THE DOCTRINE
OF
THE LAW AND GRACE UNFOLDED;
OR,
A DISCOURSE TOUCHING THE LAW AND
GRACE;
THE NATURE OF THE ONE, AND THE NATURE OF THE
OTHER; SHOWING WHAT THEY ARE, AS THEY ARE THE TWO
COVENANTS; AND LIKEWISE, WHO THEY BE, AND WHAT THEIR
CONDITIONS ARE, THAT BE UNDER EITHER OF THESE TWO
COVENANTS:
Wherein, for the better understanding of the
reader, there are several questions answered touching the
law and grace, very easy to be read, and as easy to be
understood, by those that are the sons of wisdom, the
children of the second covenant.
____________________
“For the law made nothing perfect,
but the bringing in of a better hope did; by the which we
draw nigh unto God” (Heb 7:19).
“Therefore we conclude that a man
is justified by faith without the deeds of the
law” (Rom 3:28).
“To him [therefore] that worketh
not, but believeth on Him that justifieth the ungodly, his
faith is counted for righteousness” (Rom
4:5).
___________________
ADVERTISEMENT BY THE
EDITOR.
It is difficult to understand those peculiar
trials which called forth the mighty energies of
Bunyan’s mind, unless we are acquainted with the
times in which he lived. The trammels of statecraft and
priestcraft had been suddenly removed from religion, and
men were left to form their own opinions as to rites and
ceremonies. In this state of abrupt liberty, some wild
enthusiasts ran into singular errors; and Bunyan’s
first work on “Gospel Truths” was published to
correct them. Then followed that alarm to thoughtless
souls—“A Few Sighs from Hell”; and, in
1659, as a further declaration of the most important truths
of revelation, this work on the two covenants was sent
forth to chastise error, and comfort the saints of God. It
was published many times during the author’s life;
and since then, to a late period, very large impressions
have been circulated. Upon a subject of such vast
importance—upon which hangs all our eternal
interests—all our indescribable joys or sorrows in a
future and never-ending state—the requirements of our
Creator—and His gracious provision of pardoning
mercy, upon our failing to keep His Law—these are
subjects of intense interest. How important is it that all
our researches into these solemn realities should be guided
simply by the revealed will of God! That was the fountain
at which Bunyan drunk in all his knowledge; and with
simplicity, and most earnest desire to promote the glory of
God in the salvation of sinners, he here gives the result
of his patient, prayerful, painful investigation. The
humble dependence upon Divine mercy which the author felt
is very striking. He was sensible of his want of education;
“no vain, whimsical, scholar-like
terms”—no philosophy from Plato or Aristotle.
He felt, as to human teaching, his weakness, but proved
that, “when he was weak, then was he strong.”
He claimed an interest in the fervent prayers of his fellow
saints—“My heart is vile, the devil lieth at
watch, trust myself I dare not; if God do not help me, my
heart will deceive me.” This was the proper spirit in
which to enter upon so solemn a subject; and the aid he
sought was vouchsafed to him, and appears throughout this
important work. His first object is to define what is the
Law, a strict obedience to which is exacted upon all
mankind. It was given to Adam, and was afterwards more
fully developed upon Mount Sinai. It commands implicit,
universal, perfect obedience, upon pain of eternal ruin. He
shows us that man, under the influence of that law, and
while a stranger to the Law of Grace, may repent and reform
his conduct, become a member of a Christian church, be a
virgin waiting for his Lord, “but not step even upon
the lowest round of the ladder that reacheth to
heaven.” While man is a stranger to the new birth,
“his destiny is the lion’s den; yea, worse than
that, to be thrown into Hell to the very devils.”
Bunyan in this, as well as all other of his works, is
awfully severe upon those who say, “Let us sin that
grace may abound,” perverting the consolatory
doctrine of Divine grace to their souls” destruction.
“What! because Christ is a Saviour, wilt thou be a
sinner! because His grace abounds, therefore thou wilt
abound in sin! O wicked wretch! rake Hell all over, and
surely I think thy fellow will scarce be found. If Christ
will not serve their turn, but they must have their sins
too, take them, Devil; if Heaven will not satisfy them,
take them, Hell; devour them, burn them, Hell!”
“Tell the hogs of this world what a hog-sty is
prepared for them, even such an one as a God hath prepared
to put the devil and his angels into.”
To the distressed, sin-beaten Christian,
this book abounds with consolation, and instructions how to
overcome the devices of Satan, who will plant the Ten
Commandments, like ten great guns, to destroy thy hopes.
“Learn to outshoot the devil in his own bow, and to
cut off his head with his own sword. Doth Satan tell thee
thou prayest but faintly and with cold devotions? Answer
him, I am glad you told me, I will trust the more to
Christ’s prayers, and groan, sigh, and cry more
earnestly at the Throne of Grace.” To such readers as
have been driven to the verge of despair by a fear of
having committed the unpardonable sin, here is strong
consolation, and a very explicit scriptural definition of
that awful crime. Want of space prevents me adding more
than my earnest desire that the reading of this treatise
may be productive of solid peace and
comfort.—ED.
____________________
THE EPISTLE TO THE READER
READER,
If at any time there be held forth by the
preacher the freeness and fullness of the Gospel, together
with the readiness of the Lord of Peace to receive those
that have any desire thereto, presently it is the spirit of
the world to cry out, Sure this man disdains the law,
slights the law, and counts that of none effect; and all
because there is not, together with the Gospel, mingled the
doctrine of the law, which is not a right dispensing of the
Word according to truth and knowledge. Again; if there be
the terror, horror, and severity of the law discovered to a
people by the servants of Jesus Christ, though they do not
speak of it to the end people should trust to it, by
relying on it as it is a covenant of works; but rather that
they should be driven further from that covenant, even to
embrace the tenders and privileges of the second, yet, poor
souls, because they are unacquainted with the natures of
these two covenants, or either of them, therefore,
“they say,” “Here is nothing but
preaching of the law, thundering of the law”; when,
alas, if these two be not held forth—to wit, the
Covenant of Works and the Covenant of Grace, together with
the nature of the one and the nature of the
other—souls will never be able either to know what
they are by nature or what they lie under. Also, neither
can they understand what grace is, nor how to come from
under the law to meet God in and through that other most
glorious covenant, through which and only through which,
God can communicate of Himself grace, glory, yea, even all
the good things of another world.
I, having considered these things, together
with others, have made bold to present yet once more to thy
view, my friend, something of the mind of God, to the end,
if it shall be but blessed to thee, thou mayest be
benefited thereby; for verily these things are not such as
are ordinary and of small concernment, but do absolutely
concern thee to know, and that experimentally too, if ever
thou do partake of the glory of God through Jesus Christ,
and so escape the terror and insupportable vengeance that
will otherwise come upon thee through His justice, because
of thy living and dying in thy transgressions against the
Law of God. And therefore, while thou livest here below, it
is thy duty, if thou wish thyself happy for the time to
come, to give up thyself to the studying of these two
covenants treated of in the ensuing discourse; and so to
study them until thou, through grace, do not only get the
notion of the one and of the other in thy head, but until
thou do feel the very power, life, and glory of the one and
of the other: for take this for granted, he that is dark as
touching the scope, intent, and nature of the law, is also
dark as to the scope, nature, and glory of the Gospel; and
also he that hath but a notion of the one, will barely have
any more than a notion of the other.
And the reason is this: because so long as
people are ignorant of the nature of the law, and of their
being under it—that is, under the curse and
condemning power of it, by reason of their sin against
it—so long they will be careless, and negligent as to
the inquiring after the true knowledge of the Gospel.
Before the commandment came—that is, in the
spirituality of it—Paul was alive—that is,
thought himself safe; which is clear, (Rom 7:9,10 compared
with Phil 3:5-11, etc). But when that came, and was indeed
discovered unto him by the Spirit of the Lord, then Paul
dies (Rom 7) to all his former life (Phil 3) and that man
which before could content himself to live, though ignorant
of the Gospel, cries out now, “I count all things
but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus my Lord” (verse 8). Therefore, I say, so long
they will be ignorant of the nature of the Gospel, and how
glorious a thing it is to be found within the bounds of it;
for we use to say, that man that knoweth not himself to be
sick, that man will not look out for himself a physician;
and this Christ knew full well when He saith, “The
whole have no need of the physician, but the
sick”;1 that is, none will in truth desire
the physician unless they know they be sick. That man also
that hath got but a notion of the law—a notion, that
is, the knowledge of it in the head, so as to discourse and
talk of it—if he hath not felt the power of it, and
that effectually too, it is to be feared will at the best
be but a notionist in the Gospel; he will not have the
experimental knowledge of the same in his heart; nay, he
will not seek nor heartily desire after it; and all
because, as I said before, he hath not experience of the
wounding, cutting, killing nature of the other.
I say, therefore, if thou wouldst know the
authority and power of the Gospel, labour first to know the
power and authority of the law; for I am verily persuaded
that the want of this one thing—namely, the knowledge
of the law, is one cause why so many are ignorant of the
other. That man that doth know the law doth not know in
deed and in truth that he is a sinner; and that man that
doth not know he is a sinner, doth not know savingly that
there is a Saviour.
Again; that man that doth not know the
nature of the law, that man doth not know the nature of
sin; and that man that knoweth not the nature of sin, will
not regard to know the nature of a Saviour; this is proved
(John 8:31-36). These people were professors, and yet did
not know the truth—the Gospel; and the reason was,
because they did not know themselves, and so not the law. I
would not have thee mistake me, Christian reader; I do not
say that the law of itself will lead any soul to Jesus
Christ; but the soul being killed by the law, through the
operation of its severity seizing on the soul, then the
man, if he be enlightened by the Spirit of Christ to see
where remedy is to be had, will not, through grace, be
contented without the real and saving knowledge through
faith of Him.
If thou wouldst, then, wash thy face clean,
first take a glass and see where it is dirty; that is, if
thou wouldst indeed have thy sins washed away by the blood
of Christ, labour first to see them in the glass of the
law, and do not be afraid to see thy besmeared condition,
but look on every spot thou hast; for he that looks on the
foulness of his face by the halves, will wash by the
halves; even so, he that looks on his sins by the halves,
he will seek for Christ by the halves. Reckon thyself,
therefore, I say, the biggest sinner in the world, and be
persuaded that there is none worse than thyself; then let
the guilt of it seize on thy heart, then also go in that
case and condition to Jesus Christ, and plunge thyself into
His merits and the virtue of His blood; and after that,
thou shalt speak of the things of the law and of the Gospel
experimentally, and the very language of the children of
God shall feelingly drop from thy lips, and not till then
(James 1).
Let this therefore learn thee thus much: he
that hath not seen his lost condition hath not seen a safe
condition; he that did never see himself in the
devil’s snare, did never see himself in
Christ’s bosom. “This my Son was dead, and is
alive again: he was lost, and is found.” “Among
whom we also had our conversation in time past.”
2 “But now are (so many of us as believe)
returned unto” Jesus Christ, “the” chief
“Shepherd and Bishop of your souls.”
