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A09277 VindiciƦ gratiƦ. = A plea for grace More especially the grace of faith. Or, certain lectures as touching the nature and properties of grace and faith: wherein, amongst other matters of great use, the maine sinews of Arminius doctrine are cut asunder. Delivered by that late learned and godly man William Pemble, in Magdalen Hall in Oxford. Pemble, William, 1592?-1623.; Capel, Richard, 1586-1656. 1627 (1627) STC 19591; ESTC S114374 222,244 312

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truth as themselves had either received by tradition from the Ancestors or learned by new revelation from God himselfe When the Church grew out of a family into a Nation and that as men multiplied so ignorance corruption increased God himselfe writes a Catechisme for the Iewes describing a short compendium of Religion in the two Authenticke Tables of the Law containing Ten words so few and so plaine that the shortest memory and shallowest wit might easily comprehend them And withall God now layes an expresse command upon his people both for themselves and for their children Deut. 6. 6 7. And these words which I command thee this day shall be in thine heart And thou shalt rehearse them vnto thy children and shalt talke of them when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest by the way and when thou liest downe and when thou risest up The word is emphaticall Thou shalt rehearse them continually 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 thou shalt sharpen them by often and seasonable instruction giving an edge or point to the precepts of the Law that they may pierce into the mindes of the unlearned How carefully this strict injunction was afterward observed either by the Levites in publick or in private by masters of families wee cannot certainely define where Scripture is silent of both their practises but if wee may judge of the carefulnesse of former times by the carelesnesse of these there is good cause to thinke that both Levites in the Synagogues and Governours in their private houses were negligent enough in discharging this duty Yet we may well presume that there were both of the one and other not a few whose godly industry in this particular may justly shame the impious slothfulnesse of Ministers and People in latter ages Where will a David and Bathsheba be now found personages of highest quality yet counting it no disgrace to reade a Lecture of religion and morality to a yongue Salomon You shall finde their practise 2. Chron. 28. 8. Prov. 31. 1. And Salomon himselfe seemes to give that precept out of the experience of his owne most excellent education Teach a childe the trade of his way and when hee is old he shall not depart from it though himselfe scarce did so Yea albeit infinite corruptions have at this day deformed all religion among the Iewes yet even to these times may be seene some prints of their ancient discipline among them whose children are in their tender yeares first taught the law and bookes of Moses and after that their Talmudicall Traditions with such care and industry as their skill in Iudaisme at 17. exceedes the knowledge of many among us in Christianity at 70. whereof see the learned Buxd. Synag Iudaic. c. 3. But come we unto those times when the Sunne of righteousnesse arose and the knowledge of holy things shone in its full strength by the ministery of Christ and his Apostles and we may trace this practise by its apparant footsteps even from the first age of the Christian Church and downeward The words which I have read are but a copy and briefe description of the Primitive Catechisme the Apostle Paul commends to Timothies custody 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a pattern and delincation of wholesome doctrine which hee had learned from the Apostle 2. Tim. 1. 13. which also Rom. 12. 6. he calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Analogy of faith contained in all fundamentall points of sacred doctrine with which all interpretations of Scripture must beare due proportion Now very necessity drave them in those Primitive times to draw religion into compendious heads and short summaries partly in regard of Infidels who being converted to the faith were to be instructed in the maine points of Christian beleefe a thorow knowledge and open confession whereof was required of them at their Baptisme partly in respect of the children of Christian parents who because of the dangerous sollicitations of Idolatrous Gentiles and Hereticall Christians privily creeping in to beguile by craftinesse ignorant and unstable soules were of necessity to have their mindes setled in the chiefe and generall conclusions of Christian doctrine by which they might defend themselves against all sophistical seducements Both these whether new Converts or yongue Christians were anciently called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 till their Baptisme and Confirmation and for such whose narrow wits could not comprehend large discourses it was needfull to make use of Epitomes Touching the word we finde it more ancient than this custome and more generally understood than of it onely In generall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in its Metonymicall signification is to teach others vivâ vo●● by speech sounding into their eares in speciall to instruct any in the first rudiments of an art or science because such as are ignorant learne more by others teaching than their owne study In the generall acception besides profane authors wee finde it used in the new Testament five severall times Luke 1. 4. That thou mightest acknowledge the certainty of those things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereof thou hast been instructed saith S. Luke to Theophilus rendring the reason of the dedication of his Gospell unto him Of Apollos an eloquent man mighty in the Scriptures it s said he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instructed in the way of the Lord Act. 18. 25. Rom. 2. 18. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 instucted by the Law againe 1. Cor. 14. 19. I had rather in the Church speake fiue words with mine understanding 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that I might also teach others than ten thousand words in a strange tongue But most notable is that place Gal. 6. 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let him that is taught in the Word make him that hath taught him partaker in all his goods In all which places 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is no more than 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to bee taught or instructed as the circumstances of the Texts doe evidently demonstrate But in times presently succeeding the Apostles and since the word hath been usually taken by Ecclesiasticall Writers in the strictest sense for the first instruction of yongue beginners in the rudiments of Christianity For now began the Gentiles in great multitudes to joyn themselves unto the Church and the number of those that were to be Catechised daily increasing gave occasion to the Pastors of every Congregation to bee more frequently imployed in this businesse And as the burden grew heavier so new meanes were devised for their better institution Hence besides the Pastors and Bishops of the Churches there were some specially deputed to attend this office who from their imploiment were called Catechistae and not onely in the Temples but also in Schooles opened for that purpose did teach such as were rude and ignorant the elements of Christian religion Famous above others is that Schoole at Alexandria in Egypt wherin so many learned men taught and so many holy Martyrs and Confessors had their first education There it was that Origen
having first taught a Grammar Schoole did afterward succeed Clemens in the office of Catechist and such was eyther the necessity of those times or the excellent abilities of the man that at 18. yeares of age he took upon him that charge of publicke teaching 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith Eusebius 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Very yongue yeares and I know not whether he got so much honour by his learned teaching as for his constant suffering so many persecutions as were raised against him in that City Yet was he in account for both in so much that hee was not onely sent for to come into Arabia by the Governour of the country there to teach but also being driven from Alexandria by troubles there he repaired to Caesarea Stratonis there set up a Schoole and was judged worthy to expound the Scriptures and read Divinity in publicke 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the same Eusebius witnesses Lib. 6. cap. 13. But I must not write a story of him or others who in those times bare this office in the Church nor yet of the Catachumeni and the severall constitutions decreed of in Councells and Provinciall Synods for their more convenient institution of the time of their admission to Baptisme and after that to the Communion of the manner of their being in the Congregation during the time of divine Service where they were to stand not mixed with the rest of the people but severally by themselves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 when they were to depart the assembly viz. before the celebration of the Eucharist at which they were by no means to be present though at the Sermons Praiers of the Church for them they might be of divers cases touching their Baptisme their relapses recoveries their phrensies and possessions by the divell their martyrdome before Baptisme with such like queres and customes of which now antiquated by time wee neede not trouble ourselves to make any curious inquiry The Acts and Canons of the ancient Councills and Church Writers of those times make frequent mention of them out of whom to compile an exact Commentary upon this matter is a worke of longer time than I can spare and lesser commodity than will pay for the paines Yet one word of the manner of teaching that was used towards these Novices in the faith which what ever it was in private for the publike seemes not to have beene dialogue-wise by question and answer after the fashion of these times but in a continued speech with much plainnesse and familiar easinesse That tract of S. Austins de Symbolo ad Catechumenos and these Catachismes of Cyrill Bishop of Ierusalem which are preserved to our times shew us what course they followed in writing and preaching of Catachisme the one being a plaine exposition of the Creede the other nothing but Sermons upon the chiefe Articles of faith and points of manners which Cyrill preached extempore to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or newly baptized in his Church If now wee come downe to latter times when all the world was become Christian in outward profession we shall easily perceive that when they wanted Conuerts of the Gentiles whom they might instruct these ages began by degrees to neglect also the children of the Church So that for many ages whilst ambition and tyranny in Church-men wried their thoughts more to the advancement of their owne greatnesse than to the furtherance of religion godliness in the Church this sacred institution was even quite laid aside after that through ignorance barbarism superstition easily crept in soon corrupted whatsoever was sincere either in Gods worship or good maners And now was this disease growne so desperate that its thought incurable by those lazie and idle shepheards which wealth and superstition had bred vp and advanced to the oversight of Gods flockes I meane that Cloistred rabble of Monkes and Friers who sacrilegiously parting those that God hath ioyned together made a profession of Praier without preaching and thought by their devout oraisons to bring men to heaven how ignorant and wicked soever they were Yet these were the men whose lips must be thought to preserve knowledge whose brests must bee the oracles of Divinity and in their heads must lye inclosed the more secret and precious treasures of wisedome but they were indeed wells without water deceiving the hope of weary and thirsty soules empty clouds they were without raine that did not send forth one gracious showre to refresh the inheritance of the Lord. And now these dreamers in stead of curing the peoples ignorance which would have cost them some paines take a shorter course and fall to commend it as a speciall vertue and fruitfull mother of true devotion Which base impiety as it hath been detestable to Angels to men upon whom any the least beame of saving light ever shone so since the reformation hath the shame therof been sufficiently discovered and cast upon the face of that Romish Strumpet though her whores forehead cannot yet blush at it We see and now enjoy those holy ordinances of Preaching and Catechising within our Churches revived and observed with happy successe in the increase of all piety Our adversaries have seen it and sorrowed for it to behold the industry and care of the Churches in their provision for the due instruction of yonguer and weaker Christians And though they hope that their ignorance shall uphold their Church against our knowledge yet very shame hath driven them to doe somewhat for which purpose a Catechisme there was hatcht in the Councill of Trent and by it allowed wherein of a little milke of Gods Word and superfluity of ranke poison pressed out of the brests of the Babylonish Harlot such food was prepared as was thought sit for the nourishment of her infants But I must hasten what I have spoken touching this point shall be as for justification of our present exercise so for a commendation of the paines of those faithfull skilfull worke-men in the Lords building who have laboured by preaching and writing to lay a sure foundation of knowledge before they build up in the faith I could heartily wish that those among us whom either ease or pride have made carelesse in this office would bee pleased to looke abroad into such congregations where this course is held and to compare them with their owne and others where t is neglected they should soone perceive how faire and open a passage is made for preaching to follow after where diligent catechising hath gone before on the other side how hopelesse their endeavour is who labour to imprint in the heads of their people the knowledge of conclusions before they have learned the principles of Divinity If these men complaine and say I have spent my strength in vaine and my labour without profit preaching long and seeing little reformation I will not pitty them who are like unwise Nurses who when their children thrive not lay
