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T H E 1 John 2:1 - "And if any man sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous." Written By J O H N.B U N Y A N, Author of "THE PILGRIM'S PROGRESS." L O N D O N, Printed for Dorman Newman, at the King's Arms, in the Poultry, 1689. Published one year after John Bunyan's death. |
[THE NECESSITY OF HAVING CHRIST FOR OUR ADVOCATE.]
ifthly, I come now to the fifth thing, which is, to show you what
necessity there is that Christ should be our Advocate.
That Christ should be a Priest to offer sacrifice, a King to rule, and a Prophet
to teach, all seeing men acknowledge is of necessity; but that he should be an Advocate,
a pleader for his people, few see the reason of it. But he is an Advocate, and as
an Advocate has a work and employ distinct from his priestly, kingly, or prophetical
offices. John says, "He is our Advocate," and signifieth also the nature
of his work as such, in that very place where he asserteth his office; as also I
have showed you in that which goes before. But having already showed you the nature,
I will now show you the necessity of this office.
First. It is necessary for the more full and ample vindication of the justice of
God against all the cavils of the infernal spirits. Christ died on earth to declare
the justice of God to men in his justifying the ungodly. God standeth upon the vindication
of his justice, as well as upon the act thereof. Hence the Holy Ghost, by the prophets
and apostles, so largely disputeth for the vindication thereof, while it asserteth
the reality of the pardon of sin, the justification of the unworthy, and their glorification
with God (Rom 3:24; Isa, Jer, Mal; Rom 3, 4, 8; Gal 3,4). I say, while it disputeth
the justness of this high act of God against the cavils of implacable sinners. Now
the prophets and apostles, in those disputes by which they seek to vindicate the
justice of God in the salvation of sinners, are not only ministers of God to us,
but advocates for him; since, as Elihu has it, they "speak on God's behalf,"
or, as the margin has it, "I will show thee that there are yet words for God,"
words to be spoken and pleaded against his enemies for the justification of his actions
(Job 36:2). Now, as it is necessary that there should be advocates for God on earth
to plead for his justice and holiness, while he saveth sinners, against the cavils
of an ungodly people, so it is necessary that there should be an Advocate also in
heaven, that may there vindicate the same justice and holiness of God from all those
charges that the fallen angels are apt to charge it with, while it consenteth that
we, though ungodly, should be saved.
That the fallen angels are bold enough to charge God to his face with unjustness
of language, is evident in the 1st and 2nd of Job; and that they should not be as
bold to charge him with unjustness of actions, nothing can be showed to the contrary.
Further, that God seeks to clear himself of this unjust charge of Satan is as manifest;
for all the troubles of his servant Job were chiefly for that purpose. And why he
should have one also in heaven to plead for the justness of his doing in the forgiveness
and salvation of sinners appears also as necessary, even because there is one, even
an Advocate with the Father, or on the Father's side, seeking to vindicate his justice,
while he pleadeth with him for us, against the devil and his objections. God is wonderfully
pleased with his design in saving of sinners; it pleases him at the heart. And since
he also is infinitely just, there is need that an Advocate should be appointed to
show how, in a way of justice as well as mercy, a sinner may be saved.
The good angels did not at first see so far into the mysteries of the gospel of the
grace of God, but that they needed further light therein for the vindication of their
Lord as servants. Wherefore they yet did pry and look narrowly into it further, and
also bowed their heads and hearts to learn yet more, by the church, of "the
manifold wisdom of God" (I Peter 1:12; Eph 3:9,10). And if the standing angels
were not yet, to the utmost, perfect in the knowledge of this mystery, and yet surely
they must know more thereof than those that fell could do, no wonder if those devils,
whose enmity could not but animate their ignorance, made, and do make, their cavils
against justice, insinuating that it is not impartial and exact, because it, as it
is just, justifieth the ungodly.
That Satan will quarrel with God I have showed you, and that he will also dispute
against his works with the holy angels, is more than intimated by the apostle Jude,
verse 9, and why not quarrel with, and accuse the justice of God as unrighteous,
for consenting to the salvation of sinners, since his best qualifications are most
profound and prodigious attempts to dethrone the Lord God of his power and glory.
