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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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this legal fear issues a flood of legal sorrows for sin as procurative of wrath Gods arrows stick fast in the Soul and hence men are pricked in heart Acts 2. 37. and which is more wounded in spirit Prov. 18. 14. and these wounds stink and are corrupt till the balm of Christs blood be poured into them Such is the weight of these fears and sorrows that it presses the Soul into a self-weariness and by degrees breaks it all to pieces that there is scarce left a shard thereof to take a little fire from the hearth or water out of the Pit of any Creature-comfort 4. In the midst of these fears and sorrows some glimmerings and appearances of mercy in Christ offer themselves to the Soul and the Soul begins to have some vellcities and imperfect wouldings after Mercy anguish and bitterness make it cry out Oh! What shall I do to be saved The scorching flames of Gods wrath leave a thirst in the heart after the coolings and refrigerations of pardoning Mercy and in proportion to these wouldings and velleities there are some light touches and tasts of Free Grace some flashes of joy in the Word and Christ the marrow thereof and yet all this while there is no root of Spiritual life in the heart These are the preparatories of Conversion only we must not conceive them to be such formal immediate dispositions as infallibly inferr Conversion after them for such prepared ones though not far from the Kingdom of Heaven may yet possibly never enter into it neither must we look on these preparations though Gods usual method as necessary on Gods part for if he please to use his Prerogative he can make even dry bones to rattle and come together again without any previous dispositions He can say unto men even when they are in their blood Live and that word as with child of Omnipotency shall instantly bring forth the New Creature 2. What is the work of Conversion it self I answer 'T is that inward Principle of Grace whereby a man is made able and willing to turn from all Creatures unto God in Christ. Conversion is a motion of the Soul and therefore there must be an inward Principle called in Scripture a Root The root of the matter is in me saith Job Job 19. 28. Friends you look upon me as if I were nothing but leaves of hypocrisie but the inward Root of Holiness is in me Conversion is a supernatural motion and therefore there must be an inward Principle of Grace called by the Apostle the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. the Humane Nature cannot elevate it self so high as Conversion but the Divine Nature can do it By this inward Principle of Grace man becomes able he hath an active posse convertere and which is more a velle too he becomes able and willing to turn Conversion is called in Scripture 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a returning unto God Mans Natural state wants a Turn and Gods Supernatural Grace effects it Motion is between two terms the terminus à quo in conversion is all Creatures Creatures as Creatures are the footsteps of Gods Power and Goodness and so we must not turn from a worm but see God in it but Creatures as they are deifyed and idolized in the heart become lying vanities and empty nothings and so in Conversion we turn from them all The world without us is a Glass of the Divine Wisdom and Goodness and so Conversion gives a sanctified use of it but the world within us the world in the heart is nothing but a lust 1 John 2. 16. sitting in the place and Throne of God I mean the chief and uppermost seat of the Soul and so Conversion casts it out of the heart The Soul in Conversion moves towards God as its true centre and therefore must leave all the world behind its back The terminus ad quem in Conversion is God A man before Conversion walks in an Image Psal. 39. 6. he thinks that he moves towards happiness in this or that Creature but all the while he is but in an image or picture of happiness but in Conversion he moves really to God the Centre and Sabbath of Souls Lastly in Conversion there is a turning unto God in Christ. To turn to God is a most rational Act for he is the only true end of the Soul and to turn to God in Christ is a most Regular Act for he is the only true way to that end The way into the Holy of holies is only through the vail of Christs flesh If we go to God out of Christ we go to a consuming fire but if we go to God in him we go to a reconciled Father who is ready to fall upon our necks and kiss and welcome us with his Love revealed in the face of Christ. Now in Conversion there are two instants or moments to be distinctly considered 1. The first instant is habitual Conversion or the habits or vital Principles of Grace which incline and dispose the Soul to actual Conversion 2. The second instant is actual Conversion or the actuation and crowning issue of those Principles in an actual turn to God 1. As to the habits or vital Principles of Grace I shall do two things 1. I shall demonstrate that there are habits or Principles of Grace 2. I shall particularly unfold what they are 1. I shall demonstrate that there are such things The Remonstrants mince the business There is say they potentia supernaturalis concessa voluntati ad hoc ut credere bene agere possit but as as for any habitual Grace they tell us Scholasticorum figmentum est corum qui simul somel optant infundi omnes illos habitus quos actibus crebris comparare nimis laboriosum esse arbitrantur Now there is a vast difference between a mere posse convertere and those Habits or Principles of Grace which dispose and encline the Soul to actual Conversion A mere posse convertere doth not include in it any inward disposition or inclination in the Soul to turn to God no more than the posse peccare in innocent Adam did include in it an inward disposition or inclination in the Soul to depart from God but the Habits or Principles of Grace do incline and dispose the Soul to actual Conversion Again a mere posse convertere doth not denominate a man gracious no more than the posse peccare in innocent Adam did denominate him sinful but the Habits or Principles of Grace do denominate a man gracious And the Reason is a mere posse may be abstract from the Nature or Essence of the thing into which it is reducible but the Habit or vital Principle hath something of the Nature or Essence of the thing in it nay it is virtually and seminally the thing it self A mere posse peccare in Adam before his Fall did not denominate him sinful because it had nothing of the nature of Sin in it but the Habits and Seeds of
when there is a posse convertere supernaturally poured into it but if that posse do not denominate it gracious surely it is as yet but corrupt and whilst it is such it may be so called 2. I argue from the Glory of free Grace one of its Crown-jewels is that it makes gracious Principles where there were none before it new creates in Christ and so gives Principles of Spiritual being it quickens the dead and so gives Principles of Spiritual Life thus free Grace is blessed from the fountain of Israel from the fontal Principles of the new Creature But those which deny gracious Principles darken free Grace in that which is its prime lustre But here I shall be asked whether that posse convertere be not such a Principle I answer No a Principle is more than a bare posse There was in Adam in innocency a posse peccare and yet there was no Principle of sin in him after the same manner there is say the Remonstrants a posse convertere given to fallen man but this is no Principle of Grace in him But not to strive about words suppose it might be called a Principle yet what a grand disparagement to free Grace is it to say that there was as much of Principle in innocent Adam by Nature towards his sinful transgression as there is in fallen Man by Grace towards his actual Conversion Such as deny gracious habits and grant only a naked power must say so 3. I argue from the sweetness of Providence As 't is the Glory of free Grace that there are gracious Principles made so 't is the sweetness of providence that those Principles are made first and then congruous acts issue from thence The only wise God disposes things in the sweetest method In the body of Nature first a Sun and then a beam first a Fountain and then a stream first a Root and then a fruit In the Soul of Man negative faculties precede acts of life sensitive acts of sense and intellectual acts of reason Hence those acts issue forth in an easie connaturalness to their Principles And can there be less of the beauty of providence in the Spiritual world than in the natural Should there not be as sweet an order in the new Creature as in the old Ought not supernatural acts to issue forth in as great connaturalness to their Principles as natural If so then there must be habits of Grace to precede the acts if not then those acts which are above nature in facto esse as to their essential excellency must be below it in fieri as to their procedure from causes nay 't is hardly imaginable that those acts should at all come forth into being without gracious Principles If the Will be not changed by regenerating Grace how is it constituted in ordine agentium supernaturalium And if not how can it actually turn to God seeing that is actus ordinis supernaturalis Every one that doth righteousness is born of God 1 Joh. 2. 29. To turn unto God is a prime act of Righteousness and how then can it be done before Regeneration Wherefore the Scripture method is clear first a good tree and then good fruit Mat. 7. 17. first a good treasure in the heart and then good things out of it Mat. 12. 35. first we are created in Christ and then we walk in good works Eph. 2. 10. And thus Spiritual acts are done in the easiness of the new Creature because in a way connatural to Spiritual Principles 4. If there be no habits or principles of Grace what is that that makes the grand difference between a godly and an ungodly man Surely either it must be the acts of Faith and other Graces or else the habits and principles thereof 'T is not the acts of Faith and other Graces for two Reasons 1. Because that which makes the difference must be somewhat permanent such was Caleb's other spirit which differenced him from the murmuring Congregation Numb 14. 24. Such was Job's Root which differenced him from the leavy hypocrite Job 19. 28. But the acts of Faith and other Graces are transient wherefore if these be all the difference what becomes of a Godly man in his sleep or phrensie wherein no such acts are put forth Doth he drop out of the state of Grace without any apostasie or continue in it without any differencing quality neither is possible he back-slides not from God and how can he be out of the state of Grace he is but as other men are and how can he be in it It remains therefore that the habits of Grace make the difference for by reason of these he is not as other men are no not when the Acts of Grace are suspended because he hath another spirit in him 2. All men being by Nature ungodly that which chiefly makes the difference must denominate a man changed Now in every change the Terminus is somewhat permanent in Alteration 't is a permanent Quality in Augmentation 't is a permanent Quantity in Generation 't is a substantial Form and in Regeneration 't is a new creature born of the incorruptible seed of the Word 1 Pet. 1. 23. The Terminus of this gracious Change is set out in Scripture as a permanent thing sometimes 't is called light ye were darkness but now light in the Lord Eph. 5. 8. sometimes life this my son was dead and is alive again Luk. 15. 24. sometimes the new man old things are past away behold all things are become new 2 Cor. 5. 17. still it is somewhat parmanent Hence it appears that the Acts of Faith and other Graces which are transient do not so properly denominate a man changed as improve the Change already made The wild Tree is changed by the Graff and not by the After-fruit the Natural man is changed by the ingrafted Word and not by the fruits of Faith and other Graces which naturally grow upon the Root of habitual Grace That a corrupt Tree is made good is a great Change but that a good Tree brings forth good fruit is altogether connatural If there be no Habits or Principles of Grace how can the Natural man's deadly Wound I mean Original Corruption ever be healed Habitual Corruption cannot be healed but by habitual Grace the Plague of the Heart cannot be healed but by the holy Unction instead of the old Heart there must be a new one or else there is no healing and without healing how can such a sound Act as Conversion come forth It remains therefore that there are Habits or Principles of Grace 2. Having proved that there are such Habits or Principles I come to unfold what they are and this I cannot better do than by shewing what they are in the several Faculties Wherefore 1. As to the Understanding there is a Principle of excellent Knowledge I say excellent not only in respect of the matter of it being heavenly Mysteries but also in respect of the Nature of it 't is too high for a fool
