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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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which are past and endeuoureth to forsake them in the time to come For naturally we are blinde and yet doe not perceiue our blindnesse we are most sinfull and miserable and yet doe not see our sins and miserie but with the proud Pharisie and iusticiarie Papist wee thinke our selues righteous and with the Church of the Laodiceans we imagine that we are rich and haue need of nothing not knowing that wee are wretched miserable Reuel 3.17 pour-blind and naked vntill it please the Lord to annoynt our eyes with the eye-salue of his spirit whereby we are enabled to discerne the pure gold of Christs merits which only maketh rich from the drosse of our owne workes and the white raiment of Christs obedience from the polluted ragges of our owne righteousnesse And though wee see our sinnes yet naturally wee are not sorie for them nay we delight our selues with their remembrance or if we sustaine any griefe it is not for the sinne but for the punishment which either wee feele presently inflicted or feare as being hereafter threatned vntill it please the Lord to adopt vs for his sonnes and to giue vs the spirit of adoption which mooueth vs to grieue and sorrow for our sinnes not so much for feare of punishment as for son-like affection because by our sinnes we haue dishonoured and displeased our gratious and louing father and because wee cannot wholie mortifie them so long as wee continue in this life we lamentably crie out with Paul Wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from this bodie of death And because we know that we shal be neuer freed from it altogether so long as wee liue wee wish earnestly with the Apostle that we may be speedily dissolued being contented to part with our liues because wee can no otherwise part with our sinnes Whosoeuer therefore hath this sorrow for sinne hee may be assured of his election and saluation for 2. Cor. 7.10 as it is 2. Cor. 7.10 this godly sorrow causeth repentance vnto saluation not to be repented of whereas worldly sorrow causeth death and all the promises of life and eternall happinesse are made onely to such repentant sinners and to them onely they appertaine And as Gods children are grieued for their sinnes past so doe they hate and detest them as in all others so especially in themselues which hatred causeth them to flee from them and auoide all occasions which might cause them to fall into the like wickednes striuing and endeuouring to mortifie their lusts and euill concupiscences and to leade their liues in holinesse and righteousnesse because herewith their heauenly father is well pleased Whereas the wicked man if hee bee not restrained with a seruile feare of Gods iudgements or of temporarie punishments goeth on in his sinnes with pleasure and delight adding drunkennesse vnto thirst and drawing iniquitie vnto him with the cords of vanitie Whosoeuer therefore haue this son-like care and holie endeuour of forsaking their sinnes and betaking themselues to serue the Lord in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse they may bee assured that they are elected and adopted to be the sonnes of God but those who haue no such purpose can neuer haue this assurance for if they were the sonnes of God they would be affected like louing children to such a gratious father § Sect. 5 The fift signe of the childe of God elected to saluation The fift signo is an hungring desire after Christs righteousnesse Ioh. 7.37 Reuel 21.6 is when as feeling his owne miserie and wretchednesse he earnestly desireth and euen as it were hungreth and thirsteth after Christs righteousnesse looking for life and saluation in him alone for such as these our Sauiour Christ calleth vnto him Ioh. 7.37 If any man thirst let him come vnto me and drinke and to such he promiseth euerlasting happinesse Reuel 21.6 I will giue to him that is a thirst of the well of the water of life freely of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer be more a thirst Ioh. 4. but it shall be in him a well of water springing vp vnto euerlasting life And to this we may adde also an high and incomparable estimation of Christ and his righteousnesse after that wee are assured of them whereby wee prise and value them so much aboue all worldly things that with Paul we esteeme them all but drosse and dung in respect of gaining Christ Phil. 3.8 Phil. 3.8 and are content not onely with the Merchant to sell all wee haue that we may buy these precious pearles but also to suffer tribulation anguish persecution famine nakednesse perill sword yea death it selfe Rom. 8.35 rather than wee would be separated from the loue of Christ as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 8.35 § Sect. 6 The sixt signe of the childe of God The sixt signe is the inward fight betweene the flesh and the spirit is the inward combat which they feele betweene the flesh and the spirit whereby on the one side they are drawne vnto sinne and on the other side incited vnto holy obedience now delighted in the lawe of God and yet soone after led captiue vnto sinne one while rowing against the tide of their carnall affections and another while carried violently downe the streame by reason of their weakenesse and the strength of their in-bred corruption For naturally we goe al one way without any stop opposition or resistance euen the broad way which leadeth to hell and destruction naturally we serue sinne and willingly subiect our selues to liue in the bondage of our spiritual enemies vntil the Lord doe with his holy spirit renew our will and sanctifie our affections working in vs an earnest desire to come out of this miserable captiuitie that we may attaine vnto the glorious liberty of the sonnes of God which renewing and sanctification because it is done but in part therefore is it opposed by the contrary corruption which wee haue by nature so that what the spirit loueth the flesh hateth what the spirit imbraceth the flesh abhorreth what the spirit would haue vs doe the flesh hindreth and inforceth vs to leaue vndone with whatsoeuer the spirit is delighted with that the flesh is vexed and displeased and this spirituall fight is in all Gods children as appeareth Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 which should bee so farre from discouraging vs Rom. 7.23 Gal. 5.17 that nothing more can assure vs of our election for naturally we are all flesh wholy submitting our selues to be ruled by Sathan neither is there any fight or opposition in vs for Sathans kingdome is not deuided against it selfe and whilest the strong man wholy keepeth the house all that he possesseth is in peace vntill our Sauiour Christ by the operation of his spirit thrusteth him out of his possession and seeketh to rule in vs by the scepter of his word and then the diuell rageth and striueth to keepe his hold and the flesh stormeth desiring still to serue his old maister When therefore we feele
apostle speaketh 1. Tim. 2.4 where he saith that it is the will of God that all men should bee saued 1. Tim. 2.4 and come to the acknowledging of the truth that is to the knowledge of the truth of God and assenting therunto The 2. degree a perswasion that our sins are pardonable The second degree is an assurance that our sinnes are pardonable which is wrought in vs by the knowledge and due consideration of Gods infinite mercy and Christs inualuable merites and indefinite promises of the Gospell made with out exception to ill repentant and belieuing sinners from whence also ariseth a generall hope that we shall receaue the pardon and remission of our sinnes which hope is nourished and increased by this consideration that the Lord hath placed vs in his church and gratiously granted vnto vs the outward meanes wherby we may be brought vnto vnfained repentance and haue a liuely faith wrought in vs euen the ministerie of the word and administration of the sacraments vpon which onely condition the couenant of grace and all the sweete promises of the Gospell are made and assured vnto vs. § Sect. 4 The third degree is a hungring desire after grace that is not onely to be made partakers of Gods mercy The 3. ddegree an hungring desire after grace and Christs meritts and righteousnes by which we are iustified reconciled vnto God and receaue the pardon and remission of all our sinnes but also after the meanes and instrumentall causes whereby the assurance of Gods mercy and Christs merits is deriued vnto vs namely true faith and vnfained repentance and the rest of the graces of Gods sanctifying spirit The which desire of grace is the beginning of grace neyther can wee desire it till in some measure it be wrought in vs for regeneration and sanctification is begunne at the same time in all the parts and faculties of our bodies and foules so that he who is truely regenerate many facultie or part is also regenerate in the whole man And therefore whosoeuer hath his will renewed and sanctified to desire that which is good is also sanctified and renewed in his vnderstanding affections and in all the powers and faculties of body and soule Moreouer as before I haue deliuered at large our desire of grace faith and repentance are the graces themselues which we desire at least in Gods acceptation who accepteth of the will for the deed and of our affections for the actions And therefore if we earnestly desire to repent beleeue we doe repent and beleeue in Gods sight and the Lord hath made the like gratious promises to this earnest desire of grace which hee hath made to those who find themselues plentifully indued with the graces themselues So Matth. 5.6 Blessed are they which hunger and thirst for righteousnesse for they shal be filled So the virgin Marie saith in her song Luk. 1.53 Luke 1.53 That the Lord filleth the hungrie with good things and sendeth away the rich emptie And our Sauiour Christ calleth vnto him such as thus hunger and thirst promising that he will satisfie them Iohn 7.37 Reuel 21.6 and 22.17 Ioh. 7.37 Lastly whosoeuer feeleth this desire in him ioyned with a carefull and continuall vse of the meanes whereby his desire may be satisfied he may assure himselfe that the Lord who hath wrought in him the will to desire will also in his good time worke in him abilitie to perfourme and the graces which hee so earnestly desires for hee will fulfill the desire of them that feare him he will also heare their crie and will saue them As it is Psal 145.19 So Psal 10.17 Psal 145.19 10.17 Lord thou hast heard the desire of the poore thou preparest their heart and bendest thine eare vnto them And therefore if in the middest of our afflictions and grieuous tentations wee can crie out with the Prophet Dauid Psalm 38.9 Lord I powre my whole desire before thee Psal 38.9 and my sighing is not hid from thee We may be assured how miserable soeuer wee are in our owne sense and feeling that wee are in the state of grace and shall haue our desires satisfied for he that hath begunne this good worke in vs Phil. 1.6 will also in his good time finish and perfect it as the Apostle speaketh Phil. 1.6 § Sect. 5 The fourth degree is an approaching vnto the throne of mercy that we may in all humilitie confesse our sinnes The 4. degree an approching to the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 and acknowledge that wee are guiltie of death and condemnation and also that wee may in the name and mediation of Christ obtaine the pardon and remission of them And of this the Apostle speaketh Heb. 4.16 Let vs therefore goe bouldly vnto the throne of grace that wee may receiue mercy and find grace to helpe in time of need And the Prophet Hosea cap. 14.2 O Israel returne vnto the Lord thy God for thou hast fallen by thine iniquity 3. Take vnto you words and turne vnto the Lord and say vnto him take away all iniquitie and receiue vs graciously so will we render the calues of our lips An example hereof we haue in the Prophet Dauid Psal 32.5 Then saith he I acknowledge my sinne vnto thee Psal 32.5 neyther hid I mine iniquitie for I thought I will confesse my wickednesse vnto the Lord and thou forgauest the punishment of my sinne So likewise the prodigall Sonne hauing attained vnto the sight of his sinne and to a desire of forgiuenesse resolueth to goe vnto his father and to say Luk. 15.18.19 Father I haue sinned against heauen and before thee am no more woorthie to be called thy sonne make mee as one of thy hired seruants Luke 15.18.19 § Sect. 6 The fift degree is a specially perswasion wrought in vs by Gods spirit whereby we particularly apply vnto vs the sweete promises of the gospell The 5. degree a special application of the promises and are assured of Gods loue and fauour of the remission of our sinnes for the merits righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ resting vpon him alone for our saluation An example whereof wee haue in the Apostle Paul Gal. 2.20 Gala. 2.20 Thus saith he I liue yet not I now but Christ liueth in me and in that I now liue in the flesh I liue by faith in the sonne of God who hath loued mee and giuen himselfe for mee And this perswasion ought to goe before sense and experience for first wee beleeue and are perswaded of the truth of Gods promises and resist diffidence and doubting and afterwardes followes ioyfull sense and experience of Gods mercy truth and goodnes towards vs. And hence it is that the Apostle defineth faith to bee the ground of things which are hoped for and the demonstration or euidēce of things not seene Heb. 11.1 Ioh. 20 29. Heb. 11.1 to this purpose our sauiour Christ saith to Thomas
inferiour and subordinate end is that our saluation may hereby be firmely assured vnto vs for now our saluation is not in vs but in the hands of God and it is grounded not on our owne workes and worthinesse but vpon the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ which is a most certaine and firme foundation which will neuer faile vs. And this the Apostle sheweth Rom. 4.16 whereas hee saith Rom. 4.16 that the coucnant of grace whereby wee are assured of euerlasting saluation is made by faith that it might come by grace and the promisse might be sure to all the seed § Sect. 4 Of the parts of our iustification The parts of our iustification are two the remission of our sinnes and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse for as in euery naturall man there is the corruption guilt and punishment of sinne and the absence or priuation of holinesse and righteousnesse so in Christ we haue a remedy for both for the first by his passion and suffering for the other by his actual obediēce and perfect fulfilling of the law And this is manifest Rom. 4.6.7 where the Apostle distinctly maketh mention Rom. 4.6.7 of the righteousnesse of Iesus Christ imputed without workes and of the forgiuenesse couering and not imputing of sinne That Christs actuall obedience wherby he fulfilled the law is imputed vnted vnto vs. Neither was it sufficient for the obtaining of euerlasting life and happinesse that our mediatour should by his death make full satisfaction for our sinnes both of commission and also omission but also that he should cloth vs with his actiue obedience whereby we might appeare perfectly righteous before God The truth hereof may further appeare if we consider first that our Sauiour Christ was not bound to fulfill the law for himselfe because hee was from the first moment of his conception assumed into the hypostaticall and personall vnion with the second person in Trinitie and consequently was not onely man but God also and therefore not bound to any law neither needing any legall righteousnesse being already indued with a farre more excellent righteousnesse euen the righteousnesse of God So that either our Sauiour perfourmed obedience to the law to no purpose or els to this end that he might impute it vnto vs and thereby indue vs with such a most perfect and euerlasting righteousnesse as might giue vnto vs the right of eternall life Secondly if onely our sinnes were pardoned and wee not not made partakers of Christs actiue righteousnesse our imputed righteousnesse should not excell the righteousnesse of Adam before his fall for he neither cōmitted sinne of omission nor commission till he transgressed Gods commaundement in eating of the forbidden fruit but we are made partakers of a more excellent righteousnesse by faith then we lost in Adam euen the righteousnesse of God by the faith of Iesus Christ Rom. 3.22 as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 3.22 which consisteth not onely in the absence of euill and sinne but in the prefence also of actuall holinesse and righteousnesse Thirdly and lastly because it is my purpose onely to touch this point by the way as not so properly belonging to this treatise wee are vnited vnto Christ Iesus and he is become our head and we his members by reason of which vnion as he communicateth himselfe vnto vs so also that which belongeth vnto him as he is our mediatour and consequently not onely his passiue obedience whereby he hath made full satisfaction for our sinnes but also his actuall righteousnesse whereby he perfectly fulfilled the law And thus it appeareth that our iustification consisteth of two parts the first the remission of our sinnes for the full satisfaction of Christ by his death and sufferings the other the imputation of his habituall and actiue righteousnesse The remission of sinnes is the first part of iustification whereby God forgiueth for the death and full satisfaction of Christ all our sinne both originall and actuall both in respect of the guilt and punishment so as they shall neuer be imputed to our condemnation neither in this life nor in the life to come Psal 32.1 And of this the psalmist speaketh Psal 32.1 Blessed is the man whose wickednesse is forgiuen and whose sinne is couered 2. Blessed is the man vnto whom the Lorde imputeth not iniquitie So the Apostle saith that God was in Christ and reconciled the world to himselfe not imputing their sinnes vnto them 2. Cor. 5.19 2. Cor. 5.19 The imputation of Christs righteousnesse is the other part of our iustification whereby God imputeth vnto euery beleeuer the righteousnesse of the mediatour Iesus Christ as if it were properly their owne and perfourmed by them that being clothed therewith they may bee perfectly righteous in Gods sight and so obtaine the right vnto euerlasting life and happines And of this the apostle speaketh Rom. 4.6 Rom. 4.6 Euen as saith hee Dauid declareth the blessednesse of the man vnto whom God imputeth righteousnesse without workes Rom. 9.30 and Rom. 9.30 The Gentiles which followed not righteousnesse haue attayned vnto righteousnesse euen the righteousnesse which is of faith So Phil. 3.8.9 Phil. 3.8.9 The Apostle saith that hee accounted all things losse and iudge them to bee dunge that hee might winne Christ and might be found in him not hauing his one righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is of the faith of Christ euen the righteousnesse which is of God through faith Ier. 23.6 Now this righteousnesse of Christ is twofold his habituall and inhaerent holinesse and innocencie whereby he was free from all corruption and sinne both originall and actuall and indued with all holinesse and puritie of nature from the first moment of his conception And of this the Apostle speaketh 2 Cor. 5.21 He that knew no sinne was made sinne for vs. 2. Cor. 5.21 1. Pet. 2.22 Heb. 4.15 and 1. Pet. 2.22 Who did no sinne neither was there any guile found in his mouth So Heb. 4.15 He is said to be without sinne And 1. Pet. 1.19 1. Pet. 1.19 Ioh. 8.46 Hee is called the lambe vndefiled and without spot And himselfe challengeth the Iewes Ioh. 8.46 Which of you can rebuke me of sinne And this holinesse being imputed vnto vs is opposed to our originall sinne and naturall corruption The other is his actuall righteousnesse whereby he perfourmed perfect obedience vnto the law in all his thoughts words and deeds through the whole course of his life And this being imputed vnto vs and becomming ours by reason of that vnion which is betweene Christ and vs is opposed vnto our actuall transgression whereby wee haue broken the whole law of God both in omitting the duties which are commaunded and in committing the vices and sinnes which are forbidden The persons who are thus iustified are all the faithful and they onely who doe apply the righteousnesse of Iesus Christ vnto themselues by a true and liuely faith And thus the Apostle doth
the Father sanctifieth vs by giuing vs his sonne and sending his spirit and therefore this work is ascribed vnto him Tit. 3.5 Eph. 2.4.5 God the sonne sanctifieth vs by mortifying our sins by vertue of his bloud purging our consciences from dead workes that wee may serue the liuing God and by vertue of his resurrection raising vs also from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and lastly by his death hath merited for vs Gods spirit and rising againe hath sent him vnto vs whereby wee are regenerate and therefore hee also is said to haue sanctified vs and God is said to haue sanctified vs in him Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 Eph. 5.26 1. Cor. 2.11 God the holy Ghost also sanctifieth vs by applying the vertue of Christs death and resurrection vnto vs and so immediatly beginneth continueth Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 and perfecteth this worke in vs and therefore most vsually in the Scriptures this worke is ascribed vnto him Ioh. 3.5 6. Act. 11.16 Tit. 3.5 And thus it appeareth that God himselfe is the principall and onely efficient cause of our sanctification vpon which point I haue the longer insisted to the end that wee should not in this worke rest vpon our owne strength for then wee shall be subiect to many discouragements and lie open to innumerable temptations grounded vpon our small measure and slow progresse in our sanctification as also vpon the great difficulties and manifolde discouragements which both stay vs in the birth and hinder our full growth in true godlinesse all which in respect of our owne power prooue this worke not onely hard but euen impossible for vs to be perfected and accomplished But rather that wee relie our selues vpon the Lords infinite power and gracious promises whereby wee are assured notwithstanding our owne exceeding weaknesse that he will not onely begin but also finish and perfect this good worke in vs. § Sect. 3 And thus much concerning the principall efficient cause of our sanctification The motiue cause Gods sole mercie the motiue cause which mooued the Lord to sanctifie vs was his owne mercie and Christs merits The first is expressed by the Apostle 1. Pet. 1.3 whereas it is said 1. Pet. 1.3 that God according to his abundant mercie hath begotten vs again c. The other is implied by Paul Eph. 2.5 where hee saith that God hath quickened vs in Christ Ephes 2.5 who by his death merited not onely the remission of sinne for vs but also Gods spirit whereby wee are sanctified So that it was not any good inclination vnto holinesse in vs or any thing els wherein we excelled others which moued God to sanctifie vs Eph. 2.1.3 for wee were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely his owne boundlesse mercie and the alsufficient merits of Christ our Sauiour were the onely causes which moued the Lord to giue vs his spirit whereby we are regenerate and raised from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life And therefore let vs not arrogate the praise of our sanctification in whole or in part vnto our selues but ascribe all the glorie to God who is the sole author and finisher of it § Sect. 4 The instrumentall causes of our sanctification Of the instrumentall causes of our sanctification Ioh. 15.3 and 17.17 Iam. 1.18 1. Pet. 1.23 are either externall or internall the external are first the word of God of which our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 15.3 Now are you cleane through the word which I haue spoken vnto you And cap. 17.17 Sanctifie thē with thy truth thy word is truth So the Apostle Iames chap. 1.18 Of his owne will begat he vs with the word of truth c. And the Apostle Peter affirmeth that we are borne anew not of mortall seede but of immortall by the word of God c. The word of God therefore is an instrumentall cause of our sanctification In which respect also the Ministers by whose ministerie wee are conuerted and regenerate are said to be our spirituall fathers who haue begotten vs vnto God 1. Cor. 4.15 Philem. v. 10. as appeareth 1. Cor. 4.15 and Philem. vers 10. in both which places Paul chalengeth this title vnto himselfe Another externall cause of our sanctification are the Sacraments especially the Sacrament of Baptisme whereof it is that Ananias saith vnto Paul Act. 22.16 Arise and be baptized wash away thy sins Act. 22.16 Eph. 5.26 So Eph. 5.26 it is said that Christ gaue himself for his Church that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word The which places as they are to be vnderstood principally of the washing of iustification wherby we are purged from the guilt and punishment of sinne so also of the washing of sanctification whereby we are cleansed from the sinnes and corruptions themselues The internall instrument of our sanctification is a liuely faith without which the other outward instruments are vneffectuall in those who are of yeeres neither must we think that the bare action of hearing or the outward washing take away our sins and corruptions vnlesse the word and things signified in the Sacraments bee applied vnto vs by a true faith For the word which we heare profiteth not vnlesse it be mixed with faith in those that heare it Heb. 4.2 Heb. 4.2 And vnlesse those that are capable of faith beleeue with all their heart Act. 8.37 it is to no purpose to be baptized Act. 8.37 and therefore vnto the other we must ioyne this instrument of a liuely faith if wee would attaine vnto true sanctification For faith purifieth the heart and is fruitfull in the workes of loue Act. 15.9 Gal. 5.6 as the Scripture speaketh § Sect. 5 And thus haue I set downe the efficient causes of our sanctification Of the manner how our sanctification is wrought in the next place let vs consider of the manner how this worke is wrought in vs. For the vnderstanding whereof we are to know that wee being vnited vnto Christ principally by Gods spirit and instrumentally by a liuely faith and so made members of his mysticall bodie doe participate the vertue of his death buriall and resurrection whereby not onely our iustification but also our sanctification is deriued vnto vs. For first by vertue of his death our sinnes are mortified and our corruptions crucified together with him as appeareth Rom. 6.6 Knowing this Rom. 6.6 that our old man is crucified with him that the bodie of sinne might be destroyed that hencefoorth we should not serue sinne Secondly by vertue of his buriall this death of sinne is as it were further continued and thereby our sinnes and corruptions are more and more subdued and kept vnder that they cannot rise and rebel against the spirit And of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6.3 where he saith Rom. 6.3 that we are buried with Christ into his death Thirdly by vertue of