I say, therefore, if thou do find in this
treatise, in the first place, something touching the
nature, end, and extent of the law, do not thou cry out,
therefore, all of a sudden, saying, “Here is nothing
but the terror, horror, and thundering sentences of the
law.”
Again; if thou do find in the second part of
this discourse something of the freeness and fullness of
the Gospel, do not thou say neither, “Here is nothing
but grace, therefore, surely, an undervaluing of the
law.” No; but read it quite through, and so consider
of it; and I hope thou shalt find the two
covenants—which all men are under, either the one or
the other—discovered, and held forth in their
natures, ends, bounds, together with the state and
condition of them that are under the one, and of them that
are under the other.
There be some that through ignorance do say
how that such men as preach terror and amazement to sinners
are beside the book, and are ministers of the
letter—the law, and not of the Spirit—the
Gospel; but I would answer them, citing them to the
Sixteenth of Luke, from the nineteenth verse to the end;
and (1 Cor 6:9,10; Gal 3:10; Rom 3:9-19) only this caution
I would give by the way, how that they which preach terror
to drive souls to the obtaining of salvation by the works
of the law, that preaching is not the right Gospel
preaching; yet when saints speak of the sad state that man
are in by nature, to discover to souls their need of the
Gospel, this is honest preaching, and he that doth do so,
he doth the work of a Gospel minister (Rom
3:9-25).
Again, there are others that say, because we
do preach the free, full, and exceeding grace discovered in
the Gospel, therefore we make void the law; when indeed,
unless the Gospel be held forth in the glory thereof
without confusion, by mingling the Covenant of Works
therewith, the law cannot be established. “Do we then
make void the law through faith,” or preaching of the
Gospel; nay, stay, saith Paul, “God forbid: yea, we
establish the law” (Rom 3:31).
And verily, he that will indeed establish
the law, or set it in its own place, for so I understand
the words, must be sure to hold forth the Gospel in its
right colour and nature; for if a man be ignorant of the
nature of the Gospel and the Covenant of Grace, they, or
he, will be very apt to remove the law out of its place,
and that because they are ignorant, not knowing “what
they say, nor whereof they affirm.”
And let me tell you, if a man be ignorant of
the Covenant of Grace, and the bounds and boundlessness of
the Gospel, though he speak and make mention of the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and also of the name of the new
covenant, and the blood of Christ, yet at this very time,
and in these very words, he will preach nothing but the
law, and that as a Covenant of Works.
Reader, I must confess it is a wonderfully
mysterious thing, and he had need have a wiser spirit than
his own that can rightly set these two covenants in their
right places, that when he speaks of the one he doth not
jostle the other out of its place. O, to be so well
enlightened as to speak of the one—that is, the
law—for to magnify the Gospel; and also to speak of
the Gospel so as to establish, and yet not to idolize, the
law, nor any particular thereof! It is rare, and to be
heard and found but in very few men’s
breasts.
If thou shouldst say, What is it to speak to
each of these two covenants so as to set them in their
right places, and also to use the terror of the one so as
to magnify and advance the glory of the other? To this I
shall answer also, read the ensuing discourse, but with an
understanding heart, and it is like thou wilt find a reply
therein to the same purpose, which may be to thy
satisfaction.
Reader, if thou do find this book empty of
fantastical expressions, and without light, vain,
whimsical, scholar-like terms, thou must understand it is
because I never went to school to Aristotle, or Plato, but
was brought up at my father’s house, in a very mean
condition, among a company of poor countrymen. But if thou
do find a parcel of plain, yet sound, true, and home
sayings, attribute that to the Lord Jesus His gifts and
abilities, which He hath bestowed upon such a poor creature
as I am and have been. And if thou, being a seeing
Christian, dost find me coming short, though rightly
touching at some things, attribute that either to my
brevity, or, if thou wilt, to my weaknesses, for I am full
of them. A word or two more, and so I shall have done with
this.
First. And the first is, Friend, if
thou do not desire the salvation of thy soul, yet I pray
thee to read this book over with serious consideration; it
may be it will stir up in thee some desires to look out
after it, which at present thou mayest be
without.
Secondly, If thou dost find any
stirrings in thy heart by thy reading such an unworthy
man’s works as mine are, be sure that in the first
place thou give glory to God, and give way to thy
convictions, and be not too hasty in getting them off from
thy conscience; but let them so work till thou dost see
thyself by nature void of all graces, as faith, hope,
knowledge of God, Christ, and the Covenant of
Grace.
Thirdly, Then, in the next place, fly
in all haste to Jesus Christ, thou being sensible of thy
lost condition without Him, secretly persuading of thy soul
that Jesus Christ standeth open-armed to receive thee, to
wash away thy sins, to clothe thee with His righteousness,
and is willing, yea, heartily willing, to present thee
before the presence of the glory of God and among the
innumerable company of angels with exceeding joy. This
being thus, in the next place, do not satisfy thyself with
these secret and first persuasions, which do or may
encourage thee to come to Jesus Christ; but be restless
till thou dost find by blessed experience the glorious
glory of this the second covenant extended unto thee, and
sealed upon thy soul with the very Spirit of the Lord Jesus
Christ. And that thou mayest not slight this my counsel, I
beseech thee, in the second place, consider these following
things—
First, If thou dost get off thy convictions,
and not the right way (which is by seeing thy sins washed
away by the blood of Jesus Christ), it is a question
whether ever God will knock at thy heart again or no; but
rather say, such an one “is joined to idols, let him
alone” (Hosea 4:17). Though he be in a natural state,
“let him alone.” Though he be in or under the
curse of the law, “let him alone.” Though he be
in the very hand of the devil, “let him alone.”
Though he be a-going post-haste to Hell, “let him
alone.” Though his damnation will not only be
damnation for sins against the law, but also for slighting
the Gospel, yet “let him alone.” My Spirit, My
ministers, My Word, My grace, My mercy, My love, My pity,
My common providences, shall no more strive with him;
“let him alone.” O sad! O miserable! who would
slight convictions that are on their souls, which (if not
slighted) tend so much for their good?
Secondly, If thou shalt not regard how thou
do put off convictions, but put them off without the
precious blood of Christ being savingly applied to thy
soul, thou art sure to have the mis-spending of that
conviction to prove the hardening of thy heart against the
next time thou art to hear the Word preached or read. This
is commonly seen, that those souls that have not regarded
those convictions that are at first set upon their spirits,
do commonly, and that by the just judgments of God upon
them, grow more hard, more senseless, more seared and
sottish in their spirits; for some, who formerly would
quake and weep, and relent under the hearing of the Word,
do now for the present sit so senseless, so seared, and
hardened in their consciences, that certainly if they
should have hell-fire thrown in their faces, as it
sometimes cried up in their ears, they would scarce be
moved; and this comes upon them as a just judgment of God
(2 Thess 2:11,12).
Thirdly, If thou do slight these, or those
convictions that may be set upon thy heart by reading of
this discourse, or hearing of any other good man preach the
Word of God sincerely, thou wilt have the stifling of these
or those convictions to account and answer for at the day
of judgment; not only thy sins, that are commonly committed
by thee in thy calling and common discourse, but thou shalt
be called to a reckoning for slighting convictions,
disregarding of convictions, which God useth as a special
means to make poor sinners see their lost condition and the
need of a Saviour. Now here I might add many more
considerations besides these, to the end thou mayest be
willing to tend and listen to convictions; as,
First, Consider thou hast a precious soul,
more worth than the whole world; and this is commonly
worked upon, if ever it be saved, by
convictions.
Secondly, This soul is for certain to go to
Hell, if thou shalt be a slighter of
convictions.
Thirdly, If that go to Hell, thy body must
go thither too, and then never to come out again.
“Now consider this, ye that” are apt to
“forget God,” and His convictions, “lest
He tear you in pieces, and there be none to
deliver” (Psa 50:22).
But if thou shalt be such an one that shall,
notwithstanding thy reading of thy misery, and also of
God’s mercy, shall persist to go on in thy sins,
know, in the first place, that here thou shalt be left, by
the things that thou readest, without excuse; and in the
world to come thy damnation will be exceedingly aggravated
for thy not regarding of them, and turning from thy sins,
which were not only reproved by them, but also for
rejecting of that Word of Grace that did instruct thee how
and which way thou shouldst be saved from them. And so
farewell; I shall leave thee, and also this discourse, to
God, who I know will pass a righteous judgment both upon
that and thee. I am yours, though not to serve your lusts
and filthy minds, yet to reprove, instruct, and, according
to that proportion of faith and knowledge which God hath
given me, to declare unto you the way of life and
salvation. Your judgings, railings, surmisings, and
disdaining of me, that I shall leave till the fiery
judgment comes, in which the offender shall not go
unpunished, be he you or me; yet I shall pray for you, wish
well to you, and do you what good I can. And that I might
not write or speak in vain, Christian, pray for me to our
God with much earnestness, fervency, and frequently, in all
your knockings at our Father’s door, because I do
very much stand in need thereof; for my work is great, my
heart is vile, the devil lieth at watch, the world would
fain be saying, “Aha, aha, thus we would have
it”; and of myself, keep myself I cannot; trust
myself I dare not; if God do not help me, I am sure it will
not be long before my heart deceive me, and the world would
have their advantage of me, and so God be dishonoured by
me, and thou also ashamed to own me. O, therefore, be much
in prayer for me, thy fellow! I trust, in that glorious
grace that is conveyed from Heaven to sinners, by which
they are not only sanctified here in this world, but shall
be glorified in that which is to come; unto which, the Lord
of His mercy bring us all.
John Bunyan.
___________________
These are several titles which are set over
the several TRUTHS contained in this book, for thy sooner
finding of them—
THE FIRST PART
1. The words of the text opened, and the
doctrines laid down. [This doctrine, that there are some
that are under the law, or under the Covenant of Works.] 2.
What the Covenant of Works is, and when it is given. 3.
What it is to be under the Covenant of Works. 4. Who they
are that are under the Covenant of Works. 5. What men may
attain to that are under this Covenant of Works.
THE SECOND PART
1. The doctrine proved. 2. The new covenant
made with Christ. 3. The conditions of the new covenant. 4.
The suretiship of Christ. 5. Christ the Messenger of the
new covenant. 6. Christ the Sacrifice of the new covenant.
7. Christ the High Priest of the new covenant. 8. Christ
completely fulfilled the conditions of the new covenant. 9.
The Covenant of Grace unchangeable; the opposers answered.
10. Who, and how men are actually brought into the new
covenant. 11. A word of experience. 12. The privileges of
the new covenant. 13. Two Hell-bred objections answered.
14. A use of examination about the old covenant. 15. A
legal spirit. 16. The use of the new covenant. 17. The
unpardonable sin. 18. Objections answered for their comfort
who would have their part in the new covenant.
___________________
THE DOCTRINE OF THE LAW
AND
GRACE UNFOLDED;
OR,
A DISCOVERY OF THE LAW AND GRACE; THE NATURE
OF THE ONE, AND THE NATURE OF THE OTHER, AS THEY ARE THE
TWO COVENANTS, ETC.
“FOR YE ARE NOT UNDER THE
LAW,
BUT UNDER GRACE” (Rom
6:14).
