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A53688 The doctrine of the saints perseverance, explained and confirmed, or, The certain permanency of their 1. acceptation with God & 2. sanctification from God manifested & proved from the 1. eternal principles 2. effectuall causes 3. externall meanes thereof ... vindicated in a full answer to the discourse of Mr. John Goodwin against it, in his book entituled Redemption redeemed : with some degressions concerning 1. the immediate effects of the death of Christ ... : with a discourse touching the epistles of Ignatius, the Episcopacy in them asserted, and some animadversions on Dr. H.H. his dissertations on that subject / by John Owen ... Owen, John, 1616-1683. 1654 (1654) Wing O740; ESTC R21647 722,229 498

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them to doe them good and I will put my feare in their Hearts and they shall not depart from me Or as v 39 They shall feare me for ever which distinguisheth this Covenant from the former made with their Fathers in that that was broken which this shall never be Cap 21 32 This is the Crowning Mercy that renders both the other glorious As to Acceptation he will not depart from us as to Sanctification we shall not depart from him CAP. II. 1. The Theses proposed for confirmation 2. The fivefold foundation of the Truth thereof 3. Of the Unchangeablenesse of the Nature of God and the influence thereof into the confirmation of the Truth in hand Mal. 3. 6. considered explained 4. lames 1. 16 17 18. opened 5 6 7 8 9 10. Rom. 11. 29. Explained and vindicated The conditions on which Grace is asserted to be bestowed and continued discussed The vanity of them evinced in sundry instances Of Vocation Justification and Sanctification 11. Isa. 40. 27 28 29 30. opened and improved to the end aimed at 12. Also Isa. 4. 43. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8. 13. The summe of the first Argument 14. Mal. 3. 6. with the whole Argument from the immutability of God at large vindicated 15 16. Falsely proposed by Mr G. set right and reinforced 17. Exceptions removed Sophisticall comparisons exploded distinct dispensations according to distinction of a People 19. Alteration and Change properly and directly assigned to God by Mr G. 20. The Theme in Question begged by him 21. Legall approbation of duties and conditionall Acceptation of Persons confounded As also Gods command and purpose 22. The Unchangeablenesse of Gods Decrees granted to be intended in Mal. 3. 6. The Decree directly in that place intended 23. The Decree of sending Christ not immutable upon M. G. Principles The close of the vindication of this First Argument THE Certain Infallible continuance of the Love and Favour of God unto the end §. 1. towards his those whom he hath once freely accepted in Jesus Christ notwithstanding the interposition of any such supposalls as may truly be made having foundation in the things themselves being the first thing proposed comes now to be demonstrated Now the foundation of this the Scripture layes upon Five unchangeable things §. 2. which eminently have an influence into the Truth thereof First of the Nature Secondly Purposes Thirdly the Covenant Fourthly the Promises Fiftly the Oath of God Every one whereof being ingaged herein the Lord makes use of to manifest the Vnchangeablenesse of his Love towards those whom he hath once graciously accepted in Christ. First he hath layd the shoulders of the Vnchangeablenesse of his owne nature to this worke §. 3. Malac. 3. 6. I am the Lord and I change not therefore ye Sonnes of Jacob Rom. 9. 6. 11. 4 5 6. are not consumed These Sonnes of Jacob are the Sonnes of the Faith of Jacob the Israel of God not all the seed of Jacob according to the flesh the Holy Ghost in this Prophesy makes an eminent distinction betweene these two Cap. 3. 16. Cap. 4. 1 2. The begining of this Chapter containes a most evident and cleare prediction and Prophesye of the bringing in of the Kingdome of Christ Mat. 3. 12. in the Gospell wherein he was to purge his floore and throw out the Chaffe to be burnt This his appearance makes great worke in the Visible Church of the Jewes Isa. 49. 3 4 5 6. very many of those who looked and waited for that coming of his Luk. 2. 34. are cut off and cast out as persons that have neither Lot nor Portion in the Mercy wherewith it is attended Rom. 9. 30 31. Though they sayd within themselves that they had Abraham to their Father and were the Children and Posterity of Jacob Yea v. 5. To them who are only the carnall seed and doe also walke in the wayes of the flesh he threatens a sore Revenge and swift destruction when others shall be invested with all the eminent Mercies which the Lord Christ brings along with him least the true Sonnes of Jacob should be terrifyed with the dread of the approaching Day and say as David did Isa. 54. 4 5 61 when the Lord made a breach upon Vzzah who can stand before so holy a God Shall not we also in the issue be consumed He discovereth to them the Foundation of their preservation to the end even the Vnchangeablenesse of his owne nature and being whereunto his Love to them is conformed Plainely intimating that unlesse himselfe and his everlasting Deity be subject and lyable to Alteration and Change which once to imagine were what lyeth in us to cast him downe from his Excellency it could not be that they should be cast of forever and consumed These are the Tribes of Jacob and the Preserved of Israel which Jesus Christ was sent to raise up Isaiah 50. 6. The House of Jacob which he takes from the womb and carries unto old Age unto hoary hairs and forsaketh not Isaiah 46. 3 4. This is confirmed §. 4. James 1. 16 17 18. Doe not erre my beloved Brethren every Good Guift and every perfect guift cometh downe from the Father of Lights with whom is no variablenesse nor shadow of turning Of his owne will begat he us with the word of truth He begets us of his owne will by the word of truth For whatsoever men doe pretend we are borne againe not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor the will of man but the will of God John 1. 13. Now herin saith the Apostle we doe receive from him good and perfect Guifts Guifts distinguished from the common endowments of others Yea but they are failing ones perhaps Such as may slourish for a season and be but Children of a night like Jonas Gourde Though God hath begotten us of his owne will and bestowed good perfect Guifts upon us yet he may cast us off for ever Doe not erre my beloved Brethren saith the Apostle these things come from the Father of Lights God himselfe is the Fountaine of all Lights of Grace which we have received and with him there is no Variablenesse nor shadow of Turning not the least appearance of any change or Alteration And if the Apostle did not in this place Argue from the Immutability of the Divine Nature to the Unchangeablenesse of his Love towards those whom he hath begotten and bestowed such Light and Grace upon there were no just Reason of mentioning that Attribute and Property there Hence Rom. 11. 29. The guifts and calling of God are said to be without Repentance § 5. the guifts of his effectuall calling 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shall never be repented of They are from him with whom there is no change The words are added by the Apostle to give Assurance of the certain Accomplishment of the Purpose of God towards the Remnant of the Jewes according to the Election of Grace