cause of our mortification which is the vertue and efficacie of Christs death and buriall Rom. 6.4.5 communicated and applied vnto vs by the spirit of God whereby wee are ingrafted into the body of Christ and so made partakers of the power and vertue of Christs death which being deriued vnto vs doth not onely take away the guilt and punishment of sinne but also doth mortifie and kill our naturall corruptions which heretofore wholy ruled and ouerswaied vs. Secondly the forme manner and progresse of this worke is here expressed namely the weakning subduing and killing of our corruption by little and little so that this worke is not perfected at once and in an instant but by degrees first it is weakned and the power thereof somewhat abated so as though it beare sway in vs yet it doth not wholy ouerrule vs without resistance as it was vsed to doe in the time of our ignorance then being further enabled by vertue of Gods spirit working in vs we preuaile against it so that though it often rebell yet doe we subdue it and obtaine victorie Lastly obtaining a greater measure of the spirit we mortifie and kill it that is though we doe not vtterly depriue it of life and motion yet we giue it such a deadly wound that it neuer recouereth his former strength but still pineth and languisheth till with the death of the bodie it also dieth and is wholy abolished Now whilest it is in this consumption and neere vnto death hauing a long time before been weake oftentimes it seemeth to recouer strength and to offer some violence vnto the regenerat part but this must not discourage vs as though now it were on the mending hand and like to be restored to it former health and strength for as it fareth with those that lie vpon their deathbead so it is with our sicke flesh and the corruptions thereof after that nature seemeth spent and the power thereof wholy decayed oftentimes falling into some grieuous fit wherein there is a fight betweene life and death their strength seemeth redoubled and farre greater than euer it was but bee of good comfort it is no signe of health but a pange of death which neare approacheth And thus you see the death of sinne and our naturall corruption Now as in the death of the body there is a certaine progresse therein namely when the dead carcase is also buried so also there is not only a death of sinne Rom. 6.4 Col. 2.12 and 3.3.5 but also a buriall the which is wrought by the vertue of Christs buriall applied vnto vs by Gods spirit whereby it commeth to passe that sinne which is already slaine and dead doth so remaine and continue so that this buriall of sinne is nothing else but the further progresse and continuance of our mortification Of this the Apostle speaketh Rom. 6.4 Rom. 6.4 We are buried then with him by baptisme into his death c. So Col. 2.12 § Sect. 3 And thus haue I shewed what our mortification is That the worke of mortification is hard and necessarie which as it is a worke most hard so also most necessary the difficulty appeareth by the name which is borrowed from the practise of Chirurgeons who before they cut off any member doe first mortifie it that after they may take it away with lesse sense of paine And this is implyed by our Sauiour Christ whereas hee inioyneth vs if our right hand or eye offend vs to cut it off and plucke it out and plainely expressed by the Apostle Paul Col. 3.5 Mortifie therefore your members which are in the earth fornication vncleanenesse Col. 3.5 the inordinate affection euill concupiscence and couetousnesse c. where calling these sinnes by the name of members he intimateth thus much that they are as deare vnto vs as the members of our body and also that it is as vnpleasant and painefull vnto vs to forsake our naturall corruptions as to be depriued of the hand eye or foote But though this worke be most hard yet it is most necessary for the best things that are in the flesh and vnregenerate part euen the wisedome thereof is death and enmitie against God Rom. 8.6 7 8. because it is not subiect to the lawe of God neither in deede can be Rom. 8.6 7. neither can we doe any thing pleasing vnto God so long as we are in the flesh as it is verse 8. Lastly if we liue after the flesh we shall dye euen the euerlasting death of body and soule but if wee mortifie the deeds of the body by the spirit wee shall liue euen the life of holinesse and righteousnesse vpon earth and the life of glory and eternall happinesse in Gods kingdome And therefore if it be necessary to be in amitie with God whose louing kindnesse is better than life Psalm 63.4 or to performe obedience vnto the lawe of God or to doe any thing pleasing in his sight or to escape death and damnation or to inioy life and eternall saluation then is it also necessarie to mortifie the flesh and the lusts thereof how hard and vnpleasant soeuer this worke seemeth vnto vs. So that the difficulty must not discourage vs but rather double our diligence and because it is a paine intollerable to part with our sinnes so long as they remaine like liuely members of the body of our flesh therefore as Chirurgians to make the paine tollerable to the patient doe first vse meanes to mortifie themember which they purpose to cut off so let vs vse all good meanes to weaken the strength of sinne and to mortifie our carnall affections and then we shall suffer them to be quite cut off and taken from vs without any extraordinarie passion or sense of paine § Sect. 4 And so much concerning our mortification Of Viuification what it is and the causes thereof wherein the spirit of God communicating and applying vnto vs the vertue and efficacie of Christs resurrection doth raise vs vp from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life The cause of our viuification is the vertue and efficacie of Christs resurrection applied vnto vs by Gods spirit the which vertue flowing from his deitie was first powerfull in his owne flesh raising it out of graue and giuing it victorie ouer sinne and death and being deriued from our head and communicated vnto vs who are members of his body it doth also reuiue vs who were dead in our sinnes and inableth vs to leade a new life in holinesse and righteousnesse according to the rule of Gods word This appeareth Rom. 6.4 where he saith that we are buried with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glory of the father so we also should walke in newnesse of life Phili 3.10.11 So Philip. 3.10 11. where Paul desireth not onely to bee clothed with the righteousnesse of Christ applied by faith for his iustification but also to know and
arme our selues against aduersitie howsoeuer by the grace and blessing of God aduersitie the worlds churlish sonne oftentimes worketh these good effects yet in it selfe it is a temptation and that a strong one to draw vs from God by causing vs to murmure and repine yea as Sathan said of Iob to curse God to his face to enuie all who seeme vnto vs more happie then our selues to despaire of Gods mercie and to vse vnlawfull meanes that thereby we may better our estate And therefore it behoueth vs to arme our selues against the violence of this enemie also least building our houses vpon the sands of securitie they be ouerturned when the winds of afflictions and floods of aduersitie and persecution blow and beate against vs. And to this end we are to remember first that these fatherly corrections are euident testimonies to assure vs that we are not bastards but Gods deare children whom he gently chastiseth that wee may not be destroyed with the world Heb. 12.6 7 8. that now Christ hath chosen vs out of the world seeing the world hateth vs Ioh. 15.19 that now wee are the friends of God when the world Sathans eldest sonne becommeth our enemie for so long as we are of the world the world loueth vs for it loueth her owne Secondly let vs continually remember the recompence of reward then shal we with Moses volūtarily chuse rather to suffer aduersitie with the people of God Heb. 11.25.26 than to enioy the pleasures of sin for a season esteeming the rebuke of Christ greater riches than the treasures of Egypt as it is Heb. 11.25 26. Thē shall we endure to be tried and purified in the fornace of afflictions if we know that after we are found to be pure gold the Lord will lay vs vp in his treasurie of euerlasting happines Lastly let vs remember that eternall blessednesse is promised to those that mourne with a godly sorrow and eternal woe denounced against those who pamper themselues with worldly delights Matth. 5.4.10 Matth. 5.4 Blessed are they that mourne for they shall be comforted So vers 10. Blessed are they which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake for theirs is the kingdome of heauen Luk. 6.21.25 Luk. 6.21 Blessed are ye which hunger now for ye shall be satisfied blessed are ye that weepe now for ye shall laugh And vers 25. Woe be vnto you that are full for ye shall hunger woe vnto you that now laugh for ye shall waile and weepe And least the tediousnesse of our troubles should discourage vs or the waight of them presse vs downe the Apostle telleth vs that they are but light and momentanie causing notwithstanding vnto vs a farre most excellent and eternall waight of glorie 2. Cor. 4.17 2. Cor. 4.17 Why therefore should this little spot of foule way cause vs to stand still or goe out of our course which leadeth to euerlasting happines CHAP. VII Of the flesh and the strength thereof § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the world The second enemie which assisteth Sathan against vs is the flesh which is that inborne traytor which wee nourishing in our selues doth opē a gate in our soules into which Sathan and the world may easily send whole troupes of temptations to enter and surprize vs. By the flesh we are not to vnderstand the bodie alone and the flesh thereof VVhat the flesh is but that corruption of nature which hath defiled both bodie and soule being spread and mixed with euery part of both euen as the light is mingled with darknes in the twilight or dawning of the day whereby wee are made prone to all sinne and readie to entertaine all temptations which promise the satisfying of any of the lusts thereof This secret traytor conspiring with Sathan and the world to worke our destruction doth entertaine and further all their temptations it fighteth and lusteth against the spirit it rebelleth against the law of our mindes and leadeth vs captiue to the law of sinne it hindreth vs from doing the good we would and maketh vs commit the euill which wee hate as it is notably set downe Rom. 7. So Gal. 5.17 Rom. 7. Galat. 5.17 The flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and these are contrarie the one to the other so that ye cannot doe the same things that ye would This enemie the holy Ghost in the Scriptures deciphereth by diuers names for it is called the old man the old Adam the earthly carnall and naturall man the sinne which is inherent and dwelleth in vs the adioyning euill the law of the members the lusts of the flesh which fight against the soule by all which is signified our corruption of nature which is deriued from our first parents whereby wee are made backward vnto all good and prone vnto all euill vnapt to entertaine any good motions of Gods spirit but most readie to receiue and imbrace all the suggestions and temptations of the world and the diuell as the waxe the print of the seale or the tindar fire And this the Apostle Iames sheweth chap. 1.14 Euery man is tempted when he is drawne away by his owne concupiscence and is enticed Iam. 1.14.15 15. Then when lust hath conceiued it bringeth foorth sinne and sinne when it is finished bringeth foorth death So that as Sathan is the father so the flesh is the mother of sinne which receiuing Sathans temptations as it were into a fruitfull wombe doth conceiue nourish and bring forth sinne which no sooner is borne but like a deadly stinging serpent it bringeth death to bodie and soule vnlesse the poyson thereof be ouercome and taken away by the precious bloud of Christ § Sect. 2 And thus you see what the flesh is The treacherie of the flesh and how it conspireth with Sathan in seeking our destruction whereby appeareth the treacherie and dangerousnes of this our enemie The treacherie thereof is hereby manifest in that being in outward shew a deare friend and more neere than an alter idem another selfe it notwithstanding aideth Sathan to our owne ouorthrow So as wee may complaine with Dauid Psal 41.9 My familiar friend whom I trusted Psal 41 9. which did eate my bread hath lift vp the heele against me For this Iudas which daily followeth vs and eateth drinketh and sleepeth with vs doth betray vs into the hands of those enemies who seeke our life and that when it seemeth louingly and kindly to kisse vs. And as it is most treacherous so also most dangerous and hard to be ouercome for as much as it is in our self and the greatest part of our selfe and therefore we cannot forsake it vnlesse we forsake our selues Mark 8.34 That the flesh is a most dangerous enemie we cannot fight against it vnlesse we raise intestine and ciuill warres in our owne bowels we cannot vanquish it vnlesse wee subdue our selues and if we seeke to runne away from it wee might as easily flee
to attaine vnto the land another while feareth seeing no place where to light till at last being so weary that she can flie no further she falleth downe and is drowned in the sea So these one while hope and soone after finding their owne infirmities and not seeing where they may rest their wauering minds doubt and feare till at last through wearinesse they sinke downe and are swallowed vp in the gulfe of desperation where they are drowned and destroyed if it doe not please the Lord to lift them vp again and to shew them the firme Rock Iesus Christ whereupon they may rest their wearie mindes and refresh their fainting soules which hee alwaies doth perfourme to those that belong to his election for it is impossible that any of them should perish though Sathan and all the power of hell seeke their ruine and destruction But at this marke Sathan aimeth though hee neuer hitteth it and though he neuer finally preuaile yet to this doubting and in the end despairing he laboureth to perswade the true Christian neither doth hee content himselfe with the forces of his owne temptations but he ioyneth with him the world which is as readie as Sathan himselfe to oppugne the certaintie of our election and our owne trayterous flesh which is easily moued to doubting and despaire when as it seeth nothing in it selfe whereupon it may rest In the world he maketh his choise not of sillie ignorant men but of the most subtill Sophisters and learned Doctors the true successors of the Scribes and Pharisies euen the whole rabble of the Popish clergie who stand on Sathans part stoutly fighting his battailes being perswaded and ouercome by that temptation which our Sauiour Christ withstood All this will I giue thee For to what end I pray you doe these great Doctors so stifly stand in the defence of Sathans cause perswading men might and maine to doubt of their election and consequently of their saluation Surely that by emptying mens minds of all true comfort they may fill their own chests and get the treasures of the earth into their possessions For when the weake conscience wauereth and doubteth of his election and not finding any true consolation whereupon it may rest commeth vnto them for some comfort and better assurance they behaue themselues like vnto vngracious Surgeons who intending to make a pray of their patients and to get their gains out of their pains and tortures do one day heale and the next day hinder the cure making the wound worse than it was whē they took it in hand til at last they haue so poysoned the sore that it is past their cure whereas they could easily haue healed it if they had not regarded their profit more than their own credit or their patients health or like vnto deceitfull Lawyers who somtimes speake in their clients cause and sometimes betray it going about in a tedious circuit whereas the direct way lieth open before them that so their clients cause being made more doubtfull tedious themselues impatient of delaies are faine to double and trebble their fees and yet oftentimes to no purpose because the more they receiue the fitter they thinke them to be their perpetuall Clients So doe these Popish Chirurgeons and Romish counsailers deale with their Pacient and Client for shewing his wounded conscience and desiring some comfort at their hands they will not make any soueraigne salue of the simples which they might gather out of Gods word whereby he might soone be healed for then their cure and consequently their gaines were at an ende but they holde him in suspense and increase his disease of doubting applying thereunto poysons in stead of salues whereby at last his wound is made desperate Thou canst not will they say attaine vnto any certaine assurance of thine election for that were fond presumption but thou art to hope well and that thou maist confirme thy hope thou must make vowes and goe on pilgrimage to inuocate and offer vnto these and these saints thou must doe these workes of supererogation build such a Monastery repaire such a Church giue so much money to such a Cloister buie these Indulgences whereby thou maist receiue pardon for thy sinnes and for more surety sake thou shalt at thy death bequeath so much money to the Priests for Masses Trentals and Dirges that if it happen thou goe into Purgatorie thou maist speedely be deliuered but all this while they speake not a word of Gods vndeserued grace and free election not a syllable of Christs death and satisfaction for our sinnes no this were too soueraigne a salue and would too soone heale the wounded conscience and so marre the market of these mount-bankes making their Vowes Pilgrimages Masses Dirges Indulgences and other trumpery-ware not worth the cheapning § Sect. 2 But let vs consider the state of the question betweene vs and Sathan with his Doctors and Proctors The state of this question betweene the Christian and Sathan with his assistants whom he feeth with worldly riches to pleade his cause We hold that a man truly conuerted indued with a liuely faith and sanctified may ordinarily be assured that he is the child of God elected to saluation but they affirme that it is presumption for such to haue any certaine assurance hereof vnlesse it be by extraordinary reuelation he may hope indeede that he is elected and shall be saued but this hope must he tempered with feare and mixt with doubting and this doubting they call humilitie which they doe not account an infirmitie but rather a vertue which doth commend their faith esteeming firme assurance to be but hereticall confidence and damnable presumption and pronouncing him accursed in their councell of Trent who affimeth that we are to beleeue without doubting the remission of our owne sinne and euerlasting life in particular And because they cannot but confesse that doubting and beleeuing in themselues are opposed one against another they teach that their faith is assured of Gods mercy and Christs merits as in themselues infinite and sufficient but it doubteth in respect of our vnworthinesse and manifold imperfections to apply them particularly vnto our selues so that when we looke vpon God and Christ there is cause of firme assurance but when we looke vpon our selues there is nothing but matter of doubting there is in deed some place left to their staggering hope but none to assurance of faith as though our faith were grounded on our owne worthinesse and not vpon Gods free mercy and Christs merits and as though resting vpon these alone it could not haue certaine assurance of our election and saluation notwithstanding our vnworthinesse and corruptions But let vs arme our selues against this their doctrine which containeth nothing else but principles whereupon sathan may ground his temptations whereby he perswadeth vs first to doubting and afterwards to despairing of our election and saluation for when the troubled conscience hath no other assurance of Gods loue and his owne election but
and power in punishing their sinnes which they commit with greedines but he is glorified when hee mercifully deliuereth repentant sinners out of the bondage of sinne and Sathan who are wearie of their captiuitie and desire nothing more then freedome that they may in the rest of their liues serue him their redeemer in the duties of holines and righteousnes And therefore they who liue in their sinnes without repentance continuing still traytors to God seruants of Sathan can haue no assurance of their redemption for the Lord hath therefore bought vs 1. Cor. 6.20 with a price that we should glorifie him both in our bodies and soules and therfore those who in sted of letting their lights of holines and righteousnes shine cleerly before men that their heauenly father may be glorified doe nothing els but dishonor him by their sins and wicked conuersation shew plainely that the redemption wrought by Christ doth not as yet appertaine vnto them § Sect. 4 Fourthly Three degrees of our redemption which alwaies concurre we are to know that the worke of our redemption wrought by Christ consisteth of three parts or degrees for first Christ redeemed vs by paying the price of our redemption and thus he is said in the Scriptures to haue redeemed vs with his blood Secondly he redeemeth vs when as he applieth this benefit of our redemption vnto vs in particular and doth thereby free and deliuer vs from the diuell sin and death so as we are no longer in their bondage subiect to their power and gouernment although we be continually assaulted and often foyled by them thirdly he redeemeth vs when as he perfectly freeth vs not onely from the power and gouernment but also from the assaults and molestations of all our spirituall enemies and giueth vs eternall peace in his kingdome The first was wrought immediatly by himselfe when as he paied a sufficient price for our redemption and thereby fully satisfied his fathers iustice the second he worketh by his owne spirit whereby he doth dispell out of our minds and hearts the darke mists of ignorance and infidelitie and by the glorious light thereof doth illuminate our vnderstandings with the beames of true knowledge and a liuely faith so that we know acknowledge and beleeue that Christ is our sauiour and redeemer and are assured that he hath freed vs from the bondage of our spirituall enemies after which assurance hee begetteth in vs an earnest desire of beeing more and more freed from them actually and an holy indeauour of withstanding all their assaults and temptations whereby they labour againe to bring vs into their captiuitie and withall enableth vs with some measure of strength to withstand and ouercome them and reneweth and confirmeth this strength receiued when in the conflict of temptation we are weakned and haue receiued the foyle that we may rise vp againe and afresh maintaine the fight Lastly our Sauiour Christ redeemeth vs when as he perfectly freeth and deliuereth vs from our spirituall enemies at his second comming when as we shall not onely not be ouercome nor foyled of them but also not so much as once assaulted And of this redemption our Sauiour speaketh Luk. 21.28 Luk. 21.28 When saith he these things begin to come to passe then looke vp lift vp your heads for your redemption draweth neere And these are the three degrees of our redemptiō which alwaies follow one another for for whomsoeuer Christ hath giuen himselfe as the price of their redemption to those also hee giueth his holy spirit which doth illuminate the eyes of their vnderstanding blinded with ignorance and sanctifieth their will and affections working in them a desire and holy indeauour of seruing the Lord in holines and righteousnes and of withstanding the temptations of the flesh the world and the diuell And whomsoeuer he thus redeemeth out of the power and gouernment of their spirituall enemies those he will perfectly redeeme and deliuer from all their malicious attempts and giue them the eternall peace of his kingdome But those who haue not their part in the second degree that is those who continue in their blind ignorance and in the naturall pollution of their will and affections willingly subiecting themselues to the seruice of sinne and Sathan and stubbornly withdrawing their stiffe neckes out of the yoke of holy obedience vnto Gods commaundements they can neuer haue any assurance that Christ hath redeemed them by paying the price of his blood nor will deliuer them at his second comming out of the bondage of Sathan in which they haue liued all their life time with pleasure and delight for whomsoeuer hee ransometh with the price of his blood those he freeth out of the gouernment of their spirituall enemies sinne death and the diuell and therefore they that still liue in sinne as our Sauiour saith Ioh. 8.34 Ioh. 8.34 1. Ioh. 3.8 Rom. 6.16 yea the seruants of Sathan also as the Apostle teacheth 1. Ioh. 3.8 For their seruants we are to whom we obey whether it be of sinne vnto death or of obedience vnto righteousnes as it is Rom. 6.16 and those who still remaine in the seruice and slauerie of sinne and sathan haue no part in the first redemption wrought by the shedding of his blood nor shall haue any part in the last redemption at his second comming to iudgement § Sect. 5 Lastly That Christ hath redeemed the whole man we are to know that Christ hath redeemed the whole man body and soule and hath freed and deliuered euery part and facultie of them out of the bondage of our spirituall enemies that all and euery of them may performe seruice vnto God For example our vnderstandings were captiued in the darke prison of ignorance and blindnes and appeareth Ephes 4.17.18 but our Sauiour Christ redeemed vs Eph. 4.17.18 and hath dispelled these mists of darkenes with the preaching of the Gospell which like a glorious sunshine hath appeared vnto vs and by the operation of his holy spirit he hath caused the scales of ignorance to fall from the eyes of our vnderstanding so that we can see the misterie of our redemption and worke of our saluation wrought by him Luk. 1.77.78 as it is Luk. 1.77.78.79 Our wils which were so inthralled that wee could not so much as desire any thing pleasing and acceptable vnto God Phil. 2.13 hath our Sauiour redeemed and freed out of this spirituall bondage and by the good motions of his holy spirit doth so rule and incline them that to will is present with vs and we are delighted in the law of God concerning the innerman as the Apostle speaketh of himselfe Rom. 7.18.22 Rom. 7.18.22 And though the law of our members and corruptions of the flesh doe rebell against the law of our minde leading vs captiue to the law of sinne yet doe we abhorre this sinne and earnestly desire to be freed from it and to serue the Lord in holines and righteousnes indeauoring
