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A57963 Christ dying and drawing sinners to himself, or, A survey of our Saviour in his soule-suffering, his lovelynesse in his death, and the efficacie thereof in which some cases of soule-trouble in weeke beleevers ... are opened ... delivered in sermons on the Evangel according to S. John Chap. XII, vers. 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 33 ... / by Samuel Rutherford. Rutherford, Samuel, 1600?-1661. 1647 (1647) Wing R2373; ESTC R28117 628,133 674

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shall be saved Knocke and it shall be opened Hee that overcometh shall inherite all things actu secundo to a beleever who under a distemper doth doubt of them infallible So The love of the brethren 1 Joh. 3.14 The keeping of the Commandements and the word of Jesus is infallible in it selfe That I know Christ savingly and that hee dwelleth in me 1 Joh. 2. vers 3.5 but that it infallibly concludeth so to me actu secundo is not sure except the wind blow faire from heaven and the Spirit act in me So the love-tokens and testimoniall rings and bracelets of the Husband my love to the Saints my keeping of his word my holy walking in Christ being the works of his Spirit which dwelt in Jesus Christ are actu primo in themselves as infallible signes of the Bridegromes love to me as the Beloved's word who spake and said Arise my love And if the spirations and breathings of the Spirit goe not along both the voice and the love-bracelets for Christ is no more counterfeit in his love-tokens then in his word when hee speaks as a Husband are alike ineffectuall to perswade the soule I see no reason to call the workes of Sanctification inferiour helps in the Manifestation more then the voice of the Beloved for both without the Spirit are equally ineffectuall and if the Spirit breathe and move with them both are effectuall actu primo secundo and they infallibly perswade It is then a weake Argument None can simply perswade Japhet but God ergo The word of the Bridegrome onely can infallibly perswade or therefore love-bracelets cannot infallibly perswade for the word not quickned by the Spirit of Jesus cannot simply perswade and the Lords perswading of Japhet is the Lords work of converting Japhet not his enlightening of Japhet to know his faith to be true faith Hence for that which infallibly perswadeth us I say 1. Our act of beleeving doth no more perswade of it selfe that wee doe beleeve except the Spirit breathe with the act of beleeving for actuall illumination and perswasion then any other act of loving Christ his Saints or universall intention or sincerity of heart to obey doth prove to us that wee beleeve for many beleeve who know not yea doubt of their beleeving because the Holy Ghost maketh not the light of faith effectuall to perswade that they truly beleeve 2. Asser. The testimony of the Holy Spirit is the efficacious and actuall illumination and irradiation of the Sunne of righteousnesse and his Spirit assuring us that wee are the sonnes of God This light cometh from inherent acts of grace in us 1 Joh. 2.3 4 ● chap. 3.14 2 From the testimony and rejoycing which resulteth from a good conscience 2 Cor. 1.12 2 Tim. 4.6 7 8. 1 Tim. 6.17 18. Heb. 13.18 3. From the experience they have had of the Lords dealing with their soules and the love of God spread abroad in the heart by the Holy Ghost Rom. 5.3 4 5. 4 From a sincere aime and respect to all the Commandements of God Psal. 119.6 Acts 24.16 1 Joh. 3.20 21. 1 Thess. 5.23 Phil. 4.12 Revel 22.14 15. 5. From the positive marks that Christ putteth on his Children as markes of true blessednesse Math. 5.3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11. Psal. 119.1 2. Psal. 32.1 2. 6. From the judgement that the Saints maketh of themselves and their owne begunne communion with God Psal. 73.25 Psal. 18.20 1 22. Psal. 26.3 4.8 Psal. 40.9 10.7.8 Job 31. Job 29. Esay●8 ●8 3 Psal. 42.1 2. Psal. 6● 1 2 3 4 8. Psal. 84.2 3 4 5. Psal. 119. ●0 31 40.46.50.57.60 62 63.81.82.97.98 99.101 103 111 112.125.127.128.136.139 145.148.162.164 Cant. 1.5 chap. 2.4.5.6.16 chap. 3.1 2 3 4 5. chap. 5.6 7 8 9 10 11 12. All which were needlesse floorishes if they had neither peace consolation nor assurance from these as from marks and signes which do infallibly convince the light breathings and irradiations of the Holy Ghost concurring with them that they are in a saving condition who have these qualifications in them 7. Because by holy walking the Saints make their calling and election sure and firme not to God but to themselves 2 Pet. 1.10 11 12. vers 5.6 7. Asser. 3. As there is in the eye lumen innatum in the eare aer internus a certaine inbred light to make the eye see lights and colours without and a sound and aire in the eare within to make it discerne the sounds that are without So is there a grace a new nature an habituall instinct of heaven to discerne the Lords Spirit immediatly testifying that we are the Sonnes of God Rom. 8.16 1 Cor. 1.12 Grace within knoweth Christ speaking without the voice of my beloved As the Lambe knoweth by an internall instinct the mother but for wakening and quickening of the instinct to apprehend this there is neede of opened eyes and the presence of the mother to the eye or of the bleating of the mother to a waking eare for instincts cannot worke in the sleepe if the Spirit speake and the voice behind be heard the soule knoweth what sound it heareth but not otherwaies it is but curiositie so to compare the evidence by signes and markes of Sanctification with that evidence that commeth from the Spirits immediate voice or testimonie so as the former should be lesse sure fallible conjecturall and the latter infallible sure and efficaciously convincing For the evidences are both supernaturall certaine divine and strongly convincing if there bee any deception in either it is because of the dulnesse of our apprehension or our imagination which fancieth we see what we see not or from our unbelief who will not be convinced For the Holy Ghost speaketh the same thing by his operations of grace in holy walking that he speaketh by either the Word preached or by the Word and immediat voice of the Spirit witnessing to our Spirit and there is the same authority revealing to us a thing hid and the same thing revealed it maybe there be a variation of the degrees of light and divine irradiation Or the one may cary in to the soule a more deepe impression of God then the other and the radiation of light in the subject may be more strong in the one then in the other but of themselves they are both infallible supernaturall and convincing It is doubted which of these evidences bee more free and partake more of the nature of Grace Antinomians conceive that an evidence by marks in our self is more selfie lesse free and neerer to a seeking of assurance in our selfe then that evidence which resulteth from the immediate testimony of the Spirit But the ground they build on is false and the superstructure is lesse sure If it were a matter of giving and receiving or of wages and worke it were something but it s a matter of meere knowledge God reveiling our condition to us one way not another Possibly the more
cannot determine the will of an inferiour as hee himselfe can doe Sure my knowledge and will are inferiour powers in comparison of Angels 1 Cor. 13.1 Yet have I greater dominion over my owne understanding and will then th● Angels have over my understanding and will and can know my owne actuall thoughts and determine mine owne will by grace which no superiour powers of Angels or any els save the Almighty can doe I rather conceive that the outward and inward senses humors imagination fancie memory b●ing naturall agents and Scripture clearely shewing that Angels and Devils can and doe worke upon naturall agents have a power over all our dispositions temperature senses fancie imagination memory therefore what is naturall in the acts of understanding and memory not morall Angels doe and may know What heart-secrets Devils know from the disposition of body palenesse rednesse trembling dejected countenance are good conjectures and surer it may be then wee can apprehend but no certaine knowledge God onely knowes all the thoughts of man and his secrets 1 King 8.39 For thou even thou onely knowest the hearts of all the children of men Prov. 15.11 H●ll and distruction are before the Lord how much more then the hearts of the children of men He that can read hell and destruction and all the secrets of darknesse can also read as a booke opened at noone-day the midnight-thoughts of all the children of men Psal. 44.21 Jerem. 17. Rom. 8.27 1 Thess. 2.4 Rev. 2.23 Acts 1.24 Prov. 17.3 Prov. 21.2 Joh. 2.24 25. Yea to know the present thoughts is prop●r to God Matth. 