ADVERTISEMENT BY THE EDITOR.
It is difficult to understand those peculiar trials which called forth the
mighty energies of Bunyan's mind, unless we are acquainted with the times in
which he lived. The trammels of statecraft and priestcraft had been suddenly
removed from religion, and men were left to form their own opinions as to rites
and ceremonies. In this state of abrupt liberty, some wild enthusiasts ran into
singular errors; and Bunyan's first work on "Gospel Truths" was published to
correct them.
Then followed that alarm to thoughtless souls–"A Few Sighs from Hell"; and, in
1659, as a further declaration of the most important truths of revelation, this
work on the two covenants was sent forth to chastise error, and comfort the
saints of God. It was published many times during the author's life; and since
then, to a late period, very large impressions have been circulated. Upon a
subject of such vast importance–upon which hangs all our eternal interests–all
our indescribable joys or sorrows in a future and never-ending state–the
requirements of our Creator–and His gracious provision of pardoning mercy, upon
our failing to keep His Law–these are subjects of intense interest. How
important is it that all our researches into these solemn realities should be
guided simply by the revealed will of God! That was the fountain at which Bunyan
drunk in all his knowledge; and with simplicity, and most earnest desire to
promote the glory of God in the salvation of sinners, he here gives the result
of his patient, prayerful, painful investigation. The humble dependence upon
Divine mercy which the author felt is very striking.
He was sensible of his want of education; "no vain, whimsical, scholar-like
terms"–no philosophy from Plato or Aristotle. He felt, as to human teaching, his
weakness, but proved that, "when he was weak, then was he strong." He claimed an
interest in the fervent prayers of his fellow saints– "My heart is vile, the
devil lieth at watch, trust myself I dare not; if God do not help me, my heart
will deceive me." This was the proper spirit in which to enter upon so solemn a
subject; and the aid he sought was vouchsafed to him, and appears throughout
this important work. His first object is to define what is the Law, a strict
obedience to which is exacted upon all mankind. It was given to Adam, and was
afterwards more fully developed upon Mount Sinai.
It commands implicit, universal, perfect obedience, upon pain of eternal ruin.
He shows us that man, under the influence of that law, and while a stranger to
the Law of Grace, may repent and reform his conduct, become a member of a
Christian church, be a virgin waiting for his Lord, "but not step even upon the
lowest round of the ladder that reacheth to heaven." While man is a stranger to
the new birth, "his destiny is the lion's den; yea, worse than that, to be
thrown into Hell to the very devils." Bunyan in this, as well as all other of
his works, is awfully severe upon those who say, "Let us sin that grace may
abound," perverting the consolatory doctrine of Divine grace to their souls"
destruction. "What! because Christ is a Saviour, wilt thou be a sinner! because
His grace abounds, therefore thou wilt abound in sin! O wicked wretch! rake Hell
all over, and surely I think thy fellow will scarce be found. If Christ will not
serve their turn, but they must have their sins too, take them, Devil; if Heaven
will not satisfy them, take them, Hell; devour them, burn them, Hell!" "Tell the
hogs of this world what a hog-sty is prepared for them, even such an one as a
God hath prepared to put the devil and his angels into."
To the distressed, sin-beaten Christian, this book abounds with consolation, and
instructions how to overcome the devices of Satan, who will plant the Ten
Commandments, like ten great guns, to destroy thy hopes. "Learn to outshoot the
devil in his own bow, and to cut off his head with his own sword. Doth Satan
tell thee thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? Answer him, I am
glad you told me, I will trust the more to Christ's prayers, and groan, sigh,
and cry more earnestly at the Throne of Grace." To such readers as have been
driven to the verge of despair by a fear of having committed the unpardonable
sin, here is strong consolation, and a very explicit scriptural definition of
that awful crime. Want of space prevents me adding more than my earnest desire
that the reading of this treatise may be productive of solid peace and
comfort.–ED.
THE EPISTLE TO THE READER
READER,
If at any time there be held forth by the preacher the freeness and fullness of
the Gospel, together with the readiness of the Lord of Peace to receive those
that have any desire thereto, presently it is the spirit of the world to cry
out, Sure this man disdains the law, slights the law, and counts that of none
effect; and all because there is not, together with the Gospel, mingled the
doctrine of the law, which is not a right dispensing of the Word according to
truth and knowledge. Again; if there be the terror, horror, and severity of the
law discovered to a people by the servants of Jesus Christ, though they do not
speak of it to the end people should trust to it, by relying on it as it is a
covenant of works; but rather that they should be driven further from that
covenant, even to embrace the tenders and privileges of the second, yet, poor
souls, because they are unacquainted with the natures of these two covenants, or
either of them, therefore, "they say," "Here is nothing but preaching of the
law, thundering of the law"; when, alas, if these two be not held forth–to wit,
the Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace, together with the nature of the
one and the nature of the other–souls will never be able either to know what
they are by nature or what they lie under. Also, neither can they understand
what grace is, nor how to come from under the law to meet God in and through
that other most glorious covenant, through which and only through which, God can
communicate of Himself grace, glory, yea, even all the good things of another
world.
I, having considered these things, together with others, have made bold to
present yet once more to thy view, my friend, something of the mind of God, to
the end, if it shall be but blessed to thee, thou mayest be benefited thereby;
for verily these things are not such as are ordinary and of small concernment,
but do absolutely concern thee to know, and that experimentally too, if ever
thou do partake of the glory of God through Jesus Christ, and so escape the
terror and insupportable vengeance that will otherwise come upon thee through
His justice, because of thy living and dying in thy transgressions against the
Law of God. And therefore, while thou livest here below, it is thy duty, if thou
wish thyself happy for the time to come, to give up thyself to the studying of
these two covenants treated of in the ensuing discourse; and so to study them
until thou, through grace, do not only get the notion of the one and of the
other in thy head, but until thou do feel the very power, life, and glory of the
one and of the other: for take this for granted, he that is dark as touching the
scope, intent, and nature of the law, is also dark as to the scope, nature, and
glory of the Gospel; and also he that hath but a notion of the one, will barely
have any more than a notion of the other.
And the reason is this: because so long as people are ignorant of the nature of
the law, and of their being under it–that is, under the curse and condemning
power of it, by reason of their sin against it–so long they will be careless,
and negligent as to the inquiring after the true knowledge of the Gospel. Before
the commandment came–that is, in the spirituality of it–Paul was alive–that is,
thought himself safe; which is clear, (Rom 7:9,10 compared with Phil 3:5-11,
etc). But when that came, and was indeed discovered unto him by the Spirit of
the Lord, then Paul dies (Rom 7) to all his former life (Phil 3) and that man
which before could content himself to live, though ignorant of the Gospel, cries
out now, "I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of
Christ Jesus my Lord" (verse 8). Therefore, I say, so long they will be ignorant
of the nature of the Gospel, and how glorious a thing it is to be found within
the bounds of it; for we use to say, that man that knoweth not himself to be
sick, that man will not look out for himself a physician; and this Christ knew
full well when He saith, "The whole have no need of the physician, but the
sick";[1] that is, none will in truth desire the physician unless they know they
be sick. That man also that hath got but a notion of the law–a notion, that is,
the knowledge of it in the head, so as to discourse and talk of it–if he hath
not felt the power of it, and that effectually too, it is to be feared will at
the best be but a notionist in the Gospel; he will not have the experimental
knowledge of the same in his heart; nay, he will not seek nor heartily desire
after it; and all because, as I said before, he hath not experience of the
wounding, cutting, killing nature of the other.
I say, therefore, if thou wouldst know the authority and power of the Gospel,
labour first to know the power and authority of the law; for I am verily
persuaded that the want of this one thing–namely, the knowledge of the law, is
one cause why so many are ignorant of the other. That man that doth know the law
doth not know in deed and in truth that he is a sinner; and that man that doth
not know he is a sinner, doth not know savingly that there is a Saviour.
Again; that man that doth not know the nature of the law, that man doth not know
the nature of sin; and that man that knoweth not the nature of sin, will not
regard to know the nature of a Saviour; this is proved (John 8:31-36). These
people were professors, and yet did not know the truth–the Gospel; and the
reason was, because they did not know themselves, and so not the law. I would
not have thee mistake me, Christian reader; I do not say that the law of itself
will lead any soul to Jesus Christ; but the soul being killed by the law,
through the operation of its severity seizing on the soul, then the man, if he
be enlightened by the Spirit of Christ to see where remedy is to be had, will
not, through grace, be contented without the real and saving knowledge through
faith of Him.
If thou wouldst, then, wash thy face clean, first take a glass and see where it
is dirty; that is, if thou wouldst indeed have thy sins washed away by the blood
of Christ, labour first to see them in the glass of the law, and do not be
afraid to see thy besmeared condition, but look on every spot thou hast; for he
that looks on the foulness of his face by the halves, will wash by the halves;
even so, he that looks on his sins by the halves, he will seek for Christ by the
halves. Reckon thyself, therefore, I say, the biggest sinner in the world, and
be persuaded that there is none worse than thyself; then let the guilt of it
seize on thy heart, then also go in that case and condition to Jesus Christ, and
plunge thyself into His merits and the virtue of His blood; and after that, thou
shalt speak of the things of the law and of the Gospel experimentally, and the
very language of the children of God shall feelingly drop from thy lips, and not
till then (James 1).
Let this therefore learn thee thus much: he that hath not seen his lost
condition hath not seen a safe condition; he that did never see himself in the
devil's snare, did never see himself in Christ's bosom. "This my Son was dead,
and is alive again: he was lost, and is found." "Among whom we also had our
conversation in time past." [2] "But now are (so many of us as believe) returned
unto" Jesus Christ, "the" chief "Shepherd and Bishop of your souls."
I say, therefore, if thou do find in this treatise, in the first place,
something touching the nature, end, and extent of the law, do not thou cry out,
therefore, all of a sudden, saying, "Here is nothing but the terror, horror, and
thundering sentences of the law."
Again; if thou do find in the second part of this discourse something of the
freeness and fullness of the Gospel, do not thou say neither, "Here is nothing
but grace, therefore, surely, an undervaluing of the law." No; but read it quite
through, and so consider of it; and I hope thou shalt find the two covenants–
which all men are under, either the one or the other– discovered, and held forth
in their natures, ends, bounds, together with the state and condition of them
that are under the one, and of them that are under the other.
There be some that through ignorance do say how that such men as preach terror
and amazement to sinners are beside the book, and are ministers of the
letter–the law, and not of the Spirit–the Gospel; but I would answer them,
citing them to the Sixteenth of Luke, from the nineteenth verse to the end; and
(1 Cor 6:9,10; Gal 3:10; Rom 3:9-19) only this caution I would give by the way,
how that they which preach terror to drive souls to the obtaining of salvation
by the works of the law, that preaching is not the right Gospel preaching; yet
when saints speak of the sad state that man are in by nature, to discover to
souls their need of the Gospel, this is honest preaching, and he that doth do
so, he doth the work of a Gospel minister (Rom 3:9-25).
Again, there are others that say, because we do preach the free, full, and
exceeding grace discovered in the Gospel, therefore we make void the law; when
indeed, unless the Gospel be held forth in the glory thereof without confusion,
by mingling the Covenant of Works therewith, the law cannot be established. "Do
we then make void the law through faith," or preaching of the Gospel; nay, stay,
saith Paul, "God forbid: yea, we establish the law" (Rom 3:31).
And verily, he that will indeed establish the law, or set it in its own place,
for so I understand the words, must be sure to hold forth the Gospel in its
right colour and nature; for if a man be ignorant of the nature of the Gospel
and the Covenant of Grace, they, or he, will be very apt to remove the law out
of its place, and that because they are ignorant, not knowing "what they say,
nor whereof they affirm."
And let me tell you, if a man be ignorant of the Covenant of Grace, and the
bounds and boundlessness of the Gospel, though he speak and make mention of the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and also of the name of the new covenant,
and the blood of Christ, yet at this very time, and in these very words, he will
preach nothing but the law, and that as a Covenant of Works.
Reader, I must confess it is a wonderfully mysterious thing, and he had need
have a wiser spirit than his own that can rightly set these two covenants in
their right places, that when he speaks of the one he doth not jostle the other
out of its place. O, to be so well enlightened as to speak of the one–that is,
the law–for to magnify the Gospel; and also to speak of the Gospel so as to
establish, and yet not to idolize, the law, nor any particular thereof! It is
rare, and to be heard and found but in very few men's breasts.
If thou shouldst say, What is it to speak to each of these two covenants so as
to set them in their right places, and also to use the terror of the one so as
to magnify and advance the glory of the other? To this I shall answer also, read
the ensuing discourse, but with an understanding heart, and it is like thou wilt
find a reply therein to the same purpose, which may be to thy satisfaction.
Reader, if thou do find this book empty of fantastical expressions, and without
light, vain, whimsical, scholar-like terms, thou must understand it is because I
never went to school to Aristotle, or Plato, but was brought up at my father's
house, in a very mean condition, among a company of poor countrymen. But if thou
do find a parcel of plain, yet sound, true, and home sayings, attribute that to
the Lord Jesus His gifts and abilities, which He hath bestowed upon such a poor
creature as I am and have been. And if thou, being a seeing Christian, dost find
me coming short, though rightly touching at some things, attribute that either
to my brevity, or, if thou wilt, to my weaknesses, for I am full of them. A word
or two more, and so I shall have done with this.
First. And the first is, Friend, if thou do not desire the salvation of thy
soul, yet I pray thee to read this book over with serious consideration; it may
be it will stir up in thee some desires to look out after it, which at present
thou mayest be without.
Secondly, If thou dost find any stirrings in thy heart by thy reading such an
unworthy man's works as mine are, be sure that in the first place thou give
glory to God, and give way to thy convictions, and be not too hasty in getting
them off from thy conscience; but let them so work till thou dost see thyself by
nature void of all graces, as faith, hope, knowledge of God, Christ, and the
Covenant of Grace.
Thirdly, Then, in the next place, fly in all haste to Jesus Christ, thou being
sensible of thy lost condition without Him, secretly persuading of thy soul that
Jesus Christ standeth open-armed to receive thee, to wash away thy sins, to
clothe thee with His righteousness, and is willing, yea, heartily willing, to
present thee before the presence of the glory of God and among the innumerable
company of angels with exceeding joy. This being thus, in the next place, do not
satisfy thyself with these secret and first persuasions, which do or may
encourage thee to come to Jesus Christ; but be restless till thou dost find by
blessed experience the glorious glory of this the second covenant extended unto
thee, and sealed upon thy soul with the very Spirit of the Lord Jesus Christ.
And that thou mayest not slight this my counsel, I beseech thee, in the second
place, consider these following things–
First, If thou dost get off thy convictions, and not the right way (which is by
seeing thy sins washed away by the blood of Jesus Christ), it is a question
whether ever God will knock at thy heart again or no; but rather say, such an
one "is joined to idols, let him alone" (Hosea 4:17). Though he be in a natural
state, "let him alone." Though he be in or under the curse of the law, "let him
alone." Though he be in the very hand of the devil, "let him alone." Though he
be a-going post-haste to Hell, "let him alone." Though his damnation will not
only be damnation for sins against the law, but also for slighting the Gospel,
yet "let him alone." My Spirit, My ministers, My Word, My grace, My mercy, My
love, My pity, My common providences, shall no more strive with him; "let him
alone." O sad! O miserable! who would slight convictions that are on their
souls, which (if not slighted) tend so much for their good?
Secondly, If thou shalt not regard how thou do put off convictions, but put them
off without the precious blood of Christ being savingly applied to thy soul,
thou art sure to have the mis-spending of that conviction to prove the hardening
of thy heart against the next time thou art to hear the Word preached or read.
This is commonly seen, that those souls that have not regarded those convictions
that are at first set upon their spirits, do commonly, and that by the just
judgments of God upon them, grow more hard, more senseless, more seared and
sottish in their spirits; for some, who formerly would quake and weep, and
relent under the hearing of the Word, do now for the present sit so senseless,
so seared, and hardened in their consciences, that certainly if they should have
hell-fire thrown in their faces, as it sometimes cried up in their ears, they
would scarce be moved; and this comes upon them as a just judgment of God (2
Thess 2:11,12).
Thirdly, If thou do slight these, or those convictions that may be set upon thy
heart by reading of this discourse, or hearing of any other good man preach the
Word of God sincerely, thou wilt have the stifling of these or those convictions
to account and answer for at the day of judgment; not only thy sins, that are
commonly committed by thee in thy calling and common discourse, but thou shalt
be called to a reckoning for slighting convictions, disregarding of convictions,
which God useth as a special means to make poor sinners see their lost condition
and the need of a Saviour. Now here I might add many more considerations besides
these, to the end thou mayest be willing to tend and listen to convictions; as,
First, Consider thou hast a precious soul, more worth than the whole world; and
this is commonly worked upon, if ever it be saved, by convictions.
Secondly, This soul is for certain to go to Hell, if thou shalt be a slighter of
convictions.
Thirdly, If that go to Hell, thy body must go thither too, and then never to
come out again. "Now consider this, ye that" are apt to "forget God," and His
convictions, "lest He tear you in pieces, and there be none to deliver" (Psa
50:22).
But if thou shalt be such an one that shall, notwithstanding thy reading of thy
misery, and also of God's mercy, shall persist to go on in thy sins, know, in
the first place, that here thou shalt be left, by the things that thou readest,
without excuse; and in the world to come thy damnation will be exceedingly
aggravated for thy not regarding of them, and turning from thy sins, which were
not only reproved by them, but also for rejecting of that Word of Grace that did
instruct thee how and which way thou shouldst be saved from them. And so
farewell; I shall leave thee, and also this discourse, to God, who I know will
pass a righteous judgment both upon that and thee. I am yours, though not to
serve your lusts and filthy minds, yet to reprove, instruct, and, according to
that proportion of faith and knowledge which God hath given me, to declare unto
you the way of life and salvation. Your judgings, railings, surmisings, and
disdaining of me, that I shall leave till the fiery judgment comes, in which the
offender shall not go unpunished, be he you or me; yet I shall pray for you,
wish well to you, and do you what good I can. And that I might not write or
speak in vain, Christian, pray for me to our God with much earnestness,
fervency, and frequently, in all your knockings at our Father's door, because I
do very much stand in need thereof; for my work is great, my heart is vile, the
devil lieth at watch, the world would fain be saying, "Aha, aha, thus we would
have it"; and of myself, keep myself I cannot; trust myself I dare not; if God
do not help me, I am sure it will not be long before my heart deceive me, and
the world would have their advantage of me, and so God be dishonoured by me, and
thou also ashamed to own me. O, therefore, be much in prayer for me, thy fellow!
I trust, in that glorious grace that is conveyed from Heaven to sinners, by
which they are not only sanctified here in this world, but shall be glorified in
that which is to come; unto which, the Lord of His mercy bring us all.
John Bunyan.
These are several titles which are set over the several TRUTHS contained in this
book, for thy sooner finding of them–
THE FIRST PART
1. The words of the text opened, and the doctrines laid down. [This doctrine,
that there are some that are under the law, or under the Covenant of Works.] 2.
What the Covenant of Works is, and when it is given. 3. What it is to be under
the Covenant of Works. 4. Who they are that are under the Covenant of Works. 5.
What men may attain to that are under this Covenant of Works.
THE SECOND PART
1. The doctrine proved. 2. The new covenant made with Christ. 3. The conditions
of the new covenant. 4. The suretiship of Christ. 5. Christ the Messenger of the
new covenant. 6. Christ the Sacrifice of the new covenant. 7. Christ the High
Priest of the new covenant. 8. Christ completely fulfilled the conditions of the
new covenant. 9. The Covenant of Grace unchangeable; the opposers answered. 10.
Who, and how men are actually brought into the new covenant. 11. A word of
experience. 12. The privileges of the new covenant. 13. Two Hell-bred objections
answered. 14. A use of examination about the old covenant. 15. A legal spirit.
16. The use of the new covenant. 17. The unpardonable sin. 18. Objections
answered for their comfort who would have their part in the new covenant.
THE DOCTRINE OF THE LAW AND GRACE UNFOLDED
OR,
A DISCOVERY OF THE LAW AND GRACE; THE NATURE OF THE ONE, AND THE NATURE OF THE
OTHER, AS THEY ARE THE TWO COVENANTS, ETC.
"FOR YE ARE NOT UNDER THE LAW, BUT UNDER GRACE" (Rom 6:14)
[THE WORDS OF THE TEXT OPENED, AND THE DOCTRINES LAID DOWN.]
In the three former chapters, the Apostle is pleading for the salvation of
sinners by grace without the works of the law, to the end he might confirm the
saints, and also that he might win over all those that did oppose the truth of
this doctrine, or else leave them the more without excuse; and that he might so
do, he taketh in hand, first, to show the state of all men naturally, or as they
come into the world by generation, saying, in the Third Chapter, "There is none
righteous, no, not one; there is none that understandeth; there is none that
doeth good," etc. As if he had said, It seems there is a generation of men that
think to be saved by the righteousness of the law; but let me tell them that
they are much deceived, in that they have already sinned against the law; for by
the disobedience of one, many, yea all, were brought into a state of
condemnation (Rom 5:12-20). Now, in the Sixth Chapter he doth, as if he had
turned him round to the brethren, and said, My brethren, you see now that it is
clear and evident that it is freely by the grace of Christ that we do inherit
eternal life. And again, for your comfort, my brethren, let me tell you that
your condition is wondrous safe, in that you are under grace; for, saith he,
"Sin shall not have dominion over you"; that is, neither the damning power,
neither the filthy power, so as to destroy your souls: "For ye are not under the
law"; that is, you are not under that that will damn you for sin; "but" you are
"under grace," or stand thus in relation to God, that though you have sinned,
yet you shall be pardoned. "For ye are not under the law, but under grace." If
any should ask what is the meaning of the word "under," I answer, it signifieth,
you are not held, kept, or shut up by it so as to appear before God under that
administration, and none but that; or thus, you are not now bound by the
authority of the law to fulfill it and obey it, so as to have no salvation
without you so do; or thus, if you transgress against any one tittle of it, you
by the power of it must be condemned. No, no, for you are not so under it; that
is, not thus under the law. Again, "For ye are not under the law." What is meant
by this word "law"? The word "law," in Scripture, may be taken more ways than
one, as might be largely cleared. There is the law of faith, the law of sin, the
law of men, the law of works, otherwise called the Covenant of Works, or the
first or old covenant. "In that He saith a new covenant," which is the grace of
God, or commonly called the Covenant of Grace, "He hath made the first old,"
that is, the Covenant of Works, or the law (Heb 8:13). I say, therefore, the
word "law" and the word "grace," in this Sixth of the Romans, do hold forth the
two covenants which all men are under; that is, either the one or the other.
"For ye are not under the law"–that is, you to whom I do now write these words,
who are and have been effectually brought into the faith of Jesus, you are not
under the law, or under the Covenant of Works. He doth not, therefore, apply
these words to all, but to some, when he saith, "But ye"; mark, ye, ye
believers, ye converted persons, ye saints, ye that have been born. (YE) "for ye
are not under the law," implying others are that are in their natural state,
that have not been brought in to the Covenant of Grace by faith in Jesus Christ.
The words, therefore, being thus understood, there is discovered these two
truths in them–DOCTRINE FIRST. That there are some in Gospel times that are
under the Covenant of Works. DOCTRINE SECOND. That there is never a believer
under the law, as it is the Covenant of Works, but under grace through Christ.
"For ye," you believers, you converted persons, ye "are not under the law but
under grace"; or, for you are delivered and brought into or under the Covenant
of Grace.
DOCTRINE FIRST.
For the first, THAT THERE ARE SOME THAT ARE UNDER THE LAW, OR UNDER THE COVENANT
OF WORKS, see, I pray you, that Scripture in the Third of the Romans, where the
Apostle, speaking before of sins against the law, and of the denunciations
thereof against those that are in that condition, he saith, "What things soever
the law saith, it saith to them who are under the law"; mark, "it saith to them
who are under the law, that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world become
guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). That is, all those that are under the law as a
Covenant of Works, that are yet in their sins, and unconverted, as I told you
before. Again he saith, "But if ye be led by the Spirit, ye are not under the
law" (Gal 5:18). Implying again, that those which are for sinning against the
law, or the works of the law, either as it is the old covenant, these are under
the law, and not under the Covenant of Grace. Again he saith, "For as many as
are of the works of the law are under the curse" (Gal 3:10). That is, they that
are under the law are under the curse; for mark, they that are under the
Covenant of Grace are not under the curse. Now, there are but two covenants,
therefore, it must needs be that they that are under the curse are under the
law, seeing those that are under the other covenant are not under the curse, but
under the blessing. "So, then, they which be of faith are blessed with faithful
Abraham," but the rest are under the law (Gal 3:9).
Now I shall proceed to what I do intend to speak unto. FIRST. I shall show you
what the Covenant of Works, or the law, is, and when it was first given,
together with the nature of it. SECOND. I shall show you what it is to be under
the law, or Covenant of Works, and the miserable state of all those that are
under it. THIRD. I shall show you who they are that are under this covenant, or
law. FOURTH. I shall show you how far a man may go and yet be under this
covenant, or law.
[WHAT THE COVENANT OF WORKS IS, AND WHEN IT WAS GIVEN.]
FIRST. What this Covenant of Works is, and when it was given. [What this
covenant is.] The Covenant of Works or the law, here spoken of, is the law
delivered upon Mount Sinai to Moses, in two tables of stone, in ten particular
branches or heads; for this see Galatians 4. The Apostle, speaking there of the
law, and of some also that through delusions of false doctrine were brought
again, as it were, under it, or at least were leaning that way (verse 21) he
saith, As for you that desire to be under the law, I will show you the mystery
of Abraham's two sons, which he had by Hagar and Sarah; these two do signify the
two covenants; the one named Hagar signifies Mount Sinai, where the law was
delivered to Moses on two tables of stone (Exo 24:12; 34:1; Deu 10:1). Which is
that, that whosoever is under, he is destitute of, and altogether without the
grace of Christ in his heart at the present. "For I testify again to every man,"
saith he, speaking to the same people, that "Christ has become of no effect unto
you, whosoever of you are justified by the law," namely, that given on Mount
Sinai–"ye are fallen from grace" (Gal 5:3,4). That is, not that any can be
justified by the law; but this meaning is, that all those that seek
justification by the works of the law, they are not such as seek to be under the
second covenant, the Covenant of Grace. Also the Apostle, speaking again of
these two covenants, saith, "But if the ministration of death," or the law, for
it is all one, "written and engraven in stones," mark that, "was glorious, how
shall not the ministration of the Spirit," or the Covenant of Grace, "be rather
glorious?" (2 Cor 3:7,8). As if he had said, It is true, there was a glory in
the Covenant of Works, and a very great excellency did appear in it–namely, in
that given in the stones on Sinai–yet there is another covenant, the Covenant of
Grace, that doth exceed it for comfort and glory.
[When it was given.] But, though this law was delivered to Moses from the hands
of angels in two tables of stones, on Mount Sinai, yet this was not the first
appearing of this law to man; but even this in substance, though possibly not so
openly, was given to the first man, Adam, in the Garden of Eden, in these words:
"And the LORD God commanded the man, saying, Of every tree of the garden thou
mayest freely eat: but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt
not eat of it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die"
(Gen 2:16,17). Which commandment then given to Adam did contain in it a
forbidding to do any of those things that was and is accounted evil, although at
that time it did not appear so plainly, in so many particular heads, as it did
when it was again delivered on Mount Sinai; but yet the very same. And that I
shall prove thus–
God commanded Adam in Paradise to abstain from all evil against the first
covenant, and not from some sins only; but if God had not commanded Adam to
abstain from the sins spoken against in the Ten Commandments, He had not
commanded to abstain from all, but from some; therefore it must needs be that He
then commanded to abstain from all sins forbidden in the law given on Mount
Sinai. Now that God commanded to abstain from all evil or sin against any of the
Ten Commandments, when He gave Adam the command in the garden, it is evident
that He did punish the sins that were committed against those commands that were
then delivered on Mount Sinai, before they were delivered on Mount Sinai, which
will appear as followeth–
The First, Second, and Third Commandments were broken by Pharaoh and his men;
for they had false gods which the Lord executed judgment against (Exo 12:12);
and blasphemed their true God (Exo 5:2) which escaped not punishment (Exo 7:17-
25). For their gods could neither deliver themselves nor their people from the
hand of God; but "in the thing wherein they dealt proudly, He was above them"
(Exo 18:11).
Again; some judge that the Lord punished the sin against the Second Commandment,
which Jacob was in some measure guilty of in not purging his house from false
gods, with the defiling of his daughter Dinah (Gen 34:2).
Again; we find that Abimelech thought the sin against the Third Commandment so
great, that he required no other security of Abraham against the fear of
mischief that might be done to him by Abraham, his son, and his son's son, but
only Abraham's oath (Gen 21:23). The like we see between Abimelech and Isaac
(Gen 31:53). The like we find in Moses and the Israelites, who durst not leave
the bones of Joseph in Egypt, because of the oath of the Lord, whose name, by so
doing, would have been abused (Exo 13:19).
And we find the Lord rebuking His people for the breach of the Fourth
Commandment (Exo 16:27-29).
And for the breach of the Fifth, the curse came upon Ham (Gen 9:25-27). And
Ishmael dishonouring his father in mocking Isaac was cast out, as we read (Gen
21:9,10). The sons-in-law of Lot for slighting their father perish in the
overthrow of Sodom (Gen 19:14).
The Sixth Commandment was broken by Cain, and so dreadful a curse and punishment
came upon him that it made him cry out, "My punishment is greater than I can
bear" (Gen 4:13).
Again; when Esau threatened to slay his brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying,
"Why should I be deprived also of you both in one day?" hinting unto us, that
she knew murder was to be punished with death (Gen 27:45) which the Lord Himself
declared likewise to Noah (Gen 9:6).[3] Again; a notable example of the Lord's
justice in punishing murder we see in the Egyptians and Pharaoh, who drowned the
Israelites' children in the river (Exo 1:22); and they themselves were drowned
in the sea (Exo 14:27).
The sin against the Seventh Commandment was punished in the Sodomites, etc.,
with the utter destruction of their city and themselves (Gen 19:24,25). Yea,
they suffer "the vengeance of eternal fire" (Jude 7). Also the male Shechemites,
for the sin committed by Hamor's son, were all put to the sword (Gen 34:25,26).
Our first parents sinned against the Eighth Commandment in taking the forbidden
fruit, and so brought the curse on themselves and their posterity (Gen 3:16).
Again; the punishment due to the breach of this Commandment was by Jacob
accounted death (Gen 31:30,32). And also by Jacob's sons (Gen 44:9,10).
Cain sinning against the Ninth Commandment as in Genesis 4:9, was therefore
cursed as to the earth (Verse 11). And Abraham, though the friend of God, was
blamed for false- witness by Pharaoh, and sent out of Egypt (Gen 12:18-20) and
both he and Sarah reproved by Abimelech (Gen 20:9,10,16).
Pharaoh sinned against the Tenth Commandment, and was therefore plagued with
great plagues (Gen 12:15,17). Abimelech coveted Abraham's wife, and the Lord
threatened death to him and his, except he restored her again; yea, though he
had not come near her, yet for coveting and taking her the Lord fast closed up
the wombs of his house (Gen 20:3,18).
[Further Arguments.] I could have spoken more fully to this, but that I would
not be too tedious, but speak what I have to say with as much brevity as I can.
But before I pass it, I will besides this give you an argument or two more for
the further clearing of this, that the substance of the law delivered on Mount
Sinai was, before that, delivered by the Lord to man in the garden. As, first,
"death reigned over them that had not sinned after the similitude of Adam's
transgression"–that is, though they did not take the forbidden fruit as Adam
did; but had the transgression been no other, or had their sin been laid to the
charge of none but those that did eat of that fruit, then those that were born
to Adam after he was shut out of the garden had not had sin, in that they did
not actually eat of that fruit, and so had not been slaves to death; but, in
that death did reign from Adam to Moses, of from the time of his transgression
against the first giving of the law, till the time the law was given on Mount
Sinai, it is evident that the substance of the Ten Commandments was given to
Adam and his posterity under that command, "Eat not of the tree that is in the
midst of the garden." But yet, if any shall say that it was because of the sin
of their father that death reigned over them, to that I shall answer, that
although original sin be laid to the charge of his posterity, yet it is also for
their sins that they actually committed that they were plagued. And again, saith
the Apostle, "For where no law is, there is no transgression" (Rom 4:15). For
"sin is not imputed when there is no law; nevertheless death reigned from Adam
to Moses." saith he (Rom 5:13,14). But if there had been no law, then there had
been no transgression, and so no death to follow after as the wages thereof; for
death is the wages of sin (Rom 6:23) and sin is the breach of the law; an actual
breach in our particular persons, as well as an actual breach in our public
person (1 John 3:4). [4]
Again; there are no other sins than those against that law given on Sinai, for
the which those sins before mentioned were punished; therefore the law given
before by the Lord to Adam and his posterity is the same with that afterwards
given on Mount Sinai. Again; the conditions of that on Sinai and of that in the
garden are all one; the one saying, "Do this and live," the other saying the
same. Also judgment denounced against men in both kinds alike; therefore this
law it appeareth to be the very same that was given on Mount Sinai.
Again; the Apostle speaketh but of two covenants–to wit, grace and works–under
which two covenants all are; some under one, and some under the other. Now this
to Adam is one, therefore that on Sinai is one, and all one with this; and that
this is a truth, I say, I know, because the sins against that on Sinai were
punished by God for the breech thereof before it was given there; so it doth
plainly appear to be a truth; for it would be unrighteous with God for to punish
for that law that was not broken; therefore it was all one with that on Sinai.
Now the law given on Sinai was for the more clear discovery of those sins that
were before committed against it; for though the very substance of the Ten
Commandments were given in the garden before they were received from Sinai, yet
they lay so darkly in the heart of man, that his sins were not so clearly
discovered as afterwards they were; therefore, saith the Apostle, the law was
added (Gal 3:19). Or, more plainly, given on Sinai, on tables of stone, "that
the offence might abound,"– that is, that it might the more clearly be made
manifest and appear (Rom 5:20).
Again; we have a notable resemblance of this at Sinai, even in giving the law;
for, first, the law was given twice on Sinai, to signify that indeed the
substance of it was given before. And, secondly, the first tables that were
given on Sinai were broken at the foot of the mount, and the others were
preserved whole, to signify that though it was the true law that was given
before, with that given on Sinai, yet it was not so easy to be read and to be
taken notice of, in that the stones were not whole, but broken, and so the law
written thereon somewhat defaced and disfigured.
[Object.] But if any object and say, though the sins against the one be the sins
against the other, and so in that they do agree, yet it doth not appear that the
same is therefore the same Covenant of Works with the other.
Answ. That which was given to Adam in Paradise you will grant was the Covenant
of Works; for it runs thus: Do this and live; do it not and die; nay, "Thou
shalt surely die." Now there is but one Covenant of Works. If therefore I prove
that that which was delivered on Mount Sinai is the Covenant of Works, then all
will be put out of doubt. Now that this is so it is evident–
1. Consider the two covenants are thus called in Scripture, the one the
administration of death, and the other the administration of life; the one the
Covenant of Works, the other of grace; but that delivered on Sinai is called the
ministration of death; that, therefore, is the Covenant of Works. "But if,"
saith he, "the ministration of death, written and engraven on stones was
glorious," (2 Cor 3:7).
2. The Apostle, writing to the Galatians, doth labour to beat them off from
trusting in the Covenant of Works; but when he comes to give a discovery of that
law or covenant–he labouring to take them off from trusting in it–he doth
plainly tell them it is that which was given on Sinai (Gal 4:24,25). Therefore
that which was delivered in two tables of stone on Mount Sinai, is the very same
thing that was given before to Adam in Paradise, they running both alike; that
in the garden saying, Do this and live; but in the day thou eatest thereof–or
dost not do this–thou shalt surely die.
And so is this on Sinai, as is evident when he saith, "the man which doeth those
things shall live by them" (Rom 10:5). And in case they break them, even any of
them, it saith, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things which are
written in the (whole) book of the law to do them" (Gal 3:10). Now this being
thus cleared, I shall proceed.
[WHAT IT IS TO BE UNDER THE COVENANT OF WORKS.]
SECOND. A second thing to be spoken to is this: to show what it is to be under
the law as it is a Covenant of Works; to which I shall speak, and that thus–
To be under the law as it is a Covenant of Works, is to be bound, upon pain of
eternal damnation, to fulfill, and that completely and continually, every
particular point of the Ten Commandments, by doing them–Do this, and then thou
shalt live; otherwise, "cursed is every one that continueth not in all," in
every particular thing or "things which are written in the book for the law to
do them" (Gal 3:10). That man that is under the first covenant stands thus, and
only thus, as he is under that covenant, or law. Poor souls, through ignorance
of the nature of that Covenant of Works, the law that they are under, they do
not think their state to be half so bad as it is; when, alas! there is none in
the world in such a sad condition again besides themselves; for, indeed, they do
not understand these things. He that is under the law, as it is a Covenant of
Works, is like the man that is bound by the law of his king, upon pain of
banishment, or of being hanged, drawn, and quartered, not to transgress any of
the commandments of the king; so here, they that are under the Covenant of
Works, they are bound, upon pain of eternal banishment and condemnation, to keep
within the compass of the law of the God of Heaven. The Covenant of Works may,
in this case, be compared to the laws of the Medes and Persians, which being
once made, cannot be altered. Daniel 6:8. You find that when there was a law
made and given forth that none should ask a petition of any, God or man, but of
the king only; this law being established by the king (verse 9). Daniel breaking
of it, let all do whatever they can, Daniel must go into the lions' den (verse
16). So here, I say, there being a law given, and sealed with the Truth and the
Word of God,– how that "the soul that sinneth, it shall die" (Eze 18:4).
Whosoever doth abide under this covenant, and dieth under the same, they must
and shall go into the lion's den; yea, worse than that, for they shall be thrown
into Hell, to the very devils.
But to speak in a few particulars for thy better understanding herein, know,
First. That the Law of God, or Covenant of Works, doth not contain itself in one
particular branch of the law, but doth extend itself into many, even into all
the Ten Commandments, and those ten into very many more, as might be showed; so
that the danger doth not lie in the breaking of one or two of these ten only,
but it doth lie even in the transgression of any one of them. As you know, if a
king should give forth ten particular commands to be obeyed by his subjects upon
pain of death; now if any man doth transgress against any one of these ten, he
doth commit treason, as if he had broke them all, and lieth liable to have the
sentence of the law as certainly passed on him as if he had broken every
particular of them.
Second. Again; you know that the laws being given forth by the king, which if a
man keep and obey for a long time, yet if at the last he slips and breaks those
laws, he is presently apprehended, and condemned by that law. These things are
clear as touching the Law of God, as it is a Covenant of Works. If a man doth
fulfill nine of the Commandments, and yet breaketh but one, that being broken
will as surely destroy him and shut him out from the joys of Heaven as if he had
actually transgressed against them all; for indeed, in effect, so he hath. There
is a notable Scripture for this in the Epistle of James, Second Chapter, at the
tenth verse, that runs thus:–"For whosoever shall keep the whole law, and yet
offend in one point, he is guilty of all,"–that is, he hath in effect broken
them all, and shall have the voice of them all cry out against him. And it must
needs be so, saith James, because "He that said," or that law which said, "Do
not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now, if thou commit no adultery,
yet if thou kill, thou art become a transgressor of the law" (Verse 11). As
thus; it may be thou didst never make to thyself a god of stone or wood, or at
least not to worship them so greatly and so openly as the heathen do, yet if
thou hast stolen, born false witness, or lusted after a woman in thy heart (Matt
5:28) thou hast transgressed the law, and must for certain, living and dying
under that covenant, perish for ever by the law; for the law hath resolved on
that before-hand, saying, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in ALL
things"; mark, I pray you, "in all things"; that is the Word, and that seals the
doctrine.
Third. Again; though a man doth not covet, steal, murder, worship gods of wood
and stone, etc., yet if he do take the Lord's name in vain, he is for ever gone,
living and dying under that covenant. "Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD
thy God in vain"; there is the command. But how if we do? Then he saith, "the
LORD will not hold him guiltless that taketh His name in vain." No; though thou
live as holy as ever thou canst, and walk as circumspectly as ever any did, yet
if thou dost take the Lord's name in vain, thou art gone by that covenant: "For
I will not," mark "I will not," let him be in never so much danger, "I will not
hold him guiltless that taketh My name in vain" (Exo 20:7). And so likewise for
any other of the ten, do but break them, and thy state is irrecoverable, if thou
live and die under that covenant.
Fourth. Though thou shouldest fulfill this covenant, or law, even all of it, for
a long time, ten, twenty, forty, fifty, or threescore years, yet if thou do
chance to slip and break one of them but once before thou die, thou art also
gone and lost by that covenant; for mark, "Cursed is every one that continueth
not in all things," that continueth not in ALL things, mark that, "which are
written in the book of the law to do them." But if a man doth keep all the Law
of God his whole lifetime, and only sin one time before he dies, that one sin is
a breach of the law, and he hath not continued in doing the things contained
therein. For, so to continue, according to the sense of this Scripture, is to
hold on without any failing, either in thought, word, or deed; therefore, I say,
though a man doth walk up to the law all his lifetime, but only at the very last
sin one time before he die, he is sure to perish for ever, dying under that
covenant. For, my friends, you must understand that the Law of God is "yea," as
well as the Gospel; and as they that are under the Covenant of Grace shall
surely be saved by it, so, even so, they that are under the Covenant of Works
and the law, they shall surely be damned by it, if continuing there. This is the
Covenant of Works and the nature of it–namely, not to abate anything, no, not a
mite, to him that lives and dies under it: "I tell thee," saith Christ, "thou
shalt not depart thence," that is, from under the curse, "till thou hast paid
the very last mite" (Luke 12:59).
Fifth. Again; you must consider that this law doth not only condemn words and
actions, as I said before, but it hath authority to condemn the most secret
thoughts of the heart, being evil; so that if thou do not speak any word that is
evil, as swearing, lying, jesting, dissembling, or any other word that tendeth
to, or savoureth of sin, yet if there should chance to pass but one vain thought
through thy heart but once in all thy lifetime, the law taketh hold of it,
accuseth, and also will condemn thee for it. You may see one instance for all in
(Matt 5:27,28) where Christ saith, that though a man doth not lie with a woman
carnally, yet if he doth but look on her, and in his heart lust after her, he is
counted by the law, being rightly expounded, such an one that hath committed the
sin, and thereby hath laid himself under the condemnation of the law. And so
likewise of all the rest of the commands; if there be any thought that is evil
do but pass through thy heart, whether it be against God or against man in the
least measure, though possibly not discerned of thee, or by thee, yet the law
takes hold of thee therefore, and doth by its authority, both cast, condemn, and
execute thee for thy so doing. "The thought of foolishness is sin" (Prov 24:9).
Sixth. Again; the law is of that nature and severity, that it doth not only
inquire into the generality of thy life as touching several things, whether thou
art upright there or no; but the law doth also follow thee into all thy holy
duties, and watcheth over thee there, to see whether thou dost do all things
aright there– that is to say, whether when thou dost pray thy heart hath no
wandering thoughts in it; whether thou do every holy duty thou doest perfectly
without the least mixture of sin; and if it do find thee to slip, or in the
least measure to fail in any holy duty that thou dost perform, the law taketh
hold on that, and findeth fault with that, so as to render all the holy duties
that ever thou didst unavailable because of that. I say, if, when thou art a
hearing, there is but one vain thought, or in praying, but one vain thought, or
in any other thing whatsoever, let it be civil or spiritual, one vain thought
once in all thy lifetime will cause the law to take such hold on it, that for
that one thing it doth even set open all the floodgates of God's wrath against
thee, and irrecoverably by that covenant it doth bring eternal vengeance upon
thee; so that, I say, look which ways thou wilt, and fail wherein thou wilt, and
do it as seldom as ever thou canst, either in civil or spiritual things, as
aforesaid–that is, either in the service of God, or in thy employments in the
world, as thy trade or calling, either in buying or selling any way, in anything
whatsoever; I say, if in any particular it find thee tardy, or in the least
measure guilty, it calleth thee an offender, it accuseth thee to God, it puts a
stop to all the promises thereof that are joined to the law, and leaves thee
there as a cursed transgressor against God, and a destroyer of thy own soul. [5]
Here I would have thee, by the way, for to take notice, that it is not my intent
at this time to enlarge on the several commands in particular–for that would be
very tedious both for me to write and thee to read; only thus much I would have
thee to do at the reading hereof–make a pause, and sit still one quarter of an
hour, and muse a little in thy mind thus with thyself, and say, Did I ever break
the law; yea or no? Had I ever, in all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed
through my heart since I was born; yea or no? And if thou findest thyself
guilty, as I am sure thou canst not otherwise choose but do, unless thou shut
thy eyes against thy every day's practice, then, I say, conclude thyself guilty
of the breach of the first covenant. And when that this is done, be sure, in the
next place, thou do not straightway forget it and put it out of thy mind, that
thou art condemned by the same covenant; and then do not content thyself until
thou do find that God hath sent thee a pardon from Heaven through the merits of
our Lord Jesus Christ, the mediator of the second covenant. And if God shall but
give thee a heart to take this my counsel, I do make no question but these words
spoken by me, will prove an instrument for the directing of thy heart to the
right remedy for the salvation of thy soul.
Thus much now touching the law, and the severity of it upon the person that is
found under it, having offended or broken any particular of it, either in
thought, word, or action; and now, before I do proceed to the next thing, I
shall answer four objections that do lie in my way, and also, such as do stumble
most part of the world.
[Four Objections.]
Object. First. But you will say, Methinks you speak very harsh; it is enough to
daunt a body. Set the case, therefore, that a man, after he hath sinned and
broken the law, repenteth of his wickedness and promiseth to do so no more, will
not God have mercy then, and save a poor sinner then?
Answ. I told you before, that the covenant, once broken, will execute upon the
offender that which it doth threaten to lay upon him; and as for your supposing
that your repenting and promising to do so no more may help well, and put you in
a condition to attain the mercy of God by the law, these thoughts do flow from
gross ignorance both of the nature of sin, and also of the nature of the justice
of God. And if I were to give you a description of one in a lost condition for
the present, I would brand him out with such a mark of ignorance as this is.
Answ. 2. [The first answer is expounded by the second]. The law, as it is a
Covenant of Works, doth not allow of any repentance unto life to those that live
and die under it; for the law being once broken by thee, never speaks good unto
thee, neither doth God at all regard thee, if thou be under that covenant,
notwithstanding all thy repenting and also promises to do so no more. No, saith
the law, thou hast sinned, therefore I must curse thee; for it is My nature to
curse, even, and nothing else but curse, every one that doth in any point
transgress against Me (Gal 3:10). They brake My covenant "and I regarded them
not, saith the Lord" (Heb 8:9). Let them cry, I will not regard them; let them
repent, I will not regard them; they have broken My covenant, and done that in
which I delighted not; therefore, by that covenant I do curse, and not bless;
damn, and not save; frown, and not smile; reject, and not embrace; charge sin
and not forgive it. They brake My covenant "and I regarded them not"; so that I
say, if thou break the law, the first covenant, and thou being found there, God
looking on thee through that, He hath no regard on thee, no pity for thee, no
delight in thee.
Object. Second. But hath not the law promises as well as threatenings? saying,
"The man which doeth these things shall live," mark, he shall live, "by them,"
or in them (Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12).
