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A89737 The orthodox evangelist. Or A treatise wherein many great evangelical truths (not a few whereof are much opposed and eclipsed in this perillous hour of the passion of the Gospel) are briefly discussed, cleared, and confirmed: as a further help, for the begeting, and establishing of the faith which is in Jesus. As also the state of the blessed, where; of the condition of their souls from the instant of their dissolution: and of their persons after their resurrection. By John Norton, teacher of the church at Ipswich in New England. Norton, John, 1606-1663. 1654 (1654) Wing N1320; Thomason E734_9; ESTC R206951 276,720 371

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Reprobation of which more in the two next following rules is forbidden and is inexpedient and hurtful many ways Rule 5. Nunquam in hacvita possit esse certus Reprobus de sua reprobatione Prideaux Lect. 1. 'T is a sin for any man in this life to conclude that he is a Reprobate Because Final Disobedience the Consequent and Argument of Reprobation cannot be known before death Should any desperate person argue to this purpose he must reason out of the Word for no one knoweth who are reprobate but God and those to whom God revealeth it in his Word But the reprobation of any particular person that either is or shall be during this life the cases of the sin against the Holy Ghost Matth. 12.32 And Anathema Maranatha 1 Cor. 16.22 which are rare and extraordinary excepted is not to be found in the Word Rule 6. No Person can know that he is elected before faith It is the duty of every one that heareth the Gospel to believe in Christ It belongs to us by the help of the Doctrine of the Decree and all other means to apply our selves unto the great duty of believing Scrupulum de particularitate Decreti nemo hic sibi fingit nisi qui prophanus sit Et 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 qui credit Evan●elium stultitiam esse Spank de grat univ resp ad Erot. 34. and not to enquire before the time after what is decreed concerning us in particular It is both sin and folly for us to trouble our selves and delay our yeilding obedience unto a Command known with scruples about our Personal-Election remaining hitherto a Secret unrevealed and as yet inexpedient for us to know the enquiry after which before faith we are forbidden though by it and other saving effects of that everlasting Love of God we are directed and commanded thereunto No man in danger of drowning in the waters by reason of shipwrack would in case of lines cast out with a charge that the persons then fleeting to and fro in the waves should make use thereof for their safety forbear to lay hold on them until such time as the mind of him that cast them out were known in particular concerning him What poor Lazarus standing amongst many others if the rich men casting money amongst them bid them all to take part thereof would abstain until he knew what the purpose of that rich man were concerning him It belongeth to every one that believeth to believe that they are elected From the Instant of believing there is a certainty of the Object i. e. The thing believed Namely a state of favour is certain though there be not yet a certainty of the Subject that is The person believing is not certain that he is in a state of favour and consequently that he is beloved of God Without which added to the former the believer neither can nor ought to rest For the attaining hereof he hath revealed his love to the believer 1 John 5.10 1. Thes 4.5 Knowing Brethren Beloved your Election of God c. commanding us to make it sure Give diligence to make your calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 The Spirit is therefore given us 1 Cor. 2.12 Yea he hath been pleased to take upon him the work to reveal it to us Ephes 4.30 The attaining thereof is a matter of much praise unto God Rom. 4.20 Much enlargeth the heart to God and man Cant. 8.6 1 John 4.16 17 18. It is as necessary in time of temptation as an Helmet unto the Souldier Ephes 6.17 as an anchor to the ship Heb. 6.19 Without it our hearts dye with it we live in sad hours And not only so but we glory in tribulations also knowing that tribulation workth patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto us Rom. 5.3 4 5. Rule 7. Though the Decree be absolute yet the Dispensation of the Decree in the Gospel is conditional That indefinite Proposition Whosoever believes shall be saved is equipolent unto that conditional If you believe you shall be saved John 3.16 Revel 3.20 Yet here carefully observe That by a condition we are alwayes to understand not a condition properly so called but a consequent condition scil such a condition the performance whereof is not left unto the Elect but is undertaken for by the Elector and therefore is not only not opposite unto but is both an effect and argument of an absolute Decree and also of an absolute Covenant of grace The Dispensation of the absolute Decree is Conditional 1. Because God discovers not his Eternal differencing Intent to any person in Christ before the actual Application of Christ by faith God holds men uncertain of their particular Election in Christ until they do believe in Christ 2. That all to whom the Gospel cometh being yet in their natural estate and therefore children of wrath the Elect even as others Ephes 2.3 may look at themselves so far as they are alike in sin to be also in like danger of condemnation and so far as they are alike under the Ministery or preparatory work to be answerably encouraged in their Ministerial and preparatory hope of effectual vocation and salvation but hitherto without any particular application of Election or Reprobation 3. That men may be admonished of their duty to believe whether they are elected or not elected 4. That they may know what to do that they may be saved 5. That God may proceed with man in such a way as is most sutable and agreeable unto a reasonable creature Namely by perswasion and Proposal of Arguments 6. That the outward Dispensation being alike to all both Elect and Reprobate the Reprobate may be found without excuse for their unbelief Rhetorf ex Apol. ex 3. cap. 2. Jesus Christ tendered as a sufficient Saviour to all that hear the Gospel with a Command to believe and a Promise that Whosoever none excepted believeth shall be saved is sufficient in respect of the sufficiency of outward means though not in respect of inward efficacy unto the salvation of the hearers More then this in respect of external means is not tendered unto the Elect nor less then this unto Reprobates The tender then being so great and so far the same unto both albeit the Elects receiving of it be the effect of special grace yet the Reprobates rejecting of it is without excuse For neither doth the Gospel saith Zanchy signifie God's Will to be that this or that man suppose Peter or Paul shall be saved and accordingly that his Will is that this or that man shall believe in Christ but the Gospel publisheth that it is God's Will That whosoever will be saved from death unto Eternal life they ought that is it is their duty to believe in Christ But who those are he himself truly knows but in no measure hath made known by the Gospel
2.5.9 But behold a greater building than Solomons is here a house as was said before not made with hands eternal in the Heavens 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad excellentiam artificium operis refertur Zanch. whose Builder and Maker is God Heb. 11.10 A most excellent prospect hereof we have in Johns Graphical description of that great City Rev. 21. as a type not onely though haply chiefly of the triumphing Church it self vers 2.9 but also of the place of its everlasting habitation verse 27. where the Holy Ghost gathereth together in a manner the universal excellency of the visible creature to hold forth a legible and heavenly picture of this invisible and supercelestial Mansion Be pleased to take a more orderly view of it as you have it set forth according to its foundations and structure The foundations are twelve garnished with all manner of precious stones and in them the names of the twelve Apostles of the Lamb engraven The first foundation was Jasper the chief of Gems of which before The second a Saphir blew or skie-coloured the fifth in Aarons Breast-plate The third a Calcedomy of purple colour The fourth an Emrald a stone so green that other green things lose their colour while it is present most pleasant to the sight the fourth in Aarons Breast-plate The fifth a Sardonyx white without and red underneath like the nayl of a man The sixth a Sardius of the colour of blood the first in Aarons Breast-plate The seventh a Chrysolite of such a golden colour that gold looketh like silver to it when they are laid together The eighth a Beryl of a Sea-green the tenth in Aarons Breast-plate The ninth a Topaz of a pleasing green colour the second in Aarons Breast-plate The tenth Crysophrasus a green inclining unto gold The eleventh a Jacinct of