19. ● And Jesus knowing their thoughts said wherefore think yee evill in your heart Nor can Angels see the present thoughts come out in action for otherwise the man himselfe knoweth his owne thoughts when he actually thinketh them 1 Cor. 2.11 els he could not be convinced of the sinnefuln●sse of them nor comforted in the spiritualnesse and preciousnesse of them It s a fond opinion of some who say Angels can see the thoughts of the heart when they are but not what they are whether they he good or bad love or hatred for that is non-sense to see Morall acts and not bee able to passe any judgement on them or that Angels see our thoughts but not whether they be intense and vehement or cold and remisse for its proper to God as the searcher of hearts to know the secrets of the heart and all the qualities of it that he may accordingly judge them And if Angels see them as Morall acts they must know the vehemencie or slownesse of them the Scripture placeth also the difficultie of knowing the thoughts and the distance and remotenesse of them from the understanding of men or Angels in the thoughts themselves not in the vehemencie or slownesse of the thoughts and it s but an evasion that some have that Angels may know the thoughts and acts of the will in themselves but not know to what end they are directed and that the intention of the minde is the great secret that God hath reserved to himselfe because 1. The Scripture placeth the secrecie of the free acts of will and understanding in the acts themselves and not in the intention for so most of the actions of Men and Angels their speaking this not that their walking to this Citie their eating sleeping now not another time their praying hearing reading shall be secrets known to God onely not to Angels or Men just as the acts of understanding the will are because the particular intention whether wee doe these sincerely for a good or bad end yea often for what end we doe them is amongst the secrets of the heart as farre distant from the understanding of Men or Angels as any secret can be 2. The intention of all our elicite acts that issueth from w●ll and understanding are also acts of the heart and reines that fall under the present question and the greatest secrets in man Hebr. 4.12 Neither see I any reason from the disproportion betweene the knowing faculty and the understanding of Angels why Angels may not know the thoughts of my heart aswell as I may know them my selfe nor can the reason bee as Suarez saith Because Angels though they have sufficient power in the facu●ty of understanding to know these things yet have not in their understanding the species the babies images and representations of heart-secrets but with his good leave this is Petitio principij For the question is how commeth it to passe that Angels who have the species of higher and more profound things as of the naturall knowledge that there is a God that hee is infinite eternall yet have not the species of an object farre inferiour and yet intelligible to wit of the heart-actions of a man 2. When I aske how commeth it that an Angel or a Man knoweth not this I aske indeed how cometh it to passe that an Angel or a Man wanteth such a species of such a thing so Suarez saith in effect Angels know not heart-secrets because they know not heart-secrets I conceive God hath laid a covering over the hearts of Men and Angels from his own free and wise will and reserved that secret to himselfe For God gave speech to men and a way how Angels should communicate their thoughts to Angels and Men which is Angel-speaking and this gift had bin uselesse if Angels and Men could intuitively read and behold the thoughts of one anothers hearts nor is it usefull for the end of reasonable nature for love and societie that we know the secrets of one anothers hearts for the author of nature giveth not that by nature which with lesse impeachment of love and not without danger of contention and hatred may by industrie be acquired And we should take heed what is written in the booke of our heart when such a searching eye readeth it as God and will one day read out to the hearing of Men and Angels all these secrets Eccles. 12.14 except we bee pardoned in Christ many state-secrets many foule contrivances may come out to our everlasting shame And for this cause we are to blesse the Lord who hath reserved from Satans Princedome and left out of his charter any power to compell our will It s true Satan hath a bordering or as it were some out-land Prince-dome over Sauls will in that he can sit and ride on his melancholie so as he is moved to throw a Javeling at Jonathan and to seeke to kill David yet so as he that is so acted by an evill Spirit is blame-worthy and then it must be presumed he hath some dominion over his will Acts 5.2 Peter saith to Ananias why hath Satan filled thine heart to lye to the holy Ghost Here the Holy Ghost arraigneth not Satan but Ananias for a lye which yet came from the Father of lyes Which is 1. Because there was fewell and powder in the harth before and Satan did but blow the
say they Answer Posit 1. Drawing is relative to running and walking Cant. 1.4 Now this is rather in acts of Sanctification and in running in the wayes of Gods commandements Psal. 119.32 then in Justification though coming goe for an act of beleeving and approaching to Christ Joh. 6.44 and so excludes not faith Pos. 2. It is most unsound to affirme that Justification and Regeneration are all one for this must confound all acts flowing from Justification with those that flow from Regeneration or the infused habit of Sanctification 1. Justification is an indivisible act the person is but once for all justified by grace But Sanctification is a continued daily act 2. Justification doth not grow the sinner is either freed from the guilt of sin and justified or not freed there is not a third But in Sanctification wee are said to grow in grace 2 Pet. 3.14 and advance in sanctification nor is it ever consummate and perfect so long as we beare about a body of sin Pos. 3. To repent to mortifie sin is not to condemne all our works as M. Town saith righteousnesse and judgement and our best things in us and then by faith to flie to grace nor is it to distrust our owne righteousnesse and embrace Christs in the promise 1. Because this is faith and the Scripture saith wee are justified by faith 2. We receive Christ by faith Joh. 1.12 3. Wee receive and embrace the promise by faith Heb. 11.11 and were perswaded of them 4. Wee are to beleeve without staggering Rom. 4.19 5. Wee have peace of conscience through faith Rom. 5.1 6. By faith wee have accesse into this grace wherein wee stand Rom. 5.2 And boldnesse to enter into the holy of holiest and draw neare to our High Priest with full assurance of faith Heb. 10.19 20 21 22. Now wee are not justified by repentance and morti●ication wee neither receive Christ nor embrace the promises by repentance The Apostle requireth in repentance sorrow carefulnesse to eschew sin clearing indignation feare zeale desire revenge 2 Cor. 7.10 11. but no where doth the Scripture require this as an ingredient of repentance that wee have boldnesse and accesse and full assurance nor doe Antinomians admit that by repentance wee have peace or pardon but this they ascribe to faith A second Question is How farre the Law can draw a sinner to Christ Antinomians tell us of a Legall drawing and conversion and of an Evangelike drawing the Legall drawing they say is ours the latter theirs Asser. 1. The difference between the letter of the Law and the Gospel is not in the manner of working for the letter of either Law or Gospel is alike uneffectuall and fruitlesse to draw any to Christ. Christ preached the Gospel to hard-hearted Pharisees it moved them not Moses preached the Law and the curses thereof to the stiffe-necked Jewes and they were as little humbled Sounds and syllables of ten hells of twenty heavens and Gospels without the Spirits working are alike fruitlesse And wee grant the Law is a sleepy Keeper of a captive sinner hee may either steale away from his Keeper or if hee be awed with his Keeper hee is not kept from any spirituall internall breach of the Law nor moved thereby to sincere and spirituall walking But the difference between Law and Gospel is not in the internall manner of working but in two other things 1. In the matter contained in Law and Gospel because nature is refractory to violence and the Law can doe nothing but curse sinners therefore it can draw no man to Christ. The Gospel againe containes sweet and glorious promises of giving a new heart to the elect of admitting to the Prince of peace laden and broken-hearted mourners in Sion and in conferring on them a free imputed righteousnesse and this is in it selfe a taking-way but without the gospel-Gospel-spirit utterly ineffectuall 2. To the Gospel there is a Spirit added which worketh as God doth with an omnipotent pull and this Spirit doth also use the Law to prepare and humble though this be by an higher power then goeth along with the Law as the Law Asser. 2. The Gospel-love of Christ freeth a captive from under the Law as a Curser and delivers him over to the Law as to a Pedagogue to lead him to Christ and as to an Instructer to rule and lead him when hee is come to Christ. Love is the immediate and nearest lord Law the mediate and remote lord Love biddeth the man doe all for Christ the Law now of it selfe because of our sinfulnesse is a bitter and soure thing but now the Law is dipped in Christs Gospel-love and is sugared and honeyed and evangelized with Free grace and receives a new forme from Christ and is become sweeter then the honey and the honey-combe to draw and perswade and all the Law is made a new Commandement of love and a Gospel-yoak sweet and easie but still the Law obligeth justified men to obedience not onely for the matter of it but for the supreme authority of the Lawgiver now Christ who came to fulfill not to dissolve the Law doth not remove this authority but addeth a new bond of obligation from the tye of Redemption in Jesus Christ and we are freed from the curse of the Law 2. The rigid exaction of obedience every way perfect 3. The seeking of life and justification by the Law Asser. 3. There be two things in the Law 1. The authority and power to command direct and regulate the creature to an end in acts of righteousnesse and holinesse 2. A secondary authority to punish eternally the breakers of the Law and to reward those that obey These are two different things suppose Adam had never sinned the Law had been the Law and suppose Adam had never obeyed the Law also should have been the Law and in the former case there should have been no punishment in the latter no reward Antinomians confound these two Mr. Towne saith It cannot be said that my spirit doth that voluntarily which the command of the Law bindeth and forceth unto It is one thing for a man at his owne free lyberty to keepe the Kings high way of the Law and another to keepe it by pales and ditches that he cannot without danger goe out of it It cannot be denyed but that the Gospel both chargeth or aweth us to beleeve in Christ and to bring forth good fruits worthy of Christ except wee would bee hewen downe and cast into the fire and also that Grace worketh Faith and to will and to doe and so voluntary obedience and obligation of a command may as well consist as bearing Christs yoak and soule-rest yea and delight and joy unspeakable and glorious may be and are in one regenerate person Crisp and his followers are farre wide for Christ dyed freely out of extreame love and yet he dyed out of a command laid on him to lay downe his life for his sheep
