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A55305 The divine will considered in its eternal decrees, and holy execution of them. By Edward Polhill of Burwash in Sussex Esquire Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694?; Owen, John, 1616-1683.; Seaman, Lazarus, d. 1675. 1695 (1695) Wing P2754; ESTC R212920 238,280 559

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turned from God and God departed from Man and instantly the Captive appeared all in Chains of Sin and Wrath his Lamp went out in obscure darkness Satan ascended up into the Throne the fire of Lust rose up in the Sanctuary the Affections were all in a mutiny against the upper Powers and the whole Man became a Prisoner under Sin and Wrath and all this because he left 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his original State of rectitude and holiness 2. Man fallen in opposition to fallen Angels When Man though but an earthen Pitcher fell from God the whole Trinity seemed to be moved at it the bowels of the Father yearned over him and as not content with inward compassions Grace breaks out at the Lips of the Son Unto you O men do I call saith the eternal Word Prov. 8. 4. and because words such as made a World could not do it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 2. 16. He catches hold of the Humane Nature and rather than fail he would live and bleed and die in it for our Redemption And lest after all this Man should not catch hold of his own Salvation out comes the holy Spirit to make sure work of it in an application of it unto us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith St. Chrysostome When Mankind fled and fled far from Christ he pursued and caught hold of it But when those Vessels of Gold the Angels dropt out of Heaven there was no such matter the Father's bowels though of immense largeness were shut up not a thought of mercy rose in his heart towards them the Son's Lips which drop sweet smelling Myrrh unto men let fall never a syllable of comfort unto them he saw them tumbling down from Heaven yet caught not hold of them the holy Spirit would not stir a foot to recover 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their original Rectitude for them again that so they might be capable of staying in the holy Heavens but down they must into Chains of darkness such as for ever shut out every glimpse of Mercy But why a Philanthropy rather than a Philangely Why a Redemption for Men and not for Devils Here men give their conjectures Man say some sinned by seduction but Devils by self-motion In the Fall of Men say others all the Humane Nature fell but in the Fall of Angels all the Angelical Nature fell not Others alledge that the Sin of Angels was more damnable than Man's because their Nature was more sublime than his Others yet affirm that Men are capable of Repentance but Devils not because whatever they once choose they do immobiliter velle the Devil sinneth from the beginning 1 Joh. 3. 8. 't is not said he sinned but he sinneth because from his first Apostasie he sinneth on uncessantly But alas Who can limit the holy One Might not his boundless Mercy have saved the selftempted Devils What if his devouring Justice had broke out against devil-seduced Men nay against all the Race of Men Who should accuse him for the Nations that perish which he hath made and Sin hath marred Wisd. 12. 12 Could not the Blood of God have washed out the blackest spots of fallen Angels Was not the Almighty Spirit of Grace able to melt a Devil into Repentance Had we poor Worms been to dispute with the Devil about the Body of Christ as Michael did with him about the Body of Moses O how easily would he have reasoned us out of our Redeemer What would he have said shall the tender bowels of God be let down to you on Earth and restrained to us in Heaven Will the All-wise God repair his Clay-images in the Dunghil of the lower World and neglect his fairer Pictures once hung up in his own Palace of Glory May not the Son of God be a Redeemer at an easier rate without stepping a foot out of his Fathers house and will he travel down so far as an Incarnation How much better were it for him to spot himself with an assumed Cherubin than to take Flesh into his glorious Person But the great God hath neither given Angels a day to plead for a Redeemer nor Man a licence to pry into his Ark. Wonder then O Man at this astonishing difference made by the divine Will alone Angels must be damned and men may be saved golden Vessels are irreparably broken and earthen Pots are set together again Inmates of Glory drop to Hell and Dust and Ashes fly up to Heaven When I consider thy Heavens and the Stars glistering there Lord what is man that thou mindest him Psal. 8. 4 but when I consider thy Heaven of Heavens and thy Angels dropping from thence into utter darkness Lord what is man that thou savest him Misericordiâ Domini plena est terra quare non dictum est plenum est coelum quia sunt spirituales nequitiae in coelestibus sed non illae ad commune jus indulgentiae Dei remissionémque peccatorum pertinent as holy Ambrose expresses it Even so gracious Father because so it seemeth good in thy sight Thus having found the right Captive I pass on 2. To the Captivity and this I shall set out in three things 1. The Chains 2. The Prison 3. The Jailor As for the first I shall first touch upon the Chains themselves and then upon the distinct links thereof 1. The Chains themselves are no other than Original and Actual Sin 1. Original Sin is a very heavy Chain and here I shall view 1. The upper end of this Chain I mean that first Sin of eating the forbidden fruit called in the Schools Peccatum originale originans here there was truly magnum in parvo a vast World of Sin in a small Act. There was an Idol of self-excellency a framing and to adorn it a concupiscential stealth of the forbidden fruit and in this stealth a bloody Homicide a slaying of all Humane Nature at one blow and which is more a kind of Deicide too a slaying as much as in Man lay even of God himself the Pride of this primordial Sin snatching at God's excellency the Unbelief stabbing at his Truth the Rebellion fighting against his Sovereignty the Ingratitude trampling his Goodness under foot and the Presumption as it were daring out his Justice into warlike Arms and all this contra praeceptum tam breve ad retinendum tam leve ad observandum This is the upper end of this Chain and it reaches down to us all for in him we all sinned Rom. 5. 12. The sweetest Bonaventure cannot say In Adamo non peccavi For Adam was not here considered as a private person but as the Root and Head of Mankind Adam's person was the fountain of ours and his Will the representative of ours we were all in him naturally as latent in his Loins and legally too as comprized within the Covenant made with him therefore we all sinned in his Sin Omnes nos unus ille Adam saith one Father Genus humanum in primo parente velut in radice computruit saith
them for the black Mantle of the night now all on a flame with flashes of Lightning and anon all in a Sea with the Bottles of Heaven sometimes rent in pieces with thundring Tempests and then made up again into serenity and clear as a molten Looking-glass This is the Fan of all Creatures breathing on the Earth and it self is fanned with various Winds This is the Inn where the visible Species the Imagery of the Worlds Beauty and Glory and the audible Species the multiplied progeny of Sounds and Voices lodge together This is the common Road where the influences of the Heavens and the vapours of the Earth the beams of the Sun and the sweet perfumes of Herbs and Flowers meet and embrace each other in their passage Within this is the massie Earth the Centre of the World hanging upon nothing inwardly boweled with rich Minerals and precious Stones and outwardly teeming with numberless births of Grass and Corn shaded with Trees and Woods and laughing with odoriferous Herbs and Flowers bubling with lively Springs and Fountains of Water and admirably enterlaced with gliding Streams and Rivers inhabited with strange variety of Beasts and lorded with Man And the Girdle of this Earth is the wonderful Sea swadled with Clouds swarming with Fishes lodged and locked up in the hollows of the Earth and from thence secretly winding and straining its moisture into the inward Veins thereof now swelling with the pride of Winds and Waves as if it meant to swallow up Heaven and Earth and then sinking down again into its Den as if it were afraid to be drunk up by the little Sands The third is the Mixt World the mariage or copula of the other two made up of Men whose Immortal Souls claim kindred with the World of Angels and whose Earthen Bodies are the Breviaries and Epitomes of the visible World virtually summing up the Elements in their harmonious Mixture the Plants in their Life the Beasts in their Senses and the Heavens with the Sun Moon and Stars in their Heads Eyes and beautiful Faces Now touching all this Catalogue of Beings I shall briefly demonstrate three things 1. That all these Beings had a beginning 2. That their beginning was from God 3. That it was from God as a free Agent and according to the counsel of his own Will 1. All these things had a beginning and this I prove three ways 1. I argue ex absur do if they had no beginning of being then every one of them is a God by Nature a Jehovah in Self-beingness and an Alpha in Primacy If they had no beginning of duration then are they all inmates in God's Eternity copartners in his Immutability and which is a step higher possessors of his Infinity and boundless Beings without any limits of Being For what imaginable limits of Being can they have which want a beginning which is the first limit of Being 2. The Motions of the Creatures evince this the Elements have their enterchanges the Earth its seasons the Sea its tides the Air its winds the Stars their courses the Moon her variations the Sun runs its race between the Tropicks the Heavens the common carriers of all the rest turn about with an uncessant Motion nay the immaterial Angels and rational Souls are never without some Motions in their Understanding and Will neither can they do any thing without a change because their being and their doing are two things Now what do all these Motions speak but a first Mover a beginning at some first point and a measure of time ever since Such moveable Beings cannot be measured with Eternity for that is unmoveable and unvariable but these are in motions and mutations that is instantaneous and simultaneous but these are under a flux of priority and posteriority in their motions and mutations wherefore it must needs be that these had a beginning 3. If these had no beginning then what shall we say of the Years Days and Minutes past Are they finite or infinite If finite then numerable and there was a beginning if infinite then how past Infinity cannot be passed over but and if it could then there are infinite numbers of Minutes past infinite numbers of Days past and infinite numbers of Years past and because there cannot be infinito infinitius by most necessary consequence there are as many Years past as Days and as many Days past as Minutes which is utterly impossible therefore these things must needs have a beginning 2. The beginning of all these was from God The Scripture speaks evidently In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth Gen. 1. 1. Of him and through him and to him are all things Rom. 11. 36. He that built all things is God Heb. 3. 4. When we look upon the stately Palace of the World roofed with the glorious Heavens floored with the fruitful Earth chambered with the cloudy Air watered with the stupendious Sea and furnished with all variety of Creatures we cannot dream of any other Architect but God alone And because Job bids us speak to the earth Job 12. 8. and the Psalmist tells us that there is a language in the heavens Psal. 19. 1 2 3. and the Apostle asserts that there is a witness of God in the rain Acts 14. 17. therefore suffer me to parly their Original out of their own mouths Creatures whence came you Ex nihilo What ex nihilo How then came you over that vast infinite Gulf which lies between Nothing and Being Infinite Power filled it up to make our passage But since you came over where do you stand In a Being betwixt two Nothings Nothing negative and Nothing privative And who set you there at first The first and chief Being who is ipsum Esse suum Esse infinitum Esse infinitè elongatum à non Esse But whence had you all that truth and goodness which is in you Our truth is but a beam from his infinite Verity and our goodness the Redundance and Super-effluence of his infinite Goodness And whence came all these numbers and hosts of Beings Out of perfect Unity every one of us is numbred by our finiteness and composition and every Number is from infinite simple Unity Monas est principium radix omnium there is but one God of whom are all things But how came you into such ranks Why have not the Elements Life the Plants Sense the Beasts Reason and Men Angelical Perfections When infinite Power brought us out of nothing infinite Wisdom shut up every one of us within the bounds of his proper Being But your Beings being of such different sorts how came you to be so kind each to other the Clouds drop down Rain on the Earth the Earth brings forth Grass that feeds the Beasts and these serve for Man the Breviary of all and Steward of all All these and innumerable more links of Amity were made by the God of Order But if you be of God's own make shew me your tokens 'T
is most apparent that all Beings must be from the chief Being all Truth from the first Truth all Goodness from supreme Goodness all Numbers from perfect Unity and all Ranks and Orders from infinite Wisdom and this chief Being first Truth supreme Goodness perfect Unity and infinite Wisdom can be no other than God alone But if this satisfie not you may yet further see God's glorious Immensity in the vast capacious Heavens his invariable Immobility in the unmoveable Earth his Faithfulness in the great Mountains his unsearchable Judgments in the great Deep his dreadful Justice in the devouring Fire his wonderful Omniscience in the Sun the rouling Eye of the World his transcendent Beauty in the Varnish of the Light the plain foot-steps of the Eternal Power and Godhead in every Creature and the glorious impress of his own Image and Likeness in Men and Angels Thus the very Creatures themselves tell us that their beginning was from God 3. Their beginning was from God as a free Agent and according to his own Decree for either God did produce them naturally and necessarily or else freely and voluntarily Not naturally and necessarily for then he should produce things ad extremum virium and so besides these Beings produce all the possible Beings producible by his glorious Omnipotence all the possible Orders and Congruities contrivable by his unsearchable Wisdom all the possible Goodness effluxive out of his infinite Goodness and all the possible Numbers which his infinite Unity can bring forth into being and produce them all as early as Eternity it self and all of them so produced must be necessary Beings as well as God himself in all which many great contradictions are involved Wherefore it remains that he did produce them voluntarily and according to his own Decree the Will of God was the first Mover in this great Work 'T is true that the World is as Damascene stiles it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a kind of Redundance of God's infinite Goodness but not a drop of this Goodness runs out ad extrà but by his good pleasure 'T is true that there is the various and admirable Wisdom of God in this Work but that Wisdom shews forth never an Order or Rank of Being unless it be taken into the divine Decree and so become the counsel of his Will according to which he worketh all things 'T is true that the Eternal Power and Godhead are clearly seen in the Creation but these had never shewed themselves at all if the divine Will had not spoken the word God made all things by the word of his power that is the divine Will eternally expressed to the divine Power what Beings it should produce in time 'T is true that all the numbers and hosts of Beings 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 they flow from him who is perfect Unity but not in the way of natural Necessity but of his free Decree Qui dicit Quare Dous fecit coelum terram Respondendum est ei quia voluit qui autem dicit Quare voluit majus aliquid quaerit quàm est Volunt as Dei nihil autem majus inveniri potest When the Psalmist made that general summons to the Angels Heavens Sun Moon Stars Waters Dragons Deep Fire Hail Snow Vapours Wind Trees Beasts Cattel creeping Things flying Fowl even all the hosts of Nature to sing praises to their great Makes he added this as the supreme Reason of all he commanded and they were created Psal. 148. 5. Sermo Dei Volunt as est Opus Dei Naeturae est Unto whatsoever his Will speaks a fiat it comes forth into being but if that be silent not the least Atom can appear The Egyptian Magicians cannot produce so much as the shadow or counterfeit semblance of a Louse but as men mazed and nonplus'd they are forced to cry out This is the finger of God Exod. 8. 19. And what these wicked Atheists mutter out touching this poor Creature upon the rack of Conviction that the Catholick Church confesses touching all the World in a triumphant Gratulation The Twenty four Elders in the name of all Saints falling down and worshipping before the Throne of the Everliving God cry out Thou art worthy O Lord to receive glory honour and power for thou hast created all things and for thy pleasure they are and were created Rev. 4. 11. O thou divine Will thou art worthy to be adored in the Angels above and Men below in the Luminaries of Heaven and fruitfulness of Earth in the Meteors of the Air and wonders of the Deep in the life of the Plants and senses of the Beasts at thy imperial Word all these came pouring out of the barren Womb of Nothing the births of their Existence were all dated by thine hand the dowries of their goodness were all given by thy Love the proprieties of their Being were all stamped on them by thy Ideal Truth and the various Ranks and Orders of their standing were all set out by thy glorious Wisdom O glorious Creator who hast made all these things go on one step further create in us an admiring Heart which by the scale of Creatures as by Jacob's Ladder may ascend higher and higher in the Adorations of thee when we are at the lowest step of all I mean mere Being let 's remember thee the chief and first of Beings when at the second step which is Being with Life let 's praise thee the only Fountain of Life when at the third which is Being and Life crowned with Sense let 's tremble at thee the All-seeing and All-hearing Deity when at the fourth which is Being Life and Sense irradiated with beams of Reason and impowered with liberty of Will let 's adore thy infinite Wisdom which contrived and thy allmighty Will which created all these things and us to see thy Glory in them when at the highest step of all Angelical perfections let 's be lost in holy mazes and trances at thy infinitely purer glory in comparison whereof the very Angels themselves are but as spotted lamps and duskish beauties In a word from the sublimest Seraphim to the poorest Worm let 's admire thee humbly confessing that none can shew forth all thy praise CHAP. VII Of the Works of Conservation and Gubernation HAving briefly touched upon Creation I procede to its appendants Conservation and Gubernation The Almighty and All-wise Creator is not as man who builds a House or Ship and leaves it but like a faithful Creator he repairs the House of the World by his Conservation and steers the Ship of it by his Gubernation and that according to the Counsel of his own Will aliter mundus nè per ictum oculi stare poterit as the Father expresses it And first as touching Conservation I shall demonstrate four things 1. That no Creature can preserve it self 2. That no Fellow-creature can preserve another 3. That the Preservation of all is from God 4. That it is from God according to his Decree 1. That no