assure our selues that we are not in the number of those whom Christ calleth for hee inuiteth them onely vnto him who being heauy laden with the waight of their sinnes are wearie of their burthen and sorrow and greeue that they cannot shake it of nor be freed from it Crying out with the Apostle Paule Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer mee from the bodie of this death § Sect. 7 The third signe The 3. thinge is an earnest desire to be freed from our sinnes whereby wee may know those whome Christ calleth is that being vexed with the heauy burthen of sinne they earnestly desire to be eased and released of it for as those who are ouerpressed with a heauy burthen desire aboue all things to be freed from it so those who feele the waight of sinne pressing them downe and are weary tired in bearing of it they most earnestly desire to bee eased of this intollerable burthen and will neuer bee at rest till their desire bee accomplished This desire resembled to hunger and thirst This desire in the Scriptures is resembled to hunger and thirst in which these two things concurre first a sense of our want and secondly an appetite or earnest desire to be satisfied and to haue our want supplied and so in these spirituall things first we feele the want of Gods graces and Christes righteousnesse and then wee earnestly desire that wee may be filled and satisfied with them So that to hunger and thirst after the grace of God and the righteousnesse of Christ and to be wearie and heauie laden are much alike both are blessed of the Lorde for as those who hunger and thirst after righteousnesse are blessed because they shall bee satisfied as it is Matth. 5.6 So they are blessed who are wearie and heauie laden with the burthen of their sinnes for such Christ calleth vnto him and hath promised to ease them that is to giue vnto them the remission of their sinnes and to release them of this burthen by taking it vpon his owne shoulders And as our Sauiour calleth and inuiteth vnto him such as are wearie and heauie laden Matth. 11.28 So in diuers other places he inuiteth and calleth those who hunger and thirst after his righteousnes So Esa 55.1 To euery one that thirsteth come yee to the waters and yee that haue no siluer come buie and eate come I say buy wine and milke without mony and Iohn 7.37 Iesus cryed saying If any man thirst let him come vnto mee and drinke Apoc. 21.6 I will giue to him who is a thirst Apoc. 21.6 and 22.17 of the well of the water of life freely and 22.17 Let him that is a thirst come and let whosoeuer will take of the well of the water of life freely a notable example of this thirsting wee haue in Dauid Psal 63.1 O God thou art my God early wil I seeke thee my soule thirsteth for thee and 42.1 as the hart brayeth for the riuers of water so panteth my soule after thee O God 2. my soule thirsteth for God euen for the liuing God and Psal 143.6 my soule thirsteth after thee as the thirstie land Which thirst whosoeuer feeleth he may boldly assure himselfe that hee is in the number of those whom Christ calleth and that will satisfie him Whosoeuer therefore hungreth and thirsteth after the grace of God and righteousnes of Christ whosoeuer is wearie and heauie laden that is who so hath a true sense and feeling of his sinnes and is vexed and greeued with the burthen thereof and withall his heart desireth to to be eased of his loade though he thinke himselfe in a most miserable estate yet if he come vnto Christ and with blind Bartemaeus crie out O sonne of Dauid haue mercy on mee I may fitly say vnto him as it was say do vnto this blind man Bee of good comfort for Christ calleth thee § Sect. 8 The last thing required in those whome Christ calleth is that they come vnto him The last thing required is that we come vnto Christ for to whom should wee come for ease but vnto Christ himselfe seeing their is neither saint nor Angell that can ease vs for the waight of one sinne would presse them downe into hell wheras our Sauiour Christ is able to beare the burthen of our sinnes nay he hath alreadie borne them that wee might bee deliuered from them As it is 1. Pet. 2.24 neither it is likely that either saint or Angel would so willingly helpe vs as our Sauiour Christ Iesus who so tenderly loued vs that hee came into the worlde to lay downe his own most precious life as a price for our redemption and though they were willing yet they haue not the like abilitie vnto him who hath all power in heauen and earth cōmitted vnto him Mat. 11.27 for working the worke of our redemption And therfore seeing he wanteth neither loue nor power let vs goe vnto him and him onely Otherwise we shal commit a double follie that is we shall leaue Christ who is the foūtaine of liuing water dig vnto our selues broken cisternes which will hould no water Iere. 2.13 For there is not saluation in any other neither is their amonge men any other name giuen vnder heauen whereby we must be saued as it is Actes 4.12 Hee is the way which leadeth vnto euerlasting happinesse he is the truth to instruct vs in all the counsailes of God hee is the life to reuiue vs who were dead in our sinnes yea the life of euerlasting life and the perfection of our heauenly happinesse Iohn 14.6 Hee hath taken vpon him our infirmities and borne our paines hee was wounded for our offences and smitten for our iniquities the paine of our punishment was layd vpon him and with his stripes wee are healed Esa 53.4.5.6 To whom therefore should wee goe in our sickenesse but to this our heauenly physition whose helpe should wee seeke for the curing of our woundes but the helpe of this our blessed surgeon who will easily cure them all with the precious balme of his bloud whether should wee returne after our long wandring but vnto the shepheard of our soules to whome should wee seeke to bee preserued from death and damnation but to him who is the Lorde of life and saluation and therefore leauing all other meanes of our owne diuising let vs repaire vnto him and him alone for hee calleth and inuiteth vs promising that hee will ease vs. But how should we come vnto Christ and what is meant hereby surely wee are not to vnderstand a corporall or local comming vnto him for hee is in heauen and wee are vpon the earth but our comming is spirituall not of the body but of the soule § Sect. 9 And this is twofould the comming of repentance and the comming of faith This comming to Christ twofold the comming of repentance is perfectly to God the father the comming of faith is to Christ Iesus
holy spirit like a glorious light hauing dispelled the darke foggie mists of ignorance and illuminated the eyes of their vnderstandings with the knowledge of Gods law they better discerne their sinnes and miserable estate then in former times And this the Apostle Paul sheweth vnto vs in his own example Rom. 7.9 Rom. 7.9.10 For saith he I was once aliue without the law but when the commaundement came sin reuiued 10. but I died and the same commaundement which was ordeyned vnto life was found to be vnto mee vnto death and ver 13. was that then which was good made death vnto mee God forbid but sinne that it might appeare sinne wrought death in mee by that which is good that sinne might bee out of measure sinfull by the commaundement So that the preaching of the law doth not make vs more sinfull but reuealeth those sinnes vnto vs which before we discerned not As therefore the sunne shining vpon some filthie place doth not make it so filthie but onely doth make it manifest which was not seene in the darke and as the wholesome physicke is not the cause of those corruptions which it purgeth out but by expelling them out of the bodie sheweth them vnto vs so the heauenly light and soueraigne physicke of Gods worde doth not worke in vs our filthie corruptions and hurtfull humors of sinne but it reuealeth them vnto vs whereas before times by reason of our ignorance and blindnesse they were secret and hidden § Sect. 6 When therefore out of the former premisses this conclusion is inferred either by Sathan who continually like a malicious enemie seeketh our destruction That we are not to neglect hearing the word because of the former imperfections or by our owne corrupt flesh which is impatient of any rough handlinge and therefore would rather haue vs sicke still then indure any paine in beeing cured that it were better for vs to surcease the hearing of gods word as seruing to no other end but to encrease our condemnation let vs in any case resist such motions as beeing most daungerous tentations which being entertained will bring vs to vtter ruine and endlesse destruction for if wee depriue our selues of this heauenly light the diuell will easily lead vs hudwincke vnto all fin wickednesse if we long abstaine from this comfortable food of our soules they will be hungarstarued and all the graces of Gods spirit will waxe faint and die in vs if wee disarme our selues of this sword of the spirite Sathan without any resistance will ouercome vs and take vs captiues forcing vs as his miserable slaues to commit all those workes of darknesse in which hee will imploy vs. And therefore as wee tender the saluation of our owne soules let vs not be discouraged from hearing the word of God by any suggestions whatsoeuer no not though we seeme vnto our selues euery time wee come into the Church to goe a step towards hell for whilest we vse Gods ordinance which is appointed as the meanes for our conuersion and saluation there is some good hope but when we vtterly neglect it our state is most desperate CHAP. XL. Consolations for such as bewayle their hardnesse of hart and wants in prayer § Sect. 1 OThers complaine that they are so ouerwhelmed with their hardnesse of hart Consolations for such as cōplaine that they cannot pray at all and drowsie dulnesse of spirit that eyther they cannot pray at all or if they doe it is barrainely without all forme or fashion or if they haue the eloquence of the tongue good set formes of praier yet they perfourme it coldly and drowsilie without all earnestnesse and feruencie of spirit hauing their minds caried away with wandring thoughts so that their praiers are but meere liplabour therefore it were better not to pray at all because they cannot performe this dutie in any good maner or measure as God requireth And this is a tentation wherewith euen the dearest children of God are much vexed and troubled and therefore it shall not be amisse to answere the seuerall branches of this complaint First therfore where as they complaine that they cannot pray at all this is to bee vnderstood either generally of all times or specially at sometimes If they say they can neuer pray it is very likely that either they forget or much deceiue themselues for few or none who are altogether destitute of the spirit of supplication haue any vnderstanding to discerne their want or any grace to bewaile it but content themselues with their lip-labour as though they had perfourmed acceptable seruice vnto God And it is a worke of one and the same spirit to make vs see our infirmities with hatred and dislike of them and to moue vs earnestly to desire of God that we may be freed from them which earnest desire is harty praier But if they further affirme that they are most sure they doe neuer pray vnto God I answere that though this in it selfe be a most daungerous case for it is a signe of a worker of iniquitie not to call vpon God as the Psalmist speaketh Psal 53.4 Psal 53.4 yet they haue no cause to despaire for the same spirit which hath reuealed vnto them this their sinne and infirmitie and hath wrought in them a dislike thereof will also remoue it and supply their want in Gods good time if they will labour for this good gift and not quench the good motions of the spirit when God offreth them vnto them The gift of praier not in our owne power But if they cannot denie that sometimes they haue had the grace giuen them of God to call earnestly vppon his name howsoeuer in this present time they are altogether disfurnished thereof then let them know that their case in this respect is common withall the deare children of God for harty prayer is not in our owne power neither doth it attend vpon our owne will but it is the gift of God which at sometimes in plentifull measure he bestoweth vpon his children and at other times he pulleth backe his liberall hand to the end that by the want thereof we may learne to ascribe the glorie and praise of our harty prayers vnto God who worketh in vs the will and the deed and is in truth the onely true authour of them which praise otherwise in pride of hart we would arrogate vnto our selues as being a naturall facultie and in our owne power and also to the end we may more highly esteeme it and with more ioy and diligence vse it when we haue it bestowed on vs least through our negligence and slouthfulnesse we mooue the Lord to take it from vs. Seeing therefore this hartie calling vpon Gods name is a gift of God a worke of his holy spirit in vs which at sometimes heretofore we haue discerned in our selues let vs not altogether be discouraged though at sometimes we want it Rom. 11.29 for the giftes of God are without repentance and though
with these outward afflictions he sendeth his messenger to buffet him 2. Cor. 12. that he might be no lesse vexed inwardly in minde then outwardly in bodie Yea he spared not our Sauiour Christ himselfe but as soone as he began to shew himselfe to be the sonne of God and redeemer of mankinde in perfourming the duties of his calling then especially hee bendeth all his force against him he tempteth and assaulteth him fortie daies together Matth. 4. and taking the foyle himselfe hee stirreth vp his wicked instruments to persecute him and at length to take away his life Whosoeuer therefore resolue to be Gods seruants must make account to be his souldiers also and whilest with Nehemias followers with one hand they perfourme the workes of their callings and Christianitie they must ●●●th the other hand hold their weapons to repell th●● 〈…〉 ll enemies who continually labour to hinder the L●● 〈…〉 ings for no sooner doe we become friends to God 〈…〉 ently Sathan assaulteth vs as his enemies no sooner doe we receiue the Lords presse money and set foote into his campe but Sathan aduanceth against vs his flagges of defiance labouring both by secret treacherie and outward force to supplant and ouercome vs. § Sect. 2 Here therefore is instruction for secure worldlings The two fold vse of this doctrine and consolation and incouragement for Gods children Worldly men in steed of fighting the Lords battailes spend their time in chambering and wantonnes in lusts and vncleannes in Musicke and daliance in surfetting and all voluptuousnes in couetousnes and idlenes as though there were no enemie to assault them and as if Sathan were some meeke lambe and not a roring lion readie to deuoure them so that good Moses comming neere them cannot heare the noise of them that haue the victorie nor the noise of them that are ouercome but the noise of singing and meriment Exod. 32. for they are not fighting the battailes of the Lord of hoasts but solemnising a Sabbath to the golden Calfe sitting downe to eate and drink and rising vp to play The spirituall Cananites are quite forgotten and they remember not the blessed land of promise whereunto like pilgrimes they should bee trauailing but make this world this wildernes of sin the place of their ioy and delight In a word they flourish in their outward states and neuer in their mindes feele any vexation of Sathans temtations And what is the cause of all this If you aske them they will say that they haue such a strong faith and peace of conscience That the worldlings peace proceedeth not from strength but carnall securitie that Sathans temptations haue no power ouer them neither were they euer troubled with any of his encounters And not content with these bragges of their owne happie estate they censure and condemne Gods children accounting their state most desperate who are molested with Sathans temptations and goe mourning vnder the burthen of sinne all the day long supposing either that they are in Sathans power and haue more grieuously sinned then other men or that they are mad and frantick so to vexe themselues with such needlesse sorrow But let such men know that of all others their state is most daungerous for they are grieuously sicke and haue no sense of their disease their wounds are so mortall that they depriue them of all feeling they are assaulted yea taken prisoners whilest they sleepe soundly in securitie and discerne not the approch of the enemie Non ergo repugnant quia se impugnari ignorant They make no resistance because they are ignorant of the assault And what can be more daungerous then to haue the enemie approch and lay hands on vs before we be aware But this is the state of those men Hierom. for as one saith Tum maximè impugnantur cum se impugnari nesciant They are most assaulted when they feele no assault Let them know that they are not the Lords souldiers but the diuels reuellers and therefore he fighteth not against them because they are his friends For there was neuer any of Christs souldiers in the Militant Church which haue not been exercised in this warfare there was neuer any so strong in faith but Sathan durst encounter him euen the Apostles yea Adam in the state of innocencie yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe there were neuer any so constant in the course of Christianitie but the world hath sought to draw them out of the right way by her baites of prosperitie or to force them to sinne by threatning aduersitie there were neuer any that haue had in them one sparke of Gods spirit Christ excepted who haue not felt it assaulted and often foiled by the flesh For the flesh lusteth against the spirit and the spirit against the flesh and they are contrarie the one to the other as it is Galath 5.17 Yea the Apostle Paul himselfe when he was most sanctified Galat. 5.17 Rom. 7.23 saw another law in his members rebelling against the law of his minde leading him captiue to the law of sin as appeareth Rom. 7.23 § Sect. 3 It is not therefore their strength of faith but their carnall securitie which so lulleth them asleepe in the cradle of worldly vanities that they cannot discerne this fight it is not their peace with God nor the peace of conscience which makes them thus quiet for there is no such peace saith my God to the wicked Esa 57.21 Esa 57.21 but it is a peace which they haue made with Sathan a couenant with death and an agreement with hell as the Prophet speaketh Esa 28.15 Esa 28.15 When the strong armed man Sathan quietly keepes the house the things that he possesseth are in peace but when a stronger then he commeth to dispossesse him he will neuer lose his possession without a fight and we cannot chuse but feele the blowes in so sharpe an incounter Luk. 11.21 Luk. 11.21 If a man neuer enter the field to fight against Sathan or if at the first encounter he yeeld himselfe prisoner and be content to be tied in the pleasing fetters of sinne it is no marueile that hee doth not rage in his conscience when as alreadie hee is in his captiuitie readie to perfourme all those workes of darknes wherein he employeth him but if when Christ the redeemer is preached vnto them by his Ambassadours they would shew any desire of comming out of his thraldome surely this spirituall Pharaoh would neuer lose their seruice but by force and compulsion neither can so strong a man be forced but wee must needes feele the conflict While the prisoner lieth in the dungeon loaded with bolts and tied in chaines the keeper sleepeth securely because he knoweth he is safe but if his bolts being filed off and his chaines loosed he haue escaped out of prison then the Iaylor beginneth to bustle and pursueth him speedely with Huean crye so whilest Sathan holdeth vs imprisoned in the darke dungeon of ignorance loaded and
the idolatrous heathen to burne in sacrifice their deare children So also he tempteth some to despaire of Gods mercie and so torment themselues with horror and feare yea sometimes to lay violent hands vpon themselues murthering and taking away their owne life which by nature is so deere and precious vnto them All which being contrarie to our naturall inclinations and the desires of the flesh manifestly appeare to be the suggestions of Sathan And these are the chiefe differences betweene the temptations of Sathan and the flesh otherwise they are commonly so like one to the other that they can hardly be discerned and therefore let vs not be so carefull curiously to distinguish them as to auoyde or resist them knowing that Sathan is the captaine generall and the flesh and the lusts thereof Sathans chiefe aides and assistants which continually fight against the spirit and labour to plunge both bodie and soule into euerlasting destruction CHAP. XXII Of the generall meanes whereby we may be inabled to withstand our spirituall enemies § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the manner of Sathans fight The circumstances to be considered in this spirituall conflict now we are to speake of the conflict it selfe wherein as I haue shewed the parties assaulting and oppugning are the diuell and his assistants the world and the flesh the partie defending and resisting is the christian souldier The cause of the fight is not for lands and dominions nor for riches and mines of gold for these would Sathan be content to giue if he had them in his possession if we would renounce Gods seruice and fall downe and worship him but for the euerlasting saluation of our soules which Sathan laboreth by all meanes possible to hinder and to plunge vs into endlesse destruction The weapons which the assailants vse in this fight are not the sword speare or any other carnall furniture but spirituall temptations whereby they seek to intice draw and prouoke man to sin that consequētly he may receiue the wages therof euerlasting death The weapons which the Christiā souldier vseth to defend himself and repell his enemies is the spiritual armour before spokē of namely the girdle of veritie the breast-plate of righteousnes the knowledge profession of the Gospel of peace the shield of faith the helmet of saluation the sword of the spirit and feruent and effectuall prayer § Sect. 2 Now in this conflict of temptations Of two common affections to be considered of in this spirituall conflict there are first two common affections or generall properties to be considered of the Christian souldiers manfull resistance or els his fainting and receiuing the foile for either he couragiously standeth vpon his defence armed with the graces of Gods spirit and putteth Sathan to flight by withstanding his temptations or els being surprized at vnawares whilest he is disarmed of these spirituall weapons and Christian armour hee is soiled by his spirituall enemies yeelding vnto their temptations and falling into sinne Of the first meanes to withstand our spirituall enemies to wit Gods commandement That we may withstand our spirituall enemie valiantly in all his temptations and obtaine a finall victorie there are certaine general means to be vsed which may serue as strong forts and bulworkes vnto which we may retire our selues as often as we faint and be readie to receiue any disaduantage in the fight First we are continually to haue in memorie the commandement of our chiefe captaine Christ Iesus whereby he inciteth vs to a continuall fight without fainting or yeelding So Eph. Eph. 6.10.11 6.10.11 Be strong in the Lord and in the power of his might Put on the whole armour of God that ye may be able to stand against all the assaults of the diuell 1. Pet. 5.8 And 1. Pet. 5.8 Your aduersarie the diuell as a roring lion walketh about seeking whom he may deuoure Whom resist stedfast in the faith The second meanes hope of victorie Secondly let vs be incouraged to withstand our spirituall enemies with assured hope of victorie for we fight the Lords battailes vnder the standerd of Iesus Christ whose power is omnipotent and therefore able to defend vs to ouerthrow our enemies with a word of his mouth who also is our head and we his members and therefore we may assure our selues that he hath no lesse will than power to succour vs. As also let vs alwaies haue in minde the crowne of victorie promised to all that ouercome euen a crowne of glorie and euerlasting happines in Gods kingdom Apoc. 2.7 3.5.12.21 And this will make vs resolue neuer to faint in the battell Apoc. 2.7 and 3.5.12.21 nor cowardly yeeld vnto Sathans temptations though he should intice vs to sinne by offring vs the whole world because we would not thereby hazard the losse of this eternall waight of glorie The third meanes to be alwaies in readines Thirdly we are alwaies to stand in readines armed with the christian armour the graces of Gods spirit and to vse al good means that we may be more and more strengthened confirmed in them but yet when we are at the strongest we are not to presume vpon our own strength but to relie our selues wholy vpon the Lords assistance and when wee are tempted and assaulted we must continually implore his help that being armed with the power of his might wee may withstand the temptation and obtaine victorie The fourth meanes to take occasion of Sathans temptation vnto sinne of doing the cōtrary vertue Fourthly when we are assaulted by our spirituall enemies and tempted vnto any sinne we must not only abstaine from committing thereof but also take occasion thereby of doing the contrary vertue For example whē we are tempted to vnlawful pleasures we must not only abstaine from thē but also we are somewhat to abridge our selues of those that be lawfull and the more feriously and painfully to follow the works of our lawfull callings when we are tempted to couetousnes we must the more carnestly exercise the works of mercie and christian liberalitie when we are tēpted to ambition we must not only refraine frō vainglorie but we must labour after true humilitie and mortification refusing not only vnlawfull honours but those also which are lawfull so oft as we haue iust cause to feare that Sathan wil taking occasion of our corruption hereby cause vs to forget God when we are tempted to neglect the hearing of Gods word on the Lords Sabbaoth wee are the more diligently to heare it not only then being bound hereunto by Gods commandement as being one of the chief means of sanctifying this day consecrated to Gods seruice but also on the weeke daies if the Lord giue vs fit opportunitie when as we might lawfully be exercised in the duties of our callings In a word when we are tempted to any vice wee are to take occasion thereby of doing the contrarie vertue in the meane time carefully auoiding the policie of