to be instructed and ordered in all things inwardly and outwardly after the minde of God but no unconverted man can bee said so to doe except Antinomians be grosse Pelagians But I think Antinomians with Mr. Crispe think the person under the Law in all this chapter to bee the beleever personating or acting the person of a scrupulous beleever under a temptation of doubting but cleare it is Paul speaks of a man under the Law in the flesh and in opposition to him of one under grace of one married to the Law and of one married to Christ in the first part of the chapter of one in the flesh and so unrenewed vers 5. For when wee was in the flesh c. and of one that is dead to the Law married to Christ and serves the Lord spiritually and its clear that the Apostle counteth it a part of deliverance from the Law and a fruit of our marriage to God that vers 4 we● bring forth fruits to God and walk holily 2. That the motions of sinnes bring forth wicked works as children to the second death vers 5. 3 that wee serve the Lord vers 6. in newnesse of Spirit and walk in Christ. Now Mr. Towne as setting himselfe to contradict Paul saith pag. 6. This is an addition and mixture of works and faith and cannot stand with a covenant of meere grace Towne pag. 8. How can Christ red●eme us f●om the Law being under the Law for us except beleevers be redeemed from the Law in that same very sence and extent that Christ was under it as a mediator But was not Christ under the Rule and obedience also as well as under the Raigne to death seeing he came to doe the will of his father and fulfill all righteousnesse Mat. 3.15 Answ. 1. Wee cannot every way be said to be redeemed from the Law in that same sence that Christ was under it For Christ was under the Law of Ceremonies to free the Iewes from observing that Law I hope we Gentiles are not that way freed from the Law of Ceremonies for that Law did never oblige the Gentiles except the Gentiles had adjoyned themselves in some profession to the then visible Church 2. If Christ was under the Law as the rule to free us from the Law as the rule then why did Christ command us to imitate him in doing his fathers will and submitting to that same Ru●e that hee submitted to as is clear Matth. 11.29 learne of mee that am meek Ioh. 15.10 If yee keepe my commandments ye shall abide in my love even as I have kept my fathers commandments and abide in his love Ioh. 14.15 If yee love me keep my commandments Ioh. 13.15 For I have given you example that yee should doe as I have done unto you Ephes. 5.1.2 Rev. 3.21 Heb. 12.1 1 Pet. 2.21.22 Ioh. 15.23 but Antinomians say that these that be in Christ are not under the Law or commands of the word even of the letter of the Gospel as the rule of life and that Christians are not bound to conforme themselves in their life to the directions of the word contrary to Psal. 119.9 Esai 8.20 and contrary to all the gospel-exhortations given in the New Testament by Christ and his Apostles and they say that the example of Christs life even in subjecting himselfe to the law as a rule of righteousnesse is not a paterne according to which we are to act and live In a word they will have the Spirit separated from the word and from the example of Christ and all the cloud of witnesses to be no rule to us to which I oppose that one precious word of the beloved disciple 1 Ioh. 2.26 He that saith he abideth in him ought so to walke even as he hath walked But observe 1. All means that doe not efficaciously bow the will to obedience to God and convert the soule are rejected by them as not obliging the conscience such as are the Law the letter of the Gospel all the promises exhor●●tions and precepts of the Gospel the example of the Lord who commandeth us 1 Pet. 1. to be holy as he is holy the example of Christ of all the Prophets Apostles Martyrs and Saints because all these are some other thing then grace and may prove ineffectuall hence 1. The Gospel as contradistinguished from the Law is not the Gospel written or preached but the grace that resideth no where but in God and in Iesus Christ is the Gospel so say they The faith that justifieth us is in Iesus Christ and never had any actuall beeing out of Christ. 2. There i● no habituall grace inherent in beleevers all such must bee a created thing Grace is an uncreated favour only in God for all that which is called habituall grace in us is in effectuall to act graciously and cannot produce supernaturall acts except the holy Ghost act and move it Hence they say that the new creature or the man or the new heart or new Spirit the circumcised the opened heart the Law in the inward parts the one heart the renewed minde the inner man the Law of the mind Christ dwelling in the heart by faith mentioned in the Gospel is not meant of Grace but of Christ and therefore we must not pray for gifts and graces but only for Christ and so a man may have all graces and poverty of Spirit and yet want Christ. 2. We are patients in justification Sanctification beleeving in Christ and we are blocks all the way to heaven minde will affection memory love desir● joy feare and all in us act nothing in supernaturall acts there is not such a thing as grace in any of the Saints but Grace is nothing but Christ without us drawing us as blocks as dead stones in the way to heaven having no activitie but to sin even after we beleeve in Christ and Christ works in the regenerate as in deadmen 3. Omissions of duties commanded in the Gospel are no sins for none are to be exhorted to beleeve but such whom we know to be the elect of God or to have his Spirit in them effectually and a man may not bee exhorted to any dutie because he hath no power to do it then Law Gospel exhortations commands promises threatning● are to no purpose these that want grace to obey are not lyable to obey nor guilty nor under wrath because they beleeve not in the Son of God and these that are under grace are under obligation to no commands at all and farewell all Scripture from henceforth Yea Mr. Town is frequent in this we are not under the Law as our rule Why because saith he it cannot effectually work obedience in us but so all the word of God the Gospel without the Spirit must be no rule of obedience at all because the Scripture the Gospel and all the promises without the Spirit are just alike and uneffectuall to work us to obedience But not
awed by the Law 576.577 Antinomians oblige not beleevers to personall walking with God 578 The Law leaveth not off to bee a rule of righteousnesse because it giveth not grace 579 Every naturall man under the Law 581.582 A Mystery of Antinomians that all meanes not effectually moving the will are not meanes laying bonds on the conscience 582.583 Antinomians take away all use of teaching and exhorting 584 Faith looseth us not from the Law ibid. Obeying of God because of the direction of Law and Gospel is to Antinomians a controuling of the free Spirit 589 The Law as the Law required perfect obedience but the Law as Evangelized requireth not perfect obedience that we may be justified 589 The Antinomian doctrine propounded by the carnall Libertine Rom. 7. 590.591 The Law is not meerely passive 591.592 How Faith and new obedience are the meanes of our delivery from the body of sin the former from the guilt and that perfectly and at once in justification and the other from the blot and in-dwelling of sinne and that by degrees in Sanctification 593.594 How we are saved without works 594.595 How God accounteth the good works of the justified porfect 595.596.597.598 CHRIST DYING AND Drawing Sinners to himselfe JOHN 12. 27. Now is my soule troubled and what shall I say Father save me from this houre But for this cause came I unto this houre 28. Father glorifie thy Name IT is a question whether these words of our Saviours Soule-trouble be nothing but the same words and prayer which Matthew chap. 26. and Luke 22. relate to wit O my Father if it be possible let this cup passe from me when his soule was troubled in the garden in his agonie Some think them the same others not It is like they are words of the same matter for first when Christ uttered these words hee was neare his sufferings and on the brink of that hideous and dark sea of his most extreme paine and drew up against hell and the Armies of darknesse as the story sheweth But that the Lord uttered these same words in the garden and not before is not apparent because upon this prayer it is said Then came there a voyce from heaven c. A voyce speaketh to him from heaven now Mat. 26. Luk. 22. no voyce is like to have come from heaven for when hee prayed in his agonie there were no people with him as here because of the voyce the people being present Some said it thundered others said an Angel spake from heaven there being now with Christ in the garden when hee prayed O my Father c. none save Peter James and John the three famous witnesses of his extreme suffering and of his young heaven of his transfiguration on the Mount when hee acted the Preludium and the image and representation of heaven before them as is cleare Mat. 26. vers 37. And he was removed