Nay, all this is evident, since "we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous." And again, I say, it is evident that one part of his
work as an Advocate, is to vindicate the justice of God while he pleadeth for our
salvation, because he pleadeth a propitiation; for a propitiation respects God as
well as us; the appeasing his wrath, and the reconciling of his justice to us, as
well as the redeeming us from death and hell; yea, it therefore doth the one, because
it doth the other. Now, if Christ, as an Advocate, pleadeth a propitiation with God,
for whose conviction doth he plead it? Not for God's; for he has ordained it, allows
it, and gloriously acquiesces therein, because he knows the whole virtue thereof.
It is therefore for the conviction of the fallen angels, and for the confounding
of all those cavils that can be invented and objected against our salvation by those
most subtle and envious ones. But,
Second. There is matter of law to be objected, and that both against God and us;
at least, there seems to be so, because of the sanction that God has put upon the
law, and also because we have sinned against it.
God has said, "In the day thou eatest thereof, thou shalt surely die";
and, "the soul that sinneth, it shall die." God also standeth still upon
the vindication of his justice, he also saveth sinners. Now, in comes our accuser,
and chargeth us of sin, of being guilty of sin, because we have transgressed the
law. God also will not be put out of his way, or steps of grace, to save us; also
he will say, he is just and righteous still. Ay, but these are but say-so's. How
shall this be proved? Why, now, here is room for an advocate that can plead to matter
of law, that can preserve the sanction of the law in the salvation of the sinner-"He
will magnify the law, and make it honourable" (Isa 42:21). The margin saith,
"and make him honourable[25]-that is, he shall save the sinner, and preserve
the holiness of the law, and the honour of his God. But who is this that can do this?
"It is the servant of God," saith the prophet, (Isa 42:1, 13), "the
Lord, a man of war." But how can this be done by him? The answer is, It shall
be done, "for God is well pleased for his righteousness' sake"; for it
is by that he magnifies the law, and makes his Father honourable-that is, he, as
a public person, comes into the world under the law, fulfills it, and having so done,
he gives that righteousness away, for he, as to his own person, never had need thereof;
I say, he gives that righteousness to those that have need, to those that have none
of their own, that righteousness might be imputed to them. This righteousness, then,
he presenteth to God for us, and God, for this righteousness' sake, is well pleased
that we should be saved, and for it can save us, and secure his honour, and preserve
the law in it's sanction. And this Christ pleadeth against Satan as an Advocate with
the Father for us; by which he vindicates his Father's justice, holdeth the child
of God, notwithstanding his sins, in a state of justification, and utterly overthroweth
and confoundeth the devil.
For Christ, in pleading thus, appeals to the law itself, if he has not done it justice,
saying, "Most mighty law, what command of thine have I not fulfilled? What demand
of thine have I not fully answered? Where is that jot or tittle of the law that is
able to object against my doings for want of satisfaction?" Here the law is
mute; it speaketh not one word by way of the least complaint, but rather testifies
of this righteousness that it is good and holy, (Rom 3:22, 23; 5:15-19). Now, then,
since Christ did this as a public person, it follows that others must be justified
thereby; for that was the end and reason of Christ's taking on him to do the righteousness
of the law. Nor can the law object against the equity of this dispensation of heaven;
for why might not that God, who gave the law his being and his sanction, dispose
as he pleases of the righteousness which it commendeth? Besides, if men be made righteous,
they are so; and if by a righteousness which the law commendeth, how can fault be
found with them by the law? Nay, it is "witnessed by the law and the prophets,"
who consent that it should be unto all, and upon all them that believe, for their
justification (Rom 3:20,21).
And that the mighty God suffereth the prince of the devils to do with the law what
he can, against this most wholesome and godly doctrine; it is to show the truth,
goodness, and permanency thereof; for this is as who should say, Devil, do thy worst!
