Beverley Truth

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The true state of

Gospel Truth,
Established upon the Free
Election of God in Christ.
THE
Agreement, and yet Difference between
Law and Gospel; so, that the Gospel
cannot be styled Law.
THE
Inconditionateness of
the Gospel Salvation.
THE
Procedure of the Day of Judgment; in the
way of a Conciliatory Discourse upon Mr.
Williams and his Concessions.

Thomas Beverley

LONDON. Printed for William Marshall, at the Bible in


Newgate Street, 1693.

ORIGINALLY PRINTED IN 1693

COMPLETE & UNABRIDGED

Supralapsarian Press
2015 EDITION
Thomas Beverley Biographical Sketch

In the year 1672, when King Charles II issued a Declaration


suspending the penal laws against Dissenters; numerous
Congregations were soon formed; and, to illustrate the Harmony
between Presbyterians and Independents on the leading
Doctrines of Grace; as well as to support the Doctrines of the
Reformation against the prevailing Errors of Popery,
Arminianism, Socinianism, and Infidelity, a weekly lectureship
{through the contributions of the principal merchants and
tradesmen of their persuasion in London} was established, in
which four Presbyterian and two Independent ministers
officiated in rotation. Initial speakers included Dr. Bates, Dr.
Manton, Dr. Owen, Mr. Baxter, Mr. Collins, and Mr. Jenkyn; and
so these weekly lectures were delivered in Pinners’ Hall, an
ancient building in Old Broad Street, London. Toward the close
of the year 1694, an open rupture took place among the
lecturers of Pinners’ Hall, and another lecture was set up by a
few Independents or Congregationalists, as they began now to
be called, at Salters’ Hall. The occasion of this breach was the
re-publication of the Sermons of Tobias Crisp, {this was in 1690,
by Crisp’s son, Samuel,} a book whose distinctive tendency was
to overthrow the religion of man, whilst maintaining clear
Law/Gospel Distinctions and setting forth Christ’s Pre-eminent
Glory, which Gospel Truths thus simply set forth, essentially
revived the spirit of the faithful, at a time when men whose limp
{mere creedal} grasp of the Everlasting Gospel began a down-
grade towards Arminianism, as many who professed the truths
known as the Doctrines of Grace were drifting away from their
Foundational Pillars. In attempts to quench the light of Crisp’s
distinct setting forth of the Glory of Christ, and to diminish the
Glory of Free Grace, Richard Baxter in a lecture on Jan.28th,
1690 at Pinners’ Hall, and in his book, “Scripture Gospel
Defended,” immediately lashed out, and in this book principally
succeeded in utterly distorting the views of Crisp, upon which
Crisp’s son Samuel swiftly came to his father’s defense in a
pamphlet of his own entitled, “Christ made Sin,” {Samuel Crisp,
London, 1691.} In the light of Baxter’s death in 1691, a few of
the Presbyterian ministers of London deputed Daniel Williams

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{a disciple of Richard Baxter} to send forth a reply to the book
of Sermons by Crisp, which he did in the following year, in a
book entitled, “Gospel Truth Stated and Vindicated” {1692.}
{Williams not only attacked Crisp, but the Congregational
Preacher Richard Davis, whom he accused of Antinomianism,
when Davis visited London in 1692.} This book was met with
much resistance, as the ‘orthodoxy’ of Williams was impeached,
and charges of Neonomianism, Arminianism and Socinianism
were hurled against him by Ministers such as the
Congregationalist Stephen Lobb and by Isaac Chauncey, who
was an Independent. In 1693, Chauncey, {who would become
Williams’ chief opponent} wrote {in defense of Crisp} his three-
part “Neonomianism Unmasked,” and soon thereafter Williams
was prohibited from preaching in Pinners' Hall. Many accordingly
withdrew and established their own Lecture at Salters' Hall,
leaving the Independents in possession of the Pinners' Hall
lectures.
In the midst of these events, we find Thomas Beverley,
who generally appeared upon the public stage in the reign of
James II, as one who aligned himself with the Independents and
Congregationalists that assembled together at Pinners’ Hall, for
his doctrinal sympathies fell in-line with those of the “Crisp”
party. Just a year prior to the Revolution of 1688, {often
referred to as the Glorious Revolution of 1688, being the
overthrow of King James II of England by a union of English
Parliamentarians with the Dutch stadtholder William III,
otherwise known as William of Orange. William’s successful
invasion of England with a Dutch fleet and army led to his
ascending of the English throne as William III of England, jointly
with his wife Mary II of England, who was the daughter of James
II, and granddaughter of Charles I, which would re-establish the
Protestant Religion in England; it was to this King William, that
Beverley dedicated many of his prophetical pamphlets, as he
seemed to believe that William himself would be the grand
harbinger of the kingdom of Christ, and his millennial reign, and
that England was the favoured spot from whence it was to be
announced,} he published his first work, being a tract to prove
that the Papacy could survive but nine or ten years; and so
prepossessed was he with this concept, that almost each
succeeding year produced some fresh prophetical calculation in

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confirmation of his aerial expectations, until he had the
mortification to see the time pass by, {1697,} and himself
confused and disappointed, as one whose thoughts were swept
away with this crazed notion.
Besides being pastor of a congregation at Cutlers' Hall,
Mr. Beverley was also one of the Lord’s Day Morning lecturers
at Fetter-lane, along with Mr. Stephen Lobb, and some other
Independent ministers. In the controversy that followed the
publication of Dr. Crisp’s works, Dr. Beverley {for such he was
called, though it is unknown whether he received a degree in
medicine, theology, or some other science,} took some share.
The pamphlets he published upon this occasion, hold him up in
the light of somewhat of a reconciler between the two parties,
for which, it is probable, he received the thanks of neither. His
own sentiments seemed to lean heavily towards the Crispian
side of the controversy, but he nevertheless speaks respectfully
of Mr. Williams, as also of Mr. Baxter, whom he unites with Dr.
Crisp, as two persons of estimable memory, whose spirits were
with Christ, and their seemingly different apprehensions
perfectly reconciled, and concentrated in pure and unmixed
truth. {Conciliatory Discourse upon Dr. Crisp’s Sermons.} Dr.
Beverley resigned his charge of the congregation at Cutlers'-Hall
in 1697. To this he was probably impelled by the non-fulfilment
of his prophetical calculations, Providence having deferred that
important event to a much later period. Mr. Beverley, with the
vexation arising from this disappointment, retired into the
country, and settled at Colchester, or in the neighbourhood
thereabouts, where he lived just a few years afterwards, as
nothing further is recorded concerning him. He published a
considerable number of pamphlets, the titles of which are as
follows.

WORKS.

1. The Command of God to come out of Babylon. 1687.


2. The great Revolution in this Nation according to Revelation 17:16-17,
in Pursuance of a Discourse published twelve Months past, viz., “The
Command of God to his People to come out of Babylon;” wherein is fully
proved that the Papacy can survive but nine or ten Years. Dedicated to
the Prince of Orange. 1688.

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3. Jehovah Jireh; in the Mount the Lord will be seen.
4. The Blessing of Moses on the Tribe of Asher. Deut.33:15.
5. Gospel Grace of Faith, in its Nature opened. John 17:7-8.
6. Faith by which we are Justified in a Scripture Sense. Rom.5:1.
7. A Conciliatory Discourse upon Dr. Crisp’s Sermons; humbly presented
to the Preachers of the Merchants Lecture at Pinners-Hall. Part 1 and 2.
1692.
8. The true State of Gospel Faith; a Conciliatory Discourse upon Dr.
Williams’ Concessions. 1693.
9. A compendious Assertion and Vindication of the Trinity.
10. An Exposition of the Lord’s Prayer. Matt.6:9, Lk.11:1-11.
11. A brief View of the State of Mankind.
12. A Discourse of the Doctrine of Holiness. I Pet.1:15.
13. A Discourse of several Sermons on the Sacrament.
14. A Discourse of Evangelical Repentance unto Salvation, not to be
repented of. II Cor.7:10; to which is subjoined, a Discourse on Death-
bed Repentance. Luke 22:39. 1693.
15. A Sermon on the Death of the Queen. 1694.
16. A Discourse of the Greatness of the Soul.
17. The Loss of the Soul opened and demonstrated; a Sermon at the
Lord’s-day Morning Lecture, in Fetter-lane. Matt.16:26. 1694.
18. The Pattern of the Divine Temple, &c.
19. The Line of Time from the first to the last Sabbatism.
20. The Scriptural Line of Time, &c.
21. The prophetical History of the Reformation, &c.
22. A Scheme of Prophecies to be fulfilled. 1696.
23. A fresh Memorial of the Kingdom of Christ.
24. A Table of Sabbatical Time, &c.
25. A Discourse upon the Power of the World to come.
26. A Discourse of Miracles, and the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ.
27. A Model of Gospel Sanctification, &c.
28. The Catechism of the Kingdom of our Lord Jesus Christ.
29. Christianity the Great Mystery.
30. Apology for the Hope of the Kingdom of Christ, appearing within this
approaching Year, 1697, wherein some of the principal Arguments for
such an Expectation are briefly couched, and greater Objections
answered. Presented to the Notice and Examination of the Archbishops
and Bishops in Parliament last. 1696.
31. The Kingdom of Jesus Christ entering its Succession. 1697.
32. A Scriptural Proof from Mahomet’s Times to that of Christ’s Kingdom
must needs be in its Succession. 1697.
33. A further Discover upon the Line of Time. 1697.
34. A Sermon of Mr. Benjamin Perkins’, at the Funeral of Mrs. Martha
Robient, who died at Colchester, September 15, 1700, enlarged into a

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Discourse on the excellent Life, and glorious Death of a Christian. II
Tim.4:7-8.

In this small volume entitled, “the true State of Gospel Faith,”


we see a fatal death blow handed out, {throughout its pages,}
to all Free-Will Religion of the Arminian type, but more especially
to that rank form of Conditionalism, by which work mongers of
all persuasions have made sad the hearts of the righteous, even
whilst building towering shrines to their own self-righteousness,
oft under the guise of a ‘sovereign grace’ profession. For a small
window into this book we extract the following worthy notations:

“I have offered great proof, that the faith, repentance, sanctification,


and good works the Gospel requires cannot be justly deemed, or taken
for conditions, or qualifications, but are effluxes, as from Electing Love
and Grace; so from the Righteousness and Death of Jesus Christ, and
his Victorious Resurrection, through which the Holy Spirit is given, and
are as free, as Election, and Justification themselves; when they are
considered in strict relation to the elect…-…are there not in Scripture
highest assertions of Eternal Love and Grace, independent upon
qualifications and conditions in them, who shall be made partakers? Do
not all stand in a frame and connexion? Election, calling, justification,
wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and redemption? All as free, and
as certain, the one as the other. It is true; the wisdom of God hath so
contrived, and ordered this preaching of the Gospel; that it is to be
published promiscuously to the non-elect with the elect, and {as I may
say} to probe for the elect, and to draw them out with efficacy and
power, by the Spirit joining with the Word…-…now as all these are in
Christ for us, as the Head and Fountain and Example; one as well as the
other; without any notion of Condition, or Qualification, or Means; and
so they are to be looked upon therefore in saints; and so Christ stood in
eternity before God in that Everlasting Covenant, wherein all was settled
in Him, as the Exemplar, Head, and Root of the Church; and not only
so, but as a Mediator, Surety, and Testator; upon the foresight of man,
a fallen, lost, sinful nature, out of which the elect are recovered by
Christ, as such Mediator, Testator, and Surety…-…or to this Everlasting
Covenant must everything be reduced, adjusted and reconciled; when
the Gospel according to the universal preaching requires Faith, and
Repentance, Holiness, and Obedience, as Qualifications and Conditions;
this publication of the Gospel reduced to the Everlasting Covenant must
be interpreted in relation to the elect, so, that Faith, and Repentance
may be understood to be no Qualifications, Conditions, or Means as on
our part, nor dependent on us, but as a Free and Absolute Gift to us,

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though in us, and rising as from us, when so given to us; and so
Scripture speaks often to the same purpose {as is after to be shown}
for all was both distinctly, and together settled, and established in the
same Eternal Council, and under the sanction, and unmoveable
confirmation of an Everlasting Covenant; whom he Predestinated, he
Called, he Justified, he Glorified; all in one and the same Eternity in
regard of Council, in regard of Covenant, all was then passed; and Christ
enfeoffed in all for us, however to be fulfilled in the order of Time,
appointed by God with Christ…-…and indeed, thus it must needs be, for
upon the infinite fore-knowledge of God he predestinated in whole, and
not in parts, to the conformity to the image of his Son; whatever then
is in the image of his Son, one thing as well as the other, he hath
predestinated unto, “he hath predestinated unto the adoption of children
by Jesus Christ;” whatever we are predestinated unto therefore is
essential to the being children of God by Adoption, in and according to
Christ, as in one entire sum predestinated to, and as in one act of God
upon his fore-knowledge; and then there is a distribution into its distinct
heads, fitted to our understanding, calling, justification, glory; and every
head is as free, and as certain, one, as another; that which in the
manifestation in time comes after, as that which went before; for each
single facet of Salvation was by itself singly, and distinctly determined
by God, as well as the whole contexture or the order of each head. I call
them heads because each is a whole, and not apart, each is of that worth
and dignity, that it cannot fall so low, as a condition, or qualification, or
means, in respect to, or with relation to any other of those heads…-
…thus in pressing Faith and Repentance, it may very well be said;
except ye believe, and repent, you shall certainly perish; but concerning
the elect, it may be said, you shall certainly be saved, as he that repents,
and believes, shall be saved, for they shall certainly repent, and believe,
and be saved; and I find not the Scripture to speak or allude to any
possibility whatsoever of the elect being damned; but as with a
reference of Election it says; to deceive, if possible, the very elect,
Matt.24:24; and, except those days had been shortened, no flesh could
be saved, but for the sake of the elect, those days shall be shortened.
For the Foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal; the Lord
knoweth them that are His, II Tim.2:19, this is the Supreme, or
Sovereign Seal, and it carries the exhortation, importing the other seal,
along with it, let him that nameth the Name of Christ depart from
iniquity; for that departure from iniquity is settled equally by way of Gift
in the Everlasting Covenant, and not by way of Condition, or Limitation;
but by the same Eternal Council Covenant, and Free Gift upon it, even
as Justification, or Glorification; one is as free and as indefinable as the
other, and as self-subsistent, without dependence upon ourselves, or
upon one another, one as the other; saving yet the wisdom of the Divine
Order; and no after manner of speaking can turn the Council of the Lord,

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for the LORD himself hath called, hath justified, hath glorified; and
nothing can be made conditional, or be dependent and uncertain, in the
realm, and according to the fixed pattern of his Unconditional Purpose
and Grace in Christ. I therefore deny any of the graces, or duties,
required by the Gospel can be in a supreme sense called either Condition
or Qualification, with relation to any other part of Salvation, or
dependence on our acts, when we speak of them whom Scripture stiles,
the Election of Grace.”