from them also Mat. 26.39 Luk. 22.41 and they were sleeping in his agonie Mat. 26.40 43 45. But now there is a waking people with Christ who heard this voyce But I deny not but it is the same prayer in sense even as suppose it were revealed to a godly man that hee were to suffer an extreme violent and painfull death and withall some fearfull soule-desertion as an image of the second death it should much affright him to remember this and hee might pray that the Lord would either save him from that sad houre or then give him grace with faith and courage in the Lord to endure it so here Christ God and man knowing that hee was to beare the terrors of the first and second death doth act over afore-hand the time being neare the sorrow and anguish of heart that hee was to suffer in his extreme sufferings as it were good ere the crosse come to act it in our mind and take an essay and a lift of Christs crosse ere wee beare it to try how handsomely wee would set back and shoulders under the Lords crosse I doe not intend that wee are to imitate the Martyr who put his hand in the fire the night before hee suffered to try how hee could endure burning-quick but that wee are to lay the supposition what if i● so fall out as Christ being perswaded his suffering was to come acted sorrow trouble of soule and prayer before-hand and to resolve the saddest and antedate the crosse and say with our owne hearts Let the worst come or to suffer our feare to prophecy as Job did chap. 3. vers 25. yet suppose the hardest befall me I know what to doe as the unjust Steward resolveth on a way before-hand how to swimm● through his necessities Luk. 16.4 The Lord acteth judgement and what they shall pray in the time of their extremity who now spit at all praying and Religion they shall be religious in their kind when they shall cry Revel 6.16 Mountaines and rocks fall on us and hide us from the face of him that sitteth on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb. You cannot beleeve that a Lambe shall chase the Kings of the earth and the great men and the rich men and every bond-man and every free-man into the dennes and the rocks of the mountaines to hide themselves But the Lord acteth wrath and judgement before your eyes Men will not suppose the reall story of hell Say but with thy selfe Oh! shall I weep and gnaw my tongue for paine in a sea of fire and brimstone Doe but fore-fancie I pray you how you shall look on it what thoughts you will have what you shall doe when you shall 2 Thes. 1.9 be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his power 1. Fore-seen sorrowes have not so sad an impression on the spirit 2. Grace is a well-advised and resolute thing and has the eyes of providence to say in possible events What if my Scarlet embrace the Dunghill and Providence turne the Tables 3. It is like wisedome grace is wise to see afarre-off to fore-act faith and resolve to lie under Gods feet and intend humble yeelding to God as 2 Sam. 15.25 26. In the Complaint wee have 1. the Subject-matter of it The Lords troubled soule 2. The Time Now is my soul● troubled 3. Christs Anxiety wrought on him by this trouble What shall I say or which is the sense What shall I doe 4. And a shoare is seen at hand in the storme a present rock in the raging sea What shalt thou say Lord Jesus what shalt thou doe Pray and hee prayeth Father save me from this houre 5. There is a sort of correction or rather a limitation But for this cause came I to this houre The Lord forgetting his paine embraceth this evill houre 6. Going on in his resolution to embrace this sad houre hee prayeth vers 28. Father glorifie thy Name Touching the first the Soule-trouble of Christ wee are to consider 1. How it can consist with
saved by Faith as we are Heb. 11.1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13. Gal. 3.10 13. Acts 11.16 17. Rom. 9.31 32 33. 5. Yea the Law was no lesse a Letter of condemnation to them then to us Rom. 8.3 Rom. 10.3 Deut. 27.26 Gal. 3.10 13. 2 Cor. 3 7 8.13.14 15. 6. They dranke of the same spirituall Rocke with u● and the Rocke was Christ 1 Cor. 10.1 2 3 4. Heb. 13.8 and were saved by grace as well as we Acts 15.11 2. It 's true Josiahs tendernesse of heart Davids smiting of heart the Womans weeping even to the washing of Christs f●et with teares Peters weeping bitterly for the denying of his Lord as they were woundings and Gospel-affections and commotions of love issuing from the Spirit of adoption of love grace and nothing but the Turtles love-sorrow so it is most false that they were no soule trouble for sinne as if these had beene freed from all Law of God and these soule-commotions were not from any sense of the curse or the Law or any demands of Law to pay what justice may demand of the selfe-condemned sinner yet were they acts of soule-trouble for sin as sin and it shall never follow that the parties were under no transgression and no law because under no obligement to eternall wrath for such an obligation to eternall wrath is no chain which can tye the sons of adoption who are washed justified pardoned and yet if the justified and pardoned say they have no sin and so no reason to complaine under their fetters and sigh as captives in prison as Paul doth Rom. 7.24 nor cause to mourne for in-dwelling of sin they are liars and strangers to their owne heart and doe sleep in deep security as if sin were so fully removed both in guilt and blot as if tears for sin as sin should argue the mourning party to be in the condition of those who weep in hell or that they were no more obliged to weep yea by the contrary to exercise no such affection but joy comfort and perpetuated acts of solace and rejoycing as if Christ had in the threshold of glory with his owne hand wiped all teares from their eyes already 3. Nor see I any reason why any should affirme That the Law is naturally as a party in the soule of the either regenerate and justified or of those who are out of Christ. 1. For the Law 's in-dwelling as a party ingaging by accusing and condemning is not naturally in any sonne of Adam because there is a sleeping conscience both dumbe and silent naturally in the soule and if there be any challenging and accusing in the Gentile-conscience Rom. 2. as stirring is opposed to a silent and dumb conscience that speaketh nothing so the Law-accusing is not naturally in the soule a spirit above nature I doe not meane the Spirit of regeneration must work with the Law else both the Law and sin lie dead in the soule the very law of nature lieth as a dead letter and stirreth not except some wind blow more or lesse on the soule Rom. 7.8 9. 2. That the Law wakeneth any sinner and maketh the drunken and mad sinner see himselfe in the sea and sailing down the river to the chambers of death that hee may but be occasioned to cast an eye on shore on Jesus Christ and wish a landing on Christ is a mercy that no man can father on nature or on himselfe 3. All sense of a sinfull condition to any purpose is a work above nature though it be not ever a fruit of regeneration 4. It s true Christ teacheth a mans soule through the shining of Gospel-light to answer all the enditements of the Law in regard that Christ the Ransomer stops the Law 's mouth with bloud else the sinner can make but a poore and faint advocation for himselfe yet this cannot be made in the conscience without some soule-trouble for sin 5. It s strange that Gods people need more joy after sinne then after affliction and that in some respect they have most joy who have sinned most Sure this is accidentall to sin this joy is not for sin but it s a joy of loving much because much is forgiven Forgivenesse is an act of free grace sin is no work of grace Sin grieves the heart of God as a friend's trouble is trouble to a friend the beleever is made the friend of God Joh. 15.15 and it must be cursed joy that lay in the womb of that which is most against the heart of Christ such as all sin is Yea to be more troubled in soule for sinnes then for afflictions smelleth of a heart that keeps correspondence with the heart and bowels of Christ who wept more for Jerusalems sins then for his owne afflictions and crosse As some ounces of everlasting wrath in the Law with a talent weight of free Gospel-mercy would be contempered together to cure the sinner so is there no rationall way to raise and heighten the price and worth of the soule-Redeemer of sinners and the weight of infinite love so much as to make the sinner know how deep a hell hee was plunged in when the bone aketh exceedingly for that the Gospel-tongue of the Physician Christ should lick the rotten bloud of the soules wound speaketh more then imaginable free-love Nor doe wee say that Gospel-mourning is wrought by the Law 's threatnings then it were servile sorrow but it s wrought by the doctrine of the Law discovering the foulnesse and sinfulnesse of sin and by the doctrine of the Gospel the Spirit of the Gospel shining on both Otherwise sounds breathings letters of either Law or Gospel except the breathings of heaven shine on them and animate them can do● no good Asser. 4. Sinnes of youth already pardoned as touching the obligation to eternall wrath may so rise against the childe of God as he hath need to aske the forgivenesse of them as touching the removing of present wrath sense of the want of Gods presence of the influence of his love the cloud of sadnesse and deadnes through the want of the joy of the Holy Ghost and ancient consolations of the dayes of old Psal. 90.7 Wee are consumed in thy wrath and by thy hot displeasure we are terrified Vers. 8. Thou hast set our iniquities before thee and our secret sinne in the light of thy face This was not a motion of the flesh in Moses the man of God Antinomians may so dreame the furie of the Lord waxed hot against his people so saith the Spirit of God nor is this conceit of theirs to be credited against the Text that Moses speaketh in regard of the reprobate party Moses by immediate inspiration doth not pray for the beauty and glory of the Lord in the sense of his love to be manifested on a reprobate partie Antinomian Preachers in our times confesse sinnes in publike but it s the sinnes of the reprobate and carnall multitude that are in
