LIBRARY OF THE THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY PRINCETON, N. J. Division. S-r'-fhrni ... rjtL-rfi*** tS , .THE HARMONY O F T H E Divine Attributes, IN THE Contrivance and Accornplijkment O F Man's REDEMPTION B Y T H E Lord JESUS CHRIST: O R, DISCOURSES Wherein is fhewn How the Wifdom, Mercy, Jufiice, Holinefs, Pow- er, and Truth of God are glorified in that great and blejjed Work. By WILLIAM BATE .c, D. D. Which Things the Jngels def.re to look into. 1 Pet. i. 12. LONDON, Printed : ^Wilmington, Re-printed, and Sold by James Adams, in Market-fir eet, 177 1 . [ Hi 1 THE PREFACE. TH E Subjeci of the enfuing Difcourfes is of that inejlimable Excellency and Impor- tance^ that it deferves our deeped Re- feclions and Care to confider and apply it : It is the great Myftery of Godlinefs, the Defign of Eternal Wifdom, the chief eft of all God's Works, that con- tains the glorious Wonders of his Mercy and Pow- er, wherein he renders himfelf moji worthy of our fupreme Veneration and Ajfeclion. Our mo/l raif- ed Thoughts are infinitely beneath its Dignity. Though the Light of the Gofpel hath clearly re- vealedfo much of it as is requifte to be known in cur earthly State, yet thefublimer Parts areftillfe- cret, andrefervedfor afullDifcovery by the Bright- Tie fs of our Saviour s Appearance, Now if the Excellency of Things excites our Spirits to be at- tentive infearching into their Nature, this Divine Objecl Jhould awaken all our Powers, and arreft our Minds, in the ferious fteady Contemplation of it, being alone capable to fatisfy their Immortal Appetite. The Importance of it is correfpondent to its Ex- A z cellejicy, i & i cellency -, for it is no lefs than the Recovery of us from extreme and eternal Mifery, and the Re- Storing of us to the Enjoyment of the Blejfed God ; a Felicity without Comparifon or End. If we ' have any Regard to Salvation, [and who would be fo unhappy as to negleff it for unconcerning frivolous Vanities ?) it will be delightful to know the Means by which we may obtain it ; and to em- ploy the flying Moments of ourjhort Time, in thofe Things that are profitable for our loft End, that we may not lofe Temporal and Eternal Life to- gether. Many of the ancient and modern Divines have written of this Noble Argument, from whom I have received Benefit in the following Compofure ; T>iit none, as I know, hath confidered all the Parts together, and prefented them in one View. There fill remains a rich Abundance for the perpetual Exercife of our Spirits. The Eternal Word alone was able to perfeft all Things by once fpeaking. Human Words are but an Eccho that anfwers the Voice of God, a?id cannot fully exprefs its Power, nor pafsfo i?nmediately through the Senfe to the Heart-, but they mufi be repeated. May thefej Difcourfes be effeftual to inflame us with the mofl ardent Love to our Saviour, who ranfomed us with the invaluable Price of his own Blood, and to per- fuade us to live for Heaven, the Pur chafe of that f acred Treafure, and Ifloallfor ever acknowledge the Divine Grace, and obtain my utmoft Aim. W, Bates,1 [ * ] THE .HARMONY O F The Divine Attributes, &c. CHAP. I. The Introduction. A Jhort View of Manys primitive State. His Conformity to God\ natural, moral, and in Happinefs and Dominion over the Creatures. The moral Refemblance, as it refers to all the Faculties. The Happinefs of Man with refpecl to his fenfitive and fpiritual Nature. Ofallfublunary Creatures he is only capable of a Law, What the Law of Nature contains. God entered into a Covenant with Man. The Rea- fons of that Bifpenfation. The Terms of the Cove- nant were becoming God and Man. The fpecial Claufe in the Covenant concerning the Tree of Know- ■ ledge of Good and Evil. The Reafons of the Prohibi- tion. TH E Felicity which the Lord Jefus procu- red for Believers, includes a perfect Free- dom from Sin, and all afflictive Evils, the juft Conlequents of it j and the Fruition of Righteoujnejs, Peace, and Joy, wherein the King- A 3 dom 2 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes dom of God confifts. In this the Evangelical Co- venant excels the natural ; the Law fuppofes Man upright, and the Happinefs it promifes to exad Obedience, is called Life ; it rewards Innocence with Immortality : But the Bleffednefs of the Gofpel is ftiled Salvation, which (ignifies the refcuing of lapfed Man from a State of Mifery, and the in veiling of hirq with unperifhing Glory. In order to the Difcovery of the Excellency of this Benefit, and the endearing Obligations laid on us by our Redeemer, it is neceffary to_ take a View of that dreadful and defperate Calamity which feized upon Mankind : The Wretchednefs of our Capti- vity illuftrates the Glory of our Redemption. And fince the Mifery of Man was not the original Condi- tion of his Nature, but the Effect of his guilty Choice, it is requifite to make fome Reflection upon his firft State, as he came out of the pure Hands of God 5 that comparing our prefent Mifery with our loft Happinefs, we may revive in our Breads the Affecti- ons of Sorrow, Shame and Indignation againft our- felves ; and confidering that the Heavenly Adam hath purchafed for us a Title to a better Inheritance than was forfeited by the earthly One, we may with the more affectionate Gratitude extol the Favour and Power of our Redeemer. God who is the living Fountain of all Perfections, fpent an entire Eternity in the Contemplation of his own Excellencies, before any Creature was made. In the Moment appointed by his Wifdom, he gave thefrft Being to the World. Three diftinct Orders of Natures he formed, the one purely Spiritual^ the other purely Material, and between both one Mixt% which unites the Extremes in itfelf : This is Man% the Abridgment of the Univerfe, allied to the An- gels in his Soul, and to material Things in his Body,' and in Contriving Mans Redemption] 3 and capable of the Happinefs of both -, by his inter- nal Faculties enjoying the Felicity of the Intellectual* and by his external tafting the Pleafures of the fenji- five World. Man's greateft Excellency was a per- fect Conformity to the Divine Pattern. God created plan in his own Likenefs, in the Image of God created be him. This includes, Firft, The natural Similitude of God in the Sub- fiance of the Soul, as it is an intelligent, free, fpiritual and immortal Being, This is affigned to be the Reafonof the Law, that Whofo fheds Man's Blood, by Man Jhall his Blood be Jhed -, for in the Image of God made he Man, Gen. ix. 6. Secondly % A moral Refemblance in its Qualities and Perfections. Thirdly, That Happinefs and Dignity of Man's State, which was the Confequent and Acceffton to his Holinefs. The natural Refemblance I fhall not in- fill on. For the diftinct Illuftration of the other, we may confider God in a threefold Refpect. 1. In refpect of his abfolute Holinefs, unfpottedFu- rity, infinite Goodnefs, • incorruptible Juflice, and whatever we conceive under the Notion of moral Perfections. 2. With refpect to his complete BlefTednefs, (the Refult to his infinite Excellencies •,) as he is perfectly exempt from all Evils which might allay and lerTen his Felicity, and enjoy thofe Pleafures which are worthy of his pure Nature and glorious State. 3. In regard of his fupreme Dominion, which ex- tends itfelf to all Things in Heaven and Earth. Now in the Participation of thefe the Image of God did principally confift. The Holinefs of Man was the Copy of the Divine Purity, his Happinefs a Repre- fentation of the Divine Felicity 3 and his Dominion over 4 The. Harmony of the Divine Attributes over the lower World the Refemblance of God's Sovereignty. I will take a particular Survey of them. i. Man was conformed to God in Holinefs. This appears by the Expreffions of the Apoftle concerning the Sanctification of corrupt Man, which he fets forth, by the renewing of 'him in Knowledge, Right eouf- ycfs and Holinefs, after the Image cf the Creator The Renovation or Things is the reftoring of them to their primitive State, and is more or lefs perfect, by its .Proportion to or Diftance from the Original, Holi- nefs and Righteoufnefs are the comprehenfive Sum of the Moral Law, which not only reprefents the Will, but the Nature of God in his Supreme Excel- lency, and in Conformity to it the Divine Likenefs eminently appeared. Adam was created with the Perfection of Grace : The Progrefs of thz molt ex- cellent Saints is incomparably fhortof his Beginning: By this we may in Part conjecture at the Beauty of Holinefs in him, of which one faint Ray appearing in renewed Perfons is fo amiable. This Primitive Beauty is expreft in Scripture by Rectitude : God made Man upright. There was an univerfal entire Rectitude in his Faculties, difpofing them for their proper Operations. This will more fully appear by confidering the diftinct Powers of the Soul, in their regular Conftitutions. i. The Underftanding was enriched with Know, ledge. Nature was unveiled to Adam, he entered into irs Sanctuary, and difcovered its myfierious Operati- ons. When the Creatures came to pay their Homage to him, wbaifoever he called them, that was the Name thereof, Gen. ii. 19. And their Names expreft their Na- tures. His Knowledge reached through the whole Com- ptfs of the Creation, from the Sun the glorious Veffel of L\ght,iQtheGlow-wcrmthuMne$intheHedge. And this in Contriving Mans Redemption. $ this Knowledge was not acquired by Study, it was not the Fruit of anxious Enquiry, but as the. Illuminati- on " of the Air is in an inftant by the Light of the Morning, fo his Underflanding was enlightned by a pure Beam from the Father of Lights. Befides, he had fuch a Knowledge of the Deity, as was diffident for his Duty and Felicity. His Mind didnotftick in ihe -material Part of Things, but afcend- ed by the feveral Ranks of Beings to the univerfal Caufe. He difcovered the Glory of the Divine Ef~ fence and Attributes by their wonderful Effecls. i. Almighty Power. When he firlt opened his Eyes, the ltupendous Fabrick of Heaven and Earth prefented itfdf to his View, and in it the mod ex- prefs and clear Characlers of that glorious Power which produced it. For what could overcome the infinite Diiiance between not being and being, infinite Power ? As there is no Proportion between not being and being, fo the Caufe which unites thofe Terms, mud be without Limits. Now the Divine Word alone (which calls the Things that are not, as if they were) caufed the World to rife from the Abyfs of empty nothing. At God's Command the Heavens and all their Hofi were created. And this led him to confider the lmmenfity of the Divine EfTence ; for infinite Power is incompatible with a finite Efifence, and by the Confideration of the lmmenfity he might afcend to the Eternity of God. To be eternal with- out Beginning, and infinite without Bounds, infer one another, and necefiarily exifi in the fame SubjecJ. For it is impoflible that any Thing which is formed by another, ami hath a Beginning, mould not be limit- ed in its Nature by the Caufe that produced it. Therefore the Apoftle declares, Rom. i. 20. that the Eternal Power of Cod is fet forth in the Creation of 6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes of the World ; joining with the Difcovery of his Power, that of his Eternity. 2. Admirable Wifdom appeared to Man in the Creation. For by confidering the Variety and Uni- on, the Order and Efficacy, the Beauty and Stability of the World, he clearly difcerned that Wifdom which fo regularly difpofed all. It is thus that Wifdom fpeaks, Prov. viii. 27. 28. 29. When he pre- fared the Heavens, I was there : When he jet a Compafs upon the Face of the Depth : When he eftablifhed the Clouds above : When he ftrengthened the Fountains of . cfthe Deep : When he gave the Sea his Decree, that the Waters fhould not pafs his Commandments : When he appointed the Foundations of the Earth ; / was with him, contriving all in the bed Manner for Ornament and Ufe. The Knowledge of this filled his Soul with Wonder and Delight. The Pfalmift breaks forth with Aftonifhment, as one in the midft of innume- rable Miracles, Pfal. civ. 24. O Lord, how manifold are thy Works ! In Wifdom haft thou made them all. And if he difcovered fuch Wonderful and Divine Wifdom in the Works of God, when the Vigour of the human Underftanding was fo much impaired by the Fall ; how much more did Adam, who per- fectly underftood Univerfal Nature, the Offices of its Parts, the Harmony of the Whole, and all the juft Laws of Union, by which God hath joined together fuch a Multitude of Beings fo diftant and difagreeing, and how the Publick Peace is preferved by their pri- vate Enmity ? This Difcovery caufed him to ac- knowledge, that Great is the Lord, and of great Power ; his Under (landing is infinite. 3. Infinite Goodnefs mined forth in the Creation. This is the leading Attribute, that called forth the reft to work. As there was no Matter, fo no Mo- tive to induce God to make the World, but what arofe 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 7 arofe from his Goodnefs : For he is an All-fufficient Being, pefectly bleffed in himfelf. His Majeity is not increafed by the Adoration of Angels, nor his Greatnefs by the Obedience of Nature •, neither was he lefs happy, or content, in that eternal Du- ration before the Exiftence of any Creature, than he is fince. His Original Felicity is equally incapable ofAccefllon, as of Diminution. It is evident there- fore, that only free and unexcited Goodnefs moved him to create all Things, that he might impart Being and Happinefs to the Creature, not enrich his own. And as by contemplating the other Works of God, fo efpecially by reflecting upon himfelf, Adam had a clear Sight of the Divine Attributes which concurred in his Creation. Whether he confidered his loweft Part, the Body, it was formed of the Eatth, the mod artificial and beautiful Piece of the vifible World*. The Contrivance of its Parts was with that Propor- tion and Exactnefs, as moft conduced to Comlinefs and Service. Its Stature was erect and raifed, be- coming the Lord of the Creatures, and an Obferver of the Heavens. A Divine Beauty and Majefty was fhed upon it. And this was no vanifhing Ray, foon eclipfed by a Difeafe, and extinguished by Death, but mined in the Countenance without any Decli- nation. The Tongue was Man's peculiar Glory, be- ing the Interpreter of the Mind, and capable to fig- nify all the Affections of the Soul. In fhort, the Body was fo framed, as to make a vifible Difcovery of the Prerogatives of his Creation. And when he reflected upon his Soul that animated his Dull, its excellent Endowments wherein it is comparable to the Angels, its Capacity of enjoying God Himfelf for * Difficile eft expedire lUrum fpecies an Milium major fit. Lafl, ds Opif, Horn* 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attribute} for ever, he had an internal and mod clear Tefti- mony of the Glorious Perfections of his Creator. For Man, who alone admires the Works of God, i* the moil admirable of alrf. 2. The Image of God was refplendent in Man's Confcience, the Seat of practical Knowledge, and Treafury of moral Principles. The directive Facul- ty was fincere and uncorrupt, not infected with any difguifing Tincture : It was clear from all Preju- dices, which might render it an incompetent Judge of Good and Evil. It inftructed Man in all the Parts of his Relative Obligations to God, and the Crea- tures. It was not fettered and confined, fearfully reftraining from what is lawful •, nor licentious and indulgent in what is forbidden. Briefly, Confcience in Adam upright, was a fubordinate God, that gave Laws, and exacted Obedience to that glorious Be- ing who is its Superior. 3. There was a Divine Impreflion on the Will. Spiritual Reafon kept the Throne, and the inferior Faculties obferved an eafy and regular Subordination to its Diftates. The Affections were exercifed with Proportion to the Quality of their Objects. Reafon was their inviolable Rule. Love the moft noble, and Mafter- affection, which gives Being and Good- nefs to all the reft, even to Hatred itfelf, (for fo much we hate an Object, as it hinders our Enjoy- ment of the Good we love :) this precious Incenfe was offered up to the excellent and Supreme Being, which was the Author of his Life. Adam fully obey- ed the firft and great Command, of loving the Lord with all his Heart, Soul and Strength. His Love to other f Miratur alia homo, cum fit ipfe jnirator maximum mira- sulum. Mz< In Contriving Mans Redemption. 9 other Things was regulated by his Love to God. There was a perfect Accord between Fiefh and Spi- rit in him. They both joined in the Service of God, and were naturally moved to their Happinefs. As the two Eyes content in their Motion, fo Reafon and Senfe agreed for the fame End. In fhort, the Image of God in Adam, was a living, powerful Principle, and had the fame Relation to the Soul which the Soul hath to the Body, to animate and order all its Fa- culties in the Offices and Opperations, according to the Will of his Creator. 2. The Image of God confifted (though in an in- ferior Degree) in the happy State of Man. Herein he refembled that infinitely bleffed Being. This Hap- pinefs had Relation to the two Natures, which enter into Man's Compofition : 1. To the Animal and Senjitive, and this confifted in two Things. 1. In the excellent Difpofition of his Organs. 2. In the Enjoyment of convenient Ob- jects. 1. In the excellent Difpofition of the Organs. His Body was formed immediately by God, and fo not li- able tothofe Defects which proceed from the Weak- nefs of fecond Caufes. No Blemifh, or Diteafe, which are the Effects and Footfteps of Sin, were to be found in him. His Health was not a frail incon- ftant Difpofition, eafily ruined ty the jarring Ele- ments, but firm and liable. The Humours were in a juft Temperament, to prevent any Diftemper which might tend to the Diffolution of that excellent Frame. Briefly, all the Senfes were quick and live- ly, able to perform with Facility, Vigour and De- light, their Operations. 2. There were converv°nt Objects to entertain his fenfitive Faculties. He io The Harmony of the "Divine Attributes He enjoyed Nature in its original Purity, crowned with the Bcnedittion of God, before it was blafted with the Curfe. The World was all Harmony and Beauty, becoming the Goodnefs of the Creator > and not, as it is fince the Fall, diforder'd and deform'd in many Parts, the Effect of his Juftice. The Earth was liberal to Adam of all its Treafures, the Heavens* of their Light, andfweeteft Influences, J: ■-. wasfeat- ed in Eden, a Place of fo great Beauty and Delight, that it reprefented the Celeftial Paradife which is re- frefhed with Rivers of Pleafure. And as the ultimate End of the Creatures was to raife his Mind, and in- flame his Heart witlj^fe^tove of his great Benefac- tor ; fo their firft arid natuffel Ufe was the Satisfac- tion of the Senfes, from whence the Felicity of the animal Life did proceed. 2. His fupremc Har3pineijy|Dnfifl:ed in the Exercife of his mod noble Faculties^R their proper Objects. This will appear by considering, that as the fpritual Faculties have Objects which infinitely excel thole of the fenfitive ; fo their Capacity is more enlargpd, their Union with Objetts is more intimate, and their Per- ception is with more Quicknefs and Vivacity : And thereby are the greatefb Inftruments of Pleafure to the rational Being. Now the higheft Faculties in Man are the Undcrftanding and Will, and their Hap- pinefs confifts in Union with God by Knowledge and Love. i. In the Knowledge of God. As the Defire of Knowledge is the mod natural to the human Soul, fo the obtaining of it produces the moil noble and fweeteft Pleafure. And proportionably to the de- grees of Excellency that are in Qbjefts, fo much of rational Perfection and Satisfaction accrues to the Mind by the Knowledge of them. The Difcovery of the Works of God greatly affected Man, yet the Excellencies in Contriving Mans Redemption, ii Excellencies fcattered among them are but an imper- fect and mutable Shadow of God's infinite and un- changeable Perfections. How much more delight- ful was it to his pure Underftanding, tracing the Footiteps and Imprefiions of God in natural Things, to afcend to him who is the glorious Original of all Perfections ! And though his finite Underftanding could not cc.nprehend the Divine Excellencies, yet his Knowledge was anfwerable to the Degrees of Re- velation wherein God was manifefted. He faw the admirable Beauty of the Creator through the trans- parent Vail of the Creatures. And from hence there arofe in the Soul a Pleafure pure, folid and fatisfy- ing, a Pleafure Divine; for God takes infinite con- tentment in the Contemplation of Himfelf. 2. The Happinefs of Man confuted in the Love of God. It was not the^.naked Speculation of the Deity that made him happy, but fuch a Knowledge as ravifhed his Affections : For Happinefs refuks from the Fruitions of all the Faculties. It is true, that by the Mediation of the Underftanding the other Faculties have accefsto an Objecl ; the Will and Affections can't be inclined to any thing, but by Virtue of an Acl of the Mind which propounds it as worthy of them : It follows therefore, that when by the Difcovery of the tranjcendent Excellencies in God, the Soul is excited to love and to delight in Him as its fupreme Good, it is then really and perfect- ly happy. Now as Adam had a perfect Knowledge of God, fo the Height of his Love was anfwerable to his Knowledge, and the Compleatnefs of his En- joyment was according to his Love. All the Divine Excellencies were amiable to him. The Majefty, Purity, Juftice, and Power of God, which are the Terror of guilty Creatures, fecured his Happinefs whilft he continued in his Obedience, His Confcience was is The Harmony of the Divine Attributes was clear and calm, no unquiet Fears difcompofed ks Tranquillity, it was the Seat of Innocence and Peace. Briefly, his Love to God was perfect, i John iv. 10. without any Allay of tormenting Fear; and Delight, its infeparable Attendant, was pure, with- out the lead Mixture of Sorrow. 3. There was in Man's Dominion and Power over the Creatures a mining Part of God's Image. He was appointed God's Lieutenant in the World, and adorned with a Flower of his Crown. God gave him the folemn Inveftiture of this Dignity, when he brought the Creatures to receive their Names from him, PfaL viii. 5. 6. which was a Mark of their Ho- mage, and a Token of his Supreme Empire to com- mand them by their Names. As this Dominion was edablifhed by the Order of God, fo it was exer- cifed by the Meditation of the Body. In his Face and Words there was fomething fo powerful, as commanded all the Hods of the lower World. And as their Subjection was moil eafy, without Condraint or Refiftance, fo it was mod equal without Violence and Oppreflion. Thus holy and bleffed was Adam in his Primitive State. And that he might continue fo, he was o- bliored for ever to obev the Will of God, who bellow- cd upon him Life and Happinefs. By the firil Ne- glect of his Duty he would mod judly and inevitably incur the Lofs of both. This will appear by confi- dering the Defign of God in the Creation. God did not make the World and Man for the mere Exercife of his Power, and fo left them •, but as the Production of all Things was from his Good- nefs, fo their Refolution and Tendency is for his Glory. He is as univerfally the final, as the efficient Caufe of all Creatures. For that which receives its Being from another, can't be an End to itielf : For the tn Contriving Mans Redemption, 13 the Previfion of the End in the Mind of the Creator fets him a Work, and is antecedent to the Being of the Creature. Therefore the Wifeman tells us, Prov. xvi. 4. that Gdd made all things for himfelf. And the Apoftle, Rom. xi. 36. that Of himy and to bim9 and through him are all things ; to whom be Glory for ever. The lower Rank of Creatures objectively glorify God, as there is a viable Demonftration of his excellent Attributes in them : Man is only qua- lified to know and love the Creator. And as the Be- nefit of all redounds to him, it is his Duty to pay the Tribute for all. By his Mouth the World makes its Acknowledgment to God. He is the Interpreter of the filent and uninterrupted Praifes, which the full Quire of Heaven and Earth renders to him. O Lord, all thy 'Works praife thee, Pfal. ex! v. 10. (from the mod noble to the leair worthy) thy Saints blefs thee. Thankfulneis is the Homage due from Under- flanding Creatures. And from hence it follows, that Man only was in a State of moral Dependence^ and capable of a Law. For a Law being the Declaration of the Superior's Will, requiring Obedience, and threatening Punifh- ment on the Failure thereof, there muff, be a Princi- ple of Reafon and Choice in that Nature that is go- verned by it. 1 . To difcover the Authority that en- joins it. 2. To difcern the Matter of the Law. 3. To determine itfelf out of Judgment and Electi- on to Obedience, as mod excellent in itfelf, and advantageous to the Performer. Now all inferior Creatures are moved by the fe- cret Force of natural -Inclinations •, they are infenfi- ble of moral Engagements, and are not wrought on in an illuminative Way by the Forefight of Rewards and Punifhments : But Man who is a reafonable Crea- B ture, 14 "The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ture, owes a reafonable Service, Rom. xii. i. And it is impoffible that Man mould be exempt from a Law : For as the Notion of a God, that is, of the firft and fupreme Being, excludes all poftibility of Obligation to another, Who hath firft given to the Lord, anditjhall ~be recompensed to him again ? Rom. xi. %$. And of Subjection to a Law •, for Supremacy and Subjection are incompatible •, fo the Quality of a Creature in- cludes the Relation of Dependence and natural Sub- jection to the Will of God. This is moft evident from that common Principle which governs the in- telligent Creation : *Tis a moral Maxim to which the reafonable Nature neceflarily aflents, that the difpenfing of Benefits acquires to the Giver a Right to command, and lays on the Receiver an Obligati- on to obey -, and thefe Rights and Duties are mea- fured by the Nature of the Benefits as their juft Rule. %This isvifible in that Dominion which is amongft JVlen. If we afcend to the firft Springs of human Laws, we fhall find the original Right of Power to arife ei- ther from Generation in Nature, or Prefervation in War, or fome publick Good accruing to the So- ciety by the prudent Care of the Governor. Now the Being and BlefTednefs of the Creature are the greatefl and moft valuable Benefits that can be re- ceived j and in the beftowing of them is laid the moft real Foundation of Power and Authority. Up- on this Account Man, who derives his Life and Feli- city from God, is under a natural and ftrong Obli- gation to comply with his Will. From the Right of Creation God afferts his univerfal Dominion : I have made the Earth, and created Man upon it, even my Hands have ftr etched out the Heavens, and all their Hojis have I commanded, Ifa. xlv. 12. And the Pfal- mift in Contriving Mans Redemption. re mift tells us, Pfal. c. 3. Know ye that the Lord he is God) it is He that made us, and not we ourf elves ; we are his People, and the Sheep of his Pafture. His Jurifdiction is grounded on his Propriety in Man 1 and that arifes from his giving Being to him : Ifa. xliv. 21. Remember, 0 Ifrael, for thou art my Servant i I have formed thee. From hence he hath a fupreme Right to impofe any Lav/, for the Pefformance of which Man had an original Power. Univerfal O- bedience is the juftConfequent of our Obligations to the Divine Goodnels. Suppofe that Man were not the Work of God's Hands, yet the infinite Excellency of his Nature gives him a better Title to command us than Man hath upon the Account of his Reafon to govern thofe Creatures that are inferior to him. Or fuppofe that God had not created the Matter of which the Body is compofed, but only infpired it with a living Soul, yet his Right over us had been unqueftionable. * The Civil Law determines, That when an Ar- tificer works on rich Materials, and the engraving be not of extraordinary Value, that the Whole be- longs to him who is the Owner of the Materials : But if the Matter be mean, and the Workmanfhip excellent, in which the Price wholly lies ; as if a Painter mould draw an admirable Picture on a Piece of Canvas, the Picture of right belongs to him that drew it, Inftit.Juftin. So if according to the Error of fome Philofophers, [Plato'] the Matter of which the World was made had been Eternal, yet God hav- ing infufed a reafonable Soul into a Piece of Clay B 2 which * Si plus fit pretii in opere quam in. materia, dominium eft ejus qui fpeciem fecifTet ; quoniam quod pluris eft, id prevalen* tia fua quod minus ejt ad fe ttahat. Connan, 1 6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes which is the Principle of its Life, and gives it a trarifcendent Value above all other Beings which were made of the fame Element, it is moft juft he fhould have a Property in him, and Dominion over him. The L&w of Nature to which Man was fubjecl upon his Creation, contains thofe moral Principles concerning Good and Evil which have an efTential Equity in them, and are the Meafures of 'his Duty to God, to himfelf, and to his Fellow-creatures. This was publilhed by the Voice of Reafon, and is holy, juft and good, Rom. vii. 12. Holy, as it enjoins thofe Things wherein there is a Conformity to thofe Attributes and Actions of God which are the Pat- tern of our Imitation : So the general Rule is, Be holy, as God is holy, in all Manner of Converfation, i Pet. i. 15. And this is mod: honourable to the human Nature,' 5Tis juft, that is, exactly agreeable to the Frame of Man's Faculties, and moft fuitable to his Condition in the World. And good, that is, bene- ficial to the Obferver of it ; In , keeping of it there is great Reward. Pfal. xix. 11. And the Obligation to it is eternal ; it being the unchangeable Will of God, grounded on the Natural and unvariable Relations between God and Man, and between Man and the Creatures. Befides the particular Directions of the Law of Nature, this general Principle was planted in the reafonable Soul, to obey God in any Initance wherein he did prefcribe his Pleafure. Morecver, God was pleafed to enter into a Cove- nant \ . and with all his Pofterity naturally defcendir.g From film. And this was the Effect, 1. Of: !eGoodnefs: For by his Supremacy over Man, he might have figjaified his Will merely, by hi Contriving Maiis Redemptl: \ 7 by the Way of Empire, and required CL; but he was pleafcd to condefcend fo far as to deal with Man in a fweeter Manner, as with a Creature capable of his Love, and to work upon him by Re- wards and Punifhments congruonfly to the reasona- ble Nature. 2. OfWifdom, to fecure Man's Obedience : For the Covenant being a mutual Engagement between God and Man, as it gave him infallible AiTurance of the Reward to firengthen his Faith, fo it was the fureft Bond to preferve his Fidelity. 'Tis true, the Precept alone binds by Virtue of the Authority that impofes it, but the Confent of the Creature increafes ■ the Obligation •, it twifis the cords of the Lav/, and binds more (trongly to Obedience. Thus Adam was God's Servant as by the Condition of his Nature, fo by his Choice, accepting the Covenant, Fro he could not recede without the Guilt and Infamy of the worft Perfidioufnefs. The Terms of the Covenant were becoming the Parties concerned, God and Man ; it effablifhed an infeparable Connexion between Duty and Felicity. This appears by the Sanction, Gen. ii. 17. In the Day eatefi of the forbidden Fruit, then Jhalt die. In that particular Species of Sin the whole Genus is in- cluded -, according to the Apoflle's Expofnion, Gal. iii. 10. Cur fed is every one that doth not continue . the Works of the Lava to do them. The Threatning of Death was expreft, it being more difficult to be con- ceived : The Promife of Life upon his Obedient, implied, and eafily fuggefted itfelf to the rational Mind. Thefe were the mod proper and pow< Motives to excite his Reafon, and affect his Will. For Death primarily fignihes the Diflblution of the vital Union between the Soul and Body, and coniV- queiuly 1 3 The Harmony of the 'Divine Attributes quently all the preparatory Difpofitions thereunto* Difeafes, Pains, and all the Afflictions of Mortality* ■which terminate in Death as their Center. This is the extremeft of temporal Evils, which innocent Nature fhrunk from, it being a Deprivation of that excellent State which Man enjoyed. But principally It fignified the Separation of the Soul from God's reviving Prefence, who is the only Fountain of Feli- city, l^hus the Law is interpreted by the Law-giver, $he Soul that fins Jhall di >, Ezek. xviii. 4. Briefly, Death in the Threatening is comprehenjive of all Kinds and Degrees of Evils, from the lead Pain to the complete- nefs of Damnation. Now it is an inviolable Principle deeply fet in the Human Nature, to preferve its Be- ing and BleiTednefs •, fo that nothing could be a more powerful Reftraint from Sin, than the Fear of Death, which is deftruclive to both. This Conftitution of the Covenant was founded not only in the Will of God, but in the Nature of Things themfelves : And this appears by confider- 1 . That Holinefs is more excellent in itfelf, and feparately confide red, than the Reward that attends it. 'Tis the peculiar Glory of the Divine Nature, God is Glorious in Holinefs. And as he prefers the infinite Purity of his Nature, before the immortal Felicity of his State ; fo he values in the reafonabie Creature the Virtues by which they reprefent his Holinefs, more than their perfect Contentment by which they are like Him in BleiTednefs. Now God is the moll juft Efteemer of Things, his Judgment is the infallible Meafure of their real Worth •, it is therefore according to natural Order that the Hap- pinefs of Man mould depend upon his Integrity, and the Reward be the Fruit of his Obedience. And 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 19 And though it is impoffible that a mere Creature, in what State foever, mould obtain any Thing from God by any other Title but his voluntary Promiie, the Effect of his Goodnefs •, yet it was fuch Goodnefs as God was invited to exercife by the Confideration of Man's Obedience. And as the Neglect of his Du- ty had discharged the Obligation on God's Part, fo the Performance gave him a Claim by Right of the Promife to everlafting Life. 2. As the firft Part of the Alliance was moft rea- fonable, fo was the fecond, that Death fhould be the Wages of Sin. It is not conceivable that God mould continue his Favour to Man, if he turned Rebel againft him : For this were to difarm the Law, and expofe the Authority of the Law-giver to Con- tempt, and would reflect upon the Wifdomof God. Befides, if the reafonable Creature violates the Law, it neceffarily contracts an Obligation to Punifhment. So that if the Sinner who deferves Death, fhould en- joy Life, without Satisfaction for the Offence, or Repentance to qualify him for Pardon, (both which were without the Compafs of the firft Covenant) this would infringe the unchangeable Rights of Ju- itice, and difparage the Divine Purity. In the firtt Covenant there was a fpecial Claufe, which refpected Man as the Inhabitant of Paradife, that he fhould ?iot eat of the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil upon Pain of Death, Gen. ii 17. And this Prohibition was upon mod wife andjuft Reafons. 1. To declare God's Sovereign Right in all Things. In the Quality of Creator he is fupreme Lord. Man enjoyed nothing but by a derived Title from his Bounty and Allowance, and with an Obligation to render to him the Homage of all. As Princes when they give Eilates to their Subjects, fliJU retain the B 3 Roy- so The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Royalty and receive a fmall Rent, which though in- con fiderable in its Value, is an Acknowledgment of Dependence upon them : So when God placed Adam in Paradije, he reierved this Mark of his Sovereignty, that in the free Ufe of all other Things, Man fhould abflain from the forbidden Tree. 2. To make Trial of Man's Obedience in a Mat- ter very congruous to difcover it f . If the Pro- hibition had been grounded on any moral internalEvil in the Nature of the Thing itfelf, there had not been fo clear a Teflimony of God's Dominion, nor of Adam's Subjection to it. But when that which in itfelf was indifferent became unlawful merely by the Will of God, and when the Command had no other Excellency but to make his Authority more facred -, this was a confining of Man's Liberty, and to abftain was pure Obedience. Befides, the Reftraint was from that which was very grateful, and alluring to both the Parts of Man's compounded Nature. The Senfitive Appetite is ftrongly excited by the Lull of the Eye ; and this Fruit b-ing beautiful to the Sight, (Gen. iii. 6.) the Forbearance was an excellent Exercife of Virtue in keeping the lower Appetite in Obedience. Again, the Defire of Knowledge is extremely quick and ear- ned, and in Appearance moft worthy of the rational Nature-, Nullus ammo fucrcior cibus. Lactant. It is the moil high and lufcious Food of the Soul. Now the Tree of Knowledge was forbidden •, fo that the Gbfervance of the Law was the more eminent, \n keeping the intellectual Appetite in Mediocrity. In fhort, God required Obedience as a Sacrifice. For the f In minimis obedientiae periculum faciunt Legiflatores, quia Legiflatoris ad obediemiam. obligantis potius habenda eft ratio quam rei de qua lex lata eft. in Contriving Man's Redemption. 2 1 the Prohibition being in a Matter of natural Pleafure f , and a Curb to Curiofity, which is the Luft and Concupifcence of the Mind after Things concealed ; by a reverend Regard to it, Man prefented his Soul and Body to God as a living Sacrificej which was his rcaibnable Service. Rom. xii. 1. f Obfequii gloria ere in eo major, quod quis minus velit. Plin. CHAP. II. Man's Natural State was -mutable. The Devil, moved by Hatred and Envy, attempts to feduce him. The Temptation was fui table to Tsdarfs compounded Nature. The Woman being deceived, perfuades her Hujband. The Quality of the fir ft Sin. Many were combined in it. It was perfetlly voluntary. Man had Power to ft and. The Devil could only allure, not compel him. His Underftanding and Will the Caufes of his Fall. The Punijhment was of the fame Date with his Sin. He forfeited his Right eoufne/s and Felicity. The Lofs of original Right eoufnefs, as it fignifies the Purity and Liberty of the Soul. The Torment of Confcience that was confequent to Sin. A whole Army of Evils enter with it into the World. MA N was created perfectly holy, but in a na- tural, therefore mutable State. He was inve- rted with Power to prevent his Fulling, yet under a Poflibility of it. Pie was complete in his own Order, but receptive of finful ImpreCions. An invincible Perfeverance in Holineis belongs to a fupernatual State; it is the Privilege ofGrace, andexceeds theDe- tl ' nrft Creation. The 22 Tie Harmony of the Divine Attributes The rebellious Spirits, who by a furious Ambiti-* on had raifed a War in Heaven, and were fallen from their Obedience and Glory, defigned to corrupt Man, and to make him a Companion with them in their Revolt. The moil fubtile amongft them fets about this Work, urged by two flrong Paflions, Ha- tred and Envy. i. By Hatred. For being under a final and irre- vocable Doom, he looked on God as an irreconcil- able Enemy : And not being able to injure his Ef- fence, he (truck at his Image : As the Fury of fome Beaft difcharges itfelf upon the Picture of a Man. He fingledout^ tur, State a dt Ira. 36 Ihe Harmony of the Divine Attributes would leflen its Terrour, but it is the Confummation of all. The firft Death tranfmits to the fecond. As the Body dies by the SouPs forfaking it, fo the Soul, by Separation from God its true Life, dies to its Well- being and Happinefs for ever. CHAP. III. rAll Mankind is involved in AdamV Guilt , and under the penal Confequences that follow upon it. Adam the natural and moral Principle of Mankind. An here- ditary Corruption is tranfmitted to all that are propa- gated from him. The Account the Scripture gives cf the Conveyance of it. 9 * Quando Anima tanta fatiabitur vilione, & tanta inflamma- bitur Charitate fuperioris boni, ut ad feipfam fibi placendo de- *cere ab illius delettione non potiit. Aug. Lib. 4. cont. Jul. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 45 to allure the lower Faculties, before they were dif" ordered by him. The forbidden Fruit had Beauty to invite the Eye, and Sweetnefs to delight the Pa- late: And if, upon the Competition of the Senfual with the Intellectual Good, he had rejected the one and chofe the other, he had been raifed to an un- changeable State ; his Innocence had been crowned with Perieverance. As the Angels who continued in their Duty, when the reft revolted, are finally eftablilhed in their Integrity and Felicity. And the Apoftle gives us an Account of this Order, when he tells us, i Cor. xv. 46. That wasfirjl which was natu- ral^ then that which is fpiritual and fupernatural. Man was created in a State of Perfection, but it was na- tural, therefore mutable ; the Confirming of him immediately had been Grace, which belongs to a more excellent Difpenfaion. Now to bring Man from not being to a fupernatural State, without Trial of the middle State of Nature, was not fo congruous to the Divine Wifdom. 3. The PermilTion of the Fall doth not reflect on the Divine Purity : For, 1. Man was made Upright: He had no inward Corruption to betray him : There was Antidote enough in his Nature to expel the ftrongeft Temp- tation. 2. God was not bound to hinder the Commifiion of Sin : 'Tis a true Maxim, that in debitis cauja de- ferens efficit moraliter : But God is not only free from Subjection to a Law, as having no Superiour, but was under no voluntary Obligation by Promife to prevent the Fall. 3. Neither doth that firft Act of Sin reflect on God's unfpotted Providence which fuffered it, as if Sin were in any Degree allowed by Him. The Holy Law which God gave to direct Man, the terrible D Threat- 4 6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Threatening annexed to warn him, declare his irre- concilable Hatred againil Sin. He permits innu- merable Sins every Day, yet he is as jealous of the Honour of his Holinefs now as in the Beginning. *Tis the worft Impiety for the Sinner to think God like himfelf, Pfal. 1. 21. as if he took Complacency in Sin, becaufe he is filentfor a Time, and fufFers the Commifiion of it. In the next State he will fully vindicate his Glory, and convince the whole World of his eternal Averfation from Sin, by in- flicting on Sinners the mod dreadful and durable Torments. 4. The Goodnefs of God is not difparaged by permitting the Fall : This appears by confidering, 1. That God beftowed on Man an excellent Be- ing, and a Happinefs that might fatisfy his Na- ture, confidered as human, or holy. But he per- verted the Favours of God to his Difhonour, and this doth not leffen the Goodnefs that gave them. *Tis unreafonable to judge of the Value of a Bene- fit, by the ingrateful Abufe of the Receiver, and not from its own Nature. 'Tis a chofen Mifery that is come upon Man, and not to be imputed to any Defect of the Divine Goodnefs. 2. God is infinitely good, notwithstanding the Entrance of Sin and Mifery into the World. We muft diftinguifh between Natural and Voluntary Agents. Natural Agents have no Power to fufpend their Acls, but are entirely determined, and their Operations are ad extremum Virium^ to the utmoft of their Efficacy. If there were infinite Degrees of Heat, there would be no Cold, it being overcome by the Force of its contrary. But God is a Wife and Free Agent, and as he is infinite in Goodnefs \ fo the Exercife of it is voluntary, and only fo far as he pleafes. 3. God tri Contrivi?2g Man's Redemption. 47 3. God is an Omnipotent Good, and 'tis his pe- culiar Glory to bring Good out of Evil, that by the Oppofition and Luftre of Contraries his Good- riefs might be the more confpicuous. To fpeal* flrictly, Sin is the only Evil in the World •, for all the reft which appear fo to our Fancies and Appetites, are either absolutely good, or upon the fuppofalof Sin, viz. either for the Reformation of Sinners, or for the Ruin of the Obftinate. Now the Evil of Sin God permitted as a fit Occafion for the more glorious Dilcovery of his Attributes, in fending his Son into the World to repair his Image which was defaced, and to raife Man from an Earthly to Ce- leftial Happinefs. I mail conclude with the excel- lent Anfwer of St. Auftin to the Adverfary of the Law and Prophets :* g)uit?us autem videtur fie homi- nem fieri debnifie ut pec care nolle t, non eis difpliceat fie ejje fatlum, ut non peccare pojjet, fi ncllet. Nun~ quid enim fi melior efjet qui non pojjet peccare, ideo non benefatlus eft qui pojjet & non peccare ? An vero ufque adeo defipiendum eft, ut homo videat melius aliquid fieri debuiffe, & hoc Deum vidijje non putet ? Aut putet vi- dijje & credat facer e noluiffe ? Aut voluijje quidem £5? minime potuijje ? Avertat hoc Deus a Cordibus piorum. The Subftance of which is this, That it is an impi- ous Folly to imagine that God was either defective in Wifdom, not to know what was the beft State for Man in his Creation ; or defective in Goodnefs, that knowing it, he would not confer it upon him ; or defective in Power, that willing, he was unable to make him better. There is another Objection vehemently urged, that the Imputation of Adam's Sin to all his Pofte- rity who were not exiltent at that Time, and D 2 did • Contra adver, Leg. & Pjoph. Lib. I. C. 14, 4-8 Ihe Harmony of the Divine Attributes did not give their perfonal Confent to the Treaty between God and him, is inconfiftent with Juftice. To this I anfwer : i. The Terms of the firft Covenant are fuch, that the common Reafon of Mankind cannot juftly refufe. For fuppofe all the Progeny of Adam had appeared with him before their Creator, and this had been propounded,' That God would make an Agreement with their common Father on their Behalf, that if he continued in his Obedience, they mould enjoy a happy Immortality *, if he declined from it, they fhould be deprived of Bleffednefs. What Shadow of Exception can be formed againft this Propofal ? For God who is the Matter of his own Favours, and gives them upon what Terms he pleafes, might upon their Refufal have juftly annihilated them. The Command was equal, and his Obedi- ence for all was as eafy, as that of every particular Perfon for himfelf. Befides, Adam was as much concerned to obferve the Conditions of the Covenant, for fecuring his own Intereft, as theirs ; and after a fhort Time of Trial they mould be confirmed in their Bleffednefs. By all which it is apparent how reafonable the Con- ditions of the original Agreement between God and Man are. 2. God hath a Power over our Wills fuperiour to that we ourfelves have. If God offers a Cove- nant to the Creature, the Terms being equal, it be- comes a Law, and Content is due as an Acl of Obe- dience. And if a Community may appoint one of their Number to be their Reprefentative, to tranfad Affairs of the greateft Moment, and according to his Management, the Benefit, or Damage, fhall ac- crue to them, becaufe he is reckoned to perform the [Wills of them all -9 may not God, who hath a fu- preme tfi Contriving Mans Redemption. 49 preme Dominion over us, conftitute Adam the Re- prefentative of Mankind (F/W. Ward de paccat. Origin.) and unite the Confent of all in his general Will, fo that as he fulfilled or neglected his Duty, they mould be happy or miferable ? This Confide- ration alone, that the firft Covenant was ordered by God, may perfectly fatisfy all Enquiries. As Salvian, having confeft his Ignorance in the Reafons of fome Difpofitions of Providence, filences all Objections with this ; Nihil in hac re opus eft aliquid audire, fat is fit fro univerfis rationihus Author Deus. fSalv. Lib. 3. de ProvJ) Neither is this a mere ex- trinfick Argument, as Authority ufually is, becaufe there is an intrinfick Reafon of this Authority, the abfolute Rectitude and Jultice of God's Nature, Who is righteous in all his Way s> and holy in all his Works -9 Pfal. cxlv. 17. CHAP. IV. tfbe Impoffibility of Man's Recovery by his natural Power. He cannot regain his Primitive Holinefs* 1'he Underftanding and Will, the fuperiour Fa- culties are depraved. 'The Mind is ignorant and in- fenfible of our Corruption. "The Will is more de* praved than the Mind. // embraces only fenfual Good. Carnal Objects are wounding to the Con- fcience, and unfatisfying to the Affections, yet the Will eagerly purfues them. . "The moral Impotence* that arifethfrom a perverfe Difpofition of the Will, is culpable. Neither the Beauty nor the Reward ef Holinefs can prevail upon the unrenewed Will. Guilty Man cannot recover the Favour of God. He is unable to make Satisfaction to Juftice. He D 3 is '50 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes is incapable of real Repentance, which might qualify him' for Pardon. WHEN Adam was expelled from Paradife, the Entrance was guarded by a flaming Sword, to fignify, That all Hopes of Return by the Way of Nature are cut off for ever. He loft his Right, and could not recover it by Power. The chiefeft Ornaments of Paradife are the Image and Favour of God, of which he is juftly deprived \ and there is no Pofiibility for him to regain them. "What can he expect from his own Reafon, that be- trayed him to Ruin ? If it did not fupport him when he flood, how can it raife him when he is fallen ? If there were a Power in lapfed Man to re- flore himfelf, it would exceed the original Power he had to will and obey : It being infinitely more diffi- cult for a dead Man to rife, than for a living Man to put forth vital Actions. For the clearer opening of this Point, concern- ing Man's abfolute Difability to recover his Primi- tive State, I will diftinctly confider it, with Refpect to the Image and Favour of God, upon which his BlefTednefs depends. i. He cannot recover his Primitive Holinefs. This will appear by confidering, that whatfoever is corrupted in its noble Parts, can never reftore it- felf; the Power of an external Agent is requifite for the recovering of its Integrity. This is veri- fied by innumerable Inftances, in Things artifi- cial and natural. If a Clock be difordered by a fall, the Workman muft mend it, before it can be ufeful. If Wine that is rich and generous, declines by the lofs of Spirits, it can never be revived with- out a new Supply. In the human Body, where there is a more noble Form, and more powerful to redrefe in Contriving Mans Redemption. $j redrefs any Evil that may happen to the Parts ; if a Gangrene feize on any Member, nothing can refift its Courfe but the Application of outward Means ; it cannot be cured by the internal Principles of its Conftitution. And proportionably in moral Agents, when the Faculties which are the Principles of Action are corrupted, it is impofTible, without the Virtue of a Divine Caufe, they mould ever be reftored to their original Rectitude. As the Image of God was at firft imprinted on the human Na- ture by Creation, (Ephef. iv. 24.) fo the renewed Image is wrought in him by the fame creating Power. This will be more evident by confidering that inward and deep Depravation of the Under- ftanding and Will, the two fuperiour Faculties which command the Reft. 1. The Understanding hath loft the right Appre- henfion of Things. As Sin began in the Darknefsof the Mind, fo one of its worft Effects is, the increaf- ing that Darknefs which can only be difpelled by a fupernatural Light. Now what the Eye is to the Body, that is the Mind for the directing the Will and conducting the Life. And if the Light that is in us be Darknefs, how great is that Darknefs ? Matt. vi. 23. How irregular and dangerous muft our Motions be ? Not only the lower Part of the Soul is under a dreadful Diforder-, but the Spirit of the Mind, the divined Part, is depraved with Ignorance and Errour. Ephef. iv. 23. The Light of Reafon is not pure ; but as the Sun when with its Beams it fends down peftilential Influences, and corrupts the Air in the en- lightening it, fo the carnal Mind corrupts the whole Man, by reprefenting Good as Evil, and Evil as Good. The JVi[dom of the Flef/j is Enmity again ft God. And the Apoftle defcribes the State of the Gentile 52 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Gentile World, Ephef iv. 1 1. "That their Underftand- ingswere darkened, being alienated from the Life of God, through the Ignorance that is in them, becaufe of the Blindnefs of their Hearts, The Corruption of their Manners proceeded from their Minds. For all Virtues are directed by Reafon in their Exercife, fo that if the Underftanding be darkened, all virtu- ous Operations ceafe. Befides, corrupt Man being without Light and Life, can neither difcern, nor feel his Mifery ; the carnal Mind is infenfible of its Infirmity, ignorant of its Ignorance, and fufTers under the incurable Extreams of being blind, and imagining that it is very clear-fighted. More particularly, the Reafons why the carnal Mind hath not a due Senfe of finful Corruption, are, i . Becaufe it is natural, and cleaves to the Principles of our Being, from the Birth and Conception, and natural Things do not afreet us. 2. JTis confirmed by Cuftom, which is a fecend Nature, and hath a ftrange Power to ftupify Confci- ence and render it infenfible. As the Hiftorian ob- ferved concerning the Roman Soldiers, that by con- stant Ufe their Arms were no more a Burthen to them than their natural Members. 3. In the Tranfition from the Infant-ftate, to the Age of difcerning, Man is incapable of obferving his native Corruption : Since at firft he acts evilly, and is in conftant Converfation with Sinners, who bring Vice into his Acquaintance \ and by making it familiar, lefTen the Horrour and Averfation from it. Befides, thofe corrupt and numerous Examples wherewith he is encompafTed, call forth his finful In- clinations, which as they are heightened by repeat- ed in Contriving Man's Redemption. r<* ed Acts, and become more ftrong and obftinate, fo lefs ienfible to him. And by this we may underftand how irrecoverable Man is by his own Reafon. The firft Step to our Cure is begun in the Knowledge of our Difeafe, and this Difcovery is made by the Un- derftanding, when it is feeing and vigilant, not when it is blind. A Difeafe in the Body is perceived by the Mind ; but when the Soul is the affected Part* and the Rectitude of Reafon is loft, there is no re- maining Principle to give Notice of it. And as that Difeafe is molt dangerous which ftrikes at the Life, and is without Pain j for Pain is not the chief Evil, but fuppofes it, 'tis the Spur of Nature urging us to feek for Cure : So the Corruption of the Understand- ing is very fatal to Man ; for although he labours under many pernicious Lufts, which in the Iffue will prove deadly, yet he is infenfible of them, and from thence follows a CarelefTnefs and Contempt of the Means for his Recovery. 2. The Corruption of the Will is more incurable than that of the Mind. For it is full not only of Impotence, but Contrariety to what is fpiritually good. There are fome weak Strictures of Truth in lapfed Man, but they die in the Brain, and are pow- eriefs and ineffectual as to the Will, which rufties into the Embraces of worldly Objects. This the univerfal Experience of Mankind fince the Fall doth evidently prove, and the Account of it is in the fol- lowing Confiderations. i. There is a ftrong Inclination in Man to Happi- nefs. This Defire is born and brought up with him, | and is common to all that partake of the reafonable Nature. From the Prince to the pooreft Wretch i from the moft knowing to the meaneft in Under- ftanding, every one defires to be happy : As the great Flames 54 Tfe Harmony of the Divine Attributes Flames and the little Sparks of Fire all naturally af- cend to their Sphere. 2. The constituting of any Thing to be our Hap- pinefs is the firit and universal Maxim from whence all moral Confequences are derived. It is the Rule of our Defires, and the End of our Actions. As in natural Things, the Principles of their Production operate according to theirQuality, fo in moral Things the End is as powerful to form the Soul for its O- perations in Order to it : Therefore as all Defire to be happy, fo they apply themfelves to thofe Means ■which appear to be convenient for the obtaining of it. 3. Every one frames aHappinefs according to his Temper. The Apprehenfions of it are anfvverable to the Difpofitions of the Perfon. For Felicity is the Pleafure which arifes from the harmonious Agree- ment between the Object and the Appetite. Now Man by his original and contracted Corruption is al- together carnal, he inherits the Serpent's Curfe, to creep on the Earth •, he cleaves to defiling and debas- ing Objects* and is only qualified for fenfual Satis- factions. The Soul is incarnated, and it fhapes a Happinefs to itfelf, in the Enjoyment of thofe Things which are delicious to the Senfes. The Shadow of Felicity is purfued with equal Ardour, as that which is real and fubftantial. The fupreme Part of Man, the Underftanding, is employed to ferve the lower Faculties ; Reafon is ufed to make him more ingeni- ous and luxurious in Senfuality : So much more bru- tifh than the Brutes is he become, when, befides that PartwhichisfobyitsnaturalCondition9the molt noble Part in Contriving Mans Redemptio?u 55 Part is made fo by unnatural Choice and Corrupti- on. From hence the Apoftle gives an univerfal Character of Men in their corrupt State, 37/. iii. 3. That they are foolifh and disobedient, deceived, ferving divers Lufts and Pleasures. This Purfuit of fenfual Pleafure is the Service of a Slave, which hath no o- ther Law of his Life but the Will of his Mafter. The Servitude is divers, but all are Slaves •, the Chains are not the fame; fomeare more glittering, but not lefs weighty -, and every one is deprived of true Li- berty. But the Bondage is fo pleafing, that corrupted Man prefers it before fpiritual and real Freedom. Senfual Lufts blind the Underftanding, and bind the Will fo, that he is unable, becaufe unwilling, to refcue himfelf. He is deluded with the falfe Appearance of Liberty, and imagines that to live according to Rule is a flavifh Confinement : As if the Horfe were free, becaufe his Rider allows him a full Career in a pleafant Road, when the Bridle is in his Mouth, and he is under its imperious Check at Pleafure: Or a Galley- flave were free, becaufe the VefTel wherein he rows with fo much Toil, roams over the vaft Ocean. And whereas there are two Confiderations which are pro- per to convince Man that the full and unconfined En- joyment of worldly Things cannot make him happy, becaufe they are wounding to the Confciencc, and unfatisfying to the Affections -, yet thefe are ineffec- tual to take him off from an eager Purfuit of them. I will particularly confider this, to fhevv how unable Man in his lapfed Condition is to difentangle himfelf from miferable Vanities, and confequently to reco- ver his loft Holinefs. 1. Senfual Pleafures are wounding to the Confci- ence. There is a fecret Acknowledgment in every Man's 56 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Man's Bread of a fuperiour Power to whom he muft give an Account ; and though Confcience be much impared in its Integrity, yet fometimes it recoils upon the Sinner by the Foulnefs of his Actions, and its Teftimony brings fuch Terrour, as makes Sin very unpleafant. The Poet tells us, that of all the Torments of Hell, the moft cruel, and that which exceeds the reft, is, Nocle dieque fuurn g eft are in pe ft ore t eft em. And how can the Sinner delight freely in that which vexes and frets the moft vital and tender Part * He cannot enjoy his charming Lufts without Guilt, nor embrace them without the Reluctancy of a con- tradicting Principle within him. As the Fear of Poifon will imbitter the fweeteft Cup, fo the pureft Pleafures are allayed with afflicting Apprehenfions of the future, and the Prefage of Judgment to come. Now Man in his fenfual State tries always to difarm Confcience, that he may pleafe the lower Appetites without Regret. I will inftance in the Principal. 1. He ufes many Pleas and Pretexts to juftify or extenuate the Evil, and ifpoftible, tofatisfy Carna- lity and Confcience too. Self-love, which is the elo- quent Advocate of Senfe, puts a Varnifli upon Sin, to take off from its horrid Appearance ; and endea- vours not only to colour the Object, but to corrupt the Eye by a difguifmg Tincture, that the Sight of Things may not be according to Truth, but the De- fire. Thus the Heathens allowed Intemperance, Un- cleannefs and other infamous Vices, as innocent Gra- tifications of Nature. Now if the Principles in Man are poifoned, fo that Evil is efteemedGood, he then lives in the quiet Practice of Sin without Re- flection in Contriving Mans Redemption. 57 flection or Remorfe. There is no Sting remains to awaken him out of Security. But if he cannot fo far bribe Confcience as to make it filent, or favoura- ble to that which delights the Scnfe, if he cannot e- fcape its internal Condemnation, the next Method is by a ftrong Diverfion to lefTen the Trouble. 2. When the carnal Mind fees nothing within but what torments, and finds an intolerable Pain in converfing with itfelf, it runs abroad, and ufes all the Arts of Oblivion to lofe the Remembrance of its true State. As Cain^ to drown the Voice of Confci- ence, fell a building Cities j and Saul, to difpel his Melancholy, called for Mufick. The Bufmefs and Pleafures of this Life are dangerous Amufements to divert the Soul, by theReprefentation of what is pro- fitable or pleafant, from confidering the moral Qua- lities of Good and Evil. Thus Confcience, like an intermitting Pulfe, ceafes for a While. Miferable Confolation ! which doth not remove, but concea^ the Evil until it be paft Remedy. But if Confcience, notwithstanding all thefe Evafions, ftill purfues a Sinner, and at Times fomething difturbs his Reafon and his Reit, yet he will not part with carnal Plea- fures. For being only acquainted with thofe Things that affect the Senfes, and having no Relifh of that Happinefs which is fublime and fupernatural, if he parts with them, he is deprived of all Delight, which is to him a State more intolerable than that wherein there is a Mixture of Delight and Torment. From hence it appears that the Interpofition of Confcience, though with a flaming Sword between Man, carnal, and his beloved Objects, is not effectual to reftrain him. 2. All worldly Things are unfatisfying to the Affections. There are three Confederations which depreciate and leffen the Value of any Good. 1. The 58 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes i. The Shortnefs of its Duration. 2. If it brings only a (light Pleafure. 3. If that Pleafure be attended with Torments. AH which are contrary to the efTential Properties of the fupreme Good, which is perpetual, and fin- cere, without the leaft Mixture of Evil, and pro^ duces the higher! Delight of the Soul. Now all thefe concur to vilify worldly Things : i< They are fhort in their Duration : Ifa. xl. 6, 7. Not only the Voice of Heaven, but of the Earth declares this, That allFlefh is Grafs , and the Glory of it as the Flower of the Grafs •, 1 Pet. i. 24. 25. Life, the FoundatH on of all temporal Enjoyments, is but a Span : The longeft Liver can meafure in a Thought the Space of Time between his Infant-ftate and the prefent Hour: ^How long foever, it feems as fhort to him as the twinkling of an Eye. And all the Glory of the Flefh, as Titles, Treafures, Delights, are as the Flower of the Grafs, which is the moil tender a- mongft Vegetables, and fo weak a Subfiftence, that a little Breath of Wind, the Hand of an Infant, the Teeth of a Worm can deftroy it. The Pleafures of Sin (under which fecular Greatnefs and Wealth are comprehended) are but for a Seafon •, Heb. xu 25. They are fo mort-lived, that they expire in the Birth, and die whilft they are tailed. Again, they bring only a flight Pleafure, being difpro- portionable to the Defires of the Soul. They are confined to the Senfes, wherein the Beafts are j more accurate than Man, but cannot reach to the k tipper and more comprehenfive Faculties : Ecclef. i. Nay, they cannot fatisfy the greedy Senfes, much lefs quiet the fpiritual and immortal Appetite. WHat in Contriving Mans Redemption. $g What the Poet fpeaks with Aftoniihment of Alexan- der's infatiable Ambition, Mftuat infelix angufto limit e mundi, That the whole World feemed to him as a narrow Prifon, wherein he was miferable, and as it were fuffocated, is true of every one. If the World was feated in the Heart of Man, it can no more fatisfy it, than the Picture of a Feaft can fill the Stomach. Befides, Vexation is added to the Vani- ty of worldly Things. And that either becaufe the vehement Delights of Senfe corrupt the Tempera- ment of the Body, in which the vital Complexion confifts, and expofe it to thofe fharp Difeafes, that it may be faid without an Hyperbole, That a thou- fand Pleafures are not equal to one Hour's Pain that attends them : Or, becaufe of the inward Torture of the Mind, arifing from the Senfe of Guilt and Folly, which is the Anticipation of Hell itfelf, the Beginning of eternal Sorrows. Now thefe Things are not obfeure Articles of Faith, nor abftracted Doctrines, to be confidered on- ly by refined Reafon, but are manifeft and clear as the Light, and verified by continual Experience : 'Tis therefore ftrange to Amazement, that Man ihould fearch after Happinefs in thefe Things where Jhe knows it is not to be found, and court real In- felicity under a deceitful Appearance, when the Fallacy is tranfparent. Who from a Principle of Reafon would choofe for his Happinefs a real Good, which after a little Time he mould be de- prived of for ever ? or a flight Good for ever ? as the Sight of a Picture, or the Hearing of Mufick. Yet thus unreafonable is Man in his corrupt State, whole &o The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ■whofe Soul is truly immortal, and capable of infinite BlefTednefs, yet he choofes thofe Delights which are neither fatisfying not lafting. And becaufe the hu- man Understanding from Time to Time is convinced of the Vanity of all fublunary Things, therefore to leflen the Vexation which arifes from Difappoint- ment, and that the Appetite may not be taken off from them, corrupted Man tries, i, By Variety of Objects to preferve Uniformity in Delight. The mod pleating, if confined to them, grow naufeous and infipid •, after the expiring of a few Moments there remains nothing but Satiety and fkkly Refentments •, and then Changes are the Reme- dies, to take off the Wearinefs of one Pleafure by another. The human Soul is under a perpetual In* liability of reftlefs Defires, it defpifes what it en- joys, and values what is new, as if Novelty and Goodnefs were the fame in all temporal Things. And as the Birds remain in the Air by conftant Motion, without which they would quickly fall to the Earth as other heavy Bodies, there being nothing folid to fupport them ; fo the Spirit of Man, by many un- quiet Agitations and continual Changes, fubfilts for a Time, until at laft it falls into Difcontent and Defpair, the Center of corrupt Nature. 2. When prefent Things are unfatisfactory, he entertains himfelf with Hope-, for that being termi- nated on a future Object which is of a doubtful Na- ture, the Mind attends to thofe Arguments which pro- duce a pleafant Belief, to find that in feveral Objects, which it cannot in any fmgle one, and to make up in Number, what is wanting in Meafure, whereas the prefent is manifeft, and takes away all Liberty of thinking. Upon this Ground fenfual Pleafure is more in Expectation than Fruition : For Hope by a marvel- , in Contriving Mans Redemption. 6t marvellous Enchantment not only makes that which is future prefent, but reprefenting in one View that which cannot be enjoyed but in the Intervals of Time ; it unites all the fucceftive Parts in one Point, fo that what is divided and lerTened in the Fruition, which is always gradual, is offered at once and en- tire. Thus Man carnal* deceived by the imperfect Light of Fancy, and the falfe Glafs of Hope, choofes a fictitious Felicity. Man walks in a vain Shew+ Pfal. iii. 6. His original Errour hath produced this in its own Image. And although the Complacency he takes in fenfual Objects, is like the Joy of a diftracled Perfon, the IfTue of Folly and Illufion, and Experi- ence difcovers the Deceit that is in them ; as fmel- ling to an artificial Rofe undeceives the Eye $ yet he will embrace his Errour. Man is in a voluntary Dream, which reprefents to him the World as his Happinefs, and when he is awakened, he dreams a- gain, choofing to be deceived with Delight rather than to difcover the Truth without it. This is fet forth by the Prophet, Ifa. lvii. 10. 