JUSTIFICATION is to be diversly taken in the scripture. Sometimes
it is taken for the justification of persons. Sometimes for the justification of
actions. And sometimes for the justification of the person and action too. It is
taken for the justification of persons, and that,
(1.) As to justification with God; or,
(2.) As to justification with men.
As to justification with God, that is, when a man stands clear, quit, free, or,
in a saved condition before him, in the approbation of his holy law.
As to justification with men, that is, when a man stands clear and quit from
just ground of reprehension with them. Justification also is to be taken with
reference to actions; and that may be when they are considered,
As flowing from true faith; or,
Because the act done fulfils some transient law.
(1.) As actions flow from faith, so they are justified, because done before God
in, and made complete through, the perfections of Jesus Christ, 1 Pet. 2:5; Heb.
13:15; Rev. 8:1-4.
(2.) As by the doing of the act some transient law is fulfilled; as when Jehu
executed judgment upon the house of Ahab "Thou hast done well," said God to him,
"in executing that which is righteous in mine eyes, and hast done to the house
of Ahab all that was in mine heart," 2 Kings 10:30.
As to such acts, God may or may not look at the qualification of those that do
them; and it is clear that he had not respect to any good that was in Jehu, in
the justifying of this action; nor could he, for Jehu stuck close yet to the
sins of Jeroboam, but "took no heed to walk in the law of the Lord God of
Israel," 2 Kings 10:29, 31.
I might hence also shew you, that a man may be justified even then when his
action is condemned; also that a man may be in a state of condemnation, when his
action may be justified. But with these distinctions I will not take up time, my
intention being to treat of justification, as it sets a man free or quit from
sin, the curse and condemnation of the law in the sight of God, in order to
eternal salvation.
And that I may with the more clearness handle this point before you, I will lay
down and speak to this proposition
That there is no other way for sinners to be justified from the curse of the law
in the sight of God, than by the imputation of that righteousness long ago
performed by, and still residing with, the person of Jesus Christ.
The terms of this proposition are easy; yet if it will help, I will speak a word
or two for explication.
(1.) By a sinner, I mean one that has transgressed the law; for "sin is the
transgression of the law," 1 John 3:4.
(2.) By the curse of the law, I mean that sentence, judgment, or condemnation
which the law pronounceth against the transgressor, Gal. 3:10.
(3.) By justifying righteousness, I mean that which stands in the doing and
suffering of Christ when he was in the world; Rom. 5:19.
(4.) By the residing of this righteousness in Christ's person, I mean, it still
abides with him as to the action, though the benefit is bestowed upon those that
are his.
(5.) By the imputation of it to us, I mean God's making of it ours by an act of
his grace, that we by it might be secured from the curse of the law.
(6.) When I say there is no other way to be justified, I cast away to that end
the law, and all the works of the law as done by us.
Thus I have opened the terms of the proposition.
Now the two first, to wit, What sin and the curse is, stand clear in all men's
sight, unless they be atheists, or desperately heretical. I shall therefore in
few words, clear the other four.
First, Therefore justifying righteousness is the doing and suffering of Christ
when he was in the world. This is clear, because we are said to be "justified by
his obedience," Rom. 5:19; by his obedience to the law. Hence he is said again
to be the end of the law for that very thing "Christ is the end of the law for
righteousness," &c., Rom. 10:4. The end, what is that? Why, the requirement or
demand of the law. But what is it? Why, righteousness, perfect righteousness,
Gal. 3:10. Perfect righteousness, what to do? That the soul concerned might
stand spotless in the sight of God, Rev. 1:5:Now this lies only in the doings
and sufferings of Christ; for "by his obedience many are made righteous";
wherefore as to this Christ is the end of the law, that being found in that
obedience, that becomes to us sufficient for our justification. Hence, we are
said to be made righteous by his obedience; yea, and to be washed, purged, and
justified by his blood, Heb. 9:14; Rom. 5:18, 19.
Secondly, That this righteousness still resides in and with the person of
Christ, even then when we stand just before God thereby, is clear, for that we
are said when justified to be justified "in him" "In the Lord shall all the seed
of Israel be justified." And again; "Surely, shall one say, in the Lord have I
righteousness," &c. And again; "For him are ye in Christ Jesus, who is made unto
us of God righteousness," Isa. 45:24, 25; 1 Cor. 1:30.
Mark, the righteousness is still "in him," not "in us"; even then when we are
made partakers of the benefit of it, even as the wing and feathers still abide
in the hen when the chickens are covered, kept, and warmed thereby.
For as my doings, though my children are fed and clothed thereby, are still my
doings, not theirs, so the righteousness wherewith we stand just before God from
the curse still resides in Christ, not in us. Our sins when laid upon Christ
were yet personally ours, not his; so his righteousness when put upon us is yet
personally his, not ours. What is it, then? Why, "he was made to be sin for us,
who knew no sin; that we might be made the righteousness of God in him," 2 Cor.
5:21.
Thirdly, It is therefore of a justifying virtue only by imputation, or as God
reckoneth it to us; even as our sins made the Lord Jesus a sinner, nay, sin, by
God's reckoning of them to him.
It is absolutely necessary that this be known of us; for if the understanding be
muddy as to this, it is impossible that such should be sound in the faith; also
in temptation, that man will be at a loss that looketh for a righteousness for
justification in himself, when it is to be found nowhere but in Jesus Christ.
The apostle, who was his craftsmaster as to this, was always "looking to Jesus,"
that he "might be found in him" (Phil. 3:6-8), knowing that nowhere else could
peace or safety be had.
And indeed this is one of the greatest mysteries in the world, namely, that a
righteousness that resides with a person in heaven should justify me, a sinner,
on earth.
Fourthly, Therefore the law and the works thereof, as to this must by us be cast
away; not only because they here are useless, but also they being retained are a
hindrance. That they are useless is evident, for that salvation comes by another
name, Acts 4:12. And that they are a hindrance, it is clear, for the very
adhering to the law, though it be but a little, or in a little part, prevents
justification by the righteousness of Christ, Rom. 9:31, 32.
What shall I say? As to this, the moral law is rejected, the ceremonial law is
rejected, and man's righteousness is rejected, for that they are here both weak
and unprofitable, Rom. 8:2, 3; Gal. 3:21; Heb. 10:1-12.
Now if all these and their works as to our justification are rejected, where but
in Christ is righteousness to be found?
Thus much, therefore, for the explication of the proposition, namely, that there
is no other way for sinners to be justified from the curse of the law in the
sight of God than by the imputation of that righteousness long ago performed by,
and still residing with, the person of Jesus Christ.
Now, from this proposition I draw these two positions
First, That men are justified from the curse of the law before God while sinners
in themselves.
Secondly, That this can be done by no other righteousness than that long ago
performed by, and residing with, the person of Jesus Christ.
Let us, then, now enter into the consideration of the first of these, namely,
That men are justified from the curse of the law before God while sinners in
themselves.
This I shall manifest,
By touching upon the mysterious acts of our redemption.
By giving of you plain texts which discover it; and,
By reasons drawn from the texts.
For the first of these; to wit, the mysterious act of our redemption: and that I
shall speak to under these two heads
I shall shew you what that is; and,
How we are concerned therein.
That which I call, and that rightly, the mysterious act of our redemption, is
Christ's sufferings as a common, though a particular person and as a sinner,
though always completely righteous.
That he suffered as a common person is true. By common, I mean a public person,
or one that presents the body of mankind in himself. This a multitude of
scriptures bear witness to, especially that fifth chapter to the Rom., where by
the apostle he is set before us as the head of all the elect, even as Adam was
once head of all the world. Thus he lived, and thus he died; and this was a
mysterious act.
And that he should die as a sinner, when yet himself did "no sin, nor had any
guile found in his mouth," made this act more mysterious, 1 Pet. 1:19; 2:22;
3:18. That he died as a sinner is plain "He hath made him to be sin. And the
Lord laid upon him the iniquity of us all," Isaiah, 53. That, then, as to his
own person he was completely sinless is also as truly manifest, and that by a
multitude of scriptures.
Now, I say, that Christ Jesus should be thus considered, and thus die, was the
great mystery of God. Hence Paul tells us, that when he preached "Christ
crucified," he preached not only the "wisdom of God," but the "wisdom of God in
a mystery," even his "hidden wisdom," for, indeed, this wisdom is hidden, and
kept close from the "fowls of the air," 1 Cor. 1:23; 2:7, 8; Job 28:20, 21.
It is also so mysterious, that it goes beyond the reach of all men, except those
to whom an understanding is given of God to apprehend it, 1 John 5:20.
That one particular man should represent all the elect in himself, and that the
most righteous should die as a sinner, yea, as a sinner by the hand of a just
and holy God, is a mystery of the greatest depth.
Secondly , And now I come to shew you how the elect are concerned therein; that
is, in this mysterious act of this most blessed One; and this will make this act
yet more mysterious to you.
Now, then, we will speak of this first, as to how Christ prepared himself thus
mysteriously to act.
He took hold of our nature. I say, he took hold of us , by taking upon him flesh
and blood. The Son of God therefore, took not upon him a particular person,
though he took to him a human body and soul; but that which he took was, as I
may call it, a lump of the common nature of man, and by that, hold of the whole
elect seed of Abraham; Heb. 2:16, "For verily he took not on him the nature of
angels, but he took on him the seed of Abraham."
Hence he, in a mystery, became us, and was counted as all the men that were or
should be saved. And this is the reason why we are said to do , when only Jesus
Christ did do . As for instance
First, When Jesus Christ fulfilled the righteousness of the law, it is said it
was fulfilled in us, because indeed fulfilled in our nature: "For what the law
could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh; God sending his own Son in
the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh, that the
righteousness of the law might be fulfilled in us," &c. But because none should
appropriate this unto themselves that have not had passed upon them a work of
conversion, therefore he adds, "Who walk not after the flesh, but after the
Spirit." For there being a union between head and members, though things may be
done by the head, and that for the members, the things are counted to the
members, as if not done only by the head. The "righteousness of the law is
fulfilled in us"; and that truly, because fulfilled in that common nature which
the Son of God took of the Virgin. Wherefore, in this sense we are said to do
what only was done by him; even as the client doth by his lawyer, when his
lawyer personates him; the client is said to do, when it is the lawyer only that
does; and to overcome by doing, when it is the lawyer that overcomes; the reason
is, because the lawyer does in the client's name. How much more then may it be
said we do, when only Christ does; since he does what he does, not in our name
only, but in our nature too; "for the law of the spirit of life in Christ (not
in me) has set me free from the law of sin and death," Rom. 8:1-3; he doing in
his common flesh what could not be done in my particular person, that so I might
have the righteousness of the law fulfilled in me, my flesh assumed by Christ;
though impossible to be done, because of the weakness of my person.
The reason of all this is, because we are said to be in him in his doing, in him
by our flesh, and also by the election of God. So, then, as all men sinned when
Adam fell, so all the elect did righteousness when Christ wrought and fulfilled
the law; for "as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive."
Secondly, As we are said to do by Christ, so we are said to suffer by him, to
suffer with him. "I am crucified with Christ," said Paul. And again; "Forasmuch,
then, as Christ hath suffered for us in the flesh, arm yourselves likewise with
the same mind; for he that hath suffered in the flesh hath ceased from sin," 1
Pet. 4:1, 2. Mark how the apostle seems to change the person. First he says, it
is Christ that suffered; and that is true; but then he insinuates that it is us
that suffered, for the exhortation is to believers, "to walk in newness of
life"; and the argument is, because they have suffered in the flesh: "For he
that hath suffered in the flesh, hath ceased from sin; that he no longer should
live the rest of his time in the flesh to the lusts of men, but to the will of
God," Gal. 2:20.
We then suffered when Christ suffered; we then suffered in his flesh and also
our "old man was crucified with him," Rom. 6:6; that is, in his crucifixion; for
when he hanged on the cross, all the elect hanged there in their common flesh
which he assumed, and because he suffered there as a public man.
Thirdly, As we are said to suffer with him, so we are said to die, to be dead
with him; with him, that is, by the dying of his body: "Now, if we be dead with
Christ, we believe that we shall also live with him," Rom. 6:8.
Wherefore he saith in other places, "Brethren, ye are become dead to the law by
the body of Christ"; for indeed we died then to it by him. To the law, that is,
the law now has nothing to do with us; for that it has already executed its
curse to the full upon us by its slaying of the body of Christ; for the body of
Christ was our flesh, upon it also was laid our sin. The law, too, spent that
curse that was due to us upon him when it condemned, killed, and cast him into
the grave. Wherefore, it having thus spent its whole curse upon him as standing
in our stead, we are exempted from its curse for ever; we are become dead to it
by that body, Rom. 7:4; it has done with us as to justifying righteousness. Nor
need we fear its damning threats any more; for by the death of this body we are
freed from it, and are for ever now coupled to a living Christ.
Fourthly , As we are said thus to be dead, so we are said also to rise again by
him "Thy dead men" (saith he to the Father) "shall live, together with my dead
body shall they arise." And again; "After two days he will revive us, and in the
third day we shall live in his sight," Isa. 26:19; Hos. 6:2.
Both these scriptures speak of the resurrection of Christ, of the resurrection
of his body on the third day; but behold, as we were said before to suffer and
be dead with him, so now we are said also to rise and live in God's sight by the
resurrection of his body; for, as was said, the flesh was ours; he took part of
our flesh when he came into the world; and in it he "suffered, died, and rose
again," Heb. 2:14. We also were therefore counted by God in that God-man when he
did this; yea, he suffered, died, and rose as a common head.
Hence also the New Testament is full of this, saying, "If ye be dead with
Christ." "If ye be risen with Christ." And again; "He hath quickened us together
with him," Col. 2:20; 3:1; and 2:13.
"We are quickened together with him." "Quickened," and "quickened together with
him." The apostle hath words that cannot easily be shifted or evaded. Christ
then was quickened when he was raised from the dead. Nor is it proper to say
that he was ever quickened either before or since. This text also concludes that
we, to wit, the whole body of God's elect, were also quickened then, and made to
live with him together. True, we also are quickened personally by grace the day
in the which we are born unto God by the gospel; yet before that we are
quickened in our head; quickened when he was raised from the dead; quickened
together with him.
Fifthly, Nor are we thus considered, to wit, as dying and rising, and so left.
But the apostle pursues his argument, and tells us that we also reap by him, as
being considered in him, the benefit which Christ received, both in order to his
resurrection, and the blessed effect thereof.
We received, by our thus being counted in him, that benefit which did precede
his rising from the dead; and what was that but the forgiveness of sins? For
this stands clear to reason, that if Christ had our sins charged upon him at his
death, he then must be discharged of them in order to his resurrection. Now,
though it is not proper to say they were forgiven to him, because they were
purged from him by merit, yet they may be said to be forgiven us, because we
receive this benefit by grace.
And this, I say, was done precedent to his resurrection from the dead: "He hath
quickened us together with him, having forgiven us all trespasses." He could not
be "quickened" till we were "discharged"; because it was not for himself, but
for us, that he died. Hence we are said to be at that time, as to our own
personal estate, dead in our sins, even when we are "quickened together with
him," Col. 2:13.
Therefore both the "quickening" and "forgiveness" too, so far as we are in this
text concerned, is to him, as we are considered in him or to him, with respect
to us.
Having forgiven you all trespasses. For necessity so required; because else how
was it possible that the pains of death should be loosed in order to his rising,
so long as one sin stood still charged to him, as that for the commission of
which God had not received a plenary satisfaction? As therefore we suffered,
died, and rose again by him; so, in order to his so rising, he, as presenting of
us in his person and suffering, received for us remission of all our trespasses.
A full discharge therefore was, in and by Christ, received of God of all our
sins before he arose from the dead; as his resurrection truly declared; for "he
was delivered for our offences, and was raised again for our justification,"
Rom. 4:25.
This therefore is one of the privileges we receive by the rising again of our
Lord; for that we were in his flesh considered, yea, and in his death and
suffering too.
By this means also we have now escaped death. "Knowing that Christ being raised
from the dead, dieth no more; death hath no more dominion over him. For in that
he died, he died unto (or, for) sin once; but in that he liveth, he liveth unto
God," Rom. 6:9, 10.
Now in all this, considering what has been said before, we that are of the elect
are privileged, for that we also are raised up by the rising of the body of
Christ from the dead. And thus the apostle bids us reckon "Likewise reckon also
yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but alive unto God through Jesus Christ,"
Rom. 6:11.
Hence Christ says, "he is the resurrection and the life," for that all his are
safe in him, suffering, dying, and rising. He is the life, our life; yea, so our
life that by him the elect do live before God, even then when as to themselves
they yet are dead in their sins. Wherefore, hence it is that in time they
partake of quickening grace from this their head, to the making of them also
live by faith, in order to their living hereafter with him in glory; for if
Christ lives, they cannot die that were sharers with him in his resurrection.
Hence they are said to "live," being "quickened together with him." Also, as
sure as at his resurrection they lived "by him," so sure at his coming shall
they be gathered "to him"; nay, from that day to this all that, as aforesaid,
were in him at his death and resurrection, are already, in the "fulness of the
dispensation of time," daily "gathering to him." For this he hath purposed,
wherefore none can disannul it "In the fulness of the dispensation of time, to
gather together in one all things in Christ, both which are in heaven and which
are in earth, even in him," Eph. 1:9, 10.
To secure this the more to our faith that believe, as we are said to be "raised
up together with him," so we are said "to be made to sit together in heavenly
places in Christ Jesus"; Eph. 2:6. We died by him, we rose by him, and are
together, even all the elect set down together in "heavenly places in Christ
Jesus"; for still even now he is on the right hand of God; he is to be
considered as our public man, our head, and so one in whom is concluded all the
elect of God. We then are by him already in heaven; in heaven, I say, by him;
yea, set down there in our places of glory by him. Hence the apostle, speaking
of us again, saith, that as we are predestinate, we are called, justified, and
glorified; called, justified, glorified, all is done, already done, as thus
considered in Christ, Rom. 8:30. For that in his public work there is nothing
yet to do as to this. Is not he called? Is not he justified? Is not he
glorified? And are we not in him, in him, even as so considered?