Creature can preserve it self and this is clear 1. From the Creatures Station even the highest Seraphin stands juxta non esse at the brink of Nullity his Being is between two Nothings Nothing negative and Nothing privative and as his passage from Nothing into Being could not be without an infinite Power creating so his natural fall from Being into Nothing would certainly be without an infinite Power conserving Creatur a habet redire ad non esse à se if God should but say to the highest Angel Tolle quod tuum est abi he must immediately away into Nullity All Creatures by their natural vanity press downwards towards nothing as their own Centre and none but the Almighty shoulders can bear them up in Being 2. From God's Royal Prerogative which the Scripture most emphatically decyphers out as it were in Figures of Glory He only hath immortality 1 Tim. 6. 16. as if there were none at all in Angels and Rational Spirits Nay there is None besides him 1 Sam. 2. 2. as if there were no Being at all in the Creature And the reason of these expressions is this God hath Being and Immortality originally from himself but the Creature hath them but derivatively and in a dependence upon him wherefore in comparison of his Being Creatures are but nullities and in comparison of his Immortality Angels are but smoak But now if a Creature could preserve it self in Being and so immortalize it self it would become a Self-subsistence and consequently a God unto it self 2. That no Creature can preserve another I mean as a principal Agent and this is evident for 1. If one Creature might so preserve another it should be a God to it yet so weak as not to preserve it self But if it could preserve another it must be by some transfusion of virtue into it and that but finite for more a Creature cannot give and then if God transfuse as much virtue into the Creature conserved as the Creature conservant did the Creature conserved might subsist of it self and be a God to it self 2. The nature of Conservation evinces this What is it but an Influx of Being Now suppose all the Angels in Heaven would try to guard the poorest Worm in the Earth and that but for one moment only what could they do towards an Influx of Being being only streams from God as light from the Sun If the Sun be gone who can keep light in the Air If Jehovah withdraw who can keep Being in the Creature All the Creatures are as I may so say sensible of this dependance and look up to God for their preservation Psal. 104. 27. which leads me to the next thing 3. That the preservation of all is from God as of him so through him are all thing Rom. 11. 36. and this appears 1. By a survey of all the Creatures Angels are under God the strongest of Spirits but cannot subsist one moment without him he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Heb. 1. 7. he is making the Angels even to this day by a daily Conservation their Immortality is a continual Spiration from the Father of Spirits The Heavens are the strongest of Bodies yet cannot stand alone God is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 building his stories in the Heavens Amos 9. 6. he is still a building of them or else all those glorious Arches would totter down If he be but angry the Pillars of Heaven tremble and are agast Job 26. 11. If he withdraw his hand all the heavenly Volumes pass away as a Scroll and out go the fair Letters of Sun Moon and Stars in the twinkling of an Eye The Earth is the Centre of the World and as to Sense it hangs upon nothing as if it were only poised by its own gravity but this created Centre is bore up by the infinite Centre of all Being and as to Faith and Reason hangs upon him The pillars of it are the Lord's 1 Sam. 2. 8. he by his strength setteth fast the mountains Psal. 65. 6. or else they would be wavering towards nullity The Sea is a vast spreading Element but lest it should be contracted into nothing it is held in the hollow of his hand Isai. 40. 12. and that imports no less than a preservative comprehension All the numberless Birds in the Air Beasts in the Earth and Fishes in the Sea wait on him for their preservation the sending forth of his Spirit is their Being the opening of his hand their Provision and the shadow of his wings their Protection not a Sparrow forgotten before him not a poor Fly without an infinite Preserver Man who is the Epitome of all the rest cannot but own him O how soon would the earthen Pitcher break if he did not keep it how soon would the Lamp of the Soul go out if he did not light it even every moment Hence God is stiled the preserver of men Job 7. 20. a most universal preserver even from the utmost hairs which are numbred by him Matth. 10. 30. unto the inmost spirit which is preserved by his visitation Job 10. 12. Thus running through the whole Catalogue of Creatures we must conclude with St. Austin Deus est per omnia diffusus non ut qualitas mundi sed ut substantia cratrix sine labore regens sine onere continens omnia 2. By the very nature of Preservation what is it but continuata Creatio God is still a making the Angels and building the Heavens my Father worketh hitherto saith Christ Joh. 5. 17. He doth per intimam operationem continuò facere Creatura saith a famous School-man quamdiu est creatura Deo quia pro quolibet instanti habet esse à Deo Preservation is but the eeking out of Creation and therefore can be from no other but God alone Omnia in illo subsistunt à quo creata sunt But to pass on 4. The preservation of all is from God according to his Decree and this is evinced by these Reasons 1. Either God preserves Creatures naturally or freely not naturally for then he should preserve them perpetually and so every Fly must run parallel in Eternity with an Angel nor naturally for then he should preserve them uniformly and so every mortal body would subsist without food as well as the immaterial Spirits therefore he preserves them freely There be various ways of Preservation viz. Preservation of Creatures as to their Being and as to their adjuncts of order beauty goodness and truth Preservation of them as to their individuals and as to their kinds Preservation of individuals by means and without means preservation of them in perpetuum and for certain periods of time Now all this variety of Preservations doth evidently display the glorious liberty of the divine Will in the dispensing thereof Angels are preserved in their individual Beings and that in perpetuum and that without means but the Nodus perpetuitatis is the divine pleasure or else their Immortality would dissolve in a moment Men Beasts and
Vegetables are preserved in their Individuals but 't is by means and but for a time and lest the kind should perish with the individuals Generation is a supplement to their Mortality and the ruler in all this is the Will of God As for Preservation by means it is God who bringeth food out of the earth Psal. 104. 14. and when 't is in our hand we cannot eat thereof unless God give us an heart Eccl. 6. 2. and when we do eat thereof 't will not be the staff of life to us without the word of his blessing Matth. 4. 4. without this we may eat and not be satisfied drink and not be filled Hag. 1. 6 9. Every Creature saith The blessing is not in me but in the Will of God As for the Periods of Preservation they are all fixed in the divine Decree there the days of men are determined their months numbred and their unpassable bounds appointed Job 14. 5. Hezekiah had fifteen years added to his days but there was no addition to the divine Decree Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days Psal. 55. 23. yet they live out all the days set down in the divine Decree If a Sparrow fall not without God's Will Matth. 10. 29. much less can a man do so if our very hairs are all numbred Matth. 10. 30. much more are our days As for the preservation of kinds all propagations are from that primitive Benediction Crescite multiplicamini which dropt from the divine Will Vegetables multiply but 't is God who gives to every seed his own body 1 Cor. 15. 38. Men and Beasts generate their like but 't is God who sows a land with the seed of man and the seed of beast Jer. 31. 27. The man written down childless in God's Book must be without the blessing of posterity the Member unwritten or left out in that Book must never be extant in Nature When Monsters are brought forth there is an abertation in the particular Nature but none in the Will of God when Bastards are generated which cannot be without a moral Monstrosity the sin is Man's but the Creature is God's In brief If we run through all varieties of Preservation either as to the Being of Creatures or as to the Adjuncts of order beauty goodness and truth we must resolve all into the Will of God Alas what is the mutable Being of Creatures unless fixed by the Will of the Necesse esse What are all the Orders and Harmonies of things unless kept in tune by the counsel of his Will By him all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Col. 1. 17. not only subsist in their Beings but consist in their Orders His Will is the Virtus unitiva which glues and tacks the whole System of Heaven and Earth together or else all would unframe and fall asunder in a moment What an empty nothing is Creature-beauty unless shined upon by his gracious pleasure 'T is he that reneweth the face of the earth Psal. 104. 30. or else the Spring would lose her fresh complexion nay and the face of Heaven too or else all the Starry Beauty-spots would drop off What is all the Goodness in the Creature unless supplied from the great Original 'T is but as water in a broken Cistern soon running out and never to be gathered up again What is all the Truth in the Creature but an Impress made from his Ideal Truth The Impress the Creature can no more preserve in it self than it could at first stamp it there Wherefore the Will of God is that vas conservativum which preserves and conteins all things within their Beings and modes of Being or else they would immediately run into nullity 2. Preservation is but continuata Creatio if Creation had been natural so must Conservation have been too but seeing Creation is voluntary such also is Conservation hence the Twenty four Elders attribute both to God's pleasure for thy pleasure they are and were created Rev. 4. 11. they were by his Creation and are by his Conservation and both were and are for his pleasure 3. Whatsoever God preserves he preserves rationally and for some end as he made all for himself so he preserves all for himself The Heavens and the Earth are by God's word kept in store 2 Pet. 3. 7. his Word that is his Will is the great Storier which treasures up the World with all its furniture for its own ends God preserves all rationally and by just consequence freely also Thus far of God's Conservation but to procede 2. God's Gubernation is also to be considered by us Now here I shall touch on two things 1. That God rules and governs all Creatures and Events 2. That God doth it according to his Decree 1. God rules and governs all Creatures and Events He is King of Kings 1 Tim. 6. 15. his kingdom ruleth over all Psal. 103. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisd. 14. 3. he steers the Ship of the World and all the passengers in it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Wisd. 12. 18. he orders the great House of the World and all the Families of Creatures therein All the hosts of the Universe are ruled by him the spiritual World is ruled by him the holy Angels are still a doing of his Will sometimes they are guarding the godly sometimes destroying the wicked sometimes transporting souls to heaven sometimes striving with Devils but they are always beholding God's face Matth. 18. 10. waiting for his imperial Command as their perpetual rule These have a great share in turning about the Wheels of the World when these stand still the Wheels stand also when these go the Wheels go too but these go not one step of their own heads but whither the Spirit of God goes they go Ezek. 1. 12. and when they go they go straight on to the period of their work and then they return Ver. 14. that is to the face of God for a new Commission and till that come they let down their wings Ver. 24. listening to his voice and adoring at his footstool all that they do is subordinated to his pleasure Nay not only the good Angels but the Devils will they nill they are subject unto him They lost their obediential Wings in their fall and since that he never trusts them to go without their Chains Hence without his divine sufferance these though Princes of the Air cannot raise a storm though Gods of the World cannot enter into a Swine though Rulers of darkness cannot inject a temptation indeed they would undermine the Fathers Election cheat Christ of his purchased Possession and murther all the new Creatures made by the holy Spirit but they cannot get off their Chains and when their Chains are a little loosened yet their actings fall under Providence An evil Spirit troubled Saul but 't was from the Lord as a righteous Judge 1 Sam. 16. 14. Satan afflicted Job but 't was with a Commission to try his Graces the Devil tempted Christ but
Sam. 2. 3. seeing the thoughts afar off even from the high Arch of Eternity He hath Treasures of Wisdom such as cannot be told over Sapientiae ejus non est numerus Psal. 147. 6. and who should rule but the only wise If we cast our eyes on the millions of Creatures Angels above and Men below Stars in Heaven and living Creatures in Earth and Sea and all these pouring forth millions of Acts and falling under millions of Events that from the morning to the evening of the World surely nothing less than an infinite Understanding can comprehend all these and reach à fine usque ad finem Wisd. 8. 1. If we ponder the beautiful Timings harmonious Orders and sweet Compaginations of things The heavens hear the earth the earth hears the corn and the wine and the oil and these hear man Hos. 2. 21. Surely it must be an all-wise Artist who made these golden Chains and stands at the uppermost link ordering all I will hear the heavens saith he or else all the Creatures would turn a deaf ear to one another He guides every Wheel in Nature and when there is a wheel within a wheel never so much intricacy and crossness of motion yet the wheels are full of eyes Ezek. 1. 18. directing them to their journeys end and those Eyes are always open to perpetuate that direction St. Austin derides the Gods in the Roman Capitol Dii dormiebant Anseres vigilabant but divine Providence is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 an Eye that never slumbers nor sleeps his waky Wisdom claims an universal Government over all But that which makes up his Imperial Crown is 5. His perfect Unity His sovereign Authority glorious Omnipresence almighty Power and infinite Wisdom are his Crown-jewels but that which completes and makes up all these into a Crown is his Unity he is Unus nay Unicus nay Unissimus his Singularity cannot bear a Compeer nor his Simplicity a Compound if there were either of these what would become of the Government of the World Suppose a Compeer then one Omnipresent might resist the other one Almighty counterwork the other and one All-wise counterplot the other Suppose a Compound then his Power might go one way his Wisdom another and his Presence might withdraw from both But now he being one God one in Singularity so that there is none else and one in Simplicity so that his Presence Power and Wisdom are but one Essence in him he and only he is worthy to govern all Omnis multitudo revocanda est ad unitatem and perfect Unity is no where to be found but in him alone Thus much for the first point but to go on 2. God rules all according to his Decree he works all things according to the counsel of his own will Eph. 1. 11. he doth whatsoever he pleaseth in Heaven and in earth Psal. 135. 6. That which escapes the pleasure of his Will must first fly out of the Sphere of Nature Now this I evince by these Reasons 1. All those rare Jewels of his Imperial Crown cemented in his perfect Unity do shew forth their lustre according to his Will because his Will put forth a World out of nothing therefore doth his sovereign Authority give Laws to it and his glorious Omnipresence fill and cherish it his infinite Wisdom ministers to the making of his gubernative Decree and his Almighty Power ministers to the executing of it There are infinite Orders and Congruities lying in Wisdom's breast but his Will chuses out of them all what it pleaseth and so makes up its decree there are infinite possibles within Powers Arms but his Power only exerts it self according to his Decree Wherefore it is plain that God governs all according to his Decree 2. The various ways of Government set forth the freedom of the Governour all things are not ruled in the same way Matter is ruled by Forms Bodies by Spirits inferiour Bodies by celestial the visible World by invisible Angels Angels and Spirits immediately by God himself Neither do the same things always keep the same track in Joshua's time the glorious Sun did make a stand in Daniel's time the Fire did not burn in Elisha's time the Iron swam as if it had forgot its Centre in Moses's time the floating Sea stood up as a Rock and the flinty Rock flowed as a Sea In Christ's time oh what excesses of Nature what actings by Prerogative what Epiphanies of Divine glory How many wonderful ways did the divine Will triumph over the Order of Nature evidently demonstrating that the supreme Order of all was in it self alone If the God of Nature did govern naturally all the Wheels would move one way and in one road wherefore the variety of Motions doth display the liberty of the first Mover or Governour 3. The Government of all things is no other than the efficacious Direction of them by congruous Means to their supreme End and that is done by the divine Will alone the End of all is the manifestation of his Glory and this his Will freely embraceth I say freely for the All-sufficient God was under no necessity to manifest himself the congruous Means are all of his own choice and that out of the infinite Mass of Wisdom in himself and the efficacious Direction of all by those Means to that End is according to his Decree God had designed preferment to Joseph but first he lay bleeding under the murderous intentions of his Brethren then he was sold as a slave to the Ishmaelites afterwards he was wretchedly accused by his Mistress rashly imprisoned by his Master and ungratefully forgotten by the chief Butler and yet after all these windings and turnings of Providence this is the worshipful Sheaf the Ruler over Egypt and the wise preserver of Jacob and all his posterity in the famine There are millions of Creatures which know not what an End means but a divine Intelligence conducts them thither millions of Events casual as to us but the divine Will hath fixed them millions of Acts free as to us but the divine Liberty is above them millions of Confusions dark as to us but the divine Decree orders them In all God is Alpha and Omega the first Mover and the last End the wise Contriver and sure Moderator of every thing for his own Glory according to the Counsel of his own Will O thou divine Will the tender Nurse and sweet Disposer of all thou bearest up the Pillars and turnest about the Wheels of the Universe the Guide of every Creature to its journeys end is thy wise Ordination and the safe conduct of it thither is thy gracious Preservation The swiftest Angel cannot fly out of thy Dominions and the poorest Worm hath a safe abode within them Thou hast an Eye in every Wheel an Order in every Ataxy and a Line in every Confusion without thee all Beings would moulder into Nothing congruous Means prove vain abortions and Natures Harmonies jangle into sad confusions Without thee the Breath
