The Covenant Seed
The children of believing parents are included in the covenant.
The
Covenant Seed
by Dr. Thomas Goodwin
That
my scope may by all be fully understood, I have shut up the full sum and
argument of the whole into this one proposition, that “The children of
believing parents, at least their next and immediate seed, even of us
Gentiles now under the gospel, are included by God within the covenant
of grace, as well as Abraham's or David's seed within that covenant of
theirs.” Both the proof
and explication of which great point will run along together.
I
will begin first to search out this right by that magna charta,
that great and faithful charter which was made to Abraham, the father of
the faithful, in the name of all his seed; for that is made the primary
and fundamental ground of this great privilege by our divines, that we
being ' Abraham's seed' (as Gal. iii. 29) as well as the Jews, and
having the same covenant, are therefore ' heirs of the promise,' and so
of that promise which was made to Abraham and the Jews: ' I will be the
God of thee and of thy seed.' But against this ground, as thus barely
alleged, this exception hath often come thwart my mind, that this was
Abraham's peculiar privilege, and an honour to him vouchsafed; as
likewise was that to be styled the ' father of all the faithful,' which,
as we all know, is to us incommunicable; and that therefore, although we
may for our own persons indeed come into his promise as his seed, and so
into that part of the promise, ' I will be the God of thy seed,' and so
have the promise of God's being our God, and of the blessing by Christ
for ourselves, as we are Abraham's seed, yet take the whole promise
collectively made to him and us, “I will be the God of thee and of thy
seed,” and it should seem to be peculiar to him alone, as to be the
father of the faithful also is, by which title we are no way called, but
only the sons of Abraham, and Abraham's seed. It might have well
sufficed us for our own persons to have come into his promise singly,
and to be 'heirs according to the promise, as the phrase is, Gal. iii.
26, although we were not fathers also to convey the promise, as Abraham
was; nor although the promise, as collectively taken, had belonged to
us, as to Abraham it did, nor that part of the promise, “I will be the
God of thy seed,” had been extended to us. And although the Jews, who
were Abraham's seed after the flesh as well as after the Spirit, had
that privilege also, that God in their generations promised to be the
God of them and their seed; yet that also may seem to be a special
privilege proper to them, which we Gentiles cannot plead; for as in Rom.
iii. 1, 'What advantage or prerogative had the Jews' but this, Rom. ix.
4, that 'to them pertaineth the adoption, and the covenant, and the
promises,' as being those ' whose are the fathers after the flesh,'
verse 5, and so they had this privilege, that the covenant was
propagated by the flesh.
Now,
in satisfaction to these two exceptions, although there must necessarily
be granted a transcendent special honour and privilege vouchsafed to
Abraham, and to the Jewish nation his seed, which we have not; yet
withal a farther inquiry would be made, whether notwithstanding we
Gentiles have not some correspondent sprinkling of this privilege of his
and theirs, though of a lesser extent, and how far ours extendeth, in
difference to that of theirs, and what further warrants there are for
any such privilege to us Gentiles, who must have a charter and grant to
shew for it if we would prove our seeds to be born heirs within the
covenant, even as nobles and gentlemen have in & civil way for
theirs; otherwise it will be the highest presumption in us to claim it,
or to expect it at the hands of God.
First,
then, to Abraham we grant this transcendent privilege, that he had the
peculiar honour to be the ' father of all the faithful,' as Eve had the
honour to be ' the mother of all living,' Gen. iii. 20, which being
spoken by Adam after the promise to her seed made, ver. 15, may be
interpreted in the same sense that Abraham's was; she was the ' mother
of all living,' that is, that live spiritually and by faith, as Abraham
was ' father of all the faithful,' the covenant running in her name at
the first, as in Abraham's afterward; and so Adam, in that his speech
to Eve, uttered his faith in the promise made to her of her seed, and so
in that respect Adam himself came in under her covenant.