[THE WORDS OF THE TEXT OPENED,
AND
THE DOCTRINES LAID DOWN.]
In the three former chapters, the Apostle is
pleading for the salvation of sinners by grace without the
works of the law, to the end he might confirm the saints,
and also that he might win over all those that did oppose
the truth of this doctrine, or else leave them the more
without excuse; and that he might so do, he taketh in hand,
first, to show the state of all men naturally, or as they
come into the world by generation, saying, in the Third
Chapter, “There is none righteous, no, not one; there
is none that understandeth; there is none that doeth
good,” etc. As if he had said, It seems there is a
generation of men that think to be saved by the
righteousness of the law; but let me tell them that they
are much deceived, in that they have already sinned against
the law; for by the disobedience of one, many, yea all,
were brought into a state of condemnation (Rom 5:12-20).
Now, in the Sixth Chapter he doth, as if he had turned him
round to the brethren, and said, My brethren, you see now
that it is clear and evident that it is freely by the grace
of Christ that we do inherit eternal life. And again, for
your comfort, my brethren, let me tell you that your
condition is wondrous safe, in that you are under grace;
for, saith he, “Sin shall not have dominion over
you”; that is, neither the damning power, neither the
filthy power, so as to destroy your souls: “For ye
are not under the law”; that is, you are not under
that that will damn you for sin; “but” you are
“under grace,” or stand thus in relation to
God, that though you have sinned, yet you shall be
pardoned. “For ye are not under the law, but under
grace.” If any should ask what is the meaning of the
word “under,” I answer, it signifieth, you are
not held, kept, or shut up by it so as to appear before God
under that administration, and none but that; or thus, you
are not now bound by the authority of the law to fulfill it
and obey it, so as to have no salvation without you so do;
or thus, if you transgress against any one tittle of it,
you by the power of it must be condemned. No, no, for you
are not so under it; that is, not thus under the law.
Again, “For ye are not under the law.” What
is meant by this word “law”? The word
“law,” in Scripture, may be taken more ways
than one, as might be largely cleared. There is the law of
faith, the law of sin, the law of men, the law of works,
otherwise called the Covenant of Works, or the first or old
covenant. “In that He saith a new
covenant,” which is the grace of God, or commonly
called the Covenant of Grace, “He hath made the first
old,” that is, the Covenant of Works, or the law (Heb
8:13). I say, therefore, the word “law” and the
word “grace,” in this Sixth of the Romans, do
hold forth the two covenants which all men are under; that
is, either the one or the other. “For ye are not
under the law”—that is, you to whom I do now
write these words, who are and have been effectually
brought into the faith of Jesus, you are not under the law,
or under the Covenant of Works. He doth not, therefore,
apply these words to all, but to some, when he saith,
“But ye”; mark, ye, ye believers,
ye converted persons, ye saints, ye that
have been born. (YE) “for ye are not under the
law,” implying others are that are in their natural
state, that have not been brought in to the Covenant of
Grace by faith in Jesus Christ.
The words, therefore, being thus understood,
there is discovered these two truths in them—DOCTRINE
FIRST. That there are some in Gospel times that are under
the Covenant of Works. DOCTRINE SECOND. That there is never
a believer under the law, as it is the Covenant of Works,
but under grace through Christ. “For ye,” you
believers, you converted persons, ye “are not under
the law but under grace”; or, for you are delivered
and brought into or under the Covenant of Grace.
DOCTRINE FIRST.
For the first, THAT THERE ARE SOME THAT ARE
UNDER THE LAW, OR UNDER THE COVENANT OF WORKS, see, I pray
you, that Scripture in the Third of the Romans, where the
Apostle, speaking before of sins against the law, and of
the denunciations thereof against those that are in that
condition, he saith, “What things soever the law
saith, it saith to them who are under the law”; mark,
“it saith to them who are under the law, that every
mouth may be stopped, and all the world become guilty
before God” (Rom 3:19). That is, all those that are
under the law as a Covenant of Works, that are yet in their
sins, and unconverted, as I told you before. Again he
saith, “But if ye be led by the Spirit, ye are not
under the law” (Gal 5:18). Implying again, that those
which are for sinning against the law, or the works of the
law, either as it is the old covenant, these are under the
law, and not under the Covenant of Grace. Again he saith,
“For as many as are of the works of the law are under
the curse” (Gal 3:10). That is, they that are under
the law are under the curse; for mark, they that are under
the Covenant of Grace are not under the curse. Now, there
are but two covenants, therefore, it must needs be that
they that are under the curse are under the law, seeing
those that are under the other covenant are not under the
curse, but under the blessing. “So, then, they which
be of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham,” but
the rest are under the law (Gal 3:9).
Now I shall proceed to what I do intend to
speak unto. FIRST. I shall show you what the Covenant of
Works, or the law, is, and when it was first given,
together with the nature of it. SECOND. I shall show you
what it is to be under the law, or Covenant of Works, and
the miserable state of all those that are under it. THIRD.
I shall show you who they are that are under this covenant,
or law. FOURTH. I shall show you how far a man may go and
yet be under this covenant, or law.
[WHAT THE COVENANT OF WORKS IS, AND WHEN
IT WAS GIVEN.]
FIRST. What this Covenant of Works is,
and when it was given.
[What this covenant is.] The Covenant
of Works or the law, here spoken of, is the law delivered
upon Mount Sinai to Moses, in two tables of stone, in ten
particular branches or heads; for this see Galatians 4. The
Apostle, speaking there of the law, and of some also that
through delusions of false doctrine were brought again, as
it were, under it, or at least were leaning that way (verse
21) he saith, As for you that desire to be under the law, I
will show you the mystery of Abraham’s two sons,
which he had by Hagar and Sarah; these two do signify the
two covenants; the one named Hagar signifies Mount Sinai,
where the law was delivered to Moses on two tables of stone
(Exo 24:12; 34:1; Deu 10:1). Which is that, that whosoever
is under, he is destitute of, and altogether without the
grace of Christ in his heart at the present. “For I
testify again to every man,” saith he, speaking to
the same people, that “Christ has become of no effect
unto you, whosoever of you are justified by the law,”
namely, that given on Mount Sinai—“ye are
fallen from grace” (Gal 5:3,4). That is, not that any
can be justified by the law; but this meaning is, that all
those that seek justification by the works of the law, they
are not such as seek to be under the second covenant, the
Covenant of Grace. Also the Apostle, speaking again of
these two covenants, saith, “But if the ministration
of death,” or the law, for it is all one,
“written and engraven in stones,” mark
that, “was glorious, how shall not the ministration
of the Spirit,” or the Covenant of Grace, “be
rather glorious?” (2 Cor 3:7,8). As if he had said,
It is true, there was a glory in the Covenant of Works, and
a very great excellency did appear in it—namely, in
that given in the stones on Sinai—yet there is
another covenant, the Covenant of Grace, that doth exceed
it for comfort and glory.
[When it was given.] But, though this
law was delivered to Moses from the hands of angels in two
tables of stones, on Mount Sinai, yet this was not the
first appearing of this law to man; but even this in
substance, though possibly not so openly, was given to the
first man, Adam, in the Garden of Eden, in these words:
“And the LORD God commanded the man, saying, Of every
tree of the garden thou mayest freely eat: but of the tree
of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of
it; for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt
surely die” (Gen 2:16,17). Which commandment then
given to Adam did contain in it a forbidding to do any of
those things that was and is accounted evil, although at
that time it did not appear so plainly, in so many
particular heads, as it did when it was again delivered on
Mount Sinai; but yet the very same. And that I shall prove
thus—
God commanded Adam in Paradise to abstain
from all evil against the first covenant, and not from some
sins only; but if God had not commanded Adam to abstain
from the sins spoken against in the Ten Commandments, He
had not commanded to abstain from all, but from some;
therefore it must needs be that He then commanded to
abstain from all sins forbidden in the law given on Mount
Sinai. Now that God commanded to abstain from all evil or
sin against any of the Ten Commandments, when He gave Adam
the command in the garden, it is evident that He did punish
the sins that were committed against those commands that
were then delivered on Mount Sinai, before they were
delivered on Mount Sinai, which will appear as
followeth—
The First, Second, and Third Commandments
were broken by Pharaoh and his men; for they had false gods
which the Lord executed judgment against (Exo 12:12); and
blasphemed their true God (Exo 5:2) which escaped not
punishment (Exo 7:17-25). For their gods could neither
deliver themselves nor their people from the hand of God;
but “in the thing wherein they dealt proudly, He
was above them” (Exo 18:11).
Again; some judge that the Lord punished the
sin against the Second Commandment, which Jacob was in some
measure guilty of in not purging his house from false gods,
with the defiling of his daughter Dinah (Gen
34:2).
Again; we find that Abimelech thought the
sin against the Third Commandment so great, that he
required no other security of Abraham against the fear of
mischief that might be done to him by Abraham, his son, and
his son’s son, but only Abraham’s oath (Gen
21:23). The like we see between Abimelech and Isaac (Gen
31:53). The like we find in Moses and the Israelites, who
durst not leave the bones of Joseph in Egypt, because of
the oath of the Lord, whose name, by so doing, would have
been abused (Exo 13:19).
And we find the Lord rebuking His people for
the breach of the Fourth Commandment (Exo
16:27-29).
And for the breach of the Fifth, the curse
came upon Ham (Gen 9:25-27). And Ishmael dishonouring his
father in mocking Isaac was cast out, as we read (Gen
21:9,10). The sons-in-law of Lot for slighting their father
perish in the overthrow of Sodom (Gen 19:14).
The Sixth Commandment was broken by Cain,
and so dreadful a curse and punishment came upon him that
it made him cry out, “My punishment is greater
than I can bear” (Gen 4:13).
Again; when Esau threatened to slay his
brother, Rebecca sent him away, saying, “Why should I
be deprived also of you both in one day?” hinting
unto us, that she knew murder was to be punished with death
(Gen 27:45) which the Lord Himself declared likewise to
Noah (Gen 9:6).3 Again; a notable example of the
Lord’s justice in punishing murder we see in the
Egyptians and Pharaoh, who drowned the Israelites’
children in the river (Exo 1:22); and they themselves were
drowned in the sea (Exo 14:27).
The sin against the Seventh Commandment was
punished in the Sodomites, etc., with the utter destruction
of their city and themselves (Gen 19:24,25). Yea, they
suffer “the vengeance of eternal fire” (Jude
7). Also the male Shechemites, for the sin committed by
Hamor’s son, were all put to the sword (Gen
34:25,26).
Our first parents sinned against the Eighth
Commandment in taking the forbidden fruit, and so brought
the curse on themselves and their posterity (Gen 3:16).
Again; the punishment due to the breach of this Commandment
was by Jacob accounted death (Gen 31:30,32). And also by
Jacob’s sons (Gen 44:9,10).
Cain sinning against the Ninth Commandment
as in Genesis 4:9, was therefore cursed as to the earth
(Verse 11). And Abraham, though the friend of God, was
blamed for false-witness by Pharaoh, and sent out of Egypt
(Gen 12:18-20) and both he and Sarah reproved by Abimelech
(Gen 20:9,10,16).