It goes without saying that our author had a compelling sense


of urgency pressing upon him to contend earnestly for that
Faith, as one harmonious body of doctrinal Truth, once delivered
unto the saints, and an ability bestowed upon him to discern
many matters which directly affect the glorious Gospel of our
Lord Jesus Christ, especially regarding a believer’s valuation of
Christ’s Person & Accomplishments. We send forth this volume
in hopes of further consolidating the union of believers in the
everlasting truths of the Gospel. “Now the God of patience and
consolation grant you to be likeminded one toward another
according to Christ Jesus; that ye may with one mind and one
mouth glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.”
Rom.15:5-6.

We are largely indebted to the book by Walter Wilson, History and


Antiquities of Dissenting Churches, Volume 2, 1808, for the vast
majority of the biographical information here supplied.

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THE PREFACE.

That the jealousy of so many of the Servants of Christ hath been


so exceedingly awakened, and enflamed by the suspicious
attempts by Mr. Williams to obscure the Doctrine of the Free
Grace of God in Christ, is to me a very great prognostic of that
Kingdom of Redemption drawing nigh, and that Philadelphian
State, to which Christ hath opened a door, which none can shut;
and they therefore, who are now nearest to it are obliged by
Christ to hold fast his word herein, that among all the professors
of Protestantism, who hold it in this part so loose, none should
take their crown, who are true Philadelphians.
Hence it appears, that no more disadvantageous a time
could have been chosen out by those, who would eclipse that
Glory of Free Grace, for their making an attack or impression
upon those Doctrines, wherein it is concerned, with success; so
I hope it does appear, no happier time, when in this present
Sardian State, there is but room for dispute concerning them,
could have been singled out for the friends of it than now; when
so many zealous maintainers and defenders of it have openly
shown themselves, and offered themselves willingly; should I
say, to help the Lord against the mighty in the high places of
the field of these debates for so great Truths?
And indeed it is a duty on such occasions, to discover the
foundation of error and mistake, even to the very root; and if in
this search, some precocious truths are found out, and brought
forth out of the Scripture Treasury, not only things old, but new;
I hope, none will be offended, seeing as it is a duty at all times,
so it is more hopeful so near the day dawning, and the Day-Star
arising, such humble offers should not be accounted foolish
fires; but some beams and rays of that Gospel light, that shall
appear more and more to the perfect day.
In the meantime, I have made it my earnest endeavour
not only to preserve herein the Analogy of Faith, but to offer as
a key, and clue in all these disputes these five grand principles.
1. The whole of our Salvation is from God, through God,
by God, and so to God. From God in the Majesty of the Father,
through the mediation of the Eternal Word, and Son of God by
the efficacy of the Eternal Spirit, to the praise of the glory of his

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grace, all in all. Thus the Divine Being is the Father of lights with
whom is no variation or shadow of turning, not only in his own
perfection, but always looking full on his elect.
2. That the manifestation of this Salvation by that mighty
Power and Efficacy of the Spirit, is in due times and seasons,
and in the just order, really and effectually vested in the spirits
of the elect, and so joins their several faculties, and so the action
and conversation, according to all that is spoken of in Scripture.
3. That the Law is the irrepealably standard of all, that
man himself is to do, whether imprinted on man in the very
creation, or revealed further by God in any after-manifestation
of his will; which the Gospel, as occasion requires, takes into its
own hand, and makes use of; and whatever is to be found in us
according to the Gospel, the Law lays its sanctions upon it.
4. The Gospel commands nothing; if strictly and properly
taken; requires nothing, commands nothing, that yet it
declares, must be in us an answer to itself; nor that it declares,
must, and shall be in us according to the Law; but it making use
of the Law, as to all the commanding part; itself gives, and
conveys all, as being the Covenant of Grace, from the Father
through Christ, the Son of the Father in Grace and Truth, by the
Holy Spirit.
5. The judgment of Christ is according to the Law,
answered thus by the Gospel, as the Covenant of Grace, in
relation to his own elect children, members, and servants;
written in the Lamb’s Book of Life by the Father’s Election from
the foundation of the world; and in relation to the Non-elect, his
judgment is according to the Law of Righteousness, imprinted
on the hearts of men, and according to that Law obliging, upon
any manifestations, or intimations of the Gospel revealed to
them.
Whoever then keeps these great principles as a pole-star
in his eye, shall find himself guided by them in all the various
disputes of them; and not fall into either of those great errors
the Apostle James warns us against, of saying; when we are
tempted, that we are tempted of God, who cannot be tempted
of evil, neither tempts any one; nor the second like to it, viz.,
not to be sensible of the fact that every good gift, every degree
of good, much more every perfect gift is from above, and does
not rise up, but comes down.

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Therefore above all, the assistances of the Divine Spirit
guiding us into all Truth, and bringing everything unto our
remembrance, I most humbly beseech for them, and for myself,
and therein beg the prayers of all, who shall read with any
approbation this short discussion of these Truths.

A Right State of Gospel Truth, Presented to Mr. Williams;


occasioned by some Assertions of his {so called}
Defence of Gospel Truth.

I have upon the view and consideration of Mr. Williams, in his


Defence of Gospel Truth, and the many excellent confessions of
the true Grace of God, wherein we stand, therein sound;
thought it necessary for myself as in a low, and humble capacity,
yet having appeared, as a reconciler upon the account of the
Sermons of Dr. Crisp; not to come forth as a disputant, much
less as a professed adversary, but as a reconciler of some of the
collateral, and derivative branches, of that Grace and Truth, I
find in that discourse, to their principals; and to prune, what
seems not to be so reconcilable, that the whole may be seen in
its order and beauty.
And herein I labour to avoid personal reflections, as I am
out of the temptation of them, where I profess honour and
esteem only; but of any aculeate animadversions on, or
encounter with particular expressions, wherein the fundamental
interests of Truth are not lodged, or concerned, but I have set
myself to establish those grand points of Gospel Truth, which I
am persuaded ought at all times to be set in a clear and full
light; on all just occasions, in the most stated, and solemn
discourses; and at all other times so interwoven; that they may
shine out and give their light both to prayer and preaching;
while there is just room and scope yet left for all those Scriptural
expatiations into instruction, exhortation, expostulation,
reproof, as methods of direction into the ways of Righteousness;
but still so, as they may be enlightened by these springs of
Gospel Light, Truth and Grace, which I am now undertaking to
conciliate them unto.
This I have endeavoured in the most plain, and
perspicuous method; and so that whatever may appear in Mr.

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Williams book of a contrary sentiment, and inclination; may be
comprehended so, as to be resolved in some cases of doubt, in
others fore-prized, or guarded against; not to say, answered.
And herein I have made it my business to level the
discourse to these heads, or points.
1. To state the Gospel Doctrine concerning the Eternal
Council of God, with relation to all his elect, who are the principal
concerned in all these points; yet with necessary respect to all
others, so far especially, as what is said of others or in general,
is necessary to be considered; as illustrating these things with
relation to the elect.
2. I have made an essay upon that noblest point of
debate; how far the Law upon its own authority necessarily, and
indispensably falls in with, ratifies, and confirms the power and
authority of the Gospel; and how far the Gospel finds necessary
to itself, and to its great end, not to make void, but to establish
the Law; and whether upon all this, the Gospel can by itself be
properly styled a Law; which I on great reason make out in the
negative.
3. I have offered great proof, that the faith, repentance,
sanctification, and good works the Gospel requires cannot be
justly deemed, or taken for conditions, or qualifications, but are
effluxes, as from Electing Love and Grace; so from the
Righteousness and Death of Jesus Christ, and his Victorious
Resurrection, through which the Holy Spirit is given, and are as
free, as Election, and Justification themselves; when they are
considered in strict relation to the elect, however in relation to
the non-elect, or as generally spoken of, they may put on such
notions, or representations, as of conditions or qualifications.
4. I have endeavoured to illustrate the procedure of the
Day of Judgment to be so described in Scripture, that the
primary and supreme representations, and that subordinate all
others to themselves, are most exactly agreeable to the Free
Grace of the Gospel; not as a Law, nor requiring any
qualifications, or conditions, with relation to the elect, but as
gloriously appearing with its own product, and effect, as it shall
be made to appear the glorious Gospel of the blessed God, and
by the appearance of Jesus Christ with his saints, in whom he
will be glorified, and admired at that Day.

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I begin with the first, and seeing I direct this conciliatory
discourse to them, whom I suppose to acknowledge with me an
election of a certain number to Salvation and Glory, I make this
appeal to them.
Are there not in Scripture, highest assertions of Eternal
Love and Grace, independent upon qualifications, and conditions
in them, who shall be made partakers? Do not all stand in a
frame and connexion? Election, calling, justification, wisdom,
righteousness, sanctification and redemption? All as free, and
as certain, the one as the other.
It is true, the wisdom of God hath so contrived, and
ordered this preaching of the Gospel; that it is to be published
promiscuously to the non-elect with the elect, and {as I may
say} to probe for the elect, and to draw them out with efficacy
and power, by the Spirit joining with the Word.
It is also most true, that these cannot be applied to
particular persons, but as Electing Grace singles them out by
calling, sprinkling the blood of Christ on their hearts, unto
Sanctification of the Spirit, and belief of the Truth; but they are
always true concerning the whole number and body; and so
concerning every single person; and they may, and ought to be
openly asserted and maintained in Doctrine, and also to be
proclaimed in Preaching, and in the Publication of the Gospel, as
occasion requires, to compel, and draw souls, by so free
absolute and independent a grace declared to lost man in all the
Election of God; and who knows, but it may draw this, and that
particular person in a congregation; and therefore with great
hopes of a Divine co-operation, it ought to be as other Truths,
uncompromisingly promulgated. And I doubt not, when God
opens the mouths of his servants in the boldest and frankest
declarations of Truth, as he will; when that new Song shall be
learnt, and so taught by the 144,000 on Mount Zion, with the
Father’s Name on their foreheads; it shall be sealed, with the
greatest number of converts, as it was in Peter’s sermon,
proclaiming that Grace; which thing I humbly declare myself to
be waiting for, as the great Consolation of Israel.
And there are undeniably many great Scriptures, that set
out the freest, most absolute and independent Grace,
throughout our Salvation from first to last, as patterns or
exemplars of all Scripture; such as, before the children had done

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either good, or evil, that the purpose of God according to
election might stand; who worketh all things according to the
council of his own will; to the praise of the Glory of his Grace;
who hath called us with an holy calling; not according to works,
but according to his Purpose; not of works, but of him that
calleth. Matthew the Publican was called from the Receipt of
Custom; and the Apostle Paul in the height of persecution, that
he might be a pattern. “Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye
to the waters, and he that hath no money; come ye, buy, and
eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without money and without
price.” “The Son of man came to seek, and to save that which
is lost;” “I am found of them that sought me not;” “I came not
to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance;” “being justified
freely by his Grace,” &c., “who believeth on him who justifieth
the ungodly;” “publicans and harlots go into the Kingdom of
Heaven before you.”
Now it is most evident, the settlement of the whole of
Salvation in the Eternal Council of God is most free, absolute,
independent, without having any respect to having done good
or evil, and so of Grace, and in such an opposition to works, that
here and indeed throughout, grace and works do so remove one
another, that they cannot consist in an equal domination, but
either Grace must cease to be Grace, or works cease to be
works; one of them must lose its very genus, or nature; seeing
then, none can so much, as dare to deny that the Gospel gives
the pre-eminence to Grace; it is a necessity according to the so
positive and peremptory arguing of the Apostle, works must
submit and fall under Grace. “And if by grace, then is it no more
of works; otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it be of works,
then is it no more grace; otherwise work is no more work.”
Rom.11:6.
If so, it most necessarily follows, works foreseen must be
as much excluded, as if they could be supposed present; for else
works had the primary ascendency; and seeing the Scripture
ascribes all to Grace; either Grace had not been Grace, or works
not works, or all is Grace, and works done by Grace so inherent,
and resident in us, as not to be in Christ, as the sun, and
fountain, from which it every moment flows; as much shut out,
as works done by that rectitude of nature, God at first gave to
man; so that they could be neither a condition nor qualification

14
foreseen by Electing Grace, and so moving God to elect; but
works are elected to and not for, or upon, as the Apostles
express doctrine assures; for God hath chosen us in Christ, that
we should be holy, and without blame before him in love, and
good works are fore-prepared, as the marginal translation, for
us, that we should walk in them, or God hath fore-prepared for
good works, that from himself they should be, as he hath
provided them a being in their very selves, as well as in us, and
that we should walk in them. He hath also fore-prepared; and
seeing this fore-preparation even of works, is not of works, lest
any man should boast, it must be of Grace even as much, as
Election; otherwise work is no more work, or Grace is no more
Grace, if works are not throughout of Grace. If you say, then
work is not work; I answer, that it is much more suitable to the
Gospel, work should lose its Nature into Grace, than Grace into
work. But still the precise nature of works and Grace remain
distinct in their abstract consideration; yet it is most true, that
work is comprised by Grace, for in every work we are his
workmanship, which is of Grace.
And indeed, thus it must needs be, for upon the infinite
fore-knowledge of God he predestinated in whole, and not in
parts, to the conformity to the image of his Son; whatever then
is in the image of his Son, one thing as well as the other, he
hath predestinated unto, “he hath predestinated unto the
adoption of children by Jesus Christ;” whatever we are
predestinated unto therefore is essential to the being children
of God by Adoption, in and according to Christ, as in one entire
sum predestinated to, and as in one act of God upon his fore-
knowledge; and then there is a distribution into its distinct
heads, fitted to our understanding, calling, justification, glory;
and every head is as free, and as certain, one, as another; that
which in the manifestation in time comes after, as that which
went before; for each single facet of Salvation was by itself
singly, and distinctly determined by God, as well as the whole
contexture or the order of each head. I call them heads because
each is a whole, and not apart, each is of that worth and dignity,
that it cannot fall so low, as a condition, or qualification, or
means, in respect to, or with relation to any other of those
heads.