a violet colour The twelfth an Amathist the chief of violet coloured Gems the ninth in Aarons Breast-plate It s structure is either outward where we have the matter form wall and gates the matter pure gold like unto cleer glasse ver 18. viz. transparent gold the form sour-square ver 16. Twelve thousand furlongs that is fiveteen hundred English miles square The wall of Jasper ver 18. a hundred forty four cubits in height ver 17. situated to the four coasts of Heaven vers 13. strongly founded vers 14. The gates are in number twelve made of twelve pearls every several gate was of one pearl vers 21. situated East West North and South three looking every way vers 13. having ingraven upon them the names of the twelve Tribes of Israel and twelve Angels for the keepers of them Or inward where we have the streets of pure gold as it were transparent glasse vers 21. It s Temple God and the Lamb Its light the glory of God and the Lamb Its inhabitants vers 24. It s peace vers 25 Glory ver 26. Holinesse vers 27. Its waters a pure river of life Chap. 22.1 Its fruits are the fruits of the tree of life vers 2. This heavenly society is made up of God 2 Of their Society and Christ and the blessed The good of this society in respect of the Blessed themselves chiefly consists in their knowledge one of another communion one with another and content flowing from that communion Known and approved is Luthers answer Num in illa aeterna vita simus alter alterum cognituri Melch. Adam in vita Luth. returned affirmatively upon the desire of the hearers that he would be pleased to speak to his own Query to this question propounded by himself a little before his death viz. Whether we should know one another in eternal life which he proved from Adams knowledge of Eve in innocency whom he had never seen before Gen. 2.23 The knowledge of the Beat fical Vision exceeds the knowledge of Adam David implyeth that he shall know his childe when he comforts himself that he shall go unto it 2 Sam. 12.23 Peter seeing Christ transfigured and Moses and Elias appearing with him in glory whom he had never seen no saith Tertullian not so much as in their pictures Tertul. contra Mar. the use of Statues and Images being prohibited by Law among the Jews takes notice of them Ma●th 17.4 Luke 9.33 The rich man knew Abraham and Lazarus Luk. 16. Surely then Abraham and Lazarus shall know one another The poor shall know their rich Benefacters when they receive them into everlasting habitations Luke 16.9 Poul shall know the Thessalonians whilst he looketh upon them as his crown of rejoycing at the comming of the Lord Jesus 1 Thess 2.9 The Angels know one another Tho. part I. q. ●6 art 7. and know the Elect in glory The very state of blessednesse denyeth the contrary Austin comforts the Lady Italica after her Husbands death Quosdam nostras migrantes non amisimus sed praemifimus August Epist 6. telling her that she shal know him amongst the blessed Society yea both know and love him better than ever she did in this life Their communion and conference one with another may be gathered from the like in the Angels who doubtlesse speak one unto another though not vocally as we now doe yet in their manner viz. Angelically and Spiritually which is nothing else but a spiritual insinuation instillation or communication of their minds notions and meanings one unto another For Spiritual substances to speak together Tho. part 1. q. 10. art 1. is for one spirit to signifie unto another their notions and minds in a spiritual and therefore in a better manner than we doe As the speech of the Angels Zanchi de operibus Dei part i. lib. 3 c. 19. so the speech of the blessed Souls is a power whereby as they please they make known one unto another what they know themselves our thoughts passe unto him whom we communicate them unto by two doors viz. of volition or will and expression whether by word writing or sign The Angels have but one door through which their thoughts pass namely their wil. To think that the Angels and Spirits of the just made perfect doe not speak mentally that is in their heavenly and spiritual manner communicate their minds one unto another as they see cause is against reason and inconsisting with the state of blessedness To think they speak in this manner is not repugnant to Scripture or Reason though the ful resolution of that quere viz. with what tongues the Angels and Souls departed speak seems to be reserved til we come into Heaven After the Resurrection nothing hinders but we may beleeve Synops. pur Theolog. disp 2. n 42. that the Saints shal speak not only mentally after the manner of the Angels but also when they please vocally after the manner that men now speak and as some conceive probably in the Hebrew Tongue Great must needs be the content of their Communion if we consider either the neer relation of the persons being Members of the
that is best prepared is not digested without yet is digested with time and the labor of nature The Seed which the husbandman soweth with pains the Earth receiveth not without patience 'T is the Prerogative of God 't is not in the power of man to communicate understanding without study and diligence Though it be in Gods power to give yet according to his ordinary Dispensation he doth not give knowledg unto man without labor and prayer but he giveth unto his a spirit by meditating day and night to search into the deep things of God Who refuseth ripe fruit because it groweth higher then can be had without climbing or the treasures hid in the Earth because they cannot be had without digging And who knoweth but that these poor sheets may find a place with some others especially in the houses and hearts of them of whose house I am out of whose heart they cannot be whilst I am That I may not be as one altogether dead to those whom I should have been glad to have lived and dyed with yea whom I should have been glad to have lived and dyed for My absence from them hath named this Wilderness Gersom their acceptance hereof shall so far name it Ephraim It is with God that knoweth the heart of exiles to comfort exiles 'T is not with me as with Hortensius who though he was weak in writing yet was he able to speak Nor as with Albericus who though weak in speech was able in writing but being contious of my infirmity in both I have added the latter to supply in some measure if God so please the defect of the former Sometimes Pauls writing is more weighty then his speech and some of Christs words after his death were more effectual then in his Life Hence I have desired to sow Seed both by Pen and Tongue present and absent Alive and dead Not knowing whether shal prosper most either this or that or whether they both should be alike good Good Books help both the understanding and memory They are both Teachers and Registers like steeled looking-glasses that do not only reflect but continue reflecting the Image to the beholder Segnius irritant animes demissa per auros Quam quae sunt oculis Subjecta sidelibus The speaker hasteth on and cannot wait the leasure of the hearer but the writer is always at hand attending the capacity of the Reader What is sayd of the poor with a little alteration may be applyed to written Treatises Books you have always with you you may receive good from them when you will Solomon admonisheth not to write superfluously Paul encourageth to write profitably Eccle. 12.12 2 Tim. 4.13 'T is with books as with meats he that refuseth eating as the cure of an unwholesome or unreasonable diet acts the part of a murtherer not of a Physitian He is not a man that distinguisheth not between good and bad He is not a wise man that discerneth not between excess and nothing The Pen-men of corrupt Books must hold up their hands as highly guilty of the evil of the times and superfluous Books do but add to the heap of vanity and vexation of spirit These lose precious hours those lose more precious souls By way of Apologie for this Treatise I shall only say the wise mans admonition I have been conscionably awful of and have aimed at Edification The use of Books is to communicate pertinent truth the excellency of Books is to do it Substantially clearly briefly Abuse takes not away their use nay such books are the cure of evil books The opening of Titus lips is the means to stop deceivers mouths the light of the book of the Gospel consumes the Magicians books to ashes Tit. 1.11 Acts. 19.19 one pin must be forced out by another After forgiveness begged in the Blood of Jesus for what is mine herein Pardon I crave of all pardon and acceptance as I hope for from some so especially from your selves to whom as I could bequeath no greater legacy so then from whom whence could I encourage my self with better expectation for YOU are OUR glory and joy forget not the emphasis in the word OUR Ministers compared with other Christians have little to joy in in this world 'T is not with the Ministers of the present as with the Ministers of late times nor with exiles as with the rest nor with your exiles as with some others Let this our or if you please your condition for therein you have been both partakers with us and supporters of us be your provocation A receiving encouragement whereof is the constant remembrance that you are our companions in this Patmos wherein many of you were before divers of us You know the hearts of strangers for ye are strangers The Lord who in rich grace hath not only Sanctified the tongue of the Preacher but also the pen of the Scribe unto the edification of his So bless all our labours that both Speaker and Hearer Writer and Reader may rejoyce together in that day that they have not run in vain This is the prayer of Your Servant for Jesus sake JOHN NORTON Ipswich in N. Eng. Octob. 