Nor doth this doctrine hinder or forestal the doctrine of regeneration or
conversion; nay, it lays a foundation for it; for by this doctrine we gather
assurance that Christ will have his own; for if already they live in their head,
what is that but a pledge that they shall live in their persons with him? and,
consequently, that to that end they shall, in the times allotted for that end,
be called to a state of faith, which God has ordained shall precede and go
before their personal enjoyment of glory.
Nor doth this hinder their partaking of the symbol of regeneration, and of their
other privileges to which they are called in the day of grace; yea, it lays a
foundation for all these things; for if I am dead with Christ, let me be like
one dead with him, even to all things to which Christ died when he hanged on the
tree; and then he died to sin, to the law, and to the rudiments of this world,
Rom. 6:10; 7:4; Col. 2:20.
And if I be risen with Christ, let me live, like one born from the dead, in
newness of life, and having my mind and affections on the things where Christ
now sitteth on the right hand of God. And indeed he professes in vain that
talketh of these things, and careth not to have them also answered in himself.
This was the apostle's way, namely, "To covet to know him, and the power of his
resurrection, and the fellowship of his sufferings, being made conformable to
his death," Phil. 3:9-13.
And when we are thus, that thing is true both in him and us. Then as is the
heavenly, such are they that are heavenly; for he that saith he is in him, and
by being in him a partaker of these privileges by him, "ought himself so to
walk, even as he walked," 1 Cor. 15:48; 1 John 2:6, 8.
But to pass this digression, and to come to my argument, namely, that men are
justified from the curse of the law before God while sinners in themselves.
This is evident by what hath already been said; for if the justification of
their persons is by, in, and through Christ; then it is not by, in, and through
their own doings. Nor was Christ engaged in this work but of necessity, even
because else there had not been salvation for the elect. "Father" (saith he),
"if it be possible, let this cup pass from me," Matt. 26:39. If what be
possible? Why, that my elect may be saved, and I not spill my blood. Wherefore
he saith again, Christ ought to suffer. Christ must needs have suffered; for
without shedding of blood is no remission of sin, Luke 24:26; Acts 17:3; Heb.
9:22.
We will now come to the present state and condition of those that are justified;
I mean with respect to their own qualifications, and so prove the truth of this
our great position. And this I will do,
By giving of you plain texts that discover it, and that consequently prove our
point.
And after that, by giving of you reasons drawn from the texts.
For the first of these.
First, "Speak not in thine heart" (no, not in thine heart) "after that the Lord
thy God hath cast out thine enemies before thee, saying, For my righteousness do
I possess the land... not for thy righteousness, or for the uprightness of thine
heart, dost thou go in to possess the land... Understand, therefore, that the
Lord thy God giveth thee not this good land to possess it for thy righteousness,
for thou art a stiff-necked people," Deut. 9:4-6.
In these words, very pat for our purpose, two things are worthy our
consideration.
The people here spoken to were the people of God; and so by God himself are they
here twice acknowledged to be "The Lord thy God, the Lord thy God." So, then,
the righteousness here intended, is not the righteousness that is in the world,
but that which the people of God perform.
The righteousness here intended is not some, but all, and every whit of that the
church performs to God: "Say not in thine heart, after the Lord hath brought
thee in, it was for my righteousness." No, all thy righteousness, from Egypt to
Canaan, will not purchase Canaan for thee.
That this is true is evident, because it is thrice rejected "Not for thy
righteousness, not for thy righteousness, not for thy righteousness, dost thou
possess the land." Now if the righteousness of the people of God of old could
not merit for them Canaan, which was but a type of heaven, how can the
righteousness of the world now obtain heaven itself? I say again,
If godly men, as these were, could not by their works purchase the type of
heaven, then must the ungodly be justified, if ever they be justified from the
curse and sentence of the law, while sinners in themselves. The argument is
clear; for if good men by what they do cannot merit the less, bad men by what
they do cannot merit
more.
Secondly, "Remember me, O my God, for this; and wipe not out my good deeds that
I have done," Neh. 13:14.
These words were spoken by holy Nehemiah, and that at the end of all the good
that we read he did in the world. Also, the deeds here spoken of were deeds done
for God, for his people, for his house, and for the offices thereof.
Yet godly Nehemiah durst not stand before God in these, nor yet suffer them to
stand to his judgment by the law; but prays to God to be merciful both to him
and them, and to spare him "according to the multitude of his mercy," verse 22.
God blots out no good but for the sake of sin; and forasmuch as this man prays
God would not blot out his, it is evident that he was conscious to himself that
in his good works were sin. Now, I say, if a good man's works are in danger of
being overthrown because there is in them a tang [taint] of sin, how can bad men
think to stand just before God in their works, which are in all parts, full of
sin? Yea, if the works of a sanctified man are blameworthy, how shall the works
of a bad man set him clear in the eyes of Divine justice?
Thirdly, "But we are all as an unclean thing, and all our righteousnesses are as
filthy rags; and we do all fade away as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the
wind, have taken us away," Isa. 64:6.
In these words we have a relation both of persons and things.
Of persons. And they are a righteous people, a righteous people put all together
"We, we all are," &c.
The condition of this people, even of all of them, take them at the best, are,
and that by their own confession, "as an unclean thing."
Again the things here attending this people are their good things, put down
under this large character, "Righteousnesses, all our righteousnesses." These
expressions therefore comprehend all their religious duties, both before and
after faith too. But what are all these righteousnesses? Why they are all as
"filthy rags" when set before the justice of the law; yea, it is also confessed,
and that by these people, that their iniquities, notwithstanding all their
righteousnesses, like the wind, if grace prevent not, would "carry them away."
This being so, how is it possible for one that is in his sins to work himself
into a spotless condition by works done before faith, by works done by natural
abilities? or to perform a righteousness which is able to look God in the face,
his law in the face, and to demand and obtain the forgiveness of sins, and the
life that is eternal? It cannot be: "men must therefore be justified from the
curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves, or not at all."
Fourthly, "There is not a just man upon the earth, that doth good, and sinneth
not," Eccles. 7:20; 1 Kings 8:46.
Although the words before are large, yet these seem far larger; there is not a
man, not a just man, not a just man upon the earth, that doth good, and sinneth
not. Now, if no good man, if no good man upon earth doth good, and sinneth not,
then no good man upon earth can set himself by his own actions justified in the
sight of God, for he has sin mixed with his good. How then shall a bad man, any
bad man, the best bad man upon earth, think to set himself by his best things
just in the sight of God? And if the tree makes the fruit either good or evil,
then a bad tree (and a bad man is a bad tree) can bring forth no good fruit
(Matt. 7:16), how then shall such an one do that that shall cleanse him from his
sin, and set him as "spotless before the face of God?"
Fifthly, "Hearken to me, ye stout-hearted, that are far from righteousness: I
bring near my righteousness," &c., Isa. 46:12, 13.
This call is general, and so proves, whatever men think of themselves that in
the judgment of God there is none at all righteous men, as men are from being
so.
This general offer of righteousness, of the righteousness of God, declares that
it is in vain for men to think to be set just and righteous before God by any
other means.
There is here also insinuated, that for him that thinks himself the worst, God
has prepared a righteousness, and therefore would not have him despair of life
that sees himself far from righteousness. From all these scriptures, therefore,
it is manifest that "men must be justified from the curse of the law in the
sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Sixthly , "Come unto me, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give
you rest," Matt. 11:28.
Here we have a labouring people, a people labouring for life; but by all their
labour, you see, they cannot ease themselves; their burden still remains upon
them; they yet are heavy laden. The load here is, doubtless guilt of sin, such
as David had when he said by reason thereof "he was not able to look up"; Psal.
38:3-5.
Hence, therefore, you have an experiment set before you, of those that are
trying what they can do for life; but behold, the more they stir, the more they
sink under the weight of the burden that lies upon them.
And the conclusion, to wit, Christ's call to them to come to him for rest
declares that, in his judgment, rest was not to be had elsewhere. And I think
one may with as much safety adhere to Christ's judgment as to any man's alive;
wherefore "men must be justified from the curse in the sight of God while
sinners in themselves."
Seventhly, "There is none righteous, no, not one: there is none that
understandeth, there is none that seeketh after God. They are all gone out of
the way, they are together become unprofitable; there is none that doth good,
no, not one,"
Rom. 3:10-12.
These words have respect to a righteousness which is justified by the law; and
they conclude that none by his own performances is righteous with such a
righteousness; and it is concluded from five reasons
Because they are not good; for a man must be good before he doth good, and
perfectly good before he doth good and sinneth not.
Because they understand not. How then should they do good? for a man must know
before he does, else how should he divert himself to do?
Because they want a heart, they seek not after God according to the way of his
own appointment.
They are all gone out of the way; how then can they walk therein?
They are together become unprofitable; what worth or value then can there be in
any of their doings?
These are the reasons by which he proveth that there is "none righteous, no, not
one." And the reasons are weighty; for by them he proves the tree is not good;
how then can it yield good fruit?
Now, as he concludes from these five reasons that not one indeed is righteous,
so he concludes by five more that none can do good to make him so
For that internally they are as an open sepulchre, as full of dead men's bones;
their minds and consciences are defiled; how then can sweet and good proceed
from thence? Rom. 13; Matt. 23:27; Tit. 1:15; Isa. 44:12; Jer 17:9.
Their throat is filled with this stink; all their vocal duties therefore smell
thereof.
Their mouth is full of cursing and bitterness; how then can there be found one
word that should please God?
Their tongue, which should present their praise to God, has been used to work
deceit; how then, until it is made a new one, should it speak in righteousness?
The poison of asps is under their lips, therefore whatever comes from them, must
be polluted.
Thus, you see, he sets forth their internal part; which being a true report, as
to be sure it is, it is impossible that any good should so much as be framed in
such an inward part, or come clean out of such a throat by such a tongue through
such lips as these, Rom. 3:11-14.
And yet this is not all: he also proves, and that by five reasons more, that it
is not possible they should do good
"Their feet are swift to shed blood," verse 15. This implies an inclination, an
inward inclination to evil courses; a quickness of motion to do evil, but a
backwardness to do good.
"Destruction and misery are in their ways," verse 16. Take "ways" for their
"doings," and in the best of them destruction lurks, and misery yet follows them
at the heels.
"The way of peace they have not known," verse 17; that is far above out of their
sight. Wherefore the labour of these foolish ones will weary every one of them,
because "they know not the way that goes to the city."
"There is no fear of God before their eyes," verse 18. How then can they do
anything with that godly reverence of his holy Majesty that is and must be
essential to every good work? for to do things, but not in God's fear, to what
will it amount? will it avail?
All this while they are under a law that calls for works that are perfectly
good, that will accept of none but what are perfectly good, and that will
certainly condemn them because they neither are nor can be perfectly good: "For
whatsoever things the law saith, it saith it to them that are under the law,
that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world become guilty before God,"
verse 19.
Thus you see that Paul here proves by fifteen reasons that none are, nor can be,
righteous before God by works that they can do; therefore "men must be justified
from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Eighthly, "But now the righteousness of God without the law is manifested, being
witnessed by the law and the prophets," &c., verse 21.
This text utterly excludes the law, what law? The law of works, the moral law
(verse 27)and makes mention of another righteousness, even a righteousness of
God; for the righteousness of the law is the righteousness of men, "men's own
righteousness," Phil. 3:9.
Now, if the law, as to a justifying righteousness, is rejected, then the very
matter upon and by which man should work is rejected; and if so, then he must be
justified by the righteousness of God, or not at all; for he must be justified
by a righteousness that is without the law; to wit, the righteousness of God.
Now this righteousness of God, whatever it is, to be sure it is not a
righteousness that flows from men; for that, as I said, is rejected, and the
righteousness of God opposed unto it, being called a righteousness that is
without the law, without our personal obedience to it.
The righteousness of God, or a righteousness of God's completing, a
righteousness of God's bestowing, a righteousness that God also gives unto, and
puts upon, all them that believe (verse 22), a righteousness that stands in the
works of Christ, and that is imputed both by the grace and justice of God, Rom.
3:24-26.
Where, now, is room for man's righteousness, either in the whole, or as to any
part thereof? I say, where, as to justification with God?
Ninthly, "What shall we say, then, that Abraham our father, as pertaining to the
flesh, hath found?"
Now the apostle is at the root of the matter; for Abraham is counted the father
of the faithful; consequently the man whose way of attaining justification must
needs be exemplary to all the children of Abraham.
Now the question is, How Abraham found? how he found that which some of his
children sought and missed? Rom. 9:32 that is, how he found justifying
righteousness; for it was that which Israel sought, and attained not unto, Rom.
11:7.
"Did he find it (saith Paul) by the flesh?" or, as he was in the flesh? or, by
acts and works of the flesh? But what are they? Why, the next verse tells you
"they are the works of the law."
If Abraham was justified by works, that is, as pertaining to the flesh; for the
works of the law are none other but the best sort of the works of the flesh. And
so Paul calls all they that he had before his conversion to Christ: "If any
other man (saith he) thinketh he hath whereof he may trust in the flesh, I
more." And then he counteth up several of his privileges, to which he at last
adjoineth the righteousness of the moral law, saying, "Touching the
righteousness which is in the law, I was blameless," Phil. 3:4-6.
And it is proper to call the righteousness of the law the work of the flesh (2
Cor. 3:8), because it is the work of a man, of a man in the flesh; for the Holy
Ghost doth not attend the law, or the work thereof, as to this, in man, as man;
that has confined itself to another ministration, whose glorious name it bears.
I say, it is proper to call the works of the law the works of the flesh (James
3:10), because they are done by that selfsame nature in and out of which comes
all those things that are more grossly so called, Gal. 5:19, 20, to wit, from
the corrupt fountain of fallen man's polluted nature.
This, saith he, was not the righteousness by which Abraham found justification
with God "For if Abraham was justified by works, he hath whereof to glory; but
not before God. For what saith the Scripture? Abraham believed God, and it was
counted to him for righteousness," see Rom. 4:2-11. This "believing" is also set
in flat opposition to "works," and to the "law of works"; wherefore, upon pain
of great contempt to God, it must not be reckoned as a work to justify withal,
but rather as that which receiveth and applieth that righteousness.
From all this, therefore, it is manifest "that men must be justified from the
curse of the law in the sight of God while sinners in themselves." But,
Tenthly, "Now to him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of
debt," Rom. 4:4.
These words do not only back what went before, as to the rejection of the law
for righteousness as to justification with God; but supposing the law was of
force to justify, life must not be admitted to come that way, because of the
evil consequences that will unavoidably flow therefrom.
First, By this means, grace, and justification by grace, would be rejected; and
that would be a foul business; it would not be reckoned of grace.
Secondly, By this, God would become the debtor, and so the underling; and so we
in
this the more honourable. It would not be reckoned of grace, but of debt: and
what would follow from hence? Why,
By this we should frustrate the design of Heaven, which is, to justify us freely
by grace, through a redemption brought in by Christ, Rom. 3:24-26; Eph. 2:8-13.
By this we should make ourselves the saviours, and jostle Christ quite out of
doors, Gal. 5:2-4.
We should have heaven at our own disposal, as a debt, not by promise, and so not
be beholden to God for it, Gal. 3:18. It must, then, be of grace, not of works,
for the preventing of these evils. Again; it must not be of works, because if it
should, then God would be the debtor, and we the creditor. Now much blasphemy
would flow from hence; as,
First, God himself would not be his own to dispose of; for the inheritance being
God, as well as his kingdom, for so it is written, "Heirs of God," Rom. 8:17,
himself, I say, must needs be our purchase.
Secondly, If so, then we have right to dispose of him, of his kingdom and glory,
and all; ("Be astonished, O heavens, at this!") for if he be ours by works, then
he is ours of debt; if he be ours of debt, then he is ours by purchase; and
then, again, if so, he is no longer his own, but ours, and at our disposal, &c.
Therefore, for these reasons, were there sufficiency in our personal works to
justify us, it would be even inconsistent with the being of God to suffer it.
So, then, "men are justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in
themselves."
Eleventhly, "But to him that worketh not, but believeth on him that justifieth
the ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness," Rom. 4:5.
These words shew how we must stand just in the sight of God from the curse of
the law, both as it respecteth justification itself, as also the instrument or
means that receiveth that righteousness which justifieth.
First, As for that righteousness that justifieth, it is not personal
performances in us; for the person here justified stands, in that respect, as
one that worketh not, as one that is ungodly.
Secondly, As it respecteth the instrument that receiveth it, that faith, as in
the point of justifying righteousness, will not work, but believe, but receive
the works and righteousness of another; for works and faith in this are set in
opposition "He doth not work, he doth believe," Gal. 3:12. He worketh not, but
believeth on him who justifieth us, ungodly. As Paul also saith in another
place, "The law is not of faith." And again; Works saith on this wise; faith,
far different. The law saith, Do this, and live. But the doctrine of faith
saith, "If thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe
in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. For
with the heart man believeth unto righteousness," &c.,
Rom. 10:5, 10.
Objection: But faith is counted for righteousness.
Answer: True; but yet consider, that by faith we do oft understand the doctrine
of remission of sins, as well as the act of believing.
But again; faith when it hath received the Lord Jesus, it hath done that which
pleaseth God; therefore, the very act of believing is the most noble in the
world; believing sets the crown upon the head of grace; it sets its seal to the
truth of the sufficiency of the righteousness of Christ (John 3:33), and giveth
all the glory to God; and therefore it is a righteous act: but Christ himself he
is the "Righteousness that justifieth," Rom. 4:20.
Besides, faith is a relative act, and hath its relation as such: its relation is
the righteousness that justifieth, which is therefore called the righteousness
of faith, or that with which faith hath to do, Rom. 10:6. Separate these two,
and justification cannot be, because faith now wants his righteousness. And
hence it is you have so often such sayings as these "He that believeth in me, he
that believeth on him, believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be
saved," John 6:35-40. Faith, then, as separate from Christ, doth nothing;
nothing neither with God nor man; because it wants its relative object, but let
it go to the Lord Jesus; let it behold him as dying, &c., and it fetches
righteousness, and life, and peace out of the virtue of his blood, &c., Acts
10:29, 31, 33; or rather, sees it there as sufficient for me to stand just
thereby in the sight of Eternal Justice: "For him hath God set forth to be a
propitiation through faith (belief) in his blood, with intent to justify him
that believeth in Jesus," Rom. 3:25, 26.