the condition of the afflicted soule that hee see in him some inherent qualification that may argue to the Physician there is some lesse or more of Christ in the soule of the man else if hee know him to be a person yet utterly void of Christ sure hee must deale with him that is under the Law in a more legall and violent manner then with him whom hee conceiveth to be under the Gospel for one and the same physick cannot suit with contrary complexions The Author professeth hee dealeth with sinners as sinners and so with all sinners as if physick for the gut were fit physick for the stone in the bladder I goe not so high but speak to a weak son who hath God for his Father but under soule-trouble doubteth whether God be his Father or not If hee lay downe a principle that hee was never in Christ because of such and such sinnes you are not who ever intends to cure him to yeeld so much and to deale with him according to a false supposall as if hee were not in Christ but must labour to prove hee is in Christ which to no purpose is done by proving fair generalls as Saltmarsh with other Libertines doth that is you but till the sand and beat the aire to prove that Gods love is eternall and his covenant and decree of election to his chosen so stable and unalterable as no sin can hinder the flowings of eternall love when you make not sure to the man that hee is loved with an everlasting love Hence these considerations for easing the afflicted conscience of a weak child of God Asser. 1. The soule labouring under doubts whether God be his Father is to hold off two rocks either confiding or resting on duties or neglecting of duties the former is to make a Christ of duties as if Christ himselfe were not more lovely and desirable then the comfortable accidents of joy comfort and peace in doing duties Yea take the formall vision of God in an immediate fruition in heaven as a duty and as in that notion contra-distinguished from the objective vision of Christ then Christ is to be enjoyed loved rested on infinitely above the duties of vision beatifice love eternall resting on him yea above imputed righteousnesse assurance of pardon reconciliation as the King is more then his bracelets of gold his myrrhe Spikenard perfumes oyntment kisses the tree more desireable then a fleece of apples that groweth on it for the fourth part of a yeare 2. Sinne it must be to sue and woe the Kings Attendants and Courtiers by himselfe or to make duties Christ and Christ but a Man-servant and Mediator to duties sense comfort assurance or the like 3. The Whelps of the Beare are taken from her by swift riding away with them and by casting down one of them that shee may lose time in gaining the rest while shee returneth back againe so many myles to bring that one to the den And the smell of some delicious fields they say so taketh the dogs that they forget the prey and follow it no more To smell so much in duties and to be so sick and impotent in loving and resting on them as to lie down in the way and seek Christ no more is doubtlesse a neglect of Christ. And thus high our Doctrine never advanced Sanctification nor enthroned any acts duties or qualifications under the notion of witnesses or creators of peace or reconciliation how our hearts may abuse them is another thing Asser. 2. What advise you then a deserted soule to goe on in duties and seek righteousnesse in himselfe By no meanes to seek righteousnesse in himselfe that is highest pride but will you call it pride for a starving man to beg Is it selfe-denyall for such a one to be starke dumb and to pray none in his famishing condition for food Did the Spouse seek her selfe in this duty Cant. 3. Watchmen saw yee him whom my soule loveth Was this a resolution of pride Chap. 3.2 I will rise now and goe about the City in the streets and in the broad wayes I will seek him whom my soule loveth And is it selfe-righteousnesse for the Spouse to send her hearty respects of service to Christ when shee cannot have one word from him nor one smile Cant. 5.6 Tell my beloved that I am sick of love Nor doe I think Mary Magdalen was in a distemper of Pharisaicall righteousnesse when shee rose and prevented the morning skie and came weeping to the grave O Angels saw yee the Lord Gardener whither have you carried him May I not doe these duties when I misse him May I not wake in the night May I not doe well to f●ed a love-feaver for the want of him May I not both pray and say Daughters of Jerusalem pray for mee May I not make a din through all the streets and the broad wayes and trouble all the Watch-men and Shepherds and pray them Can you lead me to his tent and tell me where hee lieth O but all these were to be done in faith True but are they not duties of love-sicknesse I owe to Christ also I know they cannot bring to mee everlasting righteousnesse but is not seeking and knocking stairs to finding and opening Asser. 3. Another counsell is force not a Law-suit seeke not buy not a plea against Christ. Conscience a tender peece under Jealousies saith O he loveth not me Christ hath forgotten me joyne not in such a quarrell with conscience Have not cold and low thoughts of Christs love to you because he is out of sight he is not out of languor of love for you Asser. 4. Unbeliefe is a Witch an Inchantresse and covers Christs face with a veile of hatred wrath displeasure Examine what grounds of reason you have to mis-beleeve or breake with Christ say he had broken with you yet because you know it not for suspition lose not such a friend as Christ if you get never more of him you may sweare and vow to take to hell with you if so he deale with you the pawnes and love-tokens you once received that they may bee witnesses what Christ is and may be the remnants seedes and leavings of the high esteeme you once had of him Asser. 5. A time Christ must have to goe and come and therefore must be waited on We give the Sea houres to ebbe and slow and the Moone dayes to decrease and grow full and the Winter-sunne and the Summer-sunne monthes to goe away and returne and whether we will or no God and Nature take their time and aske us no leave Why has God given to us eyes within and without but that David may weare his eyes while they be at the point of failing in looking up and in waiting for God Psal. 69. Asser. 6. And though you were in hell and he in heaven he is worthy to be waited on the first warme smile of a new returne is sufficient to recompence all sorrow in his
many deaths as Christ will is a rare grace of God and not of ordinary capacity Rule 7. Christ in submitting his will maketh the Prophecies the revealed Gospel his rule and in the matter of duty is willing to be ruled by Gods revealed will in the matter of suffering hee is willing that the Lords will stand for a Law to which hee doth willingly submit and will in no sort quarrell with everlasting decrees To be ruled by the one is holinesse to submit to the other is patience For patience is higher then any ordinary grace in regard its willing to adore and reverence something more and higher then a commanding promising and threatning will of God It was a grace in Christ most eminent in the Lamb of God dumb meek and silent before his shearers the meekest in earth and in heaven that hee did not onely never resist the revealed will of God but never thought motion nor any hint of a desire was in him against the secret and o●ernall decree and counsell of God Christ will not have us to make Images of him who is the invisible God but when in his works of justice power love free grace hee setteth before us the image of his glorious nature and attributes hee will have us to adore him in these According to his decree of reprobation hee raised up Pharaoh to be clay to all men on whom as on a voluntary and rationall vessell of wrath they might read power justice truth soveraignty in these works wee are to tremble before him and adore the Lord. So in works of Grace that are the Image of the invisible God the Lord is to be loved 1 Tim. 1.16 In Paul the chiefe of sinners the Lord holds forth an image of the freest grace no lesse then in the revealed will of God for 1. Christ made an example of mercy and free grace in him 2. Hee made a speaking and crying spectacle to all Ages an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a printed copy of crying grace to all the world and in this wee are to adore and submit to him Such a limb of hell hath received mercy not I who before men was holier O submit to this worke of grace as to the copy of his eternall decree and be silent Rule 8. Christ putteth nature and naturall reason that his naturall will might seem to plead withall under the Lords feet So it would seeme strange God hath many sonnes but none like Christ hee was a Sonne his alone hee had never a brother by an eternall generation hee was the onely heire of the house but never a son so afflicted as hee This seemes against all reason But Christ brings in his Fathers will with an 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But Mat. 26.39 Joh. 12.27 Luk. 22.42 Mark 14.36 But thy will be done It s against submission to put absolute interrogatories upon the Lord Wee love to have God make an account of his providence to us and that the last and finall appeale of the wayes of the Lord should be to our reason as to the great Senate and supremest Court in heaven and earth It s true Christ putteth a Why upon God My God my God why hast thou forsaken me but 1. with the greatest faith that ever was a doubled