Watts - Houston-Packer Collection BX5207.W3 S4x 1805 v.1

sER!1I. 1.3 INWARD WITNESS TO CHRISTIANITY. Li men, could never acquaint us with the foundation of divineforgiveness, nor shew us any merit sufficient to procure it; and in this sense we are left at a loss in all other religions, upon what ground we could expect par- donfromGod : For they knew nothingof an atonement equal to our guilt; nothingof a satisfaction great as our offences, and that could answer the high demands of infinite and offended justice. Mankind found out by reason, and by the stings and disquietudes of a- guilty conscience, that there was an offended God in heaven; and in several countries they followed the dictates of a wild and uneasy imagination, inventing an endless va- riety of methods to appease the angry Deity. What multitudes of rams, and goats, and thousands of larger cattle, were cut to pieces, and burnt, to atone for the sins of men ? What deluges of blood have overflowed their altars? What fanciful sprinklings, and vast efflu- sions of wine and oil ? The first-born son for the trans- gression of the father, and the fruit of the body for the sin of the soul ? What cruel practices on their own flesh ? What cuttings and burnings to procure pardon? And yet, after all, no true peace, nor reasonable hope. The Jewish religion indeed was invented by God him- self, and it contained in it the way of obtaining pardon, but it was vailed and darkened by many types and sha- dows : though it was not defective as to real pardon, yet it was very defective as to solid peace; therefore the apostle tells us, Heb. x. t, 2, &c. The law having a shadow ofgood things to come, and not the very image of the things, can never, with those sacrifices which they offeredyear by year continually, make the comers there- untoperfect, ¿c. The sense of which, compared with the following verses, is plainly this, Those sacrifices, that were so often repeated, could never perfectly take away the conscience ofguilt: there still remained some trembling fears, some uneasy doubts, some painful con- cern of mind, whether their iniquities should be entirely cancelled or no : because they were convinced that the blood of bulls and goats could not do it, and they could not fully and plainly see the blood ofJesus, the Son of God, the Saviour. Dark hints, and obscure notices of such a Messiah, and such a sacrifice, they had ; but

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