of the living is but a puff of Vanity the Reason of the intelligent but a snuff in the socket and the Liberty of the free but a dead broken Idol Shouldest thou but for one moment withdraw thy hand oh what a tumbling cast would there be among the Angels what a crack in the heavenly Orbs what a Chaos in the Elements what a strange Dooms-day by the blending of Sun and Sea Heaven and Earth together Thou O divine Will art all in all thy Wisdom is a wakeful Eye thy Power a supporting Centre thy Presence a lively Cherisher thy Authority a supreme Law-giver and thy Pleasure an universal Orderer to all the World Oh that there were such an heart in us as to eye thy Wisdom in every Wheel own thy Power in every Preservation awe thy Presence in every place acknowledge thy Authority in every Law and submit to thy Pleasure in every Event always praying Fiat Voluntas tua which cannot be perfectly prayed sine infimâ humilitate altissimâ charitate CHAP. VIII Of the Work of Redemption I Have now passed over the Work of Creation with its Appendices of Conservation and Gubernation but behold a greater than Creation is here stupendious Redemption the wonder of Angels and envy of Devils at which Creation starts back and gives up its Sabbath I am come to the Tree of Life growing in Paradise hanging full of Pardons and Graces and spreading forth a broad and indefective shadow of Merits over sinful Worms I am now at the pure Well of Salvation springing out of the Deity of the Son of God issuing through the bleeding Wounds of his Humanity and filling every Vessel of Faith I am now to open my eyes upon the most tremendous Mystery that ever was God in the Flesh the brightness of Glory under a Veil the Fulness of the Godhead tabernacling in Dust and a Sun of infinite light and lustre cloathed in Sack-cloth in his Incarnation and turned into Blood in his Passion Oh! for some illapses of that holy Spirit which takes the things of Christ and shews them in their spiritual Glory Redemption may be thus described It is the procuring of Freedom for a Captive by a Price paid by him who is to redeem and accepted by him who is the Supreme Detainer in that behalf that the Captive may be delivered out of a state of Captivity into a state of Liberty according to the Wills of the Payer and Receiver of that price I say it is the procuring Freedom Actual Freedom is the Crowning Issue of Redemption but the procuring of Freedom is an essential ingredient in it Hence Christ is said to obtain eternal Redemption for us Heb. 9. 12. 'T is the procuring of Freedom for a Captive Free-men are not capable of it but Captives only and such are all men become by sin They owed ten thousand Talents to God as the great Creditor and Traitor-like they rebelled against God as the great Law-giver and for those Debts and Rebellions God as a righteous Judge 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shut them up in the prison of wrath Rom. 11. 32. 'T is the procuring of Freedom for a Captive by a Price not by mere Power but by a Price when it is procured by mere Power 't is but a naked Deliverance but when it is procured by a Price then 't is a true proper Redemption Hence in the Evangelical Charter we find 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Price and that which issues from it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 true proper Redemption Again 't is the procuring of Freedom for a Captive by a Price paid by him who is to redeem and accepted by him who is the supreme Detainer in that behalf for if it be not paid 't is no Price if it be not paid by him who is to redeem he cannot be a Redeemer the Detainer must accept of it in that behalf or else no Freedom can be justly procured and the supreme Detainer must accept of it for not the Jailor or Fetters which are but Under-detainers but the Creditor Law-giver who is the supreme Detainer must receive satisfaction or else the Captive cannot be justly released And all these are couched together by the Apostle Christ gave himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a sweet-smelling savour Eph. 5. 2. Christ there 's he who was to redeem gave himself an Offering and a Sacrifice there 's the Price paid down by him to God there 's the supreme Detainer the Jailor Satan and the Fetters of guilt are but under-detainers but God is the supreme and must have satisfaction and for a sweet-smelling savour there 's the Price accepted by God in that behalf Lastly the end of all is that the Captive may be delivered out of a state of Captivity into a state of Liberty according to the Wills of the Payer and Receiver Redemption moves towards the actual deliverance of the Captive as its proper Centre and that actual deliverance comes forth according to the Wills of the Payer and Receiver as its rule and measure If their Wills be that upon the very payment and acceptance of the Price the Captive should be ipso facto delivered then he is delivered without any more adoe but if their Wills be that the Captive should be delivered but upon certain conditions to be by him first performed then he is not delivered till after the performance thereof Thus the Redemption wrought by Christ moves towards the actual deliverance of sinful Captives and that actual deliverance according to the Will of the Father and the Son comes forth not immediately upon the payment and acceptance of the Price but upon Faith and Repentance which are the Terms of the Gospel Hence the Apostles testified Repentance towards God and faith towards our Lord Jesus Christ Acts 20. 21. Hence also those expressions of Propitiation through faith in his blood Rom. 3. 25. and of Receiving the atonement Rom. 5. 11. which with many more shew us the Terms upon which actual deliverance comes forth into being Now in this discourse of Redemption I shall gather up all under four Heads 1. The Captive 2. The Captivity 3. The Redeemer 4. The Price 1. The Captive is fallen Man and here two things are considerable 1. Man fallen in opposition to Man standing 2. Man fallen in opposition to fallen Angels 1. Man fallen in opposition to Man standing Man as he came out of his Makers hands was a spotless Creature his Mind a pure Lamp of knowledge his Will a Throne for the holy One his Heart a Sanctuary of all Graces his Affections all in harmony with the Rational Faculties the Image of God sparkling within him and the Favour of God sunning him round about Here all was Freedom no Chain but that of Graces no Bands but Cords of Love no Prison but a Paradise no Captive but the Lord's Free-man the least drop of wrath could not fall on him here But alas how soon was this Star shot Man
Glory 1. As to the World of Nature Christ procured two things 1. The Standing of it 2. The Deliverance of it 1. The Standing of it and that in a threefold respect 1. The Standing of it in Being Sin filled it with so much spiritual stench and rottenness that the Power of the holy One would not have endured to have been there supporting and bearing it up in Being if the Death of Christ had not been 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a sweet-smelling savour Eph. 5. 2. to perfume and sweeten it the World was as it were new founded by the Cross or else Sin that abomination of desolation would have dashed it down about the Sinners Ears Justice if unsatisfied would not have spared so much as the Stage whereon Sin was acted but hurled it down into its first Nullity Christ upholdeth all things by the word of his power Heb. 1. 3. Before Sins entry they stood merely by the word of his Power but since they stand not without the blood of his Cross. Redemption is the great Buttress of Creation as it rears up the little World after its fall so it keeps up the great World from falling 2. The Standing of it in Order When the Prophet describes God's Judgments he speaks as if the old Chaos were come again Loe the earth was without form and void Jer. 4. 23. All the Orders and Harmonies in Nature were at first set by the Wisdom of God and afterwards cemented by the Blood of God or else Sin would have unframed all By Christ all things consist Col. 1. 17. not only subsist in their Beings but consist in their Orders 3. The Standing of it in its Usefulness to us Sin was the blast and forfeiture but Christ is the Purchaser and heir of all things Heb. 1. 2. and in and through him all are as it were new-given to us We became such wretches by Sin that the Earth would not have bore our persons if Christ had not bore our iniquities the Sun in the Firmament would not have lighted the material World if the Sun of Righteousness had not appeared in the spiritual these lower Heavens would not have spun out a day for us if Christ had not purchased the upper ones of Glory the Blood of Creatures should never have been shed for the life of our Bodies if the Blood of God had not been poured out for the Life of our Souls Under the Law before Harvest began the Passeover was killed at Harvest a Sheaf of the first-fruits was brought to the Priest to be offered to God and after Harvest there was the Feast of Tabernacles to bless God for the Fruits of the Earth which by the Jews was kept with Booths and Hosannahs Had not Christ our Passeover been sacrificed for us there would have been no Harvest of Creature-blessings at all and now that there is one the praise of every Sheaf must be brought to Christ the high-priest of good things and in and through him offered up to God therefore there is a spiritual feast of tabernacles under the Gospel Zach. 14. 16. Whilest we sit under the Booths of the Creature we must sing Hosannahs to the Son of God who tabernacled in our flesh and in it merited all comforts for us Every bough of Nature hangs upon his Cross every crum of Bread swims in his Blood every Grape of blessing grows on his Crown of Thorns and all the sweetness in Nature streams out of his Vinegar and Gall. A right-born Christian is the best Philosopher for he sees the Sun of Righteousness in the Luminaries of Heaven the waterings of Christ's Blood in the fruits of the Earth the Word incarnate in Creature-nourishment and the Riches of Christ in all the Riches of Nature All are ours and we are Christ's and Christ is God's 2. Christ by this Price procured the Deliverance of it God made the House of the World for Man and whilest there is Sin in the Inhabitant the Curse-mark is on the House the Heavens wax old as if there were Mothes in them the Stars have their malignant Aspects the Earth hath its Thorns and Thistles and the whole Creation groans and travels with an universal Vanity the Sun groans out his light on the Workers of darkness the Air groans with Vollies of Oaths and Blasphemies and the Earth groans forth its Corn and Wine into the lap of the Riotous and as Sin grows heavier so the Creaturegroans wax lowder every day But at last in and through Christ there shall be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a restitution of all things Acts 3. 21. the Balm of his Blood will perfectly heal all the stabs and wounds in the Body of Nature the groaning and traveling Creature shall be delivered from the bondage of Corruption Rom. 8. 21. there shall be new heavens and a new earth wherein dwelleth righteousness 2 Pet. 3. 13. and all the steps and traces of the old Curse shall be razed out of the World Thus Christ hath purchased the World of Nature but this as appears by the Purchaser's own 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 6. 33. is not the main bargain but the casting in or overplus thereof therefore 2. Christ by this Price purchased the World of Grace Grace may be considered two ways either as it is in the Map or Charter of the Gospel or as it is in the Subject or receptacle of the Heart and both ways 't is Christ's purchase 1. Grace in the Map or Charter is the Covenant of Grace comprized in the Promises called the Covenant of Promise Eph. 2. 12. In this Covenant there are Promises reaching down as low as the World of Nature and Promises reaching up as high as the World of Glory and betwixt these two run the Promises which water the World of Grace and these are either Promises of Grace such as those I will give an heart to know me Jer. 24. 7. I will circumcise the heart to love me Deut. 30. 6. I will put my laws into their minds and write them in their hearts Heb. 8. 10. I will give a new heart and a new spirit I will take away th● stony heart and give an heart of flesh Ezek. 36. 26. or else they are Promises to Grace such as those God will justifie the believer Rom. 3. 26. beautifie the meek with salvation Psal. 149. 4. dwell in a broken heart Isai. 57. 15. comfort the mourners fill the hungry and be seen of the pure in heart Matth. 5. 4 6 8. Now all these Promises are the purchase of Christ and the whole Covenant made up of them is the New-testament in his blood 1 Cor. 11. 25. Without his satisfactory Blood there would have been no room for Promises no not for the least twinkling of a Promise to the sons of men for unsatisfied Justice would have hurried all to Hell All the Promises issue out to us in and through Christ the Rivers of Life gushed out of the true Rock the Gospel-wine run forth from the true Vine if
all on the Cross may be offered to all in the Gospel there is no Pagan in the World to whom Christ may not be offered And if there were but one great Ear or Organ of Hearing common to all how would Christ's Ministers always be filling it with Gospel But it follows not that Christ shall be preached to all for the Gospel is God's own and he may do with his own as he pleaseth and Christ who purchased for all the Being of the Gospel as far as the general Promises go yet purchased not for all the publication thereof In a word the Pagans have some glimmerings of Gospel and may be saved on Gospel-terms which shews that Christ so far died for them and that they have not the express knowledge of Christ is a deep Abyss much fitter to be adored than dived into by us Object 3. If Christ died for all men then he intercedes for all but he intercedes only for the Elect therefore he died for them only I answer that Christ doth in some sort intercede for all men and this I shall clear several ways 1. From the Nature of Christ's Intercession that is not a formal Prayer but an appearing in the Holy of Holies before the face of God as an Advocate and there presenting his Blood and Righteousness in their freshness and endless life of Merit with a Will that all the Grace purchased thereby may be dispensed to the sons of men therefore Christ even in Glory stands 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as one slain Rev. 5. 6. shewing his bleeding Wounds to make Intercession with God Hence it follows that his Intercession being a kind of celestial Oblation perfectly answers to his Oblation on the Cross he is an Advocate above so far as he was a Surety here below his Blood speaks the very same things in Heaven as it did on Earth and his Will stands in the same posture towards Sinners there as here Now how far was Christ a Surety for all Surely thus far that all may be saved if they believe else either they cannot be saved at all which is contrary to the truth of the Promise or they may be saved without a Surety which is contrary to the current of the Scriptures But if he were so far a Surety for all then he is so far an Advocate for all for he appears an Advocate in Heaven for all those for whom he appeared as a Surety on the Cross. Hence the Apostle saith in general If any man sin we have an advocate with the Father 1 Joh. 2. 1. he saith not strictly if the Elect sin but at large if any man sin we have an advocate and as the true ground-work of this general Advocation he adds he is the propitiation for the whole world Ver. 2. So far forth as he was a Propitiation for the World so far forth he is an Advocate for it And another Apostle affirms that Christ is a Mediator between God and men 1 Tim. 2. 5. he saith not betwixt God and his Church but betwixt God and men and the following words give the true reason of it Christ gave himself a ransom for all Ver. 6. he is no less a Mediator for all than he was a Ransom for all Christ's Blood shed on the Cross spake thus far for all men that they might have their pardon on Gospel-terms and afterwards being carried to Heaven it speaks the very same language for them for the voice or speech of that Blood is its Merit and that Merit is of an indeficient virtue Hence that Blood cannot be speechless because it cannot be meritless and so far on Earth as it merited for all so far in Heaven it speaks and intercedes for all Moreover as Christ's Blood speaks the same things for them in Heaven as it did on Earth so Christ's Will in Heaven stands in the same posture towards them as it did on Earth wherefore in a sort he intercedes for all 2. From the Patience of God which waits on men even such as at last perish If Christ did not stand with the Incense of his sweet-smelling Merits between the living and the dead between the reprieved Sinners on Earth and the damned Spirits in Hell the Patience of God would not wait one moment upon them 3. From the working of God's Spirit for as Christ is our Paraclete or Advocate in heaven 1 Joh. 2. 1. so the holy Spirit is Gods Para. clete or Advocate on earth Joh. 16. 7. Surely if the Advocate in Heaven spake nothing for the Non-lect the Advocate on Earth would not wooe them to salvation if the Blood of Christ did not at all plead for them the Spirit of Christ would give no touches at all upon them much less such touches as to make them taste the powers of the World to come 4. From the liberty of Prayer Simon Magus even whilest in the gall of bitterness was commanded to pray Acts 8. 22. but what without a Mediator No surely that sinful man who hath no Mediator in Heaven must not presume to pray on Earth I see no reason why a man merely mediatorless should have more lieve to pray than a Devil who is therefore without hope because without a Mediator The Apostle commands men to pray every where 1 Tim. 2. 8. but a little before he lays down this as the ground-work there is one Mediator between God and men the man Christ Jesus who gave himself a ransom for all Ver. 5 and 6. The Mediation of Christ opens the door to Prayer Wherefore as to this Objection I answer thus Christ intercedes for all men in such sort as he died for them I say in such sort for there is a vast difference between his general Intercession for all and his special Intercession for the Elect For as Christ by his Blood shed on the Cross merited for all in general that they might be saved on Gospel-terms and merited for the Elect in special that they should believe and be saved so by the same blood presented in Heaven he intercedes for all that they may be saved on Gospel-terms and intercedes for the Elect that they may believe and be saved And thus he is the complete Mediator of the Covenant as the general Promises extend to all so answerably he intercedes for all and as the special Promises point only at the Elect so proportionably he intercedes for the Elect. Object 4. If Christ died for all men then he was a Surety for all and satisfied for the sins of all and consequently God hath a double Satisfaction one in Christ the Surety and another in the persons of the Damned which is against the nature of his Justice In this Argument are two consequences to be weighed 1. If Christ died for all then he was a Surety for all satisfied for the sins of all 2. If Christ so satisfied for the sins of all then God hath a double Satisfaction which is against Justice As to the first consequence I admit it as a
nay 't is a Story higher than the Knowledge of all the unregenerate Rabbies in the World T is ' not a mere literal Knowledge a knowing of Christ after the flesh but a spiritual a revealing spiritual things in their spiritual Glory 't is not a dead Knowledge called by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a form of knowledg Rom. 2. 20. such as is but a liveless figure or appearance but 't is a lively Knowledge called by the Wiseman a well-spring of life Prov. 16. 22. and by our Saviour the light of life Joh. 8. 12. 'T is not a Knowledge without Sense but such as hath Sense nay all the Senses of the inward man in it 't is a seeing of the just one Acts 22. 14. a hearing and learning of the Father Joh. 6. 45. a smelling and savouring the sweet odours of the Gospel 2. Cor. 2. 14. a tasting how good and gracious the Lord is Psal. 34. 81. a tactual knowledge a spiritual touching and handling of the word of life 1 Joh. 1. 1. here are seminally and virtually all those spiritual Senses which discern good and evil 'T is not a dark and duskish Knowledge but clear and lightsome 't is seeing with the veil off and face open 2 Cor. 3. 16 18. 't is the day dawning and the day-star arising in the heart 2 Pet. 1. 19. Here God shines into the heart and things are seen eye to eye as the expression is Isai. 52. 8. that is in a clear evidence of the truth 'T is not a Knowledge at a distance and afar off as Dives saw Abraham and as every natural man sees the things of Faith but a near and intimate Knowledge 'T is wisdom in the hidden parts Psal. 51. 6. 't is wisdom entring into the heart Prov. 2. 10. 't is a reason delivered over to the power of holy truths Rom. 6. 17. 't is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word engrafted or innaturalized in the mind Jam. 1. 21. Hereby the Truth approaches and presentiates it self to the Soul in so clear and near a manner as that it works a firm assent and perswasion thereof and that upon the divine Authority shining and sparkling out in the same This Principle saith Amen to all the Truths in Scripture by it we come to know truths in our selves Heb. 10. 34. and to carry the witness thereof within us 1 Joh. 5. 10. As Jesus Christ is the Amen the faithful and true witness who sealed the Truths of the Gospel outwardly by his Blood so the holy Unction dropping down fom Christ is an Amen a faithful and true witness sealing up those Truths inwardly in the heart And this clear and near Knowledge as it assures and perswades a man of those Truths is Faith in the Understanding for this sets to its seal that God is true in them 1 Joh. 3. 33. 'T is not a mere notional Knowledge floating in the Brain vaunting in the Tongue or flourishing in a leavy Profession but 't is a practical Knowledge influxive into the Will inflammative to the Affections and directive to the whole Life This is that Principle of excellent Knowledge whereby the Soul is enabled to see God as the only supreme End Christ as the only true Way and Sin as the only great Obstacle thereunto 2. As to the Will there is a Principle of Holiness and Rectitude such as makes the Heart pure and right such as sets the Will into a right frame and posture in a threefold Respect 1. In reference to the true End of Man 2. In reference to the right Means 3. In reference to the grand Obstacle 1. It sets the Will into a right posture in reference to Man's true End Man's true End is God alone for he is fontal Goodness Allness of Perfections the primum amabile and ultimus finis the great Alpha and Omega of Spirits perfectly able to still all the desires and fill all the crannies thereof Now this rectifying Principle in the Will as respective to this supreme End shews forth it self three ways 1. In that it is a desiring Principle Desire is the first-born of the Will the first opening of the rational Appetite and this Principle sanctifies it and sets it apart for God as its supreme End it enclines and disposes the Will to pant and thirst after God to faint and cry out for him to enquire and seek after him with all the heart Before the Will Cain-like did go out from the Lord's presence but now David-like it desires to dwell in his house and behold his beauty Before the Will lay dead in the Grave of Creature-deadness but now it hath the life of God in it quickning it to holy breathings after him before there was such a gravedo liberi arbitrii such Talents of Carnality upon the Will that it could in no wise lift up it self but lay among the pots and embraced dunghils but now it hath the wings of a Dove to elevate it self to God Here is the first resurrection of the Will here are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ascensions in the heart as the Septuagint hath it Psal. 84. 5. The nature of this Principle is to ascend up to God and leave all the World behind its back As the Principle of perswading Knowledge is Faith in the Understanding so this desiring Principle is Love in the Will in its primordial propensities there is spiritual Life in primoradio in its first Light and here is spiritual life in primo ardore in its first heat 2. In that it is a purposing Principle such as inclines and disposes the Soul to pitch by a serious determination upon God as its only happiness and to cleave unto him with purpose of heart Act. 11. 23. This renders a man a true spiritual Levite who as his name imports is joined to the Lord become one spirit with him 1 Cor. 6. 17. And as the first-born were dedicated to God and afterwards the Levites so the desiring Principle first dedicates the Desires the first-born of the Will to God and then this purposing Principle makes a man a spiritual Levite consecrated to God by a holy Conjunction with him This is that Key of David or Love as David imports which opens the everlasting doors of the Will that the king of glory may come in Psal. 24. 7. This is that sweet voice of David or Love which upon mature deliberation is ready to break out Whom have I in heaven but thee whom on earth besides thee Psal. 73. 25. In Heaven there are glorious Angels and on Earth multitudes of good Creatures but none of them all are my end or happiness none none but God alone Were Heaven and Earth emptied of all their Furniture still I should have my end as long as I have my God who fills them both with his presence whilest he is with me there can be no such thing as Emptiness for he is all in all waving all the World I pitch upon him alone as my only end I