7. 1652. To the Judicious Christian Reader THe Penning and Reading of godly Books is a singular improvement of the Communion of Saints as whereby we enjoy sweet and gracious conference with the Saints though unknown to us though absent in place distant in time yea many ages before us and so partake in the Communion of their most precious Gifts as if they were present with us or as if we had been of long acquainted with them which maketh me sometimes to wish that though I cannot nor dare not say that Spiritual Gifts are buried when they are only dispenced in a Pulpit for in a Pulpit they are set upon a Candlestick and give light to all that are in the House of this or that particular Church yet where God giveth an eminent measure of light fit to shine forth to a Nation or to a world of Churches That such Gifts might not be confined to a Pulpit but as clusters of ripe Grapes passing under the press are fit to be transported to all Nations So such Gifts and Labors passing under the Press may be fitly Communicated to all Churches It is indeed a true word which the word of truth hath spoken Eccles 12.12 Of making many books there is no end and much reading is a weariness to the flesh But yet some books there be of which I may say as Fernelius and other Physicians speak of their Pills There are Pillulae sine quibus that is sine quibus esse nolo so there be some libelli sine quibus some books sine quibus esse nolo And this is one of them without which I would neither be my self nor wish thee to be Though most books be accommodated to Popular capacity and they do most good extensively yet there had need to be some which speak accurately that
his ordinary Dispensation of the Gospel calleth not sinners as sinners but such sinners i. e. qualified sinners immediately to believe FOr the better handling this Position it may be convenient to observe the following Method 1. Premise some distinctions 2. Describe preparatory work 3. Prove the Point by Texts of Scripture by Types of Conversion by Reason by Examples 4. Satisfie some principal Objections The term preparatory nothing works so fore-going Distinct 1. as that they imply conversion to follow after is to be considered either in respect of God so only those common works which are in the Elect are preparatory i. e. properly preparatory because in them only vocation or conversion followeth thereupon Or in respect of us and so these common works in all are preparatory yet in the judgment of charity only Forasmuch as we are to hope concerning all where we see them that they are the fore-runners of conversion and till conversion we can but hope concerning any the Secret of Gods intention touching this or that person in particular being not revealed until vocation The first may be called Preparatory in respect of Gods intention the second in respect of the judgment of charity Preparatory Work is said to be so Distinct 2. either by way of meer order asserted by the Orthodox according to the Scriptures or by way of Causation Merit and Congruity asserted by the Papists and Arminians contrary to the Scriptures Calling Distinct 3. is either extraordinary as in Elect Infants dying in their Infancy or ordinary Of this last the question speaks Ordinary calling to believe Distinct 4. is either mediate or immediate Mediate when we are called to believe yet so as that some other duty or duties are to be done before we can believe thus all are called to believe that live under the Gospel Immediate when we are not only called to believe but the very next duty we are called unto is to believe so are all they called to believe that living under the Gospel are in measure preparatorily i. e. in respect of Ministerial capacity nextly disposed thereunto By preparatory Work Preparatory Work What we understand certain inherent qualifications coming between the carnal rest of the soul in the state of sin and conversion wrought in the Ministry both of the Law and Gospel by the common work of the Spirit concurring whereby the soul is put into a Ministerial capacity of believing immediately i. e. of immediate receiving of the Lord Jesus Christ Before sinners are invited immediately to believe Arguments from Scripture they must be such sinners qualified sinners 1. Sinners that are sensible of sin as appeareth from these Scriptures Matth. 9.13 Mark 2.17 Luke 5.31 32. I am not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance He came not to call all sinners for the righteous here mentioned are sinners but such sinners sick sinners the Text can admit no other interpretation Sensible of their death in sin Rom. 7. For I was alive without the Law once but when the commandement came sin revived and I dyed And the Commandment which was ordained to life I found to be unto death Paul was dead before though he thought otherwise but now he is sensible of his death he found that he was dead Sensible of their bondage both in respect of the guilt and power of sin Rom. 8.15 For ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear but ye have received the spirit of Adoption whereby we cry Abba Father The state of bondage was alwayes until faith the Spirit of bondage signifieth the sensibleness of that bondage We must distinguish between the state of bondage and the Spirit of bondage Sensible of their want of Christ Ho every one that thirsteth come ye to the waters c. Thirst doth not only signifie a want of water but a sensibleness of that want Luke 15.14 17. And when he had spent all there arose a mighty famine in the Land he began to be in want And when he came to himself he said how many hired servants in my Fathers house have bread enough and to spare and I perish with hunger Hunger especially such hunger doth not signifie only a want of bread but a sensibleness of that want Sensibleness of a lost estate Luke 15.32 For this thy Brother was dead and is alive again and was lost and is found The elder brother was in a lost i. e. a perishing estate as is also every irregenerate Son of Adam but the younger brother was lost i. e. Sensible of his lost estate Lostness signifieth that a man is out of the way perceiveth that he is out of the way and also that he cannot find the way i. e. cannot believe repent desire c. See more Chap. 7. under the Head of a lost estate 2. Sinners that are broken hearted Isai 61.1 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Broken hearted and bruised Luke 4.18 That are weary and heavy laden Matth. 11.28 Sinners that are prisoners in a pit where is no water Zach. 9.11 Sensible of their misery and of their being destitute of any remedy The Prophet comparing the spiritual captivity of the soul to the corporal captivity of the Jews in Babylon sheweth That Christ finds the soul not only in a pit but in a waterless pit in a pit wherein there is no succour He will not mix his blood with our water Sinners that mourn in Sion Isai 61.3 The cable must be unreavelled before it can pass through the eye of a neédle so must the soul be broken before conversion Matth. 19.24 Believers as Abigail had Nabal before she had David have experience of two Husbands the Law and Christ But first of the tyrannical Dominion of the Law in respect of its rigour malediction and irritation before they are married unto Christ Rom. 7.1 3 4 T is not only a truth That the Elect uncalled are foolish things weak things base things despised things nothings but that they also see it so You see your calling Brethren 1 Cor. 1.26 27 28 29. To this purpose the Apostle Gal. 3.24 The Law is our Schoolmaster to lead us unto Christ The Law is threefold Moral Ceremonial Judicial And answerably had a threefold Paedagogical or Schoolmasterly Discipline leading the soul unto Christ The Moral Law by its accidental direction as sickness occasioneth us to seek after the Physician The Ceremonial by direct signification and its duration The Judicial by its distinction of the Nation of the Jews from all other Nations and likewise by its duration This Schoolmasterly Discipline of the Ceremonial and Judicial Law is ceased with the Laws themselves but that of the Moral Law still remains by convincing of sin denouncing of the curse making us to despair in respect of our selves and so enforceth us to seek for help out of our selves in Jesus Christ So John preached Matth. 3.2 Repent ye for the Kingdom of Heaven is at hand So Christ preached Matth.
