Ant. I beseech you, sir, proceed also to the second thing; and first tell us, when the Lord began to make a promise to help and deliver fallen mankind.
Evan. Even the same day that he sinned, 1 which, as I suppose, was the very same day he was created. 2 For Adam, by his sin, being become the child of wrath, and both in body and in soul subject to the curse, and seeing nothing due to him but the wrath and vengeance of God, was "afraid, and sought to hide himself from the presence of God," (Gen 3:10), whereupon the Lord promised Christ unto him, saying to the serpent, "I will put enmity between thee and the woman, and between thy seed and her seed"; he [that is to say, the seed of the woman, for so is the Hebrew text] "shall break thy head, and thou shalt bruise his heel." This promise of Christ, the woman's seed, (verse 15), was the gospel; and the only comfort of Adam, Abel, Enoch, Noah, and the rest of the godly fathers, until the time of Abraham. 3
Nom. I pray you, sir, what ground have you to think that Adam fell the same day he was created?
Evan. My ground for this opinion is, Psalm 49:12; which text Mr. Ainsworth makes to be the 13th verse, and reads it thus, "But man in honour doth not lodge a night; he is likened unto beasts that are silenced." 4 That may be minded, says he, both for the first man Adam, who continued not in his dignity, and for all his children.
Ant. But, sir, do you think that Adam and those others did understand that promised seed to be meant of Christ?
Evan. Who can make doubt, but that the Lord had acquainted Adam with Christ, betwixt the time of his sinning and the time of his sacrificing, though both on one day?
Ant. But did Adam offer sacrifice?
Evan. Can you make any question, but that the bodies of those beasts, whose skins went for a covering for his body, were immediately before offered in sacrifice for his soul? Surely these skins could be none other but of beasts slain, and offered in sacrifice; for before Adam fell, beasts were not subject to mortality nor slaying. And God's clothing of Adam and his wife with skins signified, that their sin and shame were covered with Christ's righteousness. And, questionless, the Lord had taught him, that his sacrifice did signify his acknowledgment of his sin, and that he looked for the Seed of the woman, promised to be slain in the evening of the world, thereby to appease the wrath of God for his offence; the which, undoubtedly, he acquainted his sons, Cain and Abel, with, when he taught them also to offer sacrifice.
Ant. But how doth it appear that this his sacrificing was the very same day that he sinned?
Evan. It is said, (John 7:3), concerning Christ, "That they sought to take him, yet no man laid hands on him, because his hour was not yet come"; but after that when the time of his suffering was at hand, he himself said, (John 12:23), "The hour is come"; which day is expressly set down by the Evangelist Mark to be the sixth day, and ninth hour of that day, when "Christ, through the eternal Spirit, offered up himself without spot to God," (Mark 15:34,42). Now, if you compare this with Exodus 12:6, you shall find that the paschal lamb, a most lively type of Christ, was offered the very same day and hour, even the sixth day, and ninth hour of that day, which was at three of the clock in the afternoon: and the Scripture testifies, that Adam was created the very same sixth day; and gives us ground to think that he sinned the same day. And do not the before alleged Scriptures afford us warrant to believe that it was the very same hour of that day, (Gen 1:26); when Christ entered mystically and typically upon the work of redemption, in being offered as a sacrifice for Adam's sin? 5 And surely we may suppose, that the covenant [as you heard] being broken between God and Adam, justice would not have admitted of one hour's respite, before it had proceeded to execution, to the destruction both of Adam and the whole creation, had not Christ, at that very time, stood as the ram [or rather the lamb] in the bush, and stepped in to perform the work of the covenant. And hence I conceive it is, that Saint 6 John calls him the "Lamb slain" from the beginning of the world, 7 (Rev 13:8). For as the first state of creation was confirmed by the covenant which God made with man, and all creatures were to be upheld by means of observing the law and condition of that covenant; so that covenant being broken by man, the world should have come to ruin, had it not been, as it were, created anew, and upheld by the covenant of grace in Christ.
Ant. Then, sir, you think that Adam was saved?
Evan. The Hebrew doctors hold that Adam was a repentant sinner, and say, that he was by wisdom, [that is to say, by faith in Christ,] brought out of his fall; yea, and the Church of God doth hold, and that for necessary causes, that he was saved by the death of Christ; yea, says Mr. Vaughan, it is certain he believed the promise concerning Christ, in whose commemoration he offered continual sacrifice; and in the assurance thereof, he named his wife Hevah, that is to say, life, 8 and he called his son Seth, settled or persuaded in Christ.