direction for the right and acceptable worship of God in some sort which is nothing but a fancie overvaluing natures abilities against all reason and common experience and by consequence taking away the necessitie of Scriptures and divine Revelations to teach the right way of worshipping God in Christ. If they say t is some Supernaturall Revelation it must be knowne wherof when and by what meanes it is bestowed on the Heathen Is it of the Law or of the Gospell is it made knowne unto them by some inward suggestion vision or dreame or by outward instruction from a Preacher or Prophet invisibly convayed unto them by miracle or extraordinarily raised up among them againe when is this supernaturall knowledge bestowed on Pagans have they it as soone as they come into the world if so t is Naturall or is it given afterwards at yeares of discretion if so then t is not in Infants and so not in all the Heathen and at what yeares is it bestowed and what if they die before that age All which quaeres are inexplicable and draw into most vexing and torturing absurdities a sufficient proofe that there is no such thing as Sufficient grace to conversion given to Indians Americans Tartarians and other Pagans when they that defend it cannot tell what it should bee For seeing t is neither any Naturall or Supernaturall knowledge I thinke none will be so senselesse to say that it is some Naturall or Supernatupower or ability For if it be Naturall t is not Grace if Supernaturall t would be knowne to what purpose a Supernaturall ability should be given to ignorant Infidells to doe they know not what 2. Let 's come to experience and judge wee by what meanes it may possibly appeare unto us that the Virginians and other Americans or the Inhabitants of Southerne unknowne parts of the world have at this day or ever have had before or since Christ sufficient grace for their Conversion and Salvation What instance and example can bee given in so many ages of any one among these or other Gentiles that hath been converted by this Sufficient grace Strange that what is ordinarily bestowed on all should never take effect in any If it doe take effect extraordinarily in some how know they that If ordinarily in many then farewell the prerogative of the Iew above the Gentile of the Christian Church above Pagans if God ordinarily have his Church his Converts his right Worshippers even amidst the darknesse of Gentilisme without the knowledge of Christ and all divine revelation of Gods will in his Word These opinions are as Moulin speakes like sicke mens dreames or rather madde mens ravings 3. Let us inquire of the Scriptures and see whether they speake as favourably of the Gentiles as these pitifull Remonstrants doe In them we shall finde another manner of censure both touching their forlorne estate in Ignorance and Infidelity as also the impossibility of their recovery into Grace except by greater helpe than the Arminians afford them Of the Ephesians Paul testifieth that before they were converted by the Preaching of the Gospell They were at that time without Christ aliens from the common-wealth of Israel strangers from the covenant of Promise having no hope and being without God in the world Ephes. 2. 12. And Matthew out of the Prophet Esay witnesseth of all the Gentiles that before the light of the Gospell was risen to them they sate in darknesse and in the region of the shadow of Death Mat. 4. 15 16. This was the condition of the Nations in their pure Naturalls so fully expressed by those places as nothing can bee more significantly declared Now for the meanes they had to come out of it and bee converted the Scriptures deny them all unto them God favoured them not nor had any regard to bestow grace on them for In times past he suffered all the Gentiles to walke in their own waies saith Paul Acts 14. 16. The Word and Ordinances of his worship they had not for He sheweth his Word unto Iacob his statutes and his judgements unto Israel Hee hath not dealt so with every nation neither have they knowne his judgements as the Prophet speakes Psal. 147. 19 20. A Preacher they have not and How should they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard and how should they heare without a Preacher Rom. 10. 14. Naturall ability to know the mysteries of the Kingdome of God they have not for The Naturall man perceives not the things of the Spirit 1. Cor. 3. Nor is there any such power given them from God for Vnto you it is given to know the secrets of the Kingdome of Heaven but unto them it is not given Mat. 13. 11. and Without mee yee can doe nothing Ioh. 15. 5. What shall wee thinke then the poore Americans can either know or do in point of godlinesse by the pretended power of Sufficient grace when the Pharisees and other Iewes yea the Apostles themselves could do nothing without a speciall gift and assistance from Christ whereof they will not say those Pagans are made partakers Wherefore there is good cause wee should reject this monstrous opinion of Sufficient grace for Conversion bestowed upon Savages and Infidells as being contrary to Scripture common sense and reason Nor can it be thought but that the authors of it are ashamed of the absurdity thereof although the Sequell of their other tenents one errour drawing on another have inforced upon them a necessity of defending this also And that it may not goe abroad without the Patronage of some colour of reason they proceed in the justification of it upon two grounds 1. That the light of Nature if it be well used is of it selfe sufficient to convert a Heathen from his idolatrous and evill wayes and bring him to a right knowledge and worship of God in some sort 2. That if the Gentiles use the light and helpe of Nature well and with their best endeavour God is ready nay hee is bound in justice to bestow on them one further grace viz. the knowledge of themystery of Redemption These two are the rotten pillars of Vniversall grace given unto the Gentiles which how shaken and riven they are you may soone perceive if wee pill off that plaister of doubtfull words wavering and darke sentences wherewith they are daubed over for the matter is so shamefull that they dare scarce speake out their minde plainely But their opinion in plaine termes is this God say they hath given sufficient strength to all the Gentiles to use their Naturall gifts well Be it so But what is this Well Vsing of Naturall gifts It is that say they whereby they may in some sort according to their measure forsake their idolatrous and wicked practises and attain to the right knowledge and worship of God and reformation of Life But may all this be done without the helpe of Supernaturall revelation Yes for say they if a man goe so farre as with utmost endeavour hee
the eyes of the minde opened to discerne of spirituall things according to their spirituall nature Herein also lies a great difference because all things that are inevident to a man unregenerate are not so to the regenerate These things thus distinguished let us set downe the truth touching this point in some few conclusions which follow 1. All things revealed in the Scriptures whether they be Doctrinall Historicall or Propheticall may be knowne in the evidence of the Narration not only by such as are truly sanctified but by those also who remaining unregenerate enjoy only the benefit of common illumination This conclusion is to be observed against that injurious accusation wherewith those of the Romish Church have standered God and his written Word that the Bible is an obscure booke not to be understood A fond and impious conceit if ever any were The Scriptures are obscure say they but to whom trow yee To their learned Clergie and illuminated Doctors No they can understand them well enough they are able to reconcile all seeming contradictions to reduce all tropes and figures to their plaine meaning to note the various acceptions of words to dive into all hidden mysteries of the text and over and above the just meaning finde out many spirituall senses of it that the author never thoughton This they can doe and for witnesse of it we have of their owne writing infinite volumnes both of Controversed Divinitie decided if wee beleeve them by Scripture rightly understood and also of Commentaries upon the text which testifie unto us as no small painfulnesse in searching out so much peremptorinesse in defining the true sense of the most Difficult places of Scriptures And surely well they may bee confident having besides their owne and others wits the helpe of the Popes infallibilitie in which respect one would thinke they should now make an end of writing or at least of jarring one with another in their opinions and interpretations For may we not thinke that the Popes are very uncharitable who being endued with an infallible Spirit doe not sitting at ease in their chaire compile at last an absolute Commentary upon the Bible after which no Iesuite of them all should dare to vent his owne private opinions or it may bee t is bashfulnesse in the Friers not to trouble his Holinesse about so small a tri●●e as is the right meaning of Scriptures unlesse we say that the Romish Apollo is not at leisure to utter Oracles from his trivet unto every poore Frier that intends to trouble the world with a new booke Here questionlesse is a great fault but let them take it among them meane while wee see their owne practice confuting their owne opinion of the Scriptures obscurity unlesse they will give us leave to thinke that all their preaching disputing and writing hath beene about they know not what But say they the Scriptures for all this are obscure to the Laity And are they so whose fault is that but the Clergies whose duty it was if pride and lazinesse would have given leave to have seene their people better instructed If Scriptures are plaine unto themselves why did they not make them plaine unto others or must we in earnest speak that of the Romish Clergy which Iob doth of his friends in derision No doubt but they are the people and wisedome shall die with them as for the poore snakes the Laickes they simple soules have not wit enough to understand the meaning of plaine words To such their proud contempt of Gods people we may with indignation oppose that of Iob Even these have understanding as well as they yea are not inferior unto the greatest part of them unlesse they could give the world better proofe of their deeper wisdomes But what if they be inferior are the Scriptures obscure because some things are hard to be understood by the ignorant and unstable mindes So we might say of the plainest book that ever was written of Logick that t is obscure because a fresh man doth not understand it It is no prejudice to the cleernesse and perspicuity of the Declaration that there be some things in it which are hard to be conceived by some men at some times We doe not account the prophecy of Esay touching Christ which the Eunuch read to be a darke and obscure prediction but we know t was cleer and plaine enough though the Eunuch a raw proselyte understood not the meaning of it T is much we cannot be as charitably minded of the Scriptures as we are of other bookes in our ordinary studies wherin when we find some things difficult we can suspect our selves rather than the author when afterward we understand him we doe not censure him of obscurity but blame our owne dulnesse that could not apprehend things plainely enough expressed And me thinkes the Iesuites might be content to give God Almighty leave to write but even as men of greatest understanding do namely to comprise much matter in few words They might know that in such writing and such is the stile of all the Scripture things may be expressed very distinctly and properly which yet cannot ●●ply be understood at first reading but after some study In which case t were a reasonable thing for our adversaries to perswade the world that the Bible were at least as easie a book as some humane author and that the abundant riches of knowledge in it did by the least deserve as much paines in the search of it as a piece of Aristotle some hard Poet on some intricate crabbed scholasticall discourse of some Iesuite Did they not greatly mistrust the discovery of their owne errors by such an insinuation of Scriptures facility they would never discourage their disciples from them and yet exhort them to the study of many an obscurer author For our selves we have learned better things than to bring God in suspicion with man of envie and fraud as if hee had caused a word to be written for instruction of men which they should not understand and in it had laid a snare to intrappe mens soules in Heresie and false opinions by perverting the Scriptures to their owne perdition No against such calumnies we oppose Christs censure of his owne words for such are the Scriptures Prov. 8. 8 9. All the words of my mouth are in righteousnesse there is nothing froward or perverse in them no danger of Hereticall infection They are all plaine to him that understandeth and right to them that find knowledge nor intricate obscurity that no man can tell what to make on 't Yea we dare avouch that did the simplest of people use but halfe that diligence that they ought in attaining Christian knowledge and would take but as much paines to understand the Scripture as they doe of the Evidences of their Land● or the Statute booke or such like experience would quickly tell them that the Scriptures are not so farre above the reach of their understandings as now generally all men
proue themselues by their owne naturall light manifesting their Diuine Originall whence they are and their right meaning how they must be vnderstood They are Primum ●●sibile not like Colour which cannot be seene till light make it apparant but like Light it selfe which maketh all other things manifest it selfe too by it own proper Quality Wherefore when we are asked why we doe beleeue the Articles of the Creed we answer Because they are reuealed in Scripture Again How are you sure the Scriptures are the Word of God we answer we know it by the Scriptures themselues the Spirit of God opening our eyes to see those naturall and liuely caracters of Diuine truth which are imprinted vpon those sacred volumes Lastly If we be asked How know you that this is the right meaning of such or such a place We answer We know it by the Scriptures which being diligently examined and compared together plainly discouer their own right expesition In these answers we rest finally resoluing our Faith into the Word of God alone and nothing else As for the Authoritie of any one man or all men in the Church we giue it all due reuerence according to its place and degree We acknowledge the Decisions of Councels and Synods about controuersed Articles of Religion the continuall Preaching of the Word by the Ministers therof the manifold expositions of Doctrines of Diuinitie and Bookes of Scriptures by the Learned in their Writings all these we acknowledge with due regard thankefulnesse to be blessed meanes for the breeding and growth of Christian Faith because they all doe or should point vs vnto the Scriptures holding forth the light of them that we may the more cleerly diseern it in its true brightnesse Thus they are helpes to make vs see the truth but no causes why we belee●e it this we do for its own sake not their saying And vnlesse what they teach doe appeare vnto vs cleerly out of the Scriptures we freely confesse that although their Reuerence will cause vs to Suspend our Iudgement and thorowly to examine the Cause yet their bare authoritie cannot command our assent to any article of Religion that shall be proposed vnto vs. The rule of the Apostle prohibits vs 1 Cor. 2. 5. Our faith may not stand in the Wisedome of Man but in the Power of God Our Aduersaries here thinke that they haue vs vpon an aduantage and caught vs in a circle too as if we also ran round from the Scriptures to the Spirit againe from the Spirit to the Scriptures thus How know you the Scriptures to be Gods Word By the Spirit reuealing the same to my heart and conscience But how know you this reuelation of the Spirit to be true By the Scriptures that testifie The secret of the Lord is reuealed to them that feare him Ps. 15. But how know you this the like places of Scriptures to be Gods Word By the Spirit again Thus they suppose we are intangled but they mistake vs and our doctrine greatly in this particular We teach indeed that we know the Scriptures to be the Word of God by the Spirit of God inwardly Reuealing and Testifying the truth of them vnto our Consciences But it must here be diligently obserued what kind of Reuelation or Testimonie of the Spirit it is wherby we may be said to be sertified assured of the Scriptures Diuine Truth It is not any inward suggestion and inspiration different from those reuelations that are in the Scriptures themselues as if the Spirit did by a second priuat particular reuelation assure me of the truth of those former reuelations made in the Scriptures We haue no warrant for any such priuat reuelations now nor is there any need of them and such as looke for them may easily embrace their own presumptuous fancies in stead of a Reuelation from heauen How then doth the Holy Ghost reueale vnto vs the truth of Scriptures I answer By remouing those impediments that hindred by bestowing those graces that make vs capable of this knowledge There is in vs a two-fold Impediment First Ignorance whereby our eyes are closed that we cannot see the light 〈◊〉 Second Corruption whereby although we see the light yet we cannot but naturally hate it and turne from it The Holy Spirit cures both by a double remedy First of Illumination restoring our decayed vnderstanding to some part of its primitiue perfection Second of Sanctification infusing into our desires and affections some degrees of their primitiue Holinesse and puritie By this worke of the Spirit Opening the eyes of our minds that we may Vnderstand the Scriptures see the wonders of Gods Law and also Rectifying our corrupt affections that we may loue and embrace the Holinesse of Diuine things by this meanes I say is the Diuine truth of Scriptures reuealed to vs. For presently vpon this Opening the eyes of our minds we see the glorious brightnesse and light of the Scriptures shining into our hearts and we discerne in them the apparant characters of heauenly Maiestie as cleerly as a seeing man beholds the Sunne Also after this renewing of our Sinfull inclinations we find presently that our Soules and those things which the Scriptures do reueale vnto vs haue a singular sympathy one towards another our loue that we beare to the beautie and Holinesse of the Word is strong that command which the Word hath ouer vs is most powerfull awfull so that now we haue as kindly a relish of the goodnesse and excellency of Scriptures as a healthfull stomacke hath of wholesome food By these things which we cleerly see in the Scriptures euidently feele in our selues we are fully ascertained in our soules that none but God is the Authour of so He menly Holy Mysteries In this sence we still pray for the Spirit of Reuelation Eph. 1. 17. so called in that place because it inlightens the eyes of our vnderstanding as in vers 18. that then we may see the excellency of Diuine mysteries reuealed to the Church Other inward and secret reuelation of the Spirit we acknowledge not in this businesse Now there is no such circle as our Aduersaries would driue vs into but a plain straight way How know you that the Scriptures are Gods Word We answer By the Scriptures themselues by that wonderfull light excellency of truth and Holinesse shining in them Here we would rest and goe no further But yet if we be asked How we come to see this Light We answer It is by the only worke of the Spirit of God giuing vs eyes to see and hearts to loue this Light If we be further vrged How know you that you doe indeed perceiue such a light as you speake of or how can you make it appeare to another that you are not deceiued therein To these questions we answer That the former is idle iust as if one should aske him that ga● then the sun How know you that you now see