act of beleeving My God my God 2. With the extremest love that ever was in a man it s also a two-fold cord of warmnesse of heart to his Father My God my God 3. It s a word relative to the covenant between the Father and the Son for My God is a covenant-expression that the Father will keep what he hath promised to his Son and relateth to the infinite faithfulnesse of the Covenant-Maker 4. God relateth to the Dominion Lord-ship and Soveraignty that the Lord hath and therefore that Christ will submit to him 5. Christs complaint of the Lords forsaking sheweth the tendernesse of his soule in prizing the favour of his Father more then any thing in heaven and earth And therefore Christs why is a note of 1. Admiration 2. Of sinlesse Sorrow conjoyned with love tendernesse and submission to God Christ cannot speak to his Father beside the truth But every man is a lyar and wee seldome put questions and queries upon Soveraignty but wee preferre our reason to infinite wisdome Job is out and takes his marks by the Clouds and the Moone when hee saith Job 13.24 Why holdest thou me for thine enemy Chap. 3.11 Why died I not from the womb why did I not give up the ghost when I came out of the belly And Jeremiah 15.18 Why is my paine perpetuall and my wound incurable which refuseth to be healed Chap. 20.18 Wherefore came I out of the wombe to see labour and sorrow that my dayes should be consumed with shame All the Lords works are full yea with child of reason wisdome and grave and weighty causes and though wee see not his acts to have a why yet there is a cause why hee doth all hee doth reason is necessity to him and an essentiall ingredient in all his actions Rule 9. In this Administration of Providence with Christ the Lord goeth many wayes at once In this very act hee redeemeth the world judgeth Satan satisfieth the Law and Justice glorifieth Christ destroyeth sin fulfilleth his owne eternall will and counsell In one warre hee can ripen Babylon for wrath humble his Church deliver Jeremiah punish Idolatry In the same warre hee can humble and correct Scotland harden Malignants that they will not hearken to offers of peace and blow up their haters that they may be lofty through victories and be ripened for wrath through unthankfulnesse to God Providence hath many eyes so also many feet and hands under the wings to act and walk a thousand wayes at once There is a manifold wisdome in Providence as in the work of Redemption In every worke that God doth hee leaveth a wonder behind him No man can come after the Almighty and say I could have done better then hee It s naturall to blame God in his working but unpossible to mend his work Rule 10. Nor is Christ made a loser by losing his will for the Lord but his will is fulfilled in that which he feared Heb. 5.7 Providence submitted unto rendereth an hundred fold in this life Matth. 19.29 God makes the income above hope Gen. 48.11 And Israel said to Ioseph I had not thought to see thy face and lo God hath shewed me also thy seed One berry is not a cluster that two men cannot bear but it s a field an earth of Vine-trees in the seed Ephes. 3.20 He is able to doe above all things 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 more then aboundantly above that we can aske or thinke above the shaping or frame of my words and thoughts But I can ask heaven he can give more then heaven and above heaven yea I can think of Christ but he can give above the Christ that I can thinke on
of his own free will not from any mystinesse or intrinsecall darknesse of the object hath cast a covering over the thoughts of mans heart that they are not seen clearly to any other Men or Angels Nor could humane Societies now in the state of sin subsist if but the father could read the heart of the sonne Nor have Angels good or bad any immediate Princedome over free will nor would I say Satan is the Author yea or the immediate Tempter to all sinnes many sinfull thoughts and wicked acts are transacted in this darke chamber of presence the heart of man to which Satan can have no personall accesse neither with his eyes to see nor his hands of power to stirre or move in them The heart is the privie garden weeds grow there without Satans immediate industry he may knock or cast fire-balls over the wall or in at the windowes or send letters and messages in but hee cannot immediatly talke with the heart or act immediatly on the will wee are to keep this virgin-love of the heart to Christ hee can ravish it and none but hee It s the will that maketh the bargaine in sinning With all keeping keep the heart Wee make away the created dominion over free-will that God gave us in our creation 3. Satan hath a Princedome in 1. knowledge naturall 2. in acquired knowledge In naturall because hee is a piece of light a lamp once shining in heaven but now for his sinne smoking and glympsing in hell The naturall intellectualls of the Devill are depraved not removed It s a question if hee can remaine a Spirit if that candle were extinct by which hee beleeveth there is a God but trembleth Jam. 2. The acquired knowledge of the Devill is great hee being an advancing Student and still learning now above five thousand yeares and hee that teacheth others becometh more learned himselfe He is the great Mint-master and Coyner of knowledge in Magicians Wise-men Soothsayers Sorcerers is a carefull Reader in turning over the pages of the book of Nature and the whole works of Creation But still Satan studieth man better then man doth himselfe hee knoweth nature in generall may sin and that corrupt nature must sin hee observeth second inclinations of humour complexion temper of body disposition ere hee tempt as no Sea-man sailes till hee know how the wind bloweth and hee learned that by the Prophets and experience which hee saith Luk. 4.34 I know thee who thou art the holy one of God 4. Hee hath a particular Princedome of Power legally over mankind till Christ set them at liberty as the Executioner hath over the condemned man from the Judge Heb. 2.14 Christ tooke part with the children of flesh and bloud that through death he might destroy him that had the power of death that is the devill Vers. 15. And deliver them who through the feare of death were all their life time subject to bondage Satan from mens sins hath a sort of conquered Princedome till the Sonne of God make us free Joh. 8.36 And this Princedome hee keepeth over all the sons of disobedience as their father Joh. 8.44 as the king of the bottomlesse pit And we have no ground to say that Satan at the day of judgement leaveth off to be king because the damned and the Devill and his Angels are said to be tormented together in everlasting fire Mat. 25. for communion in paine maketh not Satan to have no Angels under him or damned men whom hee torments Quest. But how keepeth Satan still power over Job Peter to winnow them and afflict them in this life if Christ have cast him out of his Princedome Answ. 1. It s meere service for the trying of the Saints and mortifying of their lusts not dominion not any legall power such as he hath over the Sonnes of disobedience whom he keepeth captives at his will 2. In relation to Satan it is a meere grant of permission as a Noble-man forfeited for treason and kept some yeares in prison before he dye hath the life-rent of his own Lands for his necessity not by heritage as before but by a grant or gift of grace from the bounty of the Prince and State so hath Sathan not by grace to himselfe but by a grant of meere permission as it were his life-rent to tempt winnow and try the Saints so long as Satan is in the way to his full doome in Hell Now if Christ had not spoiled Satan and dissolved his workes the use of this power had beene as it were heritage to Satan in regard the Law giveth him a sort of right over sinners not made free in Christ. Yet I doe not say it s his proper right because Satan sinneth in tempting any to sinne yet the temptation as it falleth passively on the Sonnes of disobedience is a worke of Divine justice and as it falleth on the Saints an act of spotlesse and holy dispensation for most just reasons known to God 2. Satan is a prince in regard of magnificence called a Prince a Prince of the aire a God for he hath a royall army under him the Devill and his Angels are a great hoast Revel 12.9 The Devill and Satan and his Angels were cast out Vers. 7. The Dragon and his Angels fought with Michael and he hath Legions garisoned in one poore man hee hath kept the fields above these five thousand yeares with a huge and mighty army both by Sea and Land Ephes. 6.12 For wee wrestle not against flesh and bloud but against Principalities and powers against the rulers in the darkenesse of this world against spirituall wickednesse in high places Heere bee great persons in eminent places and they can leade armies against us and have in every single souldier a strong garrison of concupiscence and fleshly lusts that warre against the soule 1 Pet. 2.11 And the flesh is a strong Fort-royall a towre of imaginations which exalt themselves against a strong King the Lord Jesus and cannot bee his captives but by the mighty power of God 2 Cor. 10 5. The Devill is not a despic●ble and poore enemy to be despised it is not good warre-wisdome to despise a meane enemy farre more should we not sleepe but watch and be sober When the Peer●s of hell and Princes and Rulers in high places who have the vantage of the Mount above us are against us 3. Satans Princedome is especially seene in tempting to sinne which that it may be better cleared I shall shortly shew what a temptation in generall is 2. Open Satans power in tempting To tempt is to take a triall of any to try what is in them therefore the neerest end of tempting is knowledge Now the waies or manner of bringing out this knowledge rendreth the temptation good or ill for God tempteth and Satan tempteth So Temptation is a working upon the senses reason inclin●tion affections by which any is or may be moved under the colour of good toward that