nature of an earnest to which the measure of grace here receiued is compared But wherein doth this measure of grace and chiefe perfection of a Christian consist in this life Surely not in their workes for they are all imperfect and so full of corruptions that they are odious in Gods sight being considered in themselues and examined by the rule of his exact iustice neither in their inherent righteousnes and begun sanctification for when they are at the holiest they are polluted with the reliques of originall corruption which bring foorth the fruites of actuall transgressions and make vs vnable to doe the good we would in that manner and measure which we should and therefore those which are most righteous are not in this respect acceptable to God but herein the perfection of a christian consisteth when as seeing his imperfections wants and sinnes he is grieued and truly humbled with the sight and sense of his owne miserie and wretchednesse and disclaiming and reiecting his owne righteousnes and good workes doth flee vnto our Sauiour Christ hungring after his righteousnes and by a liuely faith applying vnto his wounded soule his merit and obedience doth looke for saluation in him alone and lastly when as in obedience to his commandement and in true thankfulnes for his infinite mercies he hath an earnest desire to glorifie his name by a godly and Christian life striuing and endeuouring continually to forsake his sinnes to mortifie his corruption and to attaine vnto more and more perfection in righteousnes and holines For Maxima pars Christianismi est toto pectore velle fieri Christianum It is the greatest part of Christianitie to desire with the whole heart to become a Christian § Sect. 5 If therefore we doe keepe the couenant of the Lord nay if we but thinke vpon his commandements to the end we may doe them the louing kindnes of the Lord shall endure for euer vpon vs as it is Psal 103.17.18 if we can from our harts say with good Nehemiah Nehem. 1.11 Nehem. 1.12 O Lord I beseech thee let thine eare now hearken to the prayer of thy seruant and to the prayer of thy seruants who desire to feare thy name the Lord will heare vs indeed and graunt our requests If with the Prophet Dauid we haue but a respect to Gods commandements with a care to fulfill them we shal not be confounded Psal 119.6 as it is Psal 119.6 If wee but desire to obey Gods commandement the Lord will accomplish our desire and quicken vs in his righteousnes 40. though we be dull yea dead vnto all goodnesse as it is vers 40. Rom. 7. If with the Apostle Paul wee doe the euill which we would not and consent to the law that it is good delighting therein in the inner man then though we are with him led captiue vnto sinne yet it is not wee that offend but sinne that dwelleth in vs that is our old man our corrupt and vnregenerate part That neither the name nor actions of the flesh can properly be ascribed to the spirituall man which cannot fitly be called by our name because it is mortified alreadie in some measure and shall be fully abolished by the spirit of God neither doth it liue the same spirituall life with vs seeing it is not quickened by the same spirit and therefore as those who haue diuers soules which giue vnto them life and motion are themselues diuers and also called by diuers names so the new and old man liuing as it were by diuers soules the one being quickned with Gods spirit the other by Sathan whereof it commeth to passe that the more the one liueth the other dieth the more strong the spirit is the weaker is the flesh and the actions of both are quite contrarie therefore they may fitly be called by diuers names neither can the actions of the flesh bee ascribed to the spirit properly seeing they are contrarie the one to the other For as if a science of a crab tree and another of a pepin tree being grafted into the same stocke doe both bring foorth their seuerall fruites the one crabs the other pepins it may fitly be said this tree bringeth foorth either pepins or crabs because they grow in the same stocke but yet it cannot bee truly said that the crab tree science bringeth foorth pepins or the pepin science crabs so because the flesh and the spirit are ioyned together in the same bodie and soule we may in this respect say that this man sinneth or doth that which is good but yet whē we speak of the regenerate or carnall man properly and seuerally as we cannot truly say that the flesh doth any good so neither can we truly affirme that the spirit and regenerate man doth commit that which is euill but as the Apostle speaketh sin which dwelleth with him And though the flesh be the farre greater part yet doth it not denominate giue the name to the christian his actions because it is partly mortified partly in mortifying and partly to be mortified that is deputed and destinated to death and destruction and also because it is the worse and more vnworthie part without compare and consequently not to giue the name for as wine mixt with water is called still wine though the water exceede the wine in quantitie because it is the more excellent substance so the flesh being mixt with the spirit though it be in greater quantitie it doth not giue the name to vs and our actions but the spirit as being our most excellent and worthie part and of it wee are called spirituall regenerate and new men though the least part be spirituall regenerate and renewed If therefore we are regenerate and haue in vs the spirit of God and the graces thereof in the least measure wee may boldly say with Paul that it is no more we that do offend God but sinne that dwelleth in vs neither shall we receiue punishment but the flesh that is our vnregenerate and corrupt part which shall be mortified and fully abolished by the spirit of God as for the spirituall and regenerate part it shall daily bee more and more strengthened and confirmed in the spirituall life and the more punishments afflictions and torments the flesh hath inflicted on it the more shall the spirituall man grow vp in grace and goodnes till our corruption being by little and little mortified and in the end fully abolished by death we shall be perfect men in Christ liuing a spirituall and euerlasting life in all glorie and happines in his kingdome When therefore the Lord suffreth Sathan to afflict vs in our goods bodies and in our soules and consciences as hee did Iob it is not because hee hath forsaken vs and giuen ouer his whole interest hee hath in vs to this wicked spirit but as the Apostle speaketh in another matter he deliuereth vs vnto Sathan to be afflicted for the destruction of the flesh 1. Cor. 5.5 that the
spirit may be saued in the day of the Lord Iesus 1. Cor. 5.5 § Sect. 5 It may be that the worke of mortification and regeneration doth goe slowly forward Though our spirituall growth be show yet it is certaine and the Lord may for a time let our corruptions beare great sway in vs to the end he may hereby truly humble vs with the sight of our infirmities and take away from vs all selfe-confidence presumption and cause of boasting and cause vs wholy to relie vpon his mercie and Christs merits but though it go on slowly yet it shall goe surely because it is not begun and continued by our selues for we cannot so much as thinke a good thought but all our sufficiencie is of God as it is 2. Cor. 3.5 2. Cor. 3.5 neither can we so much as will and desire that which is acceptable in Gods sight for it is he that worketh in vs the will and the deed Phil. 2.13 euen of his good pleasure as it is Phil. 2.13 And therefore these holie desires which are the beginnings and first fruites of regeneration being the worke of Gods spirit he will finish and perfect that which he hath begun till at last we be fully freed from our corruption and indued with vnspotted holines and sanctification Phil. 1.6 According to that Phil. 1.6 I am perswaded of this same thing that he who hath begun this good worke in you will performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ For as with the Lord himselfe there is neither change nor shadow of change Iam. 1.17 Mal. 3.6 Rom. 11.29 Iam. 1.17 Mal. 3.6 so also are his gifts and calling without repentance as it is Rom. 11.29 § Sect. 7 If therefore we haue but a desire to forsake our sinnes If we earnestly desire perfectiō the Lord will perfect vs and in the meane time pardon our imperfections and to attaine vnto true sanctification this desire is Gods worke which he wil finish accomplish according to that Psal 145 19. He wil fulfill the desire of them that feare him For if the Lord doe euen presse vpon vs whilest we doe not desire his companie if hee stand waiting and knocking at the doore of our hearts calling and crying vnto vs that we will open and giue him entrance when his holie spirit hath inflamed vs with true loue of him and opened our hearts with an earnest desire to haue him enter will he now thinke you goe away and refuse to come in when wee inuite him Nay assuredly for he hath promised the contrarie Reuel 3.20 Behold saith he I stand at the doore and knocke if any man heare my voice and open the doore I will come in vnto him and sup with him and he with me that is I will make him a rich banquet of my heauenly graces and giue him to drinke the water of life of which whosoeuer drinketh shall neuer be more a thirst but it shall be in him a well of water springing vp into euerlasting life as our Sauiour speaketh Ioh. 4.14 So our Sauiour Christ calleth such as thirst vnto him Ioh. 7.38 Reu. 21.6 If any man thirst let him come to me and drink And I will giue to him that is a thirst of the well of the water of life freely If therefore we haue a thirsting desire after Gods spirit and the graces thereof we shall in Gods good time be satisfied and filled with the full measure of them And in the meane time though our infirmities be neuer so great and manifold yet in Christ God wil be well pleased with vs when as our corruptions do displease our selues so that we earnestly desire to be freed from them and to serue the Lord in righteousnes and holines of life For the Lord esteemeth more of our will than of our deedes and of our holie endeuour than of our best workes because this is the seruice and sacrifice of our hearts wherewith aboue all other things hee is most delighted and therefore Da cordi Deo sufficit Pro. 23.26 Giue thy hart to God and it sufficeth Prou. 23.26 For the Lord is our most gracious father whose loue farre exceedeth the loue euen of tender mothers Esa 49.15 Esa 49 15. and 66.13 Looke therefore what affection the tender father or mother beareth and sheweth towards their childe and such nay infinit more will the Lord shew towards vs as himselfe professeth Mal. 3.17 And I will spare them Mal. 3.17 as a man spares his owne sonne that serueth him Now we know that if a child endeuour to to his dutie and striue to doe his best though through want of power or skill hee is not able to doe as he would those things which his father inioyned him there is no louing father but will winke at his imperfections and accept his wil commending his obedience and dutifull endeuour though the worke in it self deserue no commendations how much more therefore will our heauenly father whose loue is infinite and without all compare be wel pleased with vs in the middest of our infirmities if we haue a desire and care to serue him The Lord is our shepheard Psal 23.1 Ioh. 10. and we his flock and the sheep of his pasture as it is Psal 23.1 and Ioh. 10. Now if a sheepe be intangled in the briars so as hee cannot follow the shepheard though he heare his voyce calling vnto him yet if hee struggle and striue to come out to the vttermost of his power and bleat for the shepheards helpe when he cannot help himselfe hereby it appeareth that hee is one of his flocke which the good shepheard will not suffer to be lost whereas indeed if he want not power alone but will also to be freed and to follow after it is cleere that he belongeth to another sheepfold so if when wee are intangled in the briars of our corruptions and so hindred with our imperfections that wee cannot follow the great shepheard of our soules Iesus Christ in the path of righteousnes which leadeth to the sheepfold of euerlasting happines though wee heare his voyce calling vnto vs yet if with the sillie sheepe we struggle and striue to be freed from the snares of sinne and when wee cannot free our selues by our power doe as it were bleate and after our sheepish manner implore the help of our carefull shepheard crying out with the Apostle Paul that blessed sheepe of Christ Wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 who shall deliuer me from the bodie of this death as it is Rom. 7.24 then will our louing shepheard Iesus Christ in his good time come and loose vs and if with strugling in the briars of sinne we are so disabled that we cannot goe he will take vs like the straied sheepe vpon his shoulders and carrie vs by the waies of righteousnesse into his sheepfold of euerlasting happinesse Neither can it possibly be that our heauenly shepheard who of purpose came into the world
God againe and earnestly laboureth after mortification and newnesse of life and whosoeuer is destitute of Gods loue and liueth in his sinnes without any sorrowe for those which are past or purpose to leaue them for the time to come he may well brag of his faith and assurance of Gods loue but in very trueth there is as yet nothing in him but carnall securitie and vaine presumption § Sect. 6 Secondly That euery particular christian may assure himselfe of Gods loue the tempter will obiect that the Lord hath giuen all these testimonies and pledges of his loue vnto his Church and that it therefore may well be assured thereof but as for particular men they notwithstanding may iustly doubt of his loue seeing they haue no speciall reasons to perswade them that these testimonies and pledges were giuen vnto them But I answere that this is a fond of obiection For what is the Church but the whole company of Gods saints What is it but a body consisting of many members which are particular christians how therefore can the whole Church be perswaded of Gods loue if all the seuerall members doubt thereof How can any thing belong to the whole which belongeth not to the particular parts as though a whole citie could be assured of the Princes fauour and yet all the particular men in the citie should thinke themselues in his displeasure Saint Paul teacheth vs another lesson in his owne person saying Gal. 2.20 Gal. 2.20 Who hath loued me and giuen his life for me he saith not who hath loued and giuen his life for the Church but for himselfe Neither doth the Apostle here speake this by reuelation whereby he might extraordinarily be assured of Gods loue but he vseth for his argument a reason common to all Christians namely that God loued him because hee had giuen himselfe to death for him whosoeuer therefore beleeueth with Paul that Christ dyed for him may bee assured also with him of Gods loue § Sect. 7 Secondly if we doe not beleeue that God loueth vs That doubting of Gods loue is iniurious vnto him wee make him a lyar for he hath professed his loue and giuen vs many testimonies thereof in his word neither doth he require any condition at our hands but that we beleeue him For his mercifull promises doe not exclude any for their vnworthinesse but for their vnbeleefe according to that Iohn 3.16 So God loued the world that hee gaue his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish Ioh. 3.16 but haue euerlasting life Seeing then there is no other condition required but faith for the assurance of Gods loue and euerlasting life surely most desperately doe we sinne against our owne soules and most blasphemously against God if we will not beleeue his word confirmed by his seale no not his oath whereby he hath ratified his couenant betweene him and vs but make him who is truth it selfe a liar a couenant breaker yea a periured person For so the Apostle speaketh 1. Iohn 5.10 He that beleeueth not God hath made him a lyar 1. Ioh. 5.10 because hee beleeued not the record that God witnessed of his Sonne Though therefore we sinne yet let vs not thus blaspheme though we be grieuous sinners and vnworthy Gods loue yet let vs not adde this to all our other sinnes and vnworthinesse to distrust Gods trueth in his gracious promises for if we put all our other sinnes into the one scole and this alone into the other yet will it weigh downe all the rest neither are we damned for our other sinnes if we doe not adde vnto them infidelitie For whereas the precious baulme of our Sauiours blood is a soueraigne salue to cure all other sores of sinne yet this it cannot helpe because it doth refuse the cure and as it were pulleth off this precious plaister when it is laid on it § Sect. 8 But as this distrusting and doubting of Gods loue is iniurious vnto him Doubting of Gods loue pernicious vnto our selues so also it is pernitious vnto our owne soules For first it tormenteth our mindes and setteth our consciences vpon the racke when as we haue no other assurance of Gods loue but onely so farre foorth as we finde our selues worthy of it for so often as wee fall and the sight of our sinnes commeth before our eyes hauing no other ground of Gods loue but our owne deserts wee doubt and stagger like a ship tossed with the billowes of the sea and in the end sinke into the gulfe of despaire being ouer balanced and too heauily laden with the vnsupportable waight of our sinnes whereas if we were throughly perswaded of Gods free loue and goodwill grounded on his owne good pleasure and not on our worthinesse if we did fall we would be grieued in deede euen at the very heart because wee had displeased our gracious God and louing Father but yet our sinnes would not make vs despaire or doubt of his loue towards vs because it hath not it ground on our worthinesse but vpon Gods owne free mercie grace and good will That we cannot loue God if we haue no assurance of his loue towards vs. Secondly if we doubt and distrust of Gods loue towards vs we shall neuer loue him from our hearts for who loueth him intirely of whose loue he is not perswaded or who can performe the dueties of loue to such an one as hateth and abhorreth him Cos amoris amor Loue is the whetstone of loue And if this be true amongst men then much more betweene God and vs 1. Ioh. 4.19 for we loue him because he loued vs first as the Apostle sayth 1. Ioh. 4.19 As therefore the cold stone can of it selfe cast foorth no heate till it be first warmed by the Sunne beames and then it reflectsth againe some of the heate which it receiued so no more can our cold hearts cast any beames of hearty loue towards God till they be warmed with the apprehension of his loue towards vs and then they begin to returne some sparkes of loue towards God after they are inflamed with the beames of his loue cleerely shining in them Vnlesse therefore wee be assured of Gods loue we cannot loue him Rom. 13.8 and consequently cannot performe any duetie of loue in obedience to his will for as loue is the fulfilling of the Law as it is Rom. 13.8 so the want of loue is the transgressing of all the commandements for all consist in the loue of God which is the fountaine of all true obedience and in the loue of our neighbour which as a spring issueth from it Nay when we dispaire of Gods loue then doe we despaire of our saluation and therefore hauing no hope of happinesse in the life to come wee are ready to seeke al the pleasures and delights which this life wil affoord vnto vs giuing our selues ouer to the satisfying of all the filthy lusts of the flesh and spending our
sonne we may returne againe and be receiued into his euerlasting loue and fauour § Sect. 4 Secondly That spirituall afflictions tend to our mortification the Lord sendeth afflictions to mortifie in vs the old man the flesh and vnregenerate part now the flesh is not onely in our bodie but also in our soule and euery part and facultie thereof and therefore the Lord doth not afflict the bodie alone with outward calamities but euen the soule also with griefe of minde and horrour of conscience with the waight of sinne and sense of his wrath to the end that our corruptions both in bodie and soule may be mortified the old man with the lusts thereof crucified and in the end fullie abolished Iere. 4.4 And therefore doth the Lord breake our hard and stonie hearts therefore doth he plowe and teare them vp like fallow ground to the end that the seede of his grace being sowne in them may take roote fructifie and bring forth a plentifull haruest of godlinesse to his glorie and our comfort It is not therefore for want of loue that our heauenly father doth thus bruse vs and euen crush vs in peeces it is not because he will reiect vs and cast vs of but when we are truely humbled when our hard hearts are softned and our spirits broken and made contrite then will he regard vs and shew his tender loue and mercifull kindnesse vnto vs as he hath graciously promised Matth. 12.20 The brused reede will he not breake Matth. 12.20 Psa 51.17 and smoking flax shall he not quench So Psal 51.17 The sacrifices of God are a contrite spirit a contrite and broken heart O God thou wilt not despise And the Prophet telleth vs that our Sauiour Christ was sent into the world to preach glad tidings vnto the poore to binde vp the broken harted c. to comfort all that mourne Esa 61.1 2 3. to giue them beautie for ashes the oyle of ioy for mourning the garment of gladnes for the spirit of heauines c. as it is Esa 61.1.2.3 Luk. 4.18 § Sect. 5 Lastly Gods dearest children subiect to spirituall affliction that the afflictions of the minde the apprehension of Gods wrath the sting of sinne and torments of conscience are not any true and certaine signes of Gods hatred hereby it plainely appeareth in that the most deare children of God haue been subiect to them and that in great measure For example Iob who by Gods own testimony was the iustest man that liued on the earth Iob. 1.8 Iob. 1.8 notwithstanding was so grieuously afflicted both in body and minde that he bursteth out into these grieuous complaints Iob. 6.4 9.17 18. 13.24.26 16.9 19.11 Iob. 6.4 The arrowes of the almightie are in me the venime whereof doth drinke vp my spirit and the terrors of God fight against me And chap. 9. vers 17. He destroyeth me with a tempest and woundeth me without cause 18. He will not suffer me to take my breath but filleth me with bitternesse So c. 13.24 Wherefore hidest thou thy face and takest me for thine enemie And v. 26. Thou writest bitter things against me and makest me to possesse the iniquities of my youth And c. 16.9 His wrath hath torne me and he hateth me and gnasheth vpon me with his teeth mine enemie hath sharpned his eyes against me And. c. 19.11 He hath kindled his wrath against mee and counteth mee as one of his enemies Looke also vpon the example of the Prophet Dauid who though he were a man according to Gods own heart yet was he made to drinke a deep draught in this cup of inward afflictions and was vexed not only outwardly in his estate goods and body but also in his soule with the sense of Gods wrath with the waight of sinne and the terrors and torments of conscience which make him to vtter these and such like pittifull complaints in the booke of the Psalmes Psal 6.3 Psal 6.3 My soule is also sore troubled but Lord how long wilt thou delay And v. 6. I fainted in my mourning I cause my bed euery night to swim and water my couch with my teares So Psal 38.2 Psal 38.2.3 Thine arrowes haue light vpon me and thine hand lieth vpon me 3. There is nothing sound in my flesh because of thine anger neither is there any rest in my bones because of my sinne 4. For mine iniquities are gone ouer mine head and as a waightie burthen they are too heauie for me c. And Psal 88.7 Thine indignation lieth vpon me Psal 88.7.14 15 16. and thou hast vexed me with all thy waues And v. 14. Lord why dost thou reiect my soule and hidest thy face from me 15. I am afflicted and at the point of death from my youth I suffer thy terrors doubting of my life 16. Thine indignations goe ouer me and thy feare hath cut me off So in the 77 Psalme he taketh vp this lamentable complaint vers 7. Psal 77.7 8 9 10. Will the Lord absent himselfe for euer and will he shew no more fauour 8. Is his mercie cleane gone for euer doth his promise faile for euermore 9. Hath God forgotten to be mercifull hath he shut vp his tender mercies in displeasure 10. And I said this is my death Looke also vpon the Apostle Paul who though he were a chosen vessel whom God had seperated from his mothers wombe to carrie his name before the Gentils and is is Act. 9.15 Act. 9.15 Gal. 1.15 2. Cor. 6.4 5 6 7 8. Gallat 1.15 yet was hee afflicted grieuously not onely outwardly in body as hee professeth 2. Corinth 6.4.5.6.7.8 c. but also in minde for the messenger of Sathan was sent to buffet him 2. Cor. 12.7 8. and hee had a long time a pricke in the flesh from which hee could not be freed though he often begged this fauour at Gods hand as appeareth 2. Cor. 12.7.8 And the burthen of sinne grieuously afflicting his conscience forced him to cry out Rom. 7.24 Rom. 7.24 O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of his death § Sect. 6 So that by these and many such like examples That Christ himselfe indured these spirituall afflictions 1. Cor. 10.13 1. Pet. 5.9 Esa 53.3 that is manifest vnto our comforts which the Apostle speaketh 1. Cor. 10.13 There hath no temptation taken you but such as appertaineth to man for the same afflictions which we suffer are accomplished in our brethren which are in the world as it is 1. Pet. 5.9 Yea the same and farre greater were indured by our head Iesus Christ himselfe who receiued deepe and grisly woundes in respect of those small scratches which we suffer and drunke the full cupe of Gods heauie displeasure of which we onely sip or taste for he was not onely in his outward state deiected and reputed as an abiect amongst men nor persecuted by his cruell enemies alone euen to