VINDICIAE GRATIAE A PLEA FOR GRACE MORE ESPECIALLY THE GRACE OF FAITH OR Certain LECTURES as touching the Nature and Properties of GRACE and FAITH Wherein amongst other matters of great use the maine sinews of ARMINIUS doctrine are cut asunder DELIVERED BY THAT late learned and godly man William Pemble in Magdalen Hall in Oxford AUG de Grat. lib. Arbitr cap. 16. Certum est nos velle cum volumus sed ille facit ut velimus bonum Certum est nos facere cum facimus sed ille facit ut faciamus praebendo vires efficacissimas voluntati LONDON Printed by R. YOVNG for I. BARTLET at the golden Cup in Cheape-side 1627. TO THE RIGHT WORshipfull Nathanael Stephens Esquier Grace and Peace from Iesus Christ. SIR BOokes are more necessary in a state than arms Arms are to defend us from the invasion of foes bookes are to preserve us from the infection of errors enemies can but kill the body errors endanger the soule There are crept into the Churches a number of false opinions some that oppugne others that obscure the grace of God The earth is of it selfe prone enough to bring forth weedes but should one withall sow tares we should have much ado at harvest Our hearts are ranke enough to breed errors and our wits cunning enough to defend them but the scripture tells us that the envious man comes and sows the tares of false opinions and of weedes tares are the very worst sith therefore errors are so plenty bookes cannot but be very necessary T is true there bee many and it may bee according to the complaint too many bookes abroad already because many bee to little purpose some little to the purpose but of good and learned bookes bookes fitted to the errors and diseases of the time as this is there neither be nor well can bee too many Many errors require many bookes Nay I may safely say that many bookes are more necessary now than ever for that wee are fallen into the very age of the Church wherein as diseases in the body so errors the sicknesse of the soule doe and must abound For errors are necessary evills in the Church that they that are approved may be made manifest saith Saint Paul And this is all that Satan hath gotten by stirring up the corrupt witts and pens of many abroad and some at home to write they care not what Now wee doe begin to see that Truth is the daughter of time Truth is never new but let an old Truth be newly proposed and at first wee suspect it let it settle a little and in time truth gains ground and wins upon the judgement and consciences of men but erroneous opinions just like new fashions when they are first on foote many doate upon them give them but some time and they grow stale and vaine so now what by the decrees of Synodes and the writings and preachings of the learned Time hath brought it so about that there are few Schollars or others that minde these matters but doe begin to see thorow the conceipts of the Arminians Though then this treatise might have beene abroad sooner yet I dare promise that it comes not in too late for hee that reads it with judgement shall soone see that in the doctrine of Arminius there is more wit than truth I doe here commend it to your reading as to one whom the Lord hath made willing to learne and able to judge as also under your name unto the good of the Church to stand as a testimony of my duty and love unto you and of your zeale and love unto the truth Yours in the Lord Iesus RICH CAPEL To all that love and desire the grace of God and the glory of his grace in IESUS CHRIST MY deare and beloved brethren in Christ who are sensible of the dangers of these dayes and of the misery of this sinfull age wherein the heresies of the old condemned hereticke Pelagius that notable profest enemy of Gods grace are againe revived and raised up out of the bottomlesse pit by the malice and subtiltie of the restlesse enemy of mankinde that old Serpent the Divell working powerfully in and by that new upstart sect of Arminians the Wolves of this age who comming abroad in sheepes clothing and bearing the name of Protestants yea professing themselves Preachers of the Gospel in the reformed Churches are indeed Pelagian heretickes and disciples also of blasphemous Servetus and Socinus yea and also have joyned hearts and hands in many maine fundamentall errors with the Papists our enemies of the Romish Religion and faction I doubt not but that as you grieve and sorrow in your soules to see this smoake of pestilent heresies ascending upon the face of our land obscuring the light and eclipsing the glory of our Church so you do in your hearts earnestly desire to be made partakers of such worthy works painful labours of Gods faithful Ministers as are in all probability like to prove by Gods grace and blessing most powerfull and effectuall meanes both for the establishing of your hearts in the love of Gods truth and in the knowledge of the true doctrine of his grace and also for the confirming of your minds that they may neyther be daunted with the reproachfull calumnies and slanders nor troubled and entangled with the deceitfull cavils and carnall reasons which these subtile Sophisters have devised against Gods sacred truth in our Church professed And therefore I doe presume to commend unto you this ensuing Treatise which I having occasion to peruse it while it was under the Presse doe perceive to be as most necessary for these times so also most excellent and profitable for your purpose For I finde in it first the doctrins of truth concerning the grace of God and the powerfull worke of grace in the effectuall calling conversion and regeneration of the elect most plainly propounded and strongly proved out of the sacred Scriptures Also true saving and justifying Faith most accurately described unfolded with the whole nature and all the speciall properties of it by which it may be distinctly knowne and discerned from common fading hypocriticall Faith Secondly the maine errors of Arminians and Papists and their most grosse absurdities about universall grace and mans free-mill and power in working his owne salvation truly related their calumnies and slaunders of our Churches doctrine detected and discovered and their principall arguments carnall reasons and objections with wonderfull brevitie and singular dexteritie answered and refuted Thirdly by the way the authority perspicuity and certainty of the holy Scriptures strongly maintained and Popish errours about the uncertainty and obscurity of them beaten downe by strength of reason and by the Word of God as by a hammer that beates the rockes in pieces Though the style and maner of handling be somwhat Scholasticall sitted and applyed to the place and persons where and among whom these Exercises were first performed to wit in one of the Schooles of the
and evill 2. An earnest exhortation to increase both in Knowledge Obedience et us be led forward to perfection which is strengthened with a dreadfull threatning of vengeance against non Proficients and Apostataes betweene whom there is no medium the condition of Grace being unlike to that of Nature admitting no degree of consistancy or stay betweene growing and decaying This exhortation reacheth to the 9. verse of this 6. Chapter 3. A sweete consolation against all discouragements that might hinder their perseverance by proposing unto them 1. the examples of the old Saints in times past who through Faith and Patience now inherit the Promises 2. the stablenesse of Gods counsells and purposes who hath not onely promised but sworne to performe it by which two immutable things Gods Word and Gods Oath we may have strong consolation and firme ground whereupon to cast the anchor of our Hope sure and stedfast to the end of the 6. Chapter You now see by this briefe Analysis wherto these words which I have read doe tend namely to a growth after a plantation a finishing after a foundation laid to perfection after a beginning These Ebrews had gone to schoole long and the principles of Christianity had beene taught them a great while agoe now 't was a shame for them like children to be alwaies in their horne-bookes and never take forth a higher lesson The Apostle will now no longer favour their ignorance 't was not infirmity but negligence in them and therefore he purposes to read them a harder lecture and to sticke no longer on common points of Catechisme which hee onely names and so passes on The words then describe unto us the progresse that Preacher and People are to make in the knowledge and practise of Christianity I joine both together because it is manifest by the threatning consolations following that this exhortation perswades the increase of obedience as well as knowledge though the words seem to speake most for the latter This proceeding in Christian piety is expressed by an opposition of the two Termim or limits thereof 1. Where it begins and that is in the plaine and fundamentall points of Christian religion which must bee knowne and left Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ. 2. Where it ends and that is at perfection so farre as is attainable in this life whereto we must strive Let us boled forward or goe on unto perfection The former part is amplified and expounded more at large in the next words wherein the Apostle declares 1. What he meanes by Leaving the principles and rudiments of religion Wee must not learne and leave them i. e. forget them No. But wee may not sticke fast there and goe no further Hee is an idle and unskilfull Architect that is alwaies busie in laying of a foundation but never reares up a building upon it and no lesse unprofitable is that Hearer or Preacher who still is learning or preaching nought but the first elements of sacred science this is that he signifies by not laying again the foundation which by his and other Apostles preaching had been laid before 2. What hee meanes by the Doctrine of the beginning of Christ for so the words runne Now that he here calls a foundation from the use that Doctrinall principles have in the spirituall building of Christianity like to that of a foundation in materiall edifices Of these fundamentall points sixe are here reckoned up as so many heads and common places of the ancient Catechisme 1. Repentance from dead workes 2. Faith towards God 3. the Doctrine of Baptismes 4. I aying on of hands 5. Resurrection of the dead 6. Lastly Eternall judgement The latter part of attaining to perfection is amplified two waies 1. By the meanes that must bring us to it which is Gods grace not our owne or others abilities And this will we doe if God permit 2. By its contrary and the punishment therof viz. backsliding in the verse following It is not my meaning to goe over every particular as they lye in the words nor to stand now upon the discussing of all the difficulties which trouble the Text but purposing to handle them hereafter as just occasion shall offer them unto us I shall for this present commend to your observation two conclusions which the words naturally afford The first shall be this That it is a necessary and usefull practise in the Church of God to teach the doctrine of Christian religion plainly and summarily to yongue beginners I need not go far to make this good Nature shewes it 'T is in Grace as in Nature we are first babes in Christ then perfect men and the difference of spirituall food fetcht from our naturall sustenance approves it Children must have milke which is of effectuall nourishment but yet easie digestion Men must have strong meat 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 solider or harder meates who have teeth to chew and stomacks to digest them that is larger capacities and riper judgements to pierce into the deeper mysteries of Divinity Reason and Comparison in all other knowledge teach the same wherein infinite conclusions are deducted out of a few Principles which first learned give light of knowledge and strength of proofe to every one of them Your owne experience shall save me the labour of instances If we looke but to the words the excellent definition of Catechisme which the Apostle here gives yeelds us two good proofes of its necessity 1. It s the Doctrine of the beginning of Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by some rendred not unsitly for the sense Sermo qui rudes in Christo inchoat that gives beginning in Christ. This entrance into the knowledge of Christianity being that meanes whereby Christ is first formed within us and the seede out of which that holy conception of his glorious Image is at first shaped in our soules A blessed institution of yonguer yeares when Reason and Religion are together moulded and fashioned in tender mindes so that Religion shall not onely sanctifie but also perfect Natures abilities which euer from their first emploiment are as sinfull as they are weake 2. It s a foundation that beares up all the building and though it make the least shew is yet of greatest use Nor is their heresie more damnable who lay any other foundation besides Iesus Christ than their heresie is justly reproveable who build upon their own or others any speculations without the tryed ground-worke of infallible Principles surely laid and throughly understood If you will bee pleased to take a briefe survey of the practise of this institution you shall easily perceive that it is no new or needlesse invention In the ancient Church before Moses time as the doctrine of Religion was more obscure so the maner of its delivery is somewhat uncertaine yet we may not unfitly say that all teaching then was but Catechisme when the fathers to the children delivered by word of mouth so much of sacred