shall seek the Lord. Zech. 12.11 And in that day there shall be a great mourning in Jerusalem as the mourning of Hadadrimmon in the valley of Megiddon It s good to lie and wait at the doore and posts of Wisdomes house and to lie and attend Christs tyde it may come in an houre that you would never have beleeved O what depth of mercy when for naturall or no saving-one-waiting or upon a poore venture What if I goe to Christ I can have no lesse then I have beside any gracious intention the Lord saves and the wind not looked for turnes faire for a sea-voyage to heaven in the Lords time Asser. 12. The ground moving Christ to renew his love in drawing a fallen Saint out of the pit is the same that from heaven shined on him at the beginning Love is an undevided thing there are not two loves or three loves in Christ that which begins the good work promoves it even the same love which Christ hath taken up to heaven with him and there ye find it before you when ye come thither 2. Some love-sicknesse goes before his returne Cant. 3. I was but a little passed I found him whom my soule loves the skie devides and rents it selfe and then the Sunne is on its way to rise the birds begin to sing then the Summer is neere the voice of the Turtle is heard then the winter is gone when the affections grow warme the welbeloved is upon a returne 3. You die for want of Christ absence seemes to be at the highest when hunger for a renewed drawing in the way of comforting is great and the sad soule lowest he will come at night and sup if hee dine not 4. Let Christ moderate his own pace hope quietly waiteth Hope is not a shouting and a tumultuous grace 5. Your disposition for Christs returne can speake much for a renewed drawing as when the Church findes her own pace s●ow and prayes draw me we will runne then hee sendeth ushers before to tell that he will come 6. Sick nights for the Lords absence in not drawing are most spirituall signes Antinomians beleeve that all the promises in the Gospel made upon conditions to bee performed by creatures especially free-will casting in its share to the worke smell of some graines of the Law and of obedience for hire and that bargaining of this kind cannot consist with free grace And the doubt may seeme to have strength in that our Divines argue against the Arminian decree of election to glory upon condion of faith and perseverance foreseene in the persons so chosen because then election to glory should not be of meere grace but depend on some thing in the creature as on a condition or motive at least if not as on a cause worke or hire But Arminians reply the condition being of grace cannot make any thing against the freedome of the grace of election because so justification and glorification should not be of meere grace for sure we are justified and saved upon condition of faith freely given us of God The question then must bee Whether there can be any conditionall promises in the Gospel of Grace or whether a condition performed by us and free grace can consist together Antinomians say they are contrary as fire and water Hence these positions for the clearing of this considerable question Pos. 1. The condition that Arminians fancie to bee in the Gospel can neither consist with the grace of election justification calling of grace or crowning of beleevers with glory this condition they say we hold but they erre because it is a condition of hire that they have borrowed from Lawyers such as is betweene man and man ex causa onerosa it s absolutly in the power of men to doe or not to doe and bowes and determineth the Lord and his free will absolutly to this part of the contradiction which the creature choseth though contrary to the naturall inclination and Antecedent will and decree of God wishing desiring and earnestly inclining to the obedience and salvation of the creature Now works of grace and infinite grace flow from the bowels and in-most desire of God nothing without laying bonds chaines or determination on the Lords grace or his holy will Could our well-doing milke out of the breasts of Christs free grace or extrinsecally determine the will or acts of free-bounty Grace should not be grace But without money or hire the Lord giveth his wine and milke Isai 55.1 Ephes. 2.1 2. Ezech. 16.5 6 7. 2 Tim. 1.9 Tit. 3.3 2. Because such a condition is of work not of grace and so of no lesse Law-debt and bargaining then can be between man and man And the party that fulfilleth the condition is 1. most free to forfeit his wages by working or not working as the hireling or labourer in a vineyard yea or any Merchant ingaged to another to performe a condition of which he is Lord and Master to doe or not doe 2. He is no wise necessitate nor determined any way but as the hire or wages doe determine his will who so worketh but the wages being absolutely in his power to gaine them or lose them determine his will which cannot fall in the Almightie 3. Such a condition performed by the creature putteth the Creature to glory but not in the Lord but in himselfe Rom. 4.2 For if Abraham were justified by works hee hath whereof to glory but not before God Yea Adam before the fall and the elect Angels hold not life eternall by any such free condition of obedience as is absolutely referred to their free will to doe or not to doe so our Divines deny against Papists with good warrant the free-hold of life eternall by any title of merit Sure if God determine freewill in all good and gracious acts as I prove undeniably from Scripture 2. From the dominion of providence 3. The covenant between the Father and the Sonne Christ. 4. the intercession of Christ. 5. The promises of a new heart and perseverance 6. Our prayers to bow the heart to walke with God and not to lead us into temptation 7. The faith and confidence wee have that God will worke in the Saints to will and to doe to the end 8. The praise and glory of all our good works which are due to God onely c. If God I say determine free will to all good even before as after the entrance of sinne into the world and that of Grace for this grace hath place in Law-obedience in Men and Angels then such a condition cannot consist with Grace For such a condition puts the creature in a state above the Creator and all freedome in him Pos. 2. Evangelike conditions wrought in the Elect by the irresistible grace of God and Grace doe well consist together Joh. 5.24 Verily Verily I say unto you hee that heareth my word and beleeveth in him that sent me hath everlasting life and shall not
a Sermon free love that the man spake such an excellent word free love that I was not sleeping when it was spoken free love that the Holy Ghost drove that word into the soule as a nayle fastened by the Master of the assembly it was free mercy so that there 's a meeting of shining favours of God in obtaining mercy and this would be observed Asser. 2. There be two ordinary wayes of God in drawing sinners one Morall by words another Physicall and reall by strong hand Which may be cleared thus Fancie led with some gilding of apparent or seeming good as hope of food doth allure and draw the bird to the grin and sometime pleasure as a glasse and the singing of the Fowler So is fish drawne to nibble at the angle and lines cast out hoping to get food Now this is like Morall drawing in men and all this is but objective working on the fancy But when the foot and wing of the bird is entangled with the net and the fish hath swallowed down the bait and an instrument of death under it now the Fowler draweth the bird and the Fisher the fish a farre other way even by reall violence The Physician makes the sick child thirsty then allures him to drink physick under the notion of drink to quench his thirst this is morall drawing of the child by wiles But when the child hath drunk the drink works not by wiles or morally but naturally without freedome and whether the child will or no it purgeth head and stomack That there is a Morall working by the word in the drawing of sinners to Christ though most evident yet must be proved against Antinomians and Enthusiasts who write That the whole letter of the Scripture holds forth a covenant of works And The due search and knowledge of the holy Scripture is not a safe and sure way of searching and finding Christ. And There is a testimony of the Spirit and voyce unto the soule meerly immediate without any respect unto or concurrence with the word And Such a faith as is wrought by a practicall Syllogisme or the word of God is but an humane faith because the conclusion followeth but from the strength of reasonings or reason not from the power of God by which alone divine things are wrought Ephes. 