with whom we walke and towards whom it is required we beare Love without dissimulation Rom. 12. 18. towards such as shew us their Faith by their workes Our rule of walking from the principle of Love and Charity is layd downe in 1 Cor. 13. And if all that any man knowes at this day professours in this world should turne Apostates save only one and he had reckoned that one and them that are Apostatized before their Apostasy of the same ranke of Believers and had no evill thoughts of that one above the rest he was bound without any evill surmises to believe all things and to hope all things and not to let goe his sincere Love towards that one imbracing of him delighting in him holding cōmunion with him to his lives end without suspicion of Hypocrisy or other hard thoughts of him unles he also should degenerate 'T is said Joh. 2. 23. That many believed on Christ because of the profession of Faith that they made Ioh. 6. 34. They pray earnestly to be fed with the bread of Life So that they were accounted among his Disciples v. 60. yet upon a temptation they left our Saviour walked no more with him v. 66. Now notwithstanding the profession of these men our Saviour plainely sayes that they believed not v. 64. They falling thus away who had professed to believe and were accounted as Believers so called and named among the Disciples of Christ and Christ declaring on the account of their Apostacy that indeed they did never believe how was it that the remaining Twelve had not hard thoughts and jealousyes one of another especially considering that there was one Hypocrite still left among them whether they had true Faith or no● seeing our Saviour had declared that those who so fell off as those before mentioned had none Doubtlesse they were instructed to walke by a better and streighter Rule than that Mr Goodwin here assignes to Believers Let him who will or can fall away whilst we are taught of God to love one another and are acted by the principle of Love which thinkes no evill and do contend against evill surmizes as the workes of the flesh There is not any thing in the least attending the discovery of one mans Hypocrisy to worke us to a perswasion that another not in any thing discovered is so also that because we see some goodly house fall under stormes and temptations to the ground and so manifest it selfe to have been built on the sand that therefore we must conclude that those which stand are not built upon the Rocke is not suited to any principle or Rule that our Master hath given us to walke by in order to the exercise of that Love which he calleth for in us towards one another Secondly §. 25. I say this way of proceeding in our thoughts and judgements doth the Holy Ghost lead us to 1 Iohn 2. 19. The Apostle giving an account of some who had formerly walked with him in the profession of the Faith and of the fellowship which they had with the Father and Sonne fell away from Christ into an opposition against him so farre as to deserve the title of Antichrists having not only forsaken the Gospell but making it also their businesse to oppose it and to seduce others from the simplicity of the same These he informes the scattered Believers of the Jewes were Apostates having formerly walked with them but deserted their fellowship and thereby manifested themselves never to have been true Believers nor ever indeed to have had fellowship with the Father and the Sonne no more than they of whom our Saviour spake in the place before mentioned And yet doubtlesse the Apostle may not be supposed to lay a foundation for jealousyes evill suspicions and surmises among Believers though he plainely and evidently affirme that those who fall away were never true Believers and that if they had been so they would have continued in their Faith and fellowship with the people of God They went ous from us saith he but they were not of us for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us but they went out that they might be made manifest that they were not all of us A passage by the way clearely confirming the maine of the Doctrine we have hitherto insisted on §. 26. And therefore I shall turne aside before I come to the close of this Chapter having this occasion administred to vindicate it from the exceptions Mr Goodwin gives in against the Testimony it beares in this case The Argument that it readily furnisheth us withall is of this import § 27. If all they who fall away totally from the fellowship and society of the Church and Saints of God what ever their profession were before that Apostasy were never true Believers and are thereby manifested never to have been so then those who are true Believers cannot fall away But the First is true therefore the latter The words are so disposed as to be cast into an Hypotheticall Proposition which virtually includes a doubleArgument as every discrete Axiome doth 't is not thus therefore thus If true Believers might so depart and Apostatise as those here mentioned no unquestionable proofe could be drawne from such Apostacy that men were never true Believers which yet is plainely insisted on in the Text. M. Goodwin Cap. §. 28. 10. Sect. 21 22 23 24. Pag. 189 190 191 192. gathers up sundry Exceptions from the Remonstrants which as they also did he opposeth to this Interpretation of the words and the Inferences from them insisted on I shall briefely consider and remove them in that order as by him they are laid downe He saith First This Inference presumeth many things for which neither it nor any the Authors of it will ever be able to give any good security of proofe As First That this phrase they were not of us imports that they were never true Believers this certainly can never be proved because there is another sence and this every whit as proper to the words and more commodious for the Context and scope of the place which may be given of them as we shall see anon Ans. §. 29. That there is not any thing presumed for the eduction of the Inference proposed but what is either directly exprest or evidently included in the words of the Text will appeare in the farther consideration of what M. Goodwin hath to offer to the contrary That expression they were not of us imports evidently that they were not of them in the fellowship and communion which he was now exhorting Believers to continue and abide in He tells them at the head of this Discourse Cap. 1. 3. that the end of his writing to them was to draw them into and keep them in communion with himselfe and the Saints with him which Communion or Fellowship he tells them they had with the Father and the Sonne But as for the Persons of whom
of his Will So Heb. 10. 9. I come to doe thy Will O God that is to fulfill thy Command as it is expressed Psa. 40. 8. Thy Law is written in my heart Thy Law all that thou requirest at my hand as Mediator I am ready to performe On this account is Christ said to take on him the forme of a Servant Phil. 2. 7. that is to become so indeed in the assumption of his Humane nature that he might doe the Will of him that sent him For which Reason also his Father expresly calls him his Servant Isa. 42. 1. Behold my Servant whom I uphold mine Elect in whom my soule delighteth I have put my spirit upon him he shall bring forth Judgment to the Gentiles He is the Servant of the Father in the Accomplishment of that work for which the spirit was put upon him and v. 19. Who is blind but my servant or deafe as my messenger that I sent who is blind as he that is perfect and blind as the Lords servant God gives him in command to fulfill his will which accordingly he performes to the utmost Againe the Will of God is taken for his Purpose his designe decree and good pleasure for the fulfilling and Accomplishment whereof the Lord Christ came into the world and this appears to be the sence and importance of the Word in this place from the distinction which is put between the will of the Father and any such private Will of Christ as the Jewes thought he went about to establish it was some designe of his own in opposition whereunto he tells them that he came to doe the Will that is to fulfill the Councell Purpose and Designe of the Father However should it Principally be taken for the Command of God yet there is and must needs be an universall coincidence and onenesse in the object of Gods Purposing and Commanding Will in all commands given unto Christ because all of them shall certainely and infallibly by him be fulfilled and so the thing certainely accomplished which is commanded What now is this Will Purpose Ayme Designe and Command of the Father whose Execution Accomplishment is committed to the Lord Christ and which he faithfully undertakes to performe as he was faithfull in all things to him that appointed him for the clearing of this let these two things be observed 1. Who the Persons are concerning whom this Will of God is and those he describes by a double Character 1. From their Election the Fathers giving them to him all which he hath given me that is all his Elect as our Saviour expounds this very expression John 17. 