is exceeding weake The tree must be good before it bring forth good fruits True but what makes vs good trees our Iustification or our Sanctification Surely our Sanctification For though by Iustification wee are accounted good and Holy before God yet wee are not so in our Selues but most euill and Corrupt till we bee indewed with the grace of sanctification And then only wee become Good trees fit to beare the fruite of good workes so that the reason is in effect as if he had said we must first be Sanctified before our workes be Holy and that 's true for euen to Beleeve is a good and Holy worke and therefore though it goe before Iustification yet of necessitie presupposeth Sanctification 2. That faith is su●b an instrument of making vs partakers of the Benefites of Christs Mediation as is neither absolutely necessary in al. the Elect nor yet simply anteceding all manner of participation in those benefites That it is not absolutely necessarie in all appeares in the Elect dying infants who enjoy all the benefits of Christs merits in their Iustification Sanctification and Glorification without this instrumentall meanes of their actuall Faith as wee shall see more at large anon That Faith doth not simply precede all manner of Participation with Christ appeares by a double benefit wee enioy by and from Christ before such time as wee doe beleeve 1. Our Sanctification wrought by the Spirit which from Christ convaies Life and Grace into our Soules when wee were utterly devoid of all both Faith and other graces as hath beene shewed before at large And this is the first benefit of Christs death bestowed on us before we so much as aske it 2. Our Iustification in Gods sight which euen long before we were borne is purchased for vs by Christ. For t is vaine to thinke with the Arminians that Christs merits have made God only Placabilem not Placatum procured a freedome that God may be reconciled if hee will and other things concurre but not an actuall reconciliation A silly shift devised to uphold the libertie of mans will and universality of Grace No t is otherwise the Ransome demanded is paid and accepted full Satisfaction to the Diuine justice is giuen and taken all the sinnes of the Elect are actually pardoned Gods wrath for them is suffered and ouercome he rests contented and appeased the debt book is crossed and the hand-writing cancelled This grand transaction betweene God and the Mediator Christ Iesus was concluded upon and dispatcht in heaven long before we had any being either in Nature or Grace Yet the benefit of it was ours and belonged to us at that time though we never knew so much till after that by faith wee did apprehend it As in the like case Lands may bee purchased the Writings confirmed the estate convayed and settled vpon an Infant though it know nothing of all till it come to age and finde by experience the present commoditie of that which was prouided for him long agoe And the reason of all this is because it is not our Faith that workes Gods reconciliation with us but Christ beleeved on by our faith Now his Merits are not therefore accepted of God because we doe beleeve but because they of themselves are of such Worth and sufficiency as doe deserve his most favourable acceptance of them for vs. And what reason have we then to thinke why they have not alwaies procured aswell as deserved Gods love and actuall reconciliation for the Elect not only before their faith as in all but also without their faith as in Infants I proceed to the second cause of our Conversion viz. the Efficient cause which really produceth it and that is the Holy Ghost in whose person not excluding the Father and the Sonne this worke of Sanctification is peculiarly terminated This blessed Spirit are those two golden pipes through which the two Oliue branches emptie out of themselues the golden oyles of all precious graces into the Candlesticke the Church as it is Zach. 4. For which cause all the Graces of God are called the Fruites of the Spirit Gal. 5. 22. and Eph. 5 9 For the Fruit of the Spirit is in all goodnesse and righteousnesse and truth yea the whole worke of sanctification and renued Grace is styled by the name of the Spirit Gal. 5. 17. The flesh lusteth against the Spirit and the Spirit against the flesh id est Grace fights against corruption and this opposeth against Grace In respect of this opperation which the Holy Ghost hath in Sanctifying the Elect he is in Scripture set forth vnder a double Similitude of Water and Fire which are Elements most apt to cleanse The similitude is from the custome of the Leuiticall Purifications which were done by the use of both Elements For all vessells and utensills polluted by any legall uncleanenesse were to bee purged by Water if they were of wood but by Fire if made of metall or other materialls that might endure it as you may reade Num. 31. 23. So what euer filthinesse cleaves unto us or how deeply soever incorporated into our natures the Holy Ghost by his most blessed vertue as by water washeth away as by fire consumeth Then I will poure cleane water upon you and yee shall bee cleane from all your filthinesse and from your Idols will I cleanse you saith God unto the Church Ezech. 36. 25. And what is this water in Verse 27. he interprets himselfe in these words And I will put my Spirit within you Hence wee are said to bee baptized with the Holy Ghost Ioh. 1. 33. to bee baptized by one Spirit into one body 1 Cor. 12. 13. to bee borne of water and of the Spirit Ioh. 3. 5. Which baptizing of washing by the Holy Ghost is in plainer tearmes our Sanctification wrought by his power cleansing us from inherent corruption and creating in us Purite and Holinesse as is cleare out of that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6 11. And such were some of you but yee are washed what 's that the next words tell us But yee are sanctified but yee are justified in the name of the Lord Iesus and by the Spirit of our God Hence the bestowing of the abundant gifts of the Holy Ghost is metaphorically described by Effusion or pouring out as Esa. 44. 3. I will poure water upon the thirsty and flouds upon the dry ground I will poure my Spirit upon thy seed and my blessing upon thy buds Ioel 2. 18 I will poure out my Spirit vpon a●l fl●sh fulfilled Act. 2. For that other appellation of Fire we haue it expresly Mat. 3. 11. Hee will baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire and implied Marc. 9 49. Euery man shall bee salted with fire and euery sacrifice shall be salted with salt Grace therefore is of a diuine off-spring the immediate effect of the all-powerfull vertue of Gods Spirit whereby he replants inherent Holinesse in our Soules having purified them from
hath faith it must be administred to all and among them to some that have no faith indeed Wherefore it is as good and safe to baptize them in their infancy as to deferre it seeing at that time as well as afterwards the judgement of Charity holds good and tarry we never so long wee can goe no further than this charitable beliefe of them Wherefore to conclude the absurdity of Paedobaptisme because Infants have no knowledge nor actuall Faith whereby to embrace the promise is at the least an absurd conclusion as well for that the like inconvenience holds in Circumcision as also because where Iustification and Sanctification is given it is injurious to denie the benefite of Baptisme And wee are to know that in this case of Infants faith is not required as a Condition absolutely necessary to partake the benefit of Iustification howsoever in adult is such as are of age it be an instrument simply needfull to give them an Evidence and Assurance of it which assurance seeing it cannot be in children the actuall operation of Faith is not needfull in them But in such as are of age the case is farre otherwise whether they be Infidells or Christians children that have beene so long neglected they must have knowledge and Faith too so farre as the Church can judge of the tree by the fruit because if they have neither or knowledge only but no Grace nor sanctity of life the Church cannot but presume the worst of them as of those that yet are out of Christ rectified by their ignorance and profanenesse of Conversation which witnesseth to all the unbeliefe and impenitency of their hearts If it be now objected not to leave that scruple untouched that the Lords Supper may aswell bee given to Infants as Baptisme seeing the same presumptions may bee used here as there and that infants may make as much use of one as of the other being alike insensible of both to this I answer besides the dangerous inconveniency to their tender age which cannot endure the taking in of the very Elements of Bread and Wine that God himselfe the author of these two Sacraments hath in the manner of their Institution made a plaine difference of the persons that are to partake of them Thus briefly of the Substance of both Sacraments is one and the same viz. to set forth unto us the benefits of Christs death in our Iustification Sanctification and Glorification The Ceremonies of Administration are divers and in that sort differenced as in Baptisme they require nothing but Passion in the baptized and so may be administred to Children but in the Lords Supper they require such Actions as cannot bee performed but by those only that are of yeares of discretion such actions are those of Discerning the Lords body thankfull remembrance of the death of Christ Examination of our spirituall estate which together with that circumstance of often repetition apparantly shew that God in this Sacrament intended such an exercise of our Faith and Piety as cannot be performed by Children I will not stand longer upon this point the full descussing whereof belongs more properly to the doctrine of the Sacraments and therefore I conclude this Discourse touching the Conversion of Elect Infants with this generall rule That the Scriptures are very sparing and silent touching the case of Infants so that when they speake of Vocation Conversion Faith Repentance and such other workes of Grace done by us or in us by the Spirit of God they are generally to be understood of those that are of age and by proportion only to bee applied unto Infants Which would be observed for taking away of some doubts that may arise in reading of the Scriptures The next sort of Elect persons are those that are of Age who having some while g●ne astray are at length brought home to the Sheep-fold of Christ under the obedience of that great Shepheard of their soules Of these some are let runne longer others recovered sooner some have a more gentle and sweet passage from Mortality to Grace whose lives have beene ordered by the rule of stricter discipline others whose conversation hath beene notoriously disordered are converted with more bitter plunges terrors and anguish of Conscience some are strangely changed on a sudden upon the reading of a sentence in Scripture or hearing of a gracious word uttered in due season and deeply apprehended others wrought upon with much paines and long time in a word so various is the dispensation of Gods grace in our conversion that as Christ speakes of his comming in the flesh so may wee of this in the Spirit The kingdome of God commeth not with observation and impossible it is to set downe a generall rule that will hold in all Converts But though the manner be divers yet the meanes are Vniforme and Constant namely the Spirit of God the chiefe worker and the Word of God the subordinate instrument by which it workes our Conversion The word discovers what is to be done the Spirit inables us to the performance In Infants the Spirit without the Word in those of yeares the Spirit and the Word joyne together to work our Sanctification In which respect their conversion is properly tearmed a Vocation or Calling because it is effected by the preaching of the Gospell which is Si●ilus Pastor is the whistle or voyce of the good Shepheard which the sheepe heare and follow And from hence the whole Company of Saints is properly styled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Evocatorum coetus Saints by calling and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as t is 1 Cor. 1. 1. that is such whom God hath called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with an holy calling 2 Ton. 1 9. or unto Holinesse 1 Thes. 4. 7. by the voice of the Word from out of the corruptions of this present evill world to the communion of grace and glory All this is most excellently set downe by the Apostle Paul in those few but most pithy words containing in briefe the whole administration of the workes of our Redemption 2 Thess. 2. 13. 14. But wee ought to give thankes alwayes to God for you brethren beloved of the Lord because that God hath from the beginning chosen you to Salvation through Sanctification of the Spirit and the Faith of truth whereunto hee called you by our Gospell to obtaine the glory of our Lord Iesus Christ. Now we might iustly in this place enter upon an inquiry how and in what sort the Word and Spirit doe worke together in causing a sinners conversion a search needfull in these times wherein it is peremptorily denyed by those of the Arminian faction that there is or need to be any inward power of the Spirit working on the soule besides the outward ordinary preaching of the Word Which opinion is but the issue of their maine errour touching the liberty of Mans will in his conversion which cannot stand if withall they grant that inward Force of the Spirit giving life
well using of Naturall light is such an excellent preparation for the receiving of the Gospell Which is not so for although God shewed that favour towards learning and civility of manners that in the propagation of the Gospell through the world hee respected those Nations that excelled therein before others as appeares by the plantation of the Church among the Gentiles yet come we to particulars and t is evident the Gospell found most resistance and neglect at their hands who seemed to have used their Naturall abilities best as the learned Philosophers the wise temperate just politicke men of the world who were so farre from being the fitter to receive the Gospell that they cut of pride and fleshly wisedome were its greatest enemies Num ut quisque saith Moulin virtutis civilis laudem affectat ingenium habet multâ eruditione subactum ita eimaximè sordet simplicitas Evangelij crucis Christi scandalo magis offenditur 2. Another That a man may use his Naturall abilities well i. e. to the right worshipping and obedience of God without the grace of regeneration without faith without all knowledge of the Gospell and the will of God revealed unto man which being a grosse supposition of an utter impossibility and such a one as by consequence overturnes all Christian Religion as hath beene shewed it is manifest that this obligation wherewith the Arminians have tied God to give Supernaturall grace to the Gentiles upon their good usage of Naturall helps is void of no validity God will easily be discharged of it without forfeiture of his Iustice where the condition on mans part is so impossible to be performed And hitherto of this first question touching sufficiency of grace given to them that are out of the Church I will make an end of all with a word or two of admonition for our practice We beloved are as the Apostle speaks 〈◊〉 sinners of the Gentiles but Iewes of that circumcision which ●o not made with hands Let us then now bethink our selves what grace we have received and others want Compare we advisedly our condition at this present with that of Turkes or other Pagans and let us magnifie his mercy that hath by Grace made so great a difference betweene us and them who by Nature were all alike Wee were strangers and forreiners as they now are but we are now fellow Cittizens with the Saints and of the houshold of God which they are not A glorious priviledge and if we have grace to judge aright of it deserving to have the first place in our esteeme above all prerogatives in the world T was but a poore contentment to a dying Philosopher when he thankt his Gods for being a Crecian not a Barbarian an Athenian among Grecians a philosophen among Athenians We my Brethren have to joy in greater dignities who are Christians not Insidells true Beleevers among a world of Heretickes and Schollars among the company of true Beleevers Let mee then tell you what you know already but few of us thinke of it as we should where greater grace and favour is hestowed there more Thankes are deserved more Service is required a stricter account will be taken of both And be now intrcated by the mercies of our Lord Iesus Christ to hearken to the Apostolicall exhortation Walke worthy of that Vocation wherewith wee are called Be we ashamed that the Morality of a Pagan should outstrip our Religion that the Conversation of a Papist should disgrace the Beliefe of a Protestant that the Piety and Modesty of the Vnlearned should condemne the Vncivility and Lewdnesse of a Schollar Be not ignorant of the dignity of your Calling but if in any thing here stand upon your credit and reputation Why should not the name of Christian of Protestant of Schollar be held forth as a shield of defence against all provocations to base and unworthy courses as well as meaner titles of Gentility Honours and Offices are readily alledged against viler imploiments not besitting persons of that quality If there be any so respectlesse of his owne and regardlesse of Gods honour as by ungodly and base practices to cause those holy and pretious names wherewith we are called to be ill spoken of and Gods Name therein to be blasphemed to such a one I say only this and I wish him to heed it that God will shame that Servant that disgraces his Master and will in his time vindicate his owne glory by pouring contempt and everlasting shame upon the head of such a Caitiffe wretch Wherefore let us pray that the Lord would make us truly jealous of his and our owne honour by demeaning our selves answerably to our Holy Calling in all things to please him and glorifie his name Amen Having thus shewed the state of a meere Heathen living out of the Church and the Vnsufficiency of all meanes whatsoever that are given him in that state to worke his Conversion and Salvation wee are in the second place to descend unto the discussing of our next Question touching the Condition of those that live within the pale of the visible Church enjoying the benefit of the Word and other ordinances of Salvation Whether or no Sufficient grace be given to all and singular Christians for their Conversion unto God This Question is something perplexed and intricate by reason of divers particular queres whereinto it resolves it selfe I will by Gods helpe proceed therein as distinctly and plainely as I can First beginning with a briefe explication of the Termes of the Question where it must be in short explained 1. What is meant by Sufficient 2. What by Grace 3. What by Christians 4. What by Conversion 1. For the terme Sufficient we are to knowe that Sufficiency as it is taken in Relation to the producing of some effect is nothing but such a degree of Power or Strength in any thing as that if it be applied unto the Execution it is able to performe that whereto it was intended As we use to say of any man Hee is a man sufficient for such an imployment because if hee be set about it he can by the good parts he hath actually discharge it Where you are to observe that it is a meere abuse of this word Sufficient to oppose it to Effectuall and so to distinguish betweene the Power and the Act as if any thing could be called Sufficient in Potentia which when it is purposely applied to the Act is utterly insufficient to produce it T is an error in Speech to say This Medicine considered in it selfe is sufficient to cure such a man for t is a vaine consideration to consider the Medicine in it selfe when wee should consider it in relation to the disease And if such a medicine being administred suffice not to cure the disease it is certaine that it was an unsufficient medicine Wherefore that distinction of the grace of Conversion into Sufficientem and Essicacem is at least a frivolous imagination distinguishing those things as