sets the Heart upon God above all it may and doth love Creatures as the Prints of his Power and Goodness Ordinances as the Conduit-pipes of his Grace and Spirit and Saints as the lively Pictures and Resemblances of his Holiness but it sets the Heart upon God above all This Principle is a Fire dropt down from Heaven into the Heart to consume the dross of Corruption and inflame the Affections towards God 't is a touch from Christ risen and sitting in Glory to raise up the Affections out of the Tombs and Graves of earthly Vanities and to quicken and inspire them with the life of God that God may be all in all therein 2. Having shewed what Conversion is in the first instant I procede to the second In the first instant the Lamps of Grace are made in the second they are lighted up in the first instant the new Creature is begotten of God in all its parts and proportions in the second it is born into the spiritual World in the first instant the Tree of Righteousness is planted in the second it buds and blossoms and brings forth precious fruit there is an actuation of gracious Principles an actual turning of the Soul to God The Understanding doth actually see God as the supreme End Christ as the true Way and Sin as the great Obstacle The Will as to God the supreme End doth actually breathe after him in holy desires fix on him by serious purposes and rest in him fiducially and complacentially for all happiness As to Christ the true way it doth actually embrace and receive him as a Prophet for Guidance and Instruction as a Priest for Satisfaction and Intercession and as a King in the Government of his Spirit and Word And as to Sin the great Obstacle it doth actually surround it with Sorrow fight against it with Hatred and overcome it by a real Reformation The Affections do actually bow down under Reasons Sceptre come off from the World's Breasts and ascend up in holy Flames towards God and under this sanctified and actually returning Soul the members of the Body become 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 weapons of righteousness actually performing and executing the commands thereof Thus all the Habits and Principles of Grace are actuated and all the Powers and Faculties of Man are actually returned unto God Now this actual Conversion comes into Being three ways 1. As from the inward vital Principles of Grace there is a divine Life and Vigour in them putting forth the Soul to Acts congruous and connatural thereunto the divine nature will be shewing forth it self the well of living water will be springing up the seed of God will be shooting forth the kingdom of heaven though but as a grain of Mustard-seed will at last become a Tree When there is a Principle of right Knowledge in the Understanding it is a well-spring of life Prov. 16. 22. and the wise who have it shall understand Dan. 12 10. When there is a Principle of Rectitude in the Will integrity will guide it and direct its way Prov. 11. 3 5. the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the rectitudes or rightnesses will love Jesus Christ Cant. 1. 4. that is such hearts as have right Principles in them will assuredly love him for the Byass of those Principles draws to it converting Israel will cast forth his roots Hos. 14. 5. the root of Faith casts forth it self in actual believing the root of Love in actual loving The root of the righteous yieldeth its fruit Prov. 12. 12. The very Nature of these Principles is to dispose the Soul to actual Conversion Even moral Vertues dispose to moral Acts how much more do supernatural Principles dispose to spiritual Acts Moral Habits are of our own house but supernatural Principles are of a higher Extraction coming down from Heaven and stiled the vertues of God 1 Pet. 2. 9. therefore there must needs be more Vertue and Vigour in them than in moral Habits which come forth out of Principles of Reason and are the Vertues of Men. 2. Actual Conversion comes into Being as from the assistant and auxiliary Grace of God When the Apostle gives account of himself as to the Principles of Grace he saith By the grace of God I am that I am all his spiritual Essence was from free Grace When he gives an account of himself as to the exercise of Grace he saith I laboured yet not I but the Grace of God which was with me 1 Cor. 15. 10. auxiliary Grace which was with him moved the Principles of Grace which made up his spiritual Essence into actual exercise The new Creature can no more do ought of it self than the old As natural Agents live and move in the God of Nature so spiritual Agents live and move in the God of Grace Wherefore that there may be actual Conversion indeed there is help from the holy One a quickning virtue from God Psal. 119. 37. a stirring up and fluttering over the nest of gracious Principles Deut. 32. 11. a supply of the Spirit Phil. 1. 19. and grace with our Spirit Philem. Ver. 25. nay in a sober sence Immanuel God with us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Lord with us to encline our hearts to him 1 Kings 8. 57 58. God himself is as dew to Israel and then the roots of Grace cast forth themselves Hos. 14. 5. God blows and breathes upon his garden by auxiliary Grace and then the spices thereof flow out in the actual exercise of Grace Cant. 4. 16. 3. Actual Conversion comes into Being as from the Soul it self Timothy must 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 stir or blow up his grace 2 Tim. 1. 6. auxiliary Grace stirs and blows up the Principles of Grace the Principles of Grace stir and blow up the Soul and the Soul by virtue of those Principles and Assistances stirs and blows up it self unto actual Conversion Anima as a Learned Man hath it priùs act a agit priùs mota movet priùs à Deo conversà convertit se ad Deum Hence in Scripture Conversion is stiled man's act he believes to righteousness Rom. 10. 10. he returns to the Lord with all his heart 1 Sam. 7. 3. he gives himself unto the Lord 2. Cor. 8. 5. he obeys to the form of Gospel-doctrine Rom. 6. 17. still it is man's act Where we may note a remarkable difference between habitual and actual Conversion in the production of actual Conversion Man is active but in the production of gracious Principles he is passive We read in Scripture of men believing and repenting but we never read of any man who made himself a new heart and a new spirit these are of God's make only but being made the man in whom they are through auxiliary Grace doth actually turn to God Having shewed what Conversion is in the first and second instant thereof I pass on to the next and last Quaere viz. 3. Who is the Worker of Conversion and this I shall cleave asunder into three
Affections are inflamed towards God and here 's the holy Fire which makes our hearts burn within us towards him Every way there is a wonderful Analogy between the Principles of the New Creature and the Properties of the Word which plainly speaks forth the aptness and congrulty of the Word to be a Means or Instrument of Conversion 2. How far or in what sence may the Word be called a Means or Instrument thereof In answer whereunto I shall first lay down two things as common Concessions and then come to the main Quaere The two Concessions are these 1. That the Word is a Means or Instrument of the Preparatives to Conversion 't is as a fire and a hammer Jer. 23. 29. When the holy Ghost blows in this Fire upon the Conscience every Sin looks like a Spark of Hell when the Almighty Arms set home this hammer it breaks the rocky Heart all to pieces No sooner doth the Commandment come home to the Heart but sin revives and the sinner dies Rom. 7. 9. the Sin which before lay as dead in the sleepy Conscience now lives and gnaws upon the Heart as if the never-dying Worm were there the sinner who before was alive in his own Self-righteousness and Self-sufficiency now is a dead man one who hath the sentence of death in himself and feels as it were the pangs of Hell in Conscience 2. That the Word is a Means or Instrument to reduce the Principles of Grace into actual Conversion When God stirs up and flutters over the Nest of gracious Principles 't is by the wings of the Spirit and Word when the Spices of the Garden flow out 't is from the North and South wind the Spirit blowing in Threatnings or Promises That which makes the Roots of Graces cast forth themselves into Acts is the Dew of auxiliary Grace and that Dew falls with the Manna of the Word That Grace with our Spirit which stirs up the Principles of Grace into exercise comes in the clothing or investiture of some holy Truth or other Hence the Apostle counts it one of his Master-pieces 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to stir up pure minds by his Epistles 2. Pet. 3. 1. These two Concessions being laid down the main Quaere is touching the production of gracious Principles Whether as to that the Word may not be an Instrument in God's Hand Many learned Divines speak of the Word as operating only morally and objectively Mr. Pemble distinguishes thus Instruments are either cooperative or passive and the Word must be one of the two cooperative it is not moving or working on the Soul by any inward force of it self it is therefore in it self a passive instrument working only per modum objecti now no Object whatsoever hath any power per se to work any thing on the Organ but is only an occasion of working And a little after he saith thus I cannot better express the manner how the holy Ghost useth the Word in the work of Sanctification than by a similitude Christ meeting a dead Coarse in the City of Nain touches the Bier and utters these words Young man I say unto thee arise but could these words do any thing to raise him No 't was Christ's invisible power that quickned the dead not his words which only declared what he meant to do by his power So in this matter of Conversion Christ bids us believe and repent but these Commands work nothing of themselves but take effect by the only power of God working upon the Heart Thus that learned man But methinks this is too low the Word of it self operates morally and objectively and shall it do no more as clothed and accompanied by the holy Spirit Surely the Scripture-strains touching the Words Efficacy are so high that it cannot be nudum signum no not as to the production of gracious Principles St. James is express of his own will begat he us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 with the word of truth Jam. 1. 18. and St. Paul is more emphatical In Christ Jesus I have begotten you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by or through the Gospel 1 Cor. 4. 15. 't is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the Gospel but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by or through the Gospel as pointing out the Instrumentality of it in the Generation of the new Creature And St. Peter is yet in a higher strain We are born again not of corruptible seed but of incorruptible 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever 1 Pet. 1. 23. where besides the emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word is stiled no less than the incorruptible Seed not only a Sampler externally shewing the figures and lineaments of the new Creature but a seed too springing up into and for ever living in the new Creature Faith which is the new Creatures Head is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by or out of hearing the word Rom. 10. 