Pharaoh sinned against the Tenth
Commandment, and was therefore plagued with great plagues
(Gen 12:15,17). Abimelech coveted Abraham’s wife, and
the Lord threatened death to him and his, except he
restored her again; yea, though he had not come near her,
yet for coveting and taking her the Lord fast closed up the
wombs of his house (Gen 20:3,18).
[Further Arguments.] I could have
spoken more fully to this, but that I would not be too
tedious, but speak what I have to say with as much brevity
as I can. But before I pass it, I will besides this give
you an argument or two more for the further clearing of
this, that the substance of the law delivered on Mount
Sinai was, before that, delivered by the Lord to man in the
garden. As, first, “death reigned over them that had
not sinned after the similitude of Adam’s
transgression”—that is, though they did not
take the forbidden fruit as Adam did; but had the
transgression been no other, or had their sin been laid to
the charge of none but those that did eat of that fruit,
then those that were born to Adam after he was shut out of
the garden had not had sin, in that they did not actually
eat of that fruit, and so had not been slaves to death;
but, in that death did reign from Adam to Moses, of from
the time of his transgression against the first giving of
the law, till the time the law was given on Mount Sinai, it
is evident that the substance of the Ten Commandments was
given to Adam and his posterity under that command,
“Eat not of the tree that is in the midst of the
garden.” But yet, if any shall say that it was
because of the sin of their father that death reigned over
them, to that I shall answer, that although original sin be
laid to the charge of his posterity, yet it is also for
their sins that they actually committed that they were
plagued. And again, saith the Apostle, “For where no
law is, there is no transgression” (Rom 4:15).
For “sin is not imputed when there is no law;
nevertheless death reigned from Adam to Moses.” saith
he (Rom 5:13,14). But if there had been no law, then there
had been no transgression, and so no death to follow after
as the wages thereof; for death is the wages of sin (Rom
6:23) and sin is the breach of the law; an actual breach in
our particular persons, as well as an actual breach in our
public person (1 John 3:4). 4
Again; there are no other sins than those
against that law given on Sinai, for the which those sins
before mentioned were punished; therefore the law given
before by the Lord to Adam and his posterity is the same
with that afterwards given on Mount Sinai. Again; the
conditions of that on Sinai and of that in the garden are
all one; the one saying, “Do this and live,”
the other saying the same. Also judgment denounced against
men in both kinds alike; therefore this law it appeareth to
be the very same that was given on Mount Sinai.
Again; the Apostle speaketh but of two
covenants—to wit, grace and works—under which
two covenants all are; some under one, and some under the
other. Now this to Adam is one, therefore that on Sinai is
one, and all one with this; and that this is a truth, I
say, I know, because the sins against that on Sinai were
punished by God for the breech thereof before it was given
there; so it doth plainly appear to be a truth; for it
would be unrighteous with God for to punish for that law
that was not broken; therefore it was all one with that on
Sinai.
Now the law given on Sinai was for the more
clear discovery of those sins that were before committed
against it; for though the very substance of the Ten
Commandments were given in the garden before they were
received from Sinai, yet they lay so darkly in the heart of
man, that his sins were not so clearly discovered as
afterwards they were; therefore, saith the Apostle, the law
was added (Gal 3:19). Or, more plainly, given on Sinai, on
tables of stone, “that the offence might
abound,”— that is, that it might the more
clearly be made manifest and appear (Rom 5:20).
Again; we have a notable resemblance of this
at Sinai, even in giving the law; for, first, the law was
given twice on Sinai, to signify that indeed the substance
of it was given before. And, secondly, the first tables
that were given on Sinai were broken at the foot of the
mount, and the others were preserved whole, to signify that
though it was the true law that was given before, with that
given on Sinai, yet it was not so easy to be read and to be
taken notice of, in that the stones were not whole, but
broken, and so the law written thereon somewhat defaced and
disfigured.
[Object.] But if any object and say,
though the sins against the one be the sins against the
other, and so in that they do agree, yet it doth not appear
that the same is therefore the same Covenant of Works with
the other.
Answ. That which was given to Adam in
Paradise you will grant was the Covenant of Works; for it
runs thus: Do this and live; do it not and die; nay,
“Thou shalt surely die.” Now there is but one
Covenant of Works. If therefore I prove that that which was
delivered on Mount Sinai is the Covenant of Works, then all
will be put out of doubt. Now that this is so it is
evident—
1. Consider the two covenants are thus
called in Scripture, the one the administration of death,
and the other the administration of life; the one the
Covenant of Works, the other of grace; but that delivered
on Sinai is called the ministration of death; that,
therefore, is the Covenant of Works. “But if,”
saith he, “the ministration of death, written
and engraven on stones was glorious,” (2 Cor
3:7).
2. The Apostle, writing to the Galatians,
doth labour to beat them off from trusting in the Covenant
of Works; but when he comes to give a discovery of that law
or covenant—he labouring to take them off from
trusting in it—he doth plainly tell them it is that
which was given on Sinai (Gal 4:24,25). Therefore that
which was delivered in two tables of stone on Mount Sinai,
is the very same thing that was given before to Adam in
Paradise, they running both alike; that in the garden
saying, Do this and live; but in the day thou eatest
thereof—or dost not do this—thou shalt surely
die.
And so is this on Sinai, as is evident when
he saith, “the man which doeth those things shall
live by them” (Rom 10:5). And in case they break
them, even any of them, it saith, “Cursed is
every one that continueth not in all things which are
written in the (whole) book of the law to do them”
(Gal 3:10). Now this being thus cleared, I shall
proceed.
[WHAT IT IS TO BE UNDER THE COVENANT OF
WORKS.]
SECOND. A second thing to be spoken to is
this: to show what it is to be under the law as it is a
Covenant of Works; to which I shall speak, and that
thus—
To be under the law as it is a Covenant of
Works, is to be bound, upon pain of eternal damnation, to
fulfill, and that completely and continually, every
particular point of the Ten Commandments, by doing
them—Do this, and then thou shalt live; otherwise,
“cursed is every one that continueth not in
all,” in every particular thing or “things
which are written in the book for the law to do them”
(Gal 3:10). That man that is under the first covenant
stands thus, and only thus, as he is under that covenant,
or law. Poor souls, through ignorance of the nature of that
Covenant of Works, the law that they are under, they do not
think their state to be half so bad as it is; when, alas!
there is none in the world in such a sad condition again
besides themselves; for, indeed, they do not understand
these things. He that is under the law, as it is a Covenant
of Works, is like the man that is bound by the law of his
king, upon pain of banishment, or of being hanged, drawn,
and quartered, not to transgress any of the commandments of
the king; so here, they that are under the Covenant of
Works, they are bound, upon pain of eternal banishment and
condemnation, to keep within the compass of the law of the
God of Heaven. The Covenant of Works may, in this case, be
compared to the laws of the Medes and Persians, which being
once made, cannot be altered. Daniel 6:8. You find that
when there was a law made and given forth that none should
ask a petition of any, God or man, but of the king only;
this law being established by the king (verse 9). Daniel
breaking of it, let all do whatever they can, Daniel must
go into the lions’ den (verse 16). So here, I say,
there being a law given, and sealed with the Truth and the
Word of God,—how that “the soul that sinneth,
it shall die” (Eze 18:4). Whosoever doth abide under
this covenant, and dieth under the same, they must and
shall go into the lion’s den; yea, worse than that,
for they shall be thrown into Hell, to the very
devils.
But to speak in a few particulars for thy
better understanding herein, know,
First. That the Law of God, or
Covenant of Works, doth not contain itself in one
particular branch of the law, but doth extend itself into
many, even into all the Ten Commandments, and those ten
into very many more, as might be showed; so that the danger
doth not lie in the breaking of one or two of these ten
only, but it doth lie even in the transgression of any one
of them. As you know, if a king should give forth ten
particular commands to be obeyed by his subjects upon pain
of death; now if any man doth transgress against any one of
these ten, he doth commit treason, as if he had broke them
all, and lieth liable to have the sentence of the law as
certainly passed on him as if he had broken every
particular of them.
Second. Again; you know that the laws
being given forth by the king, which if a man keep and obey
for a long time, yet if at the last he slips and breaks
those laws, he is presently apprehended, and condemned by
that law. These things are clear as touching the Law of
God, as it is a Covenant of Works. If a man doth fulfill
nine of the Commandments, and yet breaketh but one, that
being broken will as surely destroy him and shut him out
from the joys of Heaven as if he had actually transgressed
against them all; for indeed, in effect, so he hath. There
is a notable Scripture for this in the Epistle of James,
Second Chapter, at the tenth verse, that runs
thus:—“For whosoever shall keep the whole law,
and yet offend in one point, he is guilty of
all,”—that is, he hath in effect broken them
all, and shall have the voice of them all cry out against
him. And it must needs be so, saith James, because
“He that said,” or that law which said,
“Do not commit adultery, said also, Do not kill. Now,
if thou commit no adultery, yet if thou kill, thou art
become a transgressor of the law” (Verse 11). As
thus; it may be thou didst never make to thyself a god of
stone or wood, or at least not to worship them so greatly
and so openly as the heathen do, yet if thou hast stolen,
born false witness, or lusted after a woman in thy heart
(Matt 5:28) thou hast transgressed the law, and must for
certain, living and dying under that covenant, perish for
ever by the law; for the law hath resolved on that
before-hand, saying, “Cursed is every one that
continueth not in ALL things”; mark, I pray you,
“in all things”; that is the Word, and that
seals the doctrine.
Third. Again; though a man doth not
covet, steal, murder, worship gods of wood and stone, etc.,
yet if he do take the Lord’s name in vain, he is for
ever gone, living and dying under that covenant.
“Thou shalt not take the name of the LORD thy God in
vain”; there is the command. But how if we do? Then
he saith, “the LORD will not hold him guiltless that
taketh His name in vain.” No; though thou live as
holy as ever thou canst, and walk as circumspectly as ever
any did, yet if thou dost take the Lord’s name in
vain, thou art gone by that covenant: “For I will
not,” mark “I will not,” let him be in
never so much danger, “I will not hold him guiltless
that taketh My name in vain” (Exo 20:7). And so
likewise for any other of the ten, do but break them, and
thy state is irrecoverable, if thou live and die under that
covenant.
Fourth. Though thou shouldest fulfill
this covenant, or law, even all of it, for a long time,
ten, twenty, forty, fifty, or threescore years, yet if thou
do chance to slip and break one of them but once before
thou die, thou art also gone and lost by that covenant; for
mark, “Cursed is every one that continueth not
in all things,” that continueth not in ALL things,
mark that, “which are written in the book of the law
to do them.” But if a man doth keep all the Law of
God his whole lifetime, and only sin one time before he
dies, that one sin is a breach of the law, and he hath not
continued in doing the things contained therein. For, so to
continue, according to the sense of this Scripture, is to
hold on without any failing, either in thought, word, or
deed; therefore, I say, though a man doth walk up to the
law all his lifetime, but only at the very last sin one
time before he die, he is sure to perish for ever, dying
under that covenant. For, my friends, you must understand
that the Law of God is “yea,” as well as
the Gospel; and as they that are under the Covenant of
Grace shall surely be saved by it, so, even so, they that
are under the Covenant of Works and the law, they shall
surely be damned by it, if continuing there. This is the
Covenant of Works and the nature of it—namely, not to
abate anything, no, not a mite, to him that lives and dies
under it: “I tell thee,” saith Christ,
“thou shalt not depart thence,” that is, from
under the curse, “till thou hast paid the very last
mite” (Luke 12:59).