Answ. 1. To break the Commandments is not to keep or fulfill the same; but thou
hast broken them, therefore the promise doth not belong to thee by that
covenant. 2. The promises that are of the law are conditional, and so not
performed unless there be a full and continual obedience to every particular of
it, and that without the least sin. "Do this"–mark, do this–and afterwards thou
shalt live; but if thou break one point of it once in all thy life, thou hast
not done the law; therefore the promises following the law do not belong unto
thee if one sin hath been committed by thee. As thus, I will give you a plain
instance– "Set the case, there be a law made by the king, that if any man speak
a word against him he must be put to death, and this must not be revoked, but
must for certain be executed on the offender; though there be a promise made to
them that do not
speak a word against him, that they should have great love from him; yet this
promise is nothing to the offender; he is like to have no share in it, or to be
ever the better for it; but contrariwise, the law that he hath offended must be
executed on him; for his sin shutteth him out from a share of, or in, the
promises." So it is here, there is a promise made indeed, but to whom? Why, it
is to none but those that live without sinning against the law; but if thou, I
say, sin one time against it in all thy lifetime, thou art gone, and not one
promise belongs to thee if thou continue under this covenant. Methinks the
prisoners at the bar, having offended the law, and the charge of a just judge
towards them, do much hold forth the law, as it is a Covenant of Works, and how
it deals with them that are under it. The prisoner having offended, cries out
for mercy; Good, my lord, mercy, saith he, pray, my lord, pity me. The judge
saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of death should not be
passed upon thee? Why, nothing but this, I pray my lord be merciful. But he
answers again, Friend, the law must take place, the law must not be broken. The
prisoner saith, Good, my lord, spare me, and I will never do so any more. The
judge, notwithstanding the man's outcries and sad condition, must, according to
the tenor of the law, pass judgment upon him, and the sentence of condemnation
must be read to the prisoner, though it makes him fall down dead to hear it, if
he executes the law as he ought to do. And just thus it is concerning the Law of
God.
Object. Third. Ay, but sometimes, for all your haste, the judge doth also give
some pardons, and forgives some offenders, notwithstanding their offences,
though he be a judge.
Answ. It is not because the law is merciful, but because there is manifested the
love of the judge, not the love of the law. I beseech you to mark this
distinction; for if a man that hath deserved death by the law be,
notwithstanding this, forgiven his offence, it is not because the law saith,
"spare him"; but it is the love of the judge or chief magistrate that doth set
the man free from the condemnation of the law. But mark; here the law of men and
the Law of God do differ; the law of man is not so irrevocable; but if the
Supreme please he may sometimes grant a pardon without satisfaction given for
the offence; but the Law of God is of this nature, that if a man be found under
it, and a transgressor, or one that hath transgressed against it, before that
prisoner can be released there must be a full and complete satisfaction given to
it, either by the man's own life or by the blood of some other man; for "without
shedding of blood is no remission" (Heb 9:22); that is, there is no deliverance
from under the curse of the Law of God; and therefore, however the law of man
may be made of none effect sometimes by showing mercy without giving of a full
satisfaction, yet the Law of God cannot be so contented, nor at the least give
way, that the person offending that should escape the curse and not be damned,
except some one do give a full and complete satisfaction to it for him, and
bring the prisoner into another covenant–to wit, the Covenant of Grace, which is
more easy, and soul-refreshing, and sin-pardoning.
I say, therefore, you must understand that if there be a law made that reaches
the life, to take it away for the offence given by the offender against it, then
it is clear that if the man be spared and saved, it is not the law that doth
give the man this advantage, but it is the mere mercy of the king, either
because he hath a ransom or satisfaction some other way, or being provoked
thereto out of his own love to the person whom he saveth. Now, thou also having
transgressed and broken the Law of God, if the law be not executed upon thee, it
is not because the law is merciful, or can pass by the least offence done by
thee, but thy deliverance comes another way; therefore, I say, however it be by
the laws of men where they be corrupted and perverted, yet the Law of God is of
that nature, that if it hath not thy own blood or the blood of some other
man–for it calls for no less, for to ransom thee from the curse of it, being due
to thee for thy transgression, and to satisfy the cries, the doleful cries,
thereof, and ever for to present thee pure and spotless before God,
notwithstanding this fiery law–thou art gone if thou hadst a thousand souls; for
"without shedding of blood there is no remission" (Heb 9:22); no forgiveness of
the least sin against the law.
Object. Fourth. But, you will say, "I do not only repent me of my former life,
and also promise to do so no more, but now I do labour to be righteous, and to
live a holy life; and now, instead of being a breaker of the law, I do labour to
fulfill the same. What say you to that?"
Answ. Set the case, thou couldst walk like an angel of God; set the case, thou
couldst fulfill the whole law, and live from this day to thy life's end without
sinning in thought, word, or deed, which is impossible; but, I say, set the case
it should be so, why, thy state is as bad, if thou be under the first covenant,
as ever it was. For, first, I know thou darest not say but thou hast at one time
or other sinned; and if so, then the law hath condemned thee; and if so, then I
am sure that thou, with all thy actions and works of righteousness, canst not
remove the dreadful and irresistible curse that is already laid upon thee by
that law which thou art under, and which thou hast sinned against; though thou
livest the holiest life that any man can live in this world, being under the law
of works, and so not under the Covenant of Grace, thou must be cut off without
remedy; for thou hast sinned, though afterwards thou live never so well.
The reasons for this that hath been spoken are these–
First, The nature of God's justice calls for it–that is, it calls for
irrecoverable ruin on them that transgress against this law; for justice gave
it, and justice looks to have it completely and continually obeyed, or else
justice is resolved to take place, and execute its office, which is to punish
the transgressor against it. You must understand that the justice of God is as
unchangeable as His love; His justice cannot change its nature; justice it is,
if it be pleased; and justice it is, if it be displeased. The justice of God in
this case may be compared to fire; there is a great fire made in some place; if
thou do keep out of it, it is fire; if thou do fall into it, thou wilt find it
fire; and therefore the Apostle useth this as an argument to stir up the Hebrews
to stick close to Jesus Christ, lest they fall under the justice of God by these
words, "For our God is a consuming fire" (Heb 12:29); into which, if thou fall,
it is not for thee to get out again, as it is with some that fall into a
material fire; no, but he that falls into this, he must lie there for ever; as
it is clear where he saith, "Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings,
and with devouring fire?" (Isa 33:14). For justice once offended knoweth not how
to show any pity or compassion to the offender, but runs on him like a lion,
takes him by the throat, throws him into prison, and there he is sure to lie,
and that to all eternity, unless infinite satisfaction be given to it, which is
impossible to be given by any of us the sons of Adam.
Secondly, The faithfulness of God calls for irrecoverable ruin to be poured out
on those that shall live and die under this covenant. If thou, having sinned but
one sin against this covenant, and shouldst afterwards escape damning, God must
be unfaithful to Himself and to His Word, which both agree as one. First, he
would be unfaithful to Himself; to Himself, that is, to His justice, holiness,
righteousness, wisdom, and power, if He should offer to stop the running out of
His justice for the damning of them that have offended it. And secondly, He
would be unfaithful to His Word, His written Word, and disown, deny, and break
that, of which He hath said, "It is easier for Heaven and earth to pass, than
one tittle of the law to fail," or be made of none effect (Luke 16:17). Now, if
He should not, according to His certain declarations therein, take vengeance on
those that fall and die within the threat and sad curses denounced, in that His
Word could not be fulfilled.
Thirdly, Because otherwise he would disown the sayings of His Prophets, and
gratify the sayings of His enemies; His Prophets say He will take vengeance; His
enemies say He will not; His Prophets say He will remember their iniquities, and
recompense them into their bosom; but His enemies say they should do well, and
they shall have peace, though they walk after the imaginations of their own
hearts, and be not so strict as the Word commands, and do not as it saith (Deu
29:19,20). But let me tell thee, hadst thou a thousand souls, and each of them
was worth a thousand worlds, God would set them all on a light by fire, if they
fall within the condemnings of His Word, and thou die without a Jesus, even the
right Jesus; "for the Scriptures cannot be broken." What! dost thou think that
God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie for thee? and falsify their
words for thee? It will be but ill venturing thy soul upon that.
And the reasons for it are these:–First, Because God is God; and secondly,
Because man is man.
First, Because God is perfectly just and eternally just, perfectly holy and
eternally holy, perfectly faithful and eternally faithful; that is, without any
variableness or shadow of turning, but perfectly continueth the same, and cannot
as well cease to be God as to alter or change the nature of His Godhead. As He
is thus the perfection of all perfections, He gave out His Law to be obeyed; but
if any offend it, then they fall into the hands of this His eternal justice, and
so must drink of His irrevocable wrath, which is the execution of the same
justice. I say, this being thus, the law being broken, justice takes place, and
so faithfulness followeth to see that execution be done, and also to testify
that He is true, and doth denounce His unspeakable, insupportable, and
unchangeable vengeance on the party offending.
Secondly, Because thou art not as infinite as God, but a poor created weed, that
is here today and gone tomorrow, and not able to answer God in His essence,
being, and attributes; thou art bound to fall under Him, for thy soul or body
can do nothing that is infinite in such a way as to satisfy this God, which is
an infinite God in all His attributes.
[Misery of man by this law.]
But to declare unto you the misery of man by this law to purpose, I do beseech
you to take notice of these following particulars, besides what has been already
spoken:–First, I shall show the danger of them by reason of the law, as they
come from Adam; Second, as they are in their own persons particularly under it.
[First, The danger of them by reason of the law, as they come from Adam.]
1. As they come from Adam, they are in a sad condition, because he left them a
broken covenant. Or take it thus: because they, while they were in him, did with
him break that covenant. O! this was the treasure that Adam left to his
posterity; it was a broken covenant, insomuch that death reigned over all his
children, and doth still to this day, as they come from him, both natural and
eternal death (Rom 5). It may be, drunkard, swearer, liar, thief, thou dost not
think of this.
2. He did not only leave them a broken covenant, but also made them himself
sinners against it. He [Adam] made them sinners–"By one man's disobedience many
were made sinners" (Rom 5:19). And this is worse than the first.
3. Not only so, but he did deprive them of their strength, by which at first
they were enabled to stand, and left them no more than dead men. O helpless
state! O how beggarly and miserable are the sons of Adam!
4. Not only so, but also before he left them he was the conduit pipe through
which the devil did convey off his poisoned spawn and venom nature into the
hearts of Adam's sons and daughters, by which they are at this day so strongly
and so violently carried away, that they fly as fast to Hell, and the devil, by
reason of sin, as chaff before a mighty wind.
5. In a word, Adam led them out of their paradise, that is one more; and put out
their eyes, that is another; and left them to the leading of the devil. O sad!
Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and burn on thy head?
Canst thou read this, and not feel thy conscience begin to throb and dag? If so,
surely it is because thou art either possessed with the devil, or besides
thyself.
[Second.] But I pass this, and come to the second thing, which is, the cause of
their being in a sad condition, which is by reason of their being in their
particular persons under it.
1. Therefore, they that are under the law, they are in a sad condition, because
they are under that which is more ready, through our infirmity, to curse than to
bless; they are under that called the ministration of condemnation, that is,
they are under that dispensation, or administration, whose proper work is to
curse and condemn, and nothing else (2 Cor 3).
2. Their condition is sad who are under the law, because they are not only under
that ministration that doth condemn, but also that which doth wait an
opportunity to condemn; the law doth not wait that it might be gracious, but it
doth wait to curse and condemn; it came on purpose to discover sin, "The law
entered," saith the Apostle, "that the offence might abound" (Rom 5:20) or
appear indeed to be that which God doth hate, and also to curse for that which
hath been committed; as he saith, "Cursed is every one that continueth not in
all things which are written in the book of the law to do them" (Gal 3:10).
3. They are in a sad condition, because that administration they are under that
are under the law doth always find fault with the sinner's obedience as well as
his disobedience, if it be not done in a right spirit, which they that are under
that covenant cannot do, by reason of their being destitute of faith; therefore,
I say, it doth control them, saying, "This was not well done, this was done by
the halves, this was not done freely, and that was not done perfectly, and out
of love to God." And hence it is that some men, notwithstanding they labour to
live as holy as ever they can according to the law, yet they do not live a
peaceable life, but are full of condemnings, full of guilt and torment of
conscience, finding themselves to fail here, and to fall short there, omitting
this good which the law commands, and doing that evil which the law forbids, but
never giveth them one good word for all their pains.
4. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because they are under
that administration that will never be contented with what is done by the
sinner. If thou be under this covenant, work as hard as thou canst, the law will
never say, "Well done"; never say, "My good servant"; no; but always it will be
driving thee faster, hastening of thee harder, giving thee fresh commands, which
thou must do, and upon pain of damnation not to be left undone. Nay, it is such
a master that will curse thee, not only for thy sins, but also because thy good
works were not so well done as they ought to be.
5. They that are under this covenant or law, their state is very sad, because
this law doth command impossible things of him that is under it; and yet doth
but right in it, seeing man at the first had in Adam strength to stand, if he
would have used it, and the law was given them, as I said before, when man was
in his full strength; and therefore no inequality if it commands the same still,
seeing God that gave thee strength did not take it away. I will give you a
similitude for the clearing of it. Set the case that I give to my servant ten
pounds, with this charge, Lay it out for my best advantage, that I may have my
own again with profit; now if my servant, contrary to my command, goeth and
spends my money in a disobedient way, is it any inequality in me to demand of my
servant what I gave him at first? Nay, and though he have nothing to pay, I may
lawfully cast him into prison, and keep him there until I have satisfaction. So
here; the law was delivered to man at the first when he was in a possibility to
have fulfilled it; now, then, though man have lost his strength, yet God is just
in commanding the same work to be done. Ay, and if they do not do the same
things, I say, that are impossible for them to do, it is just with God to damn
them, seeing it was they themselves that brought themselves into this condition;
therefore, saith the Apostle, "What things soever the law (or commands) saith,
it saith to them who are under the law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all
the world may become guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). And this is thy sad
condition that art under the law (Gal 3:10).
But if any should object, and say, But the law doth not command impossible
things of natural man,–
I should answer in this case as the Apostle did in another very much like unto
it, saying, "Understanding neither what they say, nor whereof they affirm." For
doth not the law command thee to love the Lord thy God with all thy soul, with
all they strength, with all thy might, etc., and can the natural man do this?
How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do that which is commanded in this
particular? "Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?" (Jer
12:23).
Doth the law command thee to do good, and nothing but good, and that with all
thy soul, heart, and delight? which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for;
and canst thou, being carnal, do that? But there is no man that hath
understanding, if he should hear thee say so, but would say that thou wast
either bewitched or stark mad.
6. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because that though they
follow the law, or Covenant of Works; I say, though they follow it, it will not
lead them to Heaven; no, but contrariwise, it will lead them under the curse. It
is not possible, saith Paul, that any should be justified by the law, or by our
following of it; for by that "is the knowledge of sin," and by it we are
condemned for the same, which is far from leading us to life, being the
ministration of death (2 Cor 3). And again; "Israel, which followeth after the
law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness. Wherefore?
Because they sought it not by faith, but by the law, and by the works thereof"
(Rom 9:30-32).
7. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because they do not know
whether ever they shall have any wages for their work or no; they have no
assurance of the pardon of their sins, neither any hopes of eternal life; but
poor hearts as they are, they work for they do not know what, even like a poor
horse that works hard all day, and at night hath a dirty stable for his pains;
so thou mayest work hard all the days of thy life, and at the day of death,
instead of having a glorious rest in the Kingdom of Heaven, thou mayest, nay,
thou shalt, have for thy sins the damnation of thy soul and body in Hell to all
eternity; forasmuch, as I said before, that the law, if thou sinnest, it doth
not take notice of any good work done by thee, but takes its advantage to
destroy and cut off thy soul for the sin thou hast committed.
8. They that are under the law are in a sad condition, because they are under
that administration; upon whose souls God doth not smile, they dying there; for
the administration that God doth smile upon His children through, is the
Covenant of Grace, they being in Jesus Christ, the Lord of life and consolation;
but contrariwise to those that are under the law; for they have His frowns, His
rebukes, His threatenings, and with much severity they must be dealt withal–"For
they continued not in My covenant, and I regarded them not, saith the Lord" (Heb
8:9).
9. They are in a sad condition, because they are out of the faith of Christ;
they that are under the law have not the faith of Christ in them; for that
dispensation which they are under is not the administration of faith. The law is
not of faith, saith the Apostle (Gal 3:12).
10. Because they have not received the Spirit; for that is received by the
hearing of faith, and not by the law, nor the works thereof (Gal 3:2).
11. In a word, if thou live and die under that covenant, Jesus Christ will
neither pray for thee, neither let thee have one drop of His blood to wash away
thy sins, neither shalt thou be so much as one of the least in the Kingdom of
Heaven; for all these privileges come to souls under another covenant, as the
Apostle saith–"For such are not under the law, but under grace"–that is, such as
have a share in the benefits of Jesus Christ, or such as are brought from under
the first covenant into the second; or from under the law into the grace of
Christ's Gospel, without which Covenant of Grace, and being found in that, there
is no soul can have the least hope of eternal life, no joy in the Holy Ghost, no
share in the privileges of saints, because they are tied up from them by the
limits and bonds of the Covenant of Works. For you must understand that these
two covenants have their several bounds and limitations, for the ruling and
keeping in subjection, or giving of freedom, to the parties under the said
covenants. Now they that are under the law are within the compass and the
jurisdiction of that, and are bound to be in subjection to that; and living and
dying under that, they must stand and fall to that, as Paul saith, "To his own
master he standeth or falleth." The Covenant of Grace doth admit to those that
are under it also liberty and freedom, together with commanding of subjection to
the things contained in it, which I shall speak to further hereafter. [For what
purpose the Law was
added and given.]
But now, that the former things may be further made to appear–that is, what the
sad condition of all them that are under the law is, as I have shown you
something of the nature of the law, so also shall I show that the law was added
and given for this purpose, that it might be so with those that are out of the
Covenant of Grace.
First, God did give the law that sin might abound, not that it should take away
sin in any, but to discover the sin which is already begotten, or that may be
hereafter begotten, by lust and Satan (Rom 5:20). I say, this is one proper work
of the law, to make manifest sin; it is sent to find fault with the sinner, and
it doth also watch that it may do so, and it doth take all advantages for the
accomplishing of its work in them that give ear thereto, or do not give ear, if
it have the rule over them. I say, it is like a man that is sent by his lord to
see and pry into the labours and works of other men, taking every advantage to
discover their infirmities and failings, and to chide them? yea, to throw them
out of the Lord's favour for the same.
Second. Another great end why the Lord did add or give the law, it was that no
man might have anything to lay to the charge of the Lord for His condemning of
them that do transgress against the same. You know that if a man should be had
before an officer or judge, and there be condemned, and yet by no law, he that
condemns him might be very well reprehended or reproved for passing the
judgment; yea, the party himself might have better ground to plead for his
liberty than the other to plead for the condemning of him; but this shall not be
so in the judgment-day, but contrariwise; for then every man shall be forced to
lay his hand on his mouth, and hold his tongue at the judgment of God when it is
passed upon them; therefore saith the Apostle, "What things soever the law
saith, it saith to them who are under the law"; that is, all the commands, all
the cursings and threatenings that are spoken by it, are spoken, saith he, "that
every mouth may be stopped"; mark, I beseech you, "it saith," saith he, "that
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become guilty before God" (Rom
3:19). So that now, in case any in the judgment-day should object against the
judgment of God, as those in the 25th of Matthew do, saying, Lord, when saw we
Thee thus and thus? and why dost Thou pass such a sad sentence of condemnation
upon us? surely this is injustice, and not equity: now for the preventing of
this the law was given; ay, and that it might prevent thee to purpose, God gave
it betimes, before either thy first father had sinned, or thou wast born. So
that again, if there should be these objections offered against the proceedings
of the Lord in justice and judgment, saying, Lord, why am I thus condemned, I
did not know it was sin? Now against these two was the law given and that
betimes, so that both these are answered. If the first come in and say, Why am I
judged? why am I damned? then will the law come in, even all the Ten
Commandments, with every one of their cries against thy soul; the First saying,
He hath sinned against Me, damn him; the Second saying also, He hath
transgressed against Me, damn him; the Third also saying the same, together with
the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth; even all of them will
discharge themselves against thy soul if thou die under the first covenant,
saying, He or they have transgressed against us, damn them, damn them: and I
tell thee also, that these ten great guns, the Ten Commandments, will, with
discharging themselves in justice against thy soul, so rattle in thy conscience,
that thou wilt in spite of thy teeth be immediately put to silence, and have thy
mouth stopped. And let me tell thee further, that if thou shalt appear before
God to have the Ten Commandments discharge themselves against thee, thou hadst
better be tied to a tree, and have ten, yea, ten thousand of the biggest pieces
of ordnance in the world to be shot off against thee; for these could go no
further but only to kill the body; but they, both body and soul, to be tormented
in Hell with the devil to all eternity.
Third, Again; if the second thing should be objected, saying, But Lord, I did
not think this had been sin, or the other had been sin, for nobody told me so;
then also will the giving of the law take off that, saying, Nay, But I was given
to thy father Adam before he had sinned, or before thou wast born, and have ever
since been in thy soul to convince thee of thy sins, and to control thee for
doing the thing that was not right. Did not I secretly tell thee at such a time,
in such a place, when thou wast doing of such a thing, with such an one, or when
thou was all alone, that this was a sin, and that God did forbid it, therefore
if thou didst commit it, God would be displeased with thee for it: and when thou
was thinking to do such a thing at such a time, did not I say, Forbear, do not
so? God will smite thee, and punish thee for it if thou dost do it. And besides,
God did so order it that you had me in your houses, in your Bibles, and also you
could speak and talk of me; thus pleading the truth, thou shalt be forced to
confess it is so; nay, it shall be so in some sort with the very Gentiles and
barbarous people that fall far short of that light we have in these parts of the
world; for, saith the Apostle, "The Gentiles which have not the law, do by
nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law," that is, not
written as we have, yet they "are a law unto themselves: which show the works of
the law written in their hearts" (Rom 2:14,15). That is, they have the law of
works in them by nature, and therefore they shall be left without excuse; for
their own consciences shall stand up for the truth of this where he saith,
"Their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the meanwhile
accusing or else excusing one another." Ay, but when? Why, "in the day when God
shall judge the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my Gospel" (Rom
2:15,16). So this, I say, is another end for which the Lord did give the
law–namely, that God might pass a sentence in righteousness, without being
charged with any injustice by those that shall fall under it in the judgment.
Fourth, A fourth end why the Lord did give the law it was, because they that die
out of Jesus Christ might not only have their mouths stopped, but also that
their persons "might become guilty before God" (Rom 3:19). And indeed this will
be the ground of silencing, as I said before, they finding themselves guilty,
their consciences backing the truth of the judgment of God passed upon them,
"they shall become guilty"–that is, they shall be fit vessels for the wrath of
God to be poured out into, being filled with guilt by reason of transgressions
against the commandments; thus, therefore, shall the parties under the first
covenant be "fitted to destruction" (Rom 9:22) even as wood or straw, being well
dried, is fitted for the fire; and the law was added and given, and speaks to
this very end, that sins might be shown, mouths might be stopped from
quarreling, and that "all the world," mark, "the world may become guilty before
God," and so be in justice for ever and ever overthrown because of their sins.
And this will be so for these reasons–
1. Because God hath a time to magnify His justice and holiness, as well as to
show His forbearance and mercy. We read in Scripture that His eyes are too pure
to behold iniquity, and then we shall find it true (Hab 1:13). We read in
Scripture that He will magnify the law, and make it honourable, and then He will
do it indeed. Now, because the Lord doth not strike so soon as He is provoked by
sin, therefore poor souls will not know nor regard the justice of God, neither
do they consider the time in which it must be advanced, which will be when men
drop under the wrath of God as fast as hail in a mighty storm (2 Peter 3:9; Psa
50:21,22). Now, therefore, look to it all you that count the long-suffering and
forbearance of God slackness; and because for the present He keepeth silence,
therefore to think that He is like unto yourselves. No, no; but know that God
hath His set time for every purpose of His, and in its time it shall be advanced
most marvelously, to the everlasting astonishment and overthrow of that soul
that shall be dealt withal by justice and the law. O! how will God advance His
justice! O! how will God advance His holiness! First, by showing men that He in
justice cannot, will not regard them, because they have sinned; and, secondly,
in that His holiness will not give way for such unclean wretches to abide in His
sight, His eyes are so pure.
2. Because God will make it appear that He will be as good as His Word to
sinners. Sinners must not look to escape always, though they may escape awhile,
yet they shall not go far all adoe unpunished; no, but they shall have their due
to a farthing, when every threatening and curse shall be accomplished and
fulfilled on the head of the transgressor. Friend, there is never an idle word
that thou speakest but God will account with thee for it; there is never a lie
thou tellest, but God will reckon with thee for it; nay, there shall not pass so
much as one passage in all thy lifetime but God, the righteous God, will have it
in the trial by His law, if thou die under it, in the judgment-day.
[WHO ARE THOSE THAT ARE UNDER THE COVENANT OF WORKS.]
THIRD. But you will say–"But who are those that are thus under the law?"
Answ. Those that are under the law may be branched out into three ranks of men;
either, first, such as are grossly profane, or such as are more refined; which
may be two ways, some in a lower sort, and some in a more eminent way.
First, Then they are under the law as a Covenant of Works who are open profane,
and ungodly wretches, such as delight not only in sin, but also make their boast
of the same, and brag at the thoughts of committing of it. Now, as for such as
these are, there is a Scripture in the First Epistle of Paul to Timothy Chapter
1, verses 9, 10, which is a notable one to this purpose, "The law," saith he,
"is not made for a righteous man," not as it is a Covenant of Works, "but for
the" unrighteous or "lawless and disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners,
for unholy and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of mothers, for
manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that defile themselves with mankind, for
menstealers, for liars," look to it, liars, "for perjured persons, and," in a
word, "if there be any other thing that is not according to sound doctrine."
These are one sort of people that are under the law, and so under the curse of
the same, whose due is to drink up the brimful cup of God's eternal vengeance,
and therefore I beseech you not to deceive yourselves; for "know ye not that the
unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God? Neither fornicators, nor
idolaters, nor adulterers, nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with
mankind, nor thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor
extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God" (1 Cor 6:9,10).
Poor souls, you think that you may have your sins, your lusts, and pleasures,
and yet you shall do pretty well, and be let to go free in the judgment-day; but
see what God saith of such in Deuteronomy 29:19, 20–which shall "bless himself
in his heart, saying, I shall have peace," I shall be saved, I shall do as well
as others, in the day when God shall judge the world by Jesus Christ; but, saith
God, I will not spare them, no, but My anger and My jealousy shall smoke against
them. How far? Even to the executing all the curses that are written in the Law
of God upon them. Nay, saith God, I will be even with them, "for I will blot out
their names from under Heaven." And indeed it must of necessity be so, because
such souls are unbelievers, in their sins, and under the law, which cannot, will
not, show any mercy on them; for it is not the administration of mercy and life,
but the administration of death and destruction, as you have it (2 Cor 3:7,9);
and all those, every one of them, that are open profane, and scandalous wretches
are under it, and have been so ever since they came into the world to this day;
and they will for certain live and die under the same dispensation, and then be
damned to all eternity, if they be not converted from under that covenant into
and under the Covenant of Grace, of which I shall speak in its place; and yet
for all this, how brag and crank [6] are our poor wantons and wicked ones in
this day of forbearance! as if God would never have a reckoning with them, as if
there was no law to condemn them, as if there was no hellfire to put them into.
But O how will they be deceived when they shall see Christ sitting upon the
judgment-seat, having laid aside his priestly and prophetical office, and
appearing only as a judge to the wicked? when they shall see all the records of
Heaven unfolded and laid open; when they shall see each man his name in the Book
of Life, and in the book of the law; when they shall see God in His majesty,
Christ in His majesty, the saints in their dignity, but themselves in their
impurity. What will they say then? whither will they fly then? where will they
leave their glory? O sad state! (Isa 10:3).
Second. They are under the law also who do not only so break and disobey the
law, but follow after the law as hard as ever they can, seeking justification
thereby–that is, though a man should abstain from the sins against the law, and
labour to fulfill the law, and give up himself to the law, yet if he look no
further than the law he is still under the law, and for all his obedience to the
law, the righteous Law of God, he shall be destroyed by that law. Friend, you
must not understand that none but profane persons are under the law; no, but you
must understand that a man may be turned from a vain, loose, open, profane
conversation and sinning against the law, to a holy, righteous, religious life,
and yet be in the same state, under the same law, and as sure to be damned as
the other that are more profane and loose. And though you may say this is very
strange, yet I shall both say it and prove it to be true. Read with
understanding that Scripture in Romans 9:30-31, where the Apostle, speaking of
the very thing, saith, "But Israel, which followed after the law of
righteousness"; mark, that followed after the law of righteousness; they
notwithstanding their earnest pursuit, or hunting after the law of
righteousness, "hath not attained to the law of righteousness." It signifies
thus much to us, that let a man be never so earnest, so fervent, so restless, so
serious, so ready, so apt and willing to follow the law and the righteousness
thereof, if he be under that covenant, he is gone, he is lost, he is deprived of
eternal life, because he is not under the ministration of life if he die there.
Read also that Scripture, Galatians 3:10, which saith, "For as many as are of
the works of the law are under the curse"; mark, they that are of the works of
the law. Now, for to be of the works of the law, it is to be of the works of the
righteousness thereof–that is, to abstain from sins against the law, and to do
the commands thereof as near as ever they can for their lives, or with all the
might they have: and therefore I beseech you to consider it, for men's being
ignorant of this is the cause why so many go on supposing they have a share in
Christ, because they are reformed, and abstain from the sins against the law,
who, when all comes to all, will be damned notwithstanding, because they are not
brought out from under the Covenant of Works, and put under the Covenant of
Grace.
Object. "But can you in very deed make these things manifestly evident from the
Word of God? Methinks to reason thus is very strange, that a man should labour
to walk up according to the Law of God as much as ever he can, and yet that man
notwithstanding this, should be still under the curse. Pray clear it."
Answ. Truly this doth seem very strange, I do know full well, to the natural
man, to him that is yet in his unbelief, because he goeth by beguiled reason;
but for my part, I do know it is so, and shall labour also to convince thee of
the truth of the same.
1. Then, the law is thus strict and severe, that if a man do sin but once
against it, he, I say, is gone for ever by the law, living and dying under that
covenant. If you would be satisfied as touching the truth of this, do but read
Galatians 3:10, where it saith "Cursed is every one," that is, not a man shall
miss by that covenant, "that continueth not in all," mark, in all "things which
are written in the book of the law to do them." (1.) Pray mark, here is a curse,
in the first place, if all things written in the book of the law be not done,
and that, continually too–that is, without any failing or one slip, as I said
before. Now there is never a one in the world but before they did begin to yield
obedience to the least command, they in their own persons did sin against it by
breaking of it. The Apostle, methinks, is very notable for the clearing of this
in Romans 3:5. In the one he endeavours for to prove that all had transgressed
in the first Adam as he stood a common person, representing both himself and us
in his standing and falling. "Wherefore," saith he, "as by one man sin entered
into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men," mark that;
but why? "for that all have sinned" (Rom 5:12). That is, forasmuch as all
naturally are guilty of original sin, the sin that was committed by us in Adam;
so this is one cause why none can be justified by their obedience to the law,
because they have in the first place broken it in their first parents. But, (2.)
in case this should be opposed and rejected by quarrelsome persons, though there
be no ground for it, Paul hath another argument to back his doctrine, saying,
For we have proved (already) that both Jews and Gentiles are all under sin. "As
it is written, There is none righteous, no, not one." "They are all gone out of
the way, they are together," mark, together, "become unprofitable, there is none
that doeth good, no, not one." "Their throat is an open sepulchre; with their
tongues they have used deceit, the poison of asps is under their lips." Their
"mouths are full of cursing and bitterness." "Their feet are swift to shed
blood." In a word, "Destruction and misery are in their ways; and the way of
peace have they not known." Now then, saith he, having proved these things so
clearly, the conclusion of the whole is this, "That what things soever the law
saith," in both showing of sin, and cursing for the same, "it saith" all "to
them who are under the law that every mouth may be stopped, and all the world
may become guilty before God" (Rom 3:10,19). So that here, I say, lieth the
ground of our not being justified by the law, even because, in the first place,
we have sinned against it; for know this for certain, that if the law doth take
the least advantage of thee by thy sinning against it, all that ever thou shalt
afterwards hear from it is nothing but Curse, curse, curse him, "for not
continuing in all things which are written in the book of the law to do them."
2. Thou canst not be saved by the righteous Law of God, the first covenant,
because that, together with this thy miserable state, by original and actual
sins, before thou didst follow the law, since thy turning to the law thou hast
committed several sins against the law–"In many things we offend all." So that
now thy righteousness to the law being mixed with sometimes the lust of
concupiscence, fornication, covetousness, pride, heart-risings against God,
coldness of affection towards Him, backwardness to good duties, speaking idle
words, having of strife in your hearts, and such like; I say, these things being
thus, the righteousness of the law is become too weak through this our flesh
(Rom 8:3), and so, notwithstanding all our obedience to the law, we are yet
through our weakness under the curse of the law; for, as I said before, the law
is so holy, so just, and so good, that it cannot allow that any failing or slip
should be done by them that look for life by the same. "Cursed is every one that
continuteth not in everything" (Gal 3:10). And this Paul knew full well, which
made him throw away all his righteousness. But you will say, that was his own.
Answ. But it was even that which while he calls it his own, he also calls it the
righteousness of the law (Phil 3:7-10) and to account it but dung, but as dirt
on his shoes, and that, that he might be found in Christ, and so be saved by Him
"without the deeds of the law" (Rom 3:28). But,
3. Set the case, the righteousness of the law which thou hast was pure and
perfect, without the least flaw or fault, without the least mixture of the least
sinful thought, yet this would fall far short of presenting of thee blameless in
the sight of God. And that I prove by these arguments–(1.) The first argument
is, that that which is not Christ cannot redeem souls from the curse, it cannot
completely present them before the Lord; now the law is not Christ; therefore
the moral law cannot, by all our obedience to it, deliver us from the curse that
is due to us (Acts 4:12). (2.) The second argument is, that that righteousness
that is not the righteousness of faith, that is, by believing in Jesus Christ,
cannot please God; now the righteousness of the law as a Covenant of Works is
not the righteousness of faith; therefore the righteousness of the law as acted
by us, being under that covenant, cannot please God. The first is proved in
Hebrews 11:6, "But without faith it is impossible to please Him"; mark, it is
impossible. The second thus, "The law is not of faith" (Gal 3:12; Rom 10:5,6),
compared with Galatians 3:11. "But 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."
But for the better understanding of those that are weak of apprehension, I shall
prove it thus–1. The soul that hath eternal life, he must have it by right of
purchase or redemption (Heb 9:12; Eph 1:7). 2. This purchase of redemption must
be through the blood of Christ. "We have redemption through His blood." "Without
shedding of blood is no remission." Now the law is not in a capacity to die, and
so to redeem sinners by the purchase of blood, which satisfaction justice calls
for. Read the same Scriptures (Heb 9:22). Justice calls for satisfaction,
because thou hast transgressed and sinned against it, and that must have
satisfaction; therefore all that ever thou canst do cannot bring in redemption,
though thou follow the law up the to the nail-head, as I may say, because all
this is not shedding of blood; for believe it, and know it for certain, that
though thou hadst sinned but one sin before thou didst turn to the law, that one
sin will murder thy soul, if it be not washed away by blood, even by the
precious blood of Jesus Christ, that was shed when He did hang upon the cross on
Mount Calvary.
Object. But you will say, "Methinks, that giving of ourselves up to live a
righteous life should make God like the better of us, and so let us be saved by
Christ, because we are so willing to obey His law."
Answ. The motive that moveth God to have mercy upon sinners is not because they
are willing to follow the law, but because He is willing to save them. "Not for
thy righteousness, or for the uprighteous of thine heart dost thou go to possess
their land" (Deu 9:4-6). Now understand this: if thy will to do righteousness
was the first moving cause why God had mercy on thee through Christ, then it
must not be freely by grace–I say, freely. But the Lord loves thee and saves
thee upon free terms, having nothing beforehand to make Him accept of thy soul,
but only the blood of Christ; therefore to allow of such a principle it is to
allow that grace is to be obtained by the works of the law, which is as gross
darkness as lies in the darkest dungeon in Popery, and is also directly opposite
to Scripture– For we are "justified freely by His grace, through the redemption
that is in Christ"; not through the good that is in our selves, or done by us,
no, "but by faith, without"–mark that– "without the deeds of the law" (Rom
3:24-28). Again, "Not of works, least any man should boast" (Eph 2:9). No, no,
saith he, "Not according to our works," or righteousness, "but according to His
own purpose"; mark "according to His own purpose and grace, which was" a free
gift, "given us in Christ Jesus," not lately, but "before the world began" (2
Tim 1:9).
Object. But you will say, "Then why did God give the law, if we cannot have
salvation by following of it?"
Answ. I told you before that the law was given for these following reasons–1.
That thou mightest be convinced by it of thy sins, and that thy sins might
indeed appear very sinful unto thee, which is done by the law these ways–(1.) By
showing of thee what a holy God He is that did give the law; and, (2.) By
showing thee thy vileness and wickedness, in that thou, contrary to this holy
God, hast transgressed against and broken this His holy Law; therefore, saith
Paul, "the law entered, that the offence might abound," that is, by showing the
creature the holiness of God, and also its own vileness (Rom 5:20). 2. That thou
mayest know that God will not damn thee for nothing in the judgment-day. 3.
Because He would have no quarreling at His just condemning of them at that day.
4. Because He will make thee to know that He is a holy God and pure.
WHAT MEN MAY ATTAIN TO THAT ARE UNDER THIS COVENANT OF WORKS.
[FOURTH] Quest. "But seeing you have spoken thus far, I wish you would do so
much as to show in some particulars, both what men have done, and how far they
have gone, and what they have received, being yet under this covenant, which you
call the ministration of condemnation."
Answ. This is somewhat a difficult question, and had need be not only warily,
but also home and soundly answered. The question consists of three
particulars–First, What men have done; Second, How far men have gone; Third,
What they have received, and yet to be under the law, or Covenant of Works, and
so in a state of condemnation.
[First.] As for the first, I have spoken something in general to that already;
but for thy better understanding I shall yet speak more particularly.
1. A man hath and may be convinced and troubled for his sins, and yet be under
this covenant, and that in a very heavy and dreadful manner, insomuch that he
find the weight of them to be intolerable and too heavy for him to bear, as it
was with Cain, "My punishment," saith he, "is greater than I can bear" (Gen
4:13).
2. A man living thus under a sense of his sins may repent and be sorry for them,
and yet be under this covenant, and yet be in a damned state. And when he,
Judas, saw what was done, he "repented" (Matt 27:3).
3. Men may not only be convinced, and also repent for their sins, but they may
also desire the prayers of the children of God for them too, and yet be under
this covenant and curse, "Then Pharaoh called for Moses and Aaron, in haste, and
he said, I have sinned; entreat the LORD your God that He may take away from me
this death" (Exo 10:16, 17).
4. A man may also humble himself for his offences and disobedience against his
God, and yet be under this covenant (1 Kings 21:24-19).
5. A man may make restitution unto men for the offence he hath done unto them,
and yet be under this covenant.
6. A man may do much work for God in his generation, and yet be under this first
covenant; as Jehu, who did do that which God bid him (2 Kings 9:25, 26). And yet
God threateneth even Jehu, because though he did do the thing that the Lord
commanded him, yet he did it not from a right principle; for had he, the Lord
would not have said, "Yet a little while, and I will avenge the blood of Jezreel
upon the house of Jehu" (Hosea 1:4).
7. Men may hear and fear the servants of the Lord, and reverence them very
highly; yea, and when they hear, they may not only hear, but hear and do, and
that gladly too, not one or two things, but many; mark, many things gladly, and
yet be lost, and yet be damned, "For Herod feared John," why? not because he had
any civil power over him, but because "he was a just man and an holy, and
observed him; and when he heard him, he did many things, and heard him gladly"
(Mark 6:20). It may be that thou thinkest that because thou hearest such and
such, therefore thou art better than thy neighbours; but know for certain that
thou mayest not only hear, but thou mayest hear and do, and that not with a
backward will, but gladly–mark, "gladly"–and yet be Herod still, an enemy to the
Lord Jesus still. Consider this, I pray you.
Second. But to the second thing, which is this, How far may such an one go? To
what may such an one attain? Whither may he arrive, and yet be an undone man,
under this covenant? 1 answer–
1. Such an one may be received into fellowship with the saints, as they are in a
visible way of walking one with another; they may walk hand in hand together,
"The Kingdom of Heaven," that is, a visible company of professors of Christ, is
likened to ten virgins, which took their lamps, and went forth to meet the
Bridegroom, "five of them were wise, and five were foolish" (Matt 25:1,2).
These, in the first place, are called virgins–that is, such as are clear from
the pollutions of the world; secondly, they are said to go forth–that is, from
the rudiments and traditions of men; thirdly, they do agree to take their lamps
with them–that is, to profess themselves the servants of Jesus Christ, that wait
upon Him, and for Him; and yet when He came, He found half of them, even the
virgins, that had lamps, that also went forth from the pollutions of the world
and the customs of men, to be such as lost their precious souls (verse 12) which
they should not have done, had they been under the Covenant of Grace, and so not
under the law.
2. They may attain to a great deal of honour in the said company of professors,
that which may be accounted honour, insomuch that they may be put in trust with
church affairs, and bear the bag, as Judas did. I speak not this to shame the
saints, but, being beloved, I warn them; yet I speak this on purpose that it
might, if the Lord will, knock at the door of the souls of professors. Consider
Demas!
3. They may attain to speak of the Word as ministers, and become preachers of
the Gospel of Jesus Christ, insomuch that the people where they dwell may even
take up a proverb concerning them, saying, "Is he among the prophets?" his gifts
may be so rare, his tongue may be so fluent, and his matter may be so fit, that
he may speak with a tongue like an angel, and speak of the hidden mysteries,
yea, of them all; mark that, and yet be nothing, and yet be none of the Lord's
anointed ones, with the Spirit of grace savingly, but may live and die under the
curse of the law (1 Cor 13:1-4).
4. They may go yet further; they may have the gifts of the Spirit of God, which
may enable them to cast out devils, to remove the biggest hills or mountains in
the world; nay, thou mayest be so gifted as to prophesy of things to come, the
most glorious things, even the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ to reign over all
His enemies, and yet be but a Balaam, a wicked and a mad prophet (2 Peter 2:16;
Num 24:16-25).
5. There may not only stand thus for awhile, for a little season, but they may
stand thus till the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ with His holy angels; ay,
and not be discovered of the saints till that very day. "Then all those virgins
arose,"–the wise and the foolish; then! when? why, when this voice was heard,
"Behold the Bridegroom cometh, go ye out to meet him" (Matt 25:1-6). And yet
were out of the Lord Jesus Christ, and yet were under the law.
6. Nay, further, they may not only continue in a profession till then, supposing
themselves to be under the grace of the Gospel, when indeed they are under the
curse of the law, but even when the Bridegroom is come, they may still be so
confident of their state to be good, that they will even reason out the case
with Christ why they are not let into the kingdom of glory, saying, "Lord, Lord,
we have eaten and drunk in Thy presence; and Thou hast taught in our streets."
Nay, further, "Have we not prophesied in Thy name? and in Thy name have cast out
devils?" Nay, not only thus, but, "done many," mark, we have "done many
wonderful works." Nay, further, they were so confident, that they commanded, in
a commanding way, saying, "Lord, open to us." See here, I beseech you, how far
these went; they thought they had had intimate acquaintance with Jesus Christ,
they thought He could not choose but save them; they had eat and drunk with Him,
sat at the table with Him, received power from Him, executed the same power. In
Thy name have we done thus and thus; even wrought many wonderful works (Matt
7:22; Luke 13:25,26). And yet these poor creatures were shut out of the kingdom.
O consider this, I beseech you, before it be too late, lest you say, Lord, let
us come in, when Christ saith, Thrust him out (Verse 28). Hears you cry, "Lord
open to us," when He saith, "Depart, I know you not"; lest though you think of
having joy, you have "weeping and gnashing of teeth."
Third. But the third thing touched in the question was this– What may such an
one receive of God who is under the curse of the law?
1. They may receive an answer to their prayers from God at some times, for some
things as they do stand in need of. I find in Scripture that God did hear these
persons that the Apostle saith were cast out (Gen 21:17). "And God heard the
voice of the lad," even of cast-out Ishmael; "and the angel of God called to
Hagar" which was the bond-woman, and under the law (Gal 4:30). "out of heaven,
and said unto her, Fear not; for God hath heard the voice of the lad where he
is." Friends, it may be you may think, because you have your prayers answered in
some particular things, therefore you may suppose that as to your eternal state
your condition is very good. But you must know that God doth hear the cry of a
company of Ishmaelites, the sons of the bondwomen, who are under the law as a
Covenant of Works. I do not say He hears them as to their eternal state, but He
heareth them as to several straits that they go through in this life, ay, and
gives them ease and liberty from their trouble. Here this poor wretch was almost
perished for a little water, and he cried, and God heard him, yea, He heard him
out of Heaven. Read also Psalm 107:23-29. "He gave them their desire, but He
sent leanness into their soul" (Psa 106:15). [7]
But some may say, Methinks this is yet more strange that God should hear the
prayers, the cries of those that are under the law, and answer them. Answ. I
told you before, He doth not hear them as to their eternal state, but as to
their temporal state; for God as their Creator hath a care for them, and causeth
the sun to shine upon them, and the rain to distill upon their substance (Matt
5:45). Nay, He doth give the beasts in the field their appointed food, and doth
hear the young ravens when they cry, which are far inferior to man (Psa 147:9).
I say, therefore, that God doth hear the cries of His creatures, and doth answer
them too, though not as to their eternal state; but may damn them nevertheless
when they die for all that.
2. They may receive promises from the mouth of the Lord. There are many that
have promises made to them by the Lord in a most eminent way, and yet, as I said
before, are such as are cast out and called the children of the bond-woman,
which is the law–"And the angel of God called to Hagar out of Heaven," that was
the bond-woman, saying, "Fear not; for God hath heard the voice of the lad where
he is. Arise, lift up the lad, and hold him in thine hand; FOR I WILL MAKE
HIM,"– mark, there is the promise,–"for I will make him," of the son of the
bond-woman, "a great nation" (Gen 21:17,18).
3. Nay, they may go further; for they may receive another heart than they had
before, and yet be under the law. There is no man, I think, but those that do
not know what they say, that will think or say that Saul was under the Covenant
of Grace; yet after he had talked with Samuel, and had turned his back to go
from him, saith the Scripture, "God gave him another heart" (1 Sam 10:9).
Another heart, mark that, and yet an out-cast, a rejected person (1 Sam
15:26,29). Friends, I beseech you, let not these things offend you, but let them
rather beget in your hearts an inquiring into the truth of your condition, and
be willing to be searched to the bottom; and also, that everything which hath
not been planted by the Lord's right hand may be rejected, and that there may be
a reaching after better things, even the things that will not only make thy soul
think thy state is good now, but that thou mayest be able to look sin, death,
Hell, the curse of the law, together with the Judge, in the face with comfort,
having such a real, sound, effectual work of God's grace in thy soul, that when
thou hearest the trumpet sound, seest the graves fly open, and the dead come
creeping forth out of their holes; when thou shalt see the judgment set, the
books opened, and all the world standing before the judgment-seat; I say, that
then thou mayest stand, and have that blessed sentence spoken to thy soul,
"Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the
foundation of the world" (Matt 25:34).
[Objection to this head.] But, you will say, for all this, We cannot believe
that we are under the law, for these reasons–As, First. Because we have found a
change in our hearts. Second. Because we do deny that the Covenant of Works will
save any. Third. Because, for our parts, we judge ourselves far from legal
principles; for we are got up into as perfect a Gospel order, as to matter of
practice and discipline in church affairs, as any this day in England, as we
judge.