irresistible way I am for the Affirmative in a right sence A work may be said to be done irresistibly two ways either when there is no resistance at all thus the Apostle saith ye have killed the just and he doth not resist you Jam. 5. 6. that is not resist at all or else when there is no such resistance as to impede the work thus they were not able to resist the wisdom and spirit of Stephen Acts 6. 10. there 's an irresistibility but what without any resistance at all No they disputed against him with might and main but because their disputes could not impede his work in propagating the Gospel therefore it is said that they were not able to resist him Thus when I say that Conversion is wrought in an irresistible way I mean not that there is no resistance at all for even in the Regenerate there is flesh lusting against the spirit the old Man and the new strugle in the same Faculties like Esau and Jacob in the same Womb but I mean that there is no such resistance as to impede the Work of Conversion In meekness saith the Apostle instructing those that oppose themselves if peradventure God will give them repentance 2 Tim. 2. 25. here is a resistance but for all that the work will be done if God give repentance He went on saith the Prophet frowardly in the way of his heart but what saith God I have seen his ways and will heal him Isai. 57. 17 18. here was a great resistance but for all that God will heal him God works Conversion in such an insuperable way that notwithstanding all the opposition made thereunto it doth infallibly come to pass Now this I shall endeavour to demonstrate first in general and then in particular with respect to the two Instants of Conversion 1. I shall demonstrate it in general and that by these Arguments taken 1. From God's Election He hath chosen some before the foundation of the World chosen them to holiness as the Way Eph. 1. 4. and chosen them to salvation as the End 2 Thess. 2. 13. But if Conversion be not wrought in an insuperable way how doth the foundation of God stand sure 2 Tim. 2. 19 How is that golden Chain kept entire Whom he did predestinate them he called whom he called them he justified and glorified Rom. 8. 30 Were not these called ones who have Predestination going before them and Justification and Glorification coming after them called in an insuperable way If not the Chain cannot hold together The Apostle makes a plain difference between men he opposes those of the election of grace to the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who were blinded Rom. 11. 7. and those on whom God will have mercy to those whom he hardens Rom. 9. 18. But if Conversion be not irresistibly wrought this difference falls to the ground those of the Election may be blinded and those on whom God hath mercy may be hardened as well as others For my part I should as soon believe that a little Child may put up his finger and rowl about the Spheres as that the Will of Man may stay or turn aside the Influences of electing Grace 2. From Christs Redemption If we consider the preciousness of his Blood surely he must have a Body every little Seed in Nature hath a Body given to it and the Son of God sowing his Blood and Life cannot want one If we consider the Promise of God surely he must have a seed Isai. 53. 10. and what else is the Fulness of the Gentiles and the Conversion of the Jews but this promised Seed But if Grace be not wrought in an insuperable way Christ might sow his Blood and Life in a wonderful Passion and yet have no Body springing out of it nay God might engage himself in the Promise of a Seed and yet nothing at all come of it if the Grace of God be resistible lieve must be asked of Man's will that Christ's Blood may be fruitful and God's Promise Faithful 3. From the Spirit 's Work The three glorious Persons in the sacred Trinity shew forth themselves in three glorious Works the Father hath a special Shine in Creation the Son in Redemption and the holy Spirit in Sanctification In the first Work we have God in the World in the second God in the Flesh and in the third God in the Heart or Spirit When God came forth in Creation Oh! what an Heaven and Earth full of admirable Creatures and Harmonies issued forth When God came in the Flesh what out-breakings of Glory were there What sparklings of the Deity in Miracles upon the Bodies of Men The blind received their sight the lame walked the lepers were cleansed the deaf did hear the dead were raised and the Devils were ejected with power And when God comes in the Heart or Spirit what planting of a new heaven and a new earth How much of Glory and spiritual Miracle breaks forth in the Souls of Men Even here also the blind receive their sight the lame walk the lepers are cleansed the deaf hear the dead are raised and the devil is cast out with power The very same Miracles which Christ in the flesh did do on the Bodies of Men in a visible manner the very same doth Christ in the Spirit do on the Souls of Men in a spiritual way This is the proper Work of the Spirit to sanctifie Mens Hearts the Spirit doth not appear any where in all the World so much as in a true Saint Look into a godly Man's Understanding there 's the Spirit of Revelation look into his Will there 's the Spirit of Holiness look into his Affections there 's the Spirit of Love and Joy look into hs Conscience there 's the Spirit of Consolation look into his Prayers there 's the Spirit of Supplication look into his Conversation there 's the Spirit of Meekness and all Righteousness Thus the holy Spirit shews forth its Glory and flows in Men as rivers of living water and this Glory and Out-flowing is so precious that before it came in Esse according to the rich Measures of Gospel-grace it is said of the eternal Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the holy Spirit was not yet Joh. 7. 39. as if the Spirits flowing in Men were a kind of second Being to it But now after all this if Conversion be not wrought in an insuperable way the holy Spirit may be barred out of every Heart and then how shall his work be done Where shall his Glory and spiritual Miracles appear The Father hath a World to appear in the Son hath Flesh to tabernacle in but possibly the holy Spirit can get never an Heart to inhabit in never a Temple to fill with his Glory the holy Spirit would tabernacle with Men but what if the Iron-sinew in the Will will not come out What if the Stone in the heart will not break Then the holy Spirit is robbed of his Glory But is this so strange
the Language of it unto this concerning which every one may judg as he pleases Truth is little concerned therein nor is it thereunto that I assign that perspicuity which appears in the main parts of this Discourse but unto the clear and distinct stating of the things themselves in the Authors mind which alone enables any to speak with evidence unto the understanding of others And hence it is that although he be forced to make use sometimes of Scholastick Notions yet he hath so expressed the matter intended as to make it obvious unto the meanest Capacity any whit exercised in the knowledge of these things Having said thus much of this Discourse which I hope God will bless unto good use and fruit I shall not need to mind the Reader of how great importance it is to have the Truths here pleaded for well vindicated and established the fulness and frequency of the Scriptures in the Revelation of them the great influence into our Faith Obedience and due Reverence of God with the eminent tendency unto the exaltation of his Glory and the debasement of the pernicious Pride of corrupt Nature which they have the Opposition made unto them by all sorts of persons for saking the Truth who however differing and fiercely contending among themselves as Papists Socinians Arminians Quakers and others yet all agree in contradiction unto the Sovereignty of God in his Decrees the special fruits of eternal Redemption by the Blood of Christ and the infallible Prevalency of Divine Grace do all sufficiently evince both the weight of these Truths themselves and the eminency of the Service which is done to the Church of God in their Vindication John Owen A Preface to the Reader concerning the Author of the Tract ensuing IT may well be reckoned among Problems or hard Questions whether it were better for those who write and print to publish their Names or conceal them because many things Pro and Cou might be argued upon that Subject especially about things Polemical when they are handled But when Causa Dei the Cause of God as our learned and famous Bradwardine intituled his Book when he wrote against the Pelagians comes to be treated of all Circumstances are duly to be weighed Quis Quid Quare Quando Quomodo c. Who What Why When and How Among those of this kind it 's very momentaneous to know for one that this Gentleman is one of the Sages of the Law an Oracle in the Country where he lives An Eirenarches well worthy of that Name and Place A Justice of Peace and not of Trouble according to the distinction which our unhappy times have made Conformable himself yet one who affects rather to be Orthodox and to mind the Power of Godliness more than the Form thereof I write this Testimony of him though be neither needs desires or knowes of it because I have bad knowledge of him à teneris from his Childhood and have been certified of his Domestical Piety and Exemplariness in all which appertains to the Practice of Piety Concerning the Book it needs not Patron or Advocate Let it speak for it self Aetatem habet It quickly shews Arma Virúmque the Spirit of the Man and his Weapons This pleases me above all the rest that though it treats of most intricate and mysterious Controversies yet that is done humbly reverently freely and with Candor I make not my self his Hyperaspistes or Second or a Party to his Opinion but because his Habitation is remote in a Corner of the Land his Converse more with Books than with Men he seldom sees London and is not yet in these parts any of our Anshe Shem noted or famous Persons Lest any Reader should cast him off with a scornful Ignoramus I know not the man I have presumed to prepare this little Lenitive that no offence should be taken in such respects as are herein mentioned I shall not conclude with Ecce hominem but ad rem Lazarus Seaman ERRATA PAg. 25. lin 27. read object p. 28. l. 24. betwixt Election and And insert 2. What the things designed p. 37. l. 8. r. Predefinition p. 43. l. 6. r. person p. 82. l. ult r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 94. l. 28. r. forbearance p. 97. l. 3. r. nolition p. 148. l. 16. r. crea●rix p. 180. l. 8 for nail r. vail p. 204. l 22. r. agony p. 212. l. 3. after that Law add and that it was p. 272. l. 9. for Rom. 20. r. Acts 20. p. 291. l. 26. r. mea p. 295. l. 3. r. little p. 376. l. 11. r. vegetative p. 384. l. 7. for Creature-deadness r. Creature-comforts p. 433. l. 17. r. actively p. 456. l. 6. r. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 p. 470. l. 11. r. no object Chap I. That God is THat God is is a Primordial Verity from whence all other Verities derive their Original If God were not which is the highest Contradiction there could be Nothing but perfect Nullity because Nullity can never pass that infinite vast Gulf which lies between it self and Being without an infinite God If God were not he could not be a mere possible God is utterly impossible for a God he cannot be unless he be supreme Perfection a pure Act immoveable Eternity and eternal Necessity in suprema essendi vehemontia This glorious Truth that God is can no where be doubted of not in Heaven where his glorious face is opened to the blessed Spirits not in Hell where his righteous Breath as a River of Brimstone doth kindle the fire unquenchable nor on Earth whilest any glimpses of Heaven irradiate the godly or any sparks of Hell flame out in the guilty Consciences of the wicked whilest the Candle of the Lord shines within men or the Heavens and the Earth those Natural Preachers declare a Deity without and wonderfully render the invisible Power and Godhead as it were visible unto them Every Particle of being in heaven and earth leads us to the infinite Being of Beings every Motion within the Sphear of Nature and Grace draws us to adore a first immoveable Mover every breath of life in the old and new Creature tells us of the great Fountain of Life every beam of Light in the natural and spiritual World owns the high Father of lights every drop of Rain natural on the earth and spiritual on the heart witnesses a Deity This truth is so indubitable that none but a fool in his greatest folly can deny it Cur dixit stultus non est Deus cur nisi quia stultus est CHAP. II. That God hath a Will GOd's Being being laid down as a sure foundation I proceed to prove that God hath a Will Which may be evinced by these Reasons 1. God is an immense Sea of infinite Perfections or rather one infinite transcendent Perfection and a Will the fountain of Liberty cannot be wanting in him but there will be a Maim in his perfection Liberum Arbitrium saith Luther est nomen planè divinum solùm competit
in God's Eternity which is Nunc stans it is sure in God's Immutability which is ever the same and the seal upon all this is God's unerrable and infallible Knowledge including within it unvariable and unchangeable Love to his people God is the Father of lights with whom there is no variableness nor shadow of turning James 1. 17. The visible corporeal Sun rides circuit round the World but whilest he salutes one Hemisphear in the turn he leaves a dark shadow on the other but God is an immutable and supercelestial Sun there can be no shadow in his eternal and unconvertible Light Neither are the various changes among the Creatures shadows cast by any turn in God or his Will but events ordered and disposed by him And because the Apostle speaks in this Verse of perfect gifts and in the next of Regeneration by God's Will therefore there is a further sence in it That if the Father of Lights purpose to make the Day-star arise in any poor Soul his gracious purpose never turns away from that Soul nor leaves it in the dark shadow of Death The Names of the Elect are all indelibly written in God's Book and if the Scripture cannot be dissolved Joh. 10. 35. surely the Book of life must be irrasible Saint Austin on those words Deleantur de libro viventium cum justis non scribantur Psal. 69. 28. raises an Objection si homo dixit Quod scripsi scripsi Deus quemquam scribit delet quomodo isti inde delentur ubi nunquam scripti sunt To which he answers Hoc dictum est secundùm spem ipsorum quia ibi se scriptos putabant Quid est deleantur de libro viventium ipsis constet non illos ibi esse Deleantur ergo secundùm spem ipsorum secundùm autem aequitatem tuam non scribantur In a word whatsoever God doth in his Decrees is immutably the same his Decrees are as Mountains of Brass Zach. 6. 1. unremoveable by any Creature because situate in the Eternal Will The strength or eternity of Israel will not lye or repent 2 Sam. 15. 29. If God's Time cannot lye but will infallibly shew forth the Verity of his Promises and Prophecies surely God's Eternity cannot lye wherein he decrees and knows all The World is full of Vicissitudes Matter is in a perpetual Flux the Glass of Time is running out and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wheel of Nature is running round but all the while God's Will is immoveable it doth not rowl about with the Heavens rise or set with the Sun or ebb and flow with the Sea but sits King for ever and ever upon the Throne of its own Immobility Apud te Domine rerum omnium instabilium stant causae rerum omnium mutabilium immutabiles manent origines omnium irrationalium temporalium sempiternae vivunt rationes Now besides what hath been said out of Scripture to prove the Immutability of his Decrees these Reasons may be offered 1. The Decrees of God are Immanent and Eternal Acts in God therefore cannot but be Unchangeable God in framing his Decrees non egreditur extra seipsum goes not out from his own Eternity 2. As the Eternity of Futures proves an Eternity in God's Decrees so the Immutability of Futures proves an Immutability in his Decrees If the Decrees which are the Basis of Futurition may be changed then that which was future by the Decree may yet cease to be future sine positione ejus in esse actuali which is impossible If a new Decree be made in succession after a former then the thing decreed begins to be future which is also impossible 3. If the divine Decrees should change Oh! what amazing Changes what an horrible Tempest must needs ensue Must not God's own dwelling-house even his glorious Eternity sink and fall to the ground Non enim est vera Aeternitas ubi oritur nova voluntas nec est immortalis Voluntas quae alia alia est Must not God's eternal Prescience fall a doubting and faltring about every Future Seeing God cannot now know his own works no not a moment before their actual Existence because even then their being may be prevented by a Change in his Will May not eternal Grace and Truth lose their glorious light and Jesus Christ the Sun of Righteousness drop out of the Gospel-orb and all the Starry Promises in the Word and lightsom Comforts in the Saints go out in a moment leaving all in darkness and confusion May not the Evangelical Banquet let down to poor Worms be called back again into Heaven and the precious Blood of Christ return again into its Veins and his Humane Nature be cast away into nothing and every Saint instead of Grace and Peace in his heart may have a Lye in his right hand and lie down in sorrow Nay in such a case must there not fall a Change upon the very Being of God himself And seeing every Change is a kind of Death must not the Deity suffer and as it were die in this Mutation All which astonishing Catastrophes being to be for ever abhorred I conclude that God's Decrees must needs be Immutable as long as there is any Stability in his Eternity Infallibility in his Prescience Sureness in his Grace and Truth or Immortality in his Life or Essence 4. The Decrees of God are crowned with Infallibility as to the Event the Event is so certain that the Spirit of God in Scripture speaks of future things as if they were already done Behold saith Enoch in the morning of the World the Lord cometh with ten thousand of his Saints as if he had been then in the Clouds coming to Judgment Jesus Christ cries out of God forsaking and men piercing him Psal. 22. 1. and 16. as if he had then been upon the Cross with all the wrath of God and fury of men upon him Whom he did predestinate saith St. Paul Rom. 8. 30. them he called whom he called them he justified whom he justified them he glorified he speaks as if all the Elect were already in Heaven Hence God is said to be Isai. 45. 11. as the Sept. there hath it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Maker of things to come the Event is as certain as if it were already done Now for the understanding of this point we must distinguish of Events either they are good things or else evil viz. sins Touching the first the Decree of God is Effective touching the last the Decree of God is Permissive The first come to pass Deo efficiente the last Deo permittente but both do fall out infallibly 1. Those Events which fall under his Effective Decree do fall out infallibly This is clear upon a double Account 1. The Will of God is Causa Causarum an Universal Supreme Cause having all things under it It reigns over all the armies in heaven and the inhabitants of the earth Dan. 4. 35. The poor Sparrow is no more forgotten by it than