'Thou art wearied in the Greatnefs of thy Way,* yet faidejl thou not, there is no Hope : That is, thou arx tired in the Chafe of Satisfaction from one Thing to another, yet thou wouldft not give over, but ftill purfueft thofe Sha« dows which can never be brought nearer to thee* And the true Reafon of it is, that in the human INature there is an intenfe and continual Defire of Pleafure, without which Life itfeif hath no Satis- faction. For Life confifting in the Operations of the Soul, either the external of the Senfes, or the internal of the Mind, 'tis fweetned by thofe Delights which are fuitable to them. So that if all plealant Opera- tions ceafe, without Pofiibility of returning, Death is more defirable than Life. And in the corrupt State there is fo ftrict an Alliance between the Flefli £ and 62 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes and Spirit, that there is but one Appetite between them, and that is of the Flefh. All the Defignsand Endeavours of the carnal Man are by fit Means to obtain Satisfaction to his Senfes ; as if the Contentment of the Flern and the Happi- nefs of the Soul were the fame Thing ; or as if the Soul were to die with the Body, and with both, all Hopes and Fears, all Joys and Sorrows wTere at an End. The Flefh is now grown abfolute, and hath acquired a perfect Empire, and taken a full PoiTeflion of all the Faculties. For this Reafon the Apoitle tells us, Rom. viii. 7, 8. .They that are in the Flejh, cannot pleafe God. And the carnal Will is Enmity againft God, 'tis not fubjetl, -neither can it be. 'Tis infnared in the Cords of Concupifcence, and cannot recover itfelf from its foolifh Bondage. But that doth not lelTen the Guilt ; which will appear by confidering there is a twofold Impotence. 1. There is a natural Impotence which protects from the Severity of Juitice. No Man is bound to flop the Sun in its Courfe, orto'remove Mountains : For the human Nature was never endued with Faculties to do thofe Things. Xhey are inculpably without our Power. Now the Law enjoins nothing but what Man had in his Creation an Original Power to per- form. 2. There is a moral Impotence, which arifes from a perverfe Difpofition of the Will, and is joined with a Delight in Sin, and a ltrong Averfion from the holy Commands of God; and the more deep and inve- terate this is, the more worthy 'tis of Punifriment. Arifiotle alTerts, Ethic. 3. That thofe who contract, invincible Habits by Cuitom, are inexcufable though they cannot abftain from Evil. Tor fince Liberty confifts in doing what one wills, this Impoflibility doth not deftroy Liberty \ the Depravation of the Fa- in Contriving Mans Redemption] 63 Faculties doth not hinder their voluntary Operations. The Understanding conceives, the Will choofes, the Appetite defires freely. A diftracted Perfon that kills, is not guilty of Murder, and therefore fecure from the Sentence of the Law. For his Underftand- ing being diflempered by the Diforderof the Images in his Fancy, it doth not judge aright, fo that the Action is involuntary, and therefore not culpable. But there is a vaft Difference between the Caufes of Diffraction, and thofe which induce a carnal Man to Sin. The firft are feated in the Diftemper of the Brain, over which the Will hath no Power : Where- as there mould be a regular Subjection of the lower Appetite to the Will enlightened and directed by the Mind. The Will itfelf is corrupted and brought into Captivity by Things pleafing to the lower Facul- ties : It cannot difintangle itfelf, but its Impotence lies in its Obftinacy. This is the Meaning of St. Pe- ter, fpeaking concerning unclean Perfons, That their Eyes are full of Adultery, and they cannot ceafe from Sin. 'Tis from their Fault alone that they are with- out Power. Therefore the Scripture reprefents Man to be * athenees and afebes, weak but wicked. His Difability to fupernatural Good arifes from an in- ordinate Affection to that which is fenfual. So that it is fo far from excufing, that it renders inexcufable, being voluntary and vicious. And in this the Dif- eaies of the Body are different from thofe of the Soul. In the firft the Defire of healing is ineffectual, through Want of Knowledge or Power to apply fovereign Re- medies : Whereas in the fecond, the lincere Defire of their Cure is fufficient, for the Difeaies are cor- rupt Defires. The natural Man is wholly led by Senfe, by Fancy and the PafTions, and he efteems it his Infelicity to be F, 2 otherwife ; \ The candid Reader will exeuie our Want of a Greek Type. 64 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes otherwife % as the degenerous Slave, who was dif* pleafed with a Jubilee, and refufed Liberty. Servi- tude is his Senfuality. He is not only in Love with the unworthy Object, but with the vicious Affection, and abhors the Cure of it. As one, in the Poet, that was fo delighted in his pleafant Madnefs, that he was offended at his Recovery ; Cuific extorta voluptas Et demptus per vim mentis gratiffimus error. This Is acknowledged by St. Auftin in his Confef- fions, where he defcribes the Strife between Convi- ction and Corruption in his Soul. He tells us in the Conflict between Reafon and Lull, that he had Re- courfe to God, and his Prayer was, Da mihi conti- nentiam, Jed noli modo\ he defired Chaftity, but not too foon \ he was afraid that God mould hear his Petition, it being more bitter than Death to change hisCuftom. This is the general Senfe, though not the general Difcourfe of Men. As the fick Perfon that defired his Phyfician to remove his Fever, but not his Thirft, which made his Drink very pleafing to him : So Man in his fenfual State would fain be freed from the iEftuations of Confcience, but he cherifhes thofe carnal Defires which give a highTafle to Objects fuitable to them. From hence it appears, that though in the corrupt Nature there is no Liber- ty of Indifference to Good and Evil, yet there is a Liberty of Delight in Evil ; and though the- Will in its natural Capacity may choofe Good, yet 'tis moral- ly determined by its Love to Evil-f. In fhort, there is fo much Power not to fin as is fufficient to Sin ; that is, that the forbidden Action be t Inter castera Mortalitatis incommoda, hog eft, errandi neceflius, & erroris amor, Sem% In Contriving Mans Redemption. 65 be free, and fo become a Sin. Which ftrarjge Com- bination of Liberty and Neceflity is excellently ex- preft by St. Bernard ;J "That the Soul which fell " by its own Choice, cannot recover itfelf, is from " the Corruption of the Will, which overcome by " the vicious Love of the Body, rejects the Love of " Righteoufnefs ; fo that in a Manner, as ftrange as " evil, the Will being corrupted with Sin, makes a " Neceflity to.itfelf, yet fo that the Neceflity, being " voluntary, doth not excufe the Will •, nor the Will, " being pleafantly and powerfully allured, exclude " Neceflity. The Law therefore remains in its full Force, and God is righteous in the commanding and condemning Sinners. From all that hath been dif- courfed, 'tis evident, how impoflible it is for corrupt Man to recover his loft Holinefs : For there are only two Motives to induce the reafonable Creature to feek after it. 1. Its Beauty and Lovelinefs. 2. The Reward that attends it. And both #thefe Arguments are ineffectual to work upon him. 1. The Beauty of Holinefs, which excels all other created Perfections, it being a Conformity to the moft florious Attribute of the Deity, doth not allure him : or, Unufquifque ut affeftus eft it a judicata Man un- derstands according to his Affections. The renew- ed Mind can only fee the effentialand intimate Beau- ty of Holinefs. Now in fallen Man the Clearnefs of the Difcerning Power is loft. As the natural Eye, D 3 until X Quod furgere Anima per fe non poteft, qun? per fe cadere potuit, voluntas in caufa eit, quae corrupts corporis vitiofo amo- re languefcens, &jacens, amorem juftitiaj non admittit : Ita neicio quo pravo, fed miro modo, ipfa fibi voluntas, peccato quidem in deterius mutata, neceflitatem facit, ut nee neceflitas cum volunta- ria fit, excufare valeat voluntatem, nee voluntas cum fit ille&a, excludes neceflitatem, 66 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes until 'tis purged from vicious Qualities, cannot look: on Things that are bright and fublime-, and if it hath been long in Darknefs, it fuffers by the moft pleafing Object the Light : So the internal Eye of the Mind, that it may fee the lively Lu (Ire of Holinefs, it muft be cleanfed from the Filthinefs of carnal Affections ; and having been fo long under thick Darknefs, it mud be ftrengthened, before it can fuftain the Brightnefs of Things fpiritual. 'Till it be prepared, it can fee nothing amiable anddefirablein the Image of God. 2. The Reward of Holinefs hath no attractive Power on the carnal Will -, becaufe it is future and fpiritual. i. 'Tis Future, and therefore the Conceptions of it are very dark and imperfect : The Soul, is funk down into the Senfes, and they are fhort-fighted and can't look beyond what is prefent to the next Life, And as the Image of Things are weakened and con- fufed j>roportionably to their Diftance, and make a fainter Impreflion upon the Faculty ; fo the Repre- fentation of Heaven and Bleffednefs, as a Happinefs to come hereafter, and therefore remote, doth but coldly affect the Will. A prefent Vanity, in the Judgment of the carnal Soul, outweighs the moft glorious Futurity. 'Till there be taken from before its Eyes (in Tertulliatfs Language) § the thick Cur- tain of the vifible World, it cannot difcern the Diffe- rence between them, nor value the Reward for its Excellency and Duration. 2. 'Tis fpiritual, and there muft be a divine Dif- pofition of the Soul before it is capable of it. ^ht pure in Heart can only fee the pure God, Matt. v. 8. The Felicity above is that which Eye hath not feen, nor Ear § Quae illi difpofltioni anernitatis, aulaei vice oppanfa eft. rffolog% in Contriving Mans Redemption. 67 Ear beards neither hath it entred into the Heart of Man to conceive^ 1 Qpr. ii. 9. Now the carnal Man is on- ly affected with grofs and corporeal Things. The Cer- tainty, Immenfity, and Immortality of the heavenly- Reward doth not prevail with him to feek after it. He hath no Palate for fpiritual Pleafures, 'tis vitiat- ed by lufcious Vanities, and can't relifh rational and refined Joys. 'Till the Temper of the Soul be alter- ed,, the Bread of Angels is diftafteful to it. For the Appetite is according to the Difpofition of the Stomach, and when that is corrupted, it longs for Things hurtful, and rejects wholfome Food. Ifacarnal Man were tranflated to Heaven, where the Love of God reigns, and where the brighter! and fweeteft Difcoveries of his Glory appear, he would not find Paradife in Heaven itfelf. For Delight ariies not merely from the Excellency of the Object, but from the Proportionablenefs to the Faculty. Though God is an infinite Good in himfelf, yet if he is not con- ceived as the fupreme Good to Man, he cannot make him happy. Sup'pofe fome flight Convictions to be in the Mind, that Happinefs confifts in the Enjoyment of God, yet this being offered upon the Terms of quitting all fen- fual Luffs, the carnal Man effeems the Condition im- poffible, and therefore is difcouraged from ufing any Endeavours to obtain it. For to excite Hope, it is not fufficient to propofe a Reward that is real and excellent, but that is attainable. For although Hope hath its Tendency to a difficult Good, as its proper Object, and the Difficulty is fo far from dif- couraging, that it quickens the Soul, and draws forth all the active Powers, by rendring it greater in our Efteem ; yet when the Difficulty is exceffive, and confines upon Impoflibility, it dejects the Soul, and inclines :- to Defpair. Thus when the Condition of obtain- 68 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes obtaining fome Good is necelTary, but infufferable, it takes off from all Endeavours in order to it. To confider it in a temporal Cafe, will make it more clear. As one that labours under a Dropfy, and is vext with an intolerable and infatiable Thirft, if aPhyfician mould allure him of Cure upon Conditi- on he would abftain from drinking, he could not con- ceive any real Hope of being healed, judging it im- pofiible to refift the Importunity of his Drought; he therefore neglects the Means, he drinks and dies. Thus the corrupt Heart of Man, that is under a per- petual Thiril of carnal Pleafures, and is more infla- med by the Satisfaction it receives, judges it an infii- perable Condition to part with them for the acquiring of fpiritual Happinefs : And this fenfual and fottifh Defpair caufes a total Neglect of the Means. 'Tis thus expreft by the Israelites, when God commanded them to return from theEvifof their Ways, in order to their Happinefs, and they faid, There is no Hope, lut we will walk after our own Devices^ and we will every one do the Imagination of his evil HearL {Abjlinere tiequeo. Grot. Jer. xviii. 12.) They were Slaves to their domineering Appetites, and refolved to make no Trial about that they judged impoflible. Briefly, In fallen Man there is fomething predominant which he values above the Favour and Fruition of Gold, and that is the World. As in the Parable, where Hap- pinefs is fet forth under the familiar Reprefentation of a Feaft, thofe who were invited to it, excufe them- felves by fuch Reafons as clearly difcover that fome amiable Luft charmed them fo ftrongly, thai:- in the Competition 'twas preferred before Heaven. One faitb I have bought a Piece of Ground, andlmuft needs go fee it ; and another, I have bought a yoke of Oxen, and I mufi go to prove them ; and a thirds I have married a Wife, and cannot come. Lukexiv. 18. The Objects of their Pafli- pns in Contriving Mans Redemption. 6y ons are different, but they all produce the fame Ef- fect, the Rejection of Happinefs. The Sum of all is this, That as Man fell from his Obedience, and loft the Image of God, by feeking Perfection and Satis- faction, thai is, Happinefs in the Creature ; fo he can never return to his Obedience, and acknowledge God as his fupreme Lord, 'till he choofes him for his; Happinefs. And this he can never intirely do, 'till he is born again, and hath a new Principle of Life that may change the Complexion of the Soul, and qualify it for thofe Delights which are fublime and fpiritual, Second^ Fallen Man can never recover the Favour of God ; And this is evident upon a double Account. i. He is not able to make Satisfaction to God's Juftice for Difhonour brought to him. 2. He is incapable of real Repentance, which might qualify him for Pardon. Firfi, He is unable to fatisfy Juftice for his Of- fence, either by exact Obedience for the future, or by enduring the Punifhment that is due to Sin. i. Suppofmg that Man cpuld perform exact Obe- dience after his Fall, yet that could not be Satisfac- tion. .'Tis efTential to Satisfaction, that the Action by which 'tis made, be in the Power of the Perfon that fatisfies. A Servant as a Servant cannot make (Satisfaction for an Injury done to his Lord, for what- soever Service he performs was due before the Of- fence, and is not properly aReftitution, becaufe'tis not of his own. Now the complete Obedience of the Creature is due to God. He is the Lord of all our Actions, and whatever Man doth is but the Pay- ment of the Original Debt. The Law requires a perpetual Reverence of the Law-giver, and exprefs Obedience to his Will in all Things. So that 'tis impoflible that the higheft Refpeft to it after- wards, 70 7fo Harmony of the 'Divine Attributes wards, mould compenfate for the lead Violation of it. Befides, To make Satisfaction for a Fault, 'tis ne- cefTary the Offender do fome voluntary Act, that may be as honourable to the Perfon, and as much above -what he was before obliged to, as the Contempt was di (honourable, and below that which was due. Un- lefsGod receive that which is as eftimable in the Na- ture of Obedience, as the Injury he received is in the Nature of Contempt, there can be no Satisfaction. Now there is a greater Difhonour brought to God by the Commiflion of one Sin, than there is Honour by the perfect Obedience of all the Angels : For in their Obedience God is preferred by the Creature, be- fore Things infinitely beneath him, which is but a fmall Honour -, but by one Sin he is difvalued in the Comparifon, which is infinite Contempt. 2. Man cannot make Satisfaction by Suffering : For the*Punifhment muft be equal to the Offence/ which derives its Guilt from the Dignity of the Per- fon offended, and the Indignity of the Offender. Now God is the univerfal King, ' his Juftice is infinite, which Man hath injured, and his Glory, which Man hath obfcured.-, and Man is finite. And what Pro4 portion is therebetween finite and infinite ? How can I a worthlefs Rebel, that is hateful to God, expiate the| Offence of fo excellent a Majefty ? If he facrifice him- felf, he can never appeafe the divine Difpleafure ; for what doth he offer but a Lump of Rebellion and Ingratitude ? He can make no other Satisfaction but that of the Devils, which continues for ever, and is riot compleated. Secondly, Fallen Man, confidered only in his cor- rupt and miferable State, is incapable of real Re- pentance, which is a necefiary Condition to qua-t lify him for Pardon. For whereas Repentance in-. eludes zn Contriving Mans Redemption. ji eludes an ingenhsuis Sorrow, for Sin pail, and a fin- cere forfaking of it, he is utterly indifpofed for both. ^ i. He cannot be ingenkwfly forrowful for his Of- fence. 'Tistrue, when theCircumftances are chang- ed, that which was pleafing will caufe Trouble of Spirit : As when a Malefactor fuffers for his Crimes, he reflects upon his Actions with Sorrow. But this hath no Moral Worth in it : For 'tis a forced Act, (Lupee nata tbeon. 2 Cor. vii. 10.) proceeding from a violent Principle, and is confident with as great a Love to Sin as he had before, and is entirely termi- nated on himfelf. But that Grief which is Divine, and is accompanied with a Change in Heart and Life, refpects the Stain more than the Punilhment of Sin ; and ariies from Love to God, who is difo- beyed and dishonoured by it : Now 'tis not conceiv- able, that the guilty Creature can Love God, whilft he looks on him as an irreconcilable Enemy. Diftruft of the Favour of a Perfon, which is a Degree of Fear, is attended with Coldnefs of Affection : A ftrong Fear, which ftill intimates an Uncertainty in the Event, inclines to Hatred : But when Fear is turned into Defpair, it caufeth direct Hatred. An Inftance of this we have in the Devils, whocurfe the Fountain of BlefTednefs. If the Evil be paft Re- medy, theSenfe of it is attended with Rage and Trans- ports of Blafphemy againft God himfelf. A difpair- ing Sinner begins in this Life the gnafhing of Teeth againfi his Judge, and kindles the Fire that fhall tor- ment him forever. Rev. xvi. 21. 'Tis for this Reafon the Scripture propounds the Goodnefs of God, as the mod powerful Perfuafive' to lead Men to Repentance. Rom. ii. 4. There can be no kindly Relentings without filial Affection, and that is always tempered with the Expectation of Fa- vour, 7 2 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes vour. Without Hope of Pardon, all other Motived are ineffectual to melt the Heart. Now the firfl Covenant obliged Man to Obedience or Punifhment: It required Innocence, and did not accept of Repentance: The final Voice of the Law is, Do or Die. Guilty Man cannot look on God with Comfort under the Notion of a Holy Creator, that delights ta view his own Refemblance in the innocent Creature, nor of a companionate Father, that fpares an offending Son, but apprehends him to be an inexorable Judge, who hath Right and Pow- ' er to revenge the Difobedience. He can find no Expedient for his Deliverance, nor conceive how Mercy can fave him without the Violation of Juftice, an Attribute as effential to the Divine Nature as Mercy. And what can induce him to make an hum- j ble Confeffion of his Fault, when he expects nothing but an irrevocable Doom ? An Inftance of this we have in Adam, who being under the Conviction of his Sin, and an Apprehenfion that God would be fevere, 1 did not folicite for Mercy, but endeavoured to tranf-j fer the Guilt on God himfelf. The Woman thougav-\ eft me, Jhe gave me ef the Tree, and I did eat, Gen. iii. | 12. As if fhe had been defigned for a Snare, and not \ to be an Aid in his innocent State. 2. A fincere Refolution to forfake Sin is built on J the Hopes of Mercy. 'Till the reafonable Creature! knows that Heaven is open to Repentance, to his fe- : cond and better Thoughts, he is irreclaimable. He I that never hopes to receive any Good, will continue J in doing Evil. Defpair of Mercy caufeth a defpifing Ii of the Law. The apoftate Angels, who are without I ' the Referves of Pardon, are confirmed in their Rebel- \ I lion : Their Guilt is mixt with Fury, they perfift in their War againft God, though they know the Iffue will be deadly to them. And had there not been an early in Contriving Mans Redemption. 73 early Revelation of Mercy to Adam^ he had been in- corrigibly wicked as the Devils. For Defpair would have inflamed his Hatred againft God, which is of all the , Paflionsthe moil incurable. Thofe vicious Affections i that depend on the Humours of the Body which are [ mutable, alter with them : But Hatred is feated in the fuperiour Part of the Soul, v/hich is of a fpiri- tual Nature, and diabolical in Obftinacy. In fhort, When the reafonable Creature is guilty and vicious, and knows that God is juft and holy, and that He will be fevere in revenging all Difobedi- nee, he hath no Care nor Defire to reform himfelf. e will not lay a Reftraint on his pleafing Appetites, hen he expects no Recompence : He efteems it loft abour to abftain : And all his Defign is to allay and weeten the Fear of future Evils by prefent Enjoy- ents. When he is fcorched with the Apprehenfions f Wrath to come, he plunges himfelf into fenfual Ex- effes for fome Relief. He refolves to make his bed f Sin for a Time : According to the Principle of the epicures -, Let us eat and drink while we may. To-morrow pejhall die, 1 Cor xv, The Sum of all is this, That an unrelenting and jnreformed Sinner is incapable of Pardon ; For un- sfs God mould renounce his own Nature, and deny lis Deity, He cannot receive him to Favour. And it 5 inconceivable how the rational Creature, once lap- pd, mould ever be encouraged to Repentance with- kit the Expectation of Mercy : And there being an ifeparable Alliance between thelntegrity and Felicity f Man by the Terms of the firft Covenant, the one liling, he could not entertain the leaft Degree of lope concerning the other. By all which it appears e is under an invincible Necefllty of finning and fuf- ring for ever •, his Mifery is complete and defpe- |ite. chap; 74 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes CHAP. V. Of the Divine Wifdom in the Contrivance of Man's Redemption. Underftanding Agents propound an End, and choofe Means for the obtaining it. The End of God is of the higheft Confequence, his own Glory and Man'j Recovery. The Difficulty of accoM- plifhing it. The 'Means are proportionable. The Di- vine Wifdom glorified in taking Occqfion from the Sin end Fall of Man to bring Glory to God, and to raife Man to a more excellent State. // appears in ordain* ing fuch a Mediator, as was fit to reconcile God to Man, and Man to God. 'Tis difcovered in the De~ fignation of the Second Perfon to be our Saviour 5 And making the Remedy to have a Proportion to the Caufe of our Ruin. 9Tis vifible in the Manner whereby our Redemption is accomplifhed : And in the ordaining fuch contemptible Means to produce fuch glorious Effects. And laying the Defign of the Gof- pel, fo as to provide for the Comfort, and promote the Holinefs of Man. GO D by his infallible Preference (to which all Things are eternally prefent) viewing the Fall of Adam, and that all Mankind lay bleeding in him, out of deep Compaffion to his Creature, and that the Devil might not be finally victorious over him, in his Council decreed the Recovery of Man from his languifhing and miferable State. The l5efign and the Means are mod worthy of God, and in both his Wifdom appears. This will be made vifible by confidering, that all underftanding Agents firft propound an End, and then choofe the Means for the obtaining of it. And the more perfect the Underftanding is, the more excel- lent in Contriving Mans Redemption. jjjfr lent is the End it defigns, and the more fit and con- venient are the Means it makes ufe of for the acquir- ing it. Now when God, whofe Underltanding is infinite, fand in Comparifon of whom the mod pru- dent and advifed are but as dark Shadows) when he determines to work, efpecially in a moil glori- ous Manner, the End and the Means are equally ad- mirable. Firfti The End is of the higheft Confequence.1 "Were it fome low inconfiderable Thing, it were un- worthy of one Thought of God for the effecting it: To be curious in the contriving how to accomplifh that which is of no Importance, expofes to a juft Imputation of Folly : But when the moil excellent Good is the End, and the Difficulties which hinder the Obtaining of it are infuperable to a finite Under- ftanding, it then becomes the only wife God (i Tim. i. 1 7. ) to difcover the Divinity of his Wifdom, in mak- ing a Way where he finds none. And fuch was the End of God in the Work of our Redemption. This was declared by the Angels, who were fent Ambafla- dors extraordinary to bring Tidings of Peace to the World. They prailed God, faying, Glory to God in the higheft) and on Earth Feace^good Will towards Men\ Luke ii. 13, 14. The fupreme End is his own Glory, and in or- der to it, the Salvation of Man hath the Nature and Refpect of a Medium. The fubordinate is the Recovery of the World from its lapfed and wretched State. 1. The fupreme End is the Glory of God. This fjgnifies principally his internal and efTential Glory : And that confifts in the Perfections of his Nature, which can never be fully conceived by the Angels, but overwhelm by their excellent Greatnefs all cre- ated Underilandings. But the Glory that relults from j6 ¥he Harmony of the Divine Attributes from God's Works is properly intended in the pre- fent Argument, and implies, 2. The Manifestation whereby he is ple/ifed to re- prefent himfelf in the Exercife of his Attributes. As the Divine Nature is the primary and complete Object of his Love, fo he takes Delight in thofe Actions wherein the Image and Brightnefs of his own Virtues appear. Now in all the Works of God there is an Evidence of his Excellencies. But as fome Stars mine with a different Glory, fo there are fome noble Effects, wherein the Divine Attributes are fo confpicuous, that in Compare with them, the reft of God's Works are but obfcure Exprefllons of his Greatnefs. The principal are Creation and Redemp- tion ; tfhe Heavens declare the Glory of God, and the Firmament his Handy -work ; Pfal. xix. i And when God furveyed the whole Creation, and faw that all which he had made was good, Gen. i. He ordained a Sabbath, to fignify the Content and Satisfaction he had in the Difcovery of his eternal Perfections therein. But efpecially his Glory is mofl refplendent in the Work of Redemption, wherein more of the Divine Attributes are exercifed than in the Creation, and in a more glorious Manner. 'Tis here that Wifdom* Goodnefs, Juftice, Holinefs and Power are united in their higheft Degree and Exaltation. Upon this Ac- count the Apoftleufeth that ExprefHon, i Tim. i. ii. the Glorious Go/pel of the Blejjed God: It being the cleareft Revelation of his excellent Attributes, the unfpotted Mirrour wherein the great and wonderful Effects of the Deity are fet forth, {ta megalia ton theou. Acts ii. n. ) 3. The Praife and Thankfgiving that arifeth from the Difcovery of his Perfections by reafonable Creatures, who confider and acknowledge them. When tn Contriving Mans Redemption. 77 When there is a folemn Veneration of his Excellen- cies, and the mod ardent Affections to him for the Communication of his Goodnefs. Thus in God's Ac- count, Whofo offers Praife, glorifies him -, Pfal. 1. 23. An eminent Example of this is fet down in Job xxxviii. 7. when at the Birth of the World, 'The Morning Stars fang together, and all the Sons of God floated for Joya And at its new Birth, they defcend and make his Praife glorious in a triumphant Song. It will be the eternal Exerciie of the Saints in Heaven, Pfal. lxvi. 2. where they more fully underftand the Myftery of our Redemption, and confider every Circumilance that may add a Luftre to it, to afcribe Bleffing, Ho- nour', Glory and Power to him that fits on the Throne, and unto the Lamb for ever and ever. Rev. v. 13. Secondly, The fubordinate End is the reftoring of Man : And this is inviolably joined with the other. 'Tis expreft by Peace en Earth, and Good- will towards Men. Sin hath broke that facred Alliance which was between God and Man •, and expofed him to his juft Difpleafure. A Mifery inconceivable. And -what is more becoming God, who is the Father of Mercies, than to glorify his dear Attribute, (God is Love, 1 John \v. 9.) and that which in a peculiar Manner characterizes his Nature, by the Salvation of the Miferable ? What is more honourable to him, than by his Almighty Mercy to raife fo many Mo- numents from the Duft, wherein his Goodnefs may live and reign for ever ? Now for the accomplish- ing of thefe excellent Ends, the Divine Wifdom pitched upon thofe Means which were moil fit and congruous, which I fhall diftinclly confider. The Mifery of fallen Man confided in the Cor- ruption of his Nature by Sin, and the Punifhmcnt that enfues : And his Happinefs is in the reftoring him to his primitive Holinefs, and in Reconciliation F la 7 8 27> for though they do . not merit his Favour, yet they never provoked his ; Anger. And 'tis impoflible but that he mould love * the Image of his Holinefs wherever it mines. Or fuppofe an innocent Creature in Mifery, the Divine Mercy would fpeedily excite his Power to refcueit: For God is Love to all his Creatures, as fuch, 'till fome extrinficalCaufe intervenes, which God hates more than he loves the Creature ; and that is Sin, which alone flops the EfFufion of his Goodnefs, and opens a wide PafTage for Wrath to fall upon the Guilty. But how to fave the Creature that is undone by its own Choice, and is as finful as mifera- ble, will pofe the Wifdom of the World. Heaven itfelf feemed to be divided. Mercy inclined to fave, but Juftice interpofed for Satisfaction. Mercy- regarded Man with refpect to his Mifery, and the Pleas of it are, Shall the Almighty build to ruin ? Shall the moft excellent Creature in the lower World perifh, the Fault not being folely his ? Shall the Enemy triumph for ever, and raife his Trophies from the Works of the moft High P Shall the rea- fonable Creature lofe the Fruition of God, and God the Subjection and Service of the Creature, and all Mankind be made in vain ? Juftice confidered Man as guilty of a tranfcendent Crime, and it is its Na- ture to render to every one what is due-, now the Wages' of Sin is Death, andjhall not the Judge of all the World do right ? All the other Attributes feemed to be Attendants on Juftice. The Wifdom of God enforced its Plea, it being moft indecent that Sin which tn Contriving Mans "Redemption, jq which provokes the Execution, fhould procure the Abrogation of the Law \ this would encourage the Commifllon of Sin without Fear. The Majefty of God was concerned, for it was not becoming his excellent Greatnefs to treat with defiled Duft, and to offer Pardon to a prefumptuous Rebel immedi- ately after his Offence, and before he made Sup- plication to his Judge. The Holinefs of God did quicken his Juftice to execute the Threatning, For be is of purer Eyes than to behold Iniquity ; Habak. i. As Goodnefs is the effential Object of his Will, which he loves unchangeably wherever it is ; fo i3 Sin the eternal Object of his Hatred, and where 'tis found in the Love of it, renders the Subject odious to him. He will not take the Wicked by the Handy Job viii. 20. *The Law of Contrariety forbids Purity and Pollution to mix together. And the Veracity of God required the inflicting the Punifhment. For the Law being a Declaration of God's Will, ac- cording to which he would difpenfe Rewards and Punifhments, either it muft be executed upon the Offender, or if extraordinarily difpenfed with, it muft be upon fuch Terms, as the Honour of God's Truth may be preferved. This feeming Conflict was between the Attributes. The fublimeft Spirits in Heaven were at a Lofs how to unravel the Difficulty, and to find out the miraculous Way to reconcile infinite Mercy with in- flexible Juftice ; how to fatisfy the Demands of the one, and the Requefts of the other. God was to overcome himfelf before he reftored Man. In this [1 Exigence his Mercy excited his Wifdom to inter- . pofe as an Arbiter, which in the Treafure of its in* , comprehenfible Light, found out an admirable Ex- F 2 pedienc * Ou themiton to me katfiaro, katharou ephaptdthai, Plat* 80 tfhe Harmony of the Divine Attributes pedient to fave Man, without Prejudice to his other Perfections : That was by conftituting a Medi- ator both able and willing, between the guilty Crea- ture and Himfelf : That by transferring the Punifh- ment on the Surety, he might punifh Sin, and par- don the Sinner. And here, the more fevere and rigorous Juftice is, the more admirable is the Mer- cy that faves. In the fame ftupendious Sacrifice he declared his Refpecl to Juftice, and his Delight in Mercy. The two principal Relations of our Re- deemer are, the one of a Gift from God to Man, the other of an Oblation for Men to God. By the one, God fatisfies his infinite Love to Man, and by the other, fatisfies his infinite Juftice for Man. Nei- ther is it unbecoming God to condefcend in accept- ing the returning Sinner, when a Mediator of infi- nite Dignity intercedes for Favour. The Divine Majefty is not lefTened when God is in Cbrift recon- ciling the World unto himfelf \ 2 Cor. v. Neither is the Sanctity of God difparaged by his Clemency to Sinners, for the Redeemer is the Principle and Pat- tern of Holinefs to all that are faved. The fame Grace that inclined God to fend his Son to die for us, gives his Spirit to live in us, that we may be revived and renewed according to his Image, and by Conformity to God be prepared for Communi- on with him. Here is a fweet Concurrence of all the Attributes, Mercy and Truth are met together *, Righ- teoufnefs and Peace kijs each other ; Pfalm lxxxv. 10, Who can count up this Heap of Wonders ? Who can unfold all the Treafures of this myfterious Love ? The Tongue of an Angel cannot explicate it according to its Dignity : 'Tis the faireft Copy of the Divine Wifdom, the Confummation of all God's Counfels, wherein all the Attributes are dif played in their brighter!: Luftre : 'Tis here the ma- mfok in Contriving Mans Redemption. 81 tiifold Wijdom of God appears-, Eph. iii. 10. The Angels of Light bend themfelves with extraordinary- Application of Mind, and ardent Affections to ftudy the rich and unfearchable Variety that is in it ; I Pet. i. 12. Parakupfai* an Allufion to the Poflure of the Cherubims looking into the Ark. Only the lame Underftanding comprehends it which contrived it. But as one that views the Ocean, though he cannot fee its Bounds or Bottom, yet he fees fo much as to know that that vaft Collection of Waters is far greater than what is within the Compafs of his fhort Sight : So tho' we cannot underftand all the Depths of that immenfe Wifdom, which ordered the Way of our Salvation, yet we may difcover fo much, as to know with the Apoftle, that it furpajfes Know- ledge* Eph. iii. May he that is the Brightnefs of his Fa- ther's Glory, and the Light of the World, fo illumi- nate our dark Understandings, that we may conceive aright of this great Myftery. The firft Thing that offers itfelf to Confideration is, the Compafs of the Divine Wifdom, in taking Occafion from the Sin and Fall of Man to bring more Glory to God, and to raife him to a more excellent State. Sin in its own Nature hath no Tendency to Good, 'tis not an apt Medium, hath no proper Effi- cacy to promote the Glory of God : So far is it from a direct contributing to it, that on the Con- trary 'tis the moft real Difhonour to Him. But as a black Ground in a Picture, which in itfelf only defiles, when placed by Art, fets off the brighter Colours, and heightens their Beauty; -j- So the Evil of Sin, which, confidered abfolutely, obfcures the Glory of God, yet by the over- ruling Difpoii- tion of his Providence, it ferves to illuftrate his F 3 Name, »»^^— — i ■■ ' ""in t In Pi&ura lumen non alia res puam umbra commendat, Pl'vu 8 a The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Name, and to make it more glorious in the Efteem of reafonable Creatures. Without the Sin of Man there had been no Place for the moft perfect Exer- cife of his Goodnefs. O fcelix culpa qu quam pro nobis obire debuit. in Contriving Mans Redemption] 87 Bowels, we may truft him to follicit our Salvation. In fhort, it is the great Support of our Faith, that we have Accefs to the Father by the Son, Ephef. ii. 18. and prefent all our Requelts by a Mediator fo wor- thy and fo dear to him, and by one who left the Joys of Heaven, that by enduring Affliction on Earth, his Heart might be made tunable to the Hearts of the afflicted. Secondly, For the Difcharge of the Prophetical Office, it was neceffary the Mediator mould be God and Man. i. He muft be God, that he might deliver his Counfels with more Authority and Efficacy than any mere Creature could. He muft be a Teacher fent from Heaven that reveals to us the Will of God con- cerning the Way thither, and the Certainty and Ex- cellency of that State. Now Chrift is the Original of all Wifdom, it is not faid the Word of the Lord came to Him, as to the Prophets ; He is the Foun- tain of all facred Knowledge. The Son came from the Bofom of the Father, (Joh. i. 18.) the Seat of his Counfels and Companions, to reveal thofe Secrets ■which were concealed from the Angels, in that Light which is inaccefiible. And it is God alone can teach the Heart, and convince the Confcience, fo as to produce a faving Belief of the Heavenly Doctrine, and a Delight in the Difcovery, and a Refolution to follow it wherever it directs. 2. It was fit he fhould be Man, that he might be familiarly converfant with us, and convey the Coun- fels of God in fuch a Way as Man could receive. All faving Truth comes from God, and it follows byjuft Confequence, that the nearer he is to us, the better we are like to be inftructed. Now there are two Things which render finful Man incapable of imme- diate Converfe with God, I. The 88 Tht Harmony of the Divine Attributes i . The Infirmity of his Nature. 2. The Guilt that cleaves to him. Firft, The Infirmity of Man's Nature cannot en- dure the Glory of God's Appearance. When the Law was delivered on Mount Sinai, the Israelites were under great Terrours at the Sights and Prodi- gies which accompanied the Divine Prefence, and they defired that God would fpeak to them no more in his Majefty and Greatnefs, left they fhould die, Deut. v. 25. There is fuch a Difproportion between our Meannefs and his Excellencies, that Daniel though a Favourite of Heaven, yet his Comelinefs was turn- ed into Corruption at the Sight of aVifion. Ban. x. 17. And r,he beloved Difciple fell down as dead at the Appearance of Chrift in his Glory, Rev. i. 17. When the Eye gazes on the Sun, 'tis more tormented with the Brightnefs than pleafed with the Beauty of it : But when the Beams are tranimitted through a co- loured Medium, they are more temporate and fweet- ned to the Sight. The eternal Word mining in his full Glory, the more bright, the lefs vifible is he to mortal Eyes •, but the incarnate Word is eclipfed and allayed by a Vail of Flejh, Heb. x. 20. and fa made acceflible to us. God out of a tender RefpecT: to our Frailty and Fears, promifed to raife up a Pro- phet do athed in our Nature, Deut. xviii. 15. that we might comfortably and quietly receive his Inftruc- tions. 2. Guilt makes us fearful of his Prefence. The Approach of God awakens the Confcience, which is his Spy in our Bofoms, and caufes a dreadful Ap- parition of Sin in its View. When one Beam of Chrift's Divinity broke forth in the miraculous Draught of Fifties ; Peter cries out. Depart from me for I am a finful Man, 0 Lord, Luke v. 8. Holinefs armed with Terrour ftrikes a Sinner into Confirma- tion. In Contriving Mans Redemption. 89 tion. Now when the Mind is fhaken with a Storm of Fear, it cannot calmly attend to the Counfels of Wifdom. But the Son of God appearing in our Na- ture, to expiate Sin, and appeafe Divine Juftice, we are encouraged to draw near to him, and fit at his Feet, to hear the Words of eternal Life. Thus God complied with our Necefflty, that with a freer Difpenfation we might receive the Counfels of our Saviour. 3. He is qualified for his Kingly Office, by the Union of the two Natures in him. He muft be God to conquor Satan, and convert the World. As emi- nent an Act of Power was neceffary to redeem, as to create. For although the fupreme Judge was to be fatisfied by humble Sufferings, yet Satan who u- furped the Right of God ( for Man had no Power Job. xii. J20. to alienate himfelf) was to be fubdued : Hav- ing no juft Title, he was to be caft out by Power. Luke xi. 38. And no lefs than the Divine Power could accomplish our victorious Refcue from him. la his Love he pitied us, and his holy Arm got him the Vic- tory, Ifa. lxiii. 9. He is the Author of eternal Salvation* Heb. vii. 23. which no inferior Agent could ever accomplish. 'Tis God alone can overcome Death, and him that had the Power of Death, and bring us fafe- ly to Felicity. Befides, our King muft be Man, that by the Ex- cellency of his Example, he might lead us in the "Way of Life. The mod rational Method to reform the World, is, not only to enact Laws to be the Rule of virtuous Adions, but for Law-giv«rs to make Virtue honourable and imitable by their own Prac- tice. And to encourage us in the Holy War againft our Enemies, vifible and invifible, it was congruous that the Prince of our Salvation mould take the hu- man Nature, and fubmit to the Inconveniences of our 90 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes our warfaring State •, as Kings when they defign a glorious Conqueft, go forth in Perfon, and willingly endure the Hardfhips of a Military Condition, to animate their Armies : The Apoftle tells us, Heb. ii. 10, that it became him, for -whom are all Things, and by whom are all Things, in bringing many Sons to Glory, to make the Captain of their Salvation perfetl through Sufferings. God the great Defigner of all Things, forefeeing the Sufferings to which the Godly would be expoled in the World, ordained it as molt conve- nient that the Author of their Deliverance mould by Sufferings obtain the Reward, that by his Example he might ftrengthen and deliver thofe that fuffer to the End. Again, the Son of God entered into our Family, and is not ajhamed to call us Brethren, Heb. ii. ii. To make his Scepter amible to us, He exer- cifeth his Dominion with a natural and fenfible touch of Pity, he pardons our Failings, and puts a Value on our fincere though mean Services, as an Honour done to him. Briefly, in him there is a Combination of Power and Love : The Power of the Deity with the Tendernefs and Clemency of the human Na- ture. He is the mighty God, and Prince of Peace, I/a> vi. 9. He is a Kingjuft and powerful againft our Ene- mies, but mild and gentle to his People, Zee. ix. He is willing to remove from us all the Evils we cannot endure, our Sins and Sorrows •, and able to convey to us all the Bleffings we are capable to enjoy. In all his Glory he remembers that he is our Saviour. At the Day of Judgment {Tit. ii. 13.) when he (hall come with a Train of mighty Angels, he will be as tender of Man, as when he fuffered on the Crofs. And from hence we may difcover the Excellency of God's Contrivance in uniting the divine and human Nature in our Redeemer, that he might have Abili- ty and Affection to qualify him for that great and blefled Work. Thirdly t in Contriving Mans Redemption. g{ Thirdly, The Divine Wifdom appears in the Defig- nation of the Perfon. For God refolving to fave Man in a Way that is honourable to his Juftice, it was expedient a Perfon in the bleffed Trinity fhould be put into a State of Subjection, to endure the Punifh- mentdue to Sin ; but it was not convenient the Fa- ther fhould : For, i. He muft then have been fent into the World, which is incongruous to the Relations that are be- tween thofe glorious Perfons. For as they fubfift in a certain Order, fo their Operations are according to the Manner of their Subfiftence. The Father is from himfelf, and the firft Motions in all Things are a- fcribed to him ; the Son is from the Father, and all his Actions take theirRife from him. The Son can do nothing of himfelf, but what he feeth the Father do, Job. v. 19. The effecting our Redemption is referred to the Father's Will as the fupreme Caufe : Our Saviour upon his Entrance into the World to undertake that Work, declares, / come to do thy Will, 0 God, Heb. x. 7. Upon this Account the Apoftle addrefles his Thanks to the Father as the firft Agent in our Salvation, Col. i. 12. which is not to lefTen the Glory of the Son and Spirit, but to fignify, that in the Accom- pliihment of it, their working follows their Being. 2. It was not fit that the Father mould be incar- nate, for he muft then have fuftained the Part of a Criminal, and appeared in that Quality before the fupreme Judge : But this was not confonant to the Order among the Perfons. For although they are of equal Majefty, being one God, yet the Father is the firft Perfon, and to him it belongs moft congruoufly to be the Guardian of the Laws and Rights of Hea- ven, to exact Satisfaction for Offences, and to re- ceive Interceflions for the Pardon of the Penitent. 3. Neither was it fit that the Third Perfon fhould under- 92 The Harmony of the Divine 'Attributes undertake that Work. For befides the Sacrifice for Propitiation, it was necefTary the Divine Power fhould be exerted, to enlighten the Minds, and incline the Wills of Men to receive the Redeemer, that the Benefits of his Death might be applied to them. * Now the Redeemer is confidered as the Object, and the Holy Spirit as the Difpofer of the Faculty to receive it. And in the natural Order of Things j the Object muft exift before the Operation of the Fa- culty upon it. There muft be Light before the Eye can fee. So intheDifpofition of theCaufes of our Salvation, theRedeemer muft be ordained, and Salvation purchas- ed, before the Divine Power is put forth to enable the Soul to receive it ; and accordingly 'tis the Office of the Spirit, who is the Power of God, Luk. i. %$. and by whom the Father and the Son execute all Things, to render effectual the Redemption procured by the Son. Briefly, the Million of the Perfons is according to their Principle. The Father fends the Son to ac- quire Salvation for us ; John iii. 17. the Son fends the Spirit to apply it; John xvi. 7. Thus there is no difturbing of their facred Order ; more particularly in appointing the Son to aflume the human Nature, and to reftore lapfed Man, the Wifdom of God is e- vident : For by that, 1. The Properties of the facred Perfons are pre- ferved entire : The fame Title is appropriated to both Natures in our Mediator. His State on Earth cor- refponds with his State in Heaven. He is the only Son from Eternity, and the Firft-born in Time ; and the Honour due to the eternal and divine, and to the temporal but fupernatural Sonfhip, is attribut- ed to him. 2. To unite the slorious Titles of Creator and Re- • Vid. Amyr. de Trin. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 93 Redeemer in the fame Perfon. The Father made the V/orld by the Son, Heb. i. 2. By this Title he had an original Propriety in Man, which could not be extinguifhed : Though we had forfeited our Right in him, he did not lofe his Right in us. Our Con- trad with Satan could not nullify it. Now it was confonant that the Son mould be employed to recover his own, that the Creator in the Beginning mould be the Redeemer in the Fulnefs of Time. 3. Who could more fitly reftore us to Favour, and the Right of Children, than the only begotten, and only beloved Son, who is the fingular and everlaft- ing Object of his Father's Delight ? Our Relation to God is an Imitation and Expreffion of Chrift's. He is a Son by Nature, a Servant by Condefcenfion •, we are Servants by Nature, and Sons by Grace and Fa- vour, Eph. i. 5. Our Adoption into the Line of Hea- ven is by the Purchafe of his Blood. The eternal Son took Flejh, and was made under the Law, that we might receive the Adoption of Sons, Rom. viii. 29. Who was more fit to repair the Image of God in Man, and beautify his Nature, that was defiled with Sin, than the Son, who is the exprefs Image of his Father's Perfon, Heb. i. 3. and Brightnefs and Beauty itfelf ? Who can better communicate the Divine Counfels to us, than the eternal Word ? 4. The Wifdom of God appears in making the Remedy to have a Proportion to the Caufe of our Ruin ; that as we fell in Adam our Reprefentative, (1 Cor. xv. 22.) foweare raifed by Chrift, the Head of our Recovery. The Apoftle makes the Compa- rifon between the firft and fecond Adam -, Rom, v. 18, 19. Therefore as by the Offence of one, Judg- ment came upon all to Condemnation, even fo bv the Righteoufnefs of one, the free Gift came upon all Men to the Juflification of Life. For as by one Man's Difcbe- G die net 94 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes (Hence many were made Sinner J, fo by the Obedience of one many ft all be made righteous*. They are con- fidered as Caufes of contrary Effects. The Effects are Sin and Righteoufnefs, Condemnation and Ju- ltification. As the Difobedience of the firft Adam is meritorioufly imputed to all his natural Pofteri- ty, and brings Death upon all •, fo the Righteouf- nefs of the Second is meritorioufly imputed to all his fpi ritual Progeny, to obtain Life for them. The carnal Adam having loft Original Righteouf- nefs, derives a corrupt Nature to all that defcend from him. And the Spiritual, having by his Obe^ dience purchafed Divine Grace for us, (that being the Price without which fo rich a Treafure as Ho- linefs could not be obtained) conveys a vital Effi- cacy to renew his People. The fame Spirit of Ho- linefs which anointed our Redeemer, does quicken all his Race, that as they have borne the Image of the Earthly, they may bear the Image of the Heavenly Adam ; i Cor. xv. 49, 5. The Divine Wildom is vifible in the Manner whereby our Redemption is accomplished ; that is, by the Humiliation of the Son of God. By this he did counterwork the Sin of Angels and Man J. Pride is the Poifon of every Sin, for in every one the Creature prefers his Pleafure, and fets up his Will above God's •, but it was the fpecial Sin of A- dam. The Devil would have levelled Heaven by an unpardonable Ufurpatio.n ; he faid, / will be like the Meft High : And Man infected with his Breath, (you ftj all be like God) became fick of the fame Difeafe. Now Chrift, that by the Quality of the Remedy he might cure our Difeafe in its Source and * ^Bmula ratione recuperavit nos Deus. Tertul. \ Unumquodcjue eodem modo diflblvitur, quo conftituitur. in Co?itrivi?ig Mans Redemption. 95 and Caufe, applied to our Pride an unfpeakable 'Hu- mility. Man was guilty of the higheft Robbery in arTccl- ing to be equal with God, and the Eternal Son who was in the Form of God, and equal to him in Ma- jefty and Authority, Phil. ii. 6. without Sacrilege or Ufurpation, he emptied himfelf by afluming the human Nature in its fervile State. The Word was made Flefh, John i. 14. The meaneft Part is fpe- cified, to fignify the greatnefs of his Abafement. There is fuch an infinite Diftance between God and Flefh, that the Condefcenfion is as admirable as the Contrivance. So great was the Malignity of our Pride, for the Cure of which fuch a profound Humility was requifite. By this he deftroyed the firft Work of the Devil \ 1 John. iii. 8. 6. The Wifdom of God appears in ordaining fuch contemptible, and, in Appearance, oppofite Means, to accomplifh fuch glorious Effects. The Way is as wonderful as the Work. That Chrift by dying on the Crofs, a reputed Malefactor, mould be made our Eternal Righteoufnefs -, that de- fending to the Grave, He mould bring up the loft World to Life and Immortality, is fo incredi- ble to our narrow Underftandings, that He faves us, and altonifhes us at once : And in nothing 'tis more vifible, That the Thoughts of God are as far above our Thoughts, as his Ways above our Ways, as Heaven is above the Earth ; I fa. lv. 8. It is a Secret in Phyfick to compound the molt noble Reme- dies of Things deftruclive to Nature, and thereby make one Death victorious over another : But that Eternal Life mould fpring from Death, Glory from Ignominy, Bleffednefs from a Curfe, is fo repug- nant to human Senfe, that to render the Belief of it eafy, it was foretold by many Prophecies, that G 2 when g6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes when it came to pafs, it might be looked on as the Effect of God's eternal Counfel. The Apoftle tells us, 1 Cor. i. 23. that Chrift crucified was to the Jews a Stumbling-block, and to the Gentiles Foolifhnefs. The grand Sophies of the World efteemed it abfurd and unreafonable to believe, that He who was expofed to Sufferings, could fave others : But thole who are called, difcover that the Doctrine of Salvation, by the Crofs of Chrift, which the World counted Folly, (ver. 24.) is the great Wifdom of God, and moft convenient for his End. A double Reafon is given of this Method ; 1 . Becaufe the Heathen World did riot find and own God in the Way of Nature. For after that, in the Wifdom of God, the World by Wifdom knew not God, it pleafed God by the Foolifhnefs of Preaching, to fave them that believe, 2 Cor. i. 21. The Frame of the World is called the Wifdom of God-, the Name of the Caufe is given to the Effect, in regard the Divine Wifdom is fo clearly difcovered there* as if it had taken a vifible Form, and prefented itfelf to the View of Men. But thofe who prof 'effed them- jelves wife, did not acknowledge the Creator : For fome conceited the World to be eternal, others that it was the product of Chance, {Rom. i. 22.) and became guilty of the molt abfolute Contradiction to Reafon. For who can believe that one who is blind from his Birth, and by Confequence perfectly ignorant of all Colours, and of the Art of Paint- ing, mould take a Bundle of Pencils into his Hand, and dipping them in Colours mixt and corrupted, Paint a great Battle with that Perfection in the De- fign, Propriety in the Colours, Diftinction in the Ha- bits and Countenances, as if it were not reprefented but prefent to the Spectators ? Who ever faw a Temple, or Palace, or any regular Building, fpring from in Contriving Mans Redemption. 97 from the ftony Bowels of a Mountain ? Yet fome fa- mous Philofophers became thus vain in their Imagi- nation^ Rom. i. 21. fancying that the World pro- ceeded from the cafual Concourfe of Atoms. And the reft of them neglected to know God fo far as they might, and to honour him fo far as they knew. They debafed the Deity by unworthy Conceptions of his Nature, and by performing fuch Acts of Worfhip, as were not fit for a rational Spirit to offer, nor for the pure Majefty of Heaven to re- ceive. Befides, they afcribed his Name, Attributes, and Honour to Creatures •, not only the Lights of Heaven, and the fecret Powers which they fuppof- ed did govern them •, not only Kings, and Great Men, who were by their Authority raifed above others, but the molt deipicable Things in Nature, Beads and Birds were the Objects of their Adora- tion. 'They changed the Glory of the uncorruptible God, into an Image made like to a corruptible Man, and to Birds, and four-footed Beajts, and creeping Things ; Rom. i. 23. A Sin fo foul, that it betrayed them to brutifh Biindnefs, and to the mod infamous Lufts, natural and unnatural.- Now fince the molt clear and open Difcovery of God's Wiidom was ineffectu- al to reclaim the World, He was pleafed to change his Method. They neglected Him appearing in his Majefty, and he now comes cloathed with Infirmi- ties : And finceby natural Light they would not fee God the Creator, He is imperceptible to the Light of Nature as Redeemer : The Difcovery of Him depends on Revelation. The Wifdom of God in making the World is evident to every Eye \ but the Gofpel is tVijdom in a Myftery, 1 Cor. ii. 7. The Deity was confpicuous in the Creation, but concealed under a Vail of Flefh when he wrought our Re- demption. He was more eafily difcovered when in- G 3 vifible, 9 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes vifible, than when vifible : He created the World by Power, but reflored it by Sufferings. 2. That the Honour of ali might folely redound to him, God hath chofen the foolijh Things of the World to confound the wife ♦, and the ' weak Things of the World to confound the Things that are mighty \ and bafe Things of the Worlds and Things which are defpifed, God hath chofen ; yea, and Things that are not, to bring to nought Things that are, that no Flejb (hould glory in his Prefence; i Cor. i. 27, 28, 29. Thus Mcfes, the Redeemer of Ifrael, was an Infant expofed to the Mercy of the Waters, drawn forth from an Ark of Bull-rufhes, and not employed whilft he lived in the Splendour of the Court, but when banifhed as a Criminal, and deprived of ail Power. And our Redeemer took not on h'wn the Nature of An- gels, equal to Satan in Power, but took part of Flefh and Blood ||, the more fignally to triumph over that proud Spirit in the human Nature which was inferiour to his, and had been vanquifhed by him in Paradife. Therefore he did not immediately ex- ercife Omnipotent Power to deftroy him, but ma- naged our Weaknefs and Infirmity to foil the roar- ing Lion. He did not enter into the Combat in the Glory of his Deity, but difguifed under the human Nature, which was fubject to Mortality. And thus the Devil is overcome in the fame Manner as he firft got the Victory : For as the whole Race of Man was captivated by him in Adam the Repre- fentative ; fo Believers are victorious over him as the Tempter and Tormentor, by the Conqueft that Chrift their Reprefentative obtained in the Wilder- nefs, and on the Crofs. And as our Ruin was ef- fected || Non ei Majeftate naturae fuae, fed habitu noftrae congre- diens, & nihil ei extorquens violento dominatu, fed fuperans legejulUtiae, iW/ff, in Contriving Mans Redemption. gcj fecled by the Subtilty of Satan, fo our Recovery is wrought by the Wifdom of God -, who takes the Wife in their own Craftinefs ; i Cor. i. The Devil excited Judas by Avarice, the Jews by Malice, and Pilate from Reafon of State, to accomplifh the Death of Chrift •, and he then feemed to be victo- rious. Now what was more honourable to the Prince of our Salvation, than the turning the Ene- mies Point upon his own Breaft, and by dyings to overcome him that had the Power of Death ? Heb. ii. 14. This was fignified in the firfb Promife of the Gof- pel, where the Salvation of Mann is inclofed irk the Curfe of the Serpent ; that is, the Devil cloathed with that Figure, It [ball bruife thy Heed, and thou Jhalt bruife his Heel-, Gen. iii. 15. That is, the Son of God mould by differing in our Fleih, overcome the .Enemy of Mankind, and refcue innumerable Captives from his Tyranny : Here the Events are mod contrary to the Probability of their Caufe. And what is more worthy of God, than to obtain. his Ends in fuch a Manner^ as the Glory of all may- be, in folidum, afcribed to Him ? 7. The Divine Wifdom appears in laying the Defign of the Gofpel in fuch a Manner, as to pro- vide for the Comfort, and promote the Holinefs of Man. This is God's Signature upon all heaven- ly Do&rines, which diftinguifhes them from carnal Inventions •, they have a direct Tendency to promote his Glory, and the real Benefit of the Rational Creature : Thus the Way of Salvation by Jefus Chrift, is mod fit as to reconcile God to Man by fecuring his Honour •, fo to reconcile Man to God by encouraging his Hope. 'Till this be effected, he can never be happy in Communion with Uod : For that is nothing elfe but the reciprocal Exercife of Love between God and the Soul, Now nothing io<3 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes can reprefent God as amiable to a guilty Creature* but his Inclination to Pardon. Whilft there are Apprehenfions of inexorable Severity, there will be hard Thoughts burning in the Bread againft God : 'Till the Soul is releafed from Terrours it can never truly love him. Toextinguifh our Hatred, he muft conquer our Fears, and this he hath done by giving us the moft undoubted and convincing Evidence of his Affections. i. By contracting the moft intimate Alliance with Mankind. In this God is not only lovely, but Love-, i Joh. iv. «, 9. and his Love is not only vifi- ble to our Understandings, but to our Senfes : The Divine Nature in Chriit is joined to the Human, in an Union that is not typical or temporary, but real and permanent. The Word was made Flejh ; John i. And in him dwells the Fulnefs of the Godhead bodily \ Col. i. Now as Love is an Affection of Union, fo the ftricteft Union is an Evidence of the greateft Love. The Son of God took the Seed of Abraham, (Heb. ii.) the original Element of our Nature, that our Interefl in Him might be more clear and certain. He ftooped from the Height of his Glory to our low Embraces, that we might with more Confidence lay hold on his Mercy. 2. By providing complete Satisfaction to offend- ed Juftice. The guilty convinced Creature is reft- lefs, and inquifitive after a "Way to efcape the Wrath to come : For being under the Apprehenfion that God is an incenfed Judge, 'tis very fenfible of the greatnefs and nearnefs of the Danger, there be- ing nothing between it and eternal Torments, but a thin Vail of Flefh. Now an abundant Satisfaction is made, that moil effectually expiates and abolifhes the Guilt of Sin : That is a temporary Act, but of infinite Evil, being committed againft an infinite Ob- ject; in Contriving Mans Redemption* 101 ject j the Death of Chrift was a temporary Pafiion, but of infinite Value in refpect of the Subject ; the Honour of the Law is fully repaired, fo that God is juftly merciful, and difpenfes Pardon to the Glory of bis Right eoufnefs. He hath fet forth his Son to be a Propitiation through Faith in his Blood, to declare his Righteou/nefs, that he might bejuft, and the Juftifier of him who believes in Jefus ; Rom. iii. 25. And what ftronger Security can be given, that God is ready to pardon Man, upon his accepting the Terms of the Gofpel, than the giving his Son to be our Atone- ment ? If the Stream fwell fo high as to overflow the Banks, will it ftop in a defcending Valley ? Hath He with fo dear an Expence fatisfied his Juftice, and wili he deny his Mercy to relenting and return- ing Sinners ? This Argument is powerful enough to overcome the molt obitinate Infidelity. 3. By the unfpeakable Gift of his Son, he aflures our Hopes of Heaven, which is a Reward fo great and glorious, that our guilty Hearts are apt to fuf- pect we fliall never enjoy it. We are fecure of his Faithfulnefs, having his infallible Promife ; and of his Goodnefs, having fuch a Pledge in our Hands ; As the Apoftle argues, Rom. viii. 32. If he hath given us his Son, will he not with him give us all Things ? Will he give us the Tree of Life, and not permit us to eat of its Fruit ? Is it conceivable that having laid the Foundation of our Happinefs in the Death of his Son, an Act to which his tender Affection feemed fo repugnant, that He will not perform the reft, which He can do by the mere Signification of his Will ? It is an excellent Encouragement St. Auftin propounds from hence -9 Securus ejlo accepturum te vitam iffius, qui pignus habes mortis ipjius, &c. Be af- fured thou malt partake of his Life, who halt the Pledge of it in his Death. He hath performed more than i02 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes than He promifed. It is more incredible that the Eternal mould die, than that a Mortal Creature fhould live for ever. In fhort ; Since no mortal Eye can difcover the heavenly Glory, to convince us of the Reality of the invisible State, and to fupport our departing Souls in their PafTage through the dark and terrible Val- ley, our Saviour rofe from the Grave, alcended in our Nature to Heaven* and is the Model of our Happinefs : He is at the Right-hand of God to dif- penfe Life and immortality to all that believe on Him. And what can be more comfortable to us, than the Aflurance of that BleiTednefs, which as it eclipfes all the Glory of the World, fo it makes Death itfelf defirable in order to the Enjoyment of it? 2. As the Comfort, fo the Holinefs of Man is moil promoted in this Way of our Redemption. Suppofe we had been recovered upon eafier Terms, the Evil of Sin would have been lefTened in our E- fleem •, (We are apt to judge of the Danger of a Difeafe from the Difficulty of its Cure : Hunger, is reputed a fmall Trouble, (although if it be not fatis- fied it will prove deadly) becaufe a fmall Price will procure what may remove it -,) and the Mercy that faves us, had not appeared fo great. He that falls into a Pit, and is drawn forth by an eafy pull of the Hand, doth not think himfelf greatly obliged to the Perfon that helped him ; though if he had re- mained there he muft have perifhed. But when the Son of God had fuffered for us, more than ever one Friend fuffered for another, or a Father for a Son, or than the Strength and Patience of an Angel., could endure ; who would not be (truck wjfh Hor- rour at the Thoughts of that Poifon which required fuch a dreadful Cure ? And the Benefit we receive in in Contriving Mans Redemption. 103 in fo coftly a Way, is juftly magnified by us. Now what is more apt to inflame our Love to God, than the admirable Expreflion of his Love to us, in that with the mod precious Blood he ranfomed us from Hell ? How doth it endear Obedience, that God hath iacrificed his Son, to keep us from Acts of Hoftility ? So that the Grace of the Gofpel is fo far from indulging Sin, that it gives the moll dead- ly Wound to it. Efpecially when the Tenour of the New Covenant is, That the condemned Crea- ture, in order to receive Pardon, and the Benefits that are purchafed, muft receive the Benefactor, with the mod entire Confent, for his Prince and Sa- viour. The Law of Faith requires us to fubmit to his Scepter, as well as to depend upon his Sacrifice. The Gofpel is a conditional Act of Oblivion, that none may venture to fin upon Confidence of Par- don. And fince the Occafion of the Fall was from a Conceit that Man could better his Eftate by com- plying with the Tempter, and obtain a more defin- able Happinefs in the Creature than in the Favour of God •, his Recovery is by revealing to him where- in true BlefTednefs confifts ; and giving him an Af- furance that he may obtain it. For Man will ne- ver fubjecl: himfelf to God as his higheit Lord, till he looks on him as his laft End, and Sovereign Good. Now the Gofpel offers to us the moft effec- tual Means, to convince Man of the Folly of his Choice, in making the Creature his Happinefs. For the Son of God who was Heir of all Things during his Continuance in the World, was in the perpetu- al Exercife of Self-denial. He lived a difpiled Life, and died an ignominious Death, to difcover to us, that as the Miferies of this Life cannot make us tru- ly miferable, fo the Profperities of it cannot make us 104 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes us truly happy. Befides, how is it poftible that the wretched Enjoyment of this World, mould be the BlefTednefs for which He fpent his Sweat, his Tears, his Blood ? The rich Price he laid down doth mod powerfully convince us, That our Felicity is infinitely more valuable than all earthly Things, and can be no lefs than the Fruition of God himfelf. Thus the Divine Wifdom hath fo ordered the Way of our Salvation, that as Mercy and Juftice in God, fo Holinefs and Comfort may be perfectly united in the reafonable Creature. CHAP. VI. Pratlical Inferences. A fuperlative Degree of Praife and Thankfulnefs due to God for the Revelation of the Gofpel. It is not difcovered by the Creation. 