15
So that those entire, supreme, absolute, most
acknowledged, and independent acts of God, his fore-knowing
a number of persons, and predestinating them to the adoption
of children, by making them conformable to the image of his
Son, being laid in the foundation, according to his Eternal Love
and Grace, the arch-type or first exemplar of all; we may find
each of those heads coming forth in its distinct and single
dignity.
1. As first he did according to his own grace, purpose;
will, and determination; such, as he hath foreknown and
predestinated to be conformed to his Son, should come to his
Son upon no either fortuitous or supremely free use of their own
will, or actuation of their powers by their own work, but upon
the certain and efficacious call from himself in his Word, and an
instinct, or implantation of wisdom flowing from himself in
Christ, that original Wisdom; all their intellectual powers seeing
Him, and their applying faculties cleaving, and uniting to Him;
now this is styled vocation, or effectual calling, and it is
absolute, and by itself, and worthy to be so; and as it first and
must needs be so in an intellectual Salvation; and as so distinct
from Sanctification, it is called Wisdom, I Cor.2:4-7, so there is
no one head, that is more specially ascribed to Grace, and to
purpose, than it is, called according to purpose, Rom.8:28,
called with a holy calling, II Tim.1:9, not according to our works,
but according to his own Purpose and Grace, which was given
us in Jesus Christ before the world began, not of works, but of
him that calleth.
And why is this head of Calling kept so distinct, even from
Justification and Sanctification, and so ascribed to true Grace;
is it, because it is indeed a condition of all the rest? No, because
it includes the certainty of all the rest, and all others certainly
join themselves; and therefore it is as much, as any, or, if it
could be, more, ascribed to Grace.
2. God hath chosen a people, whom he justifies, and
makes righteous, and pardons freely in Christ, and by the
Imputation of his Righteousness; and in whom the Glory of so
great a Righteousness shall appear, as the Righteousness of God
in Christ; this is then absolute, and by itself.

16
3. God hath chosen a people to be holiness to Jehovah in
Christ our Sanctification. And this is also so worthy a head, as
to be determined single, and for its own sake; as who will deny?
4. God hath chosen children, who shall be conformed to
the image of his Son in Glory, who is in us the hope of Glory,
Col.1:27, and this is itself so blessed, and worthy a point, that
it may be considered by itself; as all will readily grant.
It is true, none of those can be one, without the other,
but that they most necessarily implicate, infer, and include one
the other; yet there is not one of them, but Scripture speaks of
it singly; not only because it includes the other, but because it
is worthy to be alone in the Eye of God, and to be the supreme
point of his Eternal Council; wherein it can be considered, as
distinct; as how often are the foreknown, predestinated,
elected, spoken of, without anything else? The people whom he
foreknew, Rom.11:2, knowing brethren your election of God;
the Lord knows them that are his; predestinated according to
the council of him, who worketh all things after the council of
his own will; so of Justification Scripture speaks often by itself;
in him shall all the seed of Israel be justified, and glory,
Isa.45:25; justified by his Grace, Tit.3:7, and so throughout;
and so of Sanctification; inheritance among them that are
sanctified, Acts 26:18; he hath forever perfected them that are
sanctified, Heb.10:14; so of Glory, written in the Lamb’s Book
of Life from the foundation of the world, Rev.13:8; and another
book was opened, which was the Book of Life; heirs of life,
bringing many sons to Glory, Heb.2:10; an exceeding great, and
eternal weight of Glory. II Cor.4:17.
Now if this were considered, it would take away much of
the dispute about Conditions and Qualifications, seeing that
every link of the golden chain, is itself a jewel of inestimable
value, and hath in itself the splendour, and riches of all the
other.
Yet notwithstanding; it is to be freely acknowledged, that
God for the manifestation of his own Grace, hath settled an
order and connection, but not so as to lessen the dignity of any
head below the worthiness it hath, in the Eternal Council of God
to be one head with the other, and were it not, even as all the
other; freely given of God, according to the riches of his Grace;
take any one of them, that seems fittest to be looked upon, as

17
a Qualification or Condition; and it would as much deserve, to
have some Qualification, Means, or Condition found out for it,
as any of those, which seem most removed from being so, and
to which any of the other may seem to be so.
But not in a secondary consideration, but equal with the
first; all this is to be considered in Christ, the image to which all
is to be conformed; the eternal love of God is in Him; calling is
to and in Him; the Righteousness of Christ is imputed to us;
holiness is derived from Christ, not only by one act of
Sanctification, but by a continual efflux from Him, our Head, and
Root; even as it is through his whole meritorious and efficacious
Sanctification of Himself, that we are sanctified, Jn.17:9, our
glory is seeing Him, as He is, I Jn.3:2; being made like to Him,
appearing with Him in Glory, in the beams falling from his Glory,
encompassing and filling us with his Light.
Now as all these are in Him for us, as the Head and
Fountain and Example; one as well as the other, without any
notion of Condition, or Qualification, or Means; and so they are
to be looked upon therefore in saints; and so Christ stood in
eternity before God in that Everlasting Covenant, wherein all
was settled in Him, as the Exemplar, Head, and Root of the
Church; and not only so, but as a Mediator, Surety, and
Testator; upon the foresight of man, a fallen, lost, sinful nature,
out of which the elect are recovered by Christ, as such Mediator,
Testator, and Surety.
Now if this Eternal Settlement had the solemnity and
sanction of a Covenant, for so the Apostle tells us, as there was
an Everlasting Covenant in Christ; and if all be settled thus by
an Everlasting Covenant, it must be in the same Eternity,
wherein the grace and purpose of God was; whatever then was
settled in that purpose, and Council was established in, and by
that Covenant; and so must stand fast forever; and the Apostle
there instances a point, that one would be as ready to suppose
a Condition, or Qualification, as any whatever; and yet he makes
it a point settled by the Everlasting Covenant; viz., to be made
perfect in every good work, to do his will; and the working
whatever is well pleasing in the sight of God. What can be more
supposed to be a Condition, or a Qualification, than these
things? And the Apostle enough assures us; these were settled
by the Everlasting Covenant, because he prays to Him, that

18
brought again from the dead the Shepherd of the Sheep by the
Blood of the Everlasting Covenant, Heb.13:20, to make perfect
in every good work; now as it is most observable, the Spirit of
God singles out those attributes of God, that are most enforcive
of a gracious answer; seeing then God bringing back the
Shepherd of the Sheep by the Blood of the Everlasting
Covenant, is chosen as most moving of God in prayer for the
making perfect, &c., which shows, that there is a like certainty
of the Everlasting Covenant availing to perfect the saints, that
there was in bringing Christ back from the dead; the same for
the Shepherd, and the sheep; one from the Grave, dying for sin;
the other from the death of Sin.
Now then, if there was such an Everlasting Covenant in
Christ, {for it must be as Old as the Purpose, and Grace in
Christ,} that may be most infallibly argued, then there can be
no change; for as the Apostle saith, though it be but a man’s
covenant, Gal.3:15; yet if it be confirmed, no man disanulleth,
nor addeth thereto; and this {saith he} I say; the Covenant that
was before confirmed of God to Christ, the Law that was four
hundred and thirty years after, cannot disannul. Gal.3:17.
Now how much higher will the argument run concerning
the Everlasting Covenant, if every link of the chain of Salvation
was equally settled and established, that it should be freely
given, and most certainly given; no after model, nor manner of
promiscuous, universal Preaching of the Gospel, can add to, or
take from the Everlasting Covenant, settled between God, and
Christ; that every part of Salvation should not be as
unchangeably conserved, and secured by God in Christ; one as
another, nor turn any part into Condition and Qualification, or,
so much as a means on our parts, on which anything relating to
Salvation should be dependent, any law or usage of Scripture
speaking to the contrary, in any wise notwithstanding.
For to this Everlasting Covenant must everything be
reduced, adjusted, and reconciled; when the Gospel according
to the universal preaching requires Faith, and Repentance,
Holiness, and Obedience, as Qualifications, and Conditions; this
publication of the Gospel reduced to the Everlasting Covenant
must be interpreted in relation to the elect, so, that Faith and
Repentance may be understood to be no Qualifications,
Conditions, or Means as on our part, nor dependent on us, but

19
as a Free and Absolute Gift to us, though in us, and rising as
from us, when so given to us; and so Scripture speaks often to
the same purpose {as is after to be shown} for all was both
distinctly, and together settled, and established in the same
Eternal Council, and under the sanction, and unmoveable
confirmation of an Everlasting Covenant; whom he
Predestinated, he Called, he Justified, he Glorified; all in one and
the same Eternity in regard of Council, in regard of Covenant,
all was then passed; and Christ enfeoffed in all for us, however
to be fulfilled in the order of Time, appointed by God with Christ.
To say then, if the elect do not believe and repent, they
shall be damned; I must confess, may receive some
countenance from the Apostle Paul’s saying to the company,
that sailed with him to Rome concerning the shipmen, Acts
27:22-44, except these abide in the ship, ye cannot be saved;
when by a prior oracle he had assured them, that there should
not be the loss of any man’s life, but only of the ship, which
certainly included all the necessary means of preservation; and
so of the shipmen’s being kept safe in the ship {that being such
a means} before determined; and so the Apostle returns to the
first certainty, there shall not a hair fall from any of your heads.
Thus in pressing Faith and Repentance, it may very well
be said; except ye believe, and repent, you shall certainly
perish; but concerning the elect, it may be said, you shall
certainly be saved, as he that repents, and believes, shall be
saved, for they shall certainly repent, and believe, and be
saved; and I find not the Scripture to speak or allude to any
possibility whatsoever of the elect being damned; but as with a
reference of Election it says; to deceive, if possible, the very
elect, Matt.24:24; and, except those days had been shortened,
no flesh could be saved, but for the sake of the elect, those days
shall be shortened. For the Foundation of God standeth sure,
having this seal; the Lord knoweth them that are His, II
Tim.2:19, this is the Supreme, or Sovereign Seal, and it carries
the exhortation, importing the other seal, along with it, let him
that nameth the Name of Christ depart from iniquity; for that
departure from iniquity is settled equally by way of Gift in the
Everlasting Covenant, and not by way of Condition, or
Limitation; but by the same Eternal Council Covenant, and Free
Gift upon it, even as Justification, or Glorification; one is as free

20
and as indefinable as the other, and as self-subsistent, without
dependence upon ourselves, or upon one another, one as the
other; saving yet the wisdom of the Divine Order; and no after
manner of speaking can turn the Council of the Lord, for the
LORD himself hath called, hath justified, hath glorified; and
nothing can be made conditional, or be dependent and
uncertain, in the realm, and according to the fixed pattern of his
Unconditional Purpose and Grace in Christ. I therefore deny any
of the graces, or duties, required by the Gospel can be in a
supreme sense called either Condition or Qualification, with
relation to any other part of Salvation, or dependence on our
acts, when we speak of them whom Scripture stiles, the Election
of Grace.
Head 2. I come now to the second head, which I stile a
noble question, whether the Gospel can by itself be styled a Law,
according to which believers are justified. Suppose but upon the
very point of believing, or in that they have believed and
repented, and obeyed that Law, of the New Covenant, or the
Covenant of Grace, and with sincerity {though not to
perfection} all the holy Laws, and Rules of it. And this I
undertake the negative of; that it ought not to be styled a Law.
And that this principal question may be duly stated, I
must first lay down that most prime consideration, both of the
Gospel, and Covenant of Grace, and also of the Law, as an
Everlasting Covenant of Righteousness, and how these two both
conspire in the Eternal Salvation and Blessedness of the elect;
and yet how they do, in some critical, or, {as I may so call
them,} noble points oppose, and eclipse, one the other.
It is manifest from Scripture, by what hath been already
said, that the First and Supreme Point in the Council of God is
the Purpose and Grace of having many sons among the children
of men, whom the LORD would bring to Glory, and make
conformable to the image of his Son, and so as to be holy, and
without blame before Him in Love; all which was established in
Christ, the Eternal Son of God, the Eternal Son of His Love; and
so this Decree, and Purpose is properly called the Adoption of
Children.
When this was decreed by God, the creation of these heirs
of Life must needs be, and so of the whole Human Nature, must
needs be supposed to stand before, and to the Eye of God, in

21
that Decree as created; and therefore there must be by any that
would distinctly and steadfastly understand these points a most
intent, and due consideration, of what Scripture hath revealed
to us, concerning the first Creation of Man.
1. It must then be acknowledged, that communication of
the Divine Glory in the creating an intellectual spirit, and in
righteousness, and true holiness, {the most lively expressions
of the Divine Being to us,} and so to be happy, and glorious,
and blessed in the enjoyment of himself, in a perfection of
holiness, and righteousness, is the supreme Scripture account
of Creation; and it becomes the immutable and unchangeable
Law upon man; that can no more vary, nor alter, than the very
Being of God; and therefore in that great relation, wherein Jesus
Christ stood in the Creation of man, it is said, I Cor.11:3, God
is the Head of Christ, and the man {especially, as we shall
presently see, intending Christ} is the image, and Glory of God;
Christ speaking of himself even as Mediator in the Human
Nature, says, “my Father is greater than I,” whilst as Mediator
in the Divine Nature, he thought it no robbery to be equal with
God. Phil.2:6. This is the primo-prime, as may be said,
foundation of holiness, and happiness, to know and enjoy the
only true God, which Scripture calls the Glory of God, II Cor.4:6,
as first in nature, and is before the Face of Christ; and the Praise
of this Glory is Sovereign, even to Election in Christ. Eph.1:3-5.
Of this glory, man is fallen short, or become destitute,
Rom.3:23, by Sin; but neither Sin nor Redemption can bring
down this highest Glory; for notwithstanding Sin, and even Hell
itself, an intellectual spirit {mankind} is eternally obliged; and
Redemption is bringing or restoring to God, and to an access to
the Father; as Jesus Christ in all his mediatory discourses most
fully declared, and his Apostles after him; and as all along the
Kingdom of God is Christ’s Kingdom, so it is at last delivered up
to God, all in all; which I lay in the Foundation, to show the
absolute excellency, perfection, and immutability of the Divine
Law of Creation; standing in participation of, and conformity to
the Divine Nature in Holiness, for the participation also of its
blessedness, both which are the Glory of God.
2. It is much to be considered, and deeply pondered, what
Scripture so often says of man being made in the image of God,
this image of God, Jesus Christ is most positively affirmed to be,