opposite which at most are but subordinate and differ only as the cause and effect For is it not the fancy of some crackt braine to affirme that there is a Grace every way sufficient and powerfull enough in it selfe to worke the conversion of a Sinner and yet when this grace is given to such a sinner with a purpose and intent to convert him by it it shall be found to be utterly unsufficient to Effect it T is strange whence or how men should conceit a sufficiency in the power of such grace when they finde insufficiency in the performance of the worke 2. By the word Grace we understand some Supernaturall gift freely given unto man from God himselfe 3. By the word Christians wee meane all those that live in externall communion with the militant Church enjoying the ministery of the Word and being of yeares to make use of it for this Question toucheth not Infants 4. Lastly by Conversion as heretofore hath beene shewed we are to understand two things either 1. The Roote and Cause of that act namely the Sanctification of all the Faculties by the Infusion of Habituall Holinesse 2. The Fruite or Act of Conversion properly so called when a man regenerate and renued in all parts doth actually imploy them in loving and obeying God The first is Gods worke upon us the next our worke performed toward him when by the strength of inward Grace given we after convert our selves in Thought and Worke towards God This latter is not here to bee understood in this Question but the former namely that Conversion of a man which God workes in him by infusion of the grace of Regeneration into all parts This infusion of Grace into the Soule by an immediate act of Gods Spirit the Arminians can by no meanes endure to heare of in this businesse of our Conversion and therefore they burden this assertion with odious but untrue imputations of Anabaptisticall Enthusiasmes and of a Lazy expectation of all Grace to be poured into us sleeping without any endeavour of our owne to get it Which slanders are only devised for the countenance of that impious opinion of their owne namely That mans Conversion to God begins in some act which man himselfe performes and not in a worke first wrought in us by God Now that act of man is his assent and actuall Faith given to the promise A lewd imagination sufficiently confuted and cryed downe in the venerable assembly of the last Synod as most derogatory to the whole worke of Grace in our Vocation most repugnant to reason and Scriptures which tell us That the tree must bee good before the fruit can bee so it being impossible that an action so Holy and good as is the yeelding of Assent and Beliefe to the promises of the Gospell should be done by a man unlesse he be first regenerate and sanctified in all his faculties The termes thus explaned the state of the Question is more fully thus Whether God doe bestow upon all such as Heare the Word preached any such Supernaturall gift as is sufficiently powerfull to worke in them true Sanctification though it doe not alwayes effectually produce it Our Adversaries affirme it but we truly maintaine the Negative part opposing against their assertion these two Conclusions 1. That there is no supernaturall gift given unto the unregenerate which is Sufficient to worke his Sanctification but that only which is Effectuall to worke it This hath appeared manifestly enough in the explication of the termes of this Question and will bee more and more evident to us if we consider that maine mistake of our Adversaries in this businesse of our Conversion which is that they imagine our Conversion to begin in some act of ours namely our Assenting and Beleeving not in some act of God sanctifying the Soule before it can Assent and Beleeve Now because this act is good and therefore must be done by Gods helpe for to salve this they have found a daintie new devise of Spirituall strength infused into the Soule by the Holy Ghost which strength when it is inherent in the soule a man may use it if hee will to the producing of the act of Faith If he doe use it then by that act he is converted if not yet that was sufficient to bring forth the Act if it had beene thereto applied As in a like Case when Christ said to the sicke man Arise take up thy bed and walke Hee gave him bodily strength sufficient to doe what he bad him but yet the man might have let his bed lie and stood still if hee list So when God commands us to beleeve he gives us strength sufficient so to doe it albeit we may if we will neglect to make use of it This foule error hath bred all that confusion and darknesse wherein this controversie is wrapped up and it containes two grosse absurdities in it 1. That they suppose a supernaturall abilitie of beleeving infused into the soule by the Holy Ghost which yet shall be no sanctifying grace of the Spirit an opinion altogether new and against reason For aske them is not the inward disability of our soules to beleeve and convert a part of our corruption It cannot bee denied Well is not then the infusion of an Ability to Beleeve and Convert the doing away of that corruption It is And then shall not that gift which abolishes our sinfull infirmities bee justly called a Sanctifying grace It is most evident and none but such as are possest with the Spirit of wilfull contradiction to all manifest truth will affirme That the Rectifying of our weake and corrupt faculties by a supernaturall ability put into them and disposing them to the most excellent worke of Faith can be any thing else than the grace of Regeneration An Act so Holy must come from an Habit as Holy 2. That they suppose the Act in Divine graces goes before the Habit an assertion in Divinitie not tolerable which tells us that the Tree must be good before the fruit can be good And that Question which Christ put to the Pharisees Mat. 12. 34. How can yee that are evill speake good things is more than any Arminian cau tell how to answer This pincheth them and puts them to this choyce either that an unregenerate man who certainely is utterly Evill may by the helpe of such a gift as hath not sanctified nor made him Good not only speake but doe that which is eminently Good namely Beleeve and Convert or that the Act of Faith performed by such a one is not good and sound and so no beginning of true Conversion or that they doe confesse the Habit of Faith as of other graces to be first implanted in our soules in the universall renovation of all the Faculties thereof whence the operation of faith doth afterwards issue And this is the truth which under those obscure and unexplicated termes of Supernaturall strength to Beleeve they grant in effect for the strength is either Nothing
at all or Nothing else but that Habituall Faith which wee maintaine to be given us as a principall part of our regeneration These mistakings of the Nature of our Conversion hath utterly confounded our Adversaries in their opinions and writings about this point They speake of Sufficiency of Grace to produce the acts and operations of Faith and other vertues when the Question is meant of the Sufficiencie of Grace in producing the Habit of all Inherent Holinesse Now as in the former example of the sicke man it is one thing to enquire whether the Health and strength Christ gave him was sufficient to cause him to walk another thing to demand what vertue of Christ was sufficient to give him that health and strength so in this case t is one thing to aske whether the grace of Spirituall health or Sanctification be sufficient for the producing of the actions of a Sanctified man another thing to aske what grace is sufficient to worke in the soule the grace of Sanctification it selfe Wherefore in this matter we affirme that as Health when it is in a man is sufficient to every Naturall action though alwaies it be not effectuall because wee make not use of our strength at all times but to worke Health in a sicke man no vertue is sufficient but that onely which being applied proves effectuall to restore it So where Sanctification is it is alwaies sufficient to every gracious action if it be duely exercised thereabouts but may sometime bee ineffectuall through our default in not applying it aright but now to worke Sanctification in the heart that hath it not there is no other gift whatsoever sufficient but the onely vertue and power of the Holy Ghost the immortall seede of our Regeneration and wheresoever this onely and all-sufficient vertue worketh in the heart of any man there it is alwayes infallibly effectuall To dreame of any other inherent quality in the soule given to man as sufficient to Sanctifie the soule and yet after t is given ineffectuall to performe it is a fancy never thought of till of late times wherein mens hearts are strangely embittered in fierce opposition against the glory of Gods free Grace This of the first Conclusion the second followeth and it is this That sufficient grace for Sanctification is not given unto all This is a necessary consectary of the former for seeing Sufficient and Effectuall are all one in this case seeing t is apparant that this grace is not Effectuall in some who are never Sanctified it follows necessarily that such Sufficient grace is not given unto all This were enough to have beene said against this opinion of Sufficiency of Grace given to all within the Church But yet ex abundanti for our better satisfaction I desire your patience and attention in the further examination of this second Conclusion The truth of it will be cleered by considering what the grace is which is given to those that are within the Church Now this grace is twofold 1. The Externall Declaration of Gods will made unto all men in common by the Preaching of the Word the ordinary consequent whereof is Knowledge or Illumination And this is termed our Externall Vocation by the Word 2. The Inward gracious worke and vertue of the Holy Ghost immediately exercised upon the Vnderstanding Will Affections and whole Man The constant effect whereof is Regeneration And this is called our Internall Vocation by the Spirit In the explication of the Nature Distinction and Sufficiency of these two unto the worke of Sanctification consists the further cleering of this troublesome controversie The Orthodoxe sentence which hath beene held touching this matter agreeably to the Scriptures is this There are two things which are ordinarily wrought in men living under the Ministery of the Word 1. Illumination of the Vnderstanding 2. A touch or motion of the Will and Affections These two because they are the fountaine of all Outward actions we onely consider in this businesse letting passe such effects as are visible in mens conversations Now both these are each of them of two different sorts Illumination is either 1. Common and Naturall when a man in hearing or reading conceives the litterall sense and meaning of the Scriptures in most points of Christian Religion so that he is able to discourse dispute and write of them I call this knowledge Common because t is bestowed on reprobates as well as others I call it also Naturall because although the object thereof bee Supernaturall and Divine nor could be knowne but by revelation yet being revealed the manner of apprehending it in such a one is meerely Naturall and Carnall and that light which the Spirit affords to such a one is but some more eminent degree of that common assistance which hee gives to all that seeke after knowledge in any learning for a publicke benefite For the case is plaine enough a learned Schollar unregenerate knowes and studies Divinity in the same manner as he doth any other Art and as in them so in this hee may attaine excellent knowledge by a speciall but no sanctifying gift of the Spirit perfecting his Naturall reason but not making it Spirituall 2. Proper and Spirituall when a man by a singular gift of the Spirit of grace is inabled to judge of Heavenly things in a Spirituall manner according to their truth and goodnesse represented to the understanding in their native beauty and excellency I call this Proper because it belongs onely to the Elect and Spirituall because the Sanctified understanding judgeth of them Spiritually Thus for knowledge next touching the Motions which are wrought in the Will they are likewise double 1. Naturall when upon the understanding of threatnings or promises the Will is touched with some kinde of affections towards those things as they which are naturally hurtfull or beneficiall to it as to love hope desire feare or hate such or such a good or evill thing spoken of in the Word I terme these affections Naturall being proportionable to that first sort of knowledge that bred them For when an unregenerate man shall heare it plainly and amply declared what happinesse belongs to the Saints what comfort is in Gods favour what glory in heaven what horrour in Hell and a bad conscience hee will be easily stirred up with many desires of enjoying the one and escaping the other But this he doth in no other manner than as every man by instinct of Nature will wish and seeke for that good which he knoweth to be proportionable to his nature and also shunne the Contrarie 2. Spirituall when upon the thorough apprehension of all Spirituall Good and Evill known beleeved by Faith the Will is strongly inclined with all Constant and Vehement affections of Love and Hatred earnestly to embrace the one and detest the other above all things else whatsoever How great difference there is betweene these Illuminations and Motions in the regenerate and unregenerate I shall by Gods grace shortly have
occasion to handle at large Having now thus distinguished them let us see how these effects are appliable to their Causes the Word and the Spirit the dependance is thus 1. Common illumination and the naturall movings of the Will that follow thereupon are the effects of the ordinary grace of the Spirit in the ministerie of the Word preached 2. Proper illumination with the Spirituall affections thence arising are the Effects of the Speciall Vertue of the Holy Ghost in the ministery of the Word regenerating the Soule But we must goe further yet and whereas the Word and Spirit are both joyned together in this worke of regeneration wee must carefully see what belongs to one what to the other Wherefore we are to distinguish betweene the 1. Instrument For whatsoever can be ascribed to the Word agrees to it but only as it is an instrument of the power of Gods Spirit Now instruments are either Cooperative or Passive and the word must be one of the two Cooperative it is not moving and working on the soule by any inward force of it selfe For it cannot bee declared what operative force there should be in the bare Declaration of Gods Will to produce the reall effect of Sanctification in the unregenerate heart It is therefore in it selfe a Passive instrument working only Per modum Objects as it containes a Declaration of the Divine will and as it proposeth to the understanding and will the things to be knowne beleeved and practised Now 't is well knowne that no Object whatsoever hath any Active power per se to worke any thing upon the Organ but is only an occasion of working which some Force in or about the Organ makes use of But whence then hath the word its effect from the 2. Principall Agent the Spirit of God who by his immediate and proper vertue workes upon the Vnderstanding and Will causing in that a thorough apprehension of the things proposed and in this a cheerefull obedience to the things so understood The Object of this worke of the Holy Ghost is not the Word as if the Holy Ghost did infuse into it any speciall Vertue wherby it should worke together with himselfe as a partiall Coordinate efficient cause in our Coaversion the Word working one part the Holy Ghost another as the Arminians vainely dispute Act. Synod Defens Act. 4. p. 136. But the object of this Worke is the Soule of man whereinto this vertue of the Spirit is Infusa or Affusa or rather whereabout this Vertue is imployed quickening changing renuing the Faculties of the Soule with such spirituall strength and holinesse that so it may performe what the Word declares is to be done Which effect of Regeneration though properly it commeth only from the Sanctifying power of the Holy Ghost yet by a cōmon Metonymie it is ascribed also to the Word and for that cause wee are said to be borne againe by the Word 1 Pet. 1. 