intrinsecal merit of Sin and paid only to a final Sinner therefore the consideration of final sin is a prerequisite to the Decree of Damnation without that consideration I see not how it can be decreed as Wages But you 'l say Is not Eternal Life also a Reward of Faith and Holiness and how then can that be decreed as a Reward without a preconsideration of these I answer Eternal Life is a Reward but 't is a Reward of pure Grace 't is Grace upon Grace glorifying Grace upon sanctifying therefore to the Decreeing thereof as a Reward it suffices that it be decreed to Believers and Saints Not Believers and Saints so preconsidered to that Decree for Grace and Glory being both mere gifts and gifts of immediate contact are comprized in one Decree but Believers and Saints so to be made by force of that Decree and so to be made before they wear the Crown This is enough in the decreeing of a Reward so purely gratuitous But in Eternal Death there is nothing at all gratuitous all is mere wages and pay for Sin Sin doth really and intrinsecally merit it Wherefore Eternal death as such wages is decreed only to final Sinners Not final Sinners so to be made by force of God's Decree for that makes no man a final Sinner but final Sinners so preconsidered to the Decree of Damnation for without that preconsideration it is not as I conceive decreeable as wages or pay due unto them To shut up this point in a word Reprobation as to the Decree of Preterition and Permission respects men as lapsed Sinners and as to the Decree of Damnation respects them as final Sinnets 4. What is the Impulsive Cause of Reprobation To which I make answer 1. As for the Decree of Preterition and Permission of final Sin it is from God's Will as cloathed with supreme Sovereignty God passeth by and hardneth whom he will This appears in two particulars 1. First God doth not give so much as the Gospel-means unto some men He suffered all nations to walk in their own ways Acts 14. 16. Some sin and perish without Law or Gospel all the Law they have is the dark glimmering of Nature and all the Gospel they have is the patience and goodness of God leading to Repentance The Sun Moon and Stars are divided to all nations Dent. 4. 19. but Jesus Christ a Sun of infinite light and lustre shines in a narrower compass on the earth than the finite Sun the Moon is lesser than the Earth the visible Church than the World of Men. The Apostles those Stars of light must not shine in Asia and Bithynia Acts 16. 6 7. By what way is this Evangelical Light parted Surely by the divine Will alone the difference is not from the worthiness or unworthiness of men for those in Asia and Bithynia were as good as others Christ was manifested to a Thief and not to a Socrates or Plato Rebellious Israel hath the light of the Word in it and a more flexible Nation which would hearken thereunto wants it Ezek. 3. 6 7. Impenitent Corazin and Bethsaida have a visible Deity before them in Christ's Miracles when poor Tyre and Sidon much nearer to Repentance hath it not Matth. 11. 21. In all which the sovereign Will of God is to be adored for that is it which divideth between the Light and the Darkness 2. In the Visible Church the Orb of Gospel-light God doth not give saving Grace unto all 'T is true the mercy of God is so immense that all the sins of men are but as the drop of the bucket to it the Blood of God is so meritorious that all the crimson Crimes in the World are as nothing to it and the Spirit of God is so almighty that all the chains of hardness and unbelief fall off before his converting Grace Nevertheless this immense Mercy doth not pardon all this meritorious Blood doth not wash all nor this almighty Spirit doth not convert all unto God Oh the wonderful Abyss of the divine Counsel All men naturally lie in bloody pollution and God saith to one Live and not to another all are as it were one entire Rock of obstinacy against God and he calls Abraham's children out of one part of the Rock and leaves all the rest to be Rock still All are dead in sins and trespasses nay and sealed up in their Graves with a stone of hardness and unbelief and one Grave-stone is rolled away and the dead under it raised up by almighty Grace and not another External Revelation is all over the Church why is not the inward holy Unction so too The Gospel sounds in every Ear why do not all hear and learn of the Father The Gospel calls and knocks at every door why are not the Demonstrations of the Spirit and the drawings of the Father in every heart The Gospel says in general Whosoever will may take the Water of Life freely why doth not God work the Will in all Why are any dimissi libero arbitrio left to the miserable servitude of their own free Will Here there is no other resolution but that of the Apostle He will have mercy on whom he will have mercy and whom he will he hardneth and beyond this we can only wonder and in quodam mentis excessu cry out Oh the depth Cur hoc illi operetur saith St. Austin illi non operetur metuentem me trementem judicia ejus inscrutabilia incomprehensibilia nolo interroges quia quod lego ercdo revereor non autem discutio And Ne dicas Deo interrogando Quae est voluntas tua sed tremendo Fiat voluntas tua And again Posset Deus saith he of wicked men ipsorum voluntatem in bonum convertere quoniam Omnipotens est posset planè cur ergo non fecit quia noluit cur noluerit penès ipsum est If there were any thing extra Deum moving him to the Decree of Preterition and Permission it must needs be sin either Original or Actual or final Impenitency and Infidelity therein but none of all these moved God thereunto Not Original sin for this is the common blood wherein all men Elect as well as Reprobate lie by nature And this is St. Ambrose's Mirum touching Infants Ubi actio non offendit ubi arbitrium non resistit ubi eadem miseria similis imbecillitas causa communis est non unum esse de tanta parilitate judicem quales reprobat abdicatio tales adoptat Electio Indeed Original Sin makes all men reprobable for all are by nature Children of wrath Transgressors from the womb an unclean and corrupt Seed lying in bloody and abominable pollution fit and worthy to be put away from the holy One as dross and for ever to be cast out into utter darkness but it makes no man a Reprobate for the Elect are as deep in this filthy mire as others Nor yet doth Actual sin do it for Jacob was loved and Esau hated before they had
't was that he might succour the tempted Heb. 2. 18. Which way soever Satan turns himself still he is under God as the supreme Moderator But the spiritual world is not all the Material World is also under his dominions the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Wheel of Nature is all turned about by his counsel the Heavens with all their Luminaries rapid Wheelings spinnings of Time and hovering indulgent influences are under his Ordinance his immense hand spans them Isai. 48. 19. at once twirling them about with an indefatigable Motion and squeezing out their quickning influences into the lower World 't is he 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Matth. 5. 45. raises up the Sun to rule the day and the Moon and Stars to rule the night the Air with all its Meteors is at his command he maketh the vapours to ascend from the ends of the earth Psal. 135. 7. and forms them into Clouds in an admirable and exact proportion the airy and watery parts ballancing each other Job 37. 16. These are the Bottles of Heaven when he breaks a Bottle down comes a refreshing showre when he turns and tosses a Bottle 't is by his counsel Job 37. 12. The Winds are all in God's hand Prov. 30. 4. and when he lets out any of them 't is by weight Job 28. 25. just so much and no more and 't is to fulfil his will Psal. 148. 8. and when one command is done it returns by its circuits to execute another Eccl. 1. 6. Thunder is God's majestick Voice and Lightning his glittering Arrow both are at his beck and say to him Here we are Job 38. 35. The treasures of Snow and Hail he purses up in the Clouds and those pay them out again according to his pleasure The stupendious Sea is but a little Babe in his almighty Arms Clouds and darkness are its swadling-band Job 38. 9. and the hollow of the Earth its Cradle there he rocks and rules it as he pleaseth if it cry and roar he stills and rebukes it till he lull it fast asleep in a calm The vast Earth is but instar puncti before him at his command are all the living Creatures the greedy Ravens were Caterers for Elijah untrained Kine faithful carriers of the Ark the dumb Ass a reprover to the Prophet clamorous Dogs moved not their tongues at departing Israel Laban's Cattle change colour to pay Jacob's wages Peter's Fish brought Tribute-money in his mouth and when proud Pharaoh said Who is the Lord an answer was sent him by wonderful hosts of Frogs and Flies Lice and Locusts proclaiming the sovereignty of their great Maker and Master In summ Man is the Epitome of all the rest and in governing him God governs all Man hath an inward Principality of Reason and Will yet still he is under the Almighty and All-wise Moderator who rules and disposes the hearts of men as he pleaseth 'T was but his touch on their hearts and Saul had a band 1 Sam. 10. 26. 'T was but his turning the key in Lydia's heart and the Gospel had entrance Acts 16. 14. Titus went to the Corinthians 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 8. 17. a word importing high liberty yet God put it into his heart Ver. 16. The King's heart and who can be freer than he is in the hand of the Lord as the rivers of waters he turneth it whither he will Prov. 21. 1. he turneth it whither he will there is the sovereignty of Providence yet he turneth it as the Rivers of waters there is the salving of Humane Liberty For as when the Husbandman leads the Waters this and that way by Channels and Trenches they lose nothing of their natural fluency so when God turns the hearts of men to such and such Objects they part with nothing of their natural liberty God is infinitely greater than our hearts wiser than our reason and freer than our liberty therefore he is able and worthy to rule over us in our freest actions Lastly as his gubernative Providence is over all Creatures so 't is over all Events the greatest Events are not above it When Kingdoms are tossed and bandied up and down like a Tennis-ball Isai. 22. 18. not one Event can fly out of the bounds of Providence the smallest are not below it not a Sparrow falls to the ground without it not a hair but 't is numbred by it he is maximus in minimis the most natural Effects are but casual till his free concourse makes them certain The Iron with all its gravity is not sure to sink 2 Kings 6. 6. the Fire with all its fury is not sure to burn Dan. 3. 27. The most casual effects are not casual to him when the Lot is cast into the lap the whole disposing thereof is of the Lord Prov. 16. 33. When a Bow was drawn at a venture 1 Kings 22. 34. Providence sent it as a certain messenger of death to the King of Israel Thus far I have been surveying the hosts of Creatures and Events I now procede to demonstrate that God is the great and universal Governour over them all For 1. He hath an absolute Authority over all his just Title is King of kings and Lord of lords all the Sphere of Nature and World of Creatures was of his making he that ruled over Nullity it self in their Creation is worthy to rule over all Creatures by his Providence but because Authority is liveless without presence therefore 2. His presence is every where Creatures lie in the shell of Time and Place Angels have their definitive Ubi the Body of Christ which subsists in an infinite Person is circumscribed by a finite place but God is every where present he is higher than Heaven deeper than Hell longer than Time and greater than Place and who like him to be universal Governour If he were only on the Throne of Heaven how should the Footstool of the Earth be ordered If his hand only spanned the celestial Spheres what should the Sea do But he is every where where-ever any Creature is there is I AM supporting and governing it But because power is the Crown of presence therefore 3. He is Almighty the only potentate 1 Tim. 6. 15. power belongs to him nay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 1. 19. a pleonasm of power such as can do 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Eph. 3. 20. superexcessively above all thoughts of men No wonder then if the Omnipotent reign who should reign else he can call things that are not Rom. 4. 17. even a World of Creatures out of the barren Womb of Nullity and a Church of New-creatures out of the dead Womb of Nature He is a God doing wonders Exod. 15. 11. Wonders to us but none to himself for all things are easie to Omnipotence his Government can have no blemishes because his Power can have no obstacles But because Powers hands cannot be without Wisdoms eyes therefore 4. He is Infinite in Wisdom to manage all He is a God of knowledge 1
God Tit. 2. 13. not an under subordinate God but over all God blessed for ever Rom. 9. 5. not a God by office but a Jehovah Jer. 23. 6. a God by nature though not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as to his Subsistence yet 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as to his Essence Gods name is in him Exod. 23. 21. One great Letter of that Name is Eternity and his going forth was from everlasting Mic. 5. 2. another is Immutability and he is yesterday to day and for ever the same Heb. 13. 8. another is Omniscience and he knoweth all things Joh. 21. 17. another is Omnipotence and he hath all the power in heaven and earth Matth. 28. 18. another is Immortality and he hath life in himself Joh. 5. 26. another is Immensity and he whilest on earth was in heaven Joh. 3. 13. and though long since ascended to heaven is still on earth Matth. 28. 20. All these golden Letters are graven on the Godhead and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 all the fulness of the Godhead dwells in him Col. 2. 9. all these shed forth a divine Glory and Majesty he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the brightness of divine glory Heb. 1. 3. and what need we any more witnesses of his Deity His Name is wonderful Isai. 9. 6. far above all Creatures his Generation is unutterable being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the proper Son of the Father Rom. 8. 32. not as Creatures made ex nihilo but as a proper Son begotten out of his very Substance his standing is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in the essential form of God the very divine nature Phil. 2. 6. and his special Ubi there is the Fathers bosom Joh. 1. 18. and from thence together with him he breathes forth the holy Ghost His Works are divine and all one with the Fathers Joh. 5. 19. He sat in counsel with him in framing his Eternal Decrees and since wrought with him in making first a World of Creatures and then a Church of Saints and still he works with him in the preservation and gubernation of both Lastly his two Testaments which face each other as the Cherubims upon the Ark by their sweet glances and respective aspects upon each other do disclose his Deity For in the Old Testament 't is said that Jehovah brought Israel out of Egypt Exod. 20. 2. in the New Testament 't is said that Christ did it Jude 4. and 5. Ver. in the Old Jehovah circumcises the heart Deut. 30. 6. in the New Christ doth it Col. 2. 11. in the Old Jehovah poured out the Spirit Joel 2. 28. in the New Christ Acts 2. 33. in the Old every knee bowes to Jehovah Isai. 45. 23. in the New to Christ Rom. 14. 11. in the Old miracles were done in Jehovah's Name 2 Kings 2. 21. in the New in Christ's Acts 9. 34. in the Old Jehovah is the first and the last Isai. 44. 6. in the New Christ is Alpha and Omega Revel 1. 11. in the Old there is Deus absconditus Isai. 45. 15. in the New Deus manifestatus in carne 1 Tim. 3. 16. All which do most pregnantly prove the Deity of Christ unto us Nevertheless proud Reason will be babling How can the Father beget the Son ex propriâ Substantiâ Can any part of the Divine Essence be discinded in such a Generation Or if not can the whole be given to the Son And if so how is it retained to the Father I answer The Father gave unto the Son the whole Essence non alienatione sed communicatione non generatione emanante sed immanente the Father so begets the Son as that he still possesses him Prov. 8. 22. the Son so goes forth from the Father as that he still abides in him his eternal egress Micah 5. 2. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not by defluxion but immansion I am in the Father and the Father in me saith Christ Joh. 14. 10. Indeed if we speak accurately the Father begets the Son out of himself rather in Essentiâ divinâ than ex essentiâ divinâ Hence the entire Essence is in the Father and the entire Essence is in the Son too and what if it could not be thus in a finite Essence yet why may it not be so in an infinite What if Reason cannot fathom it must therefore Faith reject it I conclude then that Christ is very God and as God hath a right to redeem us his Creatures 2. Jus Idoneitatis as the Son of God he was most fit to be our Redeemer what can be more perfectly congruous than Reconciliation by God's beloved one Adoption by his Natural Son Reparation of his gracious Image by his substantial a shine of Favour by the brightness of his Glory beams of Light by his Wisdom Restitution of Life by the Prince of Life and Mediation between God and Man by the middle Person in the sacred Trinity There be three great goings forth of God into which all others may be resolved the first is that fundamental one of Creation and upon Sins Entry which is but an Apostasie from Creation in comes the second viz. Redemption and out of this as out of a Fountain flows the third and that is Sanctification these hang in order one upon another Unless there had been a Creature and that Apostate there had been no place for Redemption and unless there had been a Redemption there had been no room for Sanctification for God would never have reimplanted his Image of Holiness in a Creature left under the eternal stroke of his Justice nor have plucked away the spot of Sin there where the guilt of Sin is left behind Now albeit it is a most sure Rule that Opera Trinitatis ad extrà sunt indivisa yet among Divines Creation is in a sort peculiarized to the Father as the first Redemption to the Son as the second and Sanctification to the Spirit as the third Person in the Glorious Trinity Thus in these three goings forth of God each person in the Trinity hath his special Shine and that in the very Order of his Subsistence wherefore it was very congruous that the Son of all the Persons in the Trinity should be out Redeemer 3. Jus Conjunctionis he that redeems a Captive must be Persona conjunct a with him and so was Christ with us in a threefold respect 1. Conjunctione naturali he was our Goel Isai. 59. 20. that is our next kinsman by his Incarnation and our Redeemer by his Passion he assumed our Nature into himself that he might redeem us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 was made 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the great God a sucking Child regens Sydera yet sugens Ubera he that ruled the Stars sucked the Breasts The word was made flesh Joh. 1. 14. and a strange making it was all other Creations are as it were extra Deum but here was a Creation in the very person of God The glorious Trinity in the very instant of drawing the Humane Nature exnihilo interweaved