22
II Cor.4:4, Col.1:15, he is the image of the Invisible God. The
Eternal Word fore-seen in Human Nature is the brightness of his
Glory, and the express image of his Person, Heb.1:3, and as in
Human Nature Christ is the First-born of every creature,
Col.1:15, the Glory of God spoken of so much in the former
particular is in the Face of Jesus Christ, II Cor.4:6, and Christ is
the Head of every man, I Cor.11:3, even as God is the Head of
Christ, and man, viz., that great supreme man is primarily the
image and glory of God, I Cor.11:7, for Christ being the Head
of man, as between God and man, it is He that must be the
image, and glory of God; else God without Christ intervening
would be the Head of every man, which the Apostle says
expressly Christ is; and God the Head of Christ, as whose image
and glory the man Christ is; therefore is the man, Rev.12:5, or
man, I Cor.11:7, foreseen in human nature, and not every man
immediately; and so the Apostle’s argument in that place
reaches from Christ to every man; all these great expressions
of Christ show more clearly, who that image of God is, in which
Adam was made; for all these cannot be supposed to come in
upon Sin, and on that occasion or necessity only, as they have
place before it; and this I say not only to ascribe excellency to
our Mediator, but to show, how fit he is to be so, who is thus
the original image of God, by whom as the Eternal Word he
made and created all; I speak it also with a peculiar respect to
the point to be discoursed, concerning that admirable
agreement and conspiration between the Law and the Gospel;
and so to resolve whether the Gospel can be called a Law; on
all which these things well apprehended will reflect great light.
3. When man was thus made in the participation of the
Divine Nature, and in the image of God, {which Image Christ
is,} in order to the eternal enjoyment of God in blessedness,
and in his Glory; as it became an immutable unchangeable Law
upon man, which can no more be put off than his very being; so
it must needs be secondarily a Law upon him to be like Christ,
who is the image of God; now therefore here it comes to be
solemnly enquired, whether Adam had any notices of Jesus
Christ the image of God, wherein he was made; and there are
two great reasons that he had notices.
1. Because it being so expressly said, God made Adam in
that image, which is Christ, it is not probable that he could be

23
ignorant of it in so perfect a state of holy understanding, as
wherein he was made.
2. Because the Apostle says, Adam was the type of Him
to come, as the great and supreme Adam, though the second in
order of time of appearance, yet the First in Dignity and
Designation; again therefore here I argue, Adam in so perfect a
state, could not probably be ignorant of so great a truth, as of
the Second-First-Adam, of whom he was a type; and this I
desire the further observation of, as much tending to show, how
close the Gospel, and this Law may conspire.
3. Though the perfection of man’s being, was, as hath
been said, a law adequate to his being; as in conformity to the
Divine Being, and to the image of God, Jesus Christ; yet because
man was but a living soul, and not a quickening spirit, as the
Second Adam; that is, he was but a vessel, that had its
measure, and not a fountain, or spring, still supplying itself;
therefore whatever further revelation of the will and pleasure of
God, to which he should be obedient, God would please to
vouchsafe Adam for the securing his perseverance, and the
confirming him in a continuation of that happy state, wherein
his Creator had placed him; such revelation became, as much
of the essence of the Law of his Creation, as his conformity in
any branch of it whatever to the Divine Being in the image of
God, viz., Christ; both because of the authority and goodness of
the Revealer, to which the Law must needs oblige him; as also
because it tended to secure, and confirm him in that blessed
estate; for whatever did so, must needs bind him, even as the
preservation of that conformity to God and his image in any
other essential branch did; and herein, if possible more, because
it secured and confirmed all the rest.
It pleased therefore that infinite Wisdom and Goodness,
as well as Supreme Authority of God, to appoint in Paradise,
wherein he placed Adam, as the representation of his holy and
happy state, two Sacramental Trees; one the Tree of the
Knowledge of Good and Evil; and the other the Tree of Life. By
the one he was under an obligation of obedience in refraining
from it; by eating of the other, he was to receive a visible
pledge, and seal of the confirmation of his blessed state. The
refraining therefore from the one was to be but for a time; till
which time of abstinence observed, and expired, he had no right

24
to eat of the other; for so is signified, in that the Tree of Life
was plainly prepared to be eaten, so there must be a time for
the eating of it; and in the care God took, Adam should not eat
of it, after he had sinned, it appears God intended Adam should
not Eat of it, and die; for it was a sacrament of living forever as
God said, least he put forth his hand and eat of the Tree of Life,
and live forever; which however spoken in derision, yet imports
the sacramental sense of the Tree of Life; according to all which
sense, it is said of the true and substantial Tree of Life, blessed
are they that do his commandments, that they may have right
to the Tree of Life, Rev.22:14, alluding to the first Tree of Life,
of which Adam, if he for the time appointed {speaking strictly in
a metaphorical sense, for the Council of the LORD will stand,
even in this regard, for we clearly see that there was no half-
hazard intention in this sin, for we read explicitly, “for in the day
that thou eatest thereof” – not if you eat, but rather, you will
certainly eat thereof, “according to the eternal purpose which
he purposed in Christ Jesus our Lord,” Eph.3:11, “thou shalt
surely die,”} had kept the command of God in not eating of the
tree forbidden, would in due season have had right to eat of the
Tree of Life.
Now we may conceive two great reasons of God’s
forbidding the fruit of this Tree.
1. The observation of this command had fixed Adam in
universal obedience, and perfected him in a conformity to God,
in love, humility, dependence, self-resignation, love and care of
his posterity; righteousness, justice, and not invading, what was
not his; sobriety, temperance, universal holiness and goodness
being some way drawn up into it; on which account it might
justly be styled the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.
2. The Tree of Life being a sacramental type, plainly and
undoubtedly looking to Christ, by the so often use of it, and
application to the eternal wisdom, and in the revelation, it
argues strongly that the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil,
was a sacrament of Adam’s subsistence, for the preservation of
his integrity and happiness, in the Eternal Word, to come in
Human Nature, or the Second Adam, represented to him by the
Tree of Life. For seeing these two trees were coupled one to the
other, such as the one, such was the other; if one looked to
Christ, so did the other; now the greatest temptation to the

25
forbidden fruit, was to be as God, knowing good and evil; that
is, having the full dominion over good and evil in himself; and
so securing that holy and happy state by himself and in himself,
and not in Christ his Head, the image of the Invisible God, the
First Born of every creature, the Second Adam to come, the
Head of every man; as the Apostle stiles him, referring to the
first and original constitution. And I have not the least doubt,
Jesus Christ in so many great expressions, that have no
reference to the sin of man, was proposed as the Surety of
Creation, and the Mediator of it, and not only as to men but to
angels. But as I remember Zanchi on John 8, expounds, the
devil was a murderer from the beginning, and abode not in the
Truth, that is, not in Christ the Mediator, who is the Truth;
before all angelical and human being, by whom all were made,
and consist; so that confirmation of both the angelic, and human
nature was in Him; and even as the devil fell by not abiding in
Christ, so he tempted man, deceived them on the same point of
not abiding in the Truth, that is, in Christ, but coveting to have
all in Himself; by the delusion of the Liar, the father of lies.
Now this I have thus far insisted upon, to open so great
a Truth in such a way as may most show the harmony of the
Law and the Gospel in the same grand point of the Salvation of
the elect, as shall be further shown; how great influence this
stating of the original constitution hath upon it.
But we must yet further consider the relation, this
command of not eating the forbidden fruit, or the eating it, had
to the posterity of Adam, or to all in him.
For it is most plain from Scripture; Adam by having kept
the command of God, in not eating the forbidden fruit, had
conveyed holiness and happiness, even life and glory from God,
and Christ the image of God to all descending from him; this
may be undeniably argued from two things.
1. He could not have conveyed sin and death, if he had
not been first appointed by God to convey holiness and life; for
he was ordained by God to be a common head; else, though the
parent of the world, he could not have been so; he could not be
ordained of God, first, a conveyer of evil, that came in by his
own sin; God indeed in highest Justice, as he continues the
descent of mankind from him, continues the sanction of
conveyance of what he was, and had, which was righteousness

26
and life, as he was by God established to convey; when by his
sin he had lost both righteousness and life; as God does not cut
off that power of propagating the world, given him in that first
blessing of fruitfulness, and multiplication; so he does not
reverse the sanction of his conveying, what he should make
himself a root and original of, by the special ordination of God
upon his obedience, or disobedience in that one single act of
eating or not eating; having then by that act of disobedience
plunged himself in Sin and Death, he conveys it with that
derivation of human nature from him to the very end of the
world; Christ alone coming into the world under a peculiar law
of both generation and holiness of nature.
2. Adam could not have been a type of Christ to come, if
he had not been appointed by God a conveyor of righteousness
and life, for Christ is so alone; after the transgression, Adam
was a type of Christ only in conveyance, as a common head, as
of sin and death; for so he is an opposite to him, who conveys
Righteousness and Life. So therefore must Adam needs be as
from God, that he might be a type; the nobler part of his being
a type he lost by Sin, and is now become only an opposite type;
he conveys but contrary to Christ, not Righteousness, and Life,
but Sin, and Death; and so he begat Seth, not in the image of
God, who is Christ, but in his own image. Gen.5:3.
But thus in everything, as the Apostle says, the Scripture
foreseeing, God would do all he does, in Eternal Grace, and Love
by Jesus Christ, preached before the Gospel to Adam, in that
Tree; the symbol of removing him from the thoughts of being a
God to himself in the dominion over good and evil, called the
knowledge of it, according to the great importance of the word,
“knowing” in Scripture; but that he should trust in him,
shadowed to him, by the Tree of Life. Again he preached the
Gospel to him by making him a type of One to come, as a Second
Adam by way of appearance, but he was before him, for he was
before all things, as the Eternal Word to be made man, and by
him, they all consist; so the first man was to be an Adam, or
universal original of righteousness and life subordinate to Christ,
dependent upon him, and to be confirmed by him, by such an
appointment given him of obedience and trust, and not taking
upon himself that which was not his; for so the Apostle portrays
lust, I Jn.2:16, by its first parent lust, the lust of the eye; the

27
forbidden fruit was fair to the eye; the lust of the flesh, it was
good to taste; the taking upon the pride of life, we shall be as
gods, &c., Adam therefore taking upon himself, and not trusting
in Christ to be sustained for ever, lost himself and his posterity,
excepting redeemed by Christ; as first declared, a head of
confirmation; now of recovery.
And though this making Adam a common head, as it hath
proved, is a scandal to proud reason; yet it was first, an
Ordination of Grace, and Wisdom, and, as I may say, a
compendious contrivance for happiness and blessedness to
mankind; by one man, the common parent, and head, having
by Faith in Christ, represented by the Tree of Life, trusted in
him, and not taken upon himself; and saying with the prodigal,
let me have my portion of good, all in my own hands.
Thus all mankind had been secured, and not left to the
hazard of every single person, betraying himself; for it is most
apparent by Adam what everyone would have done; he having
all possible advantages in a fresh vigorous holiness, an
unstained world; such a lively invitation of the Tree of Life, such
a short act of self-denial, or refusing to be a God to himself, as
he thought to be, by eating of that forbidden Fruit.
But now, let us see, what all this contributes to the points
we are upon, which will be found to be exceeding in enlightening
both the Law and the Gospel to us.
1. From hence it appears that the Law is an immutable
and unchangeable Law of Holiness, and of Everlasting
Obligation, whilst there is such a being human nature, for it
arises from the Being of God to be enjoyed in holiness, and
blessedness, by man, made so to enjoy; and it arises from the
image of God, Jesus Christ, in and by whom that state was to
have been confirmed, and so for ever enjoyed; and by whom it
is to be so recovered.
2. From hence it appears, there can be no new Law, but
what must of necessity entwine, and incorporate into that First
Law, and merge into it, so adequate to the being of man,
enjoying the holy and blessed God, by Jesus Christ the image of
God; such was that Law of not eating the forbidden fruit; it was
a Law of trust in Christ the image of God, the Way, and the
Truth, and the Life, by way of confirmation, and so was
immediately adopted into that Law of Righteousness and

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Holiness; the law of faith in Christ the Redeemer, and of
repentance is in this sense no new law, but that Old
Commandment, and a New Commandment only, by being new
illustrated by a more glorious light; but it unites with that Law
first given of holiness, in and by Christ the image of God for the
enjoying God in conformity to him; now in a way of Redemption,
Expiation, and Recovery, and thereby a return to our first state,
according to the first Law.
3. From hence it appears, the Everlasting Covenant of
God in predestinating a elect number of mankind to be
conformed to the image of his Son, cannot be disannulled, or
added to, nor taken from by any dispensation or manner of
speaking that comes after it, according to that fore-mentioned
rule of the Apostle, understanding it of the elect of God,
controlling all doubts; so that what Christ was to do as the image
of God by way of confirmation, he now does by way of
Redemption, by that mighty effectuating image of the Glory of
God in Christ by his Spirit.
4. From hence it appears, that Jesus Christ in the first and
original right of being, the Head of every man, and the image of
the invisible God, by whom, and for whom all things were made,
and without whom nothing was made, that was made, and in
whom they consist, upholds a present state of the world in the
patience, and long-suffering of God; and also bears up, as he
pleases, the natural law, in which man was made, enforcing the
reasonableness, justice, and equity, to turn by repentance to
that God; who leaves not himself without witness, in giving
fruitful times, and seasons, and filling men’s hearts with food,
and gladness, {and so signifies Grace, and Mercy,} and to
recover themselves, as far as to the utmost they can to that
state of righteousness, of which they find such plain mentions
of in their hearts; and finding the shortness of their own power
to cast themselves upon Divine Grace, and Help.
And where the light of the glorious Gospel comes
according to all degrees of Divine Revelation, the obligation rises
higher, and becomes stronger. For the transgression and ruin of
human nature does not take off the obligation of duty, but it
stands wherein soever God does not immediately execute the
penalty, or vouchsafes any remainder of power at first given, or
increase, and advantage of that remainder; and wherein soever

29
men do not thus, there is a just particular, personal
condemnation; but yet it remains according to the first standard
Law of Creation, every man must be miserable for ever, and die
the Death, whoever is not found in the image of God, in Christ
in Righteousness, and true holiness.
5. From hence it lastly appears that the elect of God in
Jesus Christ must be perfectly restored into a state of
Righteousness, and freedom from Guilt, into a state of Holiness
and Purity, for the enjoyment of God; and seeing this cannot be
in man fallen, sinful, unholy, and so miserable for ever; it must
be by the sacrifice, righteousness and obedience of Christ
imputed; by the restoration of his Spirit, and all according to
Grace, and the riches of Grace, and to the praise of the glory of
that Grace, which Adam first refused; but is hereby exalted to a
far higher Glory by Jesus Christ appearing thus a Redeemer, a
Reconciler, an Eternal Spirit so closely united, and fully declared
in Redemption, for the Lord, even Christ, and his Increated
Spirit is that Spirit changing into his own image from Glory to
Glory by that Spirit, who is Himself Jehovah.
That I may now make a nearer approach to resolve this
great and weighty question; whether the Gospel can be in a
true, proper, and strict sense styled a Law; I will now propose
these two heads to discourse it upon.
1. I will show, how far, the Law, as it is a Law, must yet
needs join its authority, for and with the Gospel, according to
its eternally holy, and righteous nature; and then I will on the
other side show, how far the Gospel without any abatement of
its purest Gospel-Nature, makes use of the Law, as a most
righteous holy Law, to its own most gracious ends.
2. I shall make it yet most evident from Scripture, that
the Law can never, as it is Law in the Scripture definings and
discourses of it become Gospel; nor on the other side, can the
Gospel, as it is Gospel, and drawn out according to the
Everlasting Covenant, pass into the nature of Law, according to
a Scriptural definition of Law.
I begin with the first head, to show how far the Law
cannot, even as Law, but join its authority to the Gospel.
1. That the law of reason and understanding; of
righteousness, holiness, goodness, that God hath engraven
upon the heart of man, and seated in his conscience, cannot but