Twelfthly, "Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man to whom God
imputeth righteousness without works," Rom. 4:6.
Did our adversaries understand this one text, they would not so boldly affirm,
as they do, that the words, "impute, imputed, imputeth, imputing," &c., are not
used in scripture but to express men really and personally to be that which is
imputed unto them; for men are not really and personally faith, yet faith is
imputed to men; nay, they are not really and personally sin, nor really and
personally righteousness, yet these are imputed to men: so, then, both good
things and bad may sometimes be imputed to men, yet themselves be really and
personally neither.
But to come to the point: what righteousness hath that man that hath no works?
Doubtless none of his own; yet God imputeth righteousness to him. Yea, what
works of that man doth God impute to him that he yet justifies as ungodly?
Further, He that hath works as to justification from the curse before God, not
one of them is regarded of God; so, then, it mattereth not whether thou hast
righteousness of thine own or none.
"Blessed is the man to whom the Lord imputeth righteousness without works."
Man's blessedness, then, the blessedness of justification from the curse in the
sight of God, lieth not in good works done by us, either before or after faith
received, but in a righteousness which God imputeth without works; as we work
not, as we are ungodly. "Blessed is the man whose iniquities are forgiven, and
whose sin is covered," verse 7. To forgive and to cover are acts of mercy, not
the cause of our merit. Besides, where sin is real, there can be no perfect
righteousness; but the way of justification must be through perfect
righteousness, therefore by another than our own, "Blessed is the man to whom
the Lord will not impute sin," verse 8.
The first cause, then, of justification before God dependeth upon the will of
God, who will justify because he will; therefore the meritorious cause must also
be of his own providing, else his will cannot herein be absolute; for if
justification depend upon our personal performances, then not upon the will of
God. He may not have mercy upon whom he will, but on whom man's righteousness
will give him leave, Rom. 9:15, 18. But his will, not ours, must rule here;
therefore his righteousness, and his only. So, then, "men are justified from the
curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Having passed over these few scriptures, I shall come to particular instances of
persons who have been justified; and shall briefly touch their qualifications in
the act of God's justifying them.
First, By the Old Testament types.
Secondly, By the New.
First, By the Old.
"And unto Adam also and to his wife did the Lord God make coats of skins, and
clothed them," Gen. 3:21.
In the beginning of this chapter you find these two persons reasoning with the
serpent, the effect of which discourse was, "They take of the forbidden fruit,
and so break the command of God," verses 7-15. This done, they hide themselves,
and cover their nakedness with aprons. But God finds out their sin, from the
highest branch even to the roots thereof.
What followeth? Not one precept by which they should by works obtain the favour
of God, but the promise of a Saviour; of which promise this 21st verse is a
mystical interpretation: "The Lord God made them coats of skins, and clothed
them,"
verse 21.
Hence observe,
First, That these coats were made, not before, but after they had made
themselves aprons; a plain proof their aprons were not sufficient to hide their
shame from the sight of God.
Secondly, These coats were made, not of Adam's inherent righteousness, for that
was lost before by sin, but of the skins of the slain lambs, types of the death
of Christ, and of the righteousness brought in thereby "By whose stripes we are
healed,"
Isa. 53.
Thirdly, This is further manifest; for the coats, God made them; and for the
persons, God clothed them therewith; to shew that as the righteousness by which
we must stand just before God from the curse is a righteousness of Christ's
performing, not of theirs; so he, not they, must put it on them also, for of God
we are in Christ, and of God his righteousness is made ours, 1 Cor. 1:30.
But, I say, if you would see their antecedent qualifications, you find them
under two heads
First, Rebellion.
Second, Hypocrisy.
Rebellion, in breaking God's command; hypocrisy, in seeking how to hide their
faults from God. Expound this by gospel language, and then it shews "that men
are justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Secondly, "The Lord had respect to Abel and to his offering," Gen. 4:4.
By these words we find the person first accepted, "The Lord had respect unto
Abel." And indeed, where the person is not first accepted, the offering will not
be pleasing; the altar sanctifies the gift, and the temple sanctifieth the gold,
Matt. 23:16-21; so the person, the condition of the person, is that which makes
the offering either pleasing or despising. In the epistle to the Hebrews it is
said, "By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by
which he obtained witness that he was righteous," Heb. 11:4. Righteous before he
offered his gift, as his sacrifice testified; for God accepted of it.
By faith he offered. Wherefore faith was precedent, or before he offered. Now
faith hath to do with God through Christ; not with him through our works of
righteousness. Besides, Abel was righteous before he offered, before he did do
good, otherwise God would not have testified of his gift. "By faith he obtained
witness that he was righteous," for God approved of his gifts. Now faith, I say,
as to our standing quit before the Father, respects the promise of forgiveness
of sins through the undertaking of the Lord Jesus. Wherefore Abel's faith as to
justifying righteousness before God looked not forward to what should be done by
himself, but back to the promise of the seed of the woman, that was to destroy
the power of hell, "and to redeem them that were under the law," Gen. 3:15; Gal.
4:4, 5. By this faith he shrouds himself under the promise of victory, and the
merits of the Lord Jesus. Now being there, God finds him righteous; and being
righteous, "he offered to God a more excellent sacrifice than his brother"; for
Cain's person was not first accepted through the righteousness of faith going
before, although he seemed foremost as to personal acts of righteousness, Gen.
4. Abel therefore was righteous before he did good works, but that could not be
but alone through that respect God had to him for the sake of the Messias
promised before, Gen. 3:15. But the Lord's so respecting Abel presupposeth that
at that time he stood in himself by the law a sinner, otherwise he needed not to
be respected for and upon the account of another. Yea, Abel also, forasmuch as
he acted faith before he offered sacrifice, must thereby entirely respect the
promise, which promise was not grounded upon a condition of works to be found in
Abel, but in and for the sake of the seed of the woman, which is Christ, Gal.
4:4; which promise he believed, and so took it for granted that this Christ
should break the serpent's head, that is, destroy by himself the works of the
devil; to wit, sin, death, the curse, and hell. By this faith he stood before
God righteous, because he had put on Christ; and being thus, he offered; by
which act of faith God declared he was pleased with him, because he accepted of
his sacrifice.
Thirdly, "And the Lord said unto her, The elder shall serve the younger," Gen.
25:23. These words, after Paul's exposition, are to be understood of
justification in the sight of God, according to the purpose and decree of
electing love, which had so determined long before that one of these children
should be received to eternal grace; but mark, not by works of righteousness
which they should do, but "before they had done either good or evil"; otherwise
"the purpose of God" according to election, not of works, but of him that
calleth, "could not stand," but fall in pieces, Rom. 9:10-12. But none are
received into eternal mercy but such as are just before the Lord by a
righteousness that is complete; and Jacob having done no good, could by no means
have that of his own, and therefore it must be by some other righteousness, "and
so himself be justified from the curse in the sight of God while a sinner in
himself."
Fourthly, The same may be said concerning Solomon, whom the Lord loved with
special love as soon as born into the world (2 Sam. 12:24, 25), which he also
confirmed with signal characters. "He sent (saith the Holy Ghost) by the hand of
Nathan the prophet, and he called his name Jedidiah, because the Lord loved
him." Was this love of God extended to him because of his personal virtues? No,
verily; for he was yet an infant. He was justified then in the sight of God from
the curse by another than his own righteousness.
Fifthly, "And when I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I
said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee when
thou wast in thy blood, Live," Ezek. 16:6. The state of this people you have in
the former verses described, both as to their rise and practice in the world,
verses 1-5.
(1.) As to their rise. Their original was the same with Canaan, the men of God's
curse, Gen. 9:25. Thy birth and thy nativity is of the land of Canaan; the same
with other carnal men, Rom. 3:9. "Thy father was an Amorite, and thy mother an
Hittite."
(2.) Their condition, that is shewed us by this emblem
They had not been washed in water. 2. They had not been swaddled. 3. They had
not been salted. 4. They brought filth with them into the world. 5. They lay
polluted in their cradle. 6. They were without strength to help themselves. Thus
they appear and come by generation.
Again, as to their practice
They polluted themselves in their own blood. 2. They so continued till God
passed by "And when I passed by thee, I saw thee polluted in thine own blood"in
thy blood, in thy blood; it is doubled. Thus we see they were polluted born,
they continued in their blood till the day that the Lord looked upon them;
polluted, I say, to the loathing of their persons, &c. Now this was the time of
love "And when I passed by thee, and saw thee polluted in thine own blood, I
said unto thee when thou wast in thy blood, Live; yea, I said unto thee when
thou wast in thy blood, Live."
Quest. But how could a holy God say, live, to such a sinful people?
Answer: Though they had nought but sin, yet he had love and righteousness. He
had, 1) Love to pity them; 2) Righteousness to cover them: "Now when I passed by
thee, and looked upon thee, behold, thy time was the time of love," Ezek. 16:8.
What follows? 1) "I spread my skirt over thee"; and, 2) "Covered thy nakedness";
yea, 3) "I sware unto thee"; and, 4) "Entered into covenant with thee"; and, 5)
"Thou becamest mine." My love pitied thee; my skirt covered thee. Thus God
delivered them from the curse in his sight. "Then I washed thee with water
(after thou wast justified); yea, I thoroughly washed away thy blood from thee,
and anointed thee with oil," verse 9. Sanctification, then, is consequential,
justification goes before the Holy Ghost by this scripture setteth forth to the
life, free grace to the sons of men while they themselves are sinners. I say,
while they are unwashed, unswaddled, unsalted, but bloody sinners; for by these
words, "not washed, not salted, not swaddled," he setteth forth their
unsanctified state; yea, they were not only unsanctified, but also cast out,
without pity, to the loathing of their persons; yea, "no eye pitied them, to do
any of these things for them"; no eye but his whose glorious grace is
unsearchable; no eye but his who could look and love; all others looked and
loathed; but blessed be God that hath passed by us in that day that we wallowed
in our own blood; and blessed be God for the skirt of his glorious righteousness
wherewith he covered us when we lay before him naked in blood. It was when we
were in our blood that he loved us; when we were in our blood he said, Live.
Therefore, "men are justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners
in themselves."
Sixthly, "Now Joshua was clothed with filthy garments and stood before the
angel," Zech. 3:3.
The standing of Joshua here is as men used to stand that were arraigned before a
judge. "Joshua stood before the angel of the Lord, and Satan standing at his
right hand to resist him," verse 1. The same posture as Judas stood in when he
was to be condemned "Set thou (saith David) a wicked man over him, and let Satan
stand at his right hand," Ps. 109:6-8. Thus therefore Joshua stood. Now Joshua
was clothed (not with righteousness, but) with filthy rags! Sin upon him, and
Satan by him, and this before the angel! What must he do now? Go away? No; there
he must stand. Can he speak for himself? Not a word; guilt had made him dumb,
Isa. 53:12. Had he no place clean? No; he was clothed with filthy garments.
But his lot was to stand before Jesus Christ, that maketh intercession for
transgressors "And the Lord said unto Satan, the Lord rebuke thee, Satan; even
the Lord that hath chosen Jerusalem, rebuke thee," Zech. 3:2. Thus Christ saveth
from present condemnation those that be still in their sin and blood.
But is he now quit? No; he standeth yet in filthy garments; neither can he, by
aught that is in him, or done by him, clear himself from him. How then? Why, the
Lord clothes him with change of raiment: the iniquities were his own, the
raiment was the Lord's "This is the heritage of the servants of the Lord, and
their righteousness is of me, saith the Lord." We will not here discourse of
Joshua's sin, what it was, or when committed; it is enough to our purpose that
he was clothed with filthy garments, and that the Lord made a change with him by
causing his iniquity to pass from him, and by clothing him with change of
raiment. But what had Joshua antecedent to this glorious and heavenly clothing?
The devil at his right hand to resist him, and himself in filthy garments "Now
Joshua was clothed with filthy garments, and stood before the angel. And he
answered and spake to those that stood before him saying, Take away the filthy
garments from him. And unto him he said, Behold, I have caused thine iniquity to
pass from thee, and I will clothe thee with change of raiment," verses 3, 4.
But to pass the Old Testament types, and to come to the New.
First, "And when he was come into the ship, he that had been possessed with the
devil prayed him that he might go with him. Howbeit Jesus suffered him not, but
saith unto him, Go home to thy friends, and tell them how great things God hath
done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee," Mark 5:18, 19.
The present state of this man is sufficiently declared in these particulars
He was possessed with a devil; with devils, with many; with a whole legion,
which some say is six thousand, or thereabouts.
These devils had so the mastery of him as to drive him from place to place into
the wilderness among the mountains, and so to dwell in the tombs among the dead,
Luke 8.
He was out of his wits; he would cut his flesh, break his chains, nay, "no man
could tame him," Mark 5:7.
When he saw Jesus, the devil in him, as being lord and governor there, cried out
against the Lord Jesus. In all this what qualification shews itself as precedent
to justification? None but such as devils work, or as rank Bedlams have. Yet
this poor man was dispossessed, taken into God's compassion, and was bid to shew
it to the world "Go home to thy friends, and tell them how great things the Lord
hath done for thee, and hath had compassion on thee"; which last words, because
they are added over and above his being dispossessed of the devils, I understand
to be the fruit of electing love "I will have compassion on whom I will have
compassion," which blesseth us with the mercy of a justifying righteousness; and
all this, as by this is manifest, without the least precedent qualification of
ours.
Secondly, "And when they had nothing to pay, he frankly forgave them both,"
Luke 7:42.
The occasion of these words was, for that the Pharisee murmured against the
woman that washed Jesus' feet, because "she was a sinner," (verse 37); for so
said the Pharisee, and so saith the Holy Ghost; but saith Christ, Simon, I will
ask thee a question "A certain man had two debtors. The one owed him five
hundred pence, and the other fifty. And when they had nothing to pay, he frankly
forgave them both," verse 38.
Hence I gather these conclusions
That men that are wedded to their own righteousness understand not the doctrine
of the forgiveness of sins. This is manifested by the poor Pharisee; he objected
against the woman because she was a sinner.
Let Pharisees murmur still, yet Christ hath pity and mercy for sinners.
Yet Jesus doth not usually manifest mercy until the sinner hath nothing to pay
"And when they had nothing to pay, he frankly (or freely, or heartily) forgave
them both." If they had nothing to pay, then they were sinners; but he forgiveth
no man but with respect to a righteousness; therefore that righteousness must be
another's; for in the very act of mercy they are found sinners. They had nothing
but debt, nothing but sin, nothing to pay: "Then they were justified freely by
grace, through that redemption that is in Jesus Christ." So, then, "men are
justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Thirdly, "And when he saw their faith, he said unto the man, Thy sins are
forgiven thee," Luke 5:20.
This man had not righteousness to stand just before God withal, for his sins as
yet remained unforgiven; wherefore, seeing guilt remained until Christ remitted
him, he was discharged while ungodly.
And observe it, the faith here mentioned is not to be reckoned so much the
man's, as the faith of them that brought him; neither did it reach to the
forgiveness of sins, but to the miracle of healing; yet this man in this
condition had his sins forgiven him.
But again; set the case the faith was only his (as it was not), and that it
reached to the doctrine of forgiveness, yet it did it without respect to
righteousness in himself; for guilt lay still upon him, he had now his sins
forgiven him.
But this act of grace was a surprisal; it was unlooked for: "I am found of them
that sought me not," Isa. 65. They came for one thing, he gave them another;
they came for a cure upon his body, but, to their amazement, he cured first his
soul: "Thy sins are forgiven thee."
Besides, to have his sins forgiven betokeneth an act of grace; but grace and
works as to this are opposite, Rom. 11:6; therefore "men are justified from the
curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Fourthly, "Father, I have sinned against heaven, and in thy sight, and am no
more worthy to be called thy son," Luke 15:21.
What this man was, is sufficiently declared in verse 13, &c. As first, a riotous
spender of allof time, talent, body, and soul.
He added to this his rebellion great contempt of his father's house, he joined
himself to a stranger, and became an associate with swine, verses 15, 17.
At last, indeed, he came to himself. But then observe, 1) He sought not
justification by personal performances of his own; 2) Neither did he mitigate
his wickedness; 3) Nor excuse himself before his father, but first resolveth to
confess his sin; and coming to his Father, did confess it, and, that with
aggravating circumstances: "I have sinned against heaven; I have sinned against
thee; I am no more worthy to be called thy son," verse 18. Now what he said was
true or false; if true, then he had not righteousness; if false, he could not
stand just in the sight of his father by virtue of his own performances. And,
indeed, the sequel of the parable clears it. His father said to his servant,
"Bring forth the best robe," the justifying righteousness, "and put it upon him;
and put a ring on his hand, and shoes on his feet," verse 22. This best robe,
then, being in the father's house, was not in the prodigal's heart; neither
stayed the father for further qualifications, but put it upon him as he was,
surrounded with sin and oppressed with guilt. Therefore "men are justified from
the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
Fifthly, "For the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was lost,"
Luke 19:10.
The occasion of these words was, for that the Pharisees murmured because "Jesus
was gone to be a guest to one that was a sinner," yea, a sinner of the
publicans, and these words are most fitly applied to the case in hand. For
though Zaccheus climbed the tree, yet Jesus Christ found him first, and called
him down by his name; adding withal, "For today I must abide at thy house";
which being opened by verse 9, is as much as to say, I am come to be thy
salvation. Now this being believed by Zaccheus, he made haste and came down, and
"received him joyfully." And not only so, but to declare to all the simplicity
of his faith, and that he unfeignedly accepted of this word of salvation, he
said unto the Lord, and that before all present, "Behold, Lord, the half of my
goods I give to the poor; and if I have taken anything from any man by false
accusation (a supposition intimating an affirmative), I restore him fourfold."
This being thus, Christ doubleth his comfort, saying to him also, and that
before the people, "This day is salvation come to this house." Then, by adding
the next words, he expounds the whole of the matter, "For I am come to seek and
save that which was lost"to seek it till I find it, to save it when I find it.