[Answer to reason first.] That man's belief that is grounded upon anything done
in him, or by him only, that man's belief is not grounded upon the death,
burial, resurrection, ascension, and intercession of Jesus Christ; for that man
that hath indeed good ground of his eternal salvation, his faith is settled upon
that object which God is well pleased or satisfied withal, which is that man
that was born of Mary, even her first-born Son– that is, he doth apply by faith
to his soul the virtues of His death, blood, righteousness, etc., and doth look
for satisfaction of soul nowhere else than from that, neither doth the soul seek
to give God any satisfaction as to justification any other ways; but doth
willingly and cheerfully accept of and embrace the virtues of Christ's death,
together with the rest of His things done by Himself on the cross as a
sacrifice, and since also as a priest, advocate, mediator, etc.; and doth so
really and effectually receive the glories of the same, that thereby–mark
that–thereby he is "changed into the same image, from glory to glory" (2 Cor
3:18). Thus in general; but yet more particular–
1. To think that your condition is good because there is some change in you from
a loose profane life, to a more close, honest, and civil life and conversation;
I say, to think this testimony sufficient to ground the stress of thy salvation
upon is very dangerous. First, because such a soul doth not only lay the stress
of its salvation besides the man Christ Jesus that died upon the cross; but
secondly, because that his confidence is not grounded upon the Saviour of
sinners, but upon his turning from gross sins to a more refined life,–and it may
be to the performance of some good duties–which is no Saviour; I say, this is
very dangerous; therefore read it, and the Lord help you to understand it; for
unless you lay the whole stress of the salvation of your souls upon the merits
of another man– namely, Jesus–and that by what He did do and is adoing without
you, for certain, as sure as God is in Heaven, your souls will perish. And this
must not be notionally neither, as with an assenting of the understanding only;
but it must be by the wonderful, invisible, invincible power of the Almighty
God, working in your souls by His Spirit such a real, saving, holy faith, that
can, through the operation of the same Spirit by which it is wrought, lay hold
on and apply these most heavenly, most excellent, most meritorious benefits of
the man Christ Jesus, not only to your heads and fancies, but to your very souls
and consciences, so effectually, that you may be able by the same faith to
challenge the power, madness, malice, rage, and destroying nature either of sin,
the law, death, the devil, together with Hell and all other evils, throwing your
souls upon the death, burial, resurrection, and intercession of that man Jesus
without (Rom 8:32-39). But,
2. Do you think that there was no change in the five foolish virgins spoken of
(Matt 25:1-3). Yes; there was such a change in those very people, that the five
wise ones could give them admittance of walking with them in the most pure ways
and institutions of the Gospel of Christ, and yet but foolish; nay, they walked
with them, or shall walk with them, until the Lord Jesus Christ shall break down
from Heaven, and yet be but foolish virgins, and yet but under the law, and so
under the curse, as I said before.
[Second part of objection.] But, say you, We have disowned the Covenant of
Works, and turned from that also.
[Answer to reason second.] This is sooner said than done. Alas, alas! poor souls
think because they say, "Grace, grace, it is freely by grace," therefore they
are under the Covenant of Grace. A very wide mistake. You must understand thus
much, that though you be such as can speak of the grace of the Gospel, yet if
you yourselves be not brought under the very Covenant of Grace, you are yet,
notwithstanding your talk and profession, very far wide of a sense and of a
share in the Covenant of the Grace of God held forth in the Gospel.
The Jews were of a clearer understanding many of them than to conclude that the
law, and only the law, was the way to salvation; for they, even they that
received not the Christ of God, did expect a Saviour should come (John
7:27,41-43). But they were men that had not the Gospel Spirit, which alone is
able to lead them to the very life, marrow, or substance of the Gospel in right
terms; and so being muddy in their understandings, being between the thoughts of
a Saviour and the thoughts of the works of the law, thinking that they must be
accomplished for the obtaining of a Saviour, and His mercy towards them; I say,
between these they fell short of a Saviour. As many poor souls in these days,
they think they must be saved alone by the Saviour, yet they think there is
something to be done on their parts for the obtaining of the good-will of the
Saviour, as their humiliation for sin, their turning from the same, their
promises, and vows, and resolutions to become new men, join in
church-fellowship, and what not; and thus they, bringing this along with them as
a means to help them, they fall short of eternal salvation if they are not
converted; see that Scripture (Rom 9:30-32). The Apostle saith there, that they
that sought not did obtain, when they that did seek fell short. "What shall we
say then?" saith he. "That the Gentiles which sought not after righteousness,
have attained to righteousness," yea, "even the righteousness which is of
faith." And what else? Why, "but Israel which followed after the law of
righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness." How came that to
pass?
"Because," saith he, "they sought it not by faith, but as it were"–mark, he doth
not say, altogether, no, "but as it were"–that is, because as they sought, they
did a little by the bye lean upon the works of the law. And let me tell you,
that this is such a hard thing to beat men off of, that though Paul himself did
take the work in hand, he did find enough to do touching it; how is he fain to
labour in the ten first chapters of his Epistle to the Romans, for the
establishing of those that did even profess largely in the doctrine of grace,
and also in that Epistle to the Galatians; and yet lost many, do what he could.
Now, the reason why the doctrine of grace doth so hardly down–even with
professors–in truth, effectually, it is because there is a principle naturally
in man that doth argue against the same, and that thus: Why, saith the soul, I
am a sinner, and God is righteous, holy, and just; His holy Law, therefore,
having been broken by me, I must, by all means, if ever I look to be saved, in
the first place, be sorry for my sins; secondly, turn from the same; thirdly,
follow after good duties, and practise the good things of the law and ordinances
of the Gospel, and so hope that God for Christ's sake may forgive all my sins;
which is not the way to God as a Father in Christ, but the way, the very way to
come to God by the Covenant of Works, or the law, which things I shall more
fully clear when I speak to the second doctrine.
Again, therefore, those that this day profess the Gospel, for the generality of
them they are such, that, notwithstanding their profession, they are very
ignorant of that glorious influence and lustre of the same; I say, they are
ignorant of the virtue and efficacy of the glorious things of Christ held forth
by and in the Gospel, which doth argue their not being under the Covenant of
Grace, but rather under the law or old covenant (2 Cor 4:3). As, for instance,
if you do come among some professors of the Gospel, in general you shall have
them pretty busy and ripe; also able to hold you in a very large discourse in
several points of the same glorious Gospel; but if you come to the same people
and ask them concerning heart-work, or what work the Gospel hath wrought on
them, and what appearance they have had of the sweet influences and virtues on
their souls and consciences, it may be they will give you such an answer as
this–I do find by the preaching thereof that I am changed, and turned from my
sins in a good measure, and also have learned (but only in tongue), to
distinguish between the law and the Gospel, so that for the one–that is, for the
Gospel–I can plead, and also can show the weakness and unprofitableness of the
other. And thus far, it is like they may go, which is not far enough to prove
them under the Covenant of Grace, though they may have their tongues so largely
tipped with the profession of the same (2 Peter 2:20) where he saith "For if
after they have escaped the pollutions of the world through the knowledge of the
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ," which was not a saving knowledge, "they are
again entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end" of that man "is worse
than the beginning" (Matt 25:1-4, etc.; Matt 7:22).
Object. But, you will say, is not this a fair declaring of the work of grace, or
doth it not discover that, without all gainsaying, we are under the Covenant of
Grace, when we are able, not only to speak of the glorious Gospel of Jesus
Christ, but also to tell, and that by experience, that we have been changed from
worse to better, from sin to a holy life, by leaving of the same, and that by
hearing of the Word preached?
Answer 1. A man may, in the first place, be able to talk of all the mysteries of
the Gospel, and that like an angel of God, and yet be no more in God's account
than the sounding of a drum, brass, or the tinkling of a cymbal, which are
things that, notwithstanding their sound and great noise, are absolutely void of
life and motion, and so are accounted with God as nothing– that is, no
Christians, no believers, not under the Covenant of Grace for all that (1 Cor
13:1-4). 2. Men may not only do this, but may also be changed in reality, for a
season, from what they formerly were, and yet be nothing at all in the Lord's
account as to an eternal blessing. Read 2 Peter 2:20, the Scripture which I
mentioned before; for, indeed, that one Scripture is enough to prove all that I
desire to say as to this very thing; for, if you observe, there is enfolded
therein these following things–(1.) That reprobates may attain to a knowledge of
Christ. (2.) This knowledge may be of such weight and force, that, for the
present, it may make them escape the pollutions of the world, and this by
hearing the Gospel. "For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world
through the knowledge of the Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again
entangled therein, and overcome, the latter end of that man is worse than the
beginning." [Some professors, take them at the best, they are but like dogs,
spewing out their filth for a time.] Now that they are reprobates, dogs, or
sows, read further; "But," saith he, "it is happened unto them according to the
true proverb, The dog is turned to his own vomit again; and the sow that was
washed to her wallowing in the mire" (Verse 22).
[Third part of objection.] The last part of the objection. But, say you, our
practices in the worship of God shall testify for us that we are not under the
law; for we have by God's goodness attained to as exact a way of waking in the
ordinances of God, and as near the examples of the Apostles, as ever any
churches since the primitive times, as we judge.
[Answer to reason third.] What then? Do you think that the walking in the order
of the churches of old, as to matter of outward worship, is sufficient to clear
you of your sins at the judgment-day? or, do you think that God will be
contented with a little bodily subjection to that which shall vanish and fade
like a flower, when the Lord shall come from Heaven in flaming fire, with His
mighty angels (2 Thess 1:7,8). Alas, alas, how will such professors as these are
fall before the judgment-seat of Christ! Then such a question as this, "Friend,
how camest thou in hither, not having a wedding garment?" will make them be
speechless, and fall down into everlasting burnings, thousands on a heap; for
you must know that it is not then your crying, Lord, Lord, that will stand you
in stead; not your saying, We have ate and drank in Thy presence, that will keep
you from standing on the left hand of Christ. It is the principle as well as the
practice that shall be inquired into at that day.
Quest. The principle, you will say, what do you mean by that?
Answ. My meaning is, the Lord Jesus Christ will then inquire and examine whether
the spirit from which you acted was legal or evangelical–that is, whether it was
the Spirit of adoption that did draw you out to the thing you took in hand, or a
mere moral principle, together with some shallow and common illuminations into
the outward way of the worship of God, according to Gospel rule.
Quest. But, you will say, it is like, How should this be made manifest and
appear?
Answ. I shall speak briefly in answer hereunto as followeth– First, then, that
man that doth take up any of the ordinances of God–namely, as prayer, baptism,
breaking of bread, reading, hearing, alms-deeds, or the like; I say, he that
doth practise any of these, or such like, supposing thereby to procure the love
of Christ to his own soul, he doth do what he doth from a legal, and not from an
evangelical or Gospel spirit: as thus–for a man to suppose that God will hear
him for his prayer's sake, for his alm's sake, for his humiliation's sake, or
because he hath promised to make God amends hereafter, whereas there is no such
thing as a satisfaction to be made to God by our prayers or whatever we can do;
I say, there is no such way to have reconciliation with God in. And so also for
men to think, because they are got into such and such an ordinance, and have
crowded themselves into such and such a society, that therefore they have got
pretty good shelter from the wrath of the Almighty; when, alas, poor souls,
there is no such thing. No, but God will so set His face against such
professors, that His very looks will make them to tear their very flesh; yea,
make them to wish would they had the biggest millstone in the world hanged about
their neck, and they cast into the midst of the sea. For, friends, let me tell
you, though you can now content yourselves without the holy, harmless,
undefiled, perfect righteousness of Christ; yet there is a day a-coming in which
there is not one of you shall be saved but those that are and shall be found
clothed with that righteousness; God will say to all the rest, "Take them, bind
them hand and foot, and cast them into outer darkness; there shall be weeping
and gnashing of teeth" (Matt 22:13).
For Christ will not say unto men in that day, Come, which of you made a
profession of Me, and walked in church-fellowship with My saints: no; but then
it shall be inquired into, who have the reality of the truth of grace wrought in
their hearts. And, for certain, he that misseth of that shall surely be cast
into the Lake of Fire, there to burn with the devils and damned men and women;
there to undergo the wrath of an eternal God, and that not for a day, a month, a
year, but for ever, for ever, for ever and ever; there is that which cutteth to
the quick. Therefore, look to it, and consider now what you do, and whereon you
hang your souls; for it is not every pin that will hold in the judgment, not
every foundation that will be able to hold up the house against those mighty,
terrible, soul- drowning floods and destroying tempests which then will roar
against the soul and body of a sinner (Luke 6:47-49). And, if the principle be
rotten, all will fall, all will come to nothing. Now, the principle is this–Not
to do things because we would be saved, but to do them from this–namely, because
we do really believe that we are and shall be saved. But do not mistake me; I do
not say we should slight any holy duties; God forbid; but I say, he that doth
look for life because he doth do good duties, he is under the Covenant of Works,
the law; let his duties be never so eminent, so often, so fervent, so zealous.
Ay, and I say, as I said before, that if any man or men, or multitudes of
people, do get into never so high, so eminent; and clear practices and Gospel
order, as to church discipline, if it be done to this end I have been speaking
of, from this principle, they must and shall have these sad things fall to their
share which I have made mention of.
Object. But, you will say, can a man use Gospel ordinances with a legal spirit?
Answ. Yes, as easily as the Jews could use and practise circumcision, though not
the moral or Ten Commandments. For this I shall be bold to affirm, that it is
not the commands of the New Testament administration that can keep a man from
using of its self [that administration] in a legal spirit; for know this for
certain, that it is the principle, not the command, that makes the subjector to
the same either legal or evangelical, and so his obedience from that command to
be from legal convictions or evangelical principles.
Now, herein the devil is wondrous subtle and crafty, in suffering people to
practise the ordinances and commands of the Gospel, if they do but do them in a
legal spirit, [I beseech you, do not think because I say this, therefore I am
against the ordinances of the Gospel, for I do honour them in their places, yet
would not that any of them should be idolized, or done in a wrong spirit,] from
a spirit of works; for he knows then, that if he can but get the soul to go on
in such a spirit, though they do never so many duties, he shall hold them sure
enough; for he knows full well that thereby they do set up something in the room
of, or, at the least, to have some, though but a little, share with the Lord
Jesus Christ in their salvation; and if he can but get thee here, he knows that
he shall cause thee by thy depending a little upon the one, and so thy whole
dependence being not upon the other, that is, Christ, and taking of him upon his
own terms, thou wilt fall short of life by Christ, though thou do very much busy
thyself in a suitable walking, in an outward conformity to the several commands
of the Lord Jesus Christ. And let me tell you plainly, that I do verily believe
that as Satan by his instruments did draw many of the Galatians by circumcision
(though, I say, it was none of the commands of the moral law) to be debtors to
do upon pain of eternal damnation the whole of the moral law, so also Satan, in
the time of the Gospel, doth use even the commands laid down in the Gospel, some
of them, to bind the soul over to do the same law; the thing being done and
walked in, by and in the spirit; for, as I said before, it is not the obedience
to the command that makes the subjector thereto evangelical, or of a Gospel
spirit; but, contrariwise, the principle that leads out the soul to the doing of
the command, that makes the persons that do thus practise any command, together
with the command by them practised, either legal or evangelical. As, for
instance, prayer–it is a Gospel command; yet if he that prays doth it in a legal
spirit, he doth make that which in itself is a Gospel command an occasion of
leading him into a Covenant of Works, inasmuch as he doth it by and in that old
covenant spirit.
Again; giving of alms is a Gospel command; yet if I do give alms from a legal
principle, the command to me is not Gospel, but legal, and it binds me over, as
aforesaid, to do the whole law–"For he is not a Jew," nor a Christian, "which is
one outwardly"–that is, one only by an outward subjection to the ordinances of
prayer, hearing, reading, baptism, breaking of bread, etc.–"But he is a Jew," a
Christian, "which is one inwardly," who is rightly principled, and practiseth
the ordinances of the Lord from the leadings forth of the Spirit of the Lord,
from a true and saving faith in the Lord (Rom 2:28,29). Those men spoken of in
the 7th of Matthew, for certain, for all their great declaration, did not do
what they did from a right Gospel spirit; for had they, no question but the Lord
would have said, "Well done, good and faithful servant." But in that the Lord
Jesus doth turn them away into Hell, notwithstanding their great profession of
the Lord, and of their doing in His name, it is evident that notwithstanding all
that they did do, they were still under the law, and not under that covenant as
true believers are–to wit, the Covenant of Grace; and if so, then all their
duties that they did, of which they boasted before the Lord, was not in and by a
right evangelical principle or spirit.
Again, saith the Apostle, "Whatsoever is not of faith is sin," (Rom 14:23); but
there are some that do even practise baptism, breaking of bread, together with
other ordinances, and yet are unbelievers; therefore unbelievers doing these
things, they are not done in faith but sin. Now to do these things in sin, or
without faith, it is not to do things in an evangelical or Gospel spirit; also
they that do these things in a legal spirit, the very practising of them renders
them not under the law of Christ, as Head of His Church, but the works they do
are so much contradiction to the Gospel of God, or the Covenant of Grace, that
they that do them thus do even set up against the Covenant of Grace; and the
very performance of them is of such force that it is sufficient to drown them
that are subjects thereunto, even under the Covenant of Works; but this poor
souls are not aware of, and there is their misery.
Quest. But have you no other way to discover the things of the Gospel, how they
are done with a legal principle, but those you have already made mention of?
Answ. That thou mightest be indeed satisfied herein, I shall show you the very
manner and way that a legal, or old- covenant-converted professor, bear with the
terms, doth take both in the beginning, middle, and the end of his doing of any
duty or command, or whatsoever it be that he doth do. 1. He thinking this or
that to be his duty, and considering of the same, he is also presently persuaded
in his own conscience that God will not accept of him if he leave it undone; he
seeing that he is short of his duty, as he supposeth, while this is undone by
him, and also judging that God is angry with him until the thing be done, he, in
the second place, sets to the doing of the duty, to the end he may be able to
pacify his conscience by doing of the same, persuading of himself that now the
Lord is pleased with him for doing of it. 2. Having done it, he contents
himself, sits down at his ease, until some further convictions of his duty to be
done, which when he seeth and knoweth, he doth do it as aforesaid, from the same
principle as he did the former, and so goeth on in his progress of profession.
This is to do things from a legal principle, and from an old-covenant spirit;
for thus runs that covenant, "The man that doth these things shall live in
them," of "by them" (Lev 18:5; Gal 3:12; Rom 10:5). But more of this in the use
of this doctrine.
Object. But, you will say, by these words of yours you do seem to deny that
there are conditional promises in the Gospel, as is clear, in that you strike at
such practices as are conditional, and commanded to be done upon the same.
Answ. The thing that I strike at is this, that a man in or with a legal spirit
should not, nay, cannot, do any conditional command of the Gospel acceptably, as
to his eternal state, because he doth it in an old-covenant spirit. "No man
putteth new wine into old bottles"; but new wine must have new bottles, a Gospel
command must have a Gospel spirit, or else the wine will break the bottles, or
the principle will break the command.
Object. Then you do grant that there are conditional promises in the New
Testament, as in the moral law, or Ten Commands.
Answ. Though this be true, yet the conditional promises in the New Testament do
not call to the same people in the same state of unregeneracy to fulfill them
upon the same conditions.
The Law and the Gospel being two distinct covenants, they are made in divers
ways, and the nature of the conditions also being not the same, as saith the
Apostle, the righteousness of the law saith one thing, and the righteousness of
faith saith another (Rom 10:4-6). That is, the great condition in the law is, If
you do these things, you shall live by them; but the condition, even the
greatest condition laid down for a poor soul to do, as to salvation–for it is
that we speak of–is to believe that my sins be forgiven me for Jesus Christ's
sake, without the works or righteousness of the law, on my part, to help
forward. "To him that worketh not," saith the Apostle [that is] for salvation,
"but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his faith"–mark, "his faith
is counted for righteousness" (Rom 4:5). So that we, saith, he, "conclude that a
man is justified by faith without"– mark again, "without the deeds of the law"
(Rom 3:28).
But again; there is never a condition in the Gospel that can be fulfilled by an
unbeliever; and therefore, whether there be conditions or whether there be none,
it makes no matter to thee who art without the faith of Christ; for it is
impossible for thee in that state to do them, so as to be ever the better as to
thy eternal estate; therefore, lest thou shouldst split thy soul upon the
conditions laid down in the Gospel, as thou wilt do if thou go about to do them
only with a legal spirit; but, I say, to prevent this, see if thou canst fulfill
the first condition; that is, to believe that all thy sins are forgiven thee,
not for any condition that hath been or can be done by thee, but merely for the
Man's sake that did hang on Mount Calvary, between two thieves, some sixteen
hundred years ago and odd. And, I say, see if thou canst believe that at that
time He did, when He hanged on the Cross, give full satisfaction, for all thy
sins, before thou in thy person hadst committed ever a one. I say, see if thou
canst believe this; and take heed thou deceive not thyself with an historical,
notional, or traditional acknowledgment of the same.
And, secondly, see if thou canst so well fulfill this condition, that the very
virtue and efficacy that it hath on thy soul will engage thee to fulfill those
other conditions, really in love to that Man whom thou shouldst believe hath
frankly and freely forgiven thee all, without any condition acted by thee to
move Him thereto, according to that saying in 2 Corinthians 5:14, 15; and then
thy doing will arise from a contrary principle than otherwise it will do–that
is, then thou wilt not act and do because thou wouldst be accepted of God, but
because thou hast some good hope in thy heart that thou art accepted of Him
already, and not on thine, but wholly and alone upon another man's account; for
here runs the Gospel spirit of faith: "We believe,"–mark, "We believe, and
therefore speak." So we believe, and therefore do (2 Cor 4:13). Take heed,
therefore, that you do not DO, that you may believe, but rather believe so
effectually that you may DO, even all that Jesus doth require of you from a
right principle, even out of love to your dear Lord Jesus Christ, which thing I
shall speak to more fully by and by.
Object. But what do you mean by those expressions? Do not do that you may
believe, but believe so effectually that you may do.
Answ. When I say, Do not do that you may believe, I mean, do not think that any
of the things that thou canst do will procure or purchase faith from God unto
thy soul; for that is still the old-covenant spirit, the spirit of the law, to
think to have it for thy doing. They that are saved, they are saved by grace,
through faith, and that not of themselves, not for anything that they can do,
for they are both the free gift of God, "Not of" doing, or of "works, lest any
man should," be proud, and "boast" (Eph 2:8,9). Now, some people be so ignorant
as to think that God will give them Christ, and so all the merits of His, if
they will be but valiant, and do something to please God, that they may obtain
Him at His hands; but let me tell them, they may lose a thousand souls quickly,
if they had so many, by going this way to work, and yet be never the better; for
the Lord doth not give His Christ to any upon such conditions, but He doth give
Him freely; that is, without having respect to anything that is in thee (Rev
22:17; Isa 55:1,2). To him that is athirst will I give; He doth not say, I will
sell; but, I will give him the water of life freely (Rev 21:6).
Now, if Christ doth give it, and that freely, then He doth not sell if for
anything that is in the creature; but Christ doth give Himself, as also doth His
Father, and that freely, not because there is anything in us, or done by us,
that moves Him thereunto. If it were by doing, then, saith Paul, "Grace is not
grace," seeing it is obtained by works; but grace is grace, and that is the
reason it is given to men without their works. And if it be by grace, that is,
if it be a free gift from God, without anything foreseen as done, or to be done,
by the creature, then it is not of works, which is clear; therefore it is grace,
without the works of the law. But if you say, Nay, it is of something in the man
done by him that moves God thereunto; then you must conclude that either grace
is no grace, or else that works are grace and not works. Do but read with
understanding (Rom 11:6).
Now before I go any further, it may be necessary to speak a word or two to some
poor souls that are willing to close in with Jesus Christ, and would willingly
take Him upon His own terms, only they being muddy in their minds, and have not
yet attained the understanding of the terms and conditions of the two covenants,
they are kept off from closing with Christ; and all is, because they see they
can do nothing [to merit His favour]. As, for example, come to some souls, and
ask them how they do, they will tell you presently that they are so bad that it
is not to be expressed. If you bid them believe in Jesus Christ, they will
answer that they cannot believe; if you ask them why they cannot believe, they
will answer, because their hearts are so hard, so dead, so dull, so backward to
good duties; and if their hearts were but better, if they were more earnest, if
they could pray better, and keep their hearts more from running after sin, then
they could believe; but should they believe with such vile hearts, and presume
to believe in Christ, and be so filthy? Now all this is because the spirit of
the law still ruleth in such souls, and blinds them so that they cannot see the
terms of the Gospel.
To clear this, take the substance or the drift of these poor souls, which is
this–"If I were better, then I think I could believe; but being so bad as I am,
that is the reason that I cannot." This is just to do something that I may
believe, to work that I may have Christ, to do the law that I may have the
Gospel; or thus, to be righteous that I may come to Christ. O man! thou must go
quite back again, thou art out of the way, thou must believe, because thou canst
not pray, because thou canst not do; thou must believe, because there is nothing
in thee naturally that is good, or desireth after good, or else thou wilt never
come to Christ as a sinner; and if so, then Christ will not receive thee; and if
so, then thou mayest see that to keep off from Christ because thou canst not do,
is to be kept from Christ by the law, and to stand off from Him because thou
canst not buy Him. Thus having spoken something by the way for the direction of
those souls that would come to Christ, I shall return to the former discourse,
wherein ariseth this objection–
Object. But you did but even now put souls upon fulfilling the first condition
of the Gospel, even to believe in Christ, and so be saved; but now you say it is
alone by grace, without condition; and therefore by these words, there is first
a contradiction to your former sayings, and also that men may be saved without
the condition of faith, which to me seems a very strange thing. I desire,
therefore, that you would clear out what you have said, to my satisfaction.
Answer, 1. Though there be a condition commanded in the Gospel, yet He that
commands the condition doth not leave His children to their own natural
abilities, that in their own strength they should fulfill them, as the law doth;
but the same God that doth command that the condition be fulfilled, even He doth
help His children by His Holy Spirit to fulfill the same condition; "For it is
God which worketh in you,"–mark "in you," believers, "both to will and to do of
His own good pleasure" (Phil 2:13). "Thou also hast wrought all our works in us,
and for us" (Isa 26:12). So that, if the condition be fulfilled, it is not done
by the ability of the creature. But,
2. Faith, as it is a gift of God, or an act of ours, take it which way you will,
if we speak properly of salvation, it is not the first nor the second cause of
our salvation, but the third, and that but instrumentally neither–that is, it
only layeth hold of and applieth to us that which saveth us, which is the love
of God, through the merits of Christ, which are the two main causes of our
salvation, without which all other things are nothing, whether it be faith,
hope, love, or whatever can be done by us. And to this the great Apostle of the
Gentiles speaks fully, for, saith he, "God, who is rich in mercy, loved us, even
when we were dead in sins" (Eph 2:4,5). That is, when we were without faith, and
that was the cause why we believed for He thereby hath quickened us together,
through the meritorious cause, which is Christ, and so hath saved us by
grace–that is, of His own voluntary love and good will; the effect of which was
this, He gave us faith to believe in Christ. Read soberly Ephesians 2:4-8.
Faith, as the gift of God, is not the Saviour, as our act doth merit nothing;
faith was not the cause that God gave Christ as the first, neither is it the
cause why God converts men to Christ; but faith is a gift bestowed upon us by
the gracious God, the nature of which is to lay hold on Christ, that God afore
did give for a ransom to redeem sinners; this faith hath its nourishment and
supplies from the same God that at the first did give it, and is the only
instrument, through the Spirit, that doth keep the soul in a comfortable frame,
both to do and suffer for Christ; helps the soul to receive comfort from Christ
when it can get none from itself, beareth up the soul in its progress
heavenwards.
But that it is the first cause of salvation, that I deny, or that it is the
second, I deny; but it is only the instrument, or hand, that receiveth the
benefits, that God hath prepared for thee before thou hadst any faith; so that
we do nothing for salvation as we are men. But if we speak properly, it was
God's grace that moved Him to give Christ a ransom for sinners; and the same
God, with the same grace, that doth give to the soul faith to believe, and so,
by believing, to close in with Him whom God out of His love and pity did send
into the world to save sinners, so that all the works of the creature are shut
out as to justification and life, and men are saved freely by grace. I shall
speak no more here; but in my discourse upon the second covenant, I shall answer
a Hell-bred objection or two, to forewarn sinners how they turn the grace of God
into wantonness.
And thus, you see, I have briefly spoken to you something touching the law.
First, what it is, and when given; secondly, how sad those men's conditions are
that are under it; thirdly, who they are that be under it; fourthly, how far
they may go, and what they may do and receive, and yet be under it; which hath
been done by way of answers to several questions, for the better satisfaction of
those that may stand in doubt of the truth of what hath been delivered.
Now, in the next place, I shall come to some application of the truth of that
which hath been spoken; but I shall in the first place speak something to he
second doctrine, and then afterwards I shall speak something by way of use and
application to this first doctrine.
[DOCTRINE SECOND.]
The second doctrine now to be spoken to is, TO SHOW THAT THE PEOPLE OF GOD ARE
NOT UNDER THE LAW BUT UNDER GRACE–"For ye are not under the law, but under
grace" (Rom 6:14).
You may well remember that from these words I did observe these two great truths
of the Lord–FIRST, That there are some in Gospel times that are under the law,
or Covenant of Works. SECOND, That there is never a believer under the law, or
Covenant of Works, but under grace. I have spoken something to the former of
these truths–to wit, that there are some under the law, together with who they
are, and what their condition is, that are under it. Now I am to speak to the
second, and to show you who they are, and what their condition is, that are
under that [Covenant of Grace].
But before I come to that, I shall speak a few words to show you what the word
"grace" in this place signifies; [I touched upon this in the first doctrine] for
the word "grace" in the Scripture referreth sometimes to favour with men (Gen
33:10; 39:4; 50:4). Sometimes to holy qualifications of saints (2 Cor 8:7). And
sometimes to hold forth the condescension of Christ in coming down from the
glory which He had with His Father before the world was, to be made of no
reputation, and a servant to men (2 Cor 8:9; Phil 2:7). Again: sometimes it is
taken for the free, rich, and unchangeable love of God to man, through Jesus
Christ, that for our cause and sakes did make Himself poor; and so it is to be
understood in these words, "For ye are not under the law," to be cursed, and
damned, and sent headlong to Hell, "but" you are "under grace," to be saved, to
be pardoned, to be preserved, "and kept by the mighty power of God, through
faith," which alone is the gift of grace, "unto eternal glory." This one
Scripture alone proves the same–"For by grace are ye saved" (Eph 2:8), by free
grace, by rich grace, by unchangeable grace. And you are saved from the curse of
the law; from the power, guilt, and filth of sin; from the power, malice,
madness, and rage of the devil; from the wishes, curses, and desires of wicked
men; from the hot, scalding, flaming, fiery furnace of Hell; from being
arraigned as malefactors, convinced, judged, condemned, and fettered with the
chains of our sins to the devils to all eternity; and all this freely, freely by
His grace (Rom 3:24) by rich grace unchangeable grace; for, saith He, "I am the
LORD, I change not: therefore ye sons of Jacob are not consumed" (Mal 3:6). This
is grace indeed.
The word "grace," therefore, in this Scripture (Rom 6:14) is to be understood of
the free love of God in Christ to sinners, by virtue of the new covenant, in
delivering them from the power of sin, from the curse and condemning power of
the old covenant, from the destroying nature of sin, by its continual workings;
as is all evident if you read with understanding the words as they lie–"For,"
saith he, "sin shall not have dominion over you," or, it shall not domineer,
reign, or destroy you, though you have transgressed against the Covenant of
Works, the law; and the reason is rendered in these words, "For ye are not under
the law"–that is, under that which accuseth, chargeth, condemneth and brings
execution on the soul for sin,–"but under grace"; that is, under that which
frees you, forgives you, keeps you, and justifies you from all your sins,
adversaries, or whatever may come in to lay anything to your charge to damn you.
For that is truly called grace in this sense that doth set a man free from all
his sins, deliver him from all the curses of the law, and what else can be laid
to His charge, freely, without any foresight in God to look at what good will be
done by the party that hath offended; and also that doth keep the soul by the
same power through faith–which also is his own proper gift–unto eternal glory.
Again; that it is a pardon not conditional, but freely given, consider, first,
it is set in opposition to works–"Ye are not under the law." Secondly, The
promise that is made to them (saying, "Sin shall not have dominion over you")
doth not run with any condition as on their part to be done; but merely and
alone because they were under, or because they had the grace of God extended to
them. "Sin shall not have dominion over you: for," mark the reason, "ye are not
under the law, but under grace."
The words being thus opened, and the truth thus laid down, HOW THERE IS NEVER A
BELIEVER UNDER THE
COVENANT OF WORKS, BUT UNDER GRACE, the free, rich, unchangeable love of God, it
remaineth that, in the first place, we prove the doctrine, and after that
proceed.
THE DOCTRINE PROVED.
Now in the doctrine there are two things to be considered and proved–FIRST, That
believers are under grace. SECONDLY, Not under the law as a Covenant of Works;
for so you must understand me. For these two we need go no further than the very
words themselves; the first part of the words proves the first part of the
doctrine, "Ye are not under the law"; the second part proves the other, "but" ye
are "under grace." But besides these, consider with me a few things for the
demonstrating of these truths, as,
First. They are not under the law, because their sins are pardoned, which could
not be if they were dealt withal according to the law, and their being under it;
for the law alloweth of no repentance, but accuseth, curseth and condemneth
every one that is under it–"Cursed is every one that continueth not in all
things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them" (Gal 3:10). But, I
say, believers having their sins forgiven them, it is because they are under
another, even a new covenant–"Behold, the days come, saith the LORD, when I will
make a new covenant with them."–"For I will be merciful to their
unrighteousness, and their sins and their iniquities will I remember no more"
(Heb 8:12).
Second. They are not under the law, because their sins and iniquities are not
only forgiven, but they are forgiven them freely. They that stand in the first
covenant, and continue there, are to have never a sin forgiven them unless they
can give God a complete satisfaction; for the law calls for it at their hands,
saying, "Pay me that thou owest." O! but when God deals with His saints by the
Covenant of Grace it is not so; for it is said, "And when" He saw "they had
nothing to pay, He frankly" and freely "forgave them" all–"I will heal their
backsliding; I will love them freely."–I will blot "out thy transgressions for
Mine own sake," etc. (Luke 7:42; Hosea 14:4; Isa 43:25).
Third. The saints are not under the law, because the righteousness that they
stand justified before God in is not their own actual righteousness by the law,
but by imputation, and is really the righteousness of Another–namely, of God in
Christ (2 Cor 5:21; Phil 3:9). "Even the righteousness of God, which is by faith
of Jesus Christ unto all and upon all," that is, imputed to "them that believe"
(Rom 3:22). But if they were under the old covenant, the Covenant of Works, then
their righteousness must be their own, [But it is impossible that the
righteousness of man by the law should save him.] or no forgiveness of sins– "If
thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?" but if thou transgress, "sin lieth
at the door," saith the law (Gen 4:7).
Fourth. In a word, whatsoever they do receive, whether it be conversion to God;
whether it be pardon of sin; whether it be faith or hope; whether it be
righteousness; whether it be strength" whether it be the Spirit, or the fruits
thereof; whether it be victory over sin, death, or Hell; whether it be Heaven,
everlasting life, and glory inexpressible; or whatsoever it be, it comes to them
freely, God having no first eye to what they would do, or should do, for the
obtaining of the same. But to take this in pieces–1. In a word, are they
converted? God finds them first, for, saith He, "I am found of them that sought
Me not" (Isa 65:1). 2. Have they pardon of sin? They have that also freely,–"I
will heal their backsliding, I will love them freely" (Hosea 14:4). 3. Have they
faith? It is the gift of God in Christ Jesus, and He is not only the Author,
that is, the beginner thereof, but He doth also perfect the same (Heb 12:2). 4.
Have they hope? It is God that is the first cause thereof–"Remember the word
unto Thy servant, upon which Thou hast caused me to hope" (Psa 119:49). 5. Have
they righteousness? It is the free gift of God (Rom 5:17). Have they strength to
do the work of God in their generations, or any other thing that God would have
them do? That also is a free gift from the Lord, for without Him we neither do
nor can do anything (John 15:5). 7. Have we comfort, or consolation? We have it
not for what we have done, but from God through Christ; for He is the God of all
comforts and consolation (2 Cor 1:3-7). 8. Have we the Spirit, or the fruits
thereof? it is the gift of the Father–"how much more shall your heavenly Father
give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him (Luke 11:13)? "Thou has wrought all
our works in us" (Isa 26:12).
And so, I say, whether it be victory over sin, death, Hell, or the devil, it is
given us by the victory of Christ–"But thanks be to God which giveth us the
victory through our Lord Jesus Christ" (1 Cor 15:57; Rom 7:24,25). Heaven and
glory it is also the gift of Him who giveth us richly all things to enjoy (Matt
25:34).
So that these things, if they be duly and soberly considered, will give
satisfaction in this thing. I might have added many more for the clearing of
these things; as 1. When God came to man to convert him, He found him a dead man
(Eph 2:1,2). He found him an enemy to God, Christ, and the salvation of his own
soul; He found him wallowing in all manner of wickedness; He found him taking
pleasure therein; with all delight and greediness. 2. He was fain to quicken him
by putting His Spirit into him, and to translate him by the mighty operation
thereof. He was fain to reveal Christ Jesus unto him, man being altogether
senseless and ignorant of this blessed Jesus (Matt 11:25,27; 1 Cor 2:7-10). 4.
He was fain to break the snare of the devil, and to let poor man, poor bound and
fettered man, out of the chains of the enemy.
[THE NEW COVENANT FREE AND UNCHANGEABLE, WHO ARE UNDER IT, AND THEIR
PRIVILEGES.]
Now we are to proceed, and the things that we are to treat upon in the second
place are these–First. [Besides the reasons already given.] Why is it a free and
unchangeable grace? SECOND. Who they are that are actually brought into His free
and unchangeable Covenant of Grace, and how they are brought in? THIRD. What are
the privileges of those that are actually brought into this free and glorious
grace of the glorious God of Heaven and glory?
[THE NEW COVENANT FREE AND UNCHANGEABLE BECAUSE MADE WITH CHRIST.]
FIRST. WHY IT IS A FREE AND UNCHANGEABLE GRACE.
And for the opening of this we must consider, first, How and through Whom this
grace doth come to be, first, free to us, and, secondly, unchangeable? This
grace is free to us through conditions in Another–that is, by way of covenant or
bargain; for this grace comes by way of covenant or bargain to us, yet made with
Another for us.
First. That it comes by way of covenant, contract, or bargain, though not
personally with us, be pleased to consider these Scriptures, where it is said,
"I have made a covenant with My Chosen: I have sworn unto David [The word David
in this place signifieth Christ, as also in these Scriptures–(Eze 34:23,24;
37:24,25).] My servant" (Psa 89:3). "And as for Thee also, by the blood of Thy
covenant," speaking of Christ, "I have sent forth Thy prisoners out of the pit
wherein is no water," (Zech 9:9-11). Again; "Ye have sold yourselves for nought;
and ye shall be redeemed without money" (Isa 52:3). Blessed be the Lord,"
therefore, saith Zacharias, "for He hath visited and" also "redeemed His people,
and hath raised up an horn of salvation for us in the house of His servant
David; as He spake by the mouth of His holy Prophets, which have been since the
world began; that we should be saved from our enemies, and from the hands of all
that hate us; to perform the mercy promised to our fathers, and to remember His
holy covenant," or bargain (Luke 1:68-72). [I might give you more Scriptures;
but pray consider the second thing.] And if any should be offended with the
plainness of these words, as some poor souls may be through ignorance, let them
be pleased to read soberly Isaiah 49:1-12, and there they may see that it runs
as plain a bargain as if two would be making of a bargain between themselves,
and concluding upon several conditions on both sides. But more of this
hereafter. Now,
Second. This covenant, I say, was made with One, not with many, and also
confirmed in the conditions of it with One, not with several. First, that the
covenant was made with One (Gal 3:16). "Now to Abraham and his Seed were the
promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to thy
Seed, which is Christ" (Verse 17). "And this, I say, that the covenant that was
confirmed before of God, in Christ," etc. The covenant was made with the Seed of
Abraham; not the seeds, but the Seed, which is the Lord Jesus Christ, our Head
and Undertaker in the things concerning the covenant.
Third. The condition was made with One, and also accomplished by Him alone, and
not by several; yet in the nature, and for the everlasting deliverance of many;
even by one man Jesus Christ, as it is clear from Romans 5:15-17, etc., and in
Zechariah 9:11, the Lord saith to Christ, "And as for Thee"–mark, "As for Thee
also, by the blood of Thy covenant," or as for Thee whose covenant was by blood;
that is, the condition of the covenant was, that Thou shouldst spill Thy blood;
which having been done in the account of God, saith He, I according to My
condition have let go the prisoners, or sent them "out of the pit wherein is no
water." Those Scriptures in Galatians 3:16,17 that are above cited, are notably
to our purpose; Verse 16 saith it was made with Christ, Verse 17 saith it was
also confirmed in or with God in Him. Pray read with understanding. "Now," saith
Paul, "the promises were not made unto seeds, as of many; but as of one, And to
thy Seed, which is Christ." . . . . "The law, which was four hundred and thirty
years after, cannot disannul, that it should make the promise of none effect."
Not that the covenant was made with Abraham and Christ together, as two persons
that were the undertakers of the same; the promise was made with, or to, Abraham
afterwards; but the covenant with Christ before.
[Neither Abraham nor the fathers able to undertake the accomplishment of this
covenant.]
Further, that the covenant was not personally made with Abraham, no, nor with
any of the fathers, neither so as that they were the persons that should stand
engaged to be the accomplishers thereof, either in whole or in part; which is
very clear.
First. Because this covenant was not made with God and the creature; not with
another poor Adam, that only stood upon the strength of natural abilities; but
this covenant was made with the second Person, with the Eternal Word of God;
with Him that was everyways as holy, as pure, as infinite, as powerful, and as
everlasting as God (Prov 8:22-31; Isa 9:6; Zech 13:7; Phil 2:6; Heb 1; Rev
1:11-17; 22:13,17).
Second. This covenant or bargain was made in deed and in truth before man was in
being. O! God thought of the salvation of man before there was any transgression
of man; for then, I say, and not since then, was the Covenant of Grace made with
the Undertaker thereof; for all the other sayings are to show unto us that
glorious plot and contrivance that was concluded on before time between the
Father and the Son, which may very well be concluded on for a truth from the
Word of God, if you consider, 1. That the Scripture doth declare that the price
was agreed on by the Son before time; 2. The promise was made to Him by the
Father that He should have His bargain before time; 3. The choice, and who they
were that should be saved was made before time, even before the world began.
1. For the first, That the price was agreed upon before the world began.
Consider the word which speaketh of the price that was paid for sinners, even
the precious blood of Christ; it saith of Him, "Who verily was foreordained
before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for
you, who by Him do believe," etc. (1 Peter 1:20,21). Mark, it was foreordained
or concluded on between the Father and the Son before the world began.
2. The promise from God to the Son was also made in the same manner, as it is
clear where the Apostle saith with comfort to his soul, that he had "hope of
eternal life, which God, that cannot lie, promised before the world began,"
(Titus 1:2) which could be to none but the Mediator of the new covenant, because
there was none else to whom it should be made but He.
3. The choice was also made then, even before man had a being in this world, as
it is evident where he saith, "Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, who hath blessed us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places IN
Christ: according as He hath chosen us in Him before the foundation of the
world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love" (Eph 1:3,4).
[Did I think this would meet with any opposition, I should be in this more
large.] Nay, did I look upon it here to be necessary, I should show you very
largely and clearly that God did not only make the covenant with Christ before
the world began, and the conditions thereof, but I could also show you that the
very saints' qualifications, as part of the covenant, was then concluded on by
the Father and the Son according to these Scriptures, which, it may be, I may
touch upon further anon (Eph 1:3,4; 2:10; Rom 8:28). But,
Third. This covenant was not made with any of the fathers, neither in whole nor
in part, as the undertakers thereof; for then it must be also concluded that
they are co-partners with Christ in our salvation, and so that Christ is not
Mediator alone; but this would be blasphemy for any once to surmise. And
therefore, by the way, when thou readest of the new covenant in Scripture as
though it was made with Adam, Noah, Abraham, or David, thou art to consider thus
with thyself–1. That God spake to them in such a way for to show or signify unto
us how He did make the covenant that He did make with Christ before the world
began, they being types of Him. 2. That He thereby might let them understand
that He was the same then as He is now, and now as He was then; and that then it
was resolved on between His Son and HIM, that in after ages His Son should in
their natures, from their loins, and for their sins, be born of a woman, hanged
on the Cross, etc., for them: for all along you may see that when He speaketh to
them of the new covenant, He mentions their seed–their seed–still aiming at
Christ; Christ, the Seed of the woman, was to break the serpent's head (Gen
3:15; 17; Psa 89:36). Now to Abraham and his Seed was the promise made; his Seed
shall endure for ever, and His throne as the days of Heaven, etc.; still
pointing at Christ. And, 3. To stir up their faith and expectations to be
constant unto the end in waiting for that which He and His Son had concluded on
before time, and what He had since the conclusion declared unto the world by the
Prophets. 4. It appeareth that the heart of God was much delighted therein also,
as is evident, in that He was always in every age declaring of that unto them
which before He had prepared for them. O this good God of Heaven!
Objection: But you will say, perhaps, the Scriptures say plainly that the new
covenant was and is made with believers, saying, "The days come, saith the Lord,
that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of
Judah; not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers in the day
when I led them out of the land of Egypt," etc. (Heb 8:8-10). So that it doth
not run with Christ alone, but with believers also–I will make a new covenant
with the house of Israel and Judah, etc. (Jer 31:33).
Answer first: It cannot be meant that the new covenant was made with Christ, and
the house of Israel and Judah as the undertakers thereof; for so it was made
with Christ alone, which is clear, in that it was made long before the house of
Israel and Judah had a being, as I showed before. But,
Answer second: These words here are spoken, first, to show rather the end of the
ceremonies than the beginning or rise of the new covenant. Mind a little; the
Apostle is labouring to beat the Jews, to whom he wrote this Epistle, off of the
ceremonies of the law, of the priests, altar, offerings, temple, etc., and to
bring them to the right understanding of the thing and things that they held
forth, which were to come, and to put an end to those. If you do but understand
the Epistle to the Hebrews, it is a discourse that showeth that the Son of God
being come, there is an end put to the ceremonies; for they were to continue so
long and no longer–"It," saith the Apostle, "stood in meats and drinks, and
divers washings, and carnal ordinances imposed on them until the time of
reformation"; that is, until Christ did come. "But Christ being come an high
priest of good things to come," etc., puts an end to the things and ordinances
of the Levitical priesthood. Read the 7th, 8th, 9th, and 10th Chapters of
Hebrews, and you will find this true.
So, then, when He saith, "The days come in which I make a new covenant," it is
rather to be meant a changing of the administration, taking away the type, the
shadow, the ceremonies from the house of Israel and Judah, and relieving by the
birth of Christ, and the death of Christ, and the offering of the body of Him
whom the shadows and types did point out to be indeed He whom God the Father had
given for a ransom by covenant for the souls of the saints; and also to manifest
the truth of that covenant which was made between the Father and the Son before
the world began; for though the new covenant was made before the world began,
and also every one in all ages was saved by the virtue of that covenant, yet
that covenant was never so clearly made manifest as at the coming, death, and
resurrection of Christ; and therefore, saith the Scripture, "He hath brought
life and immortality to light through the Gospel." "Who hath saved us, and
called us with an holy calling" not according to" the "works" of righteousness
which we have done, "but according to His own purpose and grace, which was given
us in Christ Jesus before the world began," there is the covenant, but it was
"made MANIFEST by the APPEARING of our Saviour Jesus Christ, who hath abolished
death, and brought life and immortality to LIGHT through the Gospel" (2 Tim
1:9,10). Therefore, I say, these words are therefore to discover that the time
was come to change the dispensation, to take away the type, and bring in the
substance, and so manifesting that more clearly which before lay hid in dark
sayings and figures. And this is usual with God to speak in this manner.
Again; if at any time you do find in Scripture that the Covenant of Works is
spoken of as the first covenant that was manifested, and so before the second
covenant, yet you must understand that it was so only as to manifestation–that
is, it was first given to man, yet not made before that which was made with
Christ; and indeed it was requisite that it should be given or made known first,
that thereby there might be a way made for the second, by its discovering of
sin, and the sad state that man was in after the Fall by reason of that. And
again, that the other might be made the more welcome to the sons of men. Yet the
second Adam was before the first, and also the second covenant before the first.