When the law is in the hand of an easy pleader, though the cause that he pleadeth
be good, a crafty opposer may overthrow the right; but here is the salvation of the
children in debate, whether it can stand with law and justice; the opposer of this
is the devil, his argument against it is the law; he that defends the doctrine is
Christ the Advocate, who, in his plea, must justify the justice of God, defend the
holiness of the law, and save the sinner from all the arguments, pleas, stops and
demurs that Satan is able to put in against it. And this he must do fairly, righteously,
simply, pleading the voice of the self-same law for the justification of what he
standeth for, which Satan pleads against it; for though it is by the new law that
our salvation comes, yet by the old law is the new law approved of and the way of
salvation thereby by it consented to.
This shows, therefore, that Christ is not ashamed to own the way of our justification
and salvation, no, not before men and devils. It shows also that he is resolved to
dispute and plead for the same, though the devil himself shall oppose it. And since
our adversary pretends a plea in law against it, it is meet that there should be
an open hearing before the Judge of all about it; but, forasmuch as we neither can
nor dare appear to plead for ourselves, our good God has thought fit we should do
it by an advocate: "We have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the righteous."
This, therefore, is the second thing that shows the need that we have of an Advocate-to
wit, our adversary pretends that he has a plea in law against us, and that by law
we should be otherwise disposed of than to be made possessors of the heavenly kingdom.
But,
Third. There are many things relating to the promise, to our life, and to the threatenings,
that minister matter of question and doubt, and give the advantage of objections
unto him that so eagerly desireth to be putting in cavils against our salvation,
all which it hath pleased God to repel by Jesus Christ our Advocate.
1. There are many things relating to the promises, as to the largeness and straitness
of words, as to the freeness and conditionality of them, which we are not able so
well to understand; and, therefore, when Satan dealeth with us about them, we quickly
fall to the ground before him; we often conclude that the words of the promise are
too narrow and strait to comprehend us; we also think, verily, that the conditions
of some promises do utterly shut us out from hope of justification and life; but
our Advocate, who is for us with the Father, he is better acquainted with, and learned
in, this law than to be baffled out with a bold word or two, or with a subtle piece
of hellish sophistication (Isa 50:4). He knows the true purport, intent, meaning,
and sense of every promise, and piece of promise that is in the whole Bible, and
can tell how to plead it for advantage against our accuser, and doth so. And I gather
it not only from his contest with Satan for Joshua, (Zech 3), and from his conflict
with him in the wilderness, (Matt 4), and in heaven, (Rev 14), but also from the
practice of Satan's emissaries here; for what his angels do, that doth he. Now there
is here nothing more apparent than that the instruments of Satan do plead against
the church, from the pretended intricacy, ambiguity, and difficulty of the promise;
whence I gather, so doth Satan before the tribunal of God; but there we have one
to match him; "we have an Advocate with the Father," that knows law and
judgment better than Satan, and statute and commandment better than all his angels;
and by the verdict of our Advocate, all the words, and limits, and extensions of
words, with all conditions of the promises, are expounded and applied! And hence
it is that it sometimes so falleth out that the very promise we have thought could
not reach us, to comfort us by any means, has at another time swallowed us up with
joy unspeakable. Christ, the true Prophet, has the right understanding of the Word
as an Advocate, has pleaded it before God against Satan, and having overcome him
at the common law, he hath sent to let us know it by his good Spirit, to our comfort,
and the confusion of our enemy. Again,
2. There are many things relating to our lives that minister to our accuser occasions
of many objections against our salvation; for, besides our daily infirmities, there
are in our lives gross sins, many horrible backslidings; also we ofttimes suck and
drink in many abominable errors and deceitful opinions, of all which Satan accuseth
us before the judgment-seat of God, and pleadeth hard that we may be damned for ever
for them. Besides, some of these things are done after light received, against present
convictions and dissuasions to the contrary, against solemn engagements to amendment,
when the bonds of love were upon us (Jer 2:20). These are crying sins; they have
a loud voice in themselves against us, and give to Satan great advantage and boldness
to sue for our destruction before the bar of God; nor doth he want skill to aggravate
and to comment profoundly upon all occasions and circumstances that did attend us
