50.16. His Covenant, Psal. 105.8. He remembered his Covenant for ever, Psal. 111.5. He will remember his Covenant for ever, 5.9. His Covenant with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, 2 King. 13.23. When Hazael King of Syria oppressed Israel, in their saddest afflictions, Levit. 26.42, 43. The Scripture is called the Book of the Covenant, Exod. 24.7. 2 King. 23.4. 2 Chron. 34.30, 21. The Question is easily determined, it can be the Book of no Covenant, but of that made with Abraham, the oath unto Jacob, The one Covenant of Grace is called the Covenant of the Lord, by way of excellency in the Old and New Test. 1 Chron. 16.16, 17. Psal. 105.9. Jer. 11.5. Dan. 9.11. Luke 1.73. Heb. 6.15, 17. and to the fathers, the everlasting Covenant, Gen. 9.16. Gen. 17.9, 13. which relates to Adam also, Levit. 24.8. 2 Sam. 23.5. made unto David, 1 Chro. 16.17. Psal. 105.10. Isa. 61.8. Heb. 13.20. which cannot be, if there be so many Covenants, as some speak of: the new Covenant, and the better Covenant, Heb. 8.8, 13. Heb 12.20 Jer. 3.81. Heb. 7.21. which newness and excellency is all expounded of the Mediator now God, the Word made Flesh, Heb. 7. c. 8. c. 9 And we would remember that Rom. 11. Paul proves 1. God hath not casten off the Jews wholly. A short opening of Ro. 11. to v. 17 1. Arg. Because I Paul am a Jew, and he hath not casten me off: Ergo in one the Covenant may stand. 2. From his unchangeableness, God hath foreknown them. 3. From the example of the Church in the days of Elias. By way of preoccupation, it is true many are fallen off: but as then seven thousand were in Israel who bowed not their knee to Baal, so now; Because the election of grace doth not fall now, or then. Then saith he, not of works. He reconceals that he saith with what before, by a preoccupation: And have all the Jews fallen short of righteousness? and he answers, All are not fallen short. The election, that is, the elected have obtained righteousness, the rest not. 2. To make way to exhort the Gentiles to walk worthy of the place and room of the Jews▪ He speaks some more of the doctrine of Reprobation, as he spoke, Ch. 9 of eternal predestination, and of 2. The casting out of the Jews, and of their blinding and hardening. They have fallen in God's decree, not that they may utterly fall. 2. That the Gentiles may be provoked by their fall. Hence by divers Arguments he proves that the Jews shall be brought in again to Christ 1. From four ends of the Jews fall, v. 11. (2.) To provoke them to come in, v. 11. (3.) That some may be saved. 4. For the riches of the world's salvation. Whence the magnifying of Paul's Ministry, v. 13, 14. 2. Arg. From the great fruit; If their fall be the riches of the world, their incoming again must be the resurrection from the grave of the buried unbelieving world, v. 15. 3. Arg. They must be brought in. These who are holy separated from the world, for the Covenant-call of God, must be brought in again: But so is Israel. The Assumption he proves by p●rts. 1. The mass and root of Israel is holy, the Fathers were the Covenanted visible stock, line, root, as all the Old Testament sayeth: then the posterity, the first fruits, the branches partly born, partly to be born, must be holy covenant-ways: The tree, root and branches are holy and of the same nature; Therefore the branches have right to Christ, to the Covenant, to Baptism and the seals. Hence Anabaptists, without all reason, say that he speaks not of federal and external holiness, but of real, internal and true holiness, only of the invisible body predestinated to life: for though invisible holiness cannot be excluded, except we exclude the holiness of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, who were without doubt a part of the root: yet he must be taken to speak of that holiness of the Covenant and Church, as made visible and of the visible collective body of the Jews, not of only real and invisible holiness. 1. Because this was true in the days of Elias, By the holy root cannot be meant the predestinate to glory only. If the root be holy the branches are holy; And it is a New Testament-Truth of perpeall verity, If the Fathers be holy so must the Sons. The Fathers have Church-right to Circumcision, to Baptism, to the Passeover, and to the Lords Supper, so have the Children: but it is most false of the invisible mystical body and root only, and of real and internal holiness; For neither in Old or New Testament is it true, If the Fathers be predestinated to life, justified and sanctified and saved, so must the Children be. Ishmael, Esau, Absalon, and all the world of Hypocrit●● called from their profaneness Sodom and Gomorah, Isai. 1.10. uncircumcised in heart, as Egypt, Moab and Ammon, Jerem. 9.26. as the Philistines, Amos 9.7. Then should that (2.) Distinction of Jews in the heart, and inward, and of Jews in the flesh, Rom. 2.28. and of the children of the flesh, that are not of the spiritual seed, and of the children of the promise, Rom. 9.7, 8. and of the persecuting children of the bond woman not justified by faith, and of the children of the promise, Gal. 4.23, 24, etc. fall to the ground. Yea 3. If by the root and the lump be understood only Believers and chosen to life, the whole Israel, which is as the sand of the sea, should be saved, whereas the Word of God saith, a remnant only shall be saved, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX. Te●la. A part taken out shall be saved, Rom. 9.27. Isai. 10.22, 23. Host 1.10. 4. By the branches must be meant all the visible body of the Jews, old and young. Now if Anabaptists give us a Visible Church of the Jews of all real believers, even the branches and Infants, (which shall hardly be proven by the Scripture) these infants at least being visible Believers may lawfully be baptised, being both internally and visible, and externally in Covenant. For this Scripture is expressly expounded by them of real and inherent holiness, and so Infants must be real Believers and in Covenant. Ergo they must be baptised: What can be replied is not imaginable: but they have not actual faith, and possibly that is not known to the Church. But this Scripture saith that the branches and root both are holy. 2. It shall be new Divinity, that none are to be baptised but such as are under the actual ●●●rcise of their faith, a thing that cannot be discerned by the Church, in these that are come to age. 5. Here shall also be this new Divinity, that predestination to life and glory must be propagated and derived from the lump to the first fruits, from the root and parents to the branches and children. 5. It's against the whole current of the Text, that Paul spoke abstractly of the only invisible body really sanctified, and not of the visible body. For 1. The body invisible is an elect seed that cannot fall away; But the body that here he speaks of are such, of which a part are hardened and blinded, Paul, Rom. 11. speaks of a visible, not an invisible body. and under the spirit of slumber, and a part elect and chosen. 7. The election have obtained, the rest are hardened, and of such a body, compared with the body in the time of Elias, of which multitudes fell away, slew the Prophets, digged down the Altars, and a good number were believers, that bowed not their knee to Baal, and so is the body now, saith Paul, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which is a mixed body. 3. He speaks of the body that is fallen and stumbled, v. 11. and these whom he preaches unto, to provoke them to a holy emulation, to come in to Christ, by the incoming of the Gentiles, v. 13, 14. which is sure a visible body, and which shall be ingraffed in again, v. 23. which includes a visible body of divers generations. 4. Yea he must speak of a national election and external calling, as Deut. 7.7, 8, 9 Deut. 10.15. Psal. 132.13. Isai. 41.2. Not of a personal election of some certain persons who fell, were blinded, rejected fully and totally in their persons, and received in and ingraffed as sound believers again▪ for the Scripture speaks of no such boating in and out, but of a huge numerous body of which some fell, some stand and includes divers generations. 5. The collective visible body of Jews and Gentiles are such as Paul preacheth unto, v. 13, 14. such as are ingraffed in in the room of the Jews, and ingraffed into the Olive of the visible Body, and partake of the fatness of Ordinances, Baptism▪ Co●enant-comforts, promises. Infants of the Jews are cut off with the root, and shall be re-ingraffed with the root. Now if any say that this proves not that Infants are ingraffed, then must they say that Infants of the Jews before Christ partaked of no fatness of the Covenant, Circumcision, Blessings, Presence, Protection. 2. That they were not broken off with their fathers, and so that they now stand. 3. That the Infants of the Jews are not holy branches, as the root is holy, as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ and that none but the fathers shall be ingraffed in, and only 4. The aged and the baptised actual believers of the Gentiles are the ingraffed ones, not their Infants, they are all Heathen and Pagans, as well as the casten off Jew's. 5. That the Jew's engraffing in again shall be to their great hurt, so as God was long ago their God, but shall no more in time coming be their God, then of the Pagans and the lately cut off fathers: Nor can the Adversaries say that Jewish Infants were broken off through unbelief▪ because they are capable neither of belief nor of unbelief to them. Then they remain in the Olive tree, members of the Church as before, and God must be still their God, when the fathers are cut off, vers. 17. And again, when the fathers shall be reingraffed and they made Christians, the Infants shall be out of Christ, and have no more Covenant-right or Church-right to Baptism, than the Infants of Egyptians and Philistines had to Circumcision. Obj. Shall not, by this means, all the Infants of all the Gentiles be engrafted in, and baptised? Answ. The Text warrants us to say it only of the Children of the engrafted and called Gentiles, that they have right to baptism. Obj. This Text is spoken of these that have hereditary Covenant-right, from their natural Father Abraham. We Gentiles have not that natural relation to Abraham, The seed are in Covenant, not by birth as birth, but by such a birth, so & so graciously privileged. nor are we his natural sons, nor branches? Answ. It's false, that the Jews by birth as birth, had hereditary right to Church-priviledges, they had right by such a birth from Abraham taken in out of free-love to Covenant fellowship with God, and his children are natural, that is, kindly. 2. First branches and sprigs, before us Gentiles, to believing Abraham, but we believing are made abraham's by proportion, and are secondary and so wild branches. 2. Abraham is not the Physical, but a Moral root. For the Covenant was made with Abraham, not as a believing Father, but as a believing Head of Children, of Servants, and strangers under him, as the Covenant is laid as an Heavenly depositum, upon Zacheus, in relation not to his children only, but to his house, Luke 19 For when he is made a son of Abraham, salvation, that is, the Covenant of Life comes to him and to his house: and so to Cornelius, Acts 10. and to the Jailer, Acts 16. and to their houses, and the same way I distinguish seeds. Q. How can the Jews that are come in, be federaly holy for their fathers? Since now it is about fifteen hundreth years since their father● were broken off from Church and Covenant: May not all the world Jews and Gentiles be federally holy branches, by the same reason, because the Covenant was made with, and Preached unto Adam a believing root and father in Paradise? So it would appear once in the Covenant of Grace; and all the seed to the coming of CHRIST, are federally holy, as well as they. Answ. This is as great a difficulty to the Adversaries (and insuperable) as to us, for the Jews unborn by their way, are no more holy in their branches and offspring than Turks and Indians, and their children, until they grow to age and actually believe, and so are the Infants of Americans, and such as worship the Sun, or Satan, that way holy. And so the branches of the Jews have no holiness from the root, nor are they beloved for the fathers, as vers. 28.2. All the Jews leave not off to be members of the Invisible Church; For Paul saith Rom. 11.25. blindness in part is happened to Israel 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to a part of Israel: For howbeit the visible mass and body of the Jews rejected Christ and wrath ●e come upon them to the outmost, 1 Thes. 2.16. yet that is not said universally of all the Jews, 14. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Yea Paul wrote to the Jews the Epistle to the Hebrews. James to the twelve Tribes scattered abroad, Jam. 1.1. and Peter, 1 Pet. 1.1. and John to the Jews: I judge, not in a visible body, and these are not broken off the Olive, and do, though not in a Visible Church way, derive Covenant right to the branches that shall be engrafted in. But many Nations descended of Adam have universally rejected Christ, and know not the Name of Christ the blessed seed. Q. May we not say that the root is Christ as mystical Head, from whom we partake of the s●ppe of grace and life and fatness. Answ. The intent of Paul is to prove that the Jews cut off, because of their unbeleef, shall be engrafted in again, in the Lords own time, because of the holiness of the Covenant, that was in the root and in the first fruits Abraham, covenant-holiness external is not the adequat and complete cause of engraffing really in Christ. Isaac and Jacob. It is true, their Covenant-holiness is not the adequat cause, why they shall be engrafted in really into Christ, for so all the carnal children, who had this relative holiness must be really engrafted in Christ, but it is with the Lords free love, both the cause of their personal, and of their Church engrafting, and the continued deriving of that relative holiness being a continued free favour in its kind, is the Lords love in the same kind to root and branches, otherwise it should not bear truth, which, is said v. 28. which expores this, ver. 28. that they are beloved for the fathers, not as if they were predestinate to life, because Abraham was so chosen, but because of the Father's covenant-holiness, which was holiness from Christ not as root and head, through influence of saving grace, but as a politic head which yet is, what we say. For because Christ is holy as root, head and Redeemer, the Jews once his Church Visible and to be so again, the branches are not really holy by faith, because all of them were not in Christ: But if all Jews and Gentiles, and also Infants who are Jews and Gentiles and parts of the body be baptised into the visible body, so are Infants. See more of this in Mr. Cotton, Mr. Black, Mr. Cobbet, Mr. Rich. Baxter, who have closed the dispute learnedly. CHAP. XV. The differences of external and internal Covenanting. 2. No Universal Grace, Rom. 10.18. Psal. 19.3. nor in Scripture. 3. Nor power of believing to all given by Christ. HEnce, the clear differences betwixt the external visible and national Covenanting of the people of old, Considerable differences between external and internal Covenanters. when they were brought out of the Land of Egypt; And the internal and personal (though it may be visible also) Covenanting with God. 1. This under the New Testament is a new Covenant, and all the old shadows are abolished▪ The former is the old. 2. This is with the house of Israel and Judah chosen persons, and so personal with single men. You shall not give a Nation, Kingdom, or Land, with which the Covenant internally is so made, as if all and every one, without exceptions, must know the Lord savingly (what may be the converted Jews case, whether the whole body of them, all and every one shall be visible, real, and personal Covenanters, as the place, Rom. 11.26. seems to say, I cannot determine) and all and every one be saved; for than must all the visible house of Israel be saved, and not the chosen only. 3. The visible external Covenant was broken, Jer. 31.32. The other personal and internal is never broken. 4. The promise of a new heart is really fulfilled, in all the persons and single branches of the house of Judah, so that all and every one are taught of God, none excepted, Jer. 31.33, 34. Isa. 54.13. Joh. 6.45. not so in the visible external Covenant, if it be but external: not any is taught of God, but all are taught of men. 5. The real personal Covenant is everlasting, like that Covenant with the Moon and Stars; 2. The night and the day; 3. Of the motion of the Sea, Jer. 31.35, 36, 37. There is perseverance absolutely promised, Jer. 32.40. I will make an everlasting Covenant with them, that I will not turn away from them, to do them good. It's sure in God's part, for he changeth not. Nay, but we change and turn away from God, he obviats that: I will put my fear in their hearts, that they shall not depart from me. Personal Covenanters cannot fall away: but national, conditional, and visible Covenanters may. So Isai. 54.10. Isa. 59.21. but all such as Nationally, visibly only, and in profession only, are in Covenant, may fall away. 6. Jer. 31. ●●. Behold 〈◊〉 day 〈◊〉 come saith the Lord, that the City shall be built to the 〈◊〉, etc. There is a promise of spiritual right in Christ made to the blessings of this life, to these that are personal Covenanters; As Jer. 32. 4●. Ezek. 11.17, 18, 19 Ezek. 36.26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 33. Ezek. 37.24, 25, 26. Ezek. 34.23, 24, 25, 26, 27. which promise, though not rep●●ted in the New Testament, when the Prophecies of 〈…〉 cited, Heb. 8.8. Heb. 10.16, 17. but of purpose 〈…〉, because the promise of temporal blessings, is not so express 〈◊〉▪ Yet▪ in other places of the New Testamant, it is clear that we have bread by Covenant-promise, Matth. 19▪ 20. 1 Tim. ●. 8. Heb. 13. ●▪ 6. 1 Pet. 3.10, 11, 12. which 〈…〉 only 〈…〉 Covenant externally, etc. These six differences are clear, Jer. 31.33, etc. so that it is evident that all and every one of the Visible Church are not really and personally confederates, so that though the Lord say to both: I will be their God, and they shall be my people, yet not one and the same way. Hence there is no ground at all, nor truth in what Arminians say, The Covenant of grace is not made with all and every one of mankind. that the Cov●●ant of Grace is made with all and every one of mankind, as was the Covenant of Works. For this must be true, that in Paradise, the Covenant of Grace was made with Adam, and all his seed: But a Covenant so universal aught to be proclaimed to all the 〈◊〉, but thus was not: For the Lord published and made it to Abraham and his seed, and the Lord choised Israel above all the people on earth, Psal. 147.19▪ 20. Deut. 5.1, 2, 3. Deut. 7.6. Deut. 10.15. and showed his judgements and statutes to them & not to other Nations: And therefore there can be no subjejective revealing of Christ, by universal grace, given to Heathen and all others, and by an objective revealing of Christ in the works of Creation, the heaven and earth, night and day, as some teach, citing the Ps. 29.1, 2. For so 1. God choised Americans, Indians, and all the wild Savages to be his people, as well as he choised the Jews: and if the sound of the Gospel went out to the ends of the earth, that is, to all and every one, There is no universal revealing of CHRIST to Americans and to all mankind; which is either subjective, by a power or universal grace given to all, or which is objective, by the light of nature, in the works of Creation pointing out Christ as the place Psal. 19 4. mistaken is cited. as they expound, Psal. 19.3, 4. Rom. 10.18. than it must be the purpose of David and Paul, that the Doctrine of the Covenant of Grace, and of Christ crucified, by whose alone name men are saved, and by whom only 〈◊〉 come to the Father, Acts 4. 1●. John 14.6. is written in the Firmament, which must declare the glory of God manifested in the flesh, day unto day, and must preach Christ crucified to all Nations, who see the Sun rise and go down; ●or sure that sound, Psal. 19.4. goeth through all the earth. Sure Paul must give a dark interpretation, Rom. 10. of that Psalm, 〈…〉. 2. If the hearing, Rom. 10.18. (but I say have they not heard?) be the hearing of God Creator, his sounding 〈◊〉 in the Firmament, Night, Day and Sun, as it is Psal. 〈◊〉▪ by all that see the Sun, and also the hearing of the joyful sound of Christ Preached in the Gospel, written and objectively 〈◊〉 in Sun and Moon, Night and Day, as Amyrald and his do expound it; Then may all that see the Sun call upon the name of the Lord revealed in Christ, and believe in Christ (for of their belief Moses speaks, Deut. 30.14. and Paul, Rom. 10.9, ●●▪) and all have the benefit of the Preached Gospel, and sent Prophets▪ whose feet are beautiful upon the mountains, publishing 〈…〉 of peace, vers. 15. as Nah. 1.15. Isai. 52.7. and ●ll that see the Sun are the same way saved by Jesus Christ, that Jews and Gentiles are, who hear the Gospel. But Paul strangely crosseth this, How shall they call upon him (as God reveal●● i● Christ) in whom they believe not? 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 How shall they 〈◊〉 him of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a Preacher? And how shall they preach except they be 〈◊〉? Now if the sound of the Preached Gospel be to be heard in the Firmament, Sun rising and going down (as Amyrald and some Libertines do say, whom I heard Preach the same thing at London) Paul might receive an easy and a short answer: The Gospel of Christ crucified written on the Firmament Sun and night and day, The place, Psal 1●. 4. vindicated is as lawful an Ordinance, and a book upon which Americans, and all that see the same, may read the glad tidings of salvation, and so may call upon, and believe in God, and win and earn, by 〈◊〉 industry, and hearing of the Gospel by sent Preachers, as the Preached Word of God, and therefore Paul cannot deny but faith comes by hearing of some other Preacher than a Gospel-Preacher or one that is sent; for Paul, Rom. 1.16, 17, 18, 19 and David, Psal. 19.1, 2, 3.— v. 7, 8, 9 distinguish the two Books. There is not such an Objection dreamt as Amyrald imagines of Rom. 10.18. If God will have mercy on the Gentiles, how is it that they have not heard the Gospel? For the Lord hath not declared his mind to them. He answers: God did not so keep up his good will to the Gentiles in former times, but by the Ministry of the Heavens, ac veluti voce providentiae, and as it were by the preaching of the Word of Providence he spoke to them: which things should be spoken to no purpose by Paul, if they be understood of a revelation of God as Creator only, and not as Redeemer: for what hath that revelation to do with the Gospel? Therefore Calvine (saith he) speaketh of the revelation by the creatures preparatory to the Gospel. It is true there is an Objection in these words, v. 18. But I say have they not heard? A learned Countryman, Charles Fermin: Carol. Fermaeus in Analys ad Romanos, c. 10. p. 205. But the Israelites (saith he) have not heard the Gospel? Then if faith be from hearing, and saving calling upon God be from faith, then believing Israelites shall be of the number of them that call upon the name of the Lord, and shall be saved. He not only yields that the Israelites have heard, but he confirms it from Psal. 19 Yea their sound, etc. It is an argument à minore, The true Exposition of the place Psal. 19 4. by our Interpreters. from the less to the more, The whole world hath heard of God, either by the preaching of the creatures from the beginning, or by the Apostles in the revealed Gospel, far more than the Jews to whom the Oracles of God were committed, and to whom first the Gospel must be preached, have heard: And therefore not all that hear do believe (though faith come by hearing) nor do all call upon God and are saved. So Pet. Martyr: so Calvin, P. Martyr. in loc. Deus, ut inquit Psalms, voluit notitiam suam naturalem per creaturas coelestes publicari in universum orbem: Ergo & Euangelium curavit identidem evulgari. Quomodo igitur potestis dicere, vos Judaei, non audivisse?— Ra●io à pari, vel à minores Si haec minus digne, an altera longe salubrior & utilior non publicatur? Hyperius, Faius. It's not strange that the Gospel is preached to the Gentiles: for God spoke to them by the knowledge of the creature. Pareus observes that Paul citys not the place, Psal. 19 and saith not, As it is written, but alludes to it only. Spanhemius. If it be well said that the sound of the heavens is gone to the end of the world, Spanhemius in Sectio. 35 that may be said truly of the Preaching of the Gospel. Junius to that sense. But 1. the place saith not that God called with a will, Amyrald p. 1426, 1427. to save the Gentiles: The Scripture saith, he winked at them, and called them not, Acts 14.16. But now God commandeth all men every where to repent, Acts 17.30. and he revealed not his Testimonies to them. Junius, par. 18. Now was not the same Gospel-book in the Pages of the works of Creation, as legible to the Gentiles before, as after the coming of Christ in the flesh? Nor can the Gospel which never came to the ears of many Indians and millions of people, it being to them a non ens, and an un-heard of Doctrine, explain the book of Creation; as the thing that shadows out Christ, as the New Testament clears the Types of the Old: Nor doth the Scripture any where tell us, what work of Creation or Providence, expresseth Christ's dying for our sins, rising for our righteousness: Nor doth the Scripture tell us of an Emblem, in nature, of God Incarnate, of the Man Christ in glory pleading at the right hand of God for us; I have mercy on whom I will, Is a Gospel-truth in the Old and New Test. of perpetual verity. And no doubt, the Lords natural desires of saving all, call and inviting all to Repentance▪ of Christ's dying for all, his natural willingness that all and every one should obey, do not ebb and wax and decrease, as the Sea and Moon do, and therefore his taking such a course with all the Gentiles, that no word of the Covenant comes to their ears, so that then at that time, they were without Christ, being aliens from the Commonwealth of Israel, and strangers from the Covenant of promise, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Exo. 33.19. having no hope, and without God in the world, Eph. 2.12. And in time past were no people (in Covenant) and had not obtained mercy, 1 Pet. 2.9, 10. and were far off, Acts 2.39. must evince, that the sense of the Gospel was not written in Sun and Moon; and the book of Creation is not the Gospel; and therefore he hath been showing that the Gentiles were not in Covenant before the Incarnation, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and since no word of the Gospel comes to millions now, they are yet not in Covenant. And this is a Gospel-truth now, that stands after the Incarnation, as before, Rom. 9.18. He hath therefore mercy upon whom he will, and hardens whom he will. And he said it in the Old Testament, Exod. 33.19. and repeateth it to us, Rom. 9.15. I will have mercy upon whom I will have mercy, and I will have compassion upon whom I will have compassion. And if any man say that he hath the like antecedent natural goodwill, to save eternally all these whom he calleth and moveth finally to obey, and the greatest part of mankind whom he so moveth and calleth as he knoweth they shall never obey, whereas he can move all finally to obey, without straining their natural liberty: He speaks things that cannot consist with both the wisdom and liberty of God. And if amongst these to whom the word of the Covenant comes, If the Covenant be made with Heathens, they must be the chosen people of God as well as Israel. some are externally only, and never saved, Matth. 22.14. Rom. 9.6, 7. Others internally personally and really in Covenant and saved; why but some may be neither ways in Covenant, if they never heard the word of the Covenant, and if the Heathen and Americans were under the Covenant of Grace Preached to them in that sound, that goes to the end of the world. Why, but Moab, Ammon, and Assyrians, Philistines, Chaldeans, Persians, are the Israel of God, his chosen people, his Zion, and must not the principal promise of the Covenant be made to them? and are we not to believe that God will write his Law in the hearts of Cain, Pharaoh, Saul, Doeg, Ahab, Judas, Magus, and of Moabites, Ammonites, Egyptians, and of all and every one of mankind, if they be in Covenant with him? Contrair to Psa. 147.19, 20. Host 8.12. Exo. 20.1. Neither can it be said, that all mankind have received a subjective power to believe and receive Christ holden forth in the Gospel to us, Printed to be read and heard in the book of Creation, called the objective Gospel, If such a power of believing be given to all. 1. All must be renewed by grace. as Adam had power to fulfil the first Covenant, for Adam had the Image of God concreated in his soul by which he was able to fulfil the Law, then must they give us a Scripture to prove that all Adam's sons are converted, and restored to the Image of God, born over again, for by no other power but by a new heart, and the actings of God, can men believe the Gospel objective, or come to Christ, and do good works Evangelicall by which they are justified, and if it be a remote power that may grow, Job. 6.44, 45. it is not the like power which Adam had to keep the Law. 2 CHRIST died in vain 2. This power is either natural, or supernatural: Natural it cannot be, for then flesh and blood might believe, and the wisdom of the flesh might be subject to the Law of God, which the Scripture denies, Mat. 16.16, 17. Rom. 8.7. 2. There should be no need that Christ die, except only to satisfy for our breach of the Law, not to purchase new grace to us by his merits, and such a power should be no grace of Christ. If it be a supernatural grace merited by Christ, then have Pagans, and all the Heathen that supernatural inherent grace to believe in the Son of God, and yet the object thereof, the Gospel is not revealed to them, which is an incongruous dispensation not warranted by the Scripture, that the Lord should give a supernatural power, to believe they know not what. 2. A supernatural power to believe is saving grace, and a power to love Christ, and can saving grace be in Pagans or in any, and they know not of it? 3. Yea sins of Pagans, for which they are condemned, must be the Gospel-sins, for they cannot be Law-sins, for if all mankind be under the Covenant of grace, there can none at all be under the Law: For there can be none under the Covenant of Works, and also under the Covenant of Grace, for they are contrair dispensations, and contrair ways of salvation. He who is under the Law is not under Grace, and he who is under Grace, is married to Christ, as to another Husband, Rom. 7.4. and not under the Law. 3. Grace saving must be ineffectual & in vain. 3. Saving grace is not in vain, but effectual, 1 Corinth. 15.10. 1 Tim. 1.14. And we are saved by the Grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, Acts 15.11. and no greater mercy can be wished to any, than the grace of our Lord Jesus, Rom. 16.20. 2 Cor. 13.14. Rev. 22.21. by which we are called, justified and glorified. If it be said that this grace is not that effectual saving grace, bestowed upon the Elect, but a general remote gracious power, by which we may acquire the saving grace proper to the Elect. But so 1. that grace saving proper to the Elect by this means is in the power of all Pagans, and all must be gifted with a power to purchase that grace proper to the Elect: That must be strange conquishing, we must all be made our own efficacious Redeemers, and Christ is a Saviour by merit, not by efficacy; For if this saving grace be infused, it is either infused, we doing nothing to which they cannot stand: 4 The nature of saving grace, the ends & uses of the dying of CHRIST, must be destroyed. Or than it is acquired, and so we make the general grace saving and proper to the Elect, which everteth the nature of saving grace, and makes it the purchase of works. And they must say that Christ hath merited a general ineffectual power to some, and that he died to merit a special saving grace to others. Let us have a warrant for this, that Christ both died equally to save all, and yet with two contrary intentions, to purchase a power of believing which should be effectual to some to save them, and ineffectual to others. If it be said that Christ died to merit the same general power to all, but some make it ineffectual, some not; This saith thus. 1. That Christ's death might have its fruit and effect, though all perish. 2. That Christ died to merit a far off, lubric and possible venture of heaven, such as was the case of the first Adam. 3. Christ died not to purchase a new heart more to one then to another, whereas 1 Pet. 1.18, 19 the blood the Lord shed is to Redeem us from our vain conversation, Christ's blood was shed, to buy us from our vain conversation, as well as from wrath, and this suits not with Pagans state. in a natural state aswell as to save us from the wrath to come; Then must Christ have died to buy Pagans from Paganism and Idolatry: and that either absolutely, and then why should multitudes so die in their sins? If conditionally, what can be the condition going before conversion, to wit, that we should be delivered from our vain conversation, so we be willing, before our conversion, to be delivered from our vain conversation. And shall not the Question recur concerning that condition? In a word they will have Christ's death to buy Heaven, but not to buy faith, without which Heaven is impossible. Yea he no more bought to men a grace sweetly and strongly inclining the will to believe, than he bought such a grace to the damned devils. Remonstr. in Decla. c. 17. thes. 1. Deus statuit hujusmodi potentiam conferre homi●i peccatori perquam idoneus & aptus redderetur ad id ●●ne praestandum quod ab●●o in Euangelio postulatur. Remonstr. in Synod. Dordrac. Art. 2. p. 327. Mediate vel immedia●e DEUM omnes vocare. He purposed to give to all Pagans a power by which they should be made fit to perform all that the Gospel requires, and be fit to be made partakers of the inheritance of the Saints, Col. 1. And yet Paul gives thanks to God for that bestowed on the Colossians, and God must by this call all men to Christ, either mediately or immediately. And say that God is prepared ever to give more and more as we use the former well, Corvinus contra Molin. cap. 31. sect. 15. Deum sempersecundum se para●um esse ad eandem uberiorem gratiam promovendam in iis qui parciore recte utuntur. and that all by sufficient grace (saith Corvinus) are disposed to conversion, but that sufficiency is not habitual grace, but actual assistance conveying the Preached Word, which is to bring all to free-wills power, rejecting all infused power, and to make an influence of grace, which is in the power of free will to use or not to use, and to stand in two. 1. In a measure of heavenly Doctrine. 2. In the stirring upon the heart; Whence 1. Grace habitual so is denied; then the will needeth no healing. 2. Grace universal is limited to the Word Preached, than it is not universal; For Pagans hear not the Word Preached. 3. There is no other help given to freewill in every act, but 1. Information by the Word, that was the grace of Pelagius. 2. Some influence of God in every act: But that adds not new strength to the will. freewill doth all. Shortly they say, Any man may know, understand and believe the Gospel, if the object be sufficiently proposed and revealed. And so the natural man can no more know and receive the things of the Gospel, Coru. cont. Moli. cap. 3●. sect. ●. Quicquid de sufficientia (gratiae) dicimus, monemus assistentiae spiritus nobis tribui: minime vero habitualem gratiam quae omnibus communis sit à nobis statui. Sect. 29. Non est potentia infusa. Cap. 32. Secundum Concilia & Patres intelligimus tale gratiae adjutorium, quod ad singulos actus detur, cujus auxilio nititur, & ad singula adjuvetur liberum arbitrium. than he can understand the Metaphysics, the Acromaticks of Aristotle: for these he cannot receive, but judgeth them folly; And so we are the same way blind, dead, stonyhearted to believe the Gospel, as we are to know and believe the mysteries of Aristotle's Philosophy. Lastly, this power of believing and coming to Christ cannot be in all men, since the Scripture saith of all men (even these within the Visible Church not excepted) that until the light of the Gospel savingly enlighten them, they sit in darkness and in the shadow of death, Isa. 9.1. Math. 4.15, 16. And 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 No man can come to Christ without the Father's drawing, and God teaching the heart, Joh. 6.44, 45. The natural man, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, cannot understand the things of God, but judges them foolishness. 1 Cor. 2.14. His wisdom cannot be subject to the Law of God. Rom. 8.7. He cannot (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) call the Lord, Jesus, except by the Spirit of Jesus, 1 Cor. 12.3. He is a withered branch being out of Christ, and can do nothing, Joh. 15.3.4. It shall be clear to any, that the Holy Ghost denyeth any such power, as they affirm. It reckons not much to tell that Jesuits, Martmez. de Ripul. de Ente supernat. Lib. 1. Dis. 20. N. 57 Suarez, lib. 1. de necessi. gratiae c. 4. per totum. Curiel in 12 q 109. Art. 2. N. 1. Duvallius, Tract. de necess. gratiae, Q 1. Art. 2 Molina de Concor. Q. 14▪ Art. 13. Disp. 9 per totum. Did. Ruiz. Tom. the volinider. Tom. de Praed●fini. Vasquez 12. Disp. 138. Bellar. De great. & libe. arbit. Lib. 6. c. 13. & per totum. Gamachaeus in 12 Q. 85. Cap. 1. & seq. Estius Lib. 2. Dist. 41. Sect. 1. Sect. 2. & seq. Tolet. Com. ●n joan. 6. in Rom. 14. Pirer. in Rom. 8. & Rom. 14. Remonst. in Scriptis Synod. Art. 4. p. 158, 159. as Martmez de Ripul. Swarez, Alphonsus Curiel, Duvallius, Lod. Molma, Did. Ruiz, Vasquez, Bellarmine, Phili. Samachaeus, Sorbonicus, Gulie. Estius, Dominica, Toletus Cardinalis, Pirerius, Salmeron, teach that, without saving grace, men may, and can first know moral truths, shining virtues, as heathens, be free of sin, as touching these virtues in their due circumstances. 2. Keep the Commandments and Law of Nature. 3. Dispose themselves for, and obtain the grace of Conversion by their own industry. 4. Be victo●rious over this or that weighty temptation singly taken. 5. That there is no intrinsical hurt of freewill, that it is wounded a little, because of the darkness of the mind, and langour of nature, but not dead to actions supernatural. 6. That we may love God as the Author of nature, and Creator sincerely; And Arminians teach that we may without the Spirit of God know all truth, quantum sufficit ad salutem, sufficiently to salvation, and so may will, love, and believe without the infused supernatural habit or grace, so their Apology. And the Socinian Catechism, c. 6. pag. 212. and Socinus himself, Praelect. Theol. Cap. 4. Fol. 15, 16. Et de officio hominis Christi: Cap. 5. Smalcius on Joh. 1. Hom. 3. Give to us manwhole, sound, sinless, as he came from the first Adam. 2. That man can do all that Cod commands him with little help of God. 3. It's an error (saith Smalcius) that a man hath no strength in spiritual things, Smalcius con Fran●z. Disp. 8. Graviter halucinatur Fran●zius, dum ait, Hominem non renatum nihil posse in spiritualibus, nempe in sensu interno, in verbum divinum, in conversione ad Deum, in fide in illum. Catech. Raccov. c. 6. Nun a● credendum Euangelio Sp. Sancti interiore dono opus est? Nullo modo: Neque in Scriptures legimus cuiquam id donum conferri nisi credenti. there is no need of the inward gift of the Spirit of God to believe (saith the Raccovian Catechism) for we read not that such a gift in Scripture is bestowed upon any but upon believers: such as are born of Adam (saith Socinus) are all born in the same condition, S●ci. Prael. 0 Theol. c. 4 fol. 14. Qui ex Adamo nascuntur ●adem conditi one omnes nascuntur, nihilque ei ademptum, quod naturaliter haberet vel habiturus esset. and nothing is taken from such a man, which he naturally hath or was to have. Ostorodius Justi. Relig. Christ. cap. 21. Praedicatio sola Euangelij potest hominem absque interná Spiritus illuminatione, & operatione à peccatis convertere. The only Preaching of the Gospel without the inward illumination by the Holy Spirit, and his working is able to convert a man from sin. All which is Printed and taught, and many other abominable errors to us. To this Objection against universal grace (as I judge unanswerable) Corvinus Answers, that all the places of Scripture brought to prove man's inability to believe in Christ, and to worship him, conclude well that a man hath not strength of himself without Christ and his grace; Corvinus contra Molin. cap. 34. Sect. 3. pag. 619. but this is but to cloud the truth, and to mock the reader, for if all and every man (even the Infants of Pagans) be in Covenant through Christ, and be made able by a gifted grace common to all, within, and without the Church, by which they are able by degrees to do all that the Gospel requires, what avails it to discourage them, and to tell, they are not masters of a good thought, without grace; for they are no less masters of good thoughts and good words, and of good actions then Adam was; for they are not hearers of the Gospel by nature, but as gifted with universal grace, they are hearers, and before their conversion, and before they receive the Spirit of Regeneration, can please God, and prepare themselves for Regeneration: Yea there is no animal and natural Pagan de facto existing in the world (by their way) who cannot receive the things of God, and cannot come to Christ, except he be drawn, for all Pagans and others are drawn, and by this it might have been said, Adam as wanting supernatural grace, and as a natural man (for the Image of God was supernatural grace to Adam, as Arminius and Corvinus teach) so, was not able to think a good thought, as 2 Cor. 3.5. nor able to receive the things of God, as the natural man, 1 Cor. 2.14. and Adam so was also dead in trespasses and sins, and must come to Christ the same way, to wit, drawn by the grace superadded to nature, as we fallen sinners do. CHAP. XVI. Cases from the former Doctrine. 1. The differences betwixt such as are externally, visibly, and conditionally, and such as are internally and personally in Covenant with God. 2. God's esteem, not men's, make Nations Visible Churches. 3 The first and prime subject of special Church-priviledge. 4. God's command to receive seals, Mr. Hooker Survey, of Discipline, Part. 1. Cap. 3. Pag. 36, 37, 38. no warrant to all members to challenge them. Q. 1. IF multitudes and people externally Covenanted with God, though not internally, whom the Lord calls his people and chosen by him, There is no place of Scripture or warrant in the word that Nations and societies shall not be the Covenanted people of God & Visible Churches, since God so esteemeth them in multitudes of places of holy Scripture, except men judge them first invisible and real saints or converts Deut. 7.6. Deut. 10.15. be the rightly constitute and Visible Church, as Mr. Thomas Hooker granteth, than Kingdoms must be his Visible Church. Answ. No doubt, Egypt, Assyria, all Nations, all the ends of the world, all the Kingdoms of this world, are Prophesied to be the Kingdoms and Covenanted people of God, and the Lord challengeth them as his▪ (Isa. 19.25. blessed be Egypt my people) Isa. 2.1, 2, 3. Psal. 22.27. Rev. 11.15. Psal. 96. Psal 97. Psal. 98. Isal. 42.10. Isai. 49.7, 8.20, 21. Cant. 8.8.— Act. 13.46, 47. Rome 15.8, 9, 10, 11, 12. must be the visible Covenanted Churches of God, to whom the seals of the Covenant are due; But that none in Egypt, Assyria, of all the called Gentiles, though visibly and professedly in Covenant, and affirmed by the mouth of the Lord to be his people, the Sister of the Jewish Church, and his Kingdoms, are members of the Visible Church, or hath right to membership and seals, except men judge them to be real converts, sound believers, and so internally called and chosen, is to prefer the judgement of men, to the Word of God. And since he saith that Kingdoms, fathers, children, are his in Covenant, and chosen to be his people, in regard the Lord calleth them by his Word, as he did Israel, Deut. 7.6. Deut. 10.15. Psal, 147.19, 20. they must be all Visible Churches in God's esteem; except he say they are not Visible Churches, except men also esteem and judge them not only externally, but really and internally justified and effectually called. 2. These we are to judge in Covenant visibly, whom the Lord so calls, and to these the seals do belong Ecclesiastically, though we see not signs of their inward conversion; Except we say that our judgement is surer than the Lords; But the Lord calls Nations, the Gentiles so, and so must Paul and Church-members judge all the Kingdoms, and all the Gentiles real converts; Else the seals are not due to them. 3. If we must judge them all really redeemed and sanctified, Suru. Part. 1. Cap. 3. p. 39▪ 40. who are fed by Pastors, as Mr. Hooker teacheth from Acts 20.28. feed the flock, then are we to esteem all the fathers who were baptised unto Moses in the Cloud, and in the Sea, and did eat the same spiritual meat, and did all drink of the same spiritual Rock Christ, 1 Cor. 10.1, 2, 3, 4. to be really redeemed, real believers, and the whole world to be really redeemed, and yet the world is not the Church, yet they were Idolaters, murmurers, visibly known to be such; And John Baptist was obliged to esteem the multitudes, all Judea who were baptised of him, Mark 1.5. Luk. 3.7. Matth. 3.2, 3, 4. really sanctified and redeemed, yea and since there be Prophecies under the Messias, that all the Kingdoms of the world, Rev. 1●. 15. Egypt, Assyria, Isa. 19.25. all Nations, Isa. 2.2. all the Gentiles, Isa. 60. shall be the confederate people of God, Tho. Hook. argueth from confederacy with God to prove that we are to judge all visible professors to be justified internally called, and they are no Church-members except they be so in our esteem. we must believe that all these Kingdoms are visible Saints, chosen to life as the Corinthians and Ephesians were, 1 Cor. 1.1. Eph. 1.4. So argues M●. Thomas Hooker from confederacy. 4. Let one word in Old or New Testament be given of a Judicature giving judicially sentence on earth of a number that professedly are hearers, that so many are to be admitted as due members of the Church, because conceived of men to be regenerated, and so many rejected, because conceived to be non-converts; or what word of Christ there is that doth regulate the judicial sentence, as touching the time how long the Church-member hath been so. 2. What motives or inducements led Simon Magus, and the generation of vipers, the multitude and all the people baptised, Luke 3.7. compared with Luk▪ 3.2 Matth. 3.5, 6. Mark 1.5. (for as many as went out to be baptised were baptised, but all Jerusalem, and all Judea went out, Mat. 3.5, 6. and were baptised, saith Mark 1.5.) what motives I say, led and induced them to join? For they joined but for a season, Joh. 5.35. Matth. 21.32. and what rule of the word there is to regulate us in judging of these motives? 3. What outward marks the word gives of outward regeneration, and consequently of predestination to glory, Justification, Effectual Calling, made visible, which we must see in others, before Pastors can feed them as Pastors, for the word is in all the like a perfect rule. Quest. 2. What is the first principal and only proper subject of the promises of special note, in the Mediator, The Invisible and mystical body of Christ ●nd Church, is the only first principal and proper subject of the promises, and privileges of special note given in the Mediator Christ. of the promise of a new heart, of the styles, properties and privileges of special note; That is, to be called the body of CHRIST, the Anointed ones, and such as shall never fall away, Jer. 32.39, 40. Jer. 31.35, 36. Answ. Only the Invisible and Mystical body of Christ, for a promise of a new heart, of the Law engraven in the inward parts, of the anointing, Jer. 31.33. Isa. 54.13. Heb. 8.10. of perseverance, Jer. 31.35, 36. Isa. 54.10. Isa. 59.20.21. Jer. 32.39, 40. Joh. 10.27, 28, 29. are promises of special note in the Mediator; And if any say that the Visible Church as such, as visible, whereof Simon Magus is a member, is the first principal subject of these promises or of privileges of special note in the Mediator, they must join (it may be mistakenly) with Arminians. Mr. Thomas Hooker did not so ingenuously as need were, refute this Thesis of mine, as he ought to have done, Mr. Hooker, Sur● of the sum of Church Discipline, Part. 1 C. 3. p. 35, 36, 37. but framed an other of his own, and refuted it, to wit, which is not owned by me. The Invisible Church is not the prime and only subject of the seals, that is, of the external seals. I grant all the external seals is not a privilege of special note in the Mediator, for it is a privilege of Ishmael, Magus, and of all profane Hypocrites. And it is not to be said that Hypocrites and graceless men, Ishmael, and Esau, have a command of God to receive the seals, Mr. Ruther fur●. Due right of Presbyteries P. 1▪ C. 9 Sect. 9 pag. 35, 36 37 The command of God is not the b●st, nor any warrant at all, as grave Mr. Hooker saith, why graceless men should challenge the seals. and a warrant from his Word to require them, as that pious and grave man Mr. Thom. Hooker saith in his Survey, Part. 1. Cap. 3. pag. 41, 42. For (saith he) there can be no better right than Gods command to enjoin, and his Word to warrant us to challenge any privilege. The command of God is a good warrant to the Church and Ministers to confer the seals to Ishmael, Simon Magus, Judas, though no Word of God warrant us judicially to sentence them to be regenerate, before the Ministers can confer the seals, as Mr. Hooker and his teach▪ but that the command of God is a good right and warrant to Esau, and Simon Magus, to require and to challenge the seals is not written in the Scripture, with the good leave of that pious man, no more nor usurpers have warrant to challenge that to which they have no right, or a robber hath warrant to require the purse of an innocent traveller. Can the sorcerer Magus say, there can be no better right than I have to challenge Baptism and the Lords Supper? Why? I have the command of God. Nay but an answer is soon returned to the witch: The Church of Samaria hath God's warrant to confer the seals, so long as the witch's skill fails him not to act fairly the part of the painted professor, but the conditional command of an externally Preached Covenant, is not the best right, nay, no right at all for him to challenge the seals, except he come believing and discerning the Lords Body, and mourning for sin, and fulfil the condition: Indeed if the Lord had commanded Magus and all the visible members, with an absolute command, Come and receive the seals whether ye profess, know Christ, or believe and repent, or not; that command should warrant all to challenge, but I trust Mr. Hooker will not stand to such a command. There is an active right in the Church to confer the seals, when there is no passive right in many visible members either to receive or to challenge the seals. And therefore distinguish betwixt jus activum, ane active right in the Church to confer the seals, and jus passivum, a passive right in Magus to challenge: The latter requires that Magus have right as a believer, and in foro Dei, both to the seal and interest in Christ, by the grant of Adversaries; Else he hath no right, no command of God to challenge the seals. And therefore we must distinguish betwixt the Covenant of Grace, qua factum & initum, & qua annunciatum, the Covenant, I say, as made with some, and yet Preached to all. And whereas Mr. Hooker saith, 38, 39 pag. that he cannot see how the will of purpose, and the will of revealed command, do not contain apparent contradictions. This Godly man hated Arminians, when he saw them in daylight. I cannot now insist to answer him and Papists and Arminians who object the very same thing. It is clear they differ much, but they are not contradicent, more than the decree of God, and the moral obligation of men are contrair. Hypocrites and such, are only visible members and no more, and have no true and internal right and interest in the seals according to the inward grace signified or the promises of a new heart, which are absolute and made to the Elect and believers, who are the only principal prime and proper subject of such promises of special note in the Mediator. Quest. 3. What be these principal real Covenanters to whom only, the new heart is absolutely promised, and how are they known. CHAP. XVI. 1. Of the hypocrisy, of formal Covenanters. 2. Self-deceit. 3. The new Spirit. 4. Revelations and Prophecies. 5. Marks of a Spiritual disposition. Answ. THis toucheth the differences of the old and stony heart in such as are externally only in Covenant with God, and are Hypocrites: And the new and soft heart of such as are internal, real, and absolute Covenanters: Hence these propositions. 1. An Hypocrite is he who in the stage represents a King, What an Hypocrite is. when he is none, a beggar, an old man, a husband, when he is really no such thing, Luke 20.20. They sent out spies, feigning themselves to be just men: To the Hebrews they are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faciales, facemen, men of the face and vizard and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 colorati, died men, rid men, dipped, baptised, from the root 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to die, dip, wash, baptise, Jer. 12.9. mine heritage is to me as an speckled bird, or a pied bird, and hath casten off my simple livery, and so is a bird of many sundry colours: The Hypocrite is died and watered with a hue and colour of godliness. Coneph noteth hypocrisy, Isa. 32.6. from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 simulavit, fraudulenter egit. The noun 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Chald. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a dissembler, an Hypocrite, who is sometimes just, sometimes wicked, the root by a Metaphor is to pollute, and defile, Psal. 106. the land was defiled with bloods: Hence the Hypocrite is all things, and all men, and nothing, and no man but himself. Hypocrisy is considered in itself, and so it is opposed to sincerity. Or in relation to these graces and duties which it fenzies, and so it is opposed to all the true virtues which it lyingly and feinzedly represents, as painting is opposed to reality in nature, being a counterfeiting of nature, and it is opposed to things that are painted, so a living man, and a growing rose, things obvious to the eyes of sense are most easily painted as colours lineaments, as a man's body, but things that fall under the understanding only, as the soul, and under the sense of smelling and touching, are hardly pictured. Ye may paint the man, the roses, the colour, figure, and the fires red flaming, but he cannot paint the soul, the smell of the rose, It's hard to counterfite graces and things not obvious to the sense of seeing. or the heat of the fire: It is hard to counterfite spiritual graces, as love of Christ, sincere believing intending of the Glory of God, It's hard to get a coat, or put painture on spiritual graces, and the more ye counterfite the Spirit, the more Divell-like is the forgery, for he changeth himself into an Angel of light. There is some use for painted men, for they serve for ornament, but there is no use for faith but resting upon Christ, nor for love, but to cleave to God, and please him and our neighbour: In all duties we counterfite but the outward bulk of graces and actions, and would seem to do what we do not: If the colour of graces and godliness be desirable, itself is more desirable, but to imitate only the externals of the Covenant of Grace to keep a room in the Church, is to put a lie and mock upon the Lord, and to reproach him with dimness of sight: And such as hate Christ and the Godly in their heart, Many hate hypocrites, and so doing are hypocrites themselves and first cloth them with the coat of hypocrites, liars, Samaritans, seditious men, they much more hate Godliness, he that would have the picture of the man stobbed or hanged, would much more have the living man in person stobbed or hanged. Hypocrisy is a resembling of a moral good for vain glory: It's not hypocrisy to suppress tears in Prayer, What is not hypocrisy. lest the man seem to seek himself, nor for a father to seem to be angry at his child or servant when he is not angry, nor to put on deafness at reproaches, Psal. 38.12. They speak mischievous things, 13. But I as a deaf man heard not: It was prudency, not hypocrisy in Saul to hold his peace and misken when the sons of belial despised him, it being the beginning of his reign, 1 Sam. 10.27. Nor is it hypocrisy in a Magistrate or Joseph to put on an other person to his brethren, though if the ground be unbelief, it is not lawful for David to feinzie himself mad: Nor for Ammon to counterfite sickness, or to put a lie upon providence: And yet it is not hypocrisy for Solomon to seem to divide in two the living child with a sword, or for the men of Israel to fly before the men of Ai. A lawful end and a right end and motive, contributes goodness to actions that are not intrinsically evil. There is a natural hypocrisy in all, every man in both sides of the Sun is a liar, he that said he would wish that he might dwell in the land beyond the dawning of the morning, where they are all sincere, wished to dwell where there are no men; for wherever men are, there are hypocrites and hypocrisy. There is an acquired hypocrisy in all, less or more, and an habit thereof in not a few. According to men's ways so are men white and painted Hypocrites; Herod professeth to worship Christ and minds to kill him, Math. 2. And Absolom covers treason and rebellion against his father and prince, with the whiteness of a vow at Hebron, what better is the whore and what more devoute to say, Prov. 7.14. I have peace offerings with me, to day have I paid my vows? under the vail of zeal (they think it) service to God to kill the Apostles, Joh. 16. But the worst of Hypocrites is he who makes himself a Hypocrite, not before God only, and before men, but whitens and paints himself before himself, and deceives himself, 1 Joh. 1.8. It is strange a man hath such a power over himself, as to persuade himself that he hath no sin, not only in point of faith, as such as deny any original sin in themselves or others; as many seducers now do, Socinians, Arminians, divers Anabaptists▪ and such as say, the Law may be fulfilled by Grace, we are justified by Works: It is possible to be free of sin in this life and to be perfect, What is the power of self-deceit. so as they cannot sin: But also practically a man's heart may deceive his heart, and may persuade himself that he is Godly and Religious, Jam. 1.26. and that his ways are right, Prov. 14.12. and may say within his heart, and so think not only, I am holier than thou, and yet not be so much as ceremonially holy, but remain in the graves and eat swine's flesh, Isa. 65.45. but I say I am rich (and which is above admiration) I have need of nothing, Rev. 3.17. that I have no need of forgiveness, of saving Grace, of the Redeemer Christ, of Salvation. And this is so much the more dangerous, that the prejudice and blindness of self-love, doth more strongly persuade self-godlinesse then any godliness of the world, and begets a more strongly radicated and fixed habit of believing self-godlinesse, than Ministers the godliest of them, and Professors, and Angels, and the Lord immediately speaking (so long as the revelation is literal) Numb. 22.12, 24, 28. and Christ Preaching in his Person, Math. 8.9, 14. Math. 21.43, 44, 45. Luke 16.13, 14. joh. 10.24, 25, 26, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31. and the Apostles, Acts 24.25, 26. Acts 26.2, 3, 4, 5, 6, etc. 24. can be able to root out, for they can fence and ward off, and can let out blows at all that ye can say, and carry this habit of a false opinion of self-holinesse to Eternity with them, and stand to what conceited lamps they hear on earth, did glister withal; and plead against the Lord in his face, that the sentence of condemnation is unjust, Matth. 25.44. and that they deserve for their profession to be admitted in to the Bridegroom's chamber, Math. 7.22. Matth. 25.11. Luke 13.25. and all such fairded Professors, are externally only in Covenant with God. And therefore these are sad marks, when first ye hid your lusts and nourish them, and feed upon the East wind of some created last end, and have not God for your last end, Luke 12.19. Psal. 49.11. Psal. 4.6. jer. 22.17. 2. When ye know not that ye are poor, miserable, blind, naked, Rev. 3.17. Math. 9.11, 12▪ 13. Luke 15.2. Luke 19.7. and ye were never in Christ's hospital, and are whole and need no Physic. 3. Ye loath Christ but knows it not, Luke 7.44.45. ye love Christ as a supposed Prophet, and loathe him as a Redeemer. One may deadly hate Christ, and not know it. 4. Ye cannot compare the two states together, the state of nature and the state of Grace, as 1 Tim. 1.13. ye idolise your own choice, to bear down Achabs Idolatry, but choose not the will of God to oppose jeroboam Idolatry. 5. Ye want Christ, and ye were not born with Christ in the heart. 2. Yea ye are eternally lost without him, and know neither the one nor the other. Quest. 4. Whether or not are believers the parties of the Covenant of Grace. Ans. These are parties to whom the Covenant-promise is made, not these who already have the benefit promised in the Covenant, but believers must have a new heart, and consequently faith already, therefore they cannot be parties with whom the Covenant is made. Believers are properly parties of the new Covenant, but not as believers, as chosen of God to life. As because the Image of God is not promised to Adam in the Covenant of Works, but presupposed to be in him by order of nature, before God make with him the Covenant of Works, else he could not be able to keep that Covenant, which we cannot say, for God created him right and holy, Gen. 1.26, 27. Eccles. 7.29. Eph. 4.24. Col. 3.10. Therefore Adam in his pure naturals, as not yet endued with the Image of God, cannot be the party with whom the Covenant of Works is made, for then the Image of God▪ must either be a reward, which Adam by his pure naturals and strength thereof must purchase by working, which the Scripture and nature of the Covenant cannot admit, or then the Image of God must be promised to Adam in the Covenant of Works, which is no less absurd. And if faith be promised in the Gospel, the Covenant of Grace must be made with some Israel and Judah as predestinated to life eternal and yet wanting a new heart: For God cannot Covenant●ways promise a new heart to such as have it, but to such as have a stony heart and believe not, Ezek. 36.26. Deut. 30.6. Ezek▪ 11.19. nor can he promise faith to such as have faith this way. Quest. 5. Who are these that have the new heart, and so are personally and really within the Covenant of grace. Ans. Because the new spirit is given, when the new heart is given, Ezek. 36.27. Ezek. 18.31. Make you a new heart and a new spirit, and many in our times boast of the spirit, it shall be fit to speak of the new spirit, and who are spiritual. Hence these Questions of the new spirit. Quest. 1. What is the seed of the new spirit? Ans. The word of the Gospel, therefore before Adam could have the Gospel-spirit, the Lord must reveal the Doctrine of the Gospel, The Word and the Spirit. the seed of the woman must tread down the head of the serpent, Gen. 3. So the word and the spirit are promised together, Isa. 59.21. Isa. 30.21. Thy teachers shall not be removed, and thine ears shall hear (this is the inward teaching) a voice behind thee, saying, this is the way, walk ye in it. Isa. 51.16, 17. Mat. 28.20. Go teach, that is the word: Lo I am with you to the end of the world, that is the Spirit to make it effectual, by my Spirit, Joh. 14.16, 17. The first revelation of the Gospel and the first principles, cannot be tried by any former Doctrine or rule. Object. But Adam when he heard first the Doctrine of the blessed seed, could not try the Doctrine or speaker, by any new Doctrine. Ans. The first Doctrine can be tried by no other rule, because it was the first rule itself, nor can these principals written in the heart naturally (That God is) (God is just, holy) etc. be tried by any other truths, because they are first truths; As the sense of seeing cannot try whether the Sun be the Sun by the light of some other Sun, that is before this Sun, which is more lightsome. For there is not another Sun before this, the Gospel itself hath God shining in it, to these who are enlightened, as Adam was, a Rubbie doth speak that is a Rubbie. Obj. How then should Adam know what God spoke to him and n●t to another, are we not to try all spirits that speak? The immediate word, and the most immediate fountain-word, and the trying of both. Ans. There is a word immediately spoken by the Prophets, and Apostles, that is to be tried, partly by the first Preaching the Lord made in Paradise, partly by the effects, that it converteth the soul, Psal. 19.7. and smells of that same Majesty, and the divine power of another life, which is in the first Sermon, Gen. 3.15▪ this is Verbum Dei immediatum. But when God himself speaks in his own person to Adam, to Abraham, Gen. 22. to Moses▪ Isaiah, the Apostles, that is Verbum Dei immediatissimum, the fountain-word; neither word nor speaker is to be tried. The Patriarches and Prophets are never bidden try the visions of God, for when God speaks them himself, he makes it evident that it is he▪ and only he who speaks, and we read not of any in this deceived, Angels or men cannot counterfeit God. Obj. There have, after the Canon of the Scripture is closed, been some men, who have Prophesied facts to come, that fell out as they foretold, just as Isaiah, Elias, and other Prophets, than something is to be believed, that is not written, and such may have the Spirit, and yet no word of Scripture goes along with it. Ans. 1. Such men may have (I confess) a Prophetical spirit, but first, they were eminently holy and sound in the faith, The differences betwixt the Prophecies that now are, and scriptural Prophecies and taught that the Catholic Church should believe nothing, nor practise nothing, but what is warranted by the Word. Such as boast of Spirit or Prophecy, and reject the word, are therefore not to be believed. 2. What these men of God foretold, is a particular fact concerning a man, what death he should die, or a Nation, or a particular, such a man shall be eternally saved, but no dogma fidei, nor any truth that lays bands on the Catholic Church to believe that to the end of the world, as all scriptural truths do, and a doubt it is, if we are to believe these, in the individual circumstances of fact, sub periculo peccati, upon hazard of sinning against God, we may, I judge, without sin suspend belief, and yield charity to the speaker. 3. If any object, the Prophets did foretell particular facts concerning the death of Ahab, the birth of Josiah, which concerned particular persons: I, but they so were the matters of fact (as the crucifying of Christ was a mater of fact) as also they did by the intent of the Holy Ghost contain Historical, Moral and dogmatically divine Instructions, so that the whole Catholic Church must believe them, with certainty of divine faith, The difference between revelations, of what is truth, and what is lawful or not lawful, and revelations of facts, what shall come to pass, and what not. they being written and spoken for our Instruction, and they sin who believe not. Quest. 2. What are we to judge of these truths revealed to Professors, when they are in much nearness to God, and the Lord is pleased to shine upon them in some fullness of manifestation of himself to their souls, especially in particular facts? Answ. There is a wide difference betwixt revelations, which speak what is lawful or unlawful, agreeable unto or repugnant to the Word; And what is good in jure, and what in facto, shall come to pass or not come to pass, what ever is given to revelations of the former sort, is taken from the Scripture, whose peculiar perfection it is to show what is good and just, what not; Therefore to say that revelations now do guide us in disobeying higher Powers or kill men, etc. is a wronging of the Word, especially of the first, second and sixth Commands. As to the other, God may and doth lead his own, especially when they are near glory, under fewest prejudices touching time and eternity, to speak what shall be, but it is not our rule. It's an Argument of nought, Such a thing was mightily born in upon my spirit as lawful and as certainly to come to pass, when I was most near to GOD in a full manifestation of himself: therefore such a way is right, Nearness to God in fullness of manifestation of himself, is no surely concludent rule that such a thing is truth or lawful. or such a way shall come to pass; For not to say 1. that this is a wronging of the perfection of Scripture, and 2. That there is a bastard Logic in the affections where God and nature hath seated discursive power; And we often prophesy, because we love, not because we see the visions of God. 3. Peter might, the same way, reason, I saw the glory of heaven at the transfiguration, and the Peers of the higher house, Moses and Elias, and this was then mightily born in upon my spirit, It is good for us to be here, let us build three Tabernacles: therefore this is true, It is good for us to be here: But the Conclusion is a dream; who should preach the Gospel as witnesses and suffer for it, Peter, at the transfiguration, and John, Reve. 19 cap. 22. when they were most near to God did reel and stumble & err. and write Canonic Scripture, if these Disciples should be for ever there? And if they should be separated from the whole glorified body, and make up a Church eternally glorified in that Mount, of only six persons: And the word saith, Peter being drunk with glory, Mark 9.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 knew not what he said, and the Disciples were sleeping, not prophesying, Luke 9.32. which saith they were in heaven, but clothed with bodies of sin, and not led by Scripture-light (as that good Prophecy of Peter was contrair to the Gospel of suffering and dying, that Christ prophesied was abiding himself, and all his, Math. 16.21, 22.) we should reel and sin: for there may be no connexion between the present nearness to God and the thing suggested in the spirit; and they cohere by accident. So one in prayer is near God in respect of sweetness of access, and yet the individual favour which ye pray for conditionally, The deceit in liberty of praying. never granted; Ye may be saved, and God more glorified in the sufficiency of his grace, without granting it to you, as is clear 2 Cor. 12.9. Sorrow and desire can suggest such an answer to the fasting of Israel, as they may say and think, they shall be victorious now over the children of Benjamin, and yet they are deceived. It's good to keep the eye single, for rottenness in the mind putrifies the soul. The heart would be silent and let God speak here. The sight may be dazzled in nearness to God, and we take our marks by the Moon; And the liberty of praying is terminated upon the fiducial acts, and we think it is fastened upon the particular thing we seek: And here the Antecedent is true, as heaven, and the Consequence folly and darkness. So John, Rev. 19 and cap. 22. seethe Heaven opened, and behold a white horse and him who sat on him, and he heard the voice of many, saying, hallelujah, and saw the pure river of water of life, the tree of life, the Throne, and Him that sat thereupon, etc. But he did not rightly infer that he might therefore fall down and worship a created Angel. All which saith they vainly boast of the Spirit who reject the light of Scripture, which is a surer daystar than the light of glory, for our direction. The light of glory is for our perfection of happiness, in seeing and enjoying the last end, but not for our instruction in leading to the end, and the means. The Candle-light, and Sun-light in the City comes not without the City to direct us in the way, the lights and torches in Jerusalem and the new City serve not to guide the way to these Cities. 2. The spiritual man judgeth all things, but by the word. In one particular, Samuel, in another, Tertullian, dottes upon Montanus, some of the prime fathers, otherwise Godly, are blacked with Plato's purgatory, and some of them with invocation of Saints, yet speaking to them doubtingly 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, say; 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. the spirit may be, where some particular errors are, but if the judgement be rotten and unsound in the matters of God, rottenness in the one side of the Apple creeps through the whole, and so doth corruption from the mind sink down to the heart. A godly heretic I cannot know. Pain, grief, & aiking in spiritual motions speaketh that the Spirit is there where such are. 3. Any bone or hurt member in walking, actually pains and breedeth aiking, if there be a piercing and a graving conviction, in a Christian motion, that untowardness and opposition from the flesh, pains the spirit and new man, and hinders the stir of the Spirit, it saith the Spirit is there, as water cast upon fire speaketh there is fire, Rom. 7.15, 16, 23, 24. It were good to try the untowardness to spiritual duties, and several kinds of delight, whether it be borrowed delight from the literal facility of the gift, from gain and glory, adhering to the office and calling, or from the inbred sweetness in honouring God, crooking and pain in walking is a token of life-walking. 4. It's a spiritual disposition in the Church, Cant. 2. in a particular soul, To observe so the ways of God in the soul, as ye may be able to give a particular account of all Christ's motions, his going, his coming, and the actings of his Spirit: speak a most spiritual disposition. to know and be able to give an exact account of all the motions, goings and come of Christ, where he lieth as a bundle of myrrh all the night, even betwixt the breasts, Cant. 1.13. when the King brings you into his house of new wine, Cant. 1.4. Cant. 2.4. when he speaks, Cant. 2.8, 10.— My beloved spoke and said to me, arise, my love, my fair one, and come away, when he knocks, know ye his knock, to tell over again his words, open to me my sister, etc. where he is. Cant. 2.8. Behold he cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills, where he is in his dispensation to his Ancient Church? Cant. 2.9. Behold he standeth behind our wall, he looketh forth at the windows. 16. He feedeth among the Lilies: when, and how he embraceth, Cant. 2.6. His left hand is under my head, his right hand doth embrace me: when he withdraws, Cant. 5.6. and is not to be found, I sought him, but I found him not, I called him, but he answered me not. Cant. 5.6. Cant. 3.1, 2. how hard he is to be found, and how easy he is to be found, Cant. 3.1, 2.3, 4. what spiritual stir he makes in the heart, Cant. 5▪ 4. My beloved put in his hand by the keyhole. For (1.) this speaks much soul-love to be where he is. Cant. 1.7. (2.) To be able to write a spiritual Chronicle and History of all Christ's stir towards your soul, saith ye have letters daily, and good intelligence of the affairs of the Spirit, and of the King's Court, and that he writes to you, as Cant. 5.1. I am come into my garden, my sister, my spouse; I have gathered my myrrh with my spice, I have eaten my honeycomb with my honey, I have drunk my wine with my milk: Then will Christ write a letter to spiritual ones, and (as it were, with reverence to his Holiness) give a sort of account where he is, what he does, what thoughts he hath to us: O! how few know this? 5. Godly missing of Christ must be a gracious disposition, Cant. 5.6. I opened to my beloved, but my beloved had withdrawn himself, Cant. 3.1. I sought him but I found him not, vers. 2. I sought him but I found him not. Such as are pleased with a bare literal missing and are not also in a holy manner anxious and are not 6. Restless in rising and going through the City, in the streets and the broad ways, seeking and ask, saw ye him whom my soul loveth? Cant. 3.1, 2, 3. are not so spiritual, as is required. Cant. 5.6. My beloved had withdrawn himself, and was gone, my soul failed when he spoke, remembering his speeches, when he knocked. v. 2. There may be some too longsome security under sad falls, when he is not soon miss, 2 Sam. 11.1, 2, 3. Psal. 26.15. Yea a spiritual soul having regard to all the Commandments misseth the spirits acting in all the ways in eating, Pro. 3.6. Act. 27.35. 1 Cor. 10.31. Job 1.5. 7. Frequent convictions (which are the connatural actings of the Spirit) Joh. 16.9. and of the most spiritual sins, Convictions for most spiritual sins speak much spiritualness as of unbeleef, and Gospel-ignorance, Joh. 16.9. prove a spiritual state: as flaming prove fire to be fire. Unbeleef is more contrair to the Spirit, then carnal sins, being most contrary to the flower and bloomings of the Spirit in his sweetest operations, and most against the Mediator-love of Christ. For as by the fall, Christ hath a new Office to redeem us, As Christ-Man hath a new office to redeem, so hath the spirit a new office to comfort, neither of which should have been useful, if man had not sinned. Matth. 1.21. 1 Tim. 1.15. Luke 19.10. Isa. 61.1, 2. Isa. 44.6, 9 So the Spirit hath a new Office, which he should not have had, if man had not sinned, to apply the blood of sprinkling as a sort of Mediatory intercession, to dip us in the fountain of his blood. John 16.14. He shall receive of mine, and show it unto you. Joh. 14.16. to be the Comforter, Joh. 14.16. the Leader, Joh. 16.13. the Witness, Joh. 15.26. Rom. 8.15, 16. The Spirit in his Office cannot step one foot with the unbeliever. Hence much tenderness and smiting of heart where the Spirit, 1 Sam. 24.5. is. Yea conscience to weep as one over his mother's grave, for his enemies, Ps. 35.13, 14. and strict doubling of faith in greatest deeps: In which Christ proves himself to be more than a believing man, Mat. 26.39. Luk. 22.42, 44. for no man that is only man can both drink hell & believe heaven at once. 8. In duties there be these. 1. The end. 2. The delight in them. 3. The success. As to the first, the less of the creature and self, and the more of God in the end, so much the more denied and spiritual is the doer, when purely for God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we do, The Spirit as the Spirit acts us to do all for God, as God. 1 Cor. 10.13. Col. 3.23. we are sick for God, and in health for God, and wake to him, Psal. 119.62, 147, 148. and sleep to him, Psal. 16.7. Psal. 139.18. live to him, 1 Pet. 2.23. live and die to him and to Christ, Rom. 14.7.8. and pray to him, even when we speak to God, Eccles. 5.1, 2. and preach to prepare a Bride to him, 2 Cor. 1.14. 2 Cor. 4.25. we may be not speaking to God, or for God and his honour, 1 Cor. 11.2. 1 Thess. 