the sinner either in himself or in his Surety 3. That it is his glory by revealing and impartially executing such a measure of wrath in case of transgression upon the work of his own hands to manifest the Majesty of him who is offended the goodness of the Command that is transgressed the evil of sin and the vileness of the sinner Justice in God is his constant Will to render unto every one that which is theirs The Justice of God Rhetorf de Gratia Exeroit 2. cap. 3. is considered either in respect of himself or in respect of the reasonable creature in order to to himself whereby he is a necessary debtor to himself It is called essential justice in order to the reasonable creature whereby he hath freely made himself a debtor unto them it is called Relative Justice In the Essential Justice of God Vid. Twiss de reprob lib. 1. digress 1. Justitia condescenti●e is contained that which is called the Justice of Condecency or Comeliness which necessitates not God to constitute any rule of Relative Justice betvveen himself and the creature only in case he be pleased to constitute any it necessitares him so to do it as becometh such an Agent and as serveth best unto his end and which being done continueth inviolable and infallible The Essential Justice Constancy and Truth of God permitteth not any defect or alteration concerning the Execution of his Decree after he had once decreed it notwithstanding before the Decree he was free to have decreed or not to have decreed that Decree Relative or Moral Justice is an external Work of God whereby he proceeds with man according to the Law of righteousness freely constituted betvveen him and them rendring to every one what is due unto them thereby either by way of recompence in case of obedience or by way of punishment in case of disobedience For our better understanding of this Moral Justice of God in respect of man Consider 1. That nothing can be due from God to man as of himself 2. That which is due from God to man is from the free and meer good pleasure of God Non enti nihil debetur nam valet argumentū est id cui aliquid d●betur Ergo est Twiss ubi supra 3. That this good pleasure or Will of God is the Rule of Righteousness 4. That God proceeding to Execution according to this Rule of Righteousness constituted by his good pleasure can do no wrong Nothing can be due from God to man as of himself the creature of it self being a meer nothing and God being all he cannot become a debtor to the creature either of good or evil otherwise then he is pleased to make himselfe a debtor Should God be looked at as a necessary Debtor unto the creature it must either be to the creature not yet in being or to the creature in actual being but he cannot be a Debtor to the creature yet not in being for to it nothing can be due but Creation and that should be due unto nothing Thence it would follow that God were bound to create every creature that were possible to be created and that also from Eternity Neither can he be a Debtor to the creature in actual being to which if he can owe any thing it must either be the continuation of it in its being or annihilation In Deo neque est justitia commutativa nedum distributiva propriè Rhetorf ubi supra If God doth not ovve unto the creature its creation he cannot owe unto it its continuation Continuation being nothing else but the continuance of Creation he that is not bound to give a creature its being for one instant which is done in creation is much less bound to give unto a creature its being for many instants which is included in continuation Besides Were God bound to continue the creature in actual being for one year by the same reason he vvere bound to continue them for ever Neither can he ovve unto the creature in actual being annihilation for then neither could the godly enjoy Eternal life nor the vvicked be punished vvith Eternal death to ovve annihilation is to ovve nothing The vvorth of the creature in order unto God is not intrinsecal For who hath first given to him a d it shall be recompensed unto him again Rom. 11.35 2. Whatsoever is due from God to man is from the meer Will and good pleasure of God Moral Justice flovveth from the good pleasure of God the Manifestation of the Glory of God in a way of justice is the end the permission of sin is the means that this should be the means and that should be the end is vvholly of the Will of God The Creation of man is an effect of Gods good pleasure That Prohibition of Adam to eat of the forbidden fruit upon the transgression of vvhich followed the death of mankind vvas an Interdict of Gods free-vvill The Moral Lavv it self is an effect of Gods good pleasure What reasonable man but will yeild that the being of the Moral Lavv hath no necessary connexion vvth the Being of God That this Moral Lavv should be a constant rule of manners and that all mans actions should fall vvithin the compass of this rule Quod talis sit natura illius rei quae est peccatum recurrendum semper est adfont m●●dtissimum ●ei aeternum bene-placitum Idem ibid. Zanch. de Natura Dei lib. 3. cap. 4. quaest 12. cap. 5. qu. 3. is from the meer Will of God That the actions of men not conformable to this Lavv should be sin that death should be the punishment of sin that this punishment should be suffered in our ovvn persons or in our Surety as should seem good unto the Lavv-giver all these are the constitutions of God proceeding from him not by vvay of yecessity of nature but freely as effects and products of his Eternal good pleasure 3. This Good Pleasure or Will of God is the Rule of Righteousness The Will of God is God himself vvillng his Will is the Rule of our vvills Whose Will else should be the Rule The Will of God is the cause of all things the constituted Rule of Righteousness therefore being an effect it must needs proceed from the Will of God othervvise there should be an effect vvhich vvere not resolved to the first cause That vvhich is the Fountain of all good is the Rule of Righteousness but Gods Will is the Fountain of all good All Laws vvhich have their beginning in time as the Lavv of Nature the Lavv of Nations the Moral Lavv all Civil Lavv vvhether fundamental or positive that are conformable to the Moral Lavv as all ought to be flovv from the Will of God vvhich is the Eternal Lavv That vvhich is just in it self is the Rule of Justice to all other things that are just But the Will of God is just in it self because the Will of God is God himself vvilling God is essentially
just Either Relative Justice is regulated by the Will of God or the Will of God as vvilling relative justice is regulated by it But the Will of God cannot be regulated by any Rule precedaneous unto it because it vvould thence follovv that he vvere not infinitely just Hence the Demerit of sin being according to the Order of Justice for the demerit of sin intends nothing else but that which is due thereto according to the constituted rule of moral righteousness between God and man and the order of justice proceeding from the free good pleasure of God it followeth that the demerit of sin receiveth its nature measure and limits from the Will of God according as he hath revealed himself in the Moral Law so that the damned in Hell suffer not more nor less then they deserved yea had God pleased to have inflicted a greater punishment for sin it had been just as also if he had pleased to have inflicted a lesser punishment for sin it had been just The sinners demerit is such whereupon it is free for God to deny mercy and just for him to punish sin but a sinner which hath been intimated formerly hath not merited that God should shew no mercy for then it would be unjust with God to pardon sin 'T is an unmoved and received Proposition God doth not will things because they are just but things are therefore just because God so willeth them 4. God proceeding to execute justice according to this rule of righteousness doth no wrong can do no wrong Summi boni offensio mercbatur summā poenam h. e. creaturae aeternam destructionem Vrsin Expl. Catech. Part 1. qu. 7. God being an infinite Being against whom sin is committed and the person suffering for sin being but finite The Object offended being God the person suffering being but a man the evil of punishment cannot exceed the evil of offence Thus David willing to justifie God mentions the object against whom he sinned as a reason whereupon to infer the justice of the punishment Against thee thee only have I sinned and done this evil in thy sight that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest and clear when thou judgest Psal 51. 4. The offence of the chief good might well deserve the greatest punishment that is the eternal destruction of the creature Christ the Surety suffering death for all his Elect amongst which are children guilty of no actual sin it was therefore just that those children should dye Besides nothing hinders why those words of David personating Christ even in the very hottest of his passion upon the Cross as acknowledging God to be holy O my God I cry in the day time and thou hearest not but thou art holy may not be understood of the justice of the wrath of God The curse being executed upon him who was made sin for the Elect sake and not restrained only unto the Justice of the Promise belonging to the Elect for Christs sake This appears further from the Office of God viz. that he is Judg of the World Is God unrighteous that taketh vengeance God forbid for then how should God judg the World Rom. 3.5 6. So Abraham That be far from thee to do after this manner to slay the righteous with the wicked and that the righteous should be as the wicked that be far from thee Shall not the Judg of all the Earth d●right Gen. 18.25 From the Wisdom of God which dictateth this way and no other to serve best to the manifestation of the glory of God Lastly From the Nature of God who is essentially just and his Will as was said before is the Rule of Justice To grant that God can will Injustice as such is to grant that God can be unjust that is to grant that God cannot be God We cannot acknowledg the Justice of God if we do not acknowledg sin The acknowledgment of the righteousness of so great an evil of punishment as is contained in the Curse necessarily presupposeth an answerable evil of offence in sin We cannot acknowledg Grace if we do not acknowledg both sin and Justice Impunity where punishment is not just is but abstaining from an act of Injustice and no act of Grace If Damnation were not just the gift of Salvation in some respect were not Grace The due acknowledgment of the Justice of God makes the sufferer more quiet and patient God the more glorious sin more sinful sinners more awful Unjust therefore in case of punishment for sin is mans complaint of God in point of Justice First Because God punisheth no man but for sin God now having freely bound himself to such an order of Justice is relatively just necessarily yet this relative Justice proceeds to execution by accident that is in case of sin Gods Decree and Justice