Ant. Well, now, I am persuaded that Adam did understand this seed of the woman to be meant of Christ.
Evan. Assure yourself, that not only Adam, but all the rest of the godly fathers did so understand it, as is manifest in that the Targum, or Chaldee Bible, which is the ancient translation of Jerusalem, has it thus: "Between thy son and her son"; adding further, by way of comment, "So long, O serpent, as the woman's children keep the law, they kill thee! and when they cease to do so, thou stingest them in the heel, and hast power to hurt them much; but whereas for their harm there is a sure remedy, for thee there is none; for in the last days they shall crush thee all to pieces, by means of Christ their king." And this was it which did support and uphold their faith until the time of Abraham.
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[1] This, our author does here positively assert, and afterwards
confirm. And there is plain evidence for it from the holy Scriptures,
which determines the time of our Lord's calling our guilty first
parents before him, at the which time he gave them the promise. (Gen
3:8), "And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking in the garden
in the cool of the day"; [Heb, "At the wind of that day," as Junius
and Tremellius, Piscator and Picherellus, read it;] the which, as soon
as it began to blow, might convince them that their aprons of fig-
leaves were not fit covers for their nakedness.
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[2] Our author is far from being singular in this opinion. The
learned Gataker, [apud Pol. Synop. Crit. in Genesis 3:23,] owns it to
be the common opinion, though he himself is of another mind, "That man
fell, and was cast out of paradise, the same day in which he was
created." And he tells us, [Ibid. in Psalm 49:13,] that "Broughton
does most confidently assert Adam not to have stood in his integrity
so much as one day; and that he saith, out of Maimonides, This is held
by all the Jews, as also by the Greek fathers." That this opinion is
less received than formerly, is, if I mistake not, not a little owing
to the cavils of the Deists; who, to weaken the credit of the inspired
history, allege it to be incredible that the events recorded (Gen
1:24-26, 2:7,18, to the end of the third chapter), could all be
crowded into one day. [See Nichol's Conference with a Theist.] The
reasons to support it, taken from the learned Sharp, one of the six
ministers banished in the year 1606. [Curs. Theol. Loc. de Peccato.]
1. "Because of the devil's envy, who, it is likely, could not long
endure to see a man in a happy state. 2. If man had stood more days,
the blessing of marriage would have taken place, Adam would have known
his wife, and begot a child without original sin. 3. The Sabbath was
not so much appointed for meditating on the works of creation, as on
the work of redemption. 4. It appears from the words of the serpent,
and of the woman, that she had not yet tasted any fruit. 5. When the
Holy Ghost speaks of the sixth day, (Gen 1), and of the day of the
fall, it is with HE emphatic. [Compare Genesis 1 ult. and 3:8.] 6. He
fell so soon, that the work of redemption might be the more
illustrious, since man could not stand one day without the Mediator's
help." How the Sabbath was broken by Adam's sin, though committed the
day before, may be learned from the Larger Catechism, on the fourth
commandment, which teaches, that "The Sabbath is to be sanctified—and
to that end we are to prepare our hearts—that we may be the more fit
for the duties of that day": and that "the sins forbidden in the
fourth commandment, are all omissions of the duties required," &c.
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[3] In this promise was revealed, 1. Man's restoration unto the
favour of God, and his salvation; not to be effected by man himself,
and his own works, but by another. For our first parents, standing
condemned for breaking of the covenant of works, are not sent back to
it, to essay the mending of the matter, which they had marred before;
but a new covenant is purposed,—a Saviour promised as their only
hope. 2. That this Saviour was to be incarnate, to become man, "the
seed of the women." 3. That he behoved to suffer; his heel, namely his
humanity, to be bruised to death. 4. That by his death he should make
a full conquest over the devil, and destroy his works, who had now
overcome and destroyed mankind; and so recover the captives out of his
hand: "he shall bruise thy head, viz: while thou bruisest his heel."
This encounter was on the cross: there Christ treading on the serpent,
it bruised his heel, but he bruised its head. 5. That he should not be
held by death, but Satan's power should be broken irrecoverably: the
Saviour being only bruised in the heel, but the serpent in the head.
6. That the saving interest in him, and his salvation, is by faith
alone, believing the promise with particular application to one's
self, and so receiving him, forasmuch as these things are revealed by
way of a simple promise.