23. to get Faith by Hearing Rom 8. to bee begotten by the Holy Ghost 1 Cor. 4. 15. to be sanctified by the truth id est the Word Ioh. 17. 17. and hence such proporties as these are ascribed to the Word that it is the Power of God to Salvation Rom. 1. that it is mightie in operation sharpe as a two edged Sword Heb. 4. 12. that it is a Sword Eph. 6. 17. Revel 19. 15. that it is Fire and a Hammer to breake the Rocke Ier. 23. 29. that it is Powerfull to cast downe all strong bolds of Mans proud imagination 2 Cor. 10. 4. with many the like which though they properly belong to the invisible power of the Holy Ghost giving effect unto his owne Word yet are figuratively attributed unto the Word it selfe which he useth as his visible Instrument I cannot better expresse the manner how the Holy Ghost useth the Word in the worke of Sanctification than by a Similitude or two Christ meeting a dead Coarse in the Citie of Nain touches the Beare and utters these words Yongue man I say unto thee arise Heare the Command and that given to a dead man But could these words doe any thing to raise him No t was Christs invisible power that quickened the dead not his words which only declared what hee meant to doe by his power Againe to the sicke of the Palsie Hee saith Arise take up thy bed and walke Here 's the Command given to a sicke man But was it the vertue of these words that heald him No 't was that secret vertue which went from Christs Deity which did the Cure His words declared what that should bring to passe So in this matter of our Conversion Christ bids us Awake wee that sleepe and stand up on our feet he bids us Beleeve repent obey turne unto him c. But all these commands worke nothing of themselves but take effect by the only Power of God working upon the Heart In which case the Word is truly the Voice of God not of man Now Gods Voice is not a bare sound or word carrying such or such a meaning with it and no more as mans doth but it is Verbum factivum as well as significativum it deeth and really brings to effect that which it commands to bee done it makes a world when it bids a world to be made it raises us when it bids us arise it awakens us when it bids us awake it workes faith in us when it commands us to beleeve it gives repentance when it bids us repent it makes us holy when it commands us to be so According to that of the Apostle 2 Cor. 10. The weapons of our warfare are mighty but it is through God and that in Esa. 59. 21. My word saith God shall abide in you but this cannot be till he have first put his Spirit within our hearts Wherefore where this vertue of the Spirit is wanting as it is in most there the Word hath no other vertue than to bee as a faire Mappe presented to the eye wherein are described many matters of excellent knowledge which the unregenerate may gaze upon in a kinde of shallow heartlesse speculation which will differ asmuch from good knowledge as the knowledge of a Countrie by the Mappe and by the eye in travelling it And this is the Sentence of the Orthodox Church touching the Nature and distinction of these two Callings Inward by the worke of the Spirit Outward by the voyce of the Word The Arminians are of another opinion whose judgement about this matter is thas The Word say they and the Spirit alwayes goe together and wheresoever either the Law or Gospell is preached there and then the Quickening power and effectuall vertue of the Holy Ghost is present in all even those that are unregenerate untill such time as by Contumacy and Rebellion against the Spirit they have made themselves unworthy of further helpe But now what is this effectuall power according to the Arminians and what doth it in all men It doth say
of that Enmity and Hatred of all goodnesse which is deepely rooted in our nature we should all universally and finally reject it if it be left to our discretion whether or no wee will receive it Except our tongues be first brought unto a right temper purged from the bitternesse of our corrupt humours that have overflowed and infected them wee shall distaste the sweetnesse of all heavenly doctrine and nothing will seeme so unsavoury to our relish as the things of the Spirit And therefore of necessitie our distempered disordered and crooked dispositions must be first Rectified by an inward worke of Gods Spirit before we can possibly take any true benefit by the Word preached Thus then the truth of our second maine conclusion stands good That sufficient grace to Sanctification is not given to all that Heare the Word preached because none of those other gifts that are given them are sufficient but only the inward Vertue of the Holy Ghost and this is not bestowed on all because wheresoever it worketh it is alwayes infallibly effectuall by no meanes possibly to be hindred Which shall be further shewed in our third Question touching the Controversie But before we leave this a scruple or two cast into our way by the Adversary would bee removed They prove that the Word and Spirit are never seperated and for it they bring Scriptures and reason Scriptures 1. Esa. 55. 11. The word that goeth out of my mouth shall not returne unto mee voide but it shall accomplish that which I will and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it To which I answer that this place intendeth no more but that God will certainely performe all his promises that he maketh unto the Church If it be extended to a larger sense wee grant that at every Sermon the Prophet or Preacher makes the power of Gods Spirit is alwayes present with his Word but how to make it powerfull unto conversion in all to whom it is proposed Nothing lesse It sufficeth that that be done in some only for whose sakes God chiefly sent it For others that are disobedient God hath his worke in them too namely the accomplishment of his workes of judgement though not of Grace 2. Act. 7. 51. Yee have alwayes resisted the Holy Ghost viz. whose vertue was showne upon their hearts in and together with the preaching of the Prophet To this I answer That they that either neglect the Hearing of the Word or when they heare and understand it and are convinced of the truth of it doe wilfully refuse to yeeld obedience to what they know these are justly said to resist the Holy Ghost because they resist His Ordinance and His worke enlightening their understanding with the knowledge of Gods will The Iewes had both and resisted both but it cannot appeare by this place that there was any other Quickening vertue of Gods Spirit working effectually upon the Hearts of the Iewes only they had the Externall declaration of Gods will and also Illumination and Conviction of their Consciences which effect the Spirit workes ordinarily in most but not universally in all that heare the Word 3. Heb. 6. 4. 5. and 10. 26. 29. But these places as they touch only some of the Vnregenerate which are in that manner wrought upon not all who heare the Word preached so that worke of the Holy Ghost which appeares upon their hearts is not by that Saving and Quickening power which is the immediate and infallible cause of true Sanctification but only a more speciall degree of an inferiour grace as shall bee shewen hereafter Reasons which they alledge are th●se 1. If the inward worke of the Spirit doe not alwayes goe with the Word preached it will follow that God doth not sincerely meane that which hee makes profession of For outwardly by his VVord hee calls them unto him whom yet secretly he would not have come unto him For if he would have them come why doth he not give them that inward worke of the Spirit without which hee knowes they cannot come As for example when by the VVord he calls upon men and bids them repent and convert if hee will this seriously why doth not God bestowe on men all such helpes and meanes as are required on his part inward as well as outward without which they cannot convert If hee will it not seriously why doth hee command them to doe that which hee knowes they cannot nay we know he would not have them doe Is not this dissembling to say one thing and meane another to will one thing in word another in secret intent Answ. None more damnable hypocrites than they that will accuse God of counterfeiting Hee deales plainely fairely openly speakes as hee meanes and as it pleaseth him it should be If hee bid a wicked man doe well hee would truly have him doe so nor is it his secret desire hee should continue in his wickednesse when hee openly exhorts him to come unto repentance and amendment But here wee must distinguish betweene a double VVill in God 1. Voluntas approbationis of Allowance God as hee knowes so he likes of and approves of many good things which he intends never to bring to passe 2 Voluntas Effection●s ●●tentionis of Performance when God intends that shall actually come to passe which he approves as good in it selfe Now for the Conversion of all men by the Preaching of the VVord God wills it seriously by way of Approbation and allowance That the creature should convert to God and obey his Creator in all things is a thing truly good and God justly commands it and if the creature can by its owne strength performe it God doth truly approve and like well of it But God doth not will the conversion of all men Effectually by way of full intention to worke it in them If man can doe it as t is his bounden dutie hee should well and good God wills it as a thing in it selfe pleasing and acceptable to him But God wills not to bestow upon a man strength to doe it nor is he bound so to doe So that here is no fraud nor Sancta Simulatio or duplex persona in God as some impiously at least imagine as if his VVord had a meaning contrary to his secret intent No the meaning of his VVord is sincere what he commands he wills to be done as a thing in it selfe very good and on our parts our pure due obedience to doe it and his secret inient of not giving a man sufficient abilities to doe his dutie crosseth not his Approbation of the goodnesse and necessitie of our dutie to bee performed by us They are blinde that will not understand this that t is one thing to approve of an end as good another thing to will it with a purpose of using all meanes to effect it Gods Commandements or exhortations shew what hee approves and wills to be done as good but his Promises or Threatnings
so with us that wee know not what these things meane if to our apprehension there appeare more terror in the angry words of a King than the most peremptory threatnings of God if a reproofe of a knowne fault will be rejected by us with contempt and gall if we sleight the sweetest exhortations and the Consolations of God seeme a small matter to us if wee can with a Confident scorne of all Gods counsells hold a resolution to goe on still in our owne courses let God and his Ministers say what they list if our Corruptions trouble us not and of all things in this life we take least notice of the sinfull estate of our soules or of all pleasures and studies wee finde least content in hearing reading meditating on the Word These things are infallible Symptomes of Spirituall death that hath seazed on us and that as yet wee have not so heard the Word the Voyce of the Sonne of God as to be made alive by the hearing of it This tryall is certaine and this Change that the Word and Spirit worke in our regeneration is very sensible if wee be not sensible of it we may be bold to Censure our selves that as yet wee have it not To conclude they only heare the Word as the word of God which finde in it Gods power working Sanctification in their hearts others heare it only as the word of man which goes no further than the naturall care and understanding Where this change of the heart is not all reformation in the life is but counterfeit and hypocriticall In the two former Questions wee have examined the pretended sufficiency of Grace universally bestowed on all whether within or without the Church and shewed you that all those gifts which are ordinarily given either to Christians or Heathens are utterly insufficient for to worke their true Conversion unlesse there bee a further aide of the speciall grace of the Holy Ghost working on the Soule to the sanctification thereof Wee are at this time to come unto our third and last Question whether or no supposing such grace to be given as is truly sufficient to convert it be notwithstanding in mans power freely to choose whether he will be converted or not converted by it The Arminian affirmes that it is so and that when God directly intends to Convert a man and for that purpose affords him all gracious helpes needfull to be given on his part then Man by the liberty of his Will may resist Gods will and worke so as they shall not worke his Conversion A desperate error which whosoever maintaines it is impossible that Christian Humilitie and thankfulnesse can have any place in that mans heart Wherefore it behooves us much to be rightly informed in a point of such consequence wherein it is so easie to become an enemy against the grace of God The Question then is this Whether it be in mans power so to resist the grace of God as finally to hinder his owne Conversion In the explication of this Controversie I shall with Gods helpe proceed in this order 1. To shew unto you in briefe the Opinion and Errours of our Adversaries in this point 2. To unfold and confirme that Truth which the orthodox Church defends as touching this matter 3. To answer such Arguments as are made against it The Opinion of the Arminians touching the power of Mans free Will in the worke of Conversion is most fully and freely expressed by that perverse Sectary Iohannes Arnoldi Corvinus in these words of his so often mentioned in the acts of the late Synod and which are most worthy to be had in everlasting detestation Positis saith he omnibus operationibus gratiae quibus ad Conversionem in nobis e●●iciendam Deus utitur manet tamen ipsa Conversio it a in ●ostra Potestate libera ut possimus non converti id est nosmetipsos vel convertere vel non converters id est Suppose all the operations of Grace which God useth to worke conversion in us bee present yet Conversion it selfe remaines in that sort free in our power that wee may be not converted that is we may convert or not convert our selves This is plaine dealing without ambiguity and doubling When God hath done all that is to be done for his part 't is still on our free choyce whether wee will convert or not Their explication of this conclusion is as strange as the conclusion it selfe is hereticall It is thus there are two operations of Grace precedent to a mans Conversion 1. Illumination of the Vnderstanding in the cleere knowledge of the Law and Gospell Sinne and Grace Which illumination is not you must thinke wrought by any immediate worke of the Holy Ghost opening the understanding to discerne of Spirituall things but by the very plaine evidence of the things themselves so cleerely declared and represented to the Vnderstanding that every man having the use of reason a●d judgement and being attentive in the hearing or reading of the Word may by the help of his naturall reason without other Supernaturall light understand the sense of all things delivered in Scripture needfull to be knowne beleeved hoped for or practised This is the first worke of Grace upon the Vnderstanding the next is in the 2. Renovation of the Affections which are quickened and rectified with new motions towards spirituall things So that a man not yet converted may truly Sorrow for his offending of God Bewaile his spirituall death in sinne be inflamed with the love of the truth Desire Grace and the Spirit of regeneration hunger and thirst after righteousnesse and eternall life truly wish for deliverance out of his sinfull estate in briefe offer up to God the Sacrifice of a contrite and broken heart in Humilitie in Confession of sinne in Prayers for mercy in a Purpose and an Assay of amendment of life And thus farre the heart or affections may be changed and quickened when yet a man is not Converted Now this alteration which is wrought in affections is if you will beleeve them not any immediate effect of the Holy Ghost working this change in them but the proper cause of it is the Illumination of the understanding whereupon followes necessarily the stirring up of the affections in their right orderly motions which formerly were dead and disordered by reason of the darknesse of the minde misguiding them These two workes goe before mans Conversion and are wrought in all that heare the Word Vniversally and Irresistably the plainesse of Divine truth is such that men though they would cannot avoide the knowledge of it and the dependance of the affections on the Vnderstanding is such that their motions must needs bee conformable to the knowledge and apprehensions thereof When these two effects are wrought in a man hee is then furnished with sufficient strength to Beleeve and Convert if he will This power and strength is given him irresistably will he nill hee but for the Act of