friends he endured tedious labours many miseries and so Dauid was persecuted whilest Saul did sit on the throne yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe was arraigned at the barre and condemned whilest Pilate and the chiefe Priests and Pharisies sate in the seate of iustice ouerswaying all at their owne pleasures and yet at the same time Iacob was beloued Esau hated Dauid chosen of God Saul reiected our Sauiour Christ the deare sonne of his heauenly father and his enemies the instruments and limmes of Sathan So that it is most true that Salomon speaketh namely no man can haue assurance of Gods loue and fauour by these outward benefits bestowed both vpon the godly and wicked neither by his aduersities and afflictions can gather that the Lord hateth him for these befall all indifferently as it pleaseth God to punish the reprobate or to chastize his owne children But though we can gather no sound argument from these outward things of Gods loue yet it followeth not that there is no other meanes to assure vs hereof for by the same reason wee may conclude that man is no better than brute beasts and that there is no immortalitie of the soule Eccles 3.19 because it is said Eccles 3.19 that the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts is the same But as the Wiseman speaketh there of their outward mortalitie alone and not absolutely in all respects and therefore he saith that they are alike to see to that is in outward appearance vers 18. and explaineth himselfe in the words following for saith hee as one dieth so dieth the other so he doth not meane here simply that there is no assurance of Gods loue but onely in respect of these outward things and therefore he addeth that in these outward respects all things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and the wicked Though then there is no assurance of Gods loue to be gathered out of our worldly estate yet it cannot hence be concluded that therefore there is no meanes whereby we may be assured hereof for the Lord hath giuen vnto vs his word and mercifull promises he hath giuen vnto vs his holy spirit crying in our harts Abba father and witnessing to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. Rom. 8. He hath manifested his loue by giuing vs his onely sonne and begetting in vs by his word and spirit a liuely faith whereby wee may apply him and all his benefits vnto vs. Whosoeuer therefore beleeueth truly in Iesus Christ he may be assured of Gods loue and euerlasting life according to that Ioh. 3.16 So God loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten sonne Ioh. 3.16 that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life If therefore we beleeue in Iesus Christ we need not to despaire no nor to doubt of Gods loue and fauour towards vs notwithstanding our vnworthinesse nor yet in regard of the manifold afflictions which God inflicteth on vs neither in respect of those manifold infirmities which we bewray whilest the hand of God is vpon vs but wee may soundly and assuredly conclude with the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.38 I am perswaded that neither death nor life Rom. 8.38 nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 39. Nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. And so much concerning the first cause of our saluation namely Gods loue and goodwill and also the temptations of Sathan whereby hee laboureth to impugne our assurance thereof the second cause is Gods free election which proceedeth from the other for whom he loueth those hee electeth vnto euerlasting life and happinesse it being an inseparable fruite of loue to seeke the good and felicitie of the partie beloued Election therefore is that part of Gods eternal and immutable decree whereby of his free loue and vndeserued grace he hath preordained some in Christ vnto saluation and to the vse of the meanes tending thereunto for the praise of the glorie of his grace CHAP. IIII. Of Gods election the causes subiect obiect and properties thereof IN this definition is set downe first the efficient cause or author of our election namely God himselfe the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost and this appeareth Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy c. And Ioh. 15.16 Ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you and ordained you that ye goe and bring foorth fruite c. Secondly the motiue or impulsiue cause of Gods election is expressed namely Gods free loue meere goodwill and vndeserued grace And this also is manifest Luk. 12.32 Feare not little flocke for it is your fathers pleasure to giue you a kingdome And Eph. 1.5 who hath predestinated vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will Here therefore are excluded all other causes wherewith diuers haue imagined God was moued to elect vs as namely our owne will the foreseeing of our workes worthinesse or faith and the merits of our Sauiour Christ And that these were not the causes which mooued the Lord to elect vs it may be prooued by manifest testimonies of scripture First our owne will is expressely excluded Rom. 9.16 It is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that sheweth mercie Secondly not the foresight of our owne workes for the Apostle plainly affirmeth Rom. 9.11.12 that before the children were borne and when they had neither done good or euill that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth 12. It was said vnto her the elder shall serue the younger 13. As it is written I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau And chap. 11.5.6 he saith that Gods election is of grace and if it be of grace it is no more of workes or els were grace no more grace Thirdly not the foresight of any worthinesse in vs more than in others For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God as it is Rom. 3.23 And the Apostle affirmeth both of himselfe and others that they were all dead in their sinnes and by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.1.3 Fourthly the Lord respected not our faith as an impulsiue cause mouing him to elect vs but only as an effect of our election neither was the Lord mercifull vnto vs in making choise of vs to bee partakers of euerlasting happinesse because we were faithfull but that we might be faithfull as Paul professeth of himselfe 1. Cor. 7.25 And the holy Ghost affirmeth Act. 13.46 that as many of the Gentiles as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued Lastly although the merit of Christ was the onely meritorious cause of our saluation yet it was
not the cause of Gods election for Gods election was from all eternitie and the cause of Christs merits which were in time and the effects of Gods election and therefore that which came after could not be the cause of that which was from all eternitie neither can the effect produce the cause but the cause the effect Moreouer we are not said in the scriptures to be chosen for Christ but in Christ Eph. 1.4 And the Apostle Iohn affirmeth that Gods eternall loue was the cause which moued the Lord to send his sonne to redeeme vs by his death and not that his death was the cause of his loue Ioh. 3.16 And so much concerning the efficient cause of our election The materiall cause thereof was the purpose or counsaile of God himselfe whereby hee determined to elect vs. The formall cause was the seuering and setting apart of certaine men which were to bee saued § Sect. 2 selected from the rest who were reiected The end of Gods election was two-fold the first and chief end was the glorie of God set forth by manifesting his grace and mercie in the saluation of the faithfull And this the Apostle plainly expresseth Rom. 9.23 namely that the end of Gods election is that he might declare the riches of his glorie in the vessels of mercie which he hath prepared vnto glorie And Eph. 1.4 5 6. he saith that he hath chosen vs in Christ and predestinated vs to the praise of the glorie of his grace The second end which is inferiour and subordinate to the other is the saluation of the elect and this also is expressed by the Apostle Rom. 9.23 where hee saith that the elect are prepared vnto glorie And Act. 13.48 the holy Ghost saith as many as were ordained to eternall life thereby implying that the saluation of the elect is the end of Gods election And these are the causes of Gods election The effects which inseparably follow-hereupon are Christ the Mediatour and the whole worke of his mediation and our redemption wrought by him our adoption effectuall calling iustification sanctification and glorification and these are the degrees and meanes of our election which are as well contained in Gods decree as our saluation it selfe The subiect in which we are elected is Christ Iesus our Mediatour and head not in regard of his deitie alone for so he is the efficient cause nor in respect of his humanitie alone but as he is God and man And wee are therefore elected in him both because in our selues we were not capable of such glorious dignitie as also because hee alone is a fit Mediatour in whom we should be elected seeing with our election there is an vnion coniunction of vs with God who hath elected vs. The obiect of Gods election are all those who are preordained vnto euerlasting life and whom the Lord will eternally saue which being considered in themselues are a great number but yet in respect of the number of the reprobates but a small and little flocke for though many be called yet few are chosen as Christ himselfe affirmeth Matth. 22.14 The last thing which also is expressed in the definition are certaine properties attributed to Gods election namely that it is eternall free and immutable That this decree is eternall it appeareth Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world So Rom. 9.11 Secondly that it is free and of his meere grace it is manifest Rom. 9.18 He hath mercie on whom he will and whom he will he hardneth So Eph. 1.11 In whom we are chosen when wee were predestinate according to the purpose of him which worketh all things after the counsaile of his owne will Lastly that it is immutable and most firme and certaine it plainly appeareth 2. Tim. 2.19 The foundation of God remaineth sure and hath this seale the Lord knoweth who are his Where we may obserue that this immutabilitie and certaintie of Gods decree doth not depend vpon vs or our perseuerance but vpon Gods good pleasure and foreknowledge for it is a foundation in it selfe firme and stable and hath not the seale of our worthinesse or perseuerance in grace but of Gods foreknowledge whereby he knoweth who are his CHAP. V. Sathans temptations concerning Gods election answered and first those wherewith he assaulteth carnall worldlings § Sect. 1 Sathans temptation whereby he perswadeth worldlings that all in the end shall be saued answered NOw concerning this decree of election and the assurance thereof there are two sorts of Sathans temptations the first he suggesteth into the minds of carnall worldlings to nourish in them fond presumption and carnall securitie the other into the minds of weak christians whereby he moueth them to doubt despaire of their electiō to euerlasting life The worldly man he assaulteth with two principal temptations first he perswadeth him that there is no election at al or reprobation but that all in the end shall be saued Which grosse absurditie that hee may make more plausible and probable hee setteth before them the infinite mercie of God and the generall promises and consolations in the Gospell Ezech. 13. and 18. 1. Tim. 2.4 as that he will not the death of a sinner and that he will that all men shall be saued in both places cunningly dissembling that which followeth for to the first place is added but that he repent and in the latter that they who shall be saued must also come to the knowledge of the truth But this temptation is so palpably absurd that it becommeth not Sathans policie to vse it to any but those onely whose hearts are hardned their eyes blinded their consciences seared and who hauing not beleeued and loued the truth are giuen ouer of God to beleeue strong delusions and therfore I will not spend much time in answering this temptation onely let such men as are seduced with Sathans lyes know thus much that Gods mercie is a iust mercie as his iustice is a mercifull iustice that God is infinite in both and no lesse glorified in the manifestation of the one than of the other Let them know that there are no promises of the Gospell so generall which are not limited with the condition of faith and the fruite thereof vnfained repentance Let them know that God who is not onely mercifull but also true yea truth it selfe hath in his word reuealed his will as well concerning the eternall death and destruction of the wicked as the saluation of the godly he hath said Matth. 22.14 and 7.13 that many are called and few chosen that the gate of heauen is so straight that there are few who finde it that he will say to the workers of iniquitie Goe your waies I know you not 23. that hee will make a separation betweene the sheepe and the goates and as hee saith to the one Come ye blessed of my father inherit ye the kingdome prepared for you from the foundations of the world Mat. 25.34.41
that which is gathered from his owne worthinesse and workes he still doubteth whether yet he be worthy or haue fulfilled the measure of workes required and then further examining himselfe to cleare his doubt and finding his best workes exceeding imperfect and that his sinnes and corruptions are innumerable then is his conscience set vpon the racke and his soule plunged into deepe despaire hauing no other stay but the broken staffe of his owne righteousnesse which most deceiueth him when he most trusteth to it § Sect. 3 And that we may be confirmed against sathans temptations The points to be considered of in this controuersie and the subtill sophistrie of these his Doctors I will handle this poynt at large and will plainely proue first that the childe of God being conuerted iustified and sanctified may be certainely assured of his particular election and that without any speciall reuelation after an ordinarie manner Secondly I will shew the meanes whereby we may attaine vnto this assurance and the infallible signes of our election Lastly I will answere such obiections as are made against it by sathan and his adherents That we may be certainly assured of our election proued by the testimonies of the Scriptures Concerning the first namely that we may be certainely assured of our election and saluation it may be proued by testimonies of Scriptures and also by infallible reasons grounded vpon them For we must not thinke that we can haue this assurance by ascending into heauen and there searching into Gods secret decree but we must gather it out of Gods word wherein the Lord hath reuealed his will vnto vs and in regard hereof though Gods will in it selfe be secret so that we may aske who hath knowne the will of the Lord 1. Cor. 2.16 yet seeing the Lord hath reuealed his hidden will in his word we may say with Paul that we haue knowne the minde of Christ. Now this knowledge of Gods will concerning our election is not to be gathered out of the lawe as the Papists would haue it for by reason of the condition annexed to the promise of euerlasting life Doe this and liue it leaueth our consciences in perpetuall doubting nay rather in vtter desperation because we knowe that we are farre from the exact obedience thereof but out of the gracious promises of the Gospell The couenant of grace made to assure vs of our election freely made to euery one who beleeueth without any condition of our owne workes and worthinesse And therefore if wee beleeue the promises of the Gospell made in Christ we may be assured of our election and saluation though in our selues we are miserable sinners who haue transgressed all Gods commaundements for the couenant and promises of God made to Abraham and his seede was not through the lawe but through the righteousnesse of faith as it is Rom 4.13 and therefore it is by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure not in selfe onely and in respect of the sufficiencie of Gods mercie and Christs merits as the Papists dreame but to all the seede that is to all that beleeue and be the children of Abraham who was the father of the faithfull both Iew and Gentill For otherwise we should haue no better assurance of saluation by the Gospell than by the Law for euen the promise of the Law was most sure in it selfe and on Gods part yet not sure to vs who could not perfourme the condition and therefore the Lord made a new couenant not of workes but of grace onely on the condition of faith that so the promise might be sure not onely in it selfe and on Gods behalf but also vnto vs who are Abrahams seede that is true beleeuers as appeareth Rom. 4.16 And this also notably appeareth Heb. 6.17.18 where the Apostle saith Rom. 4.16 Heb. 6.17.18 that God willing more abundantly to shew vnto the heires of promise the stablenes of his counsaile bound himselfe by an oath 18. That by two immutable things wherein it is impossible that God should lie wee might haue strong consolation which haue our refuge to hold fast the hope that is set before vs 19. Which we haue as an anchor of the soule both sure and stedfast In which words the Apostle plainly sheweth that the Lord hath added his oath to his promise not to the end that in it self it should be confirmed or needed any confirmation on Gods part for his bare word is yea and Amen so infallible and sure that though heauen and earth passe away and perish yet not one iot or title of his word shall faile till all things be fulfilled but to the end that we to whom the promises are made Mat. 5.18 might be assured of the stablenesse of his counsaile and thereby receiue strong consolation and might rest our soules in the tempests of temptations vpon firme hope as it were vpon a stedfast and sure anchor Now what stabilitie what strong consolation what stedfastnesse of hope if wee are still vncertaine of our election sometimes hoping as when wee looke vpon Gods mercie and Christs merits and sometimes doubting as when wee looke vpon our owne sinnes and vnworthinesse For what is this but to be shaken from our anchor hold and to be tossed vp and downe with the waues of doubting till at last wee dash against the rockes of despaire and so make shipwrack of our soules § Sect. 4 And thus you see that the couenant of grace was therefore made with vs Particular testimonies prouing this point that wee might be assured of our election and that the whole Gospell is nothing els but Gods ambassage whereby he certifieth vs of his free and vndeserued loue in Iesus Christ but let vs further consider of some speciall testimonies whereby this assurance is confirmed Rom. 5.1 it is said Rom. 5.1 that being iustified by faith wee haue peace towards God through our Lord Iesus Christ But what peace can we haue if wee be not assured of our election but haue our mindes distracted and racked betweene faith and doubting hope and despaire Rom. 8.38 the Apostle professeth Rom. 8.38 that he is perswaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities c. nor any other creature should be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. It is true wil the tempter say that Paul had this assurance of his election and saluation but it was by some speciall reuelation and nor ordinarily and therefore it followeth not hereof that euery particular Christian can haue this assurance I answere that the Apostle groundeth not his faith on reuelations in that place but on a foundation common to him with all true Christians namely on the death of Christ vers 32. Vers 23.33.34 on Gods free iustification ver 33. and vpon Christs intercession ver 34. and from hence hee confirmeth his and our resolution that nothing should separate vs
a fruite of the flesh it is condemned in Gods word though the Papists highly commend it So Matth. 14.31 our Sauiour reprehendeth Peter for his doubting O thou of little faith Matth. 14.31 wherefore diddest thou doubt And Luk. 12.29 he telleth vs that wee must not stand in doubt or as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth be not like vnto meteors which are carried about in the ayre with euery winde Luk. 12.29 And the Apostle Iames chap. Iam. 1.7 1.7 compareth him that wauereth or doubteth to a waue of the sea tost of the winde and carried away And Paul is so farre from commending doubting for a vertue that hee doth not onely condemne it as a sinne in it selfe but also as a cause which maketh our actions which are indifferent or good in themselues to become sinnes So the eating of this or that meate is a thing indifferent and lawfull if it be recciued with prayer and thanksgiuing but yet the Apostle telleth vs Rom. 14.23 that he who doubteth is condemned if he eate Rom. 14.23 and he rendreth this reason because he eateth not of faith and whatsoeuer is not of faith is sinne So that by this hee sheweth that he who doubteth eateth not of faith and that whatsoeuer is not done of faith is sinne Seeing therefore doubting is opposed vnto faith and is in it selfe not onely a sinne but also a cause of sinne let vs not intertaine it though it bring letters commendatorie from the Pope and all his shauelings but labour to banish it out of our harts and striue after faith and full assurance of our election and saluation in Christ Iesus and though we finde our great vnworthinesse of the least of Gods mercies and cannot see any reason in our selues why we should beleeue that wee are elected and shall be saued yet let vs hope against hope and beleeue against beleefe for it is not a thing left to our choise but inioyned vs by God as the chiefe and maine dutie required in the Gospell and therefore laying aside all reasoning and disputing let vs resolue to beleeue in obedience to Gods commandement and then though we are neuer so full of corruptions Act. 15.9 yet will this faith purifie vs though wee are most backward in perfourming any good worke yet will it be fruitfull in vs Galat. 5 6. and will worke by loue though wee be most vnworthie it will make vs more worthie by applying vnto vs the righteousnesse of Christ and the merits of his death and bloudshed which will not onely free vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne but wil also purge vs from the vices and corruptions themselues § Sect. 4 Thirdly the certaintie of our election may be prooued Thirdly faith is a certaine and particular perswasion and not a doubtfull opinion or generall notion by an argument drawne from the nature of faith which is not a doubtfull opinion but a certaine perswasion not a generall notion but a particular assurance whereby we do applie and appropriate vnto our selues those things which wee doe beleeue Whosoeuer therefore hath true faith he doth certainly beleeue and is particularly assured of his election iustification and saluation That faith is a certaine perswasion it may appeare first by those properties and names which are giuen vnto it in the word Heb. 11.1 faith is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is Heb. 11.1 a subsistance or present being of things hoped for so that hope waiteth for them in time to come but faith enioyeth them as being present namely in respect of the certaine assurance and particular application of the promises vnto ourselues and therefore the Apostle saith 1. Ioh. 5.13 that hereby we may know not that wee shall haue but that we haue eternall life 1. Ioh. Heb. 11.1 5.13 not in possession but in assurance of faith It is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the same place which word is quite contrarie to doubting as signifying a manifest demonstration which doth not only shew a thing probably but also doth conuince with strong arguments and make that truth cleere and manifest which was otherwise obscure and secret and therefore in the text it is called a demonstration of things not seene So there is ascribed vnto it fulnesse of perswasion Heb. Heb. 10.22 10.22 Let vs draw neere with a true heart 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in full assurance of faith and also boldnesse with confident trust Eph. Eph. 3.12 3.12 by whom we haue boldnesse and entrance with confidence not by extraordinarie reuelations but by faith in Christ which full assurance boldnesse and confidence wee could not haue if wee were not assured of Gods loue and our election but remained doubtfull whether we were beloued of God and elected or no. To these names and properties of faith we may adde some plaine testimonies of Scriptures which cleerely shew that faith is not a doubtfull hope but a certaine perswasion 1. Iohn 3.14 1. Ioh. 3.14 The Apostle saith that we knowe that we are translated from death to life not by reuelation but because we loue the brethren he doth not say that we knowe that we shall be but that we are translated from death to life to note the certainty of this knowledge and perswasion Rom. 3.2 the Apostle saith Rom. 5.2 that by Christ we haue accesse through faith vnto Gods grace wherein we stand and reioyce vnder hope or as the word signifieth glory and triumph with ioy so that we doe not wauer and stagger but stand firmely through faith we doe not feare and timorously hope but euen glory and triumphe in our reioycing saying with the Apostle Rom. 8.33 Who shall lay any thing to the charge of Gods chosen Rom. 8.33 34.35 38. it is God that iustifieth 34. Who shall condemne it is Christ which is dead yea or rather which is risen againe who is also at the right hand of God and maketh request also for vs. 35. Who shall separate vs from the loue of Christ c. So that though our sinnes be manifold our vnworthinesse great and our faith weake yet if it be true it may also be certaine in the assurance of Gods loue and our election because it is not grounded on our worthinesse but vpon Gods free iustifying and accepting of vs as righteous in Christ Heb. 6.18 and vpon Christs death resurrection and intercession for vs vnto God his father which is a most sure foundation that cannot faile In deede if our faith and the anchor of our hope did pitch rest and fasten it selfe vpon the light and hollow sands of our owne merits and worthinesse the surging waues and boysterous blasts of Sathans temptations would disanchor and tosse vs too and fro till at length we should make shipwracke of our faith against the rockes of despaire but seeing we take holde and rest vpon the firme and sure anchor-hold Christ Iesus his merits and righteousnesse