This is a riddle].
And in this did Christ in time most gloriously answer Adam, who was the figure
of Christ, as well as of other things. Romans 5. For, Was the first covenant
made with the first Adam? so was the second covenant made with the second; for
these are and were the two great public persons, or representators of the whole
world, as to the first and second covenants; and therefore you find God speaking
on this wise in Scripture concerning the new covenant–"My covenant shall stand
fast with HIM." "My mercy will I keep for HIM for evermore," saith God: "My
covenant shall stand fast with HIM" (Psa 89:28,34,35); this HIM is Christ, if
you compare this with Luke 1:32, "My covenant will I not break"–namely, that
which was made with HIM–"nor alter the thing that is gone out of My mouth. Once
I have sworn by My holiness that I will not lie unto David," [David here is to
be understood Christ.] to whom this was spoken figuratively in the Person of
Christ; for that was God's usual way to speak of the glorious things of the
Gospel in the time of the Law, as I said before.
THE CONDITIONS OF THE NEW COVENANT.
The conditions also were concluded on and agreed to be fulfilled by Him: as it
is clear, if you understand His saying in the 12th of John, at the 27th verse,
where He foretelleth His death, and saith, "Now is My soul troubled; and what
shall I say? Father, save Me from this hour: but for this cause came I" into the
world "unto this hour"; as if He had said, My business is now not to shrink from
My sufferings that are coming upon Me; for these are the things that are a great
part of the conditions contracted in the covenant which stands between My Father
and Me; therefore I shall not pray that this might be absolutely removed from
Me; For, "for this cause came I" into the world; even this was the very terms of
the covenant. By this you may see, "we are under grace."
Now in a covenant there are these three things to be considered–First. What it
is that is covenanted for. Second. The conditions upon which the persons who are
concerned in it do agree. Third. If the conditions on both sides be not
according to the agreement fulfilled, then the covenant standeth not, but is
made void. And this new covenant in these particulars is very exactly fulfilled
and made out in Christ.
First. The thing or things covenanted for was the salvation of man, but made
good in Christ–"The Son of Man is come to seek and to save that which was lost.
The Son of Man did not come to destroy men's lives, but to save them. I gave My
life a ransom for many. And this is the will," or covenant, "of Him that sent
Me, that of all which He hath given Me, I should lose nothing, but should raise
it up again at the last day" (John 6:39).
Second. As touching the conditions agreed on, they ran thus– 1. On the
Mediator's side, that He should come into the world; and then on the Father's
side, that He should give Him a body. This was one of the glorious conditions
between the Father and Christ; "Wherefore, when He cometh into the world, He
saith, Sacrifice and offering Thou wouldest not"–that is, the old covenant must
not stand, but give way to another sacrifice which Thou hast prepared, which is
the giving up My Manhood to the strokes of Thy justice–"for a body Thou hast
prepared Me" (Heb 10:5). This doth prove us under grace.
2. On the Mediator's side, that He should be put to death; and on God the
Father's side, that He should raise Him up again; this was concluded on also to
be done between God the Father and His Son Jesus Christ. On Christ's side, that
He should die to give the justice of His Father satisfaction, and so to take
away the curse that was due to us, wretched sinners, by reason of our
transgressions; and that God His Father, being every ways fully and completely
satisfied, should by His mighty power revive and raise Him up again. He hath
"brought again– our Lord Jesus"; that is, from death to life, through the virtue
or effectual satisfaction that He received from the blood that was shed
according to the terms "of the Everlasting Covenant" (Heb 13:20).
3. On the Mediator's side, that He should be made a curse; and on the Father's
side, that through Him sinners should be inheritors of the blessing. What
wonderful love doth there appear by this in the heart of our Lord Jesus, in
suffering such things for our poor bodies and souls? (Gal 3:13,14). This is
grace.
4. That on the Mediator's side there should be by Him a victory over Hell,
death, and the devil, and the curse of the Law; and on the Father's side, that
these should be communicated to sinners, and they set at liberty thereby–"Turn
you to the stronghold," saith God, "ye prisoners of hope; even today do I
declare that I will render double unto thee" (Zech 9:12). Why so? It is because
of the blood of My Son's covenant (Verse 11); which made Paul, though sensible
of a body of death, and of the sting that death did strike into the souls of all
those that are found in their sins, bold to say, "O death! where is thy sting? O
grave! where is thy victory? The sting of death is sin." That is true, and the
terrible Law of God doth aggravate and set it home with insupportable torment
and pain. But shall I be daunted at this? No, "I thank my God through Jesus
Christ He hath given me this victory." So that now, though I be a sinner in
myself, yet I can, by believing in Jesus Christ, the Mediator of this new
covenant, triumph over the devil, sin, death, and Hell; and say, Do not fear, my
soul, seeing the victory is obtained over all my enemies through my Lord Jesus
Christ (1 Cor 15:55-57). This is the way to prove ourselves under grace.
5. That on the Mediator's side He should by thus doing bring in everlasting
righteousness for saints (Dan 9:24); and that the Father for this should give
them an everlasting kingdom (1 Peter 1:3-5; Eph 1:4; 2 Tim 4:18; Luke 22:28,29).
But,
Third. [How the conditions are fulfilled]. In the next place, this was not
all–that is, the Covenant of Grace, with the conditions thereof, was not only
concluded on by both parties to be done, but Jesus Christ [Christ is put into
office by the Father, to do all things contained in the new covenant]. must be
authorized to do what was concluded on touching this covenant by way of office.
I shall therefore speak a word or two also touching the offices, at least, some
of them, that Christ Jesus did and doth still execute as the Mediator of the new
covenant, which also were typed out in the Levitical law; for this is the way to
prove that we are not under the law, but under grace. And,
CHRIST IS THE SURETY OF THE NEW COVENANT.
FIRST. His first office, after the covenant was made and concluded upon, was
that Jesus should become bound as a Surety, [His Suretyship]. and stand engaged
upon oath to see that all the conditions of the covenant that were concluded on
between Him and His Father should, according to the agreement, be accomplished
by Him; and that after that, He should be the Messenger from God to the world to
declare the mind of God touching the tenor and nature of both the covenants,
especially of the new one. The Scripture saith, that Jesus Christ was not only
made a priest by an oath, but also a Surety, or bondsman, as in Hebrews 7:21,
22. In the 21st Verse he speaketh of the priesthood of Christ, that it was with
an oath; and saith, in the 22nd Verse, "By so much" also "was Jesus made a
Surety of a better testament," or covenant.
Now the covenant was not only made on Jesus Christ's side with an oath, but also
on God the Father's side, that it might be for the better ground of
establishment to all those that are, or are to be, the children of the promise.
Methinks it is wonderful to consider that the God and Father of our souls, by
Jesus Christ, should be so bent upon the salvation of sinners, that He would
covenant with His Son Jesus for the security of them, and also that there should
pass an oath on both sides for the confirmation of Their resolution to do good.
As if the Lord had said, My Son, Thou and I have here made a covenant, that I on
My part should do thus and thus, and that Thou on Thy part shouldst do so and
so. Now that We may give these souls the best ground of comfort that may be,
there shall pass an oath on both sides, that Our children may see that We do
indeed love them. "Wherein God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs
of promise the immutability of His counsel," in making of the covenant,
"confirmed it by an oath: that we might have a strong consolation, who have fled
for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us" (Heb 6:17,18; 7:21). Mark,
the 6th Chapter saith, God confirmed His part by an oath; and the 7th saith,
Christ was made or set on His office also by an oath. Again, "Once," saith God,
"have I sworn by My holiness, that I will not lie unto David," "nor alter the
thing that is gone out of My mouth," (Psa 89:34,35) as was before cited.
Herein you may see that God and Christ were in good earnest about the salvation
of sinners; for as soon as ever the covenant was made, the next thing was, who
should be bound to see all those things fulfilled which were conditioned on
between the Father and the Son: the angels, they could have no hands in it; the
world could not do it; the devils had rather see them damned than they would
wish them the least good; thus Christ looked, and there was none to help; though
the burden lay never so heavy upon His shoulder, He must bear it Himself; for
there was none besides Himself to uphold, or so much as to step in to be bound,
to see the conditions, before mentioned, fulfilled neither in whole nor in part
(Isa 63:1-7). So that He must not be only He with whom the covenant was made,
but He must also become the bondsman or surety thereof, and so stand bound to
see that all and every particular thing conditioned for should be, both in
manner, and matter, at the time and place, according to the agreement, duly and
orderly fulfilled. Is not this grace?
Now as touching the nature of a surety and his work, in some things it is well
known to most men; therefore I shall be very brief upon it.
First. You know a surety is at the bargain's making; and so was Christ–"Then was
I beside Him" (Prov 8:30).
Second. A surety must consent to the terms of the agreement, or covenant; and so
did Christ Jesus. Now that which He did engage should be done for sinners,
according to the terms of the covenant; it was this–1. That there should be a
complete satisfaction given to God for the sins of the world; for that was one
great thing that was agreed upon when the covenant was made (Heb 10:5,17). 2.
That Jesus Christ should, as aforesaid, bring in an everlasting righteousness to
clothe the saints (His body) withal (Dan 9:24,25). Here is grace. 3. That He
should take in charge to see all those forthcoming without spot or wrinkle at
the day of His glorious appearing from Heaven in judgment, and to quit them
before the Judgment-seat. Again,
Third. In the work of a surety there is required by the creditor that the surety
should stand to what he is bound; and on the surety's side there is a consenting
thereunto. 1. The creditor looks, that in case the debtor proves a bankrupt,
that then the surety should engage the payment. Is not this grace? [However it
is in other engagements, it is thus in this]. 2. The creditor looks that the
surety should be an able man. Now our Surety was, and is, in this case, every
way suitable; for He is heir of all things. 3. The creditor appoints the day,
and also looks that the covenant should be kept, and the debt paid, according to
the time appointed; and it is required of sureties, as well as stewards, that
they be found faithful–namely, to pay the debt according to the bargain; and
therefore it is said, "When the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth
His Son–made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law," (Gal
4:4,5). Thus comes grace to saints. 4. The creditor looks that his money should
be brought into his house, to his own habitation. Jesus, our Surety, in this
also is faithful; for by His own blood, which was the payment, He is entered
into the holy place, even into Heaven itself, which is God's dwelling-place, to
render the value and price that was agreed upon for the salvation of sinners.
But I shall speak more of this in another head, therefore I pass it. Again,
Fourth. If the surety stands bound, the debtor is at liberty; and if the law do
issue out any process to take any, it will be the surety. [Though the debtor,
together with the surety, is liable to pay the debt by the law of man, yet
Christ our Surety only by the Covenant of Grace]. And, O! how wonderfully true
was this accomplished in that, when Christ our Surety came down from Heaven,
God's Law did so seize upon the Lord Jesus, and so cruelly handle Him, and so
exact upon Him, that it would never let Him alone until it had accused Him and
condemned Him, executed Him, and screwed His very heart's blood out of His
precious heart and side; nay, and more than this too, as I shall show hereafter.
But,
CHRIST THE MESSENGER OF THE NEW COVENANT.
SECOND. [His second office]. After that Jesus Christ had stood bound, and was
become our Surety in things pertaining to this covenant, His next office was to
be the Messenger of God touching His mind and the tenor of the covenant unto the
poor world; and this did the Prophet foresee long before, when he saith,
"Behold, I will send My messenger, and he shall prepare the way before Me";
speaking of John the Baptist. "And he shall prepare the way before Me." And then
He speaketh of Christ to the people, saying, "And the Lord whom ye seek shall
suddenly come to His temple." Who is He? Even the Messenger of the covenant,
whom ye delight in," that is Christ. "Behold, He shall come, saith the LORD of
Hosts" (Mal 3:1).
Now the covenant being made before between the Father and the Son, and Jesus
Christ becoming bound to see all the conditions fulfilled, this being done, He
could come down from Heaven to earth, to declare to the world what God the
Father and HE had concluded on before, and what was the mind of the Father
towards the world concerning the salvation of their souls; and indeed, who could
better come on such an errand than He that stood by when the covenant was made?
than He that shook hands with the Father in making of the covenant? than He that
was become a Surety in the behalf of poor sinners, according to the terms of the
covenant.
Now, you know, a messenger commonly when he cometh, doth bring some errand to
them to whom he is sent, either of what is done for them, or what they would
have them whom they send unto do for them, or such like. Now what a glorious
message was that which our Lord Jesus Christ came down from Heaven withal to
declare unto poor sinners, and that from God His Father? I say, how glorious was
it; and how sweet is it to you that have seen yourselves lost by nature? and it
will also appear a glorious one to you who are a seeking after Jesus Christ, if
you do but consider these following things about what He was sent–
First. Jesus Christ was sent from Heaven to declare unto the world from God the
Father that He was wonderfully filled with love to poor sinners. First, in that
He would forgive their sins. Secondly, in that He would save their souls.
Thirdly in that He would make them heirs of His glory. "For God so loved the
world, that He gave His only begotten Son.–For God sent not His Son into the
world to condemn the world, but that the world through Him might be saved" (John
3:16,17).
Second. God sent Jesus Christ to tell the poor world how that He would do this
for poor sinners, and yet be just, and yet do His justice no wrong; and that was
to be done by Jesus Christ's dying of a cursed death in the room of poor
sinners, to satisfy justice, and make way for mercy; to take away the stumbling-
blocks, and set open Heaven's gates; to overcome Satan, and break off from
sinners his chains (Luke 4:18) to set open the prison doors, and to let the
prisoners go free (Isa 61:1-3). And this was the message that Christ was to
deliver to the world by commandment from His Father; and this did He tell us
when He came of His errand, where he saith, "I lay down My life for the sheep–no
man taketh it from Me, but I lay it down of Myself. I have power to lay it down,
and to take it again. This commandment have I received of My Father" (John
10:15-18). Even this commandment hath My Father given Me, that I should both do
this thing and also tell it unto you.
Third. He was not only sent as a Messenger to declare this His father's love,
but also how dearly He himself loved sinners, what a heart He had to do them
good, where He saith, "All that the Father giveth Me shall come to Me"; and let
me tell you, MY heart too, saith Christ–"Him that cometh to Me, I will in no
wise cast out" (John 6:37). As My Father is willing to give you unto Me, even so
am I as willing to receive you. As My Father is willing to give you Heaven, so
am I willing to make you fit for it, by washing you with My own blood; I lay
down My life that you might have life; and this I was sent to tell you of My
Father.
Fourth. His message was further; He came to tell them how and which way they
should come to enjoy these glorious benefits; also by laying down motives to
stir them up to accept of the benefits. The way is laid down in John 3:14,15,
where Christ saith, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so
must the Son of Man be lifted up," or caused to be hanged on the Cross, and die
the death–"that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have
everlasting life." The way, therefore, that thou shalt have the benefit and
comfort of that which My Father and I have covenanted for, for thee, I am come
down from Heaven to earth on purpose to give thee intelligence, and to certify
thee of it. Know, therefore, that as I have been born of a woman, and I have
taken this Body upon Me, it is on purpose that I might offer it up upon the
Cross a sacrifice to God, to give Him satisfaction for thy sins, that His mercy
may be extended to thy soul, without any wrong done to justice; and this thou
art to believe, and not in the notion but from thy very whole soul. Now the
motives are many. 1. If they do not leave their sins, and come to Jesus Christ,
that their sins may be washed away by His blood, they are sure to be damned in
Hell; for the law hath condemned them already (John 3:18,19). 2. But if they do
come, they shall have the bosom of Christ to lie in, the Kingdom of Heaven to
dwell in, the angels and saints for their companions, shall shine there like the
sun, shall be there for ever, shall sit upon the thrones of judgment, etc. Here
is grace.
Methinks if I had but the time to speak fully to all things that I could speak
to from these two heavenly truths, and to make application thereof, surely, with
the blessing of God, I think it might persuade some vile and abominable wretch
to lay down his arms that he hath taken up in defiance against God, and is
marching Hellwards, post-haste with the devil; I say, methinks it should stop
them, and make them willing to look back and accept of salvation for their poor
condemned souls, before God's eternal vengeance is executed upon them. O,
therefore! you that are upon this march, I beseech you consider a little. What!
shall Christ become a drudge for you; and will you be drudges for the devil?
Shall Christ covenant with God for the salvation of sinners; and shall sinners
covenant with Hell, death, and the devil for the damnation of their souls? Shall
Christ come down from Heaven to earth to declare this to sinners; and shall
sinners stop their ears against these good tidings? Will you not hear the errand
of Christ, although He telleth you tidings of peace and salvation? How, if He
had come, having taken a commandment from His Father to damn you, and to send
you to the devils in Hell? Sinner, hear His message; He speaketh no harm, His
words are Eternal Life; all men that give ear unto them, they have eternal
advantage by them; advantage, I say, that never hath an end. Besides, do but
consider these two things, it is like they have some sway upon thy soul–1. When
He came on His message, He came with tears in His eyes, and did even weepingly
tender the terms of reconciliation to them; I say, with tears in his eyes. And
when He came near the city–i.e., with His message of peace–beholding the
hardness of their hearts, He wept over it, and took up a lamentation over it;
because He saw they rejected His mercy, which was tidings of peace; I say, wilt
thou then slight a weeping Jesus, One that so loveth thy soul that, rather than
He will lose thee, He will with tears persuade with thee? 2. Not only so, but
also when He came, He came all on a gore blood to proffer mercy to thee, to show
thee still how dearly He did love thee; as if He had said, Sinner, here is mercy
for thee; but behold My bloody sweat, My bloody wounds, My cursed death; behold
and see what danger I have gone through to come unto thy soul; I am come indeed
unto thee, and do bring thee tidings of salvation, but it cost Me My heart's
blood before I could come at thee, to give thee the fruits of My everlasting
love. But more of this anon.
Thus have I spoken something concerning Christ's being the Messenger of the new
covenant; but because I am not willing to cut too short of what shall come
after, I shall pass by these things not half touched, and come to the other
which I promised even now; which was to show you, that as there were Levitical
ceremonies in or belonging to the first covenant, so these types, or Levitical
ceremonies, did represent the glorious things of the new covenant. In those
ceremonies you read of a sacrifice, of a priest to offer up the sacrifice, the
place where, and the manner how, he was to offer it; of which I shall speak
something.
CHRIST THE SACRIFICE OF THE NEW COVENANT.
THIRD. [A third office of Christ, in reference to the new covenant, was His
becoming the sacrifice]. As touching the sacrifice; you find that it was not to
be offered up of all kind of beasts, as of lions, bears, wolves, tigers,
dragons, serpents, or such like; to signify, that not all kind of creatures that
had sinned, as devils, the fallen angels, should be saved; but the sacrifice was
to be taken out of some kind of beasts and birds, to signify, that some of God's
creatures that had sinned He would be pleased to reconcile them to Himself
again; as poor fallen man and woman, those miserable creatures, God, the God of
Heaven, had a good look for after their fall; but not for the cruel devils,
though more noble creatures by creation than we. Here is grace.
Now though these sacrifices were offered, yet they were not offered to the end
they should make the comers to, or offerers thereof, perfect; but the things
were to represent to the world what God had in after ages for to do, which was
even the salvation of His creatures by that offering of the body of Jesus
Christ, of which these were a shadow and a type for the accomplishing of the
second covenant. For Christ was by covenant to offer a sacrifice, and that an
effectual one too, if He intended the salvation of sinners–"A body hast Thou
prepared for Me; I am come to do Thy will" (Heb 10:5). I shall therefore show
you, First. What was expected by God in the sacrifice in the type, and then show
you how it was answered in the antitype. Second. I shall show you the manner of
the offering of the type, and so answerable thereto to show you the fitness of
the sacrifice of the body of Christ, by way of answering some questions.
First. For the first of these, [What was expected by God in the sacrifice in the
type, and how answered in the antitype]–1. God did expect that sacrifice which
He Himself had appointed, and not another, to signify, that none would serve His
turn but the body and soul of His appointed Christ, the Mediator of the new
covenant (John 1:29). 2. This sacrifice must not be lame nor deformed; it must
have no scar, spot, or blemish; to signify, that Jesus Christ was to be a
complete sacrifice by covenant (1 Peter 1:19). 3. This sacrifice was to be taken
out of the flock or herd; to signify, that Jesus Christ was to come out of the
race of mankind, according to covenant (Heb 10:5). But,
Second. As to the manner of it [The offering of the types, and so answerable
thereto, to show the fitness of the sacrifice of the body of Christ]–1. The
sacrifice, before it was offered, was to have all the sins of the children of
Israel confessed over it; to signify, that Jesus Christ must bear the sins of
all His children by covenant (Isa 53:4-7; 1 Peter 2:24). "As for Thee also, by
the blood of Thy covenant," in His own body on the tree (Zech 9:11). 2. It must
be had to the place appointed–namely, without the camp of Israel; to signify,
that Jesus Christ must be led to the Mount Calvary (Luke 23:33). 3. The
sacrifice was to be killed there; to signify, that Jesus Christ must and did
suffer without the city of Jerusalem for our salvation. 4. The sacrifice must
not only have its life taken away, but also some of its flesh burned upon the
altar; to signify, that Jesus Christ was not only to die a natural death, but
also that He should undergo the pains and torments of the damned in Hell. 5.
Sometimes there must be a living offering and a dead offering, as the goat that
was killed, and the scape-goat, the dead bird and the living bird, to signify,
that Jesus Christ must die, and come to life again (Lev 19:4-6).
6. The goat that was to die was to be the sin-offering; that is, to be offered
as the rest of the sin-offerings, to make an atonement as a type; and the other
goat was to have all the sins of the children of Israel confessed over him, and
then let go into the wilderness, never to be catched again (Lev 16:7-22). To
signify, that Christ's death was to make satisfaction for sin, and His coming to
life again was to bring in everlasting justification from the power, curse, and
destroying nature of sin (Rom 4:25). 7. The scape-goat was to be carried by a
fit man into the wilderness; to signify that Jesus Christ should both be fit and
able to carry our sins quite a way from us, so as they should never be laid to
our charge again. Here is grace. 8. The sacrifices under the law, commonly part
of them must be eaten; to signify, that they that are saved should spiritually
feed on the body and blood of Jesus Christ, or else they have no life by Him
(Exo 12:5-11; John 6:51-53). 9. This sacrifice must be eaten with unleavened
bread; to signify, that they which love their sins, that devilish leaven of
wickedness, they do not feed upon Jesus Christ. [8]
Now of what hath been spoken this is the sum, that there is a sacrifice under
the new covenant, as there were sacrifices under the old; and that this
sacrifice did every way answer that, or those; indeed, they did but suffer for
sin in show, but He in reality; they are the shadow, but He as the substance. O!
when Jesus Christ did come to make Himself a sacrifice, or to offer Himself for
sin, you may understand that our sins were indeed charged to purpose upon Him.
O! how they scarred his soul, how they brake His body, insomuch that they made
the blood run down His blessed face and from His precious side; therefore thou
must understand these following things–First, that Jesus Christ by covenant did
die for sin. Secondly, that His death was not a mere natural death, but a
"cursed death," even such an one as men do undergo from God for their sins,
though He Himself had none, even such a death as to endure the very pains and
torments of Hell. O sad pains and inexpressible torments that this our Sacrifice
for sin went under! The pains of His body were not all; no, but the pains of His
soul; for His soul was made an offering as well as His body, yet all but one
sacrifice (Isa 53).
[As Christ did not suffer in His body without suffering in soul, nor yet in soul
without His suffering in body; it was because not the body without the soul, but
both the body and soul of the saints should be for ever saved]. To signify, that
the suffering of Christ was not only a bodily suffering, but a soul suffering;
not only to suffer what man could inflict upon Him, but also to suffer soul
torments that none but God can inflict, or suffer to be inflicted upon Him. O,
the torments of His soul! they were the torments indeed; His soul was that that
felt the wrath of God. "My soul," saith He, "is exceeding sorrowful, even unto
death" (Matt 26:38). "Now is My soul troubled, and what shall I say?" (John
12:27). The rock was not so rent as was His precious soul; there was not such a
terrible darkness on the face of the earth then as there was on His precious
soul. O! the torments of Hell and the eclipsings of the Divine smiles of God
were both upon Him at once; the devils assailing of Him, and God forsaking of
Him, and all at once! "My God, My God," saith He, "why hast Thou forsaken Me?"
(Matt 27:46). Now in my greatest extremity; now sin is laid upon Me, the curse
takes hold of Me, the pains of Hell are clasped about Me, and Thou hast forsaken
Me. O sad! Sinners, this was not done in pretence, but in reality; not in show,
but in very deed; otherwise Christ had dissembled, and had not spoken the truth;
but the truth of it His bloody sweat declares, His mighty cries declare, the
things which and for what He suffered declare. Nay, I must say thus much, that
all the damned souls in Hell, with all their damnations, did never yet feel that
torment and pain that did this blessed Jesus in a little time. Sinner, canst
thou read that Jesus Christ was made an offering for sin, and yet go in sin?
Canst thou hear that the load of thy sins did break the very heart of Christ,
and spill His precious blood? and canst thou find in thy heart to labour to lay
more sins upon His back? Canst thou hear that He suffered the pains, the fiery
flames of Hell, and canst thou find in thy heart to add to His groans by
slighting of His sufferings? O hard-hearted wretch! how canst thou deal so
unkindly with such a sweet Lord Jesus?
Quest. But why did Christ offer Himself in sacrifice?
Answ. That thou shouldst not be thrown to the very devils.
Quest. But why did He spill His precious blood?
Answ. That thou mightest enjoy the joys of Heaven.
Quest. But why did He suffer the pains of Hell?
Answ. That thou mightest not fry with the devil and damned souls.
Quest. But could not we have been saved if Christ had not died?
Answ. No; for without the shedding of blood there is no remission; and besides,
there was no death that could satisfy God's justice but His, which is evident,
because there was none in a capacity to die, or that was able to answer an
infinite God by His so suffering but He. [9]
Quest. But why did God let Him die?
Answ. He standing in the room of sinners, and that in their names and natures,
God's justice must fall upon Him; for justice takes vengeance for sin
wheresoever it finds it, though it be on His dear Son. Nay, God favoured His Son
no more, finding our sins upon Him, than He would have favoured any of us; for,
should we have died? so did He. Should we have been made a curse? so was He.
Should we have undergone the pains of Hell? so did He.
Quest. But did He indeed suffer the torments of Hell?
Answ. Yea, and that in such a horrible way too, that it is unspeakable.
Quest. Could He not have suffered without His so suffering? Would not His dying
only of a natural death have served the turn?
Answ. No, in nowise. 1. The sins for which He suffered called for the torments
of Hell; the conditions upon which He died did call for the torments of Hell;
for Christ did not die the death of a saint, but the death of a sinner, of a
cursed and damned sinner; because He stood in their room, the law to which He
was subjected called for the torments of Hell; the nature of God's justice could
not bate Him anything; the death which He was to suffer had not lost its sting;
all these being put together do irresistibly declare unto us that He, as a
sacrifice, did suffer the torments of Hell (Gal 3:13). But, 2. Had He not died
and suffered the cursed death, the covenant had been made void, and His
Suretyship would have been forfeited, and, besides this, the world damned in the
flames of Hell-fire; therefore, His being a sacrifice was one part of the
covenant; for the terms of the covenant were that He should spill His blood. O
blessed Jesus! O blessed grace! (Zech 9:10,11).
Quest. But why, then, is His death so slighted by some?
Answ. Because they are enemies to Him, either through ignorance or presumption;
either for want of knowledge or out of malice; for surely did they love or
believe Him, they could not choose but break and bleed at heart to consider and
to think of Him (Zech 12:10,11).
CHRIST THE HIGH PRIEST OF THE NEW COVENANT.
FOURTH, [A fourth office of Christ under the new covenant is His priestly].
Thus, passing this, I shall now speak something to Christ's priestly office.
But, by the way, if any should think that I do spin my thread too long in
distinguishing His priestly office from His being a sacrifice, the supposing
that for Christ to be a priest and a sacrifice is all one and the same thing;
and it may be it is, because they have not thought on this so well as they
should–namely, that as He was a sacrifice He was passive, that is, led or had
away as a lamb to His sufferings (Isaiah 53); but as a priest He was active–that
is, He did willingly and freely give up His Body to be a sacrifice. "He hath
given His life a ransom for many." This consideration being with some weight and
clearness on my spirit, I was and am caused to lay them down in two particular
heads.
And therefore I would speak something to is this, that as there were priests
under the first covenant, so there is a Priest under this, belonging to this new
covenant, a High Priest, the Chief Priest; as it is clear where it is said, We
"having a high priest over the house of God" (Heb 3:1; 5:5,10; 7:24-26; 8:1, 4;
10:21).
Now the things that I shall treat upon are these–First, I shall show you the
qualifications required of a priest under the Law; Second, his office; and,
Third, how Jesus Christ did according to what was signified by those under the
law; I say, how He did answer the types, and where He went beyond them.
First, For his qualifications:–
1. They must be called thereto of God–"No man taketh this honour unto himself,
but he that is called of God, as Aaron" (Heb 5:4). Now Aaron's being called of
God to be a priest signifies that Jesus Christ is a Priest of God's appointment,
such an one that God hath chosen, likes of, and hath set on work– "Called of God
an High Priest," etc. (Heb 5:10).
2. The priests under the law they must be men, complete, not deformed–"Speak
unto Aaron," saith God to Moses, "saying, Whosoever he be of thy seed in their
generations that hath any blemish, let him not approach to offer the bread of
his God. For whatsoever man he be that hath a blemish, he shall not approach; a
blind man, or a lame, or he that hath a flat nose, or any thing superfluous, or
a man that is broken-footed, or broken-handed, or crook-backt, or a dwarf, or
that hath a blemish in his eye, or be scurvy, or scabbed, or hath his stones
broken; no man that hath a blemish of the seed of Aaron the priest shall come
nigh to offer the offerings of the Lord made by fire; he that hath a blemish; he
shall not come nigh to offer the bread of his God" (Lev 21:17-21). What doth all
this signify but that, (1.) He must not be lame, to signify he must not go
haltingly about the work of our salvation. (2.) He must not be blind, to signify
that he must not go ignorantly to work, but he must be quick of understanding in
the things of God. (3.) He must not be scabbed, to signify that the priest must
not be corrupt of filthy in his office. (4.) In a word, he must be every way
complete, to signify to us that Jesus Christ was to be, and is, most complete
and most perfect in things pertaining to God in reference to His second
covenant.
3. The priests under the law were not to be hard-hearted, but pitiful and
compassionate, willing and ready, with abundance of bowels, to offer for the
people, and to make an atonement for them (Heb 5:1,2). To signify, that Jesus
Christ should be a tender-hearted High Priest, able and willing to sympathize
and be affected with the infirmities of others, to pray for them, to offer up
for them His precious blood; He must be such an One who can have compassion on a
company of poor ignorant souls, and on them that are out of the way, to recover
them, and to set them in safety (Heb 4:15). And that He might thus do, He must
be a man that had experience of the disadvantages that infirmity and sin did
bring unto those poor creatures (Heb 2:17).
4. The high priests under the law were not to be shy or squeamish in case there
were any that had the plague or leprosy, scab or blotches; but must look on
them, go to them, and offer for them (Lev 13), all which is to signify, that
Jesus Christ should not refuse to take notice of the several infirmities of the
poorest people, but to teach them, and to see that none of them be lost by
reason of their infirmity, for want of looking to or tending of. [10]
This privilege also have we under this second covenant. This is the way to make
grace shine.
5. The high priests under the law they were to be anointed with very excellent
oil, compounded by art (Exo 29:7; 30:30). To signify, that Jesus, the Great High
Priest of this new covenant, would be in a most eminent way anointed to His
priestly office by the Holy Spirit of the Lord.
6. The priest's food and livelihood in the time of his ministry was to be the
consecrated and holy things (Exo 29:33). To signify, that it is the very meat
and drink of Jesus Christ to do His priestly office, and to save and preserve
His poor, tempted,
and afflicted saints. O what a new-covenant High Priest have we!
7. The priests under the law were to be washed with water (Exo 29:4). To
signify, that Jesus Christ should not go about the work of His priestly office
with the filth of sin upon Him, but was without sin to appear as our High Priest
in the presence of His Father, to execute His priestly office there for our
advantage–"For such a high priest became us, who is holy, harmless, undefiled,
separate from sinners, and made higher than the heavens" (Heb 7:26).
8. The high priest under the law, before they went into the holy place, there
were to be clothed–with a curious garment, a breastplate, and an ephod, and a
robe, and a broidered coat, a mitre, and a girdle, and they were to be made of
gold, and blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen; and in his garment and
glorious ornaments there must be precious stones, and on those stones there must
be written the names of the children of Israel (read Exodus 28), and all this
was to signify what a glorious High Priest Jesus Christ should be, and how in
the righteousness of God He should appear before God as our High Priest, to
offer up the sacrifice that was to be offered for our salvation to God His
Father. But I pass that.
Second, Now I shall speak to His office. The office of the high priest in
general was twofold. 1. To offer the sacrifice without the camp. 2. To bring it
within the veil–that is, into the holiest of all, which did type out Heaven.
1. [First part of the high priest's office]. (1.) It was the office of the
priest to offer the sacrifice; and so did Jesus Christ; He did offer His own
Body and Soul in sacrifice. I say, HE did OFFER it, and not another, as it is
written, "No man taketh away My life, but I lay it down of Myself; I have power
to lay it down, and I have power to take it again" (John 10:17,18). And again it
is said, "When He," Jesus, "had offered up one sacrifice for sin, for ever sat
down on the right hand of God" (Heb 10:12). (2.) The priests under the law must
offer up the sacrifice that God had appointed, and none else, a complete one
without any blemish; and so did our High Priest, where He saith, "Sacrifice and
offering Thou wouldest not, but a body has Thou prepared Me," and that I will
offer (Heb 10:5). (3.) The priest was to take of the ashes of the sacrifice, and
lay them in a clean place; and this signifies, that the Body of Jesus, after it
had been offered, should be laid into Joseph's sepulchre, as in a clean place,
where never any man before was laid (Lev 6:11, compared with John 19:41,42).
2. [Second part of the high priest's office]. This being one part of his office,
and when this was done, then in the next place he was, (1.) To put on the
glorious garment, when he was to go into the holiest, and take of the blood, and
carry it thither, etc., he was to put on the holy garment which signifieth the
righteousness of Jesus Christ. (2.) He was in this holy garment, which hath in
it the stones, and in the stones the names of the twelve tribes of the children
of Israel, to appear in the holy place. "And thou shalt take two onyx stones,
and grave on them the names of the children of Israel: six of their names on one
stone, and the other six names of the rest on the other stone, according to
their birth (Exo 28:9,10). And this was to signify, that Jesus Christ was to
enter into the holiest, then He was there to bear the names of His elect in the
tables of His heart before the Throne of God and the Mercy-seat (Heb 12:23).
(3.) With this he was to take of the blood of the sacrifices, and carry it into
the holiest of all, which was a type of Heaven, and there was he to sprinkle the
mercy-seat; and this was to be done by the high priest only; to signify, that
none but Jesus Christ must have this office and privilege, to be the people's
High Priest to offer for them.
"But into the second went the high priest alone once every year, not without
blood, which he offered for himself, and for the errors of the people" (Heb
9:7). (4.) He was there to make an atonement for the people with the blood,
sprinkling of it upon the mercy-seat; but this must be done with much incense.
"And Aaron shall bring the bullock of the sin- offering which is for himself,
and for his house, and shall kill the bullock of the sin-offering which is for
himself: and he shall take a censor full of burning coals of fire from off the
altar before the Lord, and his hands full of sweet incense beaten small, and
bring it within the veil: and he shall put the incense upon the fire before the
Lord, that he cloud of the incense may cover the mercy-seat that is upon the
testimony, that he die not: and he shall take of the blood of the bullock, and
sprinkle it with his finger upon the mercy-seat eastward, and before the
mercy-seat shall he sprinkle of the blood with his finger seven times. Then
shall he kill the goat of the sin-offering, that is for the people, and bring
his blood within the veil, and do with that blood as he did with the blood of
the bullock, and sprinkle it upon the mercy-seat and before the mercy-seat."
(Lev 16:11- 15). Now this was for the priest and the people; all which doth
signify that Jesus Christ was after His death to go into Heaven itself, of which
this holy place was a figure, and there to carry the sacrifice that He offered
upon the Cross into the presence of God, to obtain mercy for the people in a way
of justice (Heb 9). And in that he is said to take his hands full of sweet
incense, it signifies that Jesus Christ was to offer up His sacrifice in the
presence of His Father in a way of intercession and prayers.
I might have branched these things out into several particulars, but I would be
brief. I say, therefore, the office of the priest was to carry the blood into
the holy place, and there to present it before the mercy-seat, with his heart
full of intercessions for the people for whom he was a priest (Luke 1:8-11).
This is Jesus Christ's work now in the Kingdom of Glory, to plead His own blood,
the nature and virtue of it, with a perpetual intercession to the God of Mercy
on behalf of us poor miserable sinners (Heb 7:25).
[Comfortable considerations from Christ's intercession]. Now, in the
intercession of this Jesus, which is part of His priestly office, there are
these things to be considered for our comfort–
1. There is a pleading of the virtue of His Blood for them that are already come
in, that they may be kept from the evils of heresies, delusions, temptations,
pleasures, profits, or anything of this world which may be too hard for them.
"Father, I pray not that Thou shouldest take them out of the world," saith
Christ, "but that Thou shouldest keep them from the evil" (John 17:15).
2. In case the devil should aspire up into the presence of God, to accuse any of
the poor saints, and to plead their backslidings against them, as he will do if
he can, then there is Jesus, our Lord Jesus, ready in the Court of Heaven, at
the right hand of God, to plead the virtue of His Blood, not only for the great
and general satisfaction that He did give when He was on the Cross, but also the
virtue that is in it now for the cleansing and fresh purging of His poor saints
under their several temptations and infirmities; as saith the Apostle, "For if
when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much
more being reconciled, we shall be saved by His life"–that is, by His
intercession (Rom 5:10).
3. The maintaining of grace, also, is by Jesus Christ's intercession, being the
second part of His priestly office. O, had we not a Jesus at the right hand of
God making intercession for us, and to convey fresh supplies of grace unto us
through the virtue of His Blood being pleaded at God's right hand, how soon
would it be with us as it is with those for whom He prays not at all (John
17:9)? But the reason why thou standest while others fall, the reason why thou
goest through the many temptations of the world, and shakest them off from thee,
while others are ensnared and entangled therein, it is because thou hast an
interceding Jesus. "I have prayed," saith He, "that thy faith fail not" (Luke
22:32).
4. It is partly by the virtue of Christ's intercession that the elect are
brought in. There are many that are to come to Christ which are not yet brought
in to Christ: and it is one part of His work to pray for their salvation
too–"Neither pray I for these alone, but for them also which shall believe,"
though as yet they do not believe "on Me," but that they may believe "through
their word" (John 17:20). And let me tell thee, soul, for thy comfort, who art
a-coming to Christ, panting and sighing, as if thy heart would break, I tell
thee, soul, thou wouldst never have come to Christ, if He had not first, by the
virtue of His blood and intercession, sent into thy heart an earnest desire
after Christ; and let me tell thee also, that it is His business to make
intercession for thee, not only that thou mightest come in, but that thou
mightest be preserved when thou art come in (Compare Heb 7:25; Rom 8:33-39).
5. It is by the intercession of Christ that the infirmities of the saints in
their holy duties are forgiven. Alas, if it were not for the priestly office of
Christ Jesus, the prayers, alms, and other duties of the saints might be
rejected, because of the sin that is in them; but Jesus being our High Priest,
He is ready to take away the iniquities of our holy things, perfuming our
prayers with the glory of His own perfections; and therefore it is that there is
an answer given to the saints' prayers, and also acceptance of their holy duties
(Rev 8:3,4). "But Christ being come an high priest of good things to come, by a
greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made with hands, that is to say, not of
this building; neither by the blood of goats and calves, but by His own blood He
entered in once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us.
For if the blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling
the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the
blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to
God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God? And for this
cause He is the mediator of the New Testament," or covenant, "that by means of
death, for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first
testament, they which are called," notwithstanding all their sins, "might
receive the promise of eternal inheritance" (Heb 9:11-15).
Third. The third thing now to be spoken to is, to show where and how Jesus
Christ outwent and goes beyond these priests, in all their qualifications and
offices, for the comfort of poor saints.
1. They that were called to the priesthood under the law were but men; but He is
both God and man (Heb 7:3,28).
2. Their qualifications were in them in a very scanty way; but Jesus was every
way qualified in an infinite and full way.
3. They were consecrated but for a time, but He for evermore (Heb 7:23,24).
4. They were made without an oath, but He with an oath (Verses 20,21).
5. They as servants; but He as a Son (Hebrews 3:6).
6. Their garments were but such as could be made with hands, but His the very
righteousness of God (Exo 28; Rom 3:22; Phil 3:8,9).
7. Their offerings were but the body and blood of beasts, and such like, but His
offering was His own body and soul (Heb 9:12,13; 10:4,5; Isa 53:10).
8. Those were at best but a shadow or type, but He the very substance and end of
all those ceremonies (Heb 9:1,10,11).
9. Their holy place was but made by men, but His, or that which Jesus is
entered, is into Heaven itself (Heb 9:2,3,24).
10. When they went to offer their sacrifice, they were forced to offer for
themselves, as men compassed about with infirmity, but He holy, harmless, who
did never commit the least transgression (Heb 7:26; 10:11).
11. They when they went to offer they were fain to do it standing, to signify
that God had no satisfaction therein; but He, when "He had offered one sacrifice
for sins for ever, sat down on the right hand of God," to signify that God was
very well pleased with His offering (Heb 10:12).
12. They were fain to offer "oftentimes the same sacrifices, which can never
take away sins"; but He, "by one offering hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified" (Heb 10:11,14).
13. Their sacrifices at the best could but serve for the cleansing of the flesh,
but His for cleansing both body and soul–the blood of Jesus Christ doth purge
the conscience from dead works, to live a holy life (Heb 9:13,14).
14. Those high priests could not offer but once a year in the holiest of all,
but our High Priest He ever liveth to make intercession for us (Heb 9:7;
12:24,25).
15. Those high priests, notwithstanding they were priests, they were not always
to wear their holy garments; but Jesus never puts them off of Him, but is in
them always.
16. Those high priests, death would be too hard for them, but our High Priest
hath vanquished and overcome that cruel enemy of ours, and brought life and
immortality to light through the glorious Gospel (Heb 7:21,23; 2:15; 2 Tim
1:10).
17. Those high priests were not able to save themselves; but this is able to
save Himself, and all that come to God, by Him (Heb 7:25).
18. Those high priests" blood could not do away sin; but the blood of Jesus
Christ, who is our High Priest, "cleanseth us from all sin" (1 John 1:7).
19. Those high priests sometimes by sin caused God to reject their sacrifices;
but this High Priest doth always the things that please Him.
20. Those high priests could never convey the Spirit by virtue of their
sacrifices or office; but this High Priest, our Lord Jesus, He can and doth give
all the gifts and graces that are given to the sons of men.
21. Those high priests could never by their sacrifices bring the soul of any
sinner to glory by virtue of itself; but Jesus hath by one offering, as I said
before, perfected for ever those that He did die for. Thus in brief I have
showed in some particulars how and wherein Jesus our High Priest doth go beyond
those high priests; and many more without question might be mentioned, but I
forbear.
Christ the forerunner of the saints.
FIFTH. A fifth office of Christ in reference to the second covenant was, that He
should be the forerunner to Heaven before His saints that were to follow after.
First, He strikes hands in the covenant, [and then] He stands bound as a Surety
to see everything in the covenant accomplished that was to be done on His part;
[next] He brings the message from Heaven to the world; and before He goeth back,
He offereth Himself for the same sins that He agreed to suffer for; and so soon
as this was done, He goeth post-haste to Heaven again, not only to exercise the
second part of His priestly office, but as our forerunner, to take possession
for us, even into Heaven itself, as you may see, where it is said, "Whither the
Forerunner is for us entered" (Heb 6:20).
First. He is run before to open Heaven's gates–Be ye open, ye everlasting doors,
that the King of Glory may enter in.
Second. He is run before us to take possession of glory in our natures for us.
Third. He is run before to prepare us our places against we come after–"I go to
prepare a place for you" (John 14:1-3).
Fourth. He is run thither to make the way easy, in that He hath first trodden
the path Himself.
Fifth. He is run thither to receive gifts for us. All spiritual and heavenly
gifts had been kept from us had not Christ, so soon as the time appointed was
come, run back to the Kingdom of Glory to receive them for us. But I cannot
stand to enlarge upon these glorious things, the Lord enlarge them upon your
hearts by meditation. [These things have I spoken to show you that saints are
under grace.]
CHRIST COMPLETELY FULFILLED THE CONDITIONS OF THE NEW COVENANT.
Here now I might begin to speak of His prophetical and kingly office, and the
privileges that do and shall come thereby, but that I fear I shall be too
tedious, therefore at this time I shall pass them by. Thus you may see how the
Covenant of Grace doth run, and with Whom it was made, and also what were the
conditions thereof.
Now, then, this grace, this everlasting grace of God, comes to be free to us
through the satisfaction, according to the conditions, given by Another for us;
for though it be free, and freely given to us, yet the obtaining of it did cost
our Head, our public Man, a very dear price. "For ye are bought with a price,"
even with the precious blood of Christ. So it is by Another, I say, not by us;
yet it is as surely made over to us, even to so many of us as do or shall
believe, as if we had done it, and obtained the grace of God ourselves (1 Cor
6:20; 1 Peter 1:9). Nay, surer; for consider, I say, this grace is free to us,
and comes upon a clear score, by virtue of the labour and purchase of Another
for us; mark, that which is obtained by Another for us is not obtained for us by
ourselves–No, but Christ hath, not by the blood of goats and calves, "obtained
eternal redemption for us," which were things offered by men under the law, "but
by His own blood," meaning Christ's, "He entered in once into the holy place,
having obtained eternal redemption for us" (Heb 9:12).
It comes to be unchangeable through the perfection of that satisfaction that was
given to God through the Son of Mary for us; for whatever the Divine, infinite,
and eternal justice of God did call for at the hands of man, if ever he intended
to be a partaker of the grace of God, this Jesus, this one Man, this public
Person, did, did completely give a satisfaction to it, even so effectually;
which caused God not only to say, I am pleased, but "I am well pleased";
completely and sufficiently satisfied with Thee on their behalf; for so you must
understand it (Matt 3:17). Mark therefore these following words–"And, having
made peace," or completely made up the difference, "through the blood of His
cross, by Him to reconcile all things unto Himself; by Him, I say, whether they
be things in earth, or things in heaven. And you, that were sometime alienated
and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now hath He reconciled," how? "in
the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy," mark, "holy and
unblameable and unreproveable in His sight" (Col 1:20-22). And thus it is grace,
unchangeable grace to us; because it was obtained, yea, completely obtained, for
us, by Jesus Christ, God-man.
Object. But some may say, How was it possible that one man Jesus, by one
offering, should so completely obtain and bring in unchangeable grace for such
an innumerable company of sinners as are to be saved?
Answ. First. In that He was every way fitted for such a work. And, Second. In
that, as I said before, He did every way completely satisfy that which was
offended by our disobedience to the former covenant.
[First. He was every way fitted for such a work]. And, for the clearing of this,
1. Consider, was it man that had offended? He was Man that gave the
satisfaction–"For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of
the dead" (1 Cor 15:21).
2. Was it God that was offended? He was God that did give a satisfaction–"Unto
us a child is born, unto us a son is given.– and His name shall be called The
mighty God" (Isa 9:6). "He thought it not robbery to be equal with God: but,"
for our sakes, He "made Himself of no reputation," etc. (Phil 2:6-7).
3. For the further clearing of this, to show you that in everything He was
rightly qualified for this great work, see what God Himself saith of Him; He
calls Him, in the first place, Man; and, secondly, He owns Him to be His Fellow,
saying, "Awake, O sword, against My Shepherd, and against the Man"–mark, "the
Man that is My Fellow, saith the LORD of hosts" (Zech 13:7).