He finds them that sought him not, Rom. 10:20; and, as in the case of Zaccheus,
behold me! to a people that asked not after him. So, then, seeing Jesus findeth
this publican first, preaching salvation to him before he came down from the
tree, it is evident he received this as he was a sinner; from which faith flowed
his following words and works as a consequence.
Sixthly, "Jesus saith unto him, Verily I say unto thee, This day shalt thou be
with me in paradise," Luke 23:43.
This was spoken to the thief upon the cross, who had lived in wickedness all his
days; neither had he so much as truly repented, no, not till he came to die;
nay, when he first was hanged he then fell to railing on Christ. For though Luke
leaves it out, beginning but at his conversion; yet by Matthew's relating the
whole tragedy, we find him at first as bad as the other, Matt. 27:44. This man,
then, had no moral righteousness, for he had lived in the breach of the law of
God. Indeed, by faith he believed Christ to be King, and that when dying with
him. But what was this to a personal performing the commandments? or of
restoring what he had oft taken away? Yea, he confesseth his death to be just
for his sin; and so leaning upon the mediation of Christ he goeth out of the
world. Now he that truly confesseth and acknowledgeth his sin, acknowledgeth
also the curse to be due thereto from the righteous hand of God. So, then, where
the curse of God is due, that man wanteth righteousness. Besides, he that makes
to another for help, hath by that condemned his own (had he any) of utter
insufficiency. But all these did this poor creature; wherefore he must stand
"just from the law in the sight of God while sinful in himself."
Seventhly, "Lord, what wilt thou have me to do?" Acts 9:6. What wilt thou have
me to do? Ignorance is here set forth to the full. He hitherto knew not Jesus,
neither what he would have him to do; yet a mighty man for the law of works, and
for zeal towards God according to that. Thus you see that he neither knew that
Christ was Lord, nor what was his mind and will "I did it ignorantly, in
unbelief," 1 Tim. 1:13-15. I did not know him; I did not believe he was to save
us; I thought I must be saved by living righteously, by keeping the law of God.
This thought kept me ignorant of Jesus, and of justification from the curse by
him. Poor Saul! how many fellows hast thou yet alive!every man zealous of the
law of works, yet none of them know the law of grace; each of them seeking for
life by doing the law, when life is to be had by nought but believing in Jesus
Christ.
Eighthly, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved," Acts
16:31.
A little before, we find Paul and Silas in the stocks for preaching of Jesus
Christ; in the stocks in the inward prison by the hands of a sturdy jailor; but
at midnight, while Paul and his companion sang praises to God, the foundations
of the prison shook, and every man's bands were loosed. Now the jailor being
awakened by the noise of this shaking, and supposing he had lost his prisoners,
drew his sword, with intent to kill himself; "But Paul cried out, Do thyself no
harm, for we are all here. Then he called for a light, and sprang in, and came
trembling, and fell down before Paul and Silas, and brought them out, and said,
Sirs, what must I do to be saved?" In all this relation here is not aught that
can justify the jailor. For, His whole life was idolatry, cruelty, and enmity to
God. Yea, Even now, while the earthquake shook the prison, he had murder in his
heart, yea, and in his intentions too; murder, I say, and that of a high nature,
even to have killed his own body and soul at once. Well,
When he began to shake under the fears of everlasting burnings, yet then his
heart was wrapped up in ignorance as to the way of salvation by Jesus Christ:
"What must I do to be saved?" He knew not what, no, not he. His condition, then,
was this: he neither had righteousness to save him, nor knew he how to get it.
Now, what was Paul's answer? Why, "Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ (look for
righteousness in Christ), and then thou shalt be saved." This, then, still
holdeth true, "men are justified from the curse in the sight of God whilst
sinners in themselves."
I should now come to the second conclusion, viz., that this can be done by no
other righteousness than that long ago performed by, and remaining with, the
person of Christ. But before I speak to that, I will a little further press
this, by urging for it several reasons.
The first reason.
First, Men must be justified from the curse while sinners in themselves, because
by nature all are under sin "All have sinned, and come short of the glory of
God. He hath concluded all in unbelief; he hath concluded all under sin," Rom.
3:23; 11:32; Gal. 3:22. Now having sinned, they are in body and soul defiled,
and become an unclean thing. Wherefore, whatever they touch with an intent to
work out righteousness thereby, they defile that also. And hence, as I have
said, all the righteousness they seek to accomplish is but as a menstruous cloth
and filthy rags; therefore they are sinners still," Tit. 1:15; Lev. 15:11; Isa.
64:6.
Indeed, to some men's thinking, the Pharisee is holier than the Publican; but in
God's sight, in the eyes of Divine justice, they stand alike condemned "All have
sinned"; there is the poison. Therefore, as to God without Christ all throats
are an open sepulchre, Matt. 23:27; Rom. 3:13.
The world in general is divided into two sorts of sinners
The open profane.
The man that seeks life by the works of the law. The profane is judged by all;
but the other by a few. Oh! but God judgeth him.
First, For a hypocrite; because that notwithstanding he hath sinned, he would be
thought to be good and righteous. And hence it is that Christ calls such kind of
holy ones, "Pharisees hypocrites, Pharisees hypocrites," because by their gay
outside they deceived those that beheld them. But, saith he, "God sees your
hearts"; you are but like "painted sepulchers, within you are full of dead men's
bones," Prov. 30:12; Matt. 23:27-30; Luke 11:24; 16:15. Such is the root from
whence flows all their righteousness. But doth the blind Pharisee think his
state is such? No; his thoughts of himself are far otherwise "God, I thank thee
(saith he) I am not as other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like
this Publican," Luke 18:11, 12. Ay, but still God judgeth him for a hypocrite.
Secondly, God judgeth him for one that spurneth against Christ, even by every
such work he doth. And hence it is, when Paul was converted to Jesus Christ,
that he calls the righteousness he had before, madness, blasphemy, injury;
because what he did to save himself by works was in direct opposition to grace
by Jesus Christ, Phil. 3:7, 8; Acts 23:3, 4; 26:4; 1 Tim. 1:14, 15.
Behold, then, the evil that is in a man's own righteousness!
It curseth and condemneth the righteousness of Christ.
It blindeth the man from seeing his misery.
It hardeneth his heart against his own salvation.
Thirdly, But again, God judgeth such for those that condemn him of foolishness
"The preaching of the cross," that is, Christ crucified, "is to them that perish
foolishness," I Cor. 1:18, 23. What! saith the merit-monger (mine ears have
heard all this), will you look for life by the obedience of another man? Will
you trust to the blood that was shed upon the cross, that run down to the
ground, and perished in the dust? Thus deridingly they scoff at, stumble upon,
and are taken in the gin that attends the gospel; not to salvation, but to their
condemnation, Isa. 8:14; because they have condemned the Just, that they might
justify their own filthy righteousness.
But, I say, if all have sinned, if all are defiled, if the best of a man's
righteousness be but madness, blasphemy, injury; if for their righteousness they
are judged hypocrites, condemned as opposers of the gospel, and as such have
counted God foolish for sending his Son into the world; then must the best of
"men be justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in
themselves"; because they still stand guilty in the sight of God, their hearts
are also still filthy infected "Though thou wash thee with nitre, and take thee
much soap, yet thine iniquity is marked before me, saith the Lord God," Jer.
2:22. It stands marked still before God. So, then, what esteem soever men have
of the righteousness of the world, yet God accounts it horrible wickedness, and
the greatest enemy that Jesus hath. Wherefore, this vine is the vine of Sodom;
these clusters are the clusters of Gomorrah; these grapes are grapes of gall;
these clusters are bitter, they are the poison of dragons, and the cruel venom
of asps, Matt. 3:7; 23. No marvel, then, if John in his ministry gives the first
rebuke and jostle to such, still calling them serpents and vipers, and
concluding it is almost impossible they should escape the damnation of hell; for
of all sin, man's own righteousness in special bids defiance to Jesus Christ.
The second reason.
Secondly, A second reason why men must stand just in the sight of God from the
curse while sinners in themselves is, because of the exactions of the law. For
were it granted that men's good works arose from a holy root, and were perfect
in their kind, yet the demand of the law, for that is still beyond them, would
leave them sinners before the justice of God, 1 Pet. 2:5; Rev. 7:14-16; Heb.
13:8. And hence it is that holy men stand just in the sight of God from the
curse, yet dare not offer their gifts by the law, but through Jesus Christ,
knowing that not only their persons, but their spiritual service also, would
else be rejected of the heavenly Majesty.
For the law is itself so perfectly holy and good as not to admit of the least
failure, either in the matter or manner of obedience "Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to do them.
For they that shall keep the whole law, and yet offend in one point, are guilty
of all, and convicted of the law as transgressors," Gal. 3:10; James 2:9, 10.
"Tribulation, therefore, and anguish, upon every soul of man that doth evil, of
the Jew first, and also of the Gentile,"
Rom. 2:9.
And observe, the law leaveth thee not to thy choice, when, or when not , to
begin to keep it, but requireth thy obedience so soon as concerned, exactly,
both as to the matter and manner, and that before thou hast sinned against it;
for the first sin breaks the law, John 3:18. Now, if thou sinnest before thou
beginnest to do, thou art found by the law a transgressor, and so standest by
that convicted of sin; so, then, all thy after-acts of righteousness are but the
righteousness of a sinner, of one whom the law hath condemned already. "The law
is spiritual, but thou art carnal, sold under sin," Rom. 7:14.
Besides, the law being absolutely perfect, doth not only respect the matter and
manner as to outward acts, but also the rise and root, the heart, from whence
they flow; and an impediment there spoils all, were the executive part never so
good "Thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, with all thy soul,
with all thy mind, and with all thy strength," Mark 12:30. Mark the repetition,
with all, with all, with all, with all; with all thy heart, with all thy soul,
in all things, at all times, else thou hadst as good do nothing. But "every
imagination of the thought of the heart of man is only evil continually," Gen.
6:5. The margin hath it, the "whole imagination, the purposes, and desires"; so
that a good root is here wanting. "The heart is deceitful above all things, and
desperately wicked; who can know it?" Jer. 17:9. What thoughts, words, or
actions can be clean, sufficiently to answer a perfect law, that flows from this
original; it is impossible. "Men must therefore be justified from the curse in
the sight of God while sinners in themselves."
But further yet to open the case. There are several things that make it
impossible that a man should stand just in the sight of God but while sinful in
himself.
First, Because the law under which he at present stands, holds him under the
dominion of sin; for sin by the law hath dominion over all that are under the
law, Rom. 6:14. Dominion, I say, both as to guilt and filth. Guilt hath dominion
over him, because he is under the curse; and filth, because the law giveth him
no power, neither can he by it deliver his soul. And for this cause it is that
it is called beggarly, weak, unprofitable; imposing duty, but giving no
strength, Gal. 3:2; 4:9; expecting the duty should be complete, yet bendeth not
the heart to do the work; to do it, I say, as is required, Rom. 8:3. And hence
it is again that it is called a void of words, Heb. 12:14; for as words that are
barely such are void of spirit and quickening life, so are the impositions of
the law of works. Thus far, therefore, the man remains a sinner. But,
Secondly, The law is so far from giving life or strength to do it, that it doth
quite the contrary. For,
It weakeneth, it discourageth, and dishearteneth the sinner, especially when it
shews itself in its glory; for then it is the ministration of death, and killeth
all the world. When Israel saw this, they fled from the face of God; they could
not endure that which was commanded; yea, so terrible was the sight, that Moses
said, "I exceedingly fear and quake," Exod. 20:18, 19; Heb. 12:20, 21. Yea,
almost forty years after, Moses stood amazed to find himself and Israel yet
alive "Did ever people," said he, "hear the voice of God speaking out of the
midst of the fire, as thou hast done, and live?" Deut. 4:32, 33.
Alas! he who boasteth himself in the works of the law, he doth not hear the law;
when that speaks, it shakes Mount Sinai, and writeth death upon all faces, and
makes the church itself cry out, A mediator! else we die, Exod. 20:19; Deut.
5:25-27; 18:15, 19.
It doth not only thus discourage, but abundantly increaseth every sin.
(1.) Sin takes the advantage of being by the law; the motions of sin are by the
law. Where no law is, there is no transgression, Rom. 4:15; 7:5.
(2.) Sin takes an occasion to live by the law: "When the commandment came, sin
revived; for without the law, sin is dead," Rom. 7:8, 9.
(3.) Sin takes an occasion to multiply by the law: "The law entered, that the
offence might abound," Rom. 5:20.
(4.) "And the strength of sin is the law," 1 Cor. 15:56.
(5.) "Sin by the commandment is become" outrageous, "exceeding sinful," Rom.
7:7, 8. "What shall we say, then? Is the law sin? God forbid. Nay, I had not
known sin, but by the law: for I had not known lust, except the law had said,
Thou shalt not covet. But sin, taking occasion by the commandment, wrought in me
all manner of concupiscence. For without the law, sin is dead."
These things, then, are not infused or operated by the law from its own nature
or doctrine, but are occasioned by the meeting of, and having to do with, a
thing directly opposite. "The law is spiritual, I am carnal"; therefore every
imposition is rejected and rebelled against. Strike a steel against a flint, and
the fire flies about you; strike the law against a carnal heart, and sin
appears, sin multiplies, sin rageth, sin is strengthened. And hence ariseth all
these doubts, murmurings, and sinful complainings that are found in the hearts
of the people of God; they have too much to do with the law; the law of works is
now in the conscience, imposing duty upon the carnal part. This is the reason of
the noise that you hear, and of the sin that you see, and of the horror that you
feel in your own souls when tempted. But to pass this digression.
The law, then, having to do with carnal men, by this they become worse sinners
than before; for their heart now recoileth desperately, opposeth blasphemously;
it giveth way to despair; and then, to conclude, there is no hope for hereafter;
and so goeth on in a sordid, ungodly course of life, till his time is come to
die and be damned, unless a miracle of grace prevent. From all this I conclude,
that "a man cannot stand just from the curse in the sight of God but while
sinful in himself." But,
Thirdly, As the law giveth neither strength nor life to keep it, so it neither
giveth nor worketh repentance unto life if thou break it, Do this and live,
break it and die; this is the voice of the law. All the repentance that such men
have, it is but that of themselves, the sorrow of the world (2 Cor. 7:10) that
endeth in death, as Cain's and Judas's did, even such a repentance as must be
repented of either here or ill hell-fire.
Fourthly, As it giveth none, so it accepteth none of them that are under the
law, Gal. 5:9. Sin and die, is for ever its language; there is no middle way in
the law; they must bear their judgment, whosoever they be, that stand and fall
to the law. Therefore Cain was a vagabond still, and Judas hangeth himself;
their repentance could not save them, they fell headlong under the law, Gen.
4:9-11; Matt. 27:3. The law stays no man from the due reward of his deeds; it
hath no ears to hear nor heart to pity its penitent ones.
Fifthly, By the law, God will shew no mercy; for, "I will be merciful to their
unrighteousness," is the tenour of another covenant, Heb. 8:9, 10, &c. But by
the law I regard them not, saith the Lord. For,
Sixthly, All the promises annexed to the law are by the first sin null and void.
Though then a man should live a thousand years twice told, and all that while
fulfil the law, yet having sinned first, he is not at all the better. Our
legalists, then, begin to talk too soon of having life by the law: let them
first begin without sin, and so throughout continue to death, and then if God
will save them, not by Christ, but works, contrary to the covenant of grace,
they may hope to go to heaven.
But, lastly, to come close to the point. Thou hast sinned; the law now calls for
passive as well as active obedience; yea, great contentedness in all thou
sufferest for thy transgressing against the law. So, then, wilt thou live by the
law? Fulfil it, then, perfectly till death, and afterwards go to hell and be
damned, and abide there till the law and curse for thy sin be satisfied for; and
then, but not till then, thou shalt have life by the law.
Tell me now, you that desire to be under the law, can you fulfil all the
commands of the law, and after answer all its demands? Can you grapple with the
judgment of God? Can you wrestle with the Almighty? Are you stronger than he
that made the heavens, and that holdeth angels in everlasting chains? "Can thine
heart endure, or can thy hands be strong in the day that I shall deal with thee?
I, saith the Lord, have spoken it; I will do it," Ezek. 22:14. Oh, it cannot be!
"These must go away into everlasting punishment," Matt. 25:46. So, then, "men
must stand just from the curse in the sight of God while sinners in themselves,"
or not at all.
Objection: But the apostle saith, "That the doers of the law shall be
justified," Rom. 2:13, plainly intimating that, notwithstanding all you say,
some by doing the law may stand just before God thereby; and if so, then Christ
fulfilled it for us but as our example.
Answ. The consequences are not true; for by these words, "The doers of the law
shall be justified," there is no more proof of a possibility of saving thyself
by the law than there is by these: "For by the works of the law shall no man
living be justified in his sight," Gal. 2:16. The intent, then, of the text
objected is not to prove a possibility of man's salvation by the law, but to
insinuate rather an impossibility, by asserting what perfections the law
requireth. And were I to argue against the pretended sufficiency of man's own
righteousness, I would choose to frame mine argument upon such a place as this
"The hearers of the law are not just before God"; therefore the breakers of the
law are not just before God; not just, I say, by the law; but all have sinned
and broken the law; therefore none by the law are just before God. For if all
stand guilty of sin by the law, then that law that judgeth them sinners cannot
justify them before God. And what if the apostle had said, "Blessed are they
that continue in all things," instead of pronouncing a curse for the contrary,
the conclusion had been the same; for where the blessing is pronounced, he is
not the better that breaks the condition; and where the curse is pronounced, he
is not the worse that keeps it. But neither doth the blessing nor curse in the
law intend a supposition that men may be just by the law, but rather to shew the
perfection of the law, and that though a blessing be annexed thereto, no man by
it can obtain that blessing; for not the hearers of the law are justified before
God, but the doers, when they do it, shall be justified. None but doers can by
it be just before God; but none do the law, no, not one, Rom. 3:10, 11;
therefore none by it can stand just before God.
And whereas it is said Christ kept the law as our example, that we by keeping it
might get to heaven, as he, it is false, as before was shewn "He is the end of
the law," or, hath perfectly finished it, "for righteousness to every one that
believeth," Rom. 10:3, 4.