2.19, 20. How miserable and carnal to do all for the creature, the flesh, Rom. 13.14. Jer. 22.15. Isa. 5.8. for self, Dan. 4.30. Heb. 2.5, 6. and this speaks much of the Spirit when the man is sick and hungry, for the exalting of God, and the will is so capaciously wide in this, that he would his eternal glory were a footstool for the highting of his glory, Exod. 32.31. Rom. 9.3. the will is a most spiritual and capacious faculty, and O! what acceptable service when the man's will looks right toward an infinite Majesty, as thirsting for and panting after this: O! if all beings, millions of Worlds, Angels and men, and all created beings, Heaven, Earth, Sun, Moon, Stars, Clouds, Air, Seas, Floods, Beasts, Birds, Fishes, and all the drops of Rain and Hail, Snow, Dew, so many Worlds of Angels would sing his praises? What wonder then, he accept the will for the deed? And what is to be thought of the will averse from God, and which hates him, and wishes that God were not? How contrair to a Spiritual disposition is this? 2. For delight, it is a spiritual disposition, to go about the duty as duty, ut bonum honestum, and not upon this formal account, because it delighteth us; Except the delight be in the Law of the Lord, night and day, as it glorifieth him. 2. It's spiritualness, when abstractedly from private consolation we go about the duty for God, It's spiritualness of disposition to do our duty for the duty, not for the pleasantness of the duty. and can rest upon suffering and burning quick as it is duty, though the sufferer should be deserted all the while; We often feed ourselves with the bonum secundum, the pleasantness in the duty, which is our sin, except the sweetness of the holiness of the duty be our delight, and the beauty of pleasing God allure us, but feeling being away, we find how hard it is, to delight ourselves in the Lord. 3. We do duties too often, for the success, not for the duty: We pray, the Lord hears not, we weary: we rebuke men, they care not, and we weary▪ success and not duty, self-delight and not the honouring of God, It's spiritualness to do duty for the duty, not for the success of the duty which should be all our delight, take us up. I pray and weep for my enemies (Ah! if it could be done) saith David, they are worse, Psal. 35.13▪ but my prayer returned to my bosom, that is, the sweet▪ peace of God, which is the fruit of the duty of praying came to my soul, and cheered me. We consider not that the promise of peace, and consolation is made to the duty itself, Psal. 119.165. Psal. 19.11. Prov. 3.21, 22, 23, 24, 25. not to success of the duty, and we consider not that we are to be quieted in the duty, and to be armed with patience, against the temptation of the duty. Often it enrages Pharisees against CHRIST and the Apostles, yet the Spirit bids them Preach. Therefore whether success in praying, and the suggar of delight in duties hire us, or not; We are to know that though Abraham's offering of Isaac to God had neither in it the one nor the other, nor our Saviour's offering himself to God, for the sins of the world; If reason weigh the one and the other, yet because both were performed upon the motive of the love of God commanding, both was most spiritual obedience, Gospel-love enclosed in the letter of the command, renders the obedience spiritual. especially, because the duty is both work and wage, and the more of the Word of God is in the obedience; I mean not the letter only, but the word including the love. 2. The authority of the Commander. 3. The beauty apprehended to be, and▪ the peace in obedience; the more spiritual is the obedience: The letter only may show you duty, your obligation, and the penalty of disobeying, and all these three in a literal way, and yet upon that account, the obedience is not spiritual, but Gospel-love added to the Laws-letter makes spiritual obedience. CHAP. XVIII. The new heart of Covenanters, the Nature, Characters, Properties thereof, hitherto of the new Spirit. Quest. 6. WHen are we to judge, that we have a new heart? And when do we know that it is not the old heart? Ans. 1 Propos. As Physically, so also Morally, the heart is the man, The heart is the man. the good heart, the good man, the evil heart, the evil man, and God weights men by the weight, not of the tongue, of the hands▪ of the outward man, but by the weight of the heart: Asa his heart was perfect, 2 Chron. 15.17. the heart of Jehoshaphat, 2 Chron. 17.3. was perefect. And Psal. 78.37. their heart was not right: the froward heart is the froward man, Pro. 3.32. There is a heart with in a heart, and a man within a man speaking and acting. For there is a man speaking within a man, and a heart within a heart acting, as if it were a man made up of soul and body. Thou hast said in thy heart, I will ascend up to Heaven, so the King of Babylon, Isa. 14.13. So the heart acts Heaven or Hell within the man, Psal. 14.1. Luk. 12.19. they have a heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 busied in the College, studying and reading covetousness, 2 Pet. 2.14. 2. Propos. When the Lord tries the man, he tries the heart and the reins, Prov. 15.11. Hell and the heart both are naked before him. God only trieth the heart▪ Aug. Confess 10. cap. 27. intus tu ●r●s, & ego foras Prov. 17.3. Theodoret. God acteth the noon-day-Sun meridionaliter in every heart: The man himself is without, and God within, Jer. 17.9▪ Man searcheth not his own heart and reins, for there be plottings and inclinations to evil in the heart, which the heart knows not, 2 King. 8.12, 13. Peter hath a better heart than all men in the books of his own heart, Matth. 26.33. but it's not so indeed. 3. Propos. The washen heart that lodges not vain thoughts, Jer. 4.14. purged from dead works, by the blood of Christ (above all the blood of bullocks and goats) Heb. 9.14. purified by faith, Act. 15.14. is the good heart. What the good heart is, and how it is made good. It is a better heart according to the heart of God, 1 King. 15.5. that turneth not aside, 1 Sam. 13.14. of Gods seeking out and finding, than the first heart created of God, Eph. 4.24. Col. 3.10. And ah! we seek a good Ruler, a good Physician, when we are sick, a good house to dwell in, 1. Creation of a better heart than the first, is a piece of the rarest of the Lords works. and (which is strange) a good horse, but not to have a good heart. 4. Propos. The excellent acts of God, in a manner (with glory to his Highness) to mind his first work, to create a better heart than the first which he created, saith, that there is great need of a good heart, Psal. 51.10. of a new heart, Ezek. 36.26. It's beyond all admiration, to create so ra●e a piece as the Sun out of no thing, and a beautiful Lily out of mire and dirt, out of common clay to bring forth Saphires, Carbuncles, and in lieu of a stony heart (for grace is not educed out of the potency of any created thing) to create a new heart, which God loveth to dwell in, rather than in heaven, the high and holy place, Isai. 57.15. which so ravisheth the heart of Christ, Cant. 4.7, 9 and is of more price with God, than gold, or any corruptible thing, even a meek and quiet spirit, 1 Ptt. 3.3, 4. is the rarest piece of the works of God. It's an excellent act of God to keep the vessel in a spiritual season, as David prays, 1 Chron. 29.18. To make room for Christ dwelling by faith, and for love to comprehend love, Eph. 3.17, 18. and who puts such a thing in the heart, Ezra 7.27. when a sparkle of fire from flint falls on water or green timber, there is no firing from thence. But when actual influences fall upon an heavenly habit, as the Lord can cast in a coal, or a lump and flood of love, Cant. 2.5, 6. Luk. 24.32. Cant. 6.12. there are most heavenly actings of the soul. 3. He bows and inclines the heart to the Lords testimonies, and to cleave to him without declining, Jer. 32.39, 40. Ps. 119.39. Cant. 1.4. Ps. 141.4. 4. We are to beware of 1. the reigning evils of the heart, of a rotten and unsound heart, 1 Tim. 6.5. Psal. 119.82. 2. Of an unsavoury stinking heart, that smells of hell and the second death, The divers sorts of evil hearts, we are to beware of. of all sort of unrighteousness and malice, like a green opened grave, Psal. 5.9. 3. Of an uncured heart, that never came through the hands of the Physician (Prov. 14.13. A sound heart is the life of the flesh.) Of an unsound, unsavoury and a rotten heart, Eph. 4.29. compared with vers. 23. from whence issue rotten words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 borrowed from rotten and wormeaten trees which speak an uncured heart. Mederi, curare mitigare dolorem. Host 11.5. I'll heal him. 5. We are to look to deadness of heart in all the branches of it. As (1.) sullenness and dumpish sadness, in refusing comforts, and being full of unbelieving heaviness, in David, Psal. 69.20. Psal. 42.11. whereas we are always to rejoice, Psal. 119.52. Phil. 4.4. (2.) Fainting at the greatness of the affliction, Isa. 20.3. Joh. 14.1. whence comes withering of heart, Psal. 102.4. Psal. 27.13. (3.) An overwhelmed and unbelieving swooning heart, Psal. 61.2. Psal. 142.3. Psal. 143.3, 4. (4.) Deadness in going about the service of God, Psal. 119.37. Quicken me in thy way, of this else where. (5.) Narrowness to take in God, opposed to an enlarged and wide heart, Psal. 119.32. Psal. 81.10. and straitening of heart, when the soul is so hampered, that he cannot speak, Psal. 77.4. unbeleef clipps the wings of the Spirit, and lays on fetters, which may come from the wicked company, and may be laid on by ourselves, Psal. 39.1, 2. (6.) There is an Atheist heart to hate the existence of God, of Christ, of a Gospel, Jam. 2.19. Matth. 8.29. Compared with Psal. 14.1. Eph. 2.12. Some believers are near to say, I take my leave of Christ, I'll pray no more, for it is in vain. Jer. 20.9. Ps. 73.13, 14. but it is not a fixed resolution: of this else where. 7. There is an evil heart of unbeleef to depart from the Living God, Heb. 3.12. Prov. 6.18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to delve, to plow inde, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he that worketh either on iron of timber. 8. A heart that deviseth, ploweth, or delveth wicked imaginations, Prov. 6.18. As Prov. 3.29. Blow not evil against thy neighbour. Host 10.13. You have ploughed iniquity, such plots are forged against the people of God, Matth. 27.1. Nah. 1.11. 9 A proud heart (1.) resisted of God. (2.) Farrest from the lowly and meek heart of Christ, Matth. 11.29. Phil. 2.5, 6, 7, (3.) Most near to Satan's heart, 1 Tim. 3.6. Q. Why are we more ashamed of an unclean lustful heart, then of a proud heart? Ans. A proud heart is deeper guiltiness, and nearer to Satan's nature; Why we are more ashamed of uncleanness and falsehood, then of pride. And pride and unbeleef are sins more reproachful to God, and encroach more upon his Throne, but there is more flesh in us then Spirit, and we think that there is more of a beast in uncleanness. Quest. But we are more ashamed of lying, falsehood, and stealing, then of pride? Ans. There's more of being ashamed before men, it being a carnal sort of passion, then of being ashamed before God, and falsehood and lying to men are fleshly evils against common honesty, but pride is a more Angelsin, or a more Godlike sin, a spiritual sin, and pride is a sort of heart-heresie, by which we judge but blindly, we have reason to ascend and climb aloft to God's room, Gen. 3.5, 6. Isai. 14.13. because of knowledge, parts, power. 10. There is deceitfulness and self-deceiving in the heart, Isa. 44.20. the Idolater feeds on ashes, a deceived heart hath turned him aside, that he cannot deliver his soul, nor say, is there not a lie in my right hand, Obadiah 3. The heart is the greatest liar on earth, to say and gainsay. 11. There is a wicked fearfulness in the heart to do evil, Judas 12. feeding themselves without fear, 3 Sam. 1.14. was thou not afraid (saith David to the Amalekite) to put out thine hand to destroy the Lords Anointed? It's a godly fear to tremble always, at feasting, speaking, hearing, sleeping, company, Prov. 28.14. 1 Pet. 1.17. Phil. 2.13. Job 1.5. And in all there lie snares within, and without the house. 12. There is a wicked flintiness of heart, we shall have peace, Characters of sinful stonines●e of heart against God though we both hear cursing and walk loosely, Deut. 29.19. we are fallen, but Ephraim's stout heart (2.) will rise whether God will, or not, Isa. 9.9. And (3.) the King of Assyria's stout heart will be as strong as God, Isa. 10.12, 13. And (4.) its wicked stoutness to say godly mourning before the Lord is in vain, Mal. 3.13, 14. (5.) It's wicked stoutness to rest upon your own righteousness and refuse to treat with God, Isa. 46.12, 13. (6.) And vain stoutness to dare God in his own quarters and fight him, Exod. 14.8.23. Exod. 23.8▪ 13. Isai. 36.10, 11, 36, 37. if it were in his own seas as Pharaoh and the Egyptians would do. 13. There is a wicked hardening of the heart, when men make the Lord his word and mighty works the contrair party, Exod. 5.1, 2, 3. Exod. 7.10, 13, 16, 20, 23. Exod· 8.5, 6, 7, 15, 17, 18, 19 Isai. 6.9, 10. Zech. 7.8, 9, 11, 12. Ezek. 2.3, 4. Ezek. 3.7, 8. Mat. 13.13, 14, 15. Act. 13.44, 45, 46. and oppose God in his word and works. 14. There is a sinful dulness upon the heart, by which men are as weaned childen, line upon line, line upon line, Of the moral concurrence ●f the word to the act of infusion of a new heart can do them no good, Isai. 29.9, 10, 11. Here it is to be observed that we cannot Preach Omnipotency, nor persuade a world to be created, nor a new heart to be infused, nor can we Preach to a Wolf to become a meek Lamb, nor threaten the Sun to rise at midnight, we but speak words about the new birth, the husbandman but breaks the earth with his plough, but God makes the corn to grow, and he only, Job 9.20. not that the word is not the instrument of conversion of souls, Rom. 1.16. Rom. 10.14. but how to the act of infusion of a new heart the word concurres as a moral and suasory instrument, Pro 28.18 is above my capacity. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To be made narrow, to be pressed in body or mind, to afflict, to vex, Gen. 32.7. straitening was on jacob by a Metalepsis it is to frame by pressing or keeping strait as Potter's frame a vessel. Hence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 jots●r a potter, Eze. 11.13. 15. There is a froward heart, Pro. 17.20. that perverteth and is crafty 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to pervert. 16. A wicked heart, Pro. 26.23. set on evil, Eccl. 8.11.17. foolishness is bound to the heart, Pro. 22.15. a dissembling heart, when seven abominations are in it, Pro. 26▪ 25. (1.) We take no● heed to the imaginations, and are not grieved for the constitution of the heart, for actual sins make original sin to swell, as two floods running into one maketh a huge River. (2.) We take not heed to the young births of the heart, with the concurrence of the mind, fancy and imagination, there are multitudes of forgeries, clay-pots, and imaginations framed, as a potter deviseth vessels of earth of many quantities, figures, shapes, great, small, narrow, wide, round, cornered, for the word is a potter's word, Gen. 6.5. 1 Chr. 28.9. with all keeping keep thy heart, Prov. 4.23. the word is to keep as the keepers of the walls, Cant. 3.5. as shepherds, for it's in danger to be stolen away, Host 4.11. 2 Sam. 17.6. Host 7.11. Ephraim is like a silly dove without heart, but we take no heed to the entry, to see what goes in, what comes out. (1.) What if there be no God? Psal. 14.1. (2.) What if God see not? Ezek. 9.9. (3.) What if man perish as the beasts? Eccl. 3.19. It may be there is no heaven, The 〈◊〉 and unreasonable imaginations of the heart and the atheism thereof. nor hell. (4.) What if there be no Christ, nor Gospel, but only questions of words? Such clay-pots were framed by Gallio, and Festus, Act. 18.14, 15. Act. 25.11, 19 Hence come imaginations of things impossible, Isa. 14.13. I'll ascend to heaven, saith Babylon, I will set my nest among the stars. Oba. 4. Tyrus saith, I am god, I sit in the seat of God. And new-wild-fire flights which are indeed old heresies, are of this kind; A heart delighted with God is the workhouse of CHRIST. such are dreamers, who see seven lean kine eat seven fat kine, in re, it's a lie. (5.) A new heart is the Office-house of Christ, and a heart delighting in God's ways is a new heart, where the Law is imprinted and engraven in the heart, Isa. 51.7. Harken ye people in whose heart is my Law. Psal. 40.8. I delight to do thy will, O God, thy Law is within my heart. It's true there is a new delight in the heart, but not a delight of the new heart, Isa. 58.2. Joh. 5.35. for a delight in the Gospel as a good thing, not as a good Gospel, a delighting in Christ as a Prophet that feeds them, not in Christ as a Redeemer, Joh. 6.26. that saves them, is not a new heart. 2. The new heart is a heart universal, wholly for God as God, there is an inteernesse in it, A whole and enteer heart. Half a sincere faith is no faith. when the whole spirit and soul and body is kept blameless, 1 Thess. 5.23. 1 Pet. 1.18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in holy conversations and godlinesses, 2 Pet. 3.11. Half a globe, though tightly plained, or half a cart wheel, is not a globe nor a cart wheel. external things may be divided, one may be an hearing Professor, and a drunken Professor, and a praising, a singing Professor in public, and not a praying nor a believing Professor in private, spiritual duties, cannot be divided: half a faith, half a love, is no faith, no love, saving grace is an essence that consists in indivisibili, and cannot be parted. 3. A new heart is a fixed and established heart by Grace, it's a new state, not a new transient flash, a new heart, Deut. 5.27. A fixed heart. All that the Lord our God will speak unto thee, we will hear, but the Lord saith, verse 19 D. Pr●●●on▪ O! that there were such a heart in them, but it is not in them. 4. 1 Sam. 10.9. God gave Saul an other heart, Some new heart or new spirit is an old heart. than a changed heart is not a new heart, a new spirit or a new gift in Jehu is not a new heart; It's not newness that makes the heart new, but God's new engraving, Jer. 31.33. 5. A heart keeped with all keeping is a new heart, Prov. 4.23. both the words note exact diligence in keeping as watchmen and shepherds with all keeping, at all times, Cant. 3 3. Cant. 5.7. A well keeped heart is a new heart Psal. 119.119. some pull their hearts to pray and hear, but not while the sabbath, or under a storm of conscience: and the heart is a word in some company, not at other times and in other company▪ 6. The heart is new, where the affections are all faith (as it were) and all sanctified, reason and zeal is a lump of angry reason, and fear a mass of shining reverence; and love only soul sickness and pure adherence to God, New affections what they are. the instinct of faith wholly on God, as the last and only end. (2.) The heart is new when the affections are equivocally, or at least, at the second hand set upon the creature, but as nothing can be seen, but what either is▪ colour, or affected with colour, so nothing is fixedly sought after, but God, he only feared and served, Mat. 4.10. Deut. 10.20. only desired, Psal. 73.25. only loved, Deut. 10.12. Cant. 3.2, 3. the soul sick of love for only only Christ, Cant. 2.5. Cant. 5.8. he only trusted in, Jer. 17.5, 7. Psal. 62.5. (1.) Nothing is all good and all desirable but God, and God in Christ, Mat. 19.17. Cant. 5.16. the shadow of the Sun in the fountain is not the real Sun: the stir of the pulse of the affections towards the shadowed good of the creature, should be lent, and like the beating of the pulse of a dying man, with a godly contradiction, loving and not loving, joying and not joying, 1 Cor. 7.29, 30. mourning and not mourning. CHAP. XIX. 1. The place of Evangelick works in the New Covenant. 2. Possession of glory and right to glory considerably different. 3. A twofold right to life. 4. We are not justified by Works. 5. The place of declarative justification by Works, Jam. 2. discussed. 6. Faith and Works different. 7. Possession of life and right to life cleared. 8. Faith and final believing both commanded in the Law, final unbelief not the sin forbidden in the Gospel only. 9 How life is promised to works Evangelic. IT's a grave and weighty Question to rid marches between the two Covenants in their conditions, the one requiring the obedience of Works, the other Faith: It's not to be said that for fifeteen hundred years no man did doubt of the necessity of good Works, The necessity of Works by the Law of faith, an old question in the Church. Paul propones the objections of the Antinomians, Shall we sin and continue in sin, that Grace may abound? Rom. 6.1. this they spoke through the occasion of what he taught, chap. 5. some have said they are hurtful, because we abuse them, some arbitrary and indifferent,, because they are not necessary to justification. O! Our mistakes of Works, of Grace, of Word, of God, & of the works of God. what proneness in us to suck out of the doctrine of free Grace poison, how kindly to desire there were no Law against treason, because the Prince pardons; All sin is virtually Atheism, to wish the existence of a Law, and so of a just holy and unchangeable God were not, and we can hardly believe this. And 2. what rising of heart and carnal reason is there against the first acts of providence, why, and what necessity was there to make a Law to forbid the eating of an Apple, God foreseeing that thence should come the ruin and endless damnation of all. It had been good God had never created such a Tree. 2. That the eating thereof had never been forbidden. 3. That it had never had such a name, as the the tree of knowledge, for it deceived Evah. 4. That God had not given freewill to Adam. 5. That he had given him confirming grace in the first moment of Creation. But, Observe 1. Satan started first the dispute concerning the equity of the Law, and that we are Disciples of and apprentices to Satan, when we toss and rackot arguments in our carnal heart-Logick against the holy Law of God, Gen. 3.2. and make the heart a ferry boat to carry messengers and devilish thoughts hither and yonder, in questioning the goodness of the Law, and the acts of providence, and therefore it is speaking Grace, to close with the sweetness not only of the Law written in the heart, It's grace to close with all sorts of commands. and these inbred principles of honesty and truth, to hurt none, to obey God, (for Satan raised not the first dispute about these) but with all the judgements and testimonies of God, as David, Psal. 119.127, 128. vers. 86. All thy commandments are faithful, 1 Sam. 12.7. Stand still that I may reason with you of all the righteous acts of the Lord. It's a mind like Christ's that hath an heart prejudice at no one command, by an other, and is sweetly friended with all that God commands, Math. 3.15. It becomes us to fulfil all rightness, and O! how sweet to have no heart quarrel, but a sweet stooping of soul unto, and an adoring of God in all providences, and acts or decrees he hath concluded or done in time or from Eternity. These draw deep in the decree of Reprobation, God had an hateful design against me. 2. The Gospel is an untrue and fabulous dispensation. What a spirit is Galaenus who reproacheth Moses because he teacheth not that God works ever and by necessity Galaenus de usupartuum. of nature, Alphonsus decimus rex Castellae. Melius ordinatiusque singula conderentur. Pamphlet printed an. 1647. p. 31. what is most good for the creature. And that Prince who said, that if he had been Counsellor to God in the time of the Creation, many things should have been created ordinatius & melius, in a better order and state, than they were. Let the man be remembered who called the Gospel a fable, and the spirits who reproach the Scripture as inky wisdom. 1. A bare dead form bare flesh, etc. and weak ones under desertion, who feed upon reports and lying news from Satan, God hated me before time, and carries on a design of eternal ruin to me, therefore I have no right to hear, to pray, to eat, to sleep. 2. Yet the necessity of good works is asserted by Luther, the Augustine Confess. and Apol. Arti. 20. docent nostri, Luther, Gal. 5. In libello de votis Monasti. Chemn. Loc. Com. de bonis oper. cap. 1. qu 3. pag. 21, 22. Confess. August. & Apol art. 20. Docent nostri, quod necesse sit bona opera facere, non ut confidamus per ea gratiam mer●ri sed propter voluntatem De●, lib. 6. Concor. p. 666. Some necessary distinctions touching the necessity of Evangelick works. etc. Evangelick works are necessary, not to merit, but by the will and commandment of God: Calvin calleth them inferior causes of the possession of our salvation. The dispute began upon occasion of the book called Interim Anno— M.DLXVIII. and in Colloquy at Altenburge, Melanthone and the Divines of Wittenberg assented to the necessity of good works, but the followers of Flaccius Illyricus dissented: The Authors of the book of Concord condemn these of Flaccius their way, and deny a necessity of efficiency in works to deserve salvation, but yield a necessity of their presence, that the work of salvation be not hindered. 3. These distinctions are necessary. 1. There is a jus and right to Gospel life eternal. And 2. there is actual possession of life eternal. 2. There is a twofold jus, One by the purchase of merit, and the paid ransom of blood; There is a right secundary by promise, every promise giveth a right in a manner: but its unproper. 3. There is promise of life formally federal. 2. There is a promis● of life consequentèr federal. 4. There is an order of things, one going before the other as the Antecedent and the Consequent, and in order of cause and effect. 5. Law-obedience doth much differ from Gospel-obedience, as Law-commands from Gospel-commands. 6. GOD sent his Son to justify persons, but not to justify works, not to make inherent obedience perfect or our righteousness before God. Asser. 1. If the new Covenant be considered strictly and formally in its essence, Faith though weak justifieth. he that believeth whether his faith be weak or strong is justified and saved, Joh, 3.18, 36. Joh. 5.24. Act. 15.9, 10, 11. Rom. 3.16. Rom. 4.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Rom. 5.1. for faith justifieth as lively faith, and not as great or small: Otherwise none should be justified and saved but the strong believer, whereas Christ died for the weak in the faith, Rom. 14. Hence Mr. Sibs excellently. Bruised Reed, pag. 107, 108. Know that in the Covenant of Grace God requires the truth of Grace, not any certain measure, and a spark of fire is aswell fire as the whole element thereof, we must look to Grace in the sparkle aswell as the whole flame, all have not the like strong, yet the like precious faith, whereby they lay hold and put on the perfect righteousness of Christ, a weak hand may receive a rich Jewel, a few grapes will show that the plant is a vine not a thorn: There is a room in heaven for thee who judges thyself; for the number of lambs, and babes weak in the faith in this Kingdom▪ do far exceed the number of the strong and aged in Christ; for the Scripture names the whole flock, little ones, babes, his sheep, they are not a flock of fathers and strong ones. Asser. 2. There is a right to life by promise, The right faith gives to life, it justifieth not as Law-obedience. he that believes shall be saved. Promissio facit jus, & create debitum: Godliness hath the promise of this life, and of that which is to come; And because a promise as a promise cannot create an equality betwixt the work and the wages, as is proven, this is an unproper right, and not proper debt, and takes not away the nature of a free gift: This is no consequence at all, The fulfilling of the condition of the Covenant of grace, canno● justify, as the fulfilling of the condition of the Covenant of Works should have justified. the performing of the condition of the Covenant of Works doth justify Adam by Law-works, so as he is no sinner, hath fulfilled the Law, hath right to life eternal; Ergo, to believe to the end, and fulfil to the end, and fulfil the condition of the Covenant of Grace doth justify the believer, by Evangelick works, make him no sinner, but a perfect fulfiller of the Covenant of Grace, and one who hath due right by working to life eternal. Certainly then, 1. doing Evangelick gives us as good right to eternal life, without the price and ransom of blood, as doing legal gives to the same life. 2. When we sin and fall in atrocious offences, Adulteries, Parricide, Robbing, we have as good right to Justification by works, and life eternal by Evangelic works, suppose he be a robber all his life, as was the repenting thief, as Adam, suppose he had perfectly fulfilled the Law. Now though believing be the condition of the Covenant of Grace, it is of a far other nature then perfect doing, to the end, and constant fulfilling of the whole Law, in thought, word, and deed with all the heart, and the soul and mind, and all the strength. For there is no sin here, and so no place for punishing justice, or wrath, none can so believe, but he sins and so deserves everlasting wrath. If it be said, that by the Covenant of Works he doth deserve it, but not by the Covenant of Grace, for Christ hath merited to him life eternal. Ans. 1. We speak now of the right that a Believer hath by Evangelick works to justification and life, as contradistinguished from the merits of Christ, this opinion saith that a man is justified by Evangelick doing, because God hath made the like promise, and the like jus and right by promise, to doing Evangelic, that he made to Law-doing, if Christ's merits be added to qualify Evangelic works, to add to them the worth that they have, than Christ's merits must give life eternal by way of merit, or a virtue of meriting condignly to our Evangelic doing, as Papists say, and so Christ hath made us saviours and redeemers of ourselves, and this is a right to life ex condigno more than adam's most perfect Law-obedience had. 2. The Covenant of Grace commanding faith, doth by this opinion command all that the Law of Works doth, but in an Evangelic way, that they be done sincerely: Ergo, it must forbid all sin which the Law forbids; But the Law forbids not only unbelief, final unbelief, but all the works of the flesh: Also Christ must come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to louse and dissolve the Law, which he denies, Math. 5. for if the Covenant of Grace condemn nothing but final unbelief, The right of redemption is not ours, by Evangelick doing, as the place, Rev. 22.14 mistaken, is exponed by some▪ Christ in this Covenant must dissolve the Law; but Christ sayeth, he that breaks or teacheth men to break these is the least of the Kingdom of God. But there is an other jus and right to life eternal, by which Christ dying hath satisfied the Law, expiated our sins, restored as much and more glory to God by passive obedience, by his sufferings, as we had taken glory from God by our evil doing, and so merited to us life eternal. If any say abusing that place, Rev. 22. 14. that we obtain this 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and right to the Tree of Life, and to Christ our life and everlasting glory (which is our only right, the only Charter of blood) by keeping the Commandments Evangelically; he must say that we first may keep the Commandments Evangelically before we have right to life, to Christ, and so before we believe. 2. That we merit Christ's right or merit by doing, and that by Evangelick works, we buy right to Christ and Christ's merits, and so Christ hath not merited to us a jus and right and title to life everlasting by dying, and grace and a gracious right to do his Commandments by his death, but that we, by doing his Commandments, do earn and sweat for a right to Heaven, which is to say, that we by doing, merit and deserve the price of Redemption, and that we merit Christ to ourselves, by doing, By Christ dying, we obtain right to life and to Christ, not by works. whereas it is he and he alone, that hath merited to us Grace and Glory, and all title to Heaven. Not to say that a Charter of life from such a noble Superior as Christ by the purchase of blood, and of such blood, the blood of God, Act. 20.28. is some better then to have eternal liveliehood and freehold from our duty and lubric best works, which are polluted with sin, and by which, though we were Evangelically conscious to ourselves of nothing, yet should we not be therefore justified, 1 Cor. 4.4. for the righteousness in which is David's blessedness before Christ, and abraham's before the Law, and ours under the Gospel, is in forgiving of iniquity, covering of sin, not imputing of sin, Rom. 4.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7. But in all the Scripture our sins are never said to be pardoned and not imputed to us, by our own most Evangelic doing, for we are justified freely by his Grace, through the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus, Rom. 3.24. not by the Redemption that is in us, and are washen from our sins in his Blood, Eph. 1.7. Col. 1.14. Mat. 26.28. Rev. 1.5. and sufferings, not by our Evangelic doings, and if such a case could stand, the Martyrs, sure, might well be justified by their own blood, and since no pardoning, washing, Law-satisfying virtue, can be in faith, works, or our Evangelic deservings, they can not justify us nor keep and occupy the Chair of Christ. And the fault were the less, Via ad regnum, non causa regna●●i. if our works were only called the way to the kingdom, not the cause of reigning, but they are called perfect, both in their nature, and conform to the rule, and also in order to the end, to justify us before God, and to save us. And if so, all in Christ may say, we have no sin, contrary to Scripture, Jam. 3.2. 1 King. 8.46. Eccles. 7.20. Prov. 20.9. Jam. 2.10. Yea though he that is guilty in one offends in all, yet in the sight of God, all flesh shall be justified, this way, Psal. 143.2. There cannot be a perfection in our faith and Evangelic works in order to the Gospel, more than to the Law, to justify us. Nor can it be said that such works are perfectly conform to the Gospel, because the doers believing in the lowest degree fulfils the condition of the Gospel. But where it is said that the Gospel commands only faith in the lowest degree; Then the Centurion's faith, the faith of the woman of Canaan, and the greatest faith shall not be required in the Law. For the condition of the Covenant of Grace cannot (say they) be required in the Covenant of Works, and it is not required in the Gospel under the pain of sinning against the Covenant of Grace, and of damnation, for then all who have not faith in the highest degree should be damned, and violate and break the Covenant of Grace, contrary to the whole Gospel, which saith that these who have weak faith are justified and saved, and so the greatest faith shall be will-worship and a work of supererogation. And because this way saith that all and every one of mankind are under the Covenant of Grace, than 1. there shall be none living under the Law. 2. no Law, but only to believe in CHRIST, shall lay an obligation on any, Jews, Christians, under pain of wrath. And if James be to prove that we are justified by works, and yet mean, that both faith and works concur as causes, though faith more principally, If faith & works concur jointly as causes of our justification, neither can James deny truly that we are justified by faith, nor Paul that we are justified by works. how can Paul deny that we are justified by works, If Peter and John jointly work a miracle and heal the cripple man, suppose the influence of John in the miracle be more, yet it is not to be denied, that Peter wrought the miracle. Nor doth the Scripture say that we are more principally justified by faith, and less principally justified by works, but the places alleged for salvation by works (if works have a causative influence) specially Matth. 25. speaks more for the pre-eminence of works. Nor doth the Scripture insinuate any thing of the first and second Justification, or of growing in Justification, in having our sins not imputed to us to our very day of death; and the Question must be, Rom. 4. whether Abraham was justified by works done before circumcision, or not, Rom. 4. when as faith was not reckoned to Abraham, when he was in uncircumcision, and the blessedness of righteousness by faith cometh both upon circumcision and uncircumcision, vers. 9 and he had faith and righteousness and was in Christ and regenerated, when he was justified. Though some taught Justification by the works of the ceremonial Law, yet Paul Gal. 3.10. states the Question of works agreeable to the Moral Law, that are absolutely perfect, and must be done by Grace. And Paul might justly in the Epistles to the Romans and Galatians have excepted himself, David, Abraham, and all the regenerate, for they are justified by giving alms to the poor, Mat. 25. as was Rachab, by receiving and lodging the spies. English Divines Annot. on Jam. 2. The English Divines say, How could the Scripture conclude from Abraham's being justified by works, whence he offered his Son Isaac, unless by works here we understand a working faith, the Apostle must mean the same by works, vers. 21. that he meaneth by faith, 23. for he cannot say vers. 23. the Scripture was fulfilled (in Abraham's being justified in the work of offering his son, v. 21.) which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him for righteousness: Except it must be meant, that the work of offering his son Isaac was counted to him for righteousness. Now the letter of the Text expressly vers. 23. saith that believing God was counted to Abraham for righteousness, Believing and faith, Jam. c. 2. v. 21, 23. must be believing and working faith. than the work of offering his Son must either be the believing declared by offering his son, and faith working by that act of offering, or if they be two sundry things, he must then say this in effect, Abraham was justified by the work of sacrificing, vers. 2●. causatively before God, Ergo, the Scripture is fulfilled, vers. 23. and Abraham is justified by believing causatively before God, vers. 23. which we cannot ascribe to the Apostle, according to their mind who make faith and works the two collateral and joint causes of Justification before God: as if one would say Peter wrought the miracle. Ergo, the Scripture is fulfilled that john wrought the miracle. So Abraham was justified by works, vers. 21. Ergo, Abraham was justified by faith, 23. 2. The faith which james debars from Justification must be the faith, jam. 2. by which Paul strongly proves, Rom. 3. c. 4. we are justified without works. If faith and works concur as collateral causes in our Justification before God, as the Papists contend; but the faith which James excludes from Justification, is no faith at all. But only (1.) fair words to the hungry and naked, The faith which Jam. excludes from justification is not the faith that Paul speaks of, Rom. 3. Gal. 3. but a bastard faith only. See Cartwright, see D. Fuilk against the Jesuits of Rheims, Jam. 2. and giving them supply for no necessity either of hunger or nakedness, and which cannot save, and so is no faith, and so can have no saving influence with works to justify and save, but such is the faith which James excludes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 14, v. 15. the faith of Paul, saves, Rom. 4. Rom. 5. purifies the heart, Acts 15.9. (2.) A dead faith is no saving and living faith, no more than a dead corpse is a living man, v. 17. (3.) A faith that cannot be shown to others in good works, as this v. 18. is no faith, for it hath no motions of life. (4.) A faith of the same nature, with the faith of the Devils, who believe and tremble, v. 19 (5.) A faith which a vain empty professor imagines to be a living faith, when it is dead, without works, as this v. 20. can have no joint influence of life to justify and save with good works; all which saving influences contrair to this, saving faith hath. 2. It is to be observed that James maketh mention of two sorts of faiths, Stapleton de sola fide justificante, l. 8. c. 9 haec autem fides sive charitate mortua est. ch. 2. which the Adversary confounds. 1. All alongs, v. 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20. he gives vive characters of a dead painted faith, which is in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the vain empty boaster, ver. 20. 2. He shows us of a lively faith of Abraham, which wrought with his Works, now it is a lewd error to make Abraham's faith, and the faith of believing Rahab of the same nature with the faith of the vain empty Hypocrite, who's faith is nothing but fair words, and with the faith of Devils. So the Papists, Lorinus, Estius, Jam. 2. seu ficta & hypocritica, 1 Tim. 1. quantum ad perfectae justitiae vitam & veritatem, non autem quantum ad s●ips●m sibique propriam virtutem, etc. Lorin. Come in Jac. 2.26. (Sicut enim corpus) non fit comparatio cum homine mortuo; 〈◊〉 cum corpore, nam homo mortuus non potest proprie vocari homo; sed corpus mortuum est propric●●t●pus. Quo etiam pacto fides sive operibus, est vere fides, litet mortua— Nec sa●is placet 〈◊〉 addit (Caj●tan in Comment.) fidem sine operibus mortuam, quoniam opera sunt concomitantia 〈◊〉. Estius Com▪ non comparat Apostolus fidem mortuam cum homine mortuo, sed ●um corpore mort●●, sicut ergo corpus mortuum est vere & proprie corpus, ita fides mortua vere & proprie fides est. Stapleton, Mavochius, Bellarmine make it an Hypocritical and dead faith, and lively faith as abraham's was, a vital receiving of Christ and a believing the Lord, so as believing is counted for righteousness, to differ not in nature and essence from the faith of the Devils, whereas in the faith of sound Believers there is a Godly submitting and leading captive of the understanding to the obedience of Christ, because it is the Lord that speaks, and so a receiving of the Word as the Word of God, 2 Cor. 10.5. 1 Thes. 2.13. Math. 22.32. which is not in the faith of Devils. (3.) There is in it a receiving of Christ, Joh. 1.11. a fiducial resting of the heart upon God in Christ. And the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to confide, to betake himself to a lu●king place, where one may be safe from a storm, Psal. 2.12. Psal. 11.1. Psal. 31.2. Deut. 32.37. Psal. 118.9. Judg. 9.15. come and 〈◊〉 under my shadow. And this is contradistinguished from the Devils and Hypocrites who cannot seek their lodging nor a hiding place against wrath in the Lord. 2. It is to lean and rest the body, Expressions of a lively faith. 2 Sam. 1.6. Saul leaned upon his spear, and by a Metaphor it is to cast the burden upon the Lord, Isa. 50.10. Psal. 55.22. hence the word that notes a staff, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Inniti, herere, recumbere est corporis, 2 King. 5.18. & 7.2. The Lord answered upon whose hand the King leaned▪ Gen. 1●. 4. lean down under the tree. 2 Chro. 14.11. 〈◊〉 cried to the Lord, help us, help us, for we 〈◊〉 upon thee. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 aspexit cum delectationes cum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 est inniti, recumbere. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 silere tacere, Ezek. 27.17. Ps 131.2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 In Kal. 〈◊〉 est, 〈◊〉, amore 〈…〉 & bitumine ●njunctis. Shimler in Lexico. 2 Sam. 22.18. Isa. 3. the Lord hath broken the stay and the staff of bread, Isa. 30.1. and this is to be done often, when there is no present duty to be done, nor any work required of us, but only a fiducial relying upon the Lord alone, as at the Red Sea Moses and the people were to lean upon JEHOVAH only, not to act, which cannot be said of the faith of Devils and Hypocrites. (3.) It is to look with delight and confidence, Isa. 17.7. as oppressed servants, Psal. 123▪ 1, 2. (4.) There is a word that notes to be silent, not to speak, not to move, Josh. 10.12, 1●. the Sun was silent, it moved not: It notes a Godly submission that the soul dar not speak against God, Psal. 37.7. rest in the Lord, file Jehov●: LXX. sub ditus esto Domino, Psal. 62.6. whence faith teacheth us to submit and hold our peace and lay the mouth in the dust, as a spirit dantoned of God, Leu. 10.3. Job 1.21. Lam. 3▪ 28. Ezek. 16. 6●. which is far from Hypocrites. (●.) To believe is to cleave to God, from a root that signifies to adhere as things glued together with pick or glue, Psal. 63▪ ●. Josh. 23.8. Deut. 11.22. so we become one Spirit with the Lord, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Firmiter initi unde sumitur pro securum esse, ●o quod con●fidentiam sequatur securitas oppo●nitur dubitationi. Est inaliquo spes omnes sic re●ponere, ut secure quies●at animus adversus omnia pericula & res ardu●s suscipere audeat. 2 Cor. 3. (6.) It is a word of near adherence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to lean firmly upon any with hope of security, 2 King. 18.5. hast thou leaned upon this reed? Host 10.13. Psal. 13.6. Psal. 31.7. Deut. 12.10. Thou shalt dwell safely, confidently, it places the soul under the Rock of Omnipotency. (7.) It is to roll thyself upon God, and is borrowed from heavy bodies, Josh. 10.18. Roll great stones to the mouth of the cave, Genes. 29.3. Psal. 22.9. he trusted in the Lord, rolling himself on the Lord. Prov. 16.3. commit thy works unto the Lord, and thy thoughts shall be established. Cartwright sayeth it is a Metaphor from men who, being oppressed with a burden, transfer it off themselves upon one who is mightier and stronger: it is excellent when the heart rolls all its cares upon the Lord, and disburdens itself upon him. (8.) There is a word that noteth to lean, to stay or establish, to strengthen, Isa. 48.2. 2 Chron. 32.8. the people rested themselves upon the word of Ezekiah, Cant. 2.5. stay me with flagons, Psal. 71.6. I have leaned upon thee from the womb, and it notes to draw near, Ezek. 24.2. so it is to strengthen and make strong the heart that is trembling and shaking if it be not stayed upon God. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 A summo ad imum de●olvit. And shall all these excellencies of faith, be in the faith of Devils and Hypocrites? and therefore it is most absurd to make the faith of Abraham all one in nature with the faith of Devils and Hypocrites, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Innixus conjunctus, vicinus fuit, confirmavit, sta●ilivit. Saving faith noteth far other lively acts than can be in the faith of hypocrites. and to make the difference only in having Works, and no Works, as if there were the same heart leaning, soul rolling, and cleaving to the Lord by faith in Abraham, and in Hypocrites and Devils who tremble. 3. That Scripture, Abraham believed and it was counted to him for righteousness: Is not Gen. 22. when he did justify himself by the work of sacrificing Isaac: But it is Gen. 15.6. when the son of promise Isaac, a type of Christ is promised to him: at which time there was no work at all required of Abraham, but only believing the promise, for what should Abraham act or do to further the fulfilling of that promise, for he believed that Gospel▪ promise in the mean time, with a faith lively, and having with it as a concomitant a resolution to walk before God and be perfect, 〈◊〉 then the Text shall say, Gen. 15.6. Abraham resolved to be fruitful in good works, when he heard the promise, and that resolution of good works was counted to him for righteousness which is most violent. 4. Who so are justified causally and in the sight of God by Works, as James saith, to him works are counted as the forma●● cause, for so James from Scripture, ver. 23. Abraham, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, believed God and it was counted to him for righteo●●nesse. Which sayeth, by that faith he was declared or by that 〈◊〉 was justified, which was imputed to him for righteousn●●●e. But his believing or his faith living and working like the ●ody quickened with the Spirit, was counted to him for righte●●snesse. Now except it be yielded that James speaks of two faiths, one dead and empty, ascribed to the hypocrite, ver. ●●, 15, 16. another lively and working, ascribed to Abraham▪ ●er. 23. and except this be denied, that Abraham was 〈◊〉, ver. 23. not by that same faith; It must follow that A●●ahams empty believing, ver. 23. was that which was count●●o him for righteousness, Gen. 15.6. but James cannot be so ●●derstood, but when he saith, the Scripture Gen. 15.6. 〈◊〉 fulfilled; for his faith in believing the promised seed, Ge●●. he shows that Abraham was justified by faith without 〈◊〉, as Paul, Rom. 4. and when he saith he was justified 〈…〉 ●orks in offering his son, as Gen. 22. he saith he was 〈◊〉 ●●●lared just, or not justified by the empty and idle faith of 〈◊〉 hypocrites; but by a faith that did prove itself to be lively. So that James proveth that we are not justified by a dead faith that neither hath, nor can have good works. As his Adversaries said, and Paul proves, Rom. 4. that we are not justified and saved by works, that is by our own inherent perfect righteousness, because, Rom. 3. all have sinned, Jew and Gentile. Because Abraham then should boast as a perfect man, free of sin, and he needed no Redeemer, the Law of works should save him, and so he needed not remission of sins, nor the non-imputation of iniquity. But there is a mids between these, and james saith that is to be justified by faith, by a metonymy of the effect, by faith made known to be lively, not to the world only, but to their own conscience, for if james should mean that we are justified by works properly as counted to us for righteousness, he could not say, vers. 21. Abraham was justified by works, when he offered his son, vers. 22. he cannot infer, vers. 2●. thou sees that his faith wrought with his works: What faith? He had spoken of works, vers. 21. not one word of Abrahams●aith ●aith, yet he saith, because Abraham was justified, that is declared to be really, before God, to his own conscience and others justified, his faith did work in a lively way as real in an● by his works, and you see that Abraham's faith, Gen. 15.6. was perfect●● by works, Gen. 22. when he offered his son. Now it was not 〈◊〉 as touching the nature of it, and the act of justifying, for 〈◊〉▪ Rom. 4. citys Gen. 15.6. to prove that Abraham was justified by 〈◊〉 faith in believing the promise of the blessed seed, some 25. year● as others reckon 30. years before he sacrificed Isaac, Gen. 22. ● that it must follow that Abraham was not justified by works▪ no● his 〈◊〉 perfect in its lively operations until he offered his son Isaac: ●hen the contrair of this, the Scripture tells us, for by faith he 〈◊〉 his Country, C. 12. By faith believing the promise he was 〈◊〉 Rom. 4. many year● before: Therefore these words, seest thou 〈◊〉 faith, must mean that his faith came out to view by his works. But the●e be learned and godly Protestants who 〈◊〉 that James must speak of ●ustification real and before God, and 〈…〉 declared Justification before men only? Answ. It's true, 〈…〉 to name them. But these are subordinate: James speaks not 〈◊〉 a faith only declared, nor of a justification only declared to the world: But of a declared Justification that is real before God. 2. That is declared to the man himself, and to the world. And that James speaks of a Justification before God, James speaks of real justification before God, but under the notion as declared and manifested to men & to the conscience of the so justified the Text saith: Because he saith, ver. 14. What can that faith profit? Which is empty, he must mean, what can it profit before God, to save and justify? As the word, 1 Cor. 13.3. if I have not love 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, it profits me nothing before God. 2. Can that faith (it is not well translated leaving out the particle in the new Translation, can faith save him?) save him? Then he must speak also of real faith, and so real salvation and so of justification before God. 3. The examples of the Justification of Abraham, of Rahab, which were real, must say something to the same purpose. 2. That he speaks of real Justification to the man's own conscience as well as to the world if clear in the Text also. For James speaks to the conscience and privity of the man who saith that he is justified, and hath faith, vers. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 19 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, thou hast faith, thou believes, the Devils also believe, he would have the hypocrite to discuss his own conscience, and solidely to know, whether his Faith and Justification be real or not; And James wakens all visible professors in this Epistle (as john also doth) to try his Religion whether it be true and solid, or vain: by Chap. 1. being a doer of the Word, and not a hearer only, 23▪ 24. by visiting the fatherless, vers. 27. by loving and respecting the poor that are Godly, as well as the rich, Ch. 2. by trying his faith whether it be dead or lively, by bridling the tongue, Ch. 3. And therefore the Arminians and others do but lose their labour, who say james doth not speak here of Justification declared to the world, Remonste● Apol. c. 10· fol. 13 col. 2. Jacobum de justificationis declaratione non loqui docent verb● ipsa. Quis enim adeo v● cors est qui cum Apostolo contendere voluerit, an homo declaretur justus ex fide, fides enim quatenus fiducia est & distincta ab operibus pietatis, non est nisi in cord● hom●●is. Theologia enim eorum non patitur credere hoc verum esse— nam ne de operibus ipsis constare potest an sint bona opera: non enim possunt esse bona nisi ex fide fi●●t, ex fide enim fieri non modo non potest alteri declarari, sed ne illi ipsi, id constare potest, qui ea facit. Quia reprobus illa eadem opera praestare potest. because the world cannot judge infallibly whether our works by which we are declared to be justified, are sincere or not. For 1. we say that james doth speak of Justification declared to the world, for he speaks of real Justification before God but as declared, not to the world only, but to the conscience also of the doer. 2. Because the world can not infallibly judge of our Justification and works, therefore they cannot judge at all. It's a loose consequence: For we may declare ourselves to our own conscience and to others by our good works, that we are before God justified. Otherwise because men cannot see our good works, nor the principles from which they proceed, whether from saving faith or not, nor the ends for which they are, whether for the glory of God, or not, men should not glorify our heavenly Father: Contrair to Matth. 5.16. nor should the Gentiles glorify God in the day of visitation: As 1 Pet. 2.12. because they cannot infallibly 〈◊〉 whether they be good works or not and done in faith and for Go●: Nor is Abraham declared to be justified because of a secret heart-●●tention to offer his son to God in the court of men (but in the co●●t of his own conscience he may) yet his journeying to the place where he was to sacrifice his son, his building an Altar, his laying on wood, his binding his son and stretching out his hand to kill him, may well declare him to be a justified man to the world and to men. Trelcatius, the Professors of Leyden, Calvine, Beza, Paraeus, yea a Papist Cajetan hath said well to this point. Not to add that Scripture shall never admit, Trelcatius senior de Justifica 1. Class. Arg. 373. Paulus, per quod homines credentes justificantur coram DEO, docet. J●cobus▪ quo modo justificari cognoscantur. 2. Paulus, fide verâ solum nos justificaris Jacobus, quanam sit vera illa fides, ab effectis, probat. 3. Paulus huic verae fidei tribuit justificationem sine operibus ut causis justificationis▪ J●cobus fidei fictae detrahit hanc vim, & contra veram probat ab effectis veris, 4. Paulus negat bona opera praecedere justificandum: Jacobus dicit ea justificatum sequi. 5. Paulus à causis justificationis ad effecta discendit, quibus detrahit coram Deo vim justificandi, ut in solidum id tribuat Dei gratiae & Christi merito. Calvin. Instituti li. 111. c. 17. n. 11. jucidunt in duplicem Paragolismum: Alterum in justificationis, alterum in fidei vocabulo.— Tu credis (inquit) quod Deus est, sane si nihil en istâ fide continetur, nisi ut credatur Deum esse, jam nihil mirum est si non justificet.— nec vero dum hec adimitur quicquam derogari putamus fidei Christiana.— N. 12. Justificari ● Paulo dicimur, cum obliterata justitiae nostrae memoria justi reputamur▪ eo si expectasset Jacobus praepostere ci●asset. Illud ex Mose, Credidit Abraham Deo.— Si absurdum est effectum sua causa prior●m esse, aut falso testatur Moses eo loco, imputatum fuisse Abrahae fidem in justitiam, aut ex ea quam in Isaac offerendo praestitit obedientia, justitiam non fuit 〈◊〉 nondum concepto Ismaele, qui jam adoleverat, antequam nasceretur Isaac, fide sua 〈◊〉 fuit Abraham. We are not Evangelically justified by Works. Professores Leyden. in Synosi Pur. Theolo. Dis. de Justific. & in Cens●●a Confessio. Remonstrant. c. 10. pag. 145. Apud Paulum nomen Justificationis sumitur pr● ipso justificandi actu, qui solius DEI est tanquam causae efficientis principalis, fidei tanquam causae instrumentalis. Apud Jacobum pro fidei professione fides sumitur. that Abraham's and Rahabs' sins were pardoned, their iniquities not imputed, and they delivered from condemnation, by the works of offering Isaac, receiving the spies, fight the Lords battles, suffering persecution of Saul. For james, if he say any thing for this cause, that good works are the formal cause of our righteousness, our merits, and in the very place of the satisfaction of the blood shed by Christ, we shall so be formal causes not of the declaratory act of justifying (for that may be thought to be the Lord our Justifiers act) yet of our own Justification, and so should we fight and run for the Crown of inherent righteousness of works, as well as for the Crown of Life. And what Scripture is there for that? 3. A man shall be as just and sinless, as he may say, I have no sin, I am just: And in order to the Covenant of Grace, which forbids no sin (as some for this way do teach) but final unbeleef, he no more needs forgiveness of sins and the blood of sprinkling, nor pardoning grace, than the Elect Angels, or Adam in the state of innocency, and to that, Prov. 20.9. as to that, Eccles. 7.20. 1 joh. 1. Who can say I have made my heart clean, I am pure from my sin? The man Evangelically justified can say, I have made my heart clean, I am pure from my sin. 4. No● needs such a man pray, forgive me my sins, as I forgive, etc. for he is justified from all Law-sins, who is inherently holy and Evangelically just: And so the Gospel is a new Law which does not forbid all sins that the Law forbids, and the man is not under sin, though he sin against the love of Christ. According to that, if ye love me keep my Commandments, Joh. 14.15. so he once, ere he die, believe. For the Law (say the Authors) forbids not unbeleef, nor any Evangelic unthankfulness against the Law of a ransome-payer, which yet, I judge the Law of Nature and Nations condemns: The Covenant of Grace forbids no sin, but final unbeleef, and the believer can not be guilty of that except he fall away. 5. And it may justly be asked, C●jetanus in Jacob. c. 2 v. 23. Adverse, prudens Lector▪ quod Jacobus non sentit fidem absque operibus mortuam esse (quoniam constat nos justificari per fidem absque operibus ut pare● in infantibus▪ etc.) sed sentit fidem si●e operibus hoc est ●enuentem operari esse mortuam▪ & impleta est (Scriptura) quoad executionem maximi operis, ad quod parat● erat fides Abrahae,— uterque v●rum dicit: Paulus quidem quod non factis ceremonialibus aut judicialibus secundum se, sed fidei gratia justificamur. Jacobus autem quod non fide sterili, sed fide● foecunda operibus justificamur. What a faith James, Chap. 2. speaks of. whether the believer Evangelically justified, who needs no grace of pardon of Redemption from sin in order to the Covenant of Grace, needs the grace of renovation to keep him to believe, for he needs no pardon for the weakness of his final believing, for the smallest weak faith is a fulfilling of the Covenant of Grace. To these add, if James mean by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, faith alone, v. 24. by which he says we are not justified, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, no other than the dead faith, ver. 20. and the faith which cannot save, the faith of fair words to the hungry and naked, when the vain man gives him nothing necessary for his body, 16. the faith without works, 17. the faith that cannot be shown to men, 18. such a faith as devils, 19 and vain hypocrites boast of, 20. then sure the conclusion is for us, and agreeable to the scope of james, v. 24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, ye see then a man is justified before men and to himself, and so really declared before God, justified and saved by works as the fruits of saving faith, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and not by faith only which is dead and without works. For 1. he cannot exclude saving and lively faith: David Pareus, Come in Jacobum c. 2. Absurd enim diceret fidem, v. 21 cooperatam fuisse operibus (nisi opera senechdochice su●cret, per metonymam effecti pro ipsa fide operibus conspicua) 1. Juberet videre, quod non erat & quod non dixerat: Quia fidei nullam mentionem fecerat: potius diceret, vides opera fuisse cooperata etc. 2. Absurd etiam diceret, ver. 22. Credidit Abraham Deo Scripturam opere impletionis filii impl●●●m fuisse Scriptura enim de fide & Justificatione Abrahami impleri non poterat, nisi per fidem justifica●tem, cujus in historia oblationis nulla habetur mentio▪ imo sibi contradic●ret, ver. 20. ●x operibus, & ver. 22. ex fide Abrahamum justificatum asserens. 3. Absurd etiam ex Scriptura Credi●●▪ Abraham Deo inferret, ver. 24. videtis ex operibus justificari hominem▪ Potius 〈◊〉 contrarium inferendum erat. Videtis ex fide justificari hominem, ●on ex fide, &c▪ 〈◊〉 Jaco. Arminius disput. priva. 8. ●h. 7. Justificatio apud Jacobum pro 〈…〉 & declaratione Justificationis, quae fide fii & operibus, sed alia ratione quam ●a qua fides▪ 〈◊〉▪ & justitiam à DEO propositam apprehendit quae cêrte fide & operibus non apprehenditur, sed apprehensa declaratur— fides non accipitur eo modo quo apud. Paulum, pro assensu nempe fiduciali, sed pro fidei confession & professione quomodo fides sumpta se habet ut oper● nempe ut 〈◊〉 bonis operibus jun●●a declaret & manifeste● hominem justificatum, & sic justificat, etc. Catech. Ruccov. c 9 de Prophet munere, l. C. pag. 193. For that believing God is counted to Abraham for righteousness, saith james▪ ver. 23. for then the conclusion should contradict the premises, and he should say, Abraham was justified by sound and lively believing. Ergo, we are not justified by only sound and lively believing. 2. The Adversaries, Socinians, and Arminians, who by this Text, say we are justified by works, know no Gospel-faith, by which we are justified, but faith including essentially new obedience, the crucifying of the old man, the walking in the Spirit, and repentance; as else where I cite. Therefore when james saith we are not justified by faith only, he must mean a naked dead assent: as in the former verses; We are not justified; and that is it which we say: james denies not but says that Abraham believed, Gen. 15. 6. (It is only believing but lively and not dead, not a naked assent, which was counted to him for righteousness) and Gen. 15. Rom. 4. he was thereby justified; and therefore Paul and james are well reconciled. And the faith here excluded must be a dead faith, not a lively faith and a true faith, as the body without the soul is a true body and hath the nature of a true body, though it be no living body. So (say they) the faith that james excludes is a true faith, when as it is evident, it is no more true faith then the faith of Devils and Hypocrites. 3. It is false by the Papists way and Arminians also, that we are not justified by faith only, which is a true and general assent to the Word of God, * James can hardly be understood to speak of the Popish second Justification by works. for they teach that in the first Justification, we are justified by faith only without works, as Paul proves, but in the second Justification when a man of just is made more just (say they) he is justified by works; as saith james, c. 2. Now by this they are forced to say, james speaks not of the first Justification, but of the second, but beside that the Scripture knows not two Justifications, james must deny that the unconverted hypocrites, and Rahab the harlot were justified by only faith, as Paul saith, and it were most incongruous to teach unconverted ones who never knew the first Justification, how they were not justified in the second Justification. And if James be speaking of the nature and causes of the same Justification before God only, with Paul and not of the effects thereof, it were false that James saith (with reverence to the holy Lord) that we are not justified by faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without works, for Paul says it, and proves it strongly from the Scripture, and never insinuates that we are justified in a second Justification by works. And sure he should not have denied all the Jews, all the Gentiles, all the world, Rom. 3 9, 19, 29, 30. David a man according to God's heart, and much in communion with God, when he penned the 32. Psalms, and Abraham a believer and effectually called, Gen. 12. and justified, when he, Gen. 15.6. believed the promise of the seed, Rom. 4. to be justified by works in their second, or their Evangelic Justification. Yea when James saith we are not justified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only, he must mean fidem solitariam, a faith solitary which hath no works conveying it, as man sees not with eyes that are solitary and plucked out of the heart, and separated from hearing, smelling, and the senses, though faith, if true and properly so called (as they say this is) must justify as the eye sees only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the e●re only, not the eye, hears, now this faith hath a causative influence in Justification as well as works (if it be proper and true faith, as they say it is, as the body without the spirit hath the nature of a body) and so James had no more ground for him to say, ye see then that we are not justified by faith only, then to say, ye see then that we are not justified by works only. For works separated from faith are no less dead works & cannot justify, 1 Cor. 13.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Then faith separated from works, & really pulled from them, as in an hypocrite, is a true faith. Obj. When James saith that a man is justified by works, not by faith only, he maketh faith and works concomitant in that procurement of Justification, and in that kind of causality, for he saith not, as he is commonly interpreted (not by faith which is alone) but by faith only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ans. He is not more commonly, nor sound and truly interpreted, he is not justified by faith which is alone, fide solitariâ, by dead faith. For solâ fide justificamur. Faith hath the only virtue of justifying as an instrument, and so is the Adverbe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Solùm taken, Matth. 5.47. If ye salute your brethren 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only, what do ye more than Publicans? Where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes duties only natural excluding these which only converts in a spiritual way can do, Matth. 8▪ 8. Only say the word, What 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 only Jam. 2. noteth. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it clearly saith that a mandat of Omnipotency only in CHRIST could heal the sick servant; but yet that Omnipotency is not really separated from justice, wisdom, mercy, Matth. 9.21. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If I only touch him, I shall be whole. But the act of touching was conjoined with the act of hearing: Who hath touched me? Yet the act of hearing had no causative influence in the drawing virtue out of Christ, but only the act of touching did extract the virtue, as Christ saith, Luk. 8.50. Mar. 5.36. Fear not, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, only believe, saith Christ to the Ruler; can it be said, but this excludes works as touching the apprehending of the power and mercy of Christ in raising the dead Damosel. And yet that believing was not solitary, but conjoined with love, reverence, submission, 35. So Luk. 8.50. Mat. 21.19. And Act. 3.16. The faith that is by Christ hath given this cripple perfect soundness. Heb. 11.30. By faith the walls of Jericho fell. It were strange to say (by Peter's and John's good works and holiness, the cripple man was made whole) and (by good works the walls of Jericho fell) and yet there were good works, love, mercifulness, courage in the Priests who compassed the walls of jericho, and in Peter and john. Add to these that by good works we must more and more justify and pardon our own sins, and must more and more buy a right to the Tree of Life, as they teach, citing Rev. 22.14. and more merit, ex pacto Euangelico, life eternal: and so our works and merits must be joint causes with the blood of Christ, and the Martyr's blood and Christ's blood must have parallel and collateral influence with Christ's blood to buy right to the Tree of Life; Yea and Paul already justified, even in the progress of that which is called his Evangelic Justification, Phil. 3. would be in another condition, 9 That I may be found in him not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith. And why should Arminians and Socinians deny it to be Paul's own. For 1. it is inherent righteousness. 2. It is not infused as Papists say, but acquired as they teach. Cateche. Raccov. c. 9 pag. 194. 3. It came (say they) from Paul's own freewill indifferent to will or nill. But how is the Scripture fulfilled in Abraham's believing, jam. 2.23. Ans. The Apostle spoke often of faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and believing, v. 14. twice, v. 17. once, v. 18. thrice, v. 19 twice, v. 20. once, v. 22. twice, that is nine times, thereof Emphatically, v. 23. by way of excellency the Scripture was then fulfilled▪ Abraham 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, believed, and it was counted to him for righteousness, as it's written, Gen. ●5. 6. before God and man and to his own conscience, when he offered his son Isaac upon the altar. That was real, visible and conspicuous believing and righteousness, to deny himself so far for God: For James is much for Religion made known to a man's self, and to men, and hath far other Adversaries in the other extremity than Paul had, even the old Gnostics, who, in opposition to the Jews and Pharisees, laid aside the Law, doing of the Law, Jam. 1.22, 23. all works, c. 2.14. all conscience of bridling the tongue, c. 13.1, 2. of peaceable and mortified living, c. 4. c. 5. and thought it godliness to hear the word in the Assemblies, ch. 2.1, 2, 3. without love to the Brethren, and to keep in their head a room, empty faith, and professed fair, and gave good words, but no garments to the naked, v. 14, 15. And James had good cause to treat of a visible and declared faith, but yet not merely declared, but which was real and can save, 14. and of justification such, as that of Abraham and Rachab, as was sen●sible and real and not in a bare profession: For james speaks of a profiting and saving faith, jam. 2.14. What doth it profit, etc. Can faith save him? Another devise is here alleged, of a form faith animated with charity and that justifies (say Papists) and an unformed faith void of charity, and that, say they, doth not justify: Socinus, tract. de justific. p. 58. Meminisse debemus fidem hanc qua scilicet justificamur, esse obedientiam. Socin. de Chris. Servat, p. 3. c. 2. In Christum ●redere nihil aliud est quam ad ipsius Christi normam & praescriptum obedientem, praebere. Cateche. Raccovien. de prophetico, I. C. munere, c. 9 pag. 193 Ergo tu obedientiam sub fide comprehendis? Sic est Jac. 2. ut fidem Abrahae ex operibus consumma●am▪ p. 194. they expone that. Vt penitentiam agamus; non secundum carnem ambulemus,— null●● peccati habitum contrahamus, omnium vero virtutum Christianarum habitus comparemus. Remonstr. Armini. Confess. c. 10. th'. 2. Vtique necesse est fidei praescriptum non alio modo hic (quatenus justificat) consideretur, quam qu●tenus proprietate sua naturali obedientiam fidei includit: Hac ratione considerata fides totam hominis conversionem Euangelio praescriptam suo ambitu continet, Remon. Apologia fol. 113, 114. Edward Poppius. August. Porta. fol. 28. And the same way, but in other expressions, Arminians and Socinians teach, that to believe and do good works, and to repent and walk in all the Commandments of jesus Christ, is to believe, or complete formed and Evangelic faith. But we distinguish them as the Scripture. It's true, Rom. 4.9. faith is said to be imputed to Abraham for righteousness, and so v. 3. v. 5. but it is not meant of the act or work of believing, that was counted for Abraham's formal righteousness, there should so no room be left to the satisfaction of Christ, reckoned to be ours: if all the righteousness of God, Rom. 10.3. 1 Corin. 5.21. Phili. 3.9. should be turned over in an act of believing, mixed with much doubting and in our sinful obedience; And the Socinians have more reason for them to say, there is no necessity of any real satisfaction of blood paid for us, than the Arminians and Papists: For if our righteousness and inherent obedience may be of grace esteemed formal righteousness before God, by a free Evangelic paction and an act of God's freewill: the Lord might have esteemed the eating of an apple, or any act of obedience, our formal righteousness, and so Christ died in vain, to become our righteousness, where an act of a sinful man, or a deed of the Law, even the Law of faith is sufficient. What needs the shedding of the blood of God? Frustrà fit per plura, quod aequè benè potest fieri per pauciora. There's no need of real satisfaction. 2. Faith imputed doth well bear the sense of the object that faith lays hold on, as our righteousness, Rom. 3.21. Now the righteousnsse of God without the Law is manifested. What righteousness of God? ver. 22. Even the righteousness of God through faith of Jesus Christ unto all. Now if the righteousness of God is manifested without one Law, to wit, of works, why not without another Law, of faith and of inherent gospel-righteousness? And what need that Christ should die, if the act of believing should be that precious righteousness of God, and that according to the Law of faith? This by the way. As hope is put for the object hoped for? As Rom. 8.24. Hope that is seen is not hope, that is, the thing possessed, the salvation which we have in present possession, is not hoped for. Col. 1.5. For the hops sake laid up in heaven, that is, the thing hoped for. For the grace of hope is not laid up in heaven. ver. 27. Christ in you the hope of glory. So faith here put for the thing believed; so saith the Martyr, my love is crucified, that is, Christ my loved or believed one is crucified: So by faith in his name is this man made whole. It were strange to say, by faith, and repentance, and mortification is this man made whole. And it must be said, if so be that faith includes repentance. Now Peter denies, Acts 3.12. this, why marvel ye, as if we by our power and holiness had made this man to walk? It's not our holiness, but Jesus Christ hath done it, even God, the God of Abraham, etc. ver. 13. hath done it: And yet, ver. 16. faith in his Name hath made him strong: That is, faith or believing in his Name, that is, in his Power, Authority, Godhead, hath made him strong. Ergo, faith is put for the thing or righteousness believed: So Heb. 11. By faith the walls of Jericho fell, that is, by love the soul and form of faith, say Papists, and by repentance and new obedience, which is all one with faith, say Socinians, the walls of Jericho fell. So by faith they subdued Kingdoms, stopped the mouths of Lions. What influence real or physical had faith in slaying men, Faith is pu● for the object of faith. in refraining the hungry Lions to eat Daniel? None at all: But thus the mighty God believed in by these men, subdued Kingdoms, stopped the mouths of Lions; if it be replied there is not alike reason of justifying faith, which is dead as touching the influence and causality to justify, as there is of the faith of miracles in these points; it is replied, there is every way the same reason: For as Abraham's dead faith, if it had been dead could no more have justified and saved him, than the hypocrites dead faith can save and justify him, as James saith, 2.14, 15, 16, etc. So could not these worthies recorded, Heb. 11. have casten down the walls of Jericho, subdued Kingdoms, stopped the mouths of Lions by faith, if that faith had been as dead in its nature, as the faith of the vain Gnostick and Hypocrite, who saith to the brother o● sister naked, depart in peace, be thou warmed and filled, and yet gives him not these things that are needful to the body, Jam. 2.15, 16. And this we must say, except we admit that the fancied faith of the Hypocrite can remove mountains, nor is it place to dispute whether Reprobates as Judas have saving faith in working miracles, it is sure their faith of miracles cannot be a Hypocritical faith such as is, james 2.14, 15, 16. (3.) The Scripture differenceth between faith and love, and faith and repentance. As 1. we are not once said to be justified by faith, but are never said to be justified by love, repentance, alms deeds. It's easy with an active engine to labour to prove how faith includes love: And so doth hope and love include many other works and gifts of the Spirit, The Scripture and sound reason distinguish between faith and new obedience. but the Holy Ghost distinguisheth them. As (2.) by faith as from a saving principle, Abraham sojourned in the Land, by faith Noah builded an Ark, jacob blessed the sons of joseph, Moses would not be called the Son of Pharaohs daughter, yet to build an Ark is not to believe in God; we pray in faith, hear in faith, yet these are not the same. (3. Mar. 1.15. Repent and believe, Act. 20.21. Testifying repentance toward God, and faith toward our Lord jesus, Heb. 6.1. Not laying the foundation of repentance from dead works, and faith toward God, 1 Tim. 1.5. Love and a good conscience and faith unfeigned, Phil. 5. Love and faith, 1 Thes. 1.3. We thank God, remembering your work of faith, and labour of love, Heb. 6.10. Labour of love. 11. The full assurance of hope. 12. Faith and patience. We believe in Christ: but do we repent in Christ? 4. Faith is a leaning on God, Isa. 10.20. Isa. 26.3. Isa. 50.10. love is not so. Faith is a coming to God by way of affiance, joh. 5.40. Matth. 