So that now, let Divine and infinite justice turn itself which way it will, it
finds one that can tell how to match it; for if it say, I will require the
satisfaction of man, here is a Man to satisfy its cry; and if it say, But I am
an infinite God, and must and will have an infinite satisfaction; here is One
also that is infinite, even fellow with God, fellow in His essence and being;
fellow in His power and strength; fellow in His wisdom; fellow in His mercy and
grace; together with the rest of the attributes of God; so that, I say, let
justice turn itself which way it will, here is a complete Person to give a
complete satisfaction (Prov 8:23; 1 Cor 1:24; Titus 2:10; compared with Verse
11). Thus much of the fitness of the Person.
Second. For the completeness of the satisfaction given by Him for us. And that
is discovered in these particulars–
1. Doth justice call for the blood of that nature that sinned? here is the
heart-blood of Jesus Christ–"We have redemption through His blood," (Eph 1:7,14;
1 Peter 1:18,19; Zech 9:10,11).
2. Doth justice say that this blood, if it be not the blood of One that is
really and naturally God, it will not give satisfaction to infinite justice?
then here is God, purchasing His Church "with His own blood" (Acts 20:28).
3. Doth justice say, that it must not only have satisfaction for sinners, but
they that are saved must be also washed and sanctified with this blood? then
here is He that so loved us, that He "washed us from our sins in His own blood"
(Rev 1:5).
4. Is there to be a righteousness to clothe them with that is to be presented
before Divine justice? there here is the righteousness of Christ, which is "even
the righteousness of God by faith" (Rom 3:22; Phil 3:8-10).
5. Are there any sins now that will fly upon this Saviour like so many lions, or
raging devils, if He take in hand to redeem man? He will be content to bear them
all Himself alone, even in His own body upon the tree (1 Peter 2:24).
6. Is there any law now that will curse and condemn this Saviour for standing in
our persons to give satisfaction to God for the transgression of man? He will be
willing to be cursed, yea, to be made a curse for sinners, rather than they
shall be cursed and damned themselves (Gal 3:13).
7. Must the great and glorious God, whose eyes are so pure that He cannot behold
iniquity; I say, must He not only have the blood, but the very life of Him that
will take in hand to be the Deliverer and Saviour of us poor miserable sinners?
He is willing to lay down His life for His sheep (John 10:11).
8. Must He not only die a natural death, but must His soul descend into hell,
though it should not be left there, He will suffer that also Psalms 16:10; and
Acts 2:31. [11]
9. Must He not only be buried, but rise again from the dead, and overcome death,
that He might be the first-fruits to God of them that sleep, which shall be
saved? He will be buried, and also through the strength of His Godhead, He will
raise Himself out of the grave, though death hold Him never so fast, and the
Jews lay never such a great stone upon the mouth of the selpulchre, and seal it
never so fast (1 Cor 15:4; Luke 24:34).
10. Must He carry that body into the presence of His Father, to take possession
of Heaven, and must He appear there as a priest, as a forerunner, as an
advocate, as prophet, as a treasure- house, as an interceder and pleader of the
causes of His people? He will be all these, and much more, to the end the grace
of God by faith in Jesus Christ might be made sure to all the seed. "Who then
can condemn? It is God that justifieth; because Christ hath died, yea rather,
that is risen again." Who, now seeing all this is so effectually done, shall lay
anything, the least thing? who can find the least flaw, the least wrinkle, the
least defect or imperfection, in this glorious satisfaction (Rom 8:33- 34; Heb
6:20; 9:24; John 14:2,3; 1 John 2:1)?
Object. But is it possible that He should so soon give infinite justice a
satisfaction, a complete satisfaction? for the eternal God doth require an
eternal lying under the curse, to the end He may be eternally satisfied.
Answ. Indeed, that which is infinite must have an eternity to satisfy God
in–that is, they that fall into the prison and pit of utter darkness must be
there to all eternity, to the end the justice of God may have its full blow at
them. But now He that I am speaking of is God, and so is infinite (Isa 9:6;
Titus 1:16,17; Heb 1:8,9; Phil 2:4-6). Now, He which is true God is able to give
in as little a time an infinite satisfaction as Adam was in giving the
dissatisfaction. Adam himself might have given satisfaction for himself as soon
as Christ had he been very God, as Jesus Christ was. For the reason why the
posterity of Adam, even so many of them as fall short of life, must lie broiling
in Hell to all eternity is this –they are not able to give the justice of God
satisfaction, they being not infinite, as aforesaid. "But Christ," that is,
God-man, "being come an High Priest," that is, to offer and give satisfaction,
"of good things to come , by a greater and more perfect tabernacle, not made
with hands, that is to say, not of this building; neither by the blood of goats
and calves, but by His own,"–mark you that, "but by His own blood He entered in
once into the holy place, having obtained eternal redemption for us." But how?
"For if the blood of bulls and of goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling
the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh: how much more shall the
blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit," who through the power and
virtue of His infinite Godhead, "offered Himself without spot to God, purge your
conscience from dead works to serve the living God? And for this cause," that
is, for that He is God as well as man, and so able to give justice an infinite
satisfaction, therefore, "He is the mediator of the new testament, that by means
of death, for the redemption of the transgressions that were under the first
testament, they which are called might receive the promise of eternal
inheritance" (Heb 9:11-15). As I said before.
Object. This is much; but is God connected with this? Is He satisfied now in the
behalf of sinners by this Man's thus suffering? If He is, then how doth it
appear?
Answ. It is evident, yea, wonderful evident, that this hath pleased Him to the
full, as appeareth by these following demonstrations.–
First. In that God did admit Him into His presence; yea, receive Him with joy
and music, even with the sound of the trumpet, at His ascension into Heaven (Psa
47:5). And Christ makes it an argument to His children that His righteousness
was sufficient, in that He went to His Father, and they saw Him no more, "of
righteousness," saith He, "because I go to My Father, and ye see Me no more"
(John 16:10). As if He had said, My Spirit shall show to the world that I have
brought in a sufficient righteousness to justify sinners withal, in that when I
go to appear in the presence of My Father on their behalf, He shall give Me
entertainment, and not throw Me down from Heaven, because I did not do it
sufficiently.
Again; if you consider the high esteem that God the Father doth set on the death
of His Son, you will find that He hath received good content thereby. When the
Lord Jesus, by way of complaint, told His Father that He and His merits were not
valued to the worth, His Father answered, It is a light thing that I should give
Thee, O My Servant, to bring Jacob again; "I will also give Thee for a light to
the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of the earth" (Isa
49:6). As if the Lord had said, "My Son, I do value Thy death at a higher rate
than that Thou shouldst save the tribes of Israel only; behold the Gentiles, the
barbarous heathens, they also shall be brought in as the price of Thy blood. It
is a light thing that Thou shouldest be My Servant only to bring, or redeem, the
tribes of Jacob, and to restore the preserved of Israel: I will also give Thee
for a light to the Gentiles, that Thou mayest be My salvation unto the end of
the earth." [12]
Again; you may see it also by the carriage of God the Father to all the great
sinners to whom mercy was proffered. We do not find that God maketh any
objection against them to come to Him for the pardon of their sins; because He
did want a satisfaction suitable to the greatness of their sins. There was
Manasseh, who was one that burned his children in the fire to the devil, that
used witchcraft, that used to worship the host of heaven, that turned his back
on the Word that God sent unto him; nay, that did worse than the very heathen
that God cast out before the children of Israel (2 Chron 33:1-13). Also those
that are spoken of in the Nineteenth of Acts, that did spend so much time in
conjuration, and the like, for such I judge they were, that when they came to
burn their books, they counted the price thereof to be fifty thousand pieces of
silver (Acts 19:19). Simon Magus also, that was a sorcerer, and bewitched the
whole city, yet he had mercy proffered to him once and again (Acts 8). I say, it
was not the greatness of the sins of these sinners; no, nor of an innumerable
company of others, that made God at all to object against the salvation of their
souls, which justice would have constrained Him to had He not had satisfaction
sufficient by the blood of the Lord Jesus. Nay, further, I do find that because
God the Father would not have the merits of His Son to be undervalued, I say, He
doth therefore freely by His consent let mercy be proffered to the greatest
sinners–in the first place, for the Jews, that were the worst of men in that day
for blasphemy against the Gospel; yet the Apostle proffered mercy to them in the
first place–"It was necessary," saith he, "that the Word of God should first
have been spoken to you" (Acts 3:26; 13:46).
And Christ gave them commission so to do; for, saith He, Let repentance and
remission of sins be preached in My name among all nations, and begin–mark that,
"beginning at Jerusalem" (Luke 24:47), Let them that but the other day had their
hands up to the elbows in My heart's blood have the first proffer of My mercy.
And, saith Paul, "For this cause I obtained mercy, that in me first Jesus Christ
might show forth all longsuffering, for a pattern to them which should hereafter
believe on Him to life everlasting" (1 Tim 1:16). As the Apostle saith, those
sinners that were dead, possessed with the devil, and the children of wrath, He
hath quickened, delivered, and saved. That He might, even in the very "ages to
come He might show the exceeding riches of His grace in His kindness toward us,"
and that "through Christ Jesus" (Eph 2:7).
Second. It is evident that that which this Man did as a common person He did it
completely and satisfactorily, as appears by the openness, as I may so call it,
which was in the heart of God to Him at His resurrection and ascension–"Ask of
Me," saith He, "and I shall give Thee the" very "heathen for Thine inheritance,
and the uttermost parts of the earth for Thy possession" (Psa 2:8). And this was
at His resurrection (Acts 13:33). Whereas, though He had asked, yet if He had
not given a full and complete satisfaction, justice would not have given Him any
thing; for justice, the justice of God, is so pure, that if it be not completely
satisfied in every particular, it giveth nothing but curses (Gal 3:10).
Third. It is yet far more evident that He hath indeed pleased God in the behalf
of sinners, in that God hath given Him gifts to distribute to sinners, yea, the
worst of sinners, as a fruit of His satisfaction, and that at His ascension (Psa
68:18). Christ hath so satisfied God, that He hath given Him all the treasures
both of Heaven and earth to dispose of as He seeth good; He hath so pleased God,
that He hath given Him a name above every name, a sceptre above every sceptre, a
crown above every crown, a kingdom above every kingdom; He hath given Him the
highest place in Heaven, even His own right hand; He hath given Him all the
power of Heaven and earth, and under the earth, in His own hand, to bind whom He
pleaseth, and to set free whom He thinks meet; He hath, in a word, such a high
esteem in the eyes of His Father, that He hath put into His hands all things
that are for the profit of His people, both in this world and that which is to
come; and all this as the fruit of His faithfulness in doing of His work, as the
Mediator of the new covenant (Phil 2:9; Rev 19:6). Thou hast ascended on high,
Thou hast led captivity captive, Thou hast received gifts– mark, Thou hast
received them–for men, even for the worst of men, for the rebellious also; and
hath sent forth some, being furnished with these gifts; some, I say, for the
work of the ministry, to the edifying of them that are already called, and also
for the calling in of all those for whom He covenanted with His Father, till all
come in the unity of faith, etc. (Eph 4:8-13).
Fourth. It doth still appear yet far more evident; for will you hear what the
Father Himself saith for the showing of His well- pleasedness in these two
particulars–First, in that He bids poor souls to hear and to do as Christ would
have them (Matt 3:17; Luke 9:35). Secondly, in that He resolves to make them
that turn their backs upon Him, that dishonour Him, which is done in a very
great measure by those that lay aside His merits done by Himself for
justification; I say, He that resolved to make this His footstool, where He
saith, "Sit Thou at My right hand, until I make Thine enemies Thy footstool"
(Psa 110:1). Are they enemies to Thee? saith God. I will be even with them. Do
they slight Thy merits? Do they slight Thy groans, Thy tears, Thy blood, Thy
death, Thy resurrection and intercession, Thy second coming again in heavenly
glory? I will tear them and rend them; I will make them as mire in the streets;
I will make Thy enemies Thy footstool (Matt 22:44; Heb 1:13; 10:13). Ay, saith
He, and "Thou shalt dash them in pieces like a potter's vessel" (Psa 2:9). Look
to it you that slight the merits of the blood of Christ.
Fifth. Again further; yet God will make all the world to know that He hath been
and is well pleased in His Son, in that God hath given, and will make it appear
He hath given, the world to come into His hand; and that He shall raise the
dead, bring them before His judgment-seat, execute judgment upon them, which He
pleaseth to execute judgment on to their damnation; and to receive them to
eternal life whom He doth favour, even so many as shall be found to believe in
His name and merits (Heb 2). "For as the Father hath life in Himself; so hath He
given to the Son to have life in Himself; and hath given Him authority to
execute judgment also, because He is the Son of man. For the hour is coming, in
the which all that are in the graves shall hear His voice, and shall come forth;
they that have done good, unto the resurrection of life; and they that have done
evil, unto the resurrection of damnation" (John 5:26-29). Ay, and the worst
enemy that Christ hath now shall come at that day with a pale face, with a
quaking heart, and bended knees, trembling before Him, confessing the glory of
His merits, and the virtue there was in them to save, "to the glory of God the
Father" (Rom 14:11; Phil 2:11).
Much more might be added to discover the glorious perfection of this Man's
satisfaction; but for you that desire to be further satisfied concerning this,
search the Scriptures, and beg of God to give you faith and understanding
therein; and as for you that slight these things, and continue so doing, God
hath another way to take with you, even to dash you in pieces like a potter's
vessel; for this hath Christ received of His Father to do unto you (Rev 2:27).
Thus I have showed you in particular, that the Covenant of Grace of God is free
and unchangeable to men–that is, in that it hath been obtained for men, and that
perfectly, to the satisfying of justice, and taking all things out of the way
that were any ways a hindrance to our salvation (Col 2:14).
THE COVENANT OF GRACE UNCHANGEABLE; THE OPPOSERS ANSWERED.
The second thing for the discovering of this freeness and constancy of the
Covenant of Grace of God is manifested thus–
First. Whatsoever any man hath of the grace of God, he hath it as a free gift of
God through Christ Jesus the Mediator of this covenant, even when they are in a
state of enmity to Him, whether it be Christ as the foundation-stone, or faith
to lay hold of Him, mark that (Rom 5:8,9; Col 1:21,22). "For by grace are ye
saved through faith; and that not of yourselves," not for anything in you, or
done by you for the purchasing of it, but "it is the gift of God," (Eph 2:8) and
that bestowed on you, even when ye "were dead in trespasses and sins" (Eph
2:1,9). Nay, if thou hast so much as one desire that is right, it is the gift of
God; for of ourselves, saith the Apostle, we are not able to speak a good word,
or think a good thought (2 Cor 3:5).
Was it not grace, absolute grace, that God made promise to Adam after
transgression? (Gen 3:15). Was it not free grace in God to save such a wretch as
Manasseh was, who used enchantments, witchcraft, burnt his children in the fire,
and wrought much evil? (2 Chron 33). Was it not free grace to save such as those
were that are spoken of in the 16th of Ezekiel, which no eye pitied? Was it not
free grace for Christ to give Peter a loving look after he had cursed, and
swore, and denied Him? Was it not free grace that met Paul when he was agoing to
Damascus to persecute, which converted him, and made him a vessel of mercy?
And what shall I say of such that are spoken of in 1 Corinthians 6:9, 10,
speaking there of fornicators, idolaters, adulterers, effeminate, abusers of
themselves with mankind, thieves, covetous, drunkards, revilers, extortioners,
the basest of sinners in the world, and yet were washed, and yet were justified;
was it not freely by grace? O saints, you that are in heaven cry out, "We came
hither by grace; and you that are on the earth, I am sure you cry, If ever we do
go thither, it must be freely by grace!"
Second. In the next place, it appears to be unchangeable in this–1. Because
justice being once satisfied doth not use to call for the debt again. No; let
never such a sinner come to Jesus Christ, and so to God by Him, and justice,
instead of speaking against the salvation of that sinner, it will say, I am just
as well as faithful to forgive him his sins (1 John 1:9). When justice itself is
pleased with a man, and speaks on his side, instead of speaking against him, we
may well cry out, Who shall condemn? 2. Because there is no law to come in
against the sinner that believes in Jesus Christ; for he is not under that, and
that by right comes in against none but those that are under it. But believers
are not under that–that is, not their Lord, therefore that hath nothing to do
with them; and besides, Christ's blood hath not only taken away the curse
thereof, but also He hath in His own Person completely fulfilled it as a public
Person in our stead. (Rom 7:1-4). 3. The devil that accused them is destroyed
(Heb 2:14,15). 4. Death, and the grave, and Hell are overcome (1 Cor 15:55;
Hosea 13:14). 5. Sin, that great enemy of man's salvation, that is washed away
(Rev 1:5). 6. The righteousness of God is put upon them that believe, and given
to them, and they are found in it (Phil 3:8- 10; Rom 3:22). 7. Christ is always
in Heaven to plead for them, and to prepare a place for them (Heb 7:24; John
14:1-4). 8. He hath not only promised that He will not leave us, nor forsake us,
but He hath also sworn to fulfill His promises. O rich grace! O free grace!
Lord, who desired Thee to promise? who compelled Thee to swear?
We use to take honest men upon their bare word, but God, "willing more
abundantly to show unto the heirs of promise the immutability of His counsel,"
hath "confirmed it by an oath: that by two immutable things," His promise and
His oath, "in which it was impossible for God to lie," or break either of them,
"we might have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon
the hope set before us" (Heb 6:17-18). I will warrant you, God will never break
His oath; therefore we may well have good ground to hope from such a good
foundation as this, that God will never leave us indeed. Amen.
Third. Not only thus, but, 1. God hath begotten believers again to Himself, to
be His adopted and accepted children, in and through the Lord Jesus (1 Peter
1:3). 2. God hath prepared a kingdom for them before the foundation of the
world, through Jesus Christ (Matt 25:34). 3. He hath given them an earnest of
their happiness while they live here in this world. "After that ye believed, ye
were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise, which is the earnest of our
inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the praise of
His glory," and that through this Jesus (Eph 1:13,14). [These things are more
fully laid down in that part of the book which containeth the discourse of the
privileges of the new covenant]. 4. If His children sin through weakness, or by
sudden temptation, they confessing of it, He willingly forgives, and heals all
their wounds, reneweth His love towards them, waits to do them good, casteth
their sins into the depths of the sea, and all this freely, without any work
done by men as men–Not for your own sakes do I do this, O house of Israel, be it
known unto you, saith the Lord, but wholly and alone by the blood of Jesus (Eze
36:23,23). 5. In a word, if you would see it altogether, God's love was the
cause why Jesus Christ was sent to bleed for sinners. Jesus Christ's bleeding
stops the cries of Divine justice; God looks upon them as complete in Him, gives
them to Him as His by right of purchase. Jesus ever lives to pray for them that
are thus given unto Him. God sends His Holy Spirit into them to reveal this to
them, sends His angels to minister for them; and all this by virtue of an
Everlasting Covenant between the Father and the Son. Thrice happy are the people
that are in such a case!
Nay, further, He hath made them brethren with Jesus Christ, members of His flesh
and of His bones, the spouse of this Lord Jesus; and all to show you how dearly,
how really, how constantly He loveth us, who, by faith of His operation, have
laid hold upon Him. [These things I might have treated upon more largely].
[Further Arguments and Objections answered].
I shall now lay down a few arguments for the superabundant clearing of it, and
afterwards answer two or three objections that may be made against it, and so I
shall fall upon the next thing.
First. God loves the saints as He loves Jesus Christ; and God loves Jesus Christ
with an eternal love; therefore the saints also with the same. "Thou hast loved
them as Thou has loved Me" (John 17:23).
Second. That love which is God Himself, must needs be everlasting love; and that
is the love wherewith God hath loved His saints in Christ Jesus; therefore His
love towards His children in Christ must needs be an everlasting love. There is
none dare say that the love of God is mixed with a created mixture; if not, then
it must needs be Himself (1 John 4:16). [You must not understand that love in
God is a passion as it is in us; but the love of God is the very essence or
nature of God].
Third. That love which is always pitched upon us, in an object as holy as God,
must needs be an everlasting love. Now the love of God was and is pitched upon
us, through an object as holy as God Himself, even our Lord Jesus; therefore it
must needs be unchangeable.
Fourth. If He with whom the Covenant of Grace was made, did in every thing and
condition do even what the Lord could desire or require of Him, that His love
might be extended to us, and that for ever, then His love must needs be an
everlasting love, seeing everything required of us was completely accomplished
for us by Him; and all this hath our Lord Jesus done, and that most gloriously,
even on our behalf; therefore it must needs be a love that lasts for ever and
ever.
Fifth. If God hath declared Himself to be the God that changeth not, and hath
sworn to be immutable in His promise, then surely He will be unchangeable; and
He hath done so; therefore it is impossible for God to lie, and so for His
eternal love to be changeable (Heb 6:13-18). Here is an argument of the Spirit's
own making! Who can contradict it? If any object, and say, But still it is upon
the condition of believing–I answer, The condition also is His own free gift,
and not a qualification arising from the stock of nature (Eph 2:8; Phil
1:28,29). So that here is the love unchangeable; here is also the condition
given by Him whose love is unchangeable, which may serve yet further for a
strong argument that God will have His love unchangeable. Sinner, this is better
felt and enjoyed than talked of.
Objection First. But if this love of God be unchangeable in itself, yet it is
not unchangeably set upon the saints unless they behave themselves the better.
[The first objection].
Answ. As God's love at the first was bestowed upon the saints without anything
foreseen by the Lord in them, as done by them, Deuteronomy 9:4-6, so He goeth on
with the same, Saying, "I will never leave thee nor forsake thee" (Heb 13:5).
Objection Second. But how cometh it to pass then, that many fall off again from
the grace of the Gospel, after a profession of it for some time; some to
delusions, and some to their own sins again? [The second objection].
Answ. They are all fallen away, not from the everlasting love of God to them,
but from the profession of the love of God to them. Men may profess that God
loves them when there is no such matter, and that they are the children of God,
when the devil is their father; as it is in John 8:40-44. Therefore they that do
finally fall away from a profession of the grace of the Gospel, it is, first,
because they are bastards and not sons. Secondly, because as they are not sons,
so God suffereth them to fall, to make it appear that they are not sons, not of
the household of God–"They went out from us, but they were not of us; for if
they had been of us, they would no doubt," mark that, "no doubt," saith he,
"they would have continued with us: but they went out," from us, "that they
might be made manifest that they were not all of us" (1 John 2:19). And though
Hymeneus and Philetus do throw themselves headlong to Hell, "nevertheless the
foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal, The Lord knoweth them that
are His" (2 Tim 2:17-19).
Objection Third. But the Scripture saith that there are some that had faith, yet
lost it, and have made shipwreck of it. [The third objection]. Now God loves no
longer than they believe, as is evident; for "he that believeth not shall be
damned." So then, if some may have faith, and yet lose it, and so lose the love
of God because they have lost their faith, it is evident that God's love is not
so immutable as you say it is to every one that believeth.
Answ. There are more sorts of faith than one that are spoken of in Scripture–
1. There is a faith that man may have, and yet be nothing, none of the saints of
God, and yet may do great things therewith (1 Cor 13:1-4).
2. There is a faith that was wrought merely by the operation of the miracles
that were done in those days by Christ and his followers–"And many of the people
believed in Him." How came they by their faith? Why, by the operation of the
miracles that He did among them; for said they, "When Christ cometh, will He do
more miracles than these which this man hath done?" (John 7:31).
The great thing that wrought their faith in them, was only by seeing the
miracles that He did, John 2:23, which is not that saving faith which is called
the faith of God's elect, as is evident; for there must not be only miracles
wrought upon outward objects to beget that–that being too weak a thing–but it
must be by the same power that was stretched out in raising Christ from the
dead; yea, the exceeding greatness of that power (Eph 1:18,19). So there is a
believing, being taken with some marvelous work, visibly appearing to the
outward sense of seeing; and there is a believing that is wrought in the heart
by an invisible operation of the Spirit, revealing the certainty of the
satisfaction of the merits of Christ to the soul in a more glorious way, both
for certainty and for durableness, both as to the promise and the constancy of
it (Matt 16:17, 18).
3. There is a faith of a man's own, of a man's self also; but the faith of the
operation of God, in Scripture, is set in opposition to that, for, saith He, you
are saved by grace, "through faith, and that not of yourselves," of your own
making, but that which is the free gift of God (Eph 2:8).
4. We say there is an historical faith–that is, such as is begotten by the
co-operation of the Spirit with the Word.
5. We say there is a traditional faith–that is, to believe things by tradition,
because others say they believe them; this is received by tradition, not by
revelation, and shall never be able to stand, neither at the day of death, nor
at the day of judgment; though possibly men, while they live here, may esteem
themselves and states to be very good, because their heads are filled full of
it.
6. There is a faith that is called in Scripture a dead faith, the faith of
devils, or of the devil; they also that have only this, they are like the devil,
and as sure to be damned as he, notwithstanding their faith, if they get no
better into their hearts; for it is far off from enabling of them to lay hold of
Jesus Christ, and so to put Him on for eternal life and sanctification, which
they must do if ever they be saved (James 2:19,26).
But all these are short of the saving faith of God's elect, as is manifest; I
say, first, Because these may be wrought, and not by that power so exceedingly
stretched forth. Secondly, Because these are wrought, partly, (1.) By the sense
of seeing–namely, the miracles–not by hearing; and, (2.) The rest is wrought by
a traditional or historical influence of the words in their heads, not by a
heavenly, invisible, almighty, and saving operation of the Spirit of God in
their hearts.
7. I do suppose also that there is a faith that is wrought upon men through the
influence of those gifts and abilities that God gives sometimes to those that
are not His own by election, though by creation; my meaning is, some men,
finding that God hath given them very great gifts and abilities,–as to the gifts
of preaching, praying, working miracles, or the like–I say, therefore do
conclude that God is their Father, and they are His children; the ground of
which confidence is still begotten, not by the glorious operation of the Spirit,
but by a considering of the great gifts that God hath bestowed upon them as to
the things before-mentioned. As thus, (1.) the poor soul considers how ignorant
it was, and now how knowing it is. (2.) Considering how vain it formerly was,
and also now how civil it is, presently makes this conclusion–Surely God loves
me, surely He hath made me one of His, and will save me. This is now a wrong
faith, as is evident, in that it is placed upon a wrong object; for mark, this
faith is not placed assuredly on God's grace alone, through the blood and merits
of Christ being discovered effectually to the soul, but upon God through those
things that God hath given it, as of gifts, either to preach, or pray, or do
great works, or the like, which will assuredly come to nought as sure as God is
in Heaven, if no better faith and ground of faith be found out for thy soul
savingly to rest upon.
As to the second clause of the objection, which runs to this effect, God loves
men upon the account of their believing, I answer, that God loves men before
they believe; He loves them, He calls them, and gives them faith to believe–"But
God, who is rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us," when? when
we believed, or before? "even when we were dead in sins," and so, far off from
believers, "hath quickened us together with" Christ, "by grace ye are saved"
(Eph 2:4,5).
Now, also, I suppose that thou wilt say in thy heart, I would you would show us
then what is saving faith; which thing it may be I may touch upon a while hence,
in the next thing that I am to speak unto. O they that have that are safe
indeed!
SECOND. WHO AND HOW MEN ARE ACTUALLY BROUGHT INTO THE NEW COVENANT.
The SECOND thing that I am to speak unto is this–WHO they are that are actually
brought into this free and unchangeable grace; and also HOW they are brought in.
Answ. Indeed, now we come to the pinch of the whole discourse; and if God do but
help me to run rightly through this, as I do verily believe He will, I may do
thee, reader, good, and bring glory to my God.
The question containeth these two branches–FIRST. Who are brought in; SECOND.
How they are brought in.
[FIRST. Who are brought in?] The first is quickly answered– "Christ Jesus came
into the world to save sinners," Jewish sinners, Gentile sinners, old sinners,
young sinners, great sinners, the chiefest of sinners. Publicans and
harlots–that is, whores, cheaters, and exactors–shall enter into the Kingdom of
Heaven (1 Tim 1:15; Rom 5:7-11; 1 Cor 6:9,11; Matt 21:31). "For I come not,"
saith Christ, "to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance" (Mark 2:17).
A sinner in the Scripture is described in general to be a transgressor of the
law–"Whosoever commiteth sin, transgresseth the law; for sin is the
transgression of the law" (1 John 3:4). But particularly; they are described in
a more particular way, as, 1. Such as in whom dwelleth the devil (Eph 2:2,3). 2.
Such as will do the service of him (John 8:44). 3. Such as are enemies to God
(Col 1:21) 4. Such as are drunkards, whoremasters, liars, perjured persons,
covetous, revilers, extortionists, fornicators, swearers, possessed with devils,
thieves, idolaters, witches, sorcerers, conjurors, murderers, and the like (1
Cor 6:9,10; 2 Chron 33:1-13; Acts 2:36,37; 9:1-6; 19:9; 1 Tim 1:14-16). These
are sinners, and such sinners that God hath prepared Heaven, happiness, pardon
of sin, and an inheritance of God, with Christ, with saints, with angels, if
they do come in and accept of grace, as I might prove at large; for God's grace
is so great, that if they do come to Him by Christ, presently all is forgiven
them; therefore never object that thy sins are too great to be pardoned; but
come, taste and see how good the Lord is to any whosoever come unto Him.
[SECOND.] The second thing is, How are these brought into this Everlasting
Covenant of Grace?
Answ. When God doth in deed and in truth bring in a sinner into this most
blessed covenant, [Come to the Touchstone, sinner]. for so it is, He usually
goeth this way–
First. He slays or kills the party to all things besides Himself, and His Son
Jesus Christ, and the comforts of the Spirit. For the clearing of this I shall
show you, 1. With what God kills; 2. How God kills; 3. To what God kills those
whom He makes alive in Jesus Christ.
1. [What God kills]. When God brings sinners into the Covenant of Grace, He doth
first kill them with the Covenant of Works, which is the moral law, or Ten
Commandments. This is Paul's doctrine, and also Paul's experience. It is his
doctrine where he saith, "The ministration of death, written and engraven in
stones–the ministration of condemnation," which is the law, in that place called
the letter, "killeth" (2 Cor 3:6-9). The letter, saith he, killeth; or the law,
or the ministration of death, which in another place is called "the voice of
words" (Heb 12:19), because they have no life in them, but rather death and
damnation, through our inability to fulfill them, doth kill (Rom 8:3; 2 Cor 6).
It is his experience where he saith, "I was alive" that is, to my own things,
"without the law once," that is, before God did strike him dead by it, "but when
the commandment came," that is, to do and exercise its right office on me, which
was to kill me, then "sin revived, and I died," and I was killed. "And the
commandment," or the law, "which was ordained to" be unto "life, I found to be
unto death. For sin, taking occasion by the commandment, deceived me, and by it
slew me" (Rom 7:9-11).
2. But how doth God kill with this law, or covenant?
1. By opening to the soul the spirituality of it–"The law is spiritual," saith
he, "but I am carnal, sold under sin" (Rom 7:14). Now the spirituality of the
law is discovered this way–
(1.) By showing to the soul that every sinful thought is a sin against it. Ay,
sinner, when the law doth come home indeed upon thy soul in the spirituality of
it, it will discover such things to thee to be sins that now thou lookest over
and regardest not; that is a remarkable saying of Paul when he saith, "Sin
revived, and I died." Sin revived, saith he; as if he had said, Those things
that before I did not value nor regard, but looked upon them to be trifles, to
be dead, and forgotten; but when the law was fastened on my soul, it did so
raise them from the dead, call them into mind, so muster them before my face,
and put such strength into them, that I was overmastered by them, by the guilt
of them. Sin revived by the commandment, or my sins had mighty strength, life,
and abundance of force upon me because of that, insomuch that they killed me
(Matt 5:28).
(2.) It showeth that every such sin deserveth eternal damnation. Friends, I
doubt there be but few of you that have seen the spirituality of the law of
works. But this is one thing in which it discovereth its spirituality, and this
is the proper work of the Law.
(3.) God, with a discovery of this, doth also discover His own Divine and
infinite justice, of which the law is a description, which backs what is
discovered by the law, and that by discovering of its purity and holiness to be
so Divine, so pure, so upright, and so far of from winking at the least sin,
that He doth by that law, without any favour, condemn the sinner for that sin
(Gal 3:10). Now, when He hath brought the soul into this praemunire,[13] into
this puzzle, then,
2. He showeth to the soul the nature and condition of the law as to its dealings
with, or forbearing of, the sinner that hath sinned against it; which is to pass
an eternal curse upon both soul and body of the party so offending, saying to
him, Cursed be the man that continueth not in everything that is written in the
Book of the Law to do it; for, saith the law, this is my proper work; first, to
show thee thy sins; and when I have done that, then, in the next place, to
condemn thee for them, and that without all remedy, as from ME, or anything
within my bounds, for I am not to save any, to pardon any–nay, not to favour any
in the least thing that have sinned against me; for God did not send me to make
alive, but to discover sin, and to condemn for the same. Now, so soon as this is
presented to thy conscience, in the next place, the Lord also by this law doth
show that now there is no righteous act according to the tenor of that covenant
that can replieve him, or take him off from all this horror and curse that lies
upon him; because that is not an administration of pardon, as I said before, to
forgive the sin, but an administration of damnation, because of transgression.
O, the very discovery of this striketh the soul into a deadly swoon, even above
half dead! But when God doth do the work indeed, He doth, in the next place,
show the soul that he is the man that is eternally under this covenant by
nature, and that it is he that hath sinned against this law, and doth by right
deserve the curse and displeasure of the same, and that all that ever he can do
will not give satisfaction to that glorious justice that did give this law; holy
actions, tears of blood, selling all, and giving it to the poor, or whatever
else can be done by thee, it comes all short and is all to no purpose (Phil 3).
I will warrant him, he that seeth this, it will kill him to that which he was
alive unto before, though he had a thousand lives. Ah, sinners, sinners, were
you but sensible indeed of the severity and truth of this, it would make you
look about you to purpose! O, how would it make you strive to stop at that that
now you drink down with delight! How many oaths would it make you bite asunder!
Nay, it would make you bite your tongues to think that they should be used as
instruments of the devil to bring your souls into such an unspeakable misery;
then also we should not have you hang the salvation of your souls upon such
slender pins as now you do; no, no; but you would be in another mind then. O,
then we should have you cry out, I must have Christ; what shall I do for Christ?
how shall I come at Christ? Would I was sure, truly sure of Christ. My soul is
gone, damned, cast away, and must for ever burn with the devils, if I do not get
precious Jesus Christ!
3. In the next place, when God hath done this, then He further shows the soul
that that covenant which it is under by nature is distinct from the Covenant of
Grace; and also they that are under it are by nature without any of the graces
which they have that are under the Covenant of Grace; as, (1.) That it hath no
faith (John 16:9). (2.) No hope (Eph 2:12). Nor none of the Spirit to work these
things in it by nature. (4.) Neither will that covenant give to them any peace
with God. (5.) No promise of safeguard from His revenging law by that covenant.
(6.) But lieth by nature liable to all the curses, and condemnings, and
thunderclaps of this most fiery covenant. (7.) That it will accept of no sorrow,
no repentance, no satisfaction, as from thee. (8.) That it calls for no less
than the shedding of thy blood. (9.) The damnation of thy soul and body. (10.)
And if there be anything proffered to it by thee, as to the making of it amends,
it throws it back again as dirt in thy face, slighting all that thou canst
bring.
Now, when the soul is brought into this condition, then it is indeed dead,
killed to that to which it was once alive. And therefore,
3. In the next place, to show you to what it is killed: and that is,
1. To sin. O, it dares not sin! it sees Hell-fire is prepared for them that sin,
God's justice will not spare it if it live in sin; the Law will damn it if it
live in sin; the devil will have it if it follows its sins. [Here I am speaking
of one that is effectually brought in]. O, I say, it trembles at the very
thoughts of sin! Ay, if sin do but offer to tempt the soul, to draw away the
soul from God, it cries, it sighs, it shunneth the very appearance of sin, it is
odious unto it. If God would but serve you thus that love your pleasures, you
would not make such a trifle of sin as you do.
2. It is killed to the Law of God as it is the Covenant of Works. O, saith the
soul, the law hath killed me to itself, "I through the law am dead to the law"
(Gal 2:19). The law is another thing than I did think it was. I thought it would
not have been so soul- destroying, so damning a law! I thought it would not have
been so severe against me for my little sins, for my playing, for my jesting,
for my dissembling, quarreling, and the like. I had some thoughts, indeed, that
it would hew great sinners, but let me pass! and though it condemned great
sinners, yet it would pass me by! But now, would I were free from this covenant,
would I were free from this law! I will tell thee that a soul thus worked upon
is more afraid of the Covenant of Works than he is of the devil; for he sees it
is the law that doth give him up into his hands for sin; and if he was but clear
from that, he should not greatly need to fear the devil. O, now every particular
command tears the caul of his heart; now every command is a great gun well
charged against his soul; now he sees he had as good run into a fire to keep
himself from burning, as to run to the law to keep himself from damning; and
this he sees really, ay, and feels it too, to his own sorrow and perplexity.
[14]
3. The soul also now is killed to his own righteousness, and counts that but
dung, but dross, not worth the dirt hanging on his shoes. O! then, says he, thou
filthy righteousness! how hast thou deceived me! How hast thou beguiled my poor
soul! (Isa 64:6). How did I deceive myself with giving of a little alms; with
abstaining from some gross pollutions; with walking in some ordinances, as to
the outside of them! How hath my good words, good thinkings, good meanings, as
the world calls them, deceived my ignorant soul! I want the righteousness of
faith, the righteousness of God; for I see now there is no less will do me any
good.
4. It is also killed to its own faith, its notion of the Gospel, its own hope,
its own repentings, its own promises and resolutions, to its own strength, its
own virtue, or whatsoever it had before. Now, saith the soul, that faith I
thought I had, it is but fancy; that hope I thought I had, I see it is by
hypocritical, but vain and groundless hope. [These things would be too tedious
to enlarge upon]. Now the soul sees it hath by nature no saving faith, no saving
hope, no grace at all by nature, by the first covenant. Now it crieth out, How
many promises have I broken! and how many times have I resolved in vain, when I
was sick at such a time, and in such a strait at such a place! Indeed, I thought
myself a wise man once, but I see myself a very fool now. O, how ignorant am I
of the Gospel now, and of the blessed experience of the work of God on a
Christian heart! In a word, it sees itself beset by nature with all evil, and
destitute of all good, which is enough to kill the stoutest, hardest-hearted
sinner that ever lived on the earth. O, friends, should you be plainly dealt
withal by this discovery of the dealing of God with a sinner when He makes him a
saint, and would seriously try your selves thereby, as God will try you one day,
how few would there be found of you to be so much as acquainted with the work of
God in the notion, much less in the experimental knowledge of the same! And
indeed, God is fain to take this way with sinners, thus to kill them with the
old covenant to all things below a crucified Christ.
Six reasons of this discourse.
1. Because otherwise there would be none in the world that would look after this
sweet Jesus Christ. There are but a few that go to Heaven in all, comparatively;
and those few God is fain to deal with them in this manner, or else His Heaven,
His Christ, His glory, and everlasting happiness must abide by themselves, for
all sinners. Do you think that Manasseh would have regarded the Lord, had He not
suffered his enemies to have prevailed against him? (2 Chron 33:1-16). Do you
think that Ephraim would have looked after salvation, had not God first
confounded him with the guilt of the sins of his youth? (Jer 31:18). What do you
think of Paul? (Acts 9:4-6). What do you think of the jailer? (Acts 16:30-32).
What do you think of the three thousand? (Acts 2:36,37). Was not this the way
that the Lord was fain to take to make them close in with Jesus Christ? Was He
not fain to kill them to everything below a Christ, that were driven to their
wits" ends, insomuch that they were forced to cry out, "What shall we do to be
saved?" I say, God might have kept Heaven and happiness to Himself, if He should
not go this way to work with sinners. O stout-hearted rebels! O tender-hearted
God!
2. Because then, and not till then, will sinners accept of Jesus Christ on God's
terms. So long as sinners can make a life out of anything below Christ, so long
they will not close with Christ without indenting; [15]
But when the God of Heaven hath killed them to everything below Himself and His
Son, then Christ will down on any terms in the world. And, indeed, this is the
very reason why sinners, when they hear of Christ, yet will not close in with
Him; there is something that they can take content in besides Him. The prodigal,
so long as he could content himself with the husks that the swine did eat, so
long he did keep him away from his father's house; but when he could get no
nourishment anywhere on this side of his father's house, then saith he, and not
till then, "I will arise, and go to my father," etc.
I say, this is the reason, therefore, why men come no faster, and close no more
readily, with the Son of God, but stand halting and indenting [16] about the
terms they must have Christ upon; for, saith the drunkard, I look on Christ to
be worth the having; but yet I am not willing to lose ALL for him; all but my
pot, saith the drunkard; and all but the world, saith the covetous. I will part
with anything but lust and pride, saith the wanton. But if Christ will not be
had without I forsake all, cast away all, then it must be with me as it was with
the young man in the Gospel, such news will make me sorry at the very heart.
But now, when a man is soundly killed to all his sins, to all his righteousness,
to all his comforts whatsoever, and sees that there is no way but the devil must
leave him, but he must be damned in Hell if he be not clothed with Jesus Christ;
O, then, saith he, give me Christ on any terms, whatsoever He cost; though He
cost me friends, though He cost me comforts, though He cost me all that ever I
have; yet, like the wise merchant in the Gospel, they will sell all to get that
pearl. I tell you, when a soul is brought to see its want of Christ aright, it
will not be kept back; father, mother, husband, wife, lands, livings, nay, life
and all, shall go rather than the soul will miss of Christ. Ay, and the soul
counteth Christ a cheap Saviour if he can get him upon any terms; now the soul
indents[17] no longer. Now, Lord, give me Christ upon any terms, whatsoever He
cost; for I am a dead man, a damned man, a castaway, if I have not Christ. What
say you, O you wounded sinners? Is not this true as I have said? Would you not
give ten thousand worlds, if you had so many, so be you might be well assured
that your sins shall be pardoned, and your souls and bodies justified and
glorified at the coming of the Lord Jesus Christ?
3. The Lord goeth this way for this reason also, that it might make the soul
sensible what it cost Christ to redeem it from death and Hell. When a man cometh
to feel the sting and guilt of sin, death and Hell upon his conscience, then,
and not till then, can he tell what it cost Christ to redeem sinners. O! saith
the soul, if a few sins are so terrible, and lay the soul under such wrath and
torment, what did Christ undergo, who bare the sins of thousands and thousands,
and all at once?
This also is one means to make souls tender of sin (it is the burned child that
feareth the fire), to make them humble in a sense of their own vileness, to make
them count everything that God giveth them a mercy, to make much of the least
glimpse of the love of God, and to prize it above the whole world. O sinners,
were you killed indeed [to sin], then Heaven would be Heaven, and Hell would be
Hell indeed; but because you are not wrought upon in this manner, therefore you
count the ways of God as bad as a good man counteth the ways of the devil, and
the ways of the devil and Hell as good as a saint doth count the ways of God.
4. Again, God is fain to go this way, and all to make sinners make sure of
Heaven. So long as souls are senseless of sin, and what a damnable state they
are in by nature, so long they will even dally with the Kingdom of Heaven and
the salvation of their own poor souls; but when God cometh and showeth them
where they are, and what it is like to become of them if they miss of the
crucified Saviour, O, then, saith the soul, would I were sure of Jesus; what
shall I do to get assurance of Jesus? And thus is God forced, as I may say, to
whip souls to Jesus Christ, they being so secure, so senseless, and so much
their own enemies, as not to look out after their own eternal advantage.
5. A fifth reason why God doth deal thus with sinners it is, because He would
bring Christ and the soul together in a right way. Christ and sinners would
never come together in a beloved posture, they would not so suitably suit each
other, if they were not brought together this way, the sinner being killed. O,
when the sinner is killed, and indeed struck dead to everything below a naked
Jesus, how suitably then doth the soul and Christ suit one with another. Then
here is a naked sinner for a righteousness Jesus, a poor sinner to a rich Jesus,
a weak sinner to a strong Jesus, a blind sinner to a seeing Jesus, an ignorant,
careless sinner to a wise and careful Jesus. O, how wise is God in dealing thus
with the sinner! He strips him of his own knowledge, that He may fill him with
Christ's; He killeth him for taking pleasure in sin, that he may take pleasure
in Jesus Christ, etc.
6. God goeth this way with sinners, because He would have the glory of their
salvation. Should not men and women be killed to their own things, they would do
sacrifice unto them, and instead of saying to the Lamb, "THOU ART WORTHY," they
would say their own arm, their own right hand hath saved them; but God will cut
off boasting from ever entering within the borders of eternal glory; for He is
resolved to have the glory of the beginning, the middle, and the end; of the
contriving, and saving, and giving salvation to them that enter in to the joys
of everlasting glory (Rom 3:27; Eph 2:8,9; Titus 3:5; Rev 5:9). "That they might
be called trees of righteousness, the planting of the LORD, that He might be
glorified" (Isa 61:3). I might have run through many things as to this; but I
shall pass them, and proceed.
Second. Now, the soul being this killed to itself, [The soul that hath the right
work of God upon its heart, is not only killed to itself, but also made alive to
Christ]. its sins, its righteousness, faith, hope, wisdom, promises,
resolutions, and the rest of its things which it trusted in by nature; in the
next place, it hath also given unto it a most glorious, perfect, and
never-fading life, which is–
1. A life imputed to it, yet so really, that the very thought of it in the soul
hath so much operation and authority, especially when the mediation of it is
mixed with faith, as to make it, though condemned by the law, to triumph, and to
look its enemies in the face with comfort, notwithstanding the greatness of the
multitude, the fierceness of their anger, and the continuation of their malice,
be never so hot against it.
This imputed life–for so it is–is the obedience of the Son of God as His
righteousness, in His suffering, rising, ascending, interceding, and so
consequently triumphing over all the enemies of the soul, and given to me, as
being wrought on purpose for me. So that, is there righteousness in Christ? that
is mine. Is there perfection in that righteousness? that is mine. Did He bleed
for sin? it was for mine. Hath He overcome the law, the devil, and Hell? the
victory is mine, and I am counted the conqueror, nay, more than a conqueror,
through Him that hath loved me. And I do count this a most glorious life; for by
this means it is that I am, in the first place, proclaimed both in Heaven and
earth guiltless, and such an one who, as I am in Christ, am not sinner, and so
not under the law, to be condemned, but as holy and righteous as the Son of God
Himself, because He Himself is my holiness and righteousness, and so likewise
having by this all things taken out of the way that would condemn me.
Sometimes I bless the Lord my soul hath had the life that now I am speaking of,
not only imputed to me, but the very glory of it upon my soul; for, upon a time,
when I was under many condemnings of heart, and feared, because of my sins, my
soul would miss of eternal glory, methought I felt in my soul such a secret
motion of this–Thy righteousness is in Heaven, together with the splendour and
shining of the Spirit of Grace in my soul, which gave me to see clearly that my
righteousness by which I should be justified from all that could condemn, was
the Son of God Himself in His own Person, now at the right hand of His Father
representing me complete before the Mercy- seat in His Ownself; so that I saw
clearly that night and day, wherever I was, or whatever I was a doing, still
there was my righteousness just before the eyes of Divine glory; so that the
Father could never find fault with me for any insufficiency that was in my
righteousness, seeing it was complete; neither could He say, Where is it?
because it was continually at His right hand. [18]
Also, at another time, having contracted guilt upon my soul, and having some
distemper of body upon me, I supposed that death might now so seize upon as to
take me away from among men; then, thought I, what shall I do now? is all right
with my soul? Have I the right work of God on my soul? Answering myself, "No,
surely"; and that because there were so many weaknesses in me; yes, so many
weaknesses in my best duties. For, thought I, how can such an one as I find
mercy, whose heart is so ready to evil, and so backward to that which is good,
so far as it is natural. Thus musing, being filled with fear to die, these words
come in upon my soul, "Being justified freely by His grace through the
redemption that is in Christ Jesus" (Rom 3:24). As if God had said, Sinner, thou
thinkest because that thou hast had so many infirmities and weaknesses in thy
soul while thou hast been professing of Me, therefore now there can be no hopes
of mercy; but be it known unto thee, that it was not anything done by thee at
the first that moved Me to have mercy upon thee: neither is it anything that is
done by thee now that shall make me either accept or reject thee.