in these our miscarriages-to wit, that we did it without a cause, also, when we had,
had we had grace to have used them, many things to have helped us against such sins,
and to have kept us clean and upright. "There is also a sin unto death,"
(I John 5:16), and he can tell how to labour, by argument and sleight of speech,
to make our transgressions, not only to border upon, but to appear in the hue, shape,
and figure of that, and thereto make his objection against our salvation. He often
argueth thus with us, and fasteneth the weight of his reasons upon our consciences,
to the almost utter destruction of us, and the bringing of us down to the gates of
despair and utter destruction; the same sins, with their aggravating circumstances,
as I said, he pleadeth against us at the bar of God. But there he meeteth with Jesus
Christ, our Lord and Advocate, who entereth his plea against him, unravels all his
reasons and arguments against us, and shows the guile and falsehood of them. He also
pleadeth as to the nature of sin, as also to all those high aggravations, and proveth
that neither the sin in itself, nor yet as joined with all it's advantageous circumstances,
can be the sin unto death, (Col 2:19), because we hold the head, and have not "made
shipwreck of faith," (I Tim 1:19), but still, as David and Solomon, we confess,
and are sorry for our sins. Thus, though we seem, through our falls, to come short
of the promise, with Peter, (Heb 4:1-3), and leave our transgressions as stumbling
blocks to the world, with Solomon, and minister occasion of a question of our salvation
among the godly, yet our Advocate fetches us off before God, and we shall be found
safe and in heaven at last, by them in the next world, who were afraid they had lost
us in this.
But all these points must be managed by Christ for us, against Satan, as a lawyer,
an advocate, who to that end now appears in the presence of God for us, and wisely
handleth the very crisis of the word, and of the failings of his people, together
with all those nice and critical juggles by which our adversary laboureth to bring
us down, to the confusion of his face.
3. There are also the threatenings that are annexed to the gospel, and they fall
now under our consideration. They are of two sorts-such as respect those who altogether
neglect and reject the gospel, or those that profess it, yet fall in or from the
profession thereof.
The first sort of threatening cannot be pleaded against the professors of the gospel
as against those that never professed it; wherefore he betaketh himself to manage
those threatenings against us that belong to those that have professed, and that
have fallen from it (Psa 109:1-6). Joshua fell in it (Zech 3:1, 2). Judas fell from
it, and the accuser stands at the right hand of them before the judgment of God,
to resist them, by pleading the threatenings against them-to wit, that God's soul
should have no pleasure in them. "If any man draw back, my soul shall have no
pleasure in him." Here is a plea for Satan, both against the one and the other;
they are both apostatized, both drawn back, and he is subtle enough to manage it.
Ay, but Satan, here is also matter sufficient for a plea for our Advocate against
thee, forasmuch as the next words distinguish betwixt drawing back, and drawing back
"unto perdition"; every one that draws back, doth not draw back unto perdition
(Heb 10:38, 39). Some of them draw back from, and some in the profession of, the
gospel. Judas drew back from, and Peter in the profession of his faith; wherefore
Judas perishes, but Peter turns again, because Judas drew back unto perdition, but
Peter yet believed to the saving of the soul.[26] Nor doth Jesus Christ,
when he sees it is to no boot, at any time step in to endeavour to save the soul.
Wherefore, as for Judas, for his backsliding from the faith, Christ turns him up
to Satan, and leaveth him in his hand, saying, "When he shall be judged, let
him be condemned: and let his prayer become sin" (Psa 109:7) But he will not
serve Peter so-"The Lord will not leave him in his hand, nor condemn him when
he is judged" (Psa 37:33). He will pray for him before, and plead for him after,
he hath been in the temptation, and so secure him, by virtue of his advocation, from
the sting and lash of the threatening that is made against final apostasy. But,
Fourth. The necessity of the Advocate's office in Jesus Christ appears plainly in
this-to plead about the judgments, distresses, afflictions, and troubles that we
meet withal in this life for our sins. For though, by virtue of this office, Christ
fully takes us off from the condemnation that the unbelievers go down to for their
sins, yet he doth not thereby exempt us from temporal punishments, for we see and
feel that they daily overtake us; but for the proportioning of the punishment, or
affliction for transgression, seeing that comes under the sentence of the law, it
is fit that we should have an Advocate that understands both law and judgment, to
plead for equal distribution of chastisement, according, I say, to the law of grace;
and this the Lord Jesus doth.