But a little to travel with this objection: no man can keep the moral law as
Christ, unless he be first without sin, as Christ; unless he be God and man, as
Christ.
And again; Christ cannot be our pattern in keeping the law for life, because of
the disproportion that is between him and us; for if we do it as he when yet we
are weaker than he, what is this but to out, vie, outdo, and go beyond Christ?
Wherefore we, not he, have our lives exemplary: exemplary, I say, to him; for
who doth the greatest work, they that take it in hand in full strength, as
Christ; or he that takes it in hand in weakness, as we? Doubtless the last, if
he fulfils it as Christ. So, then, by this doctrine, while we call ourselves his
scholars, we make ourselves indeed the masters. But I challenge all the angels
in heaven, let them but first sin as we have done, to fulfil the law, as Christ,
if they can.
But again; if Christ be our pattern in keeping the law for life from the curse
before God, then Christ fulfilled the law for himself; if so, he was imperfect
before he fulfilled it. And how far short this is of blasphemy let sober
Christians judge; for the righteousness he fulfilled was to justify from sin;
but if it was not to justify us from ours, you know what remaineth, Dan. 9:26;
Isa. 53:8-10.
But when must we conclude we have kept the law? Not when we begin, because we
have sinned first; nor when we are in the middle, for we may afterwards
miscarry. But what if a man in this his progress hath one sinful thought? I
query, is it possible to come up to the pattern for justification with God? If
yea, then Christ had such; if no, then who can fulfil the law as he?
But should I grant that which is indeed impossible, namely, that thou art
justified by the law; what then? Art thou now in the favour of God? No, thou art
fallen by this thy perfection from the love and mercy of God: "Whosoever of you
are justified by the law are fallen from grace," Gal. 5:4, 5. He speaks not this
to them that are doing, but to such as think they have done it, and shews that
the blessing that these have got thereby is to fall from the favour of God.
Being fallen from grace, Christ profits them nothing, and so they still stand
debtors to do the whole law.
So, then, they must not be saved by God's mercy, nor Christ's merits, but alone
by the works of the law. But what should such men do in that kingdom that comes
by gift, where grace and mercy reigns? Yea, what should they do among that
company that are saved alone by grace, through the redemption that is in Jesus
Christ? Let them go to that kingdom that God hath prepared for them that are
fallen from grace. "Cast out the bond-woman, with her son; for he shall not be
heir with the son of the promise," Gal. 4:30.
But to pass this objection. Before I come to the next reason, I shall yet for
the further clearing of this urge these scriptures more. The first is that in
Gal. 3:10, "As many as are of the works of the law, are under the curse."
Behold, how boldly Paul asserts it! And observe it, he saith not here, so many
as sin against the law (though that be true), but, "As many as are of the works
of the law." But what, then, are the works of the law? Not whoredom, murder,
theft, and the like; but works that are holy and good, the works commanded in
the ten commandments, as to love God, abhor idols, reverence the name of God,
keeping the sabbath, honouring thy parents, abstaining from adultery, murder,
theft, false-witness, and not to covet what is thy neighbour's, these are the
works of the law. Now he, saith Paul, that is of these is under the curse of
God. But what is it then to be of these? Why, to be found in the practice of
them, and there resting; this is the man that is under the curse: not because
the works of the law are wicked in themselves, but because the man that is in
the practice of them comes short of answering the exactness of them, and
therefore dies for his imperfections, Rom. 2:17.
The second scripture is that of the 11th verse of the same chapter, "But that no
man is justified by the law in the sight of God, it is evident: for, the just
shall live by faith." These words, "the just shall live by faith," are taken out
of the Old Testament, and are thrice used by this apostle in the New.
To shew that nothing of the gospel can be apprehended but by faith: "For therein
is the righteousness of God revealed from faith to faith." "As it is written,
The just shall live by faith," Rom. 1:17; Heb. 10:38.
To shew that the way to have relief and succour under temptation is then to live
by faith: "Now the just shall live by faith."
But in this of the Galatians it is urged to shew that how holy and just soever
men be in themselves, yet as such they are dead, and condemned to death by the
law before God. "But that no man is justified by the law in the sight of God is
evident: for, the just shall live by faith."
The word "just," therefore, in this place in special, respecteth a man that is
just, or that so esteems himself by the law, and is here considered in a double
capacity.
First, What he is before men.
Secondly, What he is before God.
As he stands before men, he is just by the law; as Paul before his conversion,
Phil. 3:4.
As he stands in the sight of God; so, without the faith of Christ, he cannot be
just, as is evident; for the just shall live, not by his justice or
righteousness by the law.
This is the true intent of this place,
Because they carry with them a supposition that the just here intended may be
excluded life, he falling within the rejection asserted within the first part of
the verse. No man is just by the law in the sight of God; for "the just shall
live by faith": his justice cannot make him live, he must live by the faith of
Christ. Again,
The words are a reason dissuasive, urged to put a stop to those that are seeking
life by the law; as if the apostle had said, Ye Galatians! what are you doing?
Would you be saved by keeping the law? Would you stand just before God thereby?
Do you not hear the prophets, how they press faith in Jesus, and life by faith
in him? Come, I will reason with you,
By way of supposition. Were it granted that you all loved the law, yet that for
life will avail you nothing; for, "the just shall live by faith."
Were it granted that you kept the law, and that no man on earth could accuse
you; were you therefore just before God? No; neither can you live by works
before him; for "the just shall live by faith." Why not live before him? Because
when we have done our best, and are applauded of all the world for just, yet
then God sees sin in our hearts: "He putteth no trust in his saints; yea, the
heavens are not clean in his sight," Job 4:18. There is then a just man that
perisheth in his righteousness, if he want the faith of Christ, Job 15:15; for
that no man is "justified by the law in the sight of God it is evident; for, the
just shall live by faith"; and the law is not of faith.
The third scripture is this "We who are Jews by nature, and not sinners of the
Gentiles, knowing that a man is not justified by the works of the law, but by
the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Jesus Christ, that we might
be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the
works of the law shall no flesh be justified," Gal. 2:15, 16.
These words are the result of the experienced Christians in the primitive times;
yea, of those among them that had given up themselves before to the law, to get
life and heaven thereby; the result, I say, of believing Jews, we who are Jews
by nature. But how are they distinguished from the Gentiles? Why, they are such
that rest in the law, and make their boast of God; that know his will, and
approve the things that are excellent; that are guides to the blind, and a light
to them that are in darkness; that are instructors of the foolish, teachers of
babes, and which have the form of knowledge, and of the truth of the law," Rom.
2:17-19.
How far these attained we find by that of the Pharisee I pray, I fast, I give
tithes of all; and by the young man in the gospel "All these have I kept from my
youth up," Luke 18:11, 12; and by that of Paul "Touching the righteousness which
is in the law, blameless," Phil. 3. This was the Jew by nature, to do and trust
in this. Now these attaining afterwards the sound knowledge of sin, the
depravedness of nature, and the exactions of the law, fled from the command of
the law to the Lord Jesus for life. We know it; we that are taught of God, and
that have found it by sad experience, we, even we, have believed in Jesus
Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works
of the law.
Surely, if righteousness had come by the law, Paul and the Jews had found it,
they being by many privileges far better than the sinners of the Gentiles; but
these, when they received the word of the gospel, even these now fly to Christ
from the law, that they might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by
the works of the law.
To conclude this. If righteous men, through the knowledge of the gospel, are
made to leave the law of God, as despairing of life thereby, surely
righteousness is not to be found in the law; I mean that which can justify thee
before God from the curse who livest and walkest in the law.
I shall therefore end this second reason with what I have said before "Men must
be justified from the curse in the sight of God while sinful in themselves."
The third reason.
Thirdly, Another reason why not one under heaven can be justified by the law, or
by his own personal performances to it, is, because since sin was in the world
God hath rejected the law and the works thereof for life, Rom. 7:10.
It is true, before man had sinned, it was ordained to be unto life; but since,
and because of sin, the God of love gave the word of grace. Take the law, then,
as God hath established it, to wit, to condemn all flesh, Gal. 3:21; and then
there is room for the promise and the law, the one to kill, the other to heal;
and so the law is not against the promises, Rom. 4:14; but make the law a
justifier, and faith is made void, and the promise is made of none effect; and
the everlasting gospel, by so doing, thou endeavourest to root out of the world.
Methinks, since it hath pleased God to reject the law and the righteousness
thereof for life, such dust and ashes as we are should strive to consent to his
holy will, especially when in the room of this of works there is established a
better covenant, and that upon better promises.
The Lord hath rejected the law, for the weakness and unprofitableness thereof;
for finding fault with them of the law, "The days come, saith the Lord, that I
will make a new covenant with the house of Israel," &c., Heb. 8:7, 8. Give God
leave to find fault with us, and to condemn our personal performances to death,
as to our justification before him thereby; let him do it, I say; and the
rather, because he doth by the gospel present us with a better. And certainly,
if ever he be pleased with us, it will be when he findeth us in that
righteousness that is of his own appointing.
To conclude. Notwithstanding all that hath or can be said, there are six things
that have great power with the heart to bend it to seek life before God by the
law; of all which I would caution that soul to beware that would have happiness
in another world.
First, Take heed thou be not made to seek to the law for life, because of that
name and majesty of God which thou findest upon the doctrine of the law, Exod.
20:1. God indeed spake all the words of the law, and delivered them in that
dread and majesty to men that shook the hearts of all that heard it. Now this is
of great authority with some, even to seek for life and bliss by the law: "We
know," said some, "that God spake to Moses," John 9:28, 29. And Saul rejected
Christ even of zeal towards God, Acts 22:3. What zeal? Zeal towards God
according to the law, which afterwards he left and rejected, because he had
found out a better way, Gal. 2:20. The life that he once lived, it was by the
law, but afterwards, saith he, the life that I now live it is by faith, by the
faith of Jesus Christ. So that, though the law was the appointment of God, and
had also his name and majesty upon it, yet now he will not live by the law.
Indeed, God is in the law, but yet only as just and holy, not as gracious and
merciful; so he is only in Jesus Christ. "The law," the word of justice, "was
given by Moses, but grace and truth came by Jesus Christ," John 1:17. Wherefore,
whatever of God thou findest in the law, yet seeing grace and mercy is not
there, let neither the name of God nor that majesty that thou findest of him in
the law prevail with thee to seek life by all the holy commands of the law.
Secondly , Take heed that the law, by taking hold on thy conscience, doth not
make thee seek life by the law, Rom. 2:13-15. The heart of man is the seat of
the law; this being so, the understanding and conscience must needs be in danger
of being bound by the law. Man is a law unto himself, and sheweth that the works
of the law are written in his heart. Now the law being thus nearly related to
man, it easily takes hold of the understanding and conscience; by which hold, if
it be not quickly broken off by the promise and grace of the gospel, it is
captivated to the works of the law; for conscience is such a thing, that if it
once he possessed with a doctrine, yea, though but with the doctrine of an idol
(1 Cor. 8:6, 7), it will cleave so fast thereto that nothing but a hand from
heaven can loosen it; and if it be not loosed, no gospel can be there embraced.
Conscience is Little-ease, if men resist it, whether it be rightly or wrongly
informed. How fast, then, will it hold when it knows it cleaves to the law of
God! Upon this account the condition of the unbeliever is most miserable; for
not having faith in the gospel of grace, through which is tendered the
forgiveness of sins, they, like men drowning, hold fast that they have found;
which being the law of God, they follow it; but because righteousness flies from
them, they at last are found only accursed and condemned to hell by the law,
Rom. 9:31, 32. Take heed, therefore, that thy conscience be not entangled by the
law.
Thirdly , Take heed of fleshly wisdom. Reasoning suiteth much with the law "I
thought verily that I ought to do many things against the name of Jesus," and so
to have sought for life by the law; my reason told me so. For thus will reason
say: Here is a righteous law, the rule of life and death; besides, what can be
better than to love God, and my neighbour as myself? Again; God hath thus
commanded, and his commands are just and good; therefore, doubtless, life must
come by the law. Further, to love God and keep the law are better than to sin
and break it; and seeing men lost heaven by sin, how should they get it again
but by working righteousness? Besides, God is righteous, and will therefore
bless the righteous. Oh, the holiness of the law! It mightily swayeth with
reason when a man addicteth himself to religion; the light of nature teacheth
that sin is not the way to heaven; and seeing no word doth more condemn sin than
the words of the ten commandments, it must needs be therefore the most perfect
rule for holiness; wherefore, saith reason, the safest way to life and glory is
to keep myself close to the law. But a little here to correct. Though the law
indeed be holy, yet the mistake as to the matter in hand is as wide as the east
from the west; for therefore the law can do thee no good, because it is holy and
just; for what can he that hath sinned expect from a law that is holy and just?
Nought but condemnation. Let them lean to it while they will, "there is one that
accuseth you," saith Christ, "even Moses in whom you trust," John 5:45.
Fourthly , Man's ignorance of the gospel suiteth well with the doctrine of the
law; they, through their being ignorant of God's righteousness, fall in love
with that, Rom. 10:1-4. Yea, they do not only suit, but, when joined in act, the
one strengtheneth the otherthat is, the law strengtheneth our blindness, and
bindeth the veil more fast about the face of our souls. The law suiteth much our
blindness of mind, "For until this day remains the veil untaken away in the
reading of the Old Testament" (2 Cor. 3:15,16), especially in the reading of
that which was written and engraven on stones, to wit, the ten commandments,
that perfect rule for holiness which veil is done away in Christ. But "even to
this day, when Moses is read, the veil is over their hearts"; they are blinded
by the duties enjoined by the law from the sight and hopes of forgiveness of
sins by grace "Nevertheless when it (the heart) shall turn to the Lord, the veil
shall be taken away." The law, then, doth veil the heart from Christ, and holds
the man so down to doing and working for the kingdom of heaven, that he quite
forgets the forgiveness of sins by mercy through Christ. Now this veiling or
blinding by the law is occasioned,
By reason of the contrariety of doctrine that is in the law to that which was in
the gospel. The law requireth obedience to all its demands upon pain of
everlasting burning; the gospel promiseth forgiveness of sins to him that
worketh not, but believeth. Now the heart cannot receive both these doctrines;
it must either let go doing or believing. If it believe, it is dead to doing; if
it be set to doing for life, it is dead to believing. Besides, he that shall
think both to do and believe for justification before God from the curse, he
seeks for life but as it were by the law, he seeks for life but as it were by
Christ; and he being not direct in either, shall for certain be forsaken of
both. Wherefore? "Because he seeks it not by faith, but as it were by the works
of the law," Rom. 9:32.
The law veils and blinds by that guilt and horror for sin that seizeth the soul
by the law; for guilt, when charged close upon the conscience, is attended with
such aggravations, and that with such power and evidence, that the conscience
cannot hear, nor see, nor feel anything else but that. When David's guilt for
murder and blood did roar by the law in his conscience, notwithstanding he knew
much of the grace of the gospel, he could hear nothing else but terror, the
sound of blood; the murder of Uriah was the only noise that he heard; wherefore
he crieth to God that he would make him hear the gospel: "Make me to hear joy
and gladness, that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice," Psalm 51:8.
And as he could not hear, so neither could he see; the law had struck him deaf
and blind: "I am (saith he) not able to look up"; not up to Christ for mercy. As
if David had said, O Lord, the guilt of sin, which is by the law, makes such a
noise and horror in my conscience, that I can neither hear nor see the word of
peace, unless it is spoken with a voice from heaven! The serpents that bit the
people in the days of old were types of guilt and sin, Num. 21:6. Now these were
fiery serpents, and such as, I think, could fly, Isa. 14:29; wherefore, in my
judgment, they stung the people about their faces, and so swelled up their eyes,
which made it the more difficult for them to look up to the brazen serpent,
which was the type of Christ, John 3:14. Just so doth sin by the law do now; it
stings the soul, the very face of the soul, which is the cause that looking up
to Jesus, or believing in him, is so difficult a task in time of terror of
conscience.
This is not only so at present, but so long as guilt is on the conscience, so
long remains the blindness; for guilt standing before the soul, the grace of God
is intercepted, even as the sun is hid from the sight of mine eyes by the cloud
that cometh between: "My sin," said David, "is ever before me" (Psalm 51:3), and
so kept other things out of his sight: sin, I say, when applied by the law. When
the law came to Paul, he remained without sight (Acts 9.) until the good man
came unto him with the word of forgiveness of sins.
Again; where the law comes with power, there it begetteth many doubts against
the grace of God; for it is only a revealer of sin, and the ministration of
death; that is, a doctrine that sheweth sin, and condemneth for the same; hence,
therefore, as was hinted before, the law being the revealer of sin, where that
is embraced, there sin must needs be discovered and condemned, and the soul for
the sake of that; further, it is not only a revealer of sin, but that which
makes it abound; so that the closer any man sticks to the law for life, the
faster sin doth cleave to him. "That law," saith Paul, "which was ordained to be
unto life, I found to be unto death" (Rom. 7:10-14); for by the law I became a
notorious sinner; I thought to have obtained life by obeying the law, "but sin
taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and thereby slew me." A strange
way of deceivableness, and it is hid from the most of men; but, as I have
already told you, you see how it comes to pass.
Man by nature is carnal, and the law itself is spiritual: now betwixt these two
ariseth great difference; the law is exceeding good, the heart exceeding bad;
these two opposites therefore (the heart so abiding) can by no means agree.
Therefore, at every approach of the law to the heart with intent to impose duty,
or to condemn for the neglect thereof; at every such approach the heart starteth
back, especially when the law comes home indeed, and is heard in his own
language. This being thus, the conscience perceiving this is a fault, begins to
tremble at the sense of judgment; the law still continueth to command to duty,
and to condemn for the neglect thereof. From this struggling of these two
opposites ariseth, I say, those doubts and fears that drive the heart into
unbelief, and that make it blind to the word of the gospel, that it can neither
see nor understand anything but that it is a sinner, and that the law must be
fulfilled by it if ever it be saved.