16. Thine they were and thou gavest them to me Thine they were in Eternall designation thou having Chosen them from the Foundation of the World and thou gavest them to me for actuall Redemption to deliver them from every thing that keepes them at distance from thee 2. From their Faith or Believing which he calles seeing the Sonne and Believing on him v. 40. The persons then here designed are Elect Belivers Persons Chosen and Called of God What next then is the Will of God concerning them This also is set out both in Generall and in some pariicuars 1. In Generall that none of them be lost that by no meanes whatsoever by no Temptation of Sathan Deceits of sinne Fury of oppressiours Weakenesse or decay of Faith they perish and fall away from him This is the Will the designe and Purpose of God this he gives to Jesus Christ in command for to accomplish 2. In particular 1. That they might have Eternall Life v. 40. That they be preserved to the Injoyment of that Glory whereunto they are designed 2. That they may be raised up at the last Day so never be lost neither as to their being nor well-being of these two v. 40. Everlasting Life is placed before the Resurrection or raising of Believers at the last Day plainely intimating that the Spirituall Life whereof in this world they are partakers is also as to its certaine uninteruptible continuance an Everlasting Life that shall never be intercepted or cut off That then which from this Portion of Scripture I Argue is this God having Purposed to give Eternall Life to his Elect Believers and that none of them should ever be lost and having committed the Accomplishing and perfomance of this his Goodwill and Pleasure unto the Lord Jesus who was Faithfull unto him in all things and indued with Power all Power from above for that end they shall certainely be Preserved to the end designed The favour and Love of God in Christ shall never be turned away from them for his Counsell shall stand and he will doe all his Pleasure Some thing is by M. Goodwin offered to take off the strength of this testimony but yet so little §. 45. that had I not resolved to heare him out to the utmost what he can say in and unto the case in hand it would scarse be thought needfull to divert to the consideration of it This place of Scripture he binds up in one bundle with nine or tenne others to the composure of one Argument which almost uno Halitu he blowes away Cap. 11. Sect. 36 37. c. Pag. 251 252 c. To the consideration of the Argument it selfe there by him proposed I am not yet arrived the influence of this Text into it is from what is said of Christs Preserving Believers my present Consideration is cheiflly of the will and Intention of the Fathers giving them to him to be preserved so that I shall observe only one or two things to his Generall Answer and then proceed to the vindication of this Particular place we have in hand 1. First he tels you That the Conclusion of the former Argument that true Believers shall never miscarry or fall away opposeth not his sence in this Controversy whether it oppose his sence or no must be judged this I know that he hath to his utmost opposed it all this while shewing himselfe therein very uncurteous unkind but why so on what account is it that this conclusion which hath so much opposed is now conceited not to oppose him Those who thus fall away saith he are noe true Believers but wicked Apostates at the time of their falling away That the conclusion mentioned opposeth his sence to me is evident but that it is sence wherewith in this place he opposeth the Conclusion is not so cleare The Question is who fall away not Believers but Apostates faith Mr G. We say so too in the naturall first sence of those words who eventualitèr are Apostates were never antecedentèr to their Apostasie True Believers But this is not your sence doubtlesse That those who fall away in their falling away which is the sence of that clause at the time of falling away were Apostats that is were fallen away before they fell away is neither our sence nor yours for it is none at all Bertius hath one Argument against
given unto them There is not a quickning a life-giving Power in a quality a created thing In the state of Nature besides gracious dispensations and habits in the Soule inclining it to that which is good and making it a sutable subject for spirituall Operations John 5. Eph. 2. 1 2. we want also a vitall Principle which should actuate the disposed subject unto answerable Operations this a quality cannot give He that carries on the worke of quickning doth also begin it Rom 8. 11. All Graces whatever Gal. 5. 22. as was said are the fruits of the Spirit and therefore in order of Nature are wrought in men consequentially to his being bestowed on them Now in the first bestowing of the Spirit we have Union with Christ the carrying on whereof consists in the farther manifestation and operations of the Indwelling Spirit which is called Communion To make this evident that our Union with Christ consists in this the same Spirit dwelling in him and us and that this is our Union let us take a view of it First from Scripturall Declarations of it and then Secondly from Scripture Illustrations of it both briefely being not my direct businesse in hand 1. First Peter tells us §. 9. that it is a participation of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. We are by the Promises made partakers of the Divine Nature that is it is promised to be given unto us which when we receive we are made partakers of by the Promises That this participation of the Divine Nature let it be interpreted how it will is the same upon the matter with our Union with Christ is not questioned that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be only a gracious habit quality or disposition of Soule in us I cannot easily receive that is somewhere called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 5. 17. the New Crea ure but no where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature The pretended high and spirituall but indeed grosse and carnall conceits of some from hence destructive to the Nature of God and Man I shall not turne aside to consider What that is of the Divine Nature or wherein it doth consist that we are made partakers of by the Promises I shewed before That the Person of the Holy and Blessed Spirit is promised to us whence he is called the Holy Spirit of Promise Eph. 1. 13. hath been I say by sundry evidences manifested Upon the Accomplishment of that Promise he coming to dwell in us we are said in him by the Promises to be made partakers of the Divine Nature We are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have our Communion with it Our participation then of the Divine Nature being our Union with Christ consists in dwelling of the same Spirit in him and in us we receiving him by the Promise for that end 2. Christ tells us § 10. that this Union arises from the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud Ioh 6. 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him The mutuall Indwelling of Christ and his Saints is their Union this saith Christ is from their Eating my flesh and Drinking my bloud But how may this be done Many were offended when this saying was spoken neere and close trialls of sincerity drive hypocrites into Apostasy from his Christ takes away this scruple v 63. it is saith he the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing It is by the Indwelling of the quickning Spirit whereby we have a reall participation of Christ whereby he dwelleth in us and we in him So 3. He prayes for his Disciples Ioh. 17. 21. that they may be one §. 11. as the Father in him and he in the Father that they may be one in the Father and Sonne and v. 22. let them be one even as we are one And that yee may not think that it is only union with and among themselves that he presses for though indeed that which gives them Union with Christ gives them Union one with another also and that which constitutes them of the Body unites them to the Head there is one Body because there is one Spirit Eph. 4. 