Secondly,
It was both Abraham's and the Jews' privilege also that they should have
this promise to all generations, as Gen. xvii. For two thousand years
the covenant to belong thus unto them, and to be entailed on them, and
also that ' after the flesh Christ should come of them,' as Rom. ix.
5, and that they should be the root of our covenant, and we but
engrafted on them as the 'natural branches,' Rom. xi.; and further, that
after their eminent breaking off by unbelief, for well nigh two thousand
years since, their covenant should be remembered, and for their fathers'
sakes all Israel Should yet be saved, as in the same chapter. And as the
place which be-there quotes out of Isaiah also promiseth that their
seed's seed should be converted in a successive way from their second
call to the world's end; and perhaps of every one, at least the most of
that nation. And indeed it hath seemed to me to be one reason why all
that nation were outwardly holy (which no nation ever was) before
Christ's time, that this might be a prophetic type that all should one
day be inwardly and really holy. How transcendent a privilege is this,
then, that they should have something peculiarly promised to them, which
is evident even by this also, that Abraham and his seed had the
peculiar promise of Canaan, which we Gentiles have not.
But
yet let us search into the records of Holy Writ, if out of this their
great charter, there be not a seal grant of a lesser, though like
privilege, and this by virtue of Christ, in that we have the honour to
be accounted Abraham's seed as truly as they; and likewise in that, to
have the covenant entailed unto children is so great and spiritual a
privilege, as would tend infinitely to the comfort of godly parents now,
as then it did to theirs, to have our seed within the covenant, as
theirs were. Wherefore, though this was peculiar unto Abraham and them,
to have an entail to them and to their seed for ever, yet that we should
have our eyes and ears blessed with the hopes of our next seed (how far
further I will not now dispute), as involved in this covenant, wag a
meet mercy for God's free grace to vouchsafe to us Gentiles also. And
seeing Abraham and they did partake of so great a privilege otherwise,
it may well be hoped and expected, that so small sin one correspondent
to theirs, God should vouchsafe to us Gentiles, upon whom the blessing
of Abraham through Christ is come, in a conformity unto his blessing
upon him and his.
And
searching this, first, I find that this very privilege is given unto a
Gentile convert by Christ himself, and founded upon this very ground,
that he was a ' son of Abraham,' being become a believer. This we have,
Luke xix., declared by Christ of Zaccheus when he was converted, who by
all circumstances was a Gentile, and so the ancients carry it, for he
was a publican; and though some, yet but few Jews were such, because
of the hatred of their own nation; yet he being a chief publican, was
surely therefore a Gentile. It being an office of trust to be chief
custom-gatherer for the emperors, they would be sure to put none into
that office but a Gentile; and so I find out of antiquity, Cyprian and
others quoted for it, that in those chief places of custom, none but equites
Romani, Roman knights, were placed.* And whereas some object, that
if Zaccheus had been a Gentile, that then the Jews would have clamoured
against Christ for going in unto a Gentile, and that so professedly as
under that notion, because a Gentile. The answer is not far off, for,
ver. 7, we read that they did quarrel him for it, ' they all murmured,
saying, that he was gone to be a guest to a sinner,' that is, a Gentile;
for the Jews usually called the Gentiles by the name of sinners, as
Paul's phrase is, Gal. ii. 15, ' sinners of the Gentiles.' But then,
further, that answer which Christ there gives unto their murmuring doth
strengthen this, for he says of him, ' Inasmuch as he also is the son of
Abraham,' ver. 9. The meaning of which words evidently is this, that he
who is not by birth a son of Abraham, but a sinner, a Gentile, yet is
made one now by grace; and when Zaccheus was thus converted, Christ
enlargeth his covenant to Zaccheus his family also, ' This day is
salvation come to this house, inasmuch as he is also the son of
Abraham,' ver. 9. This was spoken of him as now believing in Christ. Now
if Christ's intent had been in this his answer given, to shew that he
was a Jew, and so though a great sinner, yet was converted as being a
son of Abraham (as some expound it), he would have made it the reason
but of this only, why Zaccheus was saved himself personally; but he
makes it the reason why his house should be saved also, and so the
covenant stuck with them of his family likewise, because he the father