7/ is above the Reach of Natural Reafon. The Heathen World is entirely ignorant of it. It is pure Grace that diftinguifhes one Nation from another, in fending the Gofpel. Evangelical Knowledge deferves our moft ferious Study. The Gofpel exceeds all contem- plative and pracYick Sciences. Contemplative in the Greatnefs 0///J Object, and the Certainty of its Prin- ciple. Pra&ick in the Excellency of its End, and the Efficacy of the Means. i.TT 7 HAT a Superlative Degree of Praife and V Y Thankfulnefs is due to God, for revealing his eternal and companionate Counfel in order to our Salvation ? The Fall of Man was fo wounding and deadly, that only an Infinite Underflanding could find out the Means for his Recovery. And if that Mercy which moved the Lord to ordain the Reme- dy had not difcovered it, a thick Cloud of Defpair had in Contriving Mans Redemption'. 105 had covered Mankind, being forever unable to con- ceive the Way of our Redemption. It is a Myfte- ry which Eye hath not feen, nor Ear heard, nor hatb entered into the Heart of Man to conceive, 1 Cor. ii. All human Knowledge is acquired by two Sorts of Faculties •, the external and internal. Of the firft* Sight and Hearing are the mod fpiritual, and con- vey the Knowledge of the mod worthy Objects. They are the Senfes of Discipline ; the other three are immerft in Matter, and are incapable to make fuch clear Difcoveries. Befides thofe Impreffions that are made on the Senfes, we may form fome Ideas in the Imagination •, upon which the Mind reflecting may argue and difcourfe : Thus far the Light and Vigor of the Underftanding can only go. So that the A- poftle declares that the whole Plot of the Gofpel was without theCompafs of our mod fearching Faculties. This will be evident by confidering, 1. There was no Difcovery of it in the Creation : The Voice of the Heavens initructs us concerning the Being of God \ but not in the Secrets of his Will. The Oeconomy of Man's Redemption is the merci- ful Defign of God, which hath no Connexion with the Exiftence of the Creatures, but depends only up- on his good Pleafure. It is as impoflible to read the Divine Decrees in the Volume of the World, as for the Eye to difcover a Sound, which hath neither Fi- gure, Colour, nor vifible Motion. Befides, the glorious Nature of God in Three Perfons, which is the Foundation of this Myfterious Mercy, is not made known by the vifible Frame of the Univerfe. 'Tis true, in all external Works the Three Perfons are equally concerned : Being of one EfTence, they are of one Efficacy \ and the efTential Perfections of the Deity as they concur, fo they are evident in the Pro- duction of all Things. The firitMotive is Goodnefs, Rom. io6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Rom. i. 20. that which orders and directs is Wis- dom •, that which executes is Power. And the fe- veral Ranks of Creatures, according to their State, reflect an Honour on their Author. Things endued with Life, declare him to be the Fountain of Life, and intellectual Creatures reprefent him to be the Fa- ther of Lights. But the perfonal Being, as perfon- al, operating nothing out of the Divine Nature, there is no Refemblance in the World that expreffes the Diflinction, Propriety, and Singularity of the Per- fons, fo as to difc over them to the human Underftand- ing. Thoie deeper Myfteries of the Deity are only made known by the Word of God. 2. It is above the Strain and Reach of natural Rea- fon to attain to the Knowledge of it. There are fe- iriinal Sparks of the Law in the Heart of Man, Rom. ii. 15. fome common Principles of Piety, Juftice and Charity, without which the World would foon difband, and fall into Confufion -9 but there is not the leaft Prefumption or Conjecture of the Contrivance of theGofpel. Though Mifery fharpens the Mind, and makes it more ingenious to find out Ways of De- liverance, yet here Reafon was utterly at a Lofs. How could it ever enter into the Thoughts of the Ifraelites, that by erecting a Brazen Serpent on a Pole, and looking towards it, the Wounds made by the Fiery Serpents mould be healed ? And how could guilty Man find out a Way to fatisfy infinite Juftice by the Sufferings of a Mediator, and to heal the wounded Spirit by believing on him ? The mod enquiring Reafon could never have thought of the Wonders of the Incarnation, that a Virgin mould conceive, and a God be born ; nor of the Death of the Prince of Life, and the Refurrection, and Afcenfion of the Lord of Glory. We may fee how impoffible it is for the natural Underftanding to difcover the Myfte- ry 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 107 ry of Redemption, when thofe that had the higheft Reputation for Wifdom were ignorant of the Crea- tion. The Philofophers were divided in nothing more, than in their Account of the World's Original. f Some imagin'd it to proceed from Water, others from Fire ; Tome from Order, others from Con- fufion •, fome to be from Eternity, others in Time. If the Soul's Eye be fo weakened as not to fee that eternal Power, which is fo apparent in its Ef- fects, much lefs could it pierce . into the Will, and free Determinations of God, of which there is not the leaft Intimation or Shadow in the Things that are made. This Wifdom comes from above, and was hidden from Ages and Generations. Rom.xvi. 5. 'Tis cal- led the Myftery of Chrijl -, Ephef. iii. 4. He is the Ob- ject, and Revealer of it : The Myftery of Faith \ 1 Tim. iii. 9. the Difcovery of which was by pure Revelation : The Myftery of his WilU Ephef. i. 9. an inviolable Secret 'till he was pleafed to make it known. Were the Human Underftanding as clear as it is corrupt, yet it cannot by the Strength of Difcourfe arrive to the Knowledge of it. Su- pernatural Revelation was necefiary to difcover it to the Angels. The Thoughts of Men are a Secret, into which the Creator alone had Right to enter, 2 Chron. vi. 30. it being his Prerogative to fearch the Heart ; the Angels conjecture only, from the Difpofitions of Men, from outward Circumftan- ces, from the Images in the Fancy, and from mate- rial, Impreffions on the Blood and Spirits, what are the Thoughts of the Heart : And much lefs can they difcover the Counfel of God himfelf. The Apoftle tells us, Ephef. iii. 10. To Principalities and Powers in t Facilis inter JiorQlogia but his original Title to it was by the per- fonal Union. To illuftrate this by a lower Inftance : The Mother of Mofes was called to be his Nurfe by Pharaoh's Daughter, with the Promife of a Reward, as if me had no Relation to him. Now the pure Love of a Mother, not the Gain of a Nurfe, was the Motive that enclined her to nourifh him with her Milk-f. Thus the Love of Ch rift was the pri- mary active Caufe that made him liberal to us of his Blood ; neither did the juft Expectation of the Re-* ward take off from it. The Sum is this : The EiTence of Love confiftsia defiring the Good of another without Refpect to our- felves ; and Love is fo much the more free, as the Be- nefit we give to another is lefs profitable, or more damageable to us. Now among Men it is impofTible that to a virtuous Benefactor there mould not re«- dound a double Benefit. 1. From the eternal Reward which God hath pro- mifed. And, 2. From the internal Beauty of an honed Action, which the Philofopher affirms, doth exceed any Lofs that can befal us. For if one dies for his Friend, yet he f Chriftus euim per naturam bonus non propter prcemii cu- piditatem ; ideo pa/Tus eft, quia benefacere eum dele&avit, non quiaincrementum Gloria? ex fua paffione quasrebat. Ambrof% in Contriving Mans Redemption. 147 he loves himfelf mod, for he would not chufe to be lefs virtuous than his Friend, and by dying for him he excels him in Virtue, which is more valuable than Life itfelf. But to the Son of God no fuch Advantage could accrue •, for being infinitely holy and happy in his EfTence, there can be no Addition to his Felicity or Virtues by any external Emana- tion from him. His Love was for our Profit, not his own. 2. The freenefs of God's Mercy is evident by con- fidering there was no Tie upon him to difpenie it. Grace ftrictly taken differs from Love : For that may be a Debt, and without Injuftice not denied. There are inviolable Obligations on Children to love their Parents ; and Duty lefTens Delert : The Performance of it doth not fo much deferve Praife, as the Ne- glect merits Cenfure and Reproof. But the Love of God to Man' is a pure, free, and liberal Affection, no way due. The Grace of God, and the Gift by Grace hath abounded unto many, Rom. v. 15. The Creation was an Effufion of Goodnefs, much more Redemption. Thou art worthy , 0 Lord, to receive Glory, and Honour ', and Power \ for thou bdjl created all Things, and for thy Pleafure they are^ and were creat- ed, Rev. iv. 11. 'Tis Grace that gave Being to the Angels, with all the Prerogatives that adorn their Natures : 'Tis Grace confirmed them in their origi- nal Integrity: For God owes them nothing, and they are nothing to him. It was Grace that placed Adam in Paradiie, and made him as a viiible God in the lower World. And if Grace alone difpenfed Benefits to innocent Creatures, much more to thofe who are obnoxious to Jultice : The firll was free, but this is merciful. And this leads to the fecond Con- fideration, which exalts redeeming Love. The 148 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes The Object of it is Man in his lapfed State. In this Refpect it excels the Goodnefs that prevented him at the Beginning. In the Creation as there was no Object to invite, fo nothing repugnant to Man's Being and Happinefs : The Duft of the Earth did not merit fuch an excellent Condition as it received from the pure Bounty of God ; but there was no moral Unworthinefs. But the Grace of the Gofpel hath a different Object, the Wretched and Un- worthy -, and it produces different Operations -, 'tis healing and medicinal, ranfoming and delivering, and hath a peculiar Character among the Divine Attributes. 'Tis Goodnefs that crowns the Angels, but 'tis Mercy, the Sanctuary of the Guilty, and Refuge of the Miferable, that faves Man. The Scripture hath confecrated the Name of Grace, in a foecial Manner, to fignify the moil excellent and admirable Favour of God in recovering us from our juftly deferved Milery. We are jufiified freely by his Grace, Rom. iii. 24. By Grace we arejaved, Eph. ii. 5. Grace and 'Truth is come by Jefus Chrift, John i. 17. "Tis the Grace cf God that brings Salvation ; Tit. ii. 11. And this is glorioufly manifefted towards Man, in that, 1. Confidered in himfelf he is altoge- ther unworthy of it. 2. As compared with the fal- len Angels, who are left under perfect irremediable Mifery. Firft-, Man confidered in himfelf is unworthy of the Favour of God. The ufual Motives of Love are, 1. The Goodnefs of Things or Perfons. This Is the proper Allective of the rational Appetite : There is fuch a ravifhing Beauty in it, that it power- fully calls forth Affection. When there is an Uni- on of amiable Qualities in a Perfon, every one finds an Attractive. %\ A in Contriving Mans Redemption] 149 2. A Conformity in Difpofition hath a mighty Force to beget Love. Refemblance is the common Principle of Union in Nature : Social Plants thrive beft when near together : Senfitive Creatures afib- date with thofe of their Kind : And Love, which is an affectionate Union and voluntary Band, pro- ceeds from a Similitude of Wills and Inclinations. The Harmony of Tempers is the ftrongeft and fweeteft Tie of Friendfhip. 3. Love is an innocent and powerful Charm to produce Love : It is of univerfal Virtue, and known by all the World J. None are of fuch an unna- tural Hardnefs, but they are foftned and receive lmpreflion from it. Now there are none of thefe Inducements to incline God to love Man. 1. He was utterly deftitute of moral Goodnefs : As the exact Temperament of the Body, fo the Order and Beauty of the Soul, was fpoiled by Sin. Nothing remained but Deformity and Defilements : The Love of God makes us amiable, but did not find us fo. Redemption is a free Favour, not ex- cited by the Worth of him that receives it, but the Grace of him that difpenfes it; Herein God com- mended his Love to us, that while we were Sinners Chrifi died for us\ Rom. v. 8. Our Goodnefs was not the Motive of his Love, but his Love the Original of our Goodnefs. 2. There is a fixed Contrariety in the corrupted Nature of Man to the holy Nature and Will of God : For which he is not only unworthy of his Love, but worthy of his Wrath. We are oppofite to Him in our Minds, Affections, and Actions : A fcrong Antipathy is feated in all our Faculties. How» I Tibi monftrabo amatorium fine Medicamento, fine erbis fine ullius veneficae Carmine, fi vis amari ama. Stntc* 15° The Harmony of the Divine Attributes How unqualified were we for his Love ? There is infinite Holinefs in Him, whereby he is eternally oppofite to all Sin, yet he exprefTed infinite Love to Sinners in faving them from Mifery. 3. There was not the leaft Spark of Love in Man to God, notwithstanding his infinite Beauty and Bounty to us ; {Rom. v. 10) yet we renewed Acts of Hoftility againft him every Day. And it was the word Kind of Hoftility, arifing from the Hatred of God, {Rom. i. 30.) and that for his Holinefs, his moft amiable Perfection . Yet then in his Love he pitied us. The fame Favour beftowed on an E- nemy, is morally more valuable than given to a Friend. For it is Love that puts a Price on Bene- fits : And the more undeferved they are, the more they are endeared by the Affection that gives them. Here is Love, not that we loved God, but that he lov- ed us, andfent his Son to be a Propitiation for our Sins •, 1 John iv, 10. We were Rebels againft God, and at Enmity with the Prince of Life, yet then He gave Himfelf for us. It will further appear that our Salvation comes from pure Favour, if we confider Man not only as a rebellious Enemy to God, but impotent and obftinate, without Power to refift Juftice, and without Affection to defire Mercy. Sometimes the Intereft of a Prince may induce him to fpare the Guilty, he may be compelled to pardon, whom he cannot Punifh. The Multitude is the greateft Po- tentate. The Sons of Zerviah were too ftrong for David: And then it is not Pity, but Policy to fuf- pend the Judgment. But our Condition is defcrib- ed by the Apoftle, Rom, v. 6. That when we were Sinners, and without Strength, then Chrift died for us. Man is a defpicable Creature, fo weak that he trembles at the Appearance of a Worm, and yet fo wicked in Contriving Mans' Redemption] lgx wicked that he lifts up his Head againft Heaven. How unable is he to encounter with offended Omni- potence ? How eafily can God deftroy him, when by his fole Word he made him ? If he unclafps his Hand that fupports all Things, they will prefently relapfe into their firft Confufion. The whole World of Sinners was Jhut up, utterly unable to repel or avoid his Difpleafure : And what amazing Love is it to fpare Rebels that were under his Feet ? When a Man finds his Enemy, will he let him ge well away ? i Sam. xxiv. 9. But God, when we were all at his Mercy, fpared and faved us. Beiides, Rebels fometimes follicit the Favour of their Prince by their Acknowledgements, their Tears and Supplications, the Teftimonies of their Repentance : But Man perfifted in his fierce Enmi- ty, and had the Weapons of Defiance in his Hands againft his Creator •, he trampled on his Laws, and defpifed his Deity *, yet then the Lord of Hofts be- came the God of Peace. In fhort, there was no- thing to call forth the Divine CompafTion but our Mifery : The Breach began on Man's Part, but Reconciliation on God's Mercy opened his melting Eye, and prevented not only our Deiert, but our Expectation and Defires. The Defign was laid from Eternity. God forefaw our Sin and our Mifery, and appointed a Saviour before the Foundation of the World ; 1 Pet. i. 20. It was the moft early and pure Love to provide a Ranfom for us before we had a Being •, therefore we could not be deferving, nor defirous of it ; and after we were made, we deierved nothing but Damnation. 2. The Grace of God eminently appears in Man's Recovery, by comparing his State with that of the fallen Angels, who are left under Mifery. This is a fpecial Circumftance that magnifies the Fovour j J 52 7!&* Harmony of the Divine Attributes Favour; and to make it more fenfible to us, it will be convenient briefly to confider the firft State of the Angels, their Fall, and their Punifhment. God in creating the World, formed two Na- tures capable of his Image and Favour, to glorify and enjoy him, Angels, and Men ; and placed them in the principal Parts of the Univerfe, Heaven and Earth. The Angels were the eldeft Offspring of his Love, the pureft Productions of that fupreme Light : Man in his beft State was inferior to them. A great Number of them kept not their firft State \ifai. viii. 5.) of Integrity and Felicity. Their Sin is intimated in Scripture ; Ordain not a Novice, left, being lifted up in Pride, he fall into the Condemnation cf the Devil-, iTim. iii. 6. That is, left he become guilty of that Sin which brought a fevere Sentence on the Devil. The Prince of Darknefs was blinded with the Luftre of his own Excellencies, and at- tempted upon the Regalia of Heaven, affecting an independent State. He difavowed his Benefactor, inriched with his Benefits. And in the fame Mo- ment he, with his Companions in Rebellion, were banifhed from Heaven. God /pared not the Angels that finned, but caft them down to Hell, and delivered them into Chains cf Darknejs to he referved unto Judgment -, 2 Pet. ii. 4. Mercy did not interpofe to avert or fufpend their Judgment, but immediately they were expelled from the Divine Prefence. A folemn Triumph in Heaven followed : A Voice came out of the throne, faying, Praife our God all ye his Servants : And there was as it were the Voice of mighty Thundrings, faying, Hallelujah, for the Lord God Omnipotent reigns. They are now the moll eminent Examples of revenging Wrath. Their prefent Mifery is unfupportable, and they expect worfe. in Contriving Mans Redemption, 153 worfe. When our Saviour caft fome of them out of the polTeiTed Perfons, they cried out, Mark i. Art thou come to torment us before our Time ? Miferrimum eft timere cum /per es nihil \ 'tis the Height of Mifery to have nothing to hope, and fomething to fear. Their Guilt is attended with Defpair \ they are in Everlafting Chains ; He that carries the Keys of Hell and Death will never open their Prifon. If the Sentence did admit a Revocation after a Million of Years, their Torment would be nothing in Compa- rifon of what it is : For the longeft Meafure of Time bears no Proportion to Eternity j and Hope would allay the Senfe of the prefent Sufferings with the Profpect of future Eafe. But their Judgment is ir- reverfible ; they are under the Bhcknefs of Darknefs for ever. There is not the leaft Glimpfe of Hope to allay their Sorrows, no Star-light to fweeten the Hor- rors of their eternal Night. They are fervi poena , that can never be redeemed. It were a Kind of Pardon to them to be capable of Death : But God will ne- ver be fo. far reconciled, as to annihilate them. His Anger fh all be accomplifhed, and his Fury reft upon them ; Ezek. iii. 5. Immortality, the Privilege of their Nature, infinitely increafes their Torment : For when the Understanding, by a ftrong and active Apprehenfion, hath a terrible and unbounded Prof- pecl of the Continuance of their Sufferings, that what is Intolerable mult be Eternal •, this inexpref- fibly exafperates their Mifery : There wants a Word beyond Death to fet it forth. This is the Condi- tion of the finning Angels, and God might have delt in as flricl: Juftice with rebellious Man. 'Tis true, there are many Reafons may be alTigned why the Wifdom of God made no Provifion for their Re- covery. I.IC 154 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes i. It was moft decent that the firft Breach of the Divine Law fhould be pu.nifhed to fecure Obedience for the future. Prudent Law-givers are fevere a- gainft the firft TranfgrefTors, the Leaders in Dif- obedience : He that firft perfumed to break the Sab- bath, was by God's Command put to Death. And Solomon, the King of Peace, punifhedthe firft Attempt upon his Royalty with Death, tho' in the Perfon of his Brother. 2. The Malignity of their Sin was in the higher! Degree : For fuch was the Clearnefs of the an- gelical Underftanding, that there was nothing of Ig- norance and Deceit to lefTen the Voluntarinefs of their Sin : 'Twas no Miftake, but Malice : They fell in the Light of Heaven, and rendered them- felves incapable of Mercy. As under the Law, thofe who finned with a high Handy Heb. ix. 7. that is, not out of Ignorance or Imbicility, to pleafe their Paflions, but knowingly and proudly defpifed the Command, their Prefumption was inexpia- ble, no Sacrifice was appointed for it. And the Gof- pel, tho' the Declaration of Mercy, yet excepts thofe who fin the great Tranfgreflion againft the Holy Ghoft. Now of fuch a Nature was the Sin of the rebellious Angels, (Phil, iii.) it being a contemp- tuous Violation of God's Majefty, and therefore unpardonable. Befides, they are wholly fpiritual Beings, without any Allay of Flelh, and fo fell to the utmoft in Evil, there being nothing to fuf- pend the Entirenefs of their Will : Whereas the human Spirit is more flow by its Union with the Body. And that which extremely aggravates their Sin, is, that it was committed in the State of perfect Happinefs. They defpifed the full Fruition of God : It was therefore congruous to the Di- vine Wifdom, that their final Sentence fhould de- pend in Contriving Mans Redemption. 155 pend upon their firft Election : Whereas Man's Re- bellion, though inconceivably great, was againft a lower Light and lefs Grace difpenfed to him. 3. They finned without a Tempter, and were not in the fame Capacity with Man to be reftored by a Saviour. The Devil is an Original Proprietor in Sin, it is of his own, John viii. 44.) Man was be- guiled by the Serpent's Subtilty : As he fell by another's Malice, fo he is recovered by another's Merit. 4. The angelical Nature was not intirely loft: Myriads of bleffed Spirits ftill continue in the Place of their Innocency and Glory, and for ever afcribe to the Great Creator that incommunicable Honour, which is due to Him -, and perfectly do bis Commandments, Pfal. ciii. But all Mankind was loft in Adam, and no Religion was left in the lower World. Now although in thefe and other Refpects it was moft confident with the Wifdom and Juftice of God, to conclude them under an irrevocable Doom, yet the principal Caufe that inclined him to fave Man, was mere and perfect Grace. The Law made no Distinction, but awarded the fame Punifhment : Mercy alone made the Difference : And the Reafon of that is in Himfelf. Millions of them fell Sacrifices to Juftice, and guilty Man was fpared : 'Tis not for the Excellency of our Na- tures, for Man in his Creation was lower than the Angels ; nor upon the Account of Service, for they having more eminent Endowments of Wif- dom and Power, might have brought greater Ho- nour to God i nor for our Innocence, for though not equally, yet we had highly offended Him : But it muft be refolved into that Love which paffeth Knowledge, 'Twas the unaccountable Pleafure of God lS& 'The Harmony of the Divine Attributes God that preferred, Babes before the Wife and Prudent \ Matt. xi. And herein Grace is mod: glorious. He in no wife took the Nature of Angels, though immortal Spirits : He did not put forth his Hand to help them, and break the Force of their Fall : He did nothing for their Relief, they are under un- allayed Wrath : But He took the Seed of Abraham^ and plants a new Colony of thofe who fprung from the Earth, in the heavenly Country, to fill up the vacant Places of thole apoflate Spirits. This is juft Matter of our higheft Admiration, why the milder Attribute is exercifed towards Man, and the feverer on them ! Why the VefTels of Clay are chofen, and the VefTeJs of Gold neglected ! How can we reflect upon it without the warmeft Af- fections to our Redeemer ! We fhall never fully underfrand the Riches of diftinguifhing Grace, till our Saviour fhall be their Judge, and receive us into the Kingdom of Joy and Glory, and condemn them to an eternal Separation from his Prefence. CHAP. IX. The Great nefs of Redeeming Love dif covered by con- fidering the Evils from which we are freed. The Servitude of Sin, the Tyranny of Satan, the Bon- dage of the Law, the Empire of Death. The Meafure of Love is proportionable to the Degrees of our Mifery. No pojfible Remedy for us in Na- ture. Our Deliverance is complete. The Divine Love is magnified in the Means by which our Re- demption is accomplifhed. They are the Incarnation and Sufferings of the Son of God. Love is ma- nifefted in the Incarnation, upon the Account of the eflential Condition of the Nature ajjumed, and its fervile in Contriving Mans Redemption. \*j fervile State. Chrift took our Nature after it bad loft its Innocency. The mod evident Proof of God's Love is in the Sufferings of Chrift. The Defer iption of them with refpecl to his Soul and Body. The Sufferings of his Soul jet forth from the Caufes of his Grief-, the Difpcfition of Chrift, and the Defign of God in affiicling Him. The Sorrows of his forfaken State. All comforting In- fluences were Jufpended, but without Prejudice to the Perfonal Union , or the Perfeclion of his Grace, or the Love of his Father towards him. The Death of the Crofs confidered, with refpecl to the Ignomi- ny and Torment that concurred in it. The Love of the Father and of Chrift amplified upon the Account of his enduring it. TH E next Circumftance to be confidered in the Divine Mercy is the Degree of it : And this is defcribed by the Apoftle in all the Dimenfions which can fignify its Greatnefs. He prays for the Ephefians, Ephef. iii. 18. that they may be able to com- prehend with all Saints, the Breadth, and Length, and Depth, and Height of the Love of God in Chrift which paffes Knowledge. No Language is fufficient to ex- prefs it : If our Hearts were as large as the Sand on the Sea-lhore, yet they were too ftrait to com- prehend it. But although we cannot arrive to the perfedt Knowledge of this excellent Love, yet 'tis our Duty to ftudy it with the greateft Application of Mind \ for our Happincfs depends upon it •, and To far we may underftand as to inflame our Hearts with a fuperlative Affection to God. And the full Difcovery which here we defire, and fearch after, in the future State, fhall be obtained by the Prefence and Light of our Redeemer. Now the Greatnefs gf the Divine Love in our Redemption appears, L i. By 158 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes 1. By reflecting on the mighty Evils from which we are freed. 2. The Means by which our Redemption is ac- complished. 3. That excellent State to which we are advanced by our Redeemer. 1. If we reflect upon the Horror of our natural State, it will exceedingly heighten the Mercy that delivered us. This I have in Part opened before, therefore I will be the fhorter in defcribing it. Man by his Rebellion had forfeited God's Favour, and the Honour and Happinefs he enjoyed in Paradife •, PJaL xlix. 20. And as there is no middle State be- tween Sovereignty and Mifery, he that falls from the Throne (lops not till he comes to the Bottom \ fo when Man fell from God and the Dignity of his in- nocent State, he became extreamly miferable. He is under the Servitude of Sin, the Tyranny of Sa- tan, the Bondage of the Law, and the Empire of Death.! 1. Man is a Captive to Sin. He is fallen from the Hand of his Counfel, under the Power of his Paflions. Love, Hatred, Ambition, Envy, Fear, Sorrow, and all the other flinging Affections (of which is true what Solinus fpeaks of the feveral Kinds of Serpents in Africa, Quantus nominum tantus mortium numerus) exer- cife a Tyranny over him. And if no Man can ferve two Mafters, as ourSaviour tells us^Matt. vi. 24. how wretch- ed is the Slavery of Man, whofe Paflions are fo oppo- fite, that in obeying one, he cannot efcape the Lafh of many imperious Matters ? He is pofleft with a Legion of impure Lufts. And as the Demoniack in the Gofpel was fometimes caft into the Fire, and fometimes into the Water •, fo is he hurried by the Fury of contrary Paflions. This Servitude to Sin is in all Refpe&s complete. For thofe who ferve, are either ; in Contriving Mans Redemptio?u 15a either born Servants, or bought with a Price, or made Captives by Force : And Sin hath all thefe Kinds of Title to Man ; He is conceived and born in Sin, Pfal. li. He is fold under Sin, Rom. vii. And fells himfelf ' to do evil, Ifa. xxviii. 15, As that which is fold pafTes into the PoiTeffion of the Buyer ; fo the Sinner exchanging himfelf for the Pleafures of Sin, is under its Power. Onginal Sin took PofTefFion of our Nature, and Actual of our Lives. He is the Servant of Corruption by yielding to it : For of whom a Man is overcome, of the fame he is brought in Bondage, 2 Pet. ii. 19. The Condition of the mod wretched Bondflave is more fweec and lefs fervile than that of a Sinner : For the fevcreft Tyranny is exercifed only upon the Body, the Soul remains free in the midft of Chains. Slaves are called, Somatai Bodies, Rev. xviii. 13. but the Power of Sin oppref- fes the Soul, the moil noble Part, and defaces the bright Character of the Deity that was ftampt up- on its Vifage. The word Slavery is terminated with this prefent Life. In the Grave the Prifoners reft to- gether, they hear not the Voice of the Oppreffor. The fmall and the great are there, and the Servant is free from his Mafter -, Job iii. 18, 19. But there $ no Ex- emption from this Servitude by Death, it extends itfelf to Eternity. 2. Man fince his Fall is under the Tyranny of Sa- tan, who is called the God of this W.orld, and is more abfolute than all temporal Princes, his Dominion being over the Will. He overcame Man in Para- dife, and by the Right of War rules over him. The Soul is kept in his Bondage by fubtile Chains, of which the fpiritual Nature is capable. The Under- flanding is captivated by Ignorance and Errors •„ the Will by inordinate and dangerous Lufts •, the Memory by the Images of finful Pleafures, thole L ?, mortal 160 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes mortal Vifions which inchant the Soul, and make it not defirous of Liberty. Never did cruel Pirate fo incompaffionately urge his Slaves to ply their Oars in charging, or flying from an Enemy, as Satan in- cites thofe who are his Captives to do hisWill^ 2 Tim. ii. 26. And can there be a more afflicting Calami- ty, than to be the Slave of one's Enemy, efpecially if bafe and cruel ? This is the Condition of Man, he is a Captive to the Devil, who was a Liar^ and a Murderer from the Beginning. He is under the Rage of that bloody Tyrant, whofe Ambition was to render Man as miferable as himfelf, who, in Triumph, upbraids him for his Folly, and adds Derifion to his Cruelty. 3. Fallen Man is under the Curfe and Terrors of the Law. For being guilty, he is juftly expofed to the Punifhment threatned againft TranfgrefTors, without the Allowance of Repentance to obtain Par- don. And Confcience, which is the Eccho of the Law in his Bofom, repeats the dreadful Sentence. This is an Accufer which none can filence, a Judge that none can decline : And from hence it is, that Men all their Life are fubjeft to Bondage. Heb. ii. be- ing obnoxious to the Wrath of God, which the awakened Confcience fearfully/ets before them. This complicated Servitude of a Sinner theScripture reprefents under great Variety of Similitudes, that the Defects of one may be fupplied by another. Every Sinner is a Servant^ Joh. viii. 34. Now a Servant by Flight may recover his Liberty : But the Sinner is a Captive in Chains, 2 Tim. ii. 26. A Captive may be freed by laying down a Ranfom ; but the Sinner is deeply in Debt : Every Debtor is not mi- ferable by his own Fault, (Matt, xviii.) it may be his Infelicity, not his Crime, that he is poor; but the Sinner is guilty of the higheft Offence -, Ifa. I 6- A , in Contriving Mans Redemption. 161 A guilty Perfon may enjoy his Health -, but the Sin- ner is fick of a deadly Difeafe, an incurable Wound : He that is Tick and wounded may fend for the Phyfi- cian in order to his Recovery •, but the Sinner is in a deep Sleep, 2 Tim. ii. 26. The Apoftle fets forth the Converfion of a Sinner by the Word, Ananephein, which fignifies an awaking out of Sleep, caufed by the Fumes of Wine or flrong Liquor •, which is an ex- cellent Refemblance of the Sinner's State, wherein the fpiritual Senfes are bound up, and thePalTuns, as thick and malignant Vapours, cloud the Mind, that it cannot reflect upon his Miferies. He that is afleep may awake-, but the Sinner is in a State of Death, which implies not only a CeiTation f rom all vital Acti- ons, but an abfolute Difability to perform them. The Understanding is difabled for any fpiritual Per- ception, the Will for any holy Inclinations, the whole Man is difabled for the Senfe of his wretched State. This is the fpiritual Death which juftly ex- pofes the Sinner to Death temporal and eternal. 4. Every Man as defcending from Adam, is born a Sacrifice to Death. His Condition in this World is fo wretched and unworthy the original Excellency of his Nature, that it deferves not the Name of Life : 'Tis a continual Exercifeof finful Actions difhonour- able to God, and damning to himfelf, and after the Succeffion of a few Years in the Defilements of Sin, and the Accidents of this frail State, in doing and fullering Evil, Man comes to his fatal Period, and falls into the bottomlefs Pit, the Place of Pollu- tions and Horrors, of Sin and Torments. 'Tis there that the Wrath of God abides on him •, and who knows the Power of his Wrath ? According to his Fear, fo is his Wrath, Pfal. xc. 12. Fear is an unbounded PaiTion, and can extend itfelf to the Apprehenfion of fuch Torments, which no finite Power can in- L 3 flicl : 162 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes flict : But the Wrath of God exceeds the moll jea- lous Fears of the guilty Confcience. It proceeds from infinite Juftice, and is executed by Almighty Power, and contains eminently all Kind of Evils. A Lake of flaming Brimftone, and whatever is moft dreadful to Senle, is but an imperfect Allufion to re- prefent it. And how great is that Love which pitied and ref- cued us from Sin and Hell ? This faving Mercy is fet out for its Tendernefs and Vehemence by the Commotion of the Bowels, at the Sight of one in Mi- fery, Lukei. 78. efpecially the working of the Mo- ther, when any Evil befals her Children : Such an inward deep Refentment of our Diftrefs was in the Fa- ther of Mercies. When we were in our Blood, He f aid unto us, Live, Ezek. xvi. 6. And that which further dif- covers the eminent Degree of his Love is this •, He might have been unconcerned with our Diftrefs, and left us under Defpair of Deliverance. There is a Compaflion which arifeth from Self-love, when the Sight of another's Mifery furprifes us, and affects us in iuch a Manner as to difturb our Repofe, and im- bitter our Joy, by confidering our liablenefs to the fame Troubles, and from hence we are inclined to help them. And there is a Compaflion that proceeds from pure Love to the miferable, when the Perfon that expreffes it, is above all the Affaults of Evil, and incapable of all Affections that might leffen his Felicity, and yet applies himfelf to relieve the Af- flicted •, and fuch was God's towards Man. If it had been a tolerable Evil under which we were fallen, the Mercy that recovered us had been lefs : For Benefits are valued by the Neceflity of the Receiver. But Man wasdifinheritedof Paradife, an Heir of Hell, his Mifery was inconceivably great. Now the Meafure of God's Love is proportionable to in Contriving Mans Redemption. 163 to the Mifery from whence we are redeemed. If there had been any poflible Remedy for us in Nature, our Engagements had not been fo great : But only He that created us by his Power, could reftore us by his Love. Briefly, it magnifies the Divine Com- panion, that our Deliverance is full and entire. It had been admirable Favour to have mitigated our Mifery, but we have a perfect Redemption fyeetned by the Remembrance of thofe dreadful Evils that oppreft us. As the three Hebrew Martyrs came unhurt out of the fiery Furnace, 'The Hair of their Heads were notfinged, ncr their Coats changed, nor the Smell of the Fire had pajjed on them, Dan. iii. 27. So the Saints above have no Marks of Sin or Mifery remaining upon them, not the leaft Spot or Wrinkle to blaft their Beauty, nor the leaft Trouble to diminifh their BlefTednefs ; but for ever poffefs the Fulnefs of Joy and Glory, a pure and triumphant Felicity. 2. The Greatnefs of the Divine Love towards fallen Man appears in the Means by which our Re- demption is accomplifhed. And thofe are the Incar- nation and Sufferings of the Son of God. The In- carnation manifefts this Love upon a double Account. 1. In regard of the effential Condition of the Na- ture he aflumed. 2. Its Servile State and Meannefs. 1. The effential Condition of the human Na- ture affumed by our Redeemer difcovers his tran- fcendent Love to us. For what Proportion is there between God and Man ? Infinite and Finite are not Terms that admit Comparifon, as Greater and Lefs ; but are diftant, as All and Nothing. The whole World before him, is but as the Drop of the Bucket that hath fear ce Weight to fall-, and the finall Bufi of the Balance ', that is not of Juch Moment as to turn the Scales 1 'tis as nothing, and counted lefs than nothings and 164 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes and Vanity, Ifa. xl. 15, 17. The Deity in its own Nature includes Independence and Sovereignty. To be a Creature implies Dependence and Subjection. The angelical Nature is infinitely inferiour to the Divine, and Man is lower than the Angels •, yet the Word was made FleJJo. Add to this, he was not made as Adam in the Perfection of his Nature, and begin- ning the firft Step of his Life in the full Exercife of Reafon, and Dominion over the Creatures, but he came into the World by the Way of a natural Birth, and Dependence upon a mortal Creature. The e- ternal Wifdom of the Father (looped to a Sate of Infancy, which is moft diftant from that of Wif- dom, wherein though the Life, yet the Light of the reafonable Soul is not vifible ; and the mighty God, to a Condition of Indigence and Infirmity. The Lord of Nature fubmitted to the Laws of it. Admirable Love ! wherein God feemed to forget his own Greatnefs, and the Meannefs of the Creature. This is more endeared to us by confidering. 2. The fervile State of the Nature he aflllmed. An Account of this we have in the Words of the Apoftle, Phil, ii, 5, 6, 7, 8. Let this Mind be in you, which was alfo in Chrijl ; who being in the Form of God ; that is, enjoying the Divine Nature with all its Glo- ry eternally, and invariably. As to be in the Form of a King, fignifies not only to be a King, but to have all the confpicuous Marks of Royalty, the Crown, Scepter, Throne, the Guards and State of a King. Thus our Saviour poffeft that Glory that is truly Divine, before he took our Nature, John xvii. 5. The Angels adored him in Heaven, and by him Princes reigned on the Earth, Prov. viii. 15. 'Tis added, He thought is no Robbery to be equal with God, Phil. ii. 6. that is, being the efTential Image of the Father, he had a rightful PofTeflion of all his Per- fections i in Contriving Mans Redemption. i6r fe&ions ; yet he made himfelf of no Reputation, and took upon him the Form of a Servant, and was made in the Likenefs of Man : This is a lower Degree of Con - defenfion than the afluming the naked human Nature. A Servant is not (imply a Man, there be- ing many Men of higher Quality, but a Man in a low State. Now he that was in the Form of God, lefTened himfelf into the Form of a Servant ; that is, took the human Nature without Honour, attended with its Infirmities ; fo that by the vifible Condi- tion of his Life, he was judged to be an ordinary Perfon, and not that under that Meannefs the Lord of Angels had been concealed. This will more diftinctly be underftood, if we confider the Lownefs of his Extraction, the Poverty of his Birth, and the Tenour of his Life whillt he converfed with Men. What Nation was more defpicable in the Efteem of the World than the Jews? yet of their Stock Chrift difdained not to defcend J. And among the Jews none were more vilified than the Galileans ; and in Galilee, Nazareth was a contemptible Village •, and in Nazareth the Fa- mily of Jofeph was very obfcure, and to him our Saviour was nearly allied. His reputed Father was a Carpenter, and his Mother a poor Virgin, that offered two Pigeons for her Purification. He firfl breathed in a Stable, and was covered with poor Swadling-cloaths, who was Mafter of Heaven and Earth, and adorns all Creatures with their Glory. But Love made him, who is Heir of all Things, re- nounce the Privilege of his fupernatural Sonfhip. Inconceivable Condefcenfion ! Therefore an Angel was difpatched from Heaven, who appeared with a furprif- X The Jews an calUd by Tacitus, Viliffima pars kivientiunu Lib. 5. Hift. 1 66 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes furprifing miraculous Light, the vifible Character of his Dignity, to prevent the Scandal which might arife from the Meannefs of his Condition, and to affure the Shepherds that the Babe which lay in the Manger was the Redeemer of the World, Luke ii. 12. The Courfe of his Life was a Preface, and preparative for the Death of the Crofs. He had a juft Right to ail that Glory, which a created Nature perfonally united to the Deity could receive. An eminent Inftance of it there was in his Transfigura- tion, when Glory defcended from Heaven to in- compafs him •, that which was fo fhort mould have been continual, but he prefently returned to the Lownefs of his former Condition. The Fulnefs of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily ', yet in his humble State he was voluntarily deprived of thofe admi- rable Effects which mould proceed from that Uni- on. Strange Seperation between the Deity, and the Glory that refults from it ! God is Light, and the Son is the Brightnefs of his Father's Glory, yet in his Pilgrimage upon the Earth he was always under a Cloud. Aftonifhing Miracle! tranfeend- ing all thofe in the Compafs of Nature •, yet the power of Love effected it. He was made not only lower than the Angels, but lefs than all Men> Heb. ii. joining (Oh amazing Abafement!) the Majefty of God, with the Meanefs of a Worm, PfaL xxii. The High and Lofty One, whom the Prophet faw, exalted on a High Throne, Ifa. vi. and all the Powers of Heaven in a Pofture of Reverence about him, was defpifed and rejected of Men-, Ifa. liii. they turned their Eyes from him, not for the Luftre of his Countenance, but for Shame. If the Lord had a (Turned our Nature in its moft honourable Condition, and appeared in its Beauty, the Condefcenfion were infinite : For altho' Men are in Contriving Mans Redemption. i6j arediftinguifhed among themfelves by Titles of Ho- nour, yet as two Gloworms that mine with an une- qual Brightnels in the Night, are equally obfeured by the Light of the Sun •, fo all Men, thofe that are advanced to the moil eminent Degree, as well as the moft abject and wretched, are in the fame Di- ftance from God'. But He emptied himfelf of all his Glory •, Phil. ii. He grew up as a tender Plants and as a Root out of a dry Ground, there was no Form or Come- linefs in him ; Ifa. liii. 2. From his Birth to the Time of his Preaching he lived fo privately, as only known under the Quality of the Carpenter's Son. There was a continual Reprefllon of that inconceiv- able Glory, that was due to him the firft Moment: of his appearing among Men. In fhort, His de- fpifed Condition was an Abafement not only of his Divinity, but his Humanity. And how confpicu- ous was his Love in this darkning Condefcenfion ? We know the Grace of the Lord Jefus Chrift, that tho9 he was rich, he became poor for our Sakes, 2 Cor. viii. 9. He did not affume that which was due to the Ex- cellency of his Nature, but what was convenient for our Redemption, which was to be accomplifhed*by Sufferings. Where can be found an Example of fuch Love ? Some have favourable Inclinations to help the Di- ftreffed, and will exprefs fo much Companion as is confident with their State and Quality : But if, in order to the Relieving of the Miferable, one muft fubmit to what is (hameful, who hath an Affection fo ftrong and vehement as to Purchafe his Brother's Redemption at the Lofs of his own Honour ? Yet the Son of God defcended from his Throne, and put on our vile Mortality : He parted with his Glory, that He might be qualified to part with his Life for our Salvation. How doth this exalt hisCompaflion to us ! Add 1 68 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Add further, He took our Nature after it had loft its primitive Innocency. The natural Diftance be- tween God and the Creature is infinite -, the Moral between God and the finful Creature, if poffible, is more than infinite : Yet the Mercy of our Re- deemer overcame this Diftance. What an Extafy of Love tranfported the Son of God fo far as to ejpoufe our Nature, after it was depraved and dishonoured with Sin ? He was effential Innocence and Purity, yet He came in the Similitude of finful Flefh, Rom. viii. 3. which to outward View was not different from what was really finful. He was the holy Lawgiver, yet He fubmitted to that Law, which made Him appear under the Character and Difreputation of a Sinner. He paid the bloody Tribute of the Children of Wrath, being circumcifed as guilty of Adam's Sin ; and he was baptifed as guil- ty of his own. 2. The moft evident and fenfible Proof of the Greatnefs of God's Love to Mankind, is in the Sufferings of our Redeemer to obtain our Pardon. He is called in Scripture, A Man of Sorrows, Ifa. liii. The Title fignifies their Numbers and Quality. His whole Life was a continual Paftion : He fuffer- ed the Contradiction of Sinners, who, by their malici- ous Calum nies, obfcured the Luftre of his Miracles and moft innocent Actions : He endured the Tempta- tions of Satan in the Defert: He was often in Danger of his Life : But all thefe were nothing in Comparifon of his laft Sufferings. 'Tis therefore faid, That at the bare Apprehenfion of them, He began to be forrowfttl, as if he had never felt any Grief till then. His former Afflictions were like fcattered Drops of Rain : But as in the Deluge all the Fountains beneath, and all the Windows of Heaven above were opened; fo in our Saviour's laft Sufferings, the in Contriving Mans Redemption. 169 the Anger of God, the Cruelty of Men, and the Fury of Devils broke out together againft him. Andthatthe Degrees of his Love may be meafured by thofe of his Sufferings, it Will be fit to confider them with re- fpect to his Soul and his Body. TheGofpel delivers to us the Relation of Both. \ 1. Upon his Entrance into the Garden, Hecom- " plains, My Soul is exceeding forrowful, even unto Death. There were prefent only Peter, James and John, his happy Favourites, who afiured him of their Fidelity ; there was no vifible Enemy to afflict Him, yet his Soul was environ'd with Sorrows. 'Tis eafy to conceive the Injuries he fuffered from the Rage of Men, for they were terminated upon his Body •, but how to underftand his inward Sufferings, the Wounds of his Spirit, the Crois to which his Soul was nailed, is very difficult. Yet thefe were inexpreffibly greater, as the vifible Effects declare. The Anguifh of his Soul fo affected his Body, that his Sweat was as it were great Drops of Blood, the mi- raculous Evidence of his Agony. The Terror was fo dreadful, that the Affiftance of an Angel could not calm it. And if we confider the Caufes of his Grief, the Difpofitions of Chrift, and the Defign of God in afflicting him, it will further appear that no Sorrow was ever like his. The Caufes were, 1. The Evil of Sin, which inconceivably exceeds all other: For the juft Meafure of an Evil is taken from the Good to which it is oppofite, and of which it deprives us. Now Sin is formally oppo- fite to the holy Nature and Will of God, and me- ritorioufly deprives of his bleffed Prefence for ever. Therefore God being the fupreme Good, Sin is the fupreme Evil. And Grief being the Refent- ment of an Evil, that which is proportioned to the 170 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes the Evil of Sin muft be infinite. Now the Lord Chrift alone had perfect Light to difcover Sin in its true Horror, and perfect Zeal to hate it accord- ing to its Nature : For, who can underiland the Excellency of Good, and the Malignity of Evil, but the Author of the one and the Judge of the other? Who can fully conceive the Guilt of Re- bellion againft God, but the Son of God, who is alone able to comprehend his own Majefty ? On this Account the Grief of our Redeemer exceeded all the Sorrows of repenting Sinners, from the Beginning of the World. For our Knowledge is fo imperfect, and our Zeal fo remifs, that our Grief for Sin is much beneath what it is worthy of: But Sin was as hateful to Chrift as it is in itfelf, and his Sorrow was equal to its £vil. 2. The Death he was to fuffer, attended with all the Curfes of the Law, and the terrible Marks of God's Indignation : From hence it is faid, He began to be fore amazed and to be very heavy ', Matt. xiv. 34. 'Tis wonderful that the Son of God, who had per- fect Patience, and the Strength of the Deity to fupport him, who knew that his Paflion mould foon pafs away, and that the Iftue mould be his own glorious Refurrection, and the Recovery of lapfed Man, that he mould be fhaken with Fear and op- prefTed with Sorrow at the firit Approaches of it : How many of the Martyrs have, with an undifturb- ed Courage, embraced a more cruel Death ? But to them it was difarmed •, whereas our Saviour en- countred it with all its formidable Pomp, with its Darts and Poifon. 3. The Wrath of God was inflamed againft him. For altho' he was perfectly innocent, and more diftant from Sin than Heaven is from the Earth, yet by the Ordination of God, and his own Confent3 in Contriving Mans Redemption. iyi Confent, being made our Sponibr, the Iniquity of us all was laid upon him ; Ifa. liii. He fuffered as deep- ly as if he had been guilty. Vindictive Juflice was inexorable to his Prayers and Tears. Altho' he re- newed his Requeft with the greateft Ardency, as it is faid by the Evangelift, That being in an Agony, he frayed more earneftly, yet God would not fpare him. The Father of Mercies faw his Son humbled in his Prefence, proftrate on the Earth, yet deals with him in extreme Severity. He was jlriken, f mitten of God, and afflifted. And who is able to conceive the Weight of God's Hand when he pu- nifhes Sin according to its Defert ? Who can under- ltand the Degrees of thofe Sufferings when God exacts Satisfaction from one that was obliged, and able to make it ? How piercing were thofe Sorrows whereby Divine Juftice, infinitely incenfed, was to be appeafed ? Who knows the Confequence of thofe Words, My God, my God, why haft thou forfaken me ? 3Tis impofTible to comprehend, or reprefent that great and terrible Myftery. But thus much we may understand, That Holinefs and Glory being effential to the Deity, they are communicated to the reafonable Nature when united to it : But with this Difference, that Holinefs neceffarily refults from Union with God: For Sin being infinitely repug- nant to his Nature, makes a Separation between him and the Creature: But Glory and Joy are difpenfed in a free and arbitrary Manner. This Dereliction of our Saviour mud be underftood with refpect to the fecond, not the firft Commu- nication. In the Extremity of his Torments all his Affections were innocent and regular, being , only raifed to that Degree, which the Vehemency of the Object required. He expreft no Murmur a- gainft God, nor Anger againit his Enemies. His Faith, IJZ The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Faith, Love, Humility and Patience, were then in their Exaltation. But that glorious and unfpeakable Joy, which, in the Courfe or" his Life, the Deity con- veyed to him, was then withdrawn. An impetuous Torrent of pure unmixed Sorrows broke into his holy Soul : He felt no refreming Emanations, fo that having loft the Senfe of prefent Joy, there re- mained in his Soul only the Hope of future Joy. And in that fad Moment, his Mind was fo intent upon his Sufferings, that he feems to have been di- verted from the actual Confederation of the Glory that attended the IfTue of them. Briefly, All comforting Influences were fnfpended, but without Prejudice to the perfonal Union, or the Perfection of his Grace, or to the Love of his Father toward him. His Soul was liable to Sor- rows, as his Body to Death. For the Deity is the Principle of Life as well as of Joy : And as the Body of Chrift was three Days in the State of Death, and the hypoftatical Union remained entire *, fo his Soul was left for a Time under the fearful Im- preflions of Wrath, yet was not feparated from the Godhead. And although he endured whatever was neceflary for the Expiation of Sin •, yet all vicious Evils, as Blafphemy, Hatred of God, and any o- ther which are not inflicted by the Judge, but in Strictnefs are accidental to the Punifhment, and proceed from the Weaknefs or Wickednefs of the Patient, he was not in the leaft guilty of. Befides, when his Father appeared an Enemy againft him, at that Time he was infinitely pleafed in his Obedience : But with thefe Exceptions our blefled Lord fuffered whatever was due to us. The Sorrows of his forfaken State were inex- preflibly great; for according to the Degree and Senfe we have of Happinefs, fuch in Proportion is our in Contriving Mans Redemption, 173 our Grief for the Lofs of it. Now Chrift had the fulleft Enjoyment, and the higheft Valuation of God's Favour. His Enjoyment was raifed above what the moft glorious Spirits are capable of: All his Faculties were pure and vigorous, never blunted with Sin, and intimately united to the Deity. How cutting then was it to his Soul, to be fuf- pended from the perfect Vifion of God ? To be divorced as it Were from himfelf, and to lofe that Paradife he always had within him ? If all the Angels of Light were at once deprived of their Glory, the Lofs were not equal to this dreadful Eclipfe of the Sun of Righteoufnefs : As if all the Stars were extinguifhed, the Darknefs would not be fo terrible, as if the Sun the Fountain of Light were put out. Whatever his Sufferings were in Kind, yet in Degree they were anlwerable to the full and j uft Defert of Sin, and furpaffed the Power of the human or angelical Nature to endure. In fhort, his Sorrows were only equalled by that Love which procured them. And as the Sufferings inflicted by the Hand of God, fo the Evils he endured from Men, declare the Infinitenefs of our Redeemer's Love to us. For the further Difcovery of it, 'tis neceffary to reflect upon his Death, which is fet down by the Apoftle as the lowed Degree of his Humiliation, in which the Succefiion of all his Bodily Sufferings is included, it being the Complement of all. And if we confi- de r the Quality of it, the Goodnefs of our Re- deemer, will be more vifible in his voluntary Sub- miflion to it. Two Circumftances make the Kind of Death which is to be differed, very terrible to us, Ignominy and Torment •, and they eminently concur in the Death of the Crofs. 1. The greateit Ignominy attended it, and that M in 174 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes in the Account of God and Men. As Honour is in honor ante, and depends upon the Efteem of others ; fo Infamy confifts in the Judgment of others. Now in the Account of the World every Death inflicted for a Crime is attended with Difgrace : But that receives its Degrees from the Manner of it. To be executed privately is a Favour, but to be made a Spectacle to the Multitude, encreafes the Difhonour of one that fuffers. When Death is fpeedily in- flicted, the Senie of Shame is prefently paft ; but to be expofed to publick View for many Hours, as a Malefactor, whilft the Beholders deteft the Crime, and abhor the Punifhment, is an heavy Aggravation of it. Beheading, which is fuddenly difpatched by a Sword or Military Inflrument, and therefore more honourable, was a Privilege : But to hang on the Crofs, was the mod confpicuous Mark of the publick Juftice and Difpleafure : A fpecial Infamy was copcommitant with it. Among the Jews, hanging on a Tree was branded with the Curfe : Therefore God commanded that the Bodies of thofe that were hanged on a Tree Jhould be taken down in the Evening, that the Land might not be defiled with a Curfe-, Deut. xxi. 23. And the Judgment of other Nations was anfwerable : * For it was only in- flicted on the mod infamous Offender^ as Fugitives, Slaves, Thieves, and Traitors, fuch whom the Lownefs of their Quality, or the Height of their Crimes rendred unworthy of any Refpect. Hence 'tis, that Cicero, -J- to aggravate the Cruelty of Verres, * Pone Crucem Servo. Jjuven. Sat. 6. f Liberi Homines aut Cives Romani hoc fupplicio affici non potcrant, nifi fervi pce- nae flerit. Facinus eft vincire Romanum Civem, Scelus eft ver- berare, Prope Parricidum necare, quid dicam in Crucem tollere r Verbo quidem fa;is di^no jam fte&iia res appellari nwllo modo Poteft. in Contriving Mans Redemption, 175 Verres, in crucifying a Roman Citizen, calls it a namelefs Wickednefs. No Eloquence could exprefs the Indignity. 2. The Pain of that Death was extreme. The Hands and Feet, thole Parts wherein the Complexion of the Nerves meet, and are of an exquifite Senfe, were nailed. Crucified Perfons fufTered a flow Death, but quick Torments : They felt themfelves die. Therefore in Pity the Soldiers broke their Legs, to put a Period to their Mifery. And to com- plete their Punifhment, they were judged unworthy to enjoy the Privilege of the Grave, repofe in the Bofom of the Earth our common Mother, the laft Confolation of the Dead, but were expofed as a Prey- to Birds and Beads. Now the Son of God endured no gentler nor no- bler Death than that of the Crofs. His pure and gracious Hands, which were never ftretched out but to do good, were pierced •, and thofe Feet, which bore the Redeemer of the World, and for which the Waters had a Reverence, were nailed. His Body, the precious Workmanfhip of the Holy Ghoft, the Temple of the Deity, was deftroyed. He that is the Glory of Heaven, was made the Scorn of the Earth : The King of Kings was crucified between two Thieves in Jerufalem^ at their facred Feafl, in the Face of the World. His naked Body was ex- pofed on the Crofs for three Hours, only covered with a Veil of Darknefs. This was fuch a ftupen- dous Submiffion of the Son of God, that his Death aftonifhed the Univerfe in another Manner, than his Birth and Life, his Refurreclion and Afcenfion. NUniverfal Nature relented at his laft Sufferings. The Sun was ftruck with Horror, and withdrew its Light •, it did not appear crowned with Beams, when the Creator was with Thorns. The Earth trembled, M 2 and lj6 the Harmony of the Divine Attributes and the Rocks rent; the mod infenfible Creatures fympathifed with him ; and 'tis in this we have the mod vifible Inftance of Divine Love to us. The Scripture diftinctly reprefents the Love of God in giving his Son, and the Love of Chrift in giving himfelf to die for Man, and both require our deepeft Confideration. The Father exprefted fuch an Excefs of Love, that our Saviour himfelf fpeaks of it with Admiration : God Jo loved the V/orld, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whofoever believes on him Jhould not perijh, but have everlafting Life, John iii. 16. If Abraham's Refolution to offer his Son, was in the Judgment of God a convincing Evidence of his Affection, Gen, xxii. j 2. how much more is the actual Sacrificing of Chrift the ftrongeft Proof of God's Love to us ? For God had a higher Title to lfaac than Abraham had : The Father of Spirits hath a nearer Claim, than the Fathers of Flefh. Abraham's Readinefs to offer up his Son was Obedience to a Command, not his own Choice •, 'twas rather an Act of Juftice than Love, by which he rendered to God what was his own. But God /pared not his own Son in whom he had an eternal Right : And he was not only free from Obligation, but not fued to for our Salvation in that wonderful Way. For what human or an- gelical Underflanding could have conceived fuch a Thought, that the Son of God fhould die for our Re- demption ? The mod charitable Spirits in Heaven had not a glimmering Inclination towards this ad- mirable Way of faving us. It had been an impious Blafphemy to have defired it \ fo that Chrift is the moftabfolute Gift of God to us. Befides, the Love of Abraham is to be meafured by the Reafons that might excite it ; For according to the Amiablenefs of the Object, fo much greater is the Love thac gives in Contriving Mans Redemption. 177 gives it. Many endearing Circumftances made IJaac the Joy of his Father : He was an only Son, mira- culoufly obtained, after many Prayers and long Ex- pectation of his Parents, when natural Vigour was fpent, and all Hopes dead of having a furviving Heir ; he was in the Spring of his Youth, and the Root of all the Promifes, that in him a Progeny as numerous as the Stars, and that the Mefiiah infi- nitely more worthy than all the reft fhould come ; yet at the beft he was an imperfect mortal Crea- ture, fo that but a moderate Affection was regular- ly due to him. Whereas our Redeemer was not a mere Man, or an Angel, but God's only begotten Son, which Title fignifies his Unity with him in his State and Perfections ; and according to the Excel- lency of his Nature, fuch is his Father's Love to him. St. John reprefents to us that God is Love \ not charitable, and loving, that is too weak an Expreffion, but Love itlelf. The Divine Nature is infinite efTential Love, in which other Perfections are included. And he produces the ftrongeft and moft convincing Teftimony of it, John iv. 9. In this was manifefted the Love of God to us, becaufe that God fent his only begotten Sen into the World, that we might live through him. The Love of God in all temporal Blefiings, is but faint in the Companion with the Love that is expreft in our Redeemer. As much as the Creator exceeds the Creature, the Gift of Chrift is above the Gift of the whole World. Herein is Love, faith the Apoftle, that is the clear- er! and higheft Expreffion of it that can be, God fent his Son to be a Propitiation for our Sins. The Wifdom and Power of God did not act to the utmoft of their Efficacy in the Creation, he could frame a more glorious World ; but the Love of God in our ftrange Salvation by Chrift, cannot in a higher De- M 3 gree 178 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes gree be exprefTed. As the Apoftle, to fet forth how facred and inviolable God's Promife is, faith, Heb. vi. 17. that becaufe be could /ware by no Greater, he fware by Himfelf-, fo when he would give the mod excellent Teftimony of his Favour to Mankind, he gave his Eternal Son, the Heir of his Love and Blef- fednefs. The giving of Heaven itfelf, with all its Joys and Glory, is not fo perfect and full a Demon- flration of the Love of God, as the giving of his Son to die for us. 'Tis an endearing Circumfbance of this Love, that it warmed the Heart of God from Eternity, and was never interrupted in that vaft Duration. Great Be- nefits that come from a fudden Flufh of Affection, are not fo highly eftimable, as when difpenfed with Judgment and Counfel ; becaufe they do not argue in the Giver fuch a true Valuation, and fixed Love of the Perfon that receives them. The Spring- tide may be followed by as low an Ebb ; the Bene- factor may repent of his Favours as fpent in vain : But our Salvation by Chrifl is the Product of God's eternal Thoughts, the Fruit of Love that ever re- mains. He was delivered by the determinate Counfel, and Fore- knowledge of God, to fuffer for us, Abls ii. 23 Before the World began, we were before the Eyes, nay in the Heart of God. And yet the Continuance of this Love through infinite Ages pad, is lefs than the Degree of it. According to the Rule of common Efteem, a great- er Love was exprefTed to wretched Man, than to Chrifl himfelf : For we expend Things lefs valuable for thofe that are more precious; fo that God in giving him to die for us, declared that our Salva- tion was more dear to him than the Life of his only Son. When no meaner Ranfom than the Blood Royal of Heaven could purchafe our Redemption, God "in Co?itriving Mans Redemption. i~g God delighted in the Expence of that facred Trea- fureforus. It pkafed the Lord to bruife him, Ifa. liii. Though the Death of Chrift abfolutely confidered was the higheft Provocation of God's Difpleafure, and brought the greater!: Guilt upon the Jews, for which Wrath came upon them to the uttermoft -, yet in refpect of the End, namely the Salvation of Men, 'twas the moft grateful Offering to him, a Sacri- fice of a fweet fmelling Savour, Ephef. v. 2. God repented that he made Man, but never that he redeemed him. And as the Love of the Father, fo the Love of Chrift appears in a fuperlative Manner in dying for us. Greater Love hath no Man than this, that a Man lay down his Life for his Friend, John xv. 8. There is no Kind of Love that exceeds the Affection which is expreffed in dying for another : But there are di- vers Degrees of it : And the higheft is to die for our Enemies. The Apoftle faith, Rom* v. 7. Per- haps for a good Man fome would dare to die. 'Tis poffible, Gratitude may prevail upon one, who is un- der ftrong Obligations, to die for his Benefactor. Or fome may from a generous Principle be willing with the Lofs of their 'Lives to prefer ve one, who is a general and publick Good : But this is a rare, and almoft incredible Thing. 'Tis recorded as a miraculous Inftance of the Power of Love, that the two Sicilian Philofophers, Damon and Pithias, each had Courage to die for his Friend. For one of • them being condemned to die by the Tyrant, and defiring to give the laft Farewel to his Family, his Friend entred into Prifon as his Surety, to die for him if he did not ruturn at the appointed lime : And he came, to the Amazement of all, that expected the IfTue of fuch a hazardous Caution. Yet in this Example there feems to be in the lecond fuch a Con- fidence 180 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fidence of the Fidelity of the firft, that he was af- fured he fhould not die in being a Pledge for him : And in the firft it was not mere Friendship, orSenfe of the Obligation, but the Regard of his own Ho- nour that made him refcue his Friend from Death. And if Love were the fole Motive, yet the higheft ExprefTion of it was to part with a fhort Life, which in a little Time muft have been refigned by the Order of Nature. But the Love of our Saviour was fo pure and great, there can be no Refemblance, much lefs any Parallel of it. For he was perfectly holy, and fo the Privilege of Immortality was due to him, and his Life was infinitely more precious than the Lives of Angels and Men, yet he laid it down, and fubmitted to a curfed Death, and to that which was infinitely more bitter, the Wrath of God. And all this for finful Men, who were under the juft and heavy Difpleafure of the Almighty. He loved us> and gave bimjelf for us, Gal. 2. 20. If he had only interpofed as an Advocate to fpeak for us, or only had acted for our Recovery, his Love had been ad- mirable •, but he fuffered for us. Ke is not only our Mediator, but Redeemer -, not only Redeemer, but Ranfom *. 5Twas excellent Goodnefs in David, when he faw the Deftruction of his People, to offer himfelf and Family as a Sacrifice to avert the Wrath of God from them. But his Pride was the Caufe of the Judgment, whereas our Redeemer was perfectly innocent, 2 Sam. xxiv. 17. David interceded for his Subjects ; Chrift for his Enemies. He received the Arrows of the Almighty into his Breaft to fhelter us. He bore our Griefs, and carried our Sorrows ; he * Qui me tantum & femel dicendo fecit, in reiiciendo & dixit multa, & geflit mira, & pertulit indigna. Bern. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 181 he was wounded for our TranfgreJ/ions, he was bruifed for our Iniquities ; the Chafiifement of our Peace was upon him, and with his Stripes we are healed, Ifa. liii. 4, 5. Among the Romans the defpotick Power was fo terrible, that if a Slave had attempted upon the Life of his Matter, all the reft had been crucified with the guilty Perfon. But our gracious Matter died for his Slaves who had confpired againft him. He fhed his Blood for thofe who fpik it. And the Readinefs of our Lord to fave us, though by the fharpeft Sufferings, magnifies his Love. When the richeft Sacrifices under the 'Law were in- sufficient to take away Sin, and no lower Price than the Blood of God could obtain our Pardon, upon his entring into the World to execute that wonderful Commiffion which coft him his Life, with what Ar- dour of Affection did he undertake it ! Lo9 I come to do thy will, 0 God, Heb. x. 5, 6, 7. When Peter , from carnal Affection, looking with a more tender Eye on his Matter's Life than our Redemption, de- precated his Sufferings, Mafter, fpare thyfelf; he who was incarnate Goodnefs, and never quenched the fmoaking Flax, expreffes the fame Indignation againft him, Get thee behind me, Satan, as he did formerly againft the Devil tempting to worfhip him. He efteemed him the worft Adverfary that would divert him from his Sufferings : He longed for the Baptifm of his Blood. And when Death was in his View, with all the Circumftances of Terror, and the fupreme Judge ftood before him ready to inflict the juft Punimment of Sin •, tho' the Apprehenfion of it was fo dreadful that he could fcarce live un- der it, yet he refolved to accomplifh his Work. Our Salvation was amiable to him in his Agony. This is fpecially obferved by the Evangelift, John xiii. 1 . That Jefus having loved his own, he loved them to 182 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes to the End, When the Soldiers came to feize upon him, though by one Word he could have comman- ded Legions of Angels for his Refcue, yet he yielded up himlelf to their Cruelty. 'Twas not any Defect of Power, but the Strength of his Love that made him to fuffer. He was willing to be Crucified, that we might be Glorified : Our Redemption was fweet- er to him than Death was bitter, by which it was to be obtained. 'Twas excellently faid by Phe- recides J, That God transformed himfelf into Love when he made the World : But with greater Reafon 'tis faid by the Apoftle, God is Love, when he redeemed it. 'Twas Love that by a miraculous Condefcenfion took our Nature, accompli mi ng the Defire of the Myftical Spoufe, Let him kifs me with the Kijjes of his Mouth : 'Twas Love that (looped to the Form of a Servant, and led a poor defpifed Life here below : 'Twas Love that endured a Death, neither eafy nor honourable, but moft unworthy of the Glory of the divine, and the Innocency of the human Nature. Love chofe to die on the Crofs, that we might live in Heaven, rather than to enjoy that Bleffednefs, and leave Mankind in Mifery. J Eis Erota metablethai teen Dia mellonta demiourgein. CHAP. In Contriving Mans Redemption, \$* CHAP. X. Divine Mercy is magnified in the Excellency of the State to which Man is advanced. He is enriched with higher Prerogatives, under a better Covenant, entitled to a mere glorious Reward than Adam at firft enjoyed. 'The human Nature is perfonally united to the Son of God. Believers are fpiritually united to Chrift. The Gofpel is a better Covenant than that of the Law. 7/ admits of Repentance and Reconciliation after Sin. It accepts of Sincerity inftead of Perfection. It affords fupernatural Affiftance to Believers, where- by they jhall be viclorious over all Oppofition in their Way to Heaven. The Difference between the Grace of the Creator and that of the Redeemer. The Sta- bility of the New-Covenant is built on the Love of God which is unchangeable, and the Operations of his Spirit that are effeclual. The Mutability andWeaknefs of the human Will, and the Strength of Temptations Jhall not fruftrate the merciful Defign of God in regard of his Elecl. The glorious Reward of the Gofpel exceeds the primitive Felicity of Adam, in the Place of it, the higheft Heaven^ Adam's Life was attend- ed with innocent Infirmities, from which the glorified Life is entirely exempt. The Felicity of Heaven ex- ceeds the fir it, in the Manner, Degrees, and Continu- ance of the Fruition. TH E third Confideration, which makes the Love of God fo admirable to lapfed Man, is, the Excellency of that State to which he is advanced by the Redeemer. To be only exempted from Death is a great Favour : The Grace of a Prince is eminent in releafing a condemned Perfon from the Punifh- ment of the Law. This is fumcient for the Mercy of 1 84. The Harmony of the Divine Attributes of Man, but not for the Love of God : He pardons and prefers the Guilty •, he refcues us from Hell, and raifes us to Glory •, he beftows Eternity upon thofe who were unworthy of Life. The Excellency of our Condition under the Gofpel will be fet off, by compairing it with that of innocent Man in Paradife. *Tis true, he was then in a State of Holinefs and Ho- nour, and in pefect Poffefiion of that Bleffednefs which was fuitable to his Nature •, yet in many Re- ipe&s our laft State tranfcends our firft, and redeem- ing Love exceeds creating. If Man had been only reftored to his forfeited Rights, to the Enjoyment of the fame Happinefs which was loft, his firft State were moil defirable ; and it had been greater Goodnefs to have preferved him innocent, than to recover him from Ruin. As he that preferves his Friend from falling into the Hands of the Enemy, by interpofing between him and Danger, in the Midft of the Combat, delivers him in a more noble Manner, than by paying a Ran- fom for him after many Days fpent in woful Capti- vity. And that the Phyfician is more excellent in his Art, who prevents Difeafes, and keeps the Body in Health and Vigour, than another that expels them by fharp Remedies. But the Grace of the Gofpel hath fo much mended our Condition, that if it were offered to our Choice, either to enjoy the innocent State of Adam, or the renewed by Chrift, it were Folly like that of our firft Parents, to prefer the for- mer before the latter. The Jubilee of the Law re- ftored to the fame Inheritance ; but the Jubilee of the Gofpel gives us the Inveftiture of that which is tranfcendently better than what we at firft poffeffed. Since the Day-fpring from on High hath vi/ited us in tender Mercy^ we are enriched with higher Preroga- tives, and are under a better Covenant, and enti- tled in Contriving Mans Redemption. 185 tied to a more glorious Reward, than was due to Man by the Law of his Creation. Firfty The human Nature is raifed to an higher Degree of Honour, than if Man had continued in his innocent State. 1. By its intimate Union with the Son of God. He aftumed it as the fit Inftrument of our Redemp- tion, and preferred it before the angelical, which furpaffed Man's in his primitive State. The Fulnefs of the God-head dwells in our Redeemer bodily ', Col. ii. 9. From hence it is, that the Angels defcend to pay Him Homage at his Birth, and attended his Majefty in his Difguile. The Son of Man hath thofe Titles which are above the Dignity of any mere Creature ; He is King of the Church, and Judge of the World ; he exercifes divine Power, and receives divine Praife. Briefly, The human Nature in our Redeem- er is an AfTociate with the Divine ; and being made a little lower than the Angels for a Time, is now ad- vanced far above all Principalities and Powers, Ephef. i. 21. 2. In all thofe who are Partakers of Grace and Glory by the Lord Jefus. Adam was the Son of God by Creation, but to be joined to Chrift as our Head by a Union lb intimate, thatitf lives in us, and counts himfelf incomplete without us, and by that Union to be adopted into the Line of Heaven, and there- by to have an Interelt in the exceeding great and pre- cious Promifes of the Gofpel •, to be conftituted Heirs of God, and Co-heirs with Chrift , are fuch Difcove- ries of the Dignity of our fupernatural State, that the loweft Believer is advanced above Adam in all his Honour. Nay, the Angels, though fuperior to Man in the Excellency of their Nature, yet are ac- cidentally lower by the Honour of our Alliance : Their King is our Brother. And this relative Dig- nity 1 86 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes nity which feems to eclipfe their Glory, might ex- cite their Envy •, but fuch an ingenious Goodnefs dwells in thofe pure and bleffed Spirits, that they rejoice in our Reftoration and Advancement. To this I mall add, that as the Son of God hath a fpecial Relation to Man, fo the mod tender Affecli- ons for him. To illuftrate this by a fenfible Inftance : Angels and Men are as two different Nations in Language and Cufloms, but under the fame Empire : And if a Prince that commands two Nations mould employ one for the Safety and Profperity of the o- ther, it were an Argument of fpecial Favour. Now the Angels are fent forth to minifter for them who are Heirs of Salvation* Heb. i. 14. Befides, in two o- ther Things the peculiar Affection of the Prince would be mod evident to that Nation. 1. If he put on their Habit, and Attire himfelf ac- cording to their Fafhion. 2. If he fixed his Refidence among them. Now the Son of God was cloathed with our Flefli, and found in Fajhion as a Man* and for ever appears in it in Heaven ; and will at the lad Day inveft our Bodies with Glory like to his own. He now dwells in us by his Spirit, and when our Warfare is accomplifhed, he fhall, in a fpecial Manner, be prefent with us in the eternal Manfions. As God incarnate he converf- ed with Men on Earth, and as fuch he will converfe with them in Heaven. There he reigns as the Firft- born in the Midft of many Brethren. Now all thefe Prerogatives are the Fruits of our Redemption. And how great is that Mercy which hath raifed Mankind more glorious out of its Ruins ! The Apo- flle breakes out with a heavenly Aftonimment, 1 Job. iii. 1. Behold* what Manner of Love the Father hath be- (lowed upon us* that we fhould be called the Sons of God! that we, in Contriving Mans Redemption, 1 87 we, who are Strangers and Enemies, Children of Wrath by Nature, mould be dignified with the honour- able and amiable Title of his Sons ! 'Twas a rare and moil merciful Condefcenfion in Pharoah's Daughter to refcue an innocent and forfaken In- fant from periming by the Waters, and adopt him to be her Son : But how much greater Kindnefs was it for God to fave guilty and wretched Man from eternal Flames, and to take him into his Family ? The Ambition of the Prodigal rofe no higher than to be a Servant •, what an ineftimable Favour is it to make us Children ! When God would exprefs the moil dear and peculiar Affection to Solomon, he faith, 2 Sam. vii. 14. / will be his Father, and he jhall be my Son \ this was the higheft Flonour he could pro- mife -, and all Believers are dignified with it. 'Tis the fame Relation that Chrift hath : When he was go- ing to Heaven, he comforted his Difciples with thefe Words, I-afcend to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God. There is indeed a Diverfity in the Foundation of it : Chrift is a Son by Nature, we are by mere Favour ; he is by Generation, we are by Adoption. Briefly, Jefus Chrift hath made us Kings and Priefts unto God, and his Father : Thefe are the higheft Offices upon Earth, and were attended with the moll confpicuous Honour -, and the Holy Spirit chofe thofe bright Images, to convey a clear- er Notice of the Glory to which our Redeemer hath railed us. Not only all the Crowns and Scepters in this periming World are infinitely beneath this Dignity, but the Honour of our innocent State was not equal to it. Secondly, The Gofpel is a better Covenant than that which was eftablifhed with Man in his Creation : And the Excellency of it will appear, by confi- dering, 1. 'Tis 1 88 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes i. 'Tis more beneficial, in that it admits of Re- pentance and Reconciliation after Sin, and accepts of Sincerity inftead of Perfection. The Apoftle magnifies the Office of Chrift, Heb. viii. 6. By hew much he is a Mediator of a better Covenant ', which was eftablifhed upon better Promifes. The Comparifon there, is, between the Miniftry of the Gofpel, and the Mofaical Oeconomy. And the Excellency of the Gofpel is fpecified, in refpect of thofe infinitely bet- ter Promifes that are in it. The ceremonial Law appointed Sacrifices for Sins of Ignorance and Error, and to obtain only legal Impunity ; but the Gofpel upon the Account of Chrift's all fufficient Sacrifice, offers full Pardon for all Sins that are repented of and forfaken. Now with greater Reafon the Cove- nant of Grace is to be preferred before the Cove- nant of Works : For the Law confidered Man as holy, and endued with Perfection of Grace equal to whatfoever was commanded : 'Twas the Meafure of his Ability as well as Duty, and required exact Obe- dience, or threatned extreme Milery. The lead Breach of it is fatal : A fingle Offence as certainly expofes to the Curfe, as if the Whole were violated. And in our lapfed State we are utterly difabled to comply with its Purity and Perfection. But the Gofpel contains the Promifes of Mercy, and is in the Hands of a Mediator. The Tenour of it is, That Repentance and Remiffion of Sins be preached in the Name of Chrift) Act. ii. 38. And if 'we judge ourj "elves ', we jhall not be judged^ 1 Cor. xi. 31. It is not if we are innocent, for then none could be exempt from Condemnation : But if the convinced Sinner erect a Tribunal in Confcience, and ftrips Sin of its Difguife, to view its native Deformity •, if he pro- nounces the Sentence of the Law againft himfelf, and glorify the Juftice of God which he cannot fa- tisfy, in Contriving Mans Redemption. 189 tisfy, and forfake the Sins which are the Caufes of his Sorrow, he is qualified for pardoning Mercy. Befides, The Gofpel doth not only apply Pardon to us for all forfaken Sins, but provides a Remedy for thofe Infirmities to which the beft are incident. Whillt we are in this mortal State, we are expofed to Temptations from without, and have Corrupti- ons within that often betray us : Now to fupporc our drooping Spirits, our Redeemer fits in Heaven to plead for us, and perpetually renews the Pardon that was once purchafed, to every contrite Spirit, for thofe unavoidable Frailties which cleave to us here. The Promife of Grace is not made void by the fudden Surprifes of PaOions. If any Man fin* we have an Advocate with the Father, Jcfus Chrift the Righteous, 1 John ii. 1. The Rigour of the Law is mollified by his Mediation with the Father: A Title of Love and Tendernefs. God deals not with the Severity of a Judge, but He /pares us as a Man [pares his own Son that Jcrves him, Mala. i-ii. And as he pardons us upon our Repentance, fo he accepts our hearty, though mean Services. Now the Legal, that is, unfinning and complete Obedi- ence cannot be performed *, the Evangelical, that is, the fincere, though imperfect, isgracioufly received. God doth not require the Duties of a Man by the Meafures of an Angel. Unfeigned Endeavours to pleafe Him, unreferved Reipects to all his Com- mands, fingle and holy Aims at his Glory, are reward- ed. Briefly, Although the Law is continued as a Rule of living, yet not as the Covenant of Life. And what an admirable Exaltation of Mercy is there in this new Treaty of God wich Sinners ? 'Tis true, the firft Covenant was holy, jujl and good, but ic made no Abatements of Favour, and 'tis now weak through the VUftj, Rom. viii. 3. that is, the carnal cor- N rupc 190 tfhe Harmony of the Divine Attributes rupt Nature is fo flung and impetuous, that Re- ftraints of the Law are ineffectual to flop its De- fires, and therefore cannot bring Man to that Life that is promifed, by the Performance of the Condi- tion required. But the Gofpel provides an Indul- gence for relenting and returning Sinners. This is the Language of God in that Covenant, / will be merciful to their Unrightsoufnefs, and their Sins and their Iniquities will I remember no more, Heb. viii. 12. 2. The Excellency of the Evangelical Covenant above the Legal, is, in that fupernatural Afiiftance which is conveyed by it to Believers, whereby they mail be certainly victorious over all Oppofition in their Way to Heaven. 'Tis true, Adam was endu- ed with perfect Holinefs and Freedom, but he might intangle himfelf in the Snares of Sin and Death. The Grace of the Creator given to him was always prefent, but it depended on the natural Ufe of his Faculties, without the interpofing any extraordi- nary Operation of God's Spirit. The Principle of Holinefs was in himfelf, and 'twas fubjected to his Will : He had a Power to obey if he would, but not that actually determined his Will, for then he had perfevered. But the Grace of the Redeemer that flows from Chrilt as our quickening Head, and is conveyed to all his Members, inclines the Will fo powerfully, that 'tis made fubject to it. God works in us to will and to do of his good Pleafure, Phil. ii. 13. The Ufe of our Faculties, and the Exercife of Grace, depends on the good Pleafure of God, who is un- changeable, and the Operations of the Spirit which are prevailing and effectual. And upon thefe two the Stability of the New Covenant is founded. 1. On the Love of God, who is as unchangeable in his Will, as in his Nature. This Love is the Caufe of Election, from whence there can be no Separati- on. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 19 1 on. This gives Cliriit to Believers, and Believers to Him j Thine they were, faith our Saviour, and thou gaveft them me, John xvii. 6. which Words fignify not the common Title God hath to all by Creation-, for Men thus univerfally confidered, compofe the World ; and our Saviour diftinguifhes thofe that are given him fromtheWorld, John xvi. 1 7. but thatfpecial Right God hath in them by Election. And all thofe are given by the Father to Chrift in their Effectual Cal- ling, (which is expreft by his drawing them to the Son) and are committed to his Care, to lead them through a Courfe of Obedience to Glory. For them Chrill abfolutely prays as Mediator, Father 1 will that thofe whom thou haft given me, be with me where I am, and Jee my Glory, John xvii. And he is always heard in his Requeft. 'Tis from hence that the Apoflle challenges all Creatures in Heaven and Earth, with that full and ftrong Perfuafion, that nothing could feparate be- tween Believers and their Happinefs •, Rem. viii. 38. For I am perfwaded, that neither Death nor Life, nor Angels, not Principalities, nor Powers, nor Things pre- fent, nor Things to come, nor Height, nor Depth, nor any other Creature fh all be able to feparate us from the Love of God in Chrift Jefus our Lord. His AfTurance is not built on the fpecial Prerogatives he had as an Apo- flle, not on his Rapture toParadife, nor Revelations, nor the Apparition of Angels, for of thefe he makes no Mention •, but on that which is common to all Believers, the Love of God declared in the Word, and fhed abroad in their Hearts. And it is obferva- ble, that the Apoflle having fpoken in his own Perfon, changes the Number, / am perfwaded that nothing j)o all feparate us, to affociate with himfelf in the partak- ing of that blefTed Privilege, all true Believers, who have an Intereft in the fame Love of God, the N 2 fame 192 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fame Promifes of Salvation, and had felt the fanc- tifying Work of the Spirit, the certain Proof of their Election. For how is it pofiible that God fhould ret raft his merciful Purpofe to fave his Peo- ple ? He that chofe them from Eternity before they could know him, and from pure Love (there being nothing in the Creature to induce him) gave his Son to fuffer Death for them, will he flop there, without bellowing that Grace which may render it effectual ? What can change his Affections ? He that prevented them in his Mercy, when they were in their Pollutions, will he leave them after his Image is engraven upon them ? He that loved them fo as to unite them to Chrift when they were Strangers, will he hate them when they are his Members ? No : His loving Kindnefs is everlafting, and the Covenant that is built on it, is more firm than the Pillars of Heaven, and the Foundations of the Earth. This fupported David in his dying Hours, 2 Sam. xxiii. 5. that God had made with him an everlafting Covenant , ordered in all Things and fur -e, for that was all his Salva- tion. 2. The New Covenant is fecured by the Efficacy of Divine and Supernatural Grace. This Js the Co- venant that I will make with the Hcufe of Ifrael, faith the Lord, J will put my Laws into their Minds, and write them in their Hearts, and I will be to them a God, and they fhall be to me a People, Heb. viii. 10. The Elect are enabled to perform the Conditions of the Gof- pel, to which Eternal Life is promifed. Our Re- deemer blejfes us in turning us from our Iniquities, Afts iii. 26. And although the Instability of the human Spirit, by reafon of Remanent Corruptions, and thole various Temptations to which we are liable, may excite our Fear left we fhould fall fhort of the high Prize of our Calling, yet the Grace of the Gof- pel in Contriving Mans Redemption. 193 pel fecures true Believers againft both. 1. Whilft we are in the prefent State, our Cor- ruptions are not perfectly healed, but there are fome Remains, which, like a Gangrene, threaten to feize on the vital Parts, wherein the fpiritual Life is feated. But the Divine Nature, which is conveyed to all that are ipiritually defcended from (Thrift, is active and powerful to refill all carnal Defires, and will prevail in the End. For if Sin in its full Vigour could not controul the Efiicacy of converting Grace, how can the Relicks of it, after Grace hath taken PofTefiion, be ftrong enough to fpoil it of its Conqueft ? There is a greater Diftance from Death to Life, than from Life to Action. That Omnipotent Grace that vifited us in the Grave, and reitortd Life to the Dead, can much more perpe- tuate it in the Living. That which was fo powerful as to pluck the Heart of Stone out of the Bread, can preferve the Heart of Flefh. 'Tis true, the Grace that is given to Believers, in its own Nature is a perifhing Quality, as that which was bellowed on Adam, Not only the flight fuperficial Tincture in Hypocrites will wear oft, but that deep Impreflion of fanctifying Grace in true Believers, if it be not renewed, would foon be de- faced. But God hath promifed to put his Spirit in- to their Hearts, and to canfe them to walk in his Statutes, and they Jhall keep his Commandments \ Ezek. xxxvi. 26. He is a living reigning Principle in them, to which all their Faculties are fubordinate. The Spirit infufed Grace at firft, and enlivens it flaily : He confirms their Faith, inflames their Love, en- courages their Obedience, and refirefhes in their Minds the Ideas of that Glory which is inv and future. In lhort, his Influence cherifhes the blefied Beginnings of the Spiritual Life. So that N 3 fincere 1 94 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fincere Grace, though weak in its Degree, yet it is in a State of Progrefs till it comes to Perfection. The Waters of the Spirit have a cleanfing Virtue upon Believers, till every Spot be taken away, and their purified Souls afcend to Heaven. 2. The Grace of the Spirit mall make true Chri- flians finally victorious over Temptations to which they may be expofed. And thofe are various : Some are pleafant and infinuating, others are marp and furious, and are managed by the Devil, our fubtile and ind urinous Enemy, to undermind, or by open Battery to overthrow us. And how difficult is it for the Soul, whiltt united to Flefh, to refift the Charms of what is amiable, or to endure the AiTaults of what is terrible to Senfe ? But the renewed Chriftian hath no Reafon to be affrighted with difquieting Fears, that any finful Temptation may come, which, not- withstanding his Watchfulnefs, may overcome him irrecoverably. For, i. Temptations are External, and have no Power over our Spirits but what we give them. A volunta- ry Refiftance fecures the Victory to us. And the Apo- rile tells us, i Job. iv. 4, Greater is he that is in Believers than he that is in the World. God is ftronger, not only in himfelf, but as working in us, by the vigo- rous AiTiftance of his Grace to confirm us, than the Devil, afiifled with all the Delights and Terrors of the World, and taking Advantage of that remain- ing Concupifcence which is not entirely extinguished, is, to corrupt and deftroy us. 2. ,A11 Temptations in their Degrees and Continu- ance, are ordered by God's Providence. He is the Prefident of the Combat : None enters into the Lifts but by his Call : In all Ages the Promife mail be verified, God will not fuffer his People to be tempted above what they are able, 1 Cor. 10. 13. They jhall come in Contriving Mans Redemption. 195 come off more than Conquerors, through Chrift that loved them, Rom. viii. 37. And as St. Aufiin obferves, * more powerful Grace is necefTary to fortify Christians, in the Midft of all Oppofition, than Adam at firft received. This is vifible in the glo- rious IfTue of the Martyrs, Who loved not their Lives unto the Death : For Adam, when no Perfon threatned him, nay, againft the Prohibition of God, abufing his Liberty, did not abide in his Happinefs, when it was moil eafy for him to avoid Sin. But the Mar- tyrs remained firm in the Faith, not only under Terrors, but Torments. And which is the more admirable, in that Adam faw the Happinefs prefent, which he mould forfeit by his Difobedience, and the Martyrs believed only the future Glory they were to receive. This proceeded only from God, who was fo merciful, as to make them faithful. Briefly, Unlefs there were a Power above the Di- vine, the Elect are fecured from final Apoitafy : Our Saviour tells us, that his Father is greater than all, and none is able to pluck them out of his Har.d. His Invariable Will and Almighty Power prevents their perifhing. Indeed if it were only by the Strength of natural Reafon, or Courage, that we are to over- come Temptations, fome might be fo violent as to make the Stronger! to faint and fall away : But if the Divine Power be the Principle that fupports us, it will make the Weakeft victorious. For the Grace of God makes us ftrong, and is not made weak by us. From hence we may fully difcover the Advan- tage * Major quippe libertas eft neceflaria, aJverfus tot, 8c tan- tas tcntationes, qux in Paradifo non fuit dono perfeveranua mu- nita, ac firmata, ut cum omnibus terroribus & erroribus fuis, vincatur mundus. 196 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes tage we have by the Gofpel, above the Terms of the natural Covenant. Reftoring Mercy hath bettered our Condition : We have loft the In- tegrity of the Firft, and got the Perfection of the Second Adam: Our Salvation is put into a ftronger and iafer Hand. I give, faith our Re- deemer, Joh. x. unto my Sheep eternal Life, and they Jhall never perifh, neither Jhall any pluck them out of my Hand, That is an inviolable Sanctuary, from whence no Believer can be taken. Chrift is our Friend, not only to the Altar, but now in the Throne : Our Reconciliation is afcribed to his Death, our Converfion to his Life, Rom. v. 10. He that was created in a State of Nature could fin and die, but He that is born of God can't fin unto Death : I Joh, iii. 9. The new Birth is unto Eternal Life. In fhorr, As the Mercy of God is glorified in the whole Work of our Salvation, To efpecially in the firft and laft Grace it confers upon us. In Vo- cation that prevents us, and Perfeverance that crowns us : According to the double Change made in our State, tranflating us from Darknefs to Light, and from the imperfect Light of Grace, to the full Light of Glory, I have more particularly difcourfed of this Ad- vantage by the New Covenant, in regard the Glory of God, and the Comfort of true Chriftians is fo much concerned in it. For if Grace and Free- will are put in joint CommifTion, fo that the Effica- cy of it depends on the Mutability of the Will, which may receive or reject it ; the Confequence is vifible, that (which is impious to fuppofe) the Son of God might have died in vain. For that which is not effectual without a contingent Conditi- on, muft needs be as uncertain as the Condition on which ic depends. So that although the Wifdom of in Contriving Maris Redemption. 197 of God fo admirably formed the Defign of our Salva- tion, and there is fuch a Connexion in his Counfels, yet ail may be defeated by the Mutability of Man's Defires : And the mofh fincere Chriftians would be always terrified with perplexing Jealoufies, that notwithstanding their moil ferious Refolutions to continue in their Duty, yet one Day they may pe- rifh by their Apoftaly. But the Gofpel allures us, that God will not reverfe his own Eternal Decrees, Ifa. liii. 11. And that the Redeemer fhall fee the Tra- vel of his Soul, and be fatisfied : And that Believers are kept by the Power of God through Faith unto Salva- tion. 3. There is an excellent Manifeflation of Divine Love in the glorious Reward that is promifed to Believers, which far exceeds the primitive Felicity of Man. Adam was under the Covenant of Na- ture, that promifed a Reward fuitable to his Obe- dience and State. The Manner of declaring that Covenant was natural. 1. External, by the Difcovery of God's Attri- butes in his Works, from which it was eafy for Man to collect his Duty and his Reward. 2. Internal, by his "natural Faculties. By the Light of Reafon he underftood that fo long as he continued in his Original' Innocence, the Creator, who from pure Goodnefs gave him his Being, and all the Happinefs which was concomitant with it, would certainly preferve him in the perpetual En- joyment of it. But there was no Promile of Hea- ven annexed to that Covenant, without which A- dam could attain no Knowledge, nor conceive any Hopes of it. If there had been a necefTary Con- nexion between his perfect Obedience, and the Life of Glory, it would have been revealed to him, to allure his Will : For there can be no Defireof an un- known ig8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes known Good. And whereas, in the Covenant, God principally and primarly regards the Promife, and but fecondarily the Threatning, the Exercife of Goodnefs being more pleafing to him than of re- venging Juftice, 'tis faid, that God exprefly threat- ned Death, but he made no Promife of Heaven : By which it is evident it did not belong to that Co- venant. For it was eafier for Man to underftand the Quality of the Punifhment that attended Sin, than to conceive of celeftial Happinefs, of which he was incapable in his animal State. 'Tis true, God might have beftowed Heaven as an abfolute Gift upon Man, after a Courfe of Obedience, but it was not due by the Condition of the firfh Covenant. A natural Work can give no Title to a fupernatural Reward. Man's Perfeverance in his Duty, according to the original Treaty, had been attended with immortal Happinefs upon the Earth ; but the blefjed Hope (Tit. ii. 13.) is only promifed in the Gofpel, and unfpeakably tranfeends the Fe- licity of Nature in its confummate State. This Reward is anfwerable to the invaluable Treafure which was laid down for it. The Blood of the Son of God, as it is a Ran/cm to redeem us from Mifery, fo it is a Price to purchafe Glory for Believers, 1 Tim. ii. 6. 'Tis called the Blood of the New'Teftarnent, Mat. xxvi. 28. becaufe it conveys a Title to the heavenly Inheritance. Our Impunity is the Effect of his Satisfaction -, our pofitive Happinefs of his redundant Merit. God was fo well pleafed with his perfect Obedience, which infinitely fur- pafTes that of any mere Creature, that he promifed to confer upon thofe who believe in him, all the glorious Qualities becoming the Sons of God, and to make them Affociates with him in his Eternal Kingdom. The complete Happinefs of the Re- deemed, in Contriving Mans Redemption. jgg deemed, is the Redeemer's Recompence, in which he is fully fatisfied for all his Sufferings. Now the tranfcendent Excellency of this above the firft State of Man, will more diftinctly appear, by confidering, I. The Place where it is enjoyed, and that is the Heaven of Heavens. Adam was put into the Ter- reftrial Paradife, a Place fuitable to his natural Be- ing, and abounding with all pleafing Objects ; but they were fuch as Creatures of a lower Kind enjoy- ed with him. But Heaven is the Element of Angels, their native Seat, who are the moft noble Part of the Creation. 'Tis the true Palace of God, entire- ly feparated from the Impurities and Imperfections, the Alterations and Changes of the lower World ; where he reigns in Eternal Peace. 'Tis the Temple of the Divine Majefty, where his excellent Glory is revealed in the moft confpicuous Manner. 'Tis tbs Habitation of bis Holinejs, the Place where his Ho- nour dwells. 'Tis the facred Manfion of Light, and Joy, and Glory, Paradife with all its Pleafures was but a Shadow of it. II. The Life of AdoMi was attended with inno- cent Infirmities. For the Body being compofed of the fame Principles with other fenfuive Creatures, was in a perpetual Flux, and liable to Hunger, and Third, and Wearinefs, and was to be repaired by Food and Sleep. Adam was made a living Soul, j Cor. xv. 45. therefore fubject to thofe Inclinations and Neceflities which are purely animal. And though, whiifk innocent, no Difeafe could feize on him, yet he was capable of hurtful ImprefTions. Immortality was not the eflential Property of Man, as compounded of Soul and Body,, but condjtional upon his Obedience, andconfequent to his eating the Fruit 200 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Fruit of the Tree of Life, Gcn.m. 22. Therefore Man, after his Sin, was expelled from Paradife, that he might not eat of it and live for ever. By which it appears that Eternal Life in that happy State was not from the Temperament of the Body, but to be preferved by the Divine Power in the Ufe of Means. From hence it follows, that Adam in his natural State was not capable of the Vifion of God. Heaven is too pure an Air for him to have lived in. The Glory of it is inconfiftent with fuch a tempered Bo- dy. Fle/h and Blood cannot inherit the Kingdom of Heaven, 1 Cor. xv. 50. The Faculties would be confounded with its overcoming Brightnefs. Till the fenfitive Powers are refined, and exalted to that Degree that they become fpiritual, they can- not converfe with glorified Objects. Now the Bodies of the Saints (hall be inverted with celeflial Qualities. The natural mail be changed into a fpiritual Body, and be preferved as the Angels by the fole Virtue of the quickning Spirit. The Life above mail flourifh in its full Vigour, without any o- ther Support, than the Divine Power that firfl creat- ed it. As the Body mall be fpiritual, fo truly im- mortal, and free from all corruptive Change •, as the Sun, which for fo many Ages hath mined with an equal Brightnefs to the World, and hath a du- rable Fulnefs of Light in it. In this Refpect the Children of the Refurreclion, are equal to the Angels, Luke xx. 36. who being pure Spirits, do not marry to perpetuate their Kind, for they never die. And the glorified Body fliall be cloathed with a more Di- vine Beauty in the Refurrection than Adam had in the Creation. The Glory of the fecond Temple fhall excel that of the Firfb. In fhort, the firfl: Man was of the Earth earthly, 1 Con. xv. 47. and could derive but an earthly Condition to his Defcendants : But in Contriving Mans Redemption. 20 r But the Lord Chrift is from Heaven, and is the Prin- ciple of an heavenly and glorious Life to all that are united to him. III. The Felicity of Heaven exceeds the firft, in the Manner and Degrees of the Fruition, and the Con- tinuance of it. 1. The Vifion of God in Heaven is immediate. Adam was a Spectator of God's Works, and his Understanding being full of Light, he clearly dis- covered the Divine Attributes in their Effects. The Strokes of the Creator's Hand are engraven in all the Parts of the Univerfe. The Heavens, and Earth, and all Things in them, are evident Tefti- monies of the Excellency of their Author. The invifible Things of God from the Creation of the World are clearly jeen\ Rom. i. 20. And the Knowledge that fhincd in his Soul, produced a tranfcendenc Efteem of the Deity, in whom Wifdom and Power are united in their fupreme Degree, and a Superla- tive Love and Delight in him for his Goodnefs. Yet his Sight of God was but through a Glafs, an eclipfing Medium. For inferior Beings are fo imperfect, that they can give but a weak Refemblance of his infinite Perfections. But the Sight of God in Hea- ven, is called the feeing of him as he is^ 1 John iii. 2. and Signifies the mod clear and complete Know- ledge, which the rational Soul, when purified and railed to its moft perfect State, can receive ; and out-fhines all the Difcoveries of God in the lower World. Adam had a vifible Copy of his invifible Beauty, but the Saints in Heaven lee the glorious Original. He faw God in the Reflection of the Creature, but the Saints are under the direct Beams of Glory, and fee him Face to Face, 1 Cor. xiii. 12. All the Attributes appear in their full and brightcir. Luttrc 202 Ihe Harmony of the Divine Attributes Luftre to them : Wifdom, Love, Holinefs and Power, are manifefted in their Exaltation. And the glori- fied Soul, to qualify it for Converfe with God in this intimate Manner, hath a more excellent Con- ftitution than was given to it in the Creation. A new Edge is put upon the Faculties, whereby they are fitted for thofe Objects which are peculiar to Heaven. The intellectual Eye is fortified for the immediate Intuition of God. Adam in Paradife was abfent from the Lord, in Comparifon of the Saints who encompafs his Throne, and are in the Prefence of his Glory. Befides, 'Tis the peculiar Excellency of the Hea- venly Life, that the Saints every Moment enjoy it without any allay, in the higheft Degree of its Per- fection. The Life of Adam was always in a Circle of low and mean Functions of the animal Nature, which being common to him and Beafts, the Acts of it are not ftrictly human. But the fpiritual Life in Heaven is entirely freed from thofe fervile Neceflities, and is fpent in the eternal Performance of the mod noble Actions of which the intelligent Nature is capable. The Saints do always contem- plate, admire, love, enjoy and praife their ever- lafting Benefactor. God is to them all in all. In fhort, That which prefers the Glory of Hea- ven infinitely before the firft State of Man, is, the Continuance of it for ever : 'Tis an unwithering and never fading Glory. Adam was liable to Temptations, and capable of Change, he fell in the Garden of Eden, and was fentenced to die. But Heaven is the Sanctuary of Life and Im- mortality •, it .is inacceflible to any Evil. The Serpent, that corrupted Paradife with its Poifon, cannot enter there. As there is no Seed of Corrup- tion within, fo no Caufe of it without. Our Re- deemer in Contriving Mans Redemption. 203 deemer offered Himfelf by the eternal Spirit, and purchafed an eternal Inheritance for his People. Their Felicity is full and perpetual, without En- creafe, for in the firft Moment it is perfecl, and fnall continue without Declination. The Day of Judgment is called the Laft Day : For Days, and Weeks, and Months, and Years, the Revolutions which now meafure Time, mail then be fwallowed up in an unchangeable Eternity, The Saints Jhall be for ever with the Lord-, 1 Thef. iv. And in all thefe Refpefts, the Glory of the Redeemed, as far exceeds the Felicity of Man in the Creation, as Heaven, the bright Seat of it, is above the fading Beauty of the terreftrial Paradiie. CHAP. XL Praclial Inferences. Redeeming Love deferves our hvgheft Admiration, and humble Acknowledgments. The Illufiration of it by fever al Con fiderat ions. God is infinitely amiable in Himfelf, yet his hove is tranfient to the Creature. 9Tis admirable in Creat- ing and Preferving Man, more in Redeeming him9 and by the Death of his Son. The Difcovery of God'j Love in our Redemption is the ftrongeli Perfuafive to Repentance. The Law is ineffeclual to produce real Repentance. The common Benefits 0/ Provi- dence are inefficient to Caufe Faith and Repentance in the guilty Creature. The clear Difcovery of par- doning Mercy in the Gofpel can only remove our Fears, and induce us to return to God. The tran- fcendent Love of God fjjould kindle in us a recipro- cal Love to Him. His Excellencies and ordinary Bounty to Mankind cannot prevail upon us to love Him. His Love to us in Chrift only conquers our' Hatred 204 ybe Harmo?iy of the Divine Attributes Hatred. Our Love to Him mufi he fin cere and fuperlative. The defpifing of Javing Mercy is the highefi Provocation. It makes the Condemnation of Men mofi juft, certain, and heavy. i. f I AHIS Redeeming Love deferves our higheft I Admiration, and moft humble Acknowledg- ments. If we confider God aright, it may raife our Wonder, that He is pleafed to bellow Kindnefs upon any created Being. For in him is all that is excellent and amiable ; and it is tflentialto the Deity, to have the perfect Knowledge of Himfelf, and per- fect Love to himfelf. His Love being proportioned to his Excellencies, the Act is infinite, as the Object : And the Perfections of the Divine Nature, being equal to his Love, 'tis a juft Caufe of Admiration that it is not confined to Himfelf •, but is tranfient and goes forth to the Creature. When David looked up to the Heavens, and faw the Majefty of God written in Characters of Light, he admires that Love which firit made Man a little lower than the Angels, and crowned him with Glory and Hoyiour, Pfal. viii. and that providential-Care which is mindful of him, and vifits him every Moment. Such an incon- ceivable Diftance there is between God and Man, that it is wonderful God willfpend a Thought upon us. Lord, what is Man that thou takeft Knowledge of him ? or the Son of Man that thou makeft Account of him ? Man is like to Vanity, his Days are as a Shadow that pajfeth away, Pfal. cxliv. His being in this World hath no- thing firm, or folid ; 'tis like a Shadow, that de- pends upon a Caufe that is in perpetual Motion, the Light of the Sun, and is always changing, till it vanifhes in the Darknefs of the Night. But if we confider Man in the Quality of a Sinner, and what God hath wrought for his Recovery, we are over- in Contriving Mans Redemption. 205 overcome with Amazement. All temporal Favours are but Foils to this miraculous Mercy, and unfpeak- ably below the leaft Inftance of it : Without it all the Privileges we enjoy above inferior Creatures in this Life, will prove Aggravations of our future Mifery. God faw us in our degenerate State, de- ftroyed by ourfelves \ and yet, O Goodnefs, truly Divine ! he loved us fo far, as to make the Way for our Recovery. High Mountains were to be level- led, and great Depths to be filled up, before we could arrive at BlelTednefs : All this hath been done by mighty Love. God laid theCurfeof the Guilty upon the Innocent, and expofed his beloved Son to the Sword of his Juftice, to turn the Blow from us; What aftonifhing Goodnefs is it, that God who is the Author and End of all Things, mould become the Means of our Salvation ? and by the loweft A- bafement ? What is fo worthy of Admiration as that the Eternal fhould become Mortal, that being in the Form of God, he mould take on him the Form of a Servant ? that the Judge of the World fhould be condemned by the Guilty ? that he fhould leave his Throne in Heaven to be nailed to the Crofs ? that the Prince of Life fhould tafte of Death ? Thefe are the great Wonders which the Lord of Love hath performed, and all for finful, miierable and unworthy Man, who de- ferved not the leaft Drop of that Sweat and Blood he fpent for him : And without any Advantage to himfelf, for what Content can be added to his Felici- ty by a curfed Creature ? Infinite Love ! that is as admirable as faving! Love that pajjetb Knowledge! and as much above our Comprehenfion as Defert. In natural Things, Admiration is the Effect of Igno- rance, but here it is increaied by Knowledge. For the more we underftand the excellent Greatnefs of O God, 206 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes God, and the Vilenefs of Man, the more we (hall be inftructed to admire the glorious Wonder of fav- ing Mercy. A deliberate Admiration fpringing from our mod deep Thoughts, is Part of the Tri- bute and Adoration we owe to God, who fo ttrange- \y laved us from the Wrath to come. And the moil humble Acknowledgments are due for it. When David told Mephibojheth, 2 Sam. ix. 7, 8. that he mould eat Bread with him at his Table continually ; he bowed himfelf, and [aid, What is thy Servant, that thou jhouldfi look on Juch a dead Dog as lam? A Speech full of Gratitude and Humility; yet he was of a royal Extraction, though at that Time in a low Condition. With a far greater Senfe of our Unworthinefs, we mould reflect upon that condefcending Love, that provides the Bread of God for the Food of our Souls, without which we had perifhed for Want. David in that divine Thankfgiv- ing recorded in the Scripture, reflects upon his own Meannefs, and from that magnifies the Favour of God towards him, 2 Sam. vii. 18. Who am I, O Lord God ? and what is my Hottfe, that thou haft brought me hitherto ? And this was yet a fmall Thing in thy Sight, O Lord God, but thou haft fpoken of thy Servant's Houfe for a great while to come : And is this the Manner of Man, O Lord God? If fuch humble and thankful Acknow- ledgments were due for the Scepter of Ifrael, what is for the Crown of Heaven ? And that procured for us by the Sufferings of the Son of God ? Brief- ly, Goodnefs is the Foundation of Glory, there- fore the mod folemn and affectionate Praife is to be rendered for tranfcendent Goodnefs. The Confent of Heaven and Earth, is, in afcribing Blefling, and Honour, and Glory to him that fits on the Throne^ and the Lamb for ever, Rev. v. 13. 2. The in Contriving Mans Redemption. 207 2. The Love of God difcovered in our Redemp- tion, is the moft powerful Perfuafive to Repentance. For the Difcovery of this we mud confider, that real Repentance is the Confequent of Faith, and always in Proportion to it. Therefore the Law which re- prefents to us the divine Purity and Juftice, with- out any Allay of Mercy, can never work true Re- pentance in a Sinner. When Ccnfcience is under the flrong Conviction of Guilt, and of God's Juftice as implacable* it caufes a dreadful Flight from him, and a wretchlefs Neglect of Means. Defpair hardens. The brighter!: Difcoveries of God in Nature are not warm enough to melt the frozen Heart into the current of Repentance. 5Tis true, the vifible Frame of the World, and the continual Benefits of Pro- vidence, inftruct Men in thofe prime Truths, the Being, and Bounty of God to thofe that ferve him, and invite them to their Duty. God never left him- Jelf without a Witnefs in any Age : His Goodnefs is defigned to lead Men to Repentance* Ads iv. 17. And the Apoftle aggravates the Obftinacy of Men, that rendr^d that Method entirely fruitlefs. But the De- claration of God's Goodnefs in the Go/pel is infinite- ly more clear and powerful, than the filent Revela- tion by the Works of Creation and Providence. For although the Patience and general Goodnefs of God offered fome Intimations that he is placable* yet not a fufficient Support for a guilty and jealous Creature to rely on.* The natural Notion of God's Juftice is io deeply rooted in the human Soul, that till he is pleafed to proclaim an Atl of Grace and Pardon^ on the Conditions of Faith and Repenrance, it is hardly pofiible that convinced Sinners mould appre- hend him otherwife than an Enemy ; and that all the common Benefits they enjoy are but Provifions allowed in the interval between the Sentence yxonounc- O 2 ed 20 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ed by the Law, and the Execution of it at Death. Therefore God to overcome our Fears, and to melt us into a Compliance, hath given in the Scripture the hio-hefl Affurance of his Willingnefs to receive all re- tenting and returning Sinners. He interpofes the mod folemn Oath to remove our Sufpicions. As I live, faith the Lord, I delight not in the Death of the Wicked^ but that the Wicked turn from his Way and live, Ezek. xxxiii. 1 1. And have I any Pleajure at all that the Wicked fhould die ? faith the Lord God : And not that he fhould return from his Ways and live ? Ezek. xviii. 23. The Majefty and Ardency of the Expreffions teftify the Truth and Vehemency of his Defire, lb far as the Excellency of his Nature is capable to touch our Af- fections. And the Reafon of it is clear •, for the Converfion of a Sinner implies a thorough Change in the Will and Affections from Sin to Grace, and that is infinitely pleafing to God's Holinefs ; and the giving of Life to the Converted, is moft fui table to his Mercy. The Angels, who are infinitely inferior to him in Goodnefs, rejoice in the Repentance and Salvation of Men •, much more God doth. There is an eminent Difference between his Inclinations to exercife Mercy, and Juftice. He ufes Expreffions of Regret when he is conftrained to puniih ; Pfal. Jxxxi. 13.O that my People had hearkened to me, and If- rael had walked in my Ways I And how jhall 1 give thee up Ephraim ? how Jhall I deliver thee, Ifrael ? mine Heart is turned within me, Hof. xi. 8. As a merciful Judge, that pities the Man, when he condemns the Malefactor. But he difpenfes Acts of Grace with Pleafure \ He pardons Iniquity, andpaffes by Tranfgref- fions, becaufe he delights in Mercy, Mic. vii. 18. 'Tis true, when Sinners are finally obdurate, God is pleaf- ed in their Ruin, for the Honour of his Juftice -, yet it is not in fuch a Manner as ia their Converfion and in Contriving Mans Redemption. 209 and Life, he doth not invite Sinners to tranfgrefs, that he may condemn them : He is not pleafed when they give Occafion for the Exercife of his Anger. And above all, we have the cleared and fureft Difcovery of pardoning Mercy in the Death of Chrift. For what ftronger Evidence can there be of God's Readi- nefs to pardon, than fending his Son into the World to be a Sacrifice for Sin, that Mercy without Preju- dice to his other Perfections might, upon our Repent- ance, forgive us ? And what more rational Argu- ment is there, and more congruous to the Bread of a Man, to work in him a ferious Grief and hearty Deteftation of Sin, not only as a curfed Thing, but as it is contrary to the Divine Will, than the Belief that God, in whofe Power alone it is to pardon Sin- ners, is moft defirous to pardon them, if they will return to Obedience ? The Prodigal in his extreme Difcrefs refolved to go to his Father with penitential Acknowledgments and Submifllon : And, to ufe the WTords of a devout Writer, his guilty Confcience, as defperate, afk'd him, §uafpe, with what Hope ? He replied to himfelf, Ilia qua Pater eft. Ego perdidi 'quod erat filii •, tile quod Patris eft non ami/it : Though I have neglected the Duty, and loft the Confidence of a Son, he hath not loft the CompalTion of a Father. That Parable reprefents Man in his degenerate for- lorn State, and that the Divine Goodnefs is the Motive that prevails upon him to return to his Du- ty- 3. The tranfcendent Love that God hath exprefTed in our Redemption by Chrift, fhould kindle in us a reciprocal Affection to him. For what is more na- tural than that one Flame fhould produce another ? We love him^ becaufe he loved us firft. The Original or our Love to God is from the Evidence of his to O 3 us: 210 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes us : This alone can ftrongly and fweetly draw the Heart to him. 'Tis true, the Divine Excellencies as they deTerve a fuperlative Efteem, fo the higheft Af- fection •, but the bare Contemplation of them is in- effectual to fire the Heart with a zealous Love to God. For Man hath a diabolical Seed in his corrupt Nature; he is inclined not only to Senfuality, which is an implicit Hatred of God, (for an eager Appetite to thofe .Things which God forbids, and a fixed A- verfation from what he commands, are the natural Effects of Hatred) but to Malignity and direct Ha- tred again ft God. He is cm Enemy in his Mind through wicked V/orks, Col. i. 21. and this Enmity arifeth from the Confideration of God's Juftice, and the Ef- fects of it. Man cannot fin and be happy, therefore he wifhes there were no God to whom he muft be accountable. He is no more wrought on by the Di- vine Perfections and Beauties to love the Deity, than a guilty Perfon, who refolvedly goes on to break the Laws, can be perfuaded to love the Judge, for his excellent Knowledge, and his inflexible Integrity, who will certainly condemn him. Befides, the great and abundant Bleflings, which God, as Creator and Preferver, beftows upon all, cannot prevail upon guilty Creatures to love him. Indeed the Goodnefs that raifed us from a State of Nothing, is unfpeak- ably great, and lays an eternal Obligation upon us. The whole Stock of our Affections is due to him, for confering upon us the human Nature, that is com- mon to Kings and the meaneft Beggar. All the Riches and Dignity of the greateft Prince, whereby he exceeds the pooreft Wretch, compared to this Be- nefit which they both (hare in, have no more Pro- portion than a Farthing to an immenfe Treafure. The innumerable Expreffions of God's Love to us every Day mould infinitely endear him to us. For who in Contriving Mans Redemption. 2 1 1 who is fo inhumane as nor to love his Parents, or his Friend, who defended him from his deadly Enemies, or relieved him in his Poverty, efpecially if the Vein of his Bounty be not dried up, but always dif- fufes itfelf in new Favours ? If we love the Memo- ry of that Emperor, who, reflecting upon one Day, that paft without his bellowing fome Benefit, with Grief faid, Diem perdidi, I have loft a Day ! How much more mould we love God, who, every Moment, beftows innumerable Blefllngs upon his Creatures ? But fwful Man hath contracted fuch an unnatural Hardnefs, that he receives no Imprefiions from the renewed Mercies of God : He violates the Princi- ples of Nature, and Reafon. For how unnatural is it, not to love our Benefactor •, when the dull Ox and the ftupid Afs ferve thofe that feed them ? And how unreafonable, when the Pubficans return Love for Love ! Now there is nothing that can prefectly overcome our Hatred, but the Confideration of that Love which hath freed us from Eternal Mifery : For the guilty Creature will be always fufpicious, that, notwithftanding the ordinary Benefits of Providence, God is an Enemy to it : And till Man is convinced, that in loving God, he moft truly himfelf, he will never fincerely affeft him. This was one great Dcfignof God, in the Way, as well as in the Work of our Redemption, to gain our Hearts entirely to himfelf. He faves us in the moft endearing and o- bliging Manner. As David's Affection declared it- felf, / will not ferve the Lord with that which ccft me nothing : So God would not fave Man with that which coft him nothing, but with the deareft Price hath purchafed a Title to our Love. God was in Chrift reconciling theWorldto himfelf, as well as through Chrift reconciling himfelf to the World. He hath propounded fuch Arguments for our Love, fo pow- erful, 2 1 2 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes erful, and fublime, that Adam in Innocence was un- acquainted with. He fern: down his own Bowels to teftify his Affection to us. And that fhould be the greateft Endearment of our Love, which was the greater! Evidence of his. And if we confider the Perfon of our Redeemer, what more worthy Object of our Affection than Chrifl ? and Chrift enduring the mod terrible Things, and at lall dying with all the Circumftances of Dif- honour and Pain, for Love to Man ? If he had no attractive Excellencies, yet his cruel Sufferings for us fhould make him infinitely precious and dear to our Souls. If by folemn Regards we contemplate him in the Garden, amazed at the firft Approaches of that Cup mixed with all the Ingredients of Di- vine Difpleafure, fweating like Drops of Blood, under a Weight of unfpeakable Sorrow, and without the lead Relief from Man, whofe Sins he then bore ; what Kind of Marble are our Hearts if they do not tenderly relent at this doleful Spectacle ? Can we ftand by him proftraie on the Earth, and offering up Prayers and Supplications with flrong Cries and 'Tears (the Effects of the Travel of his Soul) without the moitpaf- fionate Senfibility ? Can we fee him contemned by im- pure Worms, abufed in his facred Offices, fpitefully reprefented as a mock King, buffeted and flouted as a mock Prophet, his facred Face defiled with loath- fome Spittle, his Back torn with fharp Scourges, and all endured with a victorious Patience ; can we behold this with an unconcerned Eye, without the Mournings of holy Love ? Can we accompany him in the dolorous Way, and lee him fainting and finking under his heavy Crofs, and not feel his Sufferings ? Can we afcend to Mount Calvary, and look on him hangingon theinfamousTree, in the midft of Thieves, fufferir.g the utmofl Fury of malicious Enemies, and not in Contriving Mans Redemption. 213 not be crucified with him ? Can we hear the aftonifh- ing Complaint of his deferted Soul to the Judge of all the World, doing extreme Right on him as our Surety, and not be overcome with Grief and Love ? Shall not the Warm Streams fadly running from his wounded Head, and Hands and Feet, melt our congealed Affections ? His pierced Side difcovers his Heart, the vital Fountain opened to wafli away our Guilt, and mall our Hearts be untouched ? His bloody undeferved Death, the precious Ranfom of our Souls, makes him our Life ; and fhall it not ren- der him full of Lovelinefs to our inflamed Thoughts ? He is more amiable on the Crofs, than in the Throne : For there we fee the cleareft Teftimony, and the mod glorious Triumph of his Love. There he endured the Anger of Heaven, and the Scorn of the Earth. There we might fee Joy fadned, Faith fearing, Salvation fuffering, and Life dying. * Blefled Redeemer ! what couldft thou have done or fuffered more, to quicken our dead Powers, and in- flame our could Hearts toward thee ? How can we remember thy bleeding dying Love without an Ex- tafy of Affection ? If we are not more infenfible than the Rocks, it is impoflible but we mufb be touched and foftned by it. Suppofe an Angel by fpecial Delegation had been enabled to have trod Satan under our Feet> our Obli- gations to him had been inexpreflible, and our Love might have been intercepted from afcending to our Creator. For Salvation is a greater Benefit, than the mere giving to us our natural Being: As the Privation of Felicity, with the actual Mifery that is joined with it, is infinitely worle than the Ne- * Quid violentius tiiumphat de Deo ? Vides in Chrifto bctari triilitiam, pavere fidem, fahuem pati, vitam mod. 214 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Negation of being. Our Lord pronounced concern- ing Judas, Matt. xxvi. 24. // had been good for that Man that he had never been born. Redeeming Good- nefs exceeds Creating. Now the Son of God to pro- cure our higheft Love, alone wrought Salvation for us. And what admirable Goodnefs is it, that puts a Value upon our Affection, and accepts fuch a fmall Return ! Our moft intent and ardent Love bears no more Proportion to his, than a Spark to the Element of Fire. Befides, his Love to us was pure, and without any Benefit to himfelf •, but ours to him is profitable to our Souls for their eternal Advantage. Yet with this he is fully fatisfied : When we love him in the Quality of a Saviour, we give him the Glory of that he defigns moft to be glorified in -, that is, of his Mercy to the Miferable. For this Reafon he in- flituted the Sacrament of the Supper, the Contri- vance of his Love, to refrefh the Memory of his Death, and quicken our fainting Love to him. Now the Love that our Saviour requires muft be, 1. Sincere and Unfeigned. This declares itfelf by a Care to pleafe him in all Things. If a Man love me, faith our Saviour, he will keep my Commandments. Obedience is the moft natural and neceflary Product of Love. For Love is the Spring of Action, and employs all the Faculties in the Service of the Per- son loved. The Apoftle expreffes the Force of it by an emphatical Word, Sunechei, 2 Cor. v. The Love of Chrift conflrains us : It fignifies to have one Bound, and fo much under Power, that he cannot move with- out Leave : As the infpired Prophets were carried by the Spirit, and entirely acted by his Motions : Such an abfolute Empire had the Love of Chrift o- verhim, (AffsxvYn. 5.) ruling all the Inclinations of his Heart, and Actions of his Life. 'Tis this alone makes in Contriving Mans Redemption. 21 r makes Obedience chearful, and conftant. For Love is feated in the Will, and the Obedience that pro- ceeds from it, is out of Choice, and purely volunta- ry. No Commandment is grievous that is performed Jrom Love-, i John v. 3. And it makes Obedience conftant : That which is forced from the ImprelTion of Fear, isunftedfaft-, but what is mixt with De- light, is lading. 2. Our Love to Chrift mud be fupreme, exceed- ing that which is given to all inferior Objects. The moft elevated and entire Affection is due to Him who laves us fom Torments that are extreme and eternal, and beftows u^on us an Inheritance immortal and undefiled. By the offering of himfelf to Divine Juflice, he has obliged us to prefent our Bodies a living Sacrifice to God, which is our reafon- able Service \ Life itfelf, and all the the Endearments of it, Relations, Eftates, are to be difvalued, when fet in Comparifon with Him. Nay if (by an im- poiTible Suppofition) they could be feparated, our Saviour fhould be more dear to us than Salvation. For he declared greater Love in giving Himfelf for our Ranfom, than in giving Heaven to be our Reward. When we love him in the higheft De- gree we are capable of, we have Reafon to mourn for the Imperfection of it. In fhort, a Superla- tive Love, as it is due to our Redeemer, fo 'tis only accepted by Him. He that loveth Father or Mo~ ther, Son or Daughter, more than Him, is not worthy of Him-, Matt. x. %y. And he tells us in other Places, that we muft hate them, to mew, that our Love to him fhould fo far exceed the Affection that is due to thofe Relations, that in all Occafions where they divide from Chrift, we fhould demean ourfelves as if we had only for them an Indiffe- rence, and even an Averfation. Indeed the pre- ferring 216 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ferring of any Thing before Him, who is altoge- ther defirable in Himfelf, and infinitely deferves our Love, is brutijhly to undervalue Him, and in Effect not to love Him. For in a Temptation, where Chrift and the beloved Object are fet in Competition, as a greater Weight turns the Scales, fo the ftronger Affection will caufe a Perfon to re- nounce Chrift, for the PoffefTion of what he loves better. 'Tis the Love of Chrift reigning in the Heart, that is the only Principle of Perfeverance. 4. What an high Provocation is it to defpife Re- deeming Mercy, and to defeat that infinite Good- nefs which hath been at fuch Expence for our Re- covery ? The Son of God hath emptied all the Treafures of his Love, to purchafe Deliverance for guilty and wretched Captives •, He hath paft through fo many Pains and Thorns to come and offer it to them ; He follicits them to receive Par- don and Liberty, upon the Conditions of Accept- ance and Amendment, which are abfolutely ne- ceffary to qualify them for Felicity : Now if they flight the Benefit, and renounce their Redemption ; if they fell themfelves again under the Servitude of Sin, and gratify the Devil with a new Con- queft over them ; what a bloody Cruelty is this to their own Souls, and vile Indignity to the Lord of Glory ? And are there any fervile Spirits fo charmed with their Mifery, and fo in love with their Chains, who will ftoop under their cruel Cap- tivity, to be referved for eternal Punifhment? Who can believe it P But, alas, Examples are numerous and ordinary : The moil, by a Folly as prodigious as their Ingratitude, prefer their Sins before their Saviour, and love that which is the only juft Ob- ject of Hatred, and hate Him who is the moil wor- thy Object of Love. 'Tis a moft aftonifhing Con- fideration In Contriving Mans Redemption 217 federation, that Love fhould perfvvade Chrift to die for Men, and that they fhould Trample upon his Blood, and choofe rather to die by themfelves than to live by Him. That God mould be fo eafy to forgive, and Man fo hard to be forgiven. This is a Sin of that tranfcendent Height, that all the Abominations of Sodom and Gomorrah, are not e- qual to it. This exafperates Mercy, that dear and tender Attribute •, the only Advocate in God's Bo- fom for us. This makes the Judge irreconcileable. The Rejecting of Life upon the gracious Terms of the Gofpel, makes the Condemnation of Men mod juft, certain, and heavy. 1. Moft Juft-, for when Chrift hath performed what was necefiary for the Expiation of Sin, and hath opened the Throne of Grace, which was be- fore fhut againft us, and by this God hath declared how willing he is to fave Sinners-, if they are wilful to be damned, and fruftrate the blelTed Methods of Grace, it is moft equal they mould inherit their own Choice: They judge themfelves unworthy of eternal Life. Confcience will juftify the fevereft Doom againft them. 2. It makes their Condemnation certain and fi- nal. The Sentence of the Law is reverfible by an Appeal to an higher Court •, but that of the Gofpel againft the Refufers of Mercy will remain in its full Force for ever. He that believes not, is condemned already; John iii. 18. 'Tis fome Confolation to a Malefactor, that the Sentence is not pronounc- ed againft him : But an Unbeliever hath no Re- fpite. The Gofpel afTures the fincere Believer, that be Jhall not enter into Condemnation, to prevent his Fears of an after Sentence \ but it denounces a prefent Doom againft thofe who reject it. The Wrath of God abides on them. Obftinate Infidelity fets 2 1 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fets beyond all Pofiibility of Pardon : There is no Sacrifice for that Sin. Salvation itlelf cannot fave the impenitent Infidel : For he excludes the only Means whereby Mercy is conveyed. How defpe- rate then is the Cafe of fnch a Sinner ? To what Sanctuary will he fly ? All the other Attributes condemn him, Holinefs excites Juftice, and Juftice awakens Power for his Deftruction •, and if Mercy interpofe not between him and Ruin, he mult perifh irrecoverably. Whoever loves not the Lord Chrift^ is Anathema Maranatha: He is under an irrevocable Curfe, which the Redeemer will confirm at his Com- ing. 3. Wilful Neglect of Redeeming Mercy aggra- vates the Sentence, and brings an extraordinary Damnation upon Sinners. Befides the Doom of the Law, which continues in its Vigour againft TranfgrefFors, the Gofpel adds a more heavy One againft the Impenitent •, becaufe he believes not in the Name of the only begotten Son of Gody John iii. 18. Infidelity is an Outrage not to a Man or an Angel, but to the Eternal Son. For the Redemption of Souls is reckoned as a Part of his Reward, He Jhall fee of the Travel of his Soul and be fatisfied\ I fa. liii. Thofe therefore who fpurn at Salvation, deny him the Honour of his Sufferings ; and are guilty of the Defiance of his Love, of the Contempt of his Clemency, of the Provocation of the moil fenfible and fevere Attribute when it is incenfed. This is to ftrike him at the Heart, and to kick againft his Bowels. This increafes the Anguifh of his Suffer- ings, and imbitters the Cup of his Paflion. This renews his Sorrows, and makes his Wounds bleed afrefh. Dreadful Impiety ! that exceeds the Guilt of the Jews; they once kill'd Him, being in his humble inglorious State, but this is a daily crucify- ing in Contriving Mans Redemption, 219 ing him now glorified. Ungrateful Wretches ! that refufe to bring Glory to their Redeemer, and Bleffednefs to themfelves : -J- That rather chufe that the Accufer mould triumph in their Mifery, than their Saviour rejoice in their Felicity. This is the great Condemnation, that Chrift came into the World to fave Men from Death, and they refufe the Par- don, John iii. 19. 