4. which even Lombard himselfe had some notion of in his Assertion that Charity which is in us is the person of the Holy Ghost from that place of the Apostle God is Love I say he farther manifests that it is Union with himselfe which he intends v. 23. I in them saith he and thou in mee This Union then with him our Saviour declares by or at least illustrates by resemblance unto his union with the Father Whether this be understood of the Union of the Divine Persons of Father and Sonne in the Blessed Trinity the Union I meane that they have with themselves in their distinct Personality and not their Unity of Essence or the Union which was between Father and Sonne as Incarnate it comes all to one as to the Declaration of that Union we have with him The Spirit is Vinculum Trinitatis the Bond of the Trinity as is commonly and not ineptly spoken proceeding from both the other Persons being the Love and Power of them both he gives that Union to the Trinity of Persons whose substratum and Ground is the inestimable unity of Essence wherein they are one Or if you take it for the Union of the Father with the Sonne Incarnate it is evident and beyond inquiry or dispute that as the Personall Union of the Divine Word and the Humane Nature was by the Assumption of that Nature into one Personall Substance with it selfe so the Person of the Father hath no other union with the Humane Nature of Christ immediatly and not by the Union of his own Nature thereunto in the Person of his Sonne but what consists in that Indwelling of his Spirit in all fulnesse in the Man Christ Jesus Now saith our Saviour this Union I desire they may have with mee by the dwelling of the same Spirit in me and them whereby I am in them and they in me as I am one with thee O Father 2. The Scripture sets forth this Union by many Illustrations §. 12. given unto it from the things of the neerest Union that are subject to our apprehension giving the very termes of the things so united unto Christ and his in their Union I shall name some few of them 1. That of Head and Members making up one Body §. 13. is often insisted on Christ is the Head of his Saints and they being many are Members of that one Body and of one another as the Apostle at large 1 Cor 12. 12. even as the Body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ The body is one and the Saints are one Body yea one Christ that is mysticall They then are the Body what part is Christ He is the Head 1 Cor. 11. 3. the Head of every man
in these words he is speaking to them describing them by their former and present condition with the causes of it he tells them that though they abode with them for a season yet they were never of them as to the Communion and fellowship they had with the Father and Sonne and so were never true Members of the Church The only reason M. Goodwin gives to Invalidate this sence of the Words is that he is able to give another meaning of them in his own judgement more proper to the words and more commodious to the scope of the place which whether it have any more efficacy to take in the force and evidence of the Interpretation given lying plaine and cleare in the first view of the words and Context than it hath to evade the eduction of any Truth whatever from any place of Scripture whatever seeing some or other suppose themselves able to give another sence of the words let the Reader judge But he adds Secondly §. 30. That this Expression they were of us signifies that they were true Believers is presumed of the uncertainty of this supposition we shall saith he give the like account Ans. When we come to take M. Goodwin's farther Account we shall be able I make no doubt to reckon with him and to discharge his Bill In the meane time we say that supposition if they had been of us whence our Inference is made evidently includes a fellowship and communion with the Apostle true Believers in their fellowship with God which is asserted as a certain Foundation of mens abiding in the communion of the Saints But saies he Thirdly §. 31. t is supposed that these words they went out from us signifie their finall defection or abdication of the Apostles communion or their totall and finall renunciation of Christ his Church and Gospell This supposition hath no bottome at all or colour for it Ans. Divide not the words from their coherence and the intendment of the place and the signification denyed is too evident and cleare for any one with the least colour of Reason to rise up against it They went out so out from the communion of the Church as to become Anti-Christs opposers of Christ and seducers from him and certainly in so doing did totally desert the Communion of the Apostle renounce the Lord Christ as by him Preacht and forsooke utterly both Church and Gospell as to any fellowship with the one or the other And we know full well what is the bottome of this and the like Assertions that such and such things have no bottome at all which never yet failed M. Goodwin at his need Fourthly saith he §. 32. 'T is supposed that this clause they would no doubt have continued with us signifies they would have continued in the same Faith wherein we Persevere and continue nor is there saith he any competent Reason to inforce this sence of those words because neither doth the Grammaticall tenour of them require it and much lesse the scope of the passage Ans. The Fellowship John invited Believers unto and to continue in as hath been often observed with him and the Saints with him was that which they held with the Father and the Sonne to continue with them therein in the Litterall Grammaticall sence of the words is to continue in the Faith It being Faith whereby they have that fellowship or Communion this also is evident from the scope of the whole passage and is here only impotently denied But saith he Fiftly The said Inference supposeth that John certainly knew that all those who for the present remained in his communion were true Believers for if they were not true believers they that were gone out from them in the sence contended for might be said to be of them that is persons of the same condition with them But how improbable this is I meane that John should infallibly know that all those who as yet continued with them were true Believers I referre to consideration Ans. Had M. Goodwin a little poised this passage before he took it up perhaps he would have cast it away as an uselesse trifle But his masters having insisted on it perhaps he thought it not meet to question their judgements in least for feare of being at liberty to deale so with them in matters of greater importance I say then that there is not the least coulour for any such supposall from the inference we make from the text nor is there any thing of that nature intimated or suggested in the words or Argument from them the body of them whom the Apostates forsooke were true Believers and their abiding in the fellowship of the Saints was a manifestation of it sufficient for them to be owned as such which the others manifested themselves never to have been by their Apostacy But saith he Sixtly §. 33. The inference under contest yet farther supposeth that John certainely knew that they who were now gon out from them neither were now nor ever before true Believers yea and that he certainely knew this by their departure or going out from them Ans. This is the very thing that the Apostle affirmes that he certainely knew those Apostates never to have been true Believers and that by their Apostacy or falling totally from the Gospell becomming seducers and opposers of Christ Let him argue it out with the Holy Ghost if he can whose plaine and cleare expression this is and that confirmed by the insuing Argument of the Perseverance of them who were true Believers and whose fellowship is with the Saints in their communion with the Father and the Sonne Wherefore saith he Lastly it presumeth yet farther that all true Believers do alwayes abide in the externall communion of the Church §. 34. and that when men do not so abide they plainly declare herein that they never were true Believers which is not only a manifest untruth but expressly contrary to the Doctrine it selfe of those men who assert the inference for they teach as we heard before that a true Believer may fall so foulely and so farre that the Church according to the command of Christ may be constrained to testify that shee cannot tolerate them in her externall communion nor that ever they shall have any part or portion in the Kingdome of Christ unlesse they repent Doubtlesse to be cast out of the Church according to the institution and command of Christ who commands no such thing but upon very heinous and high unchristian misdemeanours is of every whit as sad importance as a voluntary desertion of the Churches communion can be for a season Ans. It supposeth that no true Believers fall so off from the Church as to become Antichrist's opposers of Christ and the Church so as to deny that Christ is come in the flesh which was the great busines of the Antichrists in those dayes T is true and granted by us that a true Believer may forsake the outward communion of some particular Church