17. and so are all those sanctifying Graces which as it were make up the new Creatures Body For thus our Saviour prays Sanctifie them through thy truth thy word is truth Joh. 17. 17. and thus he practises too he sanctifies cleanses his Church by the word Eph. 5. 26. Surely those Scriptures which are able 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to make wise to salvation 2 Tim. 3. 15. must do somewhat as to the Principles of Knowledge in the Understanding that Law which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 converting or restoring the soul Psal. 19. 7. must do somewhat as to the Principles of Grace in the Will that Word which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 able to save the soul Jam. 1. 21. must also be able to sanctifie it because without holiness there is no seeing of God that Doctrine which is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 healing doctrine 1 Tim. 1. 10. must operate somewhat as to the Principles of Grace which heal the deadly wound of Original Corruption The converted Corinthians were Christ's Epistle and the Apostle's too written by the holy Spirit and ministred by the Apostle also 2 Cor. 3. 2 3. The Apostle's weapons were mighty through God to captivate every thought to Christ 2 Cor. 10. 4 5. which could not be if they were not also mighty through God to set up Christ's Throne in the heart These Scriptures constrain me to believe that the Word doth operate in the production of gracious Principles only not as it is alone or separate from the holy Spirit for so it operates only morally and objectively but as it is clothed in the power and virtue of the Spirit for so it becomes spirit and life to the Soul As for the Similitude used by Mr. Pemble I conceive that the raising of the young man from a natural Death and the raising of a sinner from a spiritual Death are not every way parallel For in that there was no capacity at all in the naturally dead to receive the words of Christ in this there is a passive capacity in the
119. 129. or with the convicted man God is in it of a truth 1 Cor. 14. 25. or with the Apostle The foolishness of God is wiser than men and the weakness of God is stronger than men 1 Cor. 1. 25. The Scriptures asserting this Instrumentality what if this Philosophical Objection could not be answered must therefore the holy Oracle be rejected What if Reason cannot comprehend it must therefore Faith renounce it How much better is that old Gloss Taceat Mulier in Ecclesia Let Reason be silent in the Church But for some satisfaction I shall offer four things to your consideration 1. Consider who is the principal Agent who but the Almighty and if he will appear in the word as the Expression is Acts 26. 16. what may not be done by it The Apostle was but an earthen vessel yet a Minister of the quickning Spirit because God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 made him sufficient to be such a one 2 Cor. 3. 6. If he make the Word sufficient to regenerate who can gainsay it 2. Consider what the Instrument is 't is the Word of God the two grand Truths therein are the Law and Gospel and what are these in their eternal Idea The Law is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or eternal Off-shining from the divine Will as Righteous and the Gospel is an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or eternal Off-shining from the divine Will as gracious and what are they in their external Revelation The Scripture is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 breathed out from the very mind and heart of God and therefore cannot be less than a lively Picture or Image of the divine Will Wherefore that such a Word as is the Image of the divine Will should instrumentally produce the new Creature which is the Image of the divine Nature seems to me rather congruous than impossible 3. Consider what the Principles of Grace are they are not Substances but Accidents depending upon their Subject in esse operari and may more properly be said to be increated than created now if there could be no Instrument in the Creation of Substances yet why may not there be one in the Increation of Accidents 4. Consider what a kind of Creation the production of gracious Principles is Is it every way pure Creation How then is it Generation how Resurrection Pure Creation can be neither of these You 'l say 't is Generation and Resurrection but metaphorically only very well if it be but so the Metaphor must be founded on some true likeness or analogy between these and the production of gracious Principles which is altogether unimaginable in a pure Creation It remains therefore that the production of gracious Principles is stiled all these in Scripture partly to import the excellency of the work such as cannot be fully expressed by any single one of these partly to hint out the nature of the work such as hath in it somewhat analogous to every one of these Wherefore I take it to be thus 't is a Creation because a real production of gracious Principles by Almighty Power 't is a Generation because of the immortal Seed of the Word and 't is a Resurrection because a man spiritually dead is raised up to divine life Now if there could be no Instrument in a pure Creation yet may there be one in the production of gracious Principles because that is not purely Creation though there be a creating power put forth therein 2. Object The other Objection is against the Method proposed in the two Instants viz. That first in Nature the Word is put into the Heart and then the Principles of Grace are produced which is contrary to that the natural man receives not the things of God 1 Cor. 2. 14. and contrary to that the word did not profit them not being mixed with faith Heb. 4. 2. and also contrary to the scope of that Parable where the Seed of the Word only fructifies in a good and honest heart Luk. 8. 15. for according to the Method of the two Instants the Natural man doth receive the things of God the Word doth profit before it is mixed with Faith and the Seed doth fructifie in a Heart not good or honest In answer whereunto I conceive that the Method proposed in the two Instants doth not contradict any of these Scriptures As for the first place The natural man receives not the things of God I answer that the Things or Truths of God may be received in the Heart two ways either passively by way of Impression from the holy Spirit or actually by way of actual discerning them in the Understanding and embracing them in the Will the former is a reception of them according to the obediential Capacity of the Heart the latter a reception of them according to the spiritual Faculty thereof the former doth at least in Nature go before the Principles of Grace in order to their Production the latter doth follow after the Principles of Grace as the fruit thereof The former is that which is done in the first Instant abovementioned the latter is that which is spoken of by the Apostle in the Text abovenamed for there he saith that the natural man receiveth not the things of God neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned where evidently he speaks of such a receiving as is an actual knowing and spiritual discerning of the things of God Wherefore according to the Apostle this active receiving doth presuppose the Principles of Grace already in Being but the other passive receiving of which the Apostle there speaks not doth only presuppose an obediential Capacity in the Soul There is a double obediential Capacity in the Soul to receive the Truths of God as by way of Impression the ultimate and radical Capacity is the Rationality of the Soul and the next and immediate Capacity is that Softness of Heart which is wrought in the preparatory work of Conversion The Soul as rational is capable to receive an impression of Truths from God and as softned it is yet further disposed thereunto This is that obediential Capacity which is required in the Method of the two Instants and which the Apostle in that place doth not so much as touch upon As for the second place the word did not profit them not being mixed with faith I answer that the Word may be considered under a double Notion either as it is operative of Faith or as it is promissive of Rest to Believers Take it as operative of Faith and so it profits not being mixed with Faith otherwise faith could not come by hearing as the Apostle asserts Rom. 10. 17. but take it as promissive of Rest to Believers and so it doth not profit not being mixed with Faith that is Faith which is the Condition of the Promise not being performed the eternal Rest which is the thing promised cannot belong to them and this is clearly the Apostle's meaning for having spoken of a promise of rest Heb. 4. Ver.
be their God and they shall be my people Jer. 31. 33. These Promises do most signally set forth the production of gracious Principles here 's the Principles themselves a new heart and a new spirit here 's the principal efficient of them the holy Spirit of God here 's a remotion of the Obstacles unto them the taking away the heart of stone here 's the next immediate Capacity of receiving them an heart of flesh here 's the way or manner of producing them a writing the Law in the heart here 's the effectual fruitfulness of them a causing to walk in God's statutes and here 's the crown or glory of all God will be their God and they his people Now when there is a Worker such as the Almighty Spirit a Remotion of the Obstacles such as the Stone of hardness an immediate Capacity such as an Heart of flesh a way of Working such as the intimate Impression of Truth a Fruit proceding such as Obedience to God's Statutes and a Crown of all such as an Interest in God How can the Grace be less than insuperable You will say These Promises were not made to the Gentiles but to the Jews and not to any singular persons among them but to the whole Nation I answer These Promises extend not only to the Jewes but to the Gentiles for these are Promises of Grace founded in Christ and in Christ Jew and Gentile are all one Gal. 3. 28. so one that the Gentiles are of the same body and partakers of the promise Eph. 3. 6. Indeed before the middle Wall of Partition was broken down they were strangers from the covenant of promise but that being gone they are fellow-heirs partaking of the root and fatness of the Olive Neither do these Promises extend to all the Nation of the Jews but to the true Israel the elect People of God whether they be Jews or Gentiles for in them only are these Promises fulfilled Had these been made to all the Jews the true God would have fulfilled them in every Jew You will say No God's Truth doth not exact such a performance for he promised to do these things not absolutely but conditionally so as men did not resist the operations of his Grace I answer If God only promise these things shall be done so as men do not resist then these Promises run thus If thy stony Heart do not resist I will give thee an Heart of Flesh if thy old Heart do not resist I will give thee a new one if thy own spirit do not resist I will give thee my Spirit and if the Law of Sin do not resist I will give my Laws into thy Heart Which Interpretation doth utterly evacuate the Glory and Power of these Promises for to be sure that Stone that old Heart that Spirit of our own that Law of Sin in us will what it can resist the operations of Grace You will say God gives unto Man a posse convertere a supernatural Faculty whereby he is able to turn unto God Now God promises to do these things not so as men in their mere Naturals do not resist but so as men furnished with that supernatural power do not resist I answer two things overthrow this Interpretation 1. In the Text it self there is not a tittle of such a Condition of Non-resistency nor of such a supernatural Power of Conversion nay on the contrary in stead of the Condition of Non-resistency it speaks of a stony heart which is a Principle of Resistency to be removed instead of a supernatural power of Conversion it implies an old heart which is powerless in the things of God to be made new 2. If God promise to do these things so as men furnished with supernatural power of Conversion do not resist then there is such a supernatural power in men before these things be wrought in them that is before there be a new or soft Heart whilest the Heart is old and stony there is such a supernatural power in them which assertion is as I take it 1. Against Scripture that divides all men into two ranks they are clean or unclean new creatures or old spiritual men born of the spirit or natural men born of the flesh but this Assertion ushers in a middle sort of men such as hang by a posse convertere between Nature and Grace with the natural man they have an old stony Heart and with the spiritual man they have a new supernatural Power in the frame of their Heart they are no better than natural and in their supernatural Power they are little less than spiritual 2. 