11.28. joh. 6.37. a receiving of Christ, joh. 1.11. an eating of his flesh, and drinking of his blood, joh. 6.54, 55, 56. not any of these can be said of love, of repentance, of new obedience. (4.) If to believe in Christ as Lord and Lawgiver be formally (for effectively and practically we may with that Learned and Pious D. Prestoun say it is) a consenting to Christ's Dominion and Government over us to obey him (though to consent at the Coronation and to swear an oath of loyalty to a King be widely different from obeying his Laws) as unbeleef is a rebellion against his Government, Luk. 19.17. then well may Adam, in the Covenant of Works, be said to be justified and saved by faith; To give ourselves to J●sus C●rist to be ruled & commanded by him as Lord and King, is not formally to believe in him. for if to believe in God Redeemer, be to give ourselves to obey him as Lord Redeemer, and if this surrendering be the obedience of works by which we are justified and saved and perfectly righteous before God, upon the same reason to believe in God Lawgiver and Creator in the Covenant of Works, and for Adam to surrender himself Covenant ways, by a legal faith shall be the Law obedience of works by which Adam is justified and saved, and so he is saved by Law-faith, as we are by Gospel-faith. And this is to be remembered, that for one to give himself to Christ as his Lord to be governed and commanded, and to be willing to obey him is neither formally faith (though it may be conjoined with believing) nor obedience, but an intention or purpose to obey. And 1. shall we then be justified by works, that is, by a purpose and intention to work? 2. There are in us May resolutions and purposes like May blossoms, that whither before Harvest, as some are willing but not obedient, Isa. 1.19. One saith he will go work in his father's Vineyard, it may be he purposes to work, but yet he works not, Mat. 21.30. nor is a practical purpose of heart to obey either obedience or faith formally. 5. If to be justified by faith in Christ as not only Jesus who saves, but as Lord who commands, than we are justified by love, for we are to love him not as Jesus only, but also as Lord, 1 Cor. 16.22. Eph. 6.24. especially since all the works of the Law come under the command of love, Matth. 22.3.7. Luk. 7.27. Deu. 6.5. Rom. 13.8. (6.) All these, thy faith hath saved thee, Matth. 9 Luk. 7. only believe, must be of this truth, thy good works hath saved thee: only do good works. And it is strange that Paul saith, Eph. 2.8. By grace ye are saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God. 9 Not of works, lest any man should boast. Nor could Paul make an opposition between grace and works (as in Rom. 11.6.) if the grace of believing and good works were one in the New Testament, for so we should be saved by works, and not by works. And Paul by an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, takes that away. Yea but we are saved, that is, justified and delivered from obligation to wrath by the works of freegrace. He answers, nay, but neither are we saved or justified by these works of grace as by means or causes. See the Learned Commenter, D. Trochrigge, on Eph. ●. 8, 9 For we are first saved and justified before we can do good works, for good works are the fruits of freegrace, since v. 10. we are his workmanship created in Christ jesus (and so justified and saved in Christ Jesus) to good works, that we should walk in them. Yea and Paul undeniably removeth this doubt, 1 Cor. 4.4. I know nothing by myself (that is, by his grace I am free of such sins as bring condemnation, and so he must abound in works of grace) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, yet thereby (and notwithstanding of all my inherent holiness by works of grace) I am not justified. (7.) There should be no ground of gloriation and boasting more than this, by the Socinian and Arminian way, if we should be justified by works which come from freewill not determined by any grace either habitual or actual which is merited by the death of Christ, but do proceed from pure freewill which separateth the believer from the non-beleever: Then might we glory and boast that we are not in the debt of Christ or of his grace for that which is our formal righteousness before GOD, and so no flesh can say they are justified by grace, but that we are justified by nature the same way that Adam should have been justified without being beholden to CHRIST or to his death. Right or jus to life eternal, & possession of, or the way to life eternal, are much different. Asser. 3. There are not properly the same causes of the possession of Life Eternal, and of the righteousness of Life Eternal: The ransom of Christ's blood is only the cause of the right. For jus or right to Life Eternal is a legal and a moral thing, e●s morale, and hath a moral cause, as a man hath right to such a City being the Lord and owner thereof by birth, or money▪ or conquesse, or by gift or grant of a Prince or of the Citizens themselves, but possession and enjoying the houses and rents of the City is a Physical thing, ens Physicum, and hath a Physical cause, as eating, drinking, lodging, sleeping, wearing of clothes to defend the body from the cold. So the legal right a man hath to the bread and lodging he hath in an Inns, but the Physical causes, are hunger, appetite, bodily necessities so require and his pleasure to make use of such necessities. Hence the eating, drinking, Christ's blood is the right of merit to life eternal, good works the way and means by which we come to the possession thereof. Calvinus Instr. l. 3. c. 15. n. 21. Respo. ad 1. Arg. Istis nihil obstat quo minus opera Dominus tanquam causas inferiores amplectatur. Sed unde id? Nempe quos su● misericordia aeternae vitae haereditati destinavit, eos ordinaria sua dispensatione per bona opera inducit in ejus possessionem. Quod in ordine dispensationis praecedit, posterioris causam nominat. may be Physically good, and the right, jus legale, very bad, he may have no right to the bread, when he comes to it only by spoil and rapine. So the legal right, jus legale to life eternal is the ransom of blood that Christ paid, our Goel, our friend and kinsman, to make the inheritance ours; but that great (I may say) almost Apostolic light, Mr. John Calvin saith good works, are, as it were, the inferior causes of the possession of life. So simple possession is one thing, and qu● jure aut titulo, but by what Law-right he possesseth, is another thing. But 1. Good works are necessary, necessitate praecepti, by the command of God and promise, 1 Thes. 4.4. 1 Cor. 6.20. Eph. 2.10. Matth. 28.20. and where it is said, 1 Tim. 4.8. Godliness is profitable to all things, having the promise of the life that now is, and of that which is to come. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the promise is opposed to the Law. And that is a strong Argument, Gal. 3.18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If the inheritance be of the Law, it is no more of promise, but God gave it to Abraham by promise, Covenant-promise: What is that to the Galatians and to us Gentiles? M●ch every way. For three notable points are therein. 1. The heavenly inheritance promised to the seed, to Christ and his, ver. 16. not a poor earthly Canaan, as Socini●ns and Papists say, were promised to Abraham and his seed, except they say that an earthly Canaan was promised to Christ. 2. That Covenant-promise of an heavenly inheritance made to Abraham, the same is made to the believing Galatians, the Gentiles and their seed, else Paul saith nothing for the Doctrine of Justification by faith to the Gentiles, contrair to the purpose of the Apostle. 3. There is an inheritance by Covenant-promise a promise of eternal life made not to works as the price that buys the right: for, sure, then Christ must have died in vain. 3. Works are not necessary simply, The necessity of good works. necessitate medii: for than we must exclude all Infants; But the necessity of a Precept inferreth a necessity of means ordinary to all capable of a Command, that they do good, and sow to the Spirit, that they may reap of the Spirit life everlasting, Gal. 6.8. (3.) They are necessary for the glory of God, Math. 5.16. 1 Pet. 3.1, 2. 1 Pet. 2.12. (4.) They are necessary by the law of gratitude, which is common both to the Covenant of Works and of Grace, as we are debtors to God for being, so to God-incarnate as ransoned ones for everlasting life▪ 1 Cor. 6.20. Luke 1.75. 1 Pet. 1.18. and eternal well-being. But such as will have our works the formal cause of our justification, they put them in the chair of Christ's merit, and they must be meritorious as Adam's legal obedience should have been: yea, but not, but by and of gracious estimation, God so esteeming them, say they. True: but, as is proven, neither was Adam's obedience meritorious, but by God's estimation: Yea and Calvine gives a power of meriting ex pacto to our works. But our works of grace are died and washen in Christ's blood, and justified that they may justify us. The Scripture speaks of justifying of persons, not of works. But the Scripture speaks nothing of justifying of works, or not imputing sin to our works. Antinomians dream of a freeing of both the person and works of a justified man from Law-obligation, and that is a way indeed to justify works of murder and adultery in David or any justified man from being sins against the Law of God: But because our works of grace have an intrinsical power of meriting and justifying communicated to them by the merits of Christ, they must be far more our formal righteousness before God, than Adam's righteousness was his justification and life before God. And if our works of grace have no power of merit or worth communicated to them from Christ's death, then must it follow, though Christ had never died, our works may have the same gracious esteem of God, the same power of meriting, of justifying and saving they now have. Yea, and since Christ hath redeemed us from our vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. by his blood: Why but, as he hath redeemed us from hell, How we are redeemed from our vain conversation. and purchased salvation to us, by giving us grace by our own good works after conversion to redeem and justify and save ourselves, so he hath redeemed us from our vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. by giving us grace to do such works, before we be redeemed from our vain conversation, and before we be converted, as we may merit our conversion and Redemption from our vain conversation? If it be said, he absolutely and without any condition that is required, on our part, by his blood redeems all, whom he hath given his Son Christ to die for, from their vain conversation. 1. All mankind without exception (for by their way he hath died for them all) must be redeemed from their vain conversation and converted: Nothing can be more false. 2. The Gospel to no purpose, and the Gospel-Commands shall in vain crave obedience, or so much as the duty of hearing the Gospel, from such as are not yet redeemed from their vain conversation, or not yet converted: For that Redemption is promised to them absolutely, without any condition required of them, saith this way. Obj. If works have a causative influence on the possession of glory, as working on wages, and fight on victory, Objections against the distinction of right to life, & possession of life, removed. then must they have influence on just possession also: For possession, except it be just, is no possession, but usurpation. Answ. Possession is essentially the enjoying of any thing pleasant, gainful, yea or honest, whether the title be just or unjust. The Title is accidental to the Possession. Obj. 2. He that possesseth the Crown, The title or right is accidental to the nature of possession possesseth the Diamonds and precious stones and the worth of the Crown; Therefore he that possesseth life, possesseth the right and title to it. Answ. True: but hence it followeth not but possession and right to what we possess do differ in their nature. Nor do we properly possess the right of possession: for the right or title is modus rei, non res, the manner of and the due or the undue way of the possession thereof. Obj. 3. * Possession of life, and due right to life, are both from Christ but divers ways. Is not possession of eternal life from Christ, as well as the title or right to the Crown from Him? Ans. True, both are from Christ, but not the same way. Possession of the Crown is the enjoying thereof, and is from free grace, and we, as willing and sanctified agents, make use thereof: But Christ alone bought with his blood the title and right to it. And when he gave his life for the rightful and due possession of glory to us, we did contribute nothing either request or help to procure the title, and the grace to enter in to the possession by faith is the fruits also of free grace. Nor can it be denied but our good works, by which we enter into possession of the Crown, are also the fruit of Christ's death: but yet not so as there is any meritorious or federal power of deserving the possession communicate to our works; Only they are made by Christ's death the obliged way to the possession of life. Obj. 4. How then is there a promise of the life to come made to Godliness, 1 Tim. 4.8? Answ. That promise is neither a promise of the Covenant of Works, for by the deeds of the Law no flesh can be saved: Nor is it a federal promise of the Covenant of Grace, strictly so called, except any would say that it is called a promise especially for faith, which is special Godliness, How the promise is made to godliness. and the acknowledging of the truth, which is according to godliness, Tit. 1.1. and so a promise made to the Godly in so far as he is in Christ by faith, and in Christ is the promise of life, 2 Tim. 1.1. Nor 3. is the promise of a title and right, which is made to Christ our Ransom payer, made to our Godliness, as if it did buy our right to life eternal, or were the price thereof. 4. Life is promised to Believers who work, not because they work: And 5. the Lord in these only showeth the order of bringing men to glory, not the causes of the right and title to glory, except we say the mowing of the first quarter of the Meadow is the cause of the mowing of the second, because it makes way to the mowing of the second, and the mowing of the second quarter is a cause of the mowing of the third, and so forth, until all be mown. As, because God gives grace to work, to run, to use means, therefore he giveth, of free grace, the crown of life in the possession thereof. Obj. Adam's Law-obedience should only have so, and by this way been the cause or way to the possession? Ans. Not so, if Adam had perfected his obedience, he should have claimed life by right of sinless, federal merit, ex pacto, without suiting of it by any title of grace merited by CHRIST, not so we. It's true believers are called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, worthy, Rev. 3. but that is legally in Christ the Head, not that the meritorious worth of Christ goeth out of himself and renders our works intrinsically meritorious. CHAP. XX. Whether or not suffered Christ for any sin against the Gospel only, such as unbeleef final, which is conceived to be the only sin against the Gospel. That Christ died not for all without exception. The unwarrantableness of that Doctrine, how the Law commands justifying faith and repentance, how not. IT may appear that Christ suffered not for any sin which is only against the Gospel, such as final unbeleef: If any sins be considered in any other respect as against the Gospel only, than Christ was not to suffer for any such sin so considered, for where no death is threatened, none is explicitly due, and where it is not so due to the sinner, nor should have been execute upon him, there it could not have been due to Christ nor executed upon him, For the Gospel threateneth not death to any sin, but final unbeleef and rebellion (and for that Christ never died) therefore Christ died not for any sin as against the Gospel, nor suffered that which is no where threatened. But this is most doubtsome and cannot well stand. It's true that Christ suffered not for final unbeleef, it being the proper sin of some reprobates, to wit, of such as hear the Gospel, Joh. 8.21, 24. 2 Thes. 1.7, 8. But it seems against all Scripture that Christ should die for these, for whose sins he dies not: And so that 1. Christ should half and part the sins of the Reprobate, and the Scripture, I judge shall not admit that Christ bore in his own body, on the tree, some sins of the Reprobate, to wit, all their sins against the Law, absolutely, or conditionally, and he that bears not either absolutely, or conditionally their other sins against the Gospel, to wit, Christ suffers not for some sins of reprobates, and not for others. their final unbeleef and rebellion, for Christ was wounded and bruised for the transgressions and iniquities of these for whom he died; He must then have been wounded for some of their transgressions, and not wounded for other of their transgressions. And so the sins of the Reprobates, are divided between Christ's satisfaction upon the Cross, and their own satisfaction in Hell: But he suffered (one may say) conditionally only for the Reprobates sins against the Law upon the Cross, if they believe, not otherwise? Ans. The same real satisfaction conditionally that he performed on the Cross, for the Elect, the same (say the Authors) he performed for the Reprobate, conditionally, if either believe, but because the one believes, it is accepted for payment for them, and the other believes not, it is not accepted for them. 2. As there is a satisfaction performed for some sins, not for all, not for final unbeleef, that sin than must be in the same case with the sin of the fallen Angels, there is no sacrifice for it, nor is Christ's death applicable by divine ordination to purge men from final unbeleef more than to purge Devils from any sins they commit. 3. The same incorruptible price of the blood of the Lamb that is given to ransom all from wrath, Matth. 20.28. 1 Tim. 2.6. conditionally, is given to buy all, for whom Christ died, from their vain conversation, CHRIST cannot buy all from their vain conversation conditionally, for the condition cannot be shown in Scripture also, 1 Pet. 1.18. that is to merit faith to them conditionally. Show us the condition of the one more than the other. If a condition cannot be shown, Christ must have paid the price of blood upon the Cross, for some upon intention, for others upon another unlike intention. 4. If Christ died for all, not because they did will and believe, but that they might will and believe; and if Jesus suffered without the Camp, that he might sanctify the people by his own blood, Heb. 13.12. Heb. 10.10. That he might wash them from their sins, and make them Kings and Priests to God, Rev. 1.5, 6. That they might offer up themselves holy living sacrifices to him, Rome 12.1. upon a great design of love, to cleanse them with the washing of water by the Word, and present them a glorious Church without spot or wrinkle, Eph. 5.26, 27. If he gave himself for them, that they should live to righteousness, being dead to sins, 1 Pet. 2.24. That they might be delivered from the present evil world, Gal. 1.4. If Christ gave himself for these, for whom he died, For whom Christ died, for their unbelief & final vain conversation he died also. that he might redeem them from all iniquity, and might purify them to himself a peculiar people, zealous of good works, Tit. 2.14. Then did he die to redeem all men from iniquity, even from final unbelief the great iniquity, and from the vain conversation of final unbelief, and that they might be dead to sins, especially the sin of final unbelief: Except it be said that Christ gave a price to buy faith to all Reprobate and Elect, and to redeem them from final unbelief, if all would be willing. But to commit to their freewill the efficacy of Redemption, which Prosper saith, Pr●sper Carmi. de ingrat. c. 13. Ergo hominis valida arbitrio divina voluntas. aut etiam invalida est, etc. maketh the will of God valide and effectual, and unvalide and weak, according as the will of man: which Davenantius, Bishop of Salisbury (if that opus posthumum have been written by him in his riper years, and revised by himself) justly censures as the boil of Pelagian Doctrine, which Faustus Rhegiensis did covertly teach: The Lord (saith he) redeems such as are willing, being a rewarder of their good or evil wills. Now hardly can these eschew this Pelagianism who teach, that the death of Christ is an universal salve applicable, joan. Davenantius▪ Episc. Salisburien. Dis●sert. de morte Christi. Impres. 1650. c. 1. pa. 6. Hoc enim est illud uleus doctrine Pelagianae, quo● Faustus Rhegiensis hisce verborum integ●●mentis conatur oc●ultare volentes De●us red●●i●, 〈…〉 Christ's death is not a remedy applicable by the Gospel-Covenant, to all and every one of mankind, so they actually believe. by the decree of God, to save all and every one of mankind, Christian and Pagan, so they actually believe: For it cannot be said, that Christ hath died to make all mankind saveable, upon condition of actual faith to receive Christ preached: for so Infants, to whom Christ preached is in no tolerable sense applicable, that way, by any ordination of God, if they actually believe, shall be no parts of the world, & they must be excluded from Baptism. And it cannot be said that this argument shall militate against us: for we do not defend such a conditional applicabilitie of Christ upon condition of faith actual in preached Christ even to infants in the Visible Church, yet we teach they are in Covenant with God, and so God hath his decree of election to Glory and Redemption in Christ, among infants as among aged professors. 2. There is a providential, and to many thousands of Pagans, who never heard, nor could hear of Christ, an invincible impediment, and so Christ is not applicable by God's decree to them, upon condition of actual believing, Rom. 10.14. How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? It seems to me physically impossible, that there is such a thing as the Indians worship Satan under such a name and in such rites, if I never heard of the Indians, or of their God, or their worship: So neither can they worship Christ in a Gospel-way, who never heard of him. It's impossible to believe a non ens, Christ offered in the Gospel is very nothing and so not applicable to thousands by any decree of God. 3. This is not written in Scripture. God hath decreed that Christ be Preached and life be offered actually to all and every one of all and every Nation under Heaven, and this opinion saith that Christ died and satisfied offended Justice for the sins of all and every one of all and every Nation under heaven, except for final unb●leef. The Antecedent is clear by Scripture and experience. God fulfils his decrees irresistibly: But he never sent the Preached Gospel to as many as these Authors say he died for. This is false, that God hath decreed that Christ in the preached Gospel, and salvation may be offered to all and every one, old & young, of all and every nation in all generations, upon condition of actual believing Nor can they themselves teach any such thing: Nor is this true, God hath decreed that Christ in the Preached Gospel and salvation may be offered to all and every one, old and young, of all and every Nation, in all Generations, upon condition of actual believing. And yet for all these, without exception, Christ died, say they. For not to say, God never decreed that such may be offered to infants of Pagans, for whom they say Christ died. To make a thing that physically is possible, the object of a decree of God, we must say that God hath decreed to give the gift of tongues to all Professors and Pastors to speak to all and every Nation in their own Language, and to make an offer of Christ: For there be ma●y Nations, who never heard of Christ, and understand not writing or any of the commonest Latin and Greek, and there is not any such decree revealed in the word, and we can not but know such gifts of Tongues are not bestowed on men, and without this it is physically impossible to communicate the Gospel. It shall not help to say that Christians should travel to all Countries and learn their Tongues, that so they may communicate the Gospel; and it is their sin they do not so. And therefore God hath decreed that the Gospel may be offered and Christ applicable. Ans. 1. What shall become of the aged, and of multitudes, for whom Christ died, who must die in Paganism, before Christians can be so mixed and learn the Tongues of all Nations under Heaven? 2. Did ever the Apostles to whom the Lord gave the gift of the tongues, go to this Nation and not to this, but by the call of the Spirit, to Macedonia, not to Bythinia, Act. 16? Is there no call of God now required for spreading of the Gospel? Some Nations would kill them, some would persecute Christians to death and not receive them: in the mean time, many for whom Christ died, perish. 3. Show from Scripture that it is the duty of Christians to mix themselves with all Nations, and to learn their Language, and that they sin in not doing so. Nor let it be said, into what N●tion soever I come, I may say, if thou believe in Christ thou shalt be saved. Ans. 1. You can not say that, except you P●each the Gospel to them. For they are not obliged to believe upon one sentence, and if you Preach the Gospel to the Nation, God ●●th some chosen ones there, and it is no more a Pagan Nation. 〈◊〉 Yo● are to say to any one by your way (thou art obliged ●o believe that Christ satisfied for all thy sins, and for the sins of the whole world) but that is a lie which you teach Pagans as a principle of the Gospel. 3. It's false that I may say and Preach truly such a thing to every Nation, and all in it. 4. Nor is it physically possible that Christians can so speak to all and every old and young. Also all is indeed referred to the freewill▪ except the Authors say that God doth insuperably determine the will of the Elect to believe, and the places speak of th●●fficacious redemption of the Elect only: That there be two intentions in God in dying for all without exception, hath no warrant in scripture But so God had two intentions in Christ's dying, one general to render all mankind saveable; another special, actually to save the Elect. But 1. who can believe multiplied intentions in God of half redemption from wrath, and of whole redemption from both vain conversation and ●●ath upon their bare word, when the Scripture saith Christ in suffering without the Camp▪ suffered for the world of Jew and Gentiles, that he might sanctify them he died for? 2. What warrant to separate these two conjoined by God, to wit, that CHRIST should bear on the Cross the sins of reprobate, and not intend that they should die to sin, and be redeemed, but not from all iniquity: be loved and washen, and not made Kings and Priests to God? That Christ should be wounded for the transgressions of many, and yet the chastisement of his peace not be upon them? 3. The dying for all and every one cannot be conditional, in so far as the condition is referred to dying, to wit, if they believe; for so believing must go before dying, either really, which is manifestly false: for multitudes for whom Christ died had neither being nor believing, when he died for them; The dying for all and every one cannot be conditional. Or in the prescience of God, and that destroys their principles: for so Christ cannot have died for all and every one, foreseeing that all and every one would believe: for he never foresaw that the Reprobate should believe. Then must the condition of dying or Redeeming, or of paying the ransom of His blood (these being all one) be referred to Gods accepting of Christ's death for so many or for all, if they should believe. And the same way the Argument is as formerly: For God accepteth the paid ransom for all and every one, if they all really believe, or if they all and every one be foreseen of God▪ to believe before the Lords accepting of them. Both are false, as is evident, 〈…〉 they say in the issue what we say, and contradict themselves, to wit, that believers, and only believers, are these for whom Christ died. We before said, the promises are conditionally to all within the Visible Church, but so as the condition relates only to the benefit promised, The promises are so made to all within the Visible Church as all are in Covenant conditional. we shall have remission and life, if we believe, but not otherwise: But now the Covenant-promise, which is accepted of, and assented unto by Professors, in their very profession in themselves or their p●●●nts, is absolutely made to all within the Visible Church, and they are covenant-ways engaged and say, and profess they are the Lords people, and they take him, and no other, for th●●r God, whether they obey and believe, or no: for a people, not right in heart, may bind themselves in Covenant with God, De●●. 29.10, 11, 12, 13, 14. compared with 21, 22, 23. Deut. 31.27. J●sh. 24.22. compared with Judg. 2.12, 13. So God absolutely intends to save all for whom Christ dies, and by his death intends to give a price to redeem them from hell and from unbelief, or their vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. from all iniquity, Tit. 2.14. from this present evil world, Gal. 1.14. Ergo, from final unbeleef the greatest iniquity of a present evil world. But here the case widely varies, upon no condition, that we can read in holy Scripture, gave Christ a price, a ransom of blood to redeem men from unbeleef and from all iniquity, this price must be absolutely given, and grace purchased to all whose sins Christ did ●ear in the Cross that they may bele●ve, that they may be sanctified, Heb. 13.12. 1 Pet. 2.24. 2. Sins of Thomas, refusing to believe the resurrection of Christ, The unbeleef of justified persons is against the Covenant of Grace, and divers other sins beside final unbelief, are the causes of condemnation. and of Peter denying the Lord before men, and the Gospel-sinnes of believers, after they are justified, and are enlightened, must be sins against the Covenant of Grace, as well as against the Law. And the denying of Christ before men hath a sad threatening of everlasting death, Matth. 10.32. Mar. 8.38. annexed to it, if they repent not. And shall these within the Visible Church, who receive not Christ, be in a harder condition than Sodom and Gomorrah, Matth. 10.14, 15. if no sins against the Gospel be punished with eternal death but only unbelief? Yea the Scripture saith such as live in the Visible Church and are in Covenant with God, not only for final unbelief are condemned, but because they are unrighteous, fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, 1 Cor. 6.9. whoremongers, unclean, covetous persons, Eph. 5.5, 6. murderers, sorcerers, dogs, liars, Rev. 21.8. Rev. 22.15. for all their ungodly deeds and hard speech's, Judas v. 15. 2 Pet. 2.17. for all disobedience, 1 Cor. 4.5. Matth. 12.36, 37. they are everlastingly punished. And if Christ have suffered on the Cross for all the sins of the Reprobate, how are they judged and condemned for these sins, as the Scripture saith? And what Scripture saith they are condemned for the guilt of only unbelief: or that Pagans are condemned for Gospel-unbelief, where as Sodom, Gomorrah, Mat. 10.15. the men of Niniveh, Mat. 12.41. Tyrus and Sidon, Mat. 11.21. and such as have sinned without the Law, Rom. 2.12, 13, 14 15. are freed of Gospel-guiltinesse, and condemned for sins against the Law, and yet this same way saith that there is a Gospel-Covenant made with all, even thousands of Pagans who never heard of a Gospel, never engaged themselves by any profession to take the Lord for their God in Christ, yet Christ bore their sins on the Tree, and made his blood applicable to them by a Gospel-Covenant, if they shall believe. Whence they must all break the Covenant of Grace, of which many of them never heard, and be condemned for no sins but the last act of Sodomy, gluttony, parricide, for the Gospel threatteneth not death to any sin but to final unbelief, say they. There are not any sins committed against the Gospel, All sins against the Gospel, even final unbelief, are also against the Law and against God Redeemer, Immanuel. but they are also sins against the Law: because God incarnate and Immanuel is God, and leaves not off to be God consubstantial with the Father, because he assumes the nature of man. Then as the first Command oblidgeth Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac, when God shall reveal that Command, and Moses and the people are by that first Command to believe their deliverance out of Egypt, and so if the fir●● Command oblige us to believe and obey all Commands and Promises and threatenings of God, revealed and to be revealed, because the Lord is God, then must Christ God Redeemer and Immanuel be believed by this Command, and so final unbelief and final despising of Christ God Redeemer is as directly against the first Command (and so not a sin only threatened and forbidden in the Gospel) as simple unbelief and simple despising of Christ God Redeemer; For the believing & final believing, and unbelief and unbelief, continuing to the end, differ in the accident of duration, not in nature and essence, As a Rose that grows for a month only, and a Rose of the same nature that groweth and flourisheth for three months. Otherwise Christ could not have pronounced Peter blessed, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 16.17. in the present, Dicique beatus ante obitum nemo supremaque funera debet. for believing in the present: for he should not have been blessed to the end: as Solon said of his blessed man, And this cannot but subvert our faith, crush the peace, hope, consolation of weak Believers, to whom undoubtedly the promise of perseverance i●●bsolutely made, Jer. 31.31, 35. Jer. 32.39, 40. Isai. 54.10. Isai. 59.20, 21. Joh. 4.14. Joh. 10.27, 28. 2. If there be as formal a transgression of the fi●st Command in final unbelief, as in unbelief simply considered, and in the other sins of Judas and other Apostates. Why but as Christ bore in his body the sins of unbelief and satisfied for them, he must so also bear the sins of final rebellion and unbelief? And shall we believe that Christ paid a satisfactory ransom of blood upon the cross for the yesterday unbelief of Judas, and not for the day's unbelief? If it be said, No man can break the Gospel-Covenant, for it is an everlasting Covenant. Ans. It's an everlasting Covenant, but yet all who sin against the commanding love and authority of our Immanuel, especially they so professing to be his, do truly break the Covenant: but they so break it, as it leaves not off to be the Covenant of life both to the breakers, if they repent and believe, and to others: for so is the nature of this Covenant, How the Covenant of Grace is everlasting & yet broken by men. and so it is everlasting, but the Covenant of Works if once broken, ceases to be a Covenant of life for ever, because the nature of it is, to admit of no repentance at all. Obj. Does not the Law command the sinner offending God to mourn and be humbled, and confess? Ans. It doth. But it injoines not repentance as a way of life, with a promise of life to the repenter, as the Law or as a Covenant of Works commands to its native and proper Covenanters obedience and every single act of obedience as a way to obtain the reward of a Law-life, The Law commands repentance but not with a promise of life, or as a way to life. nor does the Law as a Covenant of Works command justifying faith and reliance upon God Redeemer, or Immanuel: but rather as the Law of Nature, or as the Law of thankfulness to a Ransoning and Redeeming God, the Law does this. Though in a special Covenant way the Gospel command faith in Christ. Obj. But final unbeleef as against God Redeemer and so considered is the only breach of the Covenant of Grace: He that believes not is condemned, as the man that rejects the only remedy of sin. Ans. The only breach of the Covenant of Grace, is too narrow to be the adequat cause of damnation, for many Pagans who never heard of Christ and are under no Covenant, How final unbeleef is the only cause of condemnation and to whom, and how not. but that of Works, are condemned not for not believing in him of whom they never heard, Rom. 10.14. nor for breach of the Covenant of Grace, but for breach of the Covenant of Works. 2. Unbelief may be called the nearest cause of damnation to such as 〈◊〉 within the Visible Church, as the wilful refusing of medicine which only and infallibly would heal the sick man of such a disease, is the cause of his death, but is the Moral cause. For the disease itself is the Physical cause, or the material cause of the man's death. And without doubt, uncleanness, covetousness, sorcery, lying, idolatry, etc. and many the like sins, beside unbeleef, are, 1 Cor. 6.9. Eph. 5.5, 6. Rev. 21.8. Rev. 22.15. Jud. 6.7, 8. 2 Pet. 2.17.10, 11, 12, 13, 2 Thes. 2.9, 10. 1 Pet. 4.3, 4. 2 Pet. 2.2, 3, 4, 5. the causes of the damnation of many visible professors, where as this way saith Christ did satisfy upon the Cross for all th●se sins, and the damned of visible professors suffer in hell only for final unbeleef. And it seems unjust that both Christ and they should suffer satisfactory punishment for these same sins done against the Law: And as strange that Ch●●st should die for any, and not die for their sins, since the Scripture useth the word of dying for sins, Rom. 4.25 delivered from our sins, Christ is a propitiation for our sins, and (the same way) not for ours only, but for the sins of the whole world; For whom Christ died, he died for their sins, and for all their sins. he died for sinners, Heb. 2.17. that he might make reconciliation for the sins of the people: that is, for the sinful people, or sinners, Heb. 9.28. so Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many: That is to bear the sins of the sinful many that he died for, Heb. 10.12. But this man after he had offered one sacrifice for sin, sat down on the right hand of God: that is, after he had offered a sacrifice for sinners. 1 Pet. 3.18. Christ once suffered for sin, that is, for sinners, 1 Cor. 15.3. I delivered unto you how Christ died for our sins, that is, for the persons of us sinners. 1 Joh. 3.5. He was manifested to take away our sins. 1 Joh. 4.10. Herein is love— that he sent his Son to be a propitiation for our sins. Rev. 1.5. To him that loved us, and washed us from our sins— be glory. Gal. 1.4. He gave himself for our sins. Now it must not be asserted, but proven that in all these places where he is said to be a propitiation for the sins of the world; and hath taken away our sins▪ speaking (as these Authors say) of the whole Visible Church, and not of the elect only that Christ hath died and by his death hath taken away some sins, and hath suffered for some sins, and not for all sins, not for the final unbeleef of sinners, if it be said, that we cannot teach that Christ suffered for final unbeleef, we grant it: But then we say that Christ suffered not for final unbelievers and for the other sins of final unbelievers, since suffering for sins and for persons that are sinners, to bring them to God, 1 Pet. 3.18. are conjoined. And God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them, 2 Cor. 5.19. Therefore there must be a pardoned and a justified world, and so a truly blessed world, as Paul and David teach, Psal. 3●. 1, 2. Rom. 4. and so a loved, John. 3.16. and chosen world followed with the separating love of God to man which saves some foolish ones and serving divers lusts, and saves not others; and so there must be a love and mercy of predestination, amor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, not common to all the world; as is clear, Tit. 3.3, 4, 5. Eph. 2.1, 2, 3, There is a world reconciled to whom God imputes no sin, and therefore all the world of Pagans & Infidels cann●t be such as Christ died for, and whose final unbelief he satisfied for. 4, 5. We seek a warrant of Gods not imputing to this loved world their trespasses against the Law, and of his imputing to the same world the trespasses of rebellion and final unbelief: And how Christ's blood, shed for persons, both reconciles them to God, and leaves them in wrath, imputes not their trespasses to them, and makes them blessed, as David says, Ps. 32.1. and imputes their final unbelief to them, and leaves them under a curse: Nor shall it help the mater to say that final unbelief may be considered as both against the Law, and as only forbidden in the Gospel. And in the former respect Christ hath suffered for it, not in the latter. For if the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the contrariety between final unbelief and the first Command, as it is a rebellion against God manifested in the flesh, be satisfied for by Christ on the cross; How can it condemn the person, as sure it doth? Joh. 3.18, 36. Joh. 8.21, 24. It cannot be said that Christ died for final unbeleef, so we believe. 2. What special 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and repugnancy to the Law of God is there in final unbelief, that is not a repugnancy to the Covenant of Works and Grace both? And what repugnancy to the Covenant of Grace which is not also contrair to the Law? This I grant (which I desire the Reader carefully to observe) the Law and the Covenant of Grace do not one and the same way command faith, The Law & the Covenant of Gr●ce do not, one & the same way command faith and forbid unbeleef. and forbid unbelief. I speak now of the Covenant of Works and of the Covenant of Grace as they are two Covenants specifically and formally different. For 1. the Law as the Law commands 1. Faith in the superlative degree, as it doth all acts of obedience, and so doth it Gospel repentance. Because the Law commands all obedience most exact and perfect, and condemns faith in the positive degree, though sincere and lively, as sinfully deficient. The Gospel doth only require sincere faith, and condemneth not for the want of the degrees of faith most perfect, though the Law of thankfulness to the Ransone-payer (which Law is common to both Covenants) require that we believe in the highest degree, because Christ hath expressed to us the greatest love, Joh. 3.16, Joh. 15.13. 2. The Law as the Law requires faith not final only, but faith in Immanuel for ever, and that we be born with the Image of God that we believe at all times, under the pain of damnation. But, the Covenant of Grace, because it admits of repentance, and holds forth the meekness, forbearance, and longa●i●itie of Christ, is satisfied with faith at any time, or what hour of the day they shall be brought in. 3. The Law requires faith, with the promise of Law-life: The Covenant of Grace requires faith, promises grace to believe, with promise of a Gospel-life. 4. The Law requires not faith in Christ with sinners Covenant-ways as a work to be legally rewarded, for it finding all sinners, and all by nature, Covenant-breakers, cannot indent with th●m that have broken the Covenant, to promise life to them by tenor of the Covenant, which now ceaseth to be a Covenant of life, and cannot but condemn, and is now rendered impossible to justify and save, How the reprobate are under the Covenant of Works. by reason of the weakness of the fl●sh, Rom. 8.3. All the reprobate than are this way under the Covenant of Works, that they are (as it were) possible Covenanters liable to suffer the vengeance of a broken Covenant, but not formally active Covenanters as Adam was. But if Christ suffer for final unbeleef, as it is against the Law as the Law, how is it charged upon reprobates as a sin against the Gospel only? Since no wrong done to God Redeemer can be any thing but a sin against God, and a ●reach of the first Command. I deny not but final unbeleef hath an aggravation that it is the nearest bar and iron gate between the sinner and the only Saviour of sinners, but yet the putting of such a bar is a sin against the Law. Neither can it be said that only final unbeleef is the only meritorious cause of damnation to such as hear the Gospel. For beside final unbelief there is also a contrariety betwixt the murders, Sodomies, etc. of professors and the Law for which they suffer in hell eternally, Rev. 21.8. c. 18.7. Quest. Whether doth the Lord Mediator as Mediator, command the same good works in the Covenant of Grace which are commanded in the Covenant of Works? CHAP. XXI. Ans. ACcording to the matter of the thing commanded, qu●ad rem mandatam, he commands the same, and charges upon all and every one the moral duty even as Mediator, for he cannot lose the least of these Commandments, but simply they are not the same, quoad modum mandandi. It shall not be needful to dispute whether they be commands differing in nature: For not only doth the Mediator command obedience upon his interposed Authority as Lawgiver and Creator, but also as Lord Redeemer upon the motive of Gospel-constraining love. In which notion he calls love the keeping of his Commandments (if they love him, Joh. 14.) the new Commandment of love. Q. 2. Doth the Lord Mediator, in the Covenant of Grace, command the same good works to all, th● same way? Ans. Rom. 3.19. The Lord, in the Law, must speak one way to these that are under the Law, that is, under the jurisdiction and condemning power of the Law: and a far other way to these that are not under the Law. CHRIST speaks to reprobats in the Visible Church, even when the matter of the command is Evangelick, Christ one way lays Evangelick commands upon the Elect, & another way on the Reprobate. as to non-confederates of grace in a Law way, and in a Law intention. For he cannot bid them obey upon any other ground then legislative authority, not upon the ground of Redemption-love bestowed on them, or that he died out of love to save all and every one: For we disclaim that ground; or because he died out of a special design to save them as his chosen ones. For there is no ground for that until we believe▪ But they are to obey upon the ground of Redemption-love, so they first believe and fiducially rely upon Christ the Saviour of all. But he commands Law-obedience to his chosen even as Mediator. (1.) Upon a Gospel intention to chase them to Christ, Gal. 3.23. (2.) When they are come to b●dge them in, with Law-threatning to adhere, in a Godly fear, more closely to Christ. But the Lord commands no believer to believe hell in the event to be their reward, but to believe perseverance and life, but hell in the deserving. Hence that, 1 Tim. 1.9. The Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is not made for the righteous (to condemn them: as if God thereby opened up to them their doom) but for the lawless, etc. to let them be damned and see their damnation. CHAP. XXII. The differences in the promise of the Covenants. Quest. WHat is the special difference of the promise of the two Covenants? Ans. It is known that only life eternal is promised in the Law, if a right to the things of this life was promised to Adam, it is like he behoved to complete his course of obedience, and merit a right legal to the herbs and fruit of the earth, beside the right he had by gift of Creation, ex dono Creatoris, non jure operum. But 2. There was no promise made to Adam of perseverance, and so no promise made to him of influences to work in Adam to will and to do; so the influences by which he obeyed was, purum donum Creatoris, a mere gift of the Creator, not a gift of either the grace of Christ, or a promised grace, though in a large sense, it may be called a grace, or donum gratis datum: For God gave that influence upon no obligation. Now that it was not a grace promised is evident by Adam's fall: for God, who is true, fulfils his promises. 2. Augustine and our Divines teach, Dedit Deus posse ut vellet, non velle ut posset, a power to stand, but not the gift of actual perseverance. If any say that the Lord promised to Adam perseverance conditionally (which in one sense is true, in another false) if he pleased, in that he gave to him all necessaries required for actual standing. Ans. 1. This is to teach that perseverance was promised the same way, in the Covenant of Works, that Arminius saith it is promised in the Covenant of Grace, and that the freewill was absolute lord of standing and falling, and to deny God to be the nearest cause of our standing and persevering in either, the one or the other, and to bid us first and last sacrifice to our own freewill. 2. Willing perseverance actual cannot be promised conditionally: Conditional perseverance was not promised to Adam. for the question should be, Upon what condition doth the Lord promise to work in Adam actual perseverance, if he should be willing to persevere? But the question shall remain, whether that willingness to persevere, since it is the greatest part, if not whole perseverance, be promised or not; If it be not promised, the contrair whereof they hold, if it be promised conditionally, the question shall recur, what shall be the condition, and another condition than the willingness of the will to persevere cannot be given, and so the argument shall rise against itself, and the issue must be, God gave to Adam actual perseverance, if he should be willing to persevere, that is, he gives to Adam perseverance, if he give him perseverance; for willingness to persevere is perseverance, or a very large part thereof. 3. But persevering grace and so influence of grace to persevere is promised in the Covenant of Grace, Jer. 31.35. that they shall continue in Covenant, more sure than the night and the day. Jer. 32.40. I will put my fear in their hearts, The considerable differences betwixt the influences of God given to Adam for his standing in obedience, and these influences given to us in the second Adam that they shall not depart from me. The meaning cannot be, I will give them a power never to depart from me, if they will: For so nothing is more promised in Christ to the second Adam's heirs, then to Adam and the Angels that fell, for the like, say they, was promised to them. And 2. If notwithstanding of that fear both promised and put in the heart, and in the will, yet lubric freewill may stand or fall and remain indifferent to either, than the sense shall be thus, I will make an everlasting Covenant, I will put my fear in their heart, by which they may either depart from me, and turn apostates, or not depart from me, but persevere: But so the Covenant, made with Adam and the fallen Angels, should be an everlasting Covenant, and yet it was broken. For the Image of God of itself inclined Adam and the fallen Angels never to depart from God: For sure, Adam's fear, being a part of that Image, which sanctified his affections, inclined him (but not undeclinably and immutably) not to depart from God, and not to hearken to the lying Serpents suggestions. But it is not that new Covenant-fear promised and given in the second ADAM, jer. 32.39, 40. 4. That these influences were purchased by Christ's death is clear, because they are the nearest causes of our actual believing and coming to Christ, of faith and perseverance that are given freely, and repentance and faith are given of Christ, Acts. 5.31. Zech. 12.10. 2 Tim. 2.25. Phil. 1.29. Ephes. 2.1, 2, 3. Ezek. 36.26, 27. Eph. 1.17, 18, 19, 20. John 6.44, 45. 5. So obedience to the Covenant of Works was Adam's own. (2.) And came from his concreated self (the Image of God that was his own) by a common influence, and neither was the Image of God, nor the influences of God acts of free grace, or the purchase of grace properly so called. (2.) Adam had a Law-claim to the Crown without sin, if he had continued in obedience, The obedience of Adam only a duty, not a promised benefit, our new obedience is both a duty▪ and a promised benefit. and did merit ex pacto life eternal, our new Covenant obedience in habitual and actual performance is so a duty, that it is also promised and a benefit merited to us by the death of Christ, whereas Adam's obedience was purum officium, non officium promissum, as our Gospel-obedience is. 6. Hence in obedience distinguish two. 1. The nature of obeence. 2. The worth and excellency of obedience. The more the obedience be from ourselves, the more it partakes of the nature of obedience. Hence four kinds of obedience are to be considered. 1. Christ's obedience was the most legal obedience, and also the most perfect, Four kinds of obediences. for he obeyed most of his own, of any, from his own will purely, joh. 10.18. Mat. 26. ●9, 42, 44. His own blood, Hebr. 9.14. Rev. 1.5. My blood, saith he, Matth. 26.28. He gave his life a ransom, Matth. 20.28. He gave himself a ransom, 1 Tim. 2.6. By himself he purged our sins, Heb. 1.3. Gave himself for his Church, Eph. 5.25. Offered himself, Heb. 9.14. And therefore the satisfaction that he made was properly his own. It's true the life, flesh and blood which he offered to God, as common to the three Persons, was equally the life, flesh, blood of God by way of Creation and efficiency: For God as God created His Manhood, and gave him a body, but that Manhood, in abstracto, was not the offering, but all these, in concreto, and the self, including the value and the dignity, was not the Father's, not the Spirits, but most properly his own, and the Sons only by way of personal termination and subsistence. The excellency of the obedience of Jesus Christ how it was his own, properly meritorious. 1. There are contradictory terms affirmed of this holy self the Son, and of the Spirit and the Father. The Son was God incarnate. 2. The son offered himself, his own life, his own blood to God for our sins. Neither the Father nor the Spirit at all is God incarnate, neither Father nor Spirit offered his own life, his own blood to God; Neither the Father nor the Spirit hath (to speak so) a personal or terminative dominion over the flesh and blood of Christ. 2. Christ was in no sort obliged to empty himself, and cannot be under a jus or obligation to the Creator or the creature. Of free love and his own will he became Medi●●●● God Man, and being crea●ed man, and having said (here am I to do thy will) having stric●en hands with God as Surety of the Covenant, none more obliged, being holy and true; The obedience of CHRIST debtfull & not d●btful in divers respects. And therefore though Christ-Man was most strictly tied to give the Father obedience, yet he was not obliged to give him such and such obedience, so noble, so excellent, from a personal Union: for Christ God cannot properly come under any obligation. Hence the obedience of Christ is most meritorious, because maximè indebita, in regard of the Godhead most undebtfull, and yet obedience most debtfull in regard of the Man Christ. 3. Most from his own will personally considered, the affection, love, the bended will, highest delight to obey, lay personally near to the heart and holy will of Christ God: With desire have I desired to eat this Passeover. He went foremost in the journey to jerusalem, when he was to suffer. Much of the internal propension of the will makes much and (as it were) heightens and intends the nature of obedience, so that Christ's and our obedience have scarce an univocal definition. 4. He gave and restored more glory to offended justice, by such a noble, incomparably excellent death, than Adam and all his Sons took of glory from God: Properly so called satisfaction is performed by Christ. therefore against impure Socinus it is a most real satisfaction and compensation, where glory by obeying and suffering is restored in lieu of the glory taken away. All that Socinians say, that God cannot be a loser, and needs not glory, and nothing can be taken from him, and nothing can be given to him, proves nothing but that it is not such a satisfaction as one creature performs to another, nor is it a satisfaction that brings profit to God: For can a man be profitable to the Almighty? Nor such a satisfaction as eases a disquieted mind; Which proves not Christ to be a Saviour painted in a mere copy to us, and only a godly Martyr who saveth only by preaching and witnessing, and not by a most real and eminently clear satisfaction. 2. The Elect Angels next to Christ gave obedience in their Law course, but not so properly of their own as Christ, for some discriminating and strengthening grace they had from Christ Mediator their head, Angel's obedience properly obedience that ●s of grace and not their own. Col. 2.10. that they should not fall, and something from the Election of Grace, which do not necessarily agree to the Covenant of Works, which they performed without sin, and the more extrinsecall help from grace, the less merit, so far is grace from being, as Jesuits say, the essential requisite of merit, that the work is less ours, and so the less meritorious, that it hath grace. Let not any say then Christ's obedience that came from the fullness of the Spirit without measure 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, must so be less meritorious, Grace diminisheth of the nature of merite● from the obedience. which is absurd, for the reason why grace in Angels, and men who are mere creatures diminishes the nature of merit, is, because grace is not their own, nor their proper due, but supernatural or preternatural, and so hurts the nature of the merit, but to the meriting person Christ-God-Man nothing is supernatural, nothing extrinsecall, nothing not his own: Grace is his own as it were by a sort of personal dominion, not to say that the Man Christ as man did not merit, yet as man he was born sinless and with the full Image of God. 3. Adam gave more faintly obedience, more indeed of his own, but it was less obedience, Of Adam's obedience how proper it was. and less will in it, than the obedience of Angels, and had he continued, his obedience had been proper obedience; but this is to be observed, none did ever, actu secundo, and by the only help of simple nature attain Justification and Salvation by the simple Covenant of Works, but men and evil Angels fell under both, though that was a possible Covenant and holy and spiritual, yet God set it up to be an inlet to pure Justice in the reprobate Angels, and so to free grace in elect men. Gospel-obedience hath less of the nature of obedience, than Adam's obedience. 4. The obedience of faith, or Gospel-obedience, in the fourth place, hath less of the nature of obedience, then that of Adam, or of the Elect Angels, or that of Christ's. It's true we are called obedient Children, and they are called the Commandments of Christ, and Christ hath taken the Moral Law and made use of it in an Evangelic way, yet we are more (as it were) patients, in obeying Gospel-Commands, not that we are mere patients, as Libertines teach▪ for grace makes us willing, but we have both supernatural habits and influences of grace furnished to us from the Grace of Christ, who hath merited both to us, and so in Gospel-obedience we offer more of the Lords own, and less of our own, because he both commands, and gives us grace to obey. The Law is made (as it were) Gospel to elect believers & the Gospel Law to reprobates. And so to the elect believer the Law is turned in Gospel, he by his Grace fulfilling (as it were) the righteousness of the Law in us by begun new obedience, Rom. 8.4. and to the reprobate the Law remains the Law, and the Gospel is turned in the Law, for all conditional promises to the Reprobate, though in terms Evangelic, yet are Law to them (if Cain do well he shall be saved) (if Judas believe he shall be saved) because God by Grace fulfils not the promise in them. Obj. 1. Then shall Gospel-obedience be of less worth than Law-obedience, which floweth not from Grace, which Christ hath merited by his death? Ans. It's not denied, but it is obedience, so the Scripture, Heb. 5.9. Rom. 1.5. Rom. 6.17. Rom. 16.19. 2 Cor. 10.5. 1 Pet. 1 5. Act. 6.9. Act. 5.32, 37. But (2.) It hath less of the nature of obedience, but more excellency. Who would say Peter labouring in the Vineyard of John for wages, does properly obey, if we suppon that Peter hath from John, not only soul, will, body, arms, and legs, but the inward infused principle of willingness, the habit and art of dressing Vines, the nearest propension and determination of will to work, so have we in the Gospel, but in the Law, though the Lord who gives being, does also give his Image to Adam, and his influence to obey, yet the Image of God is concreated, and Adam's own, grace especially merited by Christ is supervenient and a mere stranger to us, and the influence, though it did predetermine Adam's will, yet it is connatural as it were, naturae debita, not merited by Christ's death, and so we give more of our own, when we give the fruit of Creation which God hath bestowed on the Pismire and the Worm, then when we give the obedience of Grace. 2. The obedience of Adam though rational and persuasive, there being a lamp of light in the mind, yet came from the feared authority of the Lawgiver under the pain of damnation, the Gospel-obedience is by the word, Act. 2.37. is by way of persuasion: Obedience from Law and from love how differenced Christ saith not, Peter, thou art afraid of hell, feed my Lambs, but, Peter, loves thou me, feed my Lambs: For a Law-obeyer is not to believe life eternal but in so far as he shall keep the Law perfectly, the Gospel obeyer so obeys as he believes deliverance from wrath and life eternal, but his believing is not reckoned to him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, of Law-debt, but of love and Grace-debt: See Rom. 4.4. Matth. 6.12. these promises, 1 Tim. 4.8. Luk. 12.31. Matth. 19.29. are exponed by the promises made to the overcomer, Rev. 2. Rev. 3. which is by faith, 1 Joh. 5.4, 5. 3. But it is most true, Gospel-obedience hath these excellencies. 1. It is a plant of a more noble Vine coming from the merit of blood, yet is not our obedience comparable to Christ's; for a work of Law or Gospel Grace hath a necessary reference to no wages of its own nature, but only by the interveening of the free pleasure of God. But Christ's obedience intrinsically from the excellent dignity of the person hath a meriting virtue. 2. It works more eminently than nature: Gospel obedience from grace how excellent and how far above civili●ty in its fairest lustre. It is a pillar to support swooning nature, and acts in more excellent subjects, in CHRIST, in the Elect Angels, in the Redeemed ones and makes them stones of another nature, and this is the handie-work of CHRIST, Isai. 54.11. I will lay thy stones with fair colours, and lay thy foundations with Saphires. v. 12. I will make thy windows of agates, and thy gates of Carbuncles, and all thy borders of pleasant stones: What do moral men that work on clay and make clay pots all their life and know nothing of the actings of saving Grace. Fairest civility is but roustie iron the basest of Metals: and they sweat and hammer upon Law-works being strangers to Christ, and his gold. O! what a difference between praying and hearing out of discretion, and by necessity of the office, and praying in the Holy Ghost, and hearing in faith. CHAP. XXIII. Q. What sort of doing the Law requireth? The Scripture is clear, that consummate, and continued in doing to the end is required by the Law. Tremellius & Trostius in Syria. Ver. Gal. 3. Qui non fecerit omnia. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Paul interpreting Moses, Deut. 26.27. Gal. 3.10. Cursed be every one, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ who continueth not in all that are written in the Law to do them. Deut. 26.27. Cursed is he who shall not confirm. It is a word they use in enacting of Laws, when we say, Be it statuted and ordained: the word in Piel is three times in the Book of Esther, to ordain by a Law: Which clearly saith that the Covenant of Works was a work of justice and such a time God set to Adam, so as to the end he was to run it out, Hyeron●▪ Maledictus qui non permanet. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Chald. Para. Qui non permanserit. Syria. Versio. Maledictus qui non per●●iceri●. Arab. Versio. Qui non confirmabit. B●za, Gal. 3.10. Qui non firmarit▪ Magna vis Verbi Jakim. Pagn●. & Ari. Montanus, Qui non statuerit. but how long he was a viator or traveller in his course of obedience no man knows CHAP. XXIII. Whether faith as lively and true, or faith as continuing to the end, be the condition of the Covenant of Grace? THese, who in all points▪ as in this, make this new Covenant a Covenant of Works, contend that faith as enduring to the end, must be the condition of the new Covenant. 1. Because the promise of the reward. 2. The reward is given to him that endures to the end. And this faith (say they) is the adequat and compleat-condition of the Covenant of Grace as full and consummate obedience to the end in degrees and parts. 2. But faith as lively and sincere is the condition of the Covenant, the nature and essence of this faith is to continue to the end, but continuance to the end is an accident all condition of this only essential condition of the Covenant, faith quae, which endures to the end, but not quâ aut quatenus, as it endures to the end is that which saves us and justifies us as the condition of the Covenant. 1. Faith as lively units us to Christ and justifies whether it be come to the full perfection or not. Otherwise 1. no man should be engrafted in Christ as branches in the Vine Tree, no man partakers of the Divine nature, no man quickened, but he that dies in final believing: Where●s, Joh. 5.24. he that believeth before his final continuance to the end, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Faith as lively, not as enduring to the end the condition of the new Covenant. hath passed from death to life and shall never come to condemnation. And in this is the difference of the condition of the Covenant of Works, that Adam had no right to life by one or two the most sincere acts and highest in measure, except he continue, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (as the Law saith, Deut. 26.27. Gal. 3.10.) to the end, otherwise at the first act of obedience perfect in degrees and parts, God behoved by Covenant (except the Lord should break the first Covenant himself, before man sin, which is blasphemous) to have given him confirming grace and the reward of life; but the condition of the Covenant of Grace is that, He that believes, Joh. 3.36. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is not condemned, yea is freed from all condemnation, Rom. 8.1. and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 hath life being really united as the member to the head, as the branch to the tree, mystically, as the wife to the husband, legally, as the debtor and the surety becomes one person in Law, the sum one and not two. 1 Joh. 5.11. And this is the witness that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he hath given us life eternal, and this is in the Son▪ 12. He that hath the Son hath life: He that believeth hath the Son dwelling in his heart by faith, Eph. 3.17. 2. Faith, before it come to seed and full harvest brings solid peace and comfort and saveth: Faith in the first lively act saves & justifies. So Christ to the blind man, Luke 18.42. thy faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, hath saved thee, not a bare miraculous faith, but that which apprehends remission of sins, as he speaks to the woman who did wash his feet with tears, Luke 7.50. and to the paralytic man, Mat. 9.2. seeing their faith, be of good cheer, go in peace, thy sins are forgiven. If they be but forgiven conditionally, so they believe to the end, whereas they may fall away. 1. What comfort and good cheer? 2. What peace being justified by faith, Rom. 5.1? 3. What glory in tribulation, Rom. 5. have they more than Judas the son of perdition? What Covenant of life and of peace are we in? What difference between our Religion and the Religion of Cicero, Seneca, and of all Pagans, if Christ furnish not to us solid unshaken help and consolation? And what a trembling hope have they that they be, and are to fear they shall be in the condition of Apostate Angels to morrw? What saith then Christ, Mat. 9.22. Mark 5.34. Mark 10.52. Luk. 8.58. Luk. 5.20, 24. Mark 5.34. Mark 9.24. yea and much more saith the Holy Ghost of our case, even of everlasting consolation, 2 Thessal. 2.16. strong consolation, Hebr. 6.18. all comfort, 2 Cor. 1.4. lively hope, 1 Pet. 1.4. Heb. 6.18, 19 then Heathens can say, Nay otherwise not so much, for they promise not so much. 3. Our lively faith is to believe our perseverance in lively faith as promised to us, Jer. 32.39, 40. Isai. 54.10. Isai. 59.20, 21. Joh. 10.27, 28. Joh. 4.14. 1 Pet. 1.3, 4, 5. Joh. 11.26, 27. As we believe life eternal, and that purchased by the merit of Christ's death, the one as well as the other, than faith as final cannot be the condition; And who can think that God commands faith in God Immanuel in the Covenant of Works? But faith in God Immanuel to the end is not commanded in the Covenant of Works, but only in the Covenant of Grace. 4. Faith justifies and saves as sincere, be it great or small: but if it justify not and save not, but as it endures to the end, than no man is completely justified and saved and united to Christ, until he die. Since faith (as all other graces in a child of God) is imperfect and still growing, 2 Pet. 3.18. and we are to pray, Lord increase our faith, none shall be justified and saved, but he that hath the greatest faith, if faith only, which endures to the end, be the condition of the Covenant, and such a faith as groweth and endures to the end: For take one who for twenty years believeth, the first two years he being united to Christ, hath right to Christ, Joh. 15.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Joh. 17.21, 22. Joh. 14.16. Joh. 16.7, 8, 13. Joh. 4.14. Joh. 7.37, 38, 39 he shall not be judged, not condemned, hath passed from death to life, shall never die, Joh. 3.36. 1 Joh. 5.11, 12. Joh. 4.24. Joh. 11.25, 26. than should he die the end of the first year of his believing, by the Scripture, he must be saved, else he must be damned, who yet died in true faith and yet never fell away, which were strange: But by this opinion either the remnant sound believing should be no condition of justification and salvation, because the man is justified and saved without it, and the faith of one or two years gave him right to Christ and saved him? Ergo the remnant faith is not a condition of the Covenant, but a persevering by grace promised and a persevering in that faith, as also by their way who make persevering faith the only condition of the Covenant of Grace 1. Faith and works are confounded: whereas to be saved by faith is to be saved before, and to be justified before we can do good works, and the jus or title to righteousness and salvation, coming only from the price and Redemption that is in Jesus Christ, is not more or less, and grows not more than the worth of the ransom of the blood called the blood of God, Acts 20.28. does grow, and it is to be justified by grace and by faith, and then works come in as the fruit of our justification and salvation, How boasting is excluded by grace. Eph. 2. Ye are not saved by works, lest any man should boast, in a righteousness of his own, coming from no merit of Christ, which buyeth determinating grace, and indeclinably leads and bows the will; Otherwise we may boast, that is, glory in the Lord, who worketh allour works for us, Psal. 34.2. Isa. 41.16. Isa. 26.12. The salvation and righteousness is the gift of God. What then shall be the room of works? He answers, No room at all as causes of justification and salvation, by an excellent antanaclasis, Boidius Comment. Eph. 2. as learned Trochrig: for he answers, We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus to good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them. Then by grace we have the full right to righteousness and salvation by the ransom of blood, which is Christ's. Papists and Arminians dare not bring in Evangelick works or faith as an Evangelic work here, though they be too hold. 2. Being once made the creation of God in Christ, and having obtained right by the blood of Christ to salvation, we walk by his grace in good works as leading us to the possession of the purchased inheritance. 3. The Authors of this stand for the Apostasy of the Saints, and they cannot eschew it who make this final faith▪ that takes in in its essence good works as the soul of it or charity (as Papists say) as the form of it, the only condition of the Covenant. Quest. But is not life eternal given and promised only to faith which continues to the end? Ans. Faith is considered two ways. In its nature. 2. In its duration and▪ existence. As to the former, saving faith is of that nature that it is apt to endure, it hath a sort of immortality, so the promise in titulo & jure, is made to that faith only which is of that nature that it must endure to the end, and the promise of life and remission is not made to a saving faith under the accident of enduring to the end, or for the years, suppon thirty or forty years, or eight hundred years, or above, that Adam or the Patriarches lived in the state of believing, for a faith of some hours only shall save the repenting thief as well as a faith of many years. And 2. life eternal in the possession is promised and given only to the faith that continues to the end, not because of the duration because a longer enduring faith hath merit, but that is by accident, in regard of the right to life and because God hath commanded persevering in faith, life is given only in possession to such a faith as endures, but we cannot say that the accidental endurance and existence of faith for so many years doth save and justify, as the living so many years makes a Child an heir to a great estate, for his being born the eldest son, makes him his father's heir. CHAP. XXIV. What faith is required in the Gospel. THere is a legal faith, a duty commanded, the object of which is twofold. 1. Truth's relating to the mind revealed and to be revealed. So Adam had a habit or habitual power to believe the Law and the Gospel upon supposition, it should be revealed. As a whole man believes skill in his Physician to prevent diseases ere they come, and to remove them, when come. It's folly to say Adam stood in need, before he fell, of a supernatural power to believe Evangelic truths, if he believed God to be true, he had such a power as to believe all was true, that God should reveal. 2. Adam had a faith of dependency, to rely upon God in all possible evils feared. 2. The promise of life is not made to Law-faith more than to Law-love, or Law-fear, or Law-desire, more than to any other, How faith saves not according to the dignity of its act. but the promise is made to Evangelick-faith that lays hold on CHRIST as our righteousness. But for obeying the Commands Adam was to live, Gal. 3.13. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in them, by doing them, Ezek. 20.11. As Lavater, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Shindlerus notat in, cum, propter. Calv. come. Ezek. 20.11. Nulla igitur est in eo absurdit●s si homines vi●ant hoc est mereantur ex pacto vitam ●ternam: Sed ●i quis●legem servat sequetur eum non opus habere Christi gratia. there is no absurdity if it be said men shall live, that is merit by free paction, life eternal: but then (saith Calvine) if a man keep the Law, he needs not the Grace of Christ. Obj. If faith be imputed, as it lays hold on Christ's Righteousness, it must be the meritorious cause of Justification and by its inherent dignity, for there is nothing more essential to faith, then to lay hold on Christ's Righteousness. Ans. If faith were imputed as righteousness according to the act of laying hold on Christ, it were true, but the act of faith is not imputed, but that which faith lays hold on, it being an instrument to wit, the Righteousness of Christ, it is not an act of believing saith a Jesuit. And though they say the works Evangelick are from the habit of grace, so was Adam a patient, when God concreated his Image, and habitual righteousness in him. But Arminians and Jesuits do not say, nor dare not, that predeterminating Grace is from Christ's merits, Toletus, Rom. 3. Adverte fidem non habere ex se officaciam ullam ut actus quidam, noster est, remitten di & reconciliandi▪ sed virtutem totam procedere ex objecto ipso, nempe, Christo cujus virtutem & meritum disposuit Deus per fidem in ipsum applicare peccatori ad justificandum. The Adversaries exclude not Law-boasting. therefore yet the sinner may more boast then Adam, and say I have justified myself by the acts of freewill which is indifferent and from under all the bowing and determining or swaying of the Grace of Christ, for the freewill should have so whether Christ had died or not died. CHAP. XXV. Q. WHether is Christ's Righteousness imputed and made ours, because we believe and apprehend it ours; or do we believe, because it is ours first before we believe? A twofold imputation of Christ, one legal, another Evangelic. Ans. There is a twofold imputation, one legal, another which for Doctrines cause we call application or real (though the legal imputation be also real; but not to us as the former) the Lord's act of laying the iniquity of us all upon Christ, Isa. 53.6. and the Lords making him sin for us, that is a sacrifice for sin, 2 Cor. 5.21. evinces necessarily the truth of this, the former imputation. For 2 Cor. 5.21. God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself, not imputing their trespasses unto them. If it be expounded of actual reconciliation of persons, it may say something, for the other imputation, but the other imputation is clear, Rom. 4.3. Abraham believed God, and it was counted to him for righteousness, v. 7. Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven and whose sins are covered, v. 8. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth not sin, v. 9 Faith (that is, that which faith believed, as hope is put for the thing hoped for, Col. 1.5. Rom. 8.24. was imputed to Abraham for righteousness, though Gomarus give another exposition, to wit, that by faith or the act of believing we obtain this to be reputed righteous, and it suits better with the Text. And as to the former imputation, God could not in justice wound Christ for our transgressions, nor bruise him for our iniquities, nor could the Lord break him, nor deliver him to the death for us all, except God had both made him the sinner, that is, imputed and reckoned him the sinner in Law (for intrinsically and inherently he was not the sinner but holy, harmless, etc.) and laid our debts upon him, Isa. 53.6. and except he had been willing to have been counted the sinner, and had said (thou hast given me a body, here am I, to do thy will, Psal. 40.7. Heb. 10.6, 7.) this reckoning of Christ to be the sinner is not only in the eternal decree, but also a laying of our iniquities upon him in time, Isa. 53.6. or a dealing with him in Law in punishing him as the sinner. And 2. by using the humane nature as an instrument of our Redemption on the Crosse. Antinomians take this imputing of our sins to Christ, The mistake of Antinomians▪ and reckoning Christ to be the sinner, to be the justifying of the sinner, which is a gross mistake; for so without believing all that Christ died for should be justified upon the Crosse. But the Scripture is so far from ascribing Justification to any but to a believer, that it saith Abraham's faith was imputed to him for righteousness. Now the faith of multitudes for whom Christ died when he suffered on the Cross, is a very nothing: Many are not born, and a nothing or a non ens cannot be counted for righteousness. It is to be observed that payment made by the surety absolveth the debtor, so as the Law, except it be the general Law of gratitude, requireth no act of love, of faith, of service from the debtor, nor doth the Law of suretyship in its essence and nature require that the Creditor, & sub eo titulo should pay the homage of faith, Obedience to the surety. Christ is by a special Law. indeed when the Creditor is both the Creditor and the offended Party, and also the supreme Lawgiver GOD, he may require of the captives the obedience of faith. So would justice, which saith, we should hurt none, give to every man his own, press, that the debtor repay to the surety, so far as he is able to make up his losses, but to pay the obedience of faith as a part of the ransom due to offended Justice, is no Gospel-Law, nor any part thereof, nor can it bea● truth, except we deny the real satisfaction made by Christ, which both Papists do weaken when they mix the merit of faith therewith, and Socinians deny. 4. The satisfaction performed upon the Cross for sinners, though it be for a certain particular number, determined of God, & quoad numerum numerantem, & quoad numerum numeratum, both as touching the number, so many, not all and every one, and such persons, by head, name, birth, etc. Yet it is not the justifying of me, or John, or Paul, for I, nor no man can know that Christ's satisfaction stands for you or me, by name and person, while first I or you believe, because it is the hid Decree of God. 3. Nor is this legal imputation beleevable, nor is it revealed, as ●t is terminated to single persons, to me or to you, until by faith we apprehend it. 5· But the imputation of application is that in which our justification standeth. And the faith by which as by an instrument we are justified, presupposeth three unions, Faith presupposeth three unions, & maketh the fourth. and maketh a fourth union. It presupposeth an union, 1. Natural. 