30
establish the Revelation of Christ, and Grace by him, manifested
by such a mighty power from Heaven, and asserted by so many
infallible proofs to be from God; so full of goodness and grace,
above the very Law of Creation itself implanted in man’s heart;
it cannot, I say, but establish it as a faithful saying, and worthy
of all acceptation, of both faith, love and obedience; so that in
this very regard, it may be truly and properly styled a law of
faith and obedience to the Gospel among all nations, to whom
it comes, and is most strictly enjoined, and commanded by it;
and so the Apostle might most elegantly say, boasting is
excluded; by what Law? Of works, viz., the Law as it commands
works; nay, by the Law, as it commands Faith, or the
embracement of Christ as Saviour, and his righteousness, by
mere gift, and of Grace; in which righteousness hath so great
honour, and full Satisfaction paid to it, that it cannot but accept,
and charge upon all that hear of it the acceptation of it. But
because thus faith will stand as a work, though {as I may call
it} a post-work, or a work after Sin, I rather understand the
Apostle using here the word, law of faith, in a lax and allusive
sense, as any doctrine, or Divine manifestation may be called a
Law or Principle of Faith.
2. The Law hereupon cannot but enlarge its promises,
according to this Divine constitution, for if God has declared,
that he gives eternal life to all believers in Christ, who turn from
iniquity by repentance, and take hold upon the righteousness of
Christ imputed to their persons; the Law must needs join issue
with these declarations of God, and with what infinite Truth and
Grace have said, and confirm with its own sanctions, all these
promises, as earnestly to be desired and laid hold of, yet still
this belongs to the Law, as Law, and interferes not with Gospel,
as Free Grace.
For as all the commands of the Law are grounded upon
the sovereignty and righteousness of God; so are its promises
grounded upon the power, truth, goodness, and un-
changeableness of God; if then the Gospel declares a
righteousness of God, a righteousness of God by faith in Jesus
Christ, accepted of God beyond any righteousness by the works
of the Law; the very Law itself opens, and enlarges all its
promises to that righteous person, by the Righteousness of
Christ; and as this Righteousness, on which such a person is

31
justified, is exceeding unto him, and upon him, as the Apostle
speaks; that is, every way overflows him, and so beyond all
other righteousnesses; so does the Law extend its promises to
the utmost in relation to it, and therefore God is said {as in
triumph} to declare herein, and at that very time his
righteousness; that he might be just, and the justifier of him
that believes in Jesus, Rom.3:26, and the Apostle John saith, “if
we confess our sins,” that is, acknowledge our absolute
necessity of such a righteousness by Christ, and receive it, the
LORD is faithful and just, even according to the Law of
Righteousness to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all
unrighteousness; so they who receive abundance of Grace, and
of the Gift of righteousness, shall reign in life by Jesus Christ,
Rom.5:17, not only live, as the Law saith to the man, who doth
its works, but reign in life; the promises of the Law being
stretched out, and accumulated upon such a person so justified
by the transcendent Righteousness of Christ. “That as sin hath
reigned unto death, even so might grace reign through
righteousness unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Rom.5:21.
3. The Law opens wide its threatenings in the cause of,
and on injury done to the Gospel, and the Grace of God revealed
in it; for seeing, it is essential to the Law of Righteousness to
condemn sinners; it is also essential to it to condemn and
adjudge to its punishments according to the degrees of sin, and
guilt; for, saith the Apostle, he that transgressed the Law of
Moses, died without mercy, under two or three witnesses, and
every transgression received a just recompense of reward, that
is, according to the degree of guilt and demerit. Of how much
sorer punishment suppose ye, shall he be thought worthy, who
hath trod underfoot the Son of God, and counted the blood of
the covenant a common thing, and done despite to the Spirit of
Grace? Heb.10:28-29. This is plainly according to the Law of
Righteousness, according to which also Christ said, it shall be
more tolerable for Sodom and Gomorrah. Matt.10:15. Thus we
may see how far the Law must needs attend the Gospel with all
its authority.
I will now show how the Gospel takes in the Law, and
makes use of it for its own great ends, and purposes; upon

32
account of which the Apostle says, do we make void the Law?
Nay we establish it. Rom.3:31.
The Law stands fair in the Gospel, and in its full perfection
of breadth, and length; that it may show the glory of the
Righteousness and Obedience of Jesus Christ; and also it stands
with all its penalty, severity, curse, and condemnation, that it
may show the depth of the sufferings of our great Mediator; and
interpret to us the agony, wherein he sweat drops of blood, and
the meaning of that loud cry, “my God, my God, why hast thou
forsaken me?” For, said Christ, “thus in every iota of the
revealed will of God, it became him to fulfil all righteousness.”
Matt.3:15.
2. That it may show to all the glory from which they are
fallen, and from which they daily fall lower, and lower; the
deformity of their own state; the dread and horror of that ruin,
and condemnation of hell, and death, that is so justly come upon
sinners, fallen short of that Glory of God; for this holy,
righteous, and good Law, of such purity, and cleanness; a fiery
Law, a royal Law, a perfect Law of liberty, shows all the
hatefulness of sin, and justice of punishment, and
condemnation; and all this is in order to humiliation, sight, and
sense of sin, conversion from it; and especially to show the great
necessity of Christ’s redemption, grace, the free gift of
righteousness, and justification by him. For thus by the Law is
the knowledge of sin; thus the Law worketh wrath; that is, it
both stirs up the due apprehension of it, and if not prevented by
Pardon and Justification, it calls up vengeance against the
offender; wherefore the Law is our schoolmaster, to bring us
unto Christ, Gal.3:24, by the severity and rigor of its justice,
and as such it is in the hand of the Gospel.
3. That the Gospel may by the Law show that perfect
pattern, and exemplar of holiness, and purity of thoughts, words
and actions, to which we are to aspire; that cleansing of
ourselves from the filthiness of flesh and spirit, to perfect
holiness, in the fear of God; that exceeding broad
commandment, that sets an end, or bound, showing all other
perfection too short, and too narrow compared with itself; and
so the Law may be as a rule of holy life, and action, to which we
should follow on according to the mark even of perfection itself;

33
if it could be, to attain the very state of that perfection, that
shall be in the resurrection of the dead.
And herein there are four great Gospel ends, aimed at by
the Gospel, thus taking the Law under itself.
First. That we may feel a continual necessity of making
recourse to the blood of Christ, the fountain set open for sin and
for uncleanness; because, by this holy Law, there is a discovery
of daily defilements, failings, falls, imperfections, and
infirmities; concerning which, there can be no atonement
between God and us, but by the blood of the Lamb, offered by
the Eternal Spirit, and his appearing in that blood before the
very face of God for us in heaven; for on the least failing, or
offence, the Law hath nothing to offer us; so that there can be
nothing but condemnation; on this account therefore we find in
the Gospel so many of the Laws severities, that we may be
continually awakened to go to Christ.
Secondly. That we may find inability in ourselves to do
anything suitable, or agreeable to that holy Law, which
commands with an astonishing and admirable excellency of
holiness, but gives not the least power, or strength to perform
what it commands; and in both respects, the Apostle may be
very well understood, if there had been a Law that could have
given life, Gal.3:21, verily righteousness should have been by
the Law. But the Law that commands, and gives not power, is
therefore called a letter that kills. II Cor.3:6.
Thirdly. That herein the Gospel may show itself to be a
Gospel indeed; in the ministration of righteousness opposite to
the Law, the ministration of condemnation; and in the
ministration of life, and power, by the Spirit giving strength to
do what is commanded; and so enabling the spirits of saints to
become the Epistle, and Gospel of Christ; ministered by the
servants of Christ in preaching the New Testament, but written
not with ink, or in the leaves of the Bible, but with the Spirit of
the Living God; and not in tables of stone, but in the fleshly
tables of the heart, II Cor.3:3; and therefore is the Gospel in all
its most proper ways of speaking so constantly interlineated
with Christ, and his Spirit.
Fourthly. Seeing what even the Spirit is pleased to
vouchsafe in the present state, is so much below the very glory,
the Gospel holds out; there is a continual incitation, the Gospel

34
sets before us to desire that change from the beginning glory of
the present state, to the glory, that shall be in the perfect state,
of the Kingdom of Christ; and on this account is that future
state, so often mentioned, when indeed with a face perfectly
open, we shall behold as in a mirror, not as in ordinary mirrors,
our own natural faces, but Jesus Christ the image of God in his
own glory; and we now are in degrees, and shall be perfectly
changed into the same image from glory begun now, II
Cor.3:18, to the perfection of the same glory in the kingdom of
Christ, as by that Spirit Jehovah. And this gives us the true
excellency of the Gospel; the Law, like our ordinary mirrors,
shows our own faces by that light, which first indeed represents
what we ought to be, but we not being that, it reproves and
condemns such sinners, or imperfect saints, as the best are; but
it shows no glorious image in Christ, with an efficacious
changing Grace and Power, but this the Gospel does for us.
4. The Gospel takes the Law into itself that it may, though
it be in itself a ministration of righteousness, and life, and spirit;
yet that it may by the Law show the greatness of the sin of
unbelief, and impenitency, rejection of itself, and refusal of its
proclamations of Grace.
And this it does on two great reasons.
1. That all those manifestations of the sin and danger of
an unbelieving, impenitent state, may be rational instruments,
and conveyances, in the hand of the Spirit, of that power of
faith, and repentance, flowing from itself in the New Testament
into the hearts of the elect.
2. That the Gospel may have in readiness the Law to
revenge every disobedience against itself; and yet preserve its
own high title of the New Testament, and the Covenant of
Grace; for as the Lord saith, I accuse you not, you have one that
accuses you, even Moses in whom you trust, Jn.5:45; and I
judge you not, the words that I have spoken, Jn.12:48, they
shall judge you at the last day, viz., in the virtue and the
authority of that Law of Righteousness, which, as hath been
shown, cannot but pass along with that so gracious Gospel
Dispensation.
And thus when the Gospel hath made proclamation of
itself, and all the Grace of it without the accompanying Power of
Effectual Grace in saving efficacy, the Law and Justice,

35
according to it, seizes upon the sinner for sin, against that
eternal righteousness essential to itself; and against the
unspeakable Grace of the Gospel, with dread-fullest
aggravations of condemnation; and herein Jesus Christ the
Eternal Son of God in our nature is the Righteous Judge at that
day; though here on earth he judged not, being come not to
judge, but to save.
And his judgment is according to that law, seated in the
heart, and thoughts of men; and yet according to the Gospel,
as the Apostle speaks, declaring that his judgment, agreeable
with the law written in men’s hearts, and so in the word of God;
which very law written in the heart, and thoughts of men,
accusing or excusing, is now in the hand of Christ, and of the
Gospel to its own great ends of drawing them to Christ, who are
his, and leading them under the conduct of his Spirit; and God
is said there to judge the secrets of men’s hearts according to
the Gospel, concerning that light and sense of natural
conscience; because the Grace of the Gospel both exalts this
light; and because also according to the saving effects of the
Gospel upon these powers of natural conscience, so preserved
by Christ, every man is found to honour, praise, and glory; or
else falls under the revelation of the righteous judgment of God
upon their hard and impenitent hearts, and ways; by which they
have treasured up wrath against the day of wrath.
And of all things in both states, Jesus Christ is most
righteously and properly constituted the Judge, as shall be
further made out.
But notwithstanding the Law and the Gospel, do thus far
join themselves, one to another, yet {which will come up close
to the decision of this question,} the Law can never pass into
the nature of the Gospel, nor can the Gospel become a Law.
First, it is most evident that the Law can never become
Gospel, or of the excellent nature of it; as shall be seen in a brief
comparison of the one with other, in these following particulars.
1. The Gospel, or New Testament gives the image of the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ; an image of the
admirable beauty, and life, in Christ the Wisdom of God, the
Righteousness of God, and the Power of God, perfect, increated,
invariable, eternal, ready to communicate itself in richest
abundance to all the election of God; but the Spirit of God itself

36
represents the Law, a holy, and righteous rule, as it must so
needs be; but it is engraven only in tables of stone, or written
with ink; for Jesus Christ, the image of God, in which Adam was
made, withdrew upon the sin, and fall of Adam; and what Adam
had, was lost, and defaced, so that there is a rule of glory, but
no image of glory; as in the Gospel, that by the Covenant of
Grace is to communicate itself.
2. The Gospel having such a communication of
righteousness, so high, so perfect, can accept a sinner by
putting upon him a perfect righteousness and obedience, and so
blot out all his transgressions, and imperfections by a full and
free pardon; the penalty being fully answered, and discharged
by Christ’s death and sufferings, even as the righteousness is
fulfilled by him, who is that image of glory; but the Law being
only a rule and no more, can accept no less, than a whole and
perfect obedience; for the least offence being {as they speak}
a convulsion or breach of the whole frame of righteousness, the
Law can pronounce nothing but condemnation to a sinner, who
hath not that full and perfect righteousness of the Gospel to
offer to it; but solicits, and stirs up, and works wrath by the
discovery of sin; and it stains all imperfect righteousness by
declaring the offender in one point guilty of all; it brings to
nothing all outward righteousness, by showing the very first
desire, or coveting to be sin.
3. The inward grace of Christ, manifesting itself in a life
conducive to Gospel holiness and righteousness, so absolutely
vital in every person redeemed by Christ, and united to him, is
not only enjoined upon him by a letter that kills, by
commanding, and giving no power; but is conveyed to him by a
quickening spirit, changing him into the same image from
beginning glory, to perfect glory; as by that Lord, who is that
Spirit Jehovah; one with that spirit, and who himself is that
image, and that Spirit; so that everyone redeemed by Christ is
the Epistle and Gospel of Christ itself, written not with ink, but
with the Spirit of the living God; this the Law can never do; it
commands, and supposes the power, which was once given; but
the Law never considers the ruin by the fall, nor takes
compassion of it; so it can never become a Gospel; for the
Gospel brings every good work from the treasury of eternal love,
and grace, from the blood of the Everlasting Covenant by a