Church or market place at noone day § Sect. 9 The eight signe of the childe of God The eight signe is the loue of our brethren because God hath commanded vs. is the loue of our brethren in obedience to Gods commandement when as a man loues intirely a Christian because he is a Christian and ingrafted into the same bodie of Christ whereof he is a member for as it is impossible that one member of the bodie should not loue cherish and defend another because they are quickened by the same soule and gouerned by the same head so it is not possible but that one true Christian should loue cherish and defend another because they are quickned by the same spirit and ruled by the same head Iesus Christ And this is made a marke of Gods child by the Apostle Iohn 1. Ioh. 3.14 1. Ioh. 3.14 We know that we are translated from death to life because wee loue the brethren as the want of this loue is a sure note of the childe of wrath for as it followeth in the same verse he that loueth not his brother abideth in death Now the vndoubted signes of loue and christian charitie are two giuing to those that want The signes of true loue 1. Cor. 13.4 and forgiuing those that offend for it is a propertie of true loue to bee bountifull 1. Cor. 13.4 as to all so especially to those that are of the household of faith as it is Gal. 6.10 and on the other side Gal. 6.10 He that hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him he is destitute of the loue of God 1. Ioh. 3.17 and consequently of the loue of his brethren which is but a streame issuing from this fountaine 1. Ioh. 3.17 And this Christian liberalitie as it is a signe of true loue so also of our election and saluation for our Sauiour Christ hath shewed vs that according to these fruites of charity and actions of Christian liberalitie hee will pronounce the sentence of euerlasting ioy and happinesse at the day of iudgement Matth. 25.34 35 c. Matth. 25.34 35 36. and on the other side that he will pronounce the sentence of condemnation against the neglectors of these duties of Christian charitie vers 41 42 43. The second signe of true loue is forgiuing when as wee are readie for Gods sake and in obedience to his commandement to remit and pardon those iniuries which are offered vs for loue is not prouoked to anger 1. Cor. 13.5.7 and therefore much lesse to reuenge it suffreth all things it indureth all things as it is 1. Cor. 13.5 7. Nay it doth not onely not render euill for euill but it ouercommeth euill with goodnes Rom. 12.19.21 leauing reuenge vnto God and to his deputies and vicegerents the Magistrates as we may see in the example of our Sauiour Christ and the blessed Martyr Steuen who prayed for their persecutors whose example wee are to imitate as the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 12.14 Blesse them that persecute you Rom. 12.14 blesse I say and curse not And so shall wee haue a certaine signe of true loue and an vndoubted note of Gods spirit dwelling in vs of the remission of our sinnes and consequently of our election and saluation For naturallie we are Wolues Leopards Lions yea Cockatrices who kil with their lookes Esa 11.6.8 as the Prophet speaketh Esa 11.6 8. and like bruit and sauage beasts willing to offer all iniuries but impatient of suffring any and therefore when our sauage crueltie is turned into charitie and wee become as meeke and harmelesse as the lambe calfe or little childe it is a manifest signe that our stoute courages are abated and beaten downe with the rod of Christs mouth that wee are borne anew and quickened by his spirit and that now wee are seated in the mountaine of his holinesse and shall be heires of his kingdome of glorie So also hereby we are assured of the remission of our sinnes when we find our selues readie and willing to forgiue our neighbours for our Sauiour Christ hath promised Matth. 6.14 that if we doe forgiue men their trespasses our heauenly father will also forgiue vs Matth. 6.14 and consequently wee may assuredly gather that wee are iustified called elected and shal be glorified § Sect. 10 The ninth signe of the child of God elected to saluation The ninth signe is the loue of Gods ministers is the loue of Gods true Ministers and ambassadours not onely because they are Christians but also because they are sent of God to execute these holie functions for the gathering together of Gods elect And this our Sauiour Christ declareth Matth. 10.41 Matth. 10.41 He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Pròphet shall haue a Prophets reward that is euerlasting ioy and vnspeakable happinesse in Gods kingdom for they that turne many vnto righteousnes Dan. 12.3 shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And because none should pretend that by reason of their pouertie they cannot shew their loue to Gods Ministers therefore the Lord encourageth euen the poorest to shew their goodwill and affection vnto them Matth. 10.43 saying Matth. 10.43 Whosoeuer shall giue to any of these little ones to drinke a cup of cold water onely in the name of a disciple verely I say vnto you he shall not lose his reward namely in Gods kingdome Moreouer those that loue Gods ambassadours doe prooue vnto themselues and shew vnto the world that they haue receiued good by their ambassage euen reconciliation with God peace of conscience and assurance of saluation which maketh them to thinke no worldly benefit sufficient to requite these spirituall graces which by their meanes and ministerie they haue receiued and therefore with the Galatians they could bee content if it were possible to doe them good hereby Gal. 4.15 to pull out their owne eyes and to giue them vnto them seeing by their means the blind eyes of their vnderstandings are inlightened with the knowledge of God and Christ their Sauiour And because they haue receiued from them to their comfort the glad tidings of peace and good things therefore their feet that is their approaching and comming vnto them seeme beautiful and delightfull as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 10.15 Rom. 10.15 If an ambassadour were sent from a mightie Prince who was our enemie in time past and able at his pleasure to destroy vs and our countrey to the end he might conclude a peace and not only so but to offer vs the free vse of al the riches and commodities of his kingdome who would not receiue him with ioy and giue him royall entertainment if they were perswaded of the truth of his ambassage But wee by our sinnes had made the glorious King of heauen and earth our enemie who is able euery minute to destroy vs with the breath of his nostrels and it hath pleased the Lord
Sauiour and Redeemer namely Christ Iesus who only saueth vs from our sinnes as it is Matth. 1.21 Neither is there saluation in any other as it is Act. 4.12 Matth. 1.21 Act. 4.12 For as there is but one God so there is but one Mediatour between God and man which is the man Iesus Christ as it is 1. Tim. 2.5 1. Tim. 2.5 And by him alone we haue redemption through his bloud euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes and that without any respect of our worthinesse but according to his rich grace Eph. 1.7 Eph. 1.7 Luk. 1.68 And though we do not exclude God the Father from the worke of our redemption for he is the author and first cause who hath so loued vs that hee sent his sonne to saue and redeeme vs nor the holy Ghost who applieth vnto vs the merits and efficacie of Christs death making them effectuall for our saluation yet if we speake properly our Sauiour Christ onely can be called our Redeemer and that in these respects first because he alone was ordained and deputed to perfect the worke of our redemption secondly because he onely was God and man both which were necessarily required in our Mediatour and Redeemer that hee might haue full right and abilitie to redeeme vs thirdly because hee alone gaue himselfe to bee the price of our redemption and lastly because in him onely there is perfect redemption as being our head who not only hath saluation in himselfe but also deriueth it to all the members of his bodie Thirdly I set downe the captiuitie it selfe out of which wee were redeemed namely not the captiuitie of Egypt or Babylon nor out of the slauerie of the Turke Spaniard or any other earthly Tyrant whose thraldome might well be bitter but not long because our liues are short and grieuous to the bodie but extendeth not to the soule but Christ hath deliuered vs out of the bondage of sinne Sathan hell and death in which we should haue been enthralled and fearefully tormented for euer and euer not in bodie alone but in soule also § Sect. 2 Fourthly 1. Pet. 1.18 How Christ is said to haue bought vs with a price I shew the price which hee hath giuen for our redemption namely not siluer and gold or any corruptible thing but himself euen his bodie to be crucified and his bloud to bee shed that so his fathers iustice being satisfied and his wrath appeased wee might be set free out of the thraldome of our spirituall enemies But it may be demaunded how it can truly be said that Christ hath redeemed vs by paying the price of our redemption seeing the scriptures testifie that by his power hee hath forcibly deliuered vs out of the hands of our spirituall enemies So Heb. 2.14 it is said that Christ destroyed him who had the power of death that is the diuell And Col. 2.15 the Apostle sheweth that hee hath spoyled principalities and powers and hath led them openly and triumphed ouer them And Luk. 11.22 hee is compared to a valiant champion who hath thrust the strong man Sathan out of his possession by which it may appeare that our Sauiour hath not redeemed vs by giuing a price after a legall manner but by force and as it were by conquest I answere that Christ hath both paid the price of our redemption and also hath deliuered vs forcibly by his power for hee paid the price vnto God to whom hee offered the sacrifice of himselfe that it might be a full satisfaction for sinne and a sufficient price to redeeme vs out of the captiuitie of our spirituall enemies and to purchase the fauour of God and our heauenlie inheritance in his kingdome and therefore in respect of God the Father to whom our Sauiour offred himselfe hee is said to haue redeemed vs by giuing a ransome for vs. But when Gods iustice was fully satisfied Christ dealt not with our spirituall enemies by intreatie much lesse offred hee this price of our redemption to Sathan for if no sacrifice might lawfully bee offered vnto any saue God alone much more vnlawfull was it that this sacrifice of Christs bodie should be offred vnto the diuell but by his almightie power hee ouercame the power of darknesse vanquished Sathan subdued death and broke open the prison of the graue and so by strong hand set all Gods elect at libertie For after that the debt of our sinnes was discharged our ransome paid and the handwriting of ordinances cancelled and nailed vnto the crosse these our spirituall enemies had no iust interest vnto vs nor any thing to alledge why they should longer hold vs in their captiuitie but yet the strong man who had taken possession would not willingly lose it vnlesse hee were ouercome with a greater strength and therefore our Sauiour Christ hauing bought vs of his father and so become our true owner buckled with our spirituall enemies ouercame these principalities and powers triumphed gloriously ouer them and freed vs out of their tyrannicall iurisdiction But it may bee obiected that wee were captiues vnto Sathan and therefore the price of redemption was to be paied vnto him and not vnto God the father who held vs not in his captiuitie I answere that though Sathan held vs in his captiuitie yet not in his owne right for wee had not sinned against him to whom we were not bound to performe obedience nor were indebted vnto him but wee had sinned against God whose seruants wee were by right of creation and had infinitly runne into his debt which we were altogether vnable to pay and therefore like a iust iudge he condemned vs to the perpetuall prison of death and committed vs to the custodie of Sathan as vnto a iaylor to be kept in his bondage till we had satiffied for our sinnes and discharged our debt which being impossible to vs our Sauiour Christ hauing assumed our nature and become our suretie and mediator payed that we owed and suffered that which we had descrued and so fully satisfying his fathers iustice hath purchased our redemption so as now Sathan had no more anthoritie to retaine vs in his captiuitie then the iaylor hath of holding him in prison who by the iudge is released or the executioner of hanging him whom the iudge hath acquitted or pardoned And therefore tyrannically exercising still his iurisdiction our Sauiour by strong hand ouercame him and all the power of hell that so he might set vs at libertie whom his fathers iust sentence had acquitted and his mercie pardoned The last thing to be considered is the end of our redemption namely that we should no longer serue sinne and Sathan out of whose bondage wee are released but become the seruants of Christ who hath redeemed vs seruing him in holines and righteousnes all the daies of our liues that so glorifying him here on earth he may glorifie vs in heauen and make vs partakers of those euerlasting ioyes which by his death and bloodshed he hath purchased for vs. CHAP.
and striuing to mortifie the flesh and the corruptions thereof and to rise againe to newnes of life Our affections also were wholy corrupted and disordered so that we hated God and loued the world feared man and not the Lord trusted vpon the inferior meanes neuer regarding the fountaine of all goodnes in a word wee were giuen ouer to our owne harts lusts Rom. 1.24.26 and vnto vile affections as it is Rom. 1.24.26 but by the redemption wrought by Christ becomming his and being quickned and strengthened by his holy spirit wee haue crucified the flesh with the affections and lusts thereof Gal. 5.24 as the Apostle speaketh Gal. 5.24 Lastly the members of our bodie were seruants to vncleanes and iniquitie to commit iniquitie Rom. 6.19 Rom. 6.19 our eyes full of adulterie our tongues forges of lies our feete swift to shed blood but our Sauiour Christ redeeming vs hath deliuered our bodies also from the thraldome of sinne and Sathan so as though sinne dwell yet it shall no longer raigne in our mortall bodies Rom. 6.12 that we should obey the lusts thereof as appeareth Rom. 6.12 In a word both body and soule were in miserable captiuitie to our spirituall enemies but our Sauiour hath bought vs with a price 1. Cor. 6.20 to the end we may glorifie God in our bodies and in our spirits for they are Gods as it is 1. Cor 6.20 And hath redeemed vs not with corruptible things as siluer and gold from our vaine couersation 1. Pet. 1.18.19 but with his owne most precious blood as Peter teacheth vs 1. Pet. 1.18.19 If therefore we are redeemed by Christ then our blind vnderstandings are inlightened by the preaching of the Gospell and we freed from our former ignorance our willes which were rebellious are inclined to obedience so as we earnestly desire to leaue our sinnes and to serue the Lord in the duties of sanctification and haue an endeauor of mortifying our sins and rising againe to newnes of life our affections also are purged from their corruptions so that we loue feare trust in hope and expect all good from him who is the fountaine of all goodnes our bodies which were giuen as seruants vnto sinne are now become the seruants of righteousnes vnto holines Rom. 6.29 vers 22. In a word both in bodie and soule we are freed from sinne and made seruants vnto God But if our vnderstandings are still blinde and ignorant our willes backward to imbrace any goodnes and most prone vnto all euill our affections as corrupt as euer they were and our bodies the readie instruments to act all sinne and wickednes then haue we as yet no fruite of the redemption wrought by Christ for it is not a titularie but a powerfull redemption which indeed and truth deliuereth vs euen in this life from our spirituall enemies so that though they may assault and grieuously vexe vs yet they shall neuer gouerne and raigne ouer vs and therefore whosoeuer feele not the redemption wrought by Christ powerfull in this life to free them in some measure from the rule and iurisdiction of sinne Sathan the world and the flesh shall neuer finde it fruitfull and effectuall to free and deliuer them from condemnation hell and destruction in the life to come CHAP. XVI Of those temptations which Sathan vseth against the faithfull concerning their redemption § Sect. 1 ANd thus much concerning those temptations which Sathan suggesteth into mens mindes to nourish in them carnall securitie That it is not repugnant to Gods iustice to punish Christ for vs. now we are to consider of those which he vseth to moue men to doubting and desperation First therefore he obiecteth that it is a thing vnreasonable and vtterly repugnant to Gods iustice that Christ who was innocent should be punished for vs who are guiltie that we should deserue the blame and he suffereth the stripes that the righteous should be condemned and the wicked acquitted that wee who like barrabas were cruell murtherers and wicked sinners should be let lose and the immaculate lambe of God in whom there was no fault should be deliuered vp to be crucified for what were this but to make the iust God like vniust Pilate what were this but to deny his owne word hauing said that the righteous should liue in his righteousnes Ezech. 18.20 and the sinner die in his iniquitie To which I answere first that it would not indeede haue stoode with Gods iustice to haue punished Christ as he was innocent and righteous nor to haue acquitted and absolued vs who were vnrighteous and wicked but he punished Christ in respect that he had taken vpon him the sins of all the faithfull and absolueth vs as we are freed from our sins clothed with his righteousnes and obedience He punished Christ not as he was most iust and free from sin but as he was our suretie who had taken vpon him to discharge our debt and to satiffie for our sinnes and thus the creditor may iustly require his debt of the suretie though in respect of himselfe he owed him nothing and thus he may nay ought to release the principall when the suretie hath allreadie discharged the debt Secondly I answere that it had bin iniustice in God if he had forced our Sauiour Christ who was iust and innocent to vndergoe the punishments which were due vnto vs who were malefactors and offenders for this were to condemne the righteous and to iustifie the wicked but our Sauiour Christ of his owne free accord did voluntarily offer himselfe to stand in our place and to discharge that debt which we owed and to make satissaction to his father by suffering that punishment which wee had deserued Ioh. 10.18 And this apeareth Ioh. 10.18 where our Sauiour saith that no man tooke his life from him but that hee laied it downe of himselfe And the Apostle telleth vs that he humbled himselfe Phil. 2.8 and became obedient vnto death Phil. 2.8 In which respect his death is called a sacrifice or free oblation which he voluntarily offered vnto his father Heb. 9.14 Heb. 9.14 and therefore the Lord might iustly take that which Christ freely gaue nay it had been crueltie and iniustice if he should haue refused the paiment of such a sufficient suretie when he voluntarily offered it for our discharge choosing rather still to haue kept vs in prison bound in the chaines of euerlasting death Lastly there might haue been some shew of rigor and iniustice if Christ the innocent had been ouerwhelmed in suffering the punishments which were due vnto vs who were the offendors but being not onely man which suffered but God also and therefore of infinit power and maiestie he was able to pay our great debt and yet is neuer the poorer to suffer death and ouercome it by suffering and by yeelding a while to the malice of our spirituall enemies he finally vanquished and gloriously triumphed ouer them all and therefore it
now broken the Serpents head so that well may hee hisse against vs but yet hee cannot sting vs. And whereas heretofore hee was the prince of the world Ioh. 12.31 who did rule and gouerne vs at his pleasure and according to his will now he is cast out by the prince of princes as it is Ioh. 12.31 and our Sauiour Christ hath established his kingdom in vs ruling and gouerning vs with the scepter of his word and holy spirit Whereas hee was the strong man who quietly kept his possession in vs Luk. 11.21 Luk. 11.21 our Sauiour Christ who is stronger than he hath spoyled him of his armour wherein hee trusted and hath thrust him out of his possession Whereas hee was a cruell tyrant who held vs fast bound in his captiuitie our Sauiour Christ hath redeemed vs out of his thraldome so as now he cannot hurt vs though hee neuer ceaseth to assault vs and though hee goeth about like a roring lion seeking whom hee 1. Pet. 5.9 may deuoure yet now we are enabled by Gods spirit to resist him stedfastly in the faith and so armed with the coat-armour of Gods spiritual graces that though he may with the violence of his assaults foyle vs yet shall hee neuer be able to ouercome vs. That God turneth Sathans temptations to the good of his children God doth indeed suffer this wicked enemie to make warre against euen his dearest children and that sometimes after a strange and extraordinarie manner not that he will giue them ouer againe vnto his thraldome out of which he hath purchased them with so deare a price but partly to driue them hereby to flie vnto him by earnest and effectuall prayer imploring his aide against Sathans crueltie and that hauing receiued it they may ascribe the whole glorie of the victorie to him alone by whose strength they haue ouercome and partly to shew vnto them their owne weakenesse that they may not relie nor rest vpon it Sometimes hee suffreth them to be thus assaulted that his power may be magnified in their weakenesse and sometimes that the graces which he hath bestowed vpon them may shine gloriously to all the world Sometimes for the confirmation of others who shall hereafter be tried with the like temptations when they haue in their brethren often experience of Gods loue power and fatherly assistance and sometimes the more to strengthen themselues in his spirituall graces and to confirme them more fully in the assurance of his loue and their saluation For as a citie which hath once bin besieged and not sacked wil euer after be more strong to hold out if it be assaulted by the like danger because the citizens will carefully fortifie their walles and increase their bulwarkes and as he who hath been once robbed by theeues will euer after ride better prouided to make resistance that hee doe not againe fall into their hands so those who are besieged and assaulted by their spirituall enemies will euer after more carefully arme themselues against them with the graces of Gods spirit that they may not be ouercome nor foiled by them We know that whilest men quietly enioy their possessions and inheritance they rest secure keeping their writings in a boxe without euer looking on them from yere to yere but when their title and right is called into question and some man labours to thrust them out of their possession then they peruse their writings and deeds with al diligence not satisfied with their own iudgement they resort to skilfull Lawyers crauing their counsaile how they may maintaine their right and answere the plea which their aduersarie makes against them whereby oftentimes it commeth to passe that they make their title not onely much more strong in it selfe but also more cleere and euident vnto al others so that afterwards none dare once aduenture to trouble them againe or call their right into question so whilest we neuer doubt of our heauenly inheritance we rest secure and let the book of God which is our best deed and euidence lie vnder our cupbords till it mould for want of vse but when sathan by his temptations doth call our title into question and pleades that we haue no right to Gods kingdome then do we most carefully and diligently peruse the booke of God then doe we goe vnto Gods Ministers desiring their counsaile how we may answere Sathans plea and cleere our title then doe we most carefully vse all good means to increase our knowledge that thereby wee may throughly infourme our selues of our right and confirme our assurance against all cauils and obiections And hereby it commeth to passe that those who before had very weak titles to their heauenly inheritance whilest they remained retchlesse and secure and but slender assurance euer to enioy it now by their care paines and diligence haue so confirmed it vnto themselues and so cleered it to al the world that Sathan dare neuer after call it into question vnlesse he doe it like many contentious men in these dates rather that he may trouble and vexe them with a tedious suite than for any hope of preuailing in the end And thus you see that Christ hath redeemed all the faithfull out of Sathans thraldome notwithstanding that he stil assaulteth them with his temptations neither doth hee hereby ouercome them and againe inthrall them in his captiuitie but rather by Gods blessing they serue to strengthen them in the spirituall graces of Gods spirit and to confirme them in the full assurance of their saluation § Sect. 8 Sixtly the tempter will obiect that wee still die and therefore are not redeemed and deliuered out of the bondage of death That though we die yet we are redeemed from death Gen. 3.19 Heb. 9.27 To which we may answer that Gods iust sentence once denounced could not be reuoked Gen. 3.19 Dust thou art and into dust thou shalt returne and therefore the Apostle saith Heb. 9.27 It is appointed vnto all men that they shall once die But as Ahashuorus Hest 8. though he could not reuoke the sentence of death against the Iewes after it was once pronounced because it was a decree of the Medes and Persians which might not be altred yet at Hesters suite sent out another decree whereby hee armed and strengthened the Iewes against their enemies to the end they might resist ouercome and destroy them so the Lord hauing pronounced the sentence of death against all the sonnes of Adam could not reuoke his decree and sentence as being farre more vnchangeable than the decree of the Medes and Persians yet at the suite of our Sauiour Christ hee made another decree whereby wee might be armed against our enemie death and ouercome him So that now though we die yet are we not subiect vnto death neither shall wee be held vnder the dominion thereof though wee are not wholy exempted from death yet now the nature therof is quite altred for heretofore it was vnconquerable but now easily ouercome