Emperour so I am certaine it is most remote from the likeness of any thing that in this affaire we are instructed in from the Scripture Plainly this language is the same with that of the false Impostor Pseudo-Clemens in his pretended Apostolical Constitutions At this rate or somewhat beyond it have you him ranting Lib. 2 cap. 2. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 All Popes with all sorts of Persons whatever Priests Kings and Princes Fathers and Children all under the feet of this Exemplar of God and Ruler over men A passage which doubtless eminently interprets and illustrates that place of Peter's Epistle ch 5. v. 1. 2. 3. The Elders that are among you I exhort who also am an Elder and a witness of the suffering● of Christ and also a partaker of the glory that shall be revealed feed the flock of God which is among you taking the oversight thereof not by constraint but willingly not for filthy lucre but of a ready mind neither as being Lords over God's heritage but ●eing Examples to the flock But yet as if the man were starke mad with wordldy pride and pompe He afterwards in the name of the Holy Apostles of Jesus Christ commands all the Laity forsooth to honour love and feare the Bishop 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Lib. 2. Cap 20. And that you may see whither the man drives and what he aimes at after he hath set out his Bishop like an Emperour or an Estern-King in all pompe and glory He addes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The paying of tribute to them as Kings is the Issue of these descriptions that they may have wherewithal to maintaine their pompe and greatness according to the institution of our Lord Jesus Christ and his blessed Apostles But I shall not rake farther into this dunghil nor shall I adde any more instances of this kind out of Ignatius but close into one insisted on by our Doctour for the proof of his Episcopacy Dissert 2. Cap. 25. 7. Saith he Quartò 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Episcopo attendite ut vobis Deus attendat ego animammeam libenter eorum loco substitui cuperem quod Anglicè optimè dicimus my soul for theirs qui Episcopo Presbyteris Diaconis obsequuntur I hope I may without great difficulty obtaine the Doctours pardon that I dare not be so bold with my soule as to jeopard it in that manner especially being not mine owne to dispose of Upon these and many more the like accounts do the Epistles seeme to me to be like the Children that the Jewes had by their strange Wives Neh 13 who spake part the language of Ashdod and part the language of the Jewes That there are in them many footsteps of a gracious Spirit every way worthy of and becoming the great and holy personage whose they are esteemed so there is evidently a mixture of the working of that worldly and carnal Spirit which in his dayes was not so let loose as in after times For what is there in the Scripture what is in the genuine Epistle of Clêmen's that gives countenance to those descriptions of Episcopacy Bishops and the subjection to them that are in those Epistles as now we have them So insisted on What titles are given to Bishops What Soveraignty Power Rule Dominion is ascribed to them Is there any thing of the like Nature in the writings of the Apostles In Clemens the Epistle of Polycarpus c. Or any unquestionable legitimate off-spring of any of the first Worthies of Christianity Whence have they their three orders of Bishops Presbyters and Deacons upon the distinct observation of which so much weight is laid Is there any one word iota title or syllable in the whole book of God giving countenance to any such distinctions Eph. 4. 8. We have Pastors and Teachers Rom 12. 7.8 Him that teacheth him that exhorteth him that ruleth and him that sheweth mercy Philip. 1. 1. We have Bishops and Deacons and their Institutions with the order of it we have at large expressed 1 Tim 3. 1. 2. Bishops and Deacons without the Interposition of any other order whatever Deacons we have appointed Acts the 7. And Elders Acts 14. 23. Those who are Bishops we find called Presbyters Titus 1. 5. 7. And those who are Presbyters we find termed Bishops Acts 20. 28. So that Deacons we know and Bishops who are Presbyters or Presbyters who are Bishops we know but Bishops Presbyters and Deacons as three distinct orders in the Church from the Scripture we know not Neither did Clemens in his Epistle to the Corinthians know of any more then we do which a few instances will manif●st saith he speaking of the Apostles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. Bishops and Deacons as in the Church at Philippi this man knowes but the third order he is utterly unacquainted withal And that the Difference of this man's expressions concerning Church Rulers from those in the Epistle under consideration may the better appear and his asserting of Bishops and Presbyters to be one and the same may the more clearly be evidenced I shall transcribe one other Passage from him whose length I hope will be execused from the usefulness of it to the Parpose in hand Pag. 57. 58. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for so it seemes was the manner of the Church in his dayes that their officers were appointed by the consent of the whole Church 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or the Bishops of whom he was speaking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. And sundry other discoveries are there in that Epistle of the like nature It is not my designe nor purpose to insist upon the parity of Bishops and Presbyters or rather the Identity of office denoted by sundry Appellations from these and the like places this work is done to the full by Blondellus that our labour in this kind were that the purpose in hand is prevented He that thinkes the Arguments of that Learned man to this purpose are indeed answered throughly and removed by D. H. in his fourth dissertation where he proposes them to Consideration may one day thinke it needful to be Able to distinguish between words and things That Clemens ownes in a Church but two sorts of Officers the first whereof he calls sometimes Bishops sometimes Presbyters the other Deacons the Doctour himselfe doth not deny That in the Judgment of Clemens no more were instituted in the Church is no less evident And this carries the conviction of it's truth so clearely with it that Lombard himselfe confesseth hos solos ministrorum duos ordines Ecclesiam primitvam habuisse de his solis praeceptum Apostoli nos habere Lib. 4. Sen. D. 24. Lib. 3. ext It seemes moreover that those Bishops and Deacons in those dayes as was observed were appointed to the office by and with the consent of the People or whole body of the Church no less do those words import 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our Doctour indeed renders these words applaudente aus