notwithstanding if man had not sinned he should not have dyed Secondly When God punisheth for sin he delighteth not in the death of a sinner Ezek. 18.23 32. and 33.11 Punishment here is to be considered as it is an execution of Justice but not as it is the destruction of the creature God delights in it as it is the execution of Justice but not as it is the destruction of the creature Punishment is to be looked at as a natural evil or as a moral good As it is the destruction of the creature it is a natural evil i. e. an evil to Nature as it is the execution of Justice it is a moral good O Israel thou hast destroyed thy self but in me is thy help Hosea 13.9 The living man afflicted should complain of his sin not of his suffering But we are not hence to infer that we ought to be content to be damned To justifie God is our duty but to be contented to be damned is no where commanded nay if taken without limitation it is prohibited because to be contented to be damned is to be contented to be an Enemy and to sin against God and that for ever the condition of the damned including an everlasting state of enmity and sin against God Paul Rom. 9.3 wisheth himself for his brethrens sake accursed from the fruit of the love of Christ not from the love of Christ he vvisheth to be vvithout the vision and fruition of Christ not to be the Enemy of Christ he vvisheth to perish not as an Enemy of Christ but as a Saviour to his Brethren he vviseth to them his Salvation but he doth not vvish unto himself their Damnation The like is to be judged of Moses request Exod. 32.32 6. Inexcuseableness is that effect of the legal Work of the Spirit vvhence the Soul lying under conviction of the nature of the Command sin guilt and the Justice of God against sinners notvvithstanding any former shifts cavils contradictions or vvhatsoever else against the mutableness of our Creraion Adams sin original sin actual sin or the Justice of God is vvholly left vvithout any excuse of or defence for it self so as novv God is justified in
omnibus illis qui convertuntur alii enim gravi●rem sentiunt perturbatione n alii vero leviorem sed omnes qui verè convert nt●r verè etiam humiliantur Ames for some feel a greater measure of trouble others a lesser But all that are truly converted are truly humbled Quest 3. Whether may it not come to pass through want of light either in the Ministery or our selves or want of due observation of Gods manner of working with the soul or of due care to keep the manner of his working in mind that a soul which hath in its measure been made partaker of preparatory work and sincerely converted may yet be unable distinctly to call to mind its former experiences of some principal part of preparatory work Ans Yes But then these three things will follow First Such a soul assents to and closeth with the substance of the Doctrine of preparatory work being made known unto it Secondly Such a soul assents to accepts of and walks in the practise of the humbling Doctrine of the Gospel concerning a Believer The holy Christ-exalting and soul-humbling Doctrine of the Gospel virtually containeth and evidently presupposeth the Spirit of Preparatory Work The Spirit of Dependance and Repentance from falls and wandrings which straying condition is called the lost condition of a believer Psal 119.176 doth in effect include the conviction of the lost estate of an unbeliever inability without recovering grace to rise from sin to obedience here being like our inability without converting grace to rise from death to life there That is called humiliation this humility In the Work of humiliation which is before faith the soul seeth that as it is nothing so it can do nothing without Christ Poverty of spirit in the regenerate Matth. 5.3 hath its proportion to poverty of spirit in the irregenerate Luke 4.18 Revel 3.17 Thirdly Such a soul must expect unsetlings and as it were an after-bondage before it cometh to be setled and attain assurance of its salvation Whereby God doth two things 1. Take off the Soul from its carnal confidences for the less measure of experience of a lost estate before faith the greater measure of carnal confidence and less measure of sensible dependance upon Christ after faith until this cure 2. God hereby provideth further for his own glory by causing the soul to magnifie the Law to condemn sin judge it self and exalt grace in such a degree as a kindly preparatory work disposed to Assurance of salvation presupposeth and the want of a kindly preparatory work until now eclipsed Many darken A Caution concerning fixing Conversion to such a time if not hide from themselves their experience of a preparatory work by unwarrantably fixing their conversion to such a time Whence notwithstanding upon just examination they cannot deny the substance of preparatory work to have been and the effects of saving grace to be in their souls yet they owning no work for preparatory work which was not wrought before nor any work for converting work which hath not been wrought since such a time they cause much unsetledness and uncomfortableness unto themselves 'T is the duty of all that live under the Gospel to be converted unto God and it is the duty of all that are converted to know they are converted but we are no where commanded to know the time of our conversion If upon better light then formerly we cannot find that to be conversion nor consequently that we were converted at that time which we were wont to reckon from yet if we find the works of God fore-going and accompanying conversion to have been Pemble Of the nature properties of grace and f●●th and to be in our fouls it is our duty to bless God that we are converted and not groundlesly to afflict our selves about the time of our conversion To tell saith Master Pemble the month day or hour wherein they were converted is in most converts impossible in all of exceeding difficult observation though I deny not saith he but the time may be in some of sensible mark CHAP. VIII Whether there be any saving Qualification before the grace of faith viz. Any such Qualification whereupon salvation may be certainly promised unto the person so qualified THe Ensuing Discourse in answer to this Question 1. Explains the terms thereof 2. Recites various judgments concerning it 3. Propounds Arguments against ascertaining Salvation to any such qualificatiō 4. Endeavoureth to satisfie the more considerable Argnments of the contrary minded 5. Annexeth two Queries Qualifications are gracious Dispensations whereby the soul is in some measure rendred a more capable subject of faith or conversion and these dispose the soul thereunto The Explication of the more difficult terms of the Question either more remotely as the remainders of the Image of God in man after the fall which is called the grace of nature or more neerly as the common works of the Spirit by the Ministery of the Law and Gospel these last properly come under the name of common supernatural grace and are usually called preparatory works The Notion Preparatory is also carefully to be distinguished Works may be said to be preparatory either in respect of Gods ordinary Dispensation so those dispositions which qualifie the soul with a greater Ministerial capacity in order to conversion are to us preparatory in the judgement of charity in all and but in the judgement of charity in any Or in respect of Gods intention whence he purposeth such a work as a means to and a part of the way unto conversion afterwards to be wrought by him So in the Elect unto God they are are preparatory really but unto us only as they are also in the Non-elect in the judgjudgement of charity Because in that which is known they are alike and that wherein they are not alike is unknown Briefly Preparatory Work is so really or in the judgment of charity only To God really as concerning his Elect to man in the judgement of charity only as concerning any Notwithstanding because we know that such who are not elect are partakers of this common work and who are the Elect whom God will not forsake in this common work as justly he may do all we know not until faith and because we are to hope concerning all in whom we see them wrought and to endeavour in the use of means accordingly that God will not leave the soul here but that he will graciously proceed to the ingenerating of the grace of faith in his accepted time yet being ignorant of his intent we can but hope concerning any Hence to us they are preparatory in judgement of Charity in all whether Elect or Non-elect and not in judgement of Certainty in the Elect themselves before faith Saving Qualifications are taken either properly and formally for some effect of special grace such as are the gifts of the Spirit in Vocation Union and Communion all flowing from election having according to the revealed Dispensation of God
that which none denyeth namely that a Beleever is dead to sin before Marriage-union between Christ and the Soul that is before the act of faith for Marriage-union is not without the act of faith on our part which also is acknowledged by them with whō this discours argueth But it doth in no case affirm which must be carefully attended to that we are dead to sin before the grace of faith The death of sin is in order after the grace of faith in Vocation The infusion of faith and grace infers the death of sin the immediate effect thereof as the income of life expelled death in the Shunamites child 2 King 4. The Sum is That before our Marriage union with Christ I mean before in order of nature not in time there is first The grace of faith 1. The death of sin 3. The act of faith and this last according to your own grant before the act of faith is both the grace of faith and the death of sin Before the death of sin is the grace of faith Before the grace of faith nothing that is saving Obj. 2. Matth. 13.44 Selling all is placed before buying But by selling we are to understand parting with sin By buying believing Therefore there is a saving Qualification viz. Selling of all or parting with sin before faith Ans In answer to this Objection it will be convenient First to distinguish the terms viz. selling of all or parting from sin which may be applicable and useful for the resolving of sundry other occasional objections and afterwards speak to the Text. The souls selling of all or parting from sin is either before faith viz. Preparatory or Legal so called not always from the means namely the Law by which such a parting with sin is wrought but also from the state of the soul still continuing under the Law notwithstanding any Gospel-work And it is nothing else but such a measurable conviction of the impotency and unprofitableness of all lusts and carnal confidences which the soul before counted gain as that novv it letteth them all go as loss so far as it ceaseth to live upon them any longer Rom. 11.24 Philip. 3.8 Matth. 18.25 Luke 15.14 17. It is the same in effect with a lost estate This preparatory parting from sin is either external consisting in the conforming of the outward man unto the practise of known duties and the restraint of the outward man from knovvn sin Philip. 