of the family was now a believer; whereas had his children and family,
being Jews by birth, and himself likewise, then salvation had come unto
him and them all, because they all were sons of Abraham by birth (if
Jews) as well as he. So as it is evident, that as he was a Gentile by
birth, so now being converted, is therefore called a ' son of Abraham '
and withal had this privilege of Abraham, as being his son (which is the
point I allege this for), to have his house brought into the covenant,
even of that of salvation, in conformity to his father Abraham, whose
house at the first giving of that covenant, even children and all, were
circumcised and saved upon that ground, Christ intending now he should
go in to eat with him, to convert his household also. And let me add
this, that as Christ once before, in the conversion of the centurion,
the first fruits of the Gentiles, Mat. viii., did first break open the
treasury of the Gentile's conversion, so upon occasion of this man's
conversion afterwards, he shews the privilege of the Gentiles, when
converted, and their covenant to be the same with Abraham's in a
conformity therewith; and so here first broacheth the doctrine of it,
this man being the next first-fruits of the Gentiles, shewing how their
covenant was to run by households, in a conformity to Abraham's family
at first.
And,
2, Thus in like manner, when the apostles came to preach the gospel to
a Gentile householder, master or father of a family, they carried the
offer of it in this tenor, and in the way of this privilege, as a motive
to conversion. So when Paul preached to the jailor, Acts xvi., he
asking, ' What shall I do to be saved?' ver. 30, Paul answers, ' Believe
on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved;' and then addeth, ' thou and
thine house.' As Christ published the covenant with these promises
annexed to a Gentile converted already, to comfort him, so the apostles
promulgate the offer of it to one to be converted, and being a master of
a family, do declare his privilege by this, that he should be a means
to convey it to his house; and accordingly it fell out there, ver. 84,
that ' he believed in God with all his house,' as Zaccheus and his
household did here.
And,
3, in the New Testament we find in the event (which still answers to
promises) that the gospel spread itself through whole households, this
being the tenure of our covenant. So it is said of the centurion, a
Gentile, Acts x. 2, that he was ' a devout man, fearing God, he and all
his house;' so Lydia was converted, 'and all her house,' Acts xvi. IS,
16; so 1 Cor. i. 16, 'The household of Stephanas,' and perhaps
intimated, at least sometimes, in that usual phrase, ' the church in
thy house.'
Now,
then, when the covenant thus runs with the heads of houses for the
families themselves, I argue thus from thence for their children, that
they must needs be included and intended in a more special manner; for
they are the natural branches, and servants but engrafted, as was said
of the Jews and Gentiles in the like case. And ' the servant abides not
always in the house, but the son ever abides in it,' John viii. 35. The
house of Aaron and his children are put for one and the same, Ps. cxv.
12, 15. In like phrase of speech, Leah and Rachel, in bringing forth
children, are said to ' build up the house of Israel,' Ruth iv.
11; and so the word house is used for posterity in all
languages.
And
for the further confirmation of this, namely, that this tenure of the
Gentiles' covenant in a conformity to Abraham's, should run thus by families
from the heads thereof, this doth fully suit with the original promise
made to Abraham himself, when the Scripture foresaw, as Paul's phrase
is, that the Gentiles should be justified, and so conveyed a blessing
through Abraham unto them, as his seed. The promise (Gen. xii. 8) runs
in these terms, ' In thee shall all the families of the earth be
blessed;' as elsewhere, Gen. xviii. 18, and xxii. 18, it runs in these
terms, 'All the nations of the earth shall be blessed.' These
expressions are both used; the one to shew, the seed should be of all
nations and people, yet so as withal the covenant was to run by families
in those nations. Therefore the New Testament quotes it in both senses:
Gal. iii. 8 says, all nations, or heathens, because some
of all nations shall be converted; but Peter, when he makes mention of
the covenant, Acts iii. 25, though chiefly for the end to shew the Jews
were the first children of the covenant, yet he expounds these words
spoken to Abraham, ' In thy seed shall the families of the earth be
blessed,' thus: 'In thy seed,' namely Christ (as ver. 20 he interprets
it), ' all the fatherhoods or kindreds of the earth shall be blessed.'