'T is against Reason All Powers in the rational Soul flow out of Life the Power of knowing and embracing natural good things flows out of the natural Life of the Soul and the power of believing and receiving spiritual good things flows out of the supernatural Life of the Soul but this Assertion supposes a supernatural Power of Conversion without any vital Root nothing of a new Heart or Spirit and yet a supernatural Power of Conversion Wherefore rejecting these Interpretations I conclude that those Promises import the production of gracious Principles in an insuperable way 4. The Production of gracious Principles is in Scripture set out in such glorious titles as do import insuperable Grace 't is a creation Eph. 2. 10. 't is a generation Jam. 1. 18. 't is a resurrection Eph. 2. 5 6. 't is a traction Joh. 6. 44. 't is an opening of the heart Act. 16. 14. 't is a translation into Christs kingdom Col. 1. 13. Now if this be not insuperable Grace then there may be a Creation on God's part and no new Creature on mans a Generation on Gods part and no Child of Grace on mans a Resurrection on Gods part and nothing quickened on mans a Traction on Gods part and nothing coming on mans an Opening on Gods part and all shut on mans and a Translation on God's part and no Remove at all on mans and why then should such stately names of Power be set on the head of resistible Grace You 'l say all these are but Metaphors very well but Metaphors are Metaphors that is they carry in them some image or resemblance of the things themselves but there is not the least shadow of likeness or similitude between these things and resistible Grace What shadow of Creation in that which a Creature may frustrate What of Generation in that which produces nothing at all What of Resurrection when the dead need not rise What of Traction when there is no coming upon it What of Opening when there is a Heart still shut up What of Translation when there is no remove by it Take away the infallible Efficacy of Grace and it can be none of all these no not so much as metaphorically because it hath no print of likeness thereunto 5. The Scripture doth not only set out Conversion under the Glory of Metaphors but in plain terms it stiles it a Work of
known will make us free true Wisdom dwells with prudence and practically leads in the way of Righteousness 't is a Suada to the Will and draws it home to God in actual Conversion 3. From those Scriptures which set forth God as the Author of actual Conversion He gives 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the actual believing Phil. 1. 29. he grants repentance unto life Acts 11. 18. he works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the very act of willing Phil. 2. 13. he causes to walk in his statutes Ezek. 36. 27. In every true Convert there is more than a mere Man the grace of God is to be seen in him Acts 11. 23. there is God in converting Paul Gal. 1. 24. In the Temple of the new Creature every thing speaks of his glory every holy breath in the Will must praise the Lord as its Author If God did not work the very Act of Willing then which I tremble to utter all the Prayers made to him for converting Grace are but God-mockeries all the Praises offered up to him for the same are but false Hallelujahs then they which glorified God in converting Paul glorified but an Idol of their own Fancy they which glorified God in the repenting Gentiles Acts 11. 18. offered but a blind Sacrifice When we pray that God's kingdom should come into our hearts we do not mean that God should put our Wills in aequilibrio but our Wills should be subdued under God's When David and his People offered willingly unto God he falls into a kind of Extasie Who am I and what is my people 1 Chron. 29. 14 And Thine O Lord is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory Ver. 11. even the victory over hearts and All things are of thee Ver. 14. not only our Gold and Silver not only our Hearts and Wills but our very actual Willingness also You will say All this is true God works the very Act of Willing but not insuperably but so as men do not resist the Work of Grace But what 's the meaning of this God works the Will so as men do not resist not to resist is to obey Wherefore the plain meaning is God works the Act of Willing so as men do will which is very absurd Because it makes the very same Act of Willing to be the Condition of it self Again What is it for God to work the Act of Willing so as men do not resist but to work it in a way of dependence upon Man's Will and what is that but to contradict the Apostle who saith that God works the Act of willing 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 of his own good pleasure if he do it of his own good pleasure surely not in a way of dependence upon Man's Will but in a glorious insuperable manner 4. From those Scriptures whose truth is so founded upon insuperable Grace that it cannot stand without it Turn thou me and I shall be turned Jer. 31. 18. Turn us unto thee O Lord and we shall be turned Lam. 5. 21. If Man's actual Turn do not infallibly follow upon God's turning Grace what truth is there in these And 's which couple both together Other sheep I must bring saith Christ and they shall hear my voice Joh. 10. 16. and which agrees with it The salvation of God is sent to the Gentiles and they will hear it Acts 28. 28. What Connexion is there betwixt Christ's bringing and Man 's hearing or betwixt Salvation sent and Man's hearing without insuperable Grace Again God says I will put my Spirit within you and you shall live Ezek. 37. 14. and I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my statutes Ezek. 36. 27. What necessity of Life or Obedience in them if the holy Spirit be given in a resistible way Again God says to Christ Thou shalt call a nation and nations shall run unto thee Isai. 55. 5. and the Church prays Draw me we will run after thee Cant. 1. 4. Where 's the truth of these Propositions if God's calling and drawing do not infer Man's running Again David prays Teach me O Lord the way of thy statutes and I shall keep it unto the end give me understanding and I shall keep thy Law Psal. 119. 33 34. Where 's the consequence of David's Obedience upon God's Teaching if Grace be superable Moreover God says I will be as dew to Israel he shall grow as the lilly and cast forth his roots as Lebanon his branches shall spread and his beauty shall be as the olive-tree Hos. 14. 5 6. Here 's Israel very florid but that which secures all is insuperable Grace nothing could hinder their spiritual prosperity who had God for their dew I say nothing not Lusts for Ephraim shall say What have I to do with Idols Ver. 8 not backslidings for God says I will heal their back-slidings Ver. 4. not barrenness for God tells them from me is thy fruit found Ver. 8. not deadness for they shall revive as the corn and grow as the vine Ver. 7. But if the Work of Grace may be frustrated then there is no certain root for all this holy fruit to stand upon 5. From those Scriptures which set forth actual Conversion as a Work of Power Thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power Psal. 110. 3. God fulfils the work of faith with power 2 Thess. 1. 11. the Principle of Faith is incomplete without its Act but God by his powerful Grace actuates it in us When our Saviour Christ told his Disciples that it was easier for a camel to go through a needles eye than for a rich man to enter into Gods kingdom they cried out with amazement Who then can be saved but our Saviour unties the knot thus The things that are unpossible with men are possible with God Luk. 18. 24 25 26 27. God by the power of his Grace can fetch off the World the Camels bunch from the Heart and so make it pass as it were through the needles eye into the Kingdom of God But now the assertors of resistible Grace may turn the words thus The things which according to the ordinary working of Grace are impossible with God are possible with Men that crowning Work of actual Conversion which is too hard and heavy for God's free Grace is absolved and dispatched out of hand by Man's free Will In the Parable of the lost Sheep we find God going after it until he find it then laying it upon his shoulders Luk. 15. 4 5. He goes after it in the Means of Grace he finds it by the intimate Inshinings of his Spirit and he lays it upon the shoulders of his power that he may bring it home to himself in actual Conversion But now if Grace be resistible the Almighty Shoulders are only put under mans Will to bear it up in aequilibrio to see whether it will go home to God or not it may be it will it may be it will not Gods Power doth but
the Records of his Prescience and for the good Works written therein make a Decree of Election unto glory for such an Election would not be an Election of grace but of works and the Elect Vessels would be vasa Meritorum and not vasa Misericordiae But where is the holiness and obedience of the Saints recorded but in the very Decree of Election Therein God doth not only chuse men to glory as the end but also unto saith and holiness as the way leading thereunto God hath chosen us that we should be holy Eph. 1. 4. Non quia futuri eramus sed ut essemus sancti I have chosen you saith Christ that you should go and bring forth fruit Joh. 15. 16. and happy are ye if you do these things saith he Joh. 13. 17. But would all the Apostles bring forth fruit would they all do so and be happy Our Saviour answers plainly Ver. 8. I speak not of you all I know whom I have chosen He speaks not of Election to the Apostleship but of Election to Grace and Glory for it is such an Election as shuts Judas out of the number Neither doth he say I know which of you will be holy and obedient but I know whom I have chosen because all the holiness and obedience of the Saints is built upon free Election Inter gratiam praedestinationem hoc tantùm interest saith St. Austin quòd praedestinatio est gratiae praeparatio gratia verò est ipsa donatio Quod ait Apostolus Ipsius sumus figmentum creati in Christo Jesu in operibus bonis gratia est quod autem sequitur quae praeparavit Deus ut in illis ambulemus praedestinatio est Si propriè appellentur saith St. Bernard ea quae dicimus nostra merita sunt quaedam spei seminaria charitatis incentiva occultae praedestinationis indicia futurae foelicitatis praesagia via regni non causa regnandi Others build Election on foreseen Faith and Perseverance as if these were the moving Causes or at least the antecedent Conditions thereof Thus the Remonstrants herein outstripping the Jesuits themselves Praedestinatio saith Ruiz tota est ex voluntate Dei quantùm ad merita quantùm ad retributionem And in another place Deus dat ut velimus facitque ut faciamus and withal gives an instance in Faith and Perseverance Bellarmine spends some Chapters in proving this Thesis Praedestinationis nulla est causa in nobis Electio saith he non pendet ex ulla praevisione operum nostrorum sed ex mero beneplacito Dei Si spectes saith Gregory de Valentia praedestinationis rationem nihil est in praedestinato sed potius in ipso Deo imò est ipse Deus à quo quae sua est infinita perfectio nulla ejus operatio reipsâ distinguitur And Praedestinationi sunt ascribenda omnia Dei dona quibus salus nostra continetur Deus suos electos saith Suarez ante praevisa merita suâ gratuitâ voluntate elegit non tantùm ad unum vel aliud beneficium gratiae sed ad totam seriem Mediorum quibus infallibiliter perducuntur ad regnum And again Electio non est ex praescientia perseverantiae futurae sed est origo illius Who can but blush at these passages wherein the Jesuits themselves attribute more to free Grace than the Remonstrants But for the thing it self the very same Scriptures which overthrow Election as founded on foreseen Works do overthrow it as founded on foreseen Faith That place Rom. 11. 