2. Legal. 3. federal. 1. Natural, that Christ and we are not only both mankind, for CHRIST and Pharaoh, Judas the traitor and all the sons of perdition are one, specie & naturâ, true men, but one in brotherhood. He assuming the nature of man with a special eye to Abraham, Heb. 2.16. that is, to the elect and believers, for with them he is bone of their bone, and is not ashamed to call them brethren, Heb. 2.11, 12. Ps. 22.22. 2. It presuppones a Legal union between Christ and them, that God made the debtor and the Surety one in Law, and the sum one in so far as he laid our debts on Christ, Isa. 53.6. ● Cor. 5.21. 3. It presuppones an union federal, God making Christ our Surety, and he was willing to be our Surery, and to assume not only our nature in a personal union, but also our state, condition, and made our cause his cause, our sins his sins, not to defend them, nor to say Amen to them, as if we might commit them again, but to suffer the punishment due to them. And our faith makes a fourth union betwixt Christ and us, whether natural, as between head and members, the branches and the Vine Tree, or mystical, as that of the spouse and beloved wife, or artificial, or mixed between the imp and the tree. Or 4. Legal, between the Surety and the Debtor, the Advocate and the Client, or rather an union above all, is hard to determine, for these are but all comparisons, and this Christ prays for, Joh. 17.23. I in them, and thou in me, that they may be made perfect in one. 6. Now to the Question, as the Law condemns not a man, but him who is first a sinner, and an heir of wrath by nature in the first Adam, for the Law is essentially just: So God justifies not a man, but the man who, by order of nature, is first by faith in CHRIST, Rom. 5.18. Therefore 〈◊〉 by the offence of one (judgement) came upon all men unto condemnation, even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon a●l men (in Christ, as the other were in the first Adam) unto the justification of life: and so we must say, that all, ere they be justified, and before God impute faith to them, that is, Christ's believed righteousness to be theirs, must have faith and so believe, and so be one with Christ. And this imputed righteousness is ours, because we believe, and not until we first believe, and the other imputation goes before faith: So the faith of God's special mercy is two ways so called. 1. As it leaneth upon and apprehendeth God in Christ, for the obtaining of mercy and remission of sins, and imputed righteousness: So faith goes before justification, and we believe that our sins may be pardoned, and that our sins may not be imputed, and that we may be justified and freed from condemnation: so by the act of believing, righteousness is imputed to us. And thus justification and remission, i. e. relaxing of our persons from a state of eternal condemnation, as is meant, Rom. 8.1. are not the object of faith, but the effect and fruit of faith. 2. The faith of special mercy to me is considered as it apprehendeth and believeth, We believe that Christ's righteousness may be made ours, & because it is ours, we believe it to be ours also. or rather feelingly knoweth special mercy, imputation of Christ's righteousness now given to me, and as Christ hath paid a ransom for me, and satisfied justice for me, and so imputed righteousness and justification are the object of faith; Or rather the object of the sense of faith, which is most carefully to be observed. To answer Bellarmine's unsolide Argument, we either believe remission of sins past, or to come, etc. But remission is liberation from punishment eternal or temporal, but justification is freedom from the fundamental guilt-deserving punishment, and remission is a consequent thereof. Q. Whether or not, is Justification taken one and the same way in the Old and New Testament? Ans. The Apostle is clear, Rom. 4. where he proves both Jews and Gentiles are justified as Abraham and David. But 2. Justification by Grace hath not in iisdem apicibus in the same points, the same adversaries. Four or five sort of adversaries who caused various considerations of the question of justification in the Old and in the New Test. 1. Moses and the Prophets contend most with Ceremonial hypocrites, who sought righteousness much in Ceremonies, Washings, Sacrifices, New Moons, and also their own inherent godliness, Deut. 5. Deut. 7. Deut. 10. Deut. 11. Isai. 1.10, 11, 12, etc. Mic. 6.6, 7, 8. Psal. 50.7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18. Ps. 4.2, 3, 4, 5. 1 Sam. 15.22, 23. Isa. 66.1, 2, 3, 4, 5. Jer. 7.1, 2, 3,— 21, 22, 23. 2. Paul had other Adversaries, Rom. ch. 3. ch. 4. ch. 5. ch. 9 ch. 10. especially Antinomians, who drew the Doctrine of free Justification by Grace to licentious looseness, than we may sin, if so and so, we be justified (said they) then is the Law of none effect, Rom. 6.1. But his chief Adversaries, on the other extreme, were men that stood much for Justification by the works of the Moral Law: And Paul, Rom. 3. proves that all, Jews, Gentiles, David, Abraham, could be justified neither by works of Nature nor of Grace, and casts down the Jews righteousness by Law-doing, Rom. 9 Rom. 10. 3. There were a third Class of Adversaries to free Justification, Galatians, seduced and false Apostles, who contended for Justificatication by Circumcision and the necessity of keeping the Ceremonial Law, if they would be saved, Act. 15.1, 2, 3, 4, etc. Gal. 2. Gal. 3. Gal. 4. Gal. 5. ch. 6. Who mixed the Gospel and Moses his Law, and Paul proves, Gal. 3. that we are not justified by the works of the Moral Law, for that Law, Deut. 26.27. involves all that omit the least duty of the Law, Gal. 3.10, 11, 12, 13. under a curse, and Christ was made a curse for us. And Paul proves in the general, we are justified by neither the works of the Moral, nor of the Ceremonial Law. 4. James had to do with another gang of loose livers, the Gnostics, who contended for justification by a bare nominal faith without love or good works. And James proves that we are justified before men and to ourselves by faith working by love, and not by a dead faith. 5. John contends much for real and speaking marks of justification and conversion, against dead Professors void of love to the Brethren. Q. 3. What is the dominion of the Law over a sinner? A. It is the legal power to condemn all such as are under the Law, as a Covenant of Works; as marriage is dissolved, if either of the parties be dead: So Rom. 7.4. Ye are dead to the Law through the body of Christ, and it is not every commanding power that Paul, Rom. 7. denies to the Law, but a Lordly dominion, such as Lords of life and death have and exercises, Of the dominion of the Law. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and we are dead to the Law through the body of Christ, which mortification or dying is not understood subjective, as if it were in us, but legally and objectively in Christ, because Christ in his body on the tree did bear our sins, 1 Pet. 2.24. and was made a curse for us, in our place, Gal. 3.13. For Christ (saith Ambrose, Ambro· Mori legi est vivere Deo, quia lex dominatur peccatoribus cui ergo dimittuntur peccata is moritur legi, boc est liberatur a Lege per corpus Christi, hoc consequimur beneficium 〈◊〉 tradens enim corpus suum Servator, mortem vicit & peccatum damnavi●. clearing the place) giving his body as a Saviour, overcame death and condemned sin: Hence these two words, Rom. 7.4. Wherefore ye also my brethren, are become dead to the Law. Gal. 2.19, For I through the Law am dead to the Law, that I might live unto God; As the death to the Law is legal, I am no more under Law-condemnation than a dead man, so the living to God is a Law living to God on a Law-absolution (as the absolved malefactor cleared of a capital crime which might have cost him his head, liveth, and so is set free) so there is another most emphatic word which insinuats that Christ is dead to the Law, as Paul was, for after Paul saith, Gal. 2.19. I through the Law am dead to the Law, he adds, v. 20. I am crucified with Christ legally, that is, as Christ was crucified for sin by the sentence of the Law, so I am crucified with him. Rom. 6.8. Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him, which is not only to be expounded of mortification and inherent newness of life, but also of legal dying with Christ: For Christ died no death but legal death, there is no inherent mortification or slaying of a body of sin in him as in us, though from his death there also flow a● merited and inherent personal mortification in us, for it is added, v. 9 knowing that Christ being raised from death dieth no more, death hath no more dominion over him, than Christ, by Law, cannot die twice, so Christ being once crucified, the Law and death, which had once dominion over him, hath now no more dominion over him. Then, first, as Christ died a Law-death and was under death, because under the Law, so are we legally in him freed from the Laws dominion, and death following thereupon. 2. As Christ defies the Laws dominion and death, Christ Mystical, Christ & believers are freed from the law-dominion. so do we. 3. As Christ cannot twice satisfy the Law by dying (for then the first had not been sufficient) so neither can we ever be under Law-death and Law-condemnation, for we was once in Christ legally condemned and crucified in our Surety and so cannot suffer in our persons legal condemnation and legal death. 4. As Christ is dead to the dominion of the Law and death having once died and come out from under both, so are we dead and come legally out in him, which answereth the several tentations we can be under in Christ. Obj. But then may we not sin, because we are freed from the dominion of the Law and death? as Rom. 6. he had said, ye are not under the Law, but under Grace, v. 15. What then? Shall we sin, because we are not under the Law, but under Grace? God forbid, ver. 16, 17. He answers from an absurd, than we that are ransomed by Christ, should not be our ransome-payers servants, but the servants of sin. Now except the meaning had been, we are not under the Law, that is, the Laws dominion and the Laws condemning power, there had been no place for such an Objection, nay, nor any shadow; but the true Objection is, we are not under the Law to be thereby condemned and eternally punished, therefore what is the hazard of sin? We may sin at will, there is no fear of hell. Paul answers not from that evil of servile fear that followeth sin, but from the woeful ingratitude to our ransome-payer. The Antinomian objection charged upon is answered by him. O than we should not be under Christ and the directing light and rule of our Lord Ransomer, if we sin at will, but still servants and slaves to sin and so not redeemed, by which we gather that there is two things in the Law. 1. The condemning power of it. 2. The directive commanding power: As to the former, Christ by being condemned and suffering a cursed death for us, took that wholly away. We are not then under the Law as condemning, yea neither as saving and justifying, for than should we be married to the Law and under conjugal power as wife and husband living together, which Paul refutes, Rom. 2.1, 2, 3, 8. (2.) There is a directive commanding power that CHRIST takes in hand, and commands us to obey our Lord Ransomer, and we should sin against his love, if we should live loosely, because we are freed from condemnation. There is a twofold dominion of sin. Hence also there is a twofold dominion of sin, one legal to condemn us eternally, another (as it were) physical to keep us under the superlative power of lusts, if Christ had not died, we had been under both. Q. 4. What is meant by the oldness of the letter in which we are not to serve? Rom. 7. A. He means the idle, fruitless, and bare knowledge of the Law in external Discipline, that reigns in an unrenewed man, by which he remaining in nature under the Law, foments an opinion pharisaical (for he points at the false and literal glosses of the Law given by Pharisees and refuted by Christ, The oldness of the letter, and the newness of the Spirit. Mat. 5.) Of merit, external worship, ceremonies without any inward heart-renovation, to which is opposed the newness of the spirit, or true new Evangelic obedience and holiness wrought by the Spirit. Object. Is not the letter of the Law a bondage, since we are freed in heaven from the letter and from awing threatening? Ans. To serve God is liberty, not bondage, Psal. 119.45. Rev. 22.3. compared with ver. 5. serving of God and reigning suit well together. See Luk. 1.74, 75. Joh. 8.34, 35, 36. Rome 6.16, 17. but there is a threefold bondage of the letter. 1. Accidental, in regard of our corruption, the service is wearisome to unrenued nature: This we are saved from in CHRIST, not fully in this life, but it comes not from the Law which is spiritual. 2. A bondage to the dominion of the condemning Law. 3. There is a bulk of Ordinances, hearing, reading, praying, meditating, repenting, receiving of the seals, we are freed from the one in this, and shall be freed from the other in the life to come. Q. What is the dignity of the Gospel above the Law? A. By the hearing of faith, that is, of the Gospel we receive the Spirit, Gal. 3. though the Law in the letter be also spiritual and lively and seek of us the lost Image of GOD by way of commanding, yet there is no promise of the Spirit, made in the Law neither gifts nor grace, and both are given by the Preaching of the Gospel. 2. No miracles are wrought by the Law to confirm the Doctrine of the Law, No gifts nor grace can be given by the Law. for it is not new, nor is the gift of miracles given as a reward of Law-obedience, miracles in genere causae finalis, are wrought to avenge Pharaoh and the Egyptians Law-obedience; but the miracles are wrought by the Name of Jesus, Act. 4. and for the confirming of the Gospel, and for the good of the Church: See Gal. 3.1, 2, 3. CHAP. XXVI. Of the property of the Covenant of Grace, the perpetuity thereof. Quest. Wherein stands the eternity of the Covenant of Grace? And what other properties there be of the Covenant? How the Covenant of works is eternal. Ans. The Law and Covenant of Works is a rule of everlasting righteousness, and so may be called an everlasting righteousness containing precepts of the Law of nature intrinsically good, such as to know love, fear, trust in him as the only true God: and in this sense it is an eternal Covenant. But 1. it is not eternal in the positives of the second, and fourth, and fifth Commands, the way of worship, the means, as Ceremonies, Sabbath, Magistracy, and such like, which are not to continue in the life to come, How the Covenant of works is not eternal and so neither faith nor hope in God through Christ, 1 Cor. 13.13. Rom. 8.24, 25. 2 Cor. 5.7. nor a Temple, nor Ordinances, nor the Kingdom of Christ as now dispensed, are to be the binding rule for eternity to such as are confederates of the Covenant of Grace, Rev. 21.22, 23. 1 Cor. 15.24. though more of the smell and remnants of the Covenant of Grace, of the Lamb, of praises to him who was slain, Rev. 5.9, 11, 14. be in the life to come, then of the Law-Covenant, in regrad of our standing in a state of glory for evermore by the Mediator, to keep the nature in an eternal union, for evermore, by the Lord Christ his being clothed with our nature, glorified for ever, Rev. 3.21. Rev. 5. Rev. 7. Rev. 20. Rev. 21. Ch. 22. And in that we shall be ever with Christ God-Man, There is more of the Covenant of grace in the life to come then of the Covenant of works. Luk. 23.42. Joh. 17.24. 1 Thess. 5. 2 Cor. 5.8. Phil. 1.23, 17. in an eternal state of glory, though not in regard of an advocation and intercession for fallen sinners. As 1 Joh. 2.1, 2. or of praying that our faith fail not, when winnowed, as Luk. 22.31, 32. In a word there is a mediation of the triumphing reign for the standing of the glorified nature, and a mediation for the reconciling of, and interceding for of sinners. The latter must cease when the Kingdom is given up by the Son to the Father, 1 Cor. 15.24. The former is eternal and shall never cease. 2. The Law as a possible and standing way of justifying and saving sinners is not eternal, but is now ceased to all flesh, the Man Christ only excepted, Other differences between the Covenant of Works, and that of Grace. but the Covenant of Grace stands as the only way under heaven, by which sinners may be saved, and after the Covenant of Grace there is no dispensation, which Libertines and Familists call more spiritual without Ordinances and a way as they speak of all spirit, of pure spirit. 3. The Covenant of Grace is eternal, in regard in it there is promised actual grace, and continual influences of grace from the Head Christ, the High Priest, to keep the confederates in obedience and in perseverence to the end. And no such influences either for the habit of grace or for the continuated acts thereof, are promised in the Covenant of Works, in regard Adam a man, and poor men in him do undertake to obey. Whereas Christ-Man binds and undertakes as head Covenanter and Surety for all the under confederates, and for sinners in the Covenant of Grace. Which difference is much to be observed, between the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace: And for that cause the Covenant of Works is, 1. more independent, and requires more of man's strength and less grace than the other. 2. It stands more by precepts, less by promises, having only one promise of a reward and hire to the obeyer, and consists all of precepts, the other though it want not precepts, especially, it is his command that we believe in the Son of God, yet stands most by promises, and this Covenant gets the name of a promise or the promise, Acts 2.39. Rom. 8.9. compared with Acts 3.25. Gen. 12.3. 3. The Covenant of Works hath more of hire, more of man, of nature, of earning and working, and more of man's Covenant, where he binds for himself, and the other party for himself, without the mutual help of any of the confederate parties. 4. The Covenant of Grace is, thus, also eternal, in that the buried and dead parties Abraham, The perpetuity of the Covenant of Grace in the life to come. Isaac and Jacob are still in the Covenant of Grace, and there remains a Covenant-union between Christ and their rotten flesh sleeping in the dust, which is not an union by faith, or by any actings obediential of dead men, as is most evident, if we compare our Saviour's words, Matth. 22.32. with the Lord speaking out of the Bush to Moses, Exod. 3.6. and God is not the God of the dead, but of the living, no● is the rising of the body promised in the Covenant of Works, nor is there a standing Law-Covenant between the Lord and dead Abraham requiring the condition of faith from buried men. Only there is a warrant to say that the Covenant is everlasting▪ because it goes beyond time, and stands with the dead in Christ, Matth. 22.32. (2.) Because two great promises of the Covenant, the rising of the body and life everlasting, are fulfilled after time is ended, Joh. 6.38, 39 1 Thess. 4.14, 16, 17. and add to this the public owning and confessing of the Saints before the Father and the holy Angels; which is public remission and declared justification before the world of Elect Men and Angels, Luke 12.8. Matth. 10.32. (3.) Because after all these, to walk among them as their God and dwell among them, Rev. 7.15, 16, 17. when they are clothed in white Robs, and are before the throne serving him night and day, and that the Lord should be their God, Rev. 21.7. after they have overcome all temptations, is fulfilled eternally in heaven. Now for God to walk among a people and be their God is to be a Covenanting God to them, as is evident from 2 Cor. 6.16. Leu. 26.11, 12. Jer. 32.38. Zech. 13.6. 2. The second and principle property of the Covenant is the graciousness and freedom thereof, therefore is it made with sinners, without hire or price, Every thing in this Covenant is free Grace. and every article and lithe of it is Grace. 1. The whole Gospel is the word of Grace, Acts 20.32. Col. 1.6. the Bargain a paction of Grace, and the new Covenant, Heb. 8.8. for Grace is a new thing, and nature an old thing, the condition of the Covenant, to believe is a gift of grace, Phil. 1.29. the mercies bestowed and promised are all of free grace, for we are justified by his grace, Rom. 3.24. freely, and are saved and called with a holy calling, not according to our works, but according to his own purpose and grace, 2 Tim. 1.9. For by grace (saith Paul) are ye saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, Eph. 2.8. and the new creation is framed in us of grace. But God who is rich in mercy, for his great love wherewith he loved us, even when we were dead in sins, hath quickened us together with Christ, Eph. 2.4, 5. and the new heart promised, Ezek. 36.26. is given upon this account, v. 32. Not for your sakes do I this, saith the Lord, be it known unto you, be ashamed and confounded for your own ways, O house of Israel. We have remission of sins freely of his grace, Eph. 1.7. In whom we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of his grace, Col. 1.14. Perseverence is promised of free grace, Jer. 31.35. Jer. 32.39, 40. Isa. 54.10. as life eternal is the gift of God through Jesus Christ our Lord, Rom. 6.23. and every influence of grace is of free grace, Phil. 1.13. Joh. 15.5. and CHRIST the Surety of the Covenant, of freegrace and love, is given, Joh. 3.16. to taste of death for every man, Heb. 2.9. CHAP. XXVII. Of cases of Law-fear, and Gospel-faith: How a child of God fears Law-threatning. FRom these properties flow divers cases touching the stability of the Saints, their perseverance, their temptations, their standing in grace. 1. If they cannot fall away, who are thus seated in the Covenant, is not free will left to much looseness of security? Answ. Not at all: For a principle of Godly fear is fixed in the heart, and so in free will, never to depart from God, Jer. 32.39, 40. And where this Godly awe is, the heart is in a Godly trembling and fear, and dare not be loose, wanton, and secure to fear nothing, but fears always, Prov. 28.14. and fears and trembles at the Lord and his goodness, Host 3.5. A Godly heart trembles more for fear of grace and the debt of grace, then of justice and wrath; and fears sin more, as it is against the bands of grace, and against Christ, and Gospel-love who can save, then as it is against Law the Lawgiver, and him who eternally destroys. And so the awe of heaven hath a stronger impression than the terror and awe of hell. Quest. 2. How can the fear of falling away, and the faith of perseverance absolutely promised and absolutely given, consist together? How fear of law-fear acts upon a believer. Ans. The Law-fear of falling away, and the Gospel faith of persevering are not consistent. The fear legal of the least sin is a fear of hell and of eternal wrath to be irrecoverably inflicted, but because the person is under grace, the believer cannot fear this fear, except the Law-fear be let out against him as a temptation, but it is not his obliged duty so to fear. 2. The Law-fear upon a believer is conditional, and not absolute, as he fears hell and falling away, jure, as his deserving, if God should enter in judgement with him, and if he were not in CHRIST: But he is obliged to a Gospel-faith which lays hold on Christ, righteousness, and deliverance from condemnation, and if Christ and interest in him be hid from him, and nothing on but Law-fear, that is a trial, not a duty of Law-fear. * So the faith of Joseph & Mary, that Christ their Son shall be great shall sit▪ in the Throne. of DAVID his father & shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever, Luk. 1.32, 33. did well consist with that holy and obediential fear of fleeing into Egypt, for fear that Herod should murder that hopeful young King in his cradle▪ Math. 2. But there is a Godly▪ Law-fear, or a Gospel-Law-fear, which is a Godly horror conditional for that which is never to be inflicted, but yet according to deserving may be inflicted, and this is the terror of the Lord, which breedeth Gospel persuasion, 2 Cor. 5.11. and so may well stand with Gospel-faith and assurance of deliverance from falling away and of being established and confirmed to the end. As a child in the father's arm threatened to be cast over a sharp Rock in the Sea, may have horror and fear, and cry out for fear, and yet believe so his father's compassion as he will not throw him in the Sea, because the threatening is ordained not to be exercised, but that the child may so much the more thrust his arms about his father's neck. Quest. 3. What is the best victory over temptations from such fears? Ans. As in all temptations, so here, What is to be done under tentations. overcoming is attended with precious promises, which are to be read, Rev. c. 2.7.17.26, 27, 28. c. 3.5.12.21. Rev. 21. For 1. Fevers of the Law that have no kindly cools, and relenting by the promises of the Gospel, tend not to the strengthening of the life of God, but only when they leave a standing self loathing, and loving of Christ. 2. It argues the strength of faith, after many, yea six foils to stand; as the Army that is broken six times, yet rallies and draws up again, is often at the seventh time victorious. 3. Such as stand against a strong and mighty tentation, b●ing pressed out of measure, above strength, as Paul was, 2 Cor. 1.8, 9 in so much (saith he) that we despaired even of life. But we had the sentence of death in ourselves, do prevail to the being taught of God, not to trust in ourselves, but in God who quickens the dead: For here there comes real strength from fight: As he who, by strength of nature, lives and convalesceth after a running boatch and strong pestilence, goes through pesthouses and is never infected again. So the worthies by faith who overcame strong temptations, Heb. 11. to the end, keep the fields and prevail till death. 4. Godly fear of self-weaknesse and trembling at sin which may darken the feelings of received mercies and sweet influences addeth strength. Something of that is here, 2 Cor. 12.10. when I am weak, then am I strong. 5. A fixed peace in assurance of deliverance from condemnation, and quietness in believing pardon and righteousness in Christ, ought always to be, as touching the state of Justification: for the questioning of this in a believer, if Antinomians will yield to truth, is contrair to faith, and no warrantable assurance. But 2. a fixed peace in David, immediately after bloodshed and adultery, before believing of the remission of these particular sins be, What way a fixed peace is in the children of GOD. in the Lord's order, renewed, is security, and not Godly peace. Psal. 32.3. While I kept silence, my bones waxed old, through my roaring all the day. 5. I acknowledged— and thou forgavest the iniquity of my sin. Psal. 51.1, 2, 3, etc. prove this. But it may be said, doth not this holy feeling of, and trouble for the particular heinous guiltiness, brangle the fixed peace and the persons faith and confidence that he is in a state of justification? Ans. Not at all: A believer ought not to complain of a state of non justification, but aught to complain of a state of non sanctification for the outcries of the child of God, Rom. 7.24. under, not a finger, or an arm, or a leg, but a body of sin: O wretched man, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? are good, and much feeling of pain argues much life. And such as in this regard say, I thank God, I was plagued and pained, but now nothing ails me, I have peace, I am rich, I have need of nothing, Revel. 3.17. I am all whole, must be in a dangerous case. Indeed the complaining of want of justification and of the righteousness of God in a believer, and a raising of the foundation, as Psal. 31.22. Jonah 2.4. I am cast out of thy sight: are both false and bastard-feelings, and hasty unbelief: for this is a reflection upon, and a reproaching of the Office of the Healer of sinners▪ This is contrair to faith, and the former is a complaining of the body of sin that can hardly be slandered; so a complaining of self, and the feeling of inherent corruption weakens not, but strengthens faith. And complaining thus, and triumphing in a believed▪ justification, do well consort in Paul, Rom. 7.24. O wretched man, etc. v. 25. I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord: and Rom. 8.1. Then every feeling of sin is not contrair to faith, as Mr. Town and other Antinomians teach, some godly tender feeling foments' faith. Q. 6. How cometh it to pass that seldom feeling of sin wanteth unbeleef? Ans. Our looking, in a Legal, not in an Evangelic way, upon sin, Why feeling of sin, seldom wants unbeleef. doth occasion unbelief: for looking to the sickness of the sinner is but abused, when this use is made of it, that the question which Christ hath abundantly answered; Ah he hath not, who satisfied and paid my ransom, justified me also by the Redemption that is in him: but the strong body of sin which leads me captive, Rom. 7.23. doth also lead, rather misled me to doubt whether the ransom was sufficiently paid, and I sufficiently and freely, by his grace and the Redemption that is in Christ Jesus, justified, as Rom. 3.24. And because the sinner feels the stirring and too vigorous acting of a body of sin, which is his own work, he removes the foundation-stones laid by Christ, and questions the well done work of Christ, and thrusts in his sickle into Christ's harvest: which is upon the mater to say, Ah my sanctification is nought or small: Therefore Christ's satisfaction is weak, so the man, Often when the believer complains of his own sanctification, because of guiltiness lately acted, he also unbeleevingly complains of Christ his performed satisfaction, as if it were weak. laying the burden upon the wrong back, will take and pull off the burden that Christ in his own body did bear on the tree, as 1 Pet. 2.24. and wrestle under his own body of sin himself, and he thinks he will do the business better himself then Christ. This is that which Antinomians imput to us groundlessly, but it is our sinful weakness so to be troubled at the indwelling of a body of sin, as we doubt of and call in question the work of Justification and the satisfaction of Christ. But there is good cause why the sinner quarrel with himself and complain of a body of sin, and yet not only quarrel with Christ, but exalt Christ, and by faith close with the absoluteness of his gifted satisfaction and righteousness. And this is as easy by the Grace of God, as we see the more that a gracious soul abases himself, as one carnal and sold under sin, Rom. 7.14. as one in whom there dwells no good, as touching the flesh, v. 18. in whom sin dwells, v. 20. as one brought into captivity to the Law of sin, and a wretched man, 24. so much the more doth he exalt Christ the only deliverer, Rom. 7.25. Rom. 8.1, 23, 33, 34, 35. and why should not our blackness commend Christ's beauty, our deadness exalt his life, our sinful wretchedness his glorious office in saving, and our emptiness and dryness his fullness of the anointing who is all fullness? CHAP. XXVIII. Christ died not to blot out the sense of sin, but rather to quicken a Godly sense thereof. THe more of Christ and his sufferings be apprehended, the more Godly sense of sin, so far is Christ's death from bloting out all sense of sin: Christ by his death removes not sense of sin. For if sense of sin be all one with a simple reflecting knowledge, that we once sinned, than the Godly in this life from grace, not from the stirring of the Law, do both know and acknowledge what they were. 1 Tim. 1.13. I thank Christ Jesus our Lord, etc. I was before a blasphemer, and a persecuter, and injurious▪ but I obtained mercy. Tit. 3.3. We ourselves were also sometimes foolish, disobedient, etc. Yea the glorified cannot before the Throne sing the glory of the Lamb slain and the price of Redemption paid, Rev. 5▪ 12. to redeem them from sin, but there must be even in glory, this sense of their debt, though without heart break or sorrow. Then it cannot be a Doctrine of the Gospel that paying of our debt, and the ransom, doth score out of a gracious memory the counts of a paid debt: The more I know what Christ hath done, the more I should kiss and embrace the gracious surety, and these kisses of Glory, and that song, worthy is the Lamb, etc. say that grace and the faith of the price paid do enlarge rather the holy memory and sense of sin, then obliterate it. Hence the translated out of sense of grace, cast back their eye to the pit, the drudgery of bondage they were once in, Ep●. 2.3, 4, 5. Tit. 3.3, 4, 5. 1 Tim. 1.13, 14. with loving and praising the riches of grace. And must it not be good to read old counts, and weep for joy, and cast and dart up praises to him who is at the right hand of the Father, and sorrow for old debts, and love much him who freely pardons? 2. If sense of sin be taken for the unbelieving feeling of, and judging myself cast out of his sight and condemned, whereas yet I am in Christ, and it is God who justifies me, who is he shall condemn, Rom. 8.33, 34. We shall agree with Antinomians, this is indeed the hasty sense of unbeleef, Psal. 31.22. Jo●. 2.4. Hence let them be rebuked who say not that Christ in the Gospel, hath taken away this sense of sin. Yea many redeemed of the Lord, are weary and laden, but they render themselves weary▪ and then sinfully complain that Christ will not ease them. In which unconverted ones in the dead-throw are more to be justified than they, the one being under a real burden, and the spirit of the Law acting upon them, the other act the Law at their own hand, and will receive the spirit of bondage to fear again, whether it be reason or not. He is the less to be pitied, who casts himself with his own hand in prison. 3. There is a Gospel-sense of indwelling of sin bringing forth the mourning of the dove, and tears that are so innocent as they wrong not Christ, or his work of redeeming and justifying: Of this, Rom. 7.24. Christ, sure, takes not this away. Believers lodge a body of sin in them, as sighing patients and as captives half against their will, at least their renewed will, CHRIST died not to remove Gospel sense or any sense of sin flowing from a natural conscience does contradict this guest, Rom. 7.14, 15, 16, 17, 18, etc. 23, 24. It is sinful doctrine to say that CHRIST takes away this sense of sin. For 1. this is the very true tenderness and gracious smitings of heart under any guiltiness: As 1 Sam. 24.5. 2 Sam. 24.10. David's heart smote him after he had cut off the lap of Saul's garment, and numbered the people. 1 Joh. 3.20. Job 27.6. And in some it is the natural conscience accusing and challenging after sin is committed; now CHRIST came not to extirpate conscience, nor the power of feeling and discerning the obligation to wrath, that the conscience apprehendeth after sin is committed, nor the legal evil deserving of sin, nor the contrariety between it and the Law. 2. Christ by his death gives repentance and mourning for sin, Acts 5.31. Eze. 12.10, 11. (3.) Christ commends this, Jer. 31.18. I have surely heard Ephraim bemoaning himself. 2 King. 22.19. Because thine heart was tender— and thou hast wept before me, I have also heard thee, saith the Lord. Luk. 7.44. She hath washed my feet with tears. (4.) If Christ by his death should remove this, he should bring on, by his death, a heart passed feeling, and burnt with a hot iron, which is condemned, Eph. 4.19. 1 Tim. 4.2. (5.) It speaks a graceless rockiness of heart to sin, and not care for it, Act. 18.17, 18. Pro. 30.20. Far less would the Lord have us to dream that a Christian is annihilated and melted into God, where they leave off to know, will, desire, feel, act, or do any thing but God is all and all in this life, and that, to the eye of faith, though not to the eye of reason, all sense of sin is destroyed; this is a destroying and overturning of all, of Law, Gospel, of all humble walking with God, and removes all necessity of fearing, hoping, believing, praying, hearing, and changes us over into blocks. PART II. Of the Mediator of the Covenant. CHAP. I. Q. WHat room or place hath Christ the Mediator in the Covenants? A. The room of Christ in both Covenants. He hath place in the Covenant of Works as a satisfier for us. 2. As a doer and an obedient fulfiller thereof in all points. And he is Mediator and Surety of the Covenant of Grace. 2. The first Adam mars all, the second ADAM who makes all things new, mends all. The first Adam mars all, the second ADAM mends all. The first Adam was a public sort of stirresman, to whom was committed the standing and falling of all mankind, and in reference to man, the standing of Heaven, Earth, and Creatures in their perfection, and he spoiled all, put all things a-reeling. The second ADAM received in his arms the whole Creation that was a-falling for in him all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stand fast, Col. 1.17. And he bears up all by his mighty word, Heb. 1 3. He satisfied for our sins, and for our breach of the Covenant of Works. 2. He is a full doer and fulfiller of the Covenant of Works most perfectly, by doing. 1 Joh. 3.7. He who does righteousness is righteous: As he who suffers for the broken Law, fulfils the Law. Rom. 6.7. He that is dead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is freed, justified from sin, in the obligation of it to punishment. So Paul, vers. 8. If we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall live with him. This dying is to believe that he died for us, at least it excludes not that. And if we keep the Law, we are not obliged to suffer: for the Law does not oblige man in absolute sense, both to perfect doing and to perfect suffering copulatively, but to one of them. But if we be (legally) dead with Christ, How the Law doth oblige to both doing and suffering. (as his death so excellent doth exhaust sins punishment and is a perfect satisfaction therefore) we are freed or justified from sin, not to suffer or satisfy by suffering for it, as Rom. 8.3. For what the Law could not do, so that it was weak (by accident, not of itself) through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin condemned sin in the flesh. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the righteousness of the Law, the passive righteousness in suffering for the breach of the Law, might be fulfilled in us, 2 Cor. 5.2. And Isai. 53.5. But he was wounded for our transgressions, etc.— 6. The Lord laid upon him the iniquity of us all. But though some suffer, as the reprobate do, and suffer in this life the beginning of satisfactory judgement, yet are they not loosed from active obedience to the Law as the Law, though they cannot, having once sinned, be under the Law as a Covenant of Justification and life: nor is any flesh under that Covenant now. Q. What place hath Christ's righteousness here? Ans. Pareus with some others distinguish between the Righteousness of Christ's person, which contains his essential Righteousness, The righteousness of Christ's person and of his merit. as God, the habitual and actual conformity of the Man Christ, and the perfect holiness of the Man Christ. Such a High Priest became us, as is holy, harmless, etc. Heb. 7.26. And, The righteousness of his merit, in the satisfaction of his suffering, the satisfaction is the formal cause of our Justification which is counted ours: this latter righteousness is acquired, the former is essential. Now the active obedience of Christ falls under a twofold consideration. 1. As the Man Christ's perfect conformity to the Law of God, so as man he was obliged to do and suffer all that he did and suffered, Christ's active obedience, how it is meritorious for us. even to lay down his life for man. But had he been only man his righteousness had neither▪ been by condignity meritorious, no● yet satisfactory for us. But 2. The whole course of Christ's obedience from his birth to the grave, by doing and suffering, is to be considered as the doing and suffering of so excellent a person, his being born, his praying, preaching, dying, coming from a Person God-Man. Now the Law required not praying, preaching of God-man, the blood of God, or the dying of him who was God-Man. And so all these being both so excellent, and then so undue, have respect of satisfaction to God. 2. The active obedience of Christ & all that Christ did and suffered were performed by him in his state of humiliation: In which he was poor, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 8.9. for us, so also by the same ground a weeping man, hungry, thirsty, weary for us, made lower than the Angels by the suffering of death, Epist. David Parel▪ de justi. ch. activa & passive, 186 Heb. 2.9. Humbled by partaking of flesh and blood, because of the children, Heb. 2.14. Emptied himself for us, Ph. 2. This was, as Pareus well saith, perpetua quaedam passio & paena peccatorum nostrorum, fuit tota vita Christi: All these have a respect of punishment and suffering. For since Christ was both a viator and a comprehensor, and such a holy sinless person, he ought to have had the actual possession of the Crown of Glory from the womb, and so should have been free of weeping, hunger, thirst, weariness, groaning, sighing, sadness, persecution, reproaches, etc. all which adhered to all his active holiness, and therefore in that his actions were satisfactory passions. For satisfaction is defined a voluntary restoring of the equivalent, and as good in the place of what is taken away▪ and the good restored must be, Satisfactio est redditi● voluntaria equivalentis, alioquin indebiti, 〈◊〉 alii ex propriis bonis & non debitis. 1. Undue. 2. The proper good of the restorer, which agrees to the active and passive obedience of Christ. Obj. Then Christ's very weeping, and praying, being the weeping and praying of God-Man, might have been a perfect satisfaction for our sins; for Christ was God-Man in all his holy actions in the state of humiliation, as in his being crucified, and in his suffering? Ans. This doth not follow: Because the punishment of the breach of the Law, and not that only, but such a special punishment, by dying the first and second death, according to the threatening of the Law, Gen. 2.17. In the day that thou eatest thou shalt surely die: was required in the Law, and except the threatening of the Law be fulfilled, the Law is not fulfilled: And Paul, Gal. 3.13. Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the Law, being made a curse for us: for it is written, cursed be every o●e that hangeth on a tree. Now Christ's suffering the death of the cross the cursed death is that which makes him under the Law. Ergo, No satisfaction could be at all except Christ had died▪ because all the satisfaction of a surety might in Law have been refused, and the Lord might have eternally punished Adam & all his, in a Law-way in their persons, therefore there was need of a punishment agreed upon between God and the Mediator by a special Covenant, & this punishment must be satisfactory to the Law which required death Gen. 2.17. and so must Christ-God-man d●e. The Scripture never speaks of Christ's dying, but it speaks of this intrinsical end, that they should die to sin and live to God, for whom Christ died; now this end is not possible in Pagans who never hear, nor can hear the Gospel, therefore Christ died not for Pagans. there is a law-righteousness in suffering death. So Gal. 4.4. God sent forth his Son made of a woman, made under the Law. For what end? 5. To redeem them that were under the Law, that we might receive the Adoption of sons. How are we redeemed from under the Law? By blood, purchasing to us Justification. Rom. 3.24. Being justified freely by his Grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ, whom God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in his blood, to declare his righteousness for the remission of sins past: And redemption from the curse of the Law, and remission is ever ascribed to the blood of Christ dying, Rom. 3.24, 25. Ye are bought with a price, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 called a ransom of Christ's blood, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Matth. 20.28. 1 Tim. 2.6. Eph. 1.1.7. In whom we have redemption in his blood, the forgiveness of sins. Col. 1.14. In whom we have redemption through his blood, even the forgiveness of sins. Rom. 5.9. Being justified by his blood. 1 Pet. 1.18. Being redeemed by the blood of the Lamb unspotted and undefided. 1 ●oh. 1.8. The blood of Jesus Christ purgeth us from all sin. Rev. 5.9. And they sang a new song (to wit, the four Beasts and the four and twenty Elders)— for thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by thy blood. 1 Pet. 1.18. By his stripes (which he suffered in his death, Isa. 5.3.) we are healed. Rev. 1.5. To him that hath loved us, and washen us from our sins in his blood. For though all Christ's actions of God-man from the worth of the infinite person be meritorious, yet are they refuseable, yea a satisfaction by Covenant, which was the death of God-Man must be also. 2. The word also never speaks of Christ's dying for all, but it mentions Justification in his blood, Ro. 3.24, 25. Rom. 5.9. Yea the Scripture adds another end of Christ's death, to wit, forgiveness, Col. 1.14. Eph. 1.7. intercession at the right hand of GOD, 1 Joh. 2.1. that we may receive the Adoption of sons, Gal. 4.5. To make us Kings and Priests to God, Rev. 1.16. dying to sin, living to him, 1 Pet. 2.24. That he might bring us to God, 1 Pet. 3.18. The glorifying of God in our bodies, 1 Cor. 6.19, 20. Redeeming us from our vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. From this present evil world, Gal. 1.4. Sanctifying the people, Heb. 13.12. Heb. 10.8, 9, 10. All which the Lord must intend in Christ's death to Pagans, old and young, to all and every one of mankind to whom the Gospel could not come. And what authority have men to devise a redemption general, universal, from hell, and not from sin? 2. For life eternal and not for the giving of the Spirit, and for redemption from a vain conversation, and for sanctifying of the people also? 3. A redemption in Christ's blood, but no forgiveness of sins in his blood, not any non-imputation of sin, nor reconciliation of the world, 2 Cor. 5.15; 18? 4. A dying of the just for the unjust, but not to bring them to God; a redeeming of them, but not a redeeming of them out of every Kindred and Tongue, and People and Nation (for these People, Nations, and Tongues, were redeemed by this way, as well as they) and a washing of them in his blood, but no making of them Kings and Priests to God, a dying for all, but no living to him: These who teach that Christ died for all and every one, and made a Covenant of Grace with all & every one, and sends no more of the Gospel to all & every one, make the way of salvation more impossible under the second, then under the first Adam, contrair to 1 Pet. 1.18. Rev. 5.9. Rev. 1.5.5, 6. 2 Cor. 5.15? 5. Christ's blood did something (and it is not any thing) to make all saveable, to pacify Justice, satisfy the Law, to merit Heaven; but did nothing to soften the heart, mortify and sanctify the will, mind, affections, to remove unbeleef, to renew the mind. But it is sure the Lord had not intended to commit heaven and hell any more to a sanctified will, but mutable and lubric in Adam, but to commit all to Christ, to a better Covenant, better promises, to a way of freegrace not of nature: Yet these men commit the salvation and damnation of all and every one, to an unsanctified, corrupt, rebellious will, Gen. 6.5. Gen. 8.21. 1 Cor. 2.14. Joh. 6.44. Job 14 4. Psal. 51.5. Jer. 17.9, 10, etc. (except they say, Pagans and all mankind are regenerated, sanctified, justified) yea to a worse Covenant than that Covenant of Works, to an universal Covenant of Grace. That 1. never came to their ears. 2. By which they are in a worse condition than Adam was, who had the Image of God in his soul, and a full power to stand, and a clearly revealed Covenant: But all mankind for whom Christ is supposed to die, are born heirs of wrath, but they are born in more misery in the bondage of sin, of a blind heart, of a corrupt will, their chains heavier, their furnace hotter in hell, helps fewer. And yet the absoluteness of Sovereignty under the freedom of the Grace of Christ, by this way of Vniversalists, shines no more now, nay not so much now as in Adam's state, for more is laid upon freewill, and less help to heal the will, than was in the Covenant of Works. And if all die in Adam, and the Second Adam die for all, he must die to lose the works of Satan in all; Now if a weaker course be taken to destroy Satan's kingdom now then in Adam's state, and all be laid upon a weaker will, Satan is stronger now than before: And if Christ do not purchase by his death grace to bow indeclinably the will of all these for whom he died, to cause them live to him, die to sin, to make them Kings and Priests to God, etc. but leave their will in a more weak and wicked condition than it was under in the first Covenant, Satan is in this stronger than the second ADAM. No more of this here. It is a question, the Threatening standing, Gen. 2.17. how the active righteousness of Christ can be a cause meriting to us life, and satisfying the Law, when there is no suffering for the breach of the Law which expressly required death in the sinner: Not to say, that it seems too near to make Christ's dying needless, if his active holiness do the business; Nay we cannot so teach. CHAP. II. Wherein stands our right to Christ and the satisfaction made for us by Christ? 2. Faith is not the cause of our right. 3. Christ's incarnation and dying are not favours merited by Christ. 4. How Adam's sin and Christ's righteousness are ours. OUr right to CHRIST must be considered more accurately then ordinarily it is. Whether it floweth from 1. the merit of Christ: Or 2. from the grace of predestination: Or 3. faith in Christ. 1. Conclusion. Grace is either objectiuè, out of us as the free love of God having mercy on whom he will; Or subjectiuè merited by Christ to us and bestowed upon us. As touching our right to God as incarnate. 2. As dying for us. Christ's incarnation and death cannot be a fruit of the Mediators death. 3. As his satisfaction is made ours, are of divers considerations. For if God out of free love sent his Son in the world, Joh. 3.16. and if he, out of freegrace that separateth the race of man from Angels, took upon him the nature of man, to wit, of Abraham, and not the nature of Angels, Heb. 2.16. Then sure by the merits of Christ's death it cannot come that God came in the flesh to save sinners. For the effect cannot but come from the cause; but the cause flows not from the effect, nor is the effect, to wit, Christ's Incarnation and his dying, the cause of that love and freegrace of God which moved God to send his Son in the flesh, but posterior unto, and latter than that love: for because he loved us, he sent his Son in the flesh to die for us. 2. This cannot then be true (Christ by his dying for the Elect, merited and deserved, that God should be made Man for us) for this should be true also (by the blood of Christ, and by the redemption that is in Christ, God sent his Son in the flesh, and the Son took on him our nature, by the blood of the Covenant) nor can this be true (Christ merited by his death, that he should die for us) for so it should be true, that Christ by his blood shed his blood for us: Where as because he loved his Church freely, he gave himself for her. Eph. 5.15. Who loved me and gave himself for me, Gal. 2.20. Hence 1. though grace be the cause of grace, as because he of grace ordained us to glory, therefore of grace he calls, and because of freegrace he calls, of freegrace he carries on his work, and gives of grace, perseverance and glory. Yet there is a fountain-grace of election to glory, which hath no cause nor merit, not the merit of Christ for its cause; but is the cause of causes and of Christ's merits. As one fire may produce another, but the element of fire was not produced by another element of fire, but by God in creation. And one Vine Tree brings forth another, but the first Vine Tree was created by the Lord only. 2. Conclus. Nor have we (to speak acurately) right to Christ's satisfaction nor to his righteousness by faith. We have not properly right to Christ's satisfaction by faith. 1. Because the Lord's freegrace in laying our sins on Christ, Isa. 53.6. and his making him sin for us, 2 Cor. 5.21. does rather give the right to his satisfaction. God would have Christ to stand for so many chosen of God upon the Cross, and for no other. 1 Cor. 1.30. Ye are of him through Jesus Christ, who is made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of God, to us, wisdom, and righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption. Nor is there any act of faith interveening by which Christ became our surety and ransone-payer upon the Cross, and not the surety of others. 2. It is ordinary to our Divines to say, by faith we do apply Christ and his righteousness: but if we speak properly, application is possession and a putting on of Christ and his righteousness. Now title or Law-right to an inheritance, and possession of it, are different natures, and have different causes: but faith gives not law-right to Christ and his righteousness not so much as instrumentally. My receiving with my hand gold, my eating and drinking the flesh and blood of Christ by faith, Joh. 6.53, 54, etc. doth presuppone some right to that gold: but no man can say that receiving of gold, and eating of bread and putting on of garments, gives a man right to gold, bread or garments. He that possesseth an inheritance hath some right to the inheritance by birth, buying, purchase or gift: the possession in its nature and causes may be unjust, yet it is possession. Nor can it be shown what causative influence, even instrumental faith, hath in our Law-right to Christ's satisfaction and righteousness, except it were a meritorious cause of our right by way of instrument, which can hardly be said. CHRIST'S death cannot be applicable to the Reprobate, by faith, except faith be merited to them by that death. Davenantius, dissert. de morte Christi, pag. 49. Respectu mortis Christi voluntas Dei aliter est comparata ad omnes & singulos, quam esset absque ea, nam hoc ipso quod Christus passus est in natura humana, sine alio ullo medio interveniente, hoc saltem apud Deum effectum, ut velit 〈◊〉 homini▪ (Caino) credenti & poenitenti reconciliari, peccata remittere, vitam aeternam confer ●— tolle respectum hunc mortis Christi— promissionibus quoad non-ele●tos nihil serii, nihil solidi aut veri subesset— illud certum quemlibet hominem beneficio mortis Christi hoc juris sibi vendicare pos●e (Ergo hoc jus est impetratum morte Christi etiam reprobis.) 3. We may ask how Christ so died for the Reprobate, as his death is a remedy applicable to them by the ordination of God, so as they shall have life eternal, if they believe. For 1. there is either a jus and a Law-right to pardon and life eternal merited b● Christ's death to the Reprobate, or no such thing is merited. If neither be procured by Christ's merit, the Patrons of this way shall say there is no serious offer made to them: yea there is a jus, a title to life eternal and remission, which all the reprobate may challenge, even a right to remission and life eternal, so they believe. Well then, it is the same right conditional to life and pardon which is purchased to the Elect: yea this must be purchased whether they believe or not. Then there is no more in the kind of the Law-right to Redemption and life eternal and remission of sins purchased to Peter, then to Judas or Cain; And therefore hath Christ bestowed as much tender love in dying for the Reprobate as in dying for his friends. And Christ saith there is no greater love than this, Joh. 15.13. As for the efficacious intention of applying of Christ's death to Peter, when as God had no such intention of applying it to Judas, that is an act of eternal predestination, not a fruit of Christ's death, and as for the grace of believing, it was purchased to all, Reprobate and Elect, only the Lord applies not his death, and bestows not the grace of believing upon the Reprobate, but for right to faith, to remission, to perseverance, to life eternal, this right must be purchased, but faith itself is never bestowed upon them. But there is a ransom of blood given for faith, and purchased by CHRIST'S merit: But CHRIST is never called the Head of all men, Elect and Reprobate, but the Head of the Body the Church, Eph. 1.22. Col. 1.18. And whereas the Head hath merited faith to the Reprobate, and that absolutely (for a condition is not possible) he should bestow it absolutely, else there is no seriousness in the command of believing. And since faith is no meritorious cause of right to remission and life eternal, nor a cause in part, or in whole, of our complete and actual reconciliation, it may well be said, that they all are completely reconciled, pardoned, justified, washen in Christ's blood, when nothing is wanting, that completes the nature of remission and justification, for faith is only a condition applying, not a cause buying, nor satisfying for us, and no cause giving in part, or in whole, any new right. 3. Conclus. Should we, by faith, have right to the promise of a new heart, by believing, We have not a new heart by believing. we should have a new heart before we have a new heart, for none can believe savingly any promise, and so neither can he believe that promise that God shall give a new heart, until the habit of faith, which is a special part of the new heart, be infused: For actual faith must flow from habitual faith. Therefore right to that promise must be absolutely purchased by the death of Christ to the elect before they believe. Quest. How is it that not only, penally, but intrinsically and formally we sinned in Adam, and are inherenter sinners in him, but we are righteous in Christ only imputatiuè, and why should not Christ be named formally the sinner, since he is made by imputation the sinner? As Adam's sin is ours by imputation, and we formally and inherently are sinners in Adam? Ans. How we sinned in Adam is a point of greater difficulty: For this first sin the tottering and reeling of the specific common nature in Adam is ours, Adam's sin is ours, not because Adam is our father by nature, but because he is our father both by nature and by law not because he is our father 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by nature (though that be a ground of the imputation also) but because he is such a father by Covenant, and Law, the Law and Covenant of Works being laid in pawned in his hand. There be three parts of Original sin: A partaking of the first sin of Adam, we all sinned in him, Rom. 5.12, 14, 15. (2.) The want of the Image of God, called the Glory of God, Rom. 3.23. (3.) Concupiscence and a bentnesse of nature to sin, Rom. 7.7, 14, 17, 18, 23, 24. As to the first, Adam's sin is ours really and truly, not so much because it is ours, Three parts of original sin. as because it is imputed to be ours by God, who so contrived the Law of Works, as it should be made with Adam, not as a single father, but with Adam as a public person representing all man, and having our common nature as a father both by nature and Law, which came from the mere freewill of God. 1. Who might so have contrived the first Covenant of Works, that sin should only have been adam's own sin, not the sin of his posterity. The freewill of God the ground of the Lords imputeing Adam's sin to us. For by no necessity of nature, which is antecedent to the free decree of God, are all mankind legally in Adam's loins, though naturally they be. (2.) But children are as naturally in their nearest father's loins, as we are all in the loins of Adam, and all men are equally of that same specific nature with their nearest Parents, as with their first Parents: Yet the sins of the nearest Parents, by no necessity, are always charged upon the children, but now all have sinned in Adam, Rom. 5.12, 18. (3.) Where a sin is inherently and personally, there is no need of imputation, which is a free Act of God, had Christ been inherently and personally the sinner, God needed not make him, or impute our sins to him: as Isai. 53.6, 2 Cor. 5.21. and if we had been intrinsically sinners in Adam, his sin had been ours as intrinsically as it was adam's; and as Adam was not the first who sinned by imputation, but personally and intrinsically, so neither should Adam's sin have been our sin by imputation, but intrinsically and personally, now the Scripture saith, Rom. 5.19. By one man's disobedience, many were made sinners, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, than they were not intrinsically sinners, before they were made, that is, before they were reputed sinners in Adam, or before Adam's sin was imputed to them: as we are not intrinsically righteous in Christ, before we be justified, and made or reputed righteous in Christ: When therefore our Divines say, we are as guilty of eating the forbidden fruit, as if our hands were there and our teeth, and we did eat in him, The difference between the imputation of Adam's sin to us, & of the righteousness of Christ to us the speech cannot be taken physically, personally (for we were not then born) but morally and legally: but our nature was legally there. But when the Elect does sin, Christ is not said to have been in our loins legally, but he was made sin, he was punished so as if he had been the sinner; though there was in Christ no formal guiltiness, no reatus culpae, but reatus paenae. But we are deprived of the Image of God, and inclined to all sin, not by imputation, as the young Lion and the young Serpent have not the bloody and the stinging nature of the old Lion and the old Serpent by imputation, but by natural and intrinsical inherency▪ Now our holy, harmless, and undefiled High Priest hath no sin in him by inherency. 3. A legal satisfaction and paying of a sum, yea more than the debtor was owing, Christ's imputed righteousness cannot remove inherent sin, or make us such as never sinned. can never take away a morally inherent guiltiness, nor inherently justify and make innocent the sinner and make him one, who hath never borrowed the money and wasted it, or one who hath never sinned in Adam, and who hath never sinned in his own person: Yea the Law of Works standing, as it is most spiritual and holy; It is 〈◊〉 impossible that he who hath once broken the Law, though he be made inherently most holy, and perfectly sanctified▪ can be made righteous, which requires there shall never be one the least sin committed, and what is done cannot be undone. 2. The suffering of another, as of the Man Christ, may well stand for what we should have suffered, but cannot remove the inherent blot of sin, and remove fundamental guiltiness. The paying a thousand Crowns for him who borrowed five hundreth Crowns and spent them on harlotry and drunkenness, may free the debtor from being in Law, liable to pay the five hundreth Crowns, but can never free him from being an unjust borrower, and a profuse waster. 3. The two Covenants of Works and of Grace standing, its impossible that the active obedience of Christ can make us actively and inherently righteous, or restore to us our lost innocency. CHAP. III. How Christ suffered for us in our room and place. 2. He died not for all and every one. 3. How many ways Christ is said to die in our stead. 4. The Lords so dying for all makes not all saveable, nor the Gospel Preachable to all Nations. 5. Christ died in the stead of the Elect. THe Lord Jesus hath a room in each Covenant, of Works, and of Grace: Davenantus de morte Christi, c. 4. pag. 48. Ex solâ vi horum verborum: Christus pro omnibus mortuus est non potest inferri Christum pro omnibus ita mortuum esse ut absolute decreverit hac sua morte omnium salutem efficaciter & insallibiliter operari: quia satis vere & proprie pro aliquo mori is dicatur qui bono alterius procurando mo●itur, quamvis ille alter suo vitio nihil commodi inde percipiat. Christ cannot be said to die for all, if these all may eternally perish. In the Covenant of Works as a sufferer for the breach of it. It's said by Learned Davenantius, one is said truly and properly to die for another, who dies to procure his good▪ though the other by his own fault, get no good of his dying for him. But there is not such a Question as this, whether one may truly and properly die for another, but whether Christ in the sense of the Holy Ghost died verè & propriè, truly and properly, the just for the unjust, to procure good to the unjust, and yet these unjust may eternally perish and reap no good by Christ's dying, through their unbeleef? 2. Will it not follow that Christ 1. died truly and properly for all, and yet, non obstante morte Christi, notwithstanding of the Lords dying, all the world may eternally perish, as say Arminians and Socinians. 3. It shall follow that the immediate, yet the complete effect of Christ's death is not actual, but possible saving of all. And Christ hath verè & propriè, truly and properly died for them. Nor 4. is it enough to say that Christ had a special intention in dying for the Elect to give them faith, but he had no such intention in dying for the Reprobate. But hence it follows that Christ as properly and truly died for the Reprobate as for the Elect, as touching the nature and intention of his dying; and that he offered as sufficient a ransom for the one as for the other, and that is a mere possible ransom, but as concerning the intention to apply effectually, or no effectual intention to apply the death, there's the difference. But 1. we ask for Scripture, where it is said CHRIST dying as dying for the world, No Scripture warranteth us to say that Christ died for all with one intention to apply his death to the elect, and with another intention to apply no death at all to the reprobate. had these two contrair intentions. The Scripture saith, Christ died to gather his scattered children, Joh. 11.5. to bring to God, 1 Pet. 3.18. these for whom he died, that they might have life, Joh. 10.11. live to God, 2 Cor. 5.15. die to sin, 1 Pet. 2.24. be redeemed from their vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. be delivered from this present evil world, Gal. 1.4. Here is our effectual intention; where is there a place for his dying with no effectual intention to bring any to God? and yet he died for all good and evil, to make salvation possible, say they. It is not enough to coin two intentions in Christ-God-Man dying, and give us Scripture for one of them only, and bid us take the other on trust. 2. Nor is it enough to say all these places speak of Christ's effectual dying for his Elect only. For 1. it is not truly nor properly said that Christ effectually died for the Elect only, for he effectually died for no man by this way, because he died only to make salvation possible to all, so as they might perish for ever, notwithstanding of his dying for them: So the efficacy of dying is in Christ's intention, and application. Now efficacy of intention and efficacy of application are both extrinsecall to his laying down his life. 2. The place, 2 Cor. 5.15. cannot be expounded by them of only the effect: For it speaks (as they expone it) of Christ dying for all that were dead, as v. 14. and these they say are Elect and Reprobate. 3. Nothing is said, Christ sustained not two persons upon the cross. whether Christ on the Cross did sustain the person of all for whom he died, Elect and Reprobate, and whether he sustained two persons (for he was cut off, but not for himself, Dan. 9.26.) one for the Reprobate, another for the Elect. And whether he finished the transgression, and made an end of sins, as Daniel saith, 9.24. that is, of all sins and transgressions, Christ was not cut off to put an end to all their transgressions for whom he died, by their way who teach that he died for all without ex●ception. final unbeleef and all others: For except he did that, he cannot finish the transgression, make an end of sins, make reconciliation for iniquity, and bring in everlasting righteousness, to these for whom he died; Except either he bring in half a righteousness, or at least imperfect, and never make an end of some sins and transgressions, because men will not have it so, and set bounds to the infinite sufficiency of Christ: O● because he puts an end of sin, and brings in everlasting righteousness conditionally, and is gracious and merciful as men will, and decrees to show mercy, not upon discriminating rebellion, or upon unbeleef, which separateth a Reprobate from an Elect, if so it seems good to men, and if man shall have mercy on whom he will, and harden whom he will, or, which is all one, if man shall have mercy upon himself, because he will, There is nothing purchased to the most part for whom Christ dies, but a pelagian power to apply which power all men have, suppone CHRIST had never died, according to these who teach that CHRIST died for all and every one. or harden himself, because he will harden himself▪ Yet may it be disputable to some, whether grace by which one is effectually drawn to Christ, rather than another, be the grace of predestination continuated and so before Christ's death, or a fruit of Christ's death and so after. But it may well be s●id that every created saving grace is a fruit of Christ's death, and that we receive the habit of saving grace out of his fullness, and the saving habit infused separateth an Elect from a Reprobate: For it is peculiar to Believers and the Elect to be gifted with one heart, Ezek. 11.19. and a new heart in the habit, Ezek. 36.26. and with the spirit 〈◊〉 grace and supplication to believe and mourn, Zech. 12.10. and the Spirit and blessing that is poured on the thirsty ground, and the seed, Isai. 44.3. And so must we say, that the same habit as actuated by the Lord's Spirit, and as it makes one to believe, and draws him effectually to the Son, actually and efficaciously, and draws not another, is a fruit of Christ's death, but this way must glory be a fruit of the death of Christ, but not habitual saving grace. 2. The death of Christ for all is as common a means of salvation as the Preaching of the Gospel: And both must be made effectual by efficacious grace, which is not the fruit of the merit of Christ, by this way, and since grace to actually apply the death of Christ, is not given to Pagans and millions for whom Christ died, as these Authors teach, how unsufficient must the death of our Lord be? For it leaves faith as impossible to the reprobates as if he had never died for them, for neither habitual nor actual faith is purchased to them by this death: How many ways it may be said Christ died in our room & stead. Only the Pelagian application is left to them, which they should have had, suppose Christ had never died for them. 2. It is to be considered, how many ways CHRIST may be said to give himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ransom for us, or in our place. 1. Christ hath sufficiently died for all in their room to redeem them. For, pro 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for men, The sufficiency of Christ's death depends upon the i●finitness of his person, not upon the free decree of God noteth ever the decree and intention of Christ dying for men; but the sufficiency and worth and intrinsecal dignity of Christ's death, depends not upon the decree & intention of God for the worth of the death and the blood of him who is God, Act. 20.28. 1 Cor. 2.8. and the Lord of Glory is infinite, because of the infiniteness of the person, before and without the decree of God. 2. Nor is it true that Christ's dying for all and every one (which is a dream) makes salvation possible to all, so that the Covenant is Preachable to all upon condition of believing, Act. 10.43. To him (Jesus Anointed who went about doing good and so was man, v. 38) to him (who was slain in our nature, Whether all believe and be saved▪ or none believe or be saved, its true that whosoever believe shall be saved, but the truth of it dependeth not upon Christ's dying for all and for every one. not for all and every man, v. 39 to him) whom God raised up the third day, v. 40. To him gave all the Prophet's witness (as it is, v. 43) that through his Name, who ever believes in him shall have remission of sins. 2. And this would be considered (whoso believes in Christ are justified and saved) how it is universal? It is most true thus: There is a sure connexion between faith and life eternal, and the connexion is decreed of God; or the concatenation of the end and the means, or of the means and the end, faith and salvation. And it is true: whether all believe or none at all believe, and whether all or none at all be saved, as is this (whosoever shall keep the Law perfectly, shall be justified and saved by the works of the Law.) But 1. it makes neither faith nor salvation possible to Pagans and Reprobates, nor perfect obedience in doing the Law nor Justification or salvation by the works of the law possible to any living man, But the Question is, whether the connexion of the former be made true by the decree and revealed will of God promising life to the believer, by no means, but only by this, because Christ died for all and every one. And so this should have been false (if all Pagans and Reprobate and Elect believe they shall be saved) if Christ had died only for the Elect. This must be proven either by Scripture, or by some solid reason from Scripture; for it saith this, Reprobats can not have life by believing in Christ crucified for them: except it be true that Christ was crucified for them, but none can be saved by believing that Christ died for them, except they also believe that Christ rose from the dead, and ascended and inter●●eds in Heaven for them. Than one might infer this could not be true, but false (if Reprobats believe they shall be saved) except Christ have died, risen again, ascended, and intercedes for all Reprobate and Elect. None are saved by believing that Christ died for them, except th●y also believe that Christ rose also, ascended, & intercee●ded for them. For true and saving faith the only condition of salvation, must lay hold on the Resurrection, Ascension, and Intercession of Christ, as well as on his dying for all. The reason why it cannot be true that Reprobats shall be saved, if they believe, except Christ have died for them, is (●y this way) they cannot believe that Christ hath died for their sins, except it be true that he died for their sins: Yea, I answer, they cannot believe that Christ rose again for their righteousness, except it be true that Christ also rose for the righteousness of the Reprobats; this latter they cannot say. It is said by Christ's dying for all, God hath now a conditional will of saving all and every one, Elect and Reprobate, if they shall believe, which conditional will was not in God, before Christ's dying for all. Yea without Christ's dying for all, salvation upon condition of believing had been impossible. But not to say that it is unworthy of the Holy Lord, that new wills and new decrees should arise in him, upon any thing that falls out in time, such as the crucifying of the Lord Jesus. Such Doctrine we condemn in Vorstius, and in Arminians, as is well observed by D. Twisse, such a decree as this, that God should say (I decree, will, and intent remission and life purchased by the death of Christ, to all Pagans that never hear the Gospel, to all Reprobats, so they shall believe in Christ: And yet I never decree they shall believe nor have grace to believe) saith no more than there is a connexion between faith as the condition, and remission and life eternal as the thing promised; as when God had decreed that Jerusalem should be burnt, and deny grace to obey; God hath no intention to save all, though he say all that believe shall be saved, nor comes such an offer from CHRIST'S intention to die for all and every one. Yet saith Jeremiah from the Lord, Jer. 38.17. If thou wilt assuredly go forth to the King of Babylon's Princes, than thy soul shall live, and this City shall not be burnt with fire, and thou shall live and thine house. And the Lord says to Cain, Gen. 4.7. If thou dost well (and shall savingly believe as Abel) thou shalt be accepted. Then was that connexion decreed of God, it containing a most just condition of life, and a condition to which Zedekiah and Cain were obliged, but that the death of Christ made the Lord to intend and decree conditionally and in any terms either acceptation to life or remission to Cain, as the end, and well doing as the means, or intended to purchase the grace either of the one or the other, is not warranted by Scripture, for both the one and the other, are the fruits of the merits of Christ; Show 1. how God can will and decree such a thing to the Reprobate: for it's as if a father would say, I purpose to sell such a plot of ground to my son, so he pay me an hundreth Crowns, When 1. the son, by no possibility, hath, or can have the hundreth Crowns, but only from his father. 2. When the father of his free pleasure hath decreed never to give him the hundreth Crowns or the plot of ground. 