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[4] "From this text the Hebrew doctors, also in Bereshit Rabba,
do gather, that the glory of the first man did not night with him, and
that in the beginning of the Sabbath his splendour was taken away from
him, and he was driven out of Eden."—[Cartwright and Pol. Synops.
Crit. in Loc.] The learned Leigh, [in his Crit. Sacr. in voc. Lun,]
citing this text, says, "Adam lodged not one night in honour, for so
are the words, if they be properly translated." He repeats the same in
his annotations on the book of Psalms, and points his reader to
Ainsworth, whose version does evidently favour this opinion, and is
here faithfully cited by our author, though without the marks of
composition—"lodge a night," there being no such marks in my copy of
Ainsworth's version or annotations, printed at London, 1639. However
the word lun may signify, to abide or continue, it is certain the
proper and primary signification of it is, tonight [at, in, or with].
I must be allowed the use of this word to express the true import of
the original one. Thus we have it rendered, (Gen 28:11), "tarried all
night."—(Judg 19:9,10,13), "Tarry all night—tarry that night—lodged
all night." And since this is the proper and primary signification of
the word, it is not to be receded from, without necessity; the which I
cannot discover here. The text seems to me to stand thus, word for
word, the propriety of the tenses also observed: "Yet Adam in honour
could not night; he became like as the beasts, they were alike."
Compare the Septuagint, and the vulgar Latin; with which, according to
Pool, [in Synop. Crit.,] the Ethiopic, Syriac, and Arabic, do agree,
though unhappy in not observing the difference between this and the
last verse of the Psalm. Nothing can be more agreeable to the scope
and content. Worldly men boast themselves in the multitude of their
riches, (verse 6), as if their houses should continue for ever, (verse
11); and yet Adam, as happy as he was in paradise, continued not one
night in his honour; it quickly left him; yea, he died, and in that
respect became like the beasts; (compare verse 14), "Like sheep they
are laid in the grave, death shall feed on them." And after showing
that the worldly man shall die, notwithstanding of his worldly wealth
and honour, (verse 19), this suitable memorial for Adam's sons is
repeated with a very small variation, (verse 20,21), "Adam was in
honour, but could not understand; he became," &c.
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[5] That the promise was given the same day that Adam sinned,
was evinced before: and from the history, (Gen 3), and the nature of
the thing itself, one may reasonably conclude, that the sacrifices
were annexed to the promise. And since the hour of Christ's death was
all along the time of the evening sacrifice, it is very natural to
reckon that it was also the hour of the first sacrifice; even as the
place on which the temple stood was at first designed by an
extraordinary sacrifice on that spot, (1 Chron 20:18-28, 22:1). 1. "At
three o'clock in the afternoon, Christ yielded up the Ghost, (Mark
15:34,) the very time when Adam had received the promise of this his
passion for his redemption."—Lightfoot on Acts 2:1.
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[6] This word might well have been spared here; notwithstanding
that we so read in the title of the book of the Revelation in our
English Bibles; and in like manner, in the titles of other books in
the New Testament, St. [i.e. Saint] Matthew, St. Mark, St. Luke, &c.;
it is evident, there is not such a word to be found in the titles of
these books in the original Greek; and the Dutch translators have
justly discarded it out of their translations. If it is to be
retained, because John, Matthew, Mark, Luke, &c., were, without
controversy, saints, why not on the same ground, Saint Moses, Saint
Aaron, [expressly called "the Saint of the Lord," (Psa 106:16)] &c.?
No reason can be given of the difference made in this point, but that
it pleased Antichrist to canonize these New Testament saints, but not
the Old Testament ones. Canonizing is an act or sentence of the Pope,
decreeing religious worship and honours to such men or women departed,
as he sees meet to confer the honour of saintship on. These honours
are seven, and the first of them is, "That they are enrolled in the
catalogue of saints, and must be accounted and called saints by
all."—Bellarmin Disp. tom. 1. Col. 1496.
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[7] The benefits thereof [viz: of Christ's redemption] "were
communicated unto the elect from the beginning of the world in and by
those promises, types, and sacrifices, wherein he was revealed, and
signified to be the Seed of the woman which should bruise the
serpent's head, and the Lamb slain from the beginning of the
world."—Westm. Confess. chap. 8, art. 6.
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[8] So the Septuagint expounds it. Others, an enlivener, not
doubting but Adam, in giving her this name, had the promised life-
giving Seed, our Lord Jesus Christ, particularly in view, amongst the
"all living" she was to be mother of.