But again; another thing that hath great influence upon the heart to make it
lean to the law for life is, the false names that Satan and his instruments have
put upon it; such as these, to call the law the gospel; conscience, the spirit
of Christ; works, faith; and the like: with these, weak consciences have been
mightily pestered; yea, thousands deluded and destroyed. This was the way
whereby the enemy attempted to overthrow the church of Christ of old; as,
namely, those in Galatia and at Corinth, &c., 2 Cor. 11:3, 4, 13, 14. I say, by
the feigned notion that the law was the gospel, the Galatians were removed from
the gospel of Christ; and Satan, by appropriating to himself and his ministers
the names and titles of the ministers of the Lord Jesus, prevailed with many at
Corinth to forsake Paul and his doctrine. Where the Lord Jesus hath been
preached in truth, and something of his doctrine known, it is not there so easy
to turn people aside from the sound of the promise of grace, unless it be by the
noise and sound of a gospel. Therefore, I say, the false apostles came thus
among the churches: "another gospel, another gospel"; which, in truth, saith
Paul, "is not another; but some would pervert the gospel of Christ" (Gal.
1:6-8), and thrust that out of doors, by gilding the law with that glorious
name. So again, for the ministers of Satan, they must be called the apostles of
Christ and ministers of righteousness which thing, I say, is of great force,
especially being accompanied with so holy and just a doctrine as the word of the
law is; for what better to the eye of reason than to love God above all, and our
neighbour as ourselves, which doctrine, being the scope of the ten words given
on Sinai, no man can contradict; for, in truth, they are holy and good. But here
is the poison; to set this law in the room of a mediator, as those do that seek
to stand just before God thereby; and then nothing is so dishonourable to
Christ, nor of so soul-destroying a nature as the law; for that thus placed hath
not only power when souls are deluded, but power to delude, by its real
holiness, the understanding, conscience, and reason of a man; and by giving the
soul a semblance of heaven, to cause it to throw away Christ, grace, and faith.
Wherefore it behoveth all men to take heed of names, and of appearances of
holiness and goodness.
Lastly, Satan will yet go further; he will make use of something that may be at
a distance from a moral precept, and therewith bring souls under the law. Thus
he did with some of old; he did not make the Galatians fall from Christ by
virtue of one of the ten words, but by something that was aloof off; by
circumcision, days and months, that were Levitical ceremonies; for he knows it
is no matter, nor in what Testament he found it, if he can therewith hide Christ
from the soul "Behold, I Paul say unto you, that if you be circumcised, Christ
shall profit you nothing; for I testify again to every man that is circumcised,
that he is a debtor to the whole law," Gal. 5:2, 3. Why so, seeing circumcision
is not one of the ten words? Why, because they did it in conscience to God, to
stand just before him thereby. Now here we may behold much cunning of the devil;
he begins with some at a distance from that law which curseth, and so by little
and little bringeth them under it; even as by circumcision the Galatians were at
length brought under the law that condemneth all men to the wrath and judgment
of God. I have often wondered when I have read how God crieth out against the
Jews for observing his own commandment (Isa. 1); but I perceive by Paul that by
these things a man may reject and condemn the Lord Jesus; which those do that
for life set up aught, whether moral or other institution, besides the faith of
Jesus.
Let men therefore warily distinguish betwixt names and things, betwixt statute
and commandment, lest they by doing the one transgress against the other, 2 Cor.
1:19, 20. Study, therefore, the nature and end of the law with the nature and
end of the gospel; and if thou canst keep them distinct in thy understanding and
conscience, neither names nor things, neither statutes nor commandments, can
draw thee from the faith of the gospel. And that thou mayest yet be helped in
this matter, I shall now come to speak to the second conclusion.
The second position.
That men can be justified from the curse before God while sinners in themselves
by no other righteousness than that long ago performed by, and remaining with,
the person of Christ.
For the better prosecuting of this position, I shall observe two things
That the righteousness by which we stand just before God from the curse was
performed by the person of Christ.
That this righteousness is inherent only in him.
As to the first of these, I shall be but brief.
Now, that the righteousness that justifieth us was performed long ago by the
person of Christ, besides what hath already been said, is further manifest thus
He is said to have purged our sins by himself "When he had by himself purged our
sins, he sat down on the right hand of God," Heb. 1:2, 3. I have shewed that in
Christ, for the accomplishing of righteousness, there was both doing and
suffering; doing, to fulfil all the commands of the law; suffering, to answer
its penalty for sin. This second is that which in this to the Hebrews is in
special intended by the apostle, where he saith, he hath "purged our sins," Heb.
9:14; that is, by his precious blood; for it is that alone can purge our sins,
either out of the sight of God or out of the sight of the soul. Now this was
done by himself, saith the apostle; that is, in or by his personal doings and
sufferings. And hence it is that when God had rejected the offerings of the law,
he said, "Lo, I come. A body hast thou prepared me, to do thy will, O God," Heb.
10:5-8. Now by this will of God, saith the Scripture, we are sanctified. By what
will? Why, by the offering up of the body of Jesus Christ; for that was God's
will, that thereby we might be a habitation for him; as he saith again "Jesus
also, that he might sanctify the people with his own blood, suffered without the
gate," Heb. 13:12.
As it is said, he hath purged our sins by himself, so it was by himself at once
"For by one offering hath he perfected for ever them that are sanctified." Now
by this word "at once," or by "one offering," is cut off all those imaginary
sufferings of Christ which foolish men conceive of; as, that he in all ages hath
suffered, or suffereth for sin in us. No; he did this work but once: "Not that
he should offer himself often, as the high priest entered into the holy place
every year with the blood of others; for then must he often have suffered since
the foundation of the world: but now once in the end of the world," in the time
of Pilate, "hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself," Heb.
9:25, 26. Mark how to the purpose the Holy Ghost expresseth it: he hath suffered
but once; and that once, now; now once; now he is God and man in one person; now
he hath taken the body that was prepared of God; now once in the end of the
world hath he appeared to put away sin by the sacrifice of himself; by the
offering up of the body of Jesus Christ once for all.
It further appears, in that by his resurrection from the dead, the mercies of
God are made sure to the soul, God declaring by that, as was said before, how
well pleased he is by the undertaking of his Son for the salvation of the world:
"And as concerning that he raised him up from the dead, now no more to return to
corruption, he said on this wise, I will give thee the sure mercies of David,"
Acts 13:34. For Christ being clothed with man's flesh, and undertaking for man's
sins, did then confirm all sure to us by his resurrection from the dead. So that
by the rising of that man again, mercy and grace are made sure to him that hath
believed on Jesus. Wherefore, from these things, together with what hath been
discovered about his addressing himself to the work, I conclude "That men can be
justified from the curse before God while sinners in themselves by no other
righteousness than that long ago performed by the person of Christ." Now the
conclusion is true, from all show of contradiction; for the Holy Ghost saith, he
hath done it; hath done it by himself, and that by the will of God, at once,
even then when he took the prepared body upon him "By the will of God we are
sanctified, through the offering up of the body of Jesus Christ once for all."
This being so, the second position is also manifest, namely, that the
righteousness by which we stand just from the curse before God is only inherent
in Jesus Christ. For if he hath undertaken to bring in a justifying
righteousness, and that by works and merits of his own, then that righteousness
must of necessity be inherent in him alone, and ours only by imputation; and
hence it is called, in that fifth to the Rom., the gift, the "gift of
righteousness"; because neither wrought nor obtained by works of ours, but
bestowed upon us, as a garment already prepared, by the mercy of God in Christ,
Rom. 5:17; Isa. 11:10.
There are four things that confirm this for a truth
First, This righteousness is said to be the righteousness of one, not of many; I
mean of one properly and personally, as his own particular personal
righteousness. The gift of grace, which is the gift of righteousness, it is "by
one man, Jesus Christ. Much more they that receive abundance of grace, and of
the gift of righteousness, shall reign in life by one Jesus Christ. Therefore as
by the offence of one judgment came upon all to condemnation; even so by the
righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men to justification of life.
For as by one man's disobedience many were made sinners, so by the obedience of
one shall many be made righteous," Rom. 5:15-19. Mark, the righteousness of one,
the obedience of one; the righteousness of one man, of one man, Jesus.
Wherefore, the righteousness that justifieth a sinner, it is personally and
inherently the righteousness of that person only who by works and acts of
obedience did complete it, even the obedience of one, of one man, Jesus Christ;
and so ours only by imputation. It is improper to say, Adam's eating of the
forbidden fruit was personally and inherently an act of mine. It was personally
his, and imputatively mine; personally his, because he did it; imputatively
mine, because I was then in him. Indeed, the effects of his personal eating is
found in my person, to wit, defilement and pravity; the effects also of the
imputation of Christ's personal righteousness are truly found in those that are
in him by electing love and unfeigned faith, even holy and heavenly
dispositions: but a personal act is one thing, and the effects of that another.
The act may be done by, and be only inherent in one; the imputation of the merit
of the act, as also the effects of the same, may be in a manner universal,
extending itself unto the most, or all. This the case of Adam and Christ doth
manifest the sin of one is imputed to his posterity; the righteousness of the
other is reckoned the righteousness of those that are his.
Secondly, The righteousness by which we stand just before God from the curse is
called "The righteousness of the Lord the righteousness of Goethe righteousness
of Jesus Christ," &c., Phil. 3:6-8; and that by way of opposition to the
righteousness of God's own holy law "That I might be found in him, not having on
my own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith
of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith." Now by this opposition,
as by what was said before, the truth is made exceeding clear; for by these
words, "not having my own righteousness," is not only excluded what
qualifications we suppose to be in us, but the righteousness through which we
stand just in the sight of God by them is limited and confined to a person
absolutely distinct. Distinct, I say, as to his person and performances, who
here is called God and Jesus Christ; as he saith also in the prophet Isaiah, "In
the Lord shall all the seed of Israel be justified, and shall glory," Isa.
45:25; 54:17. In the Lord, not in the law; in the Lord, not in themselves. "And
their righteousness is of me, saith the Lord": of me, not of themselves; of me,
not of the law. And again; "Surely shall one say, in the Lord have I
righteousness and strength." Now, as I have already said, all this is to be
understood of the righteousness that was fulfilled by acts and works of
obedience, which the person of the Son of God accomplished in the days of his
flesh in the world; by that man, I say, "The Lord our righteousness," Jer. 23:6.
Christ indeed is naturally and essentially righteousness; but as he is simply
such, so he justifieth no man; for then he need not to bear our sins in his
flesh, and become obedient in all points of the law for us; but the
righteousness by which we stand just before God is a righteousness consisting of
works and deeds, of the doings and sufferings of such a person who also is
essentially righteousness. And hence, as before I have hinted, we are said to be
justified by the obedience and blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, by the doings and
sufferings of the Son of God. And hence again it is that he first is called King
of righteousness; that is, a King of righteousness as God-man, which of
necessity supposeth his personal performances; and after that, "King of peace,"
Heb. 7:1-3; for what he is naturally and eternally in his Godhead he is not to
us, but himself; but what he is actively and by works, he is not to himself, but
to us; so, then, he is neither King of righteousness nor of peace to us, as he
is only the Eternal Son of the Father, without his being considered as our
priest and undertaker "He hath obtained," by works of righteousness, "eternal
redemption for us," Heb. 9:12. So, then, the righteousness by which we stand
just before God is a righteousness inherent (only) in Christ, because a
righteousness performed by him alone.
Now that righteousness by which we stand just before God must be a righteousness
consisting of personal performances; the reason is, because persons had sinned,
this the nature of justice requireth, that "since by man came death, by man
should come also the resurrection from the dead," 1 Cor. 15:21. The angels,
therefore, for this very reason, abide under the chains of everlasting darkness,
because he "took not hold on them," Heb. 2:16, 17; that is, by fulfilling
righteousness for them in their nature: that is a blessed word, to you "To you
is born this day in the city of David a Saviour, which is Christ the Lord," Luke
2:11; to you, not to angels; to you is born a Saviour.
Thirdly, It is yet further evident that the righteousness by which we stand just
before God from the curse is a righteousness inherent, not in us, but Christ;
because it is a righteousness inherent, not in us, but Christ; because it is a
righteousness besides, and without the law itself. Now take away the law, and
you take away the rule of righteousness. Again; take away the rule, and the act
as to us must cease: "But now the righteousness of God without the law is
manifested, being witnessed by the law and the prophets," Rom. 3:21. So, then,
by such a righteousness we are justified as is not within the power of the law
to command of us.
Quest. But what law is that which hath not power to command our obedience in the
point of our justification with God?
Answ. The moral law, or that called the ten commandments. Therefore we are
neither commanded to love God, or our neighbour, as the means or part of our
justifying righteousness; nay, he that shall attempt to do these things to be
delivered from the curse thereby, by the scripture is holden accursed of God:
"As many as are of the works," or duties, "of the law, are under the curse,"
&c., Gal. 3:10. Because we are justified not by that of the law, but by the
righteousness of God without the law; that is, without its commanding of us,
without our obedience to it: "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," Rom. 3:24, 25. This is the righteousness of God without the law;
that is, without any of our obedience to the law. Wherefore the righteousness by
which we stand just in the sight of God cannot be inherent in us, but in Christ
the King thereof.
Fourthly, This is further made apparent by the capacity that God will consider
that soul in to whom he imputeth justifying righteousness; and that is, "as one
that worketh not," as one that stands "ungodly in the judgment of the law," Rom.
4:4, 5. But this I have handled before, and therefore shall pass it here.
Fifthly, to conclude: If any works of ours could justify us before God, they
would be works after faith received; but it is evident that these do not;
therefore the righteousness that justifies us from the curse before God is a
righteousness inherent only in Christ.
That works after faith do not justify us from the curse in the sight of God is
evident
Because no works of the saints can be justified by the moral law, considering it
as the law of works for life, Gal. 3:10. For this must stand a truth for ever,
Whatsoever justifieth us must be justified by the moral law, for that is it that
pronounceth the curse; unless, then, that curse be taken away by the work, the
work cannot justify us before God, Rom. 3:21. But the curse cannot be taken away
but by a righteousness that is first approved of by that law that so curseth;
for if that shall yet complain for want of a full satisfaction, the penalty
remaineth. This is evident to reason, and confirmed by the authority of God's
word, as hath been already proved; because the law, once broken, pronounceth
death, expecteth death, and executeth the same on him that will stand to the
judgment of the law; but no work of a believer is capable of answering this
demand of the law; therefore none of his works can justify him before God; for
the law, that notwithstanding complaineth.
No works of faith can justify us from the curse before God, because of the want
of perfection that is in the greatest faith in us. Now if faith be not perfect,
the work cannot be perfect; I mean, with that perfection as to please Divine
justice. Consider the person, one that hath to do with God immediately by
himself. Now, that faith is not capable of this kind of perfection it is
evident, because when men here know most, they know but in part, 1 Cor. 8:2;
13:12. Now he that knows but in part, can do but in part; and he that doth but
in part, hath a part wanting in the judgment of the justice of God. So, then,
when thou hast done all thou canst, thou hast done but part of thy duty, and so
art short of justification from the curse by what thou hast done.
Besides, it looks too like a monster that the works of faith should justify us
before God; because then faith is turned, as it were, with its neck behind it.
Faith, in its own nature and natural course, respecteth the mercy of God through
the Mediator Jesus Christ, and, as such, its virtue and excellency is to expect
justification by grace through him; but by this doctrine faith is turned round
about, and now makes a life out of what itself hath done: but methinks faith
should be as noble as its fruits, that being the first, and they but the fruits
of that.
Besides, seeing the work is only good because it floweth from faith, for faith
purifieth the heart (Acts 15:9), therefore faith is it that justifies all its
works. If, then, we be justified by either, it is by faith, and not by his
works; unless we will say there is more virtue in the less than in the greater.
Now what is faith but a believing, a trusting, or relying act of the soul? What,
then, must it rely upon or trust in? Not in itself, that is without scripture;
not in its works, they are inferior to itself; besides, this is the way to make
even the works of faith the mediator between God and the soul, and so by them
thrust Christ out of doors; therefore it must trust in Christ; and if so, then
no man can be justified from the curse before God by the works that flow from
faith.
To put all out of doubt; the saint, when he hath done what he can to bring forth
good works by faith, yet he dares not shew these works before God but as they
pass through the Mediator Christ, but as they are washed in the blood of the
Lamb. And therefore Peter saith, those sacrifices of ours that are truly
spiritual are only then accepted of God (1 Pet. 2:5) when offered up by Jesus
Christ. And therefore it is said again, that the prayers of the saints, which
are the fruits of faith, come up before the throne of God through the angel's
hand (Rev. 8:3, 4), that is, through the hand of Christ, through his golden
censer, perfumed with his incense, made acceptable by his intercession.
It is said in the book of the Revelation that it is granted to the bride, the
Lamb's wife, that she should be "arrayed in fine linen, clean and white; which
white linen is the righteousness of saints." This fine linen, in my judgment, is
the works of godly men, their works that sprang from faith. But how came they
clean? How came they white? Not simply because they were the works of faith. But
mark, "They washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb;
and therefore they stand before the throne of God," Rev. 7:14, 15. Yea,
therefore it is that their good works stand there too.
I conclude, then, "our persons are justified while we are sinners in ourselves."
Our works, even the works of faith, are no otherwise accepted but as they come
through Jesus Christ, even through his intercession and blood. So, then, Christ
doth justify both our person and works, not by way of approbation, as we stand
in ourselves or works before God, but by presenting of us to his Father by
himself, washing what we are and have from guilt in his blood, and clothing us
with his own performances. This is the cause of our acceptance with God, and
that our works are not cast forth of his presence.
THE USE.
Is justifying righteousness to be found in the person of Christ only? Then this
should admonish us to take heed of seeking it in ourselves, that is, of working
righteousness, thereby to appease the justice of God, lest by so doing we
affront and blaspheme the righteousness of Christ. He that shall go about to
establish his own righteousness, he, as yet, doth defiance to that which is of
God, of God's appointing, of God's providing; and that only wherewith the
justice of the law must be well pleased. Wherefore take heed, I say, of doing
such a thing, lest it provoke the eyes of the Lord's glory "When I shall say to
the righteous, that he shall surely live; if he trust to his own righteousness,
and commit iniquity, all his righteousness shall not be remembered; but for his
iniquity that he hath committed, he shall die for it," Ezek. 33:13. Mark, though
he be righteous, yea, though he have a promise of life, yet he shall die. But
why? Because he sinned against the Lord by trusting to his own righteousness,
therefore he must die for it.
