Children in the Covenant of Grace
How could an unregenerate be in the
Covenant of Grace?
Children
in the Administration of The Covenant of Grace
by Dr. Thomas Shepard
When
we say that children are members by their parents' covenant, I would
premise three things for explication.
1.
That children of godly parents come to the fruition of their membership
by their parents' covenant, but that which gives them their right and
interest in this membership is God's covenant, whereby he engageth
himself equally to be a God to them and to their seed. This I suppose is
clear.
2.
That according to the double seed, viz., (1.) Elect seed; (2.) Church
seed; so there is a double covenant, (1.) External and outward; (2.)
Internal and inward. And because the covenant makes the church, hence
there is an inward and outward membership and church estate; there is an
outward Jew and an inward Jew. (Rom. 2.28,29.) All are not Israel (i.e.,
the elect seed) that are of Israel, (i.e., the church seed, or in
outward covenant,) to whom the apostle saith belongs the adoption, the
covenant, and the promises; that is, the external adoption, whereby God
accounts them his children, or the children of his house and family, the
children of the church; and accordingly have the promises belonging to
them in respect of outward dispensation, although they be not children
by internal adoption, to whom belong the promises by effectual and
special communication of saving grace. It is clearer than the day that
many who are inwardly, or in respect of inward covenant, the children of
the devil, are outwardly, or in respect of outward covenant, the
children of God. Is. 1.2, "I have brought up children," and
yet "rebellious;" and in the next verse they are called
"my people," (i.e., by outward covenant,) and yet worse than
the ox, or ass. Deut. 32.19,20, they are called sons, and yet provoking
God to revengeful wrath; and children, and yet without faith. And look,
as some may be externally dogs, and yet internally believers, (as the
woman of Canaan, whom, in respect of outward covenant, Christ calls a
dog, and the Jews who yet rejected him children, Matt. 15.26,) so many
may be externally children, in respect of external covenant, and yet
internally dogs and evil men; and we see that the purest churches of
Christ are called saints, and faithful, and children of God, and yet
many among them hypocrites and unbelievers; because they that, in
respect of church estate, and outward covenant and profession, are
outwardly or federally saints, are many times inwardly and really
unsound. Hence, therefore, it is, that when we say that children are in
covenant, and so church members, the meaning is, not that they are
always in inward covenant, and inward church members, who enjoy the
inward and saving benefits of the covenant, but that they are in
external and outward covenant, and therefore outwardly church members,
to whom belong some outward privileges of the covenant for their inward
and eternal good.
These
things being clear, I the rather make mention of them to undermine
divers usual objections against the membership and covenant interest of
children; as, that they have no saving grace many times; and that they
make no actual profession of any grace, and that many of them degenerate
and prove corrupt and wicked, etc.; for suppose all these, yet God may
take them into outward covenant, (which is sufficient to make them the
church seed, or members of the church,) although he doth not receive
them into inward covenant, in bestowing upon them saving grace, or power
to profess it; nay, though they degenerate and grow very corrupt
afterward.
3.
Because you may question what this outward covenant is, to which the
seals are annexed, and under which we shall prove children are
comprehended; and because the knowledge of it is exceeding useful and
very pleasant, I shall therefore give a short taste of it, as a light to
our after discourse, especially as it is considered in the largest
extent of it. This outward covenant, therefore, consists chiefly of
these three branches, or special promises:—
1.
The Lord engageth himself to them, that they shall be called by his
name, or his name shall be called upon them, as it is Is. 63.19. They
shall be called the sons of God, (Hos. 1.10,) and the people of God,
(Deut. 29.12,13;) thou becamest mine, (Ezek. 16.8.) They may not be his
sons, and people, really and savingly, but God will honor them outwardly
(at least) with this name and privilege; they shall bear his name, to be
called so, and consequently to be accounted so by others, and to be
reckoned as of the number of his visible church and people, just as one
that adopts a young son; he tells the father, if he carry it well toward
him, when he is grown up to years he shall possess the inheritance
itself; but yet, in the mean while, he shall have this favor, to be
called his son, and be of his family and household, and so be reckoned
among the number of his sons. See Rom. 9.4.
2.