it with the Person of the Son so that it never was any where but there all other Creations stand under the Roof of Providence and Preservation but here the Humane Nature is an Inmate in the very same Person with the Divine all other Creatures have their proper sutable seats and Ubi's in the Sphere of Nature but here 's the Sackcloth of an Humane Body cast upon and the Rush-candle of a Reasonable soul lighted up in the Sun it self The glorious Son of God espoused Flesh and Blood and the Bride-chamber where the knot was tied was the Virgins Womb there was he made of a Woman consubstantial with us as to his Humanity who was consubstantial with the Father as to his Divinity O how great is this Mystery God manifest in the flesh O Domine quàm admirabile nomen tuum non modò mundi hujus staturam admiror non stabilitatem Terrae non Lunae defectum incrementum non Solem semper integrum laborem ejus perpetuum Miror Deum in utero Virginis miror Omnipotentem in cunabulis miror quomodo Verbo Dei caro adhaeserit quomodo incorporeus Deus corporis nostri tegumentum induerit in caeteris aliquae satisfaciant rationes hîc solus me complectitur stupor God never came so near to us as in this wonderful Conjunction In the Creatures we see God above us in the Law we see God against us but here we see Immanuel God with us he is one with us by a natural Conjunction but that 's not all for being in our Nature he became one with us 2. Conjunctione Legali he was our Sponsor or Surety and so in Law one person with us his Stile is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Surety of the covenant Heb. 7. 22. and the Covenant being mutual on both parts from God to Man and from Man to God he is in both respects a Surety of it a Surety on God's part that his Promises should be performed to us and a Surety on our parts that our Debts should be paid to God We were double Debtors to God as Rational Creatures we owed perfect Obedience and as Sinful Creatures we owed eternal Sufferings the first is a debt to God's Holiness and the second to his Justice Now Jesus Christ was our Surety for both a Surety to fulfil all Righteousness for us and the Fidejussorial Bond which he gave for this was his Circumcision for he had no sinful flesh to be cut off but would become a debtor to the whole Law for us and in Circumcision he signed security for it with his own Blood and also a Surety to take our Sins on him Hence the Righteous God who cannot but judge according to truth charged our iniquities upon him Isai. 53. 6. and he as our Surety accepted the charge and those words my sins are not hid from thee Psal. 69. 5. are as St. Jorom thinks spoken ex personâ Christi for he was though not commissor yet susceptor delictorum our Flesh and Blood was taken into his Divine Person and our Sins which could by no means enter in there were yet cast upon him and being cast upon him God exacted satisfaction of him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it was exacted and he answered Isai. 53. 7. Satisfaction was exacted from him as our Surety and he answered for us and what was his Answer Why I 'le lay down my Life I 'le pour out my Soul saith he let all the Wrath due to those Sins be squeezed into one Cup and I 'le drink it up to the bottom let the Fire of God's Anger drop down from Heaven and I 'le be the Paschal Lamb roasted in it Thus Jesus Christ was a Surety nay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the noblest of Sureties putting his Soul in our Souls stead to bear our Sins and God's Wrath and for this very purpose was he one with us in Nature that he might be one with us in Law too But neither is this all for both these Conjunctions are crowned with a third and so he is one with us 3. Conjunctione Mysticâ Christ is the Head and the Church is the Body and both together make up one mystical Christ 1 Cor. 12. 12. the Head in Heaven and the Body on Earth and the spiritual Continuity between both is one and the same holy Spirit which is on the Head without measure and on the Members according to measure If the Jew ask us where is Christ we can truly answer He is at the right hand of God in Heaven and on Earth loc here is Christ and there is Christ living and breathing in his Saints every Saint is a piece of him and all together are his fulness Eph. 1. 23. so that he doth not count himself complete without them This Conjunction is so near and full of spiritual Sense that a poor Member cannot suffer on Earth but instantly the Head in Heaven cries out of Persecution Acts 9. 4. and even the suffering Member reckons himself sitting in Heaven as long as his Head is there Eph. 2. 6. Thus our Redeemer comes very near unto us in a threefold Conjunction and in each Conjunction there is a rare Condescention In the first he came down into our Natures by a stupendious Incarnation in the second he came down into our Hell by a Fidejussorial Passion in the third he comes down into our Hearts by the Spirits Inhabitation the first opens a way to the second the second is the purchase of the third and the third as in design was a Motive to and as in existence is a Crown upon the Work of Redemption 4. Having considered the Redeemer I pass on to the Price and here I shall reduce all to three Questions 1. What this Price is 2. What manner of Price it is 3. For whom it was paid 1. What this Price is and this is the Humane Nature of Christ as subjected to the Law When the Son of God came forth to redeem us he was made of a woman made under the Law to redeem us that were under the Law Gal. 4. 4 5. Made of a Woman there 's his humane Nature made under the Law there 's his subjection to the Law and the End of all is our Redemption Christ through the eternal Spirit offered up himself to God Heb. 9. 14. and that in a way fully answering the demands of the Law The Law demanded of the Captives two things perfect Obedience from them as rational Creatures and penal Suffering from them as sinful Creatures and Christ gave up his Humane Nature a price both ways in doing and in suffering he gave himself that is his humane Nature for us an offering and a sacrifice Eph. 5. 2. an Offering in his Active Obedience and a Sacrifice in his Passive and both these together were the entire Price of our Redemption 1. Christ gave up himself in his Active Obedience That holy thing his humane Nature as soon as it came out into the World fell a breathing forth
of Holiness burning with zeal for God melting in compassions over Men bowing it self down in miraculous humility and in a rape of love doing all the Will of God even to the last gasp upon the Cross. His thoughts were all births of Holiness his words oracles of Truth his works a fulfilling all Righteousness and his meat and drink was to do his Father's Will He ascended up to the top or pinacle of the Moral Law in the sweetest strains of Love and fetched about the breadth or vast compass of it in the largeness of his Obedience and passed down to the very hemm or border of it in the lowness of his Humility Rather than fail he would be subject to his own Creature Luk. 2. 51. pay tribute to his own Subject Matth. 17. 27. and wash his Disciples feet with those very hands which had all the power in Heaven and Earth in them Joh. 13. 3 4 5. Nay he stooped down as low as the fringe of the Ceremonial Law his sinless flesh was circumcised Luke 2. 21. his holy Mother purified Luk. 2. 22. the true Passeover kept the typical one Matth. 26. 20 21. and so obedientially stood under his own shadow In every respect he was obedient unto death His Obedience was a fair Commentary on the whole Law written in glorious Characters of Holiness and Righteousness all his life long and at his death clasped and sealed up with his precious Blood Thus the Mandatory part of the Law was answered now for the Minatory 2. He gave up himself in his passive obedience he was in some sence crucifyed in the womb in that he was made of his creature and coming forth into the world all his life was a perpetual passion The Gospel shews us the immense God in swadling clouts the builder of all things working as a Carpenter the holy one hurried up and down by a tempting Devil the filler of all things hungry the fountain of living water thirsty the power of God weary the eternal joy of the Father weeping the owner of all things extreme poor and not knowing where to lay his head in his own world Thus as a man of sorrows he passes on towards his Cross one of his own Apostles betraying him another denying him the rest forsaking him the chief Priests bloodily conspiring against him false witnesses unjustly accusing him the tumultuous rabble crying out crucify crucify and Pilate first confessing his innocency and then condemning his person And now arriving at his Cross sorrows break in upon every part his head raked with thorns his face besmeared with spittle his eyes afflicted with the tears of friends his ears filled with the blasphemies of enemies his lips of grace wet with vinegar and gall his hands and feet nailed to the Cross and his sacred body hanging between thieves racked and tortured to death in a Golgotha of stench and rottenness But all this is but the outside of his passion at the same time hell was let loose and from thence the Devils as so many roaring Lyons came with open mouth to devour him and which is much more Heaven thundred over his head and the righteous God as angry as our sins could make him fell a smiting of him Isai. 53. 4. and smote him in his Soul too verse 10. and with smiting wounded and bruised him verse 5. the smart and anguish whereof was so great that he was afraid Hebr 5. 7. and his fear was so high that he began 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to faint away and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be sore amazed Mark 14. 33. and in this amazement the Eclipse was so dark that he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 surrounded with sorrows even unto death verse 34. and in this spiritual Siege he falls a praying Father if it be possible let this cup pass from me nevertheless not as I will but as thou wilt Matth. 26. 39. and in prayer he sinks into an agnony His soul became like that poor ship that fell into a place where two seas met the fore-part sticking fast and remaining unmoveable and the hinder-part broken with the violence of the waves Acts 27. 41. Even so here were two seas met a sea of wrath storming against him as our Surety and a sea of love breathing in him after our Redemption His humane will as nature shrunk at the sense of Gods wrath but as reason it stedfastly pointed at the work of our Salvation Redemption stood fast and unmoveable in his heart yet the same heart though without the least spot of sinful contrariety was broken with the waves of amazing horrors and so dreadful was this agony that it cast this grand Heroe the strength of all the Martyrs into a bloody sweat there fell from him great drops of blood Luke 22. 44. The sins of the world ascending up as a vast cloud before Gods Tribunal now came dashing down upon him in an horrible tempest of incomprehensible wrath and this makes him cry nay as the Psalmist hath it Psal. 22. 1. roar out upon the Cross My God! my God! Why hast thou forsaken me Mat. 27. 46. One would have thought at the first blush that the humane nature had been dropt out of his divine person but though that were not yet the sense of Gods favour was for a time suspended from his humane nature Never was sorrow like to his sorrow In all the legal sacrifices there was destructio rei oblatae and all those destructions were summed up in his sufferings As the corn he was bruised as the wine and oil poured out as the Lamb slain and rosted in the fire of Gods wrath and as the scape-goat driven into the dismal wilderness of desertion He did as it were sport in Creation but in Redemption he sweats suffers bleeds and dyes Now his humane nature thus made under the Law both in his active and passive obedience is the complete and integral price of our Redemption I say both in his active and passive obedience for these were not sundred either in existence or merit 1. Not in existence for there was passion in his actions and action in his passions from first to last his obedience was with suffering and his suffering with obedience There was passion in his actions 't was a great suffering for the great Law-giver to be under the Law for the Lord of the Sabbath to observe it The noblest and purest piece of the Law is the knowing and loving of God and yet even in that there was a great suffering for he who eternally knew the Father in an infinity of light now knew him as it were by candle-light in a finite reason he who eternally embraced the Father in an infinity of love now loved him in the narrow compass of a finite will and therefore even in these 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he emptied himself as the Apostle speaks Phil. 2. 7. And on the other side there was action in his passion his passions were with knowledge he shut not
9. that is in the day of the Messiah Ver. 8. But how far will he remove it The Psalmist tells us as far as the East is from the West Psal. 103. 12. and so he did he removed it from us who were in occasu Adami as far as Christ who is oriens Sol Justitiae by this remove all our sins met upon him as the Prophet speaks Isai. 53. 6. Never such a concourse of Sins as here Sins of all weights Pence and Talents Sins of all magnitudes Gnats and Camels Sins of various degrees Frailties and Presumptions Sins of vast distances as far remote in place as the parts and quarters of the Earth and in time as the Morning and Evening of the World met all together upon him he is the Lamb of God that takes or bears away the sin of the world Joh. 1. 29. he saith not Sins but Sin because all the Sins of the World were as it were made up into one burthen and so laid upon him Sins past were present to him for there was a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Transmission of them unto him Rom. 3. 25. there was indeed an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Remission as to the faithful but a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a Transmission as to the Surety Sins future were all one to him as if already existent all our Sins met upon him Hence he cries out My iniquities have taken hold upon me Psal. 40. 12. My iniquities a strange word to drop from the holy one of God but the Apostle clears it God made him for us to be sin 2 Cor. 5. 21. there was no Sin in him by Inhesion but God made him Sin by Imputation not only a Sacrifice for Sin which yet includes that imputation but Sin it self the double Antithesis in the Text carries it this way he was made that Sin he knew not and that was Sin it self he was made that Sin which is opsite to Righteousness and that was Sin it self Hence Luther brings in the Father casting all our Sins on him with these words Tu sis Petrus ille negator Paulus ille persecutor David ille adulter peccator ille in paradiso latro ille in cruce person a illa quae fecerit omnium hominum peccata all our sins were imputed unto him But you 'l say How can these things be Can the righteous God who judges according to truth impute Sin to his holy one I answer As there are in the Apostle two distinct Comings of Christ in the first he bore our sins in the second he appears 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without sin Heb. 9. 28. So in his first coming he susteined two distinct persons his own and ours as he was in his own person he was without sin but as he was our Surety and susteined our persons so our Sins were imputed to him and imputed to him according to truth because he was such The holy One was righteously made sin because first he was a Surety for sinners a World of Sins was justly cast on the innocent Lamb because he stood in the room of a World of sinners In eadem persona Christi saith Luther congrediuntur illa duo summum maximum peccatum summa maxima justitia this is one of the wonders in Theology Reason and Philosophy can shew Sin in the sinner but the sublimer Gospel shews Sin on a spotless Lamb here darkness seized upon the Sun here the abomination of iniquity stood where it ought not I say where it ought not because upon the holy place yet withal where it ought because of an holy Imputation God can by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34. 7. that is the guilty remaining such therefore he first translated the guilt upon Christ and then he justifies the ungodly through him Rom. 4. 5. Oh the glory of the divine Will It s Purity cannot but hate Sin yet its Power removes it its Justice cannot but punish Sin yet its Mercy translates it from the Sinner to the Surety that it may be condemned there where it was never committed even in the flesh of Christ Rom. 8. 3. 2. Our Sins being laid on him he suffered the same punishment for the main that was due to us for them for how doth the Scripture express the punishment of Sin 'T is death Gen. 2. 17. and he died for us 't is the second death Rev. 20. 14. or death unto death 2 Cor. 2. 16. and he suffered deaths Isai. 53. 9. not the death of the Body only but all the deaths in moriendo morieris as far as his holy Humanity was capable thereof 't is wrath Rom. 1. 18. and he was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a man set in the stroke of Gods wrath as the Septuagint hath it Isai. 53. 3. 't is a curse Deut. 27. 26. and he was made a curse Gal. 3. 13. not only a ceremonial but a real Curse even that which he redeems us from Tu Christe saith Luther es peccatum meum maledictum meum seu potius ego sum peccatum tuum maledictum tuum 't is hell Psal. 9. 17. and he descended thither though not by a local Motion yet by an immense Passion his Soul travelling under the wrath of God He began to descend into Hell when he sweat drops of Blood and he descended yet further into it when he cried out My God my God! why hast thou forsaken me There are two Essentials of punishment in Hell poena sensûs poena damni and he suffered both when the fire of God's Wrath melted him into a bloody sweat there was poena sensùs and when the great Eclipse of God's Favour made him cry out of forsaking there was poenadamni Christ suffered the same punishment for the main which we should have suffered the chief change was in the Person the just suffering for the unjust the Surety for the Sinner But you 'l say Christ did not suffer the same punishment for he neither suffered eternal Death nor yet the Worm of Conscience As to that of eternal Death I answer by two Distinctions 1. In eternal Death we must distinguish between the Immensity of the Sufferings and the Duration the Immensity is essential to it but the Duration is but mor a in Esse and accidental Christ suffered eternal Death as to the Immensity of his Sufferings though not as to the Duration of them he paid down the idem as to Essentials of punishment and the tantundem as to the Accidentals what was wanting in the Duration of his Sufferings was more than compensated by the Dignity of his Person for it was far more for God to suffer for a moment than for all Creatures to suffer to Eternity 2. We must distinguish between punishment as it stands in the Law absolutely and punishment as it stands there in relation to a finite Creature which cannot at once admit a punishment commensurate to its offence and so must ever suffer because it cannot satisfie to Eternity Punishment as