seruice of our youth as well as the seruice of our old age for he requireth this as well as the other nay before the other and this was signified vnder the types of the old law where the Lord requireth that they should offer vnto him the principall of the flocke and such beasts as were whole and sound yong and without blemish So Leuit. 3.1 the Lord requireth that the sacrifice which they offered should be without blemish and 22.20 Ye shall not offer any thing that hath a blemish for that shall not be acceptable for you And Deut. 15.21 if there be any blemish therein as if it be lame or blind or haue any euill fault thou shalt not offer it vnto the Lord thy God And for transgressing this law the Lord reprehendeth the people by his Prophet Mal. 1.8 And if ye offer the blind for sacrifice is it not euill and if ye offer the lame and sicke is it not euill offer it now to thy Prince will he be content with thee or accept thy person saith the Lord of hoastes And vers 14. Cursed be the deceiuer which hath in his flocke a male and voweth and sacrificeth to the Lord a corrupt thing Now did the Lord regard the beasts and hath he made so many lawes that he might haue the best of them surely this is not Gods mayne end but hee would thereby teach vs to offer and dedicate vnto his seruice euen our best things as the prime of our youth our flourishing age for was the Lord greatly offended when as men reserued the best of the flocke to themselues and offred the old blind and lame vnto him and will he be well pleased that we should dedicate our youth and the strength of body and soule vnto Sathan and our owne lustes and reserue for him onely our old decrepit lame and withered age when as our bodies are full of diseases and our mindes of infirmities will any Prince accept of vs if we spend the whole time of our youth and strength in the seruice of his enemies and when we are sicke old lame blind offer him our seruice and will the Prince of Princes thinke hee be well pleased if he be thus vsed if Sathan and the world haue all the pure wine will he be contented with the lees and dregs if they haue the ripe fruite will God haue that which is rotten and putrified If they haue our health wil he haue our sicknesse surely it is not likely for the Lord who hath created vs redeemed vs and doth preserue vs doth looke to be serued with our youth health and strength which he hath bestowed on vs. § Sect. 3 a. Motiue taken from the momentany shortnesse of mans life The second argument to mooue vs to hasten our repentance and turning vnto God is taken from the momentanie shortnesse and the mutable vncertainty of our liues in respect of the shortnesse of our liues they are compared to a pilgrimage to the flower and grasse of the field to the wind a cloud smoke vapour to a dreame a tale tould a spanne shadow and the passage of the weauers shuttle yea it is called vanitie it selfe And therefore seeing our liues are so short surely they are al to little though they were wholy spent in Gods seruice but seeing wee haue spent a great part of this short time euen our whole life before our conuersion after the lusts of the gentiles let vs thinke that inough yea farre too much to be so ill bestowed and from hence for ward let vs liue as much time as remaineth in the flesh not after the lusts of men but after the will of God as the apostle admonisheth vs. 1. Pet. 4.2.3 But though our life were short yet if this short time were certain there were some more shew of reason why we should defer our conuersion but as it is short so is it most vncertaine for wee haue not assurance that wee shall liue one hower wee are tenants at will in these earthly tabernacles neither doe wee know how soone our great landlord will turne vs out of them wee are the Lords stewards here on earth and we know not how soone our Lord and master will call vs to a reckoninge and therefore it behoueth vs to haue our accompts alwayes perfect and the bookes of our consciences made vp in readinesse We are vncertaine when death will arrest vs and carry vs to iudgment and therefore we should be prepared for it all times when wee goe to bed we are so to lay vs downe as though we were neuer to rise til we rise to receiue our last sentence when we rise vp in the morning wee are so to spend that day as though it were the last of our liues for how many haue gone well to bed who haue beene dead before the morning how many haue risen as they thought in perfect health and yet haue beene attached by death before the euening and therefore it behooueth euery one who hath any regarde of the eternall saluation of his soule to turne speedily vnto God and while today they heare his voice not to harden their heartes Men vsually delaie matters of least waight and in the first place dispatch businesse of greatest importance and therefore vnlesse we thinke the preseruing of our bodies and soules from the eternall torments of hell fire and the assurance of euerlasting happinesse and blessednesse in Gods kingdome to be matters of lesse importance then the obtaining of some vain pleasures vnconstant honours or base commodities let vs turne vnto the Lord betimes by vnfained repentance and according to our sauiours aduise Matth. 6.33 Let vs first seeke the kingdome of God and the righteousnesse therof and then worldly necessaries shal be cast vnto vs as a vantage in this maine bargaine If our houses were on fire we would seeke first to preserue those things which are most deare and pretious vnto vs good houshould stuffe before lumber Iewels before stuffe and children before Iewels but our liues are dayly in a consumption et dum crescimus vita decrescit whilst wee grow and increase our liues decrease and therefore in the first place let vs seek to preserue our soule which is our chiefe Iewel and not suffer it to perish through impenitencie whilst we gaine some earthly vanities But most lamentable is the practise of most who liue as though they were neuer to die or as though they had taken of God a long lease of their liues which is to expire at a certaine appointed time and this makes them deferre their repentance and to put the euill day far from thē til at last death attacheth them carrieith them to iudgment and this appeareth by the scripturs and continual experience Iob speaking of earnal secure men saith that they take the tabret harpe reioyce in the sound of the organs they spend their days in wealth suddainly they go downe to the graue Iob 21.12.13 So Eccl. 9.12 man doth
securitie for whereas the Lord saith Ezech. 33.11 That he will not the death of a sinner he addeth in the next wordes but that he turne from his way and liue so that the Lord speaketh not of all sinners but of those who turne vnto him from their wicked waies So our sauiour Christ saith Math. 9.13 that hee came not to call the righteous that is those who are iust righteous in their owne conceipts but sinners to repentance so that whosoeuer are called vnto Christ that in him they may haue saluation are called also to repentance And Math. 11.28 our sauiour doth not call all sinners vnto him without difference but those onely who are wearie and heauy laden that is who find their sinnes irksome and grieuous vnto them and desire nothing more then to be freed of this vnsupportable burthen And the Apostle Paule likewise 1. Tim. 2.4 doth not say simply that God would haue all men to besaued but that he would also 〈◊〉 haue them come to the knowledge of the truth that is to the knowing acknowledging beleeuing of the principles of Christian religion cōcerning God themselues and the worke of redemption wrought by Christ Let therefore no carnall secure man take occasion to presume vpon Gods mercy in regard of the sweet and gratious promises of the Gospell for vnlesse they turne vnto God from their euill waies and truely repent them of their sinnes vnlesse they are wearie and heauie laden desiring nothing more then to be eased of their heauie burthen vnlesse they come out of their blind ignorance and attaine to the knowledge of the truth the gratious promises of the Gospell do not appertaine vnto them § Sect. 2 Secondly whereas they alleadge the example of the thiefe conuerted at the hower of death we are to know that this is but one particular act of Gods mercy The 2. let is presumption vpon the example of the conuerted thiefe and therefore we can make thereof no generall rule especialy seeing to this one we may oppose many thousands of those who hauing deferred their repētance to the last hower haue beene taken away in their sinns and impaenitencie It is true indeed that if with this thiefe we truelyturne vnto the Lord by vnfained repentance and shew our faith by the like liuely fruites he wil pardon our sinnes and receaue vs to mercy according to his gratious promises but this faith and repentance are not in our owne power but the free gifts of God which hee very seldome bestoweth on those at the hower of death who haue neglected contemned them their whole liues sometimes indeed hee calleth and conuerteth some at the last hower to shew the infinite riches of his mercy but most commonly he leaueth those who haue deferred their repentance to die in their impaenitencie that they may be examples of his iustice And to this purpose Austine speaketh well there is saith hee mention made in the Scriptures of one whome the Lord receaued to mercy that none might despaire and but of one that none might presume It is the maner of princes to send their gratious pardon sometimes to those who are led out to execution but if any will wilfully offend in hope hereof or hauing offended wil deferre to sue for his pardon to the last hower surely he is well worthy to be hanged both for his offence and also for his presumption so the Lord mercifully pardoneth some few when death is ready to cease vpon them and to transport them into the eternall torments of hell fire to shew the riches of his grace but if any shall take occasion hereby the more to offend against his maiestie or hauing offended deferreth to sue for pardon by powring out the teares of vnfained repentance vntill his last hower hee is vndoubtedly vnworthy of any grace and mercy and in all likelihood he shall be deliuered vp to suffer eternal torments Moreouer as this act of mercy in receiuing this thiefe to grace was very extraordinary so was it reserued as being most fit for the time of Christes passion for as great Princes at the time of their coronation pardon such notorious offences the like whereof they wil hardly euer after remit to the end that their clemencie and mercy may appeare to all so our Sauiour Christ the glorious king of heauen and earth being ready to lay downe the forme of a seruant and to take vpon him the crowne of endlesse glory and maiesty gaue his gratious pardon to this greeuous offender that his infinite mercy and goodnesse might be manifested vnto al men that so they might breake of their sinnes by vnfained repentance and by a liuely faith come vnto him looking and expecting for life and saluation onely in this their sauiour and redeemer and as cunning Surgeons hauing made a soueraigne salue do vpon the next occasion make experiment thereof by curing some griesly and desperate wound that so they may commend it to all who shal haue need to vse it so the Lord hauing made a pretious plaister and soueraigne salue to cure all soules who being wounded with sinne will apply it vnto them by a liuely faith presētly tooke occasion of curing there with this poore theefe grieuously wounded with sinne that all others in his state seing the vertue thereof might more earnestly desire it and more carefully seeke after and apply it to their wounded soules And therefore seeing the occasion of this cure was altogether extraordinary the action is not like to bee ordinarie the occasion being remooued and the mercy of God and vertue of Christes death and bloodshed being sufficiently manifested to al the world Thirdly we are to know that the estate of these men is farre vnlike and much more desperate then the state of the conuerted theefe for hee was in all likelihood neuer before this time called and presently he harkeneth vnto the voyce of Christ and willingly intertaineth the good motions of his spirit but these men being often called haue refused to come and haue quenched the good motions of Gods spirit he persisted in his sin ignorantly hauing not heard the doctrine of the Gospell whereby he might be inuited to come vnto Christ by a liuely faith and might turne vnto God by vnfained repentance these haue often heard these glad tidings and haue neglected and contemned them hee continued in his sinnes through ignorance neither did hee vngratefully resolue to serue the diuell his whole life reseruing the time of his old age and sicknesse for the seruice of God only for his own aduantage but these men hauing bin oftē instructed in the law of God and wayes of godlinesse notwithstanding wittingly and wil fully persist in their sinns presuming vppon repentance and hope of mercy at the last houre intending then to turne vnto God not for any loue they beare him but for feare of hel torments and eternall damnation lastly his repentance was most vnfayned and exceeding earnest and his faith brightly shined presently after his
repentant and beleeuing sinners let vs vnfainedly turne vnto the Lord and apply Christ and his meritts vnto vs by a true liuely faith and then we may assure our selues that he will pardon and forgiue vs al our sinnes and receaue vs gratiously into his loue and fauour § Sect. 5 But against this which hath beene alleaged That al Gods promises are made indefinitely to all that beleeue Sathan wil be ready to obiect to the afflicted conscience that these promises were made to the prophets apostles and holy men of God but not to such haynous and rebellious sinners who haue most iustly deserued that God should poure out vppon them the violls of his wrath and those fearefull punishments threatned in the law because of the innumerable number of their sinnes and the outragiousnesse of their wickednesse and therefore such haue nothing to doe with the sweet promisses of the Gospell but are to apply vnto themselues the terrible threatnings denounced in the law against such grieuous sinners For the answering of which tentation wee are to know that the Lords promises made in the Gospell are general indefinite and vniuersall excluding none who turne from their sinnes by vnfained repentance and beleeue in Christ Iesus resting on him alone for their saluation Neither is there any limitation or exception of this or that sinne for be they neuer so greiuous and manifold yet if wee performe the condition of faith and repentance the Lord will make good his promises vnto vs. For the first namely that the promises of the gospell are indefinite and generally made to al who repent and beleeue it shall manifestly appeare if wee consider the particulars Esa 55.1 the Lord calleth all vnto him indefinitly saying to euery one who thirsteth come to the waters and yee that haue no siluer come buy and eate Come I say buy wine and milke with out siluer and without money so that though we haue no worthinesse and righteousnesse of our owne yet if we thirst after the mercy of God and righteousnesse of Christ and come vnto God by vnfained repentance and vnto our sauiour by a liuely faith our thirst shall be satisfiyed and all our wantes supplyed So Ezech. 33.11 the Lord solemnely sweareth that hee will not the death of a sinner but that they turne from their wicked wayes and liue where hee speaketh not of this or that sinner but of all without exception who turne vnto him Our sauiour Christ likewise maketh this indefinite promise Marke 16.16 that whosoeuer shal beleeue and be baptised shal be saued and Iohn 3.14 he saith that as Moses lift vp the serpent in the wildernesse so must the sonne of man be lift vp 15. that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue eternal life So that as al who were stunge of the fyrie serpent were healed if they looked vpon the brasen serpent neither was their any exceptiō or distinctiō between those who were deeply or but a little pearsed with the sting for if they were stūg they died if they vsed not the remedy ordained of God though their wound were but small and shallow but if they looked vp to the brasen serpent according to God ordināce they were cured though their wound were neuer so deadly and desperate so those who looke not vpon Christ Iesus hanging on the crosse with the eye of faith are sure to fall into euerlasting death and damnation bee their sinnes neuer so few and on the other side they who lay hould vpon Christ and beleeue in him are sure to bee saued though their sins bee neuer so many and grieuous So in the 16. verse it is said that God so loued the world that hee hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life and ve 36. He that beleeueth in the sonne hath euerlasting life c. So that here is no exception of sinnes for the promises are made indefinitely to all that beleeue In like maner our Sauiour hath promised Iohn 6.37 That whosoeuer come vnto him hee will not cast them away and ve 40. he assureth vs that it is the will of his father who sent him that euery man who beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting life And the Apostle Peter Actes 10.43 saith that vnto our Sauiour Christ giue all the prophets witnesse that through his name all that beleeue in him shall haue remission of sinnes And the Apostle Iohn likewise saith 1. Ioh. 2.1 that if any man sinne wee haue an aduocate with the father Iesus Christ the righteous and hee is the propitiation for our sinnes and not for ours onely but also for the sinnes of the whole world that is for whosoeuer repent and beleeue of euery kingdome countrey and nation So that by all these places it is cleare and euident that none are excluded from being partakers of Gods mercifull promises but those who exclude themselues through their infidelitie and vnrepentancie § Sect. 6 Neyther is there any sins so innumerable in multitude so hainous grieuous which will debarre vs from receiuing the benefit of Gods mercie and Christs merites so wee repent and beleeue That our sins cannot debarre vs of Gods mercy so we repent and beleeue as may appeare also by plaine testimonie Esay 1.18 the Lord thus speaketh to the Iewes whom hee had described to bee rebellious and most outragiously wicked Come now saith the Lord let vs reason together though your sinnes were as crimson they shal be made white as snow though they were red as scarlet they shal be as wooll The Apostle Paul likewise witnesseth Tit. 2.14 that our sauiour Christ gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie And the Apostle Iohn saith that the bloud of Christ cleanseth vs from all sinne and if wee acknowledge our sinnes he is faithfull and iust to forgiue vs our sinnes 1. Ioh. 17.9 and to cleanse vs from all vnrighteousnesse So that here is no mention made of any sinnes which are excepted or which exclude vs from Gods mercy Christs merits so that we repent beleeue neither are the promises of the Gospell limited or restrained in respect of the number or greeuousnesse of our sinnes so we performe the conditiō of faith and repentance for whosoeuer is hartily sorie for his sinnes past and purposeth for the time to come to leaue and forsake them whosoeuer doth beleeue Gods promises and resteth vpon Christ Iesus alone for his saluation by a true and liuely faith he may be certainly assured that the Lord hath pardoned and forgiuen all his sinnes and receaued him into his grace and fauour though his sinnes be neuer so many and hainous and on the other side whosoeuer continueth in his vnrepentancie and infidelitie shal be condemned though his other sinnes be neuer so few and small neither will all our other sinnes debarre vs of Gods mercy vnlesse they bee ioyned with vnrepentancie and vnbeliefe for obserue
with the godly instructions profitable exhortations and sweete consolations of those who are more stronge and therefore the Apostle Paul exhorts those who had attayned vnto agreat measure of faith that they admitt such as were weake into their companie to be made partakers of their Christian conferences to the ende that hereby they might be more and more strengthened and confirmed Rom. 14.1 Rom. 14.1 The 4. means the vse of the sacraments The fourth meanes is the holy vse of the sacraments for the Lord hath added them as seales to the handwriting of his couenant of grace to confirme our faith in the full assurance of his promises and to take away all doubting For whereas the weake conscience might make some scruple in respect that the promises of the gospell in the preaching of the word are deliuered indefinitely and after a generall manner in the vse of the sacraments they are assured vnto them particularly and as it were by name and that not after some obscure and hidden maner but most familiarly by such common signes are are subiect to the senses and within the reach of the shallowest capacitie The 5. means good workes A fift meanes to confirme our faith is to be continually conuersant in good workes and to bring forth the fruites of holy obedience for hereby our faith is exercised and by exercise strengthened and increased whereas contrariwise the neglect hereof doth wound the conscience and so quench the liuely heate of faith that though it bee not quite extinguished yet it will not sensibly be discerned As therefore the strength of the bodie is increased by exercise and for want thereof waxeth faint and languisheth and as the stomacke is by outward exercise of the bodie made more fitt to performe his dutie of concoction so our faith being exercised in good workes is made more strong and fitt to performe his dutie in applying Christ and the sweete promises of the gospel vnto vs and without this spirituall exercise it waxeth faint and the strength thereof abateth The 6. means feruēt prayer The last meanes to strengthen and increase our faith is continuall and feruent prayer for faith is not in our owne power but it is the free gift of God as the Apostle teacheth vs Ephe. 2.8 neither can any man come vnto our Sauiour Christ by a liuely faith except it be giuen him of the father Ephe. 2.8 as himselfe speaketh Ioh. 6.65 Ioh. 6.65 And therefore when wee see the small measure of our faith we are with the apostles to pray vnto the Lord that hee will increase it Luk. 17.5 Luk. 17.5 And when wee perceiue that it is grieuosly assaulted with doubting and infidelitie we are in feruencie of spirit to crie out with the father of the possessed childe Lorde I beleeue helpe my vnbeleefe Mark Mark 9.24 9.24 And then we may be assured that the Lord will heare vs and satisfie our godly desires making vs to growe vp from faith to faith till at length wee attaine vnto such a fulnesse of perswasion that wee shall bee able truely to say with the Apostle I am perswaded that neither death nor life nor angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall bee able to seperate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. as it is Rom. Ro. 8.38.39 8.38.39 § Sect. 3 And these are the meanes which properly tende to the strengthening and increasing of our faith Of the means whereby we may be preserued from doubting and desperation which whosoeuer carefully and conscionably vse they shall assuredly find them effectuall for this purpose Now wee are to speake of those meanes whereby wee may bee preserued from doubting and desperation of which I shal not neede to speake much seeing the most of these points are handled before The 1. means The first meanes to preserue vs from desperation is to cal continually vnto our remembrance that the promisses of the gospell are generall and indefinite excluding none how vnworthie and sinnefull soeuer they be if they doe not exclude themselues through their owne infidelitie Mat. 11.28 So Mat. 11.28 our Sauiour calleth all humbled and repentant sinners without exception saying Come vnto me all yee that labour and are heauie laden and I will ease you Ioh. 3.16 and Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he sent his only béloued son that as many as beleue in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life Mat. 9.13 So Matth. 9.13 our Sauiour saith that hee came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance either then refuse the name of repentant sinner or acknowledge that he came to saue thee and Ioh. 6.40 our sauiour saith that it is his fathers will who sent him that euery man who beleeueth in him should haue euerlasting l fe Seeing therefore God taketh no exception nor excludeth any let vs not exclude our selues through our want of faith and infidelitie The 2. means Secondly we are to consider that the Lord hath not onely propounded his gratious promises vnto vs but also hath commaunded vs to beleeue them Mark 1.15 1. Ioh. 3.23 So Mark 1.15 Repent and beleeue the gospell and 1. Ioh. 3.23 This then is his commaundement that wee beleeue in the name of his sonne Iesus Christ c. now to beleeue in Christ is not onely to beleeue that he is a sauiour for this euē the diuels beleeue also but to beleeue that he is our sauiour to rest wholy vpō him for our saluatiō to say with the Apostle Paul Gal. 2.20 Gal. 2.20 I liue by the faith in the sonne of God who hath loued me and giuen himselfe for me And to the end that wee may be armed against doubting and enabled to perfourme this commaundement it hath pleased the Lord to adde vnto his word his oath Heb. 6.18 that by two immutable things wherein it is impossible that God should lye wee should haue strong consolation as the apostle speaketh Heb. 6.18 Yea he hath also vnto his word and handwriting annexed his Sacraments as seales that there might be no place left for doubting Seeing therefore the Lord hath expresly commaunded vs to beleeue and vsed al meanes to enable vs to perfourme his commaundement let vs not now dispute the question whether we are worthy to beleeue or no or whether such grieuous sinners are bound to this dutie but setting all excuses aside let vs beleeue in obedience to Gods commaundement The 3. means Thirdly we must not alwaies set before vs the innumerable multitude and huge waight of our sins but withal cal to our remembrance the infinite mercies of God and merits of Christ who hath offered vnto his father a propitiatorie sacrifice and full satisfaction for all our sinnes 1. Iohn 2.2 and not for ours onely but for the sinnes of all the world