Suppose a man for transgression be indicted at the assizes; his adversary is full
of malice, and would have him punished sorely beyond what by the law is provided
for such offence; and he pleads that the judge will so afflict and punish as he in
his malicious mind desireth. But the man has an advocate there, and he enters his
plea against the cruelty of his client's accuser, saying, My lord, it cannot be as
our enemy would have it; the punishment for these transgressions is prescribed by
that law that we here ground our plea upon; nor may it be declined to satisfy his
envy; we stand here upon matters of law, and appeal to the law. And this is the work
of our Advocate in heaven. Punishments for the sin of the children come not headlong,
not without measure, as our accuser would have them, nor yet as they fall upon those
who have none to plead their cause.[27] Hath he smote the children according to the
stroke wherewith he hath smitten others? No; "in measure when it shooteth forth,"
or seeks to exceed due bounds, "thou wilt debate with it: he stayeth his rough
wind in the day of the east wind" (Isa 27:8). "Thou wilt debate with it,"
inquiring and reasoning by the law, whether the shootings forth of the affliction
(now going out for the offence committed) be not too strong, too heavy, too hot,
and of too long a time admitted to distress and break the spirit of this Christian;
and if it be, he applies himself to the rule to measure it by, he fetches forth his
plumb line, and sets it in the midst of his people, (Amos 7:8; Isa 28:17), and lays
righteousness to that, and will not suffer it to go further; but according to the
quality of the transgression, and according to the terms, bounds, limits, and measures
which the law of grace admits, so shall the punishment be. Satan often saith of us
when we have sinned, as Abishai said of Shimei after he had cursed David, Shall not
this man die for this? (II Sam 19:21). But Jesus, our Advocate, answers as David,
What have I to do with thee, O Satan? Thou this day art an enemy to me; thou seekest
for a punishment for the transgressions of my people above what is allotted to them
by the law of grace, under which they are, and beyond what their relation that they
stand in to my Father and myself will admit. Wherefore, as Advocate, he pleadeth
against Satan when he brings in against us a charge for sins committed, for the regulating
of punishments, both as to the nature, degree, and continuation of punishment; and
this is the reason why, when we are judged, we are not condemned, but chastened,
"that we should not be condemned with the world" (I Cor 11:32). Hence king
David says, the Lord hath not given him over to the will of his enemy (Psa 27:12).
And again, "The Lord hath chastened me sore; but he hath not given me over unto
death" (Psa 118:18). Satan's plea was, that the Lord would give David over to
his will, and to the tyranny of death. No, says our Advocate, that must not be; to
do so would be an affront to the covenant under which grace has put them; that would
be to deal with them by a covenant of works, under which they are not. There is a
rod for children; and stripes for those of them that transgress. This rod is in the
hand of a Father, and must be used according to the law of that relation, not for
the destruction, but correction of the children; not to satisfy the rage of Satan,
but to vindicate the holiness of my Father; not to drive them further from, but to
bring them nearer to their God. But,
Fifth. The necessity of the advocateship of Jesus Christ is also manifest in this,
for that there is need of one to plead the efficacy of old titles to our eternal
inheritance, when our interest thereunto seems questionable by reason of new transgressions.
That God's people may, by their new and repeated sins, as to reason at least, endanger
their interest in the eternal inheritance, is manifest by such groanings of theirs
as these-"Why dost thou cast me off?" (Psa 43:2). "Cast me not away
from thy presence" (Psa 51:11). And, "O God, why hast thou cast us off
for ever?" (Psa 74:1). Yet I find in the book of Leviticus , that though any
of the children of Israel should have sold, mortgaged, or made away with their inheritance,
they did not thereby utterly make void their title to an interest therein, but it
should again return to them, and they again enjoy the possession of it, in the year
of jubilee. In the year of jubilee, saith God, you shall return every man to his
possession; "the land shall not be sold for ever," nor be quite cut off,
"for the land is mine; for ye are strangers and sojourners with me. And in all
the land of your possession, ye shall grant a redemption for the land" (Lev
25:23,24).