There are some things that will preserve a man from splitting upon this rock.
As,
Get good acquaintance with the covenant of grace, and of the persons concerned
in the conditions of that covenant. The conditions of that covenant are, that a
righteousness shall be brought into the world that shall please the justice of
God and answer (and so remove the curse of) the law. Now he that doth perform
this condition is Christ; therefore the covenant is not immediately with man,
but with him that will be the Mediator betwixt God and man; "As for thee, by the
blood of thy covenant," Zech. 9:11, speaking of Christ. So, then, Christ, the
ManChrist, is be who was to bring in these conditions, to wit, everlasting
righteousness. And hence it is that God hath said, "Christ shall be the covenant
of the people"that is, he shall be our conditions to Godward, Dan. 9:23, 24. He
therefore is all our righteousness as to the point of our justification before
God; he is the covenant of the people, as well as the light of the Gentiles; for
as no man can see but in the light of his Spirit, so no man can stand but in and
by him, he is the covenant of the people, the conditions and qualifications of
the people, Isa. 52:6. So that to Godward Christ is all in all, and no man
anything at all. "He hath made with me an everlasting covenant"; with me, as I
stand in my head Christ, who, because he hath brought in everlasting
righteousness, therefore hath removed the curse of the law; wherefore he adds,
this covenant "is ordered in all things, and sure," 2 Sam. 23:5; because all
points that concern me as to redemption from the curse are taken away by Christ,
as before is discoursed. Look, then, upon Christ as the man, the mediator,
undertaker, and accomplisher of that righteousness in himself, wherein thou must
stand just before God; and that he is the covenant or conditions of the people
to God-ward, always having in himself the righteousness that the law is well
pleased with, and always presenting himself before God as our only
righteousness.
That this truth may be the more heartily inquired into by thee, consider thine
own perfections; I say, study how polluted thou art, even from the heart
throughout. No man hath a high esteem of the Lord Jesus that is a stranger to
his own sore. Christ's church is an hospital of sick, wounded, and afflicted
people; even as when he was in the world, the afflicted and distressed set the
highest price upon Jesus Christ. Why? They were sick, and he was the Physician;
but the whole had no need of him. And just thus it is now: Christ is offered to
the world to be the righteousness and life of sinners, but no man will regard
him save he that seeth his own pollution; he that seeth he cannot answer the
demands of the law, he that sees himself from top to toe polluted, and that
therefore his service cannot be clean as to justify him from the curse before
God, he is the man that must needs die in despair and be damned, or must trust
in Jesus Christ for life.
Further, This rule I would have all receive that come to Jesus Christ for life
and salvation.
Not to stick at the acknowledgment of sin, but to make that of it which the law
makes of it: "Acknowledge thine iniquity," saith the Lord, Jer. 3:13. This is a
hard pinch (I know what I say) for a man to fall down under the sense of sins by
acknowledging them to be what the Lord saith they are; to acknowledge them, I
Say, in their own defiling and polluting nature; to acknowledge them in their
unreasonable and aggravating circumstances; to acknowledge them in their
God-offending and soul-destroying nature, especially when the conscience is
burdened with the guilt of them. Yet this is duty "If we confess our sins, he is
faithful and just to forgive," 1 John 1:9; yea, to this is annexed the promise,
"He that confesseth, and forsaketh them, shall find mercy." This made David, as
it were, lay claim to the mercy of God "Wash me thoroughly (said he) from mine
iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin; for I acknowledge my transgression, and my
sin is ever before me." Though, then, thou art to blush and be ashamed when thou
rememberest thy sins and iniquities, yet do not hide them "He that hideth his
sins shall not prosper." Do not lessen them; do not speak of them before God
after a mincing way "Acknowledge thine iniquities, that thou hast sinned against
the Lord thy God, and hast scattered thy ways to the strangers under every green
tree; and ye have not obeyed my voice, saith the Lord," Jer. 3:13.
If we would come to Christ aright, we must only acknowledge our sins; we must
only acknowledge them, and there stop; stop, I say, from attempting to do aught
to present us good before God, but only to receive the mercy offered.
"Only acknowledge thine iniquities." Men are subject to two extremes, either to
confess sins notionally and by the halves, or else, together with the confession
of them, to labour to do some holy work, thereby to ease their burdened
conscience, and beget faith in the mercy of God, Hos. 5:14, 15. Now both these
are dangerous, and very ungodly, dangerous, because the wound is healed falsely;
and ungodly, because the command is transgressed: "Only acknowledge thy sin,"
and there stand (as David) "till thy guilt is taken away." Joshua stood before
the angel, from top to toe in filthy garments, till the Lord put other clothes
upon him, Zech. 3:3. In the matter of thy justification thou must know nothing,
see nothing, hear nothing, but thine own sins and Christ's righteousness "Only
acknowledge thine iniquities." Now the Saviour and the soul comes rightly
together; the Saviour to do his work, which is to spread his skirt over the
sinner; and the sinner to receive, by believing this blessed imputed
righteousness. And hence the church, when she came to God, lieth down in her
shame, and her confusion covereth her; and so lieth till pardon comes, Jer.
3:25.
THE SECOND USE.
I come now to the second use, Have faith in Christ. But what are we to
understand by faith?
Answer: Faith importeth as much as to say, receive, embrace, accept of, or trust
in, the benefit offered. All which are, by holy men of God, words used on
purpose to shew that the mercy of God, the forgiveness of sins, and eternal
life, are not to be had by doing or by the law; but by receiving, embracing,
accepting, or trusting to the mercy of God through Christ "We believe that
through the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they,"
John 1:12; 2 Cor. 4:1; 11:4; Col. 2:6; Heb. 11:13; 1 Tim. 1:15; Ephes. 1:12, 13;
Acts 15:11. Thus you see what the gospel is, and what faith doth do in the
salvation of the soul.
Now, that faith might be helped in this work (for great are they that oppose
it), therefore the Scriptures, the word of truth, hath presented us with the
invitation in most plain and suitable sentences; as, "That Christ came into the
world to save sinners, Christ died for our sins, Christ gave himself for our
sins, Christ bare our sins in his body on the tree; and, That God for Christ's
sake hath forgiven you." Further, as the invitations are plain and easy, so the
threatenings to the opposers are sore and astonishing "He that believeth not
shall be damned, Because they received not the love of the truth, that they
might be saved, God gave them up to strong delusions, that they all might be
damned," Mark 16:16; 2 Thess. 2:10-12.
Objection: But faith is said to be an act of obedience.
Ans . 1. And well it may; for it is the most submitting act that a man can do;
it throweth out all our righteousness; it makes the soul poor in itself; it
liveth upon God and Christ, as the almsman doth upon his lord; it consenteth to
the gospel that it is true; it giveth God and Christ the glory of their mercy
and merit; it loveth God for his mercy, and Jesus Christ for his service;
whatever good it doth, it still crieth, Hereby am I not justified, but he that
justifieth me is the Lord.
Well, but is there in truth such a thing as the obedience of faith? Then let
Christians labour to understand it, and distinguish it aright, and to separate
it from the law and all man's righteousness; and remember that it is a receiving
of mercy, an embracing of forgiveness, an accepting of the righteousness of
Christ, and a trusting to these for life. Remember again, that it putteth the
soul upon coming to Christ as a sinner, and to receive forgiveness as a sinner,
as such. We now treat of justification.
But a little to insert at large a few more of the excellences of it, and so draw
towards a conclusion.
First, The more thou believest for remission of sins, the more of the light of
the glorious gospel of Christ thou receivest into thy soul "For therein is the
righteousness of God revealed, from faith to faith," Rom. 1:16, 17; that is,
according to the decree of faith. Little faith seeth but little, but great faith
seeth much; and therefore he saith again, That by faith we have "access into the
grace of God," Rom. 5:2. The reason is,
Because faith, having laid hold upon Christ, hath found him "in whom are hid all
the treasures of wisdom and knowledge," Col. 2:2, 3. In him therefore it finds
and sees those heights and depths of gospel mysteries that are nowhere else to
be found; nay, let a man be destitute of faith, and it is not possible he should
once think of some of them.
By this means the Holy Spirit is plentifully received, Gal. 3:1-3. Now the
Spirit of God is a spirit of wisdom and revelation; but yet so as in the
knowledge of Christ, Eph. 1:17; otherwise the Spirit will shew to man not any
mighty thing, its great delight being to open Christ and to reveal him unto
faith. Faith indeed can see him, for that is the eye of the soul; and the Spirit
alone can reveal him, that being the searcher of the deep things of God; by
these therefore the mysteries of heaven are revealed and received. And hence it
is that the mystery of the gospel is called the "mystery of faith," or the
mystery with which faith only hath to do, 1 Tim. 3:9. Wouldst thou, then, know
the greatest things of God? Accustom thyself to the obedience of faith; live
upon thy justifying righteousness.
And never think that to live always on Christ for justification is a low and
beggarly thing, and as it were a staying at the foundation; for let me tell you,
depart from a sense of the meritorious means of your justification with God, and
you will quickly grow light, and frothy, and vain. Besides, you will always be
subject to errors and delusions; for this is not to hold the head from or
through which nourishment is administered, Col. 2:19. Further, no man that
buildeth forsakes the good foundation; that is the ground of his encouragement
to work, for upon that is laid the stress of all; and without it nothing that is
framed can be supported, but must inevitably fall to the ground. Again; why not
live upon Christ alway? and especially as he standeth the mediator between God
and the soul, defending thee with the merit of his blood, and covering thee with
his infinite righteousness from the wrath of God and curse of the law. Can there
be any greater comfort ministered to thee than to know thy person stands just
before God? Just and justified from all things that would otherwise swallow thee
up? Is peace with God and assurance of heaven of so little respect with thee
that thou slightest the very foundation thereof, even faith in the blood and
righteousness of Christ? and are notions and whimsies of such credit with thee
that thou must leave the foundation to follow them? But again; what mystery is
desirable to be known that is not to be found in Jesus Christ, as Priest,
Prophet, or King of saints? In him are hid all the treasures of them, and he
alone hath the key of David to open them, Col. 2:1, 2; Rev. 3:7. Paul was so
taken with Jesus Christ, and the knowledge of this, that he was crucified for
us, that he desired, nay, determined not to know any thing else among the
Corinthians, that itched after other wisdom, 1 Cor. 2:2.
Objection: But I see not that in Christ now that I have seen in him in former
days. Besides, I find the Spirit lead me forth to study other things.
Answer: To the first part of this objection I would answer several things
The cause why thou seest not that in Christ now which thou hast seen in him in
former days is not in Christ, but in thy faith; he is the same, as fresh, and as
good, and as full of blessedness, as when thou didst most rejoice in him, Heb.
1:11, 12.
And why not now, as well as formerly? God is never weary of being delighted with
Jesus Christ; his blood is always precious with God; his merits being those in
which justice hath everlasting rest, why shouldst thou wander or go about to
change thy way? Prov. 8:30; Jer. 2:36.
Sin is the same as ever, and so is the curse of the law. The devil is as busy as
ever; and beware of the law in thy members. Return, therefore, to thy rest, O
soul! for he is thy life, and the length of thy days.
Guilt is to be taken off now, as it was years ago; and, whether thou seest it or
no, thou sinnest in all thy works. How, then, canst thou stand clear from guilt
in thy soul who neglectest to act faith in the blood of the Lamb? There thou
must wash thy robes, and there thou must make them white, Rev. 7:14, 15.
I conclude, then, thou art a polluted, surfeited, corrupted, hardened creature,
whosoever thou art, that thus objectest.
But I find, sayest thou, as if the Spirit led me forth to study other matters.
Answer: What other matters? What matters besides, above, or beyond the glorious
gospel of Jesus Christ, and of our acceptance with God through him? What spirit,
or doctrine, or wisdom soever it be that centers not in, that cometh not from,
and that terminates not within, the bounds of the gospel of Jesus Christ, is not
worthy the study of the sons of God; neither is it food for the faith of Jesus
Christ (John 6:51); for that is the flesh of Christ (and that is eternal life.)
Whither will you go? Beware of the spirit of Antichrist; for "many false spirits
are gone out into the world." I told you before, that the Spirit of God is "the
spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Christ," Ephes. 1:17; John
14:15; 16; and that without and besides the Lord Jesus it discovereth nothing;
it is sent to testify of him; it is sent to bring his words to our remembrance;
it is sent to "take of his things and shew them unto us." Wherefore, never call
that the Spirit of Jesus which leads you away from the blood and righteousness
of Christ; that is but the spirit of delusion and of the devil, whose teachings
end in perdition and destruction. Tempt not Christ as they of old did. But how
did they tempt him? Why, in loathing the manna, which was the type of his flesh
and blood, which we are to eat of by believing. I say, tempt him not, lest you
be destroyed by the serpents, by the gnawing guilt of sin; for, take away
Christ, and sin remains, and there is no more sacrifice for sin: if so, thou
wilt be destroyed by the destroyer, Num. 21:5-7; 1 Cor. 10:10. But again
Living by faith begets in the heart a sonlike boldness and confidence to Godward
in all our gospel duties, under all our weaknesses, and under all our
temptations. It is a blessed thing to be privileged with a holy boldness and
confidence Godward, that he is on our side, that he taketh part with us, and
that he will plead our cause "with them that rise up against us," 2 Cor. 2:14;
4:17, 18; Gal. 4:27; Phil. 3:2, 3; Rom. 5:11. But this boldness faith helpeth us
to do, and also manageth in our heart. This is that which made Paul always
triumph and rejoice in God and the Lord Jesus; he lived the life of faith; for
faith sets a man in the favour of God by Christ, and makes a man see that what
befals him in this life, it shall, through the wisdom and mercy of God, not only
prove for his forwarding to heaven, but to augment his glory when he comes
there. This man now stands on high, he lives, he is rid of slavish fears and
carking cares, and in all his straits he hath a God to go to. Thus David, when
all things looked awry upon him, "encouraged himself in the Lord his God," 1
Sam. 30:6. Daniel also believed in his God, and knew that all his trouble,
losses, and crosses, would be abundantly made up in his God, Dan. 6:23. And
David said, "I had fainted unless I had believed." Believing, therefore, is a
great preservative against all such impediments, and makes us confident in our
God, and with boldness to come into his presence, claiming privilege in what he
is and hath, Ps. 27:13; Jon. 3:4, 5; Heb. 10:22, 23; Eph. 1:4-7. For by faith, I
say, he seeth his acceptance through the Beloved, and himself interested in the
mercy of God, and riches of Christ, and glory in the world to come. This man can
look upon all the dangers in hell and earth without paleness of countenance; he
shall meditate terror with comfort, "because he beholds the King in his beauty,"
Isa. 33:17, 18.
Again; living by faith makes a man exercise patience and quietness under all his
afflictions; for faith shews him that his best part is safe, that his soul is in
God's special care and protection, purged from sin in the blood of Christ. Faith
also shews him that after a little while he shall be in the full enjoyment of
that which now he believes is coming: "We, through the Spirit, wait for the hope
of righteousness by faith," Gal. 5:5. Wherefore, upon this ground it is that
James exhorteth the saints to whom he wrote to patience, because they knew the
harvest would in due time come, James 5:7-11. Faith lodgeth the soul with
Christ: "I know," saith Paul, "on whom I have believed" (and to whom I have
committed my soul), "and am persuaded (I believe it) that he is able to keep
that which I have committed unto him against that day"; therefore it were no
shame to him to wear a chain for his name and sake. Oh! it is a blessed thing to
see, I say, by the faith of the Lord Jesus, that we are embarked in the same
ship with him; this will help us greatly "both to hope and quietly wait for the
salvation of the Lord," 2 Tim. 1:12-16; Psalm 46:1-6; Lam. 3:26.
Further, I might add, that living by faith is the way to receive fresh strength
from heaven, thereby to manage thine every day's work with life and vigour; yea,
every look by faith upon Jesus Christ as thine doth this great work. It is said,
when Paul saw the brethren that came to meet him, "he thanked God, and took
courage," Acts 28:15. Oh! how much more, then, shall the Christian be blessed
with fresh strength and courage even at the beholding of Christ; "whom beholding
as in a glass, we are changed," even by beholding of him by faith in the word,
"into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord," 2
Cor. 3:18. But to be brief.
Make conscience of the duty of believing, and be as afraid of falling short here
as in any other command of God, John 6:46. "This is his commandment, that you
believe," 1 John 3:23. Believe, therefore, in the name of the Lord Jesus. This
is the will of God, that you believe. Believe, therefore, to the saving of the
soul. Unbelief is a fine-spun thread, not so easily discerned as grosser sins;
and therefore that is truly "The sin that doth so easily beset us," Heb. 12:1.
The light of nature will shew those sins that are against the law of nature; but
the law of faith is a command beyond what flesh or nature teacheth; therefore to
live by faith is so much the harder work; yet it must be done, otherwise thine
other duties profit thee nothing. For if a man give way to unbelief, though he
be most frequent in all other duties besides, so often as he worshippeth God in
these he yet saith, God is a liar in the other, even because he hath not
believed: "He that believeth not God, hath made him a liar; because he believeth
not the record that God gave of his Son. And this is the record, that God hath
given us eternal life, and this life is in his Son," 1 John 5:10, 11. So, then,
when thou givest way to unbelief; when thou dost not venture the salvation of
thy soul upon the justifying life that is in Christ, that is, in his blood,
&c.at once, thou givest the lie to the whole testament of God; yea, thou
tramplest upon the promise of grace, and countest this precious blood an unholy
and unworthy thing, Heb. 10:29. Now how, thou doing thus, the Lord should accept
of thy other duties, of prayer, alms, thanksgiving, self-denial, or any other,
will be hard for thee to prove. In the meantime remember, that faith pleaseth
God; and that without faith it is impossible to please him. Remember also, that
for this cause it was that the offering of Cain was not accepted: "By faith Abel
offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain"; for by faith Abel first
justified the promise of the Messias, by whom a conquest should be obtained over
the devil, and all the combination of hell against us: then he honoured Christ
by believing that he was able to save him; and in token that he believed these
things indeed, he presented the Lord with the firstlings of his flock (Heb.