only the issue and end of things and not their manner of support in their abiding with God And it is not easie to conjecture why our Author should so studiously avoid the grant of a Promise of finall Perseverance in these words who in his next observation upon them affirmeth that they respect the state of the Saints in Heaven and not at all those that are on Earth I meane that part of those words which expresseth their preservation and safegarding by the Power of God So that this is fancied perhaps even to be the condition of the Saints in Heaven that God will there preserve them whilst they continue Saints but that they shall so do there is not any Assurance given or to be had It is marvelous if this be so that in so large and vast a space of time we yet never heard of any of those holy ones that were cast out of his Inheritance or that forfeited his injoyment But let us heare what is farther asserted He addeth by way of Answer 1. The security for which our Saviour engageth the Greatnesse of his Fathers power unto his sheepe is promised unto them not in order to the effecting or procuring their finall Perseverance but rather by way of reward to it Ans. But what Tittle is there I pray you in the whole Context to intimate any such thing What insinuation of any such Condition They heare my voice and they follow me that is they believe in me and bring forth the fruits of their Believing in suitable obedience as these words of hearing and following do imply Saith our Saviour these shall not perish the Power of my Father shall preserve them that is saith our Author in case they persevere to the end then God will preserve them clearely our Saviour undertaketh that Believers shall not perish and that his Power and his Fathers are engaged for that end which is all we assert or have need to do 2. That this Promise of safety made to his Sheepe by Christ doth not relate to their state or condition in this present world but that of the world to come My Sheepe heare my voice and follow me in which words of hearing and following him he intimateth or includeth their Perseverance as appeareth by the words immediately following And I give them Eternall Life Ans. This I confesse is to the purpose if it be true but being so contrary to what hath been I had almost said Universally received concerning the mind of Christ in this place we had need of evident concluding Reasons to enforce the truth of this glosse or interpretation For the present I shall give you some few inducements or perswasions why it seemeth altogether unsuitable to the mind of our Blessed Saviour that this ingagement of his Fathers Power and his owne should be shut out from taking any place in the Kingdome of Grace 1. Observe that there is a great opposition to be made against the Saints in that condition wherein they are promised to be preserved This is supposed in the words themselves There is none shall take them out of my hands my Father is great and none shall be able to take them out of his hands As if he should have said It is true many Enemies they have great opposition will there be and arise against them on all hands but preserved they shall be in the midst of them all But now what Enemies what opposition will there be and arise against the Saints in Heaven The Holy Ghost telleth us the last ●nemy is Death and that at the Resurrection that shall be utterly swallowed up into Victory that it shall never lift up the head There they rest from their labours who dye in the Lord. Yea it is exceeding ridiculous to suppose that the Saints need Assurance of the engagement of the Omnipotency of God for their safeguarding in heaven against all opposition when they are assured of nothing more then that there they shall not be liable to the least opposition or obstruction in their enjoyment of God unto all eternity 2. Our Saviour here describeth the present condition of his sheep in a way of opposition to them that are not his sheep His heare his voyce the others doe not and his shall be preserved when the others perish The Pharisees believed not and as he told them they died in their sinnes his sheep heard him and were preserved in their obedience It is then evidently the deportment of Christ towards and his care of his sheepe in this World in a contra-distinction to them who are not his sheepe among whom they live that is here set forth 3. The very Context of the words inforceth this sence They follow me and I give them eternall life I doe it that 's the work I have in hand Take eternall Life in the most comprehensive sence for that which is to be enjoyed in heaven though doubtlesse it comprizeth also the Life of Grace which here we enjoy Ioh 17. 3 What is that which our Saviour undertaketh to give 〈◊〉 they may be sure that they shall be preserved to the enjoy 〈◊〉 telleth them they shall not perish Is that not pe rishing 〈◊〉 of Heaven when they come thither Not to be deprived of 〈◊〉 after they have entered into the fulnesse of it Or rather that 〈◊〉 or come short of it and so perish And this is that which 〈◊〉 Father and Sonne is engaged to accomplish namely that 〈◊〉 not by coming short of that ●ternall Life which is the businesse 〈◊〉 give unto them If any one Reason of waight or importance that hath the least pregnancy with Truth be offered to the contrary we shall 〈◊〉 and ●ake off the power of the former Reasons which we have 〈◊〉 on though without offering the greatest violence imaginable to Truth it selfe it cannot be done It is said that by these words They heare my voyce 〈◊〉 Christ doth intimate or include their Perseverance to say a thing 〈◊〉 or included is of small power against so many expresse Reasons as we have induced to the contrary but will this be granted that where ever the Saints are said to heare the voyce of Christ Perseverance is included We shall quickly have a fresh supply of Scripture proofes for the demonstration of the Truth in hand but what attempt is made for the proofe hereof It is so because the words immediatly following are I give to them eternall Life which presuppose their finall Perseverance and this must be so because it is so said I will give to them Eternall Life is either an intimation of what he doth for the present by giving them a spirituall Life in himselfe or a Promise he will doe so with respect to eternall Life consummated in heaven which Promise is every where made upon Believing and it is a Promise of Perseverance not given upon Perseverance Neither is there any thing added in the words following to confirme this uncouth wresting of the mind of our Saviour but only the
Ephes. 1. 7. in whom we have redemption through his bloud even the forgivenesse of sinnes or the Intercision of that Obligation unto punishment which attends sinne in reference to the sinner and his subjection to the Law of God and the righteousnesse thereof As the oblation of Christ respecteth God and his justice to whom it is given as a price and Ransome and whereof it is an Attonement so it is and is called or we are said to receive thereby Redemption As it respects them who receive the benefit of that Redemption Rom. 1. 5. it is the forgivenesse of sinnes Forgivenesse of sinnes as t is compleated and terminated in the Consciences of Believers requireth the interposition of Faith 1 Cor. 1. 30. for the receiving of Christ in the Promise who of God is made unto us Righteousnesse but in respect of the procurement of it and the removing all causes Rom. 4. 4. upon the account whereof sinne should be imputed unto us that is perfected in the oblation of Christ hence he is said to beare our sins in his own body on the Crosse 1 Pet 2. 24. and being once on him either he was discharged of them or he must for ever lye under the burthen of them They were on him on the Tree what is then become of them If he were freed of them and Justifyed from them as he was Isa. 50. 8 9. how should they ever be laid to our charge And yet this freedome from condemnation for sin for all the Elect which God himselfe so clearly asserts Rom. 8. 32. 33. c. doth not in the least set them free from the necessity of Obedience nor acquit them from contracting the guilt of sin upon the least irregularity or disobedience Secondly we are said to doe together with Christ those things which he doth for us in his own person Rom. 6. 5 8. and that upon the account of that benefit which by those his personall performances 2 Cor. 5. 15 16. doth redound unto us and which being done Col. 3. 1. the Quarrell about sinne as to make an utter separation between God and our souls Rom. 6. 7. is certainly removed Thus we are said to dy with him to be raised again with him and with him we enter into the holy place this whole businesse about sin being passed through for he that is dead is justifyed from sin Now all this being done by us and for us in by our head can we hencesorth dy any more shall death any more have dominion over us This the Apostle argues 2 Cor. 5. 15. we judge saith he that if one dyed for all then were all they that is all those for whom he dyed dead or dyed likewise they were dead in and with him their sponsor as to the curse due for sin that henceforth they might live to him that dyed for them Thirdly the Compact or agreement that was between the Father and the Sonne as Mediator about the businesse of our Redemption in his blood manifests this Truth Psal. 40. 