it stands in the Law absolutely is Death punishment as it stands there in relation to a finite Creature is eternal Death the first was really suffered by Christ and the second could not be justly exacted of him for he paid down the whole sum of Sufferings all at once and so swallowed up Death in victory As to that of the Worm I answer the Worm attends not Sin imputed but Sin inherent 't is bred out of the putrefaction of Conscience and that putrefaction is from the in-being of Sin Now Christ being withot spot suffered punishment not as it follows Sin inherent but as it follows Sin imputed and so he suffered the same punishment for the main as was due to us 3. Christ suffered this punishment in our stead he died 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for us Rom. 5. 8. and which is more emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in stead of many Matth. 20. 28. the Particle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth sometimes in Scripture signifie only the utility or benefit of another but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 properly imports a Subrogation or Substitution of one in the Room of another and so Christ as our Surety died in our room or stead Hence the Apostle argues thus If one died for all 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then all died 2 Cor. 5. 15. all died in the death of one in as much as that one died as the Surety of all Hence our Sins were condemned in his flesh Rom. 8. 3. and so condemned there that upon Gospel terms they are remitted to us But unless he had stood in our room divine Justice could neither have adjudged him to punishment nor yet have admitted us to an absolution from Sin 4. Suffering thus in our stead he satisfied both God's vindictive Justice and minatory Law 1. He satisfied God's vindictive Justice God is a righteous God a God that loveth righteousness and hateth iniquity nay he so perfectly hateth it that his pure eyes cannot look upon it and his righteous hands cannot but punish it he will by no means clear the guilty Exod. 34. 7. not unless his Justice be satisfied for he is a righteous judge 2 Tim. 4. 8. so righteous that he cannot but do right Gen. 18. 25. his judgment is righteous judgment Rom. 3. 8. and every sin must have a righteous recompense Heb. 2. 2. and no wonder for Sin is an horrible Ataxy and God will not inordinatum dimittere the subjection of a rational Creature to its Creator is indispensable God whilest God must be above and the Creature whilest a Creature below and this dependance so far as it is broken off by Sin must be salved up by punishment or else God loses his dominion over his Creature This is that which the Apostle calls 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the righteousness of God Rom. 1. 32. and this is so naturally in him that the very Heathens knew it by the light of Nature The Viper upon Paul's hand made the Barbarians cry out of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Acts 28. 4. Now what doth this vindictive Justice require Not precisely that the Sinner himself should be punished for then Redemption should be impossible but that the Sin should be punished and so it was in Christ he for our debt was cast into Prison and paid every farthing of it The damned in Hell pay a little and a little and can never satisfie but he paid down the total sum of Sufferings all at once they are always striving with God's wrath but he wrastled with it and prevailed Hence in Isai. 49. Ver. 3. he is called Israel a Prince with God His Sufferings were so satisfactory to divine Justice that the pains of death could not hold him Acts 2. 24. neither could the Prison of Wrath detain him Isai. 53. 8. and all because there was 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a redemption of transgressions Heb. 9. 15. that is a compensation or satisfaction made to divine Justice for them I go to my Father saith he and ye shall see me no more Joh. 16. 10. Justice did not stop him in his passage to Heaven neither did his Father send him back again to mend his work You shall see me no more no more bleeding under the burthen of Sin no more paying down sufferings to divine Justice for all 's discharged and to assure us of it God who received the sum pawns Heaven and Earth in mortgage that he will forgive our Sins without any further satisfaction Jer. 31. 34 35 36. By all which it appears that Justice was fully satisfied But here 't will be objected That the innocent should suffer for the nocent is unjust that which is such cannot satisfie Justice I answer 'T is unjust if the innocent suffer compulsorily but not if he suffer freely 't is unjust if the innocent sink under his sufferings but not if he be able to bear them 't is unjust if there be no good in his sufferings commensurate to the evil but not if the evil be exceeded by the subsequent good 't is unjust if the innocent stand in no relation to the nocent for whom he suffers but not if he stand in relation to him Suppose a natural relation Saul's Sons were hanged up for Saul's sins 2 Sam. 21. 9. Suppose a political relation seventy thousand fall for David's sin 2 Sam. 24. 15. which makes him cry out Lo I have sinned but these sheep what have they done Suppose a voluntary relation Sureties must pay for their Principals and that not only in Money-matters but in Capital punishments thus the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 engaged life for life which the Apostle seems to insinuate in that passage Peradventure for a good man some would even dare to die Rom. 5. 7. and why then may not Christ who by all these ways is conjoin'd to us naturally as a Man legally as a Surety and mystically as a Head justly suffer for us Especially seeing there was free Action in his Passion victorious Strength under his Burthen and the penal Evil crowned by such a grand Good as Redemption is why may not he justly suffer for us The Scriptures are positive in it Christ died for the ungodly Rom. 5. 6 the just for the unjust 1 Pet. 3. 18. and one for all 2 Cor. 5. 14. Wherefore if humane Reason will not subscribe it fights against God himself 2. He satisfied the Minatory Law for this is no other than the voice of vindictive Justice uttering Death and a Curse against Sinners and to satisfie this he died and died an accursed Death in their room But you 'l say though he died for us yet the Law is not satisfied because it requires that the Sinner himself should die thou shalt die the death Gen. 2. 17. and cursed is he that doth not all the words of this Law Deut. 27. 26. in which places he and thou relate to the person of the Sinner and therefore though Vindictive Justice as in it self might have been satisfied with punishing Sin
Flame or as it is in the Original the Flame of God Cant. 8. 6. kindles upon the heart and makes it burn with true love to Christ Oh! says the Soul this is he who made the Robe of Righteousness for me and how much love was there in every thread of it This is he who drunk off the Cup of trembling for me and how much wrath did my sins squeez into it When on Earth he bore my sins upon the Cross and now in Heaven he bears my name upon his heart his Person is all desires his Blood all preciousness his Righteousness all glory his Love all heights and depths and breadths surpassing knowledge and who can chuse but love him There is no high Priest or Sacrifice but himself no Balm or healing but in his Wounds no Intercessor above but his Blood and Righteousness no Beauty or Glory in all the visible World like that in his Cross and how can the heart refuse his Espousals This is a Principle of sweet closure with Christ this makes the Soul breathe after nay approach to Christ and when it hath a being in him such is the holy aspiration of this Principle that still it desires to be more perfectly and intimately in him no embraces near enough there 's too much distance in every union When the Soul is brother and sister and mother to him still 't would be nearer nothing less than one spirit 1 Cor. 6. 17. and when 't is so in some measure still it presses hard after more oneness with him Oh! that the Veil of darkness were quite off that the remnants of separating Corruption were quite out Oh! for more gales of Faith and Prayer to blow up this holy Fire for more effusions of the holy Unction to feed and enflame it Thus this Principle is hiatus Voluntatis the opening or thirsty gaping of the Will for more and more of Christ and all that it may dwell in God who is Love it self 3. Take him as a King this Principle sets the Heart right towards him Hence a man becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in a fit posture towards the kingdom of God Luk. 9. 62. and that in a threefold respect 1. This Principle is a Principle of Faith God made Christ a King Faith owns him as such God gave him all the power in heaven and earth and Faith gives him all the power in the upper and lower Faculties of the Soul This Principle rests upon him as a King able to put all his enemies under his feet Are there strong holds of Sin in us this Principle rests on him as the power of God to cast them down Are there Armies of temptations round about us this Principle rests on him as the Captain of salvation to scatter them As soon as this Principle is in the Soul the Soul is no longer where it was but translated into the kingdom of Christ Col. 1. 13. Before it was in a region of Darkness but now in a place of marvellous Light its native soil was spiritual Sodom and Egypt where Sin is a Law but now it is in the Dominions of Christ where the Law of the Spirit frees from the Law of sin and because after the Law or Reign of Sin is broken the remnants or reliques of Corruption are still in us therefore this Principle doth in a wonderful manner rest upon Christ for a more thorough purging out thereof 2. This Principle is a Principle of Love disposing the Soul to love Christ as a Melchisedek a king of righteousness and to kiss his sceptre as a sceptre of righteousness This Principle desires and delights above all places to dwell in Immanuels land and by a holy acquiescence under his Law it sits down as it were in the kingdom of God Hence the Heart is willing that Christ should reign over it that all his Enemies should be made his footstool even those that dwell in its own bosom if he come search for darling Lusts there this Principle will open every fold and unlock every secret place of the Heart to discover them If he come and slay them with the Sword of his mouth this Principle will be consenting to their death and pray So let all thine enemies perish O Lord even all the remainders of Corruption lying in my Heart 3. This Principle is a Principle of Obedience and this is no other but the two former Principles of Faith and Love conspiring together to do the Will of Christ. Christ is at the right hand of God and the Soul by Faith and Love is at the right hand of Christ Psal. 45. 9. ready to hear and do all his pleasure Ver. 10. Faith hath two Eyes whilest one is upon the propitiatory Cross the other is upon the holy Crown of Jesus Love hath two Hands and whil'st one is thrust into his side and bleeding Wounds the other is busie in keeping his righteous Laws and Commands No sooner doth a Command drop down from him but Faith catches it up Oh! says Faith this comes from the King of Kings and must be done and this great King says Love obeyed for me even to the Cross and how can I do less than obey him His commandments are all right his yoke easie his service freedom and his love constraining 3. This Principle sets the Will into a right Frame in respect of that great Obstacle Sin Sin separates between God and the Soul but this Principle separates between the Soul and Sin and this in three respects 1. As it is a Principle of Evangelical Sorrow Sin is contracted with pleasure and must be dissolved with sorrow and this dissolution will not be kindly unless the Sorrow be Evangelical Legal Sorrow is a preparative to Conversion but Evangelical is an essential ingredient in it in Legal sorrow the Heart breaks under the Fears of Hell and Death but in Evangelical it thaws under the Beams of free Grace it melts for the exceeding sinfulness of Sin it bleeds over the bleeding Wounds of Christ it grieves at the grievings of the holy Spirit it blushes and shames it self for the stains cast upon Gods Glory it is offended full fraught with displicency at its many great offences of the divine Majesty This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sorrow according to God 2 Cor. 7. 10. Sorrow for Sin as Sin such as God would have This turns the sweet morsels of Sin into bitter herbs and the pleasant streams of lust into blood hereby Sin is in some degree loosened out of the Heart 2. As it is a Principle of hatred enclining the Will to hate every false way The Scripture sets out Sin as a very odious thing 't is the poyson of asps Rom. 3. 13. the dogs vomit 2 Pet. 2. 22. a menstruous cloth Isai. 30. 22. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the superfluity or excrement of all evil Jam. 1. 21. enmity to God Rom. 8. 7. the abominable thing which God hates Jer. 44. 4. and that with great hatred
Hos. 9. 7. Now the Heart when this Principle is in it hates and abhorrs the taste of this poison the smell of this vomit the touch of this menstruous cloth the sight or appearance of this filthy excrement the thought of this enmity to God and the very presence of this abominable thing this hatred is the very life and spirit of Repentance As the love of Sin is the vinculum unionis or vital spirit whereby the Soul and Sin are intimately united together so the hatred of Sin is the solutio vinculi or the extinction of that vital spirit whereby the Soul and Sin are separated one from another 3. As it is a Principle of actual Reformation or forsaking of Sin and this is no other than the two former Principles of Sorrow and Hatred conspiring together to make away with Sin Sorrow nails the old Man with all his members upon the Cross there to die in pains and agonies and Hatred pierces into his very Heart and le ts out his vital Blood I mean the love of Sin that he may be sure to die and not revive again where these two are a man suffers in the flesh and ceases from sin 1 Pet. 4. 1. he cannot 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 commit sin 1 Joh. 3. 9. not so as he did before Sorrow forbids it to be the joy of his way and Hatred forbids it to be the love of his Heart and both cast it out as an unclean thing causing God's departure from the Soul 3. As to the Affections there is a Principle which tunes and harmonizes them and that in a threefold respect 1. 'T is a Principle reductive of the Affections to the Rule of Reason God in Creation made Man a Lord over Brutes anointed Reason to reign over the Affections but as soon as Man rebelled against God all within him and without him was hurled into confusion Without the brute Beasts rebelled against his person and within the brutish Lusts rebelled against his Reason but when converting Grace reduces Man into order again then the beasts of the field are at peace with him Joh 5. 23. and the Affections of the Heart throw down their arms and confess their homage to the Kingdom of Reason This Principle makes a man able to rule over his own spirit Prov. 16. 32. and say with Authority to one Affection Go and it goeth and to another come and it cometh 'T is true Moral Vertue doth in its way subject the Affections to Reason but this supernatural Principle doth it in a more excellent manner there the Subjection is to Reason as the supreme Faculty of the Soul but here it is to it as the candle of the Lord even for his sake who lighted it up for the guidance of the blind Faculties there it is to Reason as a natural Light but here it is to it as supernaturally illuminated The holy Spirit makes the Truths of the Gospel to become the Law of the mind and this Law of the mind rules over the Affections the Affections are the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Woman-part in us the head of this woman is the Man or Reason and the head of this Man is Christ and his holy unction 2. 'T is a Principle moderative of the Affections as to the things of the World Before Conversion the Earth hath its Throne in the Heart but this Principle shakes the earth out of her place before the Affections are as Sails spread open to the gales of the World but this Principle contracts and folds them up lest the spirit of the World should fill them Earthly things are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the smallest things of all 1 Cor. 6. 2. and where this Principle is a very small portion of them will suffice Agur's dimensum Daniels pulse our Saviours daily bread Pauls food and raiment Luther's Herring any thing with the word of blessing will serve the turn when there is little or nothing without still there is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a self-sufficiency of holy content within and when there is a concourse or affluence of all outward blessings this Principle is as Balast to keep the Heart from drowning and overwhelming it self therein there is such an holy allay upon the Soul that in the lowest ebbs of adversity it possesses all things in its God and in the highest tides of prosperity it will not be possessed by any thing in the World Alas saith the Soul all this is but thick clay and why should I lade my Eagle-affections with it All this is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 much fancy and why should an immortal Soul be set upon it The whole World is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a figure or shadow and that Time which invelopes it is but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 time contracted and contracted into a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so the Apostle calls the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the now world 2 Tim. 4. 10. Wherefore a shadow of Affections is big enough for a figure and the shortest glance of the Heart long enough for a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a transient and momentany thing which perishes with the very using The World in Scripture is set out as a nullity a thing that is not Prov. 23. 5. and this Principle deals with it as such it makes a man rejoyce as if he rejoiced not and buy as if he possessed not the Affections like translated Enoch are not found here below because God hath translated them 3. 'T is a Principle inflammative of the Affections towards God and the things of God before the Affections run down to the World as their Centre but this Principle turns the stream of the Soul upward towards God now Love which is the Key of the heart opens unlocks it unto God Desire which is Love in motion goes out in holy breathings and thirstings after him and if he stay away from the Soul Hope which is Love in expectation looks and waits for his approaches to the Soul and when he doth approach thither Delight which is Love in rest or acquiescence joys and keeps sabbath in his presence and lest this Sabbath should be broken Fear which is the Soul's Sentinel watches against Sin as the great make-bate and incendiary and when Sin offers to enter the Soul Hatred which is the Soul's Guard shuts the doors against it with an holy displicency and antipathy and if it do enter there Anger which is the Soul's Sword strikes at it with indignation and Sorrow which is the Soul's Issue vents and lets out the corrupt blood and humours out of it and which is the heat and height of all Zeal sets the Soul on fire and makes it burn 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in that which is good for the Glory of God who is the supreme Good and against the commission of Sin which is the supreme Evil. Thus the whole 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 trade or converse of the Affections is in heaven Phil. 3. 20. This Principle
Questions 1. Whether God be not the Author of Conversion 2. After what manner it is wrought 3. Whether God's Will be not always accomplished therein 1. Whether God be not the Author of it And to this Scripture and Reason answer in the affirmative 1. Scripture asserts it there Conversion is painted out under various Notions With reference to our old Corruption 't is called a new heart with reference to the Seed of the Word 't is a generation with reference to our natural Birth 't is a regeneration with reference to the Law in the Letter 't is the Law in the heart with reference to the World 't is a heavenly call out of it with reference to Satan 't is a translation out of his kingdom with reference to Christ 't is a coming to him by faith with reference to God 't is a returning or conversion to him with reference to our death in Sins 't is a resurrection a quickning of the dead with reference to our nullity in Spirituals 't is a creation or a new creature The Scripture phrases it many ways but still it sets forth God as the supreme Author of it Be it a new Heart God is the giver of it Ezek. 36. 26. be it a Generation or Regeneration God is the father of it Jam. 1. 18. be it the Law in the heart God is the writer of it Heb. 8. 10. be it a Call out of the World God is the caller 2 Tim. 1. 9. be it a Translation out of Satan's Kingdom God is the translator Col. 1. 13. be it a coming to Christ God is the drawer Joh. 6. 44. be it a turning or returning to God God is the converter to him the Church prays Turn us O Lord and we shall be turned Lam. 5. 21. be it a Resurrection God is the quickner Eph. 2. 5. be it a new Creation God is the creator and we are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his workmanship created in Christ Jesus Eph. 2. 10. Every way God is the Author of Conversion even in Actual Conversion whilest the Act is Man's the Grace is God's for he worketh the Will and the Deed. 2. Reason evinces this and that 3 ways 1. Creature-weakness needs it Man cannot convert himself the Natural man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receiveth not the things of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. nay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he cannot be subject to God's Law Rom. 8. 7. as to God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 he wants a heart Prov. 9. 4. a Stone he hath which resists God's Will but a heart he hath not to obey the same His Will is tota cupiditas a Lust rather than a Will no wonder if he cannot by his own power convert himself Conversion is a thing above the Sphere of lapsed Nature nay beyond the line of Angels Man's Heart is so dark that those stars of light cannot irradiate it and so cold that those flames of love cannot warm it there is such an Iron-sinew in it as the heavenly hosts which excel in strength cannot bow but must leave it to the Arms of the Almighty and when he doth it they joy over the Convert as a wonder of Power and Grace 2. The Excellency of the Work calls for it The Body of Nature is a rare piece but the Soul of Man is of a nobler value and in the Soul converting Grace which is but an Accident is worth more than the Soul it self 't is the Soul's Rectitude 't is glory within 't is the precious hidden man of the heart 't is the very image of God 't is Christ formed in us 't is anima in centro the Soul centred in God joined unto him and after a wonderful manner becoming one spirit with him 't is Faith in the true one Love in the essential Love a mind light in the Lord and a Will at liberty in the Will of the primum liberum and who can be Author thereof but God alone God made all things ab Angelo usque ad vermiculum from the Angel in Heaven to the Worm on Earth but in Conversion he makes a poor Worm angelize God must be owned in every Atom of Nature how much more in the great Work of Grace This is one of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the wonderful works of God Acts 2. 11. St. Austin tells a Story of one who was seduced at first but to deny God's Creatorship in the Fly afterwards came to deny it in the Bird and then in the Beast and at last in Man But if any one should procede so far as to deny him in Conversion it would be more prodigious Blasphemy than all the rest Saving Grace is a ray or sparkle of the Deity a thing merely 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to God Eph. 4. 24. there is more of God to be seen in it than in all the World of Creatures besides and by consequence to deny him in that is more than to deny him in all the rest 3. The Almightiness of Grace can only effect it As the Scripture sets out Conversion as a great Work so it sets out an almighty Grace as the Cause thereof He that believes acording to some Scriptures that in the work of Conversion there is a resurrection of the soul from the dead a transformation of a stony heart into flesh and a Creation of a new heart and new spirit must also believe according to other Scriptures that in the production of that Work there is put forth a divine power excellency of power and exceeding greatness of power such as raised up Christ from the dead In Conversion there is not only a light shining round about the Sinner but a light shining into him not only a waking of a sleepy Will but a quickning of a dead one not only a proposal of divine Objects but an infusion of divine Principles therefore the Grace effecting it must be almighty That in the Prophet I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes Ezek. 36. 27. is as much a word of Power as the Fiat which made the World that in the Gospel the hour cometh and now is when the dead shall hear the voice of the Son of God and they that hear shall live Joh. 5. 25. sounds out as great an efficacy as that other Lazarus come forth nothing less than almighty Power can effect it 2. After what manner is it wrought Our Saviour sets out the Mystery of Regeneration by the Wind the wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth so is every one that is born of the Spirit Joh. 3. 8. In Regeneration the Spirit blows with such a sound as breaks the Stone in the Heart and with such lively gales as quicken the dead Soul but the manner of this Work is in a great measure secret and incomprehensible by us If we know not how the Bones grow in the Womb how much less how Christ is