9Tis an Aggravation of Sin above what the Devils are capable of; for Pardon was never offered to thofe rebellious Spirits. In fhort, fo deadly a Malignity there is in it, that it poifons the Gofpel itfelf, and turns the fweeteft Mercy into the foreft Judgment. The Sun of Righteouf- nefs, who is a reviving Life to the penitent Believer, is a confuming Fire to the Obdurate. How much more tolerable had been the Condition of fuch Sinners, if faving Grace had never appeared unto Men, or they had never heard of it ? For the De- grees of Wrath mail be in Proportion to the Riches of neglected Goodnefs. The refufing Life from Chrift, makes us guilty of his Death. And when he ilialF come in his Glory, and be vifible to all that pierced Him, what Vengeance will be the Portion of thofe who defpifed the Majefty of his Perfon, the Myftery of his CompafTions and Sufferings ? Thofe that lived and died in the Darknefs of Hea- thenifm, fhall have a cooler Climate in Hell, than thofe who neglect the great Salvation. f Ut denuo malus, recuperata prxda fua, adverfus Dominuai gaudeat. TertuL de Poun. CHAP- 220 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes CHAP. XII. Divine Juftice concurs with Mercy in the Work of our Redemption. The Reafons why we are Redeemed by the Satisfaction of Juftice are fpecified: To de- clare God's Hatred of Sin, to vindicate the Ho- nour of the Law, to prevent the fecure Commijfon of Sin. Thefe Ends are obtained in the Death of Chrift •, The Reality of the Satisfaction made to Divine "Juftice confidered. The Requifues in order to it. The Appointment of God, who in this Tran- saction is to be confidered not as a Judge, that is, Mi- nifter of the Law, but as Governor. His Right of Jurifdiction to relax the Law as to the Execution of it. His Will declared to accept of the Compenfation made. The Confent of our Redeemer was neceffary. He muft be perfeclly Holy. He muft be God and Man. THE Deity in itfelf is fimple and pure, without Mixture or Variety: The Scripture afcribes Attributes to God for our clearer Underftanding. And thofe as ejjential in him are fimply one : They are diftinguifhed only with refpect to the divers Ob- jects on which they are terminated, and the different Effecls that proceed from them. The two great Attributes which are exercifed towards realonable Creatures in their lapfed St te, are Mercy and Juftice : Thefe admirably concur in the Work of our Redemption. Altho' God fpared guilty Man for the Honour of his Mercy, yet He fpared not his own Son, who be :ame a Surety for the Offender, but delivered Him up to a cruel Death for the Glory of his Juftice, For the clearer un- derftanding in Contriving Mans Redemption. 221 derftanding of thisj three Things are to be confi- dered -, i. The Reafons why we are redeemed by the Satisfaction of Juftice. 2. The Reality of the Satisfaction made by our Redeemer. 3. The Completenefs and Perfection of it. Con- cerning the firft^ there are three different Opinions among thofe who acknowledge the Reality of Satis- faction. 1. That it is not poflible that Sin mould be par- doned without Satisfaction. For Juftice being a natural and neceffary Excellency in God, hath an unchangeable Refpect to the Qualities which are in the Creatures : That as the Divine Goodnefs is neceflarily exercifed towards a Creature perfectly holy, fo Juftice is in punifhing the Guilty, unlefs a Satisfaction intervene. And if it be not poflible, confidering the Perfection of the Deity, that Ho- linefs fhould be unrewarded, far lefs can it be, that Sin mould be unpunifhed •, fince the Exercife of Juftice, upon which Punifhment depends, is more neceffary than that of Goodnefs, which is the Caufe of Remuneration. For the Rewards which Boun- ty difpenfes are pure Favour, whereas the Punifh- ments which Juftice inflicts, are due. In fhorr, Since Juftice is a Perfection, it is in God in ay«- preme Degree, and being Infinite it is inflexible. This Opinion is aflerted by feveral Divines of eminent L \rning. 2. The fecon d Opinion is, That God by his ab- folute Dominion and Prerogative, might have re- leafed the Sinner from Punifhment without any Sa- tisfaction. For as by his Sovereignty He tranf- ferred the Punifhment from the Guilty to the Inno- cent i fo He tnight have forgiveo Sin, if no Re- P deemer 222* The Harmony of the Divine Attributes deemer had interpofed. From hence it follows, That the Death of Chrift, for the Expiation of Sin, was neceffary only with refpect to the Divine Decree. 3. The third Opinion is, That considering God in this Tranfaction, as qualified with the Office of fupreme Judge and Governor of the World, who hath given juft Laws to direct his Creatures in their Obedience, and to be the Rule of his Proceedings with them as to Rewards and Punifhments. He hath fo far rcftrained the Exercife of his Power, that upon the Breach of the Law, either it muft be executed upon the Sinner, or if extraordinarily difpenfed with, it muft be upon fuch Terms as may fecure the Ends of Government: And thofe are his own Honour, and publick Order, and the Be- nefit of thofe that are governed. And upon thefe Accounts 'twas requifite, fuppofing the merciful Defign of God to pardon Sin, that his Righteouf- nets mould be declared in the Sufferings of Chrift. I will diftinclly open this. In the Law the Sovereignty and Holinefs of God eminently appear : And there are two Things in all Sins which expofe the Offender juftly to Punifh- ment : 1. A Contempt of God's Sovereignty, and in that Refpect there is a fond of Equality between them. He that offends in one is guilty of all \ Jam. ii. 10. they being ratified by the fame Authority. And from hence it is, that Guilt is the natural PaiTion of Sin ; that always adheres to it. For as God has a Judi- cial Power to inflict Punifhment upon the Difo- bedient, by Virtue of his Sovereignty, fo the Defert of Punifhment arifeth from the defpifing it in the Violation of his Commands. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 223 2. In every Sin there is a Contrariety to God's Holinefs. And in this the natural Turpitude of Sin confifts, which is receptive of Degrees. From hence arifes God's Hatred of Sin, which is as ejfen- tial as his Love to Himfelf : The infinite Purity and Rectitude of his- Nature, infers the moil perfect Abhorrence of whatever is oppofite to it. The righteous Lord loves Right eoufnefs, but the Wicked his Soul hates, Pial. xi. 5, 7. Now the Juftice of God is founded in his Sovereignty, and in his Holinefs ; and the Reafon why it is exercifed ag-inft Sin, is noc an arbitrary Constitution, but his holy Nature, to which Sin is repugnant. Thefe Things being premi- fed, it follows, That God in the Relation of a Go- vernor, is Protector of thole facred Laws which are to direct the reafonable Creature. And as it was' mod reafonable, that, in the firft giving the Law, He fhould lay the ftrongeft Reftraint upon Man for preventing Sin, by the threatningof Death, the greateft Evil in itfelf, and in the Eftimation of Mankind ; fo it is moil congruous to Reafon, when the Command was broke by Man's Rebellion, that the Penalty fhould be inflicted, either on his Perfon, according to the immediate Intent of the Law, or Satisfaction equivalent to the Offence mould be made, that the Majefty and Purity of God might: appear in his Juftice, and there might be a vifible Difcovery of the Value he puts on Obedience. The Life of the Law depends upon the Execution of it •, for Impunity occafions a Contempt of Ju- ftice, and by extenuating Sin, in the Account of Men, encourages to the free Commiffion of it. If Par- don be eafily obtained, Sin will be eafily committed. Crimes unpuniihed feem authorized. The firft Temp- tation was prevalent by this Periwafion, that no Pu- nifhment would follow. Befidcs, if upon the bold P 2 Violation 224 ^e Harmony of the Divine Attributes Violation of the Law no Punifhment were inflicted, not only the Glory of God's Holinefs would be ob- fcured, as if he did not love Righteoufnefs and hate Sin, but fuffered the Contempt of the one, and the Commiffion of the other without Control*, but it •would either reflect upon his Wifdom, as if he had not upon juft Reafon eftablifhed an Alliance between the Offence and the Penalty -, or upon his Power, as if He were not able to vindicate the Rights of Hea- ven. And after his giving a Law, and declaring, that, according to the Tenor of it, He would difpenfe Rewards and Punifhments, if Sin were unrevenged, it would lefTen the Sacrednefs of his Truth in the E- fteem of Men. So that the Law and Lawgiver would be expofed to Contempt. By all which it appears, that the Honour of God was infinitely con- cerned in his requiring Satisfaction for the Breach of his Laws. Temporal Magiftrates are bound to execute wife and equal Laws, for the Prefervation of publick Order, and civil Societies. 'Tis true, there be fome Cafes wherein the Lawgiver may be forced to difpenfe with the Law, as when the fparing of an Offender is more Advantage to the State than his Punifhment : Befides, there is a fuperior Tribunal to which great Offenders are obnoxious *, and good Magiftrates, when, through Weaknefs, they are fain to fpare the Guilty, refer them to God's Judgment. But it is otherwife in the Divine Government : For God is infinitely free from any Neceffity of Compli- ance. There is no Exigency of Government that requires, that any Offenders mould efcape his Seve- rity. Neither is there any Juftice above his, which might exact Satisfaction of them. Befides, the Majefty of his Laws is more facred than of thofe which preferve earthly States, and ought to be more inviolable. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 225 inviolable. The Sum is this, to declare God's Ha- tred of Sin, which is effential to his Nature ; topre- ferve the Honour of the Law, which otherwife would be fecurely defpifed, and lofe its Effect; to prevent Sin, by keeping up in Men an holy Fear to offend God, an eternal Refpect in the rational Crea- ture to Him-, it was4moft fit that the prefnmptnous Breach of God's Command mould not be unpu- r.ifhed. Now when the Son of God was made a Sacrifice for Sin, and by a Bloody Death made Ex- piation of it, the World is convinced how infinite- ly hateful Sin is to him, the Dignity of the Law is maintained, and Sin is moll: effectually difcouraged. There is the fame Terror, though not the fame Ri- gor, as if all Mankind had been finally condemned. Thus it appears how becoming God it was, to ac- complish our Salvation in fuch a Manner, that Juftice and Mercy are revealed in their moft noble and emi- nent Effects and Operations. 2. The Reality of the Satisfaction made to Di- vine Juftice is next to be proved. This is the Cen- ter, and Heart of the Chriftian Religion, from whence all vital and comforting Influences are deriv- ed : And for the opening of it, I will firfl confider the Requifites in order to it \ which are, 1. The Appointment of God, whofe Power and Will are to be confidered in this Tranfaetion. (1.) His Power-, for it is an act of Supremacy to admit, that the Sufferings of another mould be effectual to redeem the Offender. God doth not in this Affair fuftain the Perlbn of a Judge, that is, the Minifter of the Law, and cannot free the Guil- ty by transferring the Punifhment on another-, but is to be confidered as Governor, who may by pure Jurifdiction difpenfe in the Execution of the Law, P 3 upon 22.6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes upon thofe Confklerations which fully anfwer the Ends of Government. The Law is not executed according to the Letter of it, for then no Sinner can be faved •, but repent- ing Believers are free from Condemnation. Nor is it abrogated, for then no Obligation remains as to the Duty, or Penalty of it ; but Men are ftill bound to obey it, and impenitent Infidels are ftill under the Curfe : The Wrath of God abides upon them. But it is relaxed, as to the Punifhment, by the merciful Con- defcenfion of the Lawgiver. Some Laws are not capable of Relaxation in their own Nature ; becaufe there is included moral Ini- quity in the Relaxation. As the Commands to love God and obey Confcience, can never lofe their binding Force. 'Tis an univerfal Rule that fuffers no Exception, God cannot deny himfelf; therefore he can never allow Sin, that directly oppofes the Per- fections of His Nature. Befides, fome Laws can-, not be relaxed ex hypcthefi, upon the Account of the Divine Decree which makes them irrevocable, as that all wjjo die in their Impenitency fhall be dam- ned. Now there was no exprefs Sign annexed to the Sanction of the original Law, to intimate, that it fhould be unalterable as to the Letter of it. The Threatning declared the Defertof Sin in the Offen- der, and the Right of punifhing in the Superior ; but it is fo to be underftood, as not to fruftrate the Power of the Lawgiver, to relax the Punifhment upon wife and juft Reafons. The Law did neither propound, nor exclude this Expedient; for judging without Parlion againft the Sinner, it is fatisfied with the Punifhment of the Crime. For it is not the Evil of the Offender that is primarily defigned by the Law, but the Prefervation af publick Order, for the Honour of the Lawgiver, and in Contriving Mans Redemption, 227 and the Benefit of thofe that are Subjects. So thac the Relaxing the Punifhment, as to the Perfon of the Sinner, by Compenfation, fully anfwersthe Intent of the Law. (2.) As by the Right of Jurifdi&ion God might relax the Law, and appoint a Mediator to inter- pofe by Way of Ranlbm •, fo he hath declared his Will to accept of Him. The Law, in Strictnefs, o- bliged the Sinning Perfon to fuffer, fothat he might: have refufed any other Satisfaction : Therefore the whole Work of our Redemption is referred to His Will as the primary Caufe. Our Saviour was fent- into the World by the Order of God : John iii. 17. He was fealed, that is, authorized for that great Work by Commiflion from Him. He was called to His Office, by the Voice of his Father from Heaven •, Thou art my beloved Son in whom I am well pleafed, Mate. iii. 17. God anointed him with the Holy Ghofl, and with Power, Acts x. 38. which fignifies as the enduing of Him with the Graces of the Spirit, fo the in- verting Him in the Dignity of Mediator^ as Kings,. Priefts, and Prophets were. And both were ne- cefTary, for his Graces without his Office are un- profitable to us, and his Office without his Ca- pacity, of no Advantage. In fhort, the Apoftle obferves this as the peculiar Excellency of the New Covenant, and the Foundation of our Hopes, that the Mediator was conftituted by a folemn Oath, 'The Lord hath fworn, and will not repent, thou art a- Priefl for ever after the Order of Mekhifedec, Heb. vii. 21. 2. The Confent of our Redeemer was neceflary, that he might by Sufferings fatisfy for us. For be- ing the Lord from Heaven, there was no Superior Authority to command, or Power to compel him. 'Tis true, having become our Surety, it was necef- ftry 228 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fary He fhould be accountable to the Law : But the firft Undertaking was mod free. When one hath entred into Bonds to pay the Debt of an infolvent Perfon, he muft give Satisfaction •, but it is an Act of Liberty and Choice to make himfelf liable. Our Savi- our tells us, Lu. xxiv. 46. 7/ behoved Chrift to fuffer ; he doth not lay that the Son of God mould fuffer, but that Chrift. This Title fignifies the fame Perfon in Subftance, but not in the fame Refpectand Conside- ration. Chrift is the Second Perfon, cloathed with our Nature. There was no Neceflity that obliged God to appoint his Son, or the Son to accept the Office of Mediator : But when the Eternal Son had undertook that Charge, and was made Chrift, that is, affumed our Nature in order to redeem us, it was neceffary that He fhould fuffer. Befides, His Confent was neceffary upon another Account. For the Satisfaction doth not arife merely from the Dignity of his Perfon, but from the Law of Subftitution, whereby he put himfelf in our Stead, and voluntarily obliged himfelf to fuffer the Punifhment due to us. The Efficacy of his Death, is by Virtue of the Contract between the Father and him, of which there could be no Caufe but pure Mercy, and his voluntary Condefcen- fion. Now the Scripture declares the Willingnefs of Chrift, particularly at his Entrance into the World, and at his Death. Upon His coming into the World, he begins his Life by the internal Oblation of himfelf to his Father-, Heb. x. 6, 7. Sacrifice end Offering thou didfi not defire ; mine Ears haft thou opened-, that is, He entirely refigned himfelf to be God's Servant -, Burnt-Offering and Sin-Offering haft thou not required. Then /aid I, ho, I come, in the Volume of thy Book it is written of me, I delight to do thy in Contriving Mans Redemption, 229 thy Will, O my God ; yea, thy Law is within my Heart. He faw the divine Decree, and embraced it ; the Law was in his Heart, and fully poflefled all his Thoughts and Affections, and had a commanding Influence upon his Life. And his Willingnefs was fully expreft by him, when he approached to his lad Sufferings. For although he declined Death. as Man, having natural and innocent Defires of Self- prefervation, yet as Mediator he readily fubmitted to it ; Not my Will, but thine be done, was his Voice in the Garden. And this argued the Completenefs and Fixednefs of his Will, that, notwithstanding his Averfation from Death abfolutely confidered, yet with an unabated Election He ftill chofe it as the Means of our Salvation. No involuntary Con- ftraint did force him to that Submiffion •, But the fole Caufes of it were his free Compliance with his Father's Will, and his tender Companion towards Men. He faith, Joh. x. 18. 1 have Power to lay down my Life, and Power to take it up : This Command I received of my Father : In his Death, Obedience and Sacrifice were united. The typical Sacrifices wej*e led to the Altar ; but the Lamb of God prefented Himfelf: Gal. i. 4. 'Tis faid, He gave him/elf for us, Tit. li. 14. to fignify his Willingnefs in dying. Now the Freenefs of our Redeemer in dying for us, qualified his Sufferings to be meritorious. The Apotlle tells us, Rom. v. 19. that by the Obedience of one many are made righteous •, that is, By his volun- tary Sufferings we are juftified : For without his Confent, his Death could not have the Refpect of a Punifhment for our Sins. No Man can be com- pelled to pay another's Debt, unlefs he make himfelf Surety for it. Briefly ', The Appointment of God, and the Undertaking of Chrift, to redeem us from the Curfe of the Law by his Suffering it, are the Foun- 230 The Harmo?iy of the Divine Attributes Foundation of the New Tejiament. 3. He that interpofed as Mediator, mnft be per- fectly holy, otherwife he had been liable to Juitice for his own Sin : And guilty Blood is impure and corrupt, apter toftain by its Effufion and Sprinkling, than to purge away Sin. The Apoftle joins thefe two as infeparable, 1 Job. iii. 5. He appeared to take away Sin, and in him is no Sin. The Priejihood under the Law was imperfect •, as for other Reafons, fo for the Sins of the Priefts. Aaron the firft and chief of the Levitical Order, was guilty of grofs Idolatry, fo that Reconciliation could not be obtained by their Miniflry : For how can one Captive ranfom ano- ther, or Sin expiate Sin ? But our Mediator was abfolutely innocent, without the lead Tincture of Sin original, or aflual. He was conceived in a mi- raculous Manner, infinitely diftant from all the Impurities of the Earth. That which is produced in an ordinary Way, receives its Propriety from fecond Caufes, and contracts the Defilement that cleaves to the whole Species : Whatever is born of Blood, and the Will of the Flefh, that is, formed of the Subftance of the Flefh, and by the fenfual Appetite, is defiled : But though He was formed of the Sub- ltance of the Virgin, yet by Virtue of an heavenly Principle, according to the Words of the Angel to her^ Luke i. 2 5- The Holy Ghoft Jhall come upon thee, and the Tower of the Higheft fljall overfhadow thee ; therefore alfo that Holy Thing that /hall be born of thee, Jhall be called the Son of God. He came in the Ap- pearance only of Jinful FlejJo, Rom. viii. 3. as the Brazen Serpent had the Figure, and not the Poifon of the fiery Serpent. He was without abtual Sin ; He foiled the Tempter in all his Arts and Methods wherewith he tried Him. He refilled the Luft of the Flefh, by refufing to make the Stones Bread to aflvvage in Contriving Mans Redemption. 231 aflwage his Hunger •, and the Luft of the Eyes, in defpifing the Kingdoms of the World with all their Treafures-, and the Pride of Life, when he would not throw himfelf down, that by the interpofing of Angels for his Refcue, there might be a vifible Proof that he was the Son of God. The Accufer himfeif confelTed him to be the Holy One of God, Mar. i. 24. He found no Corruption within him, and could draw nothing out of him. Judas that betrayed him, and Pilate that condemned him, acknowledged his In- nocence. He perfectly fulfilled the Lav/, and did always what plea fed his Father. In the Midft of his Sufferings, no irregular Motion difturbed hjs Soul, but he always exprelt the higheft Reverence to God, and unfpeakable Charity to Men. He was compar- ed to a Lamb, (for h« Pafiion and his Patience) that quietly dies at the Foot of the Altar. Befides, we may confider in our Mediator not on- ly a perfect Freedom from Sin, but an Impossibility that he fhould be touched by it. The angelical Na- ture was liable to Folly ; but the human Nature, by its intimate and unchangeable Union with the Divine, is eftablifhed above all Poffibility of Falling. The Deity is Holinefs itielf ; and by its perfonal Prefence, is a greater Prefervative from Sin, than either the Vifion of God in Heaven, or the mod permanent Habit of Grace. Our Saviour tells us, John v. 19. The Son can do nothing of himfelf, but according to the Pattern the Father jets him. Now the perfect Holinefs of our Redeemer hath a fpecial Efficacy in making his Death to be the Expiation of Sin, as the Scripture frequently declares, Heb. vii. 26, 27. For [itch an High Prieft became us, who is holy, harmlefs, un~ defiled, ar.djeparate from Sinners. And he that knew no Sin, was made Sin for us, that we might be made the Right ioufnefs of God in bim7 2 Cor. v. 2 1 . IVe are 232 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Redeemed not with corruptible Things, as Silver and Gold, but with the precious Blood of Chrijl, as of a Lamb without Blemijh, and without Spot, 1 Pet. i. 18. And by his Knowledge Jhall my righteous Servant juftify many, Ifa. liii. 11. 4. 'Twas requifite the Mediator ftiould be God and Man. He muff, affume the Nature of Man, that he might be put in his Stead in order to make Satis- faction for him. He was to be our Reprefentative, therefore fuch a Conjunction between us mult be, that God might efteem all his People to fuffer in him. By the Law of Ifrael the Right of Redemption be- longed to him that was next in Blood : Now Chriit took the Seed of Abraham, the original Element of our Nature, that having a Right of Propriety in us as God, he might have a Right of Propinquity as Man. He was allied to all Men, as Men ; that his Sufferings might be univerfally benefical : And he muff, be God. It is not his Innocency only, or Depu- tation, but the Dignity of his Perfon that qualifies him to be an all-fufficient Sacrifice for Sin, fo that God may difpenfe Pardon, in a Way that is honour- able to Juftice : For Juftice requires a Proportion between the Punifliment and the Crime ; and that receives its Quality from the Dignity of the Perfon offended. Now fince the Majefty of God is infinite, againft whom Sin is committed, the Guilt of it can never be expiated but by an infinite Satisfaction, There is no Name under Heaven, (Acts iv. 12.) nor in Heaven, that could fave us, but the Son of God, who, being equal to him in Greatnefs, became Man. If there had been fuch Companion in the Angels as to have inclined them to interpofe between Juftice and us, they had not been qualified for that Work ; not only upon the Account of their different Nature, fo that by Subftitution they could not fatisfy for us ; nor in Contriving Mans Redemption. 233 nor that being immaterial Subftances, they are ex- empted from the Dominion of Death, which was the Punifhment denounced againft the Sinner, and to which his Surety muft be Subjected ; but princi- pally, that being finite Creatures, they are incapable to atone an incenfed God. Who, among all their glorious Orders, durft appear before foconfuming a Fire ? who could have been an Altar whereon to fanctify a Sacrifice to Divine Juftice ? No mere Creature how worthy foever could propitiate the fu- preme Majeity when juftly provoked. Our Redeem- er was to be the Lord of Angels. The Apoftle tells us, that it pleafed the Father that in him allFulnefs Jhould dwell. This refpects not his original Nature, but his Office, and the Reafon of it is, to reconcile by the Blood of the Crofs, Things in Heaven and in the Earth. From the Greatnefs of the Work we may infer the Quality of the Means, and from the Quali- ty of the Means, the Nature of the Perfon that is to preform it. Peace with God, who was provoked by our Rebellion, could only be made by an infinite Sacrifice. Now in Chrift the Deity itfelf, not its Influences, and the Fulnefs of it, not any particular Perfection only, dwelt really and fubflantially. God was prefent in the Ark in a Shadow, and Repre- sentation •, He is prefent in Nature by his fultaining Power, and in his Saints by fpecial Favour, and the eminent Effects, the Graces and Comforts that pro- ceed from it ; but he is prefent in Chrift in a fingular and tranfcendent Manner. The Humanity is relat- ed to the Word not only as a Creature to the Au- thor of its Being, for in this Regard it hath an equal Re fpect to all the Perfon s, but by a peculiar Con- junction •, for it is actuated by the fame Subfiftence as the Divine ElTence is in the Son, but with this Dif- ference, the one is voluntary, the other necelTary ; the 234 The Harmony of theDivine Attributes the one is efpoufed by Love, the other received by Nature. Now from his intimate Union, there is a Commu- nication of the fpeciar Qualities of both Natures to the Perfon of Chi id : Man is exalted to be the Son of God, and* the Word abafed to be the Son of Man. As by Reafon of the vital Union between the Soul and Body, the efTential Parts of Man, it is truly faid, that he is rational in refpect of his Soul, and mortal in refpecl of his Body. This Union derives an infinite Merit to the Obedience of Chrift. For the human Nature having its Complement from the Divine Perfon, it is not the. Nature fimply confi- dered, but the Perfon that is the Foimtain of Acti- ons. To illuftrate this by an Inftance : The Civil Law determines, that a Tree tranfplanted from one Soil to another, and taking Root there, belongs to the Owner of that Ground -, in regard that receiv- ing Nourifhment from a new Earth, it becomes as it were another Tree, though there be the fame in- dividual Root, the fame Body, and the fame Soul of Vegetation as before-)-. Thus the human Na- ture taken from the common Mafs of Mankind, and tranfplanted by perfonal Union into the Divine, is to be reckoned as entirely belonging to the Divine, and the Actions proceeding from it are not merely human, but are raifed above their natural Worth, and become meritorious. One Hour of Chrift's Life glorified God more, than an everlafting Dura- tion fpent by Angels and Men in the Praifes of him. For the moft perfect Creatures are limited, and fi- nite, and their Services cannot fully correfpond with the Majefty of God -, but when the Word was made Flefh, f Plantata & confita ut folo cedant eft juris Conftituti, cujuj ratio eft hut by his own Blood He entered in once into '264 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes into the Holy Place, having obtained eternal Redemption for us : And by one Offering He hath for ever perfected them who are fanclifed, Heb. x. 14. Upon this Ac- count God promifeoSin the New-Covenant, that their Sins and lniquit$s He would remember no more, having received complete Satisfaction by the Suffer- ings of his Son. 'Tis now faid that once in the End cf the World hath he appeared, to put away Sin by the Sacrifice of himfelf And as it is appointed for all Men cnce to die, and after Death comes Judgment : So Chrift was once offered to bear the Sins of many \ ana unto them that look for him jhall he appear the fecor, i Time without fin, Heb. ix. 26, 27, 28. As there is no other natural Death to fuffer between Death and Judgment, fo there is no other propitiatory S fice between his All-fufficient Death on the Crofs, and the laft coming of our Redeemer. There is one Confideration I mall add, to mew the great Difference between Legal Sacrifices, and the Death of Chrift, as to its faving Virtue. The Law abfolutely forbids the eating of Blood, and the People's tailing of the Sin-offerings ; to fignify thelm£e fti (Matt, xxvi. 28.) poured forth from his Veins, and offered up to God, in- that precife Consideration, ratifies the NeW'Teftament. The Sum is, Our Saviour by his Death fuffered the Malediction of the Law, and his Divine Nature gave a full Value to his Sufferings, fo that the Satisfaction proceeding from them, was not merely ex PaRo, as Rrafs Money is current by Compofuion ; but ex Merito, as pure Gold hath an intrinfick Worth : And God who was infinitely provoked, is infinitely pleafed. 2. The Effects and Evidences of his complete Satisfaction are, Fir/}, His Refurreflion from the Grave. For if we confider the Lord Chrift in the Quality of our Surety, Hefatisfied the Law in his Death : And hav- ing made complete Payment of our Debt, He re- ceived the Acquittance in his Refurreflion. His Death appeafed God, His Refurrection affures Men. As he role himfelf, fo in one concurrent Action God is laid to raife him, Rom. vi. 4. He was releafed from the Grave, as from Prifon, by publick Sentence -, which is an indubitable Argument of the Validity and Acceptance of the Payment made by him in our Name. 266 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Name. For being under fuch Bonds as the Juftice and Power of God, he could never have loofedthe Pains of Death, Acts ii. 24. if his Sufferings had not been fully Satisfactory, and received by him, for our Dis- charge. And it is obfervable, that the raifing of Chrift is afcribed to God as reconciled -, Now the God of Peace, who brought again from the Bead the , great Shepherd of the Sheep, through the Blood of the everlafting Covenant, Heb. xiii. 20. The Divine Power was not put forth till God was pacified. Ju- ftice incenfed, expofed him to Death -, and Juftice appeafed, freed him from the Dead. And his Re- furreclion is attributed to his Blood, that being the full Price of his and our Liberty. In fhort, when inflexible Juftice ceafes topunifh, there is the ftron- geft Proof it is fatisfied. Secondly, His Afcent into Heaven, and Intercef- fion for us, prove the Compleatnefs and All-fuffici- ency of his Sacrifice. If he had been excluded from the Divine Prefence, there had been juftCaufe to fnfpedi: that Anger had been ftill remaining in God's Breaft •, but His Admiffion into Heaven is an infallible Teftimony that God is reconciled.- This our Saviour produces as the Argument by which the Holy Ghoft will overcome the guilty Fears of Men ; He jhall convince the World of Right eoufnefs, becaufe J go to my Father, John xvi. 30. Chrift in his Suffering was numbered among TranfgrefTors ; He died as a guilty Perfon, not only in refpecl of the Calumnies of Men, but the Curfe of the Law, and the Wrath of God, which then appeared inex- orable againft Sin. But having overcome Death, and broke through the Weight of the Law, and re- tired to his Father, he made apparent the In- nocency of his Righteous Perfon, and that a complete Righteoufnefs is acquired by his Suffer- ings, in Contriving Mans Redemption. 267 ings, fufficient to juftify all that fhall truly accept of it. This will be more evident, by confidering his En- try into Heaven as the true High Prieft, who carri- ed the Blood of the New Covenant into the Celeftial Sanctuary. For the opening this, we are to confider there are two Parts of the Prieftly Office, 1. To offer Sacrifice. 2. To make Interceffion for the People by Virtue of the Sacrifice. This was preformed by the High Prieft in the Feaft of Atonement, which was ce- lebrated in the Month Tifri, Lev. xvi. 14,. 15. The Oblation of the Sacrifices was without, at the Al- tar : The Interceffion was made in the Holy of Ho- lies, into which none might enter but the High Prieft once a Year. And firft he mutt expiate his own Sins, and the Sins of the People by Sacrifices, before he could remove the Vail, and enter into that facred and venerable Place, where no Sinner had Right to appear. Then he was to prefent the precious In- cenfe, (Heb. ix. 4.) and the Blood of the Sacrifices, to render God favourable to them. Now thefe were Shadows of what Chrilt was to preform. The Ho- ly of Holies was the Type of the third Heaven, in its Situation, Quality and Furniture : For it was the mod fecret Part of the Tabernacle, feparated by a double Vail, by that which was between it and the firft Sanctuary, and by another that diftinguifh- ed the firft from the outward Court. Thus the Hea- ven of Heavens is the moil diftant Part of the Uni- verfe, and feparated from the lower World, by the Starry Heaven, and by the Airy Region, which reaches down to the Earth. Befides, the moil holy Part of the Tabernacle was inacceffible to Sinners : As Heaven is ftiled by the Apoftle the Place of inaccejji- bk Light. And it was the Throne of God where he reigned j 268 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes reigned : According to the Language of the PfaK mift, He dwelt between the Cherubims\ Pfal. lxxx. i* The Figures of the Cherubims reprefented the My- riads of Holy Angels, *hat adore the incomprehen- sible Deity •, and are always ready to execute his Commands. The Tables of the Law were a Sym- bol of that infinite Wifdom and Holinefs which or- dained them : And the High Priefts entering with the Blood of the Sacrifice, and carrying with him all the Tribes of Ifrael upon his Bread, fignified, that Jefus Chrift, the true High Pried, after he had real- ly expiated Sin by his Divine Sacrifice in the lower World, mould enter into the eternal Sanctuary with his own Blood, and introduce with him all his Peo- ple. Of this there was a marvellous Sign given : For in the fame Moment that Chrift expired, the Vail of the Temple, that feparatcd the Oracle from the firft Part, was rent from the Top to the Bottom ; to fignify, that the true High Prieft had Authority and Right to enter, into Heaven itfelf. And the fpecial End of his afcending is expreft by the Apo- ftle, Heb. ix. 24. For Chrift is not entered into the Ho- ly Places made with Hands, which are the Figures of the true ; but into Heaven itfelf, now to appear in the Pre- fence of God for us. As the High Prieft might not enter into that facred and terrible Place, nor could propitiate God without fprinkling the Blood of the (lain Sacrifice : So our Redeemer firft preformed what was neceffary for the .Expiation of Sin, and then he paft through the vifible Heavens, 2nd afcend- ed before the Throne of God to appear as our Ad- vocate. He made an Oblation of Himfelf on the Earth before he could make Interceffwn for us in Hea- ven, which is the Confummation of his Prieftly Of- fice. The firft was a proper Sacrifice, the fesond is a Commemoration of it : Therefore he is faid to ap- pear before his Father by Sacrifice, Heb, ix. 26. Be- in Contriving Mans Redemption. 269 Befides what hath been difcourfed of the Order and Dependance of thefe Parts of his Prieftly Of- fice, which proves that he had accompliffied the Ex- piation of Sin, before he was admitted into Heaven to intercede for us ; there are (wo other Considera- tions which manifeft the Compleatnefs of his Satisfac- tion. 1. The Manner of his lnterceffion. 2. Its omnipotent Efficacy. 1. The Manner of it. He doth not appear in the Form of a Suppliant upon his Knees before the Throne, offering up Tears and ftrong Cries as in the Day of his Flefh, but He fits at God's right Hand making lnterceffion for us. He folicits our Salvation, not as pure Favour to him, but as the Price of his Sufferings, and as due to his infinite Merit. His Blood in the fame Manner pleads for our Pardon, as the Blood of righteous Abel called for Vengeance a- gainft the Murderer : Not by an articulate Voice, but by fuing to Juftice for a full Recompence of it. In fhort, his lnterceffion is the continual Reprefen- tation of his mofl worthy Paffion. 2. The omnipotent • Efficacy of his lnterceffion proves that God is fully fatisfied. He frees us from the greateft Evils, and obtains for us the greateft Good in Quality of Mediator. If any Man fin, we have an Advocate with the Father, Jefus Chrift the Righteous -, and he is the Propitiation for our Sins, and not for ours only, but for, the Sins of the whole lVorldy 1 John ii. 2. He difarms the Anger of God, and hin- ders the Effects of his Indignation againft repenting Sinners. Now the Prevalency of his Mediation is grounded on the Perfection of his Sacrifice. The BlefTednefs of Heaven is conferred on Believers ac- cording to his Will; FatFer, Twill that thofe •; thou baft given me i be with me where I aw, to fee my S GIcr\'y 270 The1 Harmony of the Divine Attributes Glory, John xvii. 24. His Requeft is effectual, not only becaufe he is God's Son, and in highett Favour with him, but for his meritorous Sufferings. 'Tis for this Realbn that the Office of Mediator is incommunicable to any Creature. There is one God, and one Mediator between God and Man, the Man Chrift J ejus, who gave himjelf a Ranjomjor all, 1 Tim. ii. 5. The Apottle makes a Parallel between the Unity of the Mediator, and of the Deity, which is moft facred and inviolable. For the Right of In- terceffion, as it is an authoritative Act, is founded in Redemption ; they cannot be divided. And we may obferve by the Way, how the Popijb Doctrine that erects as many Advocates, as Angels, or Saints, or whoever are canonifed, is guilty of Impiety and Folly : Of Impiety, in taking the Sovereign Crown from the Head of Chrift to adorn others with it, as if they had more Credit with God, or Compaffion for Men : And of Folly, in expecting Benefits by their Interceffion, who have no fatisfactory Merit to purchafe them. The numerous Advocates that are conceived by fuperftitious Perfons in their Fancies, are like the counterfeit Suns, that are drawn in the Clouds by Reflection as in a Glafs * : Which al- though they fhine with a confiderable Brightnefs, yet they are only Suns in Appearance, and derive no quick- ening Influences to the Earth. The bleffed Spirits a- bove, do enjoy a dependant Light from the Sun of Right eoufnefs, yet convey no Benefits to Men by merito- rious interceding for them. We obtain Grace and Glo- ry only upon the Requefis of our Redeemer. Briefly, the Acts of his Priefthood refpect the Attributes, which in a fpecial Manner are to be glorified in our Salvation. By his Death he made Satisfaction to Juftice ; by his In- * Non totum imitantur, fed imaginem ejus, figuramq caeterum nihil habent ardoris, hebetes & languid i. Sen* Nat* %" being delivered by the determinate Counjel, and Fore- knowledge of God, they have taken, and by wicked Hands have crucified and Jlain. The Inftruments were deeply guilty in fhedding that immaculate Blood j yet we muft not terminate our Thoughts on them, but afcend to the fupreme Difpofer, by whofe Wife and Holy Decree that Event came to pafs. To the Eye of Senfe it was a Spectacle of Horror, that a perfect Innocent mould be cruelly torment- ed ; but to the Eye of Faith, under that fad and ignominious Appearance, there was a Divine Myfte- ry, able to raife our Wonder, and raviih our Affec- tion s. For he that was nailed to the Crofs, was really the Son of God, and the Saviour of Men : His Death, with all the penal Circumftances of Dif- honour and Pain, is the only Expiation of Sin, and Satisfaction to Juftice, He by offering up his Bloody appeafed the Wrath of God, quenched the flaming Sword that made Paradife inacceflible to us ; he took away Sin, the true Difhonour of our Natures, and purchafed for us the Graces of the Spirit, the richeft Ornaments of the reafonable Creature. The * De cruce Chrifti nobis infultant Sapientes hujus mundi, & dicunt, Quale cor. habetis, qui Deum colitis Cruci&xum ? Aug, Strrtt de verb, /ffojl. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 29^ The Doctrine of the Crofs is the only Foundation of the Gofpel -, that unites all its Parts, and fupports the whole Building, 'Tis the Caufe of our Righte- oufnefs and Peace, of our Redemption and Reconci- liation. How bleffed an Exchange have the Merits of his Sufferings made with thofe of our Sins ? Life in- Head of Death, Glory for Shame, and Happinefs for Mifery. For this Reafon the Apoftle with Vehemence declares, Gal. vi. 14. that to be the fole Ground of his Boafting and Triumph, which others efteemed a Caufe of Blufhing ; God forbid that I Jhould glory fave in the Crofs of Chrift. He rejects with extreme Deteftation the Mention of any other Thing, as the Caufe of his Happinefs, and Matter of his Glory. The Crofs was a Tree of Death to Chrift, and of Life to us. The Supreme Wifdom is juftified of its Children. 4. The Satisfaction of Divine Juftice by the Suf- ferings of Chrift, affords the ftrongeft AfTurance to Man, who is a guilty and fufpicious Creature, that God is mod ready to Pardon Sin. There is in the natural Confcience, when opened by a piercing Con- viction of Sin, fuch a quick Senfe of Guilt and God's Juftice, that it can never have an entire Confidence in his Mercy till Juftice be atoned. From hence the convinced Sinner is reftlefly inquifitive, how to find out the Way of Reconciliation with a righteous God. Thus he is reprefented enquiring by the Prophet ; Mic. vi. 6, 7. Wherewith [h all I come before the Lordy and bow my f elf before the moft High God ? Shall I come be- fore him with Burnt -Offerings , with Calves of a Tear old? Will the Lord bepleafedwith thoufands of Rams, or with ten thoufand Rivers of Oil ? Shall I give my Firft- horn for my TranfgreJ/ion, the Fruit of my Body for the Sin of my Soul? The Scripture tells us that fome confum- ed their Children to render their Idols favourable xq them. But all thefe Means were ineffectual; their 296 *The Harmony of the Divine Attributes their mod coftly Sacrifices were only Food for the Fire. Nay, inftead of expiating their old, they committed new Sins •, and werefo far from appeal- ing, that they inflamed the Wrath of God by their cruel Oblations. But in the Gofpel there is the moft rational and eafy Way propounded for the Satisfac- tion of God and the Juftification of Man. The Righteoufnefs of Faith Jpeaketh on this wife, Say not in thy Heart, Who /hail afcend into Heaven ? {that is, to bring down Chrift from above:) Or who Jhall dejcend into the deep ? (that is, to bring up Chrift again from the Dead : ) But if thou Jhalt confefs with thy Mouth the Lord J ejus, and jhalt believe in thy Heart that God hath raijed him from the Dead, thou Jhalt be faved* Rom. X. 6, 7, 9. The Apoftle fets forth the Anxiety of an awakened Sinner -, he is at a Lofs to find out a Way to efcape Judgment : For Things that are on the Sur- face of the Earth, or floating on the Waters, are within our View, and may be obtained ; but thofe which are above our Underftanding to difco- ver, or Power to obtain, are proverbially faid to be in the Heavens above, or in the Deeps. And it is applied here to the different Ways of Juftification, by the Law, and by the Gofpel. The Law pro- pounds Life upon an impoflible Condition •, but the Gofpel clearly reveals to us, that Chrift hath perform- ed what is neceffary for our Juftification, and that by a lively and practical Faith we fhall have an Inte- reft in it. The Lord Jefus being afcended, hath given us a convincing Proof, that the Propitiation for our Sins is perfect : For otherwife he had not been received into God's Sanctuary. Therefore to be under Perplexities how we may be juftified, is to deny the Value of his Righteoufnefs, and the Truth of his Afcenfion. And Jay not, who fhall defcend in- to the Deep, to bear the Torments of Hell, and expi- ate in Contriving Mans Redemption. 297 ate Sin ? This is to deny the Virtue of his Death, whereby he appeafed God, and redeemed us from the Wrath to come. In the Law the condemning Righteouinefs of God is made viable, in the Go£ pel his juftifying Righteoufnefs is revealed, from Faith to Faiths Rom. i. 17. And this is an infalli- ble Proof of its divine Defcent. For whereas all o- ther Religions either ftupify Confcience, and harden it in carnal Security, or terrify it by continual A- larms of Vengeance -, the Gofpel alone hath difco- vered how God may (hew Mercy to repenting Sin- ners without Injury to his Juftice. The Heathens robbed one Attribute to enrich another. Either they conceived God to be indulgent to their Sins, and eafy to Pardon, to the Prejudice of his Juftice ; or cruel and revengful, to the Difhonour of his Good- nefs : But Chriftians are inftructed how thefe are wonderfully reconciled and magnified in our Re- demption. From hence there is a Divine Calm in the Confcience, and that Peace which paffeth Under- fianding. The Soul is not only freed from the Fear of God's Anger, but hath a lively Hope of his Fa- vour and Love. This is expreft by the Apoftle, Heb. xii. 23. when he reckons among the Privileges of Believers, that they are come to God the Judge of all, and to Jefus the Mediator of the New-Covenant, and to the Blood of Sprinkling, that f peaks better things than the Blood of Abel. The Apprehenfion of God as the Judge of the World, ftrikes the Guilty with Fear and Terror ; but as he is fweetned by the Mediator, we may approach to him with Confidence. For what Sins are there which fo entire a Satisfaction doth not expiate ? What Torments can they delerve, which his Wounds and Stripes have not removed ? God is juft as well as merciful in juftifying thofe who believe in Jefus. 'Tis not the Quality of Sins, but Of 2g% The Harmony of the Divine Attributes of Sinners, that excepts them from Pardon. Chrift is the golden Altar in Heaven for penitent Believers to fly to, from whence God will never pluck any one to deftroy him. 5. From hence we may learn, how abfolute a Nc- ceffity there is for our coming to Chritl for Juftifica- tion. There are but two Ways of appearing before the Righteous and Supreme Judge : 1. In Innocence and finlefs Obedience: Or, 2* By the Righteoufnefs of Chrift. The one is by the Law, the other by Grace. And thefe two can never be compounded ; for he that pleads Innocence, in that difclaims Favour ; and he that fues for Favour, acknowledges Guilt. Now the fird cannot be per* formed by us. For entire Obedience to the Law fuppofes the Integrity of our Natures, there being a moral Impoflibility that the Faculties once corrupt- ed mould act regularly : But Man is ftained with Original Sin from his Conception. And the Form of the Law runs univerfally, Curfed is every one that 0* beys not in all things which are written in the Book of the Law to do them. Gal. iii. 10. In thefe Scales one evil Work preponderates a thoufand Good. If a Man were guilty but of one fingle Error, his entire Obe- dience afterwards could not fave him ; for that be- ing always due to the Law, the Payment of it can- not difcount for the former Debt. So that we can- not in any Degree be juftified by the Law ; for there is no Middle between tranfgreffing, and not tranf- grefiing it. He that breaks one Article in a Cove- nant, cuts off his Claim to any Benefit by it. Briefly, the Law juftifies only the perfect, and condemns- without Diftin&ion all that are guilty. So that to pretend Juftification by the Works of it, is as unreafonable, as for a Man to produce in Court the in Contriving Man's Redemption. 299 the Bond which obliges him to his Creditor, in Tefti- mony that he owes him nothing. Whoever prefumes to appear before God's Judgment-Seat in his own Righteoufnefs (hall be covered with Confufion. 2. By the Righteoufnefs of Chrift. This alone abfolves from the Guilt of Sin, faves from Hell, and can endure the Trial of God's Tribunal. This the Apottle prized as his Invaluable Treafure, Phil. iii. 9. in Companion of which, all other Things are but Drofs and Dung ; That 1 may be found in him , not having mine own Righteoufnefs , which is of the Law, but that which is through the Faith of Chrifl, the Righteoufnefs which is of God by Faith. That which he ordained, and rewarded in the Perfon of our Redeemer, he cannot but accept. Now this Righteoufnefs is me- ritorioufiy imputed only to Believers : For depend- ing folely upon the Will of God as to its Being and Effects, it cannot poflibly be reckoned to any for their Benefit and Advantage, but in that Way which he hath appointed. The Lord Chrift, who made Satisfaction, tells us, that the Benefit of it is commu- nicated only through our Believing. God fo loved the World, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whofoever believeth on him, fhould not perifh, Joh. iii. 1 6. As all Sins are mortal in refpect of their Guilt, but Deatht is not actually inflicted for them, upon the Account of the Grace of the New Covenant: So all Sins are venial in refpect of the Satisfaction made by Chrift, but they are not actually pardoned, till the Perform- ing of the Condition to which Pardon is annexed. Faith transfers the Guilt from the Sinner to the Sa- crifice. And this is not an Act reftrained to the Un- derftanding, but principally refpects the Will, by which we accept or refufe Salvation. The Nature of it is beft expreft by the Scripture Phrafe, Joh. i. 12, the receiving Chrift * which refpects the Term* upon 300 The Harmony of the 'Divine Attribute* upon which God offers him in the Gofpel, (Acls v* 31.) to be our Prince and Saviour. The State of Fa- vour begins upon our Confent to the New Covenant. And how reasonable is the Condition it requires ? How impoffible is it to be otherwife ? God is recon- cilable by the Death of Chrift, fo that he may ex- ercife Mercy without Injury to his Juftice and Holi- nefs : He is willing and defirous to be upon Terms of Amity with Men, but cannot be actually recon- ciled till they accept of them : For Reconcilement is between two. Though God upon the Account of Chrift is made placable to the human Nature* which he is not to the Angelical, in its lapfed State, and hath condefcended fo far as to offer Conditions of Peace to Men, yet they are reconciled at once. That Chrift becomes an effectual Mediator, there muft be the Confent of both Parties. As God hath declared his by laying the Punifhment of our Sins on Chrift ; fo Man gives his, by fubmitting to the Law of Faith. And the great End of preaching the Gofpel, is to o- vercome the Obftinacy of Men, and reconcile them to God and their Happinefs : We are Ambajfadors for Chrift ; and pray you, in Chrift' *s Stead, to be reconciled to God, 2 Cor. v. 20. with this Difference ; Chrift furnifhed the Means, they only bring the Meffage of Reconciliation. Now Men are with Difficulty wrought on to comply with the Conditions of Pardon by Chrift : 1 . Upon the Account of a Legal Temper that uni- verfally inclines them to feek for Juftification by their own Works. This is moft fuitable to the Law and Light of Nature : For the Tenour of the .firft Covenant was, Do, and Live. So that the Way of Gofpel Juftification, as it is fu per natural in its Dis- covery, fo in its Contrariety to Man's Principles. Befides, as Pride at firft afpired to make Man as God, fo in Contriving Man s Redemption. 301 fo it tempts him to ufurp the Honour of Chrift, to be his own Saviour. He is unwilling to (loop, that he may drink of the Waters of Life. Till the Heart by the Weight of its Guilt is broken in Pieces, and lofes its former Fafhion and Figure, it will not hum- bly comply with the Offer of Salvation for the Me- rits of another. And it is very remarkable, that up- on the firft opening of the Gofpel, no Evangelical Doctrine was more difrelifhed by the Jews, than JuRification by imputed Righteouinefs. The Apoftle gives this Account of their Oppofition, Rom. x. that being ignorant of God's Rigbteoufnefs, and going abou; to eftablijh their own Righteoufnejs, they fubmitted not to the Rigbteoufnefs of God. They were prepofieft with this Principle, that Life was to be obtained by their Works ; becaufe the exprefs Condition of the Law was fo. And, miftaking the End of its Inftitution by Mofes, they fet the Law againft the Promifes : For fince the Fall, the Law was given, notabfolutely to be a Covenant of Life, but with a Defign to prepare Men for the Gofpel -, that upon the Sight of their Guilt, and the Curfe, they might have Recourie to the Redeemer, and by Faith embrace that Satisfac- tion he hath made for them. Chrift is the End of the Law- for* Rigbteoufnefs to every one that believeth, Rom. x. 4. From the Example of the Jews, we may fee how Men are naturally affected. And it is worthy of Obfervation, that the Reformation of Religion took its Rife by the fame Controverfy with the Pa- pifts, by which the Gofpel was firft introduced into the World. For, befides innumerable Abufrs crept into the Church, the People were perfuaded, that by purchafing Indulgences they fhouid be laved from the Wrath of God. And when this Duiknds co- vered the Face of the Earth, the Zeal of the firft Reformers broke forth-, who, to undeceive the U World, 302 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes World, clearly demonftrated from Scriptures, that Juftification is alone obtained by a lively and puri- fying Faith in the Blood of Chrift. A ftrong Proof that the fame Gofpel which was firft revealed by the Apoftles, was revived by thofe excellent Men ; and the fame Church which was firft built by the Apo- ftles, was raifed out of its Ruins by them. Now, the Gofpel, to eradicate this Difpofition which is fo natural and ftrong in fallen Man, is in no- thing more clear and exprefs than in declaring, that by the Deeds of the Law there /hall no Flejh be jufti- in God's Sights Rom. iii. 10. The Apoftle aflerts, without Diftinction, that ^jy the Works of the Law Ju- Jiification cannot be obtained. Gal. iii. 1 1 . whether they proceed from the Power of Nature, or the Grace of the Spirit. For he argues againft the Merit of Works to Juftification, (Rom. iii. 27.) not againft the Principle from whence they proceed. And where he moft affectionately declares his Efteem of Chrift, and his Righteoufnefs,. as the fole meritorious Caufe of his Juftification, he expreily rejects his own Righ- teoufnefs which is of the Law, Phil. iii. 9. By his own Righteoufnefs he comprehends all the Works of the renewed, as well as natural State •, for they are per- formed by Man, and are Acts of Obedience to the Law, which commands perfect Love to God. Thefe are flight withering Leaves that cannot hide our Nakednefs, and conceal our Shame, when we ap- pear before God in Judgment. Not but that good Works are moft pleafing to him, but not for this End, to expiate Sin. We mult diftinguifh between their Subftance, and the Quality that Error giveth them. The Opinion of Merit changes their Nature, and turns Gold into Drofs. And if our real Righ- teoufnefs, how exact foever, cannot abfolve us from the leaft Guilt % much lefs can the Performance of fome in Contriving Mans Redemption. 303 fome external Actions, though fpecious in Appear- ance, yet not commanded by God, and that have no moral Value. All the Difciplines and Severities, whereby Men think to make Satisfaction to the Law, are like a Crown of Straw, that difhonours the Head inftead of adorning it. But that Righteouf- nefs which was acquired by the Obedience and me- ritorious Sufferings of Chrift, and is embraced by Faith, is all-fufncient for our Juftirication. This is as pure as Innocence, to all the Effects of Pardon and Reconciliation •, this alone fecures us from the Charge of the Law, and the Challenge of Juftio Being cloathed with this, we may enter into Hea- ven, and converfe with the pure Society of Angels without blufhing. The Saints who now reign in Glory, were not Men who lived in the Perfection of Holinefs here below ; but repenting believing Sin- ners, who are warned white in the Blood of the Lamb. 2. The mod univerfal Hindrance of Men's com- plying with the Conditions of Pardon by Chrift, is, the predominant Love of fome Luft. Although Men would entertain him as a Saviour to redeem them from Hell, yet they reject him as their Lord. Thofe in the Parable, (Luke xvi. 14.) whofaid, life will not have this Man to reign over us, expreffed the in- ward Senfe and filent Thoughts of all carnal Men. Many would depend on his Sacrifice, yet will not fubmit to his Scepter ; they would have Chrift to pacify their Conferences, and the World to pleafe their Affections. Thus they divide between the Of- fices of Chrift, his Prieftly and his Regal. They would have Chrift to die for them, but not to live in them. They divide the Atls of the fame Office : They lean on his Crofs to fupport them from falling into Hell, but crucify not one Luft on it. They are U 2 defir- 304 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes defirous he ihould reconcile them to God by his Sa- crifice, but not to blefs them, in turning them from their Iniquities , Acts iii. 26. And thus in Effect they abfolutely refufe»him, and render his Death unavail- able : For the receiving of Chrift as Mediator, in all his Offices, is the Condition indifpenfibly requi- fue to partake of the Benefits of his Sufferings. The refigning up of ourfelves to him as our Prince, is as neceffary an Act of Juftifying Faith, as the apprehend- ing the crucified Saviour. So that in every real Chriftian, Faith is the Principle of Obedience and Peace, and is as inferrable from Holinefs, as from Salvation. To conclude this Argument.— From hence we may fee, how deiperate the State is of Impenitent Unbe- lievers. They are cut off from any Claim to the Be- nefits of Chrift's Death. The Law of Faith, like that of the Medes and Perfians, is unalterable, He that believeth not the Son, jhall not fee Life. Chriit died not to expiate final Infidelity. This is the ral Sin, that actually damns. It charges all their Guilt upon Sinners : It renders the Sufferings of Chriit ff uitlefs and ineffectual to them. For it is not the Preparation of a Sovereign Remedy that cures the Difeafe, but the applying it. As our Sins were imputed to him, upon the Account of his Union with vis in Nature, and his Contest to be our Surety ; fo his Righteoufnefs is merit or ioujly imputed tons, upon our Union with him by a lively Faith. The Man that looked on the Rainbow, when he was ready to be drowned, What Relief was it to him, that God had promifed not to drown the World, when he muft periih in the Waters ? So, though Chrift hath purchafed Pardon for repenting Believers, and a- Rainbow encompaffes the Throne of God, Rev. iv. 3. the Sign of Reconciliation, What Advantage is this to the in Contriving Mans Redemption 30^. the Unbeliever, who dies in his Sins, and drops into the Lake of Fire ? 'Tis not from any Defect of Mer- cy in God, or Righteoufnefs in Chrift, but for the obftinate refufal of it, that Men certainly perifh. This inhances their Guilt and Mifery. All the rich Expence of Grace for their Redemption fliall be charged upon them. The Blood of Chrift fliall not be imputed for their Ranfom, but for their deeper Damnation : And inftead of fpeaking better Things than the Blood of Abel, mall call louder for Venge- ance againft them than that innocent Blood which reached Heaven with its Voice againft the Murder- er. Briefly, whom fo precious a Sacrifice doth not redeem, they are reierved entire Viclims, whole Burnt-Offerings to Divine Juftice. Every impenitent Unbeliever (hall be fitted with Fire ', Mark ix. 49. CHAP. XVI. Of all the divine Perfections, Holinefs is peculiarly admir- able, 'The Honour of it- is fecured in our Redemp- tion. In the bitter Sufferings 0/ Chrift, God declared himfelf unappeafable to Sin, though appeasable to Sin* ners. The Privileges pur chafed by Chrift, are con- veyed upon Terms honourable to Holinefs. Pardon of Sin, Adoption, the Inheritance of Glory, are an- nexed to fpecial Qualifications in thofe who receive them. The Redeemer is made a quickening Princi- ple to infpire us with new Life. In order to our Sane- tification, he hath given us the moft perfect Rule of Holinefs, he exhibited a complete Pattern of it, he pur chafed and conveys the Spirit of Holinefs to us. He prefents the ftrongeft Motives to perfuade us to be holy. The per feci Laws of Chrift are considered, as they ctu join an abfolute Separation from alt Evil, and com* U 3 mand 306 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes mand the Practice of all fubftantial Goodnefs. Some particular Precepts, which the Gofpel ejpecially en- ■ forces, with the Reafons of them, are confidered. OF all the Perfections of the Betty, none is more worthy of his Nature,' and fo peculi- arly admirable, as his infinite Purity. 'Tis the mod mining Attribute that derives a Luftre to all the reft: He is glorious in Ho linefs, Exod. xv. 15. Wif- dom degenerates into Craft, Power into Tyranny, Mercy lofes its Nature, without Holinefs. He fwears by it as his Supreme Excellency : Once have I /worn by my Holinefs, I will not lie unto Bavid, Pfal. lix. 35. 'Tis the mod venerable Attribute, in the Praife whereof the Harmony of Heaven agrees. The Angels and Saints above are reprefented, ex- preffing their Extafy and Ravifhment at the Beauty of Holinefs. Holy, Holy, Holy is the Lord of Hofls, "The whole Earth is full of his Glory, Ifa. vi. 3. This he only loves and values in the Creature, being the ImpreiTion of his mod divine and amiable Per- fection. Inferior Creatures have a Refemblance of other Divine Attributes : The Winds and Thunder fet forth God's Power, the Firmnefs of the Rocks, and the Incorruptibility of the Heavens, are an ob- fcure Reprefentation of his Unchangeablenefs •, but Holinefs, that is the molt orient Pearl in the Crown of Heaven, only mines in the reafonable Creature. Upon this Account Man only is faid to be formed after his Image. And in Men there are fome Appearances of the Deity, that do not enti- tle to his fpecial Love. In Princes there is a Shadow of his Sovereignty, yet they may be the Objects of his Difpleafure •, but a Likenefs to God in Holinefs attracts his Eye and Heart, and infinitely endears the Creature to him. Now this Attribute is in a fpe- in Contriving Mans Redemption. 307 a fpecial Manner provoked by Man's Sin, and we are reftored to the Favour and Friendship of God, in fuch a Manner as may preferve the Honour of it entire and inviolable. This will fully appear, by confidering what our Redeemer fuffered for the purchafing our Pardon, and the Terms upon which the precious Benefits of his Death are conveyed to us •, and what he hath done to reftore our loft Holinefs, that we may be qualified for the Enjoyment of God. 1. God's infinite Purity is declared in his Juftice; in that He would not Pardon Sin, but upon fuch Terms as might fully demonftrate how odious it was to him. What inflamed the Wrath of God againft his beloved Son, whom, by a Voice from Heaven, he declared to be the Object of his Delight ? What made Him inexorable to his Prayers and Tears, when He folicited the Divine Power and Love, the Attributes that relieve the Miferable, crying, Abba* Father, all things are poffible to thee, let this Cup pafs from me ? What made him fufpend all comforting Influences, and by a dreadful Defertion afflict him when he was environed with Sorrows ? 'Tis Sin only that caufed this fierce Difplealure, not inherent, (for the Mefliah was cut off, but not for himfelf,) but im- puted, by his voluntary undertaking for us. God fo loved the World, and lb hated Sin, that He gave his Son to purchafe our Pardon by Sufferings. When his Companions to Man were at the higheft, yet then his Antipathy againft Sin was fo ftrong, that no lefs Sacrifice could reconcile Him to us. Thus God declared himfelf to be unappeafable to Sin, though not to Sinners. 2. The Privileges that are purchafed by our Re- deemer's Sufferings are difpenfed upon thofe Terms which co8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes which are honourable to God's Holinefs. I will in fiance in the three great Benefits of the Evangeli- cal Covenant: The Pardon of Sin, Adoption into God's Family, and the Inheritance of Glory, all which are conditional, and annexed to fpecial Quali- fications in the Perfons who have a Title to them. i. The Death of Chrift is beneficial to Pardon and Life, only to thofe who repent and believe. The Holy God will by no Means fpare the Guilty, that is, declare the Guilty Innocent, or forgive an incapable Subject. All the Promifes of Grace and Mercy are with refpe Mai. ii. 14, 15. for the Hardnefs of their Hearts -, Matt, xix 8. left worfe Inconvenience fhould follow. But our Saviour reduces Marriage to the Sanctity of its Ori- ginal, when Man was formed according to the image of God's Holinefs : Matt. xix. 4, 5, 6. He that made them at the Beginning, made them Male and Fe- male : For this Caufe (hall a Man leave Father and Mo* ther, and cleave to his Wife, and they twain Jh all he one Flejh. What therefore God hath joined together ', let no Man put a/under. From the Unity of the Perfon, that one Male was made and one Female, it follows that the fuper-inducing of another into the Marriage-bed is againft the firft Inltitution. And the Union that is between them not being only civil in a Confent of Wills, but natural by the joining of two Bodies, fomething natural muft in- tervene to diflblve it, viz. the Adultery of one Party. Excepting that Cafe, our Saviour feverely forbids the putting the Wife away and marrying another, as a Violation of conjugal Honour. 4. Our Redeemer hath improved the Obligations of the Moral Law, by a clearer Difcovery of the Purity and Extent of its Precepts, and by peculiar and powerful Enforcements. In his Sermon on the Mount he clears it from the darkening Clofles of Y the i 334 the Harmony of the Divine Attributes the Pharifees, who obferved the Letter of the Law, but not the Defign of the Law-giver. He declares that not only the grofs Ad, but all Things of the fame Alliance are forbidden •, not only Murder but rafh Anger, and villifying Words which wound the Reputation : Not only a&ual Pollution, but the Impurity of the Eye, and the Staining of the Soul with unclean Thoughts, are all comprifed in the Prohibition. He informs them that every Man in Calamity is their Neighbour, and to be relieved, and commands them to love their deadlieft Ene- mies. Briefly, He tells the Multitude, (Matt. v. 20.) That unlefs their Rigkteoufnefs exceed the Right eouf- nefs of the Scribes and Pharifees, t that is, the utmoft that they thought themfelves obliged to, they Jhould -not enter into the Kingdom of Heaven. Befides, our Saviour hath fuperadded fpecial Enforcements to his Precepts. The Arguments to perfwade Chri- itians to be univerfally Holy, from Chrift's re- deeming them for that great End, was not known either in the Oeconomy of Nature, or the Law : For before our lapfed State, there was no Need of a Redeemer, and he was not revealed during the legal Difpenfation. His Death was only fhadow- cd forth in Types, and foretold in fuch a Manner as was obfcure to the Jews. The Gofpel argues new Reafons to increafe our Averfion from Sin, which neither Adam nor Mofes were acquainted with. So the Apoftle dehorts Chriftians from Un- cleannefs, becaufe their Bodies are Members of Chrift, and "Temples of the Holy Ghoft, 2 Cor. ix. 19, 20. and therefore mould be inviolably confecrated to Purity. If the Utenfils of the Temple were fo facred, that the employing them to a common Ufe was revenged in a miraculous Manner •, How much forer Punifhment fhall be infli&ed on thofe who defile in Contriving Mans Redemption. 33^ defile themfelves, after they were fanclified by the Blood of the Covenant? Heb. x. 19. The Gofpel alfo recommends to us Love to one another, in Imitation of that admirable Love which Chrift ex- preft to us, and commands the higheft Obedience even unto Death when God requires it, in Conformi- ty to our Redeemer's Sufferings. Thefe and many other Motives are derived from a pure Vein of Chri- ftianity, and exalt the Moral Law to a higher Pitch, as to its Obligation upon Men, than in its firft Deli- very by Mojes. 2. The Laws of Chrift exceed the Rules which the beft Mafters of Morality in the School of Na- ture have prefcribed for the Government of our Lives. 