8. The Father required at his hands that he should doe his will Isa. 53. 10 11. fulfill his pleasure and counsell make his soule an offering for sinne and do that which the Sacrifices of Bulls Goates shadowed out Heb. 10. 5 9 7. but could never effect upon the performance whereof he was to see his Seed and to bring many Sonnes to Glory Heb. 2 10. A covenanting and agreement into an uncertaine Issue and event as that must be of God and the Mediator if the Salvation of the persons concerning which and whom it was be not infallibly certaine ought not at any cheap rate or pretence to be assigned to infinite Wisdome In the Accomplishment of this undertaking whereunto Christ was designed the Father dealt with him in strict aud rigid Justfce Rom. 8. 32. There was neither composition about the debt 2 pet 2. 4. nor commutation about the punishment that he had taken upon himselfe 2 Cor. 5. 21. Now doth not exact Justice require that the Ransome being given in Gal. 3. 13. the Prisoners be delivered That the debt being paid Heb. 2. 9. the bond be cancelled as to any power of imprisoning the Originall debtor That punishment being undergone and the Law fulfilled the offendor goe free Especially all this being covenanted for in the first undertaking doubtlesse wrath shall not arise a second time The right knowledge use and improvement of this Grace being given bounded directed by the Gospell it is safegarded from abuse by that which God calls his owne Wisdome Fourthly §. 13. it appeares from what God bestowes upon his Elect upon the Account of the undertaking of Christ for them in the pursuit of the Eternall purpose of his Will antecedently to any thing whatsoever in them that should ingage him to do them the least good when God comes as a friend to hold out unto bestow good things upon men I meane good in that kind of Mercy which is peculiarly suited to the bringing of them to the enjoyment of himselfe it is evident that he hath put an end to all enmity and quarrell between him them Isa. 59. 20. 21 Now antecedently unto any thing in men God for Christs sake bestowes Rom. 8. 11. with the greatest act of friendship imaginable Gal. 5. 22. no lesse than the holy Spirit on them 1 Cor. 7. 4. By him they are quickned 2 Cor 3. 5. their Faith is but a fruit of that Spirit bestowed on them John 15. 3 5. If they have not any sufficiency in themselves as much as to think a good thought Ephes. 2. 1 2. nor can doe any thing that is acceptable to God being by nature dead in trespasses and sinnes which at present the Scripture affirming it I take for granted then assuredly God doth give his Holy Spirit to the Saints whereby he workes in them both to will and to do of his owne good pleasure Phil. 1. 13. antecedently to any good thing in them Col. 1. 12. that is well pleasing unto him Every thing that men do must either be brought forth by the strength and Ability of their owne naturall facultyes assisted and provoked by motives and perswasions from without or it must be of the operation of the Spirit of God there is not another principle to be fixt on The first at present I take for granted is not the fountaine of any Spirituall acting whatsoever John Gal Neither can any Gracious act be educed radically from the corrupt naturall faculty Gen. 8. 21. however assisted or advantaged It must be the Spirit then Job 14. 4. that is the sole principall cause and Author of all the movings of our soules towards God Mat. 12. 33. that are acceptable to him in Christ Now the cause is certainely before the effect and the Spirit in order of Nature is bestowed upon us
sinne the body of it or the ruling of Originall sinne the old man and the full fruit of actuall sinne in the body of it is by the death of Christ crucified and destroyed and in that whole Chapter from our participation in the death of Christ he argues to such an abolition of the Law and Rule of sinne to such a breaking of the power and strength of it that it is impossible that it should any more rule in us or have dominion over us Of the way whereby virtue flowes out from the death of Christ for the killing of sinne I am not now to speake And this is the first way whereby the death of Christ hath an influence into the safegarding of Believers in their continuance of the Love and Favour of God He so takes away the guilt of sinne that it shall never be able utterly to turne the Love of God from them and so takes away the rule of Sathan and power of sinne destroying the one and killing the other that they shall never be able to turne them wholly from God Farther §. 19. to secure their continuance with God he procureth the Holy Spirit for them as was shewed before But because much weight lyes upon this part of our foundation I shall a little farther cleare it up That the Spirit of Grace and Adoption with all those Spirituall Mercyes and operations wherewith he is attended and accompanied is a Promise of the new Covenant doubtlesse is by its own evidence put out of question There is scarce any Promise thereof wherein he is not either clearly expressed or evidently included Yea and often times the whole Covenant is stated in that one Promise of the Spirit the actuall collation and bestowing of all the Mercy thereof being his proper worke and peculiar dispensation for the carrying on the great designe of the Salvation of sinners So Isa. 59. 20. As for me saith God this is my Covenant with them my Spirit that is upon thee and my word which I have put in thy mouth shall not depart from thee This is my Covenant saith God or what in my Covenant I do faithfully ingage to bestow upon you But of this Text and its vindication more afterwardes Many other places not only pregnant of proofe to the same purpose but expressly in termes affirming it might be insisted on Now that this Spirit §. 20. promised in the Covenant of Grace as to the bestowing of him on the elect of God or those for whom Christ dyed is of his purchasing and procurement in his Death is apparent 1. Because he is the Mediator of the Covenant by whose hands and for whose sake all the Mercyes of it are made out to them who are admitted into the bond thereof Gen. 17. 1. Though men are not compleatly stated in the Covenant before their owne Believing Ierem. 31. 32. 32. 38 39 40 which brings in what of their part is stipulated yet the Covenant and Grace of it layes hold of them before even to bestow Faith on them Ezek. 11. 19. 36. 25 26. or they would never Believe for Faith is not of our selves it is the Guift of God God certainely bestowes no such Guifts but from a Covenant Spirituall Graces are not administred soly in a providentiall dispensation Heb. 8. 9 10 11. Faith for the receiving the pardon of sinne is no guift nor product of the Covenant of workes Now as in generall the Mercies of the Covenant are procured by the Mediator of it so this whereof we speake in an especiall manner Heb. 9. 15. For this cause he is the mediator of the New Testament that by meanes of death they which are called might receive the Promise of Eternall Inheritance By his death they for whom he dyed and who thereupon are called Deut 27 29. being delivered from their sinnes which were against the Covenant of workes Gal. 3 12. receive the Promise Rom. 3. 21. or pledge of an Eternall Inheritance What this great Promise here intended is and wherein it doth consist the Holy Ghost declares Acts 2. 23. The Promise which Jesus Christ received of the Father upon his exaltation was that of the Holy Ghost having purchased and procured the bestowing of him by his Death upon his Exaltation the dispensation thereof is committed to him as being part of the Compacte and Covenant which was between his Father and himselfe The grand bottome of his satisfaction merit This is the great Originall radicall Promise of that Eternall Inheritance By the Promised Spirit are wee begotten a new into a hope thereof Rom. 8. 11. made meet for it Col. 1. 12. and sealed up unto it Ephes. 4. 30. Yea do but looke upon the Spirit as promised and yee may conclude him purchased for all the Promises of God are yea and a men in Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 1. 