The man in Israel that, by waxing poor, did sell his land in Canaan, was surely a
type of the Christian who, by sin and decays in grace, has forfeited his place and
inheritance in heaven; but as the ceremonial law provided that the poor man in Canaan
should not, by his poverty, lose his portion in Canaan for ever, but that it should
return to him in the year of jubilee; so the law of grace has provided that the children
shall not, for their sin, lose their inheritance in heaven for ever, but that it
shall return to them in the world to come (I Cor 11:32)[28]
All therefore that happeneth in this case is, they may live without the comfort of
it here, as he that had sold his house in Canaan might live without the enjoyment
of it till the jubilee. They may also seem to come short of it when they die, as
he in Canaan did that deceased before the year of jubilee; but as certainly as he
that died in Canaan before the jubilee did yet receive again his inheritance by the
hand of his relative survivor when the jubilee came, so certainly shall he that dieth,
and that seemeth in his dying to come short of the celestial inheritance now, be
yet admitted, at his rising again, to the repossession of his old inheritance at
the day of judgment. But now here is room for a caviler to object, and to plead against
the children, saying, They have forfeited their part of paradise by their sin; what
right, then, shall they have to the kingdom of heaven? Now let the Lord stand up
to plead, for he is Advocate for the children; yea, let them plead the sufficiency
of their first title to the kingdom, and that it is not their doings can sell the
land for ever. The reason why the children of Israel could not sell the land for
ever was, because the Lord, their head, reserved to himself a right therein-"The
land shall not be sold for ever, for the land is mine." Suppose two or three
children have a lawful title to such an estate, but they are all profuse and prodigal,
and there is a brother also that has by law a chief right to the same estate: this
brother may hinder the estate from being sold for ever, because it is his inheritance,
and he may, when the limited time that his brethren had sold their share therein
is out, if he will, restore it to them again. And in the meantime, if any that are
unjust should go about utterly and for ever to deprive his brethren, he may stand
up and plead for them; that in law the land cannot be sold for ever, for that it
is his as well as theirs, he being resolved not to part with his right. O my brethren!
Christ will not part with his right of the inheritance unto which you are also born;
your profuseness and prodigality shall not make him let go his hold that he hath
for you of heaven; nor can you, according to law, sell the land for ever, since it
is his, and he hath the principal and chief title thereto. This also gives him ground
to stand up to plead for you against all those that would hold the kingdom from you
for ever; for let Satan say what he can against you, yet Christ can say, "The
land is mine," and consequently that his brethren could not sell it.
Yes, says Satan, if the inheritance be divided.
O but, says Christ, the land is undivided; no man has his part set out and turned
over to himself; besides, my brethren yet are under age, and I am made their guardian;
they have not power to sell the land for ever; the land is mine; also my Father has
made me feoffee in trust for my brethren, that they may have what is allotted them
when they are all come to a perfect man, "unto the measure of the stature of
the fulness of Christ" (Eph 4:13). And not before, and I will reserve it for
them till then; and thus to do is the will of my Father, the law of the Judge, and
also my unchangeable resolution. And what can Satan say against this plea? Can he
prove that Christ has no interest in the saints' inheritance? Can he prove that we
are at age, or that our several parts of the heavenly house are already delivered
into our own power? And if he goes about to do this, is not the law of the land against
him? Doth it not say that our Advocate is "Lord of all," (Acts 10:36),
that the kingdom is Christ's, that it is laid up in heaven for us, (Eph 5:5, Col
1:5); yea, that the "inheritance which is incorruptible, undefiled, and that
fadeth not away, is reserved in heaven for us, who are kept by the power of God,
through faith unto salvation" (I Peter 1:4, 5). Thus therefore is our heavenly
inheritance made good by our Advocate against the thwartings and branglings[29] of the devil; nor
can our new sins make it invalid, but it abideth safe to us at last, notwithstanding
our weaknesses; though, if we sin, we may have but little comfort of it, or but little
of it's present profits, while we live in this present world. A spendthrift, though
he loses not his title, may yet lose the present benefit, but the principal will
come again at last; for "we have an Advocate with the Father, Jesus Christ the
righteous."