'Tis true there are remaining Principles of the Moral Law in the Heart of Man •, fome warm Sparks are frill left which the Philofophers laboured to enliven and cherim. Many excellent Precepts of Morality they delivered, either to calm the Affections and lay the Storms in our Breads, whereby the mod Men are guilty and mi- ferable, or to regulate the civil Converfation with others. And fince the coming of Chrift, Prcme- theus-Wke, * they brought their dead Torches to the Sun, and ftole fome Light from the Scriptures : Yet, upon fearching, we fhall eafily difcover, that, notwithftanding all their Boafts, to purge the Soul from Defilements contracted by Union with the Body, and to reftore it to its primitive Perfection, They became vain in their Thoughts, and their foolijb Heart was darkned. Altho' the vulgar Heathens Y 2 thought • Recentiores Platcnice Virtutes quafdam pofuerunt pur- gativas fed fpurias ; illas enim c Scriptoribus Chriftianis fuffu- rati funt, namque ejufrriodi virtutum nul us omniiio ante Chri- Hum memiait. £. Vives de ftrit% Rtl. Chrift, 336 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes thought them to be Guides in the fafe Way, yet they were Companions with them in their Wan- derings ; and Truth inftructs us, that when the Blind leads the Blind, both fall into the Bitch. I will briefly ihew that their Morals are defective, and mixt with falfe Rules : Only premifing three Things. 1. That I mail not infift on their Ignorance of our Redeemer, and their Infidelity in refpect of thofe Evangelical Myfteries that are only difcovered by Revelation ; for that, precifely considered, doth not make them guilty before God -, But only take Notice of their Defects in Natural Religion and Moral Duties, to which the Law written in the Heart obliges all Mankind ; Rom. ii. 15. 2. That Virtue is not to be confounded with Vice,' altho' it is not aflifted by fpecial Grace. Thofe who performed Acts of Civil Juftice, and Kind- nefs, and Honour, were not guilty as thofe who violated all the Laws of Nature and Reafon. Their Heroick Actions were Praife-worthy among Men, and God gave them a Temporal Reward -, although, not being enlivened by Faith, and purified by Love to God, and an holy Intention for his Glory, they were dead Works, unprofitable as to Salvati- on. 3. Their higheft Rule, viz. To live according to Nature, is imperfect and infufficient J. For altho' Nature in its original Purity furnifhed us with perfect Inductions, yet in its corrupt State it is not foenlightned and regular, as to direct us in our uni- verfal Duty. 'Tis as poflible to find all the Rules of % Sumpbmos to ruod en. Naturam optimam dueem k> q*i> St oici pailim. tn Contriving Mans Redemption, 3^7 of Architecture in the Ruines of a Building, as to find in the remaining Principles of the Natural Law, full and fufficient Directions for the whole Duty of Man, either as to the performing Good, or avoiding Evil. The Mind is darkned and defiled with Error •, that indifpofes it for its Office •, Eph. iv. 17, 18. I will now proceed to mew how inefficient Phi- lofopby is to direct us in our Duty to God, our- feives and others. Firft, In refpect of Piety, which is the chiefeft Duty of the realbnable Creature, Philofophy is very defective, nay, in many Things, contrary to it : 1. By delivering unworthy Notions and Con- ceptions of the Deity. Not only the vulgar Hea- thens changed the Truth of God into a Lie, when they meafured his incomprehenfible Perfections by the narrow Compafs of their Imaginations, or when looking on him through the appearing Dilbrders of the World, they thought him unjuft and cruel ; as the mod beautiful Face feems deformed and monftrous in a diflurbed Stream : But the moft renowned Philojophers dishonoured Him by their bafe Apprehenfions. For the true Notion of God, fignifies a Being Infinite, Independent, the univer- fal Creator, who preferves Heaven and Kartb, the abfolute Director of all Events •, That his Provi- dence takes Notice of all Actions, that he is a libe- ral Rewarder of thofe that feck Him, and a juft Revenger of thofe that violate his Laws : Now all this was contradicted bv them. * Some aliened Y 3 the * Arift. Plat. The Stoicks imagined that God and the / made a complete Animal, of which He was the Squ/. Yid. Aii£. it Civil, Deo, non a nobis haberemus. 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 343 that nothing were in it worthy of Admiration, if it came from Above, and depended upon the Grace of another. They acknowledged that the natu- ral Life, that Riches, Honours, and other inferi- our Things, common to the Word, were the Gifts of God i but afferted that Wifdom and Vir- tue, the fpecial Perfections of the human Na- ture, were the Effects of their own Induftry. Impious Folly! to believe that we owe the greateft Benefits to ourfelves, and the lefTer on- ly to God : Thus they robbed him of the Ho- nour of his mod precious Gifts. So ftrongly did the Poifon of the Old Serpent, breathed torth in thofe Words, Ye ft) all be as God, that infected the firft Man, (till work in his Pofterity. Were they Angels in Perfection, yet the proud reflecting on their Excellencies would inftantly turn them into Devils. And as they boafted of Virtue, ib of Happinefs, as entirely depending upon themfelves. They afcribe to their Wife Men an abfolute Em- pire over all Things, they raife him above the Clouds, whatever may difquiet or diforder ; they exempt him from all PaMions, and make him ever equal to himfelf •, that he is never furprifed with Accidents •, that it is not in the Power of Pains or Troubles to draw a Sigh or Tear from him •, that he defpifes all that the World can give or take, and is contented with pure and naked Virtue : In fhort, they put the Crown upon his Head, by attri^ buting all to the Power of his own Spirit. Thus they contradicted the Rights of Heaven. Their Impiety was fo bold, that they put no Difference between God J and their Wife-perfon, but this, that X Deus non vincit fapieotcoi felicitate, etiamfi vinck arta- te. Scfiec. 344 Tfo Harmony of the Divine Attributes that God was an immortal Wife-perfon, and a Wife- man was a mortal God. Nay, that he had this Advantage, (fince it is great Art to comprize many Things in a little Space,) to enjoy as much Happinefs in an Age, as Jupiter in his Eternity. And which is the higheft Excefs of Pride and Blaf- phemy, * they peferred the wretched imperfect Virtue and Happinefs of their Wife-man, before the infinite and unchangeable Purity and Felicity of God himfelf. For God, they faid, is wife and happy by the Privilege of his Nature ; whereas a Philo- fopher is fo by the Difcourfe of Reafon, and the Choice of his Will, notwithstanding the Refiftance of his Paffions, and the Difficulties he encounters in the World. Thus to raife themfelves above the Throne of God, fince the rebellious Angels, none have ever attempted belides the Stoicks. 'Tis no Wonder that they were the mod early Oppo- fers of the Gofpel •, for how could they acknow- ledge God in his State of Abafement and Humility, who exalted their virtuous Man above him in his Majefty and Glory ? Yet this is the Sect that was mod renowned among the Heathens, j: 5. Philofophy is very defective in not propound- ing the Glory of God as the End to which all our Actions mould finally refer. This mould have the firft and chief Place in that practical Science f : For every Action receiving its Specification and Va- lue from the End, that which is Supreme and com- mon * Ell aliquid quo Sapiens antecedat Deum, ille nature be- jieficic, norf iuo eft Sapiens. Magna res eft, habere imbecillita- tem hominis, & fecuritatem Dei. Ferte former, hoc eft quo Deum antecedatis, ilie extra patientian malorum eft, vos fupra patientiam. Seme. X Timeone Btoici foli fint Philofophi. Cic. t Pa/a de pruxis eidepoiei tai to teki cu emka Ginetau Simp. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 345 mon to all Actions, muft be fixed before we come to the particular and fubordinate \ and that is the Glory of God. Now the Defign of Philofophers in their Precepts, was either, Firft, To ufe Virtue as the Means to obtain Reputation and Honour in the World. This was evident in their Books and Actions *. They were Pick of Self-love, and did many Things to fa- tisfy the Eye. They led their Lives as in a Scene, where one Perfon is within, and another is repre- sented without, by an artificial Imitation of what is true. They were fwelled with Prefumption, hav- ing little Merit, and a great deal of Vanity. Now this Refpect to the Opinion of others, corrupts the Intention, and vitiates the Action. 'Tis not fin- cere Virtue, but a fuperficial Appearance that is re- garded : For it is fufricient to that Purpofe to feem to be virtuous without being fo. As a proud Per- fon would rather wear counterfeit Pearls that arc efteemed right, than Right which are efteemed Counterfeit : So one that is vain-glorious prefers the Reputation of being Virtuous, before real Vir- tue f . From hence we may difcover that many of their moft fpecious Actions were difguifed Sins, their Virtues were as falfe as their Deities. Upon this Account St. Auftin (Lib. 4. cont. Jul c. 3.) con- demns the Heroical Actions of the Romans as vici- ous •, Virtute civili, non vera> fed veri Jimilij human* gloria Jervierunt. Pride had a principal Part in them. Or, * Quotus cnim quifque Philofophorum invenitur, qui fit ita moratus, ita animo ac vita coilitutus ut ratio pollulat, qui difciplinam fuam non oitentationem Scientiac, fed legem vitre putet? f Tota infidelium vita falfa virtus eil, etiam in optimis moribus. Profp. 346 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Or, fecondly\ the End of Philofophy was to pre- vent the Mifchiefs which Licentioufnefs and Dif- orders might bring upon Men from without, or to preferve inward Peace, by fupprefling the turbulent Paflions arifing from Luft or Rage, that difcompofe the Mind. This was the pretended Defign of Epi- curus J, to whom Virtue was amiable only as the In- flrument of Pleafure. Or, thirdly^ the Height of Philofophy, was to propound the Beauty of Virtue -f, and its charm- ing Afpect, as the moft worthy Motive to draw the Affections. Now fuppofing that fome of the Hea- thens, (although very few,) by difcovering the in- ternal Beauty of Virtue, had a Love to it, and per- formed fome Things without any private Refpect, but for the Rectitude of the Action, and the inward Satisfaction that fprings from it, yet they were ftill defective : For Virtue is but a Ray of the Deity, and our Duty is not complete, unlefs it be referred to his Glory who is the Principle and Pattern of it. In fhort, the great Creator made Man for himfelf, and it is moft juft that as his Favour is our Sovereign Happinefs, fo his Glory mould be our Supreme End -, without which nothing is regular and truly beautiful. % Epicurus virtutes induxit voluptatis ancillas ; abfit autem ut vera? virtutes cuiquam ferviant nifi illi, vel propter ilium, cui dicimus Deus virtutum converte nos. Aug. cont. Jul. 1. 4. f Erras dum interrogas, quid fit illud propter quod virtu- tempetam? Quaeris enim aliquid fupra fummum. Sen. Nee fa- cile invenies multis e millibus unum, Vitutem pretium qui putet efTe fui. Ipfe decor redli fadti, fi premia defint, Non movet, & gratis pcenitet efle probum. Ovid, de Pont. Stoici virtutem de- fcripferunt feipfa contentam, ab omnibus liberam, & quae fola fibi fit praemium : Sed licet a quibufdam tunc vera? & honeflas putentur efTe virtutes, cum ad feipfas referuntur nee propter a- liud expetuntur ; etiam tunc inflate ac fuperbaefunt, & ideo non Yirtutes fed vitia judicandafunt. A»£* Ub, 19% de Civit, c. 25* in Contriving Mans Redemption. 347 beautiful. By thefe feveral Inftances it appears how infufficient Philofophy is to direct us in our principal Duty, that refpects God. 2. Philofophy was defective in its directions about Moral Duties that refpect ourfelves or others. 1. Philofophers were not fenfible of the firft In- clinations to Sin. They allow the Diforder of the fenfitive Appetite as innocent, till it pafTes to the fupreme Part of the Soul, and induces it to delibe- rate or refolve upon Moral Actions. For they were ignorant of that original and intimate Pollution that cleaves to the human Nature ; and becaufe our Faculties are natural, they thought the firft Mo- tions to forbidden Objects, that are univerfal in the beft as well as word, to be natural Defires, not the Irregularities of Luft. Accordingly all their Pre- cepts reach no further than the Counfels of the Heart ; but the Defires and Motions of the lower Faculties, though very culpable, are left by them indifferent. So that it is evident, that many Defile- ments and Stains are in their purgative Vir- tues. 2. The Stoicks not being able to reconcile the Paffions with Reafon, wholly renounced them. Their Philofophy is like the River in Thrace^ Ovid, 1 9$uod potum faxea reddit Met. 3 Vifcera^ quod tailis inducit marmora rebus. For by a Fiction of Fancy they turn their virtu- ous Perfon into a Statue, that feels neither the In- clinations of Love, nor the Averfions of Hatred ; that is not touched with Joy or Sorrow \ that is ex- empt from Fears and Hopes. The tender and melting Affections of Nature towards the Mifery of 348 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes of others, they entirely extinguifh as unbecoming perfect Virtue. They attribute Wifdom to none* but whom they rob of Humanity. Now, as it is the ordinary Effect of Folly to run into one Extreme by avoiding another, fo it is mod vifibly here. For the Affections are not like poifonous Plants, to be eradicated -, but as wild, to be cultivated. They were at firfl fet in the frefh Soil of Man's Nature by the Hand of God. And the Scripture defcribes the Divine Perfections, and the Actions proceeding from them, by Terms borrowed from human Af- fections, which proves them to be innocent in their own Nature. Plutarch obferves, when Lycurgus commanded to cut up all the Vines in Sparta to pre- vent Drunkennefs, he mould rather have made Fountains by them to allay the Heat of the Wines, and make them beneficial : So true Wifdom pre- fcribes how to moderate and temper the Affections, not to deflroy them. 'Tis true, they are now fin- fully inclined, yet being removed from carnal to fpiritual Objects, they are excellently ferviceable. As Reafon is to guide the Affections, fo they are to excite Reafon, whofe Operations would be languid without them. The Natures that are purely Spi- ritual, as the Angels, have an Understanding fo clear, as fuddenly to difcover in Objects their Qua- lities, and to feel their Efficacy ; but Man is com- pounded of two Natures, and the Matter of his Body obfcures the Light of his Mind, that he can- not make fuch a full Difcovery of Good or Evil at the firfl View, as may be requifite to quicken his Furfuit of the one, and Flight from the other. Now the Affections awaken the Vigour of the Mind, to make an earnefl Application to its Object. They are as the Winds, which although fometimes tem- peftuous, yet are neceflary to convey the Ship to the in Contriving Man's Redemption. 34J the Port. So that it is contumelious to the Creator, and injurious to the human Nature, to take them away as abfolutely vicious. The Lord Jefus, who how infinitely pleafant will the Light of Glory be, that difcovers the ab- folute and univerfal Excellencies of the Deity, the Beauty of his Holinefs, the Perfection of his Wif- dom, the Greatnefs of his Power, and the Riches of his Mercy ? How inexpreffibly great is the Hap- pinefs that proceeds from the Illumination of a pu- rified Soul, when fuch is the Amiablenefs of God, that his infinite and eternal Felicity arifes from the Fruition of himfelf ? The Joy of Heaven is fo full And in Contriving Mans Redemption. 38$ and fatisfying, that a thoufand Tears there^ are but as one Bay. Inferior earthly Goods prefently lofe the Flower of Novelty ', and languifh in our Enjoyment of them : Variety is necefTary to put an Edge upon our Appetites, and quicken our Delights •, becaufe they are imperfect, and fall fhort of our Expecta- tion. But the Objeft of our Blefifednefs is infinite- ly great, and produces the fame pure and perfect Joy for ever. After the longeft Fruition it never cloys or fatiates, but is as frefli and new as at the firfl Moment. And that which is the peculiar Pleafure of the Redeemed, is, that they jh all be with Chrift, and fee his Glory, John xvii. 24. What a marvellous Joy will fill our Hearts, to lee our Bleflfed Saviour, who fuffered fo much for us on Earth, to reign in Hea- ven ? Here he was in his Enemies Hands ; there he hath them under his Feet. Here he was in the Form of a Servant ; there He appears in the Form of God, adorned with all the Marks of Majefty. Here he was under the Cloud of his Father's Difplea- fure •, there he appears . as the Brightvefs of his Glory. Here he was ignominioufly crucified; there he is crowned with Immortal Honour. Now con- fidering the ardent Affections which the Saints have to their Redeemer, the Contemplation of him in this glorious State mud infinitely ravifh their Hearts : Efpecially, if we coniider that the Exal- tation of Chrift is theirs. The Members triumph when the Head is crowned : His excellent Glory reflects a Luftre upon them, and by the Sight of it they are changed into his Likencfs. If the im- perfect!, and dim Sight of his Divine Virtues in the Gofpel hath a Power to change Believers into his Image from Glory to Glory, how much more the Vi- fion of his unveiled Face ? Our Graces here are B b 3 but 3 §6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes but as the rude Draught and firft Colours of the Divine Image, that fliall then be in its Perfection. We know that when he appears, we jhall be like him, for we Jhall 'fee him as he is ,. i John iii. 2. The Simi- litude between the Saints above and Chrift, is fo exact, that if one fnould enter into the Kingdom of Heaven, and were not directed by the Light of that Place, he would be apt to think every glo- rified Saint he meets to be more than a Creature. St. John, the beloved of Chrift, and as clear-fight- ed as any of the Apoftles, miftook an Angel for God ; and would have adored him, although he did 'not appear in his full Glory. The Kingdoms of the World, with all their Splendour, are no more in Compare to it, than a dead Spark to the Sun in its Brightnefs. The very Bodies of the Saints fhall be raifed from the Grave, and beautified with eternal Ornaments : They (hall be Companions with the Angels, and conformed to the glorious Body of Chrift. Briefly, in the Prefent State we are not capable to receive the full Knowledge of Heaven : What we underftand is infinitely defina- ble, but the moft glorious Part is ftill undifcover- ed. The Apoftle tells us, 1 Cor. ii. 9. Eye hath not feen, nor Ear heard, neither hath it entered into the Heart of Man to conceive, what God hat b prepared for thofe that love him. All that is beautiful or fweet here, is but a Shadow of that Glory, a Drop of that vaft Ocean of Delights. For all that is de- firable in the Creatures, and is difperfed among them, is united in God as the Original in an infinite and indeficient Manner; with all the Prerogatives that the Creatures have not. Celeftial Bleffednefs as much exceeds our mod raifed Thoughts, as God is more glorious in himfelf than in any reprefen- tations made of him by the Shadows of our earth- ■in Contriving Mans Redemption, 387 \y Imaginations. There is a greater Difpropor- tion between the Condition of a Saint on Earth and in Heaven, than between* the Life of an Infant in the Womb, and of the fame Perfon when ad- vanced to the Throne, and attended with the No- bility of a Nation. St. John declares. 1 John iii. 2., Now we are the Sons of God, but it doth not appear what we jhall be. Who knows the full Signification of being Heirs of God, and Joint- heirs with Chrift, of partaking in that glorious Reward which is given to him for his great Services to the Crown of Hea- ven ? Who can tell the Weight, the Number and Meafure of that BlefTednefs ? To him that overcomes , faith our Redeemer, Rev. iii. 21. will I grant to Jit with me in my Throne, even as I alfo overcame, and am Jet down with my Father in his Throne. We have Reafon to break forth in the Language of the PJal- wift, How great is thy Goodnefs which thou haft laid up for thofe that fear thee ? and fuppiy the Defects of our Underftanding with a holy Admiration, that is the only Meafure of thofe Things that are a- bove our Meafure. Befides, the Reward as in Excellency it is Divine," fo in Duration it is perpetual. Heaven is an Inheri- tance as fafe as great. Here we are fubject to Time, that carries us and all our Goods down its fwift Stream •, but there Eternity, that is fixed and unchangeable, embraces us in its Bofom. We fhall be fecure and at Reft, for no Perfon /W/ take away cur Crown •, we Jhall reign for ever and ever, Rev. xxii. 5. At God's right Hand are Pleafures for evermore \ (Pfal. xvi. 11.) that can never abate or end. As his Liberal Hand beftows, fo his Powerful pre- ferves our Happinefs. The BleflTed fhr.ll fing ever- lafting Hymns of Glory, and Songs of Thankf- giving to the Great Creator, Redeemer, and Sanc- tifier, 388 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes tifier, who hath prepared and purchafed that Felicity for them, and hath brought them to the fecure PofTeflion of it. Now can there be a more powerful Motive to Obedience, than infinite and eternal Bleflednefs ? what can pretend to our Affections in Competition with it ? Carnal Pleafures only gratify our viler Part the Body, in its vileft State ; but the Joys of Heaven are Spiritual and Sublime, and proporti- oned to our nobleft and mod: capacious Faculties. Earthly Delights cannot fatisfy our Senfes, but the Peace of Gcd pajjes Under ft anding. One Hour's En- joyment of it is better than an Eternity fpent in the Pleafures of Sin. What inexcufable Madnefs is it to prefer painted Trifles before that inestima- ble Treafure ? Who can truly believe there is fuch an excellent Glory, but he mud love it and vigo- roufly endeavour to obtain it ? Who would not go to the celeitial Canaan^ though the Way lies through a Wildernefs where no Flower or Fruit grows ? All temporal Evils are not only to be en- dured, but chearfully embraced in order to the pofTeffing of it, TheApoftle tells us, Rom. viii. / reckon that the Sufferings of the prefent Time^ are not comparable with the Glory that /hall be revealed in us. And he was the moll fit Perfon to make the Com- parifon, having made Trial of both States. For he was a Man of Sorrows, that had pad through Afflictions of all Kinds, and he was raviihed up to Paradife, where he heard thofe Things that exceed all Expreffions of human Words. Now after a ferious Eftimate, he declares (2 Cor. iv. 17.) that the Eternal Weight of Glory ^ infinitely out-ballances the light and moment any troubles of this Life. Thus, from what hath been faid concerning the greatnefs of the Recompences hereaftera we may underfland how powerful in Contriving Mans Redemption. 3 80 powerful they are to deter Men from Sin, and to allure them to Holinefs. 2. That thefe Objects may be effectual, our Sa- viour hath clearly revealed them, and given us con- vincing Evidence and Affurance of their Reality. The Heathens had only fome Glimmerings, and Sufpicions of a future State : They were under Doubts concerning the Nature of the Soul, whe- ther mortal or incorruptible, wavering between the AfTent and Denial ; and inclining to this or that Part, as Senfe perfwaded them to believe them- felves only as Brutes, or Reafon to acknowledge themfelves Men. Socrates, J before his Judges, fpeaks as one that defired Immortality *, and in his laft Difcourfes to his Friends, he endeavours to per- iwade them, but could not conquer his own Doubts, nor afllire himfelf. All his Difcourfes end in Conjectures and uncertain Gueffes. Befides, the Hell which they fancied, was made up of fuch ridiculous and fenfelefs Terrors, that could only affect Children who were not arrived to the perfect Ufe of Reafon. And their Apprehenfions of Hap- pinefs in the next Life were fo extravagant, that what the Philofopher faid in general of Hope, that it is the Dream of waking Men, is more juft- ly applicable to the Hope of the Heathens, in re- fpect of the future Reward. For as the Illufions of a Dream have many times a real Subject, but envi- roned with fo many fantaftick Imaginations as fpoils all the Proportions of it; fo their Opinion had a Foundation in Truth, but was mixed with many Errors inconfiftent with perfect Felicity. And t Vid. Apol. & Pliasd. Platonii Socrat. Et contum tc S/y* gio ranas in gurgite nigras, Atque una tranfire vadum tot mil- ha cymba, Nee pucri credunt, nifi qui nondumore lavantur. 390 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes And as the Pleafure of a Dream is flight and va- nifhing, fo the uncertain Expectation of Felicity did but lightly touch their Spirits. Briefly, they had no true Knowledge, no firm Belief of eter- nal Bleflednefs in the Viflon of God, nor of the endlefs Torments in Hell -, and wanting thofe great Principles, from whence the Rules and Power to live in a holy Manner are derived, they fell fhort of that Purity which is a neceffary Qualification to prepare Men for Heaven. They were in a confufed Labyrinth, without true Light or Guide, intang- led with miferable Errors, and Humbled every Step whilft they fought after Happinefs : But the Lord Chrift hath inftructed the World concerning thofe invifible future Recompences. He hath exprefly threatned whatever is to be feared by Man as a rational or ienflble Creature, the Worm that never dies, and the Fire that Jhall never be quenched^ in cafe of Difobedience •, and he hath promifed whatever is to be hoped for, in cafe of Obedience. The Wrath of God is revealed from Heaven, in the Gof- pel, againfi all Ungodlinefs and Unrighteoufnefs of Men, Rom. i. 18. And our Saviour hath brought Life and Immortality to Light, 2 Tim. i. 10. He hath declared the Nature and Quality of Eternal Life : That it confifts in the moil perfect Ads of our raifed and mod: receptive Faculties, upon the moil excellent Objects •, That it contains perfect Holinefs and pure Felicity, being for ever diftant from the Infirmities and Defilements of our mortal State. He hath revealed as the Quality, fo the Ex- tent of it, relating to the Body as well as the Soul. Whereas the Philofophers of feveral Sects, the Aca- demicks, Stoicks, Epicureans, labouring with alltheForc« of their Underftanding, formed a Felicity accord- ing to their Fancies, which was either wholly fenfualj in Contriving Mans Redemption] 391 fenfual, or elfe but for half of Man : For of the Refurrection, and confequently the Immortality of the Body, not the lead Notice for many Ages ever arrived to them. Our Saviour, who alone had the Words of Eternal Life, hath promifed a Happinefs that refpects entire Man : The Soul and the Body -which are his effentiul Parts, fhall be united and en- dued with all the glorious Qualities becoming the Sons of God. And of all this he hath given to the World the higheft Aflurance : For he verified his Doctrine by his own Example •, rifingfrom the Grave, and appearing to his Apoflles crowned with Immortality, and vifibly afcending before them to Heaven. Since there is no greater Paradox to Rea- fon than the Refurrection, which feemed utterly incredible to Men, and not to be the Object of a rational Defire ; God by raifinghim from the Grave, hath given the moft-convincing Argument that our Redeemer was fent from him, to acquaint the World with the future State. Thus the Apoftle fpeaks to the Athenians, Ads xvii. 30. The Times of Ignorance God winked at, but now commandeth all Men every where to repent \ becaufe he hath appointed a Day, wherein he will judge the World in Rightecufnefs, by that Man whom he hath ordained, whereof he hath given Ajjurance unto all Men, in that he hath raifed him from the Bead. Jefus (Thrift, who was attefted from Heaven to be the Son of God by that great and powerful A 61, declared the Recompences that fhall attend Men after Death •, therefore a full and perfect AlTent is due to his Teftimony. Hell with all its Dread and Terror is not a Pi6ture drawn by Fancy to affright the World, but is revealed by him whofe Words fhall remain when Heaven and Earth fhall pafs away. The Heavenly Glories are not the yiiionii of a contemplative Perfon that have no Ex- iftence, 392 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ritence, but are great Realities promifed by him, who as he died to purchafe, fo he rofe to witnefs the Truth of them. And to bring thefe Great Things, that are feparate and diftant from this prefent State, nearer to us ; He fometimes caufes Hell to rife up from beneath, and rlalh in the Face of fecure Sinners, that they may break off their Sins by Repentance ; and fometimes he opens Heaven from above, the Paradife of true Delights, and fends down of the precious Fruits of the Sun, of the precious Things of the lafting Hills, that by the Sight of their Beauty, and the Tafte of their Sweetnefs, we may for ever abhor the Pleafures of Sin. By the frequent and fenfible Experience of the Truth of the Gofpel, in its Threatnings and Promifes, innumera- ble Perfons have been converted from Sin to Ho- linefs, from Earth to Heaven, from Vanity to Eter- nity. 3. Love is a prevalent Affection, ftronger than Death; and Kindnefs is the greateft Endearment of Love. Now the Lord Jefus expreffed fuch ad- mirable Love to us, that being duly confidered, it cannot but infpire us with Love to him again, and with a grateful Defire to pleafe him in all Things. He defcended from Heaven to Earth, and deliver- ed himfelf to a fhameful Death, that he might re- deem us from all Iniquity, and purify unto himfelf a peculiar People zealous of good Works. Tit. ii. 14. And what Argument is more powerful to caufe in us a ferious Hatred of Sin, than the Confederation of what Chrift hath fuffered to free us from the Punifhment and Power of it ? If a Man for his Crimes were condemned to the Gallies, and a Friend of his, who had been extremely injured by him, mould ranfom him by a great Sum 5 when the guilty Perfon is reftored to Liberty, will he not s in Contriving Mans Redemption 393 not blufh for Shame at the Memory of what he hacb, ne ? But how much more if his Friend would fTer for him the Pains and Infamy of his Slave- ? If any Spark of Humanity remain in him, can he ever delight himfelf in thofe Actions, which made i'uch a Benefit neceffary to him ? Now we were riot redeemed with corruptible Things , as Silver and Gold, from our vain Converfation, the molt for- did and deplorable Captivity) but with the precious Blood of Chrift, as a Lamb without Blemijh and without Spot, i Per." i. 18, 19. And is it pofliblefor a Chris- tian to live in thofe Sins for which' Chrift died ? Will not Love caufe an humble Fear, left he fhould fruflrate the great Defign, and make void the mod blefTed Effect of his terrible Sufferings ? Why cid be redeem us with fo excellent a Price from our cruel Bondage, but to reftore us to his free Service ? Why did he vindicate us from the Power of the Ufurper to whom we were Captives, but to make us Subjects to our natural Prince ? Why did he purify us with his molt precious Blood from our deadly Defilements, * but that we might be entirely confecrated to his Glory, and be fervent in good Works ? What can work upon an ingenu- ous Perfon more than Senfe of Kindnefs ? What can oblige more flrongly to Duty, than Gratitude? What more powerful attractive to Obedience, than Love ? This pure Love confirms the Glorified Saints for ever in Holineis. For they are not Holy to obtain Heaven, becaufe they are pofTcffed or it ; nor to preferve their Bleffcdnefs, becaufe they are paft * Errro te dignuni me tali precio, ne veniat Chriflus qui te mundavit, qui te rtdcmit, & ii te in peccato invenerit, eli- cit tibi ; qui* utilitas in mco ? quid profeci tibi dun* defcendi in ccrrupti ojicm ? Amh% dc Virginia P. 3. 394 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes paft all Hazard of lofing it ; but from the moft lively and permanent Senfe of their Obligations, becaufe they have obtained that incomparable Felicity by a Gift never to be reverft, and by a Mercy tranfcen- dently great. And the fame Love to God that is in the Saints above in the higheft Degree of Perfection, and makes them for ever to glorify him, will, pro- portionably to our State in this Life, caufe us to ob- serve his Commands with Delight and Conflancy. A true Chriftian is moved by Fear, more by Hope, moft by Love. CHAP. XIX. Practical Inferences. The Compleatnefs of our Recovery by J ejus thrift. He frees us from the Power as well as Guilt of Sin. Sin is the Difeafe and Wound of the Soul : The mere Pardon of it cannot make us happy. Sanclification equals, if not excels, Judification. It qualifies us for the Enjoyment of God. Saving Grace doth not encourage the Practice of Sin. The Pro- mifes of Pardon and Heaven are conditional. To abufe the Mercy of the Gofpel, is difhonourable to God and pernicious to Man. The Excellency of the Chriftian Religion difcovered from its Befign and Effeft. The Befign is to purge Men from Sin, and conform them to God's Holinefs, according to their Capacity. This gives it the moft vifible Pre-eminence above other Religions. The admirable Effell of the Gofpel in the Primitive Chriftians. An earneft Ex- hortation to live according to the Purity of the Gofpel, and the great Obligations our Saviour hath laid on us. i.T^ROM hence we may difcover the Perfection £* and Compleatnefs of the Redemption that our Saviour purchafed for us. He fully repairs what in Contriving Mans Redemption. 395 what was mined by the Fall. He was called Jefusy becaufe He [hould fave his People from their Sins: Matt. i. 21. He reconciles them to God, and re- deems them from their vain Converfation. He came by Water and Blood, to fignify the Accomplifhment of what was reprefented by the Ceremonial Purifi- cation, and the Blood of the Sacrifices •, Satisfacti- on and Sanctification are found in Him. And this was not a needlefs Compaflion, but abfolutely re- quifite in order to our Felicity. Man in his guilty corrupt State may be compared to a condemned Malefactor, infected with noifom and painful Wounds and Difeafes, and wants the Grace of the Prince to Pardon him, and Sovereign Remedies to heal him. Suppofing the Sentence were reverft, yet he cannot enjoy his Life till he is reflored to Health. Thus the Sinner is under the Condemna- tion of the Law, and under many fpiritual, power- ful Diftempers, that make him truly miferable. His irregular Paftions are fo many Sorts of Difeafes, not only concrary to Health, but to one another, hat continually torment him. He feels all the ffects of Sicknefs. He is inflamed by his Lulls, and made reftlefs, being without Power to accomplifh r to reftrain them. All his Faculties are difabled or the Spiritual Life, that is only worthy of his Nature, and whofe Operations are mixt with fin- :ere and lading Pleafure. Sin as it is the Difeafe, b it is the Wound of the Soul, and attended with ill the Evils of thofe that are mod terrible : The vkole Head is fuk, the vjhole Heart is faint, from he Sole of the Foot to the Head, there is no Soundnefs n it, but Wounds and Bruifes, and putrifying Sores : la. i. Now our Redeemer as he hath obtained a ull Remifiion of our Sins, fo he reftores Holinefs 0 us, the true Health and Vigour of the Soul. He hath 396 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes hath made a Plaider of his living Flefh, mixt with his Tears and Blood, thofe divine and powerful In- gredients, to heal our Wounds. By the Holy Spi- rit it is applied to us, that we may partake of its Virtue and Influence. His mod precious Sacrifice purifies the Confcience from dead Works, that we may ferve the living God. Without this the bare Exemption from Punifhment, were not fufHcient to make us happy : For altho' the guilty Confcience were fee 11 re from Wrath to come, yet thofe fierce unruly Pafiions, the Generation of Vipers that lodge in the Bread of the Sinner, would caufe a real domedick Hell. Till thefe are mortified, there can be no Eafe nor Red. Befides, Sin is the true difho- nour of Man's Nature, that degrades him from his Excellency, and changes him into a Bead or a Devil : So that to have a Licence to wallow in the Mire, to live jn the Practice of Sin that dains and vilifies him, were a miferable Privilege. The Scripture there- fore reprefeots the curing of our corrupt Inclina- tions, and the cleanfing us from our Pollutions, to be the eminent ErTedt and bleiTcd Work of Saving Mercy. Accordingly St. Peter tells the Jews (AblA iii. 16.) that God having raijed up his Son Jefus^j fent him to blefs you, in turning away every one of youw from his Iniquities: That is, Chrid in his glorified State gives the Spirit of Holinefs to work a fincere thorough Change in Men, from all prefumptuous reigning Sins, to univerfal Holinefs. Unvaluable Benefit! that equals if not excels our Judification. For as the Evil of Sin in its own Nature is worfe than the Evil of Punifhment, fo the freeing us from its Dominion is a greater Bleffing than mere Impu- nity. The Son of God for a Time was made fub- jecl: to our Mifefies, not to our Sins. He diveded himfelf of his Glory, not of his Holinefs. And the Apa- in Contriving Mans Redemption. 397 Apcftle in the Extafy of his Affection defired to be made unhappy for the Salvation of the Jews ; not to be unholy. Befides, the End is more noble than the Means : Now Jefus Chrifl purchafed our Pardon, that we might be reftored to our forfeited Holi- nefs. He ranfomed us by his Death, that he might blefs us by his Refurrection. He gave bimfelj for us that he might redeem us from all Iniquity, and purify to himfelf a peculiar People, zealous of good Works: Tit. ii. 14. Sa notification is the lait End of all he did and fufFered for us. Holinefs is the chiefelt Excellency of Man, his higheft Advantage above inferiour Beings : 'Tis the fupreme Beauty of the Soul, the Refemblance of Angels, the Image of God himfelf. In this the Perfection of the reafonable Nature truly confifts, and Glory naturally refults from it. As a Diamond^ when its earthy and colourlefs Parts are taken away, fhines forth in its Luftre ; fo when the Soul is freed from its Impurities, and all terrene Affections, it will appear with a divine Brightnefs. 'The Church Jhall then be Glorious when cleanfed from every Spot, and made complete in Holinefs. To this I will only add, that without Holinefs we cannot fee God-, that is, delightfully enjoy Him. Suppole the Law were difpenfed with, that forbids any unclean Perfon to enter into the Holy Jerufalem, the Place cannot make him happy. For Happinefs coniiits in the Fruition of an Object that is iuitable and fatisfying to our Defires. The holy God cannot be our Fe- licity, without our partaking of his Nature. Im- puted !?.ighteoufnefs frees us from Hell, inherent makes us fit for Heaven. The Sum is, Jefus Chrift, that he might be a perfect Saviour, iandtiries all whom He juftifies ; for otherwife we could not be totally exempted from fuffering Evil, nor capa- C c blc 398 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ble of enjoying the fupreme Good, we could not be happy here nor hereafter. 2. From hence it appears, that Saving Grace gives no Encouragement to the Practice of Sin. For the principal Aim of our Redeemer's Love in dying for us, was to Jan5lify and clean fe us, by the walking cf Water and the Word. And accordingly all the Promifes of Pardon and Salvation are condition- al. The holy Mercy of the Gofpel offers For- givenefs, only to penitent Believers that return from Sin to Obedience : We are commanded to repent mid be converted, that our Sins may be blotted out, in the Time of Refrefhment, from the Presence of the Lord, Acts iii. 19. And Heaven is the Reward of perfeve- ring Obedience : To them who by patient Continuance in Well-doing, Jeek for Glory, and Honour and Immortali- ty, eternal Life -, Rom. ii. 7. There cannot be the lead Ground of a rational juft Hope in any Perfon without Holinefs : Whoever hath this Hope in him, pu- rifies himfelf even as he is pure, 1 Joh. iii. 3. By which it appears, that the genuine and proper Ule we are to make of the exceeding great and precious Promifes,, is, That by them we may be Partakers of the Divine Nature, and efcape the Pollution that is in the World through Luft, 2 Pet. i. 4. Yet the corrupt Hearts of Men are fo flrongly enclined to their Lufts, that they turn the Grace of God into Wantonnefs, and make an Advantage of Mercy to afTift their Security ; pre- fuming to fin with lefs Fear and more Licence, upon the Account of the glorious Revelation of it by our Redeemer. The mofl live as if they might be faved without being Saints •, and enjoy the Paradife of the Fleih here, and not be excluded from that of the Spi- rit hereafter. But Grace doth not in the lean: De- gree authorize and favour their Lufts, nor relax the Sinews of Obedience * it is perfectly innocent of their in Contriving Mans Redemption. 399 their unnatural Abnfe of it. The Poifon is not in the Flower, but the Spider. Therefore the Apoftle propounds it with Indignation, Rom. vi. 1. Shall we fin, that Grace may abound? God forbid. He ufes this Form of Speech, toexprefs an extreme Abhor- rency of a Thing that is either impious and difhonour- able to God, or pernicious and deftructive to Men. As when he puts the Queftion, Is God unjuft who tak- eth Vengeance? God forbid, Rom. iii. 5, 6. and, Is there Iniquity in God? God forbid, Rom. ix. 14. He rejects the Mention of it with infinite Averfation, Indeed what greater Difparagement can there be of the Divine Purity, than to indulge ourfelves in Sin upon Confidence of an eafy Forgivenefs ? As if the Son of God had been confecrated by fuch terrible Sufferings, to purchafe and prepare a Pardon for thofe who fin fecurely : What an unexprefiible In- dignity is it to make a monftrous Alliance between Chrift and Belial? And this Abufe of Grace is pernicious to Men. If the Antidote be turned into Poifon, and the Remedy cherifh the Difeafe, the Cafe is defperate. The Apo- ftle tells us, Thofe that do Evil that Good may come there- by, their Damnation is juft. Suppofe a p reluming Sin- ner were afiured, that after he had gratified his car- nal vile Defires, he fhould repent and be pardoned ; yet it were an unreafonable Befetl of Self-love to do fo. What Ifraelite was fo fool-hardy as to provoke a fiery Serpent to bite him, though he knew he fhould be healed by the brazen Serpent ? But it is a Degree beyond Madnefs, for a Man to live in aCourfeorSin upon the Hopes of Salvation, making the Mercy of God to be his Bondage, as if he could not be happy without them. An unrenewed Sinner may be the Object of God's Compaflion, but while he remains fo, he is uncapable of Communion with him here, C c 2 much 400 'The Harmony of the Divine Attributes much more hereafter. Under the Law the Lepers were excluded the Camp of Ifrael, where the Pre- fence of God was in a fpeciai Manner ; much more fhali thofe who are covered with moral Pollutions, be kept out from the Habitation of his Holinefs. 'Tis a mortal Delufion for any to pretend that electing Mercy will bring them to Glory, or that the all-fuf- licient Sacrifice of Chrift will atone God's Difplea- fure towards them, although they indulge them- felves in a Courfe of Sin. The Book of Life is ie- cret ; only the Lamb, with whofe Blood the Names of the Elect are written there, can open the Seals of it: ButtheGofpel, that is a lower Book of Life, tells us the Qualifications of thofe who are Veffels of Mercy, they are by Grace prepared for Glory •, and that there can be no Benefit by the Death of Chrift without Conformity to his Life. Thofe who abufe Mercy now, fhall have Juftice forever. 3. From hence we maydifcover the peculiar Ex- cellency of the Chriftian Religion, above all other Inftitutions ; and that in refpect of its Defign and Effect. The whole Defign of the Gofpel is expref- fed in the Words of Chrift from Heaven to Paul, Act. xxvi. 18. when he fent him to the Gentiles, To open their Eyes, and to turn them from Darknefs to Lights and from the Power of Satan to God, that they may re- ceive Fcrgivenefs of Sins, and Inheritance among them that are fanclified by Faith in Chrift. One great End of it is to take away all the Filthinefs and Malignity wherewith Sin hath infected the World, and to caufe in Men a real Conformity to God's Holinefs, accord- ing to their Capacity. As the Reward it Promifes, is not an earthly Happinefs, fuch as we enjoy here, butCeleftial; fo the Holinefs it requires, is not an ordinary natural Perfection, which Men honour with the Title of Virtue, but an angelical Divine Quality that in Contriving Mans Redemption. 40 1 that fanttifies as in the Spirit, Soul and Body ; that cleanfes the Thoughts and Affections, and expref- fes itfelf in a Courfe of univerfal Obedience to God's Will. Indeed there are other Things that commend the Gofpel to any, that with Judgment compares it with other Religions. The Height of its Myfteries which are fo facred and venerable, that upon the Difcovery, they affect with Reverence and Admirati- on : Whereas the Religion of the Gentiles was built on Follies and Fables. J Their moft folemn Myf- teries, to which they were admitted after fo long a Circuit of Ceremonies and great Preparations, con- tained nothing but a prodigious Mixture of Vanity and Impiety, worthy to be concealed in everlafting Darknefs. * Befides, the Confirmation of the Gofpel by Miracles doth authorize it above all bu~ man Inftitutions. And the glorious eternal Reward of it infinitely exceeds whatever is propounded by them. ut that which gives it the mod vifible Pre-eminence, s, 'That it is a Doclrine according to Godlinefs, 1 Tim. vi. 3. The End is the Characler of its Nature. The hole Contexture and Harmony of its Doctrines, recepts, Promifes, Threatnings, is for the Exaltati- on of Godlinefs. The Objects of Faith revealed, are not merely fpeculative, to be conceived and be- ieved only as true, or to be gazed on in an Extafy }f Wonder, but are Myfteries of Godlinefs, that have powerful Influence upon Pra&ice. The Defign of God in the Publication of them, is not only to en- ighten the Mind, but to warm the Heart, and puri- y the Affe&ions. God difcovers his Nature that we imitate Him, and his Works that we may, glori- C c 3 ty X Fit totum Fabula Codnm. Martial. * Caeterum tota in idytis divinitas, totfufpiria Epoptarum, totum fjgnaculum linguae, imulachrum rcvelatur, TtrtuL com. Fal 402 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fy Him. All the Precepts of the Gofpel are to em- brace Chrift by a lively Faith, to feek for Righte- oufnefs and Holinefs in him •, to live Godly, Righ- teoufly, and Soberly in this prefent World. When our Saviour was on the Earth, the End of his Ser- mons, as appears in the Gofpel, was to regulate the Lives of Men, to correct their vicious Paflions rather than explicate the greateft Myfteries. Other Re- ligions oblige their Difciples either to fome external Actions that have no moral Worth in them, fo that it is impofTible for any one that is guided by Reafon to be taken with fuch Vanities : Or they require Things incommodious and burthenfome. The Priefls of Baal cut themfelves. And among the Chinefes, though in great Reputation for Wifdom, their Pent- tents expofe themfelves half naked to the Injuries of the fharpeft Weather ; with a double Cruelty and Pleafure of the Devil, who makes them freeze here, and expects they mould burn forever hereafter. 'Tis J not the moft fbridt Obfervance of ferious Trifles, I nor fubmitting to rigorous Aufterities, that enobles j the human Nature, and commends us to God. The j* moft zealous Performers of Things indifferent, and $ that chaftife themfelves with a bloody Difcipline,' 1 labour for nothing, and may pafs to Hell through Purgatory. But the Religion of Chrift reforms the Underftanding and Will, and all the Actions depend- ing on them. It chafes away Error, and Vice, and Hatred, and fheds abroad Light and Love, Purity and Peace ^ and forms on Earth a lively Reprefenta- tion of that pure Society that is in Heaven. The End of it is to render Men Like the Angels in Holinefs, that they may be foin BlefTednefs. This will ren- der it amiable to all that confider it without Pa/lion. And it is worthy of Obfervation, that although ma- ny Heathens and Hereticks have contradicted other Parts in Contriving Mans Redemption, 403 Parts of the Chriftian Religion ; yet none have dared openly to condemn the moral Part of it. The Effeti of the Gofpel hath been anfwerable to the Dejign. One main Difference between the old and new Law, is, that the Old gave the Knowledge of Rules without Power to obferve them -, the New, that is attended with 'the Grace of Chrift, enables us by a holy Love to perform that which the other made Men only to underftand. Of this we have the moil fenfible Evidence in the Primitive Church, that was produced by the firft Beams of the Sun of Righteoufncfs, and had received the firft Fruits of the Spirit. What is more wonderful and worthy of God, than that perfect Love which made all the firft Believers to have one Heart, and one Soul ? What greater Contempt of the World can be imagin- ed, than the voluntary parting with all their Goods, in confecrating them to God for the Relief of the Poor ? And the Churches of the Gentiles^ while the Blood of Chrift was warm, and his Actions frefh in the Memories of Men, were examplary in Holinefs. Tbey were as Stars Jloining in aperverfe Generation. There wasfuch a Brightneis in their Conventions, that it pierced through the Darknefs of Paganifm, and made a vifible Difference between them and all others. Their Words and Actions were fo full of Zeal for the Glory of God, of Chaftity, Tempe- rance, Jultice, Charity, that the Heathens, from the Holinefs of their Lives, concluded the Holinefs of their Law, and that the Doctrine that produced fuch Fruits, could not be evil. The firft Light that difcovered the Truth of the Chriftian Faith to ma- ny, was from the Graces and Virtues that appeared in the Faithful. The Purity of their Lives, their Courage in Death, were as powerful to convert the v\Vorld, as their Sermons, Difputations and Mira- cles. 404 The Harmony of the Dhive Attributes cles. J And thofe who were under fuch ftrong Prejudices, that they would not examine the Doc- trine of the Gofpel, yet they could not but admire the Integrity and Innocency that was viiible in the Converfation of Chriftians. They eiteemed their Perlbns from the good Qualities that were vifible in them, when they hated the Chiiflian Name for the concealed Evil they unreafonably fuipected to be un- der it. This Tertullian excellently reprefents in his Apology. The moft Part are fo prejudiced againft the Name, and are pofTeft with fuch a blind hatred to it, that they make it a Matter of Reproach even to thofe whom they otherwife efteemed. Caius, they fay, is a good Man, he hath no Fault, but that he is a Chriftian. * Thus the excellent Holinefs of the Profeflbrs of the Gofpel forced a Veneration from their Enemies. But we are fallen from Heaven, and mixt with the Duft. Our Converlation hath nothing fmgular in Holinefs to diflinguifh us from the World. The fame corrupt Paflions reign in Profeffors of Chrifti- anity, as in thofe who are Strangers from the facred Covenant. If we compare ourfelves with the Pri- mitive Church, we mult confefs our Unworthinefs * to be called their Succeifors. Seventeen hundred Years are run out fmce the Son of God came down tofanc- tify and lave the World, which are fo many De- grees, whereby we are defcended from the firft Per- fection. We are more diftant from them in Holinefs than in Time. So univerfal and great is the Cor- ruption, that it is almoft as difficult to revive the dy- ing Faith of Chriftians, and to reform their Lives according to the Purity of their Profeffion, as the Con- t Vid. Cbryfcji. Homil. 6. in 1 Epifl. ad Corinth. * Bonus YirCaius Sejus nifi Chriftianus. in Contriving Ma?is Redemption. 405 Converfion of the World was from Heatbenifm to Chriftianity. 'Tis true, In every Age there are fome Exam- ples of the Virtue of the Gofpel, that reflect an Honour upon it. And this laft Age, which we may call the Winter of the World, in which the Holy Spirit hath foretold, That the Love of many fhall grow cold, by a marvelous Antipcriftafis, hath infla- med the Hearts of fome excellent Saints towards God and Religion. But the great Number of the Wicked, and the Progrefs of Sin in their Lives, there is no Meafure of Tears fuflicient to lament. Fourthly, I fhall prefs Chriltians to walk as he- comes the Go/pel of Chrid, anfwerably to the Ho- linefs and Purity of that Divine Inftitution, and to thofe great and ftrict Obligations it lays upon us. The Gofpel requires an entire Holinefs in all our Faculties, an equal Refpect to all our Duties : We are commanded, to cleanfe our J elves from all Pol- lutions of Flejh and Spirit, to be holy in all Manner of Converfation. We are enjoined, to be perfecting Holinefs in the Fear of God-, to be holy, as He that hath called us is Holy. A certain Meafure of Faith, and Love, and Obedience, a Mediocrity in Virtue, we mud not content ourfelves with. 'Tis not a Counfel of Perfection given only to fome Chrijlians of a peculiar Order and Elevation, but the Com- mand of a Law that without Exception binds all ; Be per f eft as your Heavenly Father is per feci. The Gofpel gives no Difpenfation to any Perfon, nor in any Duty. The Doctrine that afiferts there are fome excellent Works to which the lower Sort of Chriftians is not obliged, is equally pernicious, both to thofe who do them by Prefumption, as if they were not due, and were therefore meritorious ; and to thofe who neglect them, by a blind Securi- ty 406 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ty, as if they might be faved without ftriving to reach the higheft Degrees of Obedience. 'Tis a weak Pretence, that becaufe the coniummate Mea- fure of Sanctification can only be attained in the next Life, therefore we mould not endeavour after it here : For by fincere and conftant Endeavours, we make nearer Approaches to it, and according to the Degrees of our Progrefs, fuch are thofe of our Joy. As Nature hath prefcribed to all heavy Bo- dies their going to the Centre, and although none comes to it, and many are at a great Diftance from it, yet the Ordination of Nature is not in vain •, becaufe by Virtue of it, every heavy Body is al- ways tending thither in Motion or Inclination : So al- though we cannot reach to complete Holinefs in this imperfect State, yet it is not in vain that the Gofpel prefcribes it, and infufes into Chrifiians thofe Difpofitions whereby they are gradually carried to the full Accomplifhment of it. Not to arrive to Perfection is the Weaknefs of the Flefh \ not to afpire after it is the Fault of the Spirit. To ex- cite us, it will be of Moment to confider the great Obligations that the Gofpel lays upon Chrifiians to be holy, i John iii. I. By that Covenant the Holy God is pleafed to take them into the Relation of his Children •, and as the Nature of Sanclification, fo the Motives of it are contained in that Title. For fo near an Alliance obliges them to a faithful Obfer- vation of his Commands, and to imitate him with the greateft Care, that the Vein of his Spirit, and the Marks of his Blood may appear in all their Actions. Whosoever is born of God^ doth not commit Sin : i Joh. iii. 9. The allowed Practice of it is inconfiftent with the Quality of a Son of God, it is ^contrary to the Grace of his divine Birth. Nay, the Omiflion of Good, as well as thq Commiflion of Evil, is incon- fiftent in Contriving Mans Redemption 407 fiftent with that Relation. 'Tis for this Reafon, that Holinefs is fo much the Character of a true Chriftian, that to be a Chriftian and a Saint are the fame Thing in the Writing of the Apoftles. That venerable Title obliges him to a higher Prac- tice of Virtue, than ever the Pagans imagined. He is far behind them, if he does not furpafs them ; and if he is furpafied by them, he will be cloathed vith Shame. Befides, our Redeemer who hath a Right to us by fo many Titles, by his Divine and human Nature, by his Life and Death, by his Glory and Sufferings ; as he ilriclly commands us to be Holy -t fo he hath joined Example to his Autho- rity, That we may walk as he walked, and be as he was in the World. St. Paul makes ufe of this Confi- deration, to reftrain the Difciples of Chrift from all Sin, and to perfwade them to univerfal Holinefs. After he had mentioned the Diforders of the Gentiles, to deter the Ephefians from the like, he tells them, Eph. iv. 20. But ye have not fo learned Chrift •, that is, his Rule and Practice inftrucled them otherwife. And when he commands the Ro- mans, Rom. xiii. 13, 14. To walk honeftly as in the Day, not in Rioting and Drunkenness, not in Chambering and Wantonnefs, not in Strife and Envying ; he oppofes to all thefe Vices the Pattern that Chrift fet before us, But put ye on the Lord Jefus Chrift. The Ex- preflion intimates the Duty, that as the Garment is commenfurate to the Body, fo we are to imitate all the Parts of his Holy Converfation. 'Tis no Wonder that the Heathens gratified the Inclinations of Luft or Rage, when their Gods were reprefented acYmg in fuch a Manner as to au- thorize their Vices: Semina pene omnium fcelerum, a Diis Juis peccantium turba collegit \ as Julius Fir- micas juftly reproaches them. There was no Vil- lany 408 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes lany how notorious feever, but had fome Deity for its Protector. They found in Heaven a Jus- tification of all their Crimes, and became vi- cious by Imitation. * For 'tis very congru- ous for Men to follow thofe whom they efteem to be perfect, and to whom they think themfelves accountable. If they attribute to their Supreme God, the Judge of the World, Vices as Virtues, what Virtues will there be to reward, or Vices to punifh in Men ? But for thofe that name the Name of Chrift to continue in Iniquity, is the mod un- becoming Thing in the World. For they live in the perfect Contradiction of their Profeflion. An unholy Chriftian is a real Apoftate from Chrift, that retracts by his Wickednefs the Dedication that was made of him in his Baptifm. Although he doth not abjure our Saviour in Words, he denies him in his Works. A proud Perfon renounces his Humi- lity, the Revengeful his Mercy, the Luke-warm his Zeal, the Unclean his Purity, the Covetous his Boun- ty and Companion, the Hypocrite his Sincerity. And can there be any Thing more indecent and abfurd, than to pretend the Relation and Refpect of Difciples to fuch an holy Mafter, and yet by Difobedience to deny him ? When the bloody Spectacles of the Gladiators were firft brought to Athens, a Wife- man cried out to the Matters of the Prizes, That they fhould remove the Statue and Altar of Mercy out of the City, there being fuch an Incongruity between the Goddefs they pretended to worfhip, and that cruel Sacrifice of Men for the Sport of the People. It were more fuitable for thofe who are not afraid * Deorum cultores boni efie non poffint ; ab ipfis enim Dili erudiuntur ad injuiUtiam, hattan* in Contriving Mans Redemption. 409 afraid to violate the moft holy Laws, and to con- tradict the Pattern of Chrift, to leave their Pro- feffcon, and to take fome other more complying with their Lufts. 'Tis not the Title of a Chri- ftian that fanctifies thofe who pollute and de- fame it. 'Tis not wearing the Livery of Chrift that can honour thofe who (lain it by their Filthi- nefs ; but it is an Aggravation of their Guilt. 'Tis an unconceivable Indignity to our Saviour, and re- vives the old Calumnies of the Heathens, as if the Gofpel were a Sanctuary for Criminals, when thofe that call him Lord, Rev. ii. 9. do not what he commands them. I know, faith Chrift, the Blafphemy of them that (ay, they are Jews, and are not, but are the Synagogue of Satan. Thofe that own the Pro- feftion of Chriftianity, and live in unchriftiaa Practices, are baptized Pagans ; and in Effect revile our blefTed Redeemer, as if he had proclaimed a licentious Impunity for Sinners. Such Wretches may deceive themfelves with a Pretence they believe in Chrift, and that vifibly they declare their Depen- dence on him •, but this Pretence will be as unpro- fitable as it is vain : 'Tis not the calling him Lord, that will give them Admiffion into the Kingdom of Hea- ven, Matt. vii. 21. The naked Name of a Chriftian cannot protect them from the Wrath of God. Tertullian (Lib. de Pom.) fmartly upbraids fome in his Time who were carelels of the Dignity and Pu- rity of the Chriftian Profefilon in their Lives, ima- gining that they might reverence God in their Hearts without regarding him in their Actions ; that they might, Salvo metu i^ fide free care, fin with- out lofing their Fear of God and their Faith. To refute this grofs Contradiction, he propounds it in a fenfible Example : Hoc eft falva caftitaie matrimo- mum violare, Jalva pictatc parent: venenum temperare ; This 4io The Harmony of the Divine Attributes This is the fame Thing as to violate the Fidelity of Marriage without the wounding of Chaftity, or to poifon a Parent without failing in the Duty that is owing to them. And to exprefs his Indignation, he tells them, Sic ergo & ipfi Jalva venia in Gehen- Tiam detruduntur, dum falvo metu peccant : Let them expect that God will caft them into Hell, without Prejudice to their Pardon, as they pretend to fin without Prejudice to theRefpect they bear him. To fum up all •, Jefus Chrift, as by his Doctrine and Life he clearly difcovered our Duty, fo he of- fers to us the Aid of his Spirit for our AfTiftance, by which the Commands of the Gofpel are not only poflible but eafy : And to enforce our Obligations he hath threatned fuch Vengeance to the Rebelli- ous, and promifed fuch a Reward to thole that obey the Gofpel, that it is impoflible we mould not be deeply affected with them, if we ferioufly be- lieve them •, and he hath given fuch Evidence of their Truth, that it is impoflible we fhould not be- lieve them, unlefs the God of this World hath blinded our Minds. 'Tis Matter therefore of juft Aftonifh- ment, that Chriftians fhould not exprefs the Effica- cy of the Gofpel in their Actions. How can a reafonable Creature believe that eternal Damnati- on Ihall be the Punifhment of Sin, and yet live in the wilful Practice of it ? The Hiftorian, fpeaking of Mujhrooms, that fometimes proved deadly to whole Families, afks, with wonder, * What Pleafure could allure them to eat fuch doubtful Meat ? Yet they may be fo corrected as to become innocent. But when 'tis certain that the Pleafures of Sin are mortal, Can any one be tempted by thofe Attraclives * Familias nuper interemere, & tota Convivia, quae vo- Ijptas tanta tam ancipitis cibi \ Plin. in Contriving Mans Redemption. 411 AttraRives to venture on that which will undoubted- ly bring Death to the Soul ? Let Senfe itfelf be Judge, and make the Companion between whatfoe- ver the prefent Life can afford for Delight in Sin, and what the future Death will bring to torment it : Let the Flefh fee into what Torments all its Delights fhall be changed, and with what other Fire than of impure Luft it fhall burn forever. Befides, We are encouraged to our Duty with the Affurance of a Happinefs lb excellent, that not only the Enjoyment of it in the next World, but the juft Expectation of it here makes us truly bleffed. If the Reward were fmall, or the Promife uncertain, there might be fome Pretence for our not perform- ing the Conditions to obtain it-, but when the one is infinitely great, and the other as true as the God of Truth, what more powerful Motive can be conceiv- ed to make us holy ? 'Tis the Apoltle's cholen Ar- gument, that we fhould walk worthy of him who hath called us to his Kingdom and Glory. The Heathens were in a great Meafure Strangers to the Secrets of ano- ther World •, they had but a Shadow of Probabili- ty ; we have the Light of Truth brought down from Heaven by the Son of God, that reveals to us a Blef- fednefs, that deferves our mofl ardent attive Affec- tions. But if Men are not wrought on by natural Reafon, nor divine Faith; if neither the Terrors of the Lord, nor the bleffed Hope can perfwade them from Sin to Holinefs, their Condition is irrecovera- ble. In this the Rules of Natural and Spiritual Heal- ing agree, Hippocrat. Se&. 7. Aphor. ult. Where nei- ther Corrofives nor Lenitives are fuccefsful, we mult ufe the Knife •, if cutting off be unprofitable, we mull fear the Part •, if the Fire is ineffectual, the Ulcer is incurable. If the threatning of Hell Fire through JJnbelief and Carelefnefs is not feared, and hath no Efficacy 412, The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Efficacy to correct and change Sinners, what remains but to make a Pre/age of eternal Death, that will un- avoidably and fpeedily feize on them ? And if fo clear a Difcovery of the Heavenly Glory doth not produce in Men a living Faith, that works by Love, and a lively Hope, that purifies the Heart and Con- verfation, what can be concluded, but that they are wholly fenfual and fenfelefs, and (hall be forever deprived of that BlefTednefs they now defpife and neglect ? CHAP. XX. The Divine Power is admirably glorified in the Creati- on of the Worlds in refpecl of the Greatnefs of the Ef~ feffi and the Manner of its Production. 'Tis as evident in our Redemption. 7 he principal Effects of it are confidered. 'The Incarnation of the Son of God is a Work fully refponfible to Omnipotence. Our Redeem- er's fuper natural Conception by the Holy Ghcjl. The Divine Power was eminently declared in the Miracles Jefus Chrifi wrought in the Courfe of his Miniflry. His Miracles were the Evidence of his celefiial Cal- ling ; they were neceffary for the Conviclion of the World : Their Nature confidered. The Divine Power was glorified in making the Death of ChriH viclorious o- ver all our fpiritual Enemies. The Refurreclion of Chrifi the Effecl of glorious Power. The Reafons of it from the Quality of his Perfon, and the Nature of his Office, that he might difpenfe the Bleffings he had pur chafed for Believers. His Refurreclion is the Foundation of Faith. It hath a threefold Reference^ to his Perfon as the Son of God> to his Death as an All-fufficient Sacrifice in Contriving Mans Redemption. 41^ Sacrifice to bis Promife of raifing Believers at the lafi Day. THE Divine Power is admirably glorified in the Creation of the World, not only in regard of the Greatnefs of the Effect, that comprehends the Heavens and Earth, and all Things in them ; but in regard of the marvellous Way of its Production : For He made the great Univerfe, without the Concur- rence of any material Caufe, from nothing. For this Reafon the raifing this glorious Fabrick is pro- duced as the diftinctive Character of the Deity from the Troop of falfe Gods. The Pfalmifl declares, Pfal. xcvi. 4, 5. The Lord is to be feared above all Godsy for all the Gods of the Nations are Idols, but the Lord made the Heavens, And as he began the Creation by proceeding from nothing to real Exiftence, fo in forming the other Parts, he drew them from infirm and indifpofed Matter, as from a fecond nothing, that all his Creatures might bear the real Teftimo- nies of infinite Power. Thus he commanded Light to arife out of Darknefs,. and fenfible Creatures from an infenfible Element. He created Man, the Accomplishment of all his Works, from the lowed and grofieft Element, the Earth. Now although at the firft View we might conceive that the vifible World is the greateft Miracle that ever God per- formed ; yet upon ferious Reflection we ftiall difco- ver, that the Works of Grace are as wonderful as the Works of Nature, and that the Power of God is as evidently expreft in our Redemption as in the Creation. For the fuller Underftanding of this, I will confider fome of the principal Effects of the Divine Power in order to our bleffed Recovery. 