5. is very pregnant against it There is saith the Apostle a remnant according to the Election of grace the reservation there spoken of is not man's act but God's 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 saith the holy Oracle Ver. 4. Non dixit saith Austin relicta sunt mihi aut reliquerunt se mihi sed reliqui mihi The word in the Old Testament is very emphatical 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 faciam remanere I will cause or make to remain 1 Kings 19. 18. And how doth God reserve or make men to remain unto himself how but by giving of Faith unto them This is that which puts them into the Ark of Salvation neither is there any other way of reserve found in the Gospel Now this reservation which imports in it the giving of Faith is saith the Apostle according to the Election of grace Election therefore is not according to Faith but Faith according to Election But as if the Apostle had not yet spoken enough in calling it the Election of grace he goes on and if by grace then it is no more of works otherwise grace is no more grace where he doth include Faith within the word works Indeed in other places treating of Justification he opposes Faith to Works but here speaking of Election he includes Faith within them and the reason is evident Faith hath a peculiar Organicalness or Receptivity to receive the free Grace of God that the Believer may be justified Gal. 2. 16. but it hath no Organicalness or Receptivity to receive the free Grace of God that the Believer may be elected Wherefore as to Justification it is opposed to Works but as to Election it is included within them It is written in the Gospel Believe and thou shalt be justified but in what Gospel is it written Believe and thou shalt be elected Now that Election is not bottomed on foreseen Faith and Perseverance I shall demonstrate divers ways 1. From the glory of Election which breaks forth in its Eternity Sovereignty Grace and Efficacy If Election be founded on foreseen Faith and Perseverance where is the Eternity of it No man according to the Remonstrants Doctrine is completely Elect until he believe nay not until the last instant of Perseverance wherein he ceases to believe But if this may be salved by the Divine Prescience yet where is the Sovereignty of it Hath not the Potter power over the clay of the same lump to make one vessel to honour and another to dishonour Rom. 9. 21 To order different Vessels out of the same lump to different ends is glorious power but to sever out Believers from Unbelievers is not so much power as skill Whether God in Predestination look on men in statu integro or in statu lapso it is out of the same lump still but if he elect out of foreseen Faith it is not out of the same lump with the unbelieving World for he looks on them in statu reparato To elect out of skill according to the goodness of the object becomes a Rational Creature but to elect out of Sovereignty and supreme Liberty becomes the great God who can make and meliorate the object as he pleaseth But if this also might be satisfied yet where is the Grace of it If God do but eligere eligentes if Man's Faith be earlier than God's Grace then we chuse God before he chuseth us contrary to that of our Saviour Joh. 15. 16. then we loved
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
of the divine Image left free but have as a learned Bishop speaks habitatorem Diabolum and it appears that a proud Devil dwells under the same roof because men seek to be justified thereby 2. He keeps on the Captive's Chains he sooths up the Old Man as if there were no such thing as a new-New-creature and flatters the earthly Members as if there were no such place as Heaven he blows up the miserable Captive into proud reflexes as if he had Reason enough to span all Mysteries and Will enough to teem all Graces out of the dead Womb of Nature He stands at the right hand of Original Corruption brooding and fly-blowing corrupt Nature into Concupiscences Concupiscences into Acts Acts by iteration into Habits and Customs which are a second corrupt Nature and all this while he keeps the House in peace that the Captive may sleep on in his Chains And if the Chains rattle too much in crying Scandals he lines them with some Moralities If legal Convictions make them too hot he sprinkles and cools them with some presumptions of Mercy if they be weighty and pressing upon Conscience he lightens them with some forms of Godliness if after all this the Captive will yet awake he shall if Satan can do it Dives-like open his Eyes in Torments and Desperation shall swallow him up for ever He works all manner of ways in Men that he may keep on their Chains and add one link of filth and guilt to another 3. He keeps the Captive as much as in him lies within the Walls of the Prison Oh! what serpentine Windings what circumventing Methods what untraceable Depths What lying Promises what shews of Happiness doth he use to keep them there He is well content to allow the Ambitious one his Pinacles of Honour the Covetous his Bags of Mammon the Voluptuous his Paradise of carnal pleasures the Curious his fine-spun Cobwebs of School-notions every Captive his peceatum in deliciis his beloved Corruption so as they will but stay where they are in a state of Wrath. 3. Having seen the Captive and Captivity let us pass on to consider the Redeemer and here I would first premise that no Creature could redeem us out of this Captivity Sin is an infinite evil objectively infinite 't is a fighting against an infinite Majesty a striving against infinite Sovereignty an enmity to infinite Holiness a provocation to infinite Justice a Deicidium a striking at the very Life and Being of God God hath no other Opposite but Sin and were it possible that the least drop of it could get into him he would instantly cease to be God and now where shall God have satisfaction for such an evil as this Shall the Brutal World be a Sacrifice for the Rational Alas the blood of bulls and goats cannot take away sin Can the Captive do ought in it Can he wear off his Chains with repentant Tears or work them off with after-holiness Alas the Captive is in love with his Chains and therefore at a vast distance from Repentance and Holiness But if he had both doubtless those repentant Tears would be black or salt in some measure and therefore want a Laver that Holiness in comparison of spotless Perfection would be but as a filthy Rag and therefore want a Cover But suppose he had such tears as are the pure Blood of a filial heart without any blackness or saltness in them and such Holiness as is pure Linnen fine and white without any spot in it yet all this must be of free Grace and nothing of his own and then how can he who sins ex proprio satisfie ex alieno But admit that these Graces were his own too yet how can finite Graces satisfie for an infinite Evil There is no proportion at all between finite and infinite But you 'l say Sin is infinite objectively and so are Repentance and Holiness too therefore they may satisfie for Sin I answer The difference is vast for Sin is measured by the Object and therefore being against an infinite God is in a sort infinite but Satisfaction is measured by the Subject and therefore Repentance and Holiness being subjectively finite cannot satisfie for Sin But you 'l yet reply These Graces flow from an infinite Spirit and therefore may satisfie for Sin I answer This is the grand disproportion between those works which Christ works for us as a Surety and those works which the Spirit works in us as a Sanctifier In the first there is God and Man in one Person and therefore they are of an infinite Dignity but not so in the second and therefore they are but of a finite Value The forlorn Captive can by no means help himself and what shall he do Shall he pray in aid of the holy Angels But O! what trembling fits would there be in them What paleness in the Cherubims at such a task But suppose they could all be induced to become a Sacrifice for us would the holy One open his Eyes upon such a Satisfaction But if he did what would become of them How soon would our Debts empty all their Coffers and God's Wrath break all their backs and who should redeem these Redeemers Therefore every Creature must say 't is not in me to redeem This premised the Redeemer is the Lord Jesus Christ the true Immanuel the Word made Flesh the Man God's Fellow the great Trismegist a Royal Priest Priestly Prophet and Prophetical King all in one a Priest upon his Throne a Couquerour on his Cross a Healer by his Wounds Oh! could we see his Glory his Head is a Fountain of holy Oil his Hairs woolly with Eternity his Eyes flaming with Omniscience his Feet brassed with invincible Power his Robe of Righteousness as long and broad as the Law his Girdle of Truth all of pure Gold his Heart graven with the Names of Saints and his tender Bowels shewing themselves through his bleeding Wounds This is the Saviour of the World and Redeemer of Man this is he and he hath a threefold Right to be so 1. Jus Proprietatis as God 2. Jus Idoneitatis as the Son of God 3. Jus Conjunctionis as Man as a Surety for Men and as a Head to his Church 1. Jus Proprietatis as God who should redeem a Creature but the true Owner And who is he but God the Creator Ovem perditam quis requirit says Tertullian nonne qui perdidit Quis autem perdidit nonne qui habuit Quis autem habuit nonne cujus fuit Homo non alterius res est quàm Creatoris He that is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 truly a Saviour as the Expression is Joh. 4. 42. must be God indeed Should one mere Creature redeem another he should ipso facto pluck away a Creature from his Creator inasmuch as Redemption is a greater Tie than Creation Now Jesus Christ who came to redeem us is very God not a Metaphorical but the true God 1 Joh. 5. 20. not a petty but the great
God meet us and commune with us in words of Grace we must thank the true Propitiatory or Mercy-seat for every syllable 2. Grace in the proper Seat or Receptacle of it is Christ's purchase and this I shall make out 1. In general Christ purchased the Spirit of all Grace There is a double Oblation of Christ a personal Oblation on the Cross and that is Moritum Spiritûs and a doctrinal Oblation in the Gospel and that is Ministerium Spiritûs and so the holy Ghost is shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ Tit. 3. 6. Christ ascended up on high that he might fill things Eph. 4. 10. One would have thought that his descent should rather have done it but he ascended up in the glory of his Merits he carried up all the Purchase-money to his Fathers house and from thence the Spirit came pouring down upon men some droppings of it were before but then it was richly poured out it came down in cloven fiery tongues and a rushing mighty wind Acts 2. 2 3. Tongues to utter magnalia Dei and above all the master-piece of Redemption and cloven tongues to utter them to all Nations in their own Language and fiery tongues to enlighten and enflame the Auditors hearts with the knowledge and love of Christ and a mighty rushing wind to blow home that fire strongly and insuperably in a thorough Conversion and all this was shed forth from Christ Ver. 33. Never any Tongue truly preached Christ but by a secret touch from him never any holy fire kindled on the heart but by a coal from his Altar never any gales of Grace on the Soul but from the breathings of his Spirit not one drop of his Blood is spiritless but full fraught and flowing with the Spirit of Life 2. In particular and so Christ hath purchased three things 1. The Radical Grace of Faith 2. All other Graces of the Spirit 3. All the Crowns of these Graces 1. Christ hath purchased the Grace of Faith the Apostle is express in it To you it is given 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for Christ's sake not only to believe on him but also to suffer for his sake Phil. 1. 