Behold My Son, who standeth by Me, He is righteous, He hath fulfilled My Law,
and given me good satisfaction; on Him, therefore, do I look, and on thee only
as thou art in Him; and according to what He hath done, so will I deal with
thee. This having stayed my heart, and taken off the guilt through the strength
of its coming on my soul, anon after came in that word as a second testimony–
"Who hath saved us, and called us with an holy calling, not according to our
works," of righteousness which we have done, "but according to His own purpose
and grace, which was given us in Christ Jesus before the world began" (2 Tim
1:9). And thus is the sinner made alive from the dead, being justified by grace
through the righteousness of Christ, which is unto all and upon all them that
believe, according to the Scriptures–"And the life which I now live–it is "by
the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me" (Gal 2:20).
"I lay down my life for the sheep." "I am come that they might have life, and
that they might have it more abundantly" (John 10:10,15). "For if, when we were
enemies, we were reconciled to God by the death of His Son, much more, being
reconciled, we shall be saved by His life. That as sin hath reigned unto death,
even so might grace reign through righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus
Christ our Lord" (Rom 5:10,21).
2. This life is not only imputed to him that is wrought on by the Spirit of
Grace–that is, not only counted his, but also there is put into the soul an
understanding, enlightened on purpose to know the things of God, which is Christ
and His imputed righteousness (1 John 5:20) which it never thought of nor
understood before (1 Cor 2:9-11). Which understanding being enlightened and made
to see such things that the soul cannot be contented without it lay hold of and
apply Christ unto itself so effectually; I say, that the soul shall be
exceedingly revived in a very heavenly measure with the application of this
imputed righteousness; for thereby it knoweth it shall find God speaking peace
to itself, with a fatherly affection, saying, "Be of good cheer, thy sins are
forgiven thee"; the righteousness of My Son I bestow upon thee; "For what the
law could not do, in that it was weak through thee," thy "flesh," "I have sent
forth My only Son, and have condemned" thy sins in His flesh (Rom 8:3). And
though thou hast gone astray like a lost sheep, yet on Him I have laid thine
iniquities; and though thou thereby didst undo and break thyself for ever, yet
by His stripes I have healed thee. Thus, I say, the Lord causeth the soul by
faith to apply that which He doth by grace impute unto it, for thus every soul
more or less is dealt withal; the soul being thus enlightened, thus quickened,
thus made alive from that dead state it was in before, or at least having the
beginnings of this life, it hath these several virtuous advantages, which they
have not that are dead in their sins and trespasses, and under the law–
[Advantages possessed by the quickened].
First. It seeth what a sad condition all men by nature are in, they being in
that state which itself was in but a while since; but now by grace it is a
beginning to scrabble [19] out of it; now it seeth "the whole world lieth in
wickedness," and so liable to eternal vengeance, because of their wickedness (1
John 5:19). Ah, friends, let me tell you, though you may be ignorant of your
state and condition, yet the poor, groaning, hungering saints of God do see what
a sad, woeful, miserable state you are in, which sometimes makes them tremble to
think of your most lamentable latter end, your dying so, and also to fly the
faster to their Lord Jesus, for very fear that they also should be partakers of
that most doleful doom. [Like as the children of Israel, who fled for fear when
the ground opened its mouth to swallow up Korah and his company]. And this it
hath by virtue of its own experience, knowing itself was but awhile ago in the
same condition, under the same condemnation. O! there is now a hearth blessing
of God that ever He should show to it its sad condition, and that He should
incline its heart to seek after a better condition.
O blessed be the Lord! saith the soul, that ever He should awaken me, stir up
me, and bring me out of that sad condition that I once with them was in (Psa
103:1-3). It makes also the soul to wonder to see how foolishly and vainly the
rest of its neighbours do spend their precious time, that they should be so void
of understanding, so forgetful of their latter end, so senseless of the damning
nature of their sins. O that their eyes were but enlightened to see whereabouts
they are! surely they would be of another mind than they are now in. Now, the
soul wonders to see what slender pins those poor creatures do hang the stress of
the eternal salvation of their souls upon. O! methinks, saith the soul, it makes
me mourn to see that some should think that they were born Christians; and
others, that their baptism makes them so; [20] others depend barely upon a
traditional, historical faith, which will leave their souls in the midst of
perplexity. That they should trust to such fables, fancies, and wicked sleights
of the devil, as their good doings, their good thinkings, their civil walking
and living with the world. O miserable profession, and the end thereof will be a
miserable end!
But now, when the souls is thus wrought upon, it must be sure to look for the
very gates of Hell to be set open against it with all their force and might to
destroy it. Now Hell rageth, the devil roareth, and all the world resolveth to
do the best they can to bring the soul again into bondage and ruin. Also, the
soul shall not want enemies, even in its own heart's lust, [But this is but for
the exercise of his faith.] as covetousness, adultery, blasphemy, unbelief,
hardness of heart, coldness, half- heartedness, ignorance, with an innumerable
company of attendants, hanging, like so many blocks, at its heels, ready to sink
it into the fire of Hell every moment, together with strange apprehensions of
God and Christ, as if now they were absolutely turned to be its enemies, which
maketh it doubt of the certainty of its salvation; for you must understand, that
though a soul may in reality have the righteousness of the Son of God imputed to
it, and also some faith in a very strong manner to lay hold upon it, yet at
another time, through temptation, they may fear and doubt again, insomuch that
the soul may be put into a very great fear lest it should return again into the
condition it once was in (Jer 32:40).
O, saith the soul, when I think of my former state, how miserable it was, it
makes me tremble; and when I think that I may fall into that condition again,
how sad are the thoughts of it to me! I would not be in that condition again for
all the world. And this fear riseth still higher and higher, as the soul is
sensible of Satan's temptations, or of the working of its own corruptions. Ah!
these filthy lusts, these filthy corruptions. O that I were rid of them, that
they were consumed in a moment, that I could be quite rid of them, they do so
disturb my soul, dishonour my God, so defile my conscience, and sometimes so
weaken my hands in the way of God, and my comforts in the Lord; O how glad
should I be if I might be stripped of them (Rom 7:24). Which fear puts the soul
upon flying to the Lord by prayer for the covering of His imputed righteousness,
and for strength against the devil's temptations and its own corruptions; that
God would give down His Holy Spirit to strengthen it against the things that do
so annoy its soul, and so discourage it in its way, with a resolution, through
grace, never to be contented while [until] it doth find in itself a triumphing
over it, by faith in the blood of a crucified Jesus.
Second. The soul that hath been thus killed by the Law to the things it formerly
delighted in, now, O now, it cannot be contented with that slender, groundless
faith and hope that once it contented itself withal. No, no; but now it must be
brought into the right saving knowledge of Jesus Christ, now it must have Him
discovered to the soul by the Spirit, now it cannot be satisfied because such
and such do tell it is so. No; but now it will cry out, Lord, show me
continually, in the light of Thy Spirit, through Thy Word, that Jesus that was
born in the days of Caesar Augustus, when Mary, a daughter of Judah, went with
Joseph to be taxed at Bethlehem, that He is the very Christ. Lord, let me see it
in the light of Thy Spirit, and in the operation thereof; and let me not be
contented without such a faith that is so wrought even by the discovery of His
birth, crucifying, death, blood, resurrection, ascension, intercession, and
second–which is His personal–coming again, that the very faith of it may fill my
soul with comfort and holiness.
And O, how afraid the soul is lest it should fall short of this faith, and of
the hope that is begotten by such discoveries as these are! For the soul knoweth
that if it hath not this, it will not be able to stand either in death or
judgment; and therefore, saith the soul, Lord, whatever other poor souls content
themselves withal, let me have that which will stand me in stead, and carry me
through a dangerous world; that may help me to resist a cunning devil; that may
help me to suck true soul-satisfying consolation from Jesus Christ through Thy
promises, by the might and power of Thy Spirit. And now, when the poor soul at
any time hath any discovery of the love of God through a bleeding, dying, risen,
interceding Jesus, because it is not willing to be deceived, O, how wary [But
this may be its temptation, taking place through the timorousness of the soul].
is it of closing with it, for fear it should not be right, for fear it should
not come from God! Saith the soul, Cannot the devil give one such comfort I
trow? Cannot he transform himself thus into an angel of light? So that the soul,
because that it would be upon a sure ground, cries out, Lord, show me Thy
salvation, and that not once or twice, but, Lord, let me have Thy presence
continually upon my heart, today, and tomorrow, and every day.
For the soul, when it is rightly brought from under the Covenant of Works, and
planted into the Covenant of Grace, then it cannot be, unless it be under some
desperate temptation, contented without the presence of God, teaching,
comforting, establishing, and helping of the soul to grow in the things of the
Lord Jesus Christ; because it knoweth that if God hath but withdrawn His
presence in any way from it, as He doth do sometimes for a while, that then the
devil will be sure to be near at hand, working with his temptations, trying all
ways to get the soul into slavery and sin again; also the corrupt principle,
that will be joining and combining with the Wicked One, and will be willing to
be a co-partner with him to bring the soul into mischief; which puts a soul upon
an earnest, continual panting after more of the strengthening, preserving,
comforting, and teaching presence of God, and for strong supplies of faith, that
it may effectually lay hold on him.
Third. The soul is quickened so that it is not satisfied now without it do in
deed and in truth partake of the peace of God's elect; now it is upon the
examination of the reality of its joy and peace. Time was indeed that anything
would serve its turn, any false conceits of its state to be good; but now all
kind of peace will not serve its turn, all kind of joy will not be accepted with
it; now it must joy in God through Jesus Christ; now its peace must come through
the virtues of the blood of Christ speaking peace to the conscience by taking
away both the guilt and filth of sin by that blood; also by showing the soul its
free acceptance with God through Christ, He hath completely fulfilled all the
conditions of the first covenant, and freely placed it into the safety of what
He hath done, and so presents the soul complete and spotless in the sight of God
through His obedience. Now, I say, he hath "peace through the blood of His
Cross," and sees himself reconciled to God by the death of His Son, or else his
comfort will be questioned by him (Col 1:20,21). It is not every promise as
cometh now upon his heart that will serve his turn, no, but he must see whether
the babe Jesus be presented to the soul in and through that promise. Now if the
babe leap in his womb, as I may so say, it is because the Lord's promise sounds
aloud in his heart, coming to him big with the love and pardoning grace of God
in Jesus Christ; I say, this is the first and principal joy that the soul hath
that is quickened and brought into the Covenant of Grace.
Fourth. Now the man finds heavenly sanctification wrought in his soul through
the most precious blood of the Man whose name is Jesus Christ–"Jesus, that He
might sanctify the people with His own blood, suffered without the gate." Now
the souls finds a change in the understanding, in the will, in the mind, in the
affections, in the judgment, and also in the conscience; through the inward man
a change, and through the outward man a change, from head to foot, as we use to
say, "for he that is in Christ," and so in this Covenant of Grace, "is a new
creature," or hath been twice made–made, and made again (2 Cor 5:17). O, now the
soul is resolved for Heaven and Glory; now it crieth out, Lord, if there be a
right eye that is offensive to Thee, pluck it out; or a right foot, cut it off;
or a right hand, take it from me. Now the soul doth begin to study how it may
honour God, and bring praise to Him. Now the soul is for a preparation for the
second coming of Christ, endeavouring to lay aside everything that may hinder;
and for the closing in with those things that may make it in a beloved posture
against that day.
Fifth. And all this is from a Gospel spirit, and not from a legal, natural
principle, for the soul hath these things as the fruits and effects of its being
separated unto the Covenant of Grace, and so now possessed with that Spirit that
doth attend, yea, and dwell in them that are brought into the Covenant of Grace
from under the old covenant; I say, these things do spring forth in the soul
from another root and stock than any of the actings of other men do; for the
soul that is thus wrought upon is as well dead to the law and the righteousness
thereof–as the first covenant–as well as to its sins.
Sixth. Now the soul begins to have some blessed experience of the things of God,
even of the glorious mysteries of the Gospel.
1. Now it knoweth the meaning of those words, "My flesh is meat indeed, and My
blood is drink, indeed," and that by experience; for the soul hath received
peace of conscience through that blood, by the effectual application of it to
the soul (John 6:55). First, by feeling the guilt of sin die off from the
conscience by the operation thereof. Secondly, By feeling the power thereof to
take away the curse of the law. Thirdly, By finding the very strength of Hell to
fail when once the blood of that Man Jesus Christ is received in reality upon
the soul.
2. Now the soul also knoweth by experience the meaning of that Scripture that
saith, "Our old man is crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be
destroyed" (Rom 6:6). Now it sees that when the Man Jesus did hang on the tree
on Mount Calvary, that then the body of its sins was there hanged up, dead and
buried with Him, though it was then unborn, so as never to be laid to its
charge, either here or hereafter; and also, so as never to carry it captive into
perpetual bondage, being itself overcome by Him, even Christ, the Head of that
poor creature. And indeed this is the way for a soul both to live comfortably as
touching the guilt of sin, and also as touching the power of the filth of sin;
for the soul that doth or hath received this in deed and in truth, finds
strength against them both by and through that Man that did for him and the rest
of his fellow-sinners so gloriously overcome it, and hath given the victory unto
them, so that now they are said to be overcomers, nay, "more than conquerors
through Him," the one Man Jesus Christ (Rom 7:33-37).
3. Now the soul hath received a faith indeed, and a lively hope indeed, such an
one as now it can fetch strength from the fullness of Christ, and from the
merits of Christ.
4. Yea, now the soul can look on itself with one eye, and look upon Christ with
another, and say, Indeed, it is true; I am an empty soul, but Christ is a full
Christ; I am a poor sinner, but Christ is a rich Christ; I am a foolish sinner,
but Christ is a wise Christ; I am an unholy, ungodly, unsanctified creature in
myself, but Christ is made of God "unto me, wisdom, and righteousness, and
sanctification, and redemption" (1 Cor 1:30).
5. Now also that fiery law, that it could not once endure, nor could not once
delight in, I say, now it can delight in it after the inward man; now this law
is its delight, it would always be walking in it, and always be delighting in
it, being offended with any sin or any corruption that would be anyways an
hinderance to it (Rom 7:24,25). And yet it will not abide, it will not endure
that that, even that that law should offer to take the work of its salvation out
of Christ's hand; no, if it once comes to do that, then out of doors it shall
go, if it were as good again. For that soul that hath the right work of God
indeed upon it, cries, Not my prayers, not my tears, not my works, not my
things, do they come from the work of the Spirit of Christ itself within me, yet
these shall not have the glory of my salvation; no, it is none but the blood of
Christ, the death of Christ, of the Man Christ Jesus of Nazareth, the
carpenter's son, as they called Him, that must have the crown and glory of my
salvation. None but Christ, none but Christ. And thus the soul labours to give
Christ the preeminence (Col 1:18).
A WORD OF EXPERIENCE.
Now, before I go any further, I must needs speak a word from my own experience
of the things of Christ; and the rather, because we have a company of silly ones
in this day of ignorance that do either comfort themselves with a notion without
the power, or else do both reject the notion and the power of this most glorious
Gospel; therefore, for the further conviction of the reader, I shall tell him,
with David, something of what the Lord hath done for my soul; and indeed a
little of the experience of the things of Christ is far more worth than all the
world. It would be too tedious for me to tell thee here all from the first to
the last; but something I shall tell thee, that thou mayest not think these
things are fables. [This conviction seized on my soul one Sabbath day, when I
was at play, being one of the first that I had, which when it came, though it
scared me with its terror, yet through the temptation of the devil, immediately
striking in therewith, I did rub it off again, and became as vile for some time
as I was before, like a wretch that I was]. [21]
Reader, when it pleased the Lord to begin to instruct my soul, He found me one
of the black sinners of the world; He found me making a sport of oaths, and also
of lies; and many a soul- poisoning meal did I make out of divers lusts, as
drinking, dancing, playing, pleasure with the wicked ones of the world. The Lord
finding of me in this condition, did open the glass of His Law unto me, wherein
He showed me so clearly my sins, both the greatness of them, and also how
abominable they were in His sight, that I thought the very clouds were charged
with the wrath of God, and ready to let fall the very fire of His jealousy upon
me; yet for all this I was so wedded to my sin, that, thought I with myself, I
will have them though I lose my soul, (O wicked wretch that I was!) but God, the
great, the rich, the infinite merciful God, did not take this advantage of my
soul to cast me away, and say, Then take him, Devil, seeing he cares for Me no
more; no, but He followed me still, and won upon my heart, by giving me some
understanding, not only into my miserable state, which I was very sensible of,
but also that there might be hopes of mercy; also taking away that love to lust,
and placing in the room thereof a love to religion; and thus the Lord won over
my heart to some desire after the means, to hear the Word, and to grow a
stranger to my old companions, and to accompany the people of God, together with
giving of me many sweet encouragements from several promises in the Scriptures.
But after this, the Lord did wonderfully set my sins upon my conscience, those
sins especially that I had committed since the first convictions; temptations
also followed me very hard, and especially such temptations as did tend to the
making me question of the very way of salvation–viz., whether Jesus Christ was
the Saviour or no; and whether I had best to venture my soul upon His blood for
salvation, or take some other course.
But being through grace kept close with God, in some measure, in prayer and the
rest of the ordinances, but went about a year and upwards without any sound
evidence as from God to my soul touching the salvation that comes by Jesus
Christ. But, at the last, as I may say, when the set time was come, the Lord,
just before the men called Quakers came into the country, did set me down so
blessedly in the truth of the doctrine of Jesus Christ, that it made me marvel
to see, first, how Jesus Christ was born of a virgin, walked in the world awhile
with His disciples, afterwards hanged on the Cross, spilt His blood, was buried,
rose again, ascended above the clouds and heavens, there lives to make
intercession, and that He also will come again at the last day to judge the
world, and take His saints unto Himself.
These things, I say, I did see so evidently, even as if I had stood when He was
in the world, and also when He was caught up. I having such a change as this
upon my soul, it made me wonder; and musing with myself at the great alteration
that was in my spirit–for the Lord did also very gloriously give me in His
precious Word to back the discovery of the Son of God unto me, so that I can
say, through grace, it was according to the Scriptures (1 Cor 15:1-4). And as I
was musing with myself what these things should mean, methought I heard such a
word in my heart as this–I have set thee down on purpose, for I have something
more than ordinary for thee to do; which made me the more marvel, saying, What,
my Lord, such a poor wretch as I? Yet still this continued, I have set thee down
on purpose, and so forth, with more fresh incomes of the Lord Jesus, and the
power of the blood of His Cross upon my soul, even so evidently that I saw,
through grace, that it was the blood shed on Mount Calvary that did save and
redeem sinners, as clearly and as really with the eyes of my soul as ever, me
thought, I had seen a penny loaf bought with a penny; which things then
discovered had such operation upon my soul, that I do hope they did sweetly
season every faculty thereof. Reader, I speak in the presence of God, and He
knows I lie not; much of this, and such like dealings of His, could I tell thee
of; but my business at this time is not so to do, but only to tell what
operation the blood of Christ hath had over and upon my conscience, and that at
several times, and also when I have been in several frames of spirit.
As, first, sometimes, I have been so loaden with my sins, that I could not tell
where to rest, nor what to do; yea, at such times I thought it would have taken
away my senses; yet at that time God through grace hath all of a sudden so
effectually applied the blood that was spilt at Mount Calvary out of the side of
Jesus, unto my poor, wounded, guilty conscience, that presently I have found
such a sweet, solid, sober, heart-comforting peace, that it hath made me as if
it [my terror] had not been, and withal the same, I may say, and I ought to say,
the power of it, hath had such a powerful operation upon my soul, that I have
for a time been in a strait and trouble to think that I should love and honour
Him no more, the virtue of His blood hath so constrained me.
Again; sometimes methinks my sins have appeared so big to me that I thought one
of my sins have been as big as all the sins of all the men in the nation; ay,
and of other nations too, reader; these things be not fancies, for I have
smarted for this experience, but yet the least stream of the heart blood of this
Man [22] Jesus hath vanished all away, and hath made it to fly, to the
astonishment of such a poor sinner; and as I said before, hath delivered me up
into sweet and heavenly peace and joy in the Holy Spirit.
Again; sometimes when my heart hath been hard, dead, slothful, blind, and
senseless, which indeed are sad frames for a poor Christian to be in, yet at
such a time, when I have been is such a case, then hath the blood of Christ, the
precious blood of Christ, the admirable blood of the God of Heaven, that run out
of His body when it did hang on the Cross, so softened, livened, quickened, and
enlightened my soul, that truly, reader, I can say, O it makes me wonder!
Again; when I have been loaden with sin, and [I cannot stand here to tell thee
of particular temptations]. pestered with several temptations, and in a very sad
manner, then have I had the trial of the virtue of Christ's blood with the trial
of the virtue of other things; and I have found that when tears would not do,
prayers would not do, repentings and all other things could not reach my heart;
O then, one touch, one drop, one shining of the virtue of the blood, of that
blood that was let out with the spear, it hath in a very blessed manner
delivered me, that it hath made me to marvel. O! methinks it hath come with such
life, such power, with such irresistible and marvelous glory, that it wipes off
all the slurs, silences all the outcries, and quenches all the fiery darts, and
all the flames of Hell-fire, that are begotten by the charges of the Law, Satan,
and doubtful remembrances of my sinful life.
Friends, as Peter saith to the church, so I say to you, I have not preached to
you cunningly devised fables in telling you of the blood of Christ, and what
authority it hath had upon my conscience; O no, but as Peter saith touching the
coming of the Lord Jesus into the world, so in some measure I can say of the
blood of the Lord Jesus Christ that was shed when He did come into the world.
There is not only my single testimony touching this; no, but there are all the
Prophets do agree in advancing this in writing, and also all the saints do now
declare the same, in speaking forth the amiableness and many powerful virtues
thereof. "As for Thee also, by the blood of Thy covenant," saith God to Christ,
"I have sent forth Thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water" (Zech
9:11). "We have redemption through His blood" (Eph 1:7). Again, "We have
redemption through His blood" (Col 1:14). Our robes are washed and made "white
in the blood of the Lamb" (Rev 7:14). The devil is overcome through "the blood
of the Lamb" (Rev 12:11). Yea, and conscience is purged, too, and that through
the blood of the Lamb (Heb 9:14). We have free recourse to the Throne of Grace
through the blood of Jesus (Heb 10:19). I could bring thee a cloud of witnesses
out of all the types and shadows, and out of the sundry Prophets, and much more
out of the New Testament, but I forebear, because I would not be too tedious to
the reader in making too large a digression, though I have committed here in
this discourse no transgression, for the blood of Christ is precious blood (1
Peter 1:18,19).
THIRD. THE PRIVILEGES OF THE NEW COVENANT.
In the next place, I shall show you the several privileges and advantages that
the man or woman hath that is under this Covenant of Grace, over what they have
that are under the Covenant of the Law and Works. As,
First. The Covenant of Grace is not grounded upon our obedience, but upon God's
love, even His pardoning love to us through Christ Jesus. The first covenant is
stood to be broken or kept by us, and God's love or anger to be lost or enjoyed
thereafter as we, as creatures, behaved ourselves; but now, the very ground of
the Covenant of Grace is God's love, His mere love through Jesus Christ–"The
LORD did not set His love upon you, nor choose you, because ye were more in
number than any people; for ye were the fewest of all people: but because the
LORD loved you, and because He would keep the oath which He had sworn unto your
fathers" (Deu 7:7,8). Again, "In His love and in His pity He redeemed them,"
"and the angel of His presence saved them," that is, Jesus Christ (Isa 63:9).
And again, "Who hath saved us–not according to our works" of righteousness which
we have done, "but according to His own purpose and grace, which was given us in
Christ Jesus before the world began" (2 Tim 1:9).
Second. This love is not conveyed to us through what we have done, as is before
proved, but through what He hath done with Whom the covenant was made, which was
given us in Christ– According as He hath chosen us in Christ. "Who hath blessed
us with all spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ." "God for Christ's
sake hath forgiven you," that is, through Christ's doings, through Christ's
sufferings (2 Tim 1:9; Eph 1:3,4; 4:32). Now if this be but rightly understood,
it doth discover abundance of comfort to them, that are within the bounds of the
Covenant of Grace. For,
1. Here a believer seeth he shall stand, if Christ's doings and sufferings
stand; which is sure foundation, for God dealeth with him through Christ. And
so, secondly, he shall not fall, unless the suffering and merits of Christ be
thrown over the bar, being found guilty, which will never be, before the eyes of
Divine justice; for with Him the covenant was made, and He was the Surety of it;
that is, as the covenant was made with Him, so He stood bound to fulfill the
same (Zech 9:11; Heb 7:22). For you must understand that the covenant was made
between the Father and the Son long before it was accomplished, or manifestly
sealed with Christ's blood; it was made before the world began (Titus 1:2; Eph
1:4; 1 Peter 1:18-20). But the conditions thereof were not fulfilled until less
than two thousand years ago; and all that while did Jesus stand bound as a
surety, as I said before, is used to do, till the time in which the payment
should be made. And it was by virtue of His Suretyship, having bound Himself by
covenant to do all things agreed on by the Father and Him, that all those of the
election that were born before He came, that they might be saved, and did enter
into rest. For the forgiveness of sins that were past, though it was through the
blood of Christ, yet it was also through the forbearance of God (Rom 3:25). That
is, Christ becoming Surety for those that died before His coming, that He should
in deed and in truth, at the fullness of time, or at the time appointed, give a
complete and full satisfaction for them according to the tenor or condition of
the covenant. (Gal 4:4). Again,
2. The second covenant, which believers are under, as the ground and foundation,
if it is safe, so the promises thereof are better, surer, freer, and fuller,
etc.
(1.) They are better, if you compare the excellency of the one with the
excellency of the other. The first hath promised nothing but an early
paradise–Do this, and thou shalt live; namely, here in an earthly paradise. But
the other doth bring the promise of a heavenly paradise.
(2.) As the Covenant of Works doth promise an earthly paradise, yet it is a
paradise or blessing, though once obtained, yet might be lost again; for no
longer than thou doest well, no longer art thou blessed by that. O, but the
promises in the new covenant do bring unto us the benefit of an eternal
inheritance–That "they which are called might receive the promise of eternal
inheritance." O rare! it is an "eternal inheritance" (Heb 9:15).
(3.) The other, as it is not so good as this, so neither is it so sure as this;
and therefore he calls the one such an one as might be, and was, shaken, but
this is said to be such an one that cannot be shaken. "And this Word," saith he,
treating of the two covenants from verse the 8th to the 24th–"And this Word, yet
once more, signifieth the removing of those things that are," or may be,
"shaken, as of things that are made, that those things which cannot be shaken,"
which is the second covenant, "may remain," (Heb 12:27); for, saith he (verse
28) "which cannot be moved." Therefore, ye blessed saints, seeing you have
received a kingdom "which cannot be moved," therefore, "let us have grace,
whereby we may serve" our "God acceptably with reverence and godly fear."
Thus in general, but more particularly.
(4.) They are surer, in that they are founded upon God's love also, and they
come to us without calling for those things at our hands that may be a means of
putting of a stop to our certain enjoying of them. The promises under, or for
the law, they might easily be stopped by our disobedience; but the promises
under the Gospel say, "If Heaven above can be measured, and the foundations of
the earth searched," then, and not till then, "I will also cast off all the seed
of Israel for all that they have done" (Jer 31:37). Again, "I, even I, am He
that blotteth out thy transgressions for Mine own" name's "sake, and will not
remember thy sins" (Isa 43:25). I will make thee a partaker of My promise; and
that I may so do, I will take away that which would hinder; "I will cast all
their sins into the depths of the sea," that My promise may be sure to all the
seed; and therefore, saith the Apostle, when he would show us that the
new-covenant promises were more sure than the old, he tells us plainly that the
law and works are set aside and they are merely made ours through the
righteousness of faith, which is the righteousness of Christ–"For the promise,
that he [Abraham] should be the heir of the world," saith he, "was not to
Abraham, or to his seed, through the law," or works, "but through the
righteousness of faith. For if they which are of the law," or of works, "be
heirs," then "faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect. Therefore
it is of faith–to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed" (Rom
4:13-14,16).
(5.) Surer, because that as that is taken away that should hinder, so they are
committed to a faithful Friend of ours in keeping. For all the promises of God
are in Christ, not yea and nay, but yea and amen; certain and sure; sure,
because they are in the hand of our Head, our Friend, our Brother, our Husband,
our flesh and bones, even in the heart and hand of our precious Jesus.
(6.) Because all the conditions of them are already fulfilled for us by Jesus
Christ, as aforesaid; every promise that is a new- covenant promise, if there be
any condition in it, our Undertaker hath accomplished that for us, and also
giveth us such grace as to receive the sweetness as doth spring from them
through His obedience to every thing required in them.
(7.) Surer, because that as they are grounded upon the love of God, everything
is taken out of the way, in the hand of a sure Friend. And has Christ has
fulfilled every condition as to justification that is contained therein, so the
Lord hath solemnly sworn with an oath for our better confidence in this
particular– "For when God made promise to Abraham," and so to all the saints,
"because He could swear by no greater, He sware by Himself, saying, Surely,
blessing I will bless thee, and multiplying I will multiply thee. And so, after
he had patiently endured, he obtained the promise. For men verily swear by the
greater: and an oath for confirmation is to them an end of all strife," that
there might be no more doubt or scruple concerning the certain fulfilling of the
promise. "Wherein God, willing more abundantly to show unto the heirs of promise
the immutability of His counsel," or certain, constant, unchangeable decree of
God in making of the promise, for the comfort of his children, "confirmed it by
an oath: that by two immutable things," His promise backed with an oath, "in
which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation, who
have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us" (Heb 6:13-18).
(8.) That they are better it appears also in that they are freer and fuller.
That they are freer, it is evident, in that one saith, No works, no life–Do
this, and then thou shalt live; if not, thou shalt be damned. But the other
saith, We are saved by believing in what Another hath done, without the works of
the Law– "Now to him that worketh not, but believeth on Him that justifieth the
ungodly, his faith is counted for righteousness" (Rom 4:4,5). The one saith, Pay
me that thou owest; the other say, I do frankly and freely forgive thee all. The
one saith, Because thou hast sinned, thou shalt die; the other saith, Because
Christ lives, thou shalt live also (John 15).
(9.) And as they are freer, so they are fuller; fuller of encouragement, fuller
of comfort; the one, to wit, the law, looks like Pharaoh's seven ill-favoured
kine, more ready to eat one up than to afford us any food; the other is like the
full grape in the cluster, which for certain hath a glorious blessing in it. The
one saith, If thou hast sinned, turn again; the other saith, If thou hast
sinned, thou shalt be damned, for all I have a promise in me.
3. They that are of the second are better than they that are of the first; and
it also appeareth in this–The promises of the Law, through them we have neither
faith, nor hope, nor the Spirit conveyed; but through the promises of the Gospel
there are all these–"Whereby are given unto us exceeding great and precious
promises, that by these we might be partakers of the Divine nature" (2 Peter
1:4). O therefore "let us hold fast the profession of our faith without
wavering; for He is faithful that promised" (Heb 10:23). "In hope of eternal
life," how so? because "God, that cannot lie, promised it before the world
began" (Titus 1:2).
4. They that are in this covenant are in a very happy state; for though there be
several conditions in the Gospel to be done, yet Christ Jesus doth not look that
they should be done by man, as man, but by His own Spirit in them, as it is
written, "Thou hast wrought all our works in us." Is there that condition, they
must believe? Why, then, He will be both the "author and finisher of their
faith" (Heb 12:2,3). Is there also hope to be in His children? He also doth and
hath given them "good hope through His grace" (2 Thess 2:16). Again, are the
people of God to behave themselves to the glory of God the Father? then He will
work in them "both to will and to do of His own good pleasure" (Phil 2:13).
5. Again, as He works all our works in us and for us, so also by virtue of this
covenant we have another nature given unto us, whereby, or by which we are made
willing to be glorifying of God, both in our bodies and in our spirits, which
are His–"Thy people shall be willing in the day of Thy power" (1 Cor 6:20; Psa
110:3).
6. In the next place, all those that are under this second covenant are in a
wonderful safe condition; for in case they should slip or fall after their
conversion into some sin or sins (for who lives and sins not? (Prov 24:16), yet
through the merits and intercession of Christ Jesus, who is their Undertaker in
this covenant, they shall have their sins pardoned, their wounds healed, and
they raised up again; which privilege the children of the first covenant have
not; for if they sin, they are never afterwards regarded by that covenant–They
brake My covenant and I regarded them not, saith the Lord (Heb 8:9). But when He
comes to speak of the Covenant of Grace, speaking first of the public person
under the name of David, He saith thus, "He shall cry unto Me, Thou art My
Father, My God, and the rock of My salvation. Also I will make Him My firstborn,
higher than the kings of the earth. My mercy will I keep for Him for evermore,
and My covenant shall stand fast with Him. His seed also will I make to endure
for ever, and His throne as the days of heaven.
If His children forsake My law, and walk not in My judgments; If they break my
statutes, and keep not My commandments; Then will I visit their transgression
with the rod, and their iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless My lovingkindness
will I not utterly take from Him, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail. My
covenant will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips. Once
have I sworn by My holiness that I will not lie unto David. His seed shall
endure for ever, and His throne as the sun before Me. It shall be established
for ever as the moon, and as a faithful witness in heaven" (Psa 89:26-37). "My
covenant shall stand fast with him"–mark that. As if God had said, I did not
make this covenant with man, but with My Son, and with Him I will perform it;
and seeing He hath given Me complete satisfaction, though His children do,
through infirmity, transgress, yet My covenant is not therefore broken, seeing
He with whom it was made standeth firm, according to the desire of my heart; so
that My justice that is satisfied, and My Law, hath nothing to say, for there is
no want of perfection in the sacrifice of Christ.
If you love your souls, and would have them live in the peace of God, to the
which you are called in one body, even all believers, then I beseech you
seriously to ponder, and labour to settle in your souls this one thing, that the
new covenant is not broken by our transgressions, and that because it was not
made with us. The reason why the very saints of God have so many ups and downs
in this their travel towards Heaven, it is because they are so weak in the faith
of this one thing; for they think that if they fail of this or that particular
performance, if their hearts be dead and cold, and their lusts mighty and
strong, therefore now God is angry, and now He will shut them out of His favour,
now the new covenant is broken, and now Christ Jesus will stand their Friend no
longer; now also the devil hath power again, and now they must have their part
in the resurrection of damnation; when, alas! the covenant is not for all this
never the more broken, and so the grace of God no more straitened than it was
before. Therefore, I say, when thou findest that thou art weak here, and failing
there, backward to this good, and thy heart forward to that evil; then be sure
thou keep a steadfast eye on the Mediator of this new covenant, and be persuaded
that it is not only made with Him, and His part also fulfilled, but that He doth
look upon His fulfilling of it, so as not to lay thy sins to thy charge, though
He may as a Father chastise thee for the same–"If His children forsake My law,
and walk not in My judgments; if they break My statutes, and keep not My
commandments; then will I visit their transgression with the rod, and their
iniquity with stripes. Nevertheless," mark "nevertheless My lovingkindness will
I not utterly take from HIM, nor suffer My faithfulness to fail. My covenant
will I not break, nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips." And what was
that? Why, that "His seed shall endure for ever, and His throne as the sun
before Me" (Psa 89:30- 34,36).
7. Another privilege that the saints have by virtue of the new covenant is, that
they have part of the possession or hold of Heaven and Glory already, and that
two manner of ways–(1.) The Divine nature is conveyed from Heaven into them;
and, secondly, the human nature, i.e., the nature of man, is received up, and
entertained in, and hath got possession of Heaven. We have the first-fruits of
the Spirit, saith the man of God; we have the earnest of the Spirit, which is
instead of the whole, for it is the earnest of the whole–"Which is the earnest
of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, unto the
praise of His glory" (Eph 1:13,14; Rom 8:8-11). (2.) The nature of man, our
nature is got into glory as the first-fruits of mankind, as a forerunner to take
possession till we all come thither (1 Cor 15:20). For the Man born at Bethlehem
is ascended, which is part of the lump of mankind, into glory as a public
Person, as the first-fruits, representing the whole of the children of God; so
that in some sense it may be said that the saints have already taken possession
of the kingdom of Heaven by their Jesus, their public Person, He being in their
room entered to prepare a place for them (John 14:1-4). I beseech you consider,
when Jesus Christ came down from Glory, it was that He might bring us to Glory;
and that He might be sure not to fail, He clothed Himself with our nature, as if
one should take a piece out of the whole lump instead of the whole, until the
other comes, and investeth it in that glory which He was in before He came down
from Heaven (Heb 2:14,15). And thus is that saying to be understood, speaking of
Christ and His saints, which saith, "And" He "hath raised us up together, and
made us sit together in heavenly places in Christ Jesus" (Eph 2:6).
8. Again, not only thus, but all the power of God, together with the rest of His
glorious attributes, are on our side, in that they dwell in our nature, which is
the Man Jesus, and doth engage for us poor, simple, empty, nothing creatures as
to our eternal happiness (1 Peter 1:5). "For in Him," that is, in the Man
Christ, who is our nature, our Head, our root, our flesh, our bone, "dwelleth
all the fullness of the Godhead bodily" (Col 2:9,10). Mark how they are joined
together, "In whom dwelleth the fullness of the Godhead. And ye are complete in
Him." God dwelleth completely in Him, and you also are completely implanted in
Him, which is the Head of all principality and power; and all this by the
consent of the Father–"For it pleased the Father that in Him should all fullness
dwell" (Col 1:19).
Now mark, the Godhead doth not dwell in Christ Jesus for Himself only, but that
it may be in a way of righteousness conveyed to us, for our comfort and help in
all our wants–"All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth," saith He
(Matt 28:18). And then followeth, "And lo, I am with you alway, even unto the
end of the world" (Verse 20). "He hath received gifts for men, yea for the
rebellious" (Psa 68:18). "Of His fullness have all we received, and grace for
grace" (John 1:16). And this the saints cannot be deprived of, because the
covenant made with Christ, in every tittle of it, was so completely fulfilled as
to righteousness, both active and passive, that justice cannot object anything;
holiness now can find fault with nothing; nay, all the power of God cannot shake
anything that hath been done for us by the Mediator of the new covenant; so that
now there is no Covenant of Works to a believer; none of the commands,
accusations, condemnations, or the least tittle of the old covenant to be
charged on any of those that are the children of the second covenant; no sin to
be charged, because there is no law to be pleaded, but all is made up by our
middle man, Jesus Christ. O blessed covenant! O blessed privilege! Be wise,
therefore, O ye poor drooping souls that are the sons of this second covenant,
and "stand fast in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made you free, and be not
entangled AGAIN," nor terrified in your consciences, "with the yoke of bondage";
neither the commands, accusations, or condemnations of the Law of the old
covenant (Gal 5:1).
TWO HELL-BRED OBJECTIONS ANSWERED.
Object. If it be so, then one need not care what they do; they may sin and sin
again, seeing Christ hath made satisfaction. [The first objection].
Answ. If I were to point out one that was under the power of the devil, and
going post-haste to Hell, for my life I would look no farther for such a man
than to him that would make such a use as this of the grace of God. What,
because Christ is a Saviour, thou wilt be a sinner! because His grace abounds,
therefore thou wilt abound in sin! O wicked wretch! rake Hell all over, and
surely I think thy fellow will scarce be found! And let me tell thee this before
I leave thee–as God's covenant with Christ for His children, which are of faith,
stands sure, immutable, unrevocable, and unchangeable, so also hath God taken
such a course with thee, that unless thou canst make God forswear Himself, it is
impossible that thou shouldst go to Heaven, dying in that condition–"They
tempted Me, proved Me," and turned the grace of God into lasciviousness, "so I
sware," mark that, "so I sware," and that in My wrath, too, that they should
never enter into My rest. Compare Hebrews 3:9-11, with 1 Corinthians 10:5-10.
No, saith God; if Christ will not serve their turns, but they must have their
sins too, take them, Devil; if Heaven will not satisfy them, take them, Hell;
devour them, Hell; scald them, fry them, burn them, Hell! God hath more places
than one to put sinners into. If they do not like Heaven, He will fit them with
Hell; if they do not like Christ, they shall be forced to have the devil.
Therefore we must and will tell of the truth of the nature of the Covenant of
Grace of God to His poor saints for their encouragement and for their comfort,
who would be glad to leap at Christ upon any terms; yet therewith, we can tell
how, through grace, to tell the hogs and sons of this world what a hog-sty there
is prepared for them, even such an one that God hath prepared to put the devil
and his angels into, is fitly prepared for them (Matt 25:41).
Object. But if Christ hath given God a full and complete satisfaction, then
though I do go on in sin, I need not fear, seeing God hath already been
satisfied. [The second objection]. It will be injustice in God to punish for
those sins for which He is already satisfied for by Christ.
Answ. Rebel, rebel, there are some in Christ and some out of Him. 1. They that
are in Him have their sins forgiven, and they themselves made new creatures, and
have the Spirit of the Son, which is a holy, living, self-denying Spirit. And
they that are thus in Jesus Christ are so far off from delighting in sin, that
sin is the greatest thing that troubleth them; and O how willing would they be
rid of the very thoughts of it (Psa 119:113). It is the grief of their souls,
when they are in a right frame of spirit, that they can live no more to the
honour and glory of God than they do; and in all their prayers to God, the
breathings of their souls are as much sanctifying grace as pardoning grace, that
they might live a holy life. They would as willing live holy here as they would
be happy in the world to come; they would as willingly be cleansed from the
filth of sin as to have the guilt of it taken away; they would as willingly
glorify God here as they would be glorified by Him hereafter (Phil 3:6-22). 2.
But there are some that are out of Christ, being under the Law; and as for all
those, let them be civil or profane, they are such as God accounts wicked; and I
say, as for those, if all the angels in Heaven can drag them before the
judgment-seat of Christ, they shall be brought before it to answer for all their
ungodly deeds; and being condemned for them, if all the fire in Hell will burn
them, they shall be burned there, if they die in that condition (Jude 15). And,
therefore, if you love your souls, do not give way to such a wicked spirit. "Let
no man deceive you with" such "vain words," as to think, because Christ hath
made satisfaction to God for sin, therefore you may live in your sins. O no, God
forbid that any should think so, "for because of these things cometh the wrath
of God upon the children of disobedience" (Eph 5:6).
Thus have I, reader, given thee a brief discourse touching the Covenant of Works
and the Covenant of Grace, also of the nature of the one, together with the
nature of the other. I have also in this discourse endeavoured to show you the
condition of them that are under the Law, how sad it is, both from the nature of
the covenant they are under, and also by the carriage of God unto them by that
covenant. And now, because I would bring all into as little a compass as I can,
I shall begin with the use and application of the whole in as brief a way as I
can, desiring the Lord to bless it to thee.
[USE AND APPLICATION].
A use of examination about the old covenant.
First. And, first of all, let us here begin to examine a little touching the
covenant you stand before God in, whether it be the Covenant of Works or the
Covenant of Grace; [The first use is a use of examination]. and for the right
doing of this, I shall lay down this proposition–namely, that all men naturally
come into the world under the first of these, which is called the old covenant,
or the Covenant of Works, which is the Law; "And were all by nature the children
of wrath, even as others"; which they could not be, had they not been under the
law; for there are none that are under the other covenant that are still the
children of wrath, but the children of faith, the children of the promise, the
accepted children, the children not of the bond-woman, but of the free (Gal
4:28-31).
[Quest.] Now here lieth the question. Which of these two covenants art thou
under, soul?
Answ. I hope I am under the Covenant of Grace.
Quest. But what ground hast thou to think that thou art under that blessed
covenant, and not rather under the Covenant of Works, that strict, that
soul-damning covenant?
Answ. What ground? Why, I hope I am.
Quest. But what ground hast thou for this thy hope? for a hope without a ground
is like a castle built in the air, that will never be able to do thee any good,
but will prove like unto that spoken of in Job 8, "Whose hope shall be cut off,
and whose trust shall be" like "a spider's web. He shall lean upon his house,
but it shall not stand; he shall hold it fast," as thou wouldst thy hope, it is
like, "but it shall not endure" (Job 8:13- 15).
Answ. My hope is grounded upon the promises; what else should it be grounded
upon?
Reply. Indeed, to build my hope upon Christ Jesus, upon God in Christ, through
the promise, and to have this hope rightly, by the shedding abroad of the love
of God in the heart, it is a right- grounded hope (Rom 5:1-7).
Quest. But what promises in the Scripture do you find your hope built upon? and
how do you know whether you do build your hope upon the promises in the Gospel,
the promises of the new covenant, and not rather on the promises of the old
covenant, for there are promises in that as well as in the other?
Answ. I hope that if I do well I shall be accepted; because God hath said I
shall (Gen 4:7).
Reply. O soul, if thy hope be grounded there, thy hope is not grounded upon the
Gospel promises, or the new covenant, but verily upon the old; for these words
were spoken to Cain, a son of the old covenant; and they themselves are the
tenor and scope of that; for that runs thus: "Do this, and thou shalt live. The
man that doth these things shall live by them. If thou do well, thou shalt be
accepted" (Lev 18:5; Eze 20:11; Rom 10:5; Gal 3:12; Gen 4:7).
Reply. Why, truly, if a man's doing well, and living well, and his striving to
serve God as well as he can, will not help him to Christ, I do not know what
will; I am sure sinning against God will not.
Quest. Did you never read that Scripture which saith, "Israel, which followed
after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the law of righteousness"?
(Rom 9:30-32).
Object. But doth not the Scripture say, "Blessed are they that do His
commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life"? (Rev 22:14).
Answ. There is first, therefore, to be inquired into, whether to keep His
commandments be to strive to keep the Law as it is a Covenant of Works, or
whether it be meant of the great commandments of the New Testament which are
cited in 1 John 3:22,23–"And whatsoever we ask we receive of Him, because we
keep His commandments, and do those things that are pleasing in His sight." But
what do you mean, John? Do you mean the covenant of the Law, or the covenant to
the Gospel? Why, "this is His commandment," saith he, "That we should believe on
the name of His Son Jesus Christ, and love one another," as the fruits of this
faith, "as He gave us commandment." If it be of the old covenant, as a Covenant
of Works, then the Gospel is but a lost thing. If it were of works, then no more
of grace; therefore it is not the old covenant, as the old covenant.
Quest. But what do you mean by these words–the old covenant as the old covenant?
Explain your meaning.
Answ. My meaning is, that the Law is not to be looked upon for life, so as it
was handed out from Mount Sinai, if ever thou wouldst indeed be saved; though
after thou hast faith in Christ, thou mayest and must solace thyself in it, and
take pleasure therein, to express thy love to Him who hath already saved thee by
His own blood, without thy obedience to the law, either from Sinai or elsewhere.
Quest. Do you think that I do mean that my righteousness will save me without
Christ? If so, you mistake me, for I think not so; but this I say, I will labour
to do what I can; and what I cannot do, Christ will do for me.
Answ. Ah, poor soul, this is the wrong way too; for this is to make Christ but a
piece of a Saviour; thou wilt do something, and Christ shall do the rest; thou
wilt set thy own things in the first place, and if thou wantest at last, then
thou wilt borrow of Christ; thou art such an one that dost Christ the greatest
injury of all. First, in that thou dost undervalue His merits by preferring of
thy own works before His; and, secondly, by mingling of thy works thy dirty,
ragged righteousness with His.
Quest. Why, would you have us do nothing? Would you have us make Christ such a
drudge as to do all, while we sit idling still?
Answ. Poor soul, thou mistakest Jesus Christ in saying thou makest Him a drudge
in letting Him do all; I tell thee, He counts it a great glory to do all for
thee, and it is a great dishonour unto Him for thee so much as to think
otherwise. And this the saints of God that have experienced the work of grace
upon their souls do count it also the same–"Saying, Thou art worthy to take the
book, and to open the seals thereof" (Rev 5:9). "Worthy is the Lamb, that was
slain, to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and
glory, and blessing" (Verse 12). And why so? read again in the 9th verse, "For
Thou wast slain, and hast redeemed us to God by Thy" own "blood" (See also Eph
1:6,7). "To the praise of the glory of His grace–in whom we have redemption
through His blood."