The word in the original is, 'fatherhoods of the earth; so he
styleth families because of the father's covenant, through which Christ,
the seed of Abraham, conveys his blessing. And the psalmist, Ps. xxii.
27, speaking of the calling of the Gentiles by Christ, as the fruit of
his death, when he says, ' All the ends of the earth shall turn unto
him; and all the kindreds,' &c. The Septuagint also renders it, as
Peter here, fatherhoods, and because it shall be derived
sometimes by succession of birth, as a means of conveying the blessing,
therefore, in the following 30th verse, he saith, 'a seed shall serve
him'; that is, the posterity of those godly, who (as ver. 31) ' shall be
born of them.'
Further,
we see that in the calling of the Jews to come, God respects their
fathers and their covenant though it be under the gospel; so Rom. xi.
Yea, and the apostle quoteth for it that place of the prophet, Isa. lix.
20, 'The Redeemer shall come to Zion.' Now if we look into the words of
the prophet prophesying of their call, how doth the promise of the new
covenant made to them in that their call to come run ? More infallibly
upon their seed than that former to Abraham's did. ' This is my
covenant, my Spirit shall not depart out of the mouth of thy seed, and
out of thy seed's seed, from henceforth and for ever.' There will be
in the new Jerusalem a continued succession of sanctified ones, a
seed's seed for ever; and not only of men converted when of ripe
years, but when infants. Therefore in Deut. xxx. (where God gives the
covenant of the gospel, as appears by Rom. x., and that in opposition to
the law given before, and expresseth it by way of prophesying what
should fall out after their dispersion, as ver. 1), ho says, ' I will
circumcise thy heart, and the heart of thy seed,' ver. 6. You know
whither the phrase circumcise leads, namely, to the sign and seal
of it, which under the New Testament is baptism answering unto it. Their
children's hearts he will circumcise, which is the fruit of baptism, as
Col. ii. 12.
And
further, that our covenant, as Abraham's seed, should run thus with us
and our families, was most correspondent to that first example of the
covenant then given to Abraham; for then the church was only in a
family, and so the first giving of this covenant and the seal to confirm
it, was established with a family through Abraham the father of it.
And this was (as all knew) the primitive and natural church way, under
the law of nature afore Moses, unto which therefore for ever God hath
suited this family covenant, and in Abraham ratified and sanctified it
to the end of world, he being constituted the father of all the
faithful, both Jews and Gentiles; and accordingly he and his family were
made the prototype of this covenant, God then blessing all families of
believers, and the fathers thereof, in blessing that of his through him
the father of it, even as God blessed all mankind in Adam and Eve, Gen.
L, for increase and multiplying, as being the root and first sampler.
And
the reason why God chose this of a family to convey the covenant by was,
that this society was the only natural society of all others, and therefore
God did always choose it throughout all states of the church. Thus when
the church was national among the Jews, then was this way in force: 'I
and my house will serve the Lord,' said Joshua; so David, Ps. ci. And
when, under the New, the institution was to consist of many believers
meeting in one place for public worship, yet this still remains, a
church in the house also. God herein engrafting (as he uses to do grace
on nature, in our spirits, when he converts us), so his covenant of
grace upon this covenant of nature to run in the channel of it.
And
let me add this further observation, that in Abraham's family his servants
that were Gentiles, if they had children, those children were circumcised,
as fore-running pledges and types that both we and our children, who are
Gentiles and strangers, were engrafted into this covenant, it held forth
this our privilege to come, that in Abraham the Gentiles' seed (as well
as Abraham's own) should be blessed in him.
|
|

Back to the
Covenant Theology
|