them Yes there was and is still great need we should make this Prayer now the Gospell is revealed to the Church yet to pray for the Spirit of Revelation to reveale it to our hearts and to inlighten the eyes of our minde not only to understand the literall sense of the Word by the helpe of that Common light of the Spirit which shineth ordinarily in the Church but to comprehend with all Saints the height depth and largenesse of Gods love the riches of his glorious inheritance the pretiousnesse of the promises of Grace the power and saving vertue of the Gospell the rare excellencie and amiablenesse of all divine truth Which none can doe without the speciall worke of the Holy Ghost changing the Vnderstanding from Naturall to Spirituall by an immediat infusion of such a qualitie as inables it to discerne aright of Spirituall things I conclude this point with one reason more If to the understanding of spirituall things there bee no other illumination required but only the cleere evidence of the object plainely represented to the understanding without any further worke of the Spirit upon the Vnderstanding it selfe infusing into it a speciall strength to apprehend the things that are proposed to it then it would be knowne whether these men thinke that our intellective Facultie hath got any hurt and defect by Adams fall yea or no. It is manifest that they thinke that mans fall hath not brought any defect and weaknesse upon the power of mans understanding no not in Spiritualib●…s For marke it when Divine things are in a plaine and lively manner declared to the understanding is there any defect in the facultie that must be first amended by the Spirit before it can have the perfect knowledge of those things No say they so therebe the common assistance of the Spirit preserving unto us the right use of reason and judgement we may without any supernaturall worke of the Spirit understand spirituall things when they are plainly expounded unto us Why then here 's all the difference betweene Adam and Vs His Vnderstanding was perfect and happy because he had both the Power to conceive of things hee was yet ignorant of when they should be cleerely revealed to him and also the Actuall knowledge of wonderfull varietie in all things Our understanding is imperfect and unhappy because by our fall wee want the Actuall knowledge of almost all things especially Spirituall but yet we still retaine the same power that we had in Adam to understand any spirituall thing when it is once cleerely discovered unto us So that according to Arminius schoole the understanding of man since the Fall is like unto our Eyes in the darke the eye is well and without blemish needing no cure of any defect in it selfe yet it sees nought because the Object is not inlightened so soone as light shines on that causing a cleere discovery of it the eye without further adoe can easily perceive it But this is yet the very pride and gall of an Hereticall spirit secretly accusing the whole mystery of Gods revealed wisdome whether in the booke of nature or of Scripture as if it were wrapped up in Obscurity and Darknesse Wee forsooth have eyes and we need not that God should restore unto us the Faculty of Seeing only wee are in darknesse because things that are to be knowne are in darkenesse if God will take away obscuritie from them and make them evident to be knowne there 's no such infirmity in us but wee may know them if wee be attentive Let us from our hearts detest this odious popish imputation of obscurity laid upon Nature and Scripture as if the cause of all our ignorance were not now in the weaknesse of our Vnderstanding but in the darknesse of Gods revealing himselfe to us And let us detest that opinion which leads us upon this absurdity and learne we to confesse our blindenesse to pray that God will give us eyes and restore our understanding to its first perfection else though the light shine round about us making all things wherein God is to be knowne most appparant and visible yet wee may still lie in darkenesse and perish in our ignorance This is their first error touching the Vnderstanding of which I shall have occasion to speake more in handling the parts of Faith I now proceed to the second touching the affections which is this 2. That even in Divine things the motions of the Affections necessarily follow upon the illumination of the Vnderstanding So that when the understanding is rightly informed and thoroughly convinced the affections are presently excited in all motions conformable to the things knowne It is very strange that men of so deepe learning should yet professe so much ignorance in the estate of Mans corrupt nature as to dreame of a Correspondency and dutifull subjection of our Passions unto our Reason so that when this is rightly taught they will be truly affected even in Spirituall things Nothing more could be said of Adam in his innocency and to affirme this touching Man corrupted is to give the lie to Reason Authority and all Experience which speake the contrary The truth is this as wee are falne out with God so are we at oddes with our selves and our affections are not more often mis-led by our erroneous understanding than our understanding and right judgement is haled aside by our vitious affections What man in the world that knowes himselfe but will confesse that even in naturalibus and moralibus much more in spiritualibus he may often say with Medea Video meliora proboque Deteriora sequor Wherefore we reject this Opinion that there is no vitious inclination properly inherent in the affections besides that which is brought upon them per t●n●bras mentis through the error of the understanding wee detest this assertion as a fond and false imagination and we confesse with the Apostle that even when we know allow of consent unto the goodnesse of the Law and delight in it in part yet then wee cannot alwayes doe what we would but through the Law of Sinne in our corrupt wills and affections are led captive to disobedience Their third error is this 3. That the affections may be excitati stirred up and quickened with true love of goodnesse and hatred of evill before such time as a man be converted The Arminians are wonderfull obscure in explicating unto us their new invented opinion concerning the Excitation of the Affections which they make the second worke of Grace preceding mans true Conversion They tell us not in plaine termes what affections they meane nor yet what kinde of Excitation and Vivification it is they would have Wherefore we are more particularly to enquire of both For Affections or Passions in man they are of two sorts 1. Sensuall belonging to the Sensitive Appetite and directed by the phantasie these are common to brute beasts with us and arise from one like temper and constitution in both The object of these
it unlesse himselfe had been acquainted with the like Revelations But this is certaine God-where he comes makes himselfe knowne and such were the lively characters of heavenly majesty brightnesse and cleernesse imprinted on those Revelations that mortall mindes were infallibly ascertained of their Divinity Yea Balaam himselfe though he could have wished with all his heart not to have knowne or beleeved those revelations that so unkindly crost his hope of preferment yet when once the Spirit of God comes upon him he utters his parable with this preface Balaam the son of Beor hath said and the man whose eies are open hath said Hee hath said which heard the words of God which saw the vision of the Almighty falling into a trance but having his eies open He that was at other times driven by the divell into furious motions of mind procured by spells inchantments is now as forcibly moved 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or borne away by the power of the holy Ghost who in this revelation makes so cleere a discovery and strong impression of divine truth in the minde of Balaam that the Wizard cannot but speake what he knowes and beleeves though it quite undoe his owne desire of Greatnesse and Balacks hope of Victory Whence also this rule followes generally true That where the revelation is infallibly knowne to be of God there will be a firme assent to the truth of the things revealed Now we are further to note that upon such immediate revelations and suggestions of the Spirit is grounded that Faith which is usually stiled the Faith of working miracles A gift proper to the primitive times of the Church bestowed then on many for the better establishment of the Gospell among unbeleeving Gentiles or Iewes Though the words of the Promise runne largely Marc. 16 17. yet it seemes not likely that every private true beleever had this priviledge but rather that it was bestowed on such as were Preachers and Publishers of the Gospell for confirmation of their doctrine And amongst them t was given not onely to the truely faithfull beleever but to others also as appears by Iudas to whom this power was given as well as to the rest of the twelve Matt. 10 1. and in many other reprobate Matt. 7. 22. Lord Lord have wee not by thy name prophesied c The proper ground of this faith and assurance of working some miraculous effect was the speciall and particular suggestion of the spirit Other motives there were further off as the generall perswasion of Gods omnipotency the beliefe of that promise which Christ made to his Disciples Matt. 17. 20. Verily I say unto you if yee have Faith as a graine of mustard-seed yee shall say unto this mountaine remove hence to yonder place and it shall remove and nothing shall be impossible to you but more specially that larger promise hee made at his Ascension Mark 16. 17. 18. And these signes shall follow them that beleeve in my name they shall cast out divells they shall speake with new tongues They shall take up Serpents and if they drinke any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shall lay their hands on the sicke and they shall recover But these grounds were not sufficient to give assurance of performing this or that miraculous act without a speciall and particular suggestion of the Holy Ghost informing them inwardly both touching the time when and matter wherin they should worke a Miracle For as all beleevers had not that power so such as had it could not doe wonders when and in what kinde they pleased but were to expect a speciall warrant and direction from the Spirit like unto Peter who though a faithfull beleever yet durst not venture upon a miraculous attempt of walking dry-shod upon the water without a speciall word from Christ bidding of him come unto him in that manner Matt. 14. 28. 29. In these times wherein this speciall direction ceaseth and also miracles have no use unlesse for conversion of a Countrey where the Gospell hath never beene preached this gift also is ceased Thus much of the first sort of Revelations to bee beleeved the other followes 2. Some Mediate delivered from God by others unto us Such were the answers Sermons which the Prophets and Apostles made by word of mouth unto the people such is now unto us the whole written word of God which is now the only ordinary object of our Faith Now touching the Scriptures wee are to enquire how farre things revealed in them may be knowne how farre they must bee beleeved You have heard before the difference betweene Knowledge and Beliefe that is an assent to things evident this to things not-evident therefore seeing those things that are written are generally the object of our faith wee must diligently examine what evidence there is to bee found in these things or whether any at all that so wee may know what to judge of that assertion of our adversaries the Papists who make obscuritie one essentiall property of Faith In the opening of this question Whether things revealed in Scriptures be evident to Mans understanding let these distinctions be observed in the first place 1. The Scriptures containe in them matters of three sorts viz. 1. Precepts and Declarations of the doctrines of Religion whether in the higher mysteries thereof as of the Trinitie Incarnation of Christ c or in other inferiour points of Sanctification Piety and morall Practice And unto this head may be referred all such discourses of naturall things as are found in the Scripture as of the windes thunder c. 2. Histories of matters of Fact past and gone as of the Creation Fall of Man the Floud c. 3. Predictions of things to come hereafter whether they be meerely Propheticall or withall doe containe some speciall Promise or Threatning concerning those to whom the prediction is made 2. There is a twofold Evidence 1. One of the Narration when it is made in Words and Sentences so plaine perspicuous that the Vnderstanding conceives cleerely what the Speaker or Writen meanes 2. Another of the thing it selfe that is related when either our senses doe plainely perceive it if it be a thing sensible or our understandings doe manifestly behold the truth and reason of it if it bee only intelligible This distinction is most manifest in all discourses and specially in Mathematickes where the meaning of a Proposition or Probleme may be cleerely understood what is to bee knowne or done before one jot of the Demonstration be understood how and wherefore it must be so 3. Wee must distinguish of Mans understanding in a twofold estate 1. Of Naturall corruption as it attaines no further light of knowledge than that which may be gotten by the ordinary gift of God in the course of a learned education and painefull studie of Humanity and Divinity for such ends as men propose unto themselves 2. Of Grace and Regeneration when the Vnderstanding is inlightened and
our assent vnto Diuine Truths springs from these three fountaines 1 From the Infallible Authority of the Reuelation 2 From the excellent greatnesse and worth of things Reuealed 3 From the manifest experiment of some part of their Truth knowne vnto vs. Of these in order The first and chiefest ground whereon is built the Certainty of faiths assent is The Infallible truth and Authority of Diuine Reuelations I call this the chiefest ground because it is that whereunto finally all our Beliefe is resolued For aske the question wherefore do you firmely belieue the Articles of the ●reed The answere is Because God hath reuealed them in Scriptures to be belieued The reason of which answere is this because What euer God saith istrue Now this is a principle in Nature aswell knowne to the reasonable creature as that they haue reason it is grauen deepe vpon the conscience of euery one which tels him That God is so infinitely Wise that hee can be ignorant of nothing that none can circumuent and ouer each him And againe that he is so infinitely good holy and Iust that no ●ie can come of this truth as Iohn speaketh Iohn 2. 21. Wisedome it selfe cannot bee deceiued Truth it selfe cannot deceiue and God is both Wherefore none but a Iesuite like Beca●… whose wits haue serued an apprentiship in the mystery of lying and aequiuocation vnder the Father of ●ies would haue affirmed that the Prophets and Apostles though they knew it was God that reuealed heauenly mysteries vnto them yet they knew not Euidently whether God was not deceiued himselfe or would not deceiue them Alying surmise much like that of the Serpent when hee tempted the Woman Yea saith he hath God indeed said so Yes the woman answeres God hath said so and we know it But Satan replies Are you sure that God spake true when hee said it The Diuell then denyed it and Becanus staggers at it as a thing very doubtfull telling vs that when God speakes man cannot be euidently certaine whether he speaks true or false But we reiect with abomination such a suggestion to Infidelity that strikes at the roote of all Christian Faith and shakes the lowest foundation-stone in all that building we know and are euidently assured That God is truth and in him or of him there is no Lie From this first ground of faith in Gods Essentiall truth wee draw another that whersoeuer any Reuelation is certainely known or belieued to be of God there the reasonable creature doth fully assent to the truth of things reuealed Whence all the holy Pen-men of Scriptures did for themselues most certainely belieue the truth of all things they deliuered though sometimes they vnderstood but darkely what was the meaning of that which they spake and wrote because they knew that they were taught them immediatly from God Yea the diuels themselues when they know as they doe these reuelations to be from God howeuer they tempt men to distrust and out of malice raises vp lies and slanders vpon Gods truth yet in the meane time are themselues cleerely conuinced of this truth and doe assent vnto it in their consciences The diuell knew well that Gods threatning to Alam was a certaine truth euen whilst he perswaded him it was but a lie And when he inspired the Pharisies to call Christ. Samaritan Belzebub a possessed Daemoniacke a Deceiuer and all to nought euen then himselfe could not but confesse that he was that Christ Iesus the Sonne of the most high God Mar. 5. 