yet all true faith and sufsicient for saluation That so long as wee continue in this life our knowledge is but imperfect and vayled with much darknesse and ignorance for we know but in parte as euen the apostle speaketh in his owne person 1. Cor. 13.12 1. Cor. 13.12 And therefore our assent and perswasion must needs be imperfect and but in part and often assaulted with much doubting that howsoeuer faith and doubting are opposed in their owne nature yet notwithstanding they may be together in the same subiect in respect of diuers partes For wee are partly flesh and partly spirit and these two with their seuerall fruits do continually fight and striue one against the other and sometimes the flesh sometimes the spirit with their seuerall fruits get the vpper hand in the meane time both retaining their owne nature and properties howsoeuer they doe not so euidently appeare nor so powerfully worke their seuerall actions when the aduerse part preuaileth and hath put them to the foile for example faith which is a fruite of the spirit is continually assaulted by doubting which is a fruite of the flesh and proceedeth from the roote of infidelitie and sometime faith preuaileth and sometime it receiueth the foyle but yet at the same time howsoeuer wee cannot sensibly discerne it nor the actions thereof yet it retaines it owne nature and properties neyther is it depriued of his firmenesse constancie and certainty howsoeuer they be for a time couered hid out of our sight like the fire vnder the ashes or the Sunne vnder a cloud as before I haue said Though therefore we finde in vs much inconstancie and doubting yet let not Sathan perswade vs that these are of the nature and properties of our faith and that therefore our faith is not true but temporarie false and counterfaite for this inconstancie and doubting proceedeth not from faith and from the spirituall and regenerate part but from the flesh and the part vnregenerate and therefore howsoeuer it is assaulted and sometimes foyled by them yet in it owne nature it is true certaine and constant § Sect. 2 Secondly Sathans tentation groūded on the strong faith of some of Gods children answered he will suggest that the Saints mentioned in the Scriptures had most certaine strong faith in exceeding great measure that they brought forth cōtinually most notable fruits thereof were not subiect to such infirmities and doubting as wee feele in our selues To which we are to answere that this tentation is full of vntruth and hath no sound part in it for first we are to assure our selues that they fell into manifold doubtings and were subiect vnto innumerable infirmities and corruptions which are not specified in the booke of God neither was it fitte or expedient that it should be a register of all humane infirmities and of their manifold falls but onely that some should bee recorded for our warning that wee might more warily watch ouer our selues least wee should fall into the like sinnes and for our comfort also when wee are fallen in that our case is common with Gods dearest children in which respect the Scriptures is not wanting Looke vpon Abraham the father of the faithfull whose faith was so strong that he aboue hope beleeued vnder hope and you shall see that his faith notwithstanding was sometimes shaken with diffidence and doubting as when distrusting Gods gratious promisses made vnto him and not resting vpon his almighty power he was content to take vnto him Hagar his maide and commit sinne with her that so by his owne deuise he might make good Gods promisse and obtaine the blessed seed as though God could not perfourme that which he had spoken vnlesse he helped him by such vnlawfull meanes So where was the strength and constancie of Moyses faith when hee dishonoured God before the people in not beleeuing his word by shewing his impatiencie Numb 20.10.11 where was the strength and constancie of Dauids faith num 20.10 11. when he complaineth that he was forsaken that God had fayled in his promisses that he had forgotten to be mercifull and had shut vp his tender mercies in displeasure Psal 22.1 and 77.8.9 Or of Iobs faith when he cursed the day of his birth and accounted God his enemy Psal 22.1 and 77.8.9 who had set him vp as a marke against which he shot poisoned arrowes or of Ieremy when he likewise wished that he had neuer bene borne and bewraieth great impatiency Iere. 20. Ier. 20. Or of Ionas when he rebelled against Gods commaundement and fled from his presence or when after his miraculous deliuerie he murmured and vttered impatient speeches euen against God himself for the losse of a poore gourd which kept him from the heate of the sunne and when the Lord mercifully and mildly reproued him saying doest thou well to be angry for the gourd he stubbornely answered I doe well to bee angry vnto the death Ion. 4.9 Ion. 4.9 Or of the Apostles themselues when they fled away and forsooke their Lord and maister Iesus Christ for feare of worldly punishment and when after his death they would not beleeue the women reporting that hee was risen againe vntill their owne eyes had seene them Lastly though it be euident that diuers of the Saints mentioned in the Scriptures had a farre greater measure of faith and brought foorth much more plentiful fruits then we can discerne in our selues yet this is no good reason to prooue that our weaker smaller faith is no faith or vneffectuall for our saluation for this is an absurd consequence the Moone giueth much lesse light then the Sunne therefore it giueth no light at all one hand is farre greater then another therefore the lesser is not a true hand this man excelleth another in the vse of reason and therefore the other is vnreasonable because the diuers degrees in the quantitie of things doe not take away the truth of their being and existence so long as they be of the same nature and qualitie Besides as the holy ghost hath set downe examples of most strong faith in some of Gods seruants so hath he made mention of some who haue had but weake and little faith to the end that we should so labour to attaine vnto the highest degree as that in the meane time we be not vtterly discouraged with the lowest for example as he hath remembred the faith of Abraham who beleeued aboue hope vnder hope so hee hath not forgotten his weake faith who cried I beleeue Lord help thou mine vnbeliefe as he hath mentioned the faith of Iob who grew to this resolution Though hee kill me yet will I trust in him so he hath expressed also the faith of Nicodemus in knowledge weake and simple and in practise and profession cowardly and fearefull as hee hath set downe the strong faith of Paul who grew to this fulnesse of perswasion that nothing should be able to separate him from the loue of
alreadie plainely proued though we neuer haue any speciall reuelation And therefore without any such particular reuelation we may attaine vnto the certaine assurance that we are iustified in Gods sight Thirdly that which the Gospell assureth vs of we neede not to make any doubt thereof or once call it into question but the Gospell assureth vs that whosoeuer beleeueth in Christ Iesus and truely repent them of their sinnes shall be made partakers of all the gracious promises of life and saluation therein contained So Ioh. 3.16 Ioh. 3.16 God so loued the world that he hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life And chap. 5.24 Ioh. 5.24 Verely verely I say vnto you he that heareth my word and beleeueth him that sent me hath euerlasting life and shall not come into condemnation but hath passed from death to life Matth. 11.28 And Matth. 11.28 Come vnto me all ye that labour and are laden and I will ease you And therefore whosoeuer beleeue in Iesus Christ approuing their faith to the world and their owne consciences to bee true and vnfained by the fruite thereof vnfained repentance he may assure himselfe of all the gratious promifes of the Gospell and consequently of the remission of his sinnes and his iustification for the merits and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ Lastly the Lord hath not onely after a generall manner propounded these promises vnto vs and left vs to our owne libertie to beleeue or not to beleeue them but hee hath bound vs to the performance of this dutie by his expresse commaundement Mark 1.15 1. Ioh. 3.23 Mark 1.15 Repent and beleeue the Gospell And 1. Ioh. 3.23 This is his commaundement that we beleeue in his sonne Iesus Christ that is that we doe not onely after a generall manner beleeue that he is the sauiour of mankinde but that we beleeue that he is our sauiour who hath redeemed iustified and wil most perfectly saue vs and rest wholy vpon him alone for our saluation And he that thus beleeueth needeth no other arguments to assure him that he is iustified and shall be saued for he hath the witnesse in himselfe euen the testimonie of Gods spirit crying in his heart Abba father and bearing witnesse vnto his spirit that he is the childe of God and not to beleeue this is to make God a lyer because wee will not beleeue the record that hee hath witnessed of that his sonne 1. Ioh. 5. 10. as the Apostle speaketh 1. Ioh. 5.10 Yea as before I haue shewed at large he hath added vnto the hand writing of his word which containeth also his oath for our better confirmation his sacraments whereby he particularly conuayeth and giueth vnto euery beleeuer as it were proper possession of Christ Iesus and all his benefits to the end that there should bee no place left to doubting nor any neede of any particular reuelation for our further assurance § Sect. 2 Secondly Sathan will suggest that those who are iustified are made iust That we are made iust not by infusion but by imputation of righteousnes and those who are made iust doe continually the workes of righteousnesse but thou will he say to the humbled sinner continuest still in thy corruptions and thy wickednesse cleaueth fast to thee and compasseth thee about and in stead of doing the workes of righteousnesse thou continually heapest vp the full measure of thy sinnes yea thy best actions are so stained with imperfections and so full of infirmities that they iustly prouoke Gods wrath against thee To which we must answere that indeede whosoeuer is iustified is made iust but not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse into our selues but by imputation of Christs most perfect righteousnesse as before I haue shewed for hereby our sinnes are pardoned he hauing taken them vpon himselfe and satisfied Gods iustice by suffering those punishments which wee had deserued and also he hath perfectly fulfilled the law that hee might make vs partakers of his actiue obedience and so imputing both vnto vs hath made vs perfectly iust and righteous in Gods sight So that now the Lord doth not require obedience to his law at our hands to the end that wee should be iustified in whole or in part by our owne righteousnesse neither are we to this end to obserue Gods commandements that we may offer vnto God our workes and inherent righteousnesse desiring thereby to be iustified for as I haue shewed our best righteousnesse is imperfect and mingled with manifold corruptions so as it would rather condemne vs then iustifie vs if the Lord should examine it according to the exact rule of his most perfect iustice but we offer vnto God for our iustification the most perfect righteousnesse and full satisfaction of Iesus Christ which by his merits and sufferings he hath once made for vs desiring thereby wholy and onely to be iustified and saued § Sect. 3 As for our workes and inherent righteousnesse That our works are not causes but effects of our iustification they are not causes but effects and fruites of our iustification neither is it possible that we should doe any good worke acceptable in Gods sight till we are iustified and reconciled vnto God in Iesus Christ for our workes cannot please him till our persons please him and whatsoeuer we doe before faith hath purified the heart it is sinne and odious in the sight of God but as soone as we haue faith begotten in vs presently it apprehendeth Christ and his righteousnes whereby we are iustified and then being iustified faith worketh by loue and bringeth forth in vs the fruites of sanctification which though they bee mingled with much corruption and manifold imperfections yet God in Christ accepteth of them as perfect and will crowne them with glorie and immortalitie That now the Lord doth not require of vs perfect righteousnesse Neither doth the Lord now require of vs that wee perfectly at once shake off all our corruptions but that we labour as much as in vs lieth to mortifie and subdue them according to the measure of his grace and holy spirit which he hath bestowed on vs he doth not straightly commaund that we should instantly banish and expell sinne from dwelling in vs but that we doe not suffer it to raigne in vs nor willingly obey the flesh in the lusts thereof submitting our selues vnto sinne as seruants and vassals to their Lord and maister he doth not inioyne vs that we should wholy vanquish our corruptions and obtaine a full victorie ouer them but that we proclaime open warres against them and manfully fight and striue vnder the conduct of his spirit against the flesh and the sinfull lusts thereof and when we are taken captiue of sinne that we labour to attaine vnto our former freedome in the meane time sorrowing and groning vnder the heauie waight of our corruptions and crying out with the Apostle Rom. 7. wretched man that
his resurrection there is a quickening power deriued into vs whereby wee are reuiued and raised vp from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnesse of life And of this mention is made Coloss 2.12.13 where it is said that as we are buried with Christ Col. 2.12.13 Rom. 6.4 so likewise wee are raised vp and quickened together with him and Rom. 6.4 the Apostle saith that we are buried with him by baptisme into his death that like as Christ was raised vp from the dead by the glorie of the father so wee also should walke in newnesse of life § Sect. 6 And this is the manner according to which God worketh sanctification in vs Of the ends of our sanctification now wee are briefly to speake of the other causes as they lie in order The materiall and formall causes of our sanctification may best be considered in the parts thereof The finall cause is two-fold Gods glorie which is the chiefe and principall cause of our sanctification and the eternal saluation of those who are sanctified which is subordinate to the other For the first that Gods glorie is the end of all our good actions and holy conuersation Matth. 5.16 it appeareth Mat. 5.16 Let your light so shine before men that they may see your good works and glorifie your father which is in heauen 1. Pet. 2.12 So 1. Pet. 2.12 Haue your conuersation honest among the Gentiles that they which speake euill of you as of euill doers may by your good workes which they shall see glorifie God in the day of visitation And the Apostle Paul willeth vs that we doe all things whatsoeuer to the glorie of God 1. Cor. 10.31 1. Cor. 10.31 For the other we are therefore sanctified that wee may be saued and also be assured of our saluation and this we may gather out of the Apostles words Tit. 3.5.7 where hee saith that God hath saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renuing of the holy Ghost Tit. 3.5.7 that we should be made heires of eternall life Neither can we euer inioy euerlasting happinesse vnlesse we be regenerate Ioh. 3.3 according to that Ioh. 3.3 Except a man be borne againe he cannot see the kingdome of God So the Apostle saith 1. Cor. 15.50 that flesh and bloud cannot inherit the kingdome of God neither doth corruption inherit vncorruption 1. Cor. 15.50 And Apoc. 21.27 it is said Apoc. 21.27 that no vncleane thing shall enter into Gods kingdome and therefore the Apostle Heb. 12.14 vseth this as an effectuall argument to mooue vs to embrace sanctification because without this holinesse no man shall see the Lord. Heb. 12.14 On the other side if wee bee regenerate and shew the fruites thereof in a holy conuersation by dying to sinne and rising againe to newnesse of life then may wee bee certainly assured of our saluation and therefore the Apostle willeth vs by these workes of holinesse to make our calling and election sure 2. Pet. 1.10 affirming that if wee doe these things wee shall neuer fall 2. Pet. 1.10 CHAP. II. Of the effects subiect obiect and time of our sanctification § Sect. 1 THe principall effects of our sanctification Of the effects of our sanctification are a detestation of our former sinnes in which wee haue taken our pleasure and delight and an hartie loue of righteousnesse and holinesse which before our regeneration were loathsome and vnpleasant vnto vs when notwithstanding our infirmities and often falles wee can say with the Apostle Paul that wee would faine doe that good we cannot and hate that euill which we doe and howsoeuer wee cannot performe perfect obedience to all Gods commandements yet we delight in the law of God in the inner man Rom. 7.15.19.22 Rom. 7.15.19.22 Secondly from these affections of louing good and hating euill there ariseth an earnest desire to embrace the one and flee the other and from this desire proceedeth a setled purpose of heart and a carefull endeuour to mortifie our flesh with the corruptions thereof and for the time to come to frame our liues according to the rule of Gods word the which purpose and endeuour is ioyned with the diligent vse of all good meanes wherby we may attaine vnto our desire Thirdly when as this desire and endeuour to leade a godly life is hindred by our spiritual enemies the flesh the world and the diuell there followeth in the man regenerate a spirituall combat wherein hee strugleth and striueth to withstand their temptations and to goe forward in his course of holy obedience And if hee preuaile and foyle his spirituall enemies then there followeth peace of conscience and ioy in the holy Ghost but if hee bee ouercome and led captiue vnto sinne through the violence of their temptations then doth hee not lie still and suffer sinne to raigne in him but hee seeketh to rise againe by vnfained repentance which is accompanied with these seuen fruites First a care to leaue that sin into which he is fallen Secondly 2. Cor. 7.11 an vtter condemning of himselfe for it Thirdly an holy anger against himselfe for his fall Fourthly a feare least againe he should fall into the same sinne Fiftly a desire euer after to please God Sixtly a zeale of the same Seuenthly reuenge vpon himselfe for his former offence And these are the effects of true sanctification which whosoeuer can finde in himselfe he may be assured that he is sanctified and shall be saued § Sect. 2 The subiect in which this worke of sanctification is wrought is all and euery one of Gods elect and them only Of the subiect of our sanctification neither is there any sanctified but those onely that are elected and shall be saued as appeareth Ephes 1.4 Neither is this worke begun in any one part of them alone but in all the parts powers and faculties of soule and bodie as appeareth 1. Thes 5.23 The God of peace sanctifie you throughout The minde is inlightned with the true knowledge of Gods will reuealed in his word Psal 119.18 Col. 1.9 Psal 119.11 Rom. 7.18 which before was blinded with ignorance The memorie is inabled to retaine those holy things which the vnderstanding conceiueth The will fleeth that which is euill and imbraceth that which is good The affections are purged from their corruptions and made seruiceable to holy reason The body also is sanctified 1. Cor. 3.16 and made a fit temple for the holy Ghost so that whereas heretofore the members thereof were the readie seruants of vnrighteousnesse vnto sinne Rom. 6.19 they are now become the seruants of righteousnesse vnto holinesse Lastly the actions and outward conuersation which heretofore were sinfull and scandalous are now holy and righteous seruing both for the aduancement of Gods glorie and the edification of our christian brethren In a word whosoeuer are truely sanctified they are also wholy sanctified that is as the Apostle speaketh sanctified throughout in
I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death and that we confesse our miserable estate vnto our captaine and leader Iesus Christ desiring him to assist vs with the power of his holy spirit that thereby we may be freed out of the hands of these our spirituall enemies whose bondage and captiuitie is so irksome and grieuous vnto vs. Neither doth the Lord now require that we performe absolute and perfect obedience to his commaundements but that to will be present in vs that we consent and approue his law to be good and delighting in it concerning the inner man that we desire and indeauour to performe that good we cannot and forgetting that which is behinde indeauour our selues to that which is before and follow hard towards the marke Phil. 3.13.14 though we cannot attaine vnto the end of our race till wee come to the end of our liues Finally the Lord doth not require of vs a whole haruest of goodnes and righteousnes but the first fruites thereof he doth not stand so much vpon our actions as vpon our affections vpon the perfection of our workes as vpon the alacritie of our willes and integritie of our hearts the righteousnes which he requireth is an humble confession of our vnrighteousnesse a sincere hatred of our sinnes a holy indeauour in the vse of the meanes to mortifie our corruptions and to rise from the death of sinne to holinesse and newnes of life which whosoeuer can offer vnto God they may assure themselues that they shall be accepted through Christ as righteous in Gods sight notwithstanding their manifold imperfections and corruptions The end of the second Booke THE THIRD BOOKE INTREATING OF SANCTIFICATION AND PERSEVERANCE as also of Sathans temptations which he suggesteth against them both and of such answeres wherewith the Christian may refute and repell them CHAP. I. Of Sanctification and the causes thereof § Sect. 1 ANd so much for the answering of such temptations of Sathan as concerne our iustification That God is the principall efficient of our sanctification Now wee are to speake of our sanctification which is the next effect of Gods election and inseparably ioyned with our iustification wherein I will obserue my former order first setting downe the doctrine of sanctification and then answering those temptations of Sathan which doe most impugne it Sanctification what is it For the first Sanctification is an action of the whole Trinitie whereby the beleeuer already iustified is by little and little renued according to Gods image in holinesse and righteousnesse by the mortification of the flesh with the corruptions thereof and the quickening of the spirit And this is our sanctification which is expressed in the Scriptures by diuers names and phrases for it is called regeneration the new birth renouation the putting off or mortifying of the old man and the putting on or quickening of the new man and such like The efficient cause of our sanctification is God himselfe who as he alone iustifieth vs and freeth vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne so he onely sanctifieth vs and deliuereth vs from the tyrannie of sinne so that it shall no longer raigne in our mortall bodies freeing vs in such measure as pleaseth him from our naturall corruptions Leuit. 20.8 which heretofore wholy ouerswayed vs. And this appeareth by plaine testimonies of holy Scriptures Iohn 1.13 Iohn 1.13 It is said that the faithfull are borne not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God Ephes 2.10 So Ephes 2.10 we are said to be Gods workemanship created in Christ Iesus vnto good workes which phrase the Apostle vseth to note vnto vs that as God onely did create vs so he onely doth renue and regenerate vs. The Lord likewise doth appropriate this worke vnto himselfe as belonging to another Ezech. 36.26 Ezech. 36.26 and 34.28 A new heart will I giue you and a new spirit will I put into you and I will take away the stony heart out of your body and I will giue you an heart of flesh And hence it is that the Apostle desiring the sanctification of the Thessalonians beggeth it at Gods hand 1. Thes 5.23 The very God of peace sanctifie you throughout 1. Thes 5.23 Psalm 51.13 And Dauid finding the want hereof in himselfe hath his recourse vnto God Psalm 51.10 Create in me a cleane heart O God and renue a right spirit within me So that as God doth begin in vs this worke of sanctification so likewise he doth accomplish and finish it And therefore as we are wholy to ascribe vnto God our election vocation and iustification so also our sanctification that he may be all in all in the worke of our saluation For as he onely formed vs so he onely can reforme vs as he is the author of our naturall generation Gen. 1.28 for by his blessing we haue our being so also of our spirituall regeneration for by his spirit onely wee are renued Neither must we imagine that it is in mans power to renew himselfe no more than to beget himselfe for as well may the Blackmoore change his skinne or the Leopard his spots as wee doe good who are accustomed to doe euill Ierem. 13.23 Ierem. 13.23 yea as easily may the dead man raise himselfe as wee may raise our selues from the death of sinne to newnesse of life Eph. 2.1 Eph. 2.1 It is onely the water of Gods spirit that can wash away our Ethiopian blacknesse and turne our spotted vncleannesse into snowie whitenesse it is onely the God of life that can make vs rise from the death of sinne to newnesse of life But here it may be demaunded that if sanctification bee wholie the worke of God and not in our owne power why doe the Scriptures exhort vs to sanctifie our selues to mortifie our sinnes and to walke in newnesse of life I answere that though sanctification bee wholy from God yet these exhortations are necessarie for hee worketh this worke in vs not as in stocks and stones but as in reasonable creatures of whom he requireth consent of will desire and endeuour in the vse of the meanes ordained of God for the beginning and perfecting of this worke of sanctification in vs. And although this will desire and endeuour be his work likewise yet these exhortations to godlinesse are to good purpose for with the exhortation God ioyneth the operation of his spirit and whilest he commandeth vs he giueth power also to performe that which he commandeth whilest he exhorteth vs to sanctification hee himselfe sanctifieth vs with his spirit § Sect. 2 Now further wee are to know That the work of sanctification is common to the three persons in Trinitie T it 3.5 Eph. 2.4.5 Heb. 9.14 that as all other workes of God which he exerciseth towards his creatures so this work of sanctification likewise is common vnto the three persons in the Trinitie for first God