37
meeting of the spirit of the Gospel in the heart of every vessel
elected in Christ; and from providential opportunities, and
advantages of such holy action, and good work, according to the
will of God.
4. The reward therefore, and the whole procedure of
judgment is according to the Gospel; of, and according to mere
grace to all the elect of God, though in, and with a splendour of
holiness and purity; even to all those who are partakers of the
blessing of the Gospel in Christ; but all is solemnly turned to
condemnation, and aggravation of punishment; even to, and
upon all those who are not the evangelized, the children of the
Gospel by election; and yet in a way of clearest justice, and
righteousness, according to their works, in that righteous
judgment; as shall presently be, in a particular head of this
discourse made out concerning that great day.
5. The Gospel hath this most illustriously peculiar to it;
that it touches nothing, even that is in its own nature most
severe, and farthest from Grace, but it by its high dominion of
Grace, subordinates it to the ends, purposes, and service of
Grace; even the Law, Sin, and Death, that where they abound,
Grace does much more abound; where sin by the Law does reign
unto death, all, who receive abundance of Grace, and of the gift
of Righteousness, shall much more reign in life by Jesus Christ,
and Grace itself so reigns, as therefore it hath been made out;
even the Law is throughout taken into this great service of the
Gospel, for the great ends and purposes of Grace; but now the
Law takes nothing under its cognizance, but so far as it comes
under its hand, with relation to fallen man, it turns it, like itself,
into a killing letter, and into a ministration of condemnation.
Let us therefore consider the most different influence of
the Law; in three dispensations that comprehend all the
dealings, or manner of treaties, God hath had with man, since
the transgression of Adam.
1. That which is the most universal dispensation of God
towards all mankind, and is generally styled the Law, or light of
nature, or as the Apostle calls it, the work of the Law written in
the heart, wherein all should be doing by nature the things
contained in the Law, men being a law to themselves; and this,
though it be the lowest of Divine dispensations to men; in order
to recovery of the elect, in order to human society for the elect’s

38
sake; yet it is general to all; only in children, and idiots, it is
hidden and close folded up, for want of the use of the faculties,
else it is the same; and it is by the interposal of the Mediator for
the elect’s sake, that there should be a world under the patience
and long-suffering of God; and by the same patience and long-
suffering there was a reserve, and reprieve from the utter loss
of the image of God, as from Christ communicated; on account
of which he is said to enlighten every man that comes into the
world; which light is capable of more and more natural degrees
of clearness, and power, if closely attended to; whereby the
world becomes habitable by being under the Government of that
Eternal Wisdom, by which kings reign, princes, Prov.8:15, and
all the judges of the earth decree justice.
Now this reserve of the image of God in man, as it falls
under the Law, or the strict rule of holiness, serves only to self-
accusation, as to every particular person, that hath not acted up
to that law, and light within; and yet still if they did live up to
the highest degrees, it could not make a recovery or restoration
of any man without Christ; for without even the least acceptance
of what is done according to it; it only aggravates what was not
done to the height; so that that accusation of thoughts the
Apostle speaks of, the Law hath its power over; and the
excusing or apologies of thoughts are from the Grace of the
Gospel, which does allow them an abatement of condemnation,
for any good thing found in them, or done by them; and
therefore the Apostle says, God will judge the secrets of all
hearts at that day according to this Gospel by Jesus Christ,
Rom.2:16; showing, that with relation to this light given by the
Mediator, and for his sake, God will proceed with great Gospel
equity and mercy; which may be another, and greater sense of
those words before given, to all those, who have laid together
those remainders, or reserves of the light of nature, and the
patience, and goodness of God; of which he hath given so many
witnesses; so that it shall be more tolerable for such, than
others; who have trodden all these under foot, and run into all
excess of riot, cruelties, and all uncleanness with greediness.
But in all the elect, the Grace of the Gospel makes a much
higher use of this light, for it lifts them up above it into a new
creation, and regeneration by the Spirit of Life, and Grace, from
Christ; and of this the Apostle discourses after the mentions of

39
the law of nature, and the Gentiles conformity to it in some
parts; the Grace of the Gospel turns the uncircumcision into
circumcision of the spirit, as he goes on.
2. Let us consider the great difference between the Law
and the Gospel in that, which Scripture in the New Testament
so universally stiles the Law, viz., the whole frame of the Mosaic
Law; and as this was purely by itself, and as it did not look to
Christ, it is represented, as that rigorous and severe
dispensation, that is, the killing letter, the ministration of death,
of condemnation, the Law that worketh wrath; by which is the
knowledge of sin, by which no flesh can be justified in his sight;
a Law of works done by our own power, in number, weight, and
measure; or else it brings under the curse; a Law therefore, that
can by no means give life, and so righteousness cannot be by it
unto justification of life; and all the ceremonies are, but so many
labels, hand-writings, and seals against us, and contrary to us;
binding us to keep the whole Law, so opposite to Christ that
where they are observed since reversed by the Gospel, he can
profit us nothing; opposite to grace, so that he that adheres to
them for righteousness, falls from Grace, and is under the works
of the Law, and under the curse; as the Apostle says, whoever
sins having the Law, perishes by it, and with having it. It is a
Covenant, that is found fault with, because God finds fault with
them, who are under it for breaking it; and yet all this time the
Law is holy, just and good; and therefore there was a glory in
regard of its so intimate, and essential goodness, that reflected
a glory on the face of Moses, when God gave the two tables; as
it were, in remembrance of the first glory of Adam; but it soon
vanished into a ministry of death and condemnation, showing
how soon Adam fell from the glory of God; and yet even this
whole Mosaic frame was designed with all its ceremonies to lead
to Christ, according to all the service of the Law to the Gospel,
when it is in the hand of the Gospel, as hath been before
explained; in which regard the face of Moses shone, receiving
the rays of the Divine Glory in the face of Jesus Christ; but
because the efficacy of Gospel Grace was only to the elect, the
Law became superior, and the ceremonies thickened as a veil
upon that glory; embalmed by the veil on the face of Moses,
which hid the glory of Christ; which veil so sadly lies on the
minds of the Jews, blinding them to this day. But this Law being

40
in the hand of the Gospel to the elect, was a Law directing the
soul to Christ, making wise, and unveiling the way of Life, as all
its ceremonies led to Christ, and his glory shone through them
all; although, because it was not a dispensation high and
spiritual enough for that glory of Grace, they saw, that glory was
to be done away in Christ, and not to remain; and therefore,
even as God did often undervalue all the legal state in
comparison with Gospel Grace; so did his saints also in the time
of the Old Testament, but under the Gospel it is done away; so
the substantial goodness of it was then, and ever shall be in the
hand of the Gospel; as hath been more fully set out in the last
head of discourse.
3. Let us now lastly duly weigh, how far even the
dispensation of the Gospel becomes Law to them, who by not
being in Christ, are under the Law, although they have the light
of the Gospel vouchsafed to them in the outward administration;
for to whomsoever the Gospel is hid or veiled, and a savour of
death, they are left to the dominion of the Law over them,
however the Gospel be never so clearly proclaimed to them; the
Law then having nothing to do with the promises of Grace, it
urges upon us, whatever is to be done by ourselves; it presses
the free declaration of Christ, and of his righteousness, a
conformity to his holiness, and to his holy precepts, as the only
way to recover ourselves; but it having no power of promise,
according to the Gospel in its own proper ordination, or
dispensation, it calls upon us in our own strength and
improvements of ourselves to obtain both righteousness and
life; and so forces upon us the manner of works, to seek pardon
of sin, righteousness and sanctification by Christ; which is
turning the Gospel into a Law, to all, who are not the children of
God by faith in Jesus Christ; hereupon it proceeds to aggravate
guilt and condemnation, and to make it more tolerable for any,
than for those who having had the Gospel, have not yet obtained
Justification, and Righteousness, and Sanctification, and
Holiness, by and from the Gospel according to it.
But now the Gospel proceeds quite otherwise with all
those, who are the evangelized, truly the children of promise;
for it gives all to them freely, and as a ministration of
righteousness, of life, and of the Spirit; even that very
righteousness, and spirit of Gospel truth directing them to all

41
righteousness in Christ; as it does not set the elect of God to
correct their faces, the face of their hearts and lives by it, as by
a glass, or mirror, showing them what they are; but it presents
Jesus Christ the image of God, who is also the Lord, that Spirit
changing the saints into the same image; though indeed it be,
but a beginning glory, onwards still to perfection of glory; so
that there are rays of glory shining from Christ upon the soul,
and the spirit of every one, united to Christ, which are far
greater than the rays of glory seen on the face of Moses, shining
from God in his Law, by his image Christ, as Mediator, as the
Eternal Word in our nature, and as in the first creation, our
Representative and Eternal Surety in the New Covenant, and
New Creation; so that glory was none, being so much exceeded
by Christ as Mediator; which is also a remaining glory, always,
going on to the perfection of glory.
Whatever therefore of righteousness arises any way to,
or in man, not thus derived from Christ, Scripture calls it flesh,
as being man’s righteousness, not the righteousness of God;
and the righteousness of flesh, that is, of human erection, not
God’s righteousness; and so the holiness rising from men’s
faculties, and power, is born of flesh, and so is flesh, and is not
spirit, not after the Spirit; therefore it cannot see, enjoy, or
enter into the kingdom of God. And this must needs be plainly
our Lord’s sense, and thus he does not speak of flesh, corrupt
flesh, as it speaks lust, and foul corruption; for that cannot
pretend to have anything to do in the matter of righteousness,
and holiness; but by flesh, is to be understood creature-
righteousness and holiness, as in our present fallen state; and
in regard of this, no flesh, {that is, man with all his powers,
even of soul in this sinful lapsed nature; whatever is not of God
in Christ is this flesh,} I say, no such flesh shall boast, or glory
in his presence as having obtained the glory of God, nor be
justified in his sight.
Now by all this, it plainly appears, the Gospel is so
distinct, in each particular from the Law, that it can no more
return back into a Law, according to Scripture discourse, when
it speaks strictly of Law, as Law, than the Law become Gospel;
yet I shall further argue it more particularly, that the Gospel
cannot be a Law in the proper Scripture sense of a Law;
although it is to be acknowledged, the Law can never cease to

42
be, because it is eternal righteousness; and it hath, and ought
to have power upon all the reserve of the light, and law of
nature, and upon all the improvements of it from a general
dispensation of Grace, as the helps of truth revealed in the word
of God; yea, even the very saints, and servants of Christ are
hereby kept within bounds at any time, or in any acts, wherein
the Grace of Christ is not present to them more abundantly;
they are hereby acted to their duty; and the supreme wisdom
and grace of the Gospel subordinates it to its own purposes,
both in the elect, and in the non-elect, as hath been shown.
And this answers all cavils about the doctrine of Free
Grace, as if the teaching of it were Antinomianism, and let men
loose either to carnal licentiousness, ease and security, till the
Grace of God should come, and work. But even while the eye of
the soul is supremely upon Free Grace, the Free Gift of
Righteousness, and of the Spirit; yet the Law binds every soul
to its ultimum posse, the all it can do; and the Gospel
subordinates the Law to engage men so to do; and though this
be no condition, or qualification, on which Free Grace is
determined; yet it is oftentimes the way, and method of
Supreme Grace to come upon such motion, and action of the
soul; not for the sake of that, but for its own sake, therefore to
excite thereunto; and it is one of the wise methods of God’s
government of the world to make it habitable for the sake of the
elect, to influence the hearts, and actions of men either by that
light of nature, or by his Gospel; all which I have prefixed, as
necessary to remove all scruple, and doubt of what is to come
after in the proof of this, that the Gospel is not a Law.
For by what is said, it appears, the Gospel and the Law
are joined; one to and with another, in sweetest consent, so
that all in Christ are under Law to Christ, and neither entrench
upon, nor interfere, one with the other; but if they are divided
or set one in opposition to the other, either Antinomianism truly
so called, or a covenant of works is brought in; even as the Jews
separating that Law from Christ, turned it to their own great ruin
into a covenant of works; and the Apostle intimates everywhere
the great danger of turning the Grace of God into licentiousness,
or proclaiming a liberty to sin, that grace may abound; if we do
not subordinate the Law under the Gospel.

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But thus joining, and setting them in a consent, and union
in the great end; the glory of Grace from the foundation of the
world; we honour, and establish both; and plainly understand,
that the Gospel is a Covenant of Grace, a ministration of
righteousness, life, and spirit; and yet hath so many admirable
incentives of holiness, such powerful commands and
exhortations to it; as also to faith in Christ, and repentance, so
many dreadful threatenings and denunciations, and so severe a
judicature at the last, not in itself, but by the ministry of the
Spirit, in that the Law is so prepared, as to serve it fully and
adequately thereunto; and the Gospel only, {as hath been
said,} is a ministration of righteousness and life.
Objection: Now, if any should say, by what means can the
Gospel thus preach the Law, and hold out all the perfections and
severities of it, both as to itself, as a declaration of free Grace
only; or as to the Law, as a Law of righteousness, and not be
turned into a Law?
Answer: The Gospel being the manifestation of life, and
salvation in Christ, it must needs come with a great glory of
light, and truth, on everything; wherein the whole nature of life
and death, happiness and misery, that human nature can be
concerned in, stands; so that though, it is not a Law, it is yet a
doctrine of the greatest amplitude, compass and extent in all
things, that pertain to life and godliness, or on the other side,
to sin, and death; so that as the Apostle says, it hath brought
life and immortality to light, II Tim.1:10; so it hath brought all
the other things any way related thereto to light; so then it is
out of all doubt, whenever the Gospel comes, a great light
comes, like the morning spread on the mountains, it is therefore
called, the dayspring from on high, Lk.1:78, opposed to night
and darkness, and the valley of the shadow of death; and so
that there is a support of, and in all our greater illuminations, of
natural conscience, by that Eternal Word, enlightening every
man that comes into the world; and on this very account were
those more heroic efforts of natural light, and moral philosophy,
by Seneca, Plutarch, Plotinus, Simplicius, &c., about the very
time of the spread of the Gospel light by the Apostles.
I come therefore to decide that noble question, as I stile
it, whether the Gospel can bear or comport with the true notion
or sense of a law. To answer this question, there must be first a

44
due understanding, and notion of a law; in the general, law may
be applied to any doctrine, or determinate frame, constitution,
or settlement, that cannot be changed, or varied. And in this
regard the Gospel may be called a law.
But this is but a very general and loose notion of a law.
There is a more strict sense of it; and it imports three things.
1. A rule of action, given by a just authority that must be
observed.
2. It supposes a power resident in the person under that
command, and therefore it expects obedience without any
further assistance, or gift of power, to enable in the obedience.
3. Rewards, or punishments are suspended upon the
obedience, or disobedience, and a just judgment must
accordingly be given.
But such a Law, as this the Gospel, a Covenant of Grace,
cannot be, as may be argued upon these great accounts.
Argument 1. There can be no law given, no rule of holy
action, but it must needs merge and fall into the Law of
Righteousness, and be the same with it, being so perfect, {and
so fulfilled in Christ, as hath been shown,} and so that upon a
supposal of a new application of Grace, the obedience of faith,
Rom.16:26, is as much ordered by the Law, as any of the most
natural moral duties of fear of God, or righteousness; and the
same may be said of repentance.
Argument 2. The supposal of the Gospel’s being a new
law, necessarily supposes a new power given, as large as that
of the Law; so that whoever teaches the Gospel a law, must also
assert, all to whom the Gospel comes, must have a power
vouchsafed enabling them to faith and repentance; which seeing
Mr. Williams disowns, as given to all the elect in Christ, the
argument, is very heavy upon him; but, as I have stated, faith
and repentance within the first Law, the first power given obliges
without any power vouchsafed anew, even as to all other duties
of obedience, as hath been said.
For the further illustration of the point, that a new law
requires new power.
Let it be supposed Adam had no power of faith, or
repentance, ever given him; he could not forfeit from his
posterity, what he never had.