Fifth. Again; you must consider that
this law doth not only condemn words and actions, as I said
before, but it hath authority to condemn the most secret
thoughts of the heart, being evil; so that if thou do not
speak any word that is evil, as swearing, lying, jesting,
dissembling, or any other word that tendeth to, or
savoureth of sin, yet if there should chance to pass but
one vain thought through thy heart but once in all thy
lifetime, the law taketh hold of it, accuseth, and also
will condemn thee for it. You may see one instance for all
in (Matt 5:27,28) where Christ saith, that though a man
doth not lie with a woman carnally, yet if he doth but look
on her, and in his heart lust after her, he is counted by
the law, being rightly expounded, such an one that hath
committed the sin, and thereby hath laid himself under the
condemnation of the law. And so likewise of all the rest of
the commands; if there be any thought that is evil do but
pass through thy heart, whether it be against God or
against man in the least measure, though possibly not
discerned of thee, or by thee, yet the law takes hold of
thee therefore, and doth by its authority, both cast,
condemn, and execute thee for thy so doing. “The
thought of foolishness is sin” (Prov
24:9).
Sixth. Again; the law is of that
nature and severity, that it doth not only inquire into the
generality of thy life as touching several things, whether
thou art upright there or no; but the law doth also follow
thee into all thy holy duties, and watcheth over thee
there, to see whether thou dost do all things aright
there—that is to say, whether when thou dost pray thy
heart hath no wandering thoughts in it; whether thou do
every holy duty thou doest perfectly without the least
mixture of sin; and if it do find thee to slip, or in the
least measure to fail in any holy duty that thou dost
perform, the law taketh hold on that, and findeth fault
with that, so as to render all the holy duties that ever
thou didst unavailable because of that. I say, if, when
thou art a hearing, there is but one vain thought, or in
praying, but one vain thought, or in any other thing
whatsoever, let it be civil or spiritual, one vain thought
once in all thy lifetime will cause the law to take such
hold on it, that for that one thing it doth even set open
all the floodgates of God’s wrath against thee, and
irrecoverably by that covenant it doth bring eternal
vengeance upon thee; so that, I say, look which ways thou
wilt, and fail wherein thou wilt, and do it as seldom as
ever thou canst, either in civil or spiritual things, as
aforesaid—that is, either in the service of God, or
in thy employments in the world, as thy trade or calling,
either in buying or selling any way, in anything
whatsoever; I say, if in any particular it find thee tardy,
or in the least measure guilty, it calleth thee an
offender, it accuseth thee to God, it puts a stop to all
the promises thereof that are joined to the law, and leaves
thee there as a cursed transgressor against God, and a
destroyer of thy own soul. 5
Here I would have thee, by the way, for to
take notice, that it is not my intent at this time to
enlarge on the several commands in particular—for
that would be very tedious both for me to write and thee to
read; only thus much I would have thee to do at the reading
hereof—make a pause, and sit still one quarter of an
hour, and muse a little in thy mind thus with thyself, and
say, Did I ever break the law; yea or no? Had I ever, in
all my lifetime, one sinful thought passed through my heart
since I was born; yea or no? And if thou findest thyself
guilty, as I am sure thou canst not otherwise choose but
do, unless thou shut thy eyes against thy every day’s
practice, then, I say, conclude thyself guilty of the
breach of the first covenant. And when that this is done,
be sure, in the next place, thou do not straightway forget
it and put it out of thy mind, that thou art condemned by
the same covenant; and then do not content thyself until
thou do find that God hath sent thee a pardon from Heaven
through the merits of our Lord Jesus Christ, the mediator
of the second covenant. And if God shall but give thee a
heart to take this my counsel, I do make no question but
these words spoken by me, will prove an instrument for the
directing of thy heart to the right remedy for the
salvation of thy soul.
Thus much now touching the law, and the
severity of it upon the person that is found under it,
having offended or broken any particular of it, either in
thought, word, or action; and now, before I do proceed to
the next thing, I shall answer four objections that do lie
in my way, and also, such as do stumble most part of the
world.
[Four Objections.]
Object. First. But you will say,
Methinks you speak very harsh; it is enough to daunt a
body. Set the case, therefore, that a man, after he hath
sinned and broken the law, repenteth of his wickedness and
promiseth to do so no more, will not God have mercy then,
and save a poor sinner then?
Answ. I told you before, that the
covenant, once broken, will execute upon the offender that
which it doth threaten to lay upon him; and as for your
supposing that your repenting and promising to do so no
more may help well, and put you in a condition to attain
the mercy of God by the law, these thoughts do flow from
gross ignorance both of the nature of sin, and also of the
nature of the justice of God. And if I were to give you a
description of one in a lost condition for the present, I
would brand him out with such a mark of ignorance as this
is.
Answ. 2. [The first answer is
expounded by the second]. The law, as it is a Covenant of
Works, doth not allow of any repentance unto life to those
that live and die under it; for the law being once broken
by thee, never speaks good unto thee, neither doth God at
all regard thee, if thou be under that covenant,
notwithstanding all thy repenting and also promises to do
so no more. No, saith the law, thou hast sinned, therefore
I must curse thee; for it is My nature to curse, even, and
nothing else but curse, every one that doth in any point
transgress against Me (Gal 3:10). They brake My covenant
“and I regarded them not, saith the Lord” (Heb
8:9). Let them cry, I will not regard them; let them
repent, I will not regard them; they have broken My
covenant, and done that in which I delighted not;
therefore, by that covenant I do curse, and not bless;
damn, and not save; frown, and not smile; reject, and not
embrace; charge sin and not forgive it. They brake My
covenant “and I regarded them not”; so that I
say, if thou break the law, the first covenant, and thou
being found there, God looking on thee through that, He
hath no regard on thee, no pity for thee, no delight in
thee.
Object. Second. But hath not the law
promises as well as threatenings? saying, “The man
which doeth these things shall live,” mark, he shall
live, “by them,” or in them (Rom 10:5; Gal
3:12).
Answ. 1. To break the Commandments is
not to keep or fulfill the same; but thou hast broken them,
therefore the promise doth not belong to thee by that
covenant. 2. The promises that are of the law are
conditional, and so not performed unless there be a full
and continual obedience to every particular of it, and that
without the least sin. “Do this”—mark, do
this—and afterwards thou shalt live; but if thou
break one point of it once in all thy life, thou hast not
done the law; therefore the promises following the law do
not belong unto thee if one sin hath been committed by
thee. As thus, I will give you a plain
instance—“Set the case, there be a law made by
the king, that if any man speak a word against him he must
be put to death, and this must not be revoked, but must for
certain be executed on the offender; though there be a
promise made to them that do not speak a word against him,
that they should have great love from him; yet this promise
is nothing to the offender; he is like to have no share in
it, or to be ever the better for it; but contrariwise, the
law that he hath offended must be executed on him; for his
sin shutteth him out from a share of, or in, the
promises.” So it is here, there is a promise made
indeed, but to whom? Why, it is to none but those that live
without sinning against the law; but if thou, I say, sin
one time against it in all thy lifetime, thou art gone, and
not one promise belongs to thee if thou continue under this
covenant. Methinks the prisoners at the bar, having
offended the law, and the charge of a just judge towards
them, do much hold forth the law, as it is a Covenant of
Works, and how it deals with them that are under it. The
prisoner having offended, cries out for mercy; Good, my
lord, mercy, saith he, pray, my lord, pity me. The judge
saith, What canst thou say for thyself that sentence of
death should not be passed upon thee? Why, nothing but
this, I pray my lord be merciful. But he answers again,
Friend, the law must take place, the law must not be
broken. The prisoner saith, Good, my lord, spare me, and I
will never do so any more. The judge, notwithstanding the
man’s outcries and sad condition, must, according to
the tenor of the law, pass judgment upon him, and the
sentence of condemnation must be read to the prisoner,
though it makes him fall down dead to hear it, if he
executes the law as he ought to do. And just thus it is
concerning the Law of God.
Object. Third. Ay, but sometimes, for
all your haste, the judge doth also give some pardons, and
forgives some offenders, notwithstanding their offences,
though he be a judge.
Answ. It is not because the law is
merciful, but because there is manifested the love of the
judge, not the love of the law. I beseech you to mark this
distinction; for if a man that hath deserved death by the
law be, notwithstanding this, forgiven his offence, it is
not because the law saith, “spare him”; but it
is the love of the judge or chief magistrate that doth set
the man free from the condemnation of the law. But mark;
here the law of men and the Law of God do differ; the law
of man is not so irrevocable; but if the Supreme please he
may sometimes grant a pardon without satisfaction given for
the offence; but the Law of God is of this nature, that if
a man be found under it, and a transgressor, or one that
hath transgressed against it, before that prisoner can be
released there must be a full and complete satisfaction
given to it, either by the man’s own life or by the
blood of some other man; for “without shedding of
blood is no remission” (Heb 9:22); that is, there is
no deliverance from under the curse of the Law of God; and
therefore, however the law of man may be made of none
effect sometimes by showing mercy without giving of a full
satisfaction, yet the Law of God cannot be so contented,
nor at the least give way, that the person offending that
should escape the curse and not be damned, except some one
do give a full and complete satisfaction to it for him, and
bring the prisoner into another covenant—to wit, the
Covenant of Grace, which is more easy, and soul-refreshing,
and sin-pardoning.
I say, therefore, you must understand that
if there be a law made that reaches the life, to take it
away for the offence given by the offender against it, then
it is clear that if the man be spared and saved, it is not
the law that doth give the man this advantage, but it is
the mere mercy of the king, either because he hath a ransom
or satisfaction some other way, or being provoked thereto
out of his own love to the person whom he saveth. Now, thou
also having transgressed and broken the Law of God, if the
law be not executed upon thee, it is not because the law is
merciful, or can pass by the least offence done by thee,
but thy deliverance comes another way; therefore, I say,
however it be by the laws of men where they be corrupted
and perverted, yet the Law of God is of that nature, that
if it hath not thy own blood or the blood of some other
man—for it calls for no less, for to ransom thee from
the curse of it, being due to thee for thy transgression,
and to satisfy the cries, the doleful cries, thereof, and
ever for to present thee pure and spotless before God,
notwithstanding this fiery law—thou art gone if thou
hadst a thousand souls; for “without shedding of
blood there is no remission” (Heb 9:22); no
forgiveness of the least sin against the law.
Object. Fourth. But, you will say,
“I do not only repent me of my former life, and also
promise to do so no more, but now I do labour to be
righteous, and to live a holy life; and now, instead of
being a breaker of the law, I do labour to fulfill the
same. What say you to that?”