29. the Apostle evidently points out the merits of Christ as the spring of Faith and Faith persevering unto suffering And in another place he saith we joy in God through Jesus Christ 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by whom we have now received the atonement Rom. 5. 11. he doth not only say that by and through him the Atonement was made but that by and through him the Atonement is received and what is this receiving of the Atonement but Faith it self That therefore is part of Christ's Purchase These express places might suffice us but because the Remonstrants oppose this Truth I shall propose two Quaeries unto them 1. Is not Faith comprized within the Covenant of Grace Let 's come to the Touch-stone Is it not written there I will give an heart to know me and is not Faith a justifying knowledge a sight of the just One and a beam or dawning of eternal life Is it not written there I will take away the heart of stone and is not Unbelief a part of that stone doth it not directly resist the Blood and Righteousness of Christ and can there be a worse Stone than this Is it not written there I will give a new heart and is not Unbelief the heart and life of the old Man and Faith of the new Is it not written there I will put my Spirit within you and is not the Spirit a spirit of faith and faith a fruit of the Spirit is not Unbelief of our Spirit and Faith of Gods Is it not written there I will circumcise the heart and is not Unbelief flesh God saith there is life in his Son and the Unbeliever saith No and does what in him lies to make God a lyar and can there be any filthier or rottenner flesh in the old man than this and unless this be cut off can there be a true Circumcision By all this it clearly appears that Faith is within the Covenant and if so is not the whole Covenant Sanctio à sanguine the New-testament in Christ's blood Is not he the Mediator and purchaser of the whole Are not all the Promises Yea and Amen in him Who dares distinguish and say Christ purchased part of the Promises and not all he purchased notional knowledge and not justifying he breaks the stone in the heart all but that which opposes his own Blood and Righteousness the old man is crucified with Christ all but his heart and life of Unbelief the Spirit of Grace flows out from Christ all but the Spirit of Faith the circumcision of Christ Col. 2. 11. so called because it is procured by the Merits and produced by the Spirit of Christ cuts off the flesh of the heart all but that of Unbelief which upbraids God with a lye who dares thus tear in sunder the Covenant mangle the Promises dimidiate Christ and divide the Spirit by unscriptural distinctions Such shuffling is unworthy of Christians Wherefore I conclude my first Quaere thus Faith is within the Covenant and the Covenant is Christ's purchase therefore Faith is such also 2. Is not Faith a Grace of the Spirit It seals to the Gospel sanctifies the heart works by Love waits by Patience overcomes the visible World and sensibly presentiates the invisible for shame let it be a Grace and if so it must be Christ's purchase The Spirit never effected that Grace in fallen Man which Christ never merited As every Creature in the World is of God's making so every Grace in the Church is of Christ's meriting He that saith Yonder is a precious Stone but 't is not of God's making blasphemes the Creator and he that saith Yonder is a precious Faith but 't is not of Christ's meriting does no less to the Redeemer But further Is not Faith the Grace of Union with Christ Doth not Christ dwell in the heart by faith Is not Faith the Mother-grace of all First Faith gives a touch to Christ and then Love is enflamed with him Joy triumphs in him and Obedience follows him Where do all the rivers of living water flow but in the Believers belly Joh. 7. 38 What holds all the starry Graces of the Church but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the firmament of faith as the Apostle calls it Col. 2. 5 Now will it not grate thine ears O Christian to hear that the Spirit of Holiness is from Christ but not the Spirit of Faith all the starry Graces are Christ's but the Firmament of Faith is our own we are blessed with all spiritual blessings in Christ but not with the Mother-grace which broods and teems out all the rest not with the Grace of Union which lies nearest to Christ eating his flesh and drinking his blood that Faith which is nearest to the Merits of Christ in its Union is furthest off from them in its Origination What is this but
ends aforesaid 1. God decreed this Price to be paid Christ did not glorifie himself in making himself an high-priest or surety but he that said unto him Thou art my son this day have I begotten thee Heb. 5. 5. Christ's Person was begotten out of the Substance of God and his Office as it were begotten out of the Will of God God eternally ordained him to that Office 1 Pet. 1. 20. and in the fulness of time called him to it Heb. 5. 10. and for more assurance superadded his Seal to his Call Joh. 6. 27. and his Oath to both Heb. 7. 21. and all to shew forth his immutable purpose touching the same Christ was booked down for a Redeemer in the eternal Volumes and slain above in the Decree long before he was slain below in time Infinite Love impregnated the divine Will with the Decree of Redemption and that Decree sent forth our Redeemer and put a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon his righteousness Matth. 3. 15. a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon the cup of wrath Joh. 12. 27. and a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 upon his death and sufferings Matth. 16. 21. and all this that the mystery of Redemption hid from ages in the will of God Col. 1. 26. might come abroad into the World When the fulness of time was come God sent forth his Son made of a woman made under the Law to redeem them that were under the Law Gal. 4. 4 5. O what a fair window is here opened into God's heart Redemption was decreed and therefore God sent forth his Son the time was decreed and therefore he sent him forth in the fulness of time and the Price was decreed and therefore he sent him forth made of a woman made under the Law that is to take a humane Nature and pay it down in all Obedience as the Price of our Redemption 2. As God decreed this Price to be paid so he accepted it being paid and this includes in it two things 1. That this Price was paid to him 2. That this Price was accepted by him 1. This Price was paid to him Christ offered himself to God Heb. 9. 14. Whether we consider this Price as redemptive from evil or as procurative of good both ways it was paid to God as redemptive from evil it was paid to him as a righteous Law-giver and Judge and as procurative of good it was paid to him as a great Remunerator and faithful Promiser God is the Law-giver against whose Laws we rebelled and God is the Judge who for our rebellions against his Law 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 shut us all up in prison Rom. 11. 32. there we lay 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 under the judgment of God Rom. 3. 19. and his wrath abode upon us Joh. 3. 36. therefore this Price as redemptive from evil was paid to God as the Law-giver and Judge That Socinian cavil That if this were a proper Redemption the Price should be paid to Sin and Satan because we are redeemed from them is but a mere trifle for God is the supreme Law-giver and Judge he only hath the Keys of Death and Hell strictly and properly Sinners are Prisoners only to him Satan is but as the Jaylor or Under-officer acting under the authority of this Judge the Guilt of Sin is but as the Chains or Fetters binding under the Justice of this Law-giver and who ever read or heard of a Price of Redemption paid to the Jaylor or Fetters and yet upon the payment thereof the Captive is delivered from them both Hence it is that our Saviour Christ was both Mercator and Bellator Mercator as to God to whom he paid the Price and Bellator as against Satan whom he conquered and both these the Apostle expresses together He blotted out the hand-writing nailing it to his cross and spoiled Principalities and powers triumphing over them in it Col. 2. 14 15. He paid God the Price and not Satan he spoiled and triumphed over Satan and not over God Again as this Price as redemptive from evil was paid to God as a Law-giver and Judge so this Price as procurative of good was paid to God as the great Remunerator and faithful Promiser God is a great Remunerator for he rewards according to the condecency of his goodness and a faithful Promiser for he will not suffer one jot or tittle of his Promises to fall to the ground he engaged himself to Christ that his blood should be returned in all good things he gave him the Promise of a seed and to raise it up the Promise of his Spirit and to crown it the Promise of eternal life he bound himself by express compact to make him a light to the Gentiles a covenant to the people and salvation to the ends of the earth Isai. 49. 6 8. Wherefore this Price as procurative of good was paid to God as a Remunerator and Promiser 2. As this Price was paid to God so it was accepted by him for the ends aforesaid Indeed simply and abstractively from his own Decree he was not bound to accept of this price though of an immense and infinite value as for us I say as for us for he might have stood upon the rigour of the Law Do this and live transgress this and die in thine own person the Tables of the Law might never have been put into the Ark nor covered with a Mercy-seat but this is the joy of our Faith that he hath accepted it When Christ was baptized there was a Voice from Heaven This is my beloved Son 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in whom I am well-pleased Mat. 3. 17. Duo grata vocabula silius dilectus saith an Ancient and that sweet word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 makes up the third When Christ was sacrificed there was a sweet smell to God Eph. 5. 2. God cries out I have found a ransom Joh 33. 24. and Christ It is finished Joh. 19. 30. Afterwards when he came into the Grave off flew the bands of Death Acts 24. 24. as a pregnant evidence that Justice was satisfied he was taken from prison and from judgment Isai. 53. 8. because all was paid God's Power raised him up and God's Justice could say nothing against it And when he was risen from the dead he raises up the Faith of his Disciples Why do thoughts arise in your hearts saith he Luk. 24. 38. Do you doubt whether I am he who paid down the Price of Redemption Behold my hands and my feet fossus est saccus manavit pretium orbis the Sack of my Humanity was broke and out run the Price of Redemption Do you scruple whether that Price were accepted of God or not Lo here are the returns of it I 'le breath the holy Ghost upon you I 'le betrust the Gospel with you go preach it to every creature make the World know that Redemption Remission Grace Peace Sanctity Salvation are the returns of my Blood And afterwards just at his parting he blessed them and