2. Show how faith is made possible by Christ's death, when it is not purchased to the reprobate by Christ's death, it is not surely made physically possible by Christ's death, if it be said that it is made possible morally, rationally, and objectively to them, because there cannot be an offer of life made to Reprobates and to all, upon condition of faith, except Christ have died for the Reprobate, that is denied, and never proven: If one should come (say they) to the Antipods or to such as never heard of Christ and Preach the Gospel, he should not, before he Preach, look for any new establishing of the conditional Covenant (who ever believes in Christ shall be justified and saved) but should take it as granted, it was made with them before; therefore by Christ's death the Gospel of itself is Preachable and may be Preached to all Nations, quovis seculo, in any age, as it was to Job. Ans. If any come to the Antipods and any Nation that never heard of Christ, having the gift of Tongues, and Preach to such, or by his own industry acquire the gift of such Tongues, One that hath the Tongues, may preach the Gospel to the Nation he comes unto, but that preachablnesse of the Gospel comes in in no sort, from the Lords sending his Son to die for all and every one. and by the strong hand of providence Preach the conditional Covenant, these providences should be a command, and the setting up of a shining torch there should prove these people (as to the elect among them) in God's mind were a Covenanted people no less than the Church of Samaria. And there were no need to expect a new establishing of the conditional Gospel-Covenant: But how is that proven to be from this, because God sent his Son to die for all and every one of these Antipods, and made the Gospel-Covenant with all and every one of them before: the Authors shall be ebb of Scripture here. And if these Antipods should, all and every one, refuse the Gospel and kill the Preacher, and never one either receive the Gospel, or propagate to any that may receive it; Then such an Apostolic mission is not in Scripture, and the lawfulness of that man's call to me is to be questioned: and I should judge, his own Spirit, not God sent him. Nor is this true, that the Gospel is and was Preachable, and of itself, may be preached to any age. Job lived before the giving of the Law, and Melchisedeck, and they had the call of God to Preach to them to whom they Preached. The Gospel is not preachable to all and every Nation, at all and every age & difference of time. 2. It shall be denied that Jonah had sinned, if he had not preached to Nineveh, except God had expressly commanded him to preach to Nineveh, otherwise it had been the sin of Godly Prophets who lived with him in the time of Joash King of Judah, 2 King. 14.25. and they had been guilty, as Jonah in not Preaching to Nineveh. Yea all the Ministers and Apostles, and Prophets had sinned in not Prophesying to the Phylistins, Syrians, Persians, Bythinia, Samaria; whereas the Apostles, Matth. 10.5. Act. 16.6. were forbidden to Preach the Gospel to the Gentiles, to Asia: and it were strange to say Ezekiel sinned in not preaching to a people of an unknown Language, whereas the Lord expressly says he sent him not unto them, Ezek. 3.5, 6. and that, Rom. 10.15. How shall they Preach, except they be sent? is meant of the Apostles, and of all lawful Pastors. And there may be running and no sending of God to Nations, Jer. 23.21. and Psal. 147.19, 20. when he denies, he declared his judgements and his statutes to any Nation, by sent Prophets, as he did to Jacob, if the Gospel than was of itself Preachable to all Nations, Prophet's unsent might have Preached these same judgements to other Nations, that were Preached to Jacob, though not sent of God. But that place, Psal. 147. and divers others would say he choised only Israel as his Covenanted people: As Deut. 7.7, 8, 9 Deut. 10.12, 13, 14, 15. Exod. 20.1, 2. Psal. 78.5, 6. Amos 3.1, 2. Deut. 27.1, 2. to them only he revealed the Covenant of Grace, than was it not a Covenant of its own nature that might at any age, be Preached to all Nations. But what is then revealed in these decrees? (if the Reprobate believe, they shall be saved) Ans. Not God's intention conditional or absolute to save them, or to give them faith or grace merited by Christ's death, to believe, for then some goodwill and love of election, the Lord should bear toward the election of such, and should desire all the Reprobate to be saved, so they would believe, and yet by this way, no more is there grace purchased to them, The conditional promise either of life to all that shall keep the Law, or of salvation to all that believe in Christ can infer no intention or goodwill ●n God to bestow the end & the means upon either the one or the other, or any goodwill toward their persons. by Christ, to believe, than there is grace purchased to them to perform obedience to the Law: Now the Authors will not say that by Christ's dying for all, there is a conditional will in Christ, or in the Father, to give life to all who perfectly keep the Law: for this conditional will or means and end, was in God before, and suppone Christ had never died for sinners. 2. This would say that the Reprobate were to believe that Christ died to save them, having purchased life to them, and to believe that he died not to save them all for whom he died, because they are not to believe he died to purchase faith by his death, or grace to believe, without which salvation is impossible: it cannot be said that God absolutely intended to save them, whether they believe or not, even while as there is such a decree in God, because he hath decreed both the end and the means, to wit, having ordained for them salvation, and having ordained for them faith; nor is there any such decree in God, toward any but the Elect only, therefore this conditional decree (if all and every one believe, all and every one shall be saved) can infer no love of God through Christ to the persons of all and every one to have them saved, more than this can infer a love of saving all and every one, to be in God or to have been in the Lord, before the fall of Angels, and men (if all and every one of Angels and men shall perfectly, without sin to the end, keep the Law, than all Angels, all men Elect and Reprobate shall be saved eternally.) Now no man found in judgement, can say this conditional can infer that God had a good will to save some Angels, not to save others: More than this (if all and every man believe in Christ they shall be saved) can infer that God hath a goodwill to save Reprobate men, and not fallen Angels. In a word, no simple conditional propositions can infer the desire or good will of God to the persons of men or to have the things done, except God effectually work the condition: As this (if all fulfil the Law perfectly, men and Angels, and all men shall be saved by the Law) cannot infer that God hath a good will to the persons of all Angels and all men to justify and save them all, without exception, by the works of the Law; the contrair whereof he decreed. For this connex proposition may stand true with the salvation of all Angels, of all men, of no Angels, or no men, according as the Lord shall be pleased of his good pleasure and free grace to work, or not to work the condition of moving the will of Angels and men to keep the Law. And therefore these connexion's nihil ponunt absoluti, they place nothing absolutely to persons, Conditional promises place nothing absolutely in persons but only the connexion of things, means & ●nd, work, & reward, but only to things, to wit, 1. that it is the duty and obligation of all Angels and men to perform absolute obedience to the Law, as they would be justified and saved by the Law, and its the duty of all men in the Visible Church to believe in Christ. if they would be justified and saved in Christ. 2. That there is a wise connexion between means and end, obedience legal and life, faith and life, according to the approving will of God, and yet neither means nor end may ever come to pass or fall out, and neither means nor end may ever be decreed of God to fall out: Yea God may decree absolutely that none of the extremes shall exist as God decrees (if Zedekiah shall yield to the King of Babylon, Jerusalem shall not be burnt) and yet according to his decree or will of purpose the Lord hath decreed that the yielding of Zedekiah, and the safety of the idolatrous City should not come to pass, but the contrair. So God decrees, if Judas repent and believe, he shall be saved according to the will of precept, and yet according to the Lords will of purpose, neither did the Lord decree or intend the repenting and saving believing of Judas nor was grace to believe and repent purchased by the death of Christ to Judas (by these Authors) though they boast of the amplitude of Christ's death, nor did the Lord by that will of purpose ever decree or intend the salvation of Judas. Therefore, 3. this, that the death of Christ is of its own nature preachable to all Nations, in every age, is not true: For the phrase is neither in Scripture, in Old or New Testament, nor is the thing itself in Scripture: For the meaning is, either GOD may send Apostles in any age to all the Nations of the world, to Preach: If that be, by his extraordinary power, he may save all the damned, If the Gospel of itself were Preachable at all times to all Nations, it were the sin of the Prophets not to Preach to all Nations, whether they can speak wi●h all Tongues or no. 2. And all Nations should be in a fit capacity at all times to be the Church●s of Christ, and ●ll Nati●̄s should be Church's in Covenant with God in Christ. that way. That Preachablenesse is not the object of our faith: Nor is that Preachablenesse a fruit of Christ's dying for all. If it be meant that God by his ordinary power may send Apostles in any age to all Nations: How is that to be said? Except we say God hath decreed in his will of purpose to send Preachers to all; That cannot be, except his decree be disappointed. O● 3. If it be his command and revealed will that the Gospel be Preached to all Nations, every age, they grievously sin, who Preach not the Gospel to the Brasilians and Antipods, whether they can speak in their Language or not. And if the Doctrine of the Covenant of its own nature may so be Preached to all Nations, without exception, in every difference of time, then must all the Nations of the earth, in all differences of time, be in a capacity to be a Covenanted people of God, the Church of Christ, the Vineyard of the Lord, his inheritance, the Spouse of Christ, his Body, his Called, and Chosen flock. For to have the Doctrine of the Covenant fixedly Preached to a Nation, and Christ offered to them, is to be the planted Vineyard of the Lord, for to Preach to Macedonia, fixedly, they willingly hearing, is indeed the Lords entering in Covenant with Macedonia, and his choising them to be his confederate people, and the Lords planting a Vineyard, and building a Winepress in it, and setting up a Ministry therein; and therefore the Lord was not in Covenant with them before. Indeed to Preach the Word simply to scoffers who reject it, and that occasionally in the passing, so as there is no sort of accepting of the Covenant nor any fixed Ministry there, is not a renewing of the Covenant with them, nor does it presuppose a Covenant before made with them. 2. It is against the wisdom of God, that 1. there should be such a band of love the greatest love that ever was, Joh. 15.13. lying upon all mankind, Brasilians, Americans, binding them to thankful Gospel-obedience that Christ died for them, yet this obligation of the greatest love is neither written in their heart, as the Law of nature, nor is it ever revealed to them that they are under so much love by Covenant. 2. How can the Lord say I choosed you, O Israel, among all the people of the earth, and entered in Covenant with you and your seed only. For 1. there is no need of a new establishing of the conditional Gospel-Covenant, for it was established with Israel, and with all the world before he choosed or called them. 2. He cannot be said to enter in Covenant with them only. For all the world ever was thus Covenanted with God. 3. All the world must be an invisible Covenanted Church, and the fit matter to be a Church. For the Evangel may be Preached est de se annunciabile, not to stones and to rocks, but to all Nations, quovis seculo. 4. Since the Preaching of the Gospel to some Nations, and not to others, is an act of the Sovereign pleasure, yea and of the free grace of God to such as this Sun-light graciously doth visit, by this way, the sinful neglect of such as refuse to Preach shall be the cause of the perishing of the elect, a dream. It's false that Christ so died for us, that is, in our stead, as that in our stead he fulfilled the Law, and performed all active obedience & passive by doing and dying▪ that God can require of us. 2. CHRIST may be said to die for us, as if we had substituted him in our place, in so rigid a sense, as if he had been made our surety to fulfil both the preceptive and active, and also the satisfying and suffering part of the Law in our room. This may please Antinomians, but a doubt it is, if it stand with the truth: For than what ever we, yea all mortal men be (for Christ died for them all, as many teach) most wicked, yet Christ's active and surety and cautionary righteousness should be ours, and though we should never believe, yet Christ who fulfilled the Law and preceptive as well as the threatening part, must have believed for all that he died for, and what need we then in our persons either believe or repent? It's true, we need not perform any active obedience, as a part of active fulfilling of that Covenant of Works, which either must have all, or no obedience. If it be said that alio titulo, upon another account of thankfulness to our ransom-payer we owe active obedience: Yet all that CHRIST died for, both actively and passively must be perfectly righteous and justified, having paid the most perfect active and passive obedience that the Law required, though we never believe, and Christ must have paid the active part of justifying faith for us. And why, but we should be formally justified in him without faith also? As also, God, not we, laid our sins upon Christ, Isai. 53.6. 2 Cor. 5.21. and therefore we did commissionate and substitute Christ to die in our room. How Socinians will have Christ to die for us. Socinus, de Servatore▪ l. 2. c. 8. dictio (pro) causam finalem notat. joan Crellius, advers. Grotiam, par. 1. c. 5. Cateche. R●ccovie. c. 8. pag. 183, 184. Loco & vice peccatorum nostrorum mortuum esse, nihil deluti●● qui that & pendit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro captis in fuga, aut loco fugae id pendit. Jac. Armin. Antiper edit. Bertianae pag. 676. Quod si statuamus talem mediatioris rationem— ut omnium electorum peccata actu ab ipsis abla●a & in Christum transl●ta sint, qui poenam pro illis passus, illos actu ipso ● poenis liberaverit, tum obedientia ab illis postulata fuerit, qui illam praestitit, & vitam aeternam illa praestatione non sibi, sed illis meruerit, non ●●cus quam si ipsi Mediatorem nostro loco constituissemus & per eum DEO solvissemus debita nostra, jam simul statuendum est secundum ipsum justitiae DEI & legis rigorem electis deberi & immunitatem ● pecca●is & vitam aeternam, eosque ista bona ● DEO postulare jure solutionis & emptionis, absque eo ut Deus postulare ullo jure fidem in Christum & conversionem ad Deum possit. Socinus, Crellius, the Raccovian Catechism, Arminius, contend that Christ died for all finaliter, for to procure good and salvation to all, so they believe, and yet through their own fault, they may haply never be saved: not that he satisfied for us, but died for example as a Martyr (say Socinians) as Paul suffered for the Church, so as we, believing in Christ as in the only chief Martyr and witness, who as the only Author declared the Gospel, not as a sufferer and ransom-payer who redeemed us from the Law, are saved. And as Arminians, he died for our good, not that he died in our room and stead, so as the sins of the Elect were actually taken off them and translated upon Christ, so as we are actually freed from the punishment of sin, as if we had substitute a Saviour ourselves, and paid our debt ourselves to God; and so according to the rigour of Justice, we might crave by the Law of buying and selling deliverance from punishment, and life eternal from God. But this way they will not have Christ to die in the place and room of any, but only for their good, so as they may die eternally themselves for whom Christ died. Hence 1. It follows that Christ died for them but gave no ransom of blood for them for whom he died. 2. Arminians will not have the sins and punishment satisfactory to justice (for of such punishment we speak) actually upon Christ, and translated off the sinner and laid upon Christ and believers actually freed from satisfactory punishment: So that both believers and Christ must actually bear the satisfactory punishment. Which indeed makes believers half redeemers with Christ: against which we disputed before. 3. Arminians denies that we paid our debts to God, in Christ paying them for us. So that the broken man cannot be said to have satisfied the debt in, and through the surety who satisfied for him, which in all Law is unjust. And since Arminians denies that we paid to Justice a ransom for sin, because our Surety Christ paid for us, he must deny that Christ was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities, or that the chastisement of our peace was upon him: Contrair to Isai. 53.5. because we made him not our Mediator and Surety, but God made him Mediator, and laid our iniquities upon him, Isai. 53.6. But it is accidental in Law that the debtor substitute the surety, One may in Law, be a real and true satisfying surety for another, though the debtor neither request, nor Covenant with him to undertake, yea though he know no, thing of the sureties willingness to undertake, and so Christ is our surety. or request him to take the place of surety upon him. But he is a real and a most legal surety who not requested, of free grace becomes surety and pays the very same sum in speciè, in kind, that the debtor ought to pay; this reason does prove he is both a surety and a gracious surety. As a King's son who comes in and lays down his head for a malefactor, truly and really dyeth and layeth down his life in the room and place of that malefactor, though there was no Covenant nor paction between him and the King's son, though neither the malefactor, nor any friend in his name did request the Prince to become surety and die for him. Reuben offers his two sons to Jacob as pawnds to be slain, if he should not bring home Benjamin safe to the father: And had Jacob accepted of the offer, Reubens two sons who knew not of the bargain, had been sureties for Benjamin, Gen. 42.37. and Judah might have been Law-surety for Benjamin to Jacob, though Benjamin requested him not to take any such place. The Lord the Creditor and Christ the Cautioner did strike hands together: Christ put himself in our room, as an hostage, pledge and surety to die for us, and paid the first and second death, the sum that we was owing, according to a paction between the Lord and Christ, and we requested not Christ to be surety, only by believing, we thank him, and subscribe and say Amen to what is done. But in Law we paid, in regard the same nature that suffered was ours, and accepted as ours. But Arminians clearly refuse that Christ shall be an hostage and surety for us, Arminius sides with Socinus. because the offended party of his own furnished not one that died for him; and so he strikes at the root of a real sacrifice that is satisfactory to God, because one and the same cannot be both satisfied, and, de suo, of his own, furnish a satisfying surety. For so as his own, Socinus saith, one cannot be both a satisfier and a person satisfied, and this is no satisfaction at all, saith Socinus. (4.) Our believing cannot effectuate this, that Christ hath actually born the satisfactory punishment due to us. Arminius saith that Christ hath not, actu ipso, actually born that punishment: he must say he hath born it only potentially▪ potentià. Then its like when we believe, he bears that punishment completely, but he cannot die nor suffer, but once; only he must mean that Christ did actually bear our sins, but the satisfactory punishment is not accepted as suffered in our name. But our believing hindereth not, How we satisfied justice in CHRIST'S dying, so that we cannot suffer eternally in hell, if CHRIST suffered for us on the Cross without wrong to Divine justice. but he hath in genere causae moralis & meritoriae really as a meriting cause deserved that God in justice cannot exact from us that same satisfactory punishment that Christ hath suffered for our sins, & its impossible that our faith can add any meritorious power to Christ's death: & therefore though not in ourselves and physically, yet really, morally, legally in Christ, deliverance from satisfactory punishment is due to us, we being in Christ legally, and life eternal is due to us, being in Christ according to the rigour of justice, and injuria irrogata Christo sponsori foret, wrong should be done to Christ, and commutative justice, by which, ex condigno, by condignity, he hath bought freedom from hell, and right to heaven, to these he died for, if we should suffer eternal wrath, in our persons, whether we believe or believe not; for believing is no part of the meriting cause of the satisfying ransom. Yea Christ by right of buying and selling, and we in Christ our surety may claim freedom from the second death, and right to everlasting life, so as God should fail against commutative justice against Christ, and break (with reverence and humble submission to his Glorious Majesty be it spoken) Covenant to Christ, and he should buy with a price more then enough, his seed, and not get his wages, if these he died for, die the second death, and come short of glory eternal, if the Lord say to Christ, I promise to thee a seed, that they shall be delivered from the second death, Christ dies not so in our room and stead, as that we cannot in justice die the second death except there be a breach of Covenant between the Lord and Christ. and have life eternal, providing thou shalt give me a price abundantly sufficient to buy these, to wit, the life and blood of God-Man, and offer thyself a sacrifice upon the Cross to offended Justice. If CHRIST shall do this and pay the ransom, and Christ get no wages, no saved seed, but they perish through the want of faith only: either must faith be a part of the ransom, which none can say, or then the Lord shall not keep Covenant to Christ. (5.) When Arminius saith that the Lord can, nullo jure, by no Law, nor Justice crave of us faith and conversion to God, if we have paid our debts, by rigour of justice exactly to God in Christ who legally in our stead and place paid for us, he supposes plainly that God requires faith and obedience of us as a part of recompense made to offended Justice. And Armini●s saith, God demands not of us faith and repentance, by necessity of divine justice, for so he should fail against justice (with all glory to him be it spoken) if he should exact these from us. that Christ's righteousness is ours, not as performed by him, but as imputed to us by faith: So that faith comes in as a collateral price paid for us or a part of the price, the very act and work of believing being counted ours, and our righteousness before God: Yea but God by no necessity of hurt Justice craves faith and repentance from us. That CHRIST died not for our good only, but in our stead is proven, 1. Because Christ in some other more legal way died for us then for Angels, for he died for their good, that he might ●e made the Head of Angels, Col. 2.10. Phil. 2.7, 8, 9, 10, 11. Rom. 10.9, 11. and he died for the good of the whole Creation that he might make all things new, and restore the creatures to their perfection, which by the sin of man they had lost, Rom. 8.20, 21, 22, 2●. Acts 3.21. Rev. 21.5. but he died not as suffering punishment due to the Angels, and the work of Creation in their stead, ●s wounded for their transgressions, as he died for our transgressions, Isa. 53. Christ died not for our good only, but also in our stead. For the transgressions of us all, Elect and Reprobate as, they say, exponing that all, Isa. 53.6. of all and every one of mankind, were upon him. 2. We deny not, but there be considerable differences between Christ's dying, and the punishment of the Elect which they were to suffer. As, 1. Ours should have been eternal, because we could never out satisfy. But the sufferings of Christ, There be considerable differences between Christ's punishment and that punishment which was due to u● eternally▪ because of the dignity of his person God-Man, were perfectly satisfactory in a short time. 2. He could not suffer the same pain in number, that we should have suffered, for one and the same accident cannot be in different subjects, nor is the surety to pay the very same sum numero, that the debtor borrowed. 3. The Lord could not but have punished the Elect with hating & aversion of mind, they being intrinsically and inherently sinners. He punished Christ, who was not inherently, but only by imputation the sinner, with no hatred at all, but with anger and desire of showing and exercising revenging justice, but still loving him dearly, as his only Son. But upon this account, Christ must stand in our room, and because of the fivefold oneness and Law-identity and sameness. For, 1. Though physically the surety and the debtor be two different men, yet in Law they are one and the same person, A fivefold oneness & law identity & samenes between Christ the surety, and sinners for whom he satisfied. and one and the same legal party, and the same object of justice. Whoso pursues in Law the surety, does also pursue the debtor. 2. The debt and sum is one, not two debts, nor two ransoms, nor two punishments, nor two lives to loss, but one. 3. It is one and the same solution and satisfaction, there can not in Law-justice, come another reckoning, dying, and payment making after the surety hath paid. 4. There is one and the same acceptation upon the creditor his part, if he accept of satisfaction in the payment made by the surety, he cannot but legally accept of the debtor, and cannot pursue him in Law, but must look upon him as no debtor. To justify him is another thing: It being a forinsecall transient declaration of his righteousness who believes. I speak here of an acception of satisfaction to hurt justice revenging sin, not of an acceptation of obedience. 5. It's one and the same legal effect, Christ justified in the Spirit, and risen again, 1 Tim 3.16. and we in him as in the meritorious cause are legally justified. Hence he who suffered the same satisfactory punishment, for the same sins committed by us, which in Law we ought to have suffered eternally. 2. He suffered and died for us in our stead and place, especially when the Creditor counts these sufferings, as if we had suffered: So Paul, Scripture and arguments from Scripture prove that Christ died in our room and stead▪ 2 Cor. 5.14. If one be dead for all, then were all dead. And the Messiah was cut off and died not for himself, Dan. 9.26. He did no violence, neither was guile found in his mouth, Isa. 53.9. Joh. 8.46. Heb. 7.26. But he was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities, the chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes we are healed, Isa. 53.5. 1 Pet. 2.23, 24, 25. He was delivered for our offences, The Lord laid on him the iniquity of us all. He was cut out of the land of the living, for the transgression of my people was he plagued, Isa. 53.8. He bore on his body our sins on the tree. 3. He who being made under the Law, paid that Law-debt of satisfaction, which the Elect in their persons should have paid, and thereby freed them from the Law-debt of satisfaction: He sustained the person of the Elect in his suffering. But Christ being made under the Law, paid that Law-debt of satisfaction, which the Elect in their persons should have paid. The proposition is out of doubt, none denies the Minor, but that we should have died eternally in our persons, if Christ had not died for us. 4. He who of purpose took on him our nature, the nature and seed of Abraham, and the legal condition of a surety to suffer for us, he stood in our person and room in suffering for us. But Christ took on him our nature, which is common to believing Jews, and to such also who are casten off of God, Rom. 9.3, 4. but not as common to them, but as the seed of Abraham, Heb. 2.16. And 5. Gal. 3.10. For as many as are of the works of the Law, are under the curse, If Christ was made the curse that was due in law to us, that blessing not due to us might come upon us than he suffered in our place. for it is written, cursed is every one who continueth not in all things which are written in the book of the Law to do them. 13. Christ hath redeemed us from the Law, being made a curse for us— not to reconcile all and every one to himself, or to obtain a potential and far off power of salvation. But, ver. 14. That the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through jesus Christ, that we might receive the promise of the spirit through faith. Not that we might believe or not believe, if we would, that is not the blessing of Abraham, Act. 11.18. Act. 15.8, 9 Act. 5.31. Ph. 1.29. and for his great love he died for us, the just for the unjust, to bring us to God. 6. And it is thus confirmed, Christ in dying is not looked on as a man; Nor 2. simply as a single man dying; Nor 3. as a public Martyr or witness that all, or none at all, if they so will, may get good of him, but by special paction, if he shall lay down his life, and work his work, and suffer for our sins, that which we should have suffered, he shall receive his wages and see his seed. 7. As also none who dies as a surety or pays as a surety, but he bears the person of such as he pays for, who ever gives a ransom for another by way of payment, and whosoever as a Priest offers a sacrifice for another, he represents the person offended for whom he offers, so does the Advocate act the person of the Client, the intercessor his person for whom he intercedes. 8. The phrase to die for another as a ransoner signifies to die in the stead and person of another. Demosthenes, orat. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in lieu of Ktesiphon. For Archias, for Marcellus, Oratio pro Ar●hia Poe●à Oratio pro Marcello 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Demosthe. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Isocrates, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Col. 1.24. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Homer. 〈◊〉 5. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Three for one slain. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Rex. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉▪ Il. 1. he pleads, it is in Law as if Archias, as if Marcellus, or as if the parties for which Cicero, and Demostenes do plead, were in persons pleading themselves. It's true, Isocrates hath 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for in bonum, for the favour and good of any: And (for) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 notes also to do or die for the good and profit of others, Col. 1.24. I rejoice in my sufferings for you, that I may fill up the remnant of the sufferings of Christ for his body. But if it cannot be denied, but for Christ to die for his body is somewhat more than for Paul or any Martyr to die for the body, then sure Christ's dying for his Church (as the more doth include the less) notes Christ's dying for the good of his Church, and somewhat more than for the Church's profit: any may see Stephanus his Thesaurus. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (For) is often the same with 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Paul, Rom. 9 Rome 9 ●. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈…〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. I would wish to be separated from Christ, for my brethren; that was not that they might be saved or not, it were contrair to his prayer. 2 Cor. 5.15. If Christ died for all, than all were dead. The bread is my flesh which I will give for the life of the world. The good shepherd gives his life for his sheep. I lay down my life for my sheep. Greater love than this hath no man, that a man should give his life for his friends. It is expedient that one die for the people, Joh. 11. Christ hath died for the ungodly, Rom. 5. in their stead. For the just, Joh. 10.11. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. ver. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for noteth most frequently vice, loco, in the place and stead: As also, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Sam. 18.33. would God I had died for thee, Absalon. The LXX. the Syriack version, and the Chalde paraphrase, Joh. 15.13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. in thy stead, I would I had died, and thou remained alive. Gen. 22.13. A sacrifice for Isaac, in stead of Isaac, Gen. 44.33. I shall remain pledge (saith Reuben) for the lad, Joh. 11.50. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in pawned for the lad. Num. 3.12. I have taken the Levites for all the first born, in stead of the first born. So LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Rom. 5. 6· 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. v. 7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2. When a ransom is given for another in point of justice, Mar. 10.45. Christ gives his life a ransom for many, Matth. 20.28. He came to give his (dear precious) life a ransom in stead of many, 1 Tim. 2.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, a counter ransom for all. Matth. 5.38. Eye for eye, tooth for tooth. Exod. 21.24.23. Thou shalt give life for life. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Sam. 18. Syria. versio Quis dabit me mori loco tui? Chaldae. Paraph. Vellem quod mortuus essem, & tu mansisses ●odiè fili mi. Goe 22. Give that piece of money for thee and me, Mat. 17. Isa 43.4. I will give men for thee, and people for thy life. 3. It is used thus, when a man is given in place of another, Pro. 11.8. The righteous is delivered out of trouble, and the wicked cometh in his stead. Job 34.24. and he makes others to stand in their place, Heb. as before, Psal. 45.16. in stead of fathers shall be sons. Job 16.4. Oh! if your soul were in my souls stead. 4. It is when the son comes in the room and stead of the father, or one kills another, which is a sad exchanging of one person for another, and though the following King does not act in the person, or by the name & authority of him who went before, yet there is one person changed, and another reigns in his place and room. 1 Chron. 14.1. Abijah steeped, and Asa his son reigned in his stead. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 King. 3.7. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Gen. 44. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Mar. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Mat. 20.28. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 23. dabis 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Daebis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Prov. 11.8. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Job 34. ●4 Heb as before. Ps. 45.16 LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Job 16▪ 4 LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat 2.22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Thou hast made thy servant to reign in the room of David my father. LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Kin. 11.43. Rehoboam reigned in his stead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Chal. Paraphrastes, pro eo. 31. Abijah reigned in his stead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Kin. 1.17. Joram reigned in his stead, LXX. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 1 Kin. 15.28. Baasha slew him and reigned, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Kin. 8.15. He slew him, and Hazael reigned, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. 2 Kin. 15.10. Shallum slew him, and reigned in his stead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. ver. 14. Menahem slew him, and reigned, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. ver. 30. Hoshea smote him, and reigned, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. So Esth. 2.4. Eccl. 4.15. 2 Sam. 17.25. Gen. 30.2. 1 King. 16.10. Zimri reigned, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Ezek. 16.32. Joseph heard that Archelaus did reign in the room of Herod his father, Mat. 2.22. Tremellius, and Trostius both turn it, Trostius, Syria versio. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Loco Herodis patris sui. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tremel. Trostius, vice piscis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Ro▪ 12.17. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Syr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Tremellius Trostius, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro multis, sed Mat. 2.22. vertunt loco. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro, vel vice omnis hominis. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loco seu vice vestri. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loco ●●ium suarunt. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vice populi, 1 Tim. 2.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 loco omnis hominis, 1 Pet. 2.11 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro nobis, vice nostri. loco Herodis, Mat. 5.38. eye for eye: It's the same word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Mat. 17.27. give it for me and thee. The same word, Luk. 11.11. If his son ask a fish, for a fish in stead of a fish. Tremellius and Trostius, in place of a fish, loco piscis, he will not give him a serpent. Rom. 12.17. neither render evil for evil: So the same in both Languages is, 1 Thes. 5.15. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and 1 Pet. 3.19. and 1 Cor. 11.16. Her hair is given her in stead of a covering. The same word in the Syriack is, 1 Pet. 3.18. The Lord Christ died, the just for the unjust: in stead of the unjust, Christ is, Gal. 3.13. made a curse for us, in our stead. Matth. 20.28. Syriack, that he might give his life a redemption for many, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vice multorum. And the same is, Mar. 10.45. and Rom. 5.6. in due time Christ died for the wicked, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Syriack, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 pro, vel vice improborum. 8. While we was sinners Christ died for us. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in our place, 2 Cor. 5.15. If one died in place of all men, all were dead. Mark 14.24. This is my blood of the New Testament which is shed 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for many, loco multorum, Luk. 22.20. This cup is the New Testament in my blood, which is shed in place of you. Joh. 10.11. The good shepherd lays down his life for his sheep, in place of his sheep: The same word, Joh. 11.50. Know ye not that it is expedient that one man die in the place of the people, & that the whole people perish not. Then the intrinsical end of Christ's dying consisteth not with the perishing of these for whom he died: for he died that the whole people should not perish. 1 Tim. 2.6. Who gave himself a redemption for every man. Tit. 2.14. Who gave his soul in stead of us. Heb. 2.9. Who tasted death in the place of every man. 1 Pet. 2.21. (In stead) or (●or) another cannot note always, for the profit and good of another, but it must make nonsense. Christ died in stead of us, 1 Pet. 4.1. Rom. 9.3. I pray that I were separated from Christ in stead of my brethren. The same word so constantly used can hardly signify, for the good and profit either of things or persons: As Luk. 11.11. will the father give the son a serpent in stead of a fish, for the good and profit of a fish? 1 Thes. 5.15. See that none of you render evil for evil, i. e. evil for the good and profit of evil? a wild sense, and it is wilder in the case of persons, when it is said, the son reigns, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so often by the Seventy Translators, in stead of his father, that must be for the good and profit of the dead father. But nothing can be wilder, then to say Jehu killed Ahabs seed, and Zimri slew his Master Elah, Hoshea slew the King, and he reigned in his stead (as the Seventy say not once) that is, he reigned for the good and profit of the King whom he slew, and so slaying of Kings, and rooting out the race and posterity of Kings, Socinus de Servato. l. 2. c. 8. Cateches. Raccoviens. c. 8. pa. 183, 184. The vain reason of Socinians, that Christ died not in the place and room of sinners, because he died not in the place and room of sins and transgressions; retorted & answered. shall be their good and profit. Socinus, and the Catechism of Raccovia, saith, if to die for sinners be as much as to die in the place and stead of sinners, then to die for sins must be to die in the place and stead of sins. Ans. These and the like argue much the vanity of Socinus, if this be retorted, as justly it may. Then as Christ's dying for sinners, is for the good, profit, saving, believing, and confirming of the faith, establishing the comfort of sinners, then by the like Christ's dying for sins, must be to save sins from hell, to bring sins to God, that sins should not live to themselves, and to establish the faith, the consolation of sins; whereas Christ died not for sins as for sinners, that he might save sins, but to dissolve the works of the devil, to take away sin, 1 Joh. 3.9. Joh. 1.29. Christ dies one way for sins, and another way for sinners: The Physician one way cures the disease that it may be rooted out, and be no more, and another way the diseased person, that he may live and be in health. CHAP. IU. Now we are i● Christ dying, and crucified in him. 2. A twofold crucifying of us with Christ. 3. A discourse of mortification. 4. The actings of the mortified. 5. That we are to be mortified in our affections to every thing that is not God, etc. IT is objected, that we was not born, nor ha● we any being, when Christ died, than we died not in Christ, nor could we rise, ascend to heaven, nor sit in heavenly places with him? Ans. But 1. in Physical actions there is required the real existence of the worker. Not so in legal actions, for as we had no being, who now believe, when Christ died, so our sins had no being; We legally died & suffered for sin in Christ, although many of us for whom he died, were not then born, and neither we nor our sins had any being. How then could our sins, that were not, deserve punishment? Yet I desire to believe that Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. 2.24. his own self bore our sins in his own body on the tree. And that he was wounded for our transgressions, and bruised for our iniquities, who now live, Isai. 53.5. and they cannot deny this, who teach that CHRIST died for the sins of the world, none excepted. And the child in the womb, when the father is absolved from treason is really and in Law restored to his father's inheritance: And the sucking child may be Crowned a King, and take possession of a Kingdom, and take the oath of loyalty of the subjects in the person of another, though physically he neither do, nor know what is done, but sleep in the arms of the nurse. So we legally in CHRIST satisfied, our nature in Christ was crucified, and we, though not born, did satisfy and suffer satisfactory punishment in Christ. Heb. 1.3. Having by himself purged our sins, he sat down on the right hand of the Majesty on high. Heb. 9.28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many. And in him we were (legally) crucified, and dead to the Law: As Gal. 2.19. so as Christ once being dead and crucified, the head and members, whole Mystical Christ is dead to the Law, and Christ can die no more, for he cannot satisfy and pay the debt twice: And so are we in him dead to hell, to wrath, to Law-vengeance. Satan raises a discussed plea against the conscience, CHRIST willeth not that we answer pleas that he hath answered, and that by unbeleef, we trouble ourselves with debt that he hath paid. thou art a sinner, and under the curse of the Law. There is no answer to that, but by believing I was with Christ, crucified, and am dead to the Law and died to death first and second. For Christ suffered mystical, Christ legally satisfied, and so did I in him▪ (I speak not now of personal suffering with, or for Christ) and therefore that is a plea of Satan's forging, and taken away. And unjust summons may be answered by non-compearance▪ and by the appeal of faith to Christ who having paid the debt sits Judge upon his own debts, which he himself paid, and therefore cannot suffer these for whom he died to suffer for his proper debt, which once he paid. The husband cannot endure the wife to be imprisoned for the debts which he made his own and fully satisfied. Obj. 2. All men must die and return to dust, and so must sinners, as the Law requires, therefore Christ died not for thee? Ans. Socinus, and Crellius object the same, which Satan doth. Socinus, de Servato. l. 2. c. 8. Quomodo igitur vice & loco nostri Christus est mortuus, si nos quoque perpetuo ●idem mortis generi expositi sumus? Crellius, adversus Grotium, c. 9 par. 9 How we die, though Christ have died for us. For that death in the hue and colour of Law-wrath is holden before a believer now and then under doubting as a temptation. For we suffer not death such as Christ suffered, to wit, for sin, watered and affected with the curse of the Law; nor must we measure death from body or bulk of departing, but from the salt, and worst of death, which is the curse, and that being removed, we never die, Joh. 11.26. Joh. 5.24. no more look upon death in the Law, for there it reigns, but in Christ, and in him death is dead and removed; the formal demeriting power is removed, when the Law is satisfied: And a believer being dead to the Law is dead to the curse and to the worst of death, as Christ is dead▪ to it now. Obj. 3. But the conscience of the believer, suppose there were no devil, challenges him of sin, and therefore that he is under a curse? Ans. The conscience may be the factor and deputy of Satan in that also, We depose CHRIST (with reverence to his holiness) from his office of Mediator, when we embark, having once believed in him, in a new plea with the Law. for it is the deposing of Christ from his Office of Mediator in satisfying and answering by his death all the demands of the Law, there is none but Christ, when the Law demands blood and the torments of the second death, can plead any thing on the contrair. Rom. 3.19. We know that what things soever the Law speaks, it speaks to these that are under the Law: but the Law speaks not then to a believer, for he is under grace, and so is not in terms of treating or parleying with the Law. Christ was crucified and the believer is legally crucified with Christ, buried and risen again with Christ. 1. Then the Law is not his judge, it spoke to Christ and condemned him and put him to death, when he was under the Law, and condemned you in him, now you say, Christ is not condemned and crucified, when ye enter in a new treaty with the Law to receive a new sentence from it, and thus ye undo what Christ hath perfectly done. 2. To hearken to conscience componing and making another paction with the Law then Christ hath made, is to take the plea that Christ hath embarked in, off his hand; ye are to stand still and be silent, and believe that Christ's dying, and your dying in him, is a closing of a satisfactory bargain with the Law. Christ condemned sin in the flesh, by taking on his flesh the curse due to us for sin, & for sin, that is, for sins cause, that it might be taken away, he sent his Son to die, Rom. 8.3. and judge and condemn sin. 3. This is to mistate a question well debated and discussed by Christ; for he being the end and perfection of the Law, hath silenced, and satisfied the Law, We are not to act of new a plea with the Law, being now in another kingdom and freed from the Law. and to what use can it serve to make a new plea and a bastard controversy with a satisfied party, or to hearken to conscience which craves in the name of mistaken Law well paid debts, and this is but Satan abusing the Law, and feigning Letters of Caption in the name of the Law, to trouble the quieted conscience of a believer. But its safest to say, I stand to what Christ hath done and suffered to fulfil the Law, and I believe I was crucified in him, judged, and condemned legally in Christ: and what can you seek more of an ill-doer? He is condemned, crucified, hanged on a tree, and so is justice quieted. Some raise the devil and a storm in the soul and cannot calm it again: It is not good to provoke, irritate, and waken a sleeping dog. There is quietness and peace of believing what Christ hath done as well done, and comfortably to rest on his deed by faith. Hence a case of some, who, because they are under deadness and security, desire a wakening of conscience, We are not to desire a Law-wakening under Gospel-deadnesse. and Satan hath taught some to commit some heinous guiltiness, that they may fall in the hand of justice, and so be wakened, and Satan gives them their fill of it. Hence, we had rather take a Law-way which is not God's way, as lie under deadness; there may be a legal looking upon deadness, whereas it is a Gospel-sin that we should be humbled for, and in which we should not please ourselves; but no man freed from the Law and brought out of prison, should be willing or desirous to return to the dungeon again. We should let God guide us under a fever, and not be our own Physicians, but be quiet at Christ's part, if he be pleased to cure by contrairs, and to quicken me by deadening me, or to make a soul humble by smiting with a spirit of pride: its good, we are to submit. Obj. How could we be in Christ as in our surety (for saith Arminius) we did not give nor appoint Christ to be our Cautioner or Surety? Ans. It's evil arguing of Arminius or Satan, who would make the union either natural or legal betwixt us and Christ, weak, We sinned in Adam, though we had neither being nor hand in making Adam either our natural or Law-head, so may we be legally crucified with Christ our surety, though we had no hand in appointing Christ to be our surety. far off, general, and such as is betwixt Christ and Pagans and all the world: But this reason is nought, for we sinners were not born and very nothing, when God made the first Adam our father and head in Law as in nature, nor had we any hand or action in substituting the first Adam in his place, and yet we sinned in Adam, and his sin is ours, by divine imputation. But can any deny but Christ on the Cross did act the cause of many believers not born? This is peculiar to this dispensation, that the creditor, not the debtor, appoint both the Law-head, and the Evangelic Surety. The Surety had from us a Cautionary, sponsorie, and deputed nature, but no subscribed commission from us, it was in the heart of the Creditor by grace efficacious to obtain our consent, and to make a sort of legal marriage assuming our nature before we either knew our husband, or gave consent to the marriage-Covenant. As the Advocate speaks in the person of the Client absent and sleeping, and when the Client hears and sees how his cause is promoved, he both assents unto, and renders thanks and praises to the Advocate: and so the absent and far off Client not knowing any thing does act in the Advocate. And how many answers doth our Advocate in Heaven make for sinners on earth in his plead, of which we know not in particular any thing? Nor doth Christ speak or plead for believers as a private man, nor appear in his Name as it were, but in our person. Neither is there a feigning of a person here, or a borrowed and feigned redemption, there be these five here. All the requisits to a real satisfaction are in Christ's dying for us. 1. A Redeemer Christ. 2. Persons redeemed, sinners. 3. A Lord from whom we are redeemed, the Lord Jehovah, not simply, as God, he is the party from whom we are redeemed, but God as the offended Lawgiver, who had us liable to eternal punishment. 4. There was a price, the life and blood of God, which though not profitable to God (for that is extrinsecall to satisfaction real) yet an abundant compensation to justice for declarative glory taken from God which is the nature of real satisfaction. 5. There is here a God just, true, holy, unchangeable, to whom the price is paid. Nor does Christ sustain the person of the enemy Satan from whom we are redeemed, for he is but the lictor who then had no right to detain us, we are redeemed from evils of sin and punishment: Nor doth Christ in suffering sustain the person of God. Hence, from our being crucified with Christ crucified, something is to be said in a practical way of our mortification; for mortification flows originally from Christ's death, we being crucified in him and with him, Gal. 2.20. Q. What is mortification? A. It is a deadning of the whole powers and inclinations of the soul in their bentnesse and operations, What mortification is. in order to things forbidden by the Law of God, or in things indifferent and commanded. Hence, not the affections only, but the understanding and mind must be deadned. And therefore this is no mortification until sin original be subdued in its damnation by Christ's death, and in its dominion by the Spirit of Sanctification. A tree is not withered while standing on its root, bulk and branches are green and flourishing: It's much to know the withdrawing of sap and life from the root and the vital parts of old Adam. The ebbing of a River is not the drying up of it; the new birth only is mortification. Q. 2. Since mortification comes only from Christ's death, what is the influence of Christ's death herein? Mortification comes from Christ's death as from a real cause and from a real new principle procured by the death of Christ. Ans. The influence is real, ad modum causae physicae, the merit of blood hath bought us from our vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. Christ dying doth merit by blood the Spirit, and infused grace, which deadens the whole life of sin. Evangelick Arguments from ten heavens, from ten Gospels working morally and in a swasory way, cannot more work mortification then touching can make a real change on a dead corpse; we was legally dead and crucified in Christ, and with Christ, when he died, many not being born then: But in the infusing of the life of God, Christ applies the real principle of mortification. Now the redemption from a vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. from the present evil world, Gal. 1.4. is as real and proper a bargain, except we follow Socinus, as redemption from the wrath to come. 2. Christ's death hath an influence moral and suasory to work mortification: As 1 Pet. 1.16. Be holy. 17. Pass the time of your sojourning in fear. For ye are bought with his blood from your vain conversation. And 1 Pet. 5.1, 2. Christ hath suffered in the flesh, therefore be mortified to your lusts, and serve them not, as the Gentiles do: So Col. 3.1.5. But the action moral of the Gospel doth not work upon the natural man: Gospel arguments how and upon whom they work. for like works upon the like; carnal reason upon a carnal spirit; and spiritual Arguments upon a renewed man; as an Argument from a painted feather works upon a child, more than an Argument from an inheritance, which no doubt will work upon a man come to age, and yet neither the one nor the other works upon a renewed mind to remove him off Christ his rock. Hence it is, 3. that Acts of Omnipotency are used as Moral Arguments: also, God works in you to will and to do, therefore work out your salvation. And choosing, redeeming, calling, justifying, quickening, converting, are brought in as causes in Scripture, both real and moral; but they work morally on reason, where there is an impression of faith and principle of life. The Gospel works on an unrenewed man to persuade him almost to be a Christian: Ye may persuade a youth to a course, When reason is green, adherence▪ to a course by persuasion is unstable. and get his word, consent, and write; but because reason is green and young, he falls off it again, but a man of judgement shall stand to it: yet if he be not renewed, reason is also green and raw before a spiritual temptation. Quest. What are the actings of a mortified man? Four sorts of considerable actings in one mortified. Ans. No actings. 2. Slow actings and lent. 3. Actings indifferent. 4. Closing with contrair providences, reproaches, work not on mortification to fire the man. Psal. 35.12. They speak mischievous things. 13. But I as a deaf man, heard not. David feared to be the reproach of the foolish: Such a case, though from God, would raise a cry in a child of this world. Psal. 39.9. I was dumb, I opened not my mouth, because thou did it. A mortified man is dead to the voice of men-singers and women-singers, and musical instruments of all sorts, Eccles. 2.8. and houses, gardens, 1. No actings are in the mortified at most moving objects. vineyards, orchards, great possessions, cattle, treasures, gold, silver, are all as music to a dead man: and repenting Solomon now mortified, looks on them as a wise man upon experienced vanity and vexation of spirit. Will he sing and dance at a shadow? Except a mad man, none will do that. 2. If any thing, without a child of God, work upon him, they move him not much: Psal. 131.2. Surely I have behaved and quieted myself, as a child that is weaned of his mother, my soul is even as a weaned child. Acts 20.24. None of these things move me: I make not much reckoning of bands. Peter, The motions of grace are quiet & slow. 1 Pet. 4.12. will have the saints not to think burning quick, strange, graces motions are quiet, slow, modest, there is not much fire in the spirit of a weaned child: A mortified soul is as a sea that hath no winds, nor low ebbings, nor high spring tides. Grace stirs leisurely and lentely toward all things, except to God: were there ten Paradices offered to it, it cries not, a dying man's pulse beats weakly. Grace shouts at nothing, The actings of a mortified man in order to all created things, are indifferent, not peremptory, not so absolutely fixed but he can q●i●e them 〈◊〉 Go●. wonders at, and admires nothing; weeps slowly, laughs slowly, sings weakly, eats slowly, drinks not wantonly, feasts, and yet trembles and fears, whether it be the outward or the inward man. David says it well▪ Ps. 62.2. He only is my Rock— I shall not greatly be moved. The believers sings, and yet he is not wanton; and weeps, and yet is not sad; dies, and yet lives; is fervent in the cause of God, and yet stayed and composed in spirit. 3. The actings of mortification are indifferent, not fixedly bend upon any thing but God, no not upon the Ark and spiritual comforts. Weeping David, 2 Sam. 16.25. saith to Zadok▪ carry back the Ark of God into the City▪ (better I want my comfort, than the Ark be taken) if I shall find favour in the eyes of the Lord, he will bring me again and show me both it and his habitation. 26. But if he say, I have no delight in thee, here am I, let him do to me as seemeth good unto him. O how sweet, when for God, Moses can lay down his personal satisfaction in a share of life eternal. What if he tramp upon my eternal Crown, I should lay it down at his feet; and is not this mortification? Should he hide his face, for eternity, from me, and I never see him in his manifestations, so his glory shine in my everlasting sad desertion; there is required an indifferency to all created things without; no peremptory and absolute fixedness of the affection to any good, God excepted, is good: the contrair of this is an ingadging of the heart more than is right to any thing, give me children, or then I die, there should be a contented living without children, if God so will: love the creature, as if ye loved not, the Lord would have us hungering for the creature, and yet not eagerly desiring, and thirsting, and yet have a lent and well ordered appetite to drink: love the child, but let the heart cleave leisurely to the child. Ploughing, and no heart-labouring, buying and selling, and no heart-ingadging to the bargain is best here. 1 Cor. 7. They that have wives should be as if they had none. 30. And they that weep, as though they wept not; and they that rejoice, as though they rejoiced not; and they that buy, as though they possessed not. In the acting of affections toward the things of this life, as father, mother, husband, wife, children, houses, gain, beauty, honour, and new bought farm, there would be a godly distance of the heart from the thing ye do: Loving, and no loving; rejoicing, and no rejoicing; weeping, and no weeping; speaks most mortification. We cannot do here, except sinfully we overdo, and the out-going of the heart to the creature must be fiery, which is childish, whereas mortification is a gracious well composed grave temper of the aged in Christ. There is a fire-edge and a fervour or fever of affections even to spiritual objects that are created at the first conversion, Actings terminated on God may be fiery. for mortification does not so soon begin as the new heart. As for God, love as one that loves, desire and desire, and when he hides himself, weep as if you weeped, so the weeping be terminated upon God, not upon his dispensations, to quarrel at, and censure his ways, but let the out-going of the heart to God, and to Christ loved and longed for, be with fire, and full strength, Cant. 3.1, 2, 3, 4. Cant. 2.5. Ps. 42.1, 2, 3. Ps. 84.1, 2. Joh. 20.13. Luk. 7.38. Rev. 1.17. 4. It's mortification to have a heart closing with all providences. Phil. 1.21. To me to live is Christ, and to die is gain: To live is good, to die is good, Mortification sweetly closes with all providences. because the Lord so wills, the Lords giving is to Job praising, and the Lords taking away is to Job praising. Phil. 4.12. I know both how to be abased, and how to abound: every where, and in all things I am instructed, both to be full and to be hungry, both to abound and to suffer need. If I die, it is good; if I live, it is good; if I be full, and rich, it is good; if I be hungry, and poor, it is good; if David be on the Throne, it is good, and he sings Psalms; if he be chased barefooted, and ashes on his head, by the ascent of Mount Olivet, it is good; he also praises and sings Psalms, 2 Sam. 15.30. Ps. 3.1, 2, 3. If he be at home in his house, it is good, he praises, Ps. 30. Ps. 101. If he be banished in the wilderness, and chased from the house of God, its good, he praises, Psal. 42. Psal. 63. Psal. 84. Nothing falls wrong to a mortified soul. The people cry Hosanna, Christ bids them rejoice, their King comes, Zech. 9.9. The wicked spits on his face, and plucks off the hair, that is good, Isa. 50.6. I gave them face and back to be doing their will. Heat to a gracious spirit is good, cold is good, joy is good, sorrow is good, health is good, sickness is good: Ezekiah gets a victory, the Assyrians are slain, that is good. Isaiah prophecies that all that are in his house, and his treasures shall be spoiled, and his children carried captive, good is the word of the Lord: Is spoil and captivity and the sword good? Yea Ezekiah closes with it, Isai. 39.8. Grace wonders at nothing, laughs at nothing, weeps at nothing but faintly, rejoices at nothing wantonly; closes with all, says Amen to all: for Christ was crucified for me, and I am crucified in, and with him. Q. 3. What are the speces or sorts of mortifications, that we may know the true mortification? A. 1. It's hard to give the division of them logically: There is 1. a natural mortification, there is no fire in the affections of sucking infants to Crowns, Kingdoms, to treasures of Gold and Silver, that is not mortification, Mortification or deadness merely natural, only because the Tools are broken & the horse wearied, hath nothing to do with the death of CHRIST but virtually there is as much fire in a flint stone, though formally it be cold, as may burn twenty Cities. Concupiscence driven away from the aged, Eccles. 12. the hearth-stone is cold, and there is in it such a deadness to lusts, not because of deadness of sin Original, it lives, as the souls of the old men live, but because the tools are broken, the animal and vital spirits are weakened, the man loves the journey, but the horse is crooked and laid by: there is nothing of Christ's death here. 2. There is a compelled mortification, sickness and withered arms and legs, and strong fetters in the prison, poverty and want, care for bread, and the armed man poverty that hath a sharp sword, necessity blunts the affections in their second acts, the man hath no mind of whoring: 2. Compelled mortification is not from Christ's death. And many drink water, who through Christ crucifying, are not mortified to wine and strong drink. 1. There is often in this, an ignorance of CHRIST crucified, and no faith. 2. A reluctance to divine dispensation, and no gracious submission to God, which is in one crucified to the world. 3. There is a Philosophic mortification to the creatures which are seen by the light of nature to be very nothing and most unsatisfactory to the natural man: 3. Philosophic and bookish mortification not from Chrst crucified. but there is no supernatural deadness in the heart wrought by the death of Christ. Archimedis, and other great spirits, sick of love to know the nature, motion, and influence of the stars, and pained with a speculative disease of books, and to know much, do contemn and despise honour, gain, pleasure, the three idols, of ambitious, of covetous and voluptuous men; but there is no deadness, no bluntning of the operations of the soul toward the idol world, flowing from the believed in crucified Lord of Glory, except you say that Plato, and Aristotle, and such, were crucified with Christ: Learning works not mortification. 4. There is a religious or a madly superstitious mortification. The Monks (saith Luther) dreamt that the world was crucified unto them, 4. Superstitious and religious mortification, Luther Com. on Gal. 6▪ 14▪ and they unto the world, when they entered unto their Monasteries, but by this means Christ is crucified, not the world: Yea the world is delivered from crucifying, and is the more quickened by that opinion of trust they had in their own holiness and righteousness. Col. 2.23. In will-worship, in humility, and neglecting of the body; not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh. There is much vain and counterfeit mortification; and Papists have as good warrant to sacrifice their lives to God, and to offer a bloody sacrifice unto God, under the New Testament, as to shed their own blood in whipping and scourging, and such bloody worship, hath the ground of mortification that Baal's Priests had to lance themselves with knives to the effusion of blood. And the same may be said of pilgrimages, of voluntary poverty, in which (as Luther said) the world and all their lusts are quickened. 5. Not unlike to this is the Pharisees mortification, 5. Pharisaical mortification. in which they are not crucified with CHRIST, but alive and vigorously strong to self-righteousness, to merits, to dead works. 6. There is a civil or moral mortification which hath divers branches. 6. Civil mortification. As 1. Senec● teacheth that nature is satisfied with water for drink, and a ●urse for a house, yet he was a covetous man himself. And shall Horatius Cocles be a mortified man, because he defended the Romans against the three Curiatij alone? Though the bloody Gallant killed his own sister? And was the state mortified who pardoned him that bloody fact, for his gallant service? And Decius father and son who suffered so much for their Country, and loved it more than their own blood? And must Africanus Major, and Cato, who suffered for the liberty of the public, and Diogenes, who lived on herbs, be mortified men to the world? But what avails it to be dead to the bulk of a bit body of clay, and yet be alive to vain glory? 2. There is an occasional deadness rising from the sight of a father, a brother, a friend dead, not from the death of Christ. An unbeliever dies with this word, I would not live for all the world, and, we are like water spilt on the ground. The house is burnt, all spoiled, treasures, and the stock, by land and sea-robbers, are plucked away; and riches have wings. Hence, mortification transient for a time: but lusts fallen in a swoon, are not dead, they rise again and live. 3. There is another transient mortification, as D. Preston observes, when the conscience is affrighted with Judgement, D. Preston Serm. 1. of mortification▪ p. 8 p. 9 and some fire-flaught of restraining grace is up. 4. A good calm nature naturally either dull and stupid, or some clement and meek disposition, and free of the fire that often follows the complexion, and hampered in with teachers, parents, company, education, learning, seems a mortified nature. But that is true mortification, that flows from faith in a humbled crucified Saviour, and it is not to believe that Christ was mortified in our room and place, as Saltmarsh and Antinomians would say. Faith in Christ crucified is our mortification causatively, in radice, not formally. Q. 4. To what things must we be crucified? Answ. Gal. 6.14. To all things created, to the world; we condemn and despise and hate the world, and the world does value us nothing. 1. Mortification to self. 1. There is a deadness to self which was in Christ our sampler of mortification, Ro. 15.1. Let us not please ourselves, but bear the infirmities of others. 3. For even Christ pleased not himself. Self loved and adored, and mortification do not consist, too much life in apprehension, and admiring self, argues deadness of deadness and of mortification. Was not Christ a noble self? Yet for the Lord, and his ransoned ones, Christ got above noble excellent self. It is true, there is a renewed spiritual self, a new I in the Saints, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Rom. 7.17. Now it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwells in me. Gal. 2.20. It is not I that lives, but Christ lives in me. Mortification sets us above new 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 renewed self, and regenerated and crucified I; it being a created excellency that we are not to adore. 2. Mortification to will 2. Mortification requires a deadness to the will, as in Christ, not my will, but thy will be done: Much life in the will to created things, speaks little or no mortification. Christ excelled in this, Joh. 5.30. I seek not mine own will▪ but the will of him that sent me. O what court, and power, and life hath our will? And how soon the will is broken and dead, then is the man broken, dead and crucified with Christ. Much will, much life of sin: See Joh. 5.40. Ye will not come. Much will, much life, all will is no mortification. Luk. 19.14. We will not have this man to reign over us. See Mark 6.25. Mat. 1.19. Mark 15.15. Act. 24.27. Act. 25.9. Luk. 10.29. Rev. 22.17. All will, argues no mortification. 3. Mortification to life. 3. There is required deadness to our life, which was eminently in Christ, Mat. 20.28. 1 Tim. 2.6. Joh. 10.11. So Paul, Act. 20.24. Ye speak of bonds and affliction, But none of thase things move me, neither count I my life dear to myself, so that I may finish my course with joy. To be mortified to life, is to hate the life, Luk. 14.26. for Christ. And Revel. 12. they overcame: mortification was their victory. v. 11. They overcame, for they loved not their lives unto death: Love of life is the life of sin when it's not loved in God. 4. We must be dead to wisdom, 4. Mortification to wisdom: there is a paper sickness for many books and to all the gifts of the mind, for the wisdom of the world is foolrie, and God hath befooled it, when it comes in competition with the wisdom of the Gospel, 1 Cor. 1.18, 19 except we be dead to it, we cannot glory in the Lord. 27, 28, 29. Compared with v. 31. 2. There must be a deadness to learning, to books, and book-vanity, Eccles. 12.12. There is no end of making many books, and much study is a weariness of the flesh. Eccles. 1.17. 5. Mortification to learning & books. Ptolemaeus Philadelphius King of Egypt gathered in the Bibliotheck of Alexandri● 40000. books. ad luxuriam non ad utilitatem, ait Livius, and they were all burnt. Serenus Sammoni●●● left in Testament to Gordianus junior three score and two thousand books. Petrarcha, Librorum larga copiae est operosa sed delectabilis sarcina, & animi jucunda distractio— libri quosdam ad scientiam, quosdam ad insaniam deduxere, dum plus hauri●nt▪ quam digerunt: Vt stomachis▪ sic ingentis nausea saepius nocuit, quam fames. And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly: I perceived that this also is a vexation of spirit. 18. For in much wisdom is much grief, and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow. Paul spoke more with Tongues than they all, 1 Cor. 14.18. but he was dead to that gift, he had rather have brought them nearer to Christ. 1 Cor. 4.10. We are fools, and hardly we can away with that; but we are fools for Christ's sake, and for the interest of Christ and the Gospel, let us so be counted. It's nearness to Christ that makes us for him to be willing that what is most eminent in us be trampled upon, even shining wisdom, sciences, acts, eloquence, knowledge which puffeth up. Yea there is (3.) required a deadness of the knowledge of Gospel-mysteries, 1 Cor. 13.2. Paul was not rude in knowledge, but he was dead to that, and would not glory in that. And (4.) they are not crucified with Christ, not dead to opinions and sides, and to lead factions: I am of Paul, I am of Apollo, was no honour to Paul in his own esteem, 1 Cor. 1. What? was Paul crucified for you? or were ye baptised in the name of Paul? Who excels in learning, who admires not his own, the birth of his own mind? If it were but to hold there be ten new worlds in the Moon, and millions of worlds in the other side of this world? My brethren, be not many masters. Ah! we are not dead to the Chair, the Pulpit, every one loves to be counted and called Rabbi. The blessed Man Christ confesses that he knows neither the day nor the hour of the Son of Man's coming; yet there are who dare define the time of his coming, and the day. The mind is a proud and haughty thing, and we are not dead to it; the mind is not mortified to the mind, 1 Cor. 8.1, 2. 5. We are not dead to Mammon: O who is like Christ and refuses to be a rich King, 6. Mortification to riches Joh. 6? Paul, 2 Cor. 8, 9 For ye kn●w the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor: He had a greater mind than that he could live to riches. Paul, Acts 20.33. saith not I have sought neither silver nor gold, as the Godly judge, Whose ox have I taken, 1 Sam. 12.3. but I have coveted no man's silver or gold, or apparel: The life of lust to riches is in the trusting in it. Job 31.24. If I have made gold my hope, or have said to the fine gold, thou art my confidence; Or, 25. have rejoiced because my wealth was great. It's true, a beggar and an extreme poor man that cannot have bread, is not troubled nor much tempted to seek a Kingdom and the millions and tons of gold that many rich ones have; but yet there are speculative desires and rolling waves and floods of wishes in the heart for these: and because hunger and want of bread is his door enemy lying between him and the hope of great riches, the man is neither mortified to the love of bread nor to the millions of gold that the heart is sick after. And as there be divers kinds and speces of pests, and they are not all of one kind, yet all contrair to the blood and the heat of life: So are there sundry kinds of unmortified lusts about riches according to the sickness of the desire. Obj. But is not the desire of food and raiment natural, how then is it faulty? The simple desire of riches is not the sin. Ans. The desire simply is natural, and the Ants and the Coneys do desire. But the desire 1. beyond measure. 2. With a sinful doubting that they shall not have it, which reproacheth Omnipotency. 3. A desire wider than that of Ants and Coneys, of that which is more nor sufficient, which would destroy and not feed but over-feed, is the faulty desire; as sickness desires drink more than sufficient, not for health, but to feed the disease, it is the desire of the disease rather than of the man diseased; and the forbidden desire is the sin. Obj. 2. May not a child of God desire more then enough, how then is he mortified? Ans. If the desire of more then enough come from the habit of covetousness, the man is not mortified to Mammon: all sinful habits in the child of God are broken, and lessened, Whether acts of covetousness may consist with mortification, and how. and chased in to inclinations, or to the habit of Original corruption slackened and by grace subdued; but in every child of God there is sin dwelling and the flesh, Heb. 12.1. Rom. 7.17, 18. 1 Joh. 1.8, 10. Jam. 4.5. Gal. 5.17. and the old man, which is put off by degrees, Eph. 4.24. Col. 3.5.10. which is a habit of corruption not in full vigour, but sickening, decaying, and a dying daily, but even a grown child of God from this broken and sick habit may, temptation invading, and the Lord withdrawing his influence of grace, may break out into gross acts of covetousness, adultery, murder, as is clear in David, Lot, Peter, Asa, and that saith that mortification is complete in none. And there is too oft a sort of sinful resurrection of the habit of sin and the flesh, so that David seems not to be David, but an adulterer, a murderer: As we see it is the same River that swells over its banks, that it was before, but the overflowing is from without, from the clouds and from excessive rain, the river also hath a receptive capacity in itself to exceed its banks and channel: So hath a child of God from strong temptation from without, and broken corruption from within, a more than his own ordinary quantity and swelling over his channel; To teach us that our mortification is a work not of day, but of our whole life. Neither would the wise Agur pray against riches, Prov. 30. if temptations contrair to mortification did not follow them. 6. There is a necessity of deadness to honour, and to learn the noble and excellent art of self-contempt, 7. Deadness to honour. that the Spirit shall teach us that spiritual lesson to be willingly tramped on, and the face spitted on, and the hair plucked off the cheeks, as our Blessed Lord went out and in the way met with spitting and shame, Isai. 50.6. Mat. 26.67. Mat. 27.26. O great word! Phil. 4.12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I have learned to be abased. 1 Cor. 4.12. Being reviled we bless, being persecuted we suffer, being defamed we entreat, we are made as the filth of the world, and are as the offscouring of all things unto this day. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the sweep of the house: Erasmus, the filth wiped off any thing. Valla, the filth that sticks to the shoes. The Syriack hath a word that noteth the dung of the belly. As the condemned man tumbled into the sea as a sacrifice to Neptune from a steep place was called peripsema. Sis pro nobis peripsema. So Budaeus thinks Paul alludes to heathen expiations. And when they reproached me, David, Psal. 38.13. But I was as a deaf man that heareth not, as a dumb man that opened not his mouth. The sense and discerning of heat and cold, of rail, and applauses, would be dead: That is mortification, when the sense of hearing is dead to sounds, to music, and to pleasant songs, these are not delightful to a crucified or hanged man, when the life is out: Nor can all the sweet smells, flowers, roses, precious ointments, affect the smelling of a crucified man, nor all the fair and magnific palaces, meadows, gardens, rivers, mountains, hangings, painted pictures, work upon the sight or eyes of a crucified man. When the heart is ravished with honour, as the man who said the glory of Themistocles hindered him to sleep in the night, Plutarch De profectu virtutum lib. 11.5.237. Themistocles somnum sibi Miltiadis Tropheo adimi, eoque se excitari electo. Plutarch. ib. pag. 239. Quid mihi nunciaturus es, nisi Homerum revixisse? as little mortified as Themistocles who said sleep was taken from him, and he was raised out of his bed in the night by reason of the brave trophy and renown of the victory of Miltiades, that renowned man of Athens, who, as is known, with a 10000 Greeks, put to flight 60000. Persians. And Alexander the Great, his heart must have been waking at the sound of honour, who, when a messenger came running to him full of joy, said what should thou tell me, but that Homer is living again? for he thirsted for nothing so much as honour: And how soft and very nothing is the spirit that is broken with riches or honour and pleasure? And often men judge themselves mortified, because they are dead, it may be to riches, but alive to ambition and desire of honour. As Nabuchadnezzar spared no charges for his gods, his pleasure, but he was alive to honour, Dan. 4.30. Is not this great Babylon, that I have built for the house of the Kingdom, by the might of my power, and the honour of my majesty? Men may judge themselves mortified to honour, because they are deadned to riches, and not be mortified. Satan doth often change Post-horses, and can seemingly deaden men to riches, when they are not mortified, and yet the heart is strongly vigorous to honour. When it was told Zeno that his ship, which he did trade withal, was broken: Well done, Fortune, (saith he) thou compels us to go within our cloak; he meaned, To live upon the glory of virtue and learning, when riches are spent and gone, was well done. But mortification, in the habit and root, is like the works of nature. The Sun equally enlightens the whole Air from the East to the West: Life comes in equally upon the whole Embryo and birth. Saving mortification goes through the whole soul. Plutarch. de capienda ex hostibus utilitate, l●bel. n. 3●. pag. 241. Zeno, cum nunciaretur navim ipsius qua negotiabatur, fractam: Bene facis, inquit▪ fortuna, quae nos intra palliolum compellis. Christ merited by his death deadness to honour as well as to riches; Though in the actual subduing of lusts D. Preston does well observe that there is not that labour required in subduing and mortifying all sins. For love of sin being the dominion, life and castle of sin, the more love to the heart-idol and to the right eye, the harder it is to be mortified. Some sins cleave to us as our hair and nails, as a custom of some sinful words, these are sooner mortified; and yet if mortification be not in the heart, these take life again, as hairs and nails cutted and shaved grow again. The trees in Winter are not dead: but there be master-devils and strongly rooted heart-darlings, pride, covetousness, to which we are mortified, with a huge greater deal of pains and wrestling, for they are to men as the eye and the right hand. 7. We are not soon dead to injuries. Our blessed Copy in this excels: Father, forgive them, All sins are not mortified with the like labour. for they know not what they do. And Steven, Act. 7.60. Lord lay not this sin to their charge, Colos. 3.13. Forgiving one another. Yea, but he wronged me, and injuries have a strong impulsion upon our spirits. I cannot forget it. If any man have a quarrel at any (saith he) let it fall: even as Christ forgave you, so do ye also. 8. Deadness to injuries. Shall not Socrates witness against us, who answered his friends, willing him to accuse before the Judge a vain youth who did smite him with his foot, If an Ass lift his heels against me, shall I lift my heels against the Ass? and the youth was so convinced that he hanged himself. And he said nothing to a multitude of reproaches casten upon him in the Theatre, but, I am vexed with words in the Theatre as in a great banquet. Plutarch. lib. de liberis educandis, moral. 1. n. 15.20. pag. 17. A● si me Asinus calce feriisset jussuri eratis, ut contra eum calcem impingerem? Omnibus hoc ei exprobrantibus, & calcitronem (adolescentem) appellantibus, suspendio vita se exuit. Nequaquam aegre fero (inquit Socrates) nam in Theatro, veluti in magno convivio, verbis vexor. But natural reason mortifies men to injuries, as cold water alleys and for a time softens the pain of the child's burnt finger, but the pain is the greater when the water is removed; Or as want of money mortifies a man to drunkenness, he drinks not excessively, not because the heart will not dare to sin, but because he cannot. The Word backed with influences from the death of Christ strongly mortifies to all sins. 9 Deadness to an office or a place of authority. 8. And the soul is not easily deadned to an office or place of a Prince, a Ruler, a Master, a Prophet, a Teacher. Abishai, 2 Sam. 16.9. Why should this dead dog curse my lord the King? Let me go over, I pray thee, and take off his head. David standeth not much upon cursing the lord the King. He is so mortified to that stile as he forgets it, and, v. 10. he saith, Let him curse, because the Lord hath said unto him, Curse David. He saith not, the Lord hath bidden him curse the lord King David. Answers thou the high Priest so? It's a great word. Christ was the Messiah, that is a great office of King, Priest and Prophet: but he was willing to forget his office, by way of taking much on him, that he might fulfil his office by way of suffering. As Rulers and such as are in place must so far be dead to their office and place, as they must be willing to bear in their bosom the reproaches of all the mighty people, and to have their footsteps, even as Rulers, reproached, Psal. 89. v. 50, 51. Places and office too often have an influence and strong enough on our unmortified hearts. But there are some providential sufferings that befall Rulers, as Rulers, against which they should be hardened, knowing that the Lord suffers in them. 10. Deadness to pleasure. 9 It should be our work to be deadned to pleasure. I have married a wife, and therefore, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I can not come. This is the most lively lust. There is a mortified eye, Job 31.1. I have made a covenant with mine eye, why then should I look on a maid? Mortified eye-looks call for mortified heart-looks. It's an old sin, Gen. 3.6. And when the woman saw the tree that it was good for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes,— she did eat▪ Mortified Joseph saw sin engraven on pleasure, Gen. 39.9. How then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God? 10. There must be a deadened heart to all the three, to the world, 11. Deadness to all the world. 1 Joh. 2.15. Love not the world, nor the things of the world. If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in him. 16. For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye, and the pride of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world, Jam. 4.4. There is some life between the friends of the world and the world, and James doubteth not to call that enimity with God, and the three great Idols of the world, gain, glory and pleasure, cannot make any happy, which Heathens, Plutarch, Cicero, Seneca saw: and therefore they pressed a contempt of the world. For strength is the glory of the Elephant or the Bull rather than of man, and plucked away by age and time; And beauty is no less uncertain, being made up of quantity and colour, and the Rose and the Lily hath more of it then man. Riches have wings, and render not the owner happy: Nobility is a borrowed good, and the Parents glory not ours: And honour is the opinion and esteem of men, and we yet cannot be dead to nothings, to shadows, to emptiness and to vanity: and fair buildings are well ordered dead stones. 11. They are not rightly mortified who are not deadned to creature-comforts, to father and mother, for they forsake, 12. Mortification to creature-comforts to multitude, friends, hosts, armies, chariots, horse, father, son, daughter, husband, to city, to our mother-countrey, etc. and the mother may forget the fruit of her own womb, but the Lord cannot forget his own, Psal. 27.10. Isa. 49.15. My friends, Job 19.19. 2. All my friends, 3. All my inward (and dearest) friends, 4. Abhor me. Forsaking is hard, but abhorring is most sad. Yea even in the Cause of God Paul is put to this, 2 Tim. 4.16. At my first answer no man stood with me, but all men forsook me. 2. So must the Church be dead to foreign forces, Host 14.3. Ashur shall not save us, we will not ride upon horses, and the people must be dead and sit still from help from Egypt, Isai. 30.7. For the Egyptians shall help in vain, and to no purpose: therefore have I cried concerning this, Your strength is to sit still. Sitting still is a ceasing from relying upon the Chariots and strength of Egypt, as being dead to them: For thus saith the Lord, the holy One of Israel, in returning and rest shall ye be saved, in quietness and in confidence shall be your strength: and ye would not. And 4. his people must cease from man whose breath is in his nostrils: for wherein is he to be accounted of? Isai. 2.22. and be dead to multitude: for, Psal. 33.16. No King is saved by an host, a mighty man is not delivered by much strength. 17. An horse is a vain thing for safety. The help of the creature substitute in the room of God, having the lustre of blue and purple, or clothed in scarlet, riding upon horses. Young men of desire, Ezek. 23.23. do easily dazzle our eyes, and when we are not renewed in the spirit of our mind, unsanctified hearts are weak in apprehending, and more weak in discerning of things. 5. So must there be a deadning of the husband to the wife, Job. 19.17. to servants, Job. 15.16. to sons, 2 Sam. 16. v. 11. of the mother to the daughter, of the daughter in law to the mother in law, Mic. 7.6. to blood-friends. 12. All the godly and zealous Prophets said Amen to the word of the Lord, even Christ with sighs and tears, to the extreme desolation and ruin of Jerusalem, Luk. 19.41. Math. 23.37, 38. and Jeremiah, Ezekiel, Isaiah, Micah, Hosea, etc. to the ploughing of Zion as a field, to the sword, captivity, to the laying waist of the land without inhabitants, Isa. 5.9. Isa. 6.10, 11, 12. Jer. 9.1, 2, 3, 4. Jer. 16.1, 2, 3. etc. Mic. 3.12. Host 4.3. Host 5.6, 9, etc. There must be a deadning to our Country and Mother-Church, that the glory of justice may shine; yea to our father's grave, our own bed, our own fireside. 13. The Lord will have Isaiah and the godly dead to Laws and Government, to vision and prophesying, when Judge and Prophet shall be taken away, Isa. 3.2. and children shall be their Princes, and babes shall rule over them, v. 4. and the vineyard broken, and the hedge spoiled. And he will have the godly dead to King and Priest and Law, 2 Chron. 15.3. Now for a long season Israel had been without the true GOD, and without a teaching Priest, and without law. Host 3.4. Host 10.3. And now shall they say, We have no King, because we feared not the Lord: what shall then a King do to us? Hence we must be mortified to every thing created which the Lord may take from us. 14. And upon this account there is required a deadning of our hearts to shipping and trading with divers mighty Nations, as we see in the case of Tyre, Ezek. 27. of Babylon, Rev. 18.11▪ 12, 13. Jer. 51. so are we to be mortified to fair houses, Isa. 5.8. stately cities, Isa. 14. to all the Cedars of Lebanon, that are high and lifted up: to all the Oaks of Bashan, to all the high mountains, to every high tower, to every fenced wall, to all the ships of Tarshish, to all the fenced cities: for the day of the Lord may be upon these, Esai. 2. to all fair Rivers, to Oxen, Horses, Chariots, fair acres of land, to Vineyards, to Olive trees, Ezek. 29.4, 5. Isa. 50.2. Exo. 7.19. Deut. 28.31, 40, 41, 51. to seed time and harvest, Deut. 28.38. Hag. 1.6. to corn, wine, oil, to cattle, increase of kine and flocks of sheep, Deut. 28.51, Amos 4.9. to Wine-trees, to Figtrees, to seasonable rains, grass and fruitful fields, Joel 1.4, 5, 7, 10. Jer. 14.3, 4, 5, 6. to peace, safe downlying and safe rising, Leu. 26.36. for in all the hand of the Lords anger is stretched out. 15. The Lord would have us dead to valiant and to mighty men, to Captains, Isa. 3.1, 3, 4. Yea he makes true, 13. A deadness to Captain's stoutness and valour in war, to birth. Ps. 76.5. The stouthearted are spoiled, they have steeped their sleep, and none of the men of might have found their hands. 6. At thy rebuke, O God of Jacob, both the chariot and the horse are cast into a dead sleep: And therefore he will have us dead to courage in war. Who brings on faintness and terror upon the spirit, when the sound of a shaking leaf shall chase men, Levit. 26.36. And when the Lord sends a trembling of heart, and failing of eyes, and sorrow of mind, Deut. 38.65? 16. We are called to be dead to honourable birth, blood, and noble Families, when Princes are filled with contempt, and these that were clothed in scarlet, embrace the dunghill, Lam. 5.12. Isa. 40.23, 20. 17. And we must be dead to the vigorousness of youth, when we read Eccl. 12.1, 2, 3, etc. And Barzillai his complaint, 14. A deadness to youth, pastime, play, laughter, to hunger, fullness. 2 Sam. 19.35. Can I taste what I eat? Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women? And why but this should make us dead to sports, pastime, dicing, gaming, dancing, feasting, chambering, wantonness, to all plenty and fullness, when God can remove the appetite, and give bread, or remove bread, and give the appetite. So as the Lord leaves that doom on you, Leu. 26.26. And when I have broken the staff of bread, ten women shall bake your bread in one oven, and they shall deliver you your bread again by weight, and ye shall eat and not be satisfied. So is Solomon dead to laughter, Eccles. 2.2. I said of laughter it is mad. 15. A deadness to Ordinances. 18. There is required a deadness to Ordinances, the Tabernacle is not God: David may be banished from it. The Temple is a Type of Christ, yet it is burnt with fire, and the Sanctuary profaned: And the Lord required a sort of lentnesse or leasurlinesse of motion of the heart toward these, and will have his people in their exile resting upon this, Ezek. 11.16. Therefore say, thus saith the Lord God, although I have cast them far off from the heathen, and although I have scattered them among the countries, yet will I be to them as a little Sanctuary in the countries where they shall come. And they who remained still at Jerusalem reproached their poor captivated brethren, as hated of God, and gloried in themselves as Citizens and Inhabitants of Jerusalem, saying, v. 15. to the exiled brethren, Get you far from the Lord, unto us is this Land given in possession. They were not mortified in looking upon the Holy Land and City, but vainly gloried in it. And therefore there are two things in Ordinances. There be two●things in Ordinances. 1. God that fills the Ordinances. 2. The external bulk of them. Mortification to God and his presence in Ordinances, is not that we here require, for the affections cannot be vigorous enough in following God. There may be a limiting and binding of God to means, to the Temple, Sanctuary, hearing, Seals, and a fleshly heat and liveliness to means, and bare and naked Ordinances; and in both these there is so far required a deadness, as there would be an holy submission to all these, when the Lord deprives us of Ordinances, and a retiring in to the fountain, to the Lord himself, that he may be all in all. So some cannot sleep except the Bible be under the head in the night: Some tie their faith and comfort so to one man, if he be not their Pastor nothing is right. But so much of CHRIST, or the substance of Gospel-promises must be neglected, as means and instruments. and Ordinances are Idolised: In a word, mortification calls for liveliness of affection to God in Christ, and a holy deadness to all things that are not God. 19 There is necessary here a deadness to works, for there be these defects in them. 1. They cannot save, Eph. 2. (2.) They were not crucified for you, let them not have the place and Chair of Christ. 3. They cannot quiet the conscience, because they cannot justify. Paul Preached from Jerusalem to Illyricum, laboured more abundantly than they all, was unrebukeable, was conscious to himself of nothing, yet was he as dead to these as to very nothing, 1 Cor. 4.4. and to loss and dung, Phil. 3.8. Hence must we be dead to the idol of Godliness, for it's not God. 20. And dead to Godly men, in point of confidence, we must not know the Man Christ after the flesh, 2 Cor. 5.16. nor any mere man, to cry man up as God, (every man is a liar) is contrair to Gospel-mortification. 21. It were good to pray much, and to be dead to prayer: One of the main causes why we cry and pray much and are not heard, 16. Deadness to prayer. Psal. 22.2. Psal. 69.1, 2, 3, is, because that which is proper to God the hearer of prayer, to wit, confidence and hope, we give to prayer which is not God. We pray to our own prayers and to our own wrestling often, rather than to God: and we believe praying does the business and works the charm, as if prayer were Omnipotency itself. 22. Nor are we dead to faith and hope, but we believe in faith and in believing, and we hope in our own hoping in God. 17. To faith and hope we pray to our own prayers. But was faith crucified for you? How many fetch peace, pardon and righteousness, not from Christ, but from their act of believing? Hence a case, whether some may not fervently pray and believe strongly, and yet be disappointed in the particular they pray for and believe they shall have? Certain it may be, especially when we are dead to Omnipotency and alive to praying and believing, and lay more weight on faith in God then on God, and on praying to God then on God himself. What Antinomians say unjustly we give to works, to wit, our peace with God, they and many unduely give to faith, not to Christ. 23. We fail in being more alive to comforts then to God the comforter: the infant may at once both suck the breasts, 18. Deadness to comforts and feeling▪ and also sleep. And is one flower more to be smelled then the whole Garden? And shall feelings and raptures, and manifestations of God in his out-going be courted and over-courted by us beyond the God of all comforts? There is need that the heart be deadened to sense, for feeling and sense is fiery and idolatrous; and were sense more mortified at the out-going of faith, hope, love, it were good, for our faith should be the more lively and vigorous to lay hold on God. How far we may be taken with feeling. Q. Is it not lawful to be taken and feelingly delighted with the influences of God? Ans. Sure, feeling of itself is not faulty, the fieriness and excessive fervour of feeling is faulty, especially when terminated upon created actings of love, faith, joy, desire, hope, and not upon influences as coming from the free Grace of God, otherwise, we are but sick and pained of love of our own gracious actings, because they are our own; and this is the sickness of selfishness. Ah! a Godhead, a Godhead is not known. 23. Nor must we be, in a too lively way, taken with our own stock, 19 Deadness to the habit & stock of created grace. nor trust in the habit of grace or the new heart: for grace in us is a created rose that spreads fair and broad and smells well, but it is not God nor Christ, that we may learn not to trust in ourselves, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 1.9. But why but we may trust in our renewed selves now furnished with a stock and infused habits, the excellent blossoms and blooms of heaven? Nay, not in ourselves thus fitted, but in God who raises the dead: for it's not possible both to trust in renewed self and in God: And Paul never meant that any that professeth CHRIST, is to lean upon sinful self or upon lost and condemned self. And sure it is as selfy to be alive to infused habits, as to misken Christ, and think, being once a convert, we can send ourselves all the rest of the way to heaven without Christ, we need not Christ for a Guide or a Tutor, it's within us may save us. And nothing can be more contrair to a living the noble and sure life of continual dependency by faith on the given Leader of the people, Jesus Christ, then to trust on habits of grace, they are not Christ. 25. Ah! who is that mortified as to be dead to the created sweetness of joy, 20. Deadness to the sweetness of heaven. and the right hand pleasures of God, and the formal beatitude of glory, and alive to the only pure objective happiness of glory? And yet that is mortification, to love and be sick and thirsty for heaven, not for the pleasures of the Garden, and the Streets of Gold, and the Tree of Life, and the River of Water of life, but for only only God, the heaven of heavens: And therefore we cannot be alive to pure and the only abstracted and unmixed God head, except we be thus dead to heaven. 26. There is a deadness to the letter of the promise: The promise (saith M. Ambrose) is but the Casket, 21. To the promises▪ M. Isaac Ambrose, prima, media, ultima. life of fa●th, c. 9 Sect. 2. pa. 2●1. and Christ the Jewel in it▪ the promise is but the field, Christ is the Pearl hid in it. Christ removed, the promise is no promise, or but ●aplesse signs. 27. We must also be dead to the rays, outshinings and manifestations of God to the soul here, and must transchange God in all presence and all love embracements, and no more: but he dead to the house of wine, to the lifted up banner of love, to love-kisses of Christ, to the love-banquets, and to the felt lying, as the beloved, all the night between the breasts: 22. Deadness to the outshinings of God, to take aright absence & presence. for these nearest communions are not God himself. There is required a godly hardness for receiving sparkles of hell and some draughts of sore trying wrath, and the hell of his most wise and righteous frownings, and necessary absence and night of hiding himself. 28. And should not the Church be dead to providences of fair weather, and Court, or the blessing of a godly King David, Ezekiah, and mortified to miraculous deliverances, 23. Deadness to fair providences of court, Godly Princes, miracles. dividing of the red sea, defeat of enemies, to confirmation of the truth by Martyrdom and sufferings to blood? He who is dead to himself and his body and ease, and hardened against contradictions of sinners, against torment of body, cold, imprisonment, sickness, death, and can in patience submit to all providences, is crucified with Christ, if God give or withdraw, he is dead to both. 28. All who are dead with Christ, are dead to all dead worship, 24. To sapless will-worship. sapless ceremonies, and formal worship, Col. 2.20. Gal. 4.9. and are lively in the serving of God, and fervent in spirit, serving the Lord: And rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh, Phil. 3.3. Rom. 12. CHAP. V. Of the Covenant of Redemption between God and the Mediator Christ. 2. Christ is not a bare witness to confirm the Covenant, but the Author of the Covenant. 3. The Socinian way of works cannot quiet the conscience. 4. Christ is upon both sides of the Covenant. 5. Justice mediate not. 6. Reasons of the entrance of sin. ISai. 49.8. I will preserve thee (saith the Lord to Christ) and give thee for a Covenant of the people. Q. 1. How is CHRIST given as a Covenant of the people▪ Is 49 6 Hence, the 1. Question: How is Christ said to be given as a Covenant of the people? Ans. As Isai. 49 6. he saith, I have given thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou mayest be my salvation unto the end of the earth: that is, as Act. 13.46, 47. I have thee, O Christ, to be the Preached Light, and Guide of the Gentiles, and the Preached Saviour, declared and proclaimed by the Preaching of Paul, Barnabas, and the Apostles, and Pastors. So I will give thee for the Covenant, that is▪ the Preached surety and Mediator of the Covenant, Heb. 7.22. Heb. 8.6. When the first Covenant was broken▪ he makes with us an everlasting Covenant, even the sure mercies of David, Isai. 55.3. 2. I will give thee as the only one who is the subject of the Gospel and Covenant of Grace: For to Preach Christ and to Preach the Gospel and New Covenant are all one. 3. I have given thee to be the confirmer of the promises, they are all yea, and Amen, in thee, 2 Cor. 1.20. Gal. 3.16. And 4. by thy death thou confirms the Covenant, and seals it with thy blood, Heb. 9.15, 16, 17, 22, 23, 24. Heb. 13.20. Q. But Socinus denies that Christ is the purchaser or the obtainer by his blood (as it were) of the New Covenant, Socinus de Servato. l. 2. c. 16. for he did not by his death procure or merit pardon to us, he is only the surety or Mediator of the Covenant. And Crellius and he say, the cause why the confirming of the Covenant is ascribed to the death of Christ, is because as by a slain beast and divided into two parts▪ Covenants of old were established, so by the death of Christ the Covenant of Grace was solemnly confirmed and sealed? Ans. Christ is so the Surety as Mediator, as he is also the Author of this Covenant, as God, Exod. 3.6. It was he who said, Christ is not the confirmer only but the Author of the Covenant of grace. I am the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. 1▪ Cor. 10.9. Let us not tempt Christ, as some of them tempted him, and were destroyed of the Serpents. And this is he who led them, and brought them out of Egypt, Numb. 21.6, 7. whom they tempted in the wilderness, 5, 6, 7. And he ascribes to himself the Covenant, Heb. 8.9. Not according to the Covenant that I made with their fathers, etc. And it is clear, that the pardon of sin promised in the Covenant, Jer. 31. Heb. 8. is never ascribed to the blood of Martyrs, but every where to Christ's blood, Eph. 1.7. Col. 1.14. Rom. 3.25. Rev. 1.5. 1 Joh. 1.8. Heb. 9.14.14, 15, 22. Heb. 10.16, 17, 18. 2. That he is the Surety also of the Covenant, is expressly said, Heb. 7.22. and the Mediator thereof, Heb. 8. Nor can it be said that the death of the Testator does properly give faith and authority to the Testament, The death of the Testator how it confirms the Covenant. for the authority and justice of the just or unjust will of the Testator, addeth unto, or diminisheth from the authority of the Testament; for the Testators will is the principal efficient cause of the Testament, the death of the man is only a necessary condition, by which the right of the Testator to these goods is transferred from him (who now being dead, needs them not) in to friends, to whom they are left in Legacy; It is true that the death of the Testator, to wit such a death of one who is more than a Testator or only man, even God man, procu●es as a meritorious cause, life, remission, &c▪ but this it does not as the death of a Testator and dying friend, but as such a so excellent, so satisfactory a death, which no Martyr's death can do. There is a far other thing in Christ's blood then power of sealing and witnessing the truth which is in the Martyr's blood. and so death is but an antecedent condition of the right to the goods. 3. Christ's dying to bear witness to his own Gospel is only the secondary end of his death, in so far as secondarily remission of sins is made known to us after the principal end of his death, to wit, reconciliation, remission, pardon, redemption, and life is purchased to us by way of merit: And sure the truth of pardon and redemption is hugely more confirmed and sealed by the whole company of the Martyrs, and made known to the sons of men, then by the death of one single man, Mary's Son: Nor does the Scripture ever commend Christ's love to us in sealing the Gospel with his blood as the only way to life, or making this the most strong Argument to move us to believe in God, and obey Christ, because Christ died for sinners, and rose again to make the Gospel true like, and worthy to be believed, as the Martyrs do: but love shined in this, that in dying we have redemption and forgiveness and life in his blood; And since Godly and sound believing Martyrs died for this end, especially to glorify God, and seal the truth, Joh. 21.19. Rev. 2.13. Mat. 10.32. Luk. 12.8. Mar. 8.38. Luk. 9.26. 2 Tim. 2.12. Rev. 12. ●1. we must have most properly forgiveness of sins in the blood of S●even, and Antipas, and the rest of the Martyrs. And miracles do abundantly seal the truth of the Gospel; And so doth the holiness of profession, Joh. 20.32. Mar. 16.20. Joh. 5.35, 36. Matth. 5.16. but never are we redeemed, justified, saved by Christ's and the Apostles miracles and holy life, for any thing we read in Scripture; but we have life by Christ's blood as by a ransom, a price to buy us. Q. Hence, 1. case: May not the conscience be quiet by the way of Socinus▪ The Socinian way quiets not the wakened conscience by mā● works, but by the blood of Christ apprehended by faith, this is done▪ which lays aside a ransom given to Justice? Ans. The experience of the Godly man wakened in conscience saith to this, when he is chastened with pain in his bed, and the multitude of his bones with strong pain, and the man's soul draws ●ear to the g●ave, and his life unto the destroyers, and the man stands on need of an Interpreter, one among a thousand to show unto man his righteousness, Job 33.19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Then God is gracious to him, and saith, deliver him from going down to the pit, I have found him a ransom: He is not quiet while God say, my Prophet, deliver him from hell and the pit, which he so much fears, for my offended Justice hath found a ransom in Christ, and I am 〈◊〉 with him. Yea, and the conscience must be purged from 〈◊〉 works, by his blood who offered himself without spot to God through the eternal Spirit, Heb. 9.14. Yea, and there is no remission of sins without shedding of blood, v. 22. Not of Bulls or Goats, for the blood of beasts leaves still conscience of sin, Heb. 10.1, 2. Then it must be the blood of Christ, v. 5.10. who was crucified and made a curse for us, Gal. 3.10. such a curse as we must have eternally, according to Divine Justice, suffered. Yea, if works done by the exemplary grace of a Martyr, such a holy man as Christ, who was never wounded for our transgressions, nor bruised for our iniquities, than Christ died in vain, and there was no ransom of blood given for our sins, only God of freewill made an innocent man a curse, and would have him crucified neither for his own sin, nor for ours; well then, may good works without the blood of sinner or surety, take away sin: And the conscience sprinkled with good works may well calm a guilty conscience, yea, and according to the measure of good works is the measure of assurance of peace with God. Now we see the most tender David, Job, Hezekiah, Heman, who walked most with God, have not always most assurance of peace and righteousness with God, but most dreadful doubtings of conscience, according as by faith they apprehend the ransom of full satisfaction, or were dazzled and darkened in their apprehension; yea sure, without the ransom of blood, of freewill, all receive a dry and unbloody pardon by doing the Commandments of Jesus Christ. The Socinian faith which looks to an exemplary Martyr whom God of no justice, but in vain, and for no cause, delivered to death, but of mere free pleasure, whereas there might be, and is forgiveness without shedding of blood: contrair to Heb. 9.22. Rom. 3.24.25, etc. even good works done in imitation of Christ. Q. 2. Another case is here: Is Christ on our side of the Covenant, and on the Lord's side? Christ is upon both the Lords side of the Covenant, & upon our side, & the satisfaction i● most 〈◊〉 This would seem no satisfying of justice. Ans. It is true the case would seem no quieting of conscience. If 1. Christ-God were not the same offended God, who out of sovereignty of free grace doth condescend to make a Covenant of grace, and so is upon God's side. 2. If Christ were not a Person different from offended God, as the Godhead is common to all the three, so in a voluntary and admirable dispensation and Oeconomie the King's Son, a Person different from the Father, taketh upon him our nature; And 3. having man's nature which offended, and so being fit therein to satisfy wrath, and fit therein to merit, to sanctify the people with his own blood, might well be upon our side: and there's no scenick, no seeming, but a most real satisfaction here, in that there is a most full and real compensation made to offended justice, and our faith laying hold on this, the conscience is quieted. As I sinned in the first Adam legally, so I satisfied in the second Adam. Obj. But justice saith, The same person that sinned, the same must suffer and satisfy, and no other. Ans. Justice saith so, but that part of justice by the graciousness and mercifulness of the Just●God is, and may be dispensed withal: So as Justice as Justice seeks payment, Justice as justice seeks satisfaction, but Sovereignty of freegrace, not justice, determines how, and who shall pay. the Creditor as the Creditor seeks recompense and restitution: But by whom, Justice determines not, whether payment and satisfaction be made by the same very person who offended, or by a fit surety in the person and place of the offender, as it determines not whether as much or far more be restored then was taken away, so there be a compact and voluntary agreement between the satisfier and the satisfied. Hence, Justice being 1. offended, is not (to speak so) the interposing and the mediating attribute of God; but Sovereignty of Freegrace and mercy interposeth. Justice is not the mediating and interposing attribute, but freegrace. 2. Justice may seek payment from the only offending party, and from no other, from Adam and his posterity only; but Justice doth not indispensably, and by necessity of nature exact payment from the only offender and from no other. 3. The conscience of the believer may with sweetness of admiration and peace rest upon satisfied justice, and adore interposing grace, and be quickened from looking unto, and loving interposing grace, to obey and take on the labour of Gospel-love to run the ways of his Commandments. 4. It is not an act of Law, nor of Justice, to give, or find out a satisfier, but an act of love, grace, and infinite wisdom. Q. 3. A third case is, how can the believer look upon life eternal as a gift, if it be sold at so condign a price as Christ's blood? Our glory was work and wadge to Christ, but of free grace to us, we bought it not. Ans. It is not fit to speak of this mystery, but with holy reverence, life eternal is bought to us, and we are said to be bought with a price, 1 Cor. 6.19. 1 Pet. 1.18. 1 Tim. 2.6. Matth. 20.28. Now it is unworthy of Christ, that the fruit of his death should be only grace, not glory, and such a grace as is lubric, uncertain, renders us indifferent, but much weaker to believe or not believe, that is, as Socinians say, to earn and win the wager of Glory by a new Gospel-working, which is our righteousness, and merit to glory: For sure Pagans are more sinfully weak in the Second ADAM who died for them, as Socinus will, than mankind were in the first Adam. The Scripture saith that Christ gave himself for his Church, that he might present her a glorious Church, Eph. 5. 25.27. 1 Thes. 5.9. For God hath not appointed us for wrath, but to obtain salvation by our Lord Jesus Christ. 10. Who died for us. 2 Tim. 2.10. Therefore I endure all things for the elects sake, that they also may obtain the salvation which is in Christ Jesus with eternal glory. Judas 21. Looking for the mercy of the Lord Jesus Christ unto eternal life. Rev. 5.9. Thou hast redeemed us to God by thy blood, etc. Act. 20.28. Feed the Church of God, which he hath purchased with his own blood. Eph. 1.7. In whom we have redemption through his blood. 11. In whom also we have obtained an inheritance. We are not afraid to call eternal life a fruit of Christ's death, that is, of the merit of his death: See Joh. 10.10, 11.28. Joh. 3.14, 15, 16. Q. 4. A fourth case: Many stumble, some in that God permitted sin to enter, which he might have hindered, knowing he should be thereby under a necessity either to torment men in hell, or torment on earth his most innocent Son Christ? Ans. Socinians, Arminians, yea Pagans, and all enemies to Christian Religion, are burdened with the same seeming reason: For if God, or their gods may hinder wickedness, and yet do not hinder it, they bring themselves, or the true God, that they must be necessitated to torment the sinners. 2. There be reasons unanswerable, why if we yield (and it is a shame to deny) that God is able to hinder sin to enter in the world, or that he is not infinitely wise, Deep reasons in the depth of unsearchable wisdom, why the Lord who can hinder sin to enter in the world, thought fit it should be and so that he hath not most weighty reasons why he suffers sin to be: As 1. if sin come freely in the world without the will of God, either the Lords dominion over sin must be none at all; or the creatures dominion of freewill must be dependent upon the dominion of grace and Sovereignty. 2. The out-going of freegrace must eternally be hid, if sin had never been. As there had been no field for the expressions and blossoms of eternal flourishing revenging justice: As also, the creatures arms are short, and could not reach the eminent degree of manifesting the glory of freegrace and pardoning mercy, but the Lord aimed at this. And 1. the relation of a Saviour and a sinner, of the Physician and the sick must be known; Now a Physician hath not relation actual to all sick, all the world over, but only to his own patients, his own sick ones, who by Covenant, feeling their danger, None sick speaks no Saviour, no such Physician as Christ have laid the weight of life and death, of righteousness, of salvation over upon that one only Saviour, and live, diet, apply salves, medicine, only by the direction of this Physician, and do receive medicine and recepts from no other. 2. Infinite wisdom made choice, beside other infinite possible ways, It is a deep of wisdom that the same men that now are firewood eternally in the lake of brimstone, might have been (if so it had pleased GOD) proclaimers of the glory of his grace in heaven, & the now heirs of glory in their place. of this only way of redeeming: and here glorious Sovereignty shines, he wailles out, Judas, Magus, Pharaoh, to be firewood and coal to the River of fire and brimstone, and made so many sinful pieces of sick, brittle clay, overgilded with the habit of grace, of free righteousness, of glory, to be the eternal harpers and proclaimers of the glory of his grace; whereas he might have made these stones, and worms, for he created Angels and worms, and all out of the Mother Nothing, by his good pleasure. And it must be a wonder of unsearchable Sovereignty, that should not for eternity have been concealed, such a number of Angels and men whom he set up in the heaven of heavens as heirs of glory, to be everlasting Heralds and Trumpeters to sound out experienced grace and mercy, might have been, if so it had pleased him, lumps of everlasting vengeance in the eternal lack, and all that are condemned, and suffer the vengeance of eternal fire▪ both devils and men are chips and pieces of beings hewn out of the same rock (if so we may speak) of that huge and vast Nothing, and might have been up before the Throne filling the Chairs and rooms of the now heirs of glory, thou believer, might have been in the seat of judas, scorched in his furnace in hell, and judas might have had thy Throne and thy Crown up with him eternally who sits on the Throne, and with the Lamb. 3. He might have keeped all the sons of men, and all the Angels, in a sinless condition, God might have hol●en up the law●dispensation for ever, but then there should have been no place for the Ark of glory. J. Ch. to be courteours to proclaim the glory of Law-goodnesse, and of the never broken Covenant of Works, but then there should never have been such a thing known to the generations to come, as that Ark of glory, that huge and boundless all fullness of the indwelling Godhead in the Man Christ. Sure, had there been none sick, such a suffering Physician to heal us had never been, none lost would have said there is no Saviour, none dead in sin, would say, there is no need of such a Lord and Prince of life, by whose swelling wounds we are healed, Isa. 53. 4. Nor was it fit that this should never be known to Angels and men, that the Lord honours so many redeemed sinners with a grant and licence to love so high, so precious a Redeemer, and as it were to mar and black his fairness and desirable excellency with our feeble and sinfully weak love, he being so far above our love or faith or praises. 5. The Gospel-wonders should not be an eternally sealed book to men and Angels, as, Revel. 12.1. that wonder in heaven, The Gospel-wonders of grace should not eternally have been bi●. A woman clothed with the Sun, and the Moon under her feet, and upon her head a crown of twelve Stars, should be known. And what was showed to John was to be shown to the Churches, Rev. 21.10. And he carried me away in the Spirit to a great and high mountain, and showed me that great City, the holy Jerusalem descending out of heaven from God. 11. Having the glory of God. I mean here the wonders of grace, mercy, declared justice: as that the most High should empty Himself and the Godhead be united to clay: that there should be such a high Bridegroom, so low and sinful a Spouse: that death should conquer death: that Nothings of clay should sing their debts, eternally cast down their crowns, being made of sinners glorified Kings, and not be ashamed to cast down their crowns before him that sits on the throne. Nor should the gifts and graces of God be hidden, Rom. 8.32. He that spared not his own Son,— how should he not with him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, give us all things, begrace to us all? How should he not make heaven and earth free grace to us, and all a mass of grace to us? Eph. 1.6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He hath begraced us all over in Christ. 1 Tim. 1.13. But I obtained mercy, as dipped in a sea of mercy. Luk. 1.28. Hail Virgin, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, filled with free grace. Let us forgive one another, Col. 3.13. as Christ begraced pardon to us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. That we might know, 1 Cor. 2.12. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the things that are freely given us. And what a debt must that be, the forgiving of ten thousand talents, more than to forgive millions and tuns of gold? Whether of the two be most excellent, Law-innocency, or Gospel-repentance. Hence the Question, whether Law-innocency and never sinning▪ or Gospel-repentance and rising again in Christ, be most excellent? It is answered. 1. Simply to us: It is better and morally more excellent never to fall, never to be sick, then to rise in Christ and be healed by such a Physician. But sinning and falling being considered in relation to a more universal good, there is more excellency in Gospel-rising then in Law-standing: As, 1. There is more feeling deeper sense in the woman which did wash Christ's feet with her tears, and wipe them with the hair of her head, then in some who never so fell. And Christ may hold forth something of this, Luk. 15.7. Likewise I say unto you (saith Christ) there is more joy in heaven over one sinner that repenteth, more than over ninety and nine just persons that need no repentance. True it is our Saviour's scope is not to compare repentance and Law-innocency together, or to show that the Pharisees needed no repentance, as if they were not in a lost condition: but to show what joy was in heaven with the Lord the father of the forlorn son, and in the Angels, at the home coming of repenting sinners. And is not a Jewel of ten thousand millions of more worth than a Diamond that is not worth the eighth part of that sum? Adam's innocency and never sinning should have been by the common influences of Law-love, and the same may be said of Angel-innocency. But Gospel-repentance is the gift procured at a dearer rate, Christ was exalted a Prince to give repentance, Acts 5.31. Neither should there be sense and such loving sense of free grace in the forlorn son, had he never fled away from his father, and never been so received with a welcome of grace which he believed, before he felt it. CHAP. VI Q. 11. Whether there be any such thing as a Covenant of Suretyship or Redemption between JEHOVAH and the Son of GOD? That there is such a Covenant, is proven by 11. Arguments. NO doubt, Christ God-Man is in Covenant with God, being a person designed from eternity, Christ Man must be in Covenant with God. with his own consent, and in time yielding thereunto, and yet he stands not in that Covenant-relation that we stand in: as we shall hear. 1. Arg. What Argument does prove that there is a people in Covenant with God, Arg. 1. who call the Lord their God, as Zech. 13.9. Jer. 32.38. Isai, 25.9. the same shall prove Christ to be in Covenant with God: As who can say, he is my God, For the Covenant of redemption because Christ c●lls the LORD his God. he must be in Covenant with God. As Jer. 31.33. I will be their God, and they shall be my people, Ezek. 11.20. Ezek. 34.24, 25, 30. Now this is clearly said of Christ, Psal. 89.26. He shall cry unto me, thou art my Father, my God, and the Rock of my salvation: The Son, the only begotten of the Father saith, thou art my God, Heb. 1.5. And again, I▪ will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son. It is expounded of Christ, but was first spoken of Solomon, the Type, 1 Sam. 7.14. My mercy, that is, my Covenant-mercy to the Son of David and his seed, shall stand sure as the days of heaven, Psal. 89.28, 29, 34, 35, 36. 1 Chron. 22.10. He shall build a house for my Name, he shall be my Son, and I will be his father. Then follows the Covenant-promise: And I will establish the Throne of his Kingdom over Israel for ever; which is expounded, Psal. 89.28, 29, etc. of Christ, a Covenanted King as long as the Sun and the Moon endures, 34, 35, 36. and cannot agree to David, whose Kingdom is now gone. As also, Christ flees to this Covenant in his extreme suffering, my God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? Psal. 22.1. Mat. 27.46. So Psal. 40. it is Christ who saith, v. 8. I delight to do thy will, O my God. And it is a Covenant compellation, my God, and spoken by him, v. 6. Mine ears thou hast opened, who removes all sacrifices, and offers himself a sacrifice, Heb. 10.5. A body thou hast prepared me. So also, Ps. 45.7. Thou lovest righteousness and hatest wickedness: Therefore God, thy God (a Covenant word) hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness, above thy fellows. See glorified Christ glorying in this, Rev. 3.12. Him that overcometh will I make a pillar in the house of my God, and he shall go no more out: and I will write upon him the Name of my God (which is) New Jerusalem, which cometh down out of heaven from ny God: Four times he calls him his God. The Lord speaks in his Type, Psal. 118.28. he who comes in the Name of the Lord, and is made the head of the corner: Thou art my God, and I will praise thee, thou art my God, I will exalt thee. Christ is a noble example in this teaching us to ride at this anchor of hope, thou art my God by Covenant. Mic. 5.4. Christ shall feed in the Name of the Lord his God, Isa. 55.4. 2. Arg. From the Lords calling of his Son to his Office. 2. Arg. Is taken from the Lords way of calling of Christ to his Office of Mediator: So, he who is the Lords chosen, called, and sent servant, is either engaged in the service, by necessity of nature, so that God cannot choose, but he must choose and call him, and he must, by the same necessity of nature, be chosen and called to that service, or he is the Lords chosen and called servant by free agreement and consent of the Lord who calls, and of the party called, which is a Covenant between Master and Servant, the Lord and the sent Ambassador who is sent, the Lord, the Messenger who comes with such news. Now of Christ it is said, Isai. 42.1. Behold my servant whom I uphold, my chosen in whom my soul delights. And of mere grace and free-love, both God sent him, and he came, Joh. 3.16. 1 Tim. 1.15. for by no necessity of nature was Christ sent to preach glad tidings to the meek, to bind up the brokenhearted, to proclaim liberty to the captives, Isai. 61.1. to say to the prisoners go forth, Isai. 49.9. For Isai. 42.6. I the Lord have called thee (saith he) in righteousness— 7. To open the blind eyes, to bring out the prisoners from the prison, and them that sit in darkness out of the prisonhouse. Nor can we say, that any thing, but the good will of the Lord did conclude or determine him to send: 1. To save men, not Angels, Heb. 2.16. 2. Some men, not others; Joh. 15.13, 14. 3. So ill deserving men, as lost ones, Luk. 19.10. sinners, ● Tim. 1.15. Rom. 5.6.8. (3.) When the Lord speaks of the Covenant of grace, Ezek. 37.23. he adds a word of this Covenant, I will cleanse them, so shall they be my people, and I will be their God. 24. And David my servant (the son of David Christ, for David was dead) shall be King over them, and they all shall have one Shepherd. Ezek. 34.23. I will set up one Shepherd over them, and he shall feed them, even my servant David, he shall feed them, and he shall be their Shepherd. 24. I the Lord will be their God. And Zecha. 13. JEHOVAH owns Christ as this Shepherd, as one of his hireing. v. 7. Awake, O sword, against my Shepherd. Mal. 3.1. The Messenger of the Covenant, whom ye delight in, behold he shall come, saith the Lord of Hosts. Hence, this David is the Servant, Shepherd, and Messenger of the Lord, either by nature, which cannot be said, for the Man Christ is by Nature his servant, but Christ-Mediatour, God-Man, is not so his servant, or he is so by free consent, on the Lord's part, who hires and sends him, and on Christ's part, who graciously condescended to be hired, and undertook for us; which all along must be understood of no servile reward. 3. Arg. Christ's voluntary yielding to the work, proves this, 3. Arg. Christ his offering of his service to GOD proves this Covenant. if Christ, God: Man willing to empty himself and take on him our nature, did offer his service to God, saying, Sacrifice and burnt-offering thou didst not desire, Psal. 40.6. Heb. 10.5. a body thou hast prepared me. 7. Then said I, lo I come (in the volume of the book it is written of me) to do thy will. And if Christ-God-Man did willingly lay down his life of his own goodness, and no man could take his life from him, against his will, Joh. 10, 11, 18. Joh. 18.5.8. Joh. 14.31. Luk. 9.51. Then is Christ's free consent to be our surety and Redeemer, to seek and to save us, clear, Matth. 20.28. Luk. 19.10. And if it pleased the Lord to bruise him, Isa. 53.10. and of love to give him to the death for us, Joh. 3.16. Rom. 8.3.32. Matth. 21.37. than the Lords consent that he should be our Surety, Saviour, and Redeemer, is no less evident. Now a mutual agreement between JEHOVAH and the Son for one and the same undertaking is a compact and Covenant, to have us saved. 4. Argument is, 4 Arg. The Father's giving of the elect to Christ to be redeemed, and the Son his willing receiving of them proves this Covenant. from the agreed upon giving and taking between the Father and the Son, where there is a free giving of some to the Son to be ransoned, and keeped, upon the Father's part, and a most free closing of the Son to own and answer for the given, and to lose none, but to raise them up at the last Day, There certainly is a Covenant gone before, as jacob's reckoning with Laban, Gen. 31.39. That which was torn of beasts, I brought not unto thee: I bore the loss of it; of my hand didst thou require it, whether stolen by day, or stolen by night. 40. (Thus) I was, in the day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night; and my sleep departed from mine eyes. This evidently speaks a Covenant upon Laban's part, delivering his flock to Jacob, as to a servant and shepherd, saying, I contract with thee, I deliver my flock to thee, answer for them: make an account to me of dead and living. And on jacob's part, a taking burden Covenant ways to take care of them; and a Covenant-yeelding, require thou at my hand old and young, weak and strong of the flock: I bind myself to keep them. So Christ hath delivered and given to him of the Father, so many by head and name, Joh. 17.2. As thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he should give eternal life to as many, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as thou hast given him. 12. Those that thou gavest me, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, I have kept, and none of them are lost. Joh. 6.37. All that the Father hath given me, shall come unto me, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and the comer to me, I will in no wise cast out. 39 And this is the Fathers (Covenant-) will that sent me, that every one which seeth the Son and believeth on him, may have ●●verlasting life, The persons being given of the Father to the Son speaks strong consolation & it's no consolation at all to depend upon freewill. and I will raise him up (by Covenant and Gospel-promise) at the last day. And what speaketh stronger consolation, than the Father gave me to the Son Christ to be saved, and the Son undertook for me, hath given a written band under his hand to keep me? O what happiness! that I am not mine own keeper, but that Christ hath given it under his hand, and the Father and the Son have Covenant-wise closed and stricken hands, the one having given, and the other received me a-keeping. 2. My soul enter thou not into their secrets who lay all peace, comfort, assurance of salvation upon their own Socinian faith, that is, their indifferent relying upon the Saviour Jesus and their own holiness, watchfulness, obedience, love to God. Sure, the comfort, joy, peace, assurance subjective that they have in their conscience, can be no stronger than the objective and fundamental certitude of standing, persevering, overcoming, flowing from freewill▪ which is woefully free and indifferent to persevere and stand, or not to persevere, not to stand, but to fall away. It's a stronger consolation (and the strongest should be the Christians choice) that is founded upon the Father's giving, 5. Arg. Christ's receiving of the Seals of the Old & New Covenant, proves that there is such a Covenant and the Sons receiving of sinners; and the faith of salvation to me which relies and leans upon Christ's undertaking for me, that I shall not be lost, nor casten out, then upon my undertaking for myself. The fifth Argument is from Christ's receiving the Seals, Who so receives in his body the Seals of the Covenant of Grace, Circumcision, and Baptism, and yet needs no putting off of the body of the sins of the flesh, by Circumcision, and needs no forgiveness of sin, no regeneration, no burying with Christ in Baptism, as Col. 2.11, 12. Rom. 6.3, 4, 5. and eats the Passeover, and needs not that the Lamb of God take away his sins, as Joh. 1.29. since he is holy, and without sin, he must be under the Covenant, and God must be his God, in some other Covenant than sinners are, for these seals are proper to a Covenanted people, strangers and Pagans might not receive them, but these in Covenant only, Gen. 17.7. Exod. 12.48. Matth. 28.20. Col. 2.11, 12. and Christ must have received Seals for other uses and ends, than sinners received them, to wit, to testify that he was the God of both Jews and Gentiles, and that he was the undertaker for us, in a Covenant of suretyship for us, to perfect a higher command than any mortal man was under, to wit, to lay down his life for sinners, Joh. 10.18. and beside that, for our cause he was made under the Law, to fulfil all righteousness, and so was Circumcised, Luk. 2.21. Baptised, Matth. 3.13, 16, 17. did eat the Passeover with the Disciples, Mat. 26.18▪ 19, 20. Mar. 14.18. Luk. 22.13, 14. he▪ in coming under that state in which he must, because a man, fulfil the Law, and be under even Gospel commands so far as they were suitable to his holy Nature, testifieth in obeying all commands even of the Moral Law (and as the Son of God he was under no such obligation) that he was under a special engagement, and compact to God, for the work of Redemption. And we are taught to feel what imbred delight and sweetness of peace is in duties; when Christ Covenants with God to come under the Law, and under the hardest of commands, to lay down his life for sinners, because it was a Law and command by Covenant, that hath most of obedience which hath most of a Law. Q. Was Christ such an one, as needed seals to his special Covenant with the Father? Why Christ received the Seals. Ans. He needed no seals at all to strengthen his faith of dependency, for there was no sinful weakness in his faith, yet he was capable of growing, Luk. 2.52: For the Law requires not the like physical intention and bendednesse of acts of obedience from the young, as from the aged. 2. In that the receiving of the seals proves Christ to be Surety of the Covenant of Grace, it makes good, that he was under the other Covenant, and to perform the obedience due to the special command of dying, as to a command of Covenant. 6. Arg. God might have followed a Law-way with all flesh, & not have sent his Son, & the Son might have refused to be sent 〈◊〉 Ergo, by compact Christ came 6. Argument, is from the Lords liberty: If God might in justice have prosecuted the Covenant of Works, and Adam and his might justly have suffered eternal death for sin (for the Law is holy and just, and the threatening Gen. 2.17. just) except the Lord had of grace made another Covenant, then must the Lord send, or not send a Saviour to suffer, and be a suffering Redeemer and Surety as pleased him, or not pleased him; and if Christ may refuse to undertake, or willingly agree, as pleased him, and Christ being God●consubstantiall with the Father, might have stood to the Law-way of works: For who, or what could have hindered him to follow a course of justice against all men? then if both agreed to dispense with that Law-way to save man; Here is Covenant-condiscension between JEHOVAH and the Son, of quieting Law, and pitching on a mild Gospel-way. 7. Arg. All the promises how they are made to Christ. 7. Argument, from the promises made to Christ: He to whom the promises are made, as to the seed, so as in him they are yea, and Amen, and he who is eminently the chief heir of the promises, as engaged to make good the promises on the Lord's part, to give forgiveness, Jer. 31.34, Heb. 8.12. perseverance, Jer. 32.39, 40. Isa. 54.10. Isa. 59.21. peace, Ezek. 34.25. Leu. 26.6.11, 12. yea, and a new heart, Jer. 31.33. Ezek. 11.19. Heb. 8.10. life eternal, Joh. 10.28. and to make good the promises upon our part, by fulfilling the condition, and giving habitual grace, Jer. 31.33. Ezek. 36.26. and actual influences, Jer. 31.34. to know the Lord, jer. 32.39, 40. Ezek 36.27. to, and with him, God must strike a Covenant of suretyship, that he shall have the anointing in its fullness, above his fellows, without measure, to make good all these promises as Mediator; for it is not simply grace and life that the Lord bestows upon his people, but grace out of the store-house of the Mediator God-Man. Now this must be given to Christ by promise, Gal. 3.16. Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made, he saith not, and to seeds, as of many, but as of one, and to thy seed, which is Christ: He cannot well mean mystical Christ, that is, Christ and all his, for they are indeed many and numerous, as Isai. 2.1, 2. Isai. 60.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6. Psal. 22.27. compared with Rev. 5.11. Rev. 7.9. for the promises are made to Christ-God-Man eminently, not formally: For 2 Cor. 1.20. All the promises of God in him are yea, and in him Amen. For the promise is made to us for Christ, and through his grace, than the promise is made first to him, and more eminently, and to us for him: Propter quod unumquodque●ale, id ipsum magis tale. 2. The promises are fulfilled and made good, not because we fulfil the condition, but for Christ, in whom, and by whose merit, both the grace promised, and the grace habitual and actual to perform the condition, be it faith, repentance, humility, etc. is freely given to us. 3. Christ is he who makes the Covenant and all the promises, Act. 7.32. Who said to Moses, I am the God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham— 34. I have seen, I have seen the affliction of my people which is in Egypt, and I have heard their groaning, and am come down to deliver them: And now come, I will send thee unto Egypt. And v. 35. Moses is made a Ruler and a deliverer by the hands of the Angel that appeared to him in the bush. This is Christ, the Angel, 38. of the Covenant, Mal. 3.1. Christ is he who made the promises and the Covenant. Whom they tempted, 1 Cor. 10.9. Of whom the Lord said, Exod. 23.21. Beware of him, and obey his voice, and provoke him not: for he will not pardon your transgressions, for my Name is upon him. And this Angel saith, I am the God of Abraham, the Omniscient God that sees the afflictions of his people. 3. Hears their prayers. 4. Delivers them out of Egypt, Exod. 20.1, 2▪ and so the Author of the Covenant, and of all the promises. It is much for weak believers that God stands engaged in Christ by Covenant with him to give us to believe, and to believe to the end. CHRIST is an engaged Surety for the standing of a weak believer. Hath the Lord given himself Surety for the standing of a tottering believer? Is there not ground to believe that Christ shall make good his undertaking? Also, if all the promises be made to Christ who is the Author of the Covenant, and upon condition that Christ do his part, and lay down his life; then sure Christ is under a Covenant, to enjoy his reward, when he hath done his work? And to have a believing seed is Christ's reward, heaven and earth can make no ●urer binding for faith and salvation. 8. As the former Argument is from the promise made unto Christ, and fulfilled to him, so this is from the Predictions, Prophecies and Promises of him, as he, of whom such glorious promises are foretold, and may claim the thing promised, by faith, he hath some word of promise for suiting these things: which is a Covenant, if he shall do what is required of him, and fulfil the Commandment, 8. Arg. From the promises concerning Christ. Joh. 10.18. But such Prophecies and Promises there be of CHRIST, Isa. 22.22. The key of the house of David will I lay upon his shoulder: so he shall open and none shall shut, and he shall shut and none shall open. 23. And I will fasten him as a nail in a sure place; and he shall be for a glorious Throne to his father's house. 24. And they shall hang upon him all the glory of his father's house, the offspring and the issue, all vessels of small quantity: from the vessels of cups, even to all the vessels of flagons. Zech. 3.8. For behold, I will bring forth my servant the BRANCH. Zech. 6.12. Speak unto Joshua, saying, Thus speaketh the Lord of Hosts, saying, Behold the man whose Name is the BRANCH, and he shall grow up out of his place, and he shall build the Temple of the Lord: 13. Even he shall build the Temple of the Lord, and he shall bear the glory, and shall sit and rule upon his Throne. Mic. 5.4. And he shall stand and feed in the strength of the Lord, in the Majesty of the Name of the Lord his God, and they shall abide: For now shall he be great unto the ends of the earth. 5. And this man shall be the peace, when the Assyrian shall come into our land. So Psal. 72.7. In his days shall the righteous flourish, etc. Hence, as Christ prayed in faith, Joh. 17.5. to be glorified with the glory he had with the Father before the world was, because he finished the work, though he was not yet crucified, but he had a mind fixed to suffer: So may Christ pray in faith to Govern right, and to bear the glory, and to feed in the strength of the Lord, and to have a conquished people, since he was to fulfil all the work that was laid upon him: And this supposes a Covenant. 9 Arg. Christ is bidden ask a people from God & the Lord promiseth that he will hear Hence, Arg. 9 from the suit he bids his Son ask, which he will grant, Psal. 2.8. Ask of me and I will give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the ends of the earth for thy possession. Psal. 89.26. He shall cry unto me, thou art my Father, my God, and the Rock of my salvation. 27. Also I will make him my firstborn, higher than the Kings of the earth. 28. My mercy will I keep for him for ever, etc. If God say to us, call upon me in the day of trouble, and I will hear thee: This argues a Covenant that God shall hear, if we pray; Then it says, if Christ the Mediator shall pray, he shall be heard and prospered with success in his work. 10. Argument from the work of Christ, and the wages, 10. Arg. The relation of Christ's working for wages, and the Lords paying him his wages, does prove this Covenant. which a Covenant calls for: Christ complains, Isa. 49.4. Then I said, I have laboured in vain, I have spent my strength for nought, and in vain: there's work. Shall he have nothing for his work? He adds, Yet surely my judgement is with the Lord, and my work with my God. v. 6. He receives an answer of a full reward for his work: And he said, it is a light thing, that thou shouldest be my servant, to raise up the Tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give thee for a light to the Gentiles, that thou may'st be my salvation unto the end of the earth. Which words are cited true of Christ, by Luke, Act. 13.47. when Christ is Preached to the Gentiles: And as one who laboured for us, so he craves his wages, though the Jews pay him unworthily. Zech. 11.12. Then I said, if ye think good, give (me) my price, and if not, forbear; pay me, or pay me not: Yet the Lord paid him. Phil. 2.7. He made himself of no reputation, and took upon him the form of a servant,— and became obedient to the death, the death of the cross. Here is work: followeth his wages, call it merit, or what else, it's a reward and the end of his suffering, which Christ both desired and intended, as the fruit of his labours. v. 9 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Therefore God highly exalted him, and gave him a Name above every name. Act. 5.21. Him hath God exalted with his right hand▪ to be a Prince and Saviour. Isa. 53.10. When he shall make his soul an offering for sin (which was work hard enough) he shall see his seed (which was his souls desired wages) he shall prolong his days, the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in hand: 11. He shall see of the travail of his soul, and be satisfied. 12. Therefore will I divide him (a portion) with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with strong: that is an ample reward. Follows his work▪ because he hath poured out his soul unto death, and he was numbered with the transgressors, and bore the sins of many, and made intercession for the transgressors. Hence, his care to finish the work of him that sent him, and to do his will, Joh. 4.34. Joh. 17.4. Joh. 8.29. and as the Father loved, so he rewarded the obedience of his Son, not by necessity of nature, but by a voluntary compact, but he loves his obedience, Joh. 10.17. Therefore doth my Father love me, because I lay down my life, that I might take it again. Joh. 15.10. If ye keep my Commandments, ye shall abide in my love, even as I have kept my Father's Commandments, and abide in his love. Nor can it be denied but a redeemed and saved people was much in the heart of Christ, and much in his desire and intention. Joh. 10.10. I am come, that they may have life, and have it more abundantly. And if, to finish the work, especially of saving lost man, was his meat and drink, Joh. 4.34. and he prayed for the ransoned ones, Joh. 17. to sanctify them: 17. That they might he where he is, 24. There must be always in the heart of Christ a design of love, in that he made redeemed ones his end, his work, his souls satisfaction, Isa. 53.11. And O how worthless were we! that the desire of God should be toward us: How far below the price that love put on us? Was man a Crown and wager for God, for God, A design of love in the heart of Christ toward low man, as his alme & end for such a God to run for, to work for, and to win? Was there not a more fixed seat in Angels, then in clay, for so high a love as the Love of God? Is there room in so low a piece of created Nothing, for so high, and deep, so broad and long a design, so high an aim, as nothing could be the last and the least result of transcendent love, but great Immanuell, God with us? Reason might say, a less price may buy poor man, a lower design may compass sinners. But love said no less could do it: and this love is not capable of a mistake, in buying, infinite love cannot err in designs of free-love. 11. Argument is from the Oath of God: Christ is made a High Priest, 11. Arg. The Lord's Oath ●o Christ when he is made Priest, and King prous this Covenant. another way then other Priests: Heb. 7.21. For those Priests were made without an oath: but this with an oath, by him that said to him, the Lord hath sworn and will not repent, thou art a Priest for ever, after the order of Melchizedec, Psal. 110.4. No man enters to an office by an oath to be faithful, or to be for ever in such an administration, but he enters also to the office by Covenant. And this oath is sworn by the Lord JEHOVAH, to Christ: The Lord hath sworn,— thou art a Priest. It's a more excellent Priesthood which is confirmed by an oath, then that of Aaron, which is confirmed by no oath. Psal. 89.35. Once have I sworn by my Holiness, that I will not lie unto David, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (the Messiah my Anointed, the son of David. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ) 36. His seed shall endure for ever. Act. 2.30. Therefore being a Prophet, and knowing that God with an oath had sworn to him, that of the fruit of his loins according to the flesh, he would raise up Christ to sit upon his Throne. 31. He seeing this before spoke of the Resurrection. Psal. 1●2. 11. The Lord hath sworn in truth unto David, he will not turn from it, of the fruit of thy body will I set upon thy Throne. 12. If thy children shall keep my Covenant, and my Testimony that I shall teach them, their children also shall sit upon thy Throne for evermore. They shall sit so and so by Covenant blessed in Christ. And so the stability and certainty of the decree and oath is not to make the children of David secure, but watchful in their duty: But this is not a condition without the which the Messiah should not reign, but without this he should not reign to their comfort and everlasting good. But otherwise the truth of the Lords Covenant-faithfulnesse depends not upon men's unbeleef, Rom. 3.3. and for the certainty of this promise and oath which made good Christ his reign which shall not cease, see 2 Sam. 7.12. 1 King. 8.25. 2 Chron. 6.16. Luk. 1.69. Gen. 21.17, 18▪ Hence there is no Covenant made with Christ that the Covenant of Works made with Adam should stand for ever. 2. No oath in that Covenant. 3. No promise or oath to give perseverance, and the Spirit and influences of grace for that effect. And the oath of God, that Christ shall be King of my will to reign over the heart, to give repentance as a Prince, CHRIST is a sworn Priest and Intercessor for the hour of temptation Acts 5.31. and that God hath sworn him to be an eternal Priest who offered himself a sacrifice to deliver me from the present evil world, Gal. 1.4. to ransom me from my vain conversation, 1 Pet. 1.18. to bring me to God, 1 Pet. 1.18. that I should, being dead to sin, live to righteousness, 1 Pet. 2.24. Eph. 5.25, 26, 27. Heb. 13.11, 12. Rev. 1.5, 6. is somewhat more comfortable than the doctrine of Papists, Arminians, who say that any tempted Saint may be a justified Saint to day, and an Apostate, a limb of Satan and a child of perdition to morrow, as Judas was: as if Christ were not a sworn Advocate in the nick and hour of temptation to help, in the act of winnowing: and had not made promises of actual grace to actual temptations when they come, Luk. 22.31. 1 Joh. 2.1. Math. 10.19. And if Christ be sworn a King, Advocate, an high Priest, to overcome the rockiness and flinty and stony rebellion of will, providing that will shall first yield and not play the King against Christ: for any thing I see, the Covenant of grace is loser (the corruption of the Covenanter being ten times stronger to evil than the will of Adam was) then the Covenant of Works, and the Gospel an infinitely more plain path to a more fiery hell than the Law. And it speaks much of free grace, that the everlasting salvation of the Elect is in such a castle as the oath of the Omnipotent and infinitely faithful Lord. Lastly, the Argument is the more considerable that every Priesthood, even that of Levi, is imposed by Covenant, Mal. 2.5. My Covenant was with him of life and peace. CHAP. VII. The Covenant of Redemption is explained in three eternal acts. 1. Designation, decree or ordination, and delectation in the work. 2. Mercy and peace, truth and righteousness are agreed in this Covenant. 3. The designed sending of the Spirit cannot be a Covenant as this was. 4. The twelfth Argument. 5. The thoughts of eternal love. THe Covenant of Redemption is two ways considered. 1. As transacted in time between Jehovah and Christ, in his actual discharge of his office of King, Priest and Prophet. 2. As it is an eternal transaction and compact between Jehovah and the second Person the Son of God, who gave personal consent that he should be the Undertaker, and no other. And these three acts are considerable in the Persons in this latter consideration: 1. Designation of one. 2. Decree and destination. 3. Delectation in the work. As to the first: There must have been a Person, either the Father, or the Son, or the Spirit. 1. By God, from eternity set apart, separated, and designed: And 2. This person must have given an actual consent from eternity to the designation: Now the person designed was the Son only, this lot eternally (to speak so) fell upon only him who was, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the Lamb fore-ordained before the foundation of the world, 1 Pet. 1.20. And because Christ-God equal with the Father, does not begin to consent and agree to the designation in time, nor can Christ-God will any thing in time, which he did not will, and consent unto, from eternity; therefore he was present with the Father, and consented unto the designation, and closed the bargain from eternity: upon which account, Christ had the glory of a designed Saviour with the Father, before the world was, and prays that he may, God-Man, be glorified, as touching the manifestation of that glory to Angels and men, with the glory that he had with the Father before the world was, The most sweet providence of God in designing a Physician to us before we be sick. Joh. 17.5. and here is an eternally closed Covenant between JEHOVAH and the Son, with the consent of parties. And who sees not our debt of love, for a foresight and providence of pure grace? Behold a designed Physician before we be sick, and Christ with his own consent, writing himself the repairer of the breaches before the house fall, and the healer and binder up before the bones be broken. 2. Christ is chosen and predestinate the head, the first born of the house, and of the many brethren, and says Amen to the choice, and we are chosen in him, as our head, and he was fore-ordained the Mediator, and the Lamb before the foundation of the world was laid, to be slain for our sin. Hence, 2. offended Justice by the breach of the Covenant of Works in all the three Persons pleads that man should die, and that pleading is most just, and the Law cannot be broken nor repealed. The soul that sins must die, Ezech. 18. the threatening, Gen. 2.17. must be fulfilled. 2. Mercy pleads (not having a Throne higher than justice, Armin. de Sacerdatio Chri. pag. 14, 15. as Arminius saith) that so many chosen ones may find mercy, and peace calls for reconciliation to sinners. 3. Infinite wisdom also requires that justice and righteousness (under the name of mercy we comprehend free and rich grace) may meet, and peace and righteousness may kiss each other, Psa. 85.11. Hence all these Attributes of glory must come forth, that a Throne may be set up and a Psalm may be sung, Rev. 5.12. and the thousands of thousands may cry, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing. 13. And every creature which is in heaven (saith John) and on the earth, and under the earth, and such as are in the sea, and all that are in them, heard I saying, Blessing, honour, and glory, and power be unto Him that sitteth upon the throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever. Hence 1. there is no conflict between mercy and justice (as Arminius saith) nor any natural desire in God to have all Angels and men saved, which is hindered by justice. Job sayeth truly, c. 23. v. 13. He is of one (mind) and who can turn him? (from this end which he intends, as if he could not compass it to another end) and what his soul desires (in saving or destroying) even that he doth. 14. For he performeth the thing that is decreed for me (and all creatures, and his decrees are most free, Eph. 1.11.) and many such things, or many the like things are with him. Therefore it pleased his most free, sovereign and absolute Counsel to bring forth to Angels and men, The harmony of the Attributes of God in the declaration of mercy, truth, justice, etc. is sweetly made out by this Covenant. to heaven and earth, to sea and to all creatures, the glory of justice, truth, mercy, peace, grace, power, wisdom, Rev. 5.13. and in Christ the decreed and appointed Mediator, the Lamb fo●e ordained, as Peter, 1 Pet. 1.20. to be slain, and who agreed to the decree, and in an eternal compact took the burden upon him, to fulfil that of Psal. 85.10. Mercy and Truth are met together, Righteousness and Peace have kissed each other. 11. Truth shall spring out of the earth, and Righteousness shall look down from Heaven. So that in this transaction, the Father and the Son and Spirit, let out to men for their salvation the glory of all th●se Attributes. Obj. Did not the Holy Ghost also from eternity, say Amen, and agree to be sent by the Father and the Son, to lead the Saints in all truth, to sanctify, to comfort them? And did not the Father and the Son from eternity decree to send the Spirit? And did not the Spirit also consent to the decree before the world was? And so shall there be also a Covenant between the Father and the Son sending the Spirit, Joh. 14.26. Joh. 16.13, 14, 15. and the Spirit who is sent? Ans. Every mutual agreement between the blessed Persons concerning their actions without, cannot be called a Covenant, The sending of the Spirit, and the Spirit his free consent to come, is not a proper Covenant. nor need we contend about names. What if we say that there is some Economical and dispensatory agreement of sending and being sent, yea even in the Works of Creation, Redemption and Sanctification, though two things stand in the way to hinder us to call such an agreement with the name of a voluntary compact or Covenant? 1. It seems natural and not voluntary, that there is such an admirable order of working as the Father creates by the Son, as by his eternal wisdom, but yet a person, a suppositum, different from the Father, and by the Spirit, as his mighty power: a third Person. 