3.6 2 Pet. 2.20 Or Internal consisting in the legal restraint of the invvard man from sin for this Restraint being understood savingly and properly is in appearance only but not in truth whether to our selves or others together with such spiritual gifts and enlargements as are wrought by the common Gospel-work of the Spirit Or else the souls parting with sin is after faith viz. saving which is threefold 1. Habitual namely the death of sin or destroying of the body of death Rom. 6.6 Chap. 7.14 which is wrought by the infusion of the Spirit of life in Vocation herein the soul is passive it being the immediate effect thereof as the in-come of life was the expelling of death in the Shunamites child Or as the cessation of darkness is the effect of light coming into the air Here is the cessation of the reign of sin 2. Repentance viz. Evangelical part of which consists in sorrow for sin as sin and aversness from sin as sin in which the soul is active 3. Mortification which is a part of Sanctification wherein the soul is also active The Distinction premised the Text remains to be spoken to vvhich being a parable it is seasonable in the interpretation thereof to make use of that generally received and commanded Rule viz. That the principal Scope is to be attended the Metaphors not to be urged above what is consonant to other Scriptures where the same truth is taught in proper and simple terms Calvin Cartwright Junius Chemnitius Piscator Pareus in their Commentaries upon the place seem not to understand conversion to be the Scope of this Parable but rather that it intends the constancy of such who are already converted in the profession of the truth of the Gospel though they should be called to suffer the loss of all yea of life it self in testimony thereunto But be it supposed That Conversion is the Scope of this Parable and so the main intent thereof to be that the soul must part with all that maketh it preparatorily uncapable of believing before it can believe yet selling of all is to be understood of a preparatory not of a saving selling of all 1. Because Selling preparatorily fully answereth the Scope of the place 2. Because Selling savingly is the act of a living spiritual man vvhich none can be vvithout faith as selling civilly is the act of a natural living man Adde hereunto That it being supposed that by buying vve are to understand the first act of faith wherein the soul is active and by selling all a saving parting with sin which yet with due submission to better Judgements appeareth not to be the true meaning of the place yet even this interpretation concludes only a saving selling of all or parting with sin before the act of faith according to the sence of the distinction and as you may please to see therein which is not the matter here controverted but it doth not conclude any saving selling of all or parting with sin before the grace of faith which is the question The Sum of this Ansvver is The Text in that it is a Parable through our infirmity is the more apt to suffer by a mis-interpretation If it be taken in the first sence according to the Commentators above-mentioned it concerns not the question If taken in the latter sence whether selling of all be interpreted preparatorily or savingly it doth not conclude the question that is It doth in no sence hold forth a saving parting with sin before the grace of faith Obj. 3. Salvation is promised unto hungering thirsting poverty of spirit seeking repentance c. which are qualifications preceding faith therefore salvation may be promised to some qualification before faith Ans All Objections raised from these and the like promises vvhereof there are many in the Scriptures may receive a full answer by the right application of the distinction of qualifications into Preparatory or Legal vvhich go before faith And Saving or Evangelical vvhich follow faith intimated before in the beginning of the Answer to the second Objection Accordingly there is a Poverty Luke 4.18 Revel 3.17 A Hunger Luke 15.14 Isai 65.13 A Thirst Isai 65.13 A Seeking Luke 13.24 A Repentance Mark 1.15 Matth. 27.3 All without faith and in judgement of charity before faith viz preparatory poverty Poenitentia Legalis Poenitentia Evangelica Bucan loc 30. Poenitentia Interna salutaris Poenitentia Externa disciplinaris Spanh Exc. de gr●●● Sect. 32. Sitis totalis indigentiae fruitionis complacentiae partialis Ames Coron Art 5. Recipiscentia
Antecedens fidem Recipiscentia Consequens fidem Med. Cap. 26. Num. 31. Quaerere in fide Quaerere sine fide Piscat preparatory hunger c. And there is a Poverty Matth. 5.3 An Hunger and Thrirst Matth. 5.6 A Seeking Matth. 7.8 James 1.6 A Repentance 2 Cor. 7.10 After faith viz. a saving poverty of Spirit a saving hunger c. To this effect Ames distinguisheth thirst into a thirst of total indigence Isai 65.13 And into a thirst of partial complacency 1 Pet. 2.2 The like both he and others teach concerning Repentance Wheresoever any of these or the like qualilifications are mentioned in the Scripture which Salvation ascertained by promise to the person so qualified such qualification or qualifications are saving not preparatory Let one instance throughout the whole Scripture be produced and evinced to the contrary Obj. 4. Matth. 18.11 For the Son of man is come to save that which was lost Here Salvation is promised to those that are lost but the lostness in this place mentioned precedes faith therefore this lostness seems to be some saving qualilification before faith Ans The words are not to be understood Collectively Christus hic loquitur de Ovibus suis h. e. de Electis Synecld●che integri of all that are lost but distributively of the Elect that are lost So Piscator expounds the place Christ here speaks of his Sheep that is of his Elect. So is the word Sinners to be understood Matth. 19.13 1 Tim. 1.15 And ungodly Rom. 4.5 Not as if Christ came to save all sinners or that God justifieth all ungodly but elect sinners and elect ungodly Christ maketh his Elect sensible of their lost and sinful estate before he saveth them God maketh his Elect sensible that they are ungodly before he justifieth them but neither doth Christ save nor God justifie all that are lost sinners and ungodly This text is to be interpreted distributively of the Elect lost not collectively of all nor personally of this or that man for who are these Elect cannot be known before faith Obj. 5. That hearing by which faith is wrought in the soul is before faith That hearing by which faith is wrought in the soul is a saving work therefore there is some saving work before faith Ans A Saving Work is taken Formally scil for that which is saving in it self though not for it self nor by it self as being for the kind thereof part of Eternal life and by reason of its necessary connexion with salvation in respect of the Ordination of God hath a promise of salvation made unto it Causally scil instrumentally for the means by which a Saving Work is wrought not for the Saving Work it self The Distinction premised the Minor scil that hearing by which faith is wrought in the soul is a saving work is denyed as labouring of an Equivocation in the word Saving which the question means formally but the Argument intends causally or efficiently Doctour Ames out of whom this Argument is taken never intended it to this purpose who as he affirms in the same tract elsewhere that other preparatory dispositions have not a certain and infallible connexion with salvation so in this very place affirms that that hearing of the word by which faith is wrought hath scil to us no necessary connexion with salvation Disp Theolog de Praep. peccat ad conver for who saith he can promise before hand that God will give faith thereby and concludes it therefore to be saving not formally but causally viz. instrumentally Obj 6. If in the conversion of a sinner there be a term from which namely sin and a term to which namely faith then there must be a departing of the soul from sin the term from which before it can attain unto faith the term to which Ans The In-come of grace to and the out-going of sin from the soul is not in strictness to be compared unto two things for sin is not a thing but a corrupt privation of a thing succeeding one another in the same place after the order of a local mutation properly where one of those things must give way by being outed from its place before the other can come in But the In-come of the Spirit of grace into the soul is after the manner of a habit succeeding in the room of its contrary privation and in such alterations of the subject the privation doth not first go out and the habit then come in but the in-come of the habit causeth the out-going of the privation as we see in knowledge and ignorance in the soul sight and blindness in the eye light and darkness in the air life and death in the body Death did not first go out of the body of Lazarus or of the Shunamites child and then life come in nor doth darkness first leave the air and then light come in but the in-come of life was the expelling of death In actibus voluntatis instantaneis mutatio duntaxat reperitur non autem motus propriè dictus Actus eliciti fiunt sine motu per mutationem duntaxat instantaneam Twiss de permiss 52. Cr. 3. dig 9. Sect. 24. and the coming in of light the expelling of 〈◊〉 and so of the rest The alteration of the sub●●● from a term from which unto a term to which is 〈…〉 way of local mutation or by way of a ha●● 〈◊〉 in stead of the contrary privation The Objection holds in alterations of its first kind but not in the alterations of the second of which sort is the alteration in question Obj. 7. Matth. 11.28 Come unto me all ye that are weary and heavy laden and I will give you rest Here rest seems to be promised to the qualifications of being weary and heavy laden which precede faith Ans Be it so that weariness and being heavy laden in this place spoken of precede faith though all seem not so to understand it yet we must distinguish between the invitation of the weary and heavy laden to come and the promise made unto the weary and heavy laden if being invited they do come The invitation is made to the qualifications weary Quibus verbis promit●it se refocillaturum non omnes qui pecc tis omnisti sunt sed omnes qui peccati onus sentientes ad ipsum veniunt Hoc autem non faciun● nisi Electi qui à Patre trahuntur Piscat de praed S. 63 and heavy laden the promise to coming In which words saith Piscator he promiseth not that he will ease all that are heavily laden with their sins but all who feeling the burden of their sin come unto him but this none do but the Elect which are drawn of the Father To this place very probably Doctour Preston looked in that speech The promise is not made to preparation but to coming The invitation is absolute to all so qualified living under the call of the Gospel the promise is conditional to those so qualified if they come Obj.