Reply. All this we confess, that Jesus Christ died for us; but he that thinks to
be saved by Christ, and liveth in his sins, shall never be saved.
Answ. I grant that. But this I say again, a man must not make his good doings
the lowest round of the ladder by which he goeth to Heaven–that is, he that will
and shall go to Heaven, must, wholly and alone, without any of his own things,
venture his precious soul upon Jesus Christ and His merits.
Quest. What, and come to Christ as a sinner?
Answ. Yea, with all thy sins upon thee, even as filthy as ever thou canst.
Quest. But is not this the way to make Christ to loath us? You know when
children fall down in the dirt, they do usually before they go home make their
clothes as clean as they can, for fear their parents should chide them; and so I
think should we.
Answ. This comparison is wrongly applied, if you bring it to show us how we must
do when we come to Christ. He that can make himself clean hath no need of
Christ; for the whole, the clean, and righteous have no need of Christ, but
those that are foul and sick. Physicians, you know, if they love to be honoured,
they will not bid the patients first make themselves whole, and then come to
them; no, but bid them come with their sores all running on them, as the woman
with her bloody issue (Mark 5). And as Mary Magdalene with her belly full of
devils, and the lepers all scabbed; and that is the right coming to Jesus
Christ.
Reply. Well, I hope that Christ will save me, for His promises and mercy are
very large; and as long as He hath promised to give us life, I fear my state the
less.
Answ. It is very true, Christ's promises are very large, blessed be the Lord for
ever; and also so is His mercy; but notwithstanding all that, there are many go
in at the broad gate; and therefore I say, your business is seriously to inquire
whether you are under the first or second covenant; for unless you are under the
second, you will never be regarded of the Lord, forasmuch as you are a sinner
(Heb 8:9). And the rather, because if God should be so good to you as to give
you a share in the second, you shall have all your sins pardoned, and for
certain have eternal life, though you have been a great sinner. But do not
expect that thou shalt have any part or share in the large promises and mercy of
God, for the benefit and comfort of thy poor soul, whilst thou art under the old
covenant; because so long thou art out of Christ, through whom God conveyeth His
mercy, grace, and love to sinners. "For all the promises of God in Him are yea,
and in Him amen." Indeed, His mercy, grace, and love are very great, but they
are treasured up in Him, "given forth in Him, through Him." "But God, who is
rich in mercy, for His great love wherewith He loved us–that He might show the
exceeding riches of His grace"–but which way?–"in His kindness towards us
through Jesus Christ."
But out of Christ thou shalt find God a just God, a sin-avenging God, a God that
will by no means spare the guilty; and be sure that every one that is found out
of Jesus Christ will be found guilty in the judgment-day, upon whom the wrath of
God shall smoke to their eternal ruin. Now, therefore, consider of it, and take
the counsel of the Apostle, in 2 Corinthians 13:5, which is, to examine thyself
whether thou art "in the faith," and to prove thy ownself whether thou hast
received the Spirit of Christ into thy soul, whether thou hast been converted,
whether thou hast been born again, and made a new creature, whether thou hast
had thy sins washed away in the blood of Christ, whether thou hast been brought
from under the old covenant into the new; and do not make a slight examination,
for thou hast a precious soul either to be saved or damned.
And that thou mayest not be deceived, consider that it is one thing to be
convinced, and another to be converted; one thing to be wounded, and another to
be killed, and so to be made alive again by the faith of Jesus Christ. When men
are killed, they are killed to all things they lived to before, both sin and
righteousness, as all their old faith and supposed grace that they thought they
had. Indeed, the old covenant will show thee that thou art a sinner, and that a
great one too; but the old covenant, the Law, will not show thee, without the
help of the Spirit, that thou are without all grace by nature; no; but in the
midst of thy troubles thou wilt keep thyself from coming to Christ by persuading
thy soul that thou art come already, and hast some grace already. O, therefore,
be earnest in begging the Spirit, that thy soul may be enlightened, and the
wickedness of thy heart discovered, that thou mayest see the miserable state
that thou art in by reason of sin and unbelief, which is the great condemning
sin; and so in a sight and sense of thy sad condition, if God should deal with
thee in severity according to thy deservings. Do thou [now] cry to God for faith
in a crucified Christ, that thou mayest have all thy sins washed away in His
blood, and such a right work of grace wrought in thy soul that may stand in the
judgment-day. Again,
Second. In the next place, you know I told you that a man might go a great way
in a profession, and have many excellent gifts, [Second use]. so as to do many
wondrous works, and yet be but under the Law; from hence you may learn not to
judge yourselves to be the children of God, because you may have some gifts of
knowledge or understanding more than others: no, for thou mayest be the
knowingest man in all the country as to head-knowledge, and yet be but under the
law, and so consequently under the curse, notwithstanding that, 1 Corinthians
13. Now, seeing it is so, that men may have all this and yet perish, then what
will become of those that do no good at all, and have no understanding, neither
of their own sadness, nor of Christ's mercy? O, sad! Read with understanding,
Isaiah 27:11, "Therefore He that made them will not have mercy on them, and He
that formed them will show them no favour" (See also 2 Thess 1:8, 9).
Now there is one thing which, for want of, most people do miscarry in a very sad
manner, and that is, because they are not able to distinguish between the nature
of the Law and the Gospel. O, people, people, your being blinded here as to the
knowledge of this is one great cause of the ruining of many. As Paul saith,
"While Moses is read," or while the law is discovered, "the veil is upon their
heart" (2 Cor 3:15) that is, the veil of ignorance is still upon their hearts,
so that they cannot discern either the nature of the law or the nature of the
Gospel, they being so dark and blind in their minds, as you may see, if you
compare it with Chronicles 4:3, 4. And truly I am confident, that were you but
well examined, I doubt many of you would be found so ignorant that you would not
be able to give a word of right answer concerning either the Law or the Gospel.
Nay, my friends, set the case, one should ask you what time you spend, what
pains you take, to the end you may understand the nature and difference of these
two covenants, would you not say, if you should speak the truth, that you did
not so much as regard whether there were two or more? Would you not say, I did
not think of covenants, or study the nature of them?
I thought that if I had lived honestly, and did as well as I could, that God
would accept of me, and have mercy upon me, as He had on others. Ah, friends,
this is the cause of the ruin of thousands; for if they are blinded to this,
both the right use of the law, and also of the Gospel, is hid from their eyes,
and so for certain they will be in danger of perishing most miserably, poor
souls that they are, unless God, of His mere mercy and love, doth rend the veil
from off their hearts, the veil of ignorance, for that is it which doth keep
these poor souls in this besotted and blindfolded condition, in which if they
die they may be lamented for, but not helped; they may be pitied, but not
preserved from the stoke of God's everlasting vengeance.
A LEGAL SPIRIT.
In the next place, if you would indeed be delivered from the first into the
second covenant, I do admonish you to the observing of these following
particulars. First. Have a care that you do not content yourselves, though you
do good works– that is, which in themselves are good. Secondly. In and with a
legal spirit, which are done these ways as followeth.
First. If you do anything commanded in Scripture, and your doing of it do think
that God is well pleased therewith, because you, as you are religious men, do do
the same. Upon this mistake was Paul himself in danger of being destroyed; for
he thought, because he was zealous, and one of the strictest sects for religion,
therefore God would have been good unto him, and have accepted his doings, as it
is clear, for he counted them his gain (Phil 3:4-8). Now this is done thus–When
a man doth think that because he thinks he is more sincere, more liberal, with
more difficulty, or to the weakening of his estate; I say, if a man, because of
this doth think that God accepteth his labour, it is done from an old-covenant
spirit.
Again; some men think that they shall be heard because they have prayer in their
families, because they can pray long, and speak excellent expressions, or
express themselves excellently in prayer, that because they have great
enlargements in prayer, I say, that therefore to think that God doth delight in
their doings, and accept their works, this is from a legal spirit.
Again; some men think that because their parents have been religious before
them, and have been indeed the people of God, they think if they also do as to
the outward observing of that which they learned from their forerunners, that
therefore God doth accept them; but this also is from a wrong spirit; and yet
how many are there in England at this day that think the better of themselves
merely upon that account; ay, and think the people of God ought to think so too,
not understanding that it is ordinary for an Eli to have a Hophni and a
Phinehas, both sons of Belial; also a good Samuel to have a perverse offspring;
likewise David an Absalom. I say, their being ignorant of, or else negligent in
regarding this, they do think that because they do spring from such and such, as
the Jews in their generation did, that therefore they have a privilege with God
more than others, when there is no such thing; but for certain, if the same
faith be not in them which was in their forerunners, to lay hold of the Christ
of God in the same spirit as they did, they must utterly perish, for all their
high conceits that they have of themselves (John 8:33-35; Matt 3:7-9).
Second. When people come into the presence of God without having their eye upon
the Divine Majesty, through the flesh and blood of the Son of Mary, the Son of
God, then also do they come before God, and do whatsoever they do from a legal
spirit, an old-covenant spirit. As, for instance, you have some people, it is
true, they will go to prayer, in appearance very fervently, and will plead very
hard with God that He would grant them their desires, pleading their want, and
the abundance thereof; they will also plead with God His great mercy, and also
His free promises; but yet they neglecting the aforesaid body or Person of
Christ, the righteous Lamb of God, to appear before Him in, I say, in thus doing
they do not appear before the Lord no otherwise than in an old-covenant spirit;
for they go to God as a merciful Creator, and they themselves as His creatures;
not as He is, their Father in the Son, and they His children by regeneration
through the Lord Jesus. Ay, and though they may call God their Father, in the
notion–not knowing what they say, only having learned such things by
tradition–as the Pharisees did, yet Christ will have His time to say to them,
even to their faces, as He did once to the Jews, Your father, for all this your
profession, is the devil, to their own grief and everlasting misery (John 8:44).
Third. The third thing that is to be observed, if we would not be under the Law,
or do things in a legal spirit, is this–to have a care that we do none of the
works of the holy Law of God for life, or acceptance with Him; no, nor of the
Gospel neither. To do the works of the law to the end we may be accepted of God,
or that we may please Him, and to have our desires of Him, is to do things from
a legal or old-covenant spirit, and that is expressly laid down where it is
said, "To him that worketh is the reward not reckoned of grace, but of debt";
that is, he appears before God through the Law, and his obedience to it (Rom
4:4,5). And again, though they be in themselves Gospel- ordinances, as baptism,
breaking of bread, hearing, praying, meditating, or the like; yet, I say, if
they be not done in the right spirit, they are thereby used as a hand by the
devil to pull thee under the Covenant of Works, as in former times he used
circumcision, which was no part of the Covenant of Works, the Ten Commands, but
a seal of the righteousness of faith; yet, I say, they being done in a legal
spirit, the soul was thereby brought under the Covenant of Works, and so most
miserably destroyed unawares to itself, and that because there was not a right
understanding of the nature and terms of the said covenants. And so it is now;
souls being ignorant of the nature of the old covenant, do even by their
subjecting to several Gospel ordinances, run themselves under the old covenant,
and fly off from Christ, even when they think they are acoming closer to him. O,
miserable! If you would know when or how this is done, whether in one particular
or more, I shall show you as followeth–
1. That man doth bring himself under the Covenant of Works, by Gospel
ordinances, when he cannot be persuaded that God will have mercy upon him except
he do yield obedience to such or such a particular thing commanded in the Word.
This is the very same spirit that was in the false brethren (spoken of Acts 15;
Galatians, the whole Epistle), whose judgment was, that unless such and such
things were done, "they could not be saved." As now-a-days we have also some
that say, Unless your infants be baptized they cannot be saved;[23] and others
say, unless you be rightly baptized, you have no ground to be assured that you
are believers, or members of churches; which is so far off from being so good as
a legal spirit, that it is the spirit of blasphemy, as is evident, because they
do reckon that the Spirit, righteousness, and faith of Jesus, and the confession
thereof, is not sufficient to declare men to be members of the Lord Jesus; when,
on the other side, though they be rank hypocrites, yet if they do yield an
outward subjection to this or that, they are counted presently communicable
members, which doth clearly discover that there is not so much honour given to
the putting on the righteousness of the Son of God as there is given to that
which a man may do, and yet go to Hell within an hour after; nay, in the very
doing of it doth shut himself for ever from Jesus Christ.
2. Men may do things from a legal or old-covenant spirit when they content
themselves with their doing of such and such a thing, as prayers, reading,
hearing, baptism, breaking of bread, or the like; I say, when they can content
themselves with the thing done, and sit down at ease and content because the
thing is done. As, for instance, some men being persuaded that such and such a
thing is their duty, and that unless they do do it, God will not be pleased with
them, nor suffer them to be heirs of His kingdom, they from this spirit do rush
into and do the thing, which being done, they are content, as being persuaded
that now they are without doubt in a happy condition, because they have done
such things, like unto the Pharisee, who, because he had done this and the other
thing, said therefore, in a bragging way, "Lord, I thank thee that I am not as
this publican"; for I have done thus and thus; when, alas! the Lord give him
never a good word for his labour, but rather a reproof.
3. That man doth act from a legal spirit who maketh the strictness of his
walking the ground of his assurance for eternal life. Some men, all the ground
they have to believe that they shall be saved, it is because they walk not so
loose as their neighbours, they are not so bad as others are, and therefore they
question not but that they shall do well. Now this is a false ground, and a
thing that is verily legal, and savours only of some slight and shallow
apprehensions of the old covenant. I call them shallow apprehensions, because
they are not right and sound, and are such as will do the soul no good, but
beguile it, in that the knowledge of the nature of this covenant doth not appear
to the soul, only some commanding power it hath on the soul, which the soul
endeavouring to give up itself unto, it doth find some peace and content, and
especially if it find itself to be pretty willing to yield itself to its
commands. And is not this the very ground of thy hoping that God will save thee
from the wrath to come?
If one should ask thee what ground thou hast to think thou shalt be saved,
wouldst thou not say, Truly, because I have left my sins, and because I am more
inclinable to do good, [Do not think that I am against the order of the Gospel].
and to learn, and get more knowledge; I endeavour to walk in church order, as
they call it, and therefore I hope God hath done a good work for me, and I hope
will save my soul. Alas, alas! this is a very trick of the devil to make souls
build the ground of their salvation upon this their strictness, and abstaining
from the wickedness of their former lives, and because they desire to be
stricter and stricter. Now, if you would know such a man or woman, you shall
find them in this frame–namely, when they think their hearts are good, then they
think also that Christ will have mercy upon them; but when their corruptions
work, then they doubt and scruple until again they have their hearts more ready
to do the things contained in the law and ordinances of the Gospel. Again, such
men do commonly cheer up their hearts, and encourage themselves still to hope
all shall be well, and that because they are not so bad as the rest, but more
inclinable than they, saying, I am glad I am not as this publican, but better
than he, more righteous than he (Luke 18:11).
4. This is a legal and old-covenant spirit that secretly persuades the soul that
if ever it will be saved by Christ, if must be fitted for Christ by its getting
of a good heart and good intentions to do this and that for Christ; I say, that
the soul when it comes to Christ may not be rejected or turned off; when in deed
and in truth this is the very way for the soul to turn itself from Jesus Christ,
instead of turning to Him; for such a soul looks upon Christ rather to be a
painted Saviour or a cypher than a very and real Saviour. Friend, if thou canst
fit thyself, what need hast thou of Christ? If thou cant get qualifications to
carry to Christ that thou mightst be accepted, thou dost not look to be accepted
in the Beloved. Shall I tell thee? Thou art as if a man should say, I will make
myself clean, and then I will go to Christ that He may wash me; or like a man
possessed, that will first cast the devils out of himself, and then come to
Christ for cure from Him. Thou, must, therefore, if thou wilt so lay hold of
Christ as not to be rejected by Him; I say, thou must come to Him as the basest
in the world, more fit to be damned, if thou hadst thy right, than to have the
least smile, hope, or comfort from Him. Come with the fire of Hell in thy
conscience, come with thy heart hard, dead, cold, full of wickedness and madness
against thy own salvation; come as renouncing all thy tears, prayers, watchings,
fastings; come as a blood-red sinner; do not stay from Christ till thou hast a
greater sense of thy own misery, nor of the reality of God's mercy; do not stay
while thy heart is softer and thy spirit in a better frame, but go against thy
mind, and against the mind of the devil and sin, throw thyself down at the foot
of Christ, with a halter about thy neck, and say, Lord Jesus, hear a sinner, a
hard-hearted sinner, a sinner that deserveth to be damned, to be cast into Hell;
and resolve never to return, or to give over crying unto Him, till thou do find
that He hath washed thy conscience from dead works with His blood virtually, and
clothed thee with His own righteousness, and make thee complete in Himself; this
is the way to come to Christ.
THE USE OF THE NEW COVENANT
Now a few words to the second doctrine, and so I shall draw towards a
conclusion.
FIRST USE. The doctrine doth contain in it very much comfort to thy [The use,
for the second doctrine]. soul who art a new- covenant man, or one of those who
are under the new covenant. There is, First, pardon of sin; and, Second, the
manifestation of the same; and, Third, as power to cause thee to persevere
through faith to the very end of thy life.
First, There is, first, pardon of sin, which is not in the old covenant; for in
that there is nothing but commands; and if not obeyed, condemned. O, but there
is pardon of sin, even of all thy sins, against the first and second covenant,
under which thou art, and that freely upon the account of Jesus Christ the
righteousness, He having in thy name, nature, and in the room of thy person,
fulfilled all the whole law in Himself for thee, and freely giveth it unto thee.
O, though the law be a ministration of death and condemnation, yet the Gospel,
under which thou art, is the ministration of life and salvation (2 Cor 3:6-9).
Though they that live and die under the first covenant, God regardeth them not
(Heb 8:9). Yet they that are under the second are as the apple of His eye (Deu
32:10; Psa 17:8; Zech 2:8). Though they that are under the first, the Law, are
"called to blackness, and darkness, and tempest, the sound of a trumpet," and a
burning mountain, which sight was so terrible, that Moses said, "I exceedingly
fear and quake" (Heb 12:18- 22). "But ye are come unto Mount Sion, and unto the
city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and to an innumerable company of
angels, to the general assembly and church of the firstborn," whose names "are
written in Heaven, and to God the Judge of all, and to the spirits of just men
made perfect, and to Jesus," to blessed Jesus, "the Mediator of the new
covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling, that speaketh better things than that
of Abel" (Heb 12:22-24). Even forgiveness of sins (Eph 1:7).
Second, The covenant that thou art under doth allow of repentance in case thou
chance to slip or fall by sudden temptation; but the law allows of none (Rev
2:5; Gal 3:10). The covenant that thou art under allows thee strength also; but
the law is only a sound of words, commanding words, but no power is given by
them to fulfill the things commanded (Heb 12:19). Thou that art under this
second, art made a son; but they that art under that first, are slaves and
vagabonds (Gen 4:12). Thou that art under this, hast a Mediator, that is to
stand between justice and thee; but they under the other, their mediator is
turned an accuser, and speaketh most bitter things against their souls (1 Tim
2:5; John 5:45). Again; the way that thou hast into Paradise is a new and living
way–mark, a living way; but they that are under the old covenant, their way into
Paradise is a killing and destroying way (Heb 10:20; Gen 3:24). Again; thou has
the righteousness of God to appear before God withal; but they under the old
covenant have nothing but the righteousness of the Law, which Paul counts dirt
and dung (Phil 3:7-9). Thou hast that which will make thee perfect, but the
other will not do so–"The law made nothing perfect, but the bringing in of a
better hope did," which is the Son of God, "by the which we draw nigh unto God"
(Heb 7:19).
Third, The new covenant promiseth thee a new heart, as I said before; but the
old covenant promiseth none; and a new spirit, but the old covenant promiseth
none (Eze 36:26). The new covenant conveyeth faith, but the old one conveyeth
none (Gal 3). Through the new covenant the love of God is conveyed into the
heart; but through the old covenant there is conveyed none of it savingly
through Jesus Christ. Romans 5. The new covenant doth not only give a promise of
life, but also with that the assurance of life, but the old one giveth none; the
old covenant wrought wrath in us and to us, but the new one worketh love (Rom
4:15; Gal 5:6). Thus much for the first use.
SECOND USE. As all these, and many more privileges, do come to thee through or
by the new covenant, and that thou mightst not doubt of the certainty of these
glorious privileges, God hath so ordered it that they do all come to thee by way
of purchase, being obtained for thee, ready to thy hand, by that one Man Jesus,
who is the Mediator, or the Person that hath principally to do both with God and
thy soul in the things pertaining to this covenant; so that now thou mayst look
on all the glorious things that are spoken of in the new covenant, and say, All
these must be mine; I must have a share in them; Christ hath purchased them for
me, and given them to me. Now I need not to say, O! but how shall I come by
them? God is holy, I am a sinner; God is just, and I have offended. No; but thou
mayst say, Though I am vile, and deserve nothing, yet Christ is holy, and He
deserveth all things; though I have so provoked God by breaking His law that He
could not in justice look upon me, yet Christ hath so gloriously paid the debt
that now God can say, Welcome, soul, I will give thee grace, I will give thee
glory, thou shalt lie in My bosom, and go no more out; My Son hath pleased Me,
He hath satisfied the loud cries of the Law and justice, that called for speedy
vengeance on thee; He hath fulfilled the whole Law, He hath brought in
everlasting righteousness (Dan 9:24,25). He hath overcome the devil, He hath
washed away thy sins with His most precious blood, He hath destroyed the power
of death, and triumphs over all the enemies. This He did in His own Person, as a
common Jesus, for all persons in their stead, even as for so many as shall come
in to Him; for His victory I give to them, His righteousness I give to them, His
merits I bestow on them, and look upon them holy, harmless, undefiled, and for
ever comely in my eye, through the victory of the Captain of their salvation (1
Cor 15:55-57).
And that thou mayest, in deed and in truth, not only hear and read this glorious
doctrine, but be found one that hath the life of it in thy heart, thou must be
much in studying of the two covenants, the nature of the one, and the nature of
the other, and the conditions of them that are under them both. Also, thou must
be well-grounded in the manner of the victory, and merits of Christ, how they
are made thine.
First, And here thou must, in the first place, believe that the babe that was
born of Mary, lay in a manger at Bethlehem, in the time of Caesar Augustus; that
He, that babe, that child, was the very Christ.
Second, Thou must believe that in the days of Tiberius Caesar, when Herod was
tetrarch of Galilee, and Pontius Pilate governor of Judea, that in those days He
was crucified, or hanged on a tree between two thieves, which by computation, or
according to the best account, is above sixteen hundred years since. [24]
Third, Thou must also believe that when He did hang upon that cross of wood on
the Mount Calvary, that then He did die there for the sins of those that did die
before He was crucified; also for their sins that were alive at the time of His
crucifying, and also that He did by that one death give satisfaction to God for
all those that should be born and believe in Him after His death, even unto the
world's end. I say, this thou must believe, upon pain of eternal damnation, that
by that one death, that when He did die, He did put an end to the curse of the
Law and sin [This is the doctrine that I will live and die by, and be willing to
be damned if it saves me not. I am not ashamed of the Gospel of Christ, for it
is the power of God to salvation; therefore I preach Christ crucified, to the
Jews a stumbling block, and to the Greeks foolishness (Rom 1:16; 1 Cor 1:23).]
and at that time by His death on the Cross, and by His resurrection out of
Joseph's sepulchre, He did bring in a sufficient righteousness to clothe thee
withal completely–"For by one offering He hath perfected for ever them that are
sanctified." Not that He should often offer Himself–"for then must He often have
suffered since the foundation of the world; but now ONCE in the end of the world
hath He appeared to put," or do, "away sin by the sacrifice of Himself"–namely,
when He hanged on the Cross. For it is by the offering up of the body of this
blessed Jesus Christ ONCE for all. Indeed, other priests may offer oftentimes
sacrifices and offerings which can never take away sins; but this Man, this
Jesus, this anointed and appointed sacrifice, when He had offered ONE sacrifice
for sins, for ever sat down on the right hand of God (Heb 10:14; 9:24,25).
[A word of advice]. But because thou in thy pursuit after the faith of the
Gospel wilt be sure to meet with devils, heretics, particular corruptions, as
unbelief, ignorance, the spirit of works animated on by suggestions, false
conclusions, with damnable doctrines, I shall therefore briefly, besides what
hath been already said, speak a word or two before I leave thee of further
advice, especially concerning these two things. First, How thou art to conceive
of the Saviour. Second, How thou art to make application of Him.
First. For the Saviour. 1. Thou must look upon Him to be very God and very Man;
not man only, nor God only, but God and Man in one Person, both natures joined
together, for the putting of Him in a capacity to be a suitable Saviour;
suitable, I say, to answer both sides and parties, with whom He hath to do in
the office of His Mediatorship and being of a Saviour. 2. Thou must not only do
this, but thou must also consider and believe that even what was done by Jesus
Christ, it was not done by one nature without the other; but thou must consider
that both natures, both the Godhead and the manhood, did gloriously concur and
join together in the undertaking of the salvation of our bodies and souls; not
that the Godhead undertook anything without the manhood, neither did the manhood
do anything without the virtue and union of the Godhead; and thou must of
necessity do this, otherwise thou canst not find any sound ground and footing
for thy soul to rest upon.
For if thou look upon any of these asunder–that is to say, the Godhead without
the manhood, or the manhood without the Godhead–thou wilt conclude that what was
done by the Godhead was not done for man, being done without the manhood; or
else, that that which was done with the manhood could not answer Divine justice,
in not doing what it did by the virtue and in union with the Godhead; for it was
the Godhead that gave virtue and value to the suffering of the manhood, and the
manhood being joined therewith, that giveth us an interest into the heavenly
glory and comforts of the Godhead.
What ground can a man have to believe that Christ is his Saviour, if he do not
believe that He suffered for sin in his nature? And what ground also can a man
have to think that God the Father is satisfied, being infinite, if he believe
not also that He who gave the satisfaction was equal to Him who was offended?
Therefore, beloved, when you read of the offering of the body of the Son of Man
for our sins, then consider that He did it in union with, and by the help of,
the eternal Godhead. "How much more shall the blood of Christ, who, through the
eternal Spirit, offered Himself without spot to God, purge your consciences from
dead works," etc.
And when thou readest of the glorious works and splendour of the Godhead in
Christ, then consider that all that was done by the Godhead, it was done as it
had union and communion with the manhood. And then thou shalt see that the devil
is overcome by God-man; sin, death, Hell, the grave, and all overcome by Jesus,
God-man, and then thou shalt find them overcome indeed. They must needs be
overcome when God doth overcome them; and we have good ground to hope the
victory is ours, when in our nature they are overcome.
Second. The second thing is, how to apply, or to make application of this Christ
to the soul. And for this there are to be considered the following particulars–
1. That when Jesus Christ did thus appear, being born of Mary, He was looked
upon by the Father as if the sin of the whole world was upon Him; nay, further,
God did look upon Him and account Him the sin of man–"He hath made Him to be sin
for us," (2 Cor 5:21) that is, God made His Son Jesus Christ our sin, or
reckoned Him to be, not only a sinner, but the very bulk of sin of the whole
world, and condemned Him so severely as if He had been nothing but sin. "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 is, for our sins condemned His Son Jesus Christ; as if He had in
deed and truth been our very sin, although altogether "without sin" (Rom 8:3; 2
Cor 5:21). Therefore, as to the taking away of thy curse, thou must reckon Him
to be made sin for thee. And as to His being thy justification, thou must reckon
Him to be thy righteousness; for, saith the Scripture, "He," that is, God, "hath
made HIM to be SIN for us, though He knew no sin, that we might be made the
RIGHTEOUSNESS of God in HIM."
2. Consider for whose sakes all this glorious design of the Father and the Son
was brought to pass; and that you shall find to be for man, for sinful man (2
Cor 8:9).
3. The terms on which it is made ours; and that you will find to be a free gift,
merely arising from the tender-heartedness of God–you are "justified freely by
His grace, through the redemption that is in Christ, whom God hath set forth to
be a Propitiation through faith in His blood," etc. (Rom 3:25).
4. How men are to reckon it theirs; and that is, upon the same terms which God
doth offer it, which is freely, as they are worthless and undeserving creatures,
as they are without all good, and also unable to do any good. This, I say, is
the right way of applying the merits of Christ to thy soul, for they are freely
given to thee, a poor sinner, not for anything that is in thee, or done by thee,
but freely as thou art a sinner, and so standest in absolute need thereof.
And, Christian, thou art not in this thing to follow thy sense and feeling, but
the very Word of God. The thing that doth do the people of God the greatest
injury, it is their too little hearkening to what the Gospel saith, and their
too much giving credit to what the Law, sin, the devil, and conscience saith;
and upon this very ground to conclude that because there is a certainty of guilt
upon the soul, therefore there is also for certain, by sin, damnation to be
brought upon the soul. This is now to set the Word of God aside, and to give
credit to what is formed by the contrary; but thou must give more credit to one
syllable of the written Word of the Gospel than thou must give to all the saints
and angels in Heaven and earth; much more than to the devil and thy own guilty
conscience.
Let me give you a parable:–There was a certain man that had committed treason
against his king; but forasmuch as the king had compassion upon him, he sent
him, by the hand of a faithful messenger, a pardon under his own hand and seal;
but in the country where this poor man dwelt, there were also many that sought
to trouble him, by often putting of him in mind of his treason, and the law that
was to be executed on the offender. Now which way should this man so honour his
king, but as by believing his handwriting, which was the pardon. Certainly he
would honour him more by so doing than to regard all the clamours of his enemies
continually against him.
Just thus it is here: thou having committed treason against the King of Heaven,
He through compassion, for Christ's sake, hath sent thee a pardon; but the
devil, the Law, and thy conscience do continually seek to disturb thee by
bringing thy sins afresh into thy remembrance. But now, wouldst thou honour thy
King? Why then, he that believeth "the record that God hath given of His Son,"
hath set to his seal that God is true. "And this is the record, that God hath
given to us eternal life, and this life is in His Son" (1 John 5:11). And
therefore, my brethren, seeing God our Father hath sent us damnable traitors a
pardon from Heaven, even all the promises of the Gospel, and also hath sealed to
the certainty of it with the heart-blood of His dear Son, let us not be daunted,
though our enemies, with terrible voices, do bring our former life never so
often into our remembrance.
Object. But, saith the soul, how, if after I have received a pardon, I should
commit treason again? What should I do then?
Answ. Set the case: thou hast committed abundance of treason, He hath by Him
abundance of pardons–"Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man
his thoughts: and let him return unto the LORD, and He will have mercy upon him;
and to our God, for He will abundantly pardon" (Isa 55:7).
Sometimes I myself have been in such a strait that I have been almost driven to
my wit's ends with the sight and sense of the greatness of my sins; but calling
to mind that God was God in His mercy, pity, and love, as well as in His
holiness, justice, etc.; and again, considering the ability of the satisfaction
that was given to holiness and justice, to the end there might be way made for
sinners to lay hold of this mercy; I say, I considering this, when tempted to
doubt and despair, I have answered in this manner–
"Lord, here is one of the greatest sinners that ever the ground bare; a sinner
against the Law, and a sinner against the Gospel. I have sinned against light,
and I have sinned against mercy. And now, Lord, the guilt of them breaks my
heart. The devil also he would have me despair, telling of me that Thou art so
far from hearing my prayers in this my distress, that I cannot anger Thee worse
than to call upon Thee; for saith he, Thou art resolved for ever to damn, and
not to grant me the least of Thy favour; yet, Lord, I would fain have
forgiveness. And Thy Word, though much may be inferred from it against me, yet
it saith, If I come unto Thee, Thou will in nowise cast me out. Lord, shall I
honour Thee most by believing Thou canst pardon my sins, or by believing Thou
canst not? Shall I honour Thee most by believing Thou wilt pardon my sins, or by
believing Thou wilt not?
Shall I honour the blood of Thy Son also by despairing that the virtue thereof
is not sufficient, or by believing that it is sufficient to purge me from all my
blood-red and crimson sins? Surely, Thou that couldst find so much mercy as to
pardon Manasseh, Mary Magdalene, the three thousand murderers, persecuting Paul,
murderous and adulterous David, and blaspheming Peter–Thou that offeredst mercy
to Simon Magus, a witch, and didst receive the astrologers and conjurors in the
19th of Acts–Thou hast mercy enough for one poor sinner. Lord, set the case: my
sins were bigger than all these, and I less deserved mercy than any of these,
yet Thou hast said in Thy Word that he that cometh to thee Thou wilt in "nowise
cast out." And God hath given comfort to my soul, even to such a sinner as I am.
And I tell you, there is no way so to honour God, and to beat out the devil, as
to stick to the truth of God's Word and the merits of Christ's blood by
believing. When Abraham believed–even against hope and reason–he gave glory to
God (Rom 4). And this is our victory, even our faith (1 John 5:4). Believe, and
all things are possible to you. He that believeth shall be saved. He that
believeth on the Son hath everlasting life, and shall never perish, neither
shall any man pluck them out of Christ's Father's hands.
And if thou dost indeed believe this, thou wilt not only confess Him as the
Quakers do–that is, that He was born at Bethlehem of Mary, suffered on Mount
Calvary under Pontius Pilate, was dead and buried, rose again, and ascended,
etc.; for all this they confess, and in the midst of their confession they do
verily deny that His death on that Mount Calvary did give satisfaction to God
for the sins of the world, and that His resurrection out of Joseph's sepulchre
is the cause of our justification in the sight of God, angels, and devils; but,
I say, if thou dost believe these things indeed, thou dost believe that then, so
long ago, even before thou wast born, He did bear thy sins in His own body,
which then was hanged on the tree, and never before nor since; that thy old man
was then crucified with Him, namely, in the same body then crucified (See 1
Peter 2:24; and Rom 6:6). This is nonsense to them that believe not; but if thou
do indeed believe, thou seest it so plain, and yet such a mystery, that it makes
thee wonder. But,
[THIRD USE]. In the third place, this glorious doctrine of the new covenant, and
the Mediator thereof, will serve for the comforting, and the maintaining of the
comfort, of the children of the new covenant this way also–that is, that He did
not only die and rise again, but that He did ascend in His own Person into
Heaven to take possession thereof for me, to prepare a place there for me,
standeth there in the second part of His suretyship to bring me safe in my
coming thither, and to present me in a glorious manner, without spot or wrinkle,
or any such thing; that He is there exercising of His priestly office for me,
pleading the perfection of His own righteousness for me, and the virtue of His
blood for me; that He is there ready to answer the accusations of the Law,
devil, and sin for me. Here thou mayst through faith look the very devil in the
face, and rejoice, saying, O Satan! I have a precious Jesus, a soul-comforting
Jesus, a sin-pardoning Jesus. Here thou mayst hear the biggest thunder-crack
that the Law can give, and yet not be daunted.
Here thou mayst say, O Law! thou mayst roar against sin, but thou canst not
reach me; thou mayst curse and condemn, but not my soul; for I have righteous
Jesus, a holy Jesus, a soul- saving Jesus, and He hath delivered me from thy
threats, from thy curses, from thy condemnations; I am out of thy reach, and out
of thy bounds; I am brought into another covenant, under better promises,
promises of life and salvation, free promises to comfort me without my merit,
even through the blood of Jesus, the satisfaction given to God for me by Him;
therefore, though thou layest my sins to my charge, and sayest thou wilt prove
me guilty, yet so long as Christ is above ground, and hath brought in
everlasting righteousness, and given that to me, I shall not fear thy threats,
thy charges, thy soul-scarring denunciations; my Christ is all, hath done all,
and will deliver me from all that thou, and whatsoever else can bring an
accusation against me. Thus also thou may say when death assaulteth thee–O
death, where is thy sting? Thou mayst bite indeed, but thou canst not devour; I
have comfort by and through the one Man Jesus; Jesus Christ, He hath taken thee
captive, and taken away thy strength; He hath pierced thy heart, and let out all
thy soul- destroying poison; therefore, though I see thee, I am not afraid of
thee; though I feel thee, I am not daunted; for thou hast lost thy sting in the
side of the Lord Jesus; through Him I overcome thee, and set foot upon thee.
Also, O Satan! though I hear thee grumble, and make a hellish noise, and though
thou threaten me very highly, yet my soul shall triumph over thee, so long as
Christ is alive and can be heard in Heaven; so long as He hath broken thy head,
and won the field of thee; so long as thou are in prison, and canst not have thy
desire. I, therefore, when I hear thy voice, do pitch my thoughts on Christ my
Saviour, and do hearken when He will say, for He will speak comfort; He saith,
He hath got the victory, and doth give to me the crown, and causeth me to
triumph through His most glorious conquest.
Nay, my brethren, the saints under the Levitical Law, who had not the new
covenant sealed or confirmed any further than by promise that it should be; I
say, they, when they thought of the glorious privileges that God had promised
should come, though at that time they were not come, but seen afar off, how
confidently were they persuaded of them, and embraced them, and were so fully
satisfied as touching the certainty of them, that they did not stick at the
parting with all for the enjoying of them. [Shall not we then that see all
things already done before us make it a strong argument to increase our faith
(Heb 11).] How many times doth David in the Psalms admire, triumph, and persuade
others to do so also, through the faith that he had in the thing that was to be
done? Also Job, in what faith doth he say he should see his Redeemer, though He
had not then shed one drop of blood for him, yet because He had promised so to
do; and this was signified by the blood of bulls and goats. Also Samuel, Isaiah,
Jeremiah, Zechariah, etc., how gloriously in confidence did they speak of
Christ, and His death, blood, conquest, and everlasting priesthood, even before
He did manifest Himself in the flesh which He took of the Virgin. [For they were
so many sure promises, with a remembrance in them, also for the better
satisfaction of them that believed them].
We that have lived since Christ, have more ground to hope than they under the
old covenant had, though they had the word of the just God for the ground of
their faith. Mark, they had only the promise that He should and would come; but
we have the assured fulfilling of those promises, because He is come; they were
told that He should spill His blood, but we do see He hath spilt His blood; they
ventured all upon His standing Surety for them, but we see He hath fulfilled,
and that faithfully too, the office of His Suretyship, in that, according to the
engagement, He hath redeemed us poor sinners; they ventured on the new covenant,
though not actually sealed, only "because He judged Him faithful who had
promised" (Heb 11:11). But we have the covenant sealed, all things are
completely done, even as sure as the heart-blood of a crucified Jesus can make
it.
There is a great difference between their dispensation and ours for comfort,
even as much as there is between the making of a bond with a promise to seal it,
and the sealing of the same. It was made indeed in their time, but it was not
sealed until the time the blood was shed on the Mount Calvary; and that we might
indeed have our faith mount up with wings like an eagle, he showeth us what
encouragement and ground of faith we have to conclude we shall be everlastingly
delivered, saying, "For where a testament" or covenant "is, there must also of
necessity be the death of the testator. For a testament is of force after men
are dead: otherwise it is of no strength at all while the testator liveth.
Whereupon neither the first testament was dedicated without blood" (Heb
9:16-18). As Christ's blood was the confirmation of the new covenant, yet it was
not sealed in Abraham, Isaac, or Jacob's days to confirm the covenant that God
did tell them of, and yet they believed; therefore we ought to give the more
earnest heed to believe the things that we have heard, and not in any wise to
let them be questioned; and the rather, because you see the testament is not
only now made, but confirmed; not only spoken of and promised, but verily sealed
by the death and blood of Jesus, who is the Testator thereof.
My brethren, I would not leave you ignorant of this one thing, that though the
Jews had the promise of a sacrifice, of an everlasting High Priest that should
deliver them, yet they had but the promise; for Christ was not sacrificed, and
was not then come a high priest of good things to come; only the type, the
shadow, the figure, the ceremonies they had, together with Christ's engaging as
Surety to bring all things to pass that were promised should come, and upon that
account received and saved.
It was with them and their dispensation as this similitude gives you to
understand:–Set the case that there be two men who make a covenant that the one
should give the other ten thousand sheep on condition the other give him two
thousand pound; but forasmuch as the money is not to be paid down presently,
therefore if he that buyeth the sheep will have any of them before the day of
payment, the creditor requesteth a surety; and upon the engagement of the surety
there is part of the sheep given to the debtor even before the day of payment,
but the other at and after. So it is here; Christ covenanted with His Father for
His sheep–"I lay down My life for My sheep," saith He–but the money was not to
be paid down so soon as the bargain was made, as I have already said, yet some
of the sheep were saved even before the money was paid, and that because of the
Suretyship of Christ; as it is written, "Being justified," or saved, "freely by
His grace through the redemption," or purchase, "that is in Christ Jesus. Whom
God hath set forth to be a propitiation through faith in His blood, to declare
His righteousness for the remission of sins that are past," or the sinners who
died in the faith before Christ was crucified, through God's forbearing till the
payment was paid; to declare, I say, at this time His righteousness; "that He
might be just, and the justifier of him which believeth in Jesus" (Rom 3:24-26).
The end of my speaking of this is, to show you that it is not wisdom now to
doubt whether God will save you or no, but to believe, because all things are
finished as to our justification: the covenant not only made, but also sealed;
the debt paid, the prison doors flung off of the hooks, with a proclamation from
Heaven of deliverance to the prisoners of hope, saying, "Turn you to the
stronghold, ye prisoners of hope, even today do I declare," saith God, "that I
will render double unto thee" (Zech 9:12). And, saith Christ, when He was come,
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because He hath anointed Me to preach the
Gospel," that is, good tidings "to the poor," that their sins should be
pardoned, that their souls shall be saved. "He hath sent Me to heal the
broken-hearted, to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight
to the blind, to set at liberty them that are bruised," and to comfort them that
mourn, "to preach the acceptable year of the Lord" (Luke 4:18,19).
Therefore here, soul, thou mayst come to Jesus Christ for anything thou wantest,
as to a common treasure-house, being the principal Man for the distributing of
the things made mention of in the new covenant, He having them all in His own
custody by right of purchase; for He hath bought them all, paid for them all.
Dost thou want faith? then come for it to the Man Christ Jesus (Heb 12:2). Dost
thou want the Spirit? then ask it of Jesus. Dost thou want wisdom? Dost thou
want grace of any sort? Dost thou want a new heart? Dost thou want strength
against thy lusts, against the devil's temptations? Dost thou want strength to
carry thee through afflictions of body, and afflictions of spirit, through
persecutions? Wouldst thou willingly hold out, stand to the last, and be more
than a conqueror? then be sure thou meditate enough on the merits of the blood
of Jesus, how He hath undertaken for thee, that He hath done the work of thy
salvation in thy room, that He is filled of God on purpose to fill thee, and is
willing to communicate whatsoever is in Him or about Him to thee. Consider this,
I say, and triumph in it.
Again; this may inform us of the safe state of the saints as touching their
perseverance, that they shall stand though Hell rages, though the devil roareth,
and all the world endeavoureth the ruin of the saints of God, though some,
through ignorance of the virtue of the offering of the body of Jesus Christ, do
say a man may be a child of God today, and a child of the devil tomorrow, which
is gross ignorance; for what? Is the blood of Christ, the death of Christ, the
resurrection of Christ, of no more virtue than to bring in for us an uncertain
salvation? or must the effectualness of Christ's merits, as touching our
perseverance, be helped on by the doings of man? Surely they that are
predestinated are also justified; and they that are justified, they shall be
glorified (Rom 8:30). Saints, do not doubt of the salvation of your souls,
unless you do intend to undervalue Christ's blood; and do not think but that He
that hath begun the good work of His grace in you will perfect it to the second
coming of our Lord Jesus (Phil 1:6). Should not we, as well as Paul, say, I am
persuaded that nothing shall separate us from the love of God, which is in
Christ Jesus (Rom 8). O let the saints know, that unless the devil can pluck
Christ out of Heaven, he cannot pull a true believer out of Christ. When I say a
true believer, I do mean such an one as hath the faith of the operation of God
in his soul.
Lastly, Is there such mercy as this? such privileges as these? Is there so much
ground of comfort, and so much cause to be glad? Is there so much store in
Christ, and such a ready heart in Him to give it to me? Hath His bleeding wounds
so much in them, as that the fruits thereof should be the salvation of my soul,
of my sinful soul, as to save me, sinful me, rebellious me, desperate me? What
then? Shall not I now be holy? Shall not I now study, strive, and lay out myself
for Him that hath laid out Himself soul and body for me? Shall I now love ever a
lust or sin? Shall I now be ashamed of the cause, ways, people, or saints of
Jesus Christ? Shall I now yield my members as instruments of righteousness,
seeing my end is everlasting life? (Rom 6). Shall Christ think nothing too dear
for me? and shall I count anything too dear for Him? Shall I grieve Him with my
foolish carriage? Shall I slight His counsel by following of my own will? Thus,
therefore, the doctrine of the new covenant doth call for holiness, engage to
holiness, and maketh the children of that covenant to take pleasure therein. Let
no man, therefore, conclude on this, that the doctrine of the Gospel is a
licentious doctrine; but if they do, it is because they are fools, and such as
have not tasted of the virtue of the blood of Jesus Christ; neither did they
ever feel the nature and sway that the love of Christ hath in the hearts of His.
And thus also you may see that the doctrine of the Gospel is of great advantage
to the people of God that are already come in, or to them that shall at the
consideration hereof be willing to come in, to partake of the glorious benefits
of this glorious covenant. But, saith the poor soul,
Object. Alas! I doubt this is too good for me.
Inquirer. Why so, I pray you?
Object. Alas! because I am a sinner.
Reply. Why, all this is bestowed upon none but sinners, as it is written, While
we were ungodly, Christ died for us (Rom 5:6,8). "He came into the world to save
sinners" (1 Tim 1:15).
Object. O, but I am one of the chief of sinners.
Reply. Why, this is for the chief of sinners–"Christ Jesus came into the world
to save sinners, of whom I am chief," saith Paul (1 Tim 1:15).
Object. O, but my sins are so big, that I cannot conceive how I should have
mercy.
Reply. Why, soul? Didst thou ever kill anybody? Didst thou ever burn any of thy
children in the fire to idols? Hast thou been a witch? Didst thou ever use
enchantments and conjuration? [You that are resolved to go on in your sins,
meddle not with this]. Didst thou ever curse, and swear, and deny Christ? And
yet if thou hast, there is yet hopes of pardon; yea, such sinners as these have
been pardoned, as appears by these and the like Scriptures, 2 Chronicles
33:1-10, compared with verses 12, 13. Again, Acts 19:19, 20; 8:22, compared with
verse 9; Matthew 26:74, 75.
Object. But though I have not sinned in such kind of sins, yet it may be I have
sinned as bad.
Answ. That cannot likely be; yet though thou hast, still there is ground of
mercy for thee, forasmuch as thou art under the promise (John 6:37).
THE UNPARDONABLE SIN.
Object. Alas! man, I am afraid that I have sinned the unpardonable sin, and
therefore there is no hope for me.
Answ. Dost thou know what the unpardonable sin, the sin against the Holy Ghost,
is? and when it is committed?
Reply. It is a sin against light.
Answ. That is true; yet every sin against light is not the sin against the Holy
Ghost.
Reply. Say you so?
Answ. Yea, and I prove it thus–If every sin against light had been the sin that
is unpardonable, then had David and Peter and others sinned that sin; but though
they did sin against light, yet they did not sin that sin; therefore every sin
against light is not the sin against the Holy Ghost, the unpardonable sin.
Object. But the Scripture saith, "If we sin willfully after that we have
received the knowledge of the Truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins;
but a certain fearful looking for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall
devour the adversaries."
Answ. Do you know what that willful sin is?
Reply. Why, what is it? Is it not for a man to sin willingly after enlightening?