2. The Son is decreed with his own consent to be the Person, to empty himself, to be in time clothed with our nature, and to put on the state and legal condition of a Covenant-Obeyer of God to the death, the death of the cross, and is made a little lower than the Angels: and this may well be called a Covenant-transaction, and a course of Covenant-obedience in the Mediator, which condition the Holy Ghost comes not under. And what should man say when the votes of the Three carries it, that our iniquities should be laid on the Son, Isa. 53.6. and the Son should be sent, Gal. 4.4. and he from eternity should step out. Lord, send me, here am I to do thy will. Joh. 3.13. No man (no person) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, hath ascended up to heaven, God's love in acting for man in time. but he that came down from heaven, even the Son of man which is in heaven. These votes of love fell not upon Angels, but upon man. And how should it break my rockiness that Christ spoke for me, undertook for me, took all my diseases upon him, before I was, and before my disease had being? We reckon it great favour, Such a man pleaded kindly and boldly for you in your absence, when you was not to speak for yourself. As its love to provide a rich inheritance for the child not born, and to fight for the sleeping child that he may not be killed: when we had neither being, action nor vote in Christ's undertaking. Obj. Such as are chosen in Christ, such are foreseen believers, when they are chosen. Ans. Justly learned and pious M. Bayn denies that: Paul Bayne Comm. on Eph. 1. v. 4. for God choised the noble royal Family, Christ the Head, and all the Branches in Him. Love, eternal love begins at the head, descends to the offspring: But not because they are in Christ by faith and actually are foreseen believers, The Lord choosed us not in Christ, because he saw us in him by faith. for that is all one. We were in Christ as the tree is in the seed, as all the Rose trees and the Vine trees are in the first Rose tree and the first Vine tree, created of God, virtually. For because God choosed us, therefore shall we be in Christ by faith: yea and he choosed us and ordained us to be in Christ by faith, when He gave us to the Son to be keeped by him. The third considerable act here, is an act of delectation, and the place is observable, Prov. 8.22. The Lord, Chanani, possessed me: It's not Bara, created me: It's not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as the LXX. have it, but as Aquila, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in the beginning of his way: as Cartwright, The mutual delights of love between the Father and the Son, in their thoughts of the Covenant-love to man. before he had created any thing. 23. I was set up from everlasting. Tremellius, inuncta fui, I was anointed. Aben Ezra, Electa fui, I was chosen. The vulgar Latin, I was ordained, from the beginning, or ever the earth was. 24. When there were no depths, I was brought forth: when there were no fountains abounding with waters. 25. Before the mountains were settled: before the hills was I brought forth, etc. In all which the authority of Christ (saith Cartwright) is proven from his eternity, antiquity, immortality, etc. and all this time He was with God, as is fully, v. 30. cleared: Then I was by him, as one brought up with him. Ambros. hexa. l. 6. c. 16. Deus fecit Coelum, & non lego quod requierit, fecit terram nec lego quod sic requieverit: fecit solemn, lunam & stellas, nec ibi lego quod requieverit; lego quod fecit hominem, & quod tunc requieverit. Chald. Para. I was nourished up as à maid at his side. He will not want his Son out of his eye: I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before him. The Hebr. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 die, die, from day to day. Rabbi Solomon, annorum myriades, myriads of years. The Father and the Son, from eternity, delighted one in another, and were solacing themselves in the works without themselves: and the ratio formalis (as it were) that which took up the love, delight and thoughts of God, when as yet there was no world, no mountains, no depths, etc. is Christ as Redeemer delighting himself with the sons of men, 31. I was with him,— rejoicing in the habitable part of his earth: Heb. Sporting or playing with the sons of men: both because of all his works, as Ambrose saith, he most longed for man, and made heaven and rested not, and made the earth and rested not, and made the Sun, Moon and Stars, and rested not there: and made man, and then rested, as having found the choicest piece of work he so much delighted in. So the Father and the Son were taken, and (as it were) love, saith Bernard, triumphed over God▪ Bernard. Serm. 64. in Cant. Quid violentius triumphat de Deo. and they solaced their heart in that great design of love, and from eternity passed over that long and sweet age of myriads of ages, in the pleasant and delighting thoughts of that boundless and bottomless Ocean of love, to wit, God is to be made sick and to die a love for the sons of men. Love being above and (in a manner) not stronger than the grave only, and then death and hell, but some way (with reverence to his holiness) mightier then the most High, and brought God down to sick clay: that you may (saith Bernard) see, if you take heed, joy sadned, faith feared, Bernard. hom. ● Super missus est videas si attendas (in Christo) tristari laetitiam, pavere fiduciam, salutem pa●i, vitam mori, fortitudinem infirmari. salvation suffering, life dying, strength weakened: and this wisdom was hid up and kept secret since the world began, Rom. 16.25. Hidden wisdom (in the heart of the Lord from eternity) which God ordained before the world, unto our glory, 1 Corinth. 2.7. the like whereof the eye hath not seen, nor the ear heard, nor hath entered in to the heart of man, v. 9 to conceive: So that this mystery of the Covenant between Jehovah and the Son of God was (as it were little enough to busy the thoughts of the infinite understanding of of the highest Lord, God Father, Son and Spirit, as containing the unsearchable riches of Christ, Eph. 3.8. Say there were millions and ten thousand millions of Globs of new whole earths of all gold mine's perfect and purest gold, The strength of God's love to man, which we too little value. yet should they not all come near to the borders of this riches: and these all were in before there was a Creation, and he lets out of this fullness to us, and we are sinfully poor beside Christ's gold mines, and dry beside the rivers of wine and milk: and dead, a thousand times, being under the flow and outletings of life and of such a life. Hence, the 12. Argument: If Christ the Son was designed, and fore-ordained with the Father, the Spirit, and his own consent to be the person should pay the ransom of satisfaction, and to be satisfied in his soul with the getting and enjoying of the bought, and well paid for and ransoned, yea the over-ransoned sons of men, who ravished love and heart of Father and Son, before the mountains were brought, Prov. 8.22, 23, etc. 30, 31. forth, and when as yet there were no depths, than was that bargain of love closed and subscribed before witnesses from eternity. For could the heart of Christ be cold and indifferent to undergo suretyship for the sons of men: Who warmed and kindled a fire of Redeemers love in his heart from everlasting? Or was his consent to the Covenant, but as late and young as since Adam fell, or Abraham was called to leave his country and his father's house, Gen. 3. Gen. 12? No less everlasting love could save us. Ah! it's an older love than so: A yesterday love, time-mercy, a grace of the age with the world could not have saved me. Nor were our Charters and Writes of Gospel-grace, first drawn up in Paradise: Nay, but copies and doubles of them only were given to Adam in Paradise. The love of God is no younger than God, and was never younger to sinners; and woe to us, if grace and mercy to redeemed ones should wax old and weaker through age, and at length die and turn in everlasting hatred. I desire to hold me fast by that, Jer. 31.3. I have loved thee with an everlasting love. He meets (as Calvin well observes) with a blasphemous temptation of Satan, that the people had in their mouth: Ho, the Lord appeared to me of old; but that is a love from one year to another, and it's out of date now: the Covenant-love to Abraham is dead and away, and the Lord is changed? No, I have loved thee, not for a year, or a summer: The Covenant-love is older than thy poor short time-love. Obj. But I may leave off to love God; and he loves me no longer than I love him? Ans. Where is then everlasting love? and because he loves us we shall not leave off to love him. Night and overclouding of the Sun, is not a perishing of the Sun out of the world; his love quickens my fainting love. CHAP. VIII. The differences between the Covenant of Suretyship or Redemption made with Christ, & the Covenant of Reconciliation and of Grace made with sinners. 2. The conjunction of the Covenants. 3. How the promises are made to the Seed, that is, to Christ, the meaning of the place, Gal. 3.16. 4. Christ acted and suffered always as a public head. IT is not the same Covenant that is made with Christ and that which is made with sinners. 1. They differ in the subject or the parties contracting. In this of suretyship, There are different parties in Covenant of Redemption and Reconciliation. the Parties are Jehovah God as common to all the three on the one part: and on the other the only Son of God the second Person undertaking the work of Redemption. In the Covenant of Reconciliation the Parties are God the Father, Son, and Spirit, out of free love pitying us and lost sinners who had broken the Covenant of Works. 2. Hence the Covenant of Suretyship is the cause of the stability and firmness of the Covenant of Grace. It's true, Psal. 89.19. David is meant, when he says, I have laid help upon one that is mighty, I have exalted one chosen out of the people. Help laid upon Christ 20. I have found David my servant. For the grace of election made David mighty in the Lord, and the Spirit of the Lord came upon him, and made him mighty to execute his office; But this is so to be understood (saith Mollerus and others) of David, as it is also to be referred to Christ, upon whom the strength of our salvation is laid, and the strength laid covenant-ways upon Christ is the cause why David and his seed stand sure in an everlasting Covenant of reconciliation. The Covenant of Redemption most to be eyed. Though the Covenants of Suretyship and of Reconciliation differ, yet must they not be separated: but faith principally must be fixed upon the most binding Covenant-relation between JEHOVAH and the Son of GOD. Eye Christ always in the Covenant, else it's but the sheath or scabbard of a Covenant, and a letter to us. 3. There be two parts (as it were) of the Covenant of Redemption. 1. A Covenant of Designation. 2. Of actual Redemption. The former is eternal; for the Lord does not begin in time to d●signe covenant-ways the Son to be the Consenter to be our Surety: nor doth the Son in time begin to consent. Two parts of the Covenant of Redemption, one before time, another in time. But the Covenant-consent in, 1. Designing of one Person the Son, and no other. Of 2. Decreeing and fore-ordaining of Him. 3. Of mutual delighting in love and in eternal thoughts in the sons of men to be redeemed, 1 Pet. 1.20. Prov. 30.31. Was closed and concluded in an ended bargain from everlasting: for the Parties were coexistent and together, and rejoicing in one another: and in the common work, to borrow that expression, thinking long till the day of marrying of God and man, and until Immanuels' day should dawn, Joh. 8. Abraham rejoiced to see my day. But as touching the other part, the Man Christ, until he should be Man and have a man's will, he could not in two wills close with the Covenant of actual Redemption. But the Covenant of Reconciliation is no more eternal, than the creation, which is eternal in the Decree of God, as are all things that fall out in time. But this Covenant was made in Paradise, How seasonable and timous the Covenant of Reconciliation was, the Physic & the Physician came both in time to the sickness. though it was decreed from everlasting, yet it had no being as a Covenant, nor could have any, so long as the Covenant of Works did stand. But it came in due time, the physic and the Physician Christ the blessed seed, not few hours after Adam was fallen, came to his sickbed, or rather to his deathbed: Blessed be his love who redeemed us in our low condition, for Adam had no faith to receive, nor hope of a Redeemer. Christ came, not sought for, not sent for, not so much as desired by us: For how could we desire a thing impossible, to our knowledge? Or could we thirst for a ransom of the blood of God unknown to Angels or Men? This is prevening grace indeed. 4. Differ. The Covenants do differ in the matter, work and wages. 4. They differ in the subject, matter: The Covenant of Redemption is, 1. who shall be the surety of Redemption to undertake for man? Here am I, saith the Son, thy fellow, Zech. 13.7. 2. What shall be his work? What shall be his wage? He shall lay down his life, that shall be his work: he shall be obedient to his Father to the death, even the death of the cross. And his wage shall be, He shall see his seed, and God shall give him a name above every name. But no such work is laid on us, nor such a reward to be expected by us in the Covenant of Reconciliation. Only here life and forgiveness is promised to us upon condition of believing in Christ: and fit it is that Christ be alone, none under such a Commandment as He, 5. The Covenant of suretyship differeth from the Covenant of Reconciliation in commands. 2. Promises. 3. And conditions Joh. 10.18. 5. The Covenant of Redemption hath different commands, 2. Promises: 3. And conditions from the Covenant of Reconciliation. The Commands of the Covenant of Suretyship are of two sorts: 1. Some common. 2. Some proper and peculiar. The former is, that Christ fulfil all righteousness, Matth. 3.15. obey the whole Law, being made under the Law. Now the command of being under the Law, is two ways considered. 1. As laid upon the Son of God, so it is no command, but a voluntary desire: And so his consenting to take on our nature is a consenting to empty himself, and to be under the Law, but no act of obedience, CHRIST'S emptying himself was no act of obedience, but a most voluntary free act beyond all obligation. because he was under no commanding obligation to take on him ou● nature. But 2. as it is laid upon him now God-Man, and the Word made flesh, he is under a necessity to give perfect obedience, Heb. 10.5. Therefore coming into the world: The Son being to enter into the world, and to take on our nature, speaketh to the Father, thus: Sacrifice and offerings thou desirest not, as expiations to take away sin, for they cannot expiate sin, A body thou hast framed to me, which is the only one sacrifice of the true Lamb of God which taketh away sin, Joh. 1.29. and that once for all: And there are not any sacrifices ever to come after, Heb. 9.26, 28. And perfect obedience with all the heart was tendered by Christ from a holy nature, he being full of the Holy Ghost from his Mother's womb, so as none could accuse him of sin, Heb. 4.15. Heb. 7.26. Joh. 8.46. and this obedience had influence in Christ's obedience. To the 2. to wit, to that proper and peculiar command of suretyship that never man was under, but only Christ. Joh. 10.18. This Commandment (to lay down my life for sinners) received I (and I only) from my Father. Psal. 40.6. Sacrifice and offering thou didst not desire, mine ears thou hast opened,— 8. I delight to do thy will, O my God, yea thy Law is within my heart. Now thus we are not either ways under the commands of the Covenant of Grace: Who in heaven and earth but Christ, could have come under bail and an act of suretyship for us? 2. There were promises of an higher nature made to Christ in his Covenant, then are made to us in our Covenant of reconciliation, to wit, dominion from sea to sea: A Throne at the right hand of God is not made to Angels, Heb. 1.8, 13. nor to us; nor is there remission and pardon promised to him, as to us, of this hereafter. 3. The condition of justifying faith, laying hold on him who justifies the ungodly, is required of us in our Covenant: There is no such condition required of Christ in his Covenant of suretyship. The faith of Christ is the faith of dependency, but not as a condition of the Covenant of suretyship, but in another account. Q. But is it not hard, that Christ is in one Covenant, and believers in another? It's not hard, when the Lord Christ's Covenant and our Covenant cannot be separated, CHRIST'S Covenant helps our Covenant, & he hath a place in our Covenant. How the promise is made unto Christ, Gal. 3. v. 16. and when Christ's room in the Covenant of Redemption is to be the designed person Covenanting, who undertakes for us, as the surety, witness, and Angel or Messenger of the New Covenant, who makes sure our Writs, makes valid and strong our Charters, Rights, and Evidences of our Inheritance. Q. How is it that the promises are made to Christ, as to the seed, Gal. 3.16? Ans. Our Divines, Beza, Piscator, Deodati, the English Divines in their Annotations, expound the Seed Christ, of Christ Mystical, as the Church the body, 1 Cor. 12.12. is called Christ. Judicious Pareus saith, that the Apostle expounds the Seed, not collectivelie of many, Da. Pareus, Comm. in Gala. 3.16▪ Hoc semen (in quo benedicentur omnes Gentes) Aposto●lus interpretatus erat non collective de multis vel omnibus Abraham● posteris, sed individue de uno Christo, ● quo non ●am corporalis quam spiritualis benedicto, hoc est, justitia & vita eterna in fideles difluit. and of all the posterity of Abraham, but individuallie of one Christ, from whom flows to the believers, not so much the corporal blessing, as the spiritual, that is, righteousness and eternal life: And so saith he, the Apostle saith, that this blessing or the inheritance is given to Abraham and believers, not by the Law, that is by no merit in Abraham, but by the promise, and by faith in Christ. Among Papists, Liranus; the promises are made to the seed, scilicet, Christo, in quo impletae sunt & non in alio, ideo dicitur semini in singulari numero, that is, to Christ in whom the promises are fulfilled, and in none other; therefore it is said to the seed in the singular number. So also, Cajetan: Semini autem ejus, tanquam & cui promissa sunt, & in quo adimplenda erant promissa. Corn. à lapide: If the word seed, semen, were taken collectively, the promise could not stand; for its sure all the Jews were not blessed in the seed: Yea many of them (saith Calvin) were a curse. Estius saith, the word seed, is a collective name, and notteth many; and hath not in the Hebrew the Plural Number. Augustine (saith he) will have all Christians following the faith of Abraham to be here noted, for they are that seed to which the promise is made, whereas Christ is properly he in whom the promise is to be fulfilled, and in whom all are one by faith, The promise, Gal. 3.16. is not made to Christ mystical. and all are reduced to the Singular Number. There is no reason to expound the Seed Christ, of Mystical Christ and of his Seed. 1. Because the Seed is he in whom the Nations are blessed, both Jews and Gentiles, v. 14. And the Seed made a curse for us, v. 13. But this seed is only Christ, not mystical Christ, head and members: for neither are we blessed in Christ mystical, nor was Christ mystical the Church made a curse for us: Nor did the Church mystical pay a price of satisfaction to offended justice for us, v. 19 The word seed seems to have the same signification, v. 16. and v. 19 Consider then, v. 19 Wherefore then serveth the Law? It was added because of transgressions, until the seed come, to whom the promise was made. Now the seed coming is Christ coming in the flesh to take on our nature. If the seed were taken for Christ mystical, the Apostle must say, The Law was added because of transgression, until the seed should come: that is, until Christ mystical, his Church should come in the flesh, which is nonsense. 3. Whether the promise be of Canaan, and of life eternal thereby holden forth; Or of Christ to come of Abraham, in whom all flesh shall be blessed; or of righteousness by faith, not by the works of the Law; Or of all these coming under the name of the inheritance, the promise is made to many in number like the Stars: For the Lamb and the hundreth forty and four thousands standing with him on Mount Zion, and the thousands of thousands which none can number, Rev. 7.9. are many, and may well be called seeds; And though they be all one in Christ, yet the Apostle must speak too ambiguously, when he said, The promise of righteousness and life is made to the seed, that is, to Christ head and members: for the promise is so made to Christ, especially of life, pardon, righteousness, as the blessings promised are fulfilled & given through, & for Christ as the only meritorious cause, as all grant: which way the promises are in no sense made to believers, who cannot come in as joint satisfiers with Christ, & as joint meritorious procurers with Christ of the blessings promised to us. 4. The promise is made to the seed coming in the flesh, and assuming our nature in a personal union, v. 19 as is, by confession of all, expounded. Now this restricts the promise to God incarnate, and must exclude the members. 5. It runs most connaturally to the Text, and comfortably to us, if neither Christ, Gal. 3.16. be understood as a private man, the Son of Mary: nor yet as Christ mystical, as 1 Cor. 12.12. But as Christ, a public person, and Head and Lord-Mediator. 1. He represents all the Elect: The Seed, Christ, Gal. 3.16. is neither meant of Christ as a private person, nor of CHRIST Mystical: but of Christ as a public person and Head, the second Adam. and so the word seed is taken individually. He takes all the promises and the weight of the whole Covenant of Grace and Covenant-promises off the Lord's hand as the second Adam representing all the Family and House: Behold I and the children that God hath given me. As the weight of the Covenant of Works, and of the promises thereof, was upon the first Adam, as he should manage these promises, so should it far, ill or well, with all his seed. And so as Christ having the Gospel and Covenant-promises committed to him, so should it be with us: and this Tutor cannot miscarry, and so shall it be well with the Pupils and Minors. Were it no more but that, Joh. 14.19. Because I live, ye shall live also: ye shall live by promise, the free promise of life eternal: it's no small vantage. 2. The promises are laid down in Christ as in a public Lord-Keeper. Christ is that excellent Ark in which are the Tables of the Covenant, and the Book of the Law and Covenant, Deut. 31.26. 1 King. 8.9. and as the first subject of the promises he keepeth them. Yea and Christ is the fountain and original cause of all the promises: for he merited by his blood, remission, righteousness, perseverance, eternal life, all grace, which the Lord makes ours by free promise. 2. In Christ they are made and published to us: so they are dear mercies to Christ: they stand Christ at a dear rate: they are ours freely for no price or hire. 3. Hence nothing hinders, but the promises as made to Christ the first Heir and Son of promise: for Christ is the chief and principal thing promised, and other things that are freely given us (by promise) are given to us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, with Christ, or after that he hath given us Christ: and assignies, and younger brethren come in under the first Heir. Our blood-relation to the Family stands by Christ, interest to promises comes all this way. The Lord's method is, Get first Christ, than all the promises are yours: for they follow him. And Christ well manages Covenant-promises, as they most tend to the good of his own. And this is specially to be considered that Christ, from the womb to the grace, does act and suffer nothing but as a public person. For us he was born, Isai. 9.6. For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given, Luke 2.11. Rejoice (saith the Angel) for unto you (not to us Angels, Christ always to be looked on as a public person. nay neither for himself) unto you is born a Saviour. 2. Why? For whose sake came he this journey to the earth? Luke saith it was no private business of his own, c. 19.10. He came to seek and to save that which was lost, and to save (saith Paul) sinners, 1 Tim. 1.15. 3. Why died he? He was made a curse, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for us, Gal 3.13. Sin for us, 2 Corin. 5.21. Died for his sheep, John 10.11. for his friends, Joh. 15.13▪ was made poor for our sake, 2 Cor. 8.9. is our forerunner who is entered into heaven, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for us, Heb. 6.20. We have a great high Priest,— touched with our infirmities, Heb. 4.14, 15. Who hath entered into the heavens to appear in the presence of God for us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. Christ's public Spirit, who breathed not for himself, lived not for himself, died not for himself, nor ascended to heaven for himself, nor enjoys he heaven for himself, should show us the necessity we have of Christ. The Physician is needful to the sick, the ransom to the captive, bread to him that famisheth: but Christ is more necessary to the sinner. We know not how many are in Christ's debt: for heaven, Angels, Sun and Moon, seas and fountains, The right necess●●ie we are in to buy Christ. men and all things subsist by him, Col. 1.17. Heb. 1.3. Yet most of men judge fire and water more needful than Christ: and think, they no more need Christ or Covenant-interest in him, than the cart needs the third wheel, or the great Ocean a drop of dew: nor is it every necessity of Christ that we press. There is a necessity of a Physician to a whole Pharisee: as a dead man stands in need of life; But it is a literal necessity by which the whole (saith Christ, Matth. 9) needs not the Physician: but it is the sick, paining necessity, such as this, I die a hundreth times, if I get not CHRIST. This takes away sleep in the night, and brings a fixed aim to sell all and buy Him. CHAP. IX. The 13. Argument, from the necessity of Gods call. 2. Of Typical sprinkling of the blood of the Covenant, and of the Testament: The place, Heb. 13.20. the blood of the everlasting Covenant opened. Of the place, Heb. 7.22. the act of suretyship, the assurance of our state. AN Argument 13. is taken from the necessity of this Covenant of Redemption. 1. From the call of God: Christ took not on him to be a Priest, nor did he glorify himself to be made an High Priest, but that he said unto him, Heb. 5. Thou art my Son, to day have I begotten thee: That is, I have ordained thee to have the honourable calling of the High Priest. The Apostle also, Heb. 1. applieth this in part to the eternal generation of the Son: And Act. 13.33. the Apostle applies this to Christ's rising from the dead, because in these two latter, manifestly appears the God Head of the Son, in that he is true High Priest, who, by offering himself hath taken away our sins, He who took not on him to be Priest and King, but upon the call of God must be made Priest and King by Covenant. which only God can do. In the other, Rom. 1.4. He is declared to be the Son of God with power,— by the resurrection from the dead. He who took not upon him to be High Priest while God called him, and neither took upon him to be King, while God called him, and said, Psal. 2.6. I have Anointed him my King, upon my holy Hill of Zion, and willingly consented to the call of God, to be King and Priest. He must be made Priest and King by Covenant between him and God: for Priests and Kings were called by Covenant, Mal. 2. v. 5. 2 King. 11.17. 2 Sam. 5.3. 2. It is necessary that the promises that are our Writs and Charters▪ of Heaven be in a surer hand than in our own, to wit, in the keeping of Christ: For this is an absolute promise made to us, Ezek. 36.26. A new heart also will I give you, and a new spirit will I put within you, and I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh. This promise is not formally made to Christ, yet it is a special Covenant-promise, Jer. 31. Ezek. 11. Heb. 8. for there is no stony heart in Christ, yet the promise is laid down in him, and made to him, eminenter; for by the merit of his blood (for he sanctified the people with his own blood, Heb. 13.12.) he sprinkles many Nations, Isai. 52.15. Some say, as Calvin, Luther, Musculus, by the Preached Gospel: But it is clear, he alludeth to the Law of sprinkling, Exod. 24.8. And Moses took the blood, and sprinkled it on the people, and said, Behold the blood of the Covenant which the Lord hath made with you, concerning all these words. Now of that blood it is said, Exod. 24.6. And Moses took half of the blood (of the oxen that the young men of the children of Israel offered, v. 5.) and put it in basons, The sprinkling of the Altar with blood and half of the blood he sprinkled on the altar. 1. The half of the blood was divided betwixt the altar and the people, to note. (say the English Divines) the mutual stipulation of God (of Christ God the true Altar) to his people, and his people to him, who were atoned and made one by the blood of Christ, v. 7. (2.) Moses took the book of the Covenant, and red it in the audience of the people: Not the Book of the Covenant of the ten Commandments▪ for Moses had not as yet brought the two Tables of Stone containing the ten Commandments, down from the mountain. Then it was the Book of the Judicial Laws and Promises, Heb. 9.19. For when Moses had spoken every Precept to all the people according to the Law: he took the blood of calves and of goats, with water (lest the blood should thicken and congeal▪ nor being mixed with water▪ notting also some other mysteries, 1 Joh. 5.6, 8.) and scarlet, wool and hyssop, and sprinkled both the Book and all the people. It's true there is no mention of wool and hyssop and scarlet, Exod. 24. but the Author to the Hebrews adds nothing of his own to Moses: for there's a ground for these, Num. 19.6. and Moses speaks not of the sprinkling of the Book, but the Book lying upon the sprinkled Altar was also sprinkled with blood; for saith the Holy Ghost, Heb. 9.22. Almost all things are by the Law purged with blood, and without shedding of blood there is no forgiveness of sins. The sprinkling of the Book with blood. There was no guiltiness in the Book, but these written Laws and Ceremonies were the hand-writing of Ordinances which was against us, which was contrary to us: which Christ by his bloody death behoved to blot out, take out of the way, and nail to His Cross, Colos. 2.14. But another Question riseth, Exod. 24.6. What needed the sprinkling of the people with one half of the blood, and the sprinkling of the Altar, that is Christ the Mediator, with the other; For, 1. Neither the work of dying to redeem man can be divided between Christ and the people: nor needed Christ, our true Altar, forgiveness of sins. Ans. The typical sprinkling of the people is expounded, Heb. 9.14. the purging of the conscience from dead works to serve the living God, & to obey the Gospel, 1 Pet. 1.3. But the sprinkling of the Altar Christ with the blood, is a far other thing: So the Holy Ghost, Heb. 9 He who is constitute the Mediator of a Testament, How the Covenant i● a Testament. his death must intervene to ratify and make valide, in Law▪ the Testament. v. 16, 17. That the friends of the Testator may have right to the goods that are bequeathed to them in the Testament. But Christ is the Mediator of the New Testament, v. 15. Ergo, etc. Now we are to know that Christ's dying is considered; 1. As a paying of ransom for captives, by which, in Law and by way of meri●e, the ranson of the blood of God exceedeth the worth of the bought captives, or the crime committed by the captives; and so Christ's death meriteth to his friends ransoned righteousness, life, pardon. 2. His dying is considered as a Testament of a dying friend. Now the living friends, We have right to the goods bequeathed to us in a Testament not simply as a Testament, but as such a Testament in which the death of the Testator in the meritorious cause of the goods tested. by virtue of a Testament as a Testament, have not ●us and right by buying and selling to the goods tested. The essence and nature of a Testament is saved, whether the goods that are bequeathed in legacy be the free gift of the Testator, not bought with a price by him, or goods of the father of the friend, to which the friend being a German-brother hath as good right or the same right, by birth, that the Testator hath. How ever: the comparison holds in this. Christ 1. hath bequeathed to believers these goods. 2. The Testament is no Testament, nor valide in Law, except the Testator be dead. No man can sue by Law tested goods, if the Testator himself be living; Nor can we have right to a new heart, forgiveness, perseverance, eternal life, to grace and glory, except Christ our Testator had died. But because the Tested goods are more than goods left to us in Testament; they are left to us by such a Testament as is both a Testament and a death perfectly meritorious (this is superadded to the nature of a Testament and beyond all Testaments) yea a death which is a price to ransom us from the wrath to come; Therefore Christ so dying in our stead, of justice meriteth that the friends should have these goods, though they belong by mere grace and free promise, to the friends. Now this is a most clear ground: Christ hath a well purchased right by giving a condign price for the goods and bles●sings promised in the Covenant of Grace to us: This right he hath by paying a price, laying down his life for us. This buying is not by necessity of nature, of justice, but by a voluntary, free and uncompelled agreement and Covenant, Joh. 10.18. Isai. 53.6. No man can exact upon him, Psal. 89.22. The Testament is confirmed by blood of some living creature slain. (2.) If the Old Testament was confirmed by the blood of beasts, then must the New Testament be confirmed by the blood of Christ prefigured in these. But the Old Testament was so confirmed, Heb. 9 v. 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23. Ergo, now neither Testament nor Covenant was confirmed by blood simply, but by the blood of a living creature slain. 3. Hence the making of a Covenant was by cutting a calf or a beast in twain, and passing between the parts thereof, Livius, li. 1. Populus (inquit Flecialis) Romanus prior non deficiet. Si prior defecit, publ●co consilio malo dolo, Tu illo die Jupi●er, populum Romanum sic ferito, ut ego hunc porcum feriam tanteque magis ferito, quanto magis potes pollesque. Id uhi dixit▪ p●rcum, si●ice sa●oque percussit. Jer. 34.18. and so they entered into a curse, Nehem. 10.29. devoted themselves to destruction, wishing they might be cut 〈◊〉 (which is a strange kind of death, Math. 24.51.) if they should break the Covenant. Hence the Phrase of striking a Covenant. So the Romans slew a sow: So the Romans and Albani made a Covenant, as Livius. A Herald or Officer at Arms slew the beast and prayed a curse on the people of Rome, that they might be the same way stricken, if they should break the Covenant. It's like they had it from the Jews. So Christ died to ratify and confirm the Covenant, Exod. 24.6. This is the blood of the Covenant. Now the Covenant hath no blood. This blood of slain beasts (for it is a figurative speech) is a sign confirming the Covenant that believers shall have remission of sins in that blood of Christ which is shadowed forth by the blood of these beasts. So Christ the great Shepherd of the flock, Heb. 13.20. is said to be brought from the dead, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, by the blood of the everlasting Covenant. Ju●ius, the Article is understood: Or as the Hebrew Phrase, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is put for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as Calvin and Piscator. The question may be, How did God b●ing Christ again from the death by the blood of the everlasting Covenant, had the blood of Christ any influence to bring himself back from the dead? Or did he, by dying, merit his own resurrection? Ans. Some read the word thus, and shun the Question, The God of peace who brought again from the dead the great shepherd of the sheep: Understanding, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, being the great shepherd or feeder, by the blood of the everlasting Covenant. So Beza, who makes these words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, to be referred to 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: So as Christ's right to be Pastor is in, and by his blood and suffering. And▪ the words, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, so is not to be constructed with the particle, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉: But Beza confesseth, that he changed the situation of the words. But if Christ be made a Pastor and feeder of the sheep by the blood of the eternal Covenant: then is he called to be a Pastor by Covenant. And what influence hath his death in his Pastoral Office? Beza, in Amitaque ut hoc planius fieret, non dubitavi verborum collocationem mutare Is it by way of merit? Or did Christ merit to himself? Hardly, if not curiously, can we say that, though I nothing doubt but Christ gave perfect obedience as man to the Covenant of Works, and he did merit as man, jure operum, life eternal, the way that Adam should have merited life eternal, so he had never fallen. But the words naturally bear this sense, as Deodati expounds them, that Christ is risen by virtue of his death: As it is well said, the just surety hath right and Law to come out of prison, by paying the sum, and neither Justice nor Creditor can keep him in prison: solutus aere est solutus carcere. Christ having satisfied our debt, and paid the ransom of his blood to the death, and being dead, and under the dominion of death by justice, Christ justified in his cause comes out of the prison of the grave, by paying of the ransom of blood. Heb. 9.28. is freed from either remaining in death, or dying any more; he is now justified, not in his person, for Christ in person was habitually righteous, and from the womb, Luk. 1.35. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, That holy thing Jesus was sinless, and so never condemned, but justified in his cause and in his condition by Law for us, and so appeareth, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the second time without sin unto salvation; the second time without sin, hath relation to the first time, without sin, that is, he shall appear the second time no less without sin, and so justified in regard of his condition in Law, than he was, when he was conceived by the Holy Ghost, and so that eminently holy thing born of the Virgin Mary, Luk. 1.35. that is, as justified as if he had never been made sin, and never had been under the Law-burden of our sins, as Isai. 53.6. And 1 Tim. 3.16. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He was justified in the Spirit, declared to be just, and the innocent Son of God, by his resurrection from the dead, Rom. 1.4. so that in the Spirit, is, in the eternal Spirit, Heb. 9.14. the Godhead: For he came from under that act and band of cautionary and Suretyship without sin, that is, acquit from sin, which he was made, and was laid upon him, 2 Cor. 5.21. Isai. 53.6. 4. We know, Heb. 7.22. Jesus, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He was made the Surety of a better Covenant, as the LXX. ever translate it, of a better Testament. Now here is a judicial and a Law-act of suretyship put upon Christ. 1. He was made Surety, Christ is not a surety by nature, but is made a surety by a Covenant-consent of Johovah, and by his own consent. than he was not Surety by nature, but so made by a free transaction and Covenant. For in Christ's coming under that act, when he was made Surety, there be two things: 1. His eternal condiscending to take on him our nature, and to empty himself and be a servant. 2. His agreeing and plighting of his faith and truth to take on our condition in Law, that God should lay upon him the iniquity of us all, Isa. 53.6. and that God should make him who knew no sin, to be sin for us, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, in our Law, place and room, 2 Cor. 5.21. not against his Father's will, nor yet without his own free consent. That is against all reason: For that which God made Christ, that he was not by nature, but that God willingly made him, and that he was willingly and by free Covenant made. But God gave him a body, Heb. 7.5. and God made him sin, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, 2 Cor. 5.11. So a Surety is one that promises to satisfy for another, and comes from a Verb which signifies to promise by striking of hands, Prov. 22.26. Be not thou among them that strike hands, or, of them that are surety for debts. The Seventy, give not thyself, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as a Surety. Aries Montan. Inter percutientes fide jubendo. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The Verb in the Hebrew is from a root that signifies to mix together: as the owl light, when light and darkness after the Sunset are mixed together. And by a Metaphor it notes suretyship and mixture of persons, as M. Legh: when one is tied for another, and mixed with him in his place. As Christ put himself in the bond and writ of blood that we were in: That Christ was made a surety in a Capital crime to die for us, is suitable to the Law of nations. We were in the Law-writ, Deut. 27. ●6. under a curse, and Christ shifted the believers out, and was made a curse by his own consent for us, Gal. 3.10. and was written and acted in the Law-book the sinner, and answered all the demands of Law and Justice, and put in our names in the Gospel. writ: And that from everlasting, God was in Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, reconciling the world (of the elect) not imputing their sins unto them, 2 Cor. 5.19. And in time we believing, are written blessed and righteous in him, Gal. 3.13, 14. 2 Cor. 5.21. And what could more be done by Christ, who substitute himself by Covenant in our place, and put us in his place? Nor is this Suretyship just in debts only, but also what ever Socinus, Crellius, and others say on the contrair, in Capital punishments. For M. Thomas Goodwin, M▪ Thomas Goodwin, Support of faith from Ch. Resur. ●. 111. pag. 50. E●oritus did (〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉) willingly become a surety for Suephenus. Yea, and in hostages and pledges in war, Plutarch saith▪ that the Thessali●ns slew two hundreth and fifty hostages. The Romans (saith Livy) did the like to three hundreth of the Volstis▪ and cast the Taratines' over rocks, the 〈◊〉 Tarp●i●: and these were humane people. The children of Tyrants were killed with the Tyrants, by some Cities of Greece, as Cice●o, and Halicarnaseus say. Curtius saith, that the Maced●nians put to death such as were near of blood to traitors: Marcellinus saith so much also of the Persians. The just Lord punishing the sins of the fathers upon the children, How mercy calleth by a sort of need for a surety. to the third and fourth generation, reaches▪ that conjunction of blood (such as was between Christ our Kinsman. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Job 19.25. and us) may well make it most just, that Christ be punished for us, the Surety for the sinner, though the sinner be under the hand of the Judge; for he is unable to satisfy Justice, Justice suits not that the debtor repay to the surety any thing in some cases. and mercy saith that there is no essential reason in Law-justice why the same head which sinned and no other should suffer. But grace may intervene, so that though God need no surety, yet tender mercy, or God decreeing to show mercy, in some good sense, needs such a Surety as Christ. Neither is it much that justice saith that the Surety ought to have satisfaction made to him and restitution by the broken debtor, because justice gives his due to every man. See Andre. Essenius, in Triumpho Crucis, de satisfact. Chri●sti, l. 2. Sect. 3. c. 1. pag. 468, 469, 500 For 1. if the surety be more than a man, and have absolute sovereignty over what he exp●nds, as Christ hath over his own life, to lay it down, and take it up again, Joh. 10.18. As of free grace he paid for us, so of free grace he pleads not in Law that the broken man pay him back, and make restitution of his losses: and this saith demonstratively that God doth neither punish, nor show mercy, by necessity of justice. 2. When the surety hath a band of relief, and as it were, a back-band, that his soul shall not be left in grave, Psal. 16.10. but that he shall be victorious and more, he may give out, Socin. de Serua. l. 3. c. 3. and look for nothing in again. And the necessity of a surety to say, remove the scaffold, the guilty man shall not die, pleads, that if the Lord shall be merciful to sinners, as he decreed, then must Christ transact so with God, Vlpianus L. S. quis reum. D. cust & exhib. reorum. Vale. Maximus de Dionysior. Siculo tametsi debita tot sacrilegii● supplicia non exolvit, dedecore tamen filli poenas rependit, quas vivus effugerat. as the everlasting out-going of mercy, may be with the free consent (as it were) of truth, and righteousness. But it may be said, if Christ's dying for sinners remove as a satisfactory punishment, the guilt and obligation to eternal wrath, what way is the real, and as it were, the physical inherency and essence of sin removed? Ans. The obligation to wrath is removed only in a legal way by suffering of punishment due to sin, Punishment suffered by a Surety can remove punishment from the guiltyman, but cannot remove formally the inherent guilt▪ and make him formally and physically and inherently innocent, except the punishment of the Surety so excellent procure, by way of merit, the expelling of sin, and the incoming of inherent holiness in its room, as Heb. 10▪ 10. which Christ hath done; But the essence real of sin is only removed, as every other contrair is removed, by the expelling of sin out of its subject, and by introducing the contrair form, to wit, inherent righteousness, and the perfect habit of Sanctification and holiness. Now for this, Christ's dying and suffering wrath due to us, suppose Christ should die a thousand thousand times for us, his dying cannot as a satisfying cause, or as a punishment remove this. For 1. a punishment suffered by our Surety can but exhaust and remove the punishment due to the sinner for whom the suretyship is undertaken. But 2. Christ's dying cannot as a punishment remove sin as sin, and as contrair to the holy Law, and make us defiled wretches and servants of sin holy, as the paying of ten thousand Crowns for a forlorn waster, cannot make him to be no waster, and a man that hath obeyed the Law; only it makes that in Law the payment cannot be charged upon him. 3. Christ's transacting with God as our Surety is not only then merely to remove eternal punishment, but to purchase by the merit of his death the healing and sanctifying of our nature, Heb. 10.10. By the which will we are sanctified by the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once for all. What will of GOD, Heb. 10.10. sanctifieth us. Then our Sanctification is procured to us by the will of God, not simply as his commanding will: for than should all and every one whom the Lord commands to be holy, 1 Pet. 1.16. be sanctified, which we see is not done: but by the will of the Father, commanding Christ to die, Joh. 10.18. Joh. 14.31. and the will of Christ offering himself once for a sacrifice for sin, is the will which sanctifies us. So Pareus well saith, it is the will with its correlate, for in the willing passive obedience of Christ are we sanctified really by the merit of his death, though this be wrought by degrees. 2. Since the Father consents and wills that Christ die, and the Son willingly offers himself a sacrifice, the number (as judicious and Godly M. Dickson hath well observed on the place) and these all, Mr. David Dickson, Exposit. of the Epistle to the Hebrews, cap. 10. v. 10. for whom Christ offered himself, were condescended upon betwixt the Father and the Mediator. God knew those whom he gave to the Son, to be ransoned: and Christ knew those whom he bought. And the necessity of this Covenant appears in this, that the comfort cannot be solid, if a child of God never have any assurance of his being gifted of the Father to the Son in particular. For two things are clear here. 1. That the Lord knows who are his, 2 Tim. 2.19. and that, if God gave some to the Son, as Joh. 17. then the Son received them in a certain number. And if Christ bought them by Covenant, Solid comfort in knowing these number of these gifted to the Son, & I am one of them. he must know how many: As one who buys a flock, but he knows the quality and number of the flock. 2. The knowledge sometime shall be this distinct, that I was by name among them, who loved me, and gave himself for me. And as the offering of every Priest is by way of Covenant and promise, so, if a sacrifice, in the faith of the great sacrifice, be offered to God, then will God accept it (here is a Covenant) so is the Body of Christ offered by the Covenanting-will, Heb. 10.10. And any doubt that may, or doth arise concerning yourself by name: 1. It may as well be moved, in some respect, against the whole number, and no wise man will say that the bargain betwixt the Father and the Son was so blind, as the number was not agreed upon. For since all the bought are sinners, and so inclined to sinful doubting of the bargain, that, which as a doubt is moved by one, may be moved by all severally, and all severally denying themselves to be the men for whom Christ bargained: By this sinful questioning of the transaction, none at all were agreed upon. 2. Every doubting of God's love to me once justified, and who have once fled to Christ for refuge, is grounded upon sin and unworthiness; now none were given by the Father to the Son from eternity upon respect of either faith, or unbeleef, or holiness, or bad deserving: It's true, it is not known to me but by believing, Sin is no cause why a justified one should doubt of his justification that I was given Covenant ways to the Son. But the Question is, if sin be any ground why one justified should cashier himself out of the number of the gifted ones to Christ, and committed to the Mediator. It's true, it should be mourned for as a thing that doth not a little hinder Sanctification in its progress, but should not brangle Justification, nor the faith of our interest in Christ. 4. The necessity of this Covenant appears, in that salvation is taken off freewill, and the slippery yea, and no, of freewill in the Covenant of Works, and laid upon one that is mighty, upon David, to govern Israel as their King; M. D. Dickson, Psa. 89.19. but Psal. 89.19. upon Christ (as excellently M. Dickson) in all respects more eminently than David, a stronger help, mighty to save, appointed of the Father in all cases,— he is one of our kind, taken out of the people, Much of the Lord his gracious will is in the Covenant of suretyship. acquainted with our condition, etc. The less of the creatures will, and the more of God's will, if gracious, as here, be in a Covenant, the better: Because the more grace and stability, even the sure mercies of David, that is, of Christ, Is. 55.3▪ Eze. 34.23. Eze. 37.24. must be here. 5. The wellhead of salvation (for mere freewill and good pleasure in God, instituted this dispensation) must be here: And most eminent freedom of grace made the bargain; so that the Magna Charta, the great Charter of the Gospel, I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy, is here eminently, for mercy and free-love began at the head man. For the Covenant of Grace (as notably M. Dickson) is consolidated in Christ our head, M. D▪ Dickson, Ps. 89. v. 26. and he hath the first right as man to say unto the Father, that which is here said, as Intercessor and Mediator for the Elect; he shall cry unto me, thou art my Father, my God, and the Rock of my salvation. Christ the first heir of the promises undertaks for all his▪ As a father binds for his heirs and children: A King subscribes articles of peace and seals them for the land and subjects: The Ambassador for the Prince and State that sent him, makes answer. So Christ acts in the Covenant of Redemption for his heirs, seed, subjects, people; and if the comparison▪ might be made, More grace (if we may compare) in the Redeemers Covenant, then in ours. Gospel-free-grace, as Covenant-mercy is more in the Covenant of Redemption, then in the Covenant of Reconciliation, for principally they are here as waters in the fountain. Hence, in this Covenant, is fountain-love, fountain-grace, all the satisfaction that the Lord craves of sinners, begins at this spring, the old and eternal design of love in the heart of God toward his Son, his everlasting delight, the bosom darling and beloved of the Father, is the designed Prince upon whose shoulder is the Government: Fountain-grace, and fountain-mercy in this Covenant. Here was mutual love-delight acted by the Father and Son, Prov. 8.31. My delights were with the sons of men, even before the fountains of waters were created, v. 24. O what everlasting out-going and issue of eternal love came from the heart of the Father and the Son in their eternal Covenant-delights towards the sons of men; here was the eternal marriage of the Lamb the King's eternal Son, and of the not as yet created Bride first written and sealed by the King and his Son, and our not knowing of this, and Gods delighting in us, when we little knew or dreamt of his eternal love, highness, his grace. Should the heart of God be taken, and (to speak so) be sick of love for so many Nothings, whom he was to make heirs? Far more being reconciled and justified we need not fear we shall be saved. Here in this Covenant were first drawn the lineaments and draughts of the free and gracious interest of Jesus Christ to the sons of men: And who should not wonder here at the purest fountain-grace that is in Jesus Christ, which did set on work eternal wisdom to frame such an eternal peace of God Covenanting with the Son of God, and love eternal hiring love eternal with the reward (to speak so) of the certain hope of enjoying a soul-satisfying seed, and a numerous offspring of Redeemed ones, if love should die and triumph over justice, which was done by love. 6. There is here much of the eternal interest of JEHOVAH to the Son, and of the essential love of God to his only begotten Son, God's essential love to the Son in this Covenant. Prov. 8.24. When there was no depths, I was brought forth.— 30. Then I was by him as one brought up with him, and I was daily his delight, rejoicing always before him. And they may that have been verified, Jer. 30.21. And their noble One shall be of themselves, and their Governor shall proceed from the midst of them, and I will cause him to draw near, and he shall approach unto me: for who is this that engaged his heart to approach unto me, saith the Lord? The love eternal here in JEHOVAH loves and wonders that Christ his Son lays hands upon his own heart to take upon him the Office of Redeemer and Priest: and the Lords saying, Who is this? is a note of love and wonder, as Psal. 24.8.10. Isa. 63.1. Cant. 6.10. and that his heart closes with the Covenant-designe. Obj. But Arminius himself also teacheth, Jac. Armi. orat. de Sacerdotio Chrsti, pag. 16, 17. Postulavit Deus ut animam suam poneret hostiam pro peccato, etc. that there was ● Covenant betwixt the Lord and Christ. God required of Christ our Priest, that he would lay down his life for sin, give his flesh for the life of the world,— and he promised, if he should so do, he should see his seed, and be an eternal high Priest after the order of Melchisedeck, and by the exercise of his Priestly Office, he should be exalted to a royal dignity. Christ our Priest closed with the condition, and said, Behold, here am I to do thy will, etc. And Socinians, who hold him to be a divine Man only, will agree that Christ was under an obediential Covenant to God. The Covenant between the Lord and the Son, that Arminius teacheth, is not the true Covenant of redemption. Ans. Arminians and others may yield to a Covenant between the Father and the Son, but it is a far other thing then such as we hold: for Christ did close with the condition of laying down his life for sinners. But when Christ hath ended his work, and paid the price of Redemption, laid down his life for Pharaoh, Cain, for Egyptians, Syrians, Persians, Chaldeans, and all in whom ever was the breath of life; yet cannot the Lord promise to Christ that he shall have any seed, or one redeemed one, nor can the Lord either promise or pay wages to Christ: For a promise, if sincere, is of things that are in our power to do, even among men. Can a King promise that to morrow he shall cause the wind for seventy days to come, blow out of the North-West? It's not in his power. Now Arminians, Socinians, and all of that Family teach, that God hath no forceable antecedent dominion to bow and determine the freewill of any one man: The Lord cannot promise by the Arminian way that Christ shall have a seed, because the Lord, by their way, hath no dominion over the free will of any man. The Lord then no more can promise, nor give the reward of a seed to Christ, for his work of laying down his life for man, than he can engage that the Serpent (with reverence to our blessed Lord) shall see his seed. For when Christ hath wrought the same work, paid the same very ransom (as these Sophists teach) for millions that perish, through their own freewill, eternally: What seed hath he of them? Where is his wage? Were not all and every one of mankind promised in the Arminian Covenant, to be the gifted seed of Christ, upon condition that they should repent and believe? But Arminians deny that God doth promise faith, or that he is so Lord and Master of the freewill of any, as indeclineably and unsuperably he can make good his promise, and cause them believe and persevere therein to the end, and that is it by which they are his seed. It's but said in vain that God promises they shall be Christ's gifted seed, providing they be willing to believe: that is but to say, the Lord promises all shall be his seed, providing they shall be his seed: For willing believing makes them his seed. 2. By this also the Lord promises what is in men's power to perform, and it might fall out that all and every one should do the like that multitudes do, who perish eternally, and so shall Christ do his work, and enjoy no seed at all. But the Covenant of suretyship which we teach, makes not the truth of God to depend upon our faith, or our unbeleef; Yea the Lord promises that Christ without all fail, shall undeclineably see his seed, yea, and shall be the restorer of the Tribes of Jacob, and a light to the Gentiles, and the salvation of God to the ends of the earth, Isa. 49.6. Isa. 54. He shall be King and Lord of the Isles, Isa. 42.6, 7. Isa. 60.9. Psal. 2.8, 9 A Prince and a shepherd over his people, Ezek. 34. Ezek. 37.24, 25. Psal. 89.25. not upon condition they be willing, over whom he is set, but to meet with the temptation. Ah! my iron and rocky will shall still resist the Lord; and he shall be King of the Nations, if the Nations shall determine their own will to submit to him, and vote that he be Crowned King: Nay, but the Covenant-promise saith, The Lord King of the will. he shall be King of thy will. This is a part of his reign, Psal. 110.2. The Lord shall send the rod of thy strength out of Zion: rule thou in the midst of thine enemies. 3. Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power, Deut. 30 6. Ezek. 11.19, 20. Ezek. 36.26, 27. Jer. 31.31, 32, 33, 34, 35. Jer. 32.39, 40. Neither can there be confidence and faith in God through the sure mercies of David, nor peace, nor solid consolation, nor warrant to pray for the Lords gracious bowing of the will to be his seed, except it be believed, Covenanted, that God shall be the God of his people, and their King, not over the element of the sea only to rule it, and over the mountains, and the stones, and rocks, but also over the particular wills, and the willing and nilling, choosing of good, and refusing of evil in the men of the Iles. And how could the Son pray, Father, give the inheritance of the Heathen to me, The Son cannot pray for the heathen to be his inheritance by the Arminian Covenant betwixt Christ and the Father. according to promise? Ask of me, and I will give thee, etc. Psal. 2. If the Father could answer nothing, but what Arminians and Socinians say he answers, as also, the believer out of the flesh's weakness must dictat this return of prayer. Son, with good will, I grant the Heathen, and the ends of the earth to thee in heritage and possession, so they be willing to submit to thee: But, what if they refuse to obey either me or thee? I did never Covenant with thee, Son, to do more than I can, try thy strength, and force their freewill, if thou can; if they be willing, well, and good it is, there is a bargain: My approving and commanding will is that they be thy seed, and thy willing people; but my decree is not to Lord it over their will, that is a fundamental act of Government, that all my subjects have liberty of conscience, to will or nill, as they please. Nay, but the Covenant of Suretyship includes the sure mercies of David, and the Lord gives band, word, and writ, and seal of blood, and the Oath of God to the Son, Psal. 110.4. Heb. 7.21. for the will. Isa. 53.4. Behold I have given him for a witness of the people, a leader and commander to the people. But what if they will neither lead nor drive? Yea the Lord promises they shall not need to be driven▪ they shall be willing, and run. 5. Behold thou shalt call a Nation that thou knowest not, and Nations that knew not thee, shall run unto thee, because of the Lord thy God, and of the Holy One of Israel, for he hath glorified thee. And a strong reason of this is given, the Gentiles run; Whence comes this forwardness of the Gentiles who knew not God? Because (saith Isaiah) of Jehovah thy God (of Christ Mediator) in Covenant with thee, Psal. 22.1. Joh. 20. ●0. because of thy God the Holy One of Israel: the running (saith Calvin) notteth the efficacy of the calling, and they run to Christ, because of Jehovah, and the mighty power of God in the Man-Christ. ●▪ Noteth because (saith Piscator.) And another reason, because he hath glorified thee, O Christ, he hath declared thee to be the Son of God by thy rising from the dead, ascension to heaven, given thee a Name above all names, Rom. 1.4. Phil. 2.7, 8, 9, 10. So Musculus, Piscator, Marlorat, Gualther, Diodati: So the running of the Gentiles to Christ is the glorifying of Christ, and a part of the reward; it's Christ's glory that he hath a seed that runs after him. Then: And M. Dickson upon these words, Ps. 2. M. D. Dickson on Psal. 2. Ask of me, after Christ's resurrection and declaration of his formerly overclouded Godhead, he should continue in the Office of his Mediation and Intercession, and by virtue of his paid ransom of Redemption call for the enlargement of his purchased Redemption among the Gentiles, for this is the Father's compact with the Son, saying, ask of me, and I will give thee, the Heathen; so that both by free Covenant, and by merit, Christ challengeth a seed: Christ both by free Covenant and by merit of condignity and justice may challenge a seed, they are both promised to him, and he gave a due price for them. and it were unjustice in the Lord (with reverence and glory to his Holiness) to deny to Christ that for which he hath given a condign ransom and price: But he hath paid a condign Covenant●ransone of his own precious self, and offered blood for h●s seed. Hence 1. though a weak believer cannot by merit suit a bowed will and a circumcised heart from the Lord: Yet 1. may be suit it by the band of the Covenant of Redemption between Jehovah and the Son: and a Redeemed one may say, it was an Article of the Covenant of Redemption, that my stony heart should be taken away, and a heart of flesh given to me, and faith hath influence to be supported that God articled Covenant-ways such a wretch as I am, to Christ: and look, as the book of life, called, the Lamb's Book of Life; contains so many by name, head, and in all their individual properties, Jacob, Paul, etc. that are written and enrolled for glory, so are all (and I by name) in a Covenant-relation given of the Father to the Son, Joh. 17.3, 9.11. Joh. 6.39. and that is surer than heaven or the fixed ordinances of nature, Jer. 31.35, 36. Psal. 89.37, 38. Happy such as can ride at this anchor: Though I mean not that the decree of election and the roll of the Mediator to me, or the gracious Surety●Covenant between Jehovah and the Son, as relating to me by name, must be the nearest object of faith, or that always a believer doth read this roll; but his faith often is, and aught, and may be supported thereby. 2. Christ may suit, There is mercy▪ in the bill of our suits & merit and justice in the bill of the suits of Christ for us. by virtue of both the Surety Covenant and by the justice of God, his condign merit to, me, a fixed will to run the way of his Commandments. Christ's appearing with blood, Heb. 9 and his prayer as high Priest, Joh. 17. prove that, in Christ's Bill for us, there is justice, the merit of blood, and that his Advocation is, 1 John 2.1. grounded upon justice, and he stands there as Jesus Christ, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the righteous without sin now imputed, not now made sin, nor made a curse, but by order of strict justice justified and righteous, and the act of Suretyship taken off, and as the hand-writing against us is canceled upon the Cross, Col. 2. So the hand-writing of obliged punishment due to Christ as our Surety is removed, and he now justified in the Spirit, without sin, Heb. 9.28. Such a one as cannot die, Rom. 6.9. Rev. 1.18. and cannot die a death satisfactory for sin, Christ was delivered from the act of suretyship. because as believers cannot die the second death, Christ having died for them, neither can Christ suffer the second death again, or be twice a curse, for once he died for all. But our faith is so supported not a little in this, I dare not put merit or justice in my suits to God, but I believe it is, and must be in Christ's bill, and that bill is for me: mercy, and only mercy is in the sinner's bill, but the justice of a condign ransoner is in Christ's suits, and so faith looks to Christ: As 1. having the first Covenant-right to heaven, as the great Lord receiver of the promises. And then we have a second right in him▪ 2. Faith looks to Christ as having more right to us, because he hath the right of justice, than we have to ourselves; for its free-graces title which we have to ourselves, Christ hath the first right of us by justice, and more right than we have of ourselves. for we gave no ransom for ourselves, and we gave no ransom for eternal life: and therefore all the doubtings and acts of unbeleef in order to the Surety of the Covenant, do resolve upon some apprehended breach between the Father and the Son, that either the one or the other, or both have failed to each other, and have broken the Articles of the Covenant, which is a reproaching of both the Father and the Son: So that nothing is more necessary then to believe firmly the Covenant-faithfulnesse of God. Our doubtings, being once justified, reflect upon the Covenant of Suretyship. 3. What strong bands of believing and holy living have we from this Surety Covenant? When 1. goodwill and freegrace is become the ingadger of the faithfulness of God as he is true God, and with a Covenant-tye to keep sure our salvation, as he will be true to his Son, and so to himself and to his own Holy Nature, that we shall be saved, yea, and not that only, but by Office, as King and High Priest, he hath laid bands upon himself, and made it the duty of his Office to save us: So that any good man thinks his office of a King, and a Prophet, or a Priest, lays bands upon him to acquit himself faithfully in the charge; So that Christ's sworn Office of High Priest lays bands upon him to compassionate as a feeling head, Christ hath laid bands by office upon himself to compassionate us. all his own, and to be touched with their infirmities: then must unbeleef in these particulars say, we judge that Christ will not do his duty in his Office, and that he shall break his faith of Suretyship, and fail under his band of Suretyship. How needful then must the firm persuasion of complete qualifications and fullness of anointing of Christ for the complete discharge of his duty be? It's needful to believe the sufficiency of Christ to save. O! believe him to be the faithful High Priest, who expiates and heals you in all the measure, kinds, degrees, circumstances of time, place, of the particular transgressions you are guilty of, Psal. 103.3. Who forgiveth all thine iniquities: who healeth all thy diseases. And if a man judge himself engaged to go about such duties as his surety and ransone-payer in his name hath promised, The believed Covenant hath more influence on us then the Law-faith can have. far more are we to walk as the redeemed of the Lord, since there was an eternal Covenant-undertaking between Jehovah and the Son of God, that we should fulfil the undertaking. And sure it is, Law-faith or believing of Law-threatning cannot have such influence upon our spirits to cause us obey the Law, as the motives of a concluded act of suretyship and closed compact between the Father and the Son, that we shall obey him: And indeed it is a meditation that morally and spiritually should obtain from us that we be holy as he is holy, and strongly melt the rocky heart. When we remembered that JEHOVAH, as a designed Surety, gave band for the heart of a sinner from eternity, and enters himself Cautioner for our rebellious will, it should put us to believe so much, and morally lay bands on our will. Q. How are we to conceive of the act of Suretyship? A. Jehovah from eternity decrees that the Son be the designed person who shall take on our nature, The eternal undertake of Jehovah & of Christ for us. and lay down his life for sinners: The Lord promises he shall have a redeemed seed for a reward. In this offer Jehovah ingadges that we shall be Christ's seed, and so shall be, by the immortal seed, born again, and shall believe and be gifted to Christ as saved; here Jehovah undertakes that we shall believe. 2. Christ agrees to the designed person: It is written of me, and so decreed of God from eternity, I delight to do thy will, I shall lay down my life for these given to me: And here the other party, Jesus Christ coming by his own consent to die, does also undertake, 1. In dying to ransom us from hell, and merit life to us, and make us his purchase. So 2. he being a Saviour by merit, he by his death purchaseth the Spirit, and meriteth the new heart, and so undertakes for us: in this regard, both parties undertake for us. And the Spirit being the same very God with the Father and the Son, also is by his own consent designed comforter and actor in his way by the anointing without measure, that he puts on the Man Christ, and the grace given to his members: But the only formal parties in the compact are the Lord Jehovah and the Son party consenting before time, and his Manhood in time becoming one who embraces the Covenant of Suretyship, and calls the Lord his God, Ps. 22.1. Joh. 20.17. Rev. 3.12. Isa. 55.5. Hence, if we employ faith, and hold out to the Lord the undertaking for us in the Covenant, there is an answer framed to all our temptations from our own frailty: This Covenant answers our tentations. As Adam and the Angels fell, and how can we stand? But God said never of them, as Psal. 89.19. I have laid strength upon one that is mighty: and Christ was no designed undertaker for Adam, nor was Adam to believe such a thing. Therefore it is fit to observe, that not only the Head Christ and the body changes names, as the body is called Christ, 1 Cor. 12.12. and Christ called David, Isai. 53.3. Ezek. 34. Ezek. 37.14. David my servant shall be King over them. So also many things in one Psalms are spoken of David, both in an Historical and Typical truth, In one Psalm some things spoken only prophetically of Christ, other things historically and typically both of David & others. as Psal. 22. But there are some things, Psal. 16. so spoken of David, that they are true only Typically of Christ, and spoken Prophetically, as David saith, Ps. 16.10. Thou will not leave my soul in grave, neither will suffer thine Holy One to see corruption. And the Apostle Peter denies that this can be exponed of David, for Acts 2.26, 27, 28, 29, 30. and Paul, Acts 13.34, 35. And as concerning that God raised him from the dead, now no more to return to corruption: he said on this wise, I will give you the sure mercies of David. Wherefore he saith also in another place, thou shalt not suffer thine Holy One to see corruption. 35. But David after he had served his own Generation, by the will of God, fell on sleep, and was laid unto his fathers, and saw corruption. And it is not to be doubted that the Prophecy, Psal. 22. They divided my garments, they pierced my hands and my feet, is only a Prophecy of Christ's being crucified: Nor was ever David crucified. To say in another case David was crucified, will not help: for it might be said in another case David saw no corruption, for all believers are delivered from the dominion, curse, and sting of death. Hence, it may well be said, that same Psal. 89. must prove both the Covenant of Suretyship, and the Covenant of Grace: v. 3. I have made a Covenant with my chosen, I have sworn unto David my servant; thy seed will I establish for ever, and build up thy Throne to all Generations. Though it be called David's Throne here, Luk. 1.32. yet we may freely speak of David's Throne as of David's body, both saw corruption: there is an end of David's Throne temporal. But sure the Scripture calls it the Throne of Christ, That which is called David's throne, is Christ's throne. Heb. 1.8. But unto the Son he saith, thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever. Luk. 1.33. And he shall reign over the house of Jacob, and of his Kingdom there shall be no end. Dan. 7.14. And there was given him Dominion, and Glory, and a Kingdom, that all Nations and Languages should serve him: His Dominion is an everlasting Dominion which shall not pass away, and his Kingdom that which shall not be destroyed. Isai. 9.7. Of the increase of his Government and peace there shall be no end: upon the Throne of David and upon his Kingdom to order it, and to establish it with judgement and with justice, from henceforth, even for ever. Obj. But this Covenant is made to, and with David, that Solomon, and one of David's line, shall sit upon David's Throne, until the Messiah, the true beloved shall be born, 2 Sam. 7.12, 13. Ans. It's true, and although these of David's line sinned▪ yet by virtue of this Covenant, for David's sake, God gave a Throne temporal to him, 1 King. 11.32, 34. 2 King. 8.19. 2 King. 19.34. But it is as true that this also, to wit, Christ's everlasting Throne is here meant: I will build up thy Throne to all generations, for David's Throne is not builded to all generations, nor can it be said of David's Throne, which is said of this Throne▪ Heb. 1.8. But unto the Son, he saith, thy Throne, O God, is for ever and ever. Therefore this oath and promise is made to Christ as well as to David: except we say that an everlasting Throne is mo●● properly the Throne of David, than the Throne of Christ. 2. 19 I have laid help upon one that is mighty, I have exalted one chosen out of the people. 18. I have found David my servant. Most grave Divines (and it may be they gathered it from v. 38, 39, etc.) think that the Psalm was composed upon the occasion of the ten Tribes division from David's house, as composed by Ethan, 1 King. 4.31. Others, that Ethan lived in the captivity of Babylon after David's death: But the calamity seems greater than the division of the ten Tribes. Philo refers it to the time of Jehoiakim. Ambrose maketh the mighty to be Christ: So Eusebius and Hieronimus expound the whole Psalm. And our Divines say that the verity must be in Christ, for the help and deliverance of the new afflicted and captive people (for the like of this publick●desolation, The Covenant, Ps. 89 must in the main he●ds agree to JESUS CHRIST. as v. 38, 39, 40, etc. never befell David after he was King) can not be laid on a dead man: And though he were now alive, the help of David's fallen glory, v. 42, 43, 44, etc. must be the Messiah. Hence, the Covenant must be with him whose Throne is built for ever, and shall not fall, v. 3, 4. and upon whom as upon a mighty one is laid the help of his fallen Church: This is not David only (though he be not excluded) but Christ principally. 3. With him the Covenant must be made, in his way, as with Surety, Head, and Redeemer: upon whom the enemy shall not exact; whose enemies shall be plagued, v. 22, 23. and, whose enemies shall be made his footstool, Ps. 110.1, 2. and that is Christ, as well as David. 4. With him must the Covenant of Redemption be made in his way; of whom God saith, v. 25. I will set his hand also in the sea, and his right hand in the rivers. The Chalde Paraphrase expounds his hand to be his power and command, which is to Euphrates: as is promised, Exod. 23.31. Num. 34.3. but fulfilled in David and Solomon, 1 King. 4.8. Solomon reigned from the sea of Sodom the red sea, to the Mediterran sea, and west, and from Euphrates, to the utmost of Canaan, North and South: but specially in Christ, who hath all Nations, Gentiles and Jews, for his own, Psal. 2.8, 9 Psal. 22.27. Psal. 72.8, 9, 10, 11. Isai. 2.1, 2. Rev. 11.15. Christ Jesus, not David, Zech. 9.10. shall speak peace to the Heathen, and his Dominion shall be even from sea to sea, and from the river, even to the ends of the earth. The Angel and Creator of Angels, who set his right foot upon the sea, and his left foot upon the earth, Rev. 10.2. is this great Conqueror. Athanas. Serm. 4. contra Arianos. 5. With him this Covenant must stand, of whom the Lord, v. 26. saith, He shall cry unto me, Thou art my Father, my God, and the Rock of my salvation. 27. I also will make him my firstborn, higher than the Kings of the earth. Now this cannot well agree to David, Cyprian, l. 2. c. 1. at least, most coldly (as Calvine saith) should the Apostle reason and conclude that Christ were above the Angels when he citeth this place, Cyrillus Hierosolymit. Catech. 7. & 12. Heb. 1.4, 5. For unto which of the Angels said he at any time, Thou art my Son, this day have I begotten thee? And again, I will be to him a Father, and he shall be to me a Son. August. de civet. de l. 17. c. 9 In the literal sense, it is meant of Solomon, 2 Sam. 7.14. 1 Chron. 22.10. and is meant here of David. Athanasius proves him hence to be God, the first begotten of many Brethren. Cyprian, Hieronim. in Isa. 53. Cyrillus, Augustine, Hieronimus, contend against the Jews, that this is necessary to be understood of Christ, not of Solomon, not of David, who cannot bear the Name of the Lords firstborn, but must be so named as the Type of him who is the firstborn of every creature, etc. Col. 1.15. 