Acts as to the rest appear as Extraministerial Blots and Errata's those Invitations to the Gospel-feast which as to the Elect are the cordial wooings and beseechings of God himself as to the rest look like the words of mere men speaking at random and without Commission for alas why should they come to that Feast for whom nothing is prepared How should they eat and drink for whom the Lamb was never slain Wherefore I conclude that Christ died for all mens so far as to found the truth of the Ministery towards them 4. I argue from the Blessings purchased by Christ's Death one great Blessing is Salvation on Gospel Terms Lapsed Angels must be damned but Men nay all Men may be saved on Gospel-terms there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a common Salvation to them and O what a blessing is this especially to such as live under the Gospel there is nothing stands between them and Heaven but their own Will they will not come to Christ that they may have life Oh! what would the damned Spirits in Hell give for such a door of Hope as hath no other bar but what is in their own Hearts how would they sweat and strive with tears and strong cries to enter in at it A second Blessing is the Patience of God which waits upon Sinners and by some glimmerings of Mercy leads them to repentance A third Blessing is the Dispensation of Gifts even in the Wilderness of the Pagan-world there are Moral Vertues and in the Eden of the Church there are even in those that perish some touches of the holy Ghost tastes of the heavenly Gift and feelings of the Powers of the World to come and whence are these but from the Death of Christ As David called the water of Bethlehem the blood of his worthies so may I call these Blessings the blood of Christ. Wherefore Christ died so far for all as to procure some Blessings for them 5. I argue from the Unbelief of Men which is wonderfully aggravated in Scripture through Jesus Christ there is a real offer of Grace made but Unbelief receives it in vain 2 Cor. 6. 1. great Salvation is prepared 〈◊〉 ●nbelief neglects it Heb. 2. 3. Eternal 〈◊〉 is promised but Unbelief comes short of it Heb. 4. 1. the Kingdom of Heaven comes nigh to men but Unbelief draws back from it Heb. 10. 39. God himself bears witness that there is Life in his Son even for all if they believe but Unbelief saith No to it and doth what it can to make him a liar 1 Joh. 5. 10. Christ is set forth before our eyes as the great Expiatory Sacrifice and evidently set forth as if he were crucified among us his Blood runs fresh in the Veins of the Gospel but Unbelief recrucifies the Son of God Heb. 6. 6. tramples his precious blood under foot Heb. 10. 29. and doth as it were nullifie his glorious Sacrifice so that as to final Unbelievers 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there no more remaineth a sacrifice Heb. 10. 26. as to their Salvation 't is as if there were no Sacrifice at all for them But if Christ died not for all men how can these things be How can those men receive Grace in vain for whom it was never procured or neglect Salvation for whom it was never prepared How can they fall short of eternal Rest for whom it was never purchased or draw back from the Kingdom of Heaven which never approached unto them How can there be life in Christ for thos● for whom he never died and if not 〈◊〉 way doth their Unbelief give God the lye How can they recrucifie the Son of God for whom he was never crucified or trample on that precious Blood which was never shed for them The Devils as full of malice as they are against Christ are never said to do it and why are men charged with it I take it because men have some share in him and Devils none at all 6. I argue from the Death of Christ which hath a superexcellent Redundance of Merit in it not only because of its intrinsecal value but because of the divine Ordination there are unsearchable riches in Christ enough to pay all mens Debts there are Pleonasms of Grace in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Grace superabounded saith the Apostle 1 Tim. 1. 14. Salvation flows out from him actually upon all Believers and by a glorious supereffluence it would run over upon all men if they did believe As it was with the Widows litte Pot of Oil 2 Kings 4. 6. the Oil did run till all the Vessels were full and then it staid the Widow called for another Vessel and if she had had many more there the Oil in the Pot would have filled them all Even so pardon the Comparison it is with the immense Sea of Christ's Merits it actually fills all the Vessels of Faith and then it stays as it were for want of Vessels mean-while Christ calls and cries out for more and if all men would come and bring their Vessels to him he would fill them all doubtless if all men did believe all would see the Glory of God all would have the Rivers of living water flowing in them all would feel spiritual Miracles wrought in their Hearts by that Christ who sits at the right hand of Power and consequently all would find an experimental witness in themselves that Christ died for them all 7. I argue from the general and large Expressions in Scripture touching Christ and his Death Christ died for all 2 Cor. 5. 15. for every man Heb. 2. 9. he gave himself for the world Joh. 6. 51. for the whole world 1 Joh. 2. 2. he is stiled the Saviour of the world 1 Joh. 4. 14. and his Salvation is called a common salvation Jude Ver. 3. a salvation prepared before the face of all people Luk. 2. 31. and flowing forth to the ends of the earth Isai. 49. 6. the Gospel of this Salvation is to be preached to all nations Matth. 28. 19. and to every creature Mark 16. 15. there is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 grace bringing salvation to all men Tit. 2. 11. a door of Hope open to them because Christ gave himself a ransom for all 1 Tim. 2. 6. I know not what could be more emphatical to point out the Universality of Redemption But you 'l say all these general Expressions do but denote genera singulorum some of all sorts the World of the Elect or the All of Believers In answer to which I shall only put two Quaeries 1. If those general Expressions denote only the World of the Elect or the All of Believers why is it not said in Scripture that God elected all and every man the World and the whole World in that sence 't is as true that God elected them all as 't is that Christ died for them all Why then doth the holy Spirit altogether forbear those general Expressions in the matter of Election which it useth in the matter of
Nature 't is a Nullity in naturals and if a rational Creature be separate from the God of Grace he is a Nullity in spirituals Sure if he were any thing at all he might speak or think but he can do neither As running a fountain of Words as his tongue is he cannot say Jesus is the Lord 1 Cor. 12. 3. and as swarming a Hive of Thoughts as his Heart is he cannot think any thing as of himself 2 Cor. 3. 5. The great Apostle gives a double account of himself an account what he is in himself I am nothing saith he 2 Cor. 12. 11. and an account what he is by Grace by the grace of God I am what I am 1 Cor. 15. 10. all his nothingness is in and of himself and all his spiritual essence is in and of Grace A mere Natural man is nothing in Spirituals his eyes are on that which is not Prov. 23. 5. his joy is in a thing of nought Amos 6. 13. and all the false Gods in his heart are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nihilitates nothingnesses Psal. 96. 5. As they are Creatures in the World they are Beings but as they are Idols in his 〈◊〉 they are nothing nothing to make a God of and he who makes them such is like unto them even nothing in Spirituals 2. 'T is a State of Enmity against God he is not only a Stranger but an enemy too Col. 1. 21. nay which is more his carnal Mind is enmity against God Rom. 8. 7. Enmity is irreconcileable it is not subject to the Law of God neither indeed can be not unless the Enmity be slain in it nay further the Apostle call the Gentiles 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 haters of God Rom. 1. 30. and Hatred is Enmity boiled up to the height Hatred saith the Philosopher seeks 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Not-being of the thing hated and such is man's Wickedness that strikes as it were at the Life and Being of God it had rather that God should not be than that Lusts should be restrained The Scripture sets out some grand Enemies as opposing God openly and upon the Stage of the World and by what they did openly we may discern what spirit and mystery of Iniquity is working in every Natural man's heart secretly there is in him some of the corrupt flesh of the old World somewhat of Pharaoh's spirit which secretly saith Who is the Lord that I should obey his voice Somewhat of the bloody Jew which is ready to crucifie the Son of God afresh and trample his precious blood under-foot somewhat of the proud Antichrist the man of sin which exalts it self above God it s own Reason above the Wisdom of God and its own Will above the Will of God The very same Venom and Poyson of Enmity which the Grand Enemies of God pour out openly privily lurks and works in every Natural Man Thus in general Man's State is Estrangement and Enmity But to procede 2. What is Man's State in particular in relation to his several parts Now here the same Estrangement and Enmity shews forth it self according to the Nature of each part 1. As for the Understanding 't is turned away from God the first and essential Truth and so become a Forge of lying Vanities 't is turned away from God the first and essential Light and so become a dark place nay darkness it self Eph. 5. 8. and if the light be darkness how great is that darkness So great it is that a Natural man sets an higher estimate on the Follies of Time than on the Blessedness of Eternity and rates the broken Cisterns above the Fountain of living waters 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the souly man who hath nothing but a rational Soul the Spirit of a mere man in him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God 2 Cor. 2. 14. One would think that all Truths should be welcome to a rational Soul and above all the Mysteries of Heaven but he receiveth them not And this the Apostle lays down distinctly The spirit of man knows the things of man because they are within his own Line but the things of God are only known by the Spirit of God because they are above the Sphere of natural Reason As the things of Man are above the Sphere of Sense so the things of God are above the Sphere of Reason and yet as if they were below it the Natural man counts them foolishness which evinces an extreme foolishness in his own heart he is not a Man not an understanding Creature in Spirituals Agur is a Brute in his own eyes I have not the understanding of a man saith he Prov. 30. 2. The Apostle proving all under sin asserts that there is none that understandeth Rom. 3. 11. Millions of ratinal Creatures in the World and yet there is none that understandeth and his proof is invincible there is none that seeketh after God which sure would be done if there were any spark of spiritual Understanding in him 'T is true there may be a mass of Notions in a man unconverted but not a dram of spiritual Knowledge Seeing he sees not he sees the things of God in the image or picture of the Letter but he sees them not in their liveliness and inward Glory Just as the carnal Israelites who saw their Manna and Sacrifices only in the outside but saw not Christ in them or as those false Seekers of whom Christ saith Ye seek me not because ye saw the miracles but because ye did eat of the loaves and were filled Joh. 6. 26. There was a Miracle in those very Loaves but they saw only the carnal and grosser part of the Miracle and not the Glory and Power of Christ's Deity sparkling out in it An Unconverted man knows nothing as he ought to know it no not in the midst of his notions there is no savouring tasting or practical Knowledge in him nothing but a husk shell or form of Knowledg and in the midst thereof a real enmity against the things known Whilest the light of Truth shines only in the Notion he likes it well enough but if it waken Conscience check Lust press Duty or any way offer to assume its Supremacy in his heart or life he instantly hates it as an enemy 2. As for the Will the Principle of Freedom 't is turn'd from God the primum liberum and from his service the vera libertas and so it is become servum arbitrium an arrant Slave bound in the bonds of iniquity and which is the height of Slavery 't is in love with its Bonds and which is the intenseness and intimateness of that love when Christ comes to break these Bonds 't is loth to be made free indeed the iron is so entred into his soul the Bondage is so intimate in the forlorn Will that it looks on God's service as bondage and Sins bondage as freedom and hence it is dead and lame to God's ways but runs and flies
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