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If there be then a law of faith, and repentance given,
there must be a power of faith and repentance answering that
law; and so there must be such universal power of Grace given,
as may answer that law in all, to whom it extends, as a law.
But now, let us look upon faith, and repentance to be a
law included within the universal Law of Righteousness, as I do;
and as must needs be done, viz., upon two suppositions.
1. That man is fallen into sin.
2. That God is pleased to provide a Mediator and a Pardon,
and so to accept the righteousness of another, it will then follow,
the faith and repentance commanded, are but the exertions of
that power of the image of God first given; for the same power
that tends to conservation in the first righteousness, works to
restitution to that righteousness, when lost, upon any possibility
of recovery.
Herein therefore is the grace of the Mediator to mankind,
that he hath shored up the lapsed faculties of human nature
universally; that there are some reserves of that law, and light
of the first creation, some of the characters, and first
impressions for very great ends, both as to the government of
the world; as also to fasten the Grace of the Gospel unto, to
whom it comes; and seeing the patience and longsuffering and
bounty of God to mankind is a witness of some merciful
intention.
Finding therefore such motions of the law of nature
within, and of merciful providence without; here is so much of
the general goodness of God leading men to repentance, as will
leave even the Gentiles without excuse at that day.
Now then God requiring of fallen man no other thing, than
what he gave him power for at first, and what he hath by the
Mediator sustained him in some reserves of, according to the
thoughts, therefore accusing, or excusing in the day of Christ,
and according to God judging the secrets of all hearts by the
Gospel, preserving these remaining’s of the law of nature, shall
all be determined upon, at that day.
And thus everything stands clear and fair, according to
the discourses of Scripture, according to sound reason; whereas
all else must be full of trouble, and be antagonistic, against the
Grace of the Gospel, as against that so evident experience of
God’s giving the very light of the Gospel by his own Purpose and

46
Grace; and those laws of human justice and equity, of which we
have so inward a sense; and surely in everything it appears,
that the first law of righteousness, continues, and stands fast;
thus its authority falls freely with the Gospel, either as there is
any witness of it among the heathen; or as it is published, and
made known to any by the immediate preaching and reading of
it; and as the Gospel for all its great uses, and ends takes it into
itself; but yet still it is itself a ministration only of Life, of
Righteousness, and of the Spirit, and the transcript of the
everlasting gracious purposes of God from eternity.
Argument 3. If the Gospel be a new law, it must have a
promulgation, as universal, as it is a law, and seeing that the
name of Christ is the only name under heaven, given to the
children of men, whereby they can be saved; if it were a law, it
would certainly be by the goodness and equity of God
proclaimed and made known to all mankind, even to every
person, for faith, repentance, and obedience; but as it is a
counterpart of that supreme purpose of Grace in God towards
his elect, and not a law, it is enough that it be made known to
so many as are called according to purpose, to all others God is
at freedom; for even the general patience, and bounty of God
are sufficient manifestations of some mercy, that should excite
men to seek after God, and to turn from sin, and leaving them
inexcusable if they do not; that natural law requiring it, when
there are such hopes, to seek after God, as far as they can,
according to those hopes, and manifestations, even as in all
natural duties; and the case is but the same in perishing without
Gospel, as in perishing without Law; for thus the Apostle argues,
while he is discoursing with pagans, {Rom.2:3-4,} according to
natural light. But this promulgation is not sufficient for a new
law of so great good to all mankind.
Argument 4. The Gospel, if it were a new law, it must
needs be a law of works, and indeed else it were no law; for
though it be founded in Grace, and though it be a law accepting
sincerity in the place of perfect obedience; yet it must, if it be a
law, {as some mistakenly speak and would have it,} resolve
itself into the last issue, into something done by ourselves, by
our own power; even though we are assisted by the Grace of
the Spirit in it; yet there must be a power in us to accept, or
refuse that assistance; and if so, beside the Apostle’s constant

47
remonstrance to any such works, or law of works in the Gospel
Covenant. 1. It is evident by Adam falling under the dominion
of sin, how hazardous the smallest dependence on our own
created will is. So the promise could not be sure to the seed, as
the Apostle discourses. Rom.4:16. 2. The reward would be of
debt, and not of Grace, because to him that worketh, though in
the least of work, as the Apostle expressly says, it is so.
Rom.4:4. 3. There would arise cause of boasting to him that
should so work; because by that part how little soever, it should
be of work, he improves, and exerts his power so, as thousands
do not, which gives cause of boasting; now there is nothing the
Apostle more excludes than boasting, as most contrary to the
design of God in the Gospel.
Argument 5. If the Gospel be a law, it is necessarily
supposed to be founded in the Grace of the Redeemer, and in
everything weighed out by him, that it should need no further
grace for the pardon of sins against it; it being a law purchased
by the blood of the Redeemer. Now, if no sin against the Law of
the Gospel, as that Law is apprehended a law of all evangelical
obedience, have the benefit of a pardon, how dreadful were all
our case; for if this Law allow no pardon, it is expressly assured,
there remains no more sacrifice for sin, but that of the Gospel;
and if that extends not to sins against the Gospel, there would
remain nothing to us, but a certain fearful expectation of
judgment, and fiery indignation. If it be said, there is no sin
against this Law, but final unbelief, impenitency, or insincerity,
or an apostasy including all these, how imperfect then is the
evangelical Law that hath command only upon those final results
of our state and case; and the subjects of it are either left to the
law of works in all other cases; or else being under no law, there
is no transgression but those fore-named.
But if the Law do so ratify and confirm the Gospel in those
grand points of Faith; and Repentance, by its own authority, and
in all things else stand the immutable rule of holiness; then the
Grace of the New Covenant does offer Pardon and Remission,
by the blood of that Everlasting Covenant, and needs not be a
law, but a fountain of pardon, and remission, and of power and
strength only, as hath been explained; enabling to every act of
obedience, both of faith and repentance, and all holiness, and
making atonement for every disobedience, and imperfection;

48
which it does not prevent. From all which is much the fairer and
clearer state of the case in reason, and more agreeable to the
Scripture, duly considered and compared.
Add hereunto, that the condemnation of every unbeliever
is according to the Law of righteousness, because he loves
darkness rather than light, in that his deeds are evil, Jn.3:19,
and so he dares not come to the light; this, saith Christ, is the
condemnation. And thus, if the Law does ratify and confirm the
Gospel with its own proper authority, as hath been asserted;
every offence seemingly against the sanction of Grace is
condemned by the Law, as primarily against itself, and so the
Covenant of Grace is applied to for the pardon of it, and as
against itself; which is all Grace, as a Covenant, and hath
nothing of Law; but as sin against the Gospel it cannot but be
against that law to refuse grace when proclaimed in the Gospel
by Christ, as will fully appear by the next argument.
Argument 6. The Apostle says, the Gospel, or New
Testament, truly, properly, or strictly defined, is a ministration
only of righteousness, of life, of the spirit, not of the letter that
killeth, but of the Spirit that giveth life; it can therefore be no
law, except upon itself; for if it minister life, righteousness, spirit
only; if it write not in tables of stone, nor with ink in paper, but
in the tables of hearts, and by the Spirit of the living God; and
if it is not only written in the heart, {as the Apostle says, the
Law is written in the hearts of all men; which may be turned by
disobedience to it, into an accusing record;} but gives a mighty
Spirit enabling, and a gracious Pardon remitting, as is evident
by the whole Covenant of Grace; if all this be so, then whatever
it charges, it charges upon itself; that it hath not so ministered
as it takes upon to minister; and that it hath not ministered as
such a ministration, as it asserts itself to be to all, that are within
it as its proper subjects; it must fault itself, as the other
covenant was found fault with, because they broke it that were
under it. But seeing this cannot be supposed of so glorious a
ministration; the Gospel cannot be a Law requiring and
condemning, when not obeyed; but a Covenant of Grace
ministering Righteousness and Pardon, and not Condemnation,
for whatever is against the Law, on the Gospel account, as well
as on the Law’s account; and so giving power, and enabling to
whatever the Law requires on its own, or the Gospel account.

49
Lastly, ministering righteousness, and pardon in whatever, it
ministers only in degrees, and not to perfection.
Having thus determined upon the second head, that
however the Law and the Gospel unite, one with the other in
several great concernments, and interests of both; yet neither
can the Law pass into Gospel, nor the Gospel become a Law. I
come therefore to the third head to make out, that the
humiliation under the sight and sense of sin, effected by the
spirit of bondage; faith in Christ, and repentance, are not
qualifications, or conditions of an interest in Christ or
Justification by his righteousness, but are effluxes from electing
love, and from Christ the Mediator, and from his righteousness
and redemption; and whoever has a sense of these great
concernments of eternity, is not to wait for these as
qualifications, or conditions, but to hasten to Christ, to fly to him
for refuge, to be found in him, and look to Christ for all these
great effects, and to expect them from him; as such effects; for
such they are to all the elect; though to the non-elect, they are
branches of the same eternally righteous Law; upon
promulgation of the Gospel of salvation by Christ, and upon the
very acknowledgment of Christ as a Saviour, and the general
sense of our lost state.
I lay in the non-elect also, a uniformity in the order, of
first looking to Christ upon those two great declarations of the
Gospel. 1. That all men are lost and undone in themselves;
which rises up also from evident, even sense and experience. 2.
That in Jesus Christ there is life and salvation for sinners; from
whence also it naturally follows in reason and true arguing, as
the Apostle observes; if one died for all, then were all dead, II
Cor.5:14; so that proposition, that Christ hath died for sinners,
may be in Divine Declaration, as well first, as the other, viz.,
that all are lost without Christ; the very preaching of Christ,
infers in all true judgment, as the Apostle reasons, that all are
lost in themselves; I know not then why in regard of its dignity,
it may not be first, that Jesus Christ died for sinners; or why not
so in most absolute consideration? For though it is true in our
state, our lost state is before the proclamation of salvation in
Christ in time; yet Grace in Christ is first in the purpose of God
before the world began, and the fall, and of our lost state upon
it, came in after. I know not therefore why that great

50
proposition, God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son, that whoever believes in him, should not perish,
but have eternal life, should not be throughout, the supreme,
and first, and carry the other in it, that then all were dead, and
when the proposition the Apostle gives, that Christ died for the
chief of sinners, is primary, then the belief and certainty thereof
shall follow; and the abundance of grace, and the gift of
righteousness, draw, compel, and invigorate the reception
thereof.
I say therefore, even to non-elect, as well as to the elect,
the first thing to be proclaimed is Christ himself, to be received
and believed on; he then is the foundation and fountain of all,
even of that which is called condition and qualification; for if we
do but weigh two things, it must needs resolve us in this matter.
Argument 1. If redemption be redemption, it must itself
be before all qualifications or conditions, else it were not
redemption; according as Christ is said to be the Author of
salvation to them, who, {he being the Author of it,} obey him;
forasmuch, as that is so great a point of salvation, and he the
Author of all salvation, is therefore of that, viz., obeying him.
Does not the Father draw all the elect to Christ? Is not the Grace
of our Lord abundant with faith and love that are not brought to
him, but in him? Does not the eye, the look of the Grace of Christ
upon any sinner move him as Peter, to sorrow after God, to
faith, repentance, and a humbled sense of sin? And therefore
what is a sinner to do but to look to Christ to be saved, to look
on him whom he hath pierced? And even such prescriptions, to
look to him, to come to him, are declared to souls, principally
though our duty be included, but in attendance on the Grace of
Christ, to see how, where, and on whom it will move; and in the
very nature of the thing, it is impossible that any qualification
should be beforehand to him, who is come not only to save, but
to seek that which is lost. It is most true therefore if any be
Christ’s, these things shall in their time be all manifested in
them, for they are prepared for them.
Argument 2. What is it by which we are redeemed? Is it
not the righteousness, sufferings, death, blood and obedience
of Christ? Must not these then be in their power, motion, and
actuation before anything else? Seeing by faith we are saved,
which is the gift of God; must not the Author of salvation and of

51
faith give that? And does God give any such grace, by which we
are saved, but through the redemption of Christ, for his sake?
And because he hath first given his Son, does not he give all
these to unite us to him? Does not his blood purchase, and
bestow that faith in his blood? Must it not needs be then true;
as we believe that we are justified by Christ; so also most true,
that those sheep for whom Christ hath laid down his life, those
he must bring in; and how are they brought in, but by believing?
If therefore they are brought in by faith, he that must bring
them in, must take effectual care, that they may believe; and
seeing he laid down his life for his sheep, and gives them eternal
life, all must be on the same title, and tenure, viz., his life laid
down for the sheep; so Faith is no more a Condition, or
Qualification, than Justification, or Eternal Life, nor any other
grace preparatory, but what Free Grace itself undertakes for.
Objection. But it may be said there is an order of the links
of the chain of salvation; and vocation {wherein faith and
repentance are contained} is in order before Justification, and
so may stand as a qualification, and condition to Justification,
and none may presume to touch at Justification or Pardon till
they are qualified by faith, and repentance, given in vocation
before Justification.
Answer. It hath been already acknowledged that there is
a wise and holy order in the several links of the chain of
Salvation, but not by such a way of dependence, as should
lessen the dignity, the equal determination, and certainty of
each part in the eternal fore-knowledge, and electing love of
God in Christ. Accordingly therefore, it is acknowledged there is
an order of vocation, or calling before Justification, Rom.8:30,
and of wisdom, righteousness, sanctification, and redemption, I
Cor.1:30, but this calling is the first change of the state of every
elect person from sin to God; the delivery from the power of
darkness, and translation into the kingdom of the Lord Jesus,
the dear Son of God; for he hath called us, saith the Apostle,
out of darkness into his marvellous light, I Pet.2:9, it is the
turning from darkness to light, it is the cutting out of the olive,
and vine, wild by nature, and the implanting into the True Vine,
and Olive Tree; it is the beginning of faith, and repentance, and
of all holiness, and sense of eternity, {though they have a
further state in sanctification, and distinct from calling,} which