to be our duty to believe as that the fault of our unbelief lyeth wholly upon our selves Sol. For the better removing of this objection there is need of a threefold Distinction 1. Distinguish between unbelief and unbelief not cured 'T is easie to conceive how a Physician may be the cause why such a disease is not cured of which disease it self he is no cause Unbelief considered in it self is simply a sin Therefore God is no way the Cause or Authour of it 2. Distinguish of unbelief not cured unbelief not cured is considered either Negatively for a meer absence of faith where the rule requireth it not to be and therefore is unblamable so it is in those that never heard of the preaching of the Gospel Or Privatively for the absence of faith where the rule requireth it to be so unbelief is looked upon in those that live under or hear of the Gospel 3. Distinguish between a Physical and a Moral cause A Physical cause is such a cause as though without it the effect cannot be yet it is no ways bound to produce such an effect thus the absence of the Sun is the cause of the night A Physician is the cause why that disease remains uncured which he can cure but is not bound to cure A Chyrurgion the cause why the issue remains unhealed which he is not tyed to heal Thus the King not giving a pardon is the cause why the offender is executed whom no Law obligeth him to pardon A Moral cause is such a cause wherein the Agent stands by duty bound concerning the producing or not producing of such an effect so as by omission of what is commanded or commission of what is forbidden there is a guilt incurred so mans will is moral therefore the blameable cause of unbelief Gods Will is the Antecedent not the Cause of unbelief the abuse of mans free-will in the fall is the cause of unbelief Unbelief not cured considered Negatively is in respect of the Will of God a physical and unblamable effect of a physical and unblamable cause but mans will being a moral cause unbelief in this sence cannot be the effect thereof Unbelief not cured privatively considered is in respect of God as a blamable Consequent of an unblamable Antecedent in respect of the will of man it is a blamable effect of a moral and blamable cause In Adam having received povver whereby vve might not have sinned vve sinned freely Unbelief is the effect of our sin in Adam God together vvith the Object of Faith tenders us means so far sufficient to the begetting of faith as leaveth us without excuse We love our unbelief and resist this means of believing John 1.11.5.41 Our contumacious opposition to the command of believing is the effect of our love to unbelief 'T is then but Justice in God to leave us to our unbelief in so doing he doth us no wrong being free to have mercy upon whom he will The Difficulty of believing The Difficulty of believing appeareth in three things 1. in the Special enmity of the heart against this duty 2. in the Eminence of the Principle requisite to the creating of faith 3. in the Greatness and largeness of the obedience of Faith 1. The Special enmity of the heart against believing appeareth thus there is no obedience that God and Christ love better 1 John 3.23 Or that the Spirit laboureth more in John 16.9 No obedience that either Satan or man oppose more Satan opposeth none more For as the Spirit of truth leadeth unto all truth but into none more then this So the Father of a lye opposeth all truth yet none more then this Men that finally resist believing in Christ by so doing do the will of the Devil do shevv him to be your Father John 8.44 Ye are of your Father the Devil and the lusts of your Father ye will do Vide Zanch. de peccat Angelorum lib. 4. c. 2. Theologitam nostri quam Pontisscis probabile aducunt Christum positum esse non modo in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 multorum hominum sed etiam in 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ipsorum etiam Angelorum Twiss de Elect. l. 4. p. 1. To this purpose there is a good use to be made of Zanchy's Discourse concerning the Revelation of Christ's Incarnation and the Exaltation of the humane Nature above the Nature of Angels by vertue of the Personal union the Doctrine of the grace of Christ ncarnate being that truth or at least contained in that truth whereof Christ speaks John 8. in which the Devil abode but hated not from the beginning Many Divines are conceived probably to think That Christ was not only set for the fall and rising again of many men but for the fall and standing of the Angels Man opposeth no truth more John 5.40 And ye will not come unto me that you may have lise What is said of the Jews Rom. 11.28 is true of all As concerning the Gospel they are enemies A formidable curse vvhereby the soul is smitten with an enmity against the Gospel of Blessedness The Gospel of Christ is a Doctrine of Contradiction Luke 2.34 Behold this child is set for the fall and rising again of many in Israel and for a signe that shall be spoken against A stumbling stone Rom. 9.32 A rock of offence 1 Pet. 2 8. A Doctrine of foolishness 1 Cor. 1.23 If he shall be in danger of hell fire that saith unto his brother Thou Fool What danger shall he be in that upbraideth the Gospel vvith foolishness They put it viz. the Word of God i. e. the Doctrine of the Gospel from them 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 13.46 They do not only not go to fetch it but being brought to them they put it away from them The Covenant of Works we could much better close vvith then vvith the Gospel any other Gospel command then that of believing any other person to be believed in then Christ Jesus John 5.43 I am come in mine own Name and ye receive me not if another shall come in his own Name him will ye receive any other way rather then the way of the Gospel Jer. 2.36 Why gaddest thou so much to change thy way Acts 22 4. I persecuted this way unto the death Grace likes no vvay to life so vvell Nature dislikes none so much We are not by nature so averse to the Turkish Alcoran as we are to Christs Gospel 2. The Eminency of the Principle requisite unto the creating of faith The Apostle excellently sheweth Ephes 1.19 20. And what is the exceeding greatness of his Power to us ward who believe according to the working of his mighty power which he wrought in Christ when he raised him from the dead Where this truth is held forth 1. By a Gradation Power his Povver the greatness of his Povver the exceeding greatness of his Power 2. By a Comparison the Povver which God puts forth in the Work of faith being compared unto
the passive voyce as being received by Christ before he makes mention of himselfe in the active voyce as having actively received Christ Receptie respeciu hominis est vel passiva vel activa Medulla l. 1. c. 26. Upon this Text Doctor Ames grounds that Spiritual and profitable distinction of a double receiving of Christ Passive and Active Passive whereby the Spiritual principle of grace is ingenerated Active proceeding from that ingenerated habit of grace and the operation of God fore-going and exciting thereunto we are received of Christ before we doe receive Christ Christ in working the grace of faith receiveth us by the act of faith we receive him Christ taketh the Soul before the Soul taketh him A third place to the same purpose is Ephes 2.1.5 And you hath he quickned who were dead in trespasses and sins even when we were dead in sins he hath quickned us together with Christ The infusion of the habit of Faith or Grace into the Soul is the quickning of the Soul until then the Soul is dead as a dead body so a dead Soul is passive in respect of its quickning or being made alive That the infusion of saving faith or saving grace is the infusion of Life appeares thus The Spirit of the Command and Promise viz. that infused grace which inclineth us to obey the Command and receive the Promise is Life the Image of God in Adam which consisted in a conformity to the Command was his spiritual life the spirit of Faith is the spirit of the Command 1 Joh. 3.23 this is his Commandement That we should beleeve on the name of his Son Jesus Christ that it is the spirit of the Promise is out of doubt Joh. 3.33 As the Image of God in Adam which consisted in conformity to the command was his Spiritual life so the Image of God created anew in the Soul is life either this is life or what can be life As the spirit of sinne is the spirit of death so by the rule of contraries the spirit of effectual saving grace is Spiritual life He that hath the Sonne hath life 1 Joh. 5.12 But every Beleever hath the Sonne From the nature of the grace of faith receiving of Jesus Christ as our Lord and Saviour being of the essence and form thereof as a natural principle of natural sense motion and action is natural life so a supernatural principle of supernatural sense motion and action is supernatural life But such a Principle is saving faith and each other saving grace No Life-lesse principle can enable the Soul to a Life-act it cannot be reasonably conceived how a Beleever as a Beleever should not be alive The summe is this text holds forth an Active-quickning Christ enlivening a dead passive Soul So from Scripture the Arguments follow First from the supernatural nature of the Habit of saving faith or of the habitual frame of the New Creature In receiving a supernatural Habit Theologi vocant habirum infusum per se quiaper se sua natusra postulat ita non alitèr fieri suarez Meraph Tom. post disp 44. sect 13 n. 6. or Principle the Soul is passive saving faith or the habitual frame of the New Creature is a supernatural Habit or Principle therefore in receiving saving faith or the habitual frame of the New Creature the Soul is passive Supernatural is that which exceeds the power of Nature and is received of the Soul by way of inspiration only as the gift of Prophecy or both by inspiration and infusion as the habits of grace such habits the Schools call Habits infused of themselves their very nature denying them to be otherwise attained