11:4), as a remembrance before God that he believed in his Christ. And therefore
it is said, "By faith he offered"; by which means the offering was accepted of
God; for no man's offering can be accepted with God but his that stands
righteous before him first. But unbelief holdeth men under their guilt, because
they have not believed in Christ, and by that means put on his righteousness.
Again; he that believeth not, hath made invalid (what in him lies) the promise
of God and merits of Christ, of whom the Father hath spoken so worthily;
therefore what duties or acts of obedience soever he performeth, God by no means
can be pleased with him.
By this, therefore, you see the miserable state of the people that have not
faith "Whatever they do, they sin"; if they break the law, they sin; if they
endeavour to keep it, they sin; they sin, I say, upon a double account, first,
because they do it but imperfectly; and, secondly, because they yet stay upon
that, resisting that which is perfect, even that which God hath appointed. It
mattereth not, as to justification from the curse, therefore, men wanting faith,
whether they be civil or profane, they are such as stand accursed of the law,
because they have not believed, and because they have given the lie to the
truth, and to the God of truth. Let all men, therefore, that would please God
make conscience of believing; on pain, I say, of displeasing him; on pain of
being with Cain rejected, and on pain of being damned in hell. "He that
believeth not shall be damned," Mark 16:16. Faith is the very quintessence of
all gospel obedience, it being that which must go before other duties, and that
which also must accompany whatever I do in the worship of God, if it be accepted
of him. Here you may see a reason why the force and power of hell is so bent
against believing; Satan hateth all the parts of our Christian obedience, but
the best and chiefest most. And hence the apostle saith to the Thessalonians,
"That he sent to know their faith, lest by some means the tempter have tempted
them, and so his labour had been in vain," 1 Thess. 3:5. Indeed, where faith is
wanting, or hath been destroyed, all the labour is in vain, nothing can profit
any man, neither as to peace with God, nor the acceptance of any religious duty;
and this, I say, Satan knows, which makes him so lend his force against us.
There are three things in the act of believing which makes this grace
displeasing to the wicked one
Faith discovereth the truth of things to the soul; the truth of things as they
are, whether they be things that are of this world, or of that which is to come;
the things and pleasures above, and also those beneath. Faith discovereth to the
soul the blessedness, and goodness, and durableness of the one; the vanity,
foolishness, transitoriness of the other. Faith giveth credit to all things that
are written in the law and in the prophets, Acts 24:14, both as to the being,
nature, and attributes of God; the blessed undertaking of the Lord Jesus Christ;
the glory of heaven and torments of hell; the sweetness of the promise and
terror of the threatenings and curses of the word; by which means Satan is
greatly frustrated in his assaults when he tempteth either to love this world or
slight that which is to come, for he can do no great matter in these things to
any but those who want the faith "In vain is the snare laid in the sight of any
bird"; therefore he must first blind, and hold blind the minds of men, "that the
light of the glorious gospel of Christ, who is the image of God, should not
shine into them," else he can do no harm to the soul. Now faith is the eye of
the godly man, and that sees the truth of things, whatever Satan suggests,
either about the glory of this world, the sweetness of sin, the uncertainty of
another world, or the like, 1 John 5:4, 5; Prov. 1:17; 2 Cor. 4:4; Heb. 11:27.
Faith wraps the soul up in the bundle of life with God; it encloseth it in the
righteousness of Jesus, and presents it so perfect in that, that whatever he can
do, with all his cunning, cannot render the soul spotted or wrinkled before the
justice of the law; yea, though the man, as to his own person and acts, be full
of sin from top to toe, Jesus Christ covereth all; faith sees it, and holds the
soul in its godly sense and comfort of it. The man, therefore, standing here,
stands shrouded under that goodly robe that makes him glister in the eye of
justice. Yea, all the answer that Satan can get from God against such a soul is,
that he "doth not see iniquity in Jacob, nor behold perverseness in Israel: for
here Israel hath not been forsaken, nor Judah of his God, of the Lord of hosts,
though, as to their own persons, their land was filled with sin against the Holy
One of Israel," Numb. 23:21-23; Jer. 51:5; Rom. 6:14; Deut. 33:12. Thus,
therefore, the soul believing, is hid from all the power of the enemy, and
dwells safely under the dominion of grace.
Faith keeps the soul from giving credit to any of his insinuations; for whatever
Satan saith, either about the acceptance of my person or performances, so long
as I believe that both are accepted of God for Christ's sake, he suggesteth to
the wind; wherefore, faith doth the same against the devil that unbelief doth
against God. Doth unbelief count God a liar? Faith counts the devil a liar. Doth
unbelief hold the soul from the mercy of God? Faith holds the soul from the
malice of the devil. Doth unbelief quench thy graces? Faith kindleth them even
unto a flame. Doth unbelief fill the soul full of sorrow? Faith fills it full of
the joy of the Holy Ghost? In a word, doth unbelief bind down thy sins upon
thee? Why, faith in Jesus Christ releaseth thee of them all.
As faith keeps the soul from giving credit to the insinuations of Satan, so,
when he makes his assaults, it over-masters him, and makes him retreat; "Resist
the devil, and he will flee from you.Whom resist steadfast in the faith," James
4:7; 1 Pet. 5:9. Believe, as I have already said, that God loveth you, that the
blood of Christ was shed for you, that your person is presented complete before
him, through the righteousness of Christ, and Satan must give place; thy
crediting of the gospel makes him fly before thee; but thou must do it steadfast
in the faith; every waver giveth him advantage. And indeed this is the reason
that the godly are so foiled with his assaults, they do not resist him steadfast
in the faith; they often stagger through unbelief. Now, at every stagger he
recovereth lost ground again, and giveth battle another time. Besides, by this
and the other stagger he taketh heart to attempt by other means, and so doubleth
the affliction with manifold temptations. This is, I say, for want of being
steadfast "Above all, taking the shield of faith, wherewith you shall be able to
quench all the fiery darts of the wicked," Ephes. 6:16. To quench them, though
they come from him as kindled with the very fire of hell. None knows, save him
that feels it, how burning hot the fiery darts of Satan are; and how, when
darted, they kindle upon our flesh and unbelief; neither can any know the power
and worth of faith to quench them but he that hath it, and hath power to act it.
5. Lastly, if justifying righteousness be alone to be found in the person of
Jesus Christ, then this shews us the sad condition of two sorts of men
Of those that hang in doubt betwixt Christ and the law.
Of those that do professedly make denial of the sufficiency of this most blessed
righteousness.
The first sort, though they may seek life, yet, thus continuing, are never like
to find it. Wherefore? Because they seek it not by faith, but, as it were, by
the works of the law. Indeed, they will not be merit-mongers; they will not
wholly trust to the law; they will partly venture on Christ, and partly trust to
the law. Well, but therefore they shall be damned, because they trust to Christ
but in part, and in part, as it were, to the works of the law; for such sinners
make Christ but a Saviour in part, why then should he be their Saviour in whole?
No, because they halt between Christ and the law, therefore they shall fall
between Christ and the law; yea, because they will trust to their works in part,
they shall be but almost saved by Christ. Let not that man think that he shall
obtain any thing from the Lord. What man? Why, he that doubteth or wavereth in
his mind about the truth of the mercy of God in Christ. Therefore the
exhortation is, "But let him ask in faith; for he that wavereth (or, that
halteth between the law and Christ for life) is like a wave of the sea, driven
of the wind and tossed," Jam. 1:6, 7. In conclusion, he resteth nowhere "a
double-minded man is unstable in all his ways." This man, therefore, must
miscarry; he must not see the good land that flows with milk and honey; no, let
him not have a thought of life in his heart; let not that man think that he
shall receive any thing of the Lord.
This was the case of many in the primitive times, for whose sake this caution
was written; for the devout and religious Jew and proselyte, when they fell away
from the word of the gospel, they did not fall to those gross and abominable
pollutions in which the open profane, like sows and swine, do wallow, but they
fell from the grace of God to the law; or, at least, did rest betwixt them both,
doubting of the sufficiency of either; and thus, being fearful, they distrust;
wherefore, being found at length unbelieving, they are reputed of God
abominable, as murderers, whoremongers, sorcerers, idolators, and liars (Rev.
21:8); and so must have their portion in the lake (with them) that burns with
fire and brimstone. The reason is, because where Christ is rejected sin
remaineth, and so the wrath of God for sin. Neither will he be a Saviour in
part; he must be all thy salvation, or none "Let not that man think that he
shall receive any thing of the Lord," Jam. 1:7.
Not any thing. There is no promise for him, no pardon for him, no heaven for
him, no salvation for him, no escaping of his fire! What condition is this man
in! Yet he is a religious man, for he prays; he is a seeking man, a desiring
man, for he prays; but he halts between two, he leaneth to his righteousness,
and committeth iniquity. He is afraid to venture all upon the Lord Jesus Christ.
Let not that man think of receiving any thing from the Lord.
Yet the words suggest that he is apt to think he shall receive something,
because God is merciful, because his promise is great; but this expectation is
by this word cut off, and this sinner is cast away. Let not that man think, let
him forbear to think, of having anything at the hand of God. The Israelites
thought to go up to the land the day after they had despised it. Agag thought
the bitterness of death was past even that day in which he was hewn to pieces.
Rechab and Baanah his brother thought to have received reward of David that day
they were hanged over the pool in Hebron. "Let not that man think that he shall
receive anything of the Lord," Num. 14:40, 41; 1 Sam. 15:32, 33; 2 Sam. 4:12.
As for those that do professedly make denial of the sufficiency of this most
blessed righteousness, the whole book is conviction to them, and shall
assuredly, if it come to their hands, rise up in judgment against them. They
have rejected the wisdom and mercy of God; they have rejected the means of their
salvation; they have trampled upon the blood of the Son of God; wherefore
judgment waiteth for them, and fiery indignation, which shall devour the
adversaries.
To conclude. One word also to you that are neglecters of Jesus Christ: "How
shall we escape, if we neglect so great salvation?" Here, then, we may see how
we ought to judge of all such persons as neglect the Lord Jesus, under what
guise, name, or notion soever they be. We ought, I say, to judge of such, that
they are at present in a state of condemnation; of condemnation, "because they
have not believed in the only begotten Son of God," John 3:18.
It is true, there is no man more at ease in his mind (with such ease as it is)
than the man that hath not closed with the Lord Jesus, but is shut up in
unbelief. Oh! but that is the man that stands convict before God, and that is
bound over to the great assize; that is the man whose sins are still his own,
and upon whom the wrath of God abideth, verse 36; for the ease and peace of
such, though it keep them far from fear, is but like to that of the secure
thief, that is ignorant that the constable standeth at the door; the first sight
of an officer makes his peace to give up the ghost. Ah, how many thousands that
can now glory that they never were troubled for sin against God; I say, how many
be there that God will trouble worse than he troubled cursed Achan, because
their peace (though false, and of the devil) was rather chosen by them than
peace by Jesus Christ, than "peace with God by the blood of his cross," Col.
1:20.
Awake, careless sinners, awake! and arise from the dead, and Christ shall give
you light. Content not yourselves either with sin or righteousness, if you be
destitute of Jesus Christ (Eph. 5:14); but cry, cry, oh cry to God for light to
see your condition by; for light in the word of God, for therein is the
righteousness of God revealed. Cry, therefore, for light to see this
righteousness by; it is a righteousness of Christ's finishing, of God's
accepting, and that which alone can save the soul from the stroke of eternal
justice, Rom. 1:17.
There are six things that on man's part are the cause he receiveth not the
gospel of Christ, and so life by him.
They see not their state by nature, how polluted they are with original sin,
Eph. 2:2.
They see not the justice of God against sin; they know not him that hath said,
"Vengeance belongeth unto me, I will recompense," Heb. 10:30.
They cannot see the beauty of Jesus Christ, 2 Cor. 4:4.
Unbelief being mighty in them, they dare not venture their souls with Jesus
Christ (Rev. 21:8); they dare not trust to his righteousness, and to that only.
For,
Their carnal reason also sets itself against the word of faith, and cannot stoop
to the grace of Jesus Christ, 1 Cor. 2:14.
They love to have honour one of another (John 5:44); they love to be commended
for their own vain-glorious righteousness; and the fools think that because they
are commended of men, they shall be commended of God also: "How can you believe,
who seek honour one of another, and seek not the honour that cometh from God
only." This last thingto wit, desire of vain-glory, is the bane of thousands; it
is the legalist's bane, it is the civilian's bane, it is the formalist's bane,
yea, which yet is stranger, it is the bane of the vicious and debauched also;
for though there be a generation that, to one's thinking, have not regard to
righteousness, yet watch them narrowly, and they have their times of doing
something that looks like good, and though possibly it be but seldom, yet this
wretch counteth that for the sake of that God accepteth him, and counteth his,
glorious righteousness.
I might add a seventh cause, which is, want of serious meditation upon eternal
judgment, and what shall follow. This consideration, did it take a deep place in
the heart, would doubtless produce these workings of spirit after Jesus Christ
for justification that now is wanting in the most of men. This made Felix, yea,
it makes the devils, tremble; and would, I say, couldst thou deeply meditate,
make thee start and turn thy wanton thoughts into heavy sighs after God's mercy
in Jesus Christ, lest thou also come into their place of torment.
Before I conclude this use, I would lay down a few motives, if so be thou mayest
be prevailed with to look after thine own everlasting state.
Consider, God hath put man, above all the creatures in this visible world, into
a state of abiding for ever; they cannot be annihilated, they shall never again
be turned into nothing, but must live with God or the devil for ever and ever.
And though the scripture saith, "Man hath not pre-eminence over a beast in his
death," yet the beast hath pre-eminence above many men, for he shall not rise
again to come into judgment as man must, nor receive that dismal sentence for
sin and transgression as man shall; this, therefore, is worthy to be considered
with seriousness of all that have souls to be saved or damned "They must one day
come to judgment," there to stand before that Judge of all the earth whose eyes
are like a flame of fire, from the sight of which thou canst not hide one of thy
words, or thoughts, or actions, because thou wantest the righteousness of God.
The fire of his justice shall burn up all thy rags of righteousness wherewith by
the law thou hast clothed thyself, and will leave thee nothing but a soul full
of sin to bemoan, and eternal burnings to grapple with. Oh, the burnings that
will then beset sinners on every side, and that will eat their flesh and torment
their spirit with far more terror than if they were stricken with scorpions! And
observe it, the torment will there be higher than other where there is the guilt
of neglecting Jesus Christ, he being indeed the Saviour, and him that was sent
on purpose to deliver men from the wrath to come.
Consider, once past grace, and ever past grace. When the door is shut against
thee, it will open no more (Luke 13.), and then repentings, desires, wishings,
and wouldings, come all too late. Good may be done to others, but to thee, none;
and this shall be "because, even because thou hast withstood the time of thy
visitation," and not received grace when offered: "My God shall cast them away,
because they did not hearken unto him," Luke 19:41-43; Hos. 9:17. Cain was
driven out from the presence of God, for aught I know, some hundreds of years
before his death; Ishmael was cast away after seventeen years of age; Esau lived
thirty or forty years after he had sold his birthright. Oh, many, very many are
in this condition! for though God be gracious, yea, very gracious, yet he will
not be slighted nor abused always; there are plenty of sinners in the world, if
one will not, another will, Luke 8:37, 40. Christ was soon repulsed by and sent
away from the country of the Gadarenes; but on the other side of the sea there
were many ready with joy to receive him, Acts 13:46-48. So when the Jews
contradicted and blasphemed, "the Gentiles gladly received the word." Look to
it, sinner, here is life and death set before thee; life, if it be not too late
to receive it; but if it be, it is not too late for death to swallow thee up.
And tell me, will it not be dreadful to be carried from under the gospel to the
damned, there to lie in endless torment, because thou wouldst not be delivered
therefrom? Will it be comfort to thee to see the Saviour turn Judge? to see him
that wept and died for the sin of the world now ease his mind on
Christ-abhorring sinners by rendering to them the just judgment of God? For all
their abominable filthiness, had they closed with Christ, they had been shrouded
from the justice of the law, and should not have come into condemnation, "but
had been passed from death to life"; but they would not take shelter there; they
would venture to meet the justice of God in its fury, wherefore now it shall
swallow them up for ever and ever. And let me ask further, is not he a madman
who, being loaded with combustible matter, will run headlong into a fire upon a
bravado? or, that being guilty of felony or murder, will desperately run himself
into the hand of the officer, as if the law, the judge, the sentence, execution,
were but a jest, or a thing to be played withal? And yet thus mad are poor,
wretched, miserable sinners, who flying from Christ as if he were a viper, they
are overcome, and cast off for ever by the just judgment of the law. But ah! how
poorly will these be able to plead the virtues of the law to which they have
cleaved, when God shall answer them, "Whom dost thou pass in beauty? go down,
and be thou laid with the uncircumcised," Ezek. 32:19. Go down to hell, and
there be laid with those that refused the grace of God.
Sinners, take my advice, with which I shall conclude this use, Call often to
remembrance that thou hast a precious soul within thee; that thou art in the way
to thine end, at which thy precious soul will be in special concerned, it being
then time to delay no longer, the time of reward being come. I say again, bring
thy end home; put thyself in thy thoughts into the last day thou must live in
this world, seriously arguing thus, How if this day were my last? How if I never
see the sun rise more? How if the first voice that rings tomorrow morning in my
heavy ears be, "Arise, ye dead, and come to judgment?" Or, how if the next sight
I see with mine eyes be the Lord in the clouds, with all his angels, raining
floods of fire and brimstone upon the world? Am I in a case to be thus near mine
end? to hear this trump of God? or to see this great appearance of this great
God, and the Lord Jesus Christ? Will my profession, or the faith I think I have,
carry me through all the trials of God's tribunal? Cannot his eyes, which are as
a flame of fire, see in my words, thoughts, and actions enough to make me
culpable of the wrath of God? Oh! how serious should sinners be in this work of
remembering things to come, of laying to their heart the greatness and terror of
that notable day of God Almighty, and in examining themselves, how it is like to
go with their souls when they shall stand before the Judge indeed! To this end,
God make this word effectual. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John Bunyan Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Our Websites:
www.biblebb.com and
www.gospelgems.com
Email:
tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986