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is the true passing from death to life, and always abides so. It
is a voice alarming the soul at the first. It is the voice of the Son
of God, quickening whom he will; not a condition or qualification,
but a holy calling, even unto eternal glory. It is wisdom without
any change, as the word certainly assures; there can be no more
return to folly. It is a calling in this regard, it is a certain abiding
therein with God; so Scripture everywhere speaks of it; it is a
calling to glory, and virtue; a calling to obtain salvation; so saith
the Apostle, you see your calling; who hath called us with an
holy calling, called according to purpose, as he who hath called
you is holy; all these expressions plainly show, that this calling
is a settled establishment of Grace, even as Justification, and
together with it entering into glory; so that to make calling a
mere qualification, or condition, is to degrade it from the high
dignity that Scripture hath invested it with; I account it the first
hand of Grace still holding the soul, so that though there be
Justification, and Sanctification, a work of faith fulfilled with
power, repentance never to be repented of, and the whole way
of sanctification in Christ; yet that first work is itself secured by
Grace, as all the rest of the workings of Grace; so that, as the
Apostle says, the gifts and calling of God are without
repentance, it is never recalled; and in the same manner may
be discoursed concerning sanctification. It is no qualification for,
or condition of glory, but there is a real self-subsistence of each
of these, for their own worth and excellency; and though they
are seated for, and connected one with the other in infinite
wisdom in Christ, Eph.1:8, yet they are also independent, and
self-subsistent also, in the Divine Decree; each one by itself,
and all from Free Grace.
This then assures, none of those great links of salvation,
however joined one to another, but yet of themselves, and by
themselves, but all of Free Grace, because none of them go off,
but remain together with all the others to eternity. The very first
call hath an eternal abiding; Justification by the righteousness
of Christ, sanctification by the Spirit in Christ abiding, and
continuing, even as glory itself; calling as free as Justification,
for except that grand foundation, being of God in Christ, by
eternal election, what qualification or condition, can there be of
cutting out of the wild olive or vine, unless to be in the
wilderness, or in darkness, are made a condition? Sanctification,

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or making perfect in every good work to do his will, and working
in us what is well-pleasing in his sight is as much secured as
glorification is; and Justification may as well be called a
condition of Sanctification, {for God sanctifies none but whom
he justifies,} as calling a condition of Justification, or
Sanctification of Glorification.
Seeing then {cutting off only some particularities} as
proper to the present state; all these are of God in Christ, and
are found together in the state of Grace here, and perfected
each distinct in glorification; and glorification distinct from them
all, and by itself in that illustrious state of saints; superadded to
all that perfection of Grace, even in Glory; I may conclude none
of them is either a qualification or condition, but of and by itself
of Free Grace. And this is caution, limitation, prevention of
deception sufficient; that no one part can be without the other.
Scripture therefore speaking of these things so freely, so
manifold; it shows all is alike, free-gift, free-grace; all is in
connection, and inseparable concatenation, and indefinable
certainty to the elect; and Grace is displayed sometimes one
way, and sometimes another, as to appearance or
manifestation. But whoever is to be advised or directed to the
most wise and hopeful method, in case of doubt; it is to lie at
the foot of God through Christ, for all Grace from first to last;
and not to stay for, or rest in any of our preparations, or
qualifications; but to press up as near, and as close to Christ as
we can; and happy is he, whom he calleth so to do, for from
whom else can we hope for any, for so much as the initial turn
of our souls to God, himself, and into the whole way everlasting,
as from, in, and through Christ alone.
And now having dispatched the third head which I
proposed, and come to the fourth and last, I am yet to speak
to, and that is, that the procedure of the judgment of Christ at
that great day, however it be represented in regard of the
exactness, righteousness, and equity of it, as if it was, and shall
be by the examination of every man’s works, and an application
of those works to Law, and that the Law, as vindicating the
Gospel; yet from undoubted, and undeniable grounds of
Scripture it must needs be, that the good, and the bad are
judged by their very appearance in, and out of Christ, and so
found written, or not found written, in the Book of Life; and that

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so every man’s case is determined, and yet that the works of
the servants of Christ adorn them; or as the Scripture says,
follow them; and the works of evil men, or their sin finds them
out, coming, as water into their bowels, and as oil to their
bones; is as the garment that covers them, and as the girdle,
wherewith they are girded continually. Notwithstanding this, all
these three things are most admirable in the grand economy of
that day, which the Father only, and not so much, as the created
Human Nature of Christ could adjust, or set in order, or in that
sense knows, or hath cognizance of.
1. The very company, and especially the great Head and
Prince under whom, and with whom the saints appear does most
illustriously show their pardon, and perfect Absolution and
Justification from all their sin; and the perfected, completed
holiness, and righteousness, received from the imputed
righteousness of Christ, communicated by his Spirit; so that
they appear in robes made white in the blood of the Lamb, and
with palms of victory in their hands. They are just men made
every way perfect; their sins are blotted out, when the times of
refreshing come from the presence of the Lord; and herein they
are above judgment in themselves, even as Christ their Head;
their appearing with Him is their immediate Justification; both
according to the Law, and everlasting Gospel, and with him they
judge angels, and the world; but those who have no interest in
Christ, not being with him, even that is their condemnation; that
he knows them not, that they are made to depart, and to go
away from him; thus he that is justified is for ever justified, and
he that is filthy, and unrighteous is so for ever. Rev.22:11. All
which is in one view determined by being with, or not with
Jehovah our Righteousness, the Sun of Righteousness, arising
with glory in his rays, or righteousness upon us, or healing in
his wings, Mal.4:2, and this is according to what hath been said
and according to all that hath been discoursed of our being
found in Christ, and receiving all from him; and so apprehending
that state of perfection, for which we are apprehended of Christ
Jesus.
2. The very view, and appearance in bodies of glory and
light, and purity; called armies of heaven, on white horses, in
linen white and clean, bodies made like to his glorious body, by
that power of his subduing all things to itself; the being made

55
like to Christ by seeing him, as he is; does without any other
law, but the Law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus, set free from
the Law of sin and death sufficiently; declare saints to be so
without laying them under any other law; and all the wicked are
known by their bodies of shame and contempt; like men
condemned, and known to be so by their prison clothes, their
chains, and fetters; thus sheep are presently known, and goats
appear goats by that very law of appearance.
And thus I have laid down the great doctrine of the New
Testament in these points, as I have reason from such an
abundant Scripture evidence to be assured; let me for a
conclusion recommend to all the ministers of the Gospel, the
due consideration of the whole matter, for it is of most
exceeding concernment to our ministry; this is our enablement,
our sufficiency, as ministers of the New Testament, to preach
not the letter, but the Spirit; to preach it as a ministration of
righteousness, and not of condemnation; as a ministration not
of the letter, but of the Spirit, for the letter killeth, but the Spirit
giveth life. Thus we shall minister it in its abiding, continuing
glory, as it shall continue in the kingdom of Christ, set out in all
its freeness, and in all its efficacy. We cannot else triumph in
manifesting the savour of the knowledge of Christ, nor will our
ministry be of sufficiency to be a savour of death unto death to
the lost, as it ought to be according to the divine ordination laid
down by the Apostle. II Cor.2:15-16. For if the full, and true
Grace of the Gospel be not set out, as a ministration of
Righteousness, of Life, and of the Spirit, it does not declare to
men the great message of the Gospel, whether it is unto them
a savour of life unto life, or of death unto death; they have not
that high savour of the knowledge of Christ, that is the
instrument of Grace, as by a most divine, and heavenly
suffumigation or perfume of life to excite, and bring to life, such
a stream of life to give life from the Spirit; nor on the other side,
till this be administered, can it according to this Gospel Canon
or Rule be said, that the ministry of it is a savour of death unto
death; for to whomsoever this high savour of life is not
administered, there is not that conclusion to be made, it is of
death unto death; herein being the strength of the crisis, or
distinction, if the highest savour of the Gospel give not life, the
only savour of life be not effectual to life, be but like a dead

56
savour, effect nothing, produce nothing of life; it must needs be
argued, such are unto death; and even the Gospel preached,
concludes them unto death, when it does not prevail by the
power of the Gospel; if the most radiant light of Christ the image
of God shining to men does not enlighten; such a hiding
demonstrates such lost, and their case desperate.
Rationalizing, moralizing upon the Gospel; yea, Scripture
legalizing upon it, without a continual interweaving this high
spirituality, and rich grace of it, cannot thus conclude, seal and
bind up; if the fountain and sources of light and life be not kept
clear, and open; though men do indeed die, and perish for want
of life and light, yet they are not sealed and bound up for death
as the true preaching of the Grace of the Gospel by this
ordination of God declared here by the Apostle, does. The close
experiment for want of this ministration of the New Testament
is not made, for the Apostle says, who is sufficient so to preach
the Gospel, as that it should be, if not a savour of life unto life,
the principal purpose, design and scope of it, then of death unto
death; this sufficiency, saith he, is of God, who is therein
sufficient to minister the New Testament, not as of a letter that
kills; but as of the Spirit that giveth life; so that though it be not
indeed to all a ministration of the Spirit giving life, yet it is not
at our disposal; for we are by such a faithful discharge of
ourselves a savour of death unto death, without which so faithful
a discharge, we could not be so; for such a preaching only, as
was said, puts such a crisis upon persons, makes such a
tremendous Gospel experiment, which God in his wisdom hath
ordained, should be made by the free proclamation of the
Gospel.
And that this experiment may be made, saith the Apostle,
we take great care not to allay the high savour of the Gospel,
by any mixture of the doctrine of works with that of Grace; as
they, who minding their own advantages, make a trade of
debasing, what is most excellent, by vending worse in
temperament with nobler liquors; but with greatest sincerity as
in the sight of God, we bring forth only pure Gospel of supreme
Grace in Christ; and herein we use all freedom, clearness,
frankness, openness and boldness, in manifesting this. No
darkened, unintelligible doublings between grace and works, as
Moses who veiled so the Gospel-part of his ministry, that it

57
became a ministration of death; and because Paul knew how
distasteful this purity of preaching is to the condemned world,
that would yet be righteous; and to the proud and stately
powers of reason and free will, he says, we arm ourselves with
a divine courage, and constancy in pursuing this ministry; and
will not on any account whatsoever, use art, or guile; but with
all integrity represent truth in its own light, and leave to God
the discrimination thereof; to whom this preaching is as the
jealousy-water, to discover them, when their very mind, the
highest rational part, being blinded by the god of this world, find
not the rays of the glory of the Gospel of Christ, {who is the
image of God, and all our perfection,} shining to them.
Wherein the Apostle manifestly alludes, to what he had
said of the superior glory of the Gospel to that of the Law,
though that gave such a glory to the face of Moses, and he
alludes also to the veil on the face of Moses, upon that glory,
and to the veil on the hearts of the Jews to this day. Implying,
that not to receive this pure Gospel light, is like Jewish unbelief,
who stumbled at that stumbling-block of exalting works, and
their own righteousness above Christ and Grace.
It is true indeed, this preaching up of our works,
endeavours, relying upon our own action, is very plausible, and
seems to carry greater force, as being more akin to our first
constitution under the first Adam. And of this the Apostle also
gives a secret {as we say} gird, when in this so great point, he
interposes not without great design that we preach not
ourselves, as if preaching, intermingled with works, and human
powers of holiness, were setting up and exalting ourselves into
a dominion over men’s consciences; but saith he, “we preach
not ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord; and ourselves your
servants for Jesus’ sake,” II Cor.4:5, in so high a ministry; and
in this epistle, II Cor.11:13-15, they who with design against
the Grace of the Gospel, teach the Law, are as the Apostle says,
in the appearance of angels of light, and ministers of
righteousness, zealous enforcers of holiness, and a good life; if
yet they stop up these springs, and are enemies of this grace,
they are false apostles, and ministers of Satan; evil workers, as
the Apostle calls them, in a taunt of their high pretence to
works; and others for want of true distinguishing thoughts,
desirous, and most propended to be teachers of the Law, and

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yet dare not desert the grand Gospel-principles, know not what
they speak, nor whereof they affirm; that is, do not accurately
think, nor speak, nor reconcile themselves to themselves; for,
the Law is good if a man use it lawfully, that is, according to the
Gospel direction of it; but pure perfect Law, is only pointed, set
against those, upon whom the Gospel hath not effect, who are
given up by it as incurable, and unto death. This I speak not, {I
appeal to the Lord, who searches hearts,} with no reflection on
any person, or sort of persons, and least upon Mr. Williams; of
whom I desire much other esteem, but to move and persuade
him and all preachers of the Gospel to reconcile all their notions
and disputes; preaching the glorious Gospel of the blessed God
committed to their trust; which the Apostle hath defined to be
then sufficiently preached, when it is primarily, and till the
Gospel hath remanded the lost under the aggravated
condemnation of the Law, for refusing the Grace of the Gospel;
till then, I say, the New Testament is to be preached, as a
ministration of the Spirit, and not of the letter; for the letter
killeth, but the Spirit giveth life, a ministration of life, not of
death, not of condemnation, but of righteousness; which
ministration shall in a short time be with open face, and all veils
removed; the Lord drawing near, and all turning to him,
beholding Christ the image of God, and the glory of God, in the
face of Christ; we shall be changed into the same image, from
the glory of a lower degree now, to the glory that shall be in
perfection, by the mighty effusions of that Spirit, who is
Jehovah, that shall so soon be. Now, this high and richest Gospel
treasure we have, saith the Apostle, at the present, but in
vessels of earth, men of like corruptions, and guilt; low, and
base appearances of outward condition and state, and of the vile
and dying bodies of sin; that the excellency of Divine Grace, and
power may be exalted alone throughout, and throughout; for at
the present we have, as the Apostle saith, all this glory but in
hope; we see yet but as in a glass, though with an open face,
this glory, but when the angelical ministry, Rev.14:6, shall in
the kingdom of Christ be missioned and sent out, this
ministration shall so exceed in glory, that all other prefabricated
notions of human righteousness shall utterly disappear; and
when it comes, it shall forever remain. And this shall be when
the Israel of God, shall be called, and turned to the Lord; and

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that shall be when the Gentile times are at an end, as Christ
says, Lk.21:24; and when the eclipse on the Gentile Churches
going off, they shall have a full orbed light, as that word,
Rom.11:25, opposed to the eclipse in that chapter, properly
signifies; and all this shall, I doubt not, begin in 1697.

FINISH.

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