with it Such a Knowledge being really actuated can the Will turn aside to other Objects for its happiness The simple one may turn away Prov. 1. 32. but shall a man of understanding do so A deceived heart may turn aside Isai. 44. 20. but shall the wise in heart do so A heart of unbelief may depart from the living God Heb. 3. 12. but shall a man of precious faith do so But whither can he turn What to the Riches of the World 'T is but dross to the unsearchable Riches of Christ saith the Understanding What to Honours 'T is but a blast to the true Honour which cometh of God only saith the Understanding What to Pleasures These are muddy Puddles to the pure Rivers of Pleasure above saith the Understanding This Understanding doth as it were blast all the World crucifie the Universe and by a prospect of Faith see the Heavens on fire the Earth burnt up and the Elements melting with fervent heat and can the Will fall in love with the Dust and Cinders of it Surely it will not But if the Will cannot turn aside to such false Beatitudes yet may it not suspend its Act as to the true Suspend what from its own blessedness verily thoroughly believed What from God the all in all plainly powerfully demonstrated to be such And what for just nothing for a sic volo Can it be so brutishly free at so dear a rate as to be eternally miserable Will it hang off from perfect Blessedness or can it do so and the summū malū not fall into its embraces And may a Will renewed with the holy Ghost and right set by gracious Principles do thus Surely it cannot They that know thy name will trust in thee Psal. 9. 10. and which follows upon Trust will love thee and which streams from Love will obey thee and which is the Crown of Obedience will resign up themselves to thee for all their happiness Where such an excellent Understanding goes before there the Will doth infallibly follow after even in actual Conversion unto God as its supreme End 2. The Will doth follow the Understanding in its embracing of Christ as the only way and this appears 1. From several Sciptures To know JesusChrist is eternal life Joh. 17. 3. it quickens the Will to embrace him Christ told the Woman If thou hadst known the gift of God and who it is that saith unto thee Give me to drink thou wouldest have asked of him and he would have given thee living water Joh. 4. 10. A true Knowledge of Christ would have inflamed her desires after him and those desires would have breathed out prayers for the living Water Our Saviour quotes that in the Prophets And they shall be all taught of God and and what follows upon that teaching Every man therefore saith he that hath heard and learned of the Father cometh unto me Joh. 6. 45. True Knowledge makes a man come to Christ and that without fail for 't is so in every man that hears and learns of the Father not in one or two but in every man and how doth Knowledge do this How but by glorifying Christ unto the Will The Spirit saith Christ shall glorifie me how so He shall take of mine and shall shew unto you Joh. 16. 14 15. the holy Spirit takes Christ and shews him after a wonderful manner it glorifies him in the Understanding and through the Understanding it glorifies him before the Will and so the Will is sweetly and strongly drawn unto him 2. From the Will it self If the Will be determined by the Understanding unto God as its ultimate End then is it also determined by the Understanding unto Christ as the only way thereunto Indeed if the Understanding did propose an End and withal two distinct ways of equal tendency thereunto then the Will might be free to either of those ways But when the Understanding proposes God as the End and Christ as the only Way to that End then the Will must infallibly close in with Christ it must or lose its End or Blessedness it must or the summū malū will fall into its arms When the Understanding tells the Will in good earnest there is no other way but one there is no other Name under Heaven but Jesus only the Will is sweetly constrained into his embraces 3. From the Understanding which shews forth Christ to be the perfect Way sutable to all our wants in our passage to God the true End Thou wouldest come to God but for the weight of Sin and Wrath Loe here is an High-priest with Expiating Blood thou wouldst come to God but thou knowest not the way thither here 's a Prophet with words of Light and Life thou wouldst come to God but for the pressure of thy reigning Lusts here 's a King with a Sceptre of Righteousness to subdue them thou wouldst come to God but for want of a gracious Heart here 's a Treasury of all Grace and Holiness The Understanding still points at Christ Art thou in darkness he is a sun of righteousness Art thou in death he is the resurrection and the life Art thou a withered branch he is a root of fatness and sweetness Art thou a lost and half-damned Creature he is a Saviour able to save to the uttermost This Understanding glorifies Christ in all his Offices sings the sing of the Lamb and cries him up for altogether precious this is the Window or Lattess at which his all-fair Person looks in upon the Will the Conduit through which the sweet Ointment of his Name is poured out unto the Will and the Crucifix which shews forth his bloody Passion in lively colours before the Will This Understanding practically presses the Will to embrace him O my Soul now hear and live take him and everlasting Mercy meets thee leave him and devouring Justice overtakes thee catch hold on this Prince of Life or die for ever look up to this Brightness of Glory or be in utter Darkness wash in his Blood or bleed in eternal Flames put on his righteousness or be naked to all Eternity there is no way into the Holy of Holies but through the Veil of his Flesh enter and thou hast an ever-blessed God to make thee happy neglect and thou hast a righteous God to make thee for ever miserable When Christ through the Understanding thus pours out his precious Name as an Ointment unto the Will how can it chuse but love him When through this hole of the door he thus drops in his sweet-smelling Truths upon the Will how can it chuse but rise and open to him If it do not whither will it turn What to the Creatures they are all Blackamoors to this all-lovely Jesus What to repentant Tears those want washing in his Blood What to its good Works and Righteousness they are but a filthy Rag. There is such a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 such a transcendent Excellency in the Knowledge of Christ that it makes all other things
without coming into actual Being which is impossible Hence it appears that humane Liberty doth well consist with a necessity of Immutability nay it cannot stand without Take away all Necessity and you take away all Futurition take away all Futurition and you take away all the free Acts of the Creature for those free Acts could not be Acts much less free Acts in time unless they were future before and future they could not be without such a Necessity Therefore liberum and necessarium may nay must stand together and if so the Will may be determined by the Understanding and yet be free without an aequilibrium and by consequence an aequilibrium is not essential to its Liberty This false Notion of Liberty maintained upholds the Objection but dissolved breaks the same in pieces 3. This Objection vanishes quite away by the true stating of Liberty Liberty is double Ethical as to that which may be done de jure and Physical as to that which may be done de facto God is perfectly free both ways Ethically because under no Law but the Perfection of his own Nature and Physically because Almighty Man is not Ethically free because under a Law nor yet altogether Physically free for some things he cannot do if he never so much will the doing thereof because they are not within his power Libertas as the learned Camero hath it est facultas faciendi quod libet or more largely facultas quâ quis tantum possit quantum velit tantumque velit quantum esse volendum judicavit It is that Faculty in Man whereby within his own Sphere he can do as much as he wills and will as much as in his Understanding he judges fit to be willed Now that this is a right Definition of humane Liberty doth appear three ways 1. 'T is bottomed upon Scripture 2. 'T is commensurate to the Nature of the thing 3. 'T is proportionable to both the Acts of the Will 1. 'T is bottomed upon Scripture In Scripture there are various Expressions touching Liberty congruous to the several parts of this Definition In the Definition Liberty is a faculty of doing in Scripture 't is a having a thing in our power Acts 5. 4. or in the power of our hand Gen. 31. 29. In the Definition 't is a faculty of doing as much as we will and in Scripture 't is a doing according to our will Dan. 11. 36. or all that is in our heart 2 Sam. 7. 3. In the Definition 't is a power of willing as much as in our Understanding we judge fit to be willed and in Scripture 't is doing what is right in our own eyes Judg. 17. 6. or what seemeth good and meet unto us Jer. 26. 14. Thus all the Definition is founded on Scripture 2. This Definition is commensurate to the Nature of Liberty What is Liberty in Man in the full compass of it but that whereby he becomes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lord of his own act and such he truly is when within his own line he can do as much as he will and will as much as in his Understanding is fit to be willed When the Scripture paints out that glorious 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or supreme Liberty in God what doth it say but that he worketh all things according to the counsel of his own will Eph. 1. 11. and doth what he pleaseth in heaven and earth Psal. 135. 6. Wherefore if a man can work according to the counsel of his Will and do what he pleaseth within his own Sphere he must needs be truly free and so much is allowed by this Definition 3. This Definition is proportionable to both the Acts of the Will There is Actus imperatus an Act commanded by the Will such as Speaking or Walking or the like there is Actus elicitus an Act produced in the Will such is the Act of willing Now quoad Actum imperatum the Definition says that a Man can do as much as he wills and quoad Actum elicitum it says that he can will as much as he judges fit to be willed These two Acts must be carefully distinguished for the Will is not alike free in both As to the imperate Act the Will is the Mistress and Commandress of that that procedes from it per modum imperii and it is truly said to be done quia volumus but as to the elicite Act the Will is not properly the Mistress or Commandress of that that procedes not from it per modum imperii for then it should be Actus imperatus rather than elicitus neither can we be said truly to will quia volumus for so the same Act of willing should be the Cause of it self Wherefore the Liberty of the Will as to the Act of willing doth not consist in a Self-motion for the Will doth not move it self To which purpose I shall quote two testimonies one out of Camero Nulla mera potentia semetipsam propellit in actum quicquid enim ejusmodi est id in actu esse necesse est Voluntas autem id est volendi facultas mera potentia est ergò non potest semetipsam excitare ad agendum Si enim hoc facit facit per aliquem actum at quod est in mera potentia illud non agit And again Non potest dici quae sit Voluntatis seipsam determinantis actio non est volitio ipsa est enim volitio ipse terminus ergo non ipsa determinatio Another out of the French Divines in their Theses Salmurienses Nulla potentia sesemet educit in actum Sensus moventur à rebus sensibilibus Phantasia à phantasmatibus Intellect us ab object is intellectualibus locomotiva à Voluntate voluntas quîpote à seipsa And indeed if the Will do move it self to the Act of Willing then because it cannot move it self as quiescent it must move it self by some Act and what is that Act but an Act of willing Therefore by an Act of willing it moves it self to an Act of Willing which is very absurd Wherefore the Will is free in the Act of willing not in respect of its Self-motion but in respect of its lubency and spontaneity what it wills it doth incoactively will according to the dictate of the Understanding Now this being the true Nature of Liberty the determination of the Will by the Understanding doth not overthrow it for notwithstanding this determination Man is free still because he can within his own Sphere do as much as he wills and will as much as he judges fit to be willed His Will is free because in its imperate Acts it commands what it pleases and in its elicite Acts it wills what it wills spontaneously according to the dictate of the Understanding therefore the determination of the Will by the Understanding doth not at all destroy the Nature of Liberty Thus passing over the second Quaere I procede to the third Quaere 3. Whether the Work of Conversion be wrought in an
but a resurrection Oh! my nothingness in Spirituals there must be a creation or I shall never be any thing Oh! the miserable down-cast when I fell from God into my self I can never get up again unless I be unhinged and unselved unless the Spirit lift me up out of my own Iness and Egoity Oh! that I were once out of my own carnal Reason and in the light of life that I were once out of mine own rebellious Will and in the will of God if ever I live 't is not I but Christ in me if ever I labour 't is not I but Grace in me I can write an I upon nothing but my sins if ever I be true to God 't is the holy anointing if ever I be willing 't is the day of God's power Oh! the Cross-bars in my perverse Heart none can shoot them back but the Almighty fingers Oh! the Plague of Apostasie in my lying Heart nothing can heal it but the holy unction if God do not write his Law in my heart there will be nothing but wickedness there if he do not let down some holy Fire into my Affections there will be nothing but Earth there Flesh is Grass and God Glory Man nothing and Grace all God's Mercy is all and the Willer or Runner nothing God's Encrease is all and the Planter or Waterer nothing Thus in Conversion all glorying is cut off and pride stained God as a God is very high upon his Throne-of free Grace and Man as Man very low upon the Dunghill of his own baseness The little ones enter into the Land of Promise the poor are evangelized the dry Wilderness gapes for distillations of Grace the poor weeping soul which bears the precious seed of Self-nothingness and mourns after a supply from free Grace alone shall be sure of the sheaf of comfort at last But now if God in working Conversion doth only put the Will in aequilibrio whether it will turn or not then the Method is quite another thing Lie not O Man upon thy face shake off the dust of Creature-weakness talk no more of thy poverty and wretchedness cry not out for a Resurrection or Creation trouble not the Almighty Spirit and Grace all 's in thine own power already will and live for ever in the sweat of thine own improvements nill and all the power of Grace cannot change thee will and take the Crown of thy self-differencing Glory ●●ll and all the breathings and inspirations of the holy Spirit must fly away from the Birth and from the Womb. Adam left thee in the common Mass God gives thee the common Grace but thou O Man must make thy self differ from others by a right use of that Grace which they neglect Beatae vitae firmamentum est sibi fidere trust in thy own heart thy way is in thy self thy Will is the great Umpire whether thou wilt be God's or not After all the swasions of Precepts and Promises after creating and quickning Grace hath done its utmost after the living Spirit hath tried to write the Law in thee shall all this be something or nothing Shall the new Creature come forth or not Which shall abide in thy Heart Law or Lust Thou thy self must determine the business God made the Heart and all the Wheels therein but the Motion is thine own Christ hath all the power in Heaven and Earth but the actual Turn is in thine own hand alone Thus according to this Doctrine Man is exalted and God is abased free Will hath the Throne and free Grace waits upon her Man in his first Transgression would have been a God in his Understanding and now in his Conversion he becomes one in his Will turning the Scale of Grace one way or other as he pleaseth 2. Having proved in general that God works Conversion in an insuperable way I procede to prove it in particular with respect to the two Instants of Conversion 1. As to the first Instant God works the Habits or Principles of Grace in an insuperable way and to make this appear 1. Let us compare them with the Remonstrants posse convertere They because they would own somewhat more than mere moral Grace in Regeneration tell us potentiam credendi ante omnia conferri dicimus per irresistibilem gratiam Now if the posse convertere be wrought in an insuperable way why should not the Habits or Principles of Grace be so wrought how is the Wills Liberty impeached by the one more than by the other Which way can the Will resist the infusion of the one more than of the other I know no difference between them as to these things Wherefore supposing what I have proved before that there are such Habits of Grace it follows that they are wrought in an insuperable way 2. There is in Man's Soul an obediential Capacity to receive the Habits or Principles of Grace there is a Capacity and therefore God who fills all things can fill it there is an obediential Capacity and therefore God when ever he fills it fills it in an insuperable way for this obediential Capacity is no other than that whereby the Soul as to the receiving of gracious Principles stands in obedience to God's power and as it stands in obedience to God's power it cannot resist To have an Obediential Capacity and not stand in obedience to God's power is one Contradiction and to stand in obedience to Gods power and yet to resist is another Wherefore the Soul receiving gracious Principles from God in its obediential Capacity receives them in such a way as excludes resistance Add hereunto that if the infusion of gracious Principles can be hindred then it must be hindred either by the habitual pravity of the Soul or by the sinful Act of the Will but neither of these can do it not the habitual pravity of the Soul for then it should hinder always and in all persons for it is in all and whilest it is there it hinders and whilest it hinders it cannot be removed because there is no other way of removing it but by those gracious Principles and by consequence there should be no Capacity at all in the Soul to receive gracious Principles nor yet can the sinful Act of the Will hinder it for the Will doth not receive gracious Principles by its Act and those which it doth not receive by its Act it cannot refuse by its Act but it receives them in its obediential Capacity and therefore in an insuperable way 3. The Covenant of Grace evidences this to us I shall instance in two famous places the one is that A new heart will I give you and a new spirit will I put within you I will take away the stony heart out of your flesh and give you an heart of flesh I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes Ezek. 36. 26 27. The other is that I will put my Laws in their inward parts and write them in their hearts and will