7. But this is the malice of Hell to sight against the Light and furiously to oppose what we cannot but acknowledge to be truth Well Thus far then our Faith goes vpon a sure ground That whatsoeuer God saith is true And againe When wee know euidently that God sayes it wee are ready to belieue it without further question But here in the next place is all the doubt How know wee infallibly that God is the Author of the Scriptures and that such things as therein are proposed for vs to belieue are reuealed by God himselfe This is a fundamentall Question wherein it greatly behoues euery Christian to be rightly informed It would require a large discourse to bee prosecuted through euery particular I shall but onely touch vpon the generall and giue occasion to each one carefully to bethinke himselfe that his faith be built on the rocke and not vpon the Sand. The Question is How is it knowne certenly that the Scriptures are the very word of God it hath two brāches 1 Toaching each seuerall part of Scripture as it was reuealed and giuen to the Church of God How did the People of the Iewes know that what was deliuered by Moses and other Prophets after him from time to time was the word of God To which I answere they knew the writing and Preaching of Moses and the Prophets to be of diuine Inspiration partly by the holinesse of the Doctrine which they taught the liuely power and worke whereof the hearts of the godly then felt partly by the miracles which they wrought for confirmation of their propheticall office partly by the certaine and infallible accomplishment of all their prophecies Of which triall of Prophets and their prophesies wee haue a generall rule set downe Deut. 18. 18. c. I will raise them vp a Prophet from among their brethren like vnto thee and will pur my words in his mouth and hee shall speake vnto them all that I command him 19. And whosoeuer will not hearken vnto my words which hee shall speake in my name I will require it of him 20. But the Prophet that shall presume to speake a word in my name which I haue not commanded him to speake or that speaketh in the name of other gods euen the same Prophet shall die 2● And if thou thinke in thine heart How shall wee know the word which the Lord hathnot spoken 22. When a Prophet speaketh in the name of the Lord if the thing follow not nor come to passe that is the thing which the Lord hath not spoken but the Prophet hath spoken it presumptuously thou shalt not so be afraid of him By the same meanes were the preaching of Christ also the preaching and writing of the Apostles knowne in their times 2 Touching the whole Scripture as it is now compleatly deliuered vnto vs in writing How can it euidently and infallibly appeare vnto vs that what wee finde written in the Bible is of diuine inspiration the very oracles of God not mans Inuentions In the solution of this Question our aduersaries of the Romish and wee of the Reformed Churches differ irreconcileably Wee affirme that the Scriptures are knowne to be of God by themselues they maintaine that we cannot bee certaine of the Scriptures Diuinity by any other argument then the testimony of the Church which say they doth infallibly propose vnto vs what is to be belieued what is not to be belieued So that ask a Roman Catholike Wherfore do you
certainely belieue such and such Articles of Faith His answere will bee Because the Church which can discerne what is what is not of God hath infallibly decreed such and such things to be belieued Against which impious doctrine we except and say That by this meanes our Faith is resolued either into nothing at all or at the furthest but only into humane Authority 1 That is resolued into iust nothing but runs round in a Circle like a mill-horse For aske a Roman Catholike why doe you belieue the Pope cannot erre His answere is because the Scripture saith so Tues Petrus c. and Orauipro te ne deficiat sides tua and Sum v●b scum ad consummationem saculs with such other places But how know you that those places are Scripture and that that is the right meaning of those places He answeres because the Councell of Trent and the Pope say so Yea but how know you infallibly they doe not erre in saying so Hee answeres Because the Scripture affirmes they cannot erre for Thou art Peter vpon this rocke c This is the Fayries dance wherein men smitten with the spirit of giddinesse are led round in a ring being neuer able to free them or finde any resting place whereon to fixe the assurance of their Faith 2 That at best their faith is resolued finally into Mans Authority Which appeares thus aske a Papist Why doe you belieue Purgatory He will say Because God in his word hath reuealed it as an Article of Faith Zach. 9. 11. I haue loosed thy prisoners out of the pit wherein is no water i. out of Purgatory and Luke 16. Lazarus was carried into Abrahams bosome i. into Purgatory with such like Well but why doe you infallibly belieue that this is Gods word and that this is the meaning of it Hee sayes Because the Church i. Counceis and Popes say so Hee can goe no further vnlesse hee will runne round Here then hee must stay resting his Faith on mans Testimony and Authority Which hee doth manifestly forasmuch as it appeares not by any argument from the Scriptures themselues that such a doctrine as Purgatory is contained in them and therefore he assents to the truth of it finally and onely because the Church for sooth hath conceiued the meaning of those places to be such Now this is not to belieue the Scriptures but to belieue the Opinion of the Church that is to say of men like our selues Heere Becanus helpes at a dead lift by a schoole distinction thus Fidesresoluitur Formaliter in Deumprimam veritatem reuelantem Directiuè in Ecclesiā propter infallililitatē proponēdt The shift of a Sophister What Faith is it that is thus resolued Theologicall or Humane Neither saith hee Theologicall Faith is resolued into Gods authority Humane is resolued into mans authority as to belieue an Article because Calui● or Lutber teach it or say wee because Pope Paul the fift Gregory the 13. or any other Pope Cardinall Bishop or Bishops teach it What saith is it then which is resolued into the Churches authority It is saith the Iesuite neither saith neque purè diuina neque purè humana sed quasi media inferior is cuinsdam ordinis Iust so I take it men vse to speak when they cannot tell what to say It is Quasi and Aliquomodò and Alicuius generis c. It is something if they could tell what But be it what it may be if it be not a diuine Faith What shall become of the vulgar sort in their Church must they bee saued by such a middle kinde of Faith betweene Diuine and Humane This is a new way to heauen of the Iesui●es inuention wherein it will bee a matter beyond his skill so to conduct a poore vnlearned Catholike that he step not aside leaning too much vpōmans authoriti whereon he should not trust at all and too little on Gods on whom he should altogether relie Plaine folke haue no skill in such nice distinctions of belieuing God Formaliter and the Church Directiuè and it will trouble the authors of them to giue a reasonable meaning of them For what is it to belieue the Church Directiuè is it to be drawne by the Churches direction in the ministeriall Preaching and application of the Scriptures vnto beleefe of the Articles of Faith Wee grant such a resolution of our faith into the Churches authority as a motiue to induce and persivade vs to belieue But Becames denies that the Church is to be reckoned inter motiua fidei and therefore he must needs account it inter formales rationes fidei as a case of reason and proper foundation of our faith whereinto it is resolued formaliter And so it is for there is neuer a Papist that wil belieue any thing that God saith but onely for this reason because the Church allowes of it It is not the light and Euidence of Gods word by it owne selfe Euincing its owne Diuinity and Interpreting its owne meaning t is not this they rest vpon if they did what need they goe further but it is meerely formally and directly the Testimony and Opinion of men whether Fathers Councels Popes or whomsoeuer they please to style the Church This impiery is horrible and so maine an errour in the foundation of Faith that it makes the whole frame to ●otter fastening the consolation and Hope of man vpon the vncertainty of another mans testimony therby throwing him into inextricable difficulties and doubts besides offering intollerable indignity vnto God in giuing such authority vnto his seruant and vassall as tends to the contumely of the Lord and Master For so it is when a few men met together in a Councell-house or one poore sinfull illeterate Pope shal be deemed of power sufficient and iudgement infallible to set themselues downe vpon the bench and to call that word which shall iudge them at the last day vnto the bar and there to interpret ratifie or nullifie what and how themselues best pleaseth Wee might wellbe ashamed of our religion when wee dispute with Athiests and infidels if wee had no better reason to confirme our Religion but our owne testimonie because we say it is the truth and the Romish Church might blush when she pleads for her infallibilitie from those places formerly mentioned yet in sine hath no other warrant from them but onely this it is so and it shall be so because shee her selfe hath decreed that onely to bee the true meaning of those Scriptures But to leaue these absurdities blasphemies and come to the truth that which we maintaine touching the Certaintie of the Scriptures Diuine authoritie is this viz. That we are infallibly ascertained of the Scriptures Diuinitie by the Scriptures themselues I or as in other Sciences there are alwayes some principles Per se not a indemonstrabili● whence other things are proued so in Diuinitie all conclusions in point of Beliefe and Practise are proued by the Scriptures but for the Scriptures they
it is through want of something in themselves namely sanctified abilities in the heart which as they come not from the VVord so God is not bound to give them by his Spirit It sufficeth that God onely command them if they cannot obey whose fault is that but their owne Gods commands presuppose that strength to obey is or should bee in the creature if that through sinne be made weake God is yet just in commanding and punishing And thus much of this second question by way of knowledge let us briefly see what use we may make thereof to our practice it learnes us a threefold lesson 1. What our affections are to bee in hearing of the Word namely the same that in teachable Schollars towards a most wise Master or in sicke Patients towards the skilfullest Physitian We must be content to be ●●ld and every way submit our selves to the discretion of that our Heavenly Doctor Wee must remember we have to doe with more than man in this businesse t is the Holy Ghost that does all in all in this sacred ordinance When therefore we goe to heare let us put on all holy humble obedient and tractable affections A proud disdainfull selfe-conceited contentious minde is un●it for mans instruction most opposite to the wisedome of Gods teaching who must needs scorne to be their Master that thinke themselves to be too good to bee his Schollars Againe a malicious uncleane worldly voluptuous heart stands contradictory to the holinesse of this blessed Spirit Those proud affections hinder us in knowing these impure lusts in doing our Masters will both together or each alone make the Word utterly unprofitable unto us 2. What the duety of Ministers is in preaching the Word This is threefold one respecting the worke two the issue of it For the worke it selfe the nature and Spirituall quality thereof should teach them faithfulnesse to speake Gods Word as it ought to be spoke which is opposed as to negligence and accaused carelessenesse in the handling thereof contrary to the dignity and majesty of it so on the other side too overmuch diligence humane curiosity contrary to the simplicity and saving vertue thereof Not that a man can be too diligent in doing Gods worke or that it is easie to define precisely what and how farre humane helpes are to bee used in Divinity but yet this is apparant a singular fault there is in mens preparations to this worke who either intend not at all the saving of mens soules or if they doe they thinke themselves must doe as much in it as Gods Spirit Whence else or to what end should so much of man be mingled with that of God why so much study to please mens ●ares why so much care to winne credite to their owne persons c. Sure it cannot but be a thing very admirable to any that will observe it to heare a man standing as Gods Embassadour speaking as from his mouth in his Name to make a solemne praier for assistance of Gods Spirit in his preaching to blesse his Meditations that he hath put into his heart to make them effectuall in the hearers c. when in the meane time his conscience tells him that in his studied preparations hee sought for nothing lesse than the aide of the Spirit and his preaching tells us that he publisheth the words not of Gods but of mans wisedome In the Issue of this worke there is a double dutie 1. If it succeed well Thankefull Humility opposed to Pride that when men are converted by his Ministery hee ascribe all to God nothing to himselfe who was but the Saw in the workemans hand c. 2. If it succeed ill Contented Patience opposed to repining Thought as Why should not my Ministery be as effectuall as anothers is Let a Minister remember he onely sowes the seede God must give it a body of his good pleasure nor is it himselfe but God whom the people here cast off He may take comfort and shall have reward for his godly pain●… in the conscionable discharge of his duety albeit God saw it not good that it should bee so blessed in the effect as 〈◊〉 could desire 3. This teacheth us how to judge of our ●onversion by the Word preached namely by the inward Sanctification of the heart not by having and frequenting the publicke ordinance Silly wretches they are that so farre mis●ake themselves and the nature of these things as to think● the going to Church the hearing of the Sermon the remembring and discoursing ●f it the commending of the Preacher outward reverence to his Person and Ministery some kinde of Reformation of maners wrought out of very shame not to follow such plaine directions as they must needes confesse to be good and others allow of in opinion and practice that thinke I say these things sufficient arguments of a sound Conversion by the Word Let us not beguile our selves in a matter of this high consequence these things are outward but the effect of the Word is inward also upon the conscience in the change of the heart and sanctification thereof with all sacred affections to holinesses Looke then inwards and trie how wee are affected in and after the hearing of the Word Doe we finde an Holy feare to fall upon us when our sinnes are threatned are we willing to abide the Surgeons hand upon our tenderest sores and though it be painfull yet doe heartily rejoyce in the sharpest strokes and deepest cuts of the sword of the Spirit when it pierceth in to the dividing asunder of the Soule and Spirit marrow and joints parting us and our best beloved sinne Doe our hearts secretly rejoyce with joy unspeakeable and glorious in hearing those sure and stedfast promises of Mercy and Grace published in the Gospell Are our soules brought under the powerfull command of the majesty and authority of the Word captivating all our thoughts to the obedience of Christ so that no command of a King armed with greatest terrour can lay the like necessity of obedience upon our outward man as Gods injunctions do upon our consciences Hath the Word wrought in us an unfained hatred of that evill which we outwardly forsake a sincere love of that good which outwardly wee practise Can we truely mourne with much bitternesse and anguish when the Word discovers unto us the infinite corruptions and loathsome uncleannesse of our hearts so that we wish for nothing more in the world than to bee freed from the sinne that hangs so fast on us and to be cloathed with perfect holinesse Finally doe wee love the Word that hath begotten us preferring that food of our soules before our appointed bodily food If these things be in us we have a witnesse to our soules that the Word preached hath been unto us not onely in word but also in power and that the same Spirit which gave it unto the Church hath made it his most blessed instrument of our effectuall Conversion to God But if the case stand