Sixth. The necessity of the advocateship of Jesus Christ for us further appears in
this-to wit, for that our evidences, which declare that we have a right to the eternal
inheritance, are often out of our own hand, yea, and also sometimes kept long from
us, the which we come not at the sight or comfort of again but by our Advocate, especially
when our evidences are taken from us, because of a present forfeiture of this inheritance
to God by this or that most foul offence. Evidences, when they are thus taken away,
as in David's case they were, (Psa 51:12), why then they are in our God's hand, laid
up, I say, from the sight of them to whom they belong, till they even forget the
contents thereof (II Peter 1:5-9).[30]
Now when writings and evidences are out of the hand of the owners, and laid up in
the court, where in justice they ought to be kept, they are not ordinarily got thence
again but by the help of a lawyer-an Advocate. Thus it is with the children of God.
We do often forfeit our interest in eternal life, but the mercy is, the forfeit falls
into the hand of God, not of the law nor of Satan, wherefore he taketh away also
our evidences, if not all, yet some of them, as he saith-"I have taken away
my peace from this people, even loving-kindness and mercies" (Jer 16:5). This
he took from David, and he entreats for the restoration of it, saying, "Restore
unto me the joy of thy salvation, and uphold me with thy free Spirit" (I Chron
17:13; Psa 51:12). And, "Lord, turn us again, cause thy face to shine, and we
shall be saved" (Psa 80:3, 7, 19.)
Satan now also hath an opportunity to plead against us, and to help forward the affliction,
as his servants did of old, when God was but a little angry (Zech 1:15); but Jesus
Christ our Advocate is ready to appear against him, and to send us from heaven our
old evidences again, or to signify to us that they are yet good and authentic, and
cannot be gainsaid. "Gabriel," saith he, "make this man to understand
the vision" (Dan 8:16). And again, saith he to another, "Run, speak to
this young man, saying, Jerusalem shall be inhabited as towns without walls"
(Zech 2:4). Jerusalem had been in captivity, had lost many evidences of God's favour
and love by reason of her sin, and her enemy stepped in to augment her sin and sorrow;
but there was a man [the angel of the Lord] "among the myrtle trees" that
were in the bottom that did prevail with God to say, I am returned to Jerusalem with
mercies; and then commands it to be proclaimed that his "cities through prosperity
shall yet be spread abroad" (Zech 1:11-17). Thus, by virtue of our Advocate,
we are either made to receive our old evidences for heaven again, or else are made
to understand that they yet are good, and stand valid in the court of heaven; nor
can they be made ineffectual, but shall abide the test at last, because our Advocate
is also concerned in the inheritance of the saints in light. Christians know what
it is to lose their evidences for heaven, and to receive them again, or to hear that
they hold their title by them; but perhaps they know not how they come at this privilege;
therefore the apostle tells them "they have an Advocate"; and that by him,
as Advocate, they enjoy all these advantages is manifest, because his Advocate's
office is appointed for our help when we sin-that is, commit sins that are great
and heinous-"If any man sin, we have an Advocate."[31]
By him the justice of God is vindicated, the law answered, the threatenings taken
off, the measure of affliction that for sin we undergo determined, our titles to
eternal life preserved, and our comfort of them restored, notwithstanding the wit,
and rage, and envy of hell. So, then, Christ gave himself for us as a priest, died
for us as a sacrifice, but pleadeth justice and righteousness in a way of justice
and righteousness; for such is his sacrifice, for our salvation from the death that
is due to our foul or high transgressions-as an Advocate. Thus have I given you thus
far, an account of the nature, end, and necessity of the Advocateship of Jesus Christ,
and should now come to the use and application, only I must first remove an objection
or two.
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