1. The Incarnation of the Son of God, in accom- plifliing whereof fuch Power was exercifed, as no li- D d mitted 414 . ^he Harmony of the Divine Attributes mitted Understanding is able to comprehend, Tbe Word was made Fkjh. This fignifies the real Union between the human Nature and the Divine in our Redeemer-, Job. i. 14. Before his Incarnation he appeared in an human Form to the Patriarchs, and in the flaming Bufh to Mofes -, but it is never faid, with rtfpect to thofe Apparitions, that the Word was made Flame, or Man. But when he came into the World to fave us, he aflumed the complete Na- ture of Man into an bypoftatical Union with him- felf. That admirable Perfon porTeffes the Titles, Qualities and Natures of God and Man. In that in- effable Union, each of the Natures preferves its pro- per Form with all the necefTary Confequents proceed- ing from it. The human Nature is joyned to the Eternal Word, but not changed into its Divinity ; it is not infinite and impaffible. The Deity is united to Flefh, but not transformed into its Nature ; it is not finite and paflible. Though there is a diftincti- on, yet no Separation : There are two Natures, but one fole Jefus. In the fame Subfiftence the Creator and the Creature are miraculoufly allied. Now this is a Work fully refponfible to Omnipotence, andex- prefles whatever is fignified by that Title. The A- poftie Mentions it with an Attribute of Excellency, 1 Tim, iii. 16. Wit bout Controverfy great is tbe My fiery 1 of Godlinefsy God manifefi in tbe Flejh. 'Tis as fu- blime, as holy. In this the Divine Power appears in its Magnificence, and in fome refpecl more glori- oufly than in the Creation : For there is incompara- bly a greater Difparity between the Majefty, Great- nefs and Infinitenefs of God, and the Meanaefs of Man, than between the whole World and Nothing. The Degrees of Difparity between the World and Nothing are not actually infinite, but between the mod excellent Creature and the glorious Creator they tn Contriving Mans Redemption. 41 5 they are abfolutely infinite. From hence it is, that that which in other Things refolves our Doubts, here increafes the Wonder, and in Appearance makes it more incredible. Te do err, faith (Thrift to the Sad- ducees, (who denied the RefurrecYion) not knowing the Power of God, But the more raifed Thoughts we have of his immenfe Power, the more unlikely his Conjunction with a Nature fo far beneath him will feem to be. 2. The Divine Power was magnified in our Re- deemer's fupernatural Conception. 'Twas requifite his Body mould be miraculoufly formed of the Sub- fiance of a Woman, by the Operation of the Holy Ghoft, not only in refpect of its fingular Dignity, and that he might be the Pattern of our Regenera- tion that is performed by the Efficacy of the Spirit, not of the Flefh, but in refpecl of his Office : For undertaking to reconcile God by the Expiation of our Sin, he muft be allied to us > and abfolutely J pure from the Stain of Sin. Heaven and Earth con- curred to form that divine Man the King of both ; the Earth furnifhing Matter, and Heaven the Prin- iple of his Conception. Accordingly the Angel told Mary, Luke i. 3$. who queftioned how me could be a Mother, not having known a Man, The Holy Ghoft floall come upon thee, and the Power of the Higheft pall overjhadow thee, therefore alfo that Holy Thing that JJj all be born of thee, (hall be called the Son )f God. This was foretold many Ages as an admi- able EfFe6t of God's Power. When Judah was op- :>reft by two potent Kings, and defpaired of an Ef- :ape, to raife their drooping Spirits, the Prophet ells them, Ifa. vii. 14. The Lord him felf would give hem a Sign of their future Deliverance. Behold, a 'irgin jhall conceive and bear a Son, and (Ij all call Vame Immamiel. The Argument is from the grca- D d 2 ter 41 6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ter to the lefs •, for it is apparently more difficult that a Virgin, without Injury or Blemilh to her Pu- rity and Integrity, mould conceive and bring forth Immanuel, than the defeating human Forces how great foever. If God will accomplifh that ftupendi- ous, unheard-of Wonder, much more would he ref- cue his People from the Fury of their Adverfaries. 3. The Divine Power was eminently declared in the Miracles our Saviour wrought during the Time of his publick Miniftry, to verify his divine Million, that he was the great Prophet fent from God to in- ilrucl: Men in the Way of Life. In difcourfing of this, I will briefly ihew, that Miracles were a con- vincing Proof of his celeftial Calling, and that the Performance of them was neceflary in order to the Conviction of the World, and confider particular- ly thofe He wrought. 1. A Miracle is an extraordinary Operation of God in Nature, either in flopping its Courfe, or in producing fome Effects that are above its Laws and Power : So that when he is pleafed to work any, they are his Seal to authorife the Perfon and Doc- trine to which they are annexed. By them Faith is made vifible: The Unbeliever is convinced by his Senfes, the only WitneiTes above Reproach in his Account. From hence Nicodemus addrefTes himfelf to Chrift, John iii. 2. Mafter, we know that thou art a teacher come from God -, for no Man can do thofe Mi- racles that thou doft) except God be with him : That is, no inferiour Agent can perform them, without the fpecial AfTiftance of the Divine Power. And it is not to be fuppofed, that God will lend his Omnipo- tency to the Devil to work a real Miracle, to con- firm a Falfity ; and thereby, neceflarily induce Men into Error in a Matter of infinite Moment : For fuch is the Dottrine of Salvation that Chrift preached. • 2. The In Contriving Maris Redemption. 417 2. The working of Miracles was necefTary to con- vince the World, that Jefus Chrift was fent from God, whether we confider the Jews or the Gentiles. To convince the Jews upon a double Account : 1. Becaufe the Performance of them was one of the Characters of the promifed MerTiah. For this Reafon when two of John's Difciples came to enquire whether he were the expected Prophet, he returns this Anfwer to the Queftion : Go and Jhew John thofe ^Things which ye do hear and fee ♦, 'The Blind receive their Sight, and the Lame walk -, the Lepers arc cleanfed, and the Deaf hear \ the Bead are railed up, and the Poor have the Go/pel preached to them •, Matt. xi. 4, 5. Thus he defcribed his Office, and verified the Commimon- he had from God, by reprefenting his Miracles in the Words of the Prophecy ; Ija. xxxv. 5, 9. 2. Our Saviour came to alter the Religion of the Jews, that had been confirmed by many illuftrious Miracles : Therefore to affure them that he was au- thorifed from Heaven, he wrought fuch and fo ma- ny, that for their Greatnefs, Clearnefs, and Number, exceeded all that were done before his coming. Our Saviour tells the Jews, If I had not done among them the Works which none other Man did, they had not had Sin: That is, in rejecting him. For if he had exer- cifed only a Power like unto that of Mofes and the Prophets, in his miraculous Actions, they had been obliged to have honoured him as one of their Rank, but not to have attributed an incomparable Dignity to him : But he did thofe which neither Mofes nor the Prophets had performed •, and in thofe that had been done, Chrift excelled them in the Manner of doing them. This the Jews could not contradict, and from hence their Infidelity was made culpable. Secondly, Miracles were neceffary to convince thq Gentiles. 1. For the Gofpel forbids the various Re- D d 3 ligions 4i 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ligions among them, and commands all to worfhip God alone in Jefus Chrift-, fo that without a ienfible Demonftration, that that was the Way wherein He would be ferved, their Prejudices had been invinci- ble. 2. The Gofpel propounds Threatnings and promifes that regard a future State, where no living Eye can fee their Effects ; fo that without an extra- ordinary Confirmation it was not likely that Men fhould yield a firm Affent to them. If it be faid, our Saviour did his Miracles only in Judea^ where very few of the Gentiles faw his Perfon or Works : I an- fwer, His Miracles were primarily, defigned for the Conviction of the Jews \ and in a fecondary Intenti- on, to difar.m Infidelity among the Gentiles. There- Tore the Teflimony of them was conveyed by thofe who were Eye-witnefTes, and moft worthy of Cre- dit, and who did many great Wonders in the Name of Chrift, to verify the Report of his famous Mira- cles, and declare his Power and Divinity, Of this more afterwards. Now I will briefly confider the Miracles wrought by Chrift, that were the certain Signs of God's fa- vouring of him, and made his CommifTion authentic. Before his coming, the Hand of the Synagogue was dried up, and impotent to produce Miracles. The Holy Spirit was withdrawn, and for the Space of four hundred Years, no Prophet nor Worker of Won- ders appeared. John the Baptift, though the Angel deputed to fignify the coming of Chrift, yet did no Miracles. But our Saviour was inverted with Power from above, and performed many. Their Quality and Number is confiderable. i. They were not mere Signs, as the Converfion of Mofes's Rod into a Serpent -, nor deftructive and punifhing, as the Wonders in Egypt ; but advanta- geous and beneficial to Men, the equal Dqmonftra- tions in Contriving Mans Redempiiciu 419 tions of his Mercy and Power. He cured Difeafei} that were ablblutely defperate, without Means, by his Omnipotent Will, as the Son of the Nobleman who was fick at Capernaum, when Himfelf was at Cana, in Galilee, John iv. 46. or by fuch vifible Means, that the Spectators might be fully convinced, that it was not the external Application, but his fole Vir- tue and Divine Power that produced the Effect. Thus by anointing with Clay and Spittle the Eyes of him that was born blind, who never had any natural Podibility of feeing, he wrought an unparalleled Cure : It was never yet heard that any Man opened the Eyes of one that was born blind, John ix. Therefore he that was healed, inferred from that, as a moft pregnant Proof, that our Saviour was from God. He raifed the Dead. This Effect exceeds the Power not only of Men, but of the Angels. 'Tis true, That one Angel deftroyed in a Night one hundred and eigh- ty-five Thonfand of the Affyrian Army ; but it is as true, that all the Angels together cannot raife from the dead one Man. 'Tis wholly the Work of the Lord of Nature, who holds the Keys of Life and Death in his Hands. 'Tis only his Light can difpel the Darknefs, his Voice can break the Silence of the Grave. And 'tis obfervable, that our Savi- our who fometimes concealed his miraculous Works, and forbad the publifhing of them, yet performed this Kind before many Witneffes, that they might jpublifh and verify it, as being mod conclufive of his I Miff on from God. He raifed to Life the Ruler's {Daughter, Mar. 5. 42. to the Aftonifhment of all that were prefent to attend her Funeral. The Wi- | dow's Son of Nairn was carried without the Gates I of the City to his Grave ; Jeftts ftops the fad Train, and reftores Life to the young Man -9 and to his Mo- ther ibmething more dear than her Life, And rhe ' more %2o The Harmony of the Divine Attribute} more fignally to triumph over Death, he purfued it to its Fort, the Obfcurity of the Grave. Lazarus was buried four Days, [Luke vii. 15 J his Carcafevt&s corrupted-, Jefus calls him from the Bottom of his Tomb with that powerful Voice that created the (World : The Dead anfwers, and comes forth, to the 'Amazement of all that faw the Glory of God fo clearly manifefted. The Evangelift reports, (John 11. 44.) that the People afterward were as defirous to fee Lazarus as Jefus. Add to thefe his calling out of Devils. Before the Fall, the unclean Spirit was incorporated with the Serpent, but now with Man himfelf. He feizes on the external Organs and internal Faculties, and rules him at his Pleafure. In the Time of Chrift, great Numbers were pofTefTed : I For the Devil perceiving the Ruin of his Kingdom approaching, would extend the Limits of it here, and by the perfect poffefiing of Sinners, begin their Torment, which is one Act of his Principality. The Cafe of thofe Perfons was mod companionable. For in that clofe Fight the Soul was difarmed of its de-> fenfive Weapons, being hindered in a great Meafure of the free Ufe of its Faculties. "Whereas in other Temptations he Works by outward Objects at a Di- itance, here he makes a violent Aflaulton both Parts. 9Tis the true Anticipation of Hell, for the pofTefTed Perfon is not exempted from Suffering, the Privi- lege of Death, nor enjoys the free Power of doing, the Effect of Life. Now the ejecting of this Enemy was above the Force of any human Means •, no ma- terial Applications had Power over immaterial Spi- rits. But our Saviour, by a Word, commanded them forth of their Garifons : And the Evangelifts ob- ferve, that the Sight of it affected the People, in an extraordinary Manner, above what his other Mira- cles did. Tis faid3 Matt, i. 27, 29, They were all amazed* 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 421 amazed^ infomucb that they queftioned among them- /elves, faying, What Thing is this, what new DoBrine is this ? For with Authority commandeth he even tht unclean Spirits, and they obey him. His Empire over evil Spirits was more admired than over Difeafes, or Death itfelf. Thofe who were infenfible of his former Miracles, received Impreflion from this: They were aftonijhed at the mighty Power of God, con- f effing that it was never fo feen in lfrael, Luke ix. 43. And another Time they faid, Is not this the S&n of David ? {Matt. ix. 33.) i. e. the Mefliah. The Pha- rifees, his obftinate Enemies, were more troubled about this than any other Action •, and to elude the prefent Conviction that he came from God, a- lcribed it to a fecret Compact with Beelzebub, as if there were a Collufion between the Evil Spirits, a lefTer Devil retired that the Prince might reign. But fo great was the Evidence of the Spirit of God in that Act of Jurifdiction over the Devils, that our Saviour charges them with unpardonable Guilt for their wilful denying it. The Number of his Miracles was fo great, that St. John faith, If all were written, the World could not contain the Books. We may in Part conjecture how numerous they were, by taking Notice how many he performed in one Day. He dined with Matthew, at Capernaum ; Matt. ix. 10, 1 1 •, whilfthewas there, Jairus entreats him to go to his Daughter newly dead; Ver. 18. as he went, the Woman with the Bloody IfTue touched the Hem of his Garment, and was healed-, Ver. 20, 21, 22. he railed the dead Maid ; in his returning he cured two blind Men •, and immediately after caft out the Devil from one that was dumb. And in all thefe mira- culous Operations, the Glory of God's Power was clearly manifefted. 4. The ^22 The Harmony of the ^Divine Attributes 4. The Divine Power admirably appeared, in making the Death of Chrift victorious over all our ^ Spiritual Enemies. Now to fhew what an emi- nent Degree of Power was exercifed in the Effect- ing this, we muft confider, that after Satan was caft out of Heaven for his Rebellion, he fet up a Throne on the Earth, and ufurped an abfo- lute Empire over Mankind. His Power was Great, and his Malice was equal to hk Power. The Apoftle reprefents him with his black Army, Ephef. vi. 12. under the Titles of Principalities and Powers, the Rulers of the Barknefs of this World, fpi- ritual Wickednejjes in high Places \ as in refpect of the Order among them, fo in refpect of their \ Dominion they exercife in the World. His Prin- '■}. cipality hath two Parts : To tempt Men powerful- ly to (in, and to execute the Wrath of God upon them. He works ejfetlually in the Children of Difo- ledience. He fires their Lufts, and by the thick af- cending Smoke darkens their Minds, and hurries them to do the vileft Actions. And he hath the Power of Death, to torment Sinners; God juftly permitting him to exercife his Cruelty upon thofe who comply with his Temptations. Now in the Time of Chrift, feeing many ravifhed out of his hands, and tranflated into the Kingdom of God, he grew Jealous of his State, and by his Inftru- ments brought him to a cruel and fhameful Death. He then, in Appearance, obtained a complete Con- queft; but in Truth was abfolutely overcome. And from hence the glorious Power of Chrift is moft clearly manifefted. As he that will take the Height of a Mountain muft defcend to the loweft part of the Valley, where, fixing his Inftrument, he may difcover the Diftance from the Foot to the Top of it : So we muft defcend to the loweft Degree of tn Contriving Mans Redemption 423 of our Saviour's Abafement, to underftand the Height of his Exaltation. By Death he overcame him that had the Power of Death -, that is, the Devil. Heb. ii. 14. For his cruel Empire was founded in Man's Sin ; his Greatnefs was built on our Ruins. AH the penal Evils he brings on Mankind are upon [the Account of our Difobedience ; and his mighty ■tower in Temptations, is from our inward Cor- Iruption : Otherwife he might furround, but could ■not furprife us. Now the Lord (Thrift, by his JDeath, hath taken away the Guilt and Power of Sin : The Guilt in enduring the Curfe of the Law, and thereby fatisfying Eternal Juftice, which all ^he Creatures in Heaven and Earth could not do •, and the Power of it, By crucifying our old Man with 'rim, that the Body of Sin might be de/lroyed, thai henceforth we fljould not ferve Sin. Rom. vi. 6. By the Zrojs of Chrijl the World is crucified to us ; and we are rucified to the World. Gal. vi. By it we are vindicat- d from the Power of Satan, into the glorious Li- erty of the Sons of God. For this Realbn our Sa- iour, a little before his Paftion, faid, Now ft all the }rince of this World be caft out. By the Crofs be Wiled Principalities and Powers, and made a Shew of hem openly, triumphing over them in it, Col. ii. xv. 0 their extreme Confufion, in the View of Heaven nd Earth. Although the Refurre&ion and Af- enfion of Chrift are the proper Acts of his Tri- mph, yet his Death is the Sole Caufe and Origi- al of it. The Nails and Spear that pierced his lody, were his Omnipotent Arms ; and the Crofs, the iftrument of his Sufferings, was the Trophy of his riclory. All our triumphant Palms are gathered •om that Tree. 'Tis there our Saviour bruifed le Head of the old Serpent, and renewed his anci- bc Victory over him. And 424 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes And from hence it was, that upon the firft Preach- ing of Chrift Crucified, Oracles were ftruck dumb, and put to eternal Silence. Invifible Powers were forced to do him vifible Honour. As the Rifing Su/i caufes the Night-birds to retire, fo his Name chaf- ed the Rout of Deities into Darknefs. They con- tinue to be our Enemies, but not our Lords. Nowfl where did the Divine Power ever appear more glo«| rious than in our Crucified Saviour ? He hath done greater Things fuffering as Man, than acting as God*. The Works of Creation and Providence I are not equal to the Effects of his Death. In the Creation a corruptible World was produced from Nothing, which as it had no Difpofition, fo no Con- trariety to receive the Form the Creator gave it: But the new World of Grace, that is Immortal, was formed out of Rebellious Matter. The moft eminent Work of Providence, was the drowning the Egyptians in the Red Sea : But the fpiritual Pharaoh, and all his Hofts, were drowned in his Blood. In fhort, the Crofs hath opened Heaven to lis, and wrought a miraculous Change on the Earth; But this I (hall more particularly confider under a- nother Head of Difcourfe. Fifthly, The Divine Power was eminently mag- nified in Chrift's Refurrection from the Grave. This was foretold concerning the Meffiah by the Prophet David, fpeaking in the Type, Pfal. xvi. 10. My Flejh /hall refl in Hope, for thou wilt not leave my Soul in Hell, neither wilt thou fuffer thy Holy One to fee Corruption. As it was ordained by God's Coun- fel> * Met a tonfauron, kai to foterion pathos, ouk eti phainakizei tout Anthropous, o AJklepios, oude alios tis ton kaloummon Tbeon. Apantagar out on ton ormathon oion tinas nukteridas to jkoto parepemp- Jsn anauilan to pbos. Theodor. deCur. Graec. Affeft. Lib. 12. in Contriving Mans Redemption^ 425 fel, fo it was executed by his Power. This is de~ cifive, that he is the Meffiah. His other Miracles were performed by the Prophets, but this was An- gular, and only done by the God of the Prophets. The Reafons of it prove, that it was equally ne- ceiTary for his Glory and our Salvation. 1. The Quality of his Perfon required it. For Jie was a Heavenly Man without Guilt, therefore immortal by the original Conftitution of his Nature. Death, that is the Wages of Sin, had no Power over him. He was fubjecl: to it, not by the Law of his Conception, but the Difpenfation of his Love \ not to fatisfy Nature, but purchafe our Sal- vation : Therefore the Eternal Law that annexes Immortality to Innocence, would not fufFer that he mould remain in the State of Death. 2. The Nature of his Office made it neceflary: As the Oeconomy of our Redemption required, that he fhould defcend from Heaven, the Seat of his Glory, that by dying he might expiate our Sins •, fo after his lying in the Grave, fo long as to atteft the Reality of his Death, it was neceflary he mould rife again in order to his difpenfing the Glorious Bene- fits he had purchafed. The Apoftle tells the Corin- thians, 1 Cor. xv. 14. If Chrtfl be not rifeny then our Preaching is in vain, and your Faith is aljo in vain. For the Faith of Chriftians hath a threefold Reference : 1. To the Perfon of Chrift, that he is the Son of God. 2. To his Death, that it is an all fufficient Sacri- fice for Sin. 3. To his Promiie, that he will raife Believers at , the lad Bay. Now the Refurrection of Chrift is the Foundation of Faith in refpedr, of all thefe. 1. He was declared to be the Son of God with Pow- er, according to the Spirit of Holinefs, by the Refurrec- tion 426 Tbe Harmony of the Divine Attributes tion from the Dead, Rom. i. 4. He was the Son of* God from Eternity as the Word, and from the firftr Moment of his Incarnation as God-Man* but the Honour of this Relation was much eclipfed in his poor Life, and ignominious Death. And although his darkeft Night was inlightened with fome Dis- coveries of his Deity, yet they were tranfient and foon vanilhed. But in his Refurrection God did publickly own him in the Fa§e of the World ; there- fore he is reprefented, teftifying from Heaven, Thou art my Son, this Day have I begotten thee -, Ads xiii. 33. According to the Phrafe of Scripture then Things' are faid to be when they confpicuoufly appear. All the miraculous Proofs, by which God acknowledged him for his Son during his Life, had been ineffectual without this. If he had remained in the Grave, it had been reafonable to believe him an ordinary Perfon, and that his Death had been the Punish- ment of his Prefumption ; but* his Refurrection was the moft illuftrious and convincing Evidence, that he was what he declared himfelf to be. For it is not conceivable that God mould put forth an Almighty Power to raife him, and thereby autho- I rife his Ufurpation, if by Robbery he had affumed that Glorious Title. He is therefore faid to bejuf- l\ tified by the Spirit, which raifed him, 1 Tim. iii. 16. from all the Accufations of his Enemies, who charg- ed him with Blaiphemy for making himfelf equal with God : Upon the Evidence of it, Thomas ador- ed him as his Lord and God. 2. His Refurrection is the moft pregnant Proof of the All-fufficiency of his Satisfaction. This was Spe- cial in the Death of Chrift, that the Curfe of the Law accompanied it, and feemed like an infinite Weight to lie on his Grave. But in rifing again, th& Value and Virtue of his Sufferings was fully declar- ed. In Contriving Mans Redemption. 427 j 1 ed. Therefore the Apoftle tells us, Rom. iv. 25. . That he was delivered for our Offences ', and was raifed [again for our Juftijication. Although his Death was " fufficient to merit our Pardon, yet, fince Believers 5 alone actually partake of the Benefit, and none could believe it he had not rofe from the Grave ; \ it is clear his Death had been ineffectual without 3. Our Faith in his Promifes, to give Life and Glory to his Servants, is built on his Refurreclion : For how could we believe him to be the Author of Life, who remained under the Power of Death ? :LHow could he quicken and glorify us, who finally jperifhed ? If he had been confined to the Grave, all four Hopes had been buried with him. But his Re- 1 furrection is the Caufe, Pattern and Argument of I ours: He did not only raife his Body from the / Grave, but his Church with him. Now the Ef- :' feeling this is attributed to the Divine Power, with 3 a Note of Eminency : Chrift was raifed by the Glory " of his Father -, Rom. vi. 4. that is, by his Power, which in that A6t was manifested in its full Splendour -9 for what is ftronger than Death ? and more inexorable y than the Grave ? Omnipotency alone can break its . 3ates, and loole its Bands. CHAP. XXI. be Divine Power was glorified in the Converfion of the World to Chriltianity. Notwithjianding the jna,y Infirmity in Chrifl: Crucified^ yet to the Called he was the Power of God. The numerous and great Difficulties that obfirucled the Receiving the GofpcL What the State of the World was at thefirfi Preaching it. Ignorance was Univerfal. Idolatry, '428 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes Idolatry, and the Depravation of Manners, were the Conferences of it. Idolatry was fortified by Cuf- torn* Antiquity, and external Pomp. The Depra- vation of Manners was extreme. The principal Ac- count of it from their dijbelieving a future State, and their attributing to their Gods thofe Paffions and Vices that were pleafing to the Flejh. The Averfion of the vulgar Heathens was ftrengthened by thofe in Veneration among them. The Philofophers, Priefts and Princes vehemently oppofed the Gofpel. An Account of their Enmity againft it. The Confede- ration of the Means by which the Gofpel was con- veyed, dif covers that Omnipotency alone made it fuccefsful. The Perfons employed were a few Fifher- men, without Authority and Power to force Men to Obedience, and without Art or Eloquence to injinuate the Belief of their Doftrine. The great, fudden, and lofting Change in the World, by the Preaching of the Gofpel, is a certain Argument of the Divine Tower that animated thofe weak Appearances. Ido- latry was abolifhed. A miraculous Change followed in the Lives of Men. Chriftians gave a Divorce to all the finful Delights of Senfe, and embraced for the Honour of Chrift thofe Things that Nature moft abhors. AJhort View of the Sufferings and Courage of the Martyrs. Their Patience was infpired from Heaven. Chriftianity was victorious over all Oppo- fition. The Divine Power will be glorioufly mani- felled in the complete Salvation of the Church at the laft Day. Our Saviour Jkall then finijh his Me- diatory Office : Death, the laft Enemy, Jhall be de- Jlroyed: The Bodies of the Saints jhall be raijed and conformed to the glorious Body of Chrift. T HE Divine Power was glorified in the Con- vcrfion of the World tq Chriftianity. The Apoftle in Contriving Mans Redemption] 429 Apoftle tells us, That Chrift crucified was to the Jews a Stumbling-block , and to the Gentiles Foolifhnefs. The Jews expected the Meffiah to deliver them from temporal Servitude, and eftablifh an univerfal Em- pire, either by the Force of Arms, or by the Ter- ror of Signs and Prodigies, as Mofes did againft the Egyptians: But when, inftead of Power, they faw nothing but Weaknefs, and inftead of a glorious Triumph, a difgraceful Punishment, they defpifed his Perfon, and rejected his Doctrine. But not- withstanding this imaginary Infirmity in Chrift cru- cified, yet to thefe that are called according to the di- vine Purpofe, He was the tnoft excellent Power of God : It being more glorious to fubdue the World to the Faith and Obedience of a crucified Perfon, than if he had appeared with all the Powers of Heaven* and Princes of the Earth as his Attendants. For this Reafon the Apoftle declares, He was not ajhamed cf the Go [pel of Chrift, it being the Power of God to Salvation to all that believe, to the Jew fir ft, and a I/a to the Greek. And he prays for the Ephejians, Ch. i. 18, 19, 20. That the Eyes of their Under/landings being enlightned, they might know what is the exceeding great- nejs of his Power to us-wardwbo believe, according to the working of his mighty Power which he wrought in Chrift when he raifed him from the Dead, and fet him at his own right I land in the heavenly Places. He ules va- rious and lofty Expreflions, as if one had been in- fufRcient to fignify the Extent and Efficacy of that Power which produced the Faith of Chrift in the Heathens. And if we duly confidcr Thing*, it will appear, that the Terms of the Apoftle arc not too ltrong and hyperbolical, but juft and equal to the Degree of Power requifite lor the Accumplifh- ment of that great Work. E c For 430 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes For the underftanding of this, I will conlider three Things. i. The numerous and great Difficulties that ob- ftructed the receiving of the Gofpel. idly. The Quality of the Means by which 'twas conveyed and became fuccefsful. $dly. The eminent, fudden, univerfal and lading Change made by it in the World. 17?. The numerous and great Difficulties that obftructed the receiving of the Gofpel. This will appear by reprefenting the State and Difpofition of the World at that Time when it was firft preach- ed. Firft \ Ignorance was univerfal; a deep thick Darknefs covered the Face of the Earth. And the Confequents of that grofs palpable Ignorance, were execrable Idolatry, and the moil notorious Depra- vation of Manners. 1. Execrable Idolatry : For as in the Night Spec* ires walk, fo in the Times of Ignorance, the Prince of Darknefs made his Progrefs in the Earth. He reigned in the Hearts of Men, and in the Places of their Devotion. The whole World as filled with Idols of feveral Forms and Myfteries, fome amia- ble, others terrible, according to the Humour of Superftition. For many Ages Satan had kept peace- able PofTeffion of his Empire : For the ignorant World did not underftand its Mifery, but willingly paid that Honour to the cruel Ufurper, that was only due to the lawful Sovereign. They were confirmed in their Idolatry by feveral Things. (1.) They were trained up in it from their In- fant State. Now the firft Perfwafions of the Mind, though grofly falfe, and ill Habits, do ftrangely captivate, and are with Difficulty removed ; becaufe the Concurrence of thofe Faculties is requifue, which are In Contriving Mans Redemption. 43 T are under the Power of Error and Vice. No Ty- rant is fo exactly obeyed as Cuftom, efpecially in Things efteemed facred : For the Conceit that the Service is pleafing to the Deity, renders Men in- capable to believe any Thing that contradicts it. 'Twas as hard to make the Gentiles forfake the Religion they received from their Birth, and to loofe the ImpreiTions made in their tender Age, as rto make the Africans change their Skin and become Fair, and the Europeans to turn Black : For the Tincture which the Religion practiied in each Coun- try conveys to the Souls of Men, is as deep and lading as that which the Sun imprefTes upon their Bodies, according to the Diverfity of its Afpects. (2.) The Pagan Religion was derived through a long Succefllon from their Progenitors. Antiquity :brings I know not what Refpect to Things, but it is fpecially venerable in Matters of Religion. There- fore the Heathens accufed the Chriftian Religion of Novelty, and urged nothing more plaufibly than the Argument of immemorial Prefcription for their Superftition. * They would not confider whether it were juft and reafonable, but with a blind Defe- rence yielded up themfelves to the Authority of the Ancients. They refolved not to condemn their Pa- rents and Friends, that had gone before them in the Road of Damnation, but chofe to die in their Ido- latry : So hard is it to refill the Current of the World, and to refcue ourfelves from the Bondage of popular Errors. (3.) The Pomp of the Pagan Worfhip was very E e 2 pleafing * Vid. Sym. in rclat. ad Imperat. Majorum excipere difci- ♦ ^linam, Religiones traditas colere. Cacil. Tantum Sanftkatis •; tttribuere confuevit, quantum altruxerit vetuftatis. M. />/, Hoc I anftum ab kyq eft, Hoc ab Atavis uaditum, Prudwt, 432 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes pleafing to the Flefh. The Magnificence of their Temples, adorned with the Trophies of Superftiti- on, their myfterious Ceremonies, their Mufick, their ProcefTions, their Images and Altars, their Sacri- fices and Purifications, and the reft of the Equipage of a carnal Religion, drew their Refpects, and ftrongly affected their Minds through their Senfes : Whereas the Religion of the Gofpel is Spiritual and Serious, Holy and Pure, and hath nothing to move the Carnal Part. Now how difficult was it to overcome Paganifm when fortified by Antiquity, Univerlality, and fo agreeable to Senfe ? How hard was it to free Men from the double Tyranny of Cuftom from without, and blind Affections from within. 2. The Depravation of Manners was fuch in the Heathen World, that if the unclean Spirits had been incarnate, and taken their Refidence among Men, they could not have acted worfe Villanies. The whole Earth was covered with Abomina- tions, as Egypt with the Frogs that poifoned the whole Climate. We may fee a Picture of their Converfation in the firft to the Romans. And it could not be otherwise : For as the Apoftle faith, Thofe who are Drunk, are Drunk in the Night •, fo when the Mind is darkened with Ignorance and Er- ror, the Affections are corrupted, and Men give up themfelves to the unfruitful Works of Darknefs. Unnatural Crimes were committed even among the Grecians and Romans, with that Liberty, as if no Spark of common Reafon had remained in them. The moft filthy Lufts had loft the Fear and Shame that naturally attends them. They efteemed thofe Things to be the Means to obtain Happinefs, that were Caufes of the Contrary. They placed their fovereign Good in extreme Evil j i. e. finful PJea- fures. In Contriving Mans Redemption 433 fures. They were encouraged to work all Unclcan- nefs with Greedinefs, not only upon the Account of prefent Impunity, for their Laws left almoft all Vices indifferent but what didurbed the Tranquil- lity of the State -, and not only by the Multitude of Examples, fo that Vices by their Commonnefs had loft their Names, and were ftiled Virtues ; nay, it was a Crime to appear innocent among the Guilty,|j but principally becaufe they thought themfelves le- cure as to a future State : For either they wholly dis- believed it ; and it is congruous that thofe who think to die like Beads, mould live like Beads -, or elfe by attributing to their Deities thofe Paffwns and Vices that fo powerfully reigned in themfelves, they were ftrongly perfwaded no Punifhment would be inflict- ed. J For how could the Gods make them Sacri- fices to their Judice, who wereCompanions with them in their Crimes P Or revenge the Imitation of their own Actions ? This was to cad down the Banks and to let the Torrent of corrupt Nature break forth in all its Fury. As St. Aufiine obferves of Homer ■, the Father of Poetical Fictions, that reprefenting the Murders, Thefts, and Adulteries of their Gods, he made thofe Sins divine Properties, and effectually commended them to the Heathens : Quifquis ea fe- cifjet, non Homines per ditos fed ctelejles Dens videbatur imitattts. And he gives an Indance of this from a Comedy of 'Terence, * where a vicious young Man is introduced, reporting how he animated himielf to fatisfy his arutiJJj Lull, as having no Ids a Deity E e 3 than || Apud eos totaimpuritas vocatur urbanitas. M. Fel. X Et cuncla licere credimus, ct fcquimur magnorum exem- y\z.T)eor\im.R\b\\s tempting her Brother to inccji. Ovid. Met. 1. 9. Fab. 7. • * Confef. atque in Deum qui templa Cceli fumma fonitu con- cuit. Ego homuncio hoc non facerera ; Ego illud vero iu feci ac lubens. Ttr. Eunuch. 434 2"J* Harmony of the Divine Attributes than Jupiter for his Matter and Model. In fhort, the Theology of the Pagans in flamed them to the bold Commiftion of every pleafant Sin. The Hiftory of their Gods was fo interfperft with the mod infa- mous Impurities, that at the firft reading, Verterunt pupillas Virgin es in Meretrices ; They loft the Virgi- nity of their Eyes, then of their Souls, and then of their Bodies. Now the Gofpel is a holy Difcipline that forbids all ExceiTes, that enjoins univerfal Puri- ty and Chaftity •, fo that when it was firft preached to the Heathens, they thought it impoffibleto beo- beyed, nnlefs Men were Angels without Bodies, or Statues without Souls. I fhall add further, That the Averfion of the Hea- thens from Chriftianity was much ftrengthened by thofe who were in Veneration among them, and vehemently oppofed it. And they were the Philo- fophers greatly efteemed for Wifdom, their Priefts that had Dominion over their Confciences, and their Princes that had Power over their States and Lives. i. Philofophers vehemently oppofed the receive ingof the Gofpel. At the firft View it may be juft Matter of Wonder that they mould be Enemies to it, whether we confider the Objects of Faith, or the Rules of Life laid down in it. The Objects of Faith were new and noble, of infinite Beauty and Profit, and moil worthy of a rational Contemplation to be exercifed upon them : Now that the Philo- fophers who were fo diligent to improve their Minds, who received with Complacency Truths of a lower Defcent, and of infinitely lefs Importance, fhould reject Evangelicat Truths, fublime in their Nature, faving in their Efficacy, and revealed from Heaven, what Account can be given of it ? Turtulli- m reproaches them with Reafon, That the Chriftian " Faith 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 435 Faith was the only Thing, which Curiofity did not tempt them to fearch into: Hie folum curiojitas hu* mana torpefcit, Apol. C. 1. Befides, whereas the Gofpel is a plain and perfect Inftitution for the Go- vernment of Life, wholly converfant about the Souls of Men, and allures a BlefTednefs infinitely more ex- cellent than was ever thought of by them, it might: have been expected that thofe, who in regard of Morality, feemed moft to approach to it, and whofe profeft Defign was to fearch after Happinefs, fhould fiave readily entertained and ufed their bed Endea- vours to have drawn others to embrace it. But if we confider Things aright, our Wonder will vanifh ; for their Knowledge and Morality, which in them- felves were Preparatives, yet accidentally hindered their Submifiion to the Gofpel, and caufed the moft potent Prejudices againft it -, and that upon a Dou- ble Account : 1. Of Pride. 2. Of Satisfaction in their own Way. 1. Pride was their univerfal Difeafe : They had a liberal Efteem of themfelves as raifed above the com- mon Rank of Men, and were Lovers of Glory more than of Wifdom. * And becaufe Philofophy had inftru&ed them in fome Truths, they believed its falfe as well as true Dictates, and concluded all Things impoflible that did not concur with their old Tenets : They admitted no higher Principle than natural Reafon, and utterly reje&ed divine Revela- tion •, which was as unreafonable as if one that ne- ver law but the Light of a Candle, mould contend there was no other Light in the World. Now a Per- form • * Mundi Philofophus ell gloriae animal, & popularis auraa atque nummorum venale Mancipiura. Uhr. '436 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes fon that doth not believe divine Revelation, is wholly unqualified to judge of fupernatural Myfteries. For till the Authority of the Revealer is fubmitted to, he cannot truly confider their Caufc and their End. Befides, they looked on it as a Reproach, that any Secret mould be revealed to others and not to them. It feemed to darken their Glory, that any School mould be more knowing than theirs. There- fore they chofe to be Inftructors of Error, rather than Difciples to the Truth. Add further, they thought their Honour concerned to defend the Prin* ciples they had once efpoufed. From hence arofe the great Conteftations between themfelves, accom- panied with Invectives and Satyrs, being very jea- lous for their Opinions, and paffionate for the Inte- rest of their Sects, Now the Gofpel was in fome Things contrary to all of them, fo that being impe- rious and impatient of Contradiction, and touched in their tendered Part, no wonder they were fo vio- lent againft it. They were unwilling to receive a Doctrine that difcovered their Errors, and lefTene.d their Efteem. Our Saviour afks the Jews, How can ye believe which receive Honour one from another , and feek not the Honour which comes from God only ? He propounds it as an impoflible Thing. The Gofpel would ftrip them of all their pretended Excellencies, and diveft them of many vain Conceptions adorned with fo much Art, and commanded, as its firft Arti- cle, they mould humbly refign their Understandings to divine Revelation •, this they looked on as a Sub- iniflion unworthy of their refined ftrong Spirits. 2. They had Satisfaction in their own imperfect Virtues. Becaufe they did fome Things to recover the Jiuman Nature from its degenerate State, they were more confirmed in their Infidelity than the gtoffeft Idolaters, and the naoft vicious Perfons. For the In Contriving Mans Redemption. 437 the more probable Arguments they had to obtain Happinefs in their own Way, the more obftinately they refufed any other. They thought there was no need of fupernatural Revelation to direct,, nor of fupernatural Grace to aflift them ; but without the interceffion of a Saviour, and the Power of the Holy Spirit, they had Self-fufficiency to obtain Per- fection and Felicity. Like foolifh Chymifts that have melted away a great Part of their Eftates in vain, and little remaining to fupport their wretched Lives \ At in Expectation of the great Elixir create in their Fancies Treafures of Gold, and inrich themfelves. So the Philofophers, who wafted their Time and Spi- rits in fearching after Happinefs to little Purpofe, although the belt of their Principles and the height of their Virtue, were infufficient to fupport them under any prefling Affliction •, yet they had vain Hopes of obtaining perfect Tranquillity and Content by them. Now the Gofpel commanding an entire renouncing of ourfelves, to embrace the fole Good- nefs and Will of God, it was hard for thofe who were lb full of Pride and Vanity to relifh a Doctrine fo contrary to them. In truth, whatever ihe Philo- fophers pretended concerning the Incredibility that the Son of God fhouki furier Death, yet it was not fo much the Crofs to which Chrilt was nailed by his Enemies that made them reject the Gofpel,* as the other Crofs to whichjefus would fallen them, i. e. the (trict and holy Difcipline to which he 1 mands them tofubmit. A Difcipline that condemns their vain b a W ifdom and \' utile, due mortifies fenlual Plcaiurcs, -\ which many of the Phi- bibphen • Quid in bii deprehendai prsctcr I tuum otium, &: qa item f J§m;«/. 1 l'hilolbphorum fupcrcilu tccufanto, inicrcuiibiu ipG vitiu 111: 43 8 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes lofophers indulged themfelves in, notwithftanding all their Difcourfes of the purgative and illuminative Life. And that this was the real Caufe of their re- jecting a crucified Saviour is evident : For they knew that Sufferings of the word Kind are not always in- famous, but muft be efteemed according to the Qua- lity of their Caufes and Ends. Thofe who for pub- lick Good generoufly expofe themfelves to Difgrace and Mifery, are honoured for their heroick Courage as Patriots of the nobleft Strain. And it is not unu- fual for Perfons of extraordinary Wifdom and Vir- tue to fuffer in the World. Their Prefence and Ex- ample upbraid the Vicious, and wound their Spirits, as a great Light diftempered and fore Eyes. And fome of them acknowledged the Wifdom of Provi- dence in permitting this for an excellent End, that Virtue tried in the Fire might be more refplendent. * Plato, an eminent Philofopher, defcribes a Man tru- ly juft, by this Proof of his Integrity, that he fhall fuffer the Lofs of Eftate and Honour, be fcourged, racked, bound, and have his Eyes plucked out, and after the enduring all Miferies, at laft be crucified. So- crates^o admired by them, was fo difguiled by the Ma* lice of his Enemies, that he was condemned to die by Poifon : Yet this was fo far from obfcu ring his Repu-. tation, that his fuffering Death was efteemed the molt noble Effect of his Courage, and the moft excellent Proof of his Virtue. Why then mould they make a contrary Judgment of our Redeemer's Sufferings ; whofe Innocence was perfect, and whofe Patience was fo Holy and Divine, that in the midft of His Torments he prayed for his Murderers ? No Reafou can * Oti onto diakirmnos o dikaios mafiigo fetai, ftreblofetai, dedefttai tkkauthefetai to Tbalmo, teleuton, panta kaka pathon ana cbas Ufa* the/etas. Lib. 2. de Repub. 'in Contriving Maris Redemption, 4139 can be juftly alledged, but fome darling Luft fpiri- tual or flefhly which they were refolved to cherifh. The Light that comes from above illuminates the Humble, and dazles the Proud. The Prefumption of their own Knowledge, was the Caufe of their pro- digious Stupidity. Simple Ignorance is not fo dange- rous as Error : A falfe Light that deceives and leads to Precipices is worfe than Darknefs. We find there- fore that none were fiercer Enemies to the Gofpel ^han the Philofophers. f The facred Story tells us, that when the Apoftle preached at Athens, that was as much the Seat of Su- perftition as of Sciences : The Epicureans and Stoicks though moft oppofite in their Principles, yet confpir- ed to encounter him •, they entertained him with Scorn, What will this Babler fay ? and his Succefs was but fmall there. He that fifhed with a Net in other Places, and brought great Numbers to Baptifm, did there only with an Angle, and caught but one or two Souls. And in the Progrefs of the Gofpel they perfift- ed in their Oppofition. The moft grave and virtu- ous among them cenfured the Martyrs as fool-hardy in their generous Sufferings for the Name of Jefus Chrift. Antoninus * acculed the Chriftians of ob- flinacy in their Readinefs to endure Torments. Ar- rianus reprefents their Courage as proceeding from a cuftomary Contempt of Death, which he oppofes to Judgment and Reafon. Crefcens, theCynick, was the Periecutor of Juftin Martyr. In all Ages the Gof- pel felt the fharp Points of their malicious Wits. 1 They defpifed it as an ill-contrived Fable, as the En- tertainment # To de etoimon touto, ina apos idekei krifrts erchetai me kai ipfe- Un frataxin os oi Cbrifianoi. Lib. 2. Eitai upo manias men donatai UJcuto diatejihmm pros taula, kai upo dhons oi Galilaaioi. 4. C. 7. 440 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes tertainment of fmall Understandings ; J and Faith, as the Prefidium of the Weak and Illiterate, who were incapable of Confideration. Now when thofe who were in higheft Reputation for their Morality and Learning, difcountenanced Chriftianity, it was a ftrong Argument to move the vulgar Heathens to judge of it as a mere Delufion. In our Saviour's Time it was urged as a fufHcient Reafon againft the receiv- ing of Him as fent from God, Becaufe none of the Pharifees, the mod learned and mod likely to un- deritand the Prophefies concerning the Mejftah^ bd^k lieved on him^ John vii. 48. 2. The Heathen Priefts vehemently obftructed the Reception of the Gofpel ; for their Intereft was fpecially concerned upon the Account of their Repu- tation and Gain. With great Art they had kept the People in Ignorance for a long Time : They per- fwaded them that their idolatrous Ceremonies, Sa- crifices and Feftivals, made the Gods favourable, and were the fupreme Caufes of their Profperity ; and that ill Succefs in War, publick Difafters, great Con- tagions, were fent for the Neglect of their Service. From this Fountain all Superftition was derived. Now if the Doctrine of Chrilt (that ftrictly forbids the Worfhip of Idols) were received, who would attend to their old Lies ? Who would purchafe their deceitful Promifes ? Who would maintain them with prodigal Donatives ? Who would efteem them divine Men ? They muft lofe their Honour and Sup- port, and for their Fables be the Scorn of the Mul- titude. 'Tis no Wonder then that their Paflions mould % Nemo accedat eruditus, nemo fapiens, nemo prudens, ar- cemus enim tales : Quid fi quis eft indoftus, infipiens, infans, fi- denter veniat. Hoc patto fatis apparet, quod folos fatuos, igna- xos, ftolidos, mancipia, mulierculas, pueros captent, & pelliciantt Maxim. Madaurenjis in Epift, ad St. Augujl. tn Contriving Maris 'Redemption* 441 fhould be edged, and their Endeavours furious in op- pofing the Truth. And fince the People had a reve- rend Regard for their Office, and a high Opinion of their Wifdom, Authority and Sanctity, they rea- dily joined with them in their Oppofuion. 3. Princes who were adored by the People, thought themfelves obliged to prevent the Introduction of a new Religion, left their Empire mould be in Hazard, or the Majefty and Greatnefs of it lefTened. * For Religion being the true Foundation of publick Peace, Arery Change in it is fufpected as dangerous, and likely to bring fome eminent Alteration in the State. St. Paul was accufed for teaching Cuftoms (Att. xvi. 21.) which were not lawful for them to obferve be- ing Romans. And in after Times Chriftians were condemned as feditious and mutinous, and their Af- femblies as riotous and unlawful. And it is obfervable, that there never was a lefs favourable Conftkution of Time, than when the Gofpel was firft preached : For Tiberius was extremely cruel and extremely jea- lous of all Novelty that might difturb his Repofe. And Nero9 the bloodieft Tyrant that ever fat on the Roman Throne, endeavoured to flrangle Chriftianity in the Cradle. || Befides, the Doctrine of Chrift was not only new and ftrange, but fevere ; for it gives no Dif- penfation for Perfons of the higheft Rank from univerfal Duty. 'Tis the Law of God, to whom all are equally fubjecl, or equally obedient. It gives Rules without Exception, to the Court as well as the Cottage -, to thofe cloathed in Purple, and thofe in Sackcloth : It condemns the Greateft for Delinquents, and guilty of eternal Death, if * Vulgafia logum capita, feparatim Deos non habendos, nee novos. || Orientem fidem Romas primus Ntro cruentavit. 7trt. Scorp. I 442 ^he Harmony of the Divine Attributes if they do not abandon thofe Pieafures to which corrupt Nature and many ftrong Temptations vio- lently incline them. Now the Heathen Princes, who were profperous and vicious, could not relifh a Doc- trine that retrenched their exorbitant Defires, and ftrictiy forbad their unconfined Enjoyment of fenfual Delights, which they efteemed the Prerogative an- nexed to their fupreme Dignity ; and the Minds of Subjects are tainted with Dependance on the Power- ful. From what hath been difcourfed, we may judge how great Refiftance the Gofpel met with in its fir ft Publication. For all Things that can make an Enter- prife impoflible, were united together againft it. Wifdom and Power, the Pieafures of Sin, and Zeal for Religion ; the Underftandings and "Wills of Men were combined in Oppofition to its Progrefs ; the Learned and Ignorant, Magiftrates and People, Men and Devils, joined tofupprefsit. Hell was in a Com- motion, and the Prince of Darknefs in Arms, not to furTer the Crowns of fo many Kingdoms to fall from his Head, which for fo many Ages he had kept : He was enraged to lofe the Homage and Service, ef- pecially of the more knowing Nations, as the Gre- cians and Romans •, who, by how much the more ca- pable of Truth, with fo much the more Art, to the Difhonour of God, for a long Time had been kept un- der his Deceit. idly. If we confider the Means by which the Go- fpel was conveyed, it will be more evident that Om- nipotence alone made it fuccefsful. When Chrift came from Heaven to convert the World, it had been according to the Law of Reafon more fuitable to his Purpofe to have been born at Rome, the Seat of the Empire, wherein the Confluence of all Nations met, than in an obfcure Corner. So when the Apoftles were firft fent forth to propagate the Gofpel, hu- man in Contriving Mans Redemption. 443 man Prudence would judge, that they fhould have been afiifted either with Authority and Power, or with Learning and Eloquence, to compel or perfuade toaSubmifiion to it. But if there had been any Proportion between the Quality of the Inftruments and the Effects produced, the Gofpel had been efteem- ed a Doctrine purely human. The immediate Agents had been entitled to all the Honour by the Suffrage of the Senfes -, and their proper Sufficiency- would have obfeured the Virtue of Chrift that *rought in them, therefore God chofe the weak 'Things ' the Worlds to confound the Mighty ; * and bafe Things of the Worlds and Things which are defpifed hath God chofen : Yea, and Things that are not, to bring to nought Things that are, that his glorious Power may be fully manifefled, 1 Cor. i. 27. Chriftianity (like its Author) [prang as a Root out of a dry Ground, and grew into a fair ftrong Tree, not by human plant- ing and watering, but the miraculous Influences of Heaven. The Perfons employed were a few Fifhermen, with a Publican and a Tent-maker, without Authority and Power to force Men to Obedience, and without the Charms of Eloquence to infinuate the Belief of the Doctrines they delivered. And with thefe Difad- vantages they could nev^r have conceived a Thought, uch lefs had Courage to attempt the great Impof- bility of converting the whole World to Chrift, nd fubjecting the Heads of Princes, and the Learned and Wife, to the Foot of a crucified Per- (bn, without the Divine Aftiftance, 1. They * Elegit humiliter natos, inhonoratos, illiterates, ut, quio luid magnum eflent & facerent, ipfe in cis effet & faceret. kg. deCivit. Dei. lib. i8. C. 49, 444 ^he Harmony of the Divine Attribute i. They were without Authority and Power. O- ther Religions were eftablifhed in feveral Nations, by Perfons of the greateft Eminency and Credit a- mong them. That of the Perfians by Zoroajires^ that of the Egyptians by Hermes, that of the Greci- ans by Orpheus, that of the Romans by Nutoa, all Kings or of great Reputation for their Wifdom and Virtue ; and they were received without Con- tradiction : For being correfpondent to the corrupt Inclinations of Men, it was not ftrange that the Princes had either Capacity to invent them, or Pow- er to plant them. And in latter Times Mahomet opened a Way for his Religion by his Sword, and advanced it by his Conqueft. Now it is no wonder that a Religion fo pleafing to the lower Appetites, that gives Licence to all corrupt Affections in the pre- fent Life, and promifes a fenfual Paradife fuitable to Beafts in the future, mould be embraced by thofe who were fubject to his Arms. But the Apoftles were meanly born and educated, without Credit and Re- putation, deftitute of all human Strength, and had only a crucified Perfon for their Leader. Chri- ftianity was expoled naked in the Day of its Birth, without any Shelter from fecular Powers. 2. They had not the Advantage of Art and Elo- quence to commend their Religion. There is a Kind of Charm in Rhetorick that makes Things appear o* therwife than they are : The beft Caufe it ruins ; the worn: it confirms. Truth, tho' in itfelf invincible, yet by it feems to be overcome ; and Error obtains a falfe Triumph. We have a vifible Proof of this in the Writings of Celjus, Symmachus, Cacilius, and others, for Paganifm againft Chri/lianity. What a vail Difference is there between the Lies and Filthi- nefs of the one, and the Truth and Sanctity of the other ? Yet with what admirable Addrefs did they manage 'in Contriving Mans Redemption, 445 manage that infamous Subject ? Although it feemed incapable of any Defence, yet they gave fuch Co- lours to it, by the Beauty of their Expreflions, and their apparent Reafons, that it feemed plaufible ; and Chriftianity, notwithstanding its Brightnete and Purity, was made odious to the People. But the A- poftles were mod of them wholly unlearned. S Paul himfelf acknowledges, (2 Cor. ii. 4.) that he was weak in Prefence, and his Speech was not with the entic- ing Words of Man's Wifdcm. A crucified Chrift was a^Jl their Rhetorick. Now thefe impotent defpica- ble Perfons were employed tofubdue the World to the Crofs of Chrift ; and in that Seafon, when the Roman Empire was at its Height, when the mod rigo- rous Severities were ufed againft all Innovations, when Philojopy and Eloquence were in their Flower and Vigour •, fo that Truth, unlefs adorned with the Drefs and Artifice of Fallhood, wasdefpifed, and aMeflage from God himfelf, unlefs eloquently conveyed, had no Force to perfwade. Therefore the Apoftles debafed themfelves in the Senfe of their own Weaknefs, 2 Cor. iv. 7. We have this-Treafure in earthen Vejfels* that the Excellency of the Power may be of God, and not. of us. 'Twas from Diftruft of themfelves, their true Confidence in God proceeded. They were on- ly fo far powerful as he enabled them •, like Inftru- ments in which there is not Virtue fufficient for the: carving of a Statue, if they do not receive it im- preft from the Artificer that ufes them. Briefly, as God the Author of Wonders ufes that which is weak in Nature, to conquer the molt rebellious Parts of it -9 He makes the weak Sand a more powerful Bridle to the impetuous Element of Waters, than the ltrong- efl Banks raifed by the Induftry of Men, and compo- :d of the molt folid Materials : So he was pleafed a few artlefs impotent Perfons to confound F f the 446 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes the Wifdom, and overcome the Power of the World. %dly. The great, fudden, and lading Change that was made in the World by the preaching of the Gol- pel, is a certain Argument of the Divine Power that animated thofe mean Appearances, and that no Inftrument is weak in God's Hands. i. The greatnefsof the Change is fuch, that it was only poffible to Divine Power. 5Tis a great Miracle to render Sight to the Blind, but it is more miraculous to inlighten the dark Mind, to fee the Truth and Beauty of fupernatural Myiteries, when they are difguifed under Reproach and fad Repre- fentations, and effectually to believe them -, espe- cially when the inferiour Appetite is fo contrary to Faith. 'Tis a Prodigy to raife the Dead, but it is more admirable to fanctify an habituated Sinner. For in comparing the Quality of thofe Miracles, that is the greater!:, in the performing whereof God is difcovered to be the abfolute Lord of the greater Nature : Now the intellectual Nature is fuperiour to the corporeal. Befides, there is no Contradicti- on from a dead Body againft the Divine Power in raifing it ; on the contrary, if any Senfe were re- maining, it would ardently defire to be reflored to the full Enjoyment of Life; but corrupt Nature is moft oppofite to renewing Grace. And in this Senie our Saviour's Promife to the Difciples was principally accomplished; Verily I Jay unto you^ He that believes on me^ the Works that I dojhallbe do alfo9 and greater Works than thefe /hall he do, becaufe I go to the Father. For the ftrange Converfion of the Gen- tiles by the preaching of the Gofpel, was the moft divine and powerful Work of our Saviour in Glo- ry, after his fending the Holy Ghoft, and exceeded all the miraculous Operations performed by him on the In Contriving Man's Redemption. 447 the Earth. The glorious Light of Truth fcatteredthe thick and terrible Darknefs of Ignorance and Er- ror, that was fo univerfal. The Gofpel in its Power and the Quality of its Effects, was like thofe Words, Let there be Light, which the eternal Word pronounced upon the confufed Chaos, and infufed a Soul and Life into the World. The clear Know- ledge of God in his Nature, and glorious Works of Creation and Redemption, of the Duty of Man, of the future State, was communicated to the meaneft Underflandings. And in Proportion to the Light of Faith, fuch was the Meafure of Piety and Holinefs. Idolatry that had Number, Antiquity, Authority of its Side, was entirely abolifhed. The falfe Deities were caft out of the Temple ; and the Crofs of Chrift was planted in the Hearts of Men. The pure Beams of the Sun of Righteoufnefs quickly extin- guished the Fires of the Devil's Altars and the re- al Miracles performed by the Divine Power expofed his lying Wonders to Contempt. Accordingly the Apoitle tells the Thefjalonians, 1 Thef. i. 9. For they ihemfelves Jhew of us, what Manner of entring in we had unto you, and how ye turned to God from Idols, to ferve the living and true God, and to wait for his Son from Heaven, whom he raifed from the dead, even Je- fus which delivered us from the Wrath to come. Innu- merable from fecret Atheifm and publick Gentilifm were converted to acknowledge and accept of the Redeemer for their Lord. What could produce fuch a marvelous Change in the World but an Al- mighty Power? How feemingly impoffible was it to bring fo many, who were proud in their Natures, perverfe in their Cuftoms, and indubitably affent- tng to their falfe Religions, from fuch a Diftance as the Worfhip of innumerable Deities, to adore a Crucified God ? 'Twas admirable that Alexander* F f 2 broke 448 The Harmony $f the Divine Attributes broke the Perfian Empire with an Army of Thirty Thoufand : But what is there comparable in that Conqueft to the Acts of the Apoftles ? How much lefs difficult is it for fome Nations to change their Kings, than for all to change their Gods ? How far more eafy is it to overcome the Bodies of Men, than fubdue their Souls ? Upon the moft exact Enquiry, there will never be found in human Nature, any Caufe capable to produce fuch an Effect, nor in the Records of all Ages any Example like it. Add to this the excellent Reformation in the Hearts and Lives of Men. As their Underftand- ings, fo their Wills and Affections, the Sources of Action, were miraculoufly altered. What the Sages of the World could not effect in a few felect Perfons, the Gofpel hath done in great Numbers ; nay raifed them above all their feigned Ideas, above the higheft Pitch of their proud Philofophy. Thofe flrong and furious Pafllons, which natural Reafon was as unable to reftrain as a Thread of Silk is to govern a fierce Bead, the Gofpel hath tamed and brought into Order : It hath executed what Philo- fophy durft never enterprife, defpairing of Succefs. The Gofpel overcame all thofe carnal Reluctancies that feemed infuperable : It made the wife Men of the World refign their Reafon to Faith •, it perfua- ded Carnal Men to mortify the Flefh, the Ambiti- ons to defpife fecular Honours, the Voluptuous to renounce their Pleafures, the Covetous to diftribute their Goods to the Poor, the Injured and Incenfed to forgive their Enemies, and all this for Love to God, an Affection unknown to all other Laws and Inftitutions. Wherever it came it miraculoufly transformed Pagans into Chriftians, which was as truly wonderful, as for the Bafilijk to part with its Poifon, fox * Wolf to be changed into a Lamb, nay, for In Contriving Mans Redemption 449 for Dogs, (fuch were the Gentiles in our Saviour's Language) to be changed into Angels of Light and Purity. An eminent lnftance we have of its Effica- cy in the Corinthians, who in their Heathen State were guilty of the vileft Enormities •, But after their receiving the Gofpel, the Apoftle teftifies, 2 Cor. vi. to, 11. they were wafhed, fanclified. and jujlified in the Name of the Lord J ejus, and by the Spi- rit of our God. Juftin Martyr tells Triphon, * that thofe who had been ftained with all Filthinefs, and enflaved by charming imperious Lulls, yet becoming Chriftians, they were purified, and freed, and de- lighted in thofe Virtues that were moft contrary to their former Vices. This Alteration was fo viable, that the Lives of the firft Chriftians were an Apo- logy for their Faith. And it is ftrongly urged by 0- rigen, Tertullian, Laftantius, and others, as a con- vincing Proof of the Divinity of the Chriftian Doc- trine, that it made the ProfelTors of it Divine in their Converfations. The Creation of Grace was like the Creation of Nature, v/hen Trees fprang up in an inftant laden with Fruits, fo in the Con- verted, all the blelTed Fruits of the Spirit, Love, Joy, Peace, Long-Juffering, Gentlenejs, GcodneJsy Faith, Meeknefs, Temperance abounded. This Testi- mony even a Pagan Perfecutor gives the common Sort of Chriftians, J That they afiembled to fing Hymns to Chrift •, that they obliged themfelves fo- lemnly to injure no Perfon, to deceive none, to pre- ferve faithfully what was committed to them, to be always true. And as in Obedience to the Gofpel 5 they gave a Divorce to all the finful Delights of Senfc, fo, which was incomparably more difficult, they F f 3 cm- • * Oi palai men porneiais chair ontei, nun de fcpkrofunen mmtn axpa wmmoi. Jn Apol. Poft. t Plin.Lib. 10, Epift. 7, 45° The Harmony of the Divine Attributes embraced thofe Things which Nature doth mod ab- hor. No Religion ever £xpofed its Followers ta fuch Sufferings, nor infpired them with fuch Refolu- tion to fuftain them. All other Religions were Pro- ductions of the Flem, and being allied together, if at any time Jealoufy caufed a Difcord between them, yet an open Perfecution was unufual. But when Chriilianity firft appeared they all turned their Ha- tred and Violence againft it, as a Foreigner of a different Extraction. How many living Martyrs were Exiles for the Faith, and deprived of all hu- man Confolation ? yet they efteemed themfelves more bleffed in their Miferies, than others in their Pleafures. How many Thoufands were put to Death for the Honour of our Redeemer? yet the lead Thing is the Number, in Comparifon of the Manner of their Sufferings: If they had fuffered a mild Marry room, an eafy and hidden Death, wherein the Combat and Victory had been finifhed at a Blow, their Love and Courage had not been fo ad- mirable •, but they endured Torments fo J various and terrible, that had they not been practifed upon them by their Enemies, it were incredible that ever Malice mould be fo ingenious to invent, or Cruelty fo hardened to inflict them. If all the Furies of Hell had come forth to fuggeft new Tortures, they could not have devifed worfe. Neither was their mere differing fuch Torments fo aftonifhing, as their Readinefs to encounter them, and their Beha- viour under them. They maintained their Faith in the Prefence of the mcfl formidable Princes. Some who % Ulpian wrote /even Books, to dtfcribe the Variety, of Torments the Christians fuffered. Timebit foriitan caro gladium gravem & crucem excelfam, & rabieni Befiiarum, & fummam ignium pce- iiam, & omne Canuficia iagemuna ia Tor mentis,, Tcrt, ad Mattp '« 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 451 who might by Favour, were afraid to efcape the common Perfecution, efteeming no Death precious but Martyrdom. * They contended earneitly to fuffer, and envied others the honourable Ignominy and happy Torments that were endured for their beloved Redeemer. We have an Inftance of their Courage in Tiburtius^ || who thus fpake to his Judges > Bind me to Racks and Wheels, condemn me, banifh me, load me v/ith Chains, burn me, tear me, omit no Kind of Torment. If you banifh me, the fmal- lefl Corner of the Earth fhall be to me as the whole World, becaufe I fhall find my God there : If you kill me, by the fame A 61 you will give me the happy Liberty I figh after, and deliver me from a Prifon on Earth to reign in Heaven : If you condemn me to the Fire, I have quenched other Flames in refitt- ing Concupifcence : Ordain what Torment you pleafe, it fhall not trouble me, fince my Heart is filled with Love to fuffer, and defire it. They were thankful tothofe who condemned them, and regard- ed their Executioners with the fame Eye, as St. Pe- ter did the Angel that brake off his Fetters to reftore him to Freedom. They chearfully received them, as thofe who brought the Keys of Paradife in the fame Hands wherewith they brought their Swords. They entred into the Fire with Joy, and were not only patient but triumphant in their Sufferings ; as if they had been glorified in their Souls, and im- paflible to the Sufferings of their Bodies. I have feen, faith Eujebius^ the Executioners tired with tormenting them, lie down panting and breathing, and * Ignatius /aid to the Romans, dijfuading him from fujfering, Jgnofcite mihi Filioli, quid mihi profit ego fcio. Huron, dq %*ript. EccUfiaft. \ Inde elt quod ibidem feateotiis veftris gratias aginius. Tf Man cannot infpire into its Productions a Prin- ciple of Life ; only that Power which conveys to Vlan an immortal Soul, can derive to its Inflitutions 1 Spirit to animate and preferve them. J And -his victorious permanent Virtue of the Gofpel is more Ergo vincimus cum occiditur, plures efficimur, quotics tietimura vobis : Semen eft Sanguis Chriftianorum. Tert. Apol. X Diockfiany Jo-vian, & Maximtnianusy Harculausy Cffargj, ufti. Amplificato per Orintemy tff Occidtntem Impcrio RomanoK ine Cbrijiianor, qui Remp> evertebant exuafto. 