Tuesday, June 25, 2013
Chapter Twelve: An Answer to Acts 2:39 As It Is Alleged To Prove The Baptism Of Infants.
CHAPTER TWELVE
An Answer to Acts 2:39 As It Is Alleged To Prove The Baptism Of
Infants.
Now, in the fourth place, I shall endeavor to
answer such Scripture allegations, and those especially brought in
from the New Testament to countenance this error. I shall endeavor to take
off those false and corrupt Glosses that are usually put upon them, wherein
men pretend to prove the Covenant of Grace among the Gentiles, does run
in the flesh and line of believing parents under the Gospel; which I am
sure was never yet since the world began nor never shall be with any, neither
parents nor children, but such individual persons who particularly
believed in Christ with their own hearts.
An Answer to That Text, Acts
2:39.
First, let me speak to that in Acts 2:39 which
is usually pretended to be a proof of the covenant in the flesh, the words
are these, "The promise is to you and to your children, and to all that are
afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call." Now I pray you,
take notice how evident this text makes against this error. For this text affirms
only the promises to belong to so many even as God shall call, and that is a
fundamental truth if by promise you understand the gift of the Holy
Ghost, or remission of sins, or both, to be promised in this text.
This is Given To Those
Called By God
It is most true that so many as God shall call
have an interest in Christ and all the promises in Him, and only they. For
the text says, "Repent and be baptized every one of you for the remission
of sins, and ye shall receive the Holy Ghost." So that by remission of
sins and the gift of the Holy Ghost it is safe to understand here to mean that promise
belonging to them, to their children, and to those afar off, even so
many of them, and their children, and of those afar off, as the Lord our
God should call, agreeable to the words thus understood is Rom. 8:30,
"moreover whom he did predestinate, them he also called, whom he
called, them he also justified, and whom he justified, them he also
glorified." Justification or remission of sins is here given only to called persons.
This agrees with Heb. 9:15. "For this cause he is the Mediator of the
New Testament, that by means of death, for the redemption of the transgressions
that were under the first Testament, they which are called might receive
the promise of the eternal Inheritance." So here you see that those
who are predestinated to have a Covenant of Life and the blessings given in that
covenant, are first called, as 1 Pet. 2:9. "He hath called us out of
darkness into his marvelous light." Now this text is plain to prove that unto those
Jews and Proselytes, and their children who then heard him, and also the
Gentiles, the promises did belong. The promises were to so many of all
these as God should call.
This Promise Did Not Belong To Those Unconverted Jews
Except souls be given up to a Spirit of
Delusion, will any dare to affirm that the promises of the Spirit, remission of
sins, and eternal life, do belong to any other? Will any be so ignorant as
to judge, that those promises did belong to the Generation of the
Jews whether they were called or not, though they continued in unbelief and hardness
of heart and impenitency? Is not such a corrupt
interpretation against Christ's words to that very people? John 8:24, "Except you
believe that I am he, you shall die in your sins," speaking to the very Jews.
Does not John the Baptist say to these, John 3, last verse, "He that
believeth not on the Son, shall not see life, but the wrath of God abideth on him?"
Christ directed this speech indefinitely to the generation of the Jews, the
seed of Abraham, such as were in the Covenant of Circumcision.
The Promise Belongs Unto Those Children
Whom God Shall Call
But if by the children you understand, so many
of them as God should call, whether then at that time, or afterwards to the
end of the world, it is most true, that to such of their children the promise
of grace did belong.
Those In Unbelief Are
Broken Off
The Scripture is firm and full in this, that the
promise of grace belonged not to any of those Jews' seed, but only such as
were called. For God shuts them under unbelief, and because of unbelief
they were broken off, Rom. 11.
If unbelief excluded them from that external
relation which they had then in the covenant entailed on the flesh before
Christ's death, and Christ's coming in the flesh and fully exhibiting and putting
an end to that covenant, with no other covenant standing in
force in the Church of God but what Christ was the Mediator of, these
unbelieving Jews of necessity were broken off.
No Promise of Remission of Sins to the Unbelieving Jews
The promise of remission of sins was so far from
running upon the unbelieving Jews, the true fleshly seed of
Abraham, that the Apostle Paul affirms the contrary, Acts 19:9. "But when
divers were hardened, and believed not, but spake evil of that way before
the multitude, he departed from them;" and Acts 13:45,46. "But
when the Jews saw the multitude, they were filled with envy, and spake against those
things that were spoken by Paul, contradicting and blaspheming, then Paul
and Barnabas waxed bold, and said, it was necessary that the word of God
should first have been spoken to you, but seeing ye put it from you and judge
your selves unworthy of everlasting life? Lo, we turn to the Gentiles,
for so hath the Lord commanded us," and v. 50, the Jews stirred
up the devout and honorable women, and raised persecution against Paul and
Barnabus, but they shook off the dust of their feet against them; and
therefore Paul is plain in Rom. 11 saying, That God had a certain number that were
of the eternal election, among the Jews, those obtained right to the remission
of sins, and the rest were blinded and hardened. But it should seem to be
the general understanding of those who urge this text for a covenant in the
flesh, that if they were the seed of the Jews, though they were not called
nor did not believe, but were hardened in their continuance in unbelief, yet
this promise of remission of sins and the gift of the Holy Ghost, belongs to
them.
No Room For A Covenant in
the Flesh
This interpretation which defends a covenant in
the flesh, I leave to any intelligent man to consider how greatly
erroneous it is to affirm that the promise of the remission of sins belongs to the
unbelieving and hardened children of the Jews, those whom God has not,
nor does call. So that you may clearly see the truth which lies in this text is
that the promise is not to Fathers nor children, nor those afar off but
such as God, by His especial grace, does call to be the Sons of God by faith.
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