The Lord promiseth that they shall, above all others in the world, have
the means of doing them good, and of conveying of the special benefits
of the covenant. Nay, they shall be set apart above all people in the
world, to enjoy these special benefits of remission of sins, power
against sin, eternal life, etc., and shall certainly have these, by
these means, unless they refuse them; this is evident from these and
such like scriptures and examples: What privilege hath the Jew? (saith
the apostle, Rom. 3.1, and what advantage by circumcision, if by nature
under wrath and sin? for upon that ground the apostle makes the
question:) he answers, It is much every way, but chiefly because to them
were committed the oracles of God, i.e., the word, promises, covenant;
which are the ordinary means of saving grace and eternal good: others
hear the word, but these in outward covenant enjoy it by covenant and
promise; and hence these, in the first place and principally, are sought
after by these means; and therefore Christ forbids his disciples at
first to go preach in the way of the Gentiles, (persons out of
covenant,) but to the lost sheep of the house of Israel, (Matt. 10.6;)
and himself tells the woman of Canaan that he came not but to the lost
sheep of the house of Israel. (Matt. 15.24.) And although he bids his
disciples go preach to all nations, yet (Acts 3.26) it is said, Unto you
first hath he sent Christ, because you are children of the promise and
covenant, (ver. 25;) repent therefore, and be converted. (ver. 19.) Do
not resist or refuse Christ, for he hath first sent Christ to you, to
bless you and turn you from your iniquities; and the promise is full and
fair. (Rom. 11.23.) If they abide not in unbelief, (i.e., in refusing
grace and Christ when offered,) they shall be grafted in, for God is
able to do it, and will do it; and the reason why the Lord gave his
people up to their own counsels, it was because "my people would
none of me," after all the means God used for their good. (Ps.
81.11-13, and Deut. 7.6.) The Lord hath chosen you, above all people on
the earth, to be a special people to himself, and thou art a holy people
unto the Lord. How a holy people? By inward holiness? No, verily; for
many of them were inwardly unholy, both parents and children; but thou
art holy, i.e., thou art externally sanctified and set apart, by special
means of holiness, to be a special people unto God. And therefore (Is.
5.7) the men of Judah are called God's pleasant plant; i.e., planted
into the root and fatness of the church, and therefore had all means
used for their further special good. (ver. 4.) "What could be done
to my vineyard that hath not been done?" And hence it is, that
though the word may come to heathens as well as church members, yet it
comes not to them by way of covenant, as it doth to church members; nor
have they any promise of mercy aforehand, as church members have; nor is
it chiefly belonging to such, but unto the children of the covenant and
the promise, as hath been said. And hence also it follows that God never
cuts off the seed of his servants from the special benefits of the
covenant, until they have had the means thereunto, and they have
positively rejected those means; and hence the Jews (who are made the
pattern of what God will do toward all Gentile churches, Rom. 11.) were
never cast off till by positive unbelief they provoked the Lord to break
them off by rejecting and refusing the means of their eternal peace.
3.
The Lord promiseth that the seed of his people (indefinitely considered)
shall have this heart (viz., which would refuse special grace and mercy)
taken away, as well as means used for that end; this is evident from
Deut. 30.6, "The Lord thy God will circumcise thy heart and the
heart of thy seed to love the Lord;" he will cut off the
uncircumcision, and sin, and resistance of the heart against God; he
will take away the stony heart; not indeed from all in outward covenant
particularly, but from these indefinitely; so that there is no promise
to do this for any out of the visible church, (though God of his
sovereignty and free mercy sometimes doth so,) but the promise of this
belongs indefinitely to those of his church, among whom usually and
ordinarily he works this great work, leaving him to his own freeness of
secret mercy, to work thus on whom he will, and when he will; in the
mean while no man can exclude himself, or any others within this
covenant, from hope of this mercy and grace, but may with comfort look
and pray for it; for this is God's covenant, that the Redeemer shall
come out of Sion, and turn away ungodliness from Jacob, (Rom. 11.26,27;)
for the covenant of God doth not only run thus, If thou believe and
receive grace, thou shalt have it; but thus also, I will circumcise your
heart, I will take away the stony heart, I will turn away ungodliness
from you, I will enable to believe. And hence these three things follow
from these things thus opened:—
1.
That as the covenant runs not only thus, viz., "If thou believest
though shalt be saved," but also, "I will enable to
believe," so a man's entrance into covenant is not only by actual
and personal profession of faith, (as some say,) because God's covenant
runs a peg higher, viz., to make and enable some to believe, and so to
make that profession.
2. That the very
outward covenant is not merely conditional, but there is something
absolute in it; and hence it follows that it is a great mistake of some
who think that circumcision and baptism seal only conditionally, the
outward covenant being, say they, merely conditional; for those three
things mentioned in the outward covenant, you see, are in some respect
absolute, and if the covenant was only conditional, then the Lord was no
more in covenant with church members than with pagans and infidels; for
it may be propounded conditionally to all such, that if they believe
they shall be saved; but assuredly God's grace is a little more
extensive to the one than to the other.
3.
Hence you may see what circumcision once did, and baptism now seals
unto; even to infants the seal is to confirm the covenant; the covenant
is, that God (outwardly at least) owns them, and reckons them among his
people and children within his visible church and kingdom, and that
hereupon he will prune, and cut, and dress, and water them, and improve
the means of their eternal good upon them, which good they shall have,
unless they refuse in resisting the means; nay, that he will take away
this refusing heart from among them indefinitely, so that though every
one can not assure himself that he will do it particularly for this or
that person, yet every one, through this promise, may hope and pray for
the communication of this grace, and so feel it in time. |
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