Answ. Set the case, thou couldst walk
like an angel of God; set the case, thou couldst fulfill
the whole law, and live from this day to thy life’s
end without sinning in thought, word, or deed, which is
impossible; but, I say, set the case it should be so, why,
thy state is as bad, if thou be under the first covenant,
as ever it was. For, first, I know thou darest not say but
thou hast at one time or other sinned; and if so, then the
law hath condemned thee; and if so, then I am sure that
thou, with all thy actions and works of righteousness,
canst not remove the dreadful and irresistible curse that
is already laid upon thee by that law which thou art under,
and which thou hast sinned against; though thou livest the
holiest life that any man can live in this world, being
under the law of works, and so not under the Covenant of
Grace, thou must be cut off without remedy; for thou hast
sinned, though afterwards thou live never so
well.
The reasons for this that hath been spoken
are these—
First, The nature of God’s justice
calls for it—that is, it calls for irrecoverable ruin
on them that transgress against this law; for justice gave
it, and justice looks to have it completely and continually
obeyed, or else justice is resolved to take place, and
execute its office, which is to punish the transgressor
against it. You must understand that the justice of God is
as unchangeable as His love; His justice cannot change its
nature; justice it is, if it be pleased; and justice it is,
if it be displeased. The justice of God in this case may be
compared to fire; there is a great fire made in some place;
if thou do keep out of it, it is fire; if thou do fall into
it, thou wilt find it fire; and therefore the Apostle useth
this as an argument to stir up the Hebrews to stick close
to Jesus Christ, lest they fall under the justice of God by
these words, “For our God is a consuming
fire” (Heb 12:29); into which, if thou fall, it is
not for thee to get out again, as it is with some that fall
into a material fire; no, but he that falls into this, he
must lie there for ever; as it is clear where he saith,
“Who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings,
and with devouring fire?” (Isa 33:14). For justice
once offended knoweth not how to show any pity or
compassion to the offender, but runs on him like a lion,
takes him by the throat, throws him into prison, and there
he is sure to lie, and that to all eternity, unless
infinite satisfaction be given to it, which is impossible
to be given by any of us the sons of Adam.
Secondly, The faithfulness of God calls for
irrecoverable ruin to be poured out on those that shall
live and die under this covenant. If thou, having sinned
but one sin against this covenant, and shouldst afterwards
escape damning, God must be unfaithful to Himself and to
His Word, which both agree as one. First, he would be
unfaithful to Himself; to Himself, that is, to His justice,
holiness, righteousness, wisdom, and power, if He should
offer to stop the running out of His justice for the
damning of them that have offended it. And secondly, He
would be unfaithful to His Word, His written Word, and
disown, deny, and break that, of which He hath said,
“It is easier for Heaven and earth to pass, than one
tittle of the law to fail,” or be made of none effect
(Luke 16:17). Now, if He should not, according to His
certain declarations therein, take vengeance on those that
fall and die within the threat and sad curses denounced, in
that His Word could not be fulfilled.
Thirdly, Because otherwise he would disown
the sayings of His Prophets, and gratify the sayings of His
enemies; His Prophets say He will take vengeance; His
enemies say He will not; His Prophets say He will remember
their iniquities, and recompense them into their bosom; but
His enemies say they should do well, and they shall have
peace, though they walk after the imaginations of their own
hearts, and be not so strict as the Word commands, and do
not as it saith (Deu 29:19,20). But let me tell thee, hadst
thou a thousand souls, and each of them was worth a
thousand worlds, God would set them all on a light by fire,
if they fall within the condemnings of His Word, and thou
die without a Jesus, even the right Jesus; “for the
Scriptures cannot be broken.” What! dost thou think
that God, Christ, Prophets, and Scriptures, will all lie
for thee? and falsify their words for thee? It will be but
ill venturing thy soul upon that.
And the reasons for it are
these:—First, Because God is God; and secondly,
Because man is man.
First, Because God is perfectly just and
eternally just, perfectly holy and eternally holy,
perfectly faithful and eternally faithful; that is, without
any variableness or shadow of turning, but perfectly
continueth the same, and cannot as well cease to be God as
to alter or change the nature of His Godhead. As He is thus
the perfection of all perfections, He gave out His Law to
be obeyed; but if any offend it, then they fall into the
hands of this His eternal justice, and so must drink of His
irrevocable wrath, which is the execution of the same
justice. I say, this being thus, the law being broken,
justice takes place, and so faithfulness followeth to see
that execution be done, and also to testify that He is
true, and doth denounce His unspeakable, insupportable, and
unchangeable vengeance on the party offending.
Secondly, Because thou art not as infinite
as God, but a poor created weed, that is here today and
gone tomorrow, and not able to answer God in His essence,
being, and attributes; thou art bound to fall under Him,
for thy soul or body can do nothing that is infinite in
such a way as to satisfy this God, which is an infinite God
in all His attributes.
[Misery of man by this
law.]
But to declare unto you the misery of man by
this law to purpose, I do beseech you to take notice of
these following particulars, besides what has been already
spoken:—First, I shall show the danger of them
by reason of the law, as they come from Adam;
Second, as they are in their own persons particularly
under it.
[First, The danger of them by reason
of the law, as they come from Adam.]
1. As they come from Adam, they are in a sad
condition, because he left them a broken covenant. Or take
it thus: because they, while they were in him, did with him
break that covenant. O! this was the treasure that Adam
left to his posterity; it was a broken covenant, insomuch
that death reigned over all his children, and doth still to
this day, as they come from him, both natural and eternal
death (Rom 5). It may be, drunkard, swearer, liar, thief,
thou dost not think of this.
2. He did not only leave them a broken
covenant, but also made them himself sinners against it. He
[Adam] made them sinners—“By one man’s
disobedience many were made sinners” (Rom 5:19). And
this is worse than the first.
3. Not only so, but he did deprive them of
their strength, by which at first they were enabled to
stand, and left them no more than dead men. O helpless
state! O how beggarly and miserable are the sons of
Adam!
4. Not only so, but also before he left them
he was the conduit pipe through which the devil did convey
off his poisoned spawn and venom nature into the hearts of
Adam’s sons and daughters, by which they are at this
day so strongly and so violently carried away, that they
fly as fast to Hell, and the devil, by reason of sin, as
chaff before a mighty wind.
5. In a word, Adam led them out of their
paradise, that is one more; and put out their eyes, that is
another; and left them to the leading of the devil. O sad!
Canst thou hear this, and not have thy ears to tingle and
burn on thy head? Canst thou read this, and not feel thy
conscience begin to throb and dag? If so, surely it is
because thou art either possessed with the devil, or
besides thyself.
[Second.] But I pass this, and come
to the second thing, which is, the cause of their being in
a sad condition, which is by reason of their being in
their particular persons under it.
1. Therefore, they that are under the law,
they are in a sad condition, because they are under that
which is more ready, through our infirmity, to curse than
to bless; they are under that called the ministration of
condemnation, that is, they are under that dispensation, or
administration, whose proper work is to curse and condemn,
and nothing else (2 Cor 3).
2. Their condition is sad who are under the
law, because they are not only under that ministration that
doth condemn, but also that which doth wait an opportunity
to condemn; the law doth not wait that it might be
gracious, but it doth wait to curse and condemn; it came on
purpose to discover sin, “The law entered,”
saith the Apostle, “that the offence might
abound” (Rom 5:20) or appear indeed to be that which
God doth hate, and also to curse for that which hath been
committed; as he saith, “Cursed is every one
that continueth not in all things which are written in the
book of the law to do them” (Gal 3:10).
3. They are in a sad condition, because that
administration they are under that are under the law doth
always find fault with the sinner’s obedience as well
as his disobedience, if it be not done in a right spirit,
which they that are under that covenant cannot do, by
reason of their being destitute of faith; therefore, I say,
it doth control them, saying, “This was not well
done, this was done by the halves, this was not done
freely, and that was not done perfectly, and out of love to
God.” And hence it is that some men, notwithstanding
they labour to live as holy as ever they can according to
the law, yet they do not live a peaceable life, but are
full of condemnings, full of guilt and torment of
conscience, finding themselves to fail here, and to fall
short there, omitting this good which the law commands, and
doing that evil which the law forbids, but never giveth
them one good word for all their pains.
4. They that are under the law are in a sad
condition, because they are under that administration that
will never be contented with what is done by the sinner. If
thou be under this covenant, work as hard as thou canst,
the law will never say, “Well done”; never say,
“My good servant”; no; but always it will be
driving thee faster, hastening of thee harder, giving thee
fresh commands, which thou must do, and upon pain of
damnation not to be left undone. Nay, it is such a master
that will curse thee, not only for thy sins, but also
because thy good works were not so well done as they ought
to be.
5. They that are under this covenant or law,
their state is very sad, because this law doth command
impossible things of him that is under it; and yet doth but
right in it, seeing man at the first had in Adam strength
to stand, if he would have used it, and the law was given
them, as I said before, when man was in his full strength;
and therefore no inequality if it commands the same still,
seeing God that gave thee strength did not take it away. I
will give you a similitude for the clearing of it. Set the
case that I give to my servant ten pounds, with this
charge, Lay it out for my best advantage, that I may have
my own again with profit; now if my servant, contrary to my
command, goeth and spends my money in a disobedient way, is
it any inequality in me to demand of my servant what I gave
him at first? Nay, and though he have nothing to pay, I may
lawfully cast him into prison, and keep him there until I
have satisfaction. So here; the law was delivered to man at
the first when he was in a possibility to have fulfilled
it; now, then, though man have lost his strength, yet God
is just in commanding the same work to be done. Ay, and if
they do not do the same things, I say, that are impossible
for them to do, it is just with God to damn them, seeing it
was they themselves that brought themselves into this
condition; therefore, saith the Apostle, “What things
soever the law (or commands) saith, it saith to them who
are under the law; that every mouth may be stopped, and all
the world may become guilty before God” (Rom 3:19).
And this is thy sad condition that art under the law (Gal
3:10).
But if any should object, and say, But the
law doth not command impossible things of natural
man,—
I should answer in this case as the Apostle
did in another very much like unto it, saying,
“Understanding neither what they say, nor whereof
they affirm.” For doth not the law command thee to
love the Lord thy God with all thy soul, with all they
strength, with all thy might, etc., and can the natural man
do this? How can those that are accustomed to do evil, do
that which is commanded in this particular? “Can the
Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?”
(Jer 12:23).
Doth the law command thee to do good, and
nothing but good, and that with all thy soul, heart, and
delight? which the law as a Covenant of Works calleth for;
and canst thou, being carnal, do that? But there is no man
that hath understanding, if he should hear thee say so, but
would say that thou wast either bewitched or stark
mad.
6. They that are under the law are in a sad
condition, because that though they follow the law, or
Covenant of Works; I say, though they follow it, it will
not lead them to Heaven; no, but contrariwise, it will lead
them under the curse. It is not possible, saith Paul, that
any should be justified by the law, or by our following of
it; for by that “is the knowledge of
sin,” and by it we are condemned for the same, which
is far from leading us to life, being the ministration of
death (2 Cor 3). And again; “Israel, which followeth
after the law of righteousness, hath not attained to the
law of righteousness. Wherefore? Because they sought
it not by faith, but by the law, and by the works
thereof” (Rom 9:30-32).