20. They all have their Confirmation Establishment and Accomplishment in by and for Jesus Christ. And if it be granted that any designed appointed Mercy whatever that in Christ the Lord blesseth us withall be procured for us by him in the way of merit being given freely to us through him but reckoned to him of debt it will easily be manifested that the same is the condition of every Mercy whatever promised unto us and given us upon his Mediatory interposition 2. It appears from that peculiar promise § 21. that Christ makes of sending his Holy Spirit unto his owne He tels them indeed once and againe that the Father will send him Ioh. 14. 16 26. As he comes from that originall and Fountaine Love from which also himselfe was sent But withall he assures us that he himselfe will send him Ioh. 15. 26. When the Comforter is come whom I will send unto you from the Father even the Spirit of truth It is true that he is promised here only as a Comforter for the performance of that part of his Office But look upon what account he is sent for any one Act Ioh. 16. 7. or Worke of Grace on that he is sent for all I will send him then saith Christ and that as a fruit of his death as the procurement of his Mediation for that alone he promiseth to bestow on his And in particular he tells us that he receives the spirit from the Father for us upon his Intercession wherein as hath been elsewhere demonstrated he askes no more nor lesse Salus Electorum sanguis Iesu. then what by his death is obtained Iohn 14. 16 17. I will pray the Father and he shall give you another Comforter that he may abide with you for ever even the spirit of Truth whom the World cannot receive he tells us v. 13. that whatsoever we aske he will doe it But withall in these verses how he will doe it even by interceding with the Father for it as a fruit of his Bloodshedding and the Promise made to him upon his undertaking to Glorify his Fathers
lesse Anti-evangelicall This foundation then being removed what ever is built upon it mole ruit su● Neither is it in any measure restored or laid a new by the reason of it given by Mr G. viz. That the Scripture affirmeth in sundry places that God is no accepter of persons for he that shall hence conclude that what ever Doctrine affirmeth directly or by consequence that God is no Aceepter of persons what ever other abomination it is evidently deeming with all is yet true and according to the minde of God shall have leave notwithstanding the antiquated Statute of our Vniversity against it to goe and reade Logicke at Stamford On this account do but provide that a Doctrine be not gnilty of any one crime and you may conclude that it is guilty of none For instance That Doctrine which impeacheth not the Omnipresence of the Diety is true according to the Scripture for the Scripture aboundeth with cleare Testimonyes of the Presence of God in all places Now the Doctrine of the Vbiquity of the humane nature of Christ doth no way impeach the omnipresence of the Diety therefore it is true and according to Scripture I might supersede all further considerations of this Argument having rendered it altogether uselesse and unserviceable in this warfare by breaking its right legge or rather cruteh whereon it leaned but something also may be added to the Minor because of its reflection in the close of its proofe upon the Doctrine we maintaine intimating an inconsistency of it with that Excellency of God spoken of namely that he is no Accepter of Persons Prosopolepsia §. 4. or Accepting of Persons is an evill in Judgment when he who is to determine in causes of righteousnesse hath respect to personall things that concerue not the merit of the Cause in hand and judgeth accordingly This properly can have no place in God as to any bestowing of free Grace Mercy or Pardon There is Roome made for it only when the things that are bestowed or wrought by it are such as in Justice are due it being an Iniquity solely and directly opposed to distributive Justice Exod. 23. 2 3 6 7 8 9. that rendreth to every one according to what is Righteous and due Iob. 31. 34. That with God there be no Accepting of Persons there is no more required but this that he appoint and determine equall Punishments to equall faults and give equall Rewards to equall deservings If he will dispose of his pardoning Mercy and free Grace to some in Christ not to others who shall say unto him what dost thou May he not do what he will with his owne So he giveth a peny to him that laboureth all day he maygive a peny also to him that worketh but one houre Now suppose that Mr G's Doctrine render God free from this or rather chargeth him not with it yet if withall it calleth his Truth Righteousnesse Faithfulnesse Oath and Immutabillity into question shall it passe for a Truth or be embraced ever the sooner But the sting of this Argument lieth in the Taile §. 5. or close of it in the Reflection insisted on upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance as it is called viz. that it teacheth God to be an accepter of Persons This is Mr Goodwin's way of Arguing all along When at any time he hath proposed a proofe of the Doctrine he goeth about to establish finding that as somthing heavy worke to lye upon his hand and not much to be said in the case he instantly turneth about and falleth upon his Adversaries in declaiming against whom he hath a rich and overflowing Veine There is scarce any one of his Arguments in the pursuit and improvement whereof one fourth part of it is spoken to that head where in he is engaged But wherein is the Common Doctrine of Perseverance guilty of this great crime §. 6. It teacheth that He that believeth shall be saved and he that believeth not shall be damned It teacheth that God hath allotted equall punishments to equall Transgressions and appointed equall Rewards to equall wayes of Obedience That the Wages of every sinne is death and that every sinner must dye unlesse it be those concerning whom God himselfe saith Deliver them I have found a Ransome Job 33. 24. that he is a like displeased with sinne in whomsoever it is and that in a peculiar and eminent manner when it is found in his owne Indeed if this be to impute Acceptation of Persons to God to say that he hath Mercy on whom he will have Mercy and whom he will he hardeneth that he is tender to his owne as a Father to his only Child that serveth him and will recover them being faithfull in his Promises from their sinnes and heale their backeslidings though he suffer others to lye wallowing in their rebellions and pollutions all their dayes that he will not give pardon to any finner but upon Faith and Repentance but will give Faith and Repentance to those whom he hath chosen and given unto Jesus Christ to be saved If this I say be acceptance of Persons our Doctrine owneth the imputation of ascribing it to God and glorieth in it we being ascertained that God taketh all this to himselfe clearely and plentifully in the Word of Truth The summe of what our Author gives in §. 7. to make good his charge upon the common Doctrine of Perseverance is That it affirmeth that though Saints and Believers fall into the same sinnes of Adultery and Idolatry and the like with other men yet they are not dealt withall as other men but continued in the Love and Favour of God To wave the consideration of the false impositions by the way on the Doctrine opposed as that is that it teacheth the Saints to fall into and to continue in them to the significancy of that expression never so long under Abominations and to joyne Issue upon the whole of the matter I say 1. That in and with this Doctrine and in perfect Harmony and Consistency therewith Rom. 1. 32. we maintaine that the judgement of God is the same in respect of every sinne in whomsoever it is and that he that doth it on that account is worthy of death and 2. That the sentence of the Law is the same towards all cursing every one that continueth not in all things written in the Book thereof Deut. 27. 26. to doe them 3. That in and under the Gospell wherein a remedy is provided in reference to the rigour and severity of both the former Apprehensions yet the Judge of all dealeth with all men equally according to the tenor of it He that Believeth shall be Saved and he that Believeth not shall be damned Men in the same condition shall have the same recompence of reward But you will say Doe not the same sinnes put men into the same condition and deserve the same punishment in one as in another Ans. 1. They doe deserve the same punishment God