456 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes * more admirable in regard it prevailed without the Afiiftance, and againft the Oppofition of all. Nothing could effectually refill the facred Force of naked Truth. The more it was oppreft, the more it pros- pered. It gained Credit and Difciples by Contradic- tion and Perfecution •, it was multiplied by the Deaths of its Followers. The Cloud of JVitnejjes difTolv- ing in a Shower of Bloody made the Church fruitful. For many Spectators that faw the Chriftian Faith fo fiercely perfecuted, from a Defire to know the Cauie that made it fo hateful, by fearching for its fuppo- fed Guilt, found its real Innocence. And thus to difcover the Truth, the Tempefts it fuffered were more ferviceable than the Calm it enjoyed. Altho* fome Perfecutors have boafted of their utter aboliih- ing the Chriftian Name in all Parts of the Empire ; yet thofe Infcriptions are the proud Monuments of their Vanity, not Victory. Tyrants are perifhed, but Truth remains for ever. By which it is evident that as the Gofpel had a higher Principle than what is from below, fo it was arBfted with more than hu- man Power. To fum up in fhort what hath been amplified •, How glorioufly was the Arm of the Lord revealed in railing the World, that for four thoufand Years lay in Wickednefs ? What lefs than a Divine Power could foften fuch an obllinate Hard- nefs, as long Cuftom in Sin brings ? What could pluck up Errors that had taken fuch deep Root in the Spirit of Men, and were naturalized to them, and plant a Difcipline fo auftere and thorny to Senle ? Who but the Almighty could caft out the Devil from his Empire fo univerfally and long u- furpt, and withdraw his Subjects that were captivat- ed by the Terror of Laws, and by the Delights of the Flelh ? What invifible Power made innume- rable of the tender Sex, who were not by Temper cou- In Contriving Mans Redemption. 457 couragious, nor by Obftinacy inflexible, nay, who were fo fearful that they could not fee a drawn Sword without Afrightment, yet fo refolute, as to defpife all the Inftruments of Cruelty ? What is more aftonifhing than to fee a Flock of Sheep en- counter and overcome an Army of Lions ? This was the Lord's doing, and ought to be marvelous in our Eyes. Briefly, the making a Crucified Perfon to reign in the Midft of his Enemies, and to give Laws to the whole Earth, is a Victory worthy the Lord of Hods. The Converfion of the World to Chriftianity was the Effect of infinite Mercy, and equal Power. Laftly, The Divine Power mail be glorioufly manirefted in the complete Salvation of the Church at the End of the World. Jefus Chrift as Mediator is inverted with Sovereign Power in Heaven and in Earth •, and in that quality he lhall exercife it, till our Salvation is finifhed. For he mud reign till he hath put all Enemies under his Feet ; 1 Cor. xv. 25. But we fee not yet all Things put under him ; Heb. ii. 8. Altho* thofe Perfons and Things that never degenerated from their Original, are entirely fubject to him ; the Angels obey his Will, univerfal Nature is go- verned by his Providence -, The Heavens, the Earth, the Waters, and all Things produced from them, never refill the Direction of his Hand •, yet there are others that fell from their Integrity, and fome Things confequent to Man's Rebellion, which either oppofe the Power of Chrift, or are not yet actually fubdued ; and they are the Enemies of our Salvati- on, Satan, Sin, and Death. Now the perfect Free- dom of the Church from all thefe, will be the laft glorious Act of Chrift's Regal Office. And it is ob- fervable, the Day of Judgment is called the Day of Redemption, with refpect to the final Accomplish- ment 458 Ybi Harmony of the Divine Attributes ment of our Felicity, that was purchafed by the in- finite Price of his Sufferings. The Day of Chrift's Death was the Day of Redemption, as to our Right and Title -, for then our Ranfom was fully paid, and it is by the immortal Efficacy of his Blood that we partake of the glorious Liberty of the Sons of God \ but the actual Enjoyment of it fhall be at the laft Day. Therefore the Perfection of all our Spiritual Privileges is referred to that Time, when Death our laft Enemy ihall be overcome. The Apo- ftle faith, Rom. viii. And not only they, but our f elves alfo, which have the fir ft Fruits of the Spirit, even we cur/elves, groan within our [elves, waiting for the A- doption; to wit, the Redemption of our Bodies. During the prefent Life, we are taken into God's Family, in the Quality of his Children ; but the moft folemn Act of our Adoption mail be at the laft Day. In this there is a fimilitude betwixt Chrift and his Mem- bers ; for although he was the Son of God by his marvellous Conception, and owned by him while he performed his Miniftry upon the Earth ; yet all the Teftimonies of God's Favour to him, were not comparable to the Declaration of it in raifing him from the Grave : Then in the Face t)f Heaven and Earth, He faid, Thou art my Son, this Day have I begotten Thee. So in this Life God acknowledges and treats us as his Children, he cloaths us with the Righteoufnefs of his Son, feeds us with his Word, defends us from our Spiritual Enemies ; but the moft publick Declaration of his Favour fhall be in the next Life, when all the Children of the Refurreclion lhall be born in a Day. Add further : Although the Souls of Believers immediately upon their Separati- on are received into Heaven, and during the Sleep of Death enjoy admirable Vifions of Glory ; yet their Bleffednefs is imperfect, in Comparifon of that in Contriving Mans Redemption. 459 that excellent Degree which fhall be enjoyed at the Refurrection. As the Roman Generals, after a com- plete Conqueft, firft entred the City privately, and having obtained Licenfe of the Senate, made their triumphant Entry with all the Magnificence and Splendor becoming the Greatnefs of their Victo- ries : So after a faithful Chriftian hath fought the good Fights and is come off more than a Conquerw^ he enters privately into the Celeftial City ; but when the Body is raifed to Immortality, he fhall then, in the Company and with the Acclamations of the holy Angels, have a glorious Entry into it. I will briefly confider why the Bodies of the Saints fhall be railed, and how the Divine Power will be manifelted in that laft Act. 1 . The general Reafon is from God's Juftice. As the Oeconomy of Divine Providence requires there muft be a future State, when God fhall fit upon a judicial Throne to weigh the Actions of all Men, [ and render to every one according to their Quality ; fo it is as necefTary that the Perfon be judged, and not one Part alone. The- Law commands the en- tire Man, compofed of efTential Parts, the Soul and i Body : And it is obeyed or violated by both of them. Although the Guilt or Moral Goodnefs of Actions is chiefly attributed to the Soul, becaufe it is the Prin- ciple of them, yet the Actions are imputed to the whole Man. The Soul is the Guide, the Body the ,,Inltrument : * It is reafonable therefore that both mould receive their Recompence. We fee the Ex- ample of this in human Juftice, which is a Copy Lof the Divine. The whole Man is punifhed or re- ■warded. The Soul is punifhed with Difgrace and llnfamy, the Body with Pains -, the Soul is rewarded with - * Animi imperio Corporis fervitio magii utimur. Sal* 460 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes *with Efteem and Honour, the Body with external Marks of Dignity. Thus the Divine Juftice will ren- der to every one according to the Things done in the Body, whether good or evil, 2 Cor. v. 10. 2. The fpecial Reafon of the Saints Refurre&ion is their Union with Chrift ; for he is not only our Redeemer and Prince, but our fecond Adam, the fame in Grace as the firft was in Nature. Now as from the firft: the Soul was deftroyed by Sin, and the Body by Death •, fo the fecond reftores them both to their primitive State, the one by Grace, the other by a glorious Refurreclion. Accordingly the Apoftle faith, 1 Cor. xv. 2 1 . That by Man came Death, and by Man came the Refurreclion from the Dead. Chrift removed the moral and natural Impoflibility of our glorious Refurreclion : The Moral by the in- finite Merit of his Death, whereby Divine Juftice is fatisfied, that otherwife would not permit the Guilty to be reftored to eternal Life ; and the Natu- ral, by his rifmg from the Grave to a glorious Im- mortality : For his infinite Power can do the fame in all Believers. 'Tis obfervable, the Apoftle infers the Refurre&ion of Believers from that of Chrift, not only as the Caufe but the Original Example. For the Members muft be conformed to the Head, the Children to their Father, the younger to the elder Brother. Therefore he is called the firft Fruits of them that flept, 1 Cor. xv. and the Firft-begotten of the Dead, Rev. i. In Chrift's Refurreclion ours is fo fully aflured, that the Event is infallible. Now no lefs than infinite Power is requifite to raife the Bodies of the Saints from the Duft, and to trans- form them into the Similitude of Chrift's. 1. To raife them. Nothing is more aftonifhing to Nature, than that the Bodies which after fo ma- ny Ages in the perpetual Circulation of the Elements have in Contriving Mans Redemption. 461 have paft into a thoufand different Forms, one Part of them being refolved into Water, another evapo- rated into Air, another turned into Duft, fhould be reftored to their fir ft Srate. J What Wikiom is requifite to feparate the Parts fo rnixt and con- founded ? What Power to recompofe them ? What Virtue to reinipire them with new Life ? It may feem more difficult than to revive a dead Body whofe Organs and Matter is not changed, of which we have Examples in the Scripture. When the Spirit of the Lord placed Ezekiel in the Midft of a Valley covered with Bones, and caufed him to confider attentively their Number, which was very great, and their ex- treme Drynefs, he afked him, Whether thefe Bones could the ? Ezek. xxxvii. 4, 5, 6. Upon which, as one divided and ballanced between the feeming ImpofTi- bility of the Thing in itfelf, and the Confideration of the Divine Power to which nothing is impofli- ble, he anfwered, Lord, thou knoweft. Upon this God commanded him, to prophe/y upon tho/e Bones9 and [peak to them, as if they had been endued with. Senfe and Underftandiog : 0 ye dry Bones, bear the Word 0} the Lord : Thus faith the Lord God unto tbefe Bones, Behold, I will cau/e Breath to enter into you, and ye /hall live. And I will lay Sinews upon you, and wtiHfa. bring in Flejh upon you, and cover you with Skin, and put Breath in you, and ye Jh all live, and ye /hall know that I am the Lord. And immediately there was a general Commotion among them, they joined together, the Sinews and Flefh came upon them, and the Skin co- vered them. And upon a fecond Prophecy thev were all infpired with the Breath of Life, and ilood" ,y G g up % Imperfecta: in homine naturae, precipua folatia, ne Deum ajridem pofle omnia, nam nee fibi potert mortem conicifcere, nee uorulessterniute donarc,necrcvovaredefun&os. A/*, lib. z. c. 7. 462 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes up an exceeding great Army. Now whether this was really reprefented to his outward Senfes, or on- ly by the Efficacy of the Spirit to his Imagination, no doubt fo ftrange a Spectacle vehemently affected him ; as with Joy in hope of the miraculous Refto- ration of lfrael9 which that Vifion foretold, fo with Admiration of the Divine Power. But when the Trumpet of the Arch-Angel fhall found the univer- fal Jubilee, J and call forth the Dead from all their Receptacles, when the Elements, as faithful Depofitories, fhall effectively reftore what was com- mitted by them, how admirable will the Power of God appear ? 2. No lefs than Infinite Power is able to change the raifed Bodies into the Likenefs of Chrift's. The Apoftle fpeaks with an Exaggeration of it : For our Conversation is in Heaven, from whence alfo we look for the Saviour the Lord J ejus Chrift, who fhall change our vile Body, that it may be fafhioned like unto his Glorious Body, according to the working whereby he is able to fubdue all Things to himfelf. This Refemblance will be only in the Per [on of Believers All Men fhall rife to be Judged, but not all to be transformed. There is aRefurrection to Death as well as to Life. Unhappy Refurrection ! which only ferves to make the Body the Food of eternal Death. But the Saints who endeavour to be like to Chrifl in Purity, fhall then have a perfect Conformity to him in Glory and Immortality. How glorious the Body of Chrift is, we may conjecture in Part by what the Apoltle re- lates to Agrippa, Acts xxvi. 13. At Mid-day, 0 King, I faw X f u perire Deo credis fiquid oculis noflris hebetibus fub- trahitur. Corpus omne five arefcit in pulverem, five in humo- tem folvitur, vel in cinerem comprimitur, vel in nidorem tenu- atur, fubducitur nobis, fed Deo elementorum cuitodia referva- tur. 4rmb, lib. 11. 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 46 J faw in the Way a Light from Heaven above the Bright- fiefs of the Sun, fhinning round about me ; which was no other but the Light of the Face of Chrift that ftruck him with Blindnels. One Ray of this reflecting up- on the firft Martyr St. Stephen, in his Sufferings, gave an angelical Glory to his Countenance. And Saint John tells us, 1 John iii. 2. When he appears, wefhallke like him. He alludes to the rifing of the Sun, buc y with this Difference -, when the Sun appears in the Morning, the Stars are made invifible -, but the Bo- dies of the Saints fhall be clothed with a Sun-like Luftre, and ihine in the Midll of Chrift' s Glory. On> nipotency alone that fubdues all Things, can raife and refine them from their Drofs unto fuch an ad- mirable Brightnefs. The Angels will be furprized with Wonder to fee Millions of Stars fpring out of the Duft. The Lord Jefus Chrift will be admired in all them that believe, 2 ThefT. i. 10. 2. Their Bodies fhall be raifed to a glorious Im- mortality. In this the general Refurre&ion is diffe- rent from that which was particular, as of Laza- rus. By the one Death was overcome and put to Flight, only for fome Time •, for his fecond Life was jio more exempt from Death than his firft : But by the other, Death fhall be fwallowed up in Victory, 1 Cor. xv. 54. and lofe its Force for ever. Then fhall our true Jojhua be magnified in the Sight of the whole "World, and the glorious Number of Sain:"> fhall caft their Crowns at his Feet, and fing the tri- umphant Song, Thou haft redeemed us to God by Blood, and refcued us by thy Power Irom all Enemies, and art worthy of Honour, and Glory, Bleffmgfor ever. G g 2 CHAP 464 ?he Harmony of the Divine Attributes CHAP. XXII. Inference. The extraordinary working of the Divine- Power is a convincing Proof of the Verity of the Chri- fiian Religion. The internal Excellencies of it are clear Marks of its Divinity, to the 'purified Mind. The external Operations of God's Power were requifite to convince Men in their corrupt State, that the Doc- trine of the Gofpcl came from God. The miracu- lous owning of Chrift by the whole Divinity from Hea- ven. The Refurretlion of Chrifl the moft important Article of the Gofpel, and the Demonftration of all the reft. How valuable the Teftimony of the Apo- fbles is concerning it. That it was impoffible they {hould deceive, or be deceived. The Quality of the Witnejjes confidered. There cannot be the leaft reafon- able Sufpicion of them. 'Tis utterly incredible that any human temporal Refpecls moved them to feign the Refurretlion of Chrift. The Nature of the Teftimo- ny confidered. It was of a Matter of Facl, and veri- fied to all their Senfes. The Uniformity of itfecures ms there was no Corruption in the Witnejjes, and that it was no lllufion. They fealed the Truth of it with their Blood. The Miracles the Apoftles did in the Name of Chrift, aftrong Demonftration that he was raifed to a glorious Life. That Power was continued in the Church for a Time. I he Conclufion, howrea- fonable it is to give an entire Affent to the Truth of Chriftianity. 9Tis defperate Infidelity not to believe it ; and the highefl Madnefs to pretend to believe it, and to live in Dif obedience to it. 1. IT* ROM what hath been difcourfed concerning Jj the extraordinary working of the Divine Power, we have a moft convincing Proof of the Ve- rity in Contriving Ma7iys Redemption* 465 rity of the Chriftian Religion. For fince God hath by fo many miraculous Effects, the infallible Indica- tions of his Favour to the Perfon of Jefus Chrift, juftified his Doctrine, no reafonable Doubt can re- main con«rning it. Indeed the internal Excellen- cies of it, which are vifible to the purged Eye of the Soul^arcaear Marks of its Divinity. The Myfte- ry of our Redemption is made up of various Parts, in the Union of which fuch an evident Wifdom ap- pears, that the rational Mind, nnlefs enflaved by Prejudice, mud be ravifhed into a Compliance. * Even that which m oft offends Senfe, the Meannefs of our Saviour's Condition in the World, and the Miferies to which he was expofed, do fo perfectly correfpond with his great Dcfign to make Men holy and heavenly, that it appears to be the Effect of moil wife Counfel. His Death on the Crofs is fo much not unbecoming God, as an infinite Love and unconceivable Companion is becoming him. And fuch a Beauty of Holinefs mines in the moral Part, as clearly proves God to be its Author. ' It denounces "War againft all Vices, and commands every Virtue. All that is excellent in human Inftituti- ons it delivers with infinite more Authority and Ef- ficacy : And what natural Reafon did not reach to, it fully defcribes, in order to the Glory of God, and the Happinefs of Man. Now as God, the Author of Nature, hath by Taftes and Smells, and other •fenfible Qualities, diftinguifhed Things wholefome from noxious, even to the lowed living Creatures -, b he hath much more diftinguifhed Objects that are favingfrom deadly, that is, the true Religion from I the falfe, by undoubted Evidences to any who will G g 3 exer- * Vid. Mr. Baxtir's excellent Account of the RtajcnabUneft if Qbrijiinnity* 466 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes exercife their Spiritual Senfes, and fincerely defire to know and obey it. And that all the Wife and Holy embraced it in the Face of the greateft Difcou- ragements, is an unanfwerable Argument that it is pieanng to God. For how is it poflibkfc that the good God fhould fuffer thofe to fall intoWortal Er- ror, who from an ardent Affection to hirh defpifed whatever is amiable or terrible in the World ? How is it poflible he fhould deny the Knowledge of Himfelf to thofe, to whom he gave fuch a pure Love to Him- felf? But the human Nature in its corrupted State is contrary both to the Doctrine of the Gofpel, that propounds Supernatural Verities hard to believe, and to the Commands of it, that enjoins Things hard ; to do : For this Reafon it was necefTary that God by fome external Operations, the undeniable Effects of his Power, mould difcover to the World his Ap^ probation of it. Now thatChrift is the Son of *God, and Redeem- er of the World, was miraculoudy declared from Heaven by the whole Divinity : There are three that bear Record in Heaven, the Father-, the Word, and the Holy Ghoft, and thefe three are One, 1 John i. 5. The; Father teflified by a Voice as loud as Thunder at his Baptifm and Transfiguration, Matt. iii. 17. Thwart my beloved Son, in whom I a?n well plea fed. The Son by his glorious Apparition to Paul, Atts ix. 4. when he {truck him to the Earth with thefe Words, Why perfecuteft thou me ? The Light was fo radiant, the Voice fo ftrong, the Impreflion it made fo deep and fenfible, that he knew it came from God. And he manifefled himfelf to St. John with that Brightnefs, Rev. i. 17. That he fell at his Feet as dead, till in Companion he revived him, and faid, I am he that liveth and was dead* and behold lam alive for evermore. An* in Contriving Mans Redemption. 467 And the Holy Spirit by his miraculous Defcent in the Shape of a Dove upon him, and in fiery Tongues upon the Apoftles, gave a vifible Teftimony that Je- fus Chrift was fent from God to fave the World. I will particularly confider one Effect of the Divine Power, the Refurrection of Chrift, this being the mod important Article of the Gofpel, and the De- monftration of all the reft. For it is not conceivable that God would by his Almighty Power have raifed him from the Grave to a glorious Life, (and it is impoflible he mould be otherwife) if he had taken the Name of the Son of God in vain, and arrogat- ed to himfelf Divine Honour, and only pretended that he was fent from Him : By the Refurretlion He was declared to be the Son of God with Power, Rom. i. 4. For that being the Proof of his MJfion, ju- ftifies the Truth of his Doctrine, and particularly of the Quality of God's Son which he always attri- buted to himfelf. Now if Infidelity object, that we who live in the prefent Age have no fenfible Tef- timony that Chrift is rifen, and what Affurance is there, that the Apoftles who reported it were not Deceivers or deceived ? In Anfwer to this, I will briefly (hew how valuable the Teftimony of the A- poftles is, and worthy of all Acceptation ; and that it was equally impoflible they mould be deceived, or intend to deceive. His Death is attefted by his Enemies. Tacitus, a Pagan, relates, that he fuffered under Pontius Pilate. And the Jews to this Day are fo unhappy as to boaft of their being the Caufes of his Crucifixion, and call him by a Name that is the Mark, of his Punifhment. But his Refurrection they peremptorily deny. Now the Apoftles being; fent to convert the World, were to lay this down as the Foundation of their Preach- ing, that Jefus Chrift was railed from the Dead, that 468 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes that all might yield Faith and Obedience to Him. This was their fpecial Charge, as St. Peter declares, A£t. i. 20, 21. Wherefore of the fe Men which have companied with us all the Time that the Lord Jefus went in and out among us, beginning from the Baptifm of John, unto thejame Bay that he was taken up from us, r,iuft be one ordained to be a Witnefs of his Refurretlion. They were to teftify concerning his Doctrine and Life, his Miracks and Sufferings, but principally his Refurre&ion. For this reafon St. Paul, who was extraordinarily admitted into their Order, had a miraculous Sight of Chrift from Heaven ( Laft of all he was feen of me, 1 Cor. xv. 8. ) to teftify it to the World. Now for our full Conviction, it is ne- ceflary to confider the Quality of the Witnefles, and the Nature of their Teftimony. 1. The Witnefles were fuch of whom there can- not be the leaft reafonable Sufpicion. * In Civil Caufes of the greateft Moment, the Teflimony of the Honourable and the Rich are accounted valuable, becaufe they are not eafily corrupted : One of a low Degree may, from Bafenefs of Spirit, through Cow- ardice and Fear be tempted to deny the Truth •, one in a poor Condition may befodazled with the Luftre of Gold, when he conflders the Price of Perjury, as to be induced to aflert a Falfhood. But who is more incorruptible, the Noble that from a Senfe of Honour abhor a Lie, or thofe who by their divine Birth and Qualities did fo deteft it, that they would rot tell a Lie for the Glory of God ? Who is more worthy of Credit, the Rich whofe Riches fometimes excites their Defires after more, or thofe who by a generous Difdain defpifed all Things ? Befldes, Per- fons * In tefamoniis dignitas, fides, mores grayitas examinan- da eft, in Contriving Mans Redemption. 469 fons of known Integrity, whom the different Images of Hopes and Fears cannot probably incline to E- vil, are admitted to decide the weightiefl Caufes : Now the Apoflles were fo innocent, fober, honeft and unblameable in the whole Tenour of their Con- verfations, that their mod malignant Adverfaries could never fatten an Accufation upon them. In- deed if their carnal Interefts had been concerned, there might have been fome coloured Objections a- gainfl their Teftimony : But if we duely confider Things, it will appear utterly incredible that any de- ceit could be in it. For as all the Actions of reafon- able Men proceed from Reafon folid or apparent, fo particularly Impofture and Fiction are never without fome Motive and Defign : For being con- trary to Nature, there mult intervene a foreign Confideration for their Contrivance. Now the uni- verfal Motives to invent Fables are Honour, Riches, or Pleafure. Bat none of thefe could poftibly move the Apojlles to feign the Redirection of Chrifl. Not to infill on the Meannefs of their Extraction and E- ducation, who had only feen Boats and Nets, and converfed with Lakes and Fifties, whereas Ambition lifually fprings up in Perfons of high Birth and Breeding-, it is evident that no Refpect to human Praife excited them, fince they attributed the Doc- trine of the Gofpsl, that mould give them Reputa- tion in the World, to the Holy Spirit, and alcrib- ed the Glory of their miraculous Actions entirely to the Divine Power. When the People of Lyjlra would have given Divine Honour to St. Paul, Acts iii. 12, 13. he difclaimed it with Abhorrency : And prefently after, thofe who would have adored him as a God, ftoned him as a Malefactor, Afls'w. 10. He chofe rather to be their Sacrifice than their Idol. JJefides, how could they expect to be great or rich by 47° 7J5f Harmony of the Divine Attributes by declaring, that One who came to fuch a Tragi- cal End in the Face of the World was raifed to Life, when the Hands of the Jews were ftill bloody with the Wounds of their Matter, and their Hearts fo enraged againft all that honoured his Name, as to excommunicate them for execrable Perfons. It had been as extravagant to have defigned the ac- quiring of Reputation or Riches by their preach- ing, as for one to throw himfelf into a flaming Furnace to be cooled and refrefhed. And that Pleafure could not be their Aim is manifeft : For they met with nothing but Poverty and Perfecti- on, with Derifion and Difgrace, with Hardlhips and all the effects of Fury, which they willingly endured rather than ceafe from preaching, or de- ny what they had preached. Their unheard of Re- folution to forfake their native Country, and travel to all the known Parts of the Earth, to convey the Doctrine of J ejus Chrift, is a ftrong De- monftration that they believed it to be true, and of infinite Moment, moft worthy of all the Dangers to which they voluntarily expofed themfelves. Never did Ambition or Avarice, the moft active Paflions, caufe Men to be more diligent, than they were to communicate the Knowledge of our Savi- our to all Nations. Now what greater Aflurance can we pofiibly receive that they were fincere in their Report? Secondly, The Nature of the Teftimony makes it very credible. i. It was of a Matter of Fact. If it had been fome high Speculation of univerfal Things, ab- ftracted from Matter, and above the Cognizance of the Senfes, there might be fome Pretence to object, That the Difciples, unexercifed in Sciences, were de- ceived by the Subtilty of their Matter : But it is a fmgular tn Contriving Man's Redemption. '47! fingular Thing, of which the Senfes are the moft faithful Informers, and competent Judges, It was an ocular Teftimony, which as it makes the ftrongeft Impreflion upon the Spectator, fo upon the Belief of others. Thus St John, (1 Joh. i. 1.) That which we have feen with our Eyes^ which we have looked on, declare we unto you. And that they were not deceived, we have great Certainty -9 for Jefus had converfed a long Time with them be- fore his Death, and their Refpect and Love to Him, and after their Companion had deeply en- graved the Lineaments of his Vifage in their Me- mories ; and He prefented himfelf not many Years, but three Days after his Abfence, fo that it was impoftible they mould have forgot his Coun- tenance. He appeared to them not once or twice, but many Times, and not fuddenly as a flafh of Lightning, that prefently vanifheth, but converfed with them familiarly for forty Days. And it is ob- fervable, the Apojlles themfelves were not eafily wrought on to believe this Truth : When the Tef- timony of the Angels allured them that He was rifen, they received it with Doubting, Wonder, and troubled Joy, and were fufpended between Hopes and Fears ; and at his firft Appearance they were vehemently furprized. They law Him die on the Crofs threeDzys before, (Luke xxiv. 37, 39, 43. ) and their Memories were (till filled with the frightful Images of his Sufferings, fo that they were bal- lanced between the prefent Teftimony of Senfe, and the frefh Remembrance of what they had feen. Therefore He juftified the Truth of his Refurrec- tion to all their Senfes. He difcourfed with them, made them feel his Wounds, (1 John i. 1.) eat and drank with them, fo that it was impoflible they fiiould be deceived unlefs willingly. Thus by the wife %j2 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes wife Difpenfation of God, their doubting hath confirmed our Faith. Thirdly, The Uniformity of the Teftimony makes it valuable upon a double Account. Firft, as it fecures us, there was no Corruption in the WitnefTes, Secondly, That it was no Illufion. i. That there was no Corruption in the Wit- nefTes. The mod: prudent way to difcover the Falfity of a Teftimony, is to interrogate the Wit- nefTes feverally, to fee if there be any Contradiction between them. But if they concur not only as to the Subftance but Circumftances, their Depofition is very credible. Now the Apoftles exactly agreed in their Teftimony, as appears by the feverai Gofpels, in which, altho' wrote in divers Times and Places, yet there is an admirable Harmony not only as to the Fact itfelf, but the leaft Par- ticularities. 2. The Agreement of fo many, proves it was no Illufion that depended on Fancy for its Existence •, for Deceptions of the Brain are not common to many at once as vifible Bodies are, but fingular, becaufe cf the Variety of Fancies. If He had on- ly appeared to fome Perfons feparately, carnal Rea- fon, which is ingenious to deceive itfelf, might ob- ject that it was only the Effect of a diftempered Fancy, and no real Object of Senfe. But after He had fhewn Himfelf to fome of the Difciples apart, and that holy Company was met together, uniting the feverai Sparks, to encourage their Hopes of his Refurrection, He came to them all together, and for many Days converfed with them. Now who can believe that fo many mould be obftructed with Melancholy for fo long Time, fo.as conftantly to remain under the Power of a Delufion ? Befides, He afterwards appeared to Five Hundred at once : And In Contriving Mans Redemption 473 And how could fuch a Number of different Ages, Sexes, Temperaments be at the fame time ftruck with the fame Imagination ? Add further, If a ftrong Imagination had de- ceived them by Melancholy, there would have been fome Difcoveries of that Humour in their Actions. For it is impoffible that the Mind fo indifpofed, ihould for a long Time act regularly. But in the -whole Courfe of their Lives not the lead Extrava- gancy appears. Their Zeal was tempered with Prudence, their Innocence was without Folly, their Converfation was becoming their great Office. And of this we have unqueftionable Evidence : For otherwife fo many Perfons of excellent Wifdom had never been perfwaded by them to embrace Chriftianity ; neither had their Enemies fo furioufly perfecuted them : For it is beyond Belief that they had fo far extinguifhed the Sentiments of Humani- ty, as to treat the Apoftles as the moft guilty Cri- minals, whom they knew to be diffracted, and therefore worthy of Compafiion rather than Ha- tred. But if it be objected, that it might be a Than- tafm^ or folid Body formed according to the Like- nefs of Cbrift, that abufed the Apoitles, and after fome Time withdrew itfelf; The Vanity of the Objection is very apparent : For fuch an Effect could not be without the Operation of a Spiritual Caufe. Now the good Angels cannot be guilty of Falfhood, of which they had been in that Reprefentation ; for He that appeared declared himfelf to be Jejus that fuffered •, neither would the Evil ufe fuch an Artifice. The old Serpent was too wife to pro- mote the Belief of (Thrift's Refurrection, which is the Foundation of Chriftianity : An Inftitution mod holy, that would deftroy his Altars, difcredit his 474 fhe Harmony of the Divine Attributes his Oracles, bring Glory to God, and Happinefs to Man, to both which he is eternally oppofite. By all which it appears there was no Deceit in the Sub- ject nor Object. 4. They fealed it with their Blood. This laft Proof confirms all the other. If a Perfon of clear Fame afTert a Thing, which he is ready to maintain with the Lofs of his Life, there is no Reafon to doubt of the Truth of his Depofition. 'Tis no Wonder that Philoftratus^ a bold Grecian^ to fhew his Art, painted Apollonius Tyan^us as a Demi-God, exempted from Death, and cloathed with Immor- tality. But if he had been drawn from his Study, where he dreft that Idol of Iniquity, to appear before the Magiftrates to give an Account of the Truth of his Relation, he certainly would have re- nounced his pretended Hero rather than have given his Life for a Lie. Now the Apoftles endured the moft cruel Death, to confirm the Truth of their Tes- timony. And what could poflibly induce them to it, if they had not been certain of his ReSurrecn- cn ? Could Love to their clead Mafter animate them to Suffer for the Honour of his Name ? This is inconceivable : For He promifed that He would rife the Third Day, and afcend to Heaven, and make them partakers of his Glory: So that if He had lain in the Rotten nefs of the Grave, What Charm, what Stupidity was able to make them preferve fo high a Veneration for a Deceiver ? No- thing could remain in them but the Memory and In- dignation of his Impofture. Now if it be the Deflate of natural Reafon, that the concurrent Tes- timony of izvo or three credible Perfons, not wea- kened by any Exception, is Sufficient to decide any Caufe of the greater! Moment, that reSpects Life, Honour and Eftate, how much more ihould the Attefta- in Contriving Mans Redemption. '475 Atteftation of the Apofties put this great Truth be" yond all Doubt, fmce they parted with their Lives, the moft precious PofTeflion in this World, for it ? and which is infinitely more, if Deceivers, they would certainly be deprived of eternal Life in the next ? In fhort, Since the Creation, never was a Teftimony fo clear and authenticity the Divine Pro- vidence io ordering the Circumftances, that the Evidence mould be above all Sufpicion. Neither did it ever happen, that any Thing affirmed by fo ma- ny, and fuch worthy Perfons, was ever fufpected, much lefs found to be falfe. 'Tis the moft unrea- fonable StifTnefs not to yield an intire AfTent to it. For there would be no fecure Foundation of determining innumerable weighty Cafes, if we mould doubt of Things reported by the moft cre- dible circumfpecl Perfons, fince we can be certified by our own Senfes but of a few Objects. I mall only add, That the Apofties did many and great Miracles in the Name of Chrift, which was the ftrongeft Demonftration that He was raifed to a glorious Life. They were invefted by the Spirit with the Habits of various Tongues. This Kind of Miracle was necefiary for the univerfal preaching of the Gofpel : For how difficult and obftructive had it been to their Work, if they muft have returned to their Infant-ftate, to learn the Signification of foreign Languages, to pronounce the Words in their original Sound, and the Accents proper to their Country ? Therefore the Holy Spirit, ac- cording to the Promife of Chrift, defcended upon them, and became their Mafter, and in a Moment impreft on their Memories the Forms of difcourfing, and on their Tongues the Manner of exprefiing them. Wherever the Doctrine of Jefus was preached, Cod bare thtm Witness both with Signs and Won- ders, 476 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ders, and with divers Miracles and Gifts of the Holy Ghoft, according to his own Will. When St. Peter parted through the Streets, filled with Perfons dif- eafed and half dead, he caufed an univerfal Re- furrection, by touching them with his reviving Shadow. They tamed Serpents, and quenched the Malignity of their Poiion 5 they commanded Death to leave its Prey, and Life to return to its Manfion that was not habitable for it. And that miraculous Power continued in their Succeflbrs fo long as was requifite for the Conviction of the World. Juftin Martyr ', Ireneen no other Defign but the relieving their Necefll- ty, that might have been fupplied by Rain from Heaven \ or if only to give a vifible Effect of the Divine 49° 5T2tf Harmony of the Divine Attributes Divine Power, that had been difcovered in caufing new Springs to rife from the Earth, or the Com- mand of God had been fufficient to ftrike the Rock : But he went to it, to fignify the Refpect it had to himfelf. He was the Son of God that fpake to Mofes, and conducted the People : For this Reafon He is (tiled the Angel of God's Prefence, not with refpect to his Nature, but Offices. I will briefly obferve the Parallel between the Rock and Chrift. i. A Rock is the ordinary Title of God in Scripture, to reprefent his unchangeable Nature and infinite Power, whereby He upholds the World : And in a fpecial Manner it refembles the Meffiah. He is called The Stone which the Builders refufed, that was made the Head of the Comer -9 i Pet. ii. 7, 8. He is the Rock upon which the Church is built, andfecured againft the Violence of Hell. Now J/rael was not fupplied from the Clouds or the Vallies, but the Rock -, to fhew that the myfiical Rock, the Son of God, can only refrefh the Spiritual IJrael with living Water. 2. The Quality of the Rock hath a proper Sig- nification : For altho' it had in its Veins a rich A- bundance of Waters, yet to Appearance nothing was more dry and hard. In this it was a Figure of the Spiritual Rock : The Effects have difcovered in him unfathomable Depths of Righteoufhefs, Grace and Salvation •, yet at the firft View we had no Hopes. For if we confider him as God, He is in- finitely Holy and Juft, encompatfed with everlafting Flames againft Sin, and how can we expect any cooling Streams from him ? If we confider him as Man, he is refembled to a Root out of a dry Ground ; If a. liii. The Juftice of the Divine and the Infirmi- ty of the human Nature did not promife any Comfort in Contriving Mans Redemption. 491 Comfort to us. But what cannot infinite Love, unit- ed to infinite Power, perform ? Divine Good- nefs hath changed the Laws of Nature in our Fa- vour, and by an admirable Act opened the Rock to refrelh us. 3. The Rock was (truck with the Rod of Mofes, a Type of the Law, before it fent forth its Streams : Thus our Spiritual Rock was wounded for our Tranfgreffions, Ifa. liii. bruifed for our Iniquities, and then opened all his Treafures to us. Being confe- crated by Sufferings he is the Author of Eternal Salva- tion. In this Refpect the Gofpel propounds him for the Objecl of laving Faith. I determined to know nothing among you but Jefus Chrift, and him crucified. The Sacraments, the Seals of the New Covenant, have a fpecial Reference to his Death, the Founda- tion of it. 4. The Miraculous Waters followed the Ifrae- lites in their Journey, without which they had pe- rifhed in the Wildernefs. This reprefents the In- deficiency of the Grace of Chrift. A Sovereign Stream flows from him tofatisfy all Believers. He tells us, {Job. vii, 37.) Whofoever drinketh of the Water that I jh all give him, jhall never thirft ; but the Water that 1 jhall give him, jhall be in him a Well of Water fpringing up unto Everlafting Life ; Joh. iv. 14. 3. The Brazen Serpent fenfibly exprefl the Man- ner of his Death, and Benefits derived from it. Therefore Jefus, being the Minifter of the Circum- cifion, chofe this Figure for the InltrucYion of the Jews. As Mofes lifted up the Serpent in the Wil- itrnefs, even fo muft the Son of Man be lifted up ; 'bat whofoever believes in him fhould not peri/h, but \bave Eternal Life •, Joh. iii. The facred Story re- lates, that the Ijraelites by their rebellious Mur- muring 492 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes muring provoked God to fend Serpents among them, whofe Poifon was fo fiery and mortal, that it brought the molt Painful Death. In this Af- fliction they addreffed them lei ves to the Father of Mercies, who, moved by their Repentance, com- manded Mofes to make a Serpent of Brafs, and erect it on a Pole in the View of the whole Camp, that whofoever looked on it, mould be healed. By this Account from Scripture we may clearly under- ftand fomething of the greateft Confequence was re- prefented by it : For the only wife God ordains nothing without juft Reafon. Why mull a Ser- pent of Brafs be elevated on a Pole ? Could not the Divine Power recover them without it ? Why muft they look towards it ? Could not a healing Virtue be conveyed to their Wounds but through their Eyes ? All this had a direct Reference to the Myitery of Chriit. For the Bitting of the Israelites by the fiery Serpents, doth naturally reprefent the Effects of Sin, that torments the Confcience, and inflames the Soul with the Apprehenfions of Future Judgment. And the Erecting a Brazen Serpent upon a Pole, that had the Figure, not the Poifon of thofe Serpents, doth in a lively Manner fet forth the lifting up of Jefus Chrift on the Crofs, who only had the Similitude of linful Fle/h. The look- ing towards the Brazen Serpent, is a fit Refem- blance of believing in Chrift crucified for Salva- tion. The Sight of the Eye was the only Means to derive Virtue from it, and the Faith of the Heart is the Means by which the Sovereign Efficacy of our Redeemer is conveyed. This is the Will of him that fent me, faith our Saviour, that every one which feeth the Son, and believeth on him, may have Eternal Life. As in the Camp of lfrael, whoever looked towards the Brazen Serpent, whatever his Woundsl in Contriving Mans Redemption. 493 Wounds were, or the Weaknefs of his Sight, had a prefect Remedy : So how numerous and grievous foever our Sins be, how infirm our Faith, yet if we fincerely regard the Son of God fufTering, he will preferve us from Death. For this End he is pre- fented in the Gofpel as crucified before the Eyes of all Perfons. 2. Things endued with Life and Senfe prefigur- ed the Mefliah. I (hall particularly confider the Pafchal Lamb, an illuftrious Type of him. Chrifi cur Paffover was facrificed for us. The whole Scene, as it is laid down in the 12th of Exodus, fnews an admirable A- greement between them. 1. A Lamb in refpect of its natural Innocency and Meeknefs, that fuffers without Refiftance, was a fit Emblem of our Saviour ; JVhofe Voice was not heard in the Street, who did not break the brut fed Reedy nor quench the fmoaking Flax . He was epprejfed, and he was affiicled, yet he opened not his Mouth, He was brought as a Lamb to the Slaughter, and as a Sheep be- fore the Shearers is dumb, fo he opened not his Mouth. Ifa. liii. 7. 2. The Lamb was to be without Spot, to fignify his abfolute Perfection. We are redeemed with the precious Blood of Chrifi, as a Lamb without BlemifJj end without Spot, 1 Pet. i. 17. 18. 3. The Lamb was to be feparated from the Flock four Days : The Lord Jefus was feparated from Men, and confecrated to be the Sacrifice for the World, after three or four Years fpent in his Minifterial Office, preparing himlelf for that great Work. 4. The Pafchal Lamb was facrificed and fubfti- tuted in the Place of the Firlt-born. The LeviticaL Priefthood not being inflituted at their going I i from 494 *£he Harmony of the Divine Attributes from Egypt, every Mafter of a Family had a Right to exercifc it in his own Houfe. Our Redeemer fuffered in our Stead, to propitiate God's Juftice to- wards us. 5. The Blood was to be fprinkled upon the Pofts of the Door, that Death might not enter into their Houles. That facred Ceremony was typical ♦, for the Sign itfelf had no Refemblance of fparing, and certainly the Angel could diftinguifh between the If- raelites and the Egyptians without the bloody Mark of God's Favour-, but it had a final Refpect to Chrift. We are fecured from Deftruction by the Blood of Sprinkling. They were to eat the whole Flefh of the Lamb, to fingnify our entire taking of Chrift upon the Terms of the Goipel to be our Prince and Sa- viour. 6. The Effects attributed to the Pafchal Lamb, . Redemption from Death and Bondage, clearly reprefent the glorious Benefits we enjoy by Jefus Chrift. The deftroying Angel parted over their Houfes, ahdcatiied the Egyptians toreftore them tofull Liberty. That which all the dreadful Signs wrought by Mofes could not do, was effected by the PafT- ovcr; that overcame the Stubbornnefs of Pharaoh, and infpired the Ifraeliies with Courage to under- take their Journey to the promifed Land. Thus we pafs from Death to -Life, and from Bondage to the glorious Liberty of the Sons of God, by Virtue of Ch riil's Biood. 3. Realbnable Perfons reprefented our Saviour ei- ther in their Offices, Actions, or the memorable Ac- cidents that berel them. Jofeph, the beloved of his Father, knt by him to vifit his Brethren, by them unworthily fold to Strangers, and thereby raifed to be their Lord and Saviour, was a lively Type of him. Jonahs three Days and Nights in the Whale's BeJly, in Contriving Mans Redemption. 495 Belly, and miraculoufly reftored, was a Type of his. lying in the Grave, and Refurrection. Mofes in his Prophetical, David in his Kingly Office, prefigur- ed him. The Prieftly Office being the Foundation of the other two, and that upon which our Salva- tion principally depends, was illuftrated by two glorious Types, Melcbifedec and Aaron. The one the High-prieft in ordinary, the other the Prieft of God by extraordinary Defignation. I will briefly touch upon the Refemblance between him and (Thrift. Altho* Sacrifices were offered from the Beginning-, yet he is the firft to whom that Title is given, as called to that Office in a fpecial Manner. The Divinity of (Thrift's Perfon, the Eternity of his Office, and the infinite Value of his Oblation, were (hadowed forth by him. Melcbifedec is introduced into the facred Story, as one defcending from Heaven, and amend- ing thither, without any Account of his Birth or Death. The Silence of the Scripture is mysterious : For the Spirit conducted holy Men in their Writ- ings. The Levitical Priefts defcended by natural Ge- neration from their Predecefibrs, and had SuccefTors in their Office, which were annexed to the Race of Levi: But Melcbifedec is reprefented w& Father and Mother, without Beginning and End cf Days9 whofe Priefthood was permanent in himfelf. For Things and Pcrfons have a double Being, real in themlelves, and notional as they exift in the Mind ; fo that no Mention being made of his coming into the World, or leaving it, the Silence of the Scripture is, equivalent to his continual Duration. Now in this was an Adumbration of Chrift, who was the eternal Son of God, and really came from Heaven to execute his Office, and afcended thither. And altho' his Oblation was finiflied on the Earth, and his Inter- ceftion fhall ceaic in Heaven j yec the Effects of ic I i 2 fhall 49 6 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes ihall be eternal in his People, and the Glory of it in himfelf. The Apoftle obferves another Refemblance between the fupreme Quality of Melchifedec, King of Salem, and Jefus (Thrift : He was King of Righteouf- nefs and Peace ; He governed his Subjects in Righte- oufnefs, and never ftained thofe Hands with human Bleed that were employed in the facred Office of the Prieiihood. And by thofe glorious Titles are fignified the Benefits our Saviour conveys to his Peo- ple- He is the true King of Righteoufnefs : By which is not intended the Righteoufnefs that Juftifies before God, in which refpecthe is called the Lord our Right ecufnejs, and is faid to have brought in eternal Righ- teoufnefs, for that refpects his Prieftly Office -, in that Quality he acquired it. But that Title fignifies his giv- ing mod righteous Laws for the Government of the Church, and his difpenfing righteous Rewards and Punifhments, eternal Life and Death, by which he preferves the Majefty of his Laws, and fecures the Obedience of his Subjects. And he is King of Peace, by which we are not to underftand his Temper and Difpofition, nor our Peace with God, for Reconcili- ation is grounded on his Sacrifice, nor Peace with Conference the Effect of the other ; but that which depends on his Royalty. As the King of Peace, he keeps his Subjects in a calm and quiet Obedience ; all their Thoughts and Paflions are regulated by his Will. The Laws of fecular Kings are only expof- ed to the Eyes, or proclaimed to the Ears of their Subjects ; but His are engraven in their Hearts. By the inward and almighty Efficacy of his Spirit he enclines them to their univerfal Duty ; and will bring them to Eternal Peace in his Glorious King- dom. Firfi, From hence we have an irrefragable Argu- ment of the Truth and Divinity of theGofpel: For it 'in Contriving Mans Redemption. 497 it is evident by comparing the ancient Figures with the prefent Truth, the Copies with the Original, the Pictures with the Life, that Eternal Wifdom contrived them. For no created Underftanding could frame fo various Reprefentations of Chrift, and all exactly agreeing with him at fuch a Diftance before his Appearance. And if we compare the Predictions with the Events, it is moll clear that on- ly the- divine Knowledge could reveal them. For o- therwife how was it poflible, that the Prophets fo many Ages before the Coming of Chrift fhould pre- dict thofe Things concerning Him, that exceeded the Forefight of all the Angeis of Light ? What In- telligence could there be between Mofes and David, and IJaiah, that lived fuch a Diftance of Time from one another, to deliver fuch Things as meet in him as their Center ? And thefe Prophecies are convey- ed to us by the Jews, the moft obftinate Enemies of Chriftianity, who although they reverence the Let- ter, yet abhor the Accomplilhment of them •, fo that there can be no pofnble Sufpicion that they are feigned, and of a later Date than their Titles de- clare. Their fucceflive Fulfilling is a perpetual Mi- racle to juftify the Truth of our Religion. Our Saviour ufed this Method for the Inttruction of his Difciples. Thefe are the Words which I you, that all Things muft be fulfilled which -i: . :ten in the Law of Mofes, and in the Prophets, Pfalms concerning me, Luk. xxiv. 44. As by difiecYing a dead Body we fee the Order and P ~:tion of Part; in the living; fo by iearching into the legal Types we may difcover the Truth of Evangelical Myftc- ries. Accordingly St. Paid framed a powerful De- monftration from the Scriptures, to prove that ', Jus was the Chrift. In his Writings hre deciphers the Riddles of the Law, and removcj the Veil to dif I i 3 ver 498 The Harmony of the Divine Attributes verthe Face of Chrift engraven by the Divine Arti- ficer. Briefly, by (hewing the Confent between the two Teftaments, he illuftrates the Old by the New, and confirms the New by the Old. Now what Re- ligion is there in the World, whofe Myfteries were foretold by the Oracles of God, and figured by his Inilitutions above two 'Thcufand Years before it was exhibited ? Whofe Doctrine perfectly accords with the mod ancient, venerable and divine Writings? Can that Religion be any other than Divine, which God did fo exprefly predicl \ and pour tray in fuch va- rious Manner, for the receiving whereof He made fuch early Preparations in the World ? Certainly without offering the greateft Violence to our ration- al Faculties, none can difbelieve it. He degrades himfelf from the Dignity of being a Man, that re- fufes to be a Chriftian. 2. From hence we may underftand the excellent Privileges of Cbrzftians, not only above the Hea- thens, who by Divine Defertion were wholly Stran- gers to the Covenant of Mercy , but above God's pecu- liar People. The Meffiah was the Expectation andDe- fire of Heaven and Earth. Before his Coming the Saints had fome Glimmerings of Light, which made them inwardly languifh after the blefTed Manifefta- tion of it : But that was referved for Believers in the ]aft Ages of the World. That ancient Promife (the Morning- blufh of the Gofpel-day) That the Seed cf the Woman fhould break the Head of the Serpent :, and the Serpent bruifebis Heel, fignified the bloody Victory the Meffiah mould obtain over Satan ; but how little of it was underftood ? One may as well from the Sight of the Root foretel the Dimenuons of a Tree, the Colour, Figure, and Tafte of its Fruit, as from that Prediction have difcovered all the Parts of our Medi- ator's Office, and the excellent Benefits refulting frorrj in Contriving Mans Redemption 499 from it. The Incarnation, Crucifixion, Refurrec- tion and Afccnfion of Chrift, are in the Types and Prophecies of the O/^Teftament, as Corporeal Being* are in the Darknefs of the Night •, they have a real Exiftence, but no Eye is fo clear as to enlighten the Obfcurity. The molt marp-fighted Seer might fay, I {hall {ee him, but not now. The Mini (try of the Law is compared / 239> 24° -*-'Twas a Punifliment inflicted on him for Sin. 238 — Its Value is from his Divine Nature. 264, &c. — 'Tis effectual for the Pardon of Sins before his coming. 275, 276 — And to the end of the World. 276 —It procured Holinefs for us. 27* — 'Twas the Price to ranfom us from Hell. 244 CONTENTS. Page Death, 'Tis no Caufe of Scandal, but Admiration to Believ- ers. 293, 294 •'Twas victorious over our Spiritual Enemies. 422, 423 Debts, why Sin reprefented by them. 237 Delight, the bell arifes from the Knowledge of the Gofpel. 115, 116 Defpair flops all Endeavours. 63, 67 Devil, the Motives of his tempting Adam. 22 His Tyranny over Man fince the Fall. 159 He is overcome by the Death of Chrift. 422 His Rage in poiTeft Perfons. 420 His calling out, the Effect of Divine Power. 421 End of God in our Redemption. 75, 76 ——Of Chrift in his Suffering. 145 Evil of Sin clearly difcovered. 289, 290, 291 Examples, their Efficacy. 360 • That of Chrift is perfect and accommodate to our State. • 362 It difcovers our Duty, and excites to perform it. 367 Exaltation of Chriil the Reward of his Sufferings. 272, 273 Faith is above Senfe and Reafon. ——'Tis built on Divine Revelation. — — 'Tis not repugnant to right Reafon. ——It improves Reafon. It makes ufe of it. , 'Tis faving, when it draws the Will, and Perfon obedient to the Gofpel. 139, — 'Tis required as the Condition of our Juftification. 279, 2S0, 308, 309, 320, 327 Fall of Man, an Occafion of greater Glory to God, and of a more excellent Happinefs to Man. 82, 8^ Father, Why God the Father was not incarnate. 91 Fear, a powerful Affection. 381 ■Fear of Hell alone cannot make Men truly Koly. i3*> 132 132, *33 "3* 136 Z38 renders 3 140, 141 -It firft awakens Men to feek for Heaven. 381 •'Tis a proper Motive to the Saints, 382 CONTENTS. G Page Glory of God muft be the End of all our Actions. 316 The Glory of Chrifr. and of the Saints in Heaven. 346 God's Goodneis mined in the Creation. 6 J Is efientially and infinitely happy. 6, 143, 144 His Goodnefs not difparaged by permitting the Fall. 46 Godlinefs, what it comprehends. 316, 317 Gofpel, the Ignorance of it leaves Men in a wretched State. 108, 109 The Service of it is pure and fpiritual. 330, 331 •> It enjoins a Separation from all Evil, and the Performance of all that is truly good. 31 1, 312 'Tis more efficacious to make Men better, than Philofophv. 373 It reveals and allures the future State of BleiTednefs and Mifery. 389, 390 It lays the ftricteft Obligations upon Chriftians to be emi- nent in Holinefs. 4°5> 4°6 An empty Profeflionof it is without Benefit. 409 The Abufe of it is difhonourable to God, and pernicious to Men. 398, 399 1 — The firfl preaching of it made a great Change in the World. 446, 447 Grace of God is no Encouragement to Sin. 398, 399 Guilt makes us fearful of God's Prefence. 88 «■ Typical was removed by Ceremonial Offerings. 250 * Real only by the Sacrifice of Chrifl. 251 H Happinefs the univerfal Defire of Men. 54 — — — 'Tis placed in Objects fuitable to their Temper. 54 Happinefs of the Saints in Heaven is eternal. 387 Heathens did not find and own God in the Way of Nature. $6, 97 Had lome lower Operations of the Spirit. 390 — — They had uncertain vain Conceits of the future State of Mifery and Happinefs. 389, 390 Their Corruption in Manners defcribed. 432 They were vicious by the Imitation of their Gods. 407, 433» 434 Heaven is fecured to Believers by the Gift of Chrifl. 101 Excels Paradife. 199 'Tis the Purchafe of Chrift's Blood. 278 Defcribed. 385—588 Hell defcribed. 379, 38° 3} Dermi '.32 ttinjr 45 102 230 3o6> 307 307» 30S 309 310 396> .397 C O N T E NTS; Page Hell, A proper and powerful Motive to reftrain from pleafant Sins. 380, 410 And to overcome carnal Fears. 380 Holinefs is more excellent than the Reward that attends it. i& Was loft by Man's Fall. The Holinefs of God not blemifhed by his Man's Fall. Is advanced by the Way of our Redemption. ■Perfect Holinefs was requisite in our Saviour. . 'Tis the peculiar Glory of the Deity. — . 'Tis glorified in the Death of Chrift. — — 'Tis abfolutely necelTary in order to Salvation, ——'Tis reltored to us by our Redeemer. 'Tis the moft excellent Benefit. Hope of carnal Felicity draws Men to purfue earthly Things. 60 —Of Heaven a powerful Perfwafive to Holinefs. 38S Humility prepares for the Belief of fupernatural Myfteries. 138 'Tis ftiictly enjoined in the Gofpel, and the Reafons of it. 318, 320 Humility of Chrift our Pattern. 363, 364 Humiliation of Chrift requifite to deftroy the Pride of Man. 95 Jefus Chrift a fit Perfon to reconcile God and Man. 83 •Vanquifhed Satan by Sufferings. 98, 99 .Willingly became our Surety. 228, 229 •Was perfectly Holy. 230 ■And beyond Poffibility of finning. 231 In the Quality ©f Mediator is diftinguifhed from God. 247, 248 Was God and Man, and the Reafons of it. 232, 233, 234» 235 Jews, their rejecting Chrift foretold. 285 Idolatry of the Heathens. 430 Allowed by Philofophers. 341, 342 [mage of God in Man. 3, 4, 5 impotence natural fecures from the Law. 62 Moral expofes to juft Punifhment. 6iy 6$ mitation of Chrift the belt Way to Perfection. 367 ncarnate ; the Father was not incarnate. 0f Nor the Holy Spirit. 91, 92 But the Son was. oi ucarnation of the Son of God, a deaf Mflfti fixation of his Love. 163 — 169 CONTENTS. Page Interceffion of Chrift performed with a tender Senfeof our Infir- mities. 86 It proves the All-fufficiency of his Sacrifice. 266, 267 . The Manner and Efficacy of it. 269 No meritorious Interceffion by any mere Creature. 270 Infidelity brings certain and deeper Damnation. • 217 — 220 Joy of the Saints in Heaven complete. 384 JulHce, Divine not blemifhed in charging Adamh Sin on his Pof- terity. _ i 48, 49 "Man incapable of fatisfying it. 69 Why it requires Satisfaction for Sin. 221, 222 'Tis not violated in transferring the Punifhment of the Guilty on Jefus Chrift. 24.2, 24.3 ——The Strictnefs of it in exacting Satisfaction for Sin. 291 Justification from the Guilt of Sin, impoffible by the Law of Works. 300, 301 ■ ■ Only obtained by the Righteoufnefs of Chrift. 298 K Kingly Office of Chrift requires the Union of both his Natures. 89, 90 Knowledge of Adam in Innocency. 4» 5» 6 That of the Gofpel excels all other Sciences. 1 1 2 — 1 1 7 Commended to our Study. 120, 121 Law, Ceremonial was abolifhed by Chrift. 331, 332 Law, Moral contains the Principles of eflential Equity. 16 Its Curfe and Terror upon the Guilty. 160 ■ God only can difpenfe with the Penalty. 225 p Some Laws not capable of Relaxation. 220 The Law did not exclude Satisfaction by another. 226 The Moral Law more clearly explained and powerfully enforced by Chrift. 333, 334 ■ The Law of Chrift exceeds that of Mofiu. 329 Exceeds the Morals of the Philofophers. 335 Life of Chrift contains all our Duties or Motives to perform them. 367 Love of God in Redemption of Man moil free, 157 The Greatnefsof it confidered. 157, &c. . 'Tis the raoft efFe&ual Caufe. of Man's Love to God. 209, 210, 211 Love of Chrift dying for us, 179; 18a CONTENTS. Page 'Tis the mod powerful Caufe of our Love to him. 2 is, 213, 214 Our Love to Chrift muft be fincere and fuperlative, 214, 215 Love to all Men enjoined by the Gofpel. 322 Love to God is the Principle of true Obedience. 316, 317 Loving our Enemies, the peculiar Law of Chrift, and indifpenfa* bly neceflary. 324. Love is perfedl in Heaven. 383 Luft : The beloved Lull hinders Men's complying with the Terms of the Gofpel. 303 M Man the Abridgment of the Univerfe. 2 -—Made in God's Image. 2, 3 He was created to ferve God in a rational Way. 11, 12 He of all vifible Beings is only capable of a Law. 33 —He is under an eternal Obligation to ferve God. 14 — He loll his Holinefs and Felicity by his Difobedience. 31, 32, 33> 34- — He cannot recover his loft Holinefs. 50 ■ He is ftrongly enclined to fenfual Pleafures. 55, 56 •——He is not afFc<£ted with the Beauty of Holinefs, nor the Re- wards of it. 65, 66, 6j Man in his prefent State cannot fuftain the Glory of God's Pre- fence. , 88 — TheMifery of his fallen State defcribed. 158, 159, 160, 161 Is reftored to a more excellent State than his firit. 183 ■ In his corrupt State is without any Motives to excite God's Love. 148 Mannah; a Type of Chrift. 487 Martyrs ; Their Courage and Chearfulnefs in fuffering for the Gofpel. 459, &c. ■ The Difference between their Sufferings for the Gofpel, and of others for a falfe Religion. Mtlchifedec a Type of Chrilt. 496 Meffiah : Jefus was foretold under that Title. 482 Mercy its peculiar Glory. ia ; — It excels the Goodnefs of God in our Creation. —It alone puts a Difference between fallen Man and the An- gels of Darknefs. IC5 — 'Tis molt pleafiog to God, and effectual to caufe Repentance in Man. 207 —The Mercy of God in giving Chrift not inconfiftent with examine Satisfaction for Sin. 258, 25a K k contents: Page Miracles the Proof of Chrift's Divine Million. 416 Neceflary to convince the Jews and Gentiles. 417, 418 Thofe that Chrift wrought, were beneficial to Men, and were numerous. 418, 419, 420 — — Performed by the Apoftles, a clear Proof of the Truth of the Gofpel. 475, &c. Mofaical Service was carnal. 329 Myfteries of Religion exceed our Comprehenfion. 132, 133 N Nature : The human Nature of Chrift renders his Government amiable to Men. 90 The human is raifed to the highefl Honour by Union with the Spn of God. 182 The Light of it is imperfect to difcover all our Duties, and all our Sins. 347 — — Neceffity not a fufHcient Argument to make us contented under Troubles. 350, 351 Obedience of Chrift was complete and of infinite Value. 364, 365 Offices of Chrift are fuitable to the Neceffities of fallen Man. 84 Original Sin derived from Adam the natural and moral Principle of Mankind. 36, 37 Its Pollution and Guilt. 37, 38, 39 Pagan Religion why fo obftinately retained. 430, 431 Pafchal Lamb a Type of Chrift. 493 Patience encouraged by Arguments from the Gofpel. 356 Perfe vera nee of the Saints fecured by the unchangeable Love of God, and the Efficacy of the Spirit. 190, 191, 19? Perfecution againft Chriftianity. 449; Philofophers moft oppofite to the Gofpel. 128, 129; 434 — 499 Their immoral Maxims. 356, 357 The beft of them vicious. 377 Philofophy defective as to Piety. 337 — 345 — — Ineffectual to form the Soul to Patience under Troubles. 349, 35°> 351 Cannot fortify againft Death. 354, 355 Vhilofbphical Change was not entire from all Sin to Holinefs. m> 3/$ C O N T E N. T s; Page Poligamy taken away by Chrift. 3-2 Power Divine was glorified jn the Creation. c, 6 It could have preferved Man in his innocent State. 44 ■ 'Tis glorified in the Ihcarnation of the Son of God. 413, l1** 4*5 In his Miracles. 416, 417, 418 In his Refurreclion. 424 ■ In the Converfion of the World to Chriftianity ; 428 — 434 * In the Refurreftion of the Saints. 460, 461 Priefthood of Chrift required the Concurrence of both his Na- tures. 85, 86 Priefts of the Heathens great Enemies to the Gofpel. 440 Pride, a chief Ingredient in the firft Sin. 2£ — ■ — It hinders the Belief of fupernatural Verities. 128, 129, 435 Pride of their own Righteoufnefs hinders Men's fubmitting to God's. 300, 301 Princes of the World oppofed the Gofpel. 441, 442 Prophetical Office of Chrift required the Concurrence of both his Natures. 87 Prophecies fulfilled in Chrift. 481, &c. Providence: The common Bounties of it not fufficient to over- come the guilty Fears of Men. 207 Nor to kindle in us a fincere Love to God. 210 'Twas denied by the Philofophers. 337, 338 Punilhment of Sin, purely vindictive, is taken away by Chrift as to Believers. 256, 257, 286 R Reconciliation of God to Man by Chrift's Death. 257 Redeemer of Man muft be God and Man. 232, 233, 234 Redemption ; the Manner of it is correfpondent to the Caufe of our Ruin. 93 There is no Difcovery of it in the Creation, nor by Natural Reafon. 105, 106 J 'Tis revealed to the Angels. 107 The defign of it is to make us hoJy. 401, 402 Repentance flows from the Hope of Mercy. 71, 72, 208 'Tis antecedently neceflary to Pardon. 279, 280, 308 Refurredlion is only poilible to the Divine Power. 410 ■ ■ Of Chrift, a convincing Proof of his Satisfaction to God's Juftice. 265, 266, 426 The Effedt of Divine Power. 460 'Twas due to the Holinefs of his Nature, 424 *»— Jt proved him to be the Son of God. 424, 42 ? K k 2 CONTENTS. Page Refurredtion ; 'Tis the Foundation of our Faith. 427 S Sacrifices, their Kinds. 248 -» The Expiatory were offered inftead of the Sinner. 249 *■ The Effects of them. 250 All placatory Sacrifices referred to Chrift, and the Effects of them, in a perfect Manner. 250 Sacrifices of Beafts ineffectual to expiate Sin. 263, 264 Salvation, the Neglect of it aggravated. 216, 217 Will certainly bring an extraordinary Damnation. 217, 218 Satisfaction of Chrift is all-fufficient from the Dignity of his Perfon. 261, 262 * And the Degrees of his Suffering. 265 'Tis demonstrated from the Effects. 265 — 279 * The Satisfaction of Juftice the Ground of Hope in pardon- ning Mercy. 294, 295 Self-denial commanded by Chrift. 320 Seneca confidered. 376 Senfual Lufts hinder the Belief of the Gofpel. 129, 130 Serpent of Brafs, a Type of Chrift. 491, 492 Sbiloh, the Title of Chrift. 481 Sin ; the firft how it came to pafs. 21 The Aggravations of it. 21 — 29 Sin hath captivated Man. 158, 159 The Evil of it. 288, 289 All Sins are pardonable, excepting that againft the Holy Ghoft. 277 Spirit of God produces a faving Belief of fuperrtatural Myfteries. Spirit of Holinefs can only renew Man to God's Image. 368 ■ Was purchafed by the Sufferings of Chrift. 369 Is conferred after his Exaltation. 370 The Spirit was poured forth more liberally in the Times of the Gofpel than before. 371 Is conveyed by the Gofpel-Revelation. 372 Socrates cenfidered. 374 Stoicks aflerted Afflictions to be no true Evil. 352 They arrogated the praife of Virtue and Happinefs to them- felves. " 119, 342, 343 —They extinguifhed the Affections. 347, 348 Temple ; the fecond more glorious than the firft, by Chrift's Pre- fence. 484) CONTENTS. Page Types, why ufed in the firfl Age of the Church. 480 Temptations fhall not finally overcome the Elett. 194, 195 Tree of Knowledge why forbidden to Man. 19, 20 Trinity ; the Doctrine of it the Foundation of our Redemption. — 'Tis revealed in Scripture, not known by natural Light. 105, *32 Truth ; Divine glorified in our Redemption. 479 Of the Gofpel confirmed by comparing it with the Types and Prophecy of the Old Teftament* 496, 497 Virtues of the Heathens not fincere. 336, 358, 438 Vifion ; beatifical excels Man's Knowledge of God in Paradiie. 201 ■ 'Tis for ever enjoyed in the mofl perfect Manner by the Saints. 302 Unbelief cuts off from all the Benefits of the Gofpel. 304 W Will of the firfl: Man was entirely fanctified. 8, 9 Its Corruption fince the Fall. 50, 51, 55 Will of God the primary Caufe of ordaining Chrilt to be our Mediator. 227 Will of Chiift was requifite for his undertaking to be our Medi- ator. 227, 228 Wifdom ; the Divine vifible in the Creation. 1, £ — — 'Twas not blemifhed by permitting the Fall of Man. 43, 44 —It contrived the Way of our Recovery. £7, y8, 79 'Tis incomprehensible. 79 'Tis glorified in our Redemption. 83 — 103 Wrath : The Averfion of God is upon the Account of Chrift's Death. 253, 254. *iW J r J* DATE DUE CAYLORD PRINTED IN U S A •m