7. They that are under the law are in a sad
condition, because they do not know whether ever they shall
have any wages for their work or no; they have no assurance
of the pardon of their sins, neither any hopes of eternal
life; but poor hearts as they are, they work for they do
not know what, even like a poor horse that works hard all
day, and at night hath a dirty stable for his pains; so
thou mayest work hard all the days of thy life, and at the
day of death, instead of having a glorious rest in the
Kingdom of Heaven, thou mayest, nay, thou shalt, have for
thy sins the damnation of thy soul and body in Hell to all
eternity; forasmuch, as I said before, that the law, if
thou sinnest, it doth not take notice of any good work done
by thee, but takes its advantage to destroy and cut off thy
soul for the sin thou hast committed.
8. They that are under the law are in a sad
condition, because they are under that administration; upon
whose souls God doth not smile, they dying there; for the
administration that God doth smile upon His children
through, is the Covenant of Grace, they being in Jesus
Christ, the Lord of life and consolation; but contrariwise
to those that are under the law; for they have His frowns,
His rebukes, His threatenings, and with much severity they
must be dealt withal—“For they continued not in
My covenant, and I regarded them not, saith the Lord”
(Heb 8:9).
9. They are in a sad condition, because they
are out of the faith of Christ; they that are under the law
have not the faith of Christ in them; for that dispensation
which they are under is not the administration of faith.
The law is not of faith, saith the Apostle (Gal
3:12).
10. Because they have not received the
Spirit; for that is received by the hearing of faith, and
not by the law, nor the works thereof (Gal 3:2).
11. In a word, if thou live and die under
that covenant, Jesus Christ will neither pray for thee,
neither let thee have one drop of His blood to wash away
thy sins, neither shalt thou be so much as one of the least
in the Kingdom of Heaven; for all these privileges come to
souls under another covenant, as the Apostle
saith—“For such are not under the law, but
under grace”—that is, such as have a share in
the benefits of Jesus Christ, or such as are brought from
under the first covenant into the second; or from under the
law into the grace of Christ’s Gospel, without which
Covenant of Grace, and being found in that, there is no
soul can have the least hope of eternal life, no joy in the
Holy Ghost, no share in the privileges of saints, because
they are tied up from them by the limits and bonds of the
Covenant of Works. For you must understand that these two
covenants have their several bounds and limitations, for
the ruling and keeping in subjection, or giving of freedom,
to the parties under the said covenants. Now they that are
under the law are within the compass and the jurisdiction
of that, and are bound to be in subjection to that; and
living and dying under that, they must stand and fall to
that, as Paul saith, “To his own master he standeth
or falleth.” The Covenant of Grace doth admit to
those that are under it also liberty and freedom, together
with commanding of subjection to the things contained in
it, which I shall speak to further hereafter.
[For what purpose the Law was
added and given.]
But now, that the former things may be
further made to appear—that is, what the sad
condition of all them that are under the law is, as I have
shown you something of the nature of the law, so also shall
I show that the law was added and given for this purpose,
that it might be so with those that are out of the Covenant
of Grace.
First, God did give the law that sin
might abound, not that it should take away sin in any, but
to discover the sin which is already begotten, or that may
be hereafter begotten, by lust and Satan (Rom 5:20). I say,
this is one proper work of the law, to make manifest sin;
it is sent to find fault with the sinner, and it doth also
watch that it may do so, and it doth take all advantages
for the accomplishing of its work in them that give ear
thereto, or do not give ear, if it have the rule over them.
I say, it is like a man that is sent by his lord to see and
pry into the labours and works of other men, taking every
advantage to discover their infirmities and failings, and
to chide them? yea, to throw them out of the Lord’s
favour for the same.
Second. Another great end why the
Lord did add or give the law, it was that no man might have
anything to lay to the charge of the Lord for His
condemning of them that do transgress against the same. You
know that if a man should be had before an officer or
judge, and there be condemned, and yet by no law, he that
condemns him might be very well reprehended or reproved for
passing the judgment; yea, the party himself might have
better ground to plead for his liberty than the other to
plead for the condemning of him; but this shall not be so
in the judgment-day, but contrariwise; for then every man
shall be forced to lay his hand on his mouth, and hold his
tongue at the judgment of God when it is passed upon them;
therefore saith the Apostle, “What things soever the
law saith, it saith to them who are under the law”;
that is, all the commands, all the cursings and
threatenings that are spoken by it, are spoken, saith he,
“that every mouth may be stopped”; mark, I
beseech you, “it saith,” saith he, “that
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become
guilty before God” (Rom 3:19). So that now, in case
any in the judgment-day should object against the judgment
of God, as those in the 25th of Matthew do, saying, Lord,
when saw we Thee thus and thus? and why dost Thou pass such
a sad sentence of condemnation upon us? surely this is
injustice, and not equity: now for the preventing of this
the law was given; ay, and that it might prevent thee to
purpose, God gave it betimes, before either thy first
father had sinned, or thou wast born. So that again, if
there should be these objections offered against the
proceedings of the Lord in justice and judgment, saying,
Lord, why am I thus condemned, I did not know it was sin?
Now against these two was the law given and that betimes,
so that both these are answered. If the first come in and
say, Why am I judged? why am I damned? then will the law
come in, even all the Ten Commandments, with every one of
their cries against thy soul; the First saying, He hath
sinned against Me, damn him; the Second saying also, He
hath transgressed against Me, damn him; the Third also
saying the same, together with the Fourth, Fifth, Sixth,
Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth; even all of them will
discharge themselves against thy soul if thou die under the
first covenant, saying, He or they have transgressed
against us, damn them, damn them: and I tell thee also,
that these ten great guns, the Ten Commandments, will, with
discharging themselves in justice against thy soul, so
rattle in thy conscience, that thou wilt in spite of thy
teeth be immediately put to silence, and have thy mouth
stopped. And let me tell thee further, that if thou shalt
appear before God to have the Ten Commandments discharge
themselves against thee, thou hadst better be tied to a
tree, and have ten, yea, ten thousand of the biggest pieces
of ordnance in the world to be shot off against thee; for
these could go no further but only to kill the body; but
they, both body and soul, to be tormented in Hell with the
devil to all eternity.
Third, Again; if the second thing
should be objected, saying, But Lord, I did not think this
had been sin, or the other had been sin, for nobody told me
so; then also will the giving of the law take off that,
saying, Nay, But I was given to thy father Adam before he
had sinned, or before thou wast born, and have ever since
been in thy soul to convince thee of thy sins, and to
control thee for doing the thing that was not right. Did
not I secretly tell thee at such a time, in such a place,
when thou wast doing of such a thing, with such an one, or
when thou was all alone, that this was a sin, and that God
did forbid it, therefore if thou didst commit it, God would
be displeased with thee for it: and when thou was thinking
to do such a thing at such a time, did not I say, Forbear,
do not so? God will smite thee, and punish thee for it if
thou dost do it. And besides, God did so order it that you
had me in your houses, in your Bibles, and also you could
speak and talk of me; thus pleading the truth, thou shalt
be forced to confess it is so; nay, it shall be so in some
sort with the very Gentiles and barbarous people that fall
far short of that light we have in these parts of the
world; for, saith the Apostle, “The Gentiles which
have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the
law, these, having not the law,” that is, not written
as we have, yet they “are a law unto themselves:
which show the works of the law written in their
hearts” (Rom 2:14,15). That is, they have the law of
works in them by nature, and therefore they shall be left
without excuse; for their own consciences shall stand up
for the truth of this where he saith, “Their
conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts
the meanwhile accusing or else excusing one another.”
Ay, but when? Why, “in the day when God shall judge
the secrets of men by Jesus Christ according to my
Gospel” (Rom 2:15,16). So this, I say, is another end
for which the Lord did give the law—namely, that God
might pass a sentence in righteousness, without being
charged with any injustice by those that shall fall under
it in the judgment.
Fourth, A fourth end why the Lord did
give the law it was, because they that die out of Jesus
Christ might not only have their mouths stopped, but also
that their persons “might become guilty before
God” (Rom 3:19). And indeed this will be the ground
of silencing, as I said before, they finding themselves
guilty, their consciences backing the truth of the judgment
of God passed upon them, “they shall become
guilty”—that is, they shall be fit vessels for
the wrath of God to be poured out into, being filled with
guilt by reason of transgressions against the commandments;
thus, therefore, shall the parties under the first covenant
be “fitted to destruction” (Rom 9:22) even as
wood or straw, being well dried, is fitted for the fire;
and the law was added and given, and speaks to this very
end, that sins might be shown, mouths might be stopped from
quarreling, and that “all the world,” mark,
“the world may become guilty before God,” and
so be in justice for ever and ever overthrown because of
their sins.
And this will be so for these
reasons—
1. Because God hath a time to magnify His
justice and holiness, as well as to show His forbearance
and mercy. We read in Scripture that His eyes are too pure
to behold iniquity, and then we shall find it true (Hab
1:13). We read in Scripture that He will magnify the law,
and make it honourable, and then He will do it indeed. Now,
because the Lord doth not strike so soon as He is provoked
by sin, therefore poor souls will not know nor regard the
justice of God, neither do they consider the time in which
it must be advanced, which will be when men drop under the
wrath of God as fast as hail in a mighty storm (2 Peter
3:9; Psa 50:21,22). Now, therefore, look to it all you that
count the long-suffering and forbearance of God slackness;
and because for the present He keepeth silence, therefore
to think that He is like unto yourselves. No, no; but know
that God hath His set time for every purpose of His, and in
its time it shall be advanced most marvelously, to the
everlasting astonishment and overthrow of that soul that
shall be dealt withal by justice and the law. O! how will
God advance His justice! O! how will God advance His
holiness! First, by showing men that He in justice cannot,
will not regard them, because they have sinned; and,
secondly, in that His holiness will not give way for such
unclean wretches to abide in His sight, His eyes are so
pure.
2. Because God will make it appear that
He will be as good as His Word to sinners. Sinners must
not look to escape always, though they may escape awhile,
yet they shall not go far all adoe unpunished; no, but they
shall have their due to a farthing, when every threatening
and curse shall be accomplished and fulfilled on the head
of the transgressor. Friend, there is never an idle word
that thou speakest but God will account with thee for it;
there is never a lie thou tellest, but God will reckon with
thee for it; nay, there shall not pass so much as one
passage in all thy lifetime but God, the righteous God,
will have it in the trial by His law, if thou die under it,
in the judgment-day.
[WHO THE ARE THAT ARE UNDER THE COVENANT
OF WORKS.]
THIRD. But you will say—“But
who are those that are thus under the
law?”
Answ. Those that are under the law
may be branched out into three ranks of men; either, first,
such as are grossly profane, or such as are more refined;
which may be two ways, some in a lower sort, and some in a
more eminent way.