ordinative Will to will the turning and Salvation of all men This I shall explain 1. With reference to those in the Bosom of the Church 2. With reference to those out of it 1. God by a virtual or ordinative Will doth will the Turning and Salvation of all Men within the Bosom of the Church for they have Jesus Christ set before their Eyes and what was the true End of Christ's coming but to turn every one from his iniquities Acts 3. 26 They have the Gospel preached unto them there we have God spreading out his hands all the day standing and knocking at the door of the heart crying out with redoubled Calls Turn ye turn ye why will ye die Wooing and beseeching men be ye reconciled unto me making his salvation bringing grace appear unto all men even to the Non-elect themselves and causing the kingdom of God to come nigh unto men even to such as for the rejection thereof have the dust of their city wiped off against them and what is the meaning of all this if God no way will their Conversion Take away God's ordinative Will and then God as to the Non-elect spreads out his hands of Mercy that he may shut them knocks that he may be barred out cries and beseeches that he may not be heard makes his Grace appear and Kingdom come nigh that it may be rejected and not received All which is to evacuate Scripture and put a lye upon the offers of Grace Neither will it salve the business to say there is a Voluntas signi in all this for what is Voluntas signi if it be not signum Voluntatis If it be only an outward Sign or Appearance and there be no Counterpane or Prototype thereof within the divine Will how is it a true Sign Which way could it be breathed out from God's Heart When God makes his great Gospel-supper and says Come for all things are ready he is not he cannot be like him with the evil eye who saith Eat and drink but his heart is not with thee Prov. 23. 6 7. No God's Heart goes along with every Offer of Grace he never calls but in a serious manner And therefore unbelieving and impenitent Persons are in Scripture said not only to reject the Means but to receive the grace of God in vain 2 Cor. 6. 1. to reject the counsel of God against themselves Luk. 7. 30. and to make God a lyar 1 Joh. 5. 10. as if he meant not really in the Offers of his Son Jesus Christ. When God threatned the Jews with his Judgements they belied the Lord and said it is not he Jer. 5. 12. and when God offers men Grace in the Gospel they by their Unbelief belye the Lord and say It is not he 't is but only the Minister or outward Sign God's Heart or Mind is not in it Under such weighty words as these doth the Scripture set out the rejection of means because of God's ordinative Will ' that God who will one day mock at the rejecters of his call Prov. 1. 26. doth not now mock them in the Grace of his Call the true end of his Call is their Conversion that that end is not attained the only Reason lies within themselves in their own corrupt unbelieving Hearts Moreover it is worthy of our consideration that those Scriptures which the Remonstrants urge to prove that all the Operations of Grace even those in the very Elect who actually turn unto God are resistible do signally set forth this ordinative Will of God As first they urge that Matth. 23. 37. O Jerusalem Jerusalem thou that killest the Prophets and stonest them which are sent unto thee how often would I have gathered thy children together even as an hen gathereth her chickens under her wings and ye would not Here say they is resistible Grace Very well but what Grace doth the Text speak of It speaks only of the Grace afforded to those Jews which were never gathered or converted thereby but not a tittle of the Grace afforded to those Jews which were thereby actually gathered or converted and how then can it prove that this latter Grace of which it speaks not at all was resistible If it prove this Grace resistible it can be upon no other ground but this only That the Grace afforded to the Jews which were not gathered and the Grace afforded to the Jews which were gathered was one and the same but how can that be made good Can that Text assert an equality of Grace to both sorts of Jews which speaks only of the Grace afforded to one of them viz. to the ungathered ones 'T is impossible But if it be not the Truth of the Text is there yet any Truth in the thing Had all the Jews equal Grace with the Jews given to Christ with the Jews drawn by the Father with the Jews chosen out of the world 'T is incredible The Remonstrants allow that God doth irresistibly enlighten the Understanding excite the Affections and infuse a posse convertere into the Will but was it thus with all the Jews Were the blind leaders of the blind thus enlightned Were the malicious scorners thus affected Were those which could not believe Joh. 12. 39. endued with a posse convertere It cannot be Wherefore this Text speaking only of the Grace given to the ungathered Jews proves not the Grace given to the other Jews to be resistible but it genuinely proves a Will in God to gather them all under his wings of Grace I say a Will in God for it cannot be interpreted of Christ's humane Will for the gathering willed was not only a gathering by Christ's Ministry but by the Mission of Prophets before his Incarnation to which Christ's humane Will could not extend because not then in being Wherefore this Will is God's ordinative Will imported in the Ministery of Christ and the Prophets the proper end tendency whereof was to gather them into the bosom of his Grace This Calvin in his Commentaries upon this place calls mirum incomparabile amoris documentum and withal adds significat nunquam proponi nobis Dei verbum quin ipse maternâ dulcedine gremium suum nobis aperiat Again they urge that Isai. 65. 2. I have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people but this place speaks only of the Grace afforded to the Rebellious and therefore it proves not that the Grace afforded to the Elect was resistible Neither is it imaginable that the same measure of Grace is signified in this expansion of God's hand as in the revelation of his arm Isai. 53. 1. The Apostle quoteth this place Rom. 10. 21. yet withal asserts that there was a remnant according to the election of Grace Rom. 11. 5. not a remnant according to the better improvement of the same Grace but a remnant according to the election of Grace such as pure Grace had reserved to it self by those special Operations which were not vouchsafed to the blinded
pouring forth his Blood and reconciling us to God's Justice here we have him pouring forth his Spirit and reconciling us to God's Holiness Now in my discourse touching Conversion I shall reduce all to 3. Quaeries 1. What is Mans state before Conversion 2. What is the Nature of the Work 3. Who is the Worker thereof In the first we shall meet with the extreme Necessity of the work in the second with the intrinsecal Excellency thereof and in the third with the Power and Grace of the great Agent 1. What is Man's State before Conversion I mean Man fallen for Man standing needed no Conversion and this I shall consider two ways 1. What it is in general in relation to the whole Man 2. What it is in particular in relation to the several parts of Man 1. What it is in general and this I shall open in two things 1. 'T is a State of Estrangement from God 2. 'T is a State of Enmity against God 1. 'T is a State of Estrangement from God a natural Man is estranged from the womb Psal. 58. 3. without God in the world Eph. 2. 12. God is all round about him in the witnessing Creatures and yet he is without God in the World God is in him in the Lamp of Conscience yet he is without God in his Heart for there he saith There is no God Psal. 14. 1. Which way soever God comes forth to meet him whether from Mount Sinai in the fiery Law or from Mount Sion in Gospel-charms of free Grace still he flies away from God's presence and if God pursue after him he 'l say to God in plain Terms Depart from me Job 21. 14. and if any reliques of light will not depart but stay behind in his heart he shuts them up in the prison of unrighteousness Rom. 1. 18. His Ubi is with Cain in Nod the Land of wandring and demigration and with the Prodigal in a far Country where he is far off from God Psal. 73. 27. and God far off from him Prov. 15. 29. if ever he be saved he must be brought from far Isai. 43. 6. Now upon a distinct View this is a deplorable Condition for 1. A natural Man being estranged from God the Fountain of Life must needs be a dead Man dead in sins and trespasses Eph. 2. 1. because alienated from the Life of God he is not only as the man in the Gospel half dead Luk. 10. 30. who is there set forth not as a figure of Original Corruption but as an Object of Charity as is very evident by the scope of the Parable which is ushered in with that Question And who is my neighbour Ver. 29 and at last closed up with the like Which of the three was neighbour to him Ver. 36 but he is altogether dead in Spirituals there are no true vital Spirits of Faith in him no true motions of Obedience no pulse of heavenly Affections no breath of Spiritual Prayer no taste of the Gospel-wine and Marrow no feeling of all that massy Sin and Wrath which lies upon him all his Life is a Death-wandering all his rest is in the Congregation of the dead Prov. 21. 16. Give him all the Statures of natural Excellencies strew him over with the flowers of sweetest Morality and spangle him with the Notions of sublime Theology yet still he is but a dead man his Soul a dead Soul his Faith a dead Faith his Works dead works and his Hopes and Comfors but as the giving up of the Ghost But you 'l say Is not Man a living Creature Hath he not a Reason and reliques of Light in it Hath he not a free Will and Seeds of Moral Vertue in it And why then do you call him dead I answer Man is a living Creature alive in Naturals but dead in Spirituals he hath a Reason but because there is no light of life in it 't is but a dead Reason his reliques of Light argue no more Spiritual Life in him than knowledge doth in Devils he hath a free Will but for want of the freedom indeed 't is only free among the dead I mean to this or that carnal or natural Work and not to the Will of God he hath some Seeds of Moral Vertue in him but alas these are of too low an Extraction to be any Particles of spiritual Life Mere Moral Vertues are by God's blessing on humane Industry struck as sparks out of natural Principles but Spiritual Life is a Fire dropt down from Heaven into the Heart mere Moral Vertues descending but from natural Principles never ascend up to God as their end but Spiritual Life as it is originally born of God so it is ultimately terminated in him Wherefore a man may be naturally nay morally alive and yet be spiritually dead 2. A natural Man being estranged from God who is an infinite Spirit must needs be Flesh Thus God calls the Men of the old World flesh Gen. 6. 3. thus our Saviour sets out Regeneration by its opposite That which is born of the flesh is flesh and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit Joh. 3. 6. As the Body separate from the Soul is Flesh such as moulders into Dust and putrifies into Worms so the Soul separate from God is Flesh too such as turns into the Dust of earthly things and rots in those Lusts which breed the never-dying Worm in Hell neither is this Flesh only in the lower Rooms of the Soul but in the upmost Faculties of Reason and Will In the Reason there is the cankred flesh of Errors and Heresies and in the Will there is the dead flesh of Impotency and the proud flesh of Obstinacy against the Will of God Hence the Apostle tells us of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a mind of flesh Col. 2. 18. and of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 wills of flesh Eph. 2. 3. And therefore the true Circumcision is in the heart and in the spirit Rom. 2. 29. even in the highest Faculties and Powers of the Soul 3. A natural Man being estranged from God who is the Beauty of Holiness must needs be very impure he is filthy or stinking Psal. 14. 3. an unclean thing Joh 14. 4. he lies polluted in his blood with a Leprosie in his head and a Plague in his heart clothed in filthy rags of Sin and rolling in the mire and vomit of Corruption so great is his filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness that he taints whatsoever he touches his very Prayers are an abomination and his Services as dung before God Neither is this pollution only in the sensitive Soul but also in the rational there is filthiness of spirit 2 Cor. 7. 1. and disilement in the very mind and conscience Tit. 1. 15. there is no sound part but all over wounds and bruises and putrifying sores 4. A natural Man being estranged from God who is Jehovah or Beingness must needs be a very Nullity in spirituals If a Creature be separate from the God of