6. So my mercy will I keep for him for evermore, and my Covenant shall stand fast with him. ●9. His seed also will I make to endure for ever, and his Throne as the days of Heaven. If the Covenant be made with him who hath an eternal seed, then sure, principally with Christ: Without whom (saith Calvine, who otherwise much loves to follow the letter of the word) this Prophecy hath no effect, for eternity is only in Christ, not in David. Calv. Com. in locum. Vnd● sequitur non posse constare vaticimi hujus effectum, donec ad Christum ventum fuerit in quo solo demum reperietur vera Aeternitas. Ver. 30. If his children forsake my Law, etc. a pre-occupation, if an eternal seed be promised to Christ, then although Christ and his Children sin, no matter, the hazard is not great? He Answers, the danger is not to be despised; I will visit the sons, of Solomon and others, 2 Sam. 7.14. with the rod of men: 15. But my mercy (of the Covenant of Redemption, and of Reconciliation) I will not take from him, as I took it from Saul. This is not spoken of Christ, for he cannot sin, but of Christ's seed, his spiritual seed, and the business is so contrived, as the seed of Christ and his children shall not sin unpunished: but yet there is a difference between the sins of the reprobate Saul, and such like, and of the spiritual seed of Christ. So he takes his mercy, Covenant-mercy (but offered conditionally) utterly away from reprobats when they sin, but takes not away Covenant-mercy from the seed of Christ: And the reason is, from the nature of the Covenant, v. 34. My Covenant I will not break▪ etc. If then the elect and chosen of Christ should fall away, God should break and alter his Covenant: but impossible is the latter. Hence, 1. the questioning of the stability of our state, being once internally in Covenant with God, is a reproaching of God▪ and to make him a liar. v. 35. Once have I sworn (saith he) by my Holiness, that I will not lie unto David. Though (1.) we seem to reproach ourselves in questioning our state, being once in Christ, yet the truth is, The justified man's question of his state rejecteth upon God & his truth. the plea is against God, and his Truth and Holiness. (2.) It's easier to believe general truths, then to believe particular truths, in which ourselves and our own actings are interested: So spiritual and wily a snare is unbelief, that when we think we are unbelieuly fearing our own treachery, we are indeed charging treachery and falsehood upon the Holy lord (3.) In our sinful pleas with our own state, Ah! I am casten out of his sight, Psal. 31.22. Jona. 2.4. we are overturning the whole Gospel and Covenant of Suretyship and Reconciliation, and we say, God lied to David, and to his Son Christ: contrair to that, Psal. 89.35. Once have I sworn by my Holiness, I will not lie unto David. 36. His seed shall endure for ever, for the Lord once justified thee. (4.) We shall find ourselves so selfy in contraverting with God in the matter of fact touching ourselves: How selfie we are in the unbelieving challenging of our Justification. am I in Christ? Or, am I an Apostate and fallen from Christ? That we are more taken up with a hellish fretting for our falling in a state of condemnation, than we are grieved for the injury of unbeleef in traducing the Holy Lord with a lie. There is a taste here of Judas his fiery unbelief, for he complains more, Mat. 27.4. I have sinned, in betraying the innocent blood, then that God is dishonoured, and Christ's love offended: The grief is more for the interest of I, of self, that is entered in the borders of hell, then that his glory who commands believing is overclouded. It were good in such a case to go about two things: 1. Be less moved that self is under these apprehensions, lost and cast away, then that the spotless glory of the Lord suffers: What matter of me, and of self, in comparison of the dishonour done to God? What though I, and millions like me, were tormented▪ if God were not offended. Now God, 1. who hath bought me. 2. Who hath accepted a ransom for me. 3. Hath justified me. 4. Hath witnessed all these, is contradicted in all these: and yet we complain only, Ah I am fallen! 2. Leave the Question concerning yourself, whether ye be cast away or no, when you cannot come to a peaceable and quiet close about it, and dwell upon the duty of fiducial relying on God's general Covenant to David's Son, Christ his ingadging with him, and Christ his gracious accepting of the condition. (5.) God swore to the Son of David for the seed, that is, for the whole race, and gave them all to Christ, and gave you among them; and Christ closed with the condition, though ye cannot come to application. It's good to feed the soul upon the solatious thoughts, I cannot apply, but Christ whose egressions, outgoings, When ye cannot apply, its good to feed the thoughts upon Christ's applying himself & the Covenant to you and to other single persons. have been from of old, from everlasting, Mic. 5.2. did apply: For Christ's everlasting outgoings are not only his eternal generations from the Father, but the decrees, the sweet eternal flow, emanations, and issue of Christ's holy thoughts of me, of all the individuals, by name, of the seed given and received by Christ, his eternal acts of soul-delighting thoughts of every redeemed son of man, Prov. 8.30, 31. Rom. 9.11. Eph. 1.4. 1 Pet. 1, 2. the eternal acts of love, and love-thoughts to Jacob, David, Peter, Mary, etc. his acts of designing you (if ever you believed, and can rub and blow up experiences under ashes, Rom. 5.4. Ps. 77.6.) and the thousands that stand before the Throne, from eternity, his actings of eternal love, appointing and setting Chairs, Throns', Mansions, and dwelling places for 〈◊〉 man, and this man, are so many applications of Christ to you: Feed and feast upon these, by believing the ancient Covenant, and you cannot but come to quietness of peace in your apprehended estate. CHAP. X. Christ procures the Gospel to be Preached to Reprobats, but undertakes not for them. A necessary distinction of the Covenant as Preached according to the approving will of God, and as acted upon the heart, according to the decree of God: and the differences of the members. The place, Jer. 31. Heb. 8. This is my Covenant, opened. A Question it is, Christ undertaks that the Gospel shall be preached to the elect for themselves, and to the reprobat only as mixed with the elect▪ for other ends. whether Christ undertakes in the bargain with JEHOVAH, for all visibly in Covenant, for as is said before, these in the Visible Church and their children that are baptised, Magus, Demas, and others are in Covenant thus, Act. 2.39. Ans Christ undertakes in his bargain, only for the elect, and undertakes that the Gospel shall be Preached to them; but because many hypocrites are mixed with the Gentiles, and Christ is given a light to the Gentiles, Preached to a visible multitude, as is foretold, Isa. 49.6. Isa. 55.4, 5. fulfilled, Act. 13.46, 47. Rom. 15.8, 9, 10, 11, 12, etc. Therefore he procures to many hypocrites, for whom, and for whose Redemption, he undertakes not, that the Covenant shall be Preached by concomitancy, because they are mixed with the elect, not as an undertaker for them, but for Church Discipline, Christian Societies, and to render such unexcusable. Hence a necessary distinction of the Covenant of Grace. The necessary distinction of the Covenant▪ as preached to many, and as acted upon the heart of the few chosen. The New Covenant must be considered, 1. As Preached according to the approving and commanding will of God. 2. As it is internally and effectually fulfilled in the elect according to the decree and the Lords will of purpose. There must of necessity, differences be holden forth between these two. For, Antinomians, and legal Justiciaries miserably err in both extremities: The former will have no New Covenant in the days of the Gospel, but that which is made with the elect: The latter will have no New Covenant but such as is made with the whole race of mankind, Pagans not excepted: So Socinians, Arminians, Papists. 1. They differ in the party's contracters: The parties contracters in the Covenant Preached, God and all within the visible Church, who hear the word of the Gospel, are the parties contracters in the Covenant▪ Preached, but God & the elect only are contracters of the Covenant, as acted upon the heart. are God, and all within the Visible Church, whether Elect or Reprobate, and their seed, they professing the Gospel, Mat. 28.19, 20. Act. 2.39, 40. Act. 3.25. Ye are the children of the Prophets, and of the Covenant which God made to our fathers; etc. and they were not all the chosen of God: This is against the Anabaptists also, and against these who will have the Gospel-Covenant to be made with all the world. But it's a rich mercy that Professors are dwelling in the workhouse of the Grace of God, within the Visible Church, they are at the pool side, near the fountain, and dwell in Immanuels' land where dwells Jehovah in his beauty, and where are the Golden Candlesticks, and where there run Rivers of Wine and Milk, such are Exspectants of Grace and Glory, to such the Marriage Table is covered, eat if they will. But the party's contracters of the Covenant in the latter respect are, Jer. 31. Heb. 8. only, the house of Judah, the taught of God, the people in whose heart the Law is engraven; for as God teacheth not all Nations his statutes, nor sends the Gospel to them, Ps. 147.19, 20. Act. 16. So neither is the promise of a new heart made to all within the Visible Church. 2. A great difference there is in regard of the Covenant of Suretyship or Mediation, that Christ undertakes not for such as are only visible Covenanters, and shall never believe: As he prays not for such, as High Priest, so he dies not for them, nor came as a designed Covenanting Saviour from eternity under an act of Cautionry for them. How then cometh the Gospel to them? The Gospel comes from Chr●st as undertaker for the elect, & for their sake. Ans. It comes to them, 1. Not from Christ as their Surety, since he prays not for any Mediation of his own toward them: But 2. for the Elects sake: so Paul, Act. 13.26. Men and brethren, children of the stock of Abraham, and who among you feareth God, to you, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, is the word of salvation, to you and for your cause, that ye may be saved, is the Gospel, sent. 2 Corin. 4.15. For all things, our suffering, our dying, are, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for your sake. 2 Tim. 2.10. Therefore I endure all things, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for the Elects sake, that they may also obtain the salvation which is in Jesus Christ, with eternal glory. Hence there is no salvation but that which is in Christ Jesus our Lord, the Author and Cause, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and meriting Procurer of eternal salvation, Hebr. 5.9. Now, though salvation be offered, yet the salvation that is in Christ Jesus, and merited by the ransom and price of his blood, can be decreed and intended in the Preached Gospel to none but to the elect, except they say that Christ did undertake to lay down his life, and to save, by his death and blood by Covenant-inga●gment, all the Reprobate within the visible Church, for whom he refuses to pray, John 17. But Christ undertook from eternity for the fulfilling of the Covenant of Grace, and bestowing salvation upon them for whom he is Surety: for it is he who makes the new Covenant, Jer. 31.31, 32, 33, 34. Heb. 8.10, 11. 3. There is a twofold consideration of Gods will: One is called his approving, commanding, and forbidding will, The distinction of Gods will of approbation what is good or evil in point of our duty, whether it come to pass or not, and of his will of pleasure, what the Lord hath decreed shall come to pass, or not come to pass, whether good or evil, is of special consideration in this point. when God reveals to us what is our obligation and duty, and what is morally good, and to be done, because he commands it, and what is morally evil, and to be eschewed, because he forbids it. Now whether this good or evil shall come to pass, or never come to pass, it is all one, as to the nature of the approving will of God, for though the repenting of Cain, and saving faith of the traitor Judas never came to pass, yet it is the duty of the one and the other to repent and believe, and the Lord commands and approves their obedience as good, though he never decreed by his good pleasure, that the obedience of Cain and Judas should come to pass. But his will of pleasure, his discerning will, or his counsel, purpose, or decree, is his pleasure, and appointment of things, not as good and evil, or as agreeable unto, or repugnant, and contrair to an equal and just command of God, but of things as they come to pass, or shall never come to pass. Hence, in a premissive decree, God appointed the crucifying of the Lord of Life, the not breaking of a bone of Christ, but he did never will the crucifying of his Son, but forbids and hates it as execrable murder; as touching his approving will: in a word, his commanding will is of things lawful or unlawful, what we who are under a Law, aught to do, or not to do▪ His will of pleasure is of things fixed and resolved upon, what he purposes, good or evil, shall come to pass, or not come to pass: And by the way we may make good use of the foul sins that fall out; for holy and clean is that hand and counsel of the Lord, We are to adore the Lord in regard of the beauty of his work▪ even when the foulest works fall out. Act. 2.27, 28. which determined what Herod and Pilate should do: Yet did the Jews with wicked hands slay and crucify him, Act. 2.23. And O what beauty of wisdom and mercy do they see here, who make that foul work of the slayers of Christ the subject matter of a fair Psalm? Rev. 5.12. The thousands before the Throne, sing, worthy is the Lamb that was slain: But were they worthy who slew him? was it a worthy fact in the murderers of the Lord of Glory? No: but grudge not at the beauty of his work, who over rules all, but adore and praise. Let us not wrestle with his holy dispensation, and say, Ah! What an untoward Government of the world is it, that God should suffer Angels and Men to sin, and overturn the whole fabric of Heaven and earth by sin? Nay, he hath by their fall brought in a more glorious order, When he that sitteth upon the Throne, saith, Behold I make all things new, Rev. 21.5. and it's said, 2 Pet. 3.13. Nevertheless we, according to his promise, look for new Heavens and a new earth, wherein dwells righteousness. We are to pray against the event of the decree of God in some cases, and yet to submit unto the decree itself, and to adore the Holy Lord therein. Peter and the Disciples were to pray that they should not enter into temptation, Mat. 26.41. and were obliged not to be offended and scattered by the sufferings of the Lord; but they were not to blame and grudgingly to judge that holy decree Prophesied by Zechariah, and revealed to themselves, Zech. 13.7. Mat. 26.31. I will smite the Shepherd, and the Sheep of the flock shall be scattered abroad. His part is clean and holy, even when he throws the wicked in hell, and they are obliged to sing the Psalm of the glory of his spotless Justice, and that eternally, as these who are before the Throne are to hold up, for all ages, the new song of the glory of his mercy and freegrace. This ground being laid down, the Holy Ghost speaks of the New Covenant two ways in Scripture▪ 1. According to the approving will of God, as it stands, of promises, precepts, threatenings; and shows both what God doth by promises, and what we are obliged to do in point of duty, Act. 2.39. The promise is to you and to your children. Act. 3.25. Ye are the children of the Prophets, and of the Covenant which God made with our fathers. 2 Cor. 6.17. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye separate, saith the Lord,— And I will be a Father to you, etc. This is the whole New Covenant, holding out our duty, ordaining those that profess, to be baptised, received members of the Visible Church, the body to be edified as a visibly Covenanted people: This excludes not, but includes the Lords taking in members to the invisible and mystical body: which is to be observed against Anabaptists and Antinomians. The Lord speaks often of the Covenant of Grace not so much as Preached, The Lord speaks of the Covenant, Jer. 31.31, 32. Jer. 32. Ezek. 11. Ezek. ch▪ 36. Isai. 59 according to his decree, and what he works in our heart, and not according to his will of command, and what we ought of duty to do. quâ foedus ennunciatum (though it so also must be Preached) but as fulfilled by God, and acted in an effectual powerful way, upon the hearts of the elect only, and that according to the Lords decree of election, and will of pleasure: So speaks the Lord of the Covenant. Jer. 31.31, 32, 33. Jer. 32.37, 38, 39 Ezek. 11.16, 17, 18, 19, 20. Ezek. 36.25, 26, 27, etc. Isa. 59.20, 21. in a pure Evangelic way, and in these places the Lord speaks of the Covenant, not so much as it contains our duty, as principally it holds forth his Gospel promise what he shall effectually do according to his decree and will of pleasure overruling our corrupt will: which Papists, Arminians, and Socinians utterly mistake, and will have it to be spoken of the Covenant as Preached according to the Lords approving and commanding will, whereas there is not one word of a command in these places, and therefore they say that these places speak nothing for the efficacy and mighty power of God in converting sinners. The mistake of Socinians and Arminians, touching the places, Jer. 31. Eze. 11, etc. 2. The Anabaptists from these places say none are to be baptised, but such as are so in Covenant, and as have these promises fulfilled in them, in whom the Lord hath wrought a new heart, and a new spirit; and that there is no external Covenanting under the New Testament. But then the whole Gentiles, Isai. 55.4, 5. Isai. 11.10. Isai. 60.1, 2, 3, etc. all Nations, crisp, Christ exalted, Ser. 6 pag. 159. Isai. 2.1, 2. all flesh, Isai. 40.5. Psal. 65.2. all the Kindred's of the earth, Psal. 22.26, 27. the Kingdoms of the world, Rev. 11.15. should be all chosen to life, taught of God, such as have the Law of God engraven in their inward parts, as Jer. 31.33. Ezek. 36.26. which is most false. The mistake of Antinomians as touching these places Jer. 31. Eze. 11. cap. 36.26. Isa. 59, etc. For they own no Covenant of grace, but that 〈◊〉 which 〈◊〉 doth all▪ & we are mere patients. Now there are undeniable Prophecies that the Gentiles from the rising of the Sun, to the going, down thereof, Mal. 1.11. shall be, under the New Testament, the people of God by Covenant, Isa. 19.18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25. Then must the generality and mixed multitude of the Gentiles be some other way in Covenant, than these of whom the Prophets s●eak, Isa. 5●▪ 20, 21. Isa. 55.10. Jer. 31.31. Ezek. 11.19. Ezek. 36.26. 3. The Antinomians do also own no Covenant of grace, but this wherein the new heart is given, and the condition is both promised and given. And D. Crispe saith, All other Covenants of God besides this, run upon a stipulation, and the promises run upon conditions altogether upon both sides.— The New Covenant is without any conditions whatsoever upon man's part: Man in tied to no condition that he must perform, that if he do not perform, the Covenant is made void by him. Ans. Man is under a condition of believing, and tied to believe, so as the wrath of God abides upon him, he shall not see life, nor be justified, if he believe not, Joh. 3.18.36. Rom. 10.6, 7, 8, 9▪ (2.) Man is tied to no condition which he must 〈◊〉, say which, he can perform without the grace of God. For have he grace, or have he no grace (the Holy Lord (O if we could plead for him and his High Sovereignty) is debtor to no man) he is so obliged to believe as he sins against the Preached Covenant and forefaults his salvation, if he believe not▪ and so breaks the Covenant, but devils or men cannot make it● void, he may make it of no effect to himself he being an heir of damnation, but being a chosen vessel God shall work him to believe, and he makes it not void to himself. If it be said, that the New Covenant is without, any conditions whatsoever, upon man's pure: It says too much for the believers being under no debt, no obligation of conscience to believe, or to any duty, but as the Spirit their only Law leads them: And if the Spirit breathe not upon them to forbear adultery, parricide sodomy, or to believe, pray, praise, hear, mourn for sin, as Peter, and David, they sin not, for sin is a transgression of the Law, And when the Spirit breathes not, acts not, The Antinomians, confound the efficient cause of obedience with the objective cause and rule of obedience in either Law or Gospel, & free men from all duties when the actual influences of the Spirit cease. there is no Law: and this is most ●ilde. Where observe that ●. Antinomians and Familists confound the efficient cause of our obedience, which is the Spirit of Grace, and the objective cause, which is the holy rule of the command, promise, or threatening. For though the Spirit be absent, and not given at all to men in the state of nature, yet do they sin in committing of Sodomy, and in not praying, for they are obliged not to sin, and commanded in the first Command to pray to a revealed God. I know Adam was not obliged before he sinned to pray to Jesus Christ Mediator, as Steven, Act. 7. prayed to him. The Spirit by grace, does help us to obey the command and the Law, but the Spirit is not the Law, nor rule of out obedience. 2. Not only will they have the Spirit● to be all the believers Law and word, and the letter of the command to lay on no obligation, but the Spirit as actually breathing and giving actual influences must be the Law: For though the natural conscience or habitual light say that the man should not commit this wickedness, nor omit this duty, seeing present necessity of one starving for want, of one drowning in a water crying for my help, is a call of God to perform the duty. And if the Spirit give inward warning that I should do the duty, yet if the Spirit actually breathe not and contribute not his actual influence, the man hath no warrant of any command or Law to act without his rule, since the Spirit acts not at all: and cannot so be guilty in the committing of the most vile abomination; for where no Law is, no sin is. M. crisp pag. 160. brings this Argument, The Covenant is everlasting: if the Covenant stand upon any conditions to be performed by man, it cannot be an everlasting Covenant, except man were so confirmed in righteousness that he should never fail in that which is his part, but he daily fails, & so daily breaks the Covenant? Ans. To the first act of believing, which is a performing of the condition of the Covenant, The believer is confirmed so as he cannot but believe, and believe to the end, being under the special promises made to the chosen, although he have not the confirming grace of the elect Angels. there is no other condition required then that, Ezek. 36.26. I will put in you a heart of flesh. 27. I will put my Spirit in you, and cause you walk in my statutes. Zech. 12.10. I will powr● upon the house of David, the Spirit of grace and supplication, and they shall look upon me whom they have pierced, that is, they shall believe in me: That is a strong confirmation, to wit, a promise that he will work the condition in us. And so is that, Joh. 6.37. All that the Father gives unto me, shall come unto me (that is, believe in me) and him that cometh, I will in no wise cast out. 2. It is to question the perseverance of the Saints to say, that God shall not confirm them into the day of the Lord, as he promiseth, 1 Cor. 1.8. Phil. 1.6. 1 Pet. 1.4, 5. (3.) Our daily doubtings of unbeleef will not prove that we so break the Covenant, as our fails and daily slips of unbeleef should render the Covenant void, and null, so as it should leave off to be an everlasting Covenant, for such failings are indeed sins against the love of the Redeemer and Surety of the Covenant, for his love should constrain us to believe at all times, The doubtings & unbeleef of the justified renders not the Covenant of Grace null, so as it should not be a possible way of life to them, as the least sin against the Covenant of Works renders the Covenant null, so that it can never be a possible way of salvation again to those that once sin. and to hope to the end. Nor does the eternity of the Covenant depend upon our believing, but upon his grace who gives us to believe: but it's otherways in the Covenant of Works. D. crisp, pag. 162. in Jer. 31. Ezek. 36. Heb. 8. and other passages where the Tenor of the Covenant is contained, there is no word of a tie, pag. 163, 164. there is not one word that God saith to man, thou must do this. But God takes all upon himself, and saith he will do this: Yea, if faith were the condition of the Covenant, the fault of the broken Covenant should be his who works, not faith in us. Ans. Here is the mistake of many who imagine that, The Lord speaks not Jer. 31. Heb. 8. of the whole Covenant of Grace as preached to all in the Visible Church, as many suppose. Jer. 31. Ezek. 36. Heb. 8. the Holy Ghost setteth down the whole entire sum and tenor of the new Covenant, which he doth not. For 1. he speaketh nothing of the whole parties of the Preached Covenant, which is all within the Visible Church: these he speaks of here, are only believers in whom he works a new heart. 2. He speaks nothing of Covenant Commandments, nothing of Covenant duties directly. 3. Nothing of the condition required of us. 2. He speaks not of the Covenant under the reduplication as Preached, or as a treaty offered to elect and reprobate, as Math. 2●. 31, 32. Luk. 1.72. Act. 2.39. and as every where holden out as a visible Covenant made with Abraham and his seed in both Old and New Testament, according to the approving will of God. But he speaks only of the fulfilling of some special promises of the Covenant, heart teaching, and the efficacy of the Covenant. 2. Only upon the elect who shall persevere to the end, Jer. 31.35. Jer. 32.40. Isa. 59.20, 21. (3.) Only according to the Lords decree and will of pleasure, not what we ought to do, but what the Lord by his powerful grace will do in us. As 1. I will engrave my Law in their heart. 2. I will be their God. 3. They shall be my people, to wit, effectually as gifted with a new heart, and such as shall never be casten off, but shall persevere to the end, v. 35, 36, 37. Jer. 32.40. otherwise by external calling all the carnal and stiffe-hearted Jews were his people in Covenant, Isai. 1.3. Isa. 5.25. Ps. 81.8. Ps. 50.7. Deut. 7.7. as is in every page almost of the Old Testament. (4.) They shall be taught of God, 31, 34. (5.) I will forgive their iniquity, v. 34. (6.) I will give them perseverance, and never cast them off, v. 35, 36, 37. so that the Covenant is a metonymy. This is my Covenant that I will make with them: that is, these are effects, fruits, and blessings of the Covenant which I shall by my effectual and mighty grace work in them. The scope of the Epistle to the Hebrews is not to treat of the Covenant Preached in his nature, parties, promises, precepts, conditions, but to treat of the excellency of Christ above Angels, Moses, Priests, Sacrifices, and in acting of the Covenant upon the heart of the elect, especially Christ excels all. 4. The Apostle to the Hebrews hath no purpose to expone the Covenant of Grace made with Abraham, that Covenant (saith he) they break▪ Yea it is contrair to the scope of the Apostle to set down the Doctrine of the Covenant of Grace. He purposes in the Epistle to the Hebrews to exalt Christ above the Angels. ch. 1▪ above Moses, ch. 3. above all the Priests, the High Priest, and above all the Sacrifices Bullocks, Lambs, Goats, etc. he through the eternal Spirit, once offered himself too God. And ch. 8. he proves Christ to be a more excellent High Priest, a Minister of a more excellent Tabernacle, and a more excellent Ministry, Because he is Mediator of a better Covenant: he is a days-man who lays his hands upon both parties at variance, both upon God and man, to bring them together: See Job. 9.32, 33. that is, a Mediator of a Covenant▪ So that here he saith, Christ is engaged to the Father in a more spiritual, and heavenly Covenant. None could engrave the Law of God in the heart but Christ: one might say, was not the Law engraven in the heart of some, and their sins pardoned? Were not Moses, Aaron, and many of the people of God, sanctified, pardoned, and justified according to that Covenant? Ans. They were justified and sanctified, but not by the letter of the Covenant of Grace, nor by sacrifices, shadows, conditional promises, threattens, but by Christ, I the Lord Redeemer will write my Law in their heart, etc. It is then contrair to the Apostles scope; Heb. 8. to enter the discourse of the Doctrine of the literal Law-Covenant, or the conditional Covenant of Grace, it strongly concludes his point, to speak but of the half (though the choicest half) of the Covenant, as fulfilled in the elect, and that exalts Christ and his Ministry, that he hath a Ministry upon the heart. Now it is a shame to lay the blame of our not believing on Christ, be it a condition of the Covenant, or be it none: Christ works all our works in us, and by this reason it must he his fault (hallowed be his Name) that we sin at all, because he works not in us contrair acts of obedience. But to whom is the Sovereign Lord debtor? And therefore this Antinomian way must be refused. CHAP. XI. Of the promises made to Christ in the Covenant of Mediation, not to Christ-God, but to Christ God and Man the Mediator, and these of twelve sorts. TO Christ-God promises of reward cannot be made, nor can Christ-God suffer, but they are made to the Person God-Man, for the encouraging of the Man Christ, and he incourages himself therewith, Isa. 50.7, 8. Christ-Man lived the life of faith by depending upon God for the joy set before him, and therefore did run, Heb. 1●. our life should be sweeter, should we fetch all our comforts and actings from his influences by the faith of daily dependency. Faith here promises to itself good, Isa. 26.12. Is. 30.31. Ps. 118.10, 11. Ps. 16.9, 10, 11. If the kinds of promises made to Christ be asked for: Then 1. no such promise as remission of sin can be made to him; Justification promised to Christ; and that twofold▪ but a twofold Justification must be promised to him. A Law-Justification, this do and live: For the promise was made to the first Adam, to wit, that he should be justified and live, if he give consummate and perfect obedience to the Law▪ now this Christ did in all things. 2. There is a Justification of Christ from the band of suretyship, he having completely satisfied for our debts, this was due to him, and promised, 1 Tim. 3.16, Justified in the Spirit. Rom. 1.4. Declared to be the Son of God, by the resurrection from the dead: That was a judicial declaration. Acts 2.24. Having loosed the pains of death, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, as a King by authority and judicially loses a prisoner from his fetters, having no more to say against him. Christ judicially loosed from death, came out, and we in him. Psa. 105.20. The King sent and loosed him. Isa. 50.8. He is near that justifies me, who is he that contends with me (in judgement?) Rom. 6.9. Knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, dieth no more, death shall no more have Lordship or Lordly dominion over him, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉. So the word, Luk. 22.25. The Kings of the Gentiles bear dominion over them. Rom. 14.9. Death had some Kingly dominion in Justice and by Law over him: But Christ by Law of satisfactory payment, who was also the mighty Son of God, wrought himself out of the grips and fetters of death: So in Christ death hath lost Law-dominion over the believer. It is against Justice and the just Covenant between Jehovah and Christ, that we should be for ever among the worms and not at length be loosed from the sting and victory of the grace: O death, thou shalt, thou must let the captives go free, 1 Cor. 15.55. Host 13. the prison must be a free Jail, when iron gates and fetters are broken. We have in Christ a good cause, the cause and action of Law is win, and carried on our favours. 2. There is a promise of heavenly influences made to Christ, Isa. 50.4. A promise of heavenly influences is made to Christ. He wakeneth morning by morning, he wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned. 5. The Lord hath opened mine ear, and I was not rebellious. Some great Divines say, Christ had no sleepy nor closed ear: he must there speak of Isaiah. But so there was no sinful dryness in Christ; Was He not therefore anointed? Isa. 42.1. I will put my Spirit upon him. Then all influences are promised also, Isa. 11.2. The Spirit of the Lord shall rest upon him:— 3. And shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord, and he shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, etc. 2. Christ was assured he could not sin, Christ was assured of influences. and so of influences to duties, Joh. 5.30. Joh. 8.26, 27, 38, 50, 55. Joh. 10.38. though he wanted influences at a time, as touching consolation and the felt fruition of God, being forsaken for a time, Psal. 22.1. Luk. 22.44. Math▪ 27.45. But Adam, Adam was not to believe he should have influences, nor yet to believe his own reprobation. as he was not to believe perseverance, nor yet sinfully to fear falling: so neither was he to believe influences to all acts of obedience, they not being promised to him. Yet was not Adam to believe his own reprobation; for it was neither true nor a revealed truth. Then the only nearest way against deadness and dryness, is to have recourse to the fountain and fullness of life that is in Christ. Literal quickening of ourselves, miskenning Christ, out of whose fullness we receive, produceth but literal fardinesse. 3. The special and cardinal promise (I will be his God, The great promise, I will be his God, made to Christ. Psal. 89.26. and he shall cry to me, Thou art my Father, my God, and the rock of my salvation.) is bound up with Christ in the Covenant of Suretyship, and is the key and corner stone of the frame and building of the Covenant of Grace, Joh. 20.17. Go to my Brethren, (saith Christ to Magdalen) and say unto them, I ascend unto my Father and to your Father, and to my God and your God. It's comfortable talking that Christ saith to us, I and you Believers are the Children of the same Father, and have one Covenant-relation to one God: though, as is said, Christ bear the relation of a Surety-Covenant to God, and we of a Covenant of Mediation; and notwithstanding of the differences, yet it may be said that Christ and Believers are in one writ, Christ and believers are in one writ. and one letter of acquittance dischargeth both from condemnation, Christ from condemnation of punishment, us from condemnation of inherent guiltiness and punishment. Blessed we to be unite to him every way, and to join our Amen and consent to the Covenant: yea, and in regard of profession, we should subscribe and write our names to it, Isa. 44.1, 2, 3. Our maimed and broken and half consent proclaims an overly and cold Covenanting. It's true, parties are but once married, once Covenanting by oath is as good as twenty: Wear to make firmer our marriage-love with Christ. but frequent and multiplied acts of marriage-love add a great deal of firmness and of strength to the Marriage band, they are confirmations of our first subscription. Renewed acts of faith to take Christ for Jesus and Redeemer, and renewed acts of love, do more and more engaged the heart to Christ as Lord and King. Little conversing with Christ deadens marriage-love. Rare visits and thin bring on worn out acquaintance. We are apt to complain he visits us seldom: that is because we have not the childish hire of consolation and feeling, we refuse to work, and yet we should look at comfort for the duty, and not on the duty for the comfort, Our mistake touching comforts and duties. when it's a duty to our Father; And who looks upon the comfort both as a comfort and a duty▪ 1 Thes. 4.18. Comfort one another with these words: and so must they comfort themselves. Comfort is mainly for believing, Colos. 2.2. Heb. 6.18. and there is a feast and a fill of joy in believing, Rom. 15.13. We seek but a comfort and a joy of cheering and solacing ourselves, and that is all. 4. There is promised to Christ a seed, Isa. 53.10. A seed is promised to Christ, seed was much in the heart of Christ. When thou shalt make his soul an offering for sin, he shall see his seed. Heb. 2.13. Behold I and the children that God hath given me. Jacob by Covenant served for Rachel: Christ also served, suffered and died of love for his Spouse, Eph. 5.25, 26. Isa. 53. he shall be satisfied. A Redeemed seed was his end, and we endure hard labour for a desired end, and we are sick till we get the great end we aim at. It's true the honour of God was the special end, Joh. 12.28. c. 17.1. yet it was heart satisfaction to Christ to have all his offspring and children with him, Joh. 17.24. How should Christ not be our end? See if ye do all, and suffer all, to fetch this shore, Phil. 3.8, 9 Examine comparative ends, by-ends, self ends. It's impossible a man can be ignorant of his last and main end, so strong an impulsion it hath upon his heart. 5. There's not only a seed, but a rich conquest, the heathen promised, and the ends of the earth, Psal. 2.8, 9 Dominion from sea to sea▪ Zech. 9.10. Psal. 72.8. Dan. 7.14. and both this and the former satisfies Christ. There is not a sight so desirable to the eye of Christ, as to see all his Redeemed ones conquering and last in the fields, and fairly landed on the shore, passed Gun-shot and reach of all temptations. We satisfy our unbelieving hearts too much▪ Christs●nd ●nd is satisfied by the Lord, therefore are we not to fear. Ah! who can stand, temptations are so strong. But as JEHOVAH fully satisfies Christ's soul, his hope, his aim and intended end in all the Articles of the Covenant of Redemption: so fear not, JEHOVAH cannot break off the Treaty with his Son, nor can Christ be left unsatisfied. 6. The Lord promises help to Christ against his enemies, Psal. 89.21. With him my hand shall be established, mine arm also shall strengthen him. There be many against Christ, but he hath a divine furniture of strength. Hence protection is promised to him in the discharge of his Office, Isai. 49.2. In the shadow of his hand hath he hid me, and made me a polished sh●f●: in his quiver hath he hid me. The outletings and manifestations of strength and furniture that is in the ●ead redounds to a seasonable supplie of all his afflicted ones, Because victory is promised to Christ in temptations, we may flee to the Covenant, as Christ and the Saints have done. that they shall not be overwhelmed. 7. Victory is promised to Christ over all his enemies: The Lord will not leave his soul in grave, Psal. ●6. 10. Therefore (saith the Lord speaking covenant-ways, Isai. 53.12.) will I divide him a portion with the great, and he shall divide the spoil with the strong: because he hath poured out his soul unto death. He shall triumph over principalities and powers, Col. 2.15. Luk. 11.22. and shall make all his enemies his footstool, and subdue them, so that he shall fill the pits with the dead bodies, Psal. 110.1, 6. and plague all his enemies, Gen. ●●. 3. Psal. 89. 2●. I will beat down his foes before his face, and plague them that hate him. It supports not a little our faith, that when we tremble before temptations from Satan and the mighty of the world, the Lord hath written & Covenanted to Christ all his and our enemy's destruction. Our turning away our eye from the Covenant is the cause why we succumb; Christ, under his sorest assault with hell and hell's pursuivants and officers, devils, and the felt anger of a forsaking God, doubles his grips on the Covenant, my God, my God, Psal. 22.1. Mat. 27. O my Father, Mat. 26. Psal. 89.26. He shall cry to me, my Father, my God. A Covenant is (as it were) more than a promise, being a solemn promise in condiscension of mercy: So the Church, Psal. 89.38, 39 and Jer. 14.21. and the afflicted people, Isa. 63.16. and Dan. ●. 9.4, 5, 6. Ezra. 9.6.10.15. Hezekiah in a day of rebuke, Isa. 37.16, 20. the slain Church, Psal. 79.9. Psal. 80.1. flee to this shore in their storms, and the Lord professes he will be broken, entreated, and holden by his Covenant, Leu. 26.41, 42. 8. There is a promise of glory, A promise of glory is made to Christ. of a Name above all names made to Christ for his sufferings, Psal. 16.9, 10, 11. Isa. 53.12. Act. 5.31. and to such as suffer with him, and overcome, Luk. 22.29, 30. Rev. 3.21. Rev. 2.10. As also, he shall bear all the glory of his Father's house, Isa. 22. Zech. 7.13. 9 The Lord promiseth forbearing mercy to the children of Christ, if they sin, he will correct them in measure, and in a Fatherly way give them repentance, but not remove the Covenant-mercy. Rods in mercy are Covenanted to us. So hath the Lord Covenanted and articled in the writ with his Son, a rod to children, to difference them from bastards, Heb. ●2. And ●e that hath hi● fire in Zion, and his furnace in Jerusalem, writes this up as a Covenant-mercy, that he will not suffer them to perish with the world. Hence, the rods of the wicked stand booked in the Covenant of Works among the curses of the book of the Law, Leu. ●6. Deut. 28.15, 16, 17, etc. our rods are Covenanted mercies in the compact between the Lord and Christ, and written in the Gospel-book of the Covenant of Grace. 10. All the promises of the Gospel, are first (as it were) promised to Christ; the Gospel is put over in his hand. Jesus is the Angel, Rev. 10.1. ch●a●hed with a Cloud, and a Rainbow on his head. v. 2. And hath in his hand a little book open; the Testament, and the book of all the promises to dispense them to such as the Father hath given to him, to give his Spirit to his own, to interceded and advocate for them, to ratify and seal them with his blood. 11. There is promised to him an head-ship, and power of judgement, An headship is promised to Christ. over man and Angels, with an oath, that to him all knees shall bow, Rom. 14.11. Isa. 45.23. Phil. 2.10. and that he shall add his seal to Gospel-hell and vengeance inflicted upon the despisers of the Gospel, Luk. 19.14. Mat. 26.64. The threatenings against Gospel unbeleef are put in the hands of Christ, not as Redeemer and Surety, but as a refused Surety and King, whom unbelievers will not have to reign over them. 12. Adam broke the whole frame of heaven and earth: and to the Second ADAM the whole broken and marred lump of the Creation is promised, The creatures in the Covenant of works are now broken out, when that Covenant is broken, but now in Christ they are taken in again & restored as under-Covenanters. that he may be the repairer of the waste places. Isa. 49.8. I will preserve thee, and give thee for a Covenant of the people, to establish the earth, to cause to inherit the desolate heritage's. Ps. 72.16. Under the reign of the Messiah, There shall be an handful of corn upon the top of the mountains, the fruit thereof shall shake like Lebanon. Jer. 31.12. Therefore shall they come and sing in the height of Zion, and shall flow together for the goodness of the Lord (Christ) for wheat, and for wine, and for oil, and for the young of the flock, and of the herd. 1. The Lord made all things at the beginning very good, Gen. 1.31. Heaven, Earth, Sun, Moon, Beasts, Birds, etc. being all made servants to man, were in a manner fellow-Covenanters in their kind with man in the Covenant of Works: As a King covenants with a great Family, his servants and dependers have the benefit of the King's Covenant-peace, all obeyed Adam without jarring: but when Adam sinned, war between the Lord, and between the Master and the servants is denounced, the earth is cursed for his sake, Genes. 3.17, 18. and Lions and wild Beasts rise against him like loose borderers. But in the Covenant of Grace, Host 2.18, 19, 20. the beasts of the field, the fowls of the heaven, the Sun which shall not smite by day, nor the Moon by night, Ps. 121.6. are by the Surety of the Covenant brought in a new league: yea the stones of the field, Job 5.23. are compartners of the peace, and Christ the King takes off the forefaultry upon all, and loses the arrestment of vanity that by sin was laid upon the Creation, which was made sick like a woman travelling in birth, Rom. 8.20, 21, 22. Hence are they blessed in Christ to the Saints, Deut. 28.4, 5. Levit. 26.4, 5, 6. and the Angels come in under their Head Christ, Col. 2.10. and serve the new restored heirs, Heb. 1.13. for their Heads sake. 2. God hath appointed Christ the Heir of all things, and, Heb. 1.2. hath given a Charter to Christ and put in bread, garments, houses and all to the Believer in Christ the first Heir: his great evidence is, 1 Cor. 3.21. All things are yours. 3. He makes all things new, Rev. 21.5. This Christ mends the broken gold ring which was broken by the first unattentive and rash Heir Adam; So that now Heavens, Earth, Mountains, Isai. 49.13. sea, trees, fields, Psal. 96.11, 12, 13. are commanded to sing a Gospel-Psalm of joy, because Christ the new King and Restorer of all is come to the Throne: yea let the stoods clap their hands, Psal. 98.9. and he purposes to purge with fire the great Pest-house infected with sin and under bondage of corruption, Rom. 8.21. 2 Pet. 3.10, 11. that he may set up the new world in Gospel-beauty▪ the new heavens and the new earth, 2 Pet. 3.13. Isai. 65.17. Isai. 66.22. Rev. 21.1. Oh what a life to have a cottage and a little yard of herbs in that new World, and how base to be but Citizens of this World! CHAP. XII. The condition and Properties of the Covenant of Redemption. Q. WHat need is there of any condition to be performed by Christ, or of any Covenant? Christ being Man, required that he should be under a Covenant. Ans. The same Question may be of the need of an oath to Christ, Psal. 110. The Lord hath sworn and will not repent, Thou art a Priest, etc. 2. The same necessity, in regard of infinite wisdom that our Redeemer should be obedient to the death of the Cross, Phil. 2.8. and be under the Law, Gal. 4.4. and keep his Father's Commandments, and abide in his love, Joh. 15.10. requires also a Covenant of obedience upon the part of Christ-Man; for all men being born under the Law and Covenant of Works, Christ-Man also must be under the same. And then Christ the Mediator was to give obedience to a particular Commandment of laying down his life for sinners, and this required an ingadgement by way of Covenant, and so a condition of obedience to perform what this peculiar Law of Suretyship required of him, to wit, to lay down his life. 3. It's not a condition of indifferency which is required of Christ, such as is required of Adam, No such condition is required of Christ as of Adam or of us, nor was he under any threatening, but had confirming grace from the womb. in which there is a hazard of failing and coming short of the reward. Adam's Covenant had both threatenings and promises, and so hath our Covenant of Reconciliation, though in another way: see Psal. 89.30, 31, 32. But the Covenant of Suretyship hath promises most large that are made to Christ: but no threatenings are laid before the Man-Christ that are to be read in the Scripture. There was no hazard nor possibility, in regard of the Personal Union, that Christ could sin: yea, in regard that Christ from the womb was both a Traveller, a Viator and an enjoyer and Comprehensor, and had the Spirit above measure from his birth, as Man he had gifted to him the confirming grace which is now given to the Elect Angels in their Head Christ; And therefore there was somewhat like a condition necessary, and as the members enter to glory through obedience, so also the Covenanted Head, Luk. 24.26. Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter in to his glory? The paying of the price of blood, and dying for man was the formal condition of the Covenant of suretyship. Q. 2. What was the special condition of the Covenant of Suretyship? Ans. The Covenant being a bargain of buying a people to God, than the paid price and ransom must be the duly formal condition. As for obedience to the Moral Law, it was the condition of the Covenant of Works, to which the Man Christ, as Man, was obliged, that he might have right to Law-justification and life eternal, jure & merito foederali operum, by the Law and federal merit (I mean merit by paction and faithful Law-promise, not of condignity) of the Covenant of Works, that he might be saved. Law-holinesse in Christ did not exclude grace. But this Law-holinesse had influence in that most solemn act of obedience in offering himself a sacrifice to death for our sins. And the Law-holinesse of the Man Christ did not exclude supernatural grace as the Law-holinesse of Adam: for it was the perfect conformity of Christ's nature, his soul, understanding, will, affections, and all his actions internal and external with the holy Law of God. Hence the heart and inclinations of Christ stood ever right and stright to the Law. He exercised no affection in puris naturalibus, his anger came not out in pure natural anger and no more, The holy actings of Christ's affections. but it came out in acts of zeal; Nor his joy in pure natural joy, though sinless, but in joy of the Holy Ghost. And in the whole Man Christ was a perfect mass, and, as it were, a complete body of all gracious qualifications. Isai. 11. Christ's wisdom. He received the Spirit of knowledge and was ignorant of nothing he aught to know: Disputed with the Doctors being of twelve years old: The world knew not his School or Teacher. Hence his wisdom and practical understanding of the Law of God and practical conclusions, He had the Spirit of counsel, as the greatest of Statesmen for Government, Isa. 52.13. Behold my Servant shall deal prudently. And so, when we are in perplexities and know not what to do, Christ his undantoned boldness of faith. he can lead the blind in a way they know not, Isai. 11.1, 2. He hath the Spirit of might and courage, an undantoned Spirit, yet conjoined with counsel, no fool hardiness, but the resolute ventoriousnesse of faith, Isai. 42.4. He shall not fail nor be discouraged: Heb. broken, till he have set judgement in the earth. Our softness of unbeleef, at the blowing of a feather or stirring of a leaf, brings on falling of Spirit and swooning. He hath the boldness of faith to believe victory before the battle, Isa. 50.9. Lo they all shall wax old as a garment, the moth shall eat them up. He hath hope from the womb, His hope. Psal. 22.9. Thou art he that took me out of the womb, thou didst make me hope when I was in my mother's breasts. And for the joy set before him, he endured the cross and despised the shame, Heb. 12.2. And the Spirit of the fear of the Lord made him quick in understanding, that is, the high and reverend apprehensions of God made him quick to smell or sent (so the word imports) the snares and temptations in the work of Redemption plotted by men and devils. So excelled he in righteousness, His holy sagacity. which as a girdle went about his loins, both in judging, His righteousness. and in discharging the trust put upon him by the Lord who laid the key of David and the Government upon his shoulder: his obedience to his Father, and continuing in his love, Joh. 15.10. and thirsting to do the will of the Father, Joh. 4.34. His zeal to his Father's house should be a fair copy for us to follow. He was meekness itself, Isa. 53.7. 1 Pet. 2.23, 24. much in praying, His meekness. believing, rejoicing in spirit, Luk. 6.12. Psal. 16.9, 10, 11. tender to the weak of the flock, Isa. 40.11. His tenderness to the weak. He shall feed his flock like a shepherd, he shall gather the lambs with his arm, and carry them in his bosom, and he shall gently lead these that are with young. Isa. 42.2. He shall not cry, nor lift up (a shout) nor cause his voice to be heard in the street. 3. A bruised reed shall he not break, and the smoking flax shall he not quench. He was most compassionate to sinners, inviting them to come, Mat. 11.28, 29. crying and shouting with a loud voice to the thirsty, His compassion to sinners. Joh. 7.37. journeyed from heaven to seek and to save the lost, Luk. 19.10. came to serve them with his heart blood, Mat. 20.28. his bowels were turned with compassion to perishing souls that wanted the feeding Pastors, Mat. 9.36. He sighed deeply in his Spirit, at the perverse unbeleef of his deadly enemies the Pharisees, Mar. 8.12. wept and shed tears at the foreseen destruction of Jerusalem, Mat. 23.37. Luk. 19.41, 42. and yet that City slew him. Loved as the tender Physician, to be much in company with sick sinners, Mat. 9.11, 12. Luk. 15.1, 2, 3. Luk. 19.1, 2, 3, 9, 10. O what rejoicing! when he lays the lost sheep on his shoulder, Luk. 15.5. When, v. 20. he sees the home-coming sinner, he ran, fell on his neck, and had compassion upon him, and kissed him, and made a feast, and sang and danced for joy. There is no humility like his, His humility. to wash the feet of his servants: there is no patience like his, who, when he was reviled, reviled not again▪ when he suffered, he threatened not, but committed himself to him that judgeth righteously▪ His painful way of gaining of souls. 1 Pet. 2.23. As a lamb dumb before the shearer, Isa. 53. How gaining of souls was he, who preached in the Temple, in the Synagogues, in the Villages, in the Ship, at the Sea side, at every Table he came to, at every Feast, at every confluence of people, at every way side, and stood still and talked with a woman, and wanted his dinner upon that occasion? And thought he dined well when he gained to the Lord the soul of a woman, and of them of Samaria, His faithful & free teaching. who hated him and refused to lodge him? How faithful and free in rebuking the Pharisees and Rulers, and in declaring the truth of the Gospel, that he was the Son of God, though they attempted to stone him for his free Teaching? His mortification. None mortified to honour as he that refused to be a King, Joh. 6.15. and was willing to be worse lodged than birds and foxes, Mat. 8.20. and being rich, for our cause became poor▪ 2 Cor. 8.9. and endured the cross, despised the shame, suffered the contradiction of sinners, Heb. 12. and did run and fainted not: And was he not a pattern of love, who laid down his life for his friends, Joh. 15.10. even when we were enemies, Rom. 5.10? A pattern of love. He pleased not himself, Rom. 15.3. honoured his Father, Joh. 8. sought not his own glory, v. 49.50. and saith true, Job. 5.30. I seek not mine own will, but the will of him that sent me. Joh. 8.29. Of obedience to God and to all to whom obedience is due. I do always these things that please him. He faithfully expounded the Law, Mat. 5. refuted heresies, Mat. 22. glorified God with his miracles, he was subject to his Parents, Luk. 2.51. paid tribute to the Prince himself. Mat. 17.27. and taught others to obey lawful Governors, Mat. 22.21. would not usurp the place of a Judge, Luk. 12. v. 13, 14. and witnessed a good confession before Pontius Pilate, 1 Tim. 6.13. and was for that cause born, and for that end came he into the world, that he might bear witness unto the truth, Joh. 18.37. none so selfdenied, he pleased not himself, sought not his own glory, nor his own ease, nor his own will, but submitted to the will of God. Christ hath all these qualifications as the grace of head-ship, to be communicated to us, not as the grace of his person, to be personal and private enduements for himself only. In all which, we are 1. to look upon Christ who went about do●ing good, Act. 10. as one who 1. was Covenant-wise designed of God and anointed with the Holy Ghost and power to do what he did, and to be what he was, for our good: and it's much for the establishing of our faith, that Christ was all this for our salvations sake, by counsel and Covenant. These gracious qualifications Christ-God undertook to have for our good: and they were not given to Christ as personal and proper for himself, but as head; for we may here distinguish the grace of the person and the grace of head-ship, though they must not be divided. But as the light and heat of the Sun is not (if we may so speak) private or personal for the Sun itself, but for the earth, and all that live and grow out of the earth that need the influences of the Sun and have eyes to enjoy the light thereof. The water of the fountain is not for that hole or cave of the earth from whence the fountain doth issue, but it is very often to 〈◊〉 in strea●● to be a river for the use of the whole land. All these excellencies and graces are in Christ, not as his (to speak so) personal enduements, but as the public treasure, that we may receive of his fullness. We should think it a strange exorbitancy in nature, if all the trees, flowers, herbs on earth, should refuse to receive influences and growing from the Sun, and deny to be obliged to the Sun for light and heat: and our unwillingness to receive from Christ the public grace that is made his by Covenant, when a public con●ignation by compact is made for our good, proclaims our unbeleef and our wicked estrangement from Christ, as if we had said, let Christ be gracious for Christ, only I shall not be his debtor. Nor is it from the natural connexion between head and members, or because simply Christ is man as we are, though the humanity be ground thereof, nor is it because Christ simply is anointed with the fullness of the Spirit, for he is head of the body, and Lord, General, Captain of his people, no● by nature only, not because of grace simply, but by Covenant-purchase. Rom. 14.9. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, For this end Christ both died, and rose, and revived, that he might be Lord both of the dead and living. We too much affect bastard graces, and 〈◊〉 little the grace that is Chri●●, which hath a 〈◊〉 desirableness to cause us follow the●● graces because they lodge in God Immanuel There's a Covenant between the Father and the Son that Christ should die, not simply, but for, and in the name of the heirs of glory, such as are designed friends (for his dying is a relative and a legal binding and buying by Covenant of so many certain persons) and upon this he is made Head and Prince, and exalted to give of his fullness, to give repentance and forgiveness of sins to the house of Israel, Act. 5.30, 31. Ah! how do we love to be behold●● to nature? to self? for Heathen and Pagan virtues by education, and moral exercise, which is but wild corn? and we se● not how unwilling we are to trade with Christ, or to buy from him fine gold, yet it was given to him without measure, as to the universal fountain and head, for all his. 2. All these are in Christ, that he should be a living copy which we must follow: And he is a more lively example than the Gospel itself, for Christ is the acted Gospel. And if ye look on Christ, loving, believing, hoping, praying, The graces in Christ are more forceable patterns to us to follow, in some sense, than the Scripture itself. there comes more life and warmness from his actions, then from the word: when we consider that as God would have the humane nature a chariot to convey to us the fullness of merit by satisfaction, so must it be the mean of carrying to us the fullness of grace by sanctification, and then, when God Covenants with the Man Christ, that love, faith, hope, meekness, humility and 〈◊〉 shall live, speak and act in Christ out to us we are more strongly convinced to follow the footsteps of so blessed a guide. Christ is a living glass in which we see the beauty of grace. As also his meekness and humility is the meekness and humility of God, and all these graces have a seat and lodging in our Immanuel God with us, they have a drawing and an alluring desirablenes from the Person the Lord Jehovah our King, the mighty God, the Father of ages, in whom they reside. The properties of the Covenant of Suretyship are, 1. Freedom. 1. The freedom of the Covenant of suretyship. 2. graciousness. 3. Eternity. As to the first: Nothing could compel, nothing could hire Christ for eternity to engaged his Name in such a band, since he well knew what it should cost him, how dear it should stand him, and saw what indignity, shame, pain, curse, and all these conditions before him. And what could move the father, since he might have followed the Law-course of Works? 2. The first draughts▪ of freegrace and the Lords unsearchable riches appears in the sure mercies of David▪ The grace in the Covenant of suretyship. in an everlasting Covenant, Isa. 55.3. and Ps. 89.1. I will sing the mercies of the Lord.— 2. For I have said, mercy shall be built-up for ever:— Why? v. 3. I have made a Cov●nant with my chosen, I have sworn unto David my servant. 4. Thy seed will I establish for ever, etc. The giving of the Covenant. 2. The design of a Redeemer. 3. The sending. 4. Anointing. 5. The consenting of Christ. 6. His coming. 7. Dying, are all acts of grace. God was no debtor to the Man Christ, or to any of his kindred and blood-friends, more than he was to David and his seed, but God would act grace in Christ and make him a sampler and the first copy of freegrace to all his brethren, that they might share with him therein. But though he made Christ also a copy of his Justice, Rom. 3.25. and spared not his Son, Rom. 8.32. yet, Mal. 3.17. the ●ord deals not so with us: And they shall be mine, saith the Lord of Hosts, in that day when I make up my Jewels, and I will spare them as a man spareth his own son, that serveth him. And of Christ it is said, Ps. 72.13. He shall spare the poor and needy. And, O what riches of grace and mercy, and plenteous Redemption hath he manifested to us? and therefore the more grace he shows to us, The more grace that is shown to us, the more should we serve, not with a servile, but with a godly fear. the more freely and sonly should we serve him, with less hirednesse and servile disposition: If we could love God and Christ with a heart abstracted from heaven's hire, at least the pleasure of it (for pleasure mak● not any conform to God, but holiness doth) and the heart not legally fearing the burning torment of hell it were good: for since Christ hath freed us from the Law-wrath, he takes it not well that we dare approach too near to the mount burning with fire; nor does Christ allow our affections of fear and sorrow, & sadness to act upon feared everlasting wrath, (we being justified by faith) any other way, then in a Gospel-consideration, being casten down for our Law-deserving, but so as we highly value our ranson-payer, and serve him with godly fear, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, which word, Heb. 12.28. must note a difference between the fear and trembling and terror upon devils, The godly fear and the other fear differenced for the torment of hell, Mat. 8.29. Jam. 2.19. and the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, the godly fear of believers, Heb. 12.28. which is also given to Christ, Heb. 5.7. in whom there was no fear of hell torment, and therefore the fear of him that can cast both soul and body in hell (though it be another word, Mat. 10.28.) which Christ commands, cannot be a servile fear legal, for hell such as is in devils and men, but a godly fear, such as is consistent with the faith of deliverance from the wrath to come: for Christ, Mat. 10.28. commands that fear, fear (saith he) to deny Christ before men: Why? fear him who can cast soul and body in hell. And immediately, v. 31. Fear not therefore: the same word that is, v. 28. then he must forbid a fear opposite to servile fear, and which stands with the faith of sons who are to believe the care of a father, which is more toward his children then toward sparrows, v. 29, 30. And that the word no●●eth a godly fear, which is, Heb. 12. beside other Greek Authors▪ See Heb. 5.7. see Luk 2.25. Act. 2.5. Act. 8.2. Act. 23.10. and Heb. 11.7. Noah moved with fear, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, built and ark: sure the fear of everlasting torment in hell, moved not Noah to build the ark, for by faith which is saving, he builded it, v. 7. 3. Eternity is a special property of the Covenant of suretyship: For 1. the parties are eternal▪ Jehovah the Lord and the Son of God never began to agree upon the designation of the Redeemer for that work, it was a bargain closed from everlasting▪ Only the question is, when the Son shall render the Kingdom to the Father, 1 Cor. 15. whether or not the Covenant shall then cea●e. For 1. Christ shall then end his work of Redemption, and shall fully and finally have purchased what his soul desires, and shall have received his wages, and enjoy with his conquished bride an eternal sabbath. 2. He shall interceded no more for sinners, for the sinning of his redeemed ones shall have an end. 2. The Son (saith Camero) shall leave off to reign, In Respons. ad Quaestio. quod attinet ad regnandi actum, according to the act of reigning, but as touching the Kingdom itself, there shall be no end of the Kingdom. But it may appear as there was a time when it was said of Christ, Phil. 2.7. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, He emptied himself, and took on him the form of a servant. So there is a time opposite to that, v. 9 Therefore God hath highly exalted him: which is not fulfilled in his resurrection, ascension, and sitting only at the right hand of God, The Son's being subject to the Father how it is to be expounded, 1 Cor. 15 but when all power, friends, and unfriends, and the Man Christ shall be subject to the Lord, yea even the Son, not as God, for Christ-God is equal with the Father▪ not as man, for so in the days of his flesh as man, he ever was, and is, and shall be subject to God, but the Son shall be subject, as touching the Office of a formal Mediator. 2. Another distinction is here needful, as Augustine and Ambrose: Augustine, & Ambrose their mind touching Christ his being subject to the Father. he shall render the Kingdom to the Father, not that he shall leave off to reign, but that he then shall declare that he reigns not of himself, but that he hath his power of reigning from the Father, and he shall profess this before men and Angels, and so shall glorify the Father. It's not to be rejected that Hilarius, lib. 1. de Trinit. 11. August. lib. 1. de Trinit. c. 8. he shall render the elect back to God, as now saved▪ and present to the Father his ransoned ones now perfected, so Eph. 5.27. 3. Taking the word of reigning, for this, to excel in eminency of power above all, so Christ shall reign eternally, but taking the word of reigning as it notes the exercise of royal authority, so and so by gathering a Church, by the Preached word, fight against enemies, and overcoming them, to make them his footstool, until which time he reigns, Christ his not exercising of some second acts of a Mediatory Head and King after the last Judgement▪ proves not but he is a Mediatory King even then. Ps. 110. And so it may be, and is said by some, he reigns, not after the day of the universal Judgement: but these are but the second acts of a King, and the not exercising of these acts proves not but Christ is a King, actu primo, and essentially, for the exercise of such and such acts are often extrinsecall to the office. But the question shall remain whether he be not for ever and ever a Mediatory King, and does retain his headship over the Church; so as the Angel say, Luk. 1.33. He shall reign, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, and of his Kingdom there shal● be no end. And as Dan. 7.14. Cameron, and others say, the meaning of that, that his Kingdom shall have no end: is only, it shall not be destroyed by external violence, as worldly Monarchies that are made away, and others rise in their place, but that Kingdom (say they) may well●be called eternal, That Christ's Kingdom is eternal only because it is not destroyed as worldly▪ Kingdoms are by external violence, ●s said by some. though the King leave off to reign▪ when he leaves off to reign through no weakness and want of power, but because he needs not raign● there being no need of laws, because the subjects are perfected, and there are no enemies to be subdued, and the King hath obtained that eternal end, a glorified people, for which he was fight. But yet this seems not to satisfy, 1. Circumcision, and the Ceremonies; and the Priesthood, Exo. 40.15. Leu. 16.29. the fast in the seventh month, shall be a statute, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, for ever. Leu. 6.18. All the mules of the sons of Aaron shall eat the remainder of the meat-offering, it shall be a statute for ever in your generations: so Leu. 17.7. Leu. 7.34, 3●. Leu. 23.14. Num. 23.11, 23. yet these Ordinances can hardly be called eternal, as the Kingdom of Christ is: And yet they cease when the body is come, and they are not destroyed as humane inventions, the hay and the stubble that are builded upon the foundation Christ. 2. These reasons prove that Christ shall not exercise such and such acts of royalty upon such and such enemies, for they shall be no enemies: Illius imperii princeps desiit regnare. Yet we say not, as ●amero, that such a Prince leaves off to reign even as Mediator. Christ's rendering of the Kingdom dispensatory or Oeconomick to the Father may well be a rendering of an account of his subjects, and a presenting of them to God perfected, Eph. 5.26, 27. without spot and wrinkle: Christ having brought them out of danger, so as they need not Word, Sacraments, or a Temple. And so▪ 1 Cor. 15.24. He shall put down all rule, all power, and authority, all Magistracy and Government that now is in either Church or State▪ and so saith Par●us, the Son shall be subject to the Father▪ having subdued all the rebels▪ as his Father's Deputy, he shall return to his Father the Kingdom now reduced to subjection and made peaceable, and lay down his mediatory Commission, and so be subject to the Father, having ended the deputed and delegated charge. And it is sure, the Son as Mediator is sent, and is a Servant, an Angel, or Messenger of the Covenant, Mal. 3. and the laying down of his written Commission is a sort of subjection, and God doth not now actually reign in such a Mediatory way as in the days of Christ's flesh: he did reign in Christ, but now after the last Judgement, God is all in all, that is, not because he is not now all in all, and is not the Lord of lords, and King of kings, but because it doth not so appear to be, many now rise against him and contradict him▪ and persecuting his Mystical body, do persecute Christ. 2. He shall be all in all by change of the Oeconomick Government, than the Father, Son, and Spirit, shall immediately glorify the Church, Rev. 21.22. And I saw no Temple therein, for the Lord God▪ Almighty and the Lamb is their Temple. 3. And the City had no need of the Sun, neither of the Moon to shine, in it▪ for the glory of God did enlighten it, and the Lamb is the light thereof. But that Christ shall leave off to be Mediatory King after the last Judgement, I deny. For there is a twofold Mediation, one, Christ is ever, even after the universal Judgement a Mediatory Head, King, and Lord. of uniting sinners to God, and mediating between God and them. This shall cease, and all the royal acts thereof, but these, with reverence, 〈…〉 second operations and acts of royalty. There is another Mediation substantial, by which our natures glorified, stand in a substantial union with God for ever▪ for to what end shall Christ stand glorified in our nature in heaven, but to be the substantial 〈…〉 between 〈◊〉 and us, glorified for ever? If any say that Christ-God-Man after that day is no Mediator of reconciliation, There is a twofold Mediation because there shall be no sin then: It's true▪ Nay, but even now in the interval between his ascension and second appearing to Judge the world, he acts not as Mediator of reconciliation to expiate our sins, and to satisfy for them, for only he did upon the cross by dying for us, so mediate. And we will not say he is acting the part of a Priest formally by sacrificing for us in heaven, Christ acts not as a sacrificing Priest for us in heaven. as Socinians teach: for he can offer no expiatory sacrifice for us in heaven, for he died but once, & that was on the earth only. Obj. But now he Advocats for sinners, 1 Joh. 2.1. therefore as now in heaven glorified, he is a Mediator for sinners. Ans. True, he is a Mediator and Intercessor now, applicatione, non expiatione, by applying his blood, but not by shedding of it: And he is an Advocate, but called, 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉, Jesus the Righteous, and an Advocate as just and righteous, supposeth a right and just cause, and that sufficient satisfaction and payment is given to God for the sins of these for whom Christ intercedes; the Advocation of Christ is not to plead that believers may sin, How Christ appears for us now in heaven, as just, as well, as merciful or their sins may be excused as no sins: But his intercession is to plead, 1. that for his blood we may stand as accepted of God, and freed from condemnation. 2. That the Spirit procured by the death of Christ, may be given to us, that we may repent and believe. But again, after the last Judgement Christ stands as Mediator, not to apply his death, nor to interceded for sinners, when there shall be no sinners, but Christ eternally shall appear for us as a pawned of a perfect satisfaction once given, and as a pledge and hostage of peace, and Christ's appearing for us for ever is an allusion to the Ambassadors sent by foreign Princes, who standing in Court before the Prince they are sent unto, are speaking tokens that the confederacy of peace stands, and that no acts of hostility can be done by either of the States, and because God is eternally and not by fits just, as if he were now angry at sin, and then satisfied and pacified when the satisfaction is gone, Christ stands in our nature our Mediatory Head and King, after the last Judgement. therefore the Lord Christ stands in that Body and Nature in which he once suffered, before God, for the acquiescing of Justice for ever in the once paid ransom. As also, Christ remains the substantial and natural Head (though nature be now glorified) of the Mystical glorified body for ever, and of these members under the Covenant of Redemption eternally, though all be done and performed in regard of the purchased redemption: yet we then glorified, once broke the Law, and therefore cannot even then stand in our law-righteousness, but must stand in our Lord Jesus Christ's Righteousness, which garment shall never cast the colour nor lustre. 2. That love to redeemed ones, and the soul-satisfaction of Christ in his seed i● eternal, Christ stands eternally well pleased and in love with his redeemed ones. looking back to the bargain he hath once made as Mediator, he cannot leave off to be satisfied in soul with what he hath done, for that were a retracting of his love, and a repenting of his royal and Princely tenderness, that as King, he once did beat to his conquered subjects whom he hath made his own for ever. 3. The soul of God must be eternally well pleased with his Son eternally God-Man, and he stands resting in his love, God stands eternally well pleased with what Christ hath done and suffered, & the once given Throne stands never empty. Zeph. 3.17. and delighting for ever in all his Sons actings and transactions in the work of Redemption, if therefore God have once given to him, God●Man, the Throne of David to reign over the house of Jacob, he must make empty that Throne, if he shall leave off to reign. And the Angel, Luk. 1. speaks of his birth and conception. 31. Thou shalt bring forth a son, and he shall be great, and the Lord God shall give unto him the Throne of his Father David, and he shall reign over the house of Jacob for ever: And he speaks of the eternity of David's Throne over jacob's house, so that▪ as he shall be a man (and he shall never lay down our nature) so shall he be a King upon David's Throne for ever and ever. 4. To triumph eternally over enemies, the devils, Malignant opposers of his reign▪ sin, and hell is an act of a Mediatory King; when head and members do both triumph▪ no less than it is a part of his royal Mediatory power to crush them all, and make them his footstool, Psal. 110. But Christ and the Armies of heaven, Christ's Mediatory triumph is eternal. when the Marriage-Supper of the Lamb shall come, shall ride upon white horses, and triumph over enemies for ever, Rev. 19.7, 13, 14, 15. and the eternal living of Christ in our nature with all his, is a triumphing over the grave, and death▪ 1 Cor. 15. and who can prescribe a period and an end of that triumph? 5. The River of Water of Life showed to John, Rev. 22. proceeds out of the Throne of God and of the Lamb; The Throne of the Lamb is eternal. then hath the slain Lamb a Throne for 〈◊〉▪ v. 3. And there shall be no more curse there: the Law of Works as threatening a curse, shall no more be there, Gal. 3.10, 11, 13, 14. Deut. 27.26. but the Gospel-blessing shall be there, and the Throne of God and of the Lamb shall be in it. v. 5. And they shall reign for ever and ever. 6: If the glorified sit with the Lamb on a Throne, as he is set down with his Father upon his 〈…〉 is▪ promised, Luk. 22.29, 30. Rev. 3.21. If Christ's Throne 〈◊〉 removed, the Throne of the glorified cannot stand: And all alongs where the state of the triumphing Church is described, the Lord Jesus keeps the name of the Lamb, in reference to the Mediatory sacrifice of the Lamb of God slain for the sins of the world, Joh. 1.29. as, Rev. 5. The Beasts and the Elders stand round about the Throne,— saying, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain, to receive power and riches and wisdom, etc. Rev. 7.15. Therefore are they before the Throne, and serve him night and day in his Temple, and he that sitteth on the Throne shall dwell among them.— They shall hunger no more, nor thirst any more:— 17. For the Lamb that is in the midst of them shall lead them unto the living fountains of waters. Though this be expounded of the Church Militant, Isa. 49.10. yet it hath not its perfect accomplishment, but of the Church before the Throne: for all tears are wiped from that Church only. And whereas it is said, that Christ acts not as Mediator in heaven, its true, he acts not as now he acteth for sinners; but even then the Lamb, v. 17. is the midst of them, and leads them, when they need neither Temple, nor Sun-light, beside that, the Lord God Almighty is their Temple, Rev. 21. The Lamb is their Temple, v. 22. And the Lamb is their light, v. 23. Now what sort of leading, and what influences of worship and light comes from the Lamb is another question. And it weighs much with me, that its impossible that the precious Ark, God●Man, and the union personal can be dissolved. 7. Christ saith, I will be a God to the overcomer, and he shall inherit all things, Rev. 21. And if he be the God of Abraham, being dead, in regard of the soul that lives, far more shall he be a God in an eternal Covenant with Abraham, in soul and body glorified, though the acts of Christ's reigning▪ and the actings of his Covenanted people must be suitable to a glorified state. Come Lord Jesus. FINIS.