First, Then they are under the law as
a Covenant of Works who are open profane, and ungodly
wretches, such as delight not only in sin, but also make
their boast of the same, and brag at the thoughts of
committing of it. Now, as for such as these are, there is a
Scripture in the First Epistle of Paul to Timothy Chapter
1, verses 9, 10, which is a notable one to this purpose,
“The law,” saith he, “is not made for a
righteous man,” not as it is a Covenant of Works,
“but for the” unrighteous or “lawless and
disobedient, for the ungodly and for sinners, for unholy
and profane, for murderers of fathers and murderers of
mothers, for manslayers, for whoremongers, for them that
defile themselves with mankind, for menstealers, for
liars,” look to it, liars, “for perjured
persons, and,” in a word, “if there be any
other thing that is not according to sound doctrine.”
These are one sort of people that are under the law, and so
under the curse of the same, whose due is to drink up the
brimful cup of God’s eternal vengeance, and therefore
I beseech you not to deceive yourselves; for “know ye
not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of
God? Neither fornicators, nor idolaters, nor adulterers,
nor effeminate, nor abusers of themselves with mankind, nor
thieves, nor covetous, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor
extortioners, shall inherit the kingdom of God” (1
Cor 6:9,10). Poor souls, you think that you may have your
sins, your lusts, and pleasures, and yet you shall do
pretty well, and be let to go free in the judgment-day; but
see what God saith of such in Deuteronomy 29:19,
20—which shall “bless himself in his heart,
saying, I shall have peace,” I shall be saved, I
shall do as well as others, in the day when God shall judge
the world by Jesus Christ; but, saith God, I will not spare
them, no, but My anger and My jealousy shall smoke against
them. How far? Even to the executing all the curses that
are written in the Law of God upon them. Nay, saith God, I
will be even with them, “for I will blot out their
names from under Heaven.” And indeed it must of
necessity be so, because such souls are unbelievers, in
their sins, and under the law, which cannot, will not, show
any mercy on them; for it is not the administration of
mercy and life, but the administration of death and
destruction, as you have it (2 Cor 3:7,9); and all those,
every one of them, that are open profane, and scandalous
wretches are under it, and have been so ever since they
came into the world to this day; and they will for certain
live and die under the same dispensation, and then be
damned to all eternity, if they be not converted from under
that covenant into and under the Covenant of Grace, of
which I shall speak in its place; and yet for all this, how
brag and crank 6 are our poor wantons and wicked
ones in this day of forbearance! as if God would never have
a reckoning with them, as if there was no law to condemn
them, as if there was no hellfire to put them into. But O
how will they be deceived when they shall see Christ
sitting upon the judgment-seat, having laid aside his
priestly and prophetical office, and appearing only as a
judge to the wicked? when they shall see all the records of
Heaven unfolded and laid open; when they shall see each man
his name in the Book of Life, and in the book of the law;
when they shall see God in His majesty, Christ in His
majesty, the saints in their dignity, but themselves in
their impurity. What will they say then? whither will they
fly then? where will they leave their glory? O sad state!
(Isa 10:3).
Second. They are under the law also
who do not only so break and disobey the law, but follow
after the law as hard as ever they can, seeking
justification thereby—that is, though a man should
abstain from the sins against the law, and labour to
fulfill the law, and give up himself to the law, yet if he
look no further than the law he is still under the law, and
for all his obedience to the law, the righteous Law of God,
he shall be destroyed by that law. Friend, you must not
understand that none but profane persons are under the law;
no, but you must understand that a man may be turned from a
vain, loose, open, profane conversation and sinning against
the law, to a holy, righteous, religious life, and yet be
in the same state, under the same law, and as sure to be
damned as the other that are more profane and loose. And
though you may say this is very strange, yet I shall both
say it and prove it to be true. Read with understanding
that Scripture in Romans 9:30-31, where the Apostle,
speaking of the very thing, saith, “But Israel, which
followed after the law of righteousness”; mark, that
followed after the law of righteousness; they
notwithstanding their earnest pursuit, or hunting after the
law of righteousness, “hath not attained to the law
of righteousness.” It signifies thus much to us, that
let a man be never so earnest, so fervent, so restless, so
serious, so ready, so apt and willing to follow the law and
the righteousness thereof, if he be under that covenant, he
is gone, he is lost, he is deprived of eternal life,
because he is not under the ministration of life if he die
there. Read also that Scripture, Galatians 3:10, which
saith, “For as many as are of the works of the law
are under the curse”; mark, they that are of the
works of the law. Now, for to be of the works of the law,
it is to be of the works of the righteousness
thereof—that is, to abstain from sins against the
law, and to do the commands thereof as near as ever they
can for their lives, or with all the might they have: and
therefore I beseech you to consider it, for men’s
being ignorant of this is the cause why so many go on
supposing they have a share in Christ, because they are
reformed, and abstain from the sins against the law, who,
when all comes to all, will be damned notwithstanding,
because they are not brought out from under the Covenant of
Works, and put under the Covenant of Grace.
Object. “But can you in very
deed make these things manifestly evident from the Word of
God? Methinks to reason thus is very strange, that a man
should labour to walk up according to the Law of God as
much as ever he can, and yet that man notwithstanding this,
should be still under the curse. Pray clear
it.”
Answ. Truly this doth seem very
strange, I do know full well, to the natural man, to him
that is yet in his unbelief, because he goeth by beguiled
reason; but for my part, I do know it is so, and shall
labour also to convince thee of the truth of the
same.
1. Then, the law is thus strict and severe,
that if a man do sin but once against it, he, I say, is
gone for ever by the law, living and dying under that
covenant. If you would be satisfied as touching the truth
of this, do but read Galatians 3:10, where it saith
“Cursed is every one,” that is, not a
man shall miss by that covenant, “that continueth not
in all,” mark, in all “things which are written
in the book of the law to do them.” (1.) Pray mark,
here is a curse, in the first place, if all things written
in the book of the law be not done, and that, continually
too—that is, without any failing or one slip, as I
said before. Now there is never a one in the world but
before they did begin to yield obedience to the least
command, they in their own persons did sin against it by
breaking of it. The Apostle, methinks, is very notable for
the clearing of this in Romans 3:5. In the one he
endeavours for to prove that all had transgressed in the
first Adam as he stood a common person, representing both
himself and us in his standing and falling.
“Wherefore,” saith he, “as by one man sin
entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death
passed upon all men,” mark that; but why? “for
that all have sinned” (Rom 5:12). That is, forasmuch
as all naturally are guilty of original sin, the sin that
was committed by us in Adam; so this is one cause why none
can be justified by their obedience to the law, because
they have in the first place broken it in their first
parents. But, (2.) in case this should be opposed and
rejected by quarrelsome persons, though there be no ground
for it, Paul hath another argument to back his doctrine,
saying, For we have proved (already) that both Jews and
Gentiles are all under sin. “As it is written, There
is none righteous, no, not one.” “They are all
gone out of the way, they are together,” mark,
together, “become unprofitable, there is none that
doeth good, no, not one.” “Their throat
is an open sepulchre; with their tongues they have used
deceit, the poison of asps is under their
lips.” Their “mouths are full of cursing and
bitterness.” “Their feet are swift to
shed blood.” In a word, “Destruction and misery
are in their ways; and the way of peace have they
not known.” Now then, saith he, having proved these
things so clearly, the conclusion of the whole is this,
“That what things soever the law saith,” in
both showing of sin, and cursing for the same, “it
saith” all “to them who are under the law that
every mouth may be stopped, and all the world may become
guilty before God” (Rom 3:10,19). So that here, I
say, lieth the ground of our not being justified by the
law, even because, in the first place, we have sinned
against it; for know this for certain, that if the law doth
take the least advantage of thee by thy sinning against it,
all that ever thou shalt afterwards hear from it is nothing
but Curse, curse, curse him, “for not continuing in
all things which are written in the book of the law to do
them.”
2. Thou canst not be saved by the righteous
Law of God, the first covenant, because that, together with
this thy miserable state, by original and actual sins,
before thou didst follow the law, since thy turning to the
law thou hast committed several sins against the
law—“In many things we offend all.” So
that now thy righteousness to the law being mixed with
sometimes the lust of concupiscence, fornication,
covetousness, pride, heart-risings against God, coldness of
affection towards Him, backwardness to good duties,
speaking idle words, having of strife in your hearts, and
such like; I say, these things being thus, the
righteousness of the law is become too weak through this
our flesh (Rom 8:3), and so, notwithstanding all our
obedience to the law, we are yet through our weakness under
the curse of the law; for, as I said before, the law is so
holy, so just, and so good, that it cannot allow that any
failing or slip should be done by them that look for life
by the same. “Cursed is every one that
continuteth not in everything” (Gal 3:10). And this
Paul knew full well, which made him throw away all his
righteousness. But you will say, that was his
own.
Answ. But it was even that which
while he calls it his own, he also calls it the
righteousness of the law (Phil 3:7-10) and to account it
but dung, but as dirt on his shoes, and that, that he might
be found in Christ, and so be saved by Him “without
the deeds of the law” (Rom 3:28). But,
3. Set the case, the righteousness of the
law which thou hast was pure and perfect, without the least
flaw or fault, without the least mixture of the least
sinful thought, yet this would fall far short of presenting
of thee blameless in the sight of God. And that I prove by
these arguments—(1.) The first argument is, that that
which is not Christ cannot redeem souls from the curse, it
cannot completely present them before the Lord; now the law
is not Christ; therefore the moral law cannot, by all our
obedience to it, deliver us from the curse that is due to
us (Acts 4:12). (2.) The second argument is, that that
righteousness that is not the righteousness of faith, that
is, by believing in Jesus Christ, cannot please God; now
the righteousness of the law as a Covenant of Works is not
the righteousness of faith; therefore the righteousness of
the law as acted by us, being under that covenant, cannot
please God. The first is proved in Hebrews 11:6, “But
without faith it is impossible to please
Him”; mark, it is impossible. The second thus,
“The law is not of faith” (Gal 3:12; Rom
10:5,6), compared with Galatians 3:11. “But that no
man is justified by the law in the sight of God, it
is evident; for, The just shall live by faith. And the
law is not of faith.”
But for the better understanding of those
that are weak of apprehension, I shall prove it
thus—1. The soul that hath eternal life, he must have
it by right of purchase or redemption (Heb 9:12; Eph 1:7).
2. This purchase of redemption must be through the blood of
Christ. “We have redemption through His blood.”
“Without shedding of blood is no remission.”
Now the law is not in a capacity to die, and so to redeem
sinners by the purchase of blood, which satisfaction
justice calls for. Read the same Scriptures (Heb 9:22).
Justice calls for satisfaction, because thou hast
transgressed and sinned against it, and that must have
satisfaction; therefore all that ever thou canst do cannot
bring in redemption, though thou follow the law up the to
the nail-head, as I may say, because all this is not
shedding of blood; for believe it, and know it for certain,
that though thou hadst sinned but one sin before thou didst
turn to the law, that one sin will murder thy soul, if it
be not washed away by blood, even by the precious blood of
Jesus Christ, that was shed when He did hang upon the cross
on Mount Calvary.
Object. But you will say,
“Methinks, that giving of ourselves up to live a
righteous life should make God like the better of us, and
so let us be saved by Christ, because we are so willing to
obey His law.”
Answ. The motive that