either by acts or any created cause whereby they are distinguished from Habits infused by accident such as are the gifts of Tongues and the gifts of healing which though they are ordinarily acquired and gotten by acts of study and practise yet have sometime been infused as in the Apostles time In receiving that supernatural saving habit or principle before which the soul hath received no supernatural saving habit or principle the soul is passive But the grace of saving faith is such a supernatural saving habit or principle received before which the soul hath received no supernatural saving habit or principle Therefore in receiving the supernatural saving habit or principle of faith the soul is passive From the nature of the subject of saving faith which is wholly unable to confer any causative power towards the producing of such an effect In receiving a miraculous impression the soule is passive but the infusion of the habit of faith or principle of life in Vocation or Conversion is a miraculous impression Vocation is a miracle it being no lesse a miracle to raise a soul from spiritual than a body from natural death therefore in receiving the infused habit of faith the soul is passive notwithstanding God oft-times makes such use as he pleaseth of men in working a miraculous effect in them yet because in such works the whole efficiency alwayes flows from God and none from man Men are passive in receiving such miraculous effects or impressions Moses putting his hand into and plucking it out of his bosome Exod. 4.7 Naamans dipping himself seven times in Jordan 2 King 5.14 conferred no more power to the curing of their Leprosie nor the womans touching the hem of Christs garment Mark 5.28 29. to the healing of her issue of blood than if they had done nothing In receiving that saving power to do before which there is no such active saving power the soul is passive we cannot do any thing whilst we are but yet receiving power to do but in receiving the habit of faith we receive that saving power to do before which there is no such active saving-power Therefore in receiving the habit of faith the soul is passive Vocation is compared to Circumcision of the heart Deut. 30.6 to Creation to powring out of the Spirit so is the habit of faith there called Tit. 3.6 to quickning or making alive As therefore the person circumcised was passive in Circumcision the creature in its creation the subject quickned in its vivification and the subject into which precious water is powred is passive in respect of the water powred thereinto So the soul in Vocation which is all these spiritually as being that work wherein the heart is circumcised quickned hath inherent saving grace created in it and powred out into it by the Spirit must needs be passive The contrary tenet makes us in the creation of faith to be our own creators in part An assertion as full of pride as empty of reason it makes us in part authors of our faith a high degree of spiritual facrilege against the glory of Christ and grace of the Gospel Obj. 1. The Soul before and in receiving of grace is active in respect of the use of means therefore not meerly passive Sol. Passive is taken either absolutely for that which is simply passive and
not subjectively that is such as remain ungodly when they are justified The Text saith not he reconcileth enemies according to the sense of those words in the former place He justifieth the ungodly But If when we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Son mark the time of this Reconciliation was the time of the death of his Son not the time of our Conversion much more being reconciled we shall be saved by his life that is If while we were enemies in respect of our nature and state we were reconciled in our head i. e. our Reconciliation was actually purchased by and acknowledged at the death of his Son how much more being reconciled in our selves by the slaying of the enmity of nature through the infusion of grace and the changing of our estate in respect of our persons and actions through faith in Christ shall we be saved by his life he that hath done the greater with greatest difficulty he will do the lesse having overcome and triumphed over all difficulty past and proceeding being without all difficulty in respect of what is to come This exposition is agreeable to the Analogie of faith strengthens the Apostles arguing from the greater to the lesser and any shorter interpretation seemeth to straighten those words We were reconciled to God by the death of his Son Thus Dr. Amos and Dr. Twisse understand this place Medulla l. 1. c. 20. Twiss de permiss l. 2 cr 4. digr 10. Sect. 4. and Calvin seemeth very well to allow thereof nor doth Piscator dissent there-from as appeareth in his citation of this Text disputing with Vorstius There is remission of sins that is actually procured before we do beleeve Cham. Nobis persuasissimum est Calv. in loc Cham. Tom. 3 lib. 12. Sect 18. Perkins in Gal. 3.16 Medulla c. 24. 27. remissa esse peccata antequam credidimus Christ is first justified that is acquit of our sins and we justified in him Perkins There is a kind of previous application of Redemption to us in Christ The sentence of our Justification was pronounced in Christ our head rising from the dead Ames Transactio inter Deum Christum fuit praevia quaedam applicatio ad nos Sententia haec fuit in Christo capite nostro à mortuis jam resurgente pronunciata There is saith Mr. Rutherford Rhetorf exc 1. c. 2. a Justification in the mind of God Eternal and a Justification in time terminated in the conscience of the beleever Obj. But if it be yeelded that the grace of Justification be before Faith it will follow that in justification by faith there is nothing really and possitively wrought in the Soul but only a manifestation of what was before Ans Not so in the justification of a sinner there is that which is real and positive both on Gods part and on the Beleevers part on Gods part 1 An actual imputing of the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ to the Beleever 2 A transient judicial act of God whereby he declareth the sinner to be justified for the righteousnesse sake of Christ received by faith terminated in the Conscience of the Beleever upon the Beleevers part there is 1. An actual relying upon the righteousnesse of Jesus Christ 2. A renouncing of our own righteousnesse Obj. But if we yeeld a being of Iustification how doth the condition of an elect person justified by faith differ from his condition yet an unbeleever in respect of his Iustification Ans God hath absolutely decreed to justifie them before they doe beleeve their persons are beloved from eternity Jesus Christ hath actually and absolutely procured their justification before faith God hath accepted this Meritorious satisfaction of Christ before faith God never imputes the sins of the world of the elect to them unto Condemnation having already imputed them unto and being satisfied for them by Christ All which notwithstanding the condition or state of the Elect before faith is the same with the condition of those who are not elected we are the children of wrath even as others Ephes 2 3. guilty of sinne before God and therefore in respect of their estate obnoxious to Condemnation even as others Though their Justification be absolutely Vide Retorf ex 1. c. 2. and actually procured before Faith yet they are not justified until they doe beleeve now and not until now is their state changed now and not until now doe the effects of Gods displeasure cease towards them by vertue of the Promise He that beleeveth shall not come into condemnation now and not before are their persons accepted in themselves and consequently their actions capable of being accepted hence Albeit the justification of the Elect is absolue ely procured before they doe beleeve yet they have no consolation nor peace of Conscience till they doe beleeve Obj. Yee see how that by works a man is justified and not by faith only Jam. 2.24 Sol. That James agreeth with Paul concerning the Doctrine of Justification is evident in that the same Scripture Gen. 15.6 cited by Paul Rom. 4.3 is cited and acknowledged to be fulfilled by James 2.23 and the Scripture was fulfilled which saith Abraham beleeved God and it was imputed unto him for righteousnesse That Proposition of Pauls We are justified by faith without works and that of James We are justified by works and not by faith only are distinct but not opposite Propositions for Iames referreth not to the manner of our Justification of which Paul speaks but to the nature of justifying faith against such as boasted of such a faith as justifying which was without works Paul disputes against the Legalist Iames both against the Legalists and Libertines Paul sheweth the manner of Justification by faith Iames the nature of justifying faith Pauls conclusion is that We are justified by faith without works Iames's conclusion is that Faith without works doth not justifie Justificamur Effectivè à Deo Approhensivé à fide Declarativè ab operibus Prideaux lect 5. de Justificatione The objection also is further satisfied by distinguishing of Justification Justification is either of our persons before God so Faith only justifies or of our faith before Men so works justifie that is they declare our faith before men to be unfeigned I will shew thee my faith by my works Jam. 2.18 By works was faith made perfect ver 22. Obj. We are justified by faith Rom. 4.9 Faith is a work therefore we are not justified without works and consequently not by faith only Ans How Faith justifieth hath been spoken before that faith doth not justifie as a work is evident Rom. 4 5. But to him that worketh not but beleeveth on him that justifieth the ungodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse God makes high account of that faith which accounts of its object as the matter of our Justification God makes no account of that faith which we account of as a work in the matter of our Justification the Beleever