Answ. 1. Yes; yet doubtless every willing sin is not that; for then David had
sinned it when he lay with Bathsheba; and Jonah, when he fled from the presence
of the Lord; and Solomon also, when he had so many concubines. 2. But that sin
is a sin that is of another nature, which is this–For a man after he hath made
some profession of salvation to come alone by the blood of Jesus, together with
some light and power of the same upon his spirit; I say, for him after this
knowingly, willfully, and despitefully to trample upon the blood of Christ shed
on the Cross, and to count it an unholy thing, or no better than the blood of
another man, and rather to venture his soul any other way than to be saved by
this precious blood. And this must be done, I say, after some light (Heb 6:4,5)
despitefully (Heb 10:29) knowingly (2 Peter 2:21) and willfully (Heb 10:26
compared with verse 29) and that not in a hurry and sudden fit, as Peter's was,
but with some time beforehand to pause upon it first, with Judas; and also with
a continued resolution never to turn or be converted again; "for it is
impossible to renew such again to repentance," they are so resolved and so
desperate (Heb 6).
Quest. And how sayest thou now? Didst thou ever, after thou hadst received some
blessed light from Christ, willfully, despitefully, and knowingly stamp or
trample the blood of the Man Christ Jesus under thy feet? and art thou for ever
resolved so to do?
Answ. O no; I would not do that willfully, despitefully, and knowingly, not for
all the world.
Inquiry. But yet I must tell you, now you put me in mind of it, surely sometimes
I have most horrible blasphemous thoughts in me against God, Christ, and the
Spirit. May not these be that sin I trow?
Answ. Dost thou delight in them? Are they such things as thou takest pleasure
in?
Reply. O no; neither would I do it for a thousand worlds. O, methinks they make
me sometimes tremble to think of them. But how and if I should delight in them
before I am aware?
Answ. Beg of God for strength against them, and if at any time thou findest thy
wicked heart to give way in the least thereto, for that is likely enough, and
though thou find it may on a sudden give way to that Hell-bred wickedness that
is in it, yet do not despair, forasmuch as Christ hath said, "All manner of sins
and blasphemies shall be forgiven to the sons of men. And whosoever speaketh a
word against the Son of man," that is Christ, as he may do with Peter, through
temptation, yet upon repentance, "it shall be forgiven him" (Matt 12:31, 32).
Object. But I thought it might have been committed all on a sudden, either by
some blasphemous thought, or else by committing some other horrible sin.
Answ. For certain, this sin and the commission of it doth lie in a knowing,
willful, malicious, or despiteful, together with a final trampling the blood of
sweet Jesus under foot (Heb 10).
Object. But it seems to be rather a resisting of the Spirit, and the motions
thereof, than this which you say; for, first, its proper title is the sin
against the Holy Ghost; and again, "They have done despite unto the Spirit of
grace"; so that it rather seems to be, I say, that a resisting of the Spirit,
and the movings thereof, is that sin.
Answ. First. For certain, the sin is committed by them that do as before I have
said–that is, by a final, knowing, willful, malicious trampling under foot the
blood of Christ, which was shed on Mount Calvary when Jesus was there crucified.
And though it be called the sin against the Spirit, yet as I said before, every
sin against the Spirit is not that; for if it were, then every sin against the
light and convictions of the Spirit would be unpardonable; but that is an
evident untruth, for these reasons– First, Because there be those who have
sinned against the movings of the Spirit, and that knowingly too, and yet did
not commit that sin; as Jonah, who when God had expressly by His Spirit bid him
go to Nineveh, he runs thereupon quite another way. Secondly, Because the very
people that have sinned against the movings of the Spirit are yet, if they do
return, received to mercy. Witness also Jonah, who though he had sinned against
the movings of the Spirit of the Lord in doing contrary thereunto, "yet when he
called," as he saith, "to the Lord," out of the belly of Hell, "the LORD heard
him, and gave him deliverance, and set him again about his work." Read the whole
story of that Prophet. But,
Answ. Second. I shall show you that it must needs be willfully, knowingly, and a
malicious rejecting of the Man Christ Jesus as the Saviour–that is, counting His
blood, His righteousness, His intercession in His own Person, for he that
rejects one rejects all, to be of no value as to salvation; I say, this I shall
show you is the unpardonable sin, and then afterwards in brief show you why it
is called the sin against the Holy Ghost.
[Must be a willfully and maliciously rejecting the Saviour.]
1. That man that doth reject, as aforesaid, the blood, death, righteousness,
resurrection, ascension, and intercession of the Man Christ, doth reject that
sacrifice, that blood, that righteousness, that victory, that rest, that God
alone hath appointed for salvation–"Behold the Lamb," or sacrifice, "of God"
(John 1:29). "We have redemption through His blood" (Eph 1:7). That I may "be
found in Him"–to wit, in Christ's righteousness, with Christ's own personal
obedience to His Father's will (Phil 3:7-10). By His resurrection comes
justification (Rom 4:25). His intercession now in His own Person in the Heavens,
now absent from His saints, is the cause of the saints' perseverance (Rom
8:33-39).
2. They that reject this sacrifice, and the merits of this Christ, which He by
Himself hath brought in for sinners, have rejected Him through whom alone all
the promises of the New Testament, together with all the mercy discovered
thereby, doth come unto poor creatures–"For all the promises of God in Him are
yea, and in Him amen, unto the glory of God" (2 Cor 1:20). And all spiritual
blessings are made over to us through Him; that is, through and in this Man,
which is Christ, we have all our spiritual, heavenly, and eternal mercies (Eph
1:3,4).
3. He that doth knowingly, willfully, and despitefully reject this Man for
salvation doth sin the unpardonable sin, because there is never another
sacrifice to be offered. "There is no more offering for sin.–There remaineth no
more sacrifice for sin," (Heb 10:18-26); namely, than the offering of the body
of Jesus Christ a sacrifice once for all (Heb 10:10,14, compared with 18, 26).
No; but they that shall, after light and clear conviction, reject the first
offering of His body for salvation, do crucify Him the second time, which
irrecoverably merits their own damnation–"For it is impossible for those who
were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift, and were made
partakers of the Holy Ghost, and have tasted the good Word of God, and the
powers of the world to come, if they shall fall away, to renew them again unto
repentance; seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God afresh, and put Him
to an open shame" (Heb 6:4-6). "If they shall fall away, to renew them again
unto repentance." And why so? Seeing, saith the Apostle, they do crucify to
themselves the Son of God afresh, and do put Him to an open shame. O, then, how
miserably hath the devil deceived some, in that he hath got them to reject the
merits of the first offering of the body of Christ, which was for salvation, and
got them to trust in a fresh crucifying of Christ, which unavoidably brings
their speedy damnation.
4. They that do reject this Man, as aforesaid, do sin the unpardonable sin,
because in rejecting Him they do make way for the justice of God to break out
upon them, and to handle them as it shall find them; which will be, in the first
place, sinners against the first covenant; and also despising of, even the life,
and glory, and consolations, pardon, grace, and love, that is discovered in the
second covenant, forasmuch as they reject the Mediator and priest of the same,
which is the Man Jesus. And the man that doth so, I would fain see how his sins
should be pardoned, and his soul saved, seeing the means, which is the Son of
Man, the Son of Mary, and His merits, are rejected; "for," saith He, "if you
believe not that I am He, you shall," mark, "you shall," do what you can; "you
shall," appear where you can; "you shall," follow Moses' law, or any holiness
whatsoever, "ye shall die in your sins" (John 8:24). So that, I say, the sin
that is called the unpardonable sin is a knowing, willful, and despiteful
rejecting of the sacrificing of the Son of Man the first time for sin.
[Why it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost.]
And now to show you why it is called the sin against the Holy Ghost, as in these
Scriptures, (Matt 12; Heb 10; Mark 3).
1. Because they sin against the manifest light of the Spirit, as I said before;
it is a sin against the light of the Spirit–that is, they have been formerly
enlightened into the nature of the Gospel and the merits of the Man Christ, and
His blood, righteousness, intercession, etc.; and also professed and confessed
the same, with some life and comfort in and through the profession of Him; yet
now against all that light, maliciously, and with despite to all their former
profession, turn their backs and trample upon the same.
2. It is called the sin against the Holy Ghost because such a person doth, as I
may say, lay violent hands on it; one that sets himself in opposition to, and is
resolved to resist all the motions that do come in from the Spirit to persuade
the contrary. For I do verily believe that men, in this very rejecting of the
Son of God, after some knowledge of Him, especially at their first resisting and
refusing of Him, they have certain motions of the Spirit of God to dissuade them
from so great a soul-damning act. But they, being filled with an overpowering
measure of the spirit of the devil, do despite unto these convictions and
motions by studying and contriving how they may answer them, and get from under
the convincing nature of them, and therefore it is called a doing despite unto
the Spirit of Grace (Heb 10:29). And so,
3. In that they do reject the beseeching of the Spirit, and all its gentle
entreatings of the soul to tarry still in the same doctrine.
4. In that they do reject the very testimony of the Prophets and Apostles with
Christ Himself; I say, their testimony, through the Spirit, of the power,
virtue, sufficiency, and prevalency of the blood, sacrifice, death,
resurrection, ascension, and intercession of the Man Christ Jesus, of which the
Scriptures are full both in the Old and New Testament, as the Apostle saith, for
all the Prophets from Samuel, with them that follow after, have showed of these
days–that is, in which Christ should be a sacrifice for sin (Acts 3:24, compared
with verses 6, 13-15, 18, 26). Again, saith, he, "He therefore that despiseth
not man, but God; who hath also given unto us His Holy Spirit" (1 Thessalonians
4:8); that is, he rejecteth or despiseth the very testimony of the Spirit.
5. It is called the sin against the Holy Ghost, because he that doth reject and
disown the doctrine of salvation by the Man Christ Jesus, through believing in
Him, doth despise, resist, and reject the wisdom of the Spirit; for the wisdom
of God's Spirit did never more appear than its finding out a way for sinners to
be reconciled to God by the death of this Man; and therefore Christ, as He is a
sacrifice, is called the wisdom of God. And again, when it doth reveal the Lord
Jesus it is called the "Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him"
(Eph 1:17).
Object. But, some may say, the slighting or rejecting of the Son of Man, Jesus
of Nazareth, the Son of Mary, cannot be the sin that is unpardonable, as is
clear from that Scripture in Matthew 12:32, where He Himself saith, "Whosoever
speaketh a word against the Son of Man, it shall be forgiven him; but whosoever
speaketh against the Holy Ghost, it shall not be forgiven him, neither in this
world, neither in the world to come." Now by this it is clear that the sin that
is unpardonable is one thing, and the sin against the Son of Man another; that
sin that is against the Son of Man is pardonable; but if that was the sin
against the Holy Ghost, it would not be pardonable; therefore the sin against
the Son of Man is not the sin against the Holy Ghost, the unpardonable sin.
Answ. 1. I do know full well that there are several persons that have been
pardoned, yet have sinned against the Son of Man, and that have for a time
rejected Him, as Paul (1 Tim 1:13, 14) also the Jews (Acts 2:36,37). But there
was an ignorant rejecting of Him, without the enlightening, and taste, and
feeling of the power of the things of God, made mention in Hebrews 6:3-6. 2.
There is and hath been a higher manner of sinning against the Son of Man, which
also hath been, and is still, pardonable; as in the case of Peter, who in a
violent temptation, in a mighty hurry, upon a sudden denied Him, and that after
the revelation of the Spirit of God from Heaven to him, that He, Jesus, was the
Son of God (Matt 16:16-18). This also is pardonable, if there be a coming up
again to repentance. O, rich grace! O, wonderful grace! that God should be so
full of love to His poor creatures, that though they do sin against the Son of
God, either through ignorance, or some sudden violent charge breaking loose from
Hell upon them, but yet take if for certain that if a man do slight and reject
the Son of God and the Spirit in that manner as I have before hinted–that is,
for a man after some great measure of the enlightening by the Spirit of God, and
some profession of Jesus Christ to be the Saviour, and His blood that was shed
on the mount without the gates of Jerusalem to be the Atonement;
I say, he that shall after this knowingly, willfully, and out of malice and
despite reject, speak against, and trample that doctrine under foot, resolving
for ever so to do, and if he there continue, I will pawn my soul upon it, he
hath sinned the unpardonable sin, and shall never be forgiven, neither in this
world, nor in the world to come; or else these Scriptures that testify the truth
of this must be scrabbled out, and must be looked upon for mere fables, which
are these following–"For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world,
through the knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ," which is the Son of
Man (Matt 16:13) "and are again entangled therein, and overcome," which must be
by denying this Lord that brought them (2 Peter 2:1) "the latter end is worse
with them than the beginning," (2 Peter 2:20). For it is impossible for those
who were once enlightened, and have tasted of the heavenly gift–and have tasted
the good Word of God, and the powers of the world to come; if they shall fall
away," not only fall, but fall away, that is, finally (Heb 10:29) "it is
impossible to renew them again unto repentance"; and the reason is rendered,
"seeing they crucify to themselves the Son of God," which is the Son of Man,
"afresh, and put Him to an open shame" (Heb 6:4-6).
Now if you would further know what it is to crucify the Son of God afresh, it is
this–for to undervalue and trample under foot the merits and virtue of His blood
for remission of sins, as is clearly manifested in Hebrews 10:26-28, where it is
said, "For if we sin willfully after that we have received the knowledge of the
Truth, there remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain fearful looking
for of judgment and fiery indignation, which shall devour the adversaries. He
that despised Moses' law died without mercy,–of how much sorer punishment,
suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who hath trodden under foot the Son of
God," there is the second crucifying of Christ, which the Quakers think to be
saved by, "and hath counted the blood of the covenant, wherewith he was
sanctified, an unholy thing,"– and then followeth–"and hath done despite unto
the Spirit of Grace?" (verse 29). All that Paul had to keep him from this sin
was, his ignorance in persecuting the Man and merits of Jesus Christ (Acts 9).
But I obtained mercy, saith he, because I did it ignorantly (1 Tim 1:13).
And Peter, though he did deny Him knowingly, yet he did it unwillingly, and in a
sudden and fearful temptation, and so by the intercession of Jesus escaped that
danger. So, I say, they that commit this sin, they do it after light, knowingly,
willfully, and despitefully, and in the open view of the whole world reject the
Son of Man for being their Lord and Saviour, and in that it is called the sin
against the Holy Ghost. It is a name most fit for this sin to be called the sin
against the Holy Ghost, for these reasons but now laid down; for this sin is
immediately committed against the motions, and convictions, and light of the
Holy Spirit of God that makes it its business to hand forth and manifest the
truth and reality of the merits and virtues of the Lord Jesus, the Son of Man.
And therefore beware, Ranters and Quakers, for I am sure you are the nearest
that sin by profession, which is, indeed, the right committing of it, of any
persons that I do know at this day under the whole heavens, forasmuch as you
will not venture the salvation of your souls on the blood shed on Mount Calvary,
out of the side of that Man that was offered up in sacrifice for all that did
believe (Luke 23:33). In that His offering up of His body at that time, either
before He offered it, or that have, do, or shall believe on it for the time
since, together with that time that He offered it, though formerly you did
profess that salvation was wrought out that way, by that sacrifice then offered,
and also seemed to have some comfort thereby; yea, insomuch that some of you
declared the same in the hearing of many, professing yourselves to be believers
of the same.
O, therefore, it is sad for you that were once enlightened, and have tasted
these good things, and yet, notwithstanding all your profession, you are now
turned from the simplicity that is in Christ to another doctrine, which will be
your destruction, if you continue in it; for without blood there is no remission
(Heb 9:22).
Many other reasons might be given, but that I would not be too tedious; yet I
would put in this caution, that if there be any souls that be but now willing to
venture their salvation upon the merits of a naked Jesus, I do verily for the
present believe they have not sinned that sin, because there is still a promise
holds forth itself to such a soul where Christ saith, "Him that cometh to me, I
will in nowise," for nothing that he hath done, "cast him out" (John 6:37). That
promise is worth to be written in letters of gold.
OBJECTIONS ANSWERED FOR THEIR COMFORT WHO WOULD HAVE THEIR PART IN THE NEW
COVENANT.
Object. But, alas, though I should never sin that sin, yet I have other sins
enough to damn me.
Answ. What though thou hadst the sins of a thousand sinners, yet if thou come to
Christ, He will save thee (John 6:37; See also Hebrews 7:25).
Object. Alas, but how shall I come? I doubt I do not come as I should do? My
heart is naught and dead; and, alas! then how should I come?
Answ. Why, bethink thyself of all the sins that ever thou didst commit, and lay
the weight of them all upon thy heart, till thou art down loaden with the same,
and come to Him in such a case as this, and He will give thee rest for thy soul
(Matt 11:28-30). And again; if thou wouldst know how thou shouldst come, come as
much undervaluing thyself as ever thou canst, saying, Lord, here is a sinner,
the basest in all the country; if I had my deserts, I had been damned in
Hell-fire long ago; Lord, I am not worthy to have the least corner in the
Kingdom of Heaven; and yet, O that Thou wouldst have mercy! Come like Benhadad's
servants to the king of Israel, with a rope about thy neck (1 Kings 20:31,32)
and fling thyself at Christ's feet, and lie there a while, striving with Him by
thy prayers, and I will warrant thee speed (Matt 11:28-30; John 6:37).
Object. O, but I am not sanctified.
Answ. He will sanctify thee, and be made thy sanctification also (1 Cor 1:30;
6:10,11).
Object. O, but I cannot pray.
Answ. To pray is not for thee to down on thy knees, and say over a many
Scripture words only; for that thou mayest do, and yet do nothing but babble.
But if thou from a sense of thy baseness canst groan out thy heart's desire
before the Lord, He will hear thee, and grant thy desire; for He can tell what
is the meaning of the groanings of the Spirit (Rom 8:26,27).
Object. O, but I am afraid to pray, for fear my prayers should be counted as sin
in the sight of the great God.
Answ. That is a good sign that thy prayers are more than bare words, and have
some prevalence at the Throne of Grace through Christ Jesus, or else the devil
would never seek to labour to beat thee off from prayer by undervaluing thy
prayers, telling thee they are sin; for the best prayers he will call the worst,
and the worst he will call the best, or else how should he be a liar?
Object. But I am afraid the day of grace is past; and if it should be so, what
should I do then?
Answ. Truly, with some men indeed it doth fare thus, that the day of grace is at
an end before their lives are at end. Or thus, the day of grace is past before
the day of death is come, as Christ saith, "If thou hadst known, even thou, at
least in this thy day, the things which belong unto thy peace," that is, the
word of grace or reconciliation, "but now they are hid from thine eyes" (Luke
19:41,42). But for the better satisfying of thee as touching this thing,
consider these following things–
First, Doth the Lord knock still at the door of thy heart by His Word and
Spirit? If so, then the day of grace is not past with thy soul; for where He
doth so knock, there He doth also proffer and promise to come in and sup, that
is, to communicate of His things unto them, which he would not do was the day of
grace past with his soul (Rev 3:20).
Object. But how should I know whether Christ do so knock at my heart as to be
desirous to come in? That I may know also, whether the day of grace be past with
me or no?
Answ. Consider these things–1. Doth the Lord make thee sensible of thy miserable
state without an interest in Jesus Christ, and that naturally thou hast no share
in Him, no faith in Him, no communion with Him, no delight in Him, or love in
the least to Him? If He hath, and is doing this, He hath, and is knocking at thy
heart. 2. Doth He, together with this, put into thy heart an earnest desire
after communion with Him, together with holy resolutions not to be satisfied
without real communion with Him. 3. Doth He sometimes give thee some secret
persuasions, though scarcely discernible, that thou mayest attain, and get an
interest in Him? 4. Doth He now and then glance in some of the promises into thy
heart, causing them to leave some heavenly savour, though but for a very short
time, on thy spirit? 5. Dost thou at some time see some little excellency in
Christ? And doth all this stir up in thy heart some breathing after Him? If so,
then fear not, the day of grace is not past with thy poor soul; for if the day
of grace should be past with such a soul as this, then that Scripture must be
broken where Christ saith, "Him that cometh to Me, I will in nowise," for
nothing, by no means, upon no terms whatsoever, "cast out. (John 6:37).
Object. But surely, if the day of grace was not past with me, I should not be so
long without an answer of God's love to my soul; that therefore doth make me
mistrust my state the more is, that I wait and wait, and yet am not delivered.
Answ. 1. Hast thou waited on the Lord so long as the Lord hath waited on thee?
It may be the Lord hath waited on thee these twenty, or thirty, yes, forty years
or more, and thou hath not waited on Him seven years. Cast this into thy mind,
therefore, when Satan tells thee that God doth not love thee, because thou hast
waited so long without an assurance, for it is his temptation, for God did wait
longer upon thee, and was fain to send to thee by His ambassadors time after
time; and, therefore, say thou, I will wait to see what the Lord will say unto
me; and the rather, because He will speak peace, for He is the Lord thereof.
But, 2. Know that it is not thy being under trouble a long time that will be an
argument sufficiently to prove that thou art past hopes; nay, contrariwise, for
Jesus Christ did take our nature upon Him, and also did undertake deliverance
for those, and bring it in for them who "were all their LIFETIME subject to
bondage" (Heb 2:14,15).
Object. But alas! I am not able to wait, all my strength is gone; I have waited
so long, I can wait no longer.
Answ. It may be thou hast concluded on this long ago, thinking thou shouldst not
be able to hold out any longer; no, not a year, a month, or a week; nay, it may
be, not so long. It may be in the morning thou hast thought thou shouldst not
hold out till night; and at night, till morning again; yet the Lord hath
supported thee, and kept thee in waiting upon Him many weeks and years;
therefore that is but the temptation of the devil to make thee think so, that he
might drive thee to despair of God's mercy, and so to leave off following the
ways of God, and to close in with thy sins again. O therefore do not give way
unto it, but believe that thou shalt "see the goodness of the Lord in the land
of the living. Wait on the Lord, be of good courage, and He shall strengthen
thine heart; wait, I say, on the Lord" (Psa 28:13,14). And that thou mayest so
do, consider these things– (1.) If thou, after thou hast waited thus long,
shouldst now give over, and wait no longer, thou wouldst lose all thy time and
pains that thou hast taken in the way of God hitherto, and wilt be like to a man
that, because he sought long for gold, and did not find it, therefore turned
back from seeking after it, though he was hard by it, and had almost found it,
and all because he was loath to look and seek a little further. (2.) Thou wilt
not only lose thy time, but also lose thy own soul, for salvation is nowhere
else but in Jesus Christ (Acts 4:12). (3.) Thou wilt sin the highest sin that
ever thou didst sin before, in drawing finally back, insomuch that God may say,
My soul shall have no pleasure in him (Heb 10:38). But, 2. Consider, thou
sayest, all my strength is gone, and therefore how should I wait? Why, at that
time when thou feelest and findest thy strength quite gone, even that is the
time when the Lord will renew and give thee fresh strength. "The youths shall
faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall: but they that wait
upon the Lord shall renew their strength: they shall mount up with wings as
eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk, and not faint" (Isa
40:30,31).
Object. But though I do wait, yet if I be not elected to eternal life, what good
will all my waiting do me? "For it is not of him that willeth, nor of him that
runneth, but of God that showeth mercy." Therefore, I say, if I should not be
elected, all is in vain.
Answ. 1. Why in the first place, to be sure thy backsliding from God will not
prove thy election, neither thy growing weary of waiting upon God. But, 2. Thou
art, it may be, troubled to know whether thou art elected; and, sayest thou, If
I did but know that, that would encourage me in my waiting on God. Answ. I
believe thee; but mark, thou shalt not know thy election in the first place, but
in the second–that is to say, thou must first get acquaintance with God in
Christ, which doth come by thy giving credit to His promises, and records which
He hath given of Jesus Christ's blood and righteousness, together with the rest
of His merits–that is, before thou canst know whether thou are elected, thou
must believe in Jesus Christ so really, that thy faith laying hold of, and
drinking and eating the flesh and blood of Christ, even so that there shall be
life begotten in thy soul by the same; life from the condemnings of the Law;
life from the guilt of sin; life over the filth of the same; life also to walk
with God in His Son and ways; the life of love to God the Father, and Jesus
Christ His Son, saints and ways and that because they are holy, harmless, and
such that are altogether contrary to iniquity.
For these things must be in thy soul as a forerunner of thy being made
acquainted with the other; God hath these two ways to show His children their
election–(1.) By testimony of the Spirit–that is, the soul being under trouble
of conscience and grieved for sin, the Spirit doth seal up the soul by its
comfortable testimony; persuading of the soul that God, for Christ's sake, hath
forgiven all those sins that lie so heavy on the conscience, and that do so much
perplex the soul, by showing it that that Law, which doth utter such horrible
curses against it, is by Christ's blood satisfied and fulfilled (Eph 1:13,14).
(2.) By consequence–that is, the soul finding that God hath been good unto it,
in that He hath showed it its lost state and miserable condition, and also that
He hath given it some comfortable hope that He will save it from the same; I
say, the soul, from a right sight thereof, doth, or may, draw this conclusion,
that if God had not been minded to have saved it, He would not have done for it
such things as these. But for the more sure dealing with thy soul, it is not
good to take any of these apart–that is, it is not good to take the testimony of
the Spirit, as thou supposest thou hast, apart from the fruits thereof, so as to
conclude the testimony thou hast received to be a sufficient ground without the
other; not that it is not, if it be the testimony of the Spirit, but because the
devil doth also deceive souls by the workings of his spirit in them, pretending
that it is the Spirit of God.
And again; thou shouldst not satisfy thyself, though thou do find some seekings
in thee after that which is good, without the testimony of the other–that is to
say, of the Spirit–for it is the testimony of two that is to be taken for the
truth; therefore, say I, as thou shouldst be much in praying for the Spirit to
testify assurance to thee, so also thou shouldst look to the end of it when thou
thinkest thou hast it; which is this, to show thee that it is alone for Christ's
sake that thy sins are forgiven thee, and also thereby a constraining of thee to
advance Him, both by words and works, in holiness and righteousness all the days
of thy life. From hence thou mayst boldly conclude thy election–"Remembering
without ceasing your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope in
our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father. Knowing, brethren,"
saith the Apostle, "beloved, your election of God." But how? why by this, "For
our Gospel came not unto you in word only, but also in power, and in the Holy
Ghost, and in much assurance. And ye became followers of us, and of the Lord,
having received the word in much affliction, with joy of the Holy Ghost: so that
ye were ensamples to all that believe in Macedonia and Achaia. And to wait for
His Son from Heaven, whom He raised from the dead, even Jesus, which" hath
"delivered us from the wrath to come" (1 Thess 3:4-6, 10).
Object. But alas, for my part, instead of finding in me anything that is good, I
find in me all manners of wickedness, hard- heartedness, hypocricy, coldness of
affection to Christ, very great unbelief, together with everything that is base
and of an ill savour. What hope therefore can I have?
Answ. If thou wast not such an one, thou hadst no need of mercy. If thou wast
whole, thou hadst no need of the physician. Dost thou therefore see thyself in
such a sad condition as this? Thou hast the more need to come to Christ, that
thou mayst be not only cleansed from these evils, but also that thou mayst be
delivered from that wrath they will bring upon thee, if thou dost not get rid of
them, to all eternity.
Quest. But how should I do? and what course should I take to be delivered from
this sad and troublesome condition?
Answ. Dost thou see in thee all manner of wickedness? The best way that I can
direct a soul in such a case is, to pitch a steadfast eye on Him that is full,
and to look so steadfastly upon Him by faith, that thereby thou mayst even draw
down of His fullness into thy heart; for that is the right way, and the way that
was typed out, before Christ came in the flesh, in the time of Moses, when the
Lord said unto him, "Make thee a fiery serpent" of brass, which was a type of
Christ "and set it upon a pole; and it shall come to pass" that when a serpent
hath bitten any man, "when he looketh upon it, shall live" (Num 21:8). Even so
now in Gospel times, when any soul is bitten with the fiery serpents–their
sins–that then the next way to be healed is, for the soul to look upon the Son
of Man, who, as the serpent was, was hanged on a pole, or tree, that whosoever
shall indeed look on Him by faith may be healed of all their distempers whatever
(John 3:14,15).
As now to instance in some things. 1. Is thy heart hard? Why, then, behold how
full of bowels and compassion is the heart of Christ towards thee, which may be
seen in His coming down from Heaven to spill His heart-blood for thee. 2. Is thy
heart slothful and idle? Then see how active the Lord Jesus is for thee in that
He did not only die for thee, but also in that He hath been ever since His
ascension into Heaven making intercession for thee (Heb 7:25). 3. Dost thou see
and find in thee iniquity and unrighteousness? Then look up to Heaven, and see
there a righteous Person, even thy righteous Jesus Christ, now presenting thee
in His own perfection before the throne of His Father's glory (1 Cor 1:30). 4.
Dost thou see that thou art very much void of sanctification? Then look up, and
thou shalt see that thy sanctification is in the presence of God a complete
sanctification, representing all the saints as righteous, as sanctified ones in
the presence of the great God of Heaven. And so whatsoever thou wantest, be sure
to strive to pitch thy faith upon the Son of God, and behold Him steadfastly,
and thou shalt, by so doing, find a mighty change in thy soul. For when we
behold Him as in a glass, even the glory of the Lord, we are changed, namely, by
beholding, "from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord" (2 Cor
3:18). This is the true way to get both comfort to thy soul, and also
sanctification and right holiness into thy soul.
Poor souls that are under the distemper of a guilty conscience, and under the
workings of much corruption, do not go the nearest way to Heaven if they do not
in the first place look upon themselves as cursed sinners by Law; and yet at
that time they are blessed, for ever blessed saints by the merits of Jesus
Christ. "O wretched man that I am," saith Paul; and yet, O blessed man that I
am, through my Lord Jesus Christ; for that is the scope of the Scripture (Rom
7:24,25).
Object. But, alas, I am blind, and cannot see; what shall I do now?
Answ. Why, truly, thou must go to Him that can make the eyes that are blind to
see, even to our Lord Jesus, by prayer, saying, as the poor blind man did,
"Lord, that I might receive my sight"; and so continue begging Him, till thou do
receive sight, even a sight of Jesus Christ, His death, blood, resurrection,
ascension, intercession, and that for thee, even for thee. And the rather,
because, 1. He hath invited thee to come and buy such eye-salve of Him that may
make thee see (Rev 3:18). 2. Because thou shalt never have any true comfort till
thou dost thus come to see and behold the Lamb of God that hath taken away thy
sins (John 1:29). 3. Because that thereby thou wilt be able through grace, to
step over and turn aside from the several stumbling-blocks that Satan, together
with his instruments, hath laid in our way, which otherwise thou wilt not be
able to shun, but will certainly fall when others stand, and grope and stumble
when others go upright, to the great prejudice of thy poor soul.
Object. But, alas, I have nothing to carry with me; how then should I go?
Answ. Hast thou no sins? If thou hast, carry them, and exchange them for His
righteousness; because He hath said, "Cast thy burden upon the Lord, and He
shall sustain thee" (Psa 54:22); and again, because He hath said, though thou be
heavy laden, yet if thou do but come to Him, He will give thee rest (Matt
11:28).
Object. But, you will say, Satan telleth me that I am so cold in prayers, so
weak in believing, so great a sinner, that I do go so slothfully on in the way
of God, that I am so apt to slip at every temptation, and to be entangled
therewith, together with other things, so that I shall never be able to attain
those blessed things that are held forth to sinners by Jesus Christ; and
therefore my trouble is much upon this account also, and many times I fear that
will come upon me which Satan suggesteth to me–that is, I shall miss of eternal
life.
Answ. 1. As to the latter part of the objection, that thou shalt never attain to
everlasting life, that is obtained for thee already, without thy doing, either
thy praying, striving, or wrestling against sin. If we speak properly, it is
Christ that hath in His own body abolished death on the Cross, and brought
light, life, and glory to us through this His thus doing. But this is the thing
that thou aimest at, that thou shalt never have a share in this life already
obtained for so many as do come by faith to Jesus Christ; and all because thou
art so slothful, so cold, so weak, so great a sinner, so subject to slip and
commit infirmities. 2. I answer, Didst thou never learn for to outshoot the
devil in his own bow, and to cut off his head with his own sword, as David
served Goliath, who was a type of him.
Quest. O how should a poor soul do this? This is rare, indeed.
Answ. Why, truly thus–Doth Satan tell thee thou prayest but faintly, and with
very cold devotion? Answer him thus, and say, I am glad you told me, for this
will make me trust the more to Christ's prayers, and the less to my own; also I
will endeavour henceforth to groan, to sigh, and to be so fervent in my crying
at the Throne of Grace, that I will, if I can, make the heavens rattle again
with the mighty groans thereof. And whereas thou sayest that I am so weak in
believing, I am glad you mind me of it; I hope it will henceforward stir me up
to cry the more heartily to God for strong faith, and make me the more restless
till I have it. And seeing thou tellest me that I run so softly, and that I
shall go near to miss of glory, this also shall be, through grace, to my
advantage, and cause me to press the more earnestly towards the mark for the
prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus. And seeing thou dost tell me
that my sins are wondrous great, hereby thou bringest the remembrance of the
unsupportable vengeance of God into my mind, if I die out of Jesus Christ, and
also the necessity of the blood, death, and merits of Christ to help me; I hope
it will make me fly the faster, and press the harder after an interest in Him;
and the rather, because, as thou tellest me, my state will be unspeakably
miserable without Him. And so all along, if he tell thee of thy deadness,
dullness, coldness, or unbelief, or the greatness of thy sins, answer him, and
say, I am glad you told me, I hope it will be a means to make me run faster,
seek earnestlier, and to be the more restless after Jesus Christ. If thou didst
but get this art as to outrun him in his own shoes, as I may say, and to make
his own darts to pierce himself, then thou mightst also say, how doth Satan's
temptations, as well as all other things, work together for my good, for my
advantage (Rom 8:28).
Object. But I do find many weaknesses in every duty that I do perform, as when I
pray, when I read, when I hear, or any other duty, that it maketh me out of
conceit with myself, it maketh me think that my duties are nothing worth.
Answ. I answer, it may be it is thy mercy that thou art sensible of infirmities
in thy best things thou doest; ay, a greater mercy than thou art aware of.
Quest. Can it me a mercy for me to be troubled with my corruptions? Can it be a
privilege for me to be annoyed with my infirmities, and to have my best duties
infected with it? How can it possibly be?
Answ. Verily, thy sins appearing in thy best duties, do work for thy advantage
these ways–1. In that thou findest ground enough thereby to make thee humble;
and when thou hast done all, yet to count thyself but an unprofitable servant.
And, 2. Thou by this means art taken off from leaning on anything below a naked
Jesus for eternal life. It is like, if thou wast not sensible of many
by-thoughts and wickednesses in thy best performances, thou wouldst go near to
be some proud, abominable hypocrite, or a silly, proud dissembling wretch at the
best, such an one as would send thy soul to the devil in a bundle of thy own
righteousness. But now, thou, through grace, seest that in all and everything
thou doest there is sin enough in it to condemn thee. This, in the first place,
makes thee have a care of trusting in thy own doings; and, secondly, showeth
thee that there is nothing in thyself which will do thee any good by working in
thee, as to the meritorious cause of thy salvation. No; but thou must have a
share in the birth of Jesus, in the death of Jesus, in the blood, resurrection,
ascension, and intercession of a crucified Jesus. And how sayest thou? Doth not
thy finding of this in thee cause thee to fly from a depending on thy own
doings? And doth it not also make thee more earnestly to groan after the Lord
Jesus?
Yea, and let me tell thee also, it will be a cause to make thee admire the
freeness and tender heartedness of Christ to thee, when He shall lift up the
light of His countenance upon thee, because He hath regarded such an one as
thou, sinful thou; and therefore, in this sense, it will be mercy to the saints
that they do find the relics of sin still struggling in their hearts. But this
is not simply the nature of sin, but the mercy and wisdom of God, who causeth
all things to work together for the good of those that love and fear God (Rom
8). And, therefore, whatever thou findest in thy soul, though it be sin of never
so black a soul-scarring nature, let it move thee to run the faster to the Lord
Jesus Christ, and thou shalt not be ashamed–that is, of thy running to Him.
But when thou dost apprehend that thou art defiled, and also thy best duties
annoyed with many weaknesses, let that Scripture come into thy thoughts which
saith, "Of Him are ye in Christ Jesus, who of God is made unto us wisdom, and
righteousness, and sanctification, and redemption"; and if thou shalt understand
that, what thou canst not find in thyself thou shalt find in Christ. Art thou a
fool in thyself? then Christ is made of God thy wisdom. Art thou unrighteous in
thyself? Christ is made of God thy righteousness. Dost thou find that there is
but very little sanctifying grace in thy soul? still here is Christ made thy
sanctification; and all this in His own Person without thee, without thy wisdom,
without thy righteousness, without thy sanctification, without in His own Person
in thy Father's presence, appearing there perfect wisdom, righteousness, and
sanctification in His own Person; I say, as a public Person for thee; so that
thou mayest believe, and say to thy soul, My soul, though dost find innumerable
infirmities in thyself, and in thy actions, yet look upon thy Jesus, the Man
Jesus; He is wisdom, and that for thee, to govern thee, to take care for thee,
and to order all things for the best for thee. He is also thy righteousness now
at God's right hand, always shining before the eyes of His glory; so that there
it is unmoveable, though thou art in never such a sad condition, yet thy
righteousness, which is the Son of God, God-man, shines as bright as ever, and
is as much accepted of God as ever. O this sometimes hath been life to me; and
so, whatever thou, O my soul, findest wanting in thyself, through faith thou
shalt see all laid up for thee in Jesus Christ, whether it be wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification, or redemption. Nay, not only so, but, as I said
before, He is all these in His own Person without thee in the presence of His
Father for thee.
Object. But now, if any should say in their hearts, O, but I am one of the
old-covenant men, I doubt–that is, I doubt I am not within this glorious
Covenant of Grace. And how if I should not?
Answ. Well, thou fearest that thou are one of the old covenant, a son of the
bond-woman. [1.] In the first place, know that thou wast one of them by nature,
for all by nature are under that covenant; but set the case that thou art to
this day under that, yet let me tell thee, in the first place, there are hopes
for thee; for there is a gap open, a way made for souls to come from under the
Covenant of Works, by Christ, "for He hath broken down the middle wall of
partition between us" and you (Eph 2:14). And therefore, if thou wouldst be
saved, thou mayest come to Christ; if thou wantest a righteousness, as I said
before, there is one in Christ; if thou wouldst be washed, thou mayest come to
Christ; and if thou wouldst be justified, there is justification enough in the
Lord Jesus Christ. That is the first. [2.] And thou canst not be so willing to
come to Christ as He is willing thou shouldst come to Him. Witness His coming
down from Heaven, His humiliation, His spilling of His blood from both His
cheeks, by sweat under the burden of sin (Luke 22:44) and His shedding of it by
the spear when He hanged on the Cross. It appears also by His promises, by His
invitations, by His sending forth His messengers to preach the same to poor
sinners, and threateneth damnation upon this very account, namely, the neglect
of Him; and declares that all the thousands and ten thousands of sins in the
world should not be able to damn those that believed in Him; that He would
pardon all, forgive and pass by all, if they would but come unto Him; moreover,
promiseth to cast out none, no, not the poorest, vilest, contemptiblest creature
in the whole world.
"Come unto Me all," every one, though you be never so many, so vile, though your
load be never so heavy and intolerable, though you deserve no help, not the
least help, no mercy, not the least compassion, yet "cast your burden upon Me,
and you shall find rest for your souls." Come unto Me and I will heal you, love
you, teach you, and tell you the way to the Kingdom of Heaven. Come unto Me, and
I will succour you, help you, and keep you from all devils and their
temptations, from the Law and its curses, and from being for ever overcome with
any evil whatever. Come unto Me for what you need, and tell Me what you would
have, or what you would have Me do for you, and all My strength, love, wisdom,
and interest that I have with My Father shall be laid out for you. Come unto Me,
your sweet Jesus, your loving and tender-hearted Jesus, your everlasting and
sin-pardoning Jesus. Come unto Me ,and I will wash you, and put My righteousness
upon you, pray to the Father for you, and send My Spirit into you, that you
might be saved. Therefore,
Consider, besides this, what a privilege thou shalt have at the Day of Judgment
above thousands, if thou do in deed and in truth close in with this Jesus and
accept of Him; for thou shalt not only have a privilege in this life, but in the
life everlasting, even at the time of Christ's second coming from Heaven; for
then, when there shall be the whole world gathered together, and all the good
angels, bad angels, saints, and reprobates, when all thy friends and kindred,
with thy neighbours on the right hand and on the left shall be with thee,
beholding of the wonderful glory and majesty of the Son of God; then shall the
Son of Glory, even Jesus, in the very view and sight of them all, smile and look
kindly upon thee; when a smile or a kind look from Christ shall be worth more
than ten thousand worlds, then thou shalt have it. You know it is counted an
honour for a poor man to be favourably looked upon by a judge, or a king, in the
sight of lords, earls, dukes, and princes; why, thus it will be with thee in the
sight of all the princely saints, angels, and devils, in the sight of all the
great nobles in the world; then, even thou that closest in with Christ, be thou
rich or poor, be thou bond or free, wise or foolish, if thou close in with Him,
He will say unto thee, "Well done, good and faithful servant," even in the midst
of the whole world; they that love thee shall see it, and they that hate thee
shall all to their shame behold it; for if thou fear Him here in secret, He will
make it manifest even at that day upon the house-tops.
Secondly, Not only thus, but thou shalt also be lovingly received and tenderly
embraced of Him at that day, when Christ hath thousands of gallant saints, as
old Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, Isaiah, Jeremiah, together with all the
Prophets, and Apostles, and martyrs, attending on Him; together with many
thousands of glittering angels ministering before Him; besides, when the ungodly
shall appear there with their pale faces, with their guilty consciences, and
trembling souls, that would then give thousands and ten thousands of worlds, if
they had so many, if they could enjoy but one loving look from Christ. I say,
then, then shalt thou have the hand of Christ, reached to thee kindly to receive
thee, saying, Come, thou blessed, step up hither; thou was willing to leave all
for Me, and now will I give all to thee; here is a throne, a crown, a kingdom,
take them; thou wast not ashamed of Me when thou wast in the world among my
enemies, and now will not I be ashamed of thee before thine enemies, but will,
in the view of all these devils and damned reprobates promote thee to honour and
dignity. "Come, ye blessed of My Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you
from the foundation of the world." Thou shalt see that those who have served Me
in truth shall lose nothing by the means.
No; but ye shall be as pillars in My temple, and inheritors of My glory, and
shall have place to walk in among My saints and angels (Zech 3:7). O! who would
not be in this condition? who would not be in this glory? It will be such a
soul-ravishing glory, that I am ready to think the whole reprobate world will be
ready to run mad, to think that they should miss of it (Deu 28:34). Then will
the vilest drunkard, swearer, liar, and unclean person willingly cry, "Lord,
Lord, open to us," yet be denied of entrance; and thou in the meantime embraced,
entertained, made welcome, have a fair mitre set upon thy head, and clothed with
immortal glory (Zech 3:5). O, therefore, let all this move thee, and be of
weight upon thy soul to close in with Jesus, this tender-hearted Jesus. And if
yet, for all what I have said, thy sins do still stick with thee, and thou
findest thy hellish heart loath to let them go, think with thyself in this
manner–Shall I have my sins and lose my soul? Will they do me any good when
Christ comes? Would not Heaven be better to me than my sins? and the company of
God, Christ, saints, and angels, be better than the company of Cain, Judas,
Balaam, with the devils in the furnace of fire? Canst thou now that readest or
hearest these lines turn thy back, and go on in your sins? Canst thou set so
light of Heaven, of God, of Christ, and the salvation of thy poor, yet precious
soul? Canst thou hear of Christ, His bloody sweat and death, and not be taken
with it, and not be grieved for it, and also converted by it? If so, I might lay
thee down several considerations to stir thee up to mend thy pace towards
Heaven; but I shall not; there is enough written already to leave thy soul
without excuse and to bring thee down with a vengeance into Hell-fire, devouring
fire, the Lake of Fire, eternal everlasting fire; O to make thee swim and roll
up and down in the flames of the furnace of fire!
FOOTNOTES:
[1] These words are quoted from the Genevan or Breeches Bible (Mark 2:17).– Ed.
[2] This quotation is from the Genevan translation (Eph 2:3).– Ed.
[3] It is observable that the reason given for the punishment of the murderer
with death (Gen 9:6) is taken from the affront he offers to God, not from the
injury he does to man.–Scott.
[4] The reader need scarcely be reminded, that by "public person" is meant the
Saviour, in whom all His people have an equal right. "For He made Him, who knew
no sin, to be sin for us" (2 Cor 5:21).–ED.
[5] Bunyan's first sight of the spiritual, inward, and extensive requirements of
the law filled his heart with despair; see "Grace Abounding," No. 28. It was
like the alarming sound of the drum Diabolus mentioned in the "Holy War," which
caused Mansoul to shake with terror and dismay. Thus the soul is stripped of
self-righteousness, and flies to Christ, whose blood alone cleanseth from all
sin.–ED.
[6] "Crank," brisk, jolly, lusty, spiritful, buxom.–ED.
[7] From the Puritan or Genevan version.–ED.
[8] These nine particulars are very methodically arranged, and are all deeply
interesting. Very few of those who read the scriptural law of sacrifices see how
clearly they pointed as types to Christ the great Antitype.–ED.
[9] It is a mark of prying and dangerous, if not wicked curiosity to inquire
whether God could have found any other way of salvation than by the atoning
death of our blessed Lord. Instead of such vain researches, how much more
consistent would it be to call upon our souls, and all that is within us, to
bless His name, who hath thus provided abundant pardon, full remission, even to
the chief of sinners.–ED.
[10] The duty of the priests, under the law, led them to be familiar with the
most loathsome and catching diseases; and doubtless they took every precaution
to avoid contagion. Poor sin-sick soul, do you consider your state more
loathsome and dangerous than the leprosy? Fly to Christ, our High Priest and
Physician; He will visit you in the lowest abyss of misery, without fear of
contagion, and with full powers to heal and save.–ED.
[11] The word "hell" in the two verses means the unseen place of the dead, the
invisible world, or the grave.–ED.
[12] How awful and vast must have been the sufferings of the Saviour, when He
paid the redemption price for the countless myriads of His saints; redeemed "out
of every kindred, and tongue, and people, and nation." How magnificent His glory
when "ten thousand times ten thousands, and thousands of thousands, shall sing
with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and
riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honour, and glory, and blessing, for ever
and ever." Such were the ecstatic vision which Bunyan enjoyed, drawn from the
unerring pages of eternal truth.–ED.
[13] This singular use of the law term "premunire," meaning that the soul has
trusted in a foreign jurisdiction, incurred God's anger, and forfeited its
liberty and all its goods.–ED.
[14] These are solemn truths, in homely, forcible language. Let the soul be
convinced that by the obedience of Christ it is released from the law, it has no
fear of Satan or of future punishment; Christ is all and in all.–ED.
[15] "Indenture"; a written agreement, binding one party to reward the other for
specified services. As man is by nature bound to love God with all his soul, he
cannot be entitled to any reward for anything beyond his duty. When he feels
that he has failed in his obedience, he must fly to Christ for that mercy which
he can never obtain by indenture of service or merit and reward.– ED.
[16] Same as 15 —Ed.
[17] Same as 15 —Ed.
[18] For a deeply affecting account of the author's experience about this period
read Grace Abounding, No. 259-261.–ED.
[19] "Scrabble"; to go on the hands and feet or knees. See a remarkable
illustration of the word "scrabble" in Grace Abounding, No. 335.–ED.
[20] As Bunyan was a Baptist, this is full proof that his friends did not
ascribe regeneration to water baptism. It is an awful delusion to suppose that
immersion in or sprinkling with water can effect or promote the new birth or
spiritual regeneration of the soul.–ED.
[21] This is one of the very thrilling circumstances described by Bunyan in his
Grace Abounding, No. 24:–Sunday sports were then allowed by the State, and after
hearing a sermon on the evil of Sabbath-breaking, he went as usual to his sport.
On that day it was a game at cat, and as he was about to strike, "a voice did
suddenly dart from Heaven into my soul, which said, Wilt thou leave thy sins and
go to Heaven, or have thy sins and go to Hell?"–ED.
[22] The word Man was essential in Bunyan's days, as an antidote to the jargon
of the Ranters, who affirmed that Jesus only existed in the heart of the
believer.–ED.
[23] Same As 20 —Ed.
[24] Same as 22 —Ed.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John Bunyan Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
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