1.19 20. Col. 2.20 and that because such a faith wrought by the word the works of sanctification in the regenerate and light of a renewed conscience are all done by things that are created blessings and gifts and these cannot produce that which is onely produced by an Almighty power For the word of it selfe without the Spirit yet the word is more then works of sanctification is but a dead letter but that God works faith by the word his owne Spirit concurring is cleare 1. The Prophets alledge this for their warrant Thus saith the Lord. Ergo You must beleeve it And one more and greater then all the Prophets But I say so Christ God equall with the Father speaketh 2. Rom. 10.17 Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God Verse 14. How shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard It s true the word the works of God are not the principall object of faith nor objectum quod faith rests onely on God and the Lord Jesus Joh. 14.1 1 Thes. 1.8 Your faith toward God 1 Pet. 1.21 Deut. 1.32 Joh. 3.12 Gen. 15.6 Dan. 6.23 Rom. 4.3 Gal. 2.16 2 Tim. 1.12 The word promises and Prophets and Apostles are all creatures and but media fidei the meanes of saving faith they are objectum quo Joh. 5.46 Psal. 106.12 Exod. 4.8 Psal. 78.7 of themselves they are dead letters and dead things and cannot without the Spirit produce faith Yea all habits of grace of faith of love in us are like the streames of a fountaine that would dry up of themselves if the spring did not with a sort of eternity furnish them new supply so would habits of grace being but created things wither in us if they were not supplied from the Fountaine Christ. And all beings created in comparison of the first Being are nothing and all nations to him are lesse then nothing and vanity Isai. 40.17 and so are the infused habits of grace nothing If this were the meaning of Familists and Antinomians who say that there is in us no inherent grace but that grace is onely in Christ we should not contend with them Wee teach no such thing as that Reasonings Syllogismes or the Scriptures without the Spirit can produce Faith yet is it vaine arguing to say raine and dew the Summer-Sunne good soyle cannot bring forth roses floures vines cornes because sure it is a worke of Omnipotencie that produceth all these and so its vaine to say that because Faith is the worke of the omnipotencie of Grace therefore Faith commeth not by hearing and reasoning from Scripture the contrary whereof is evident in Christs proving of the resurrection by consequence from Scripture Mat. 22.31 32. Luk. 20.37 ●8 Nor can any say Christ may make discourses from Scripture and his reasonings because he is the King of the Church are valid and may produce faith but we cannot doe the like nor are our reasonings Scriptures for Christ r●buketh the Saduces Yee erre not knowing the Scriptures c. because they beleeved not the consequences of Scripture as Scripture and made not the like discourse for the building of themselves in the faith 3. The searching of the Scriptures is life eternall the onely way to find Christ. Joh. 5.39 Acts 10.43 Rom. 3.21 Esai 8.20 4. Gen. 9.27 God shall perswade Japhet by the Scriptures preached and he shall dwell in the tents of Shem Acts 16.14 Gods opening of the heart and Lydia's hearing and attending to the word that Paul spoke goe together 5. The way of Enthusiasts in rejecting both Law and Gospel and all the written word of God is because there is no light in them Some immediate sense of God and working of the holy Ghost on the soule of the child of God witnessing to me in particular that I am the child of God I deny not and that my name expressely is not in Scripture is as true but this testimony excludeth not the Scripture as if the searching thereof were no safe way of finding Christ as they blasphemously say 1. Because this Enthusiasme excludeth the onely revealed rule by which we trie the Spirits and we are forbidden to presume above that which is written 1 Cor. 4.16 and Enthusiasts have acted murthers and much wickednesse under this notion of inspirations of the Spirit 2. Because if the matter of that which is revealed be not according to the written Word Now after the Scriptrue is signed by Christs owne hand Revel 22.18 I see not what we are to beleeve of these inspirations What extraordinary impulsions and propheticall instincts have been in holy men and such as God hath raised to reforme his
amenity and lovelinesse of his nature and all infinite perfections as this pleasantnesse offers it selfe to his owne understanding and the understanding of men and Angels and as bodily beauty satisfies the eies and so acts on the heart to win love to beauty so the truth of the Lords nature and all his Attributes offered to the understanding and mind and drawing from them admiration or wondering and love is the beauty of God David maketh this his one thing Psal. 27.4 That saith he I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the daies of my life to behold the beauty of the Lord and inquire in his Temple See then as white and red excellently contempered maketh pleasure and delectation to the eies and through these windowes to the mind and heart so there ariseth from the nature of God and his Attributes a sweet intelligibility as David desires no other life but to stand beside God and behold with his mind and faiths eyes God in his Nature and Attributes as he reveales himself to the creature The Queen of Sheba came a far journey to see Salomon because of his perfection some common people desire to see the King the Lord is a fair and pleasant object to the understanding 2. There is in beautie a due proportion of members 1. quantity 2. situation 3. stature Let a person have a most pleasant colour yet if the eares and nose be as little as an Ant or as big as an ordinary mans leg he is not beautifull 2. If members be not right seated if the one eye be two inches lower in the face then the other it mars the beautie or if the head be in the breast it is a monster Or 3. if the stature be not due as if the person be the stature of ten men and too big or the stature of an infant or a Dove had he all other things for colour and proportion his beauty is no beauty but an error of nature he is not as he should be now the Lord is beautifull because infinitnesse and sweetnesse of order is so spread over his nature and Attributes nothing can be added to him nothing taken from him and hee is not all mercy only but infinitely just were God infinitely true yet not meek and gracious he should not be beautifull had he all perfections but weak mortall not omnipotent not eternall his beauty should be mar●ed then one attribute does not over-top out-border or limit another were he infinite in power but finite in mercy the lustre and amenity of God were defaced 3. There is integrity of parts in beauty Were a person fairer then Absolom and wanted a nose or an arme the beauty should be lame The Lord is compleat and absolutely perfect in his blessed nature and attributes 4. All these required in beauty must be naturall and truely and really there Borrowed colours and painting and fair-ding of the face as Jezabel did are not beauty the Lord in all his perfections is truely that which he seemes to bee Now as there is in Roses gardens creatures that are faire something pl●●sant that ravisheth eye and heart so there are in God so many faire and pleasant truths to take the minde and God is so capatious and so comprehensive a truth and so lovely such a bottomlesse Sea of wonders and to the understanding that beholds Gods beauty there is an amenity goodlinesse a splendor an irradiation of brightnesse a lovelinesse and drawing sweetnesse of excellencie diffused through the Lords nature Hence heaven is a seeing of God face to face Revel 22.4 Matth. 18.10 Now God hath not a face but the face of a man is the most heavenly visible part in man there is majestie and gravitie in it much of the art and goodlinesse of the creature is in his face To see Gods face is to behold Gods blessed essence so farre as the creature can see God Now as we may be said to see the Sunnes face when we see the Sunne as we are able to behold it but there is beauty and such vehemency of visibility in it as it exceedeth our faculty of seeing so do we see Gods face when we neerely behold him not by heare-say but immediately Let us imagine that millions of Sunnes in the firmament were all massed and framed in one Sunne and that the sense of seeing that is in all men that ever hath been or may be yet this Sun should far excell this faculty of seeing so suppose that the Lord should create an understanding facultie of man or Angels millions of degrees more vigorous and apprehensive then if all the men and Angels that are or possibly may be created were contemperated in one yet could not this understanding so see Gods transcendent and superexcellent beauty but there should remaine unseene treasures of lovelinesse never seene yea it involves an eternall contradiction that the creature can see to the bottome of the Creator All this bounty of God is holden forth to us in Christ. Psal. 45.10 He is fairer then the Sonnes of men 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the word is of a double forme to note a double excellencie Cant. 1.16 Behold thou art faire my beloved yea pleasant 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifieth lovely amiable acceptable The Seventy render it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Psal. 146. It is pleasant and sweet 2 Sam. 1.26 Thou wast very pleasant to me Cant. 5.10 He is white and ruddie Vers. 15. His countenance is as Lebanon excellent as the Cedars Rev. 1.16 His countenance as when the Sunne shineth in his 〈◊〉 strength All the beauty of God is put forth in Christ. Esai 33.17 Thine eyes shall see the King in his beauty Hebr. 1.3 Christ is the brightnesse of his Fathers glorie The light of the Sunne in the ayre is the accidentall reflection of the Suns beames Christ is the substantiall reflection of the Fathers light and glory for he is God equall with the Father and the same God 3. This beauty to Men and Angels is an high beauty Angels have eyes within and without Revel 4.6 to behold the beautie of the Lord and it takes up their eyes alwayes to behold his face and there is no beautie of truth they desire more to behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1.12 as to stoope downe and to looke into a darke and veiled thing with the bowing of the head and bending of the necke the Seventy use for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Cant. 2.9 Where Christ is said to stand behind the wall and looke out at the casements with great attention of minde It is to looke downe over a window bending the head Exod. 25.18 19 20. Joh. 20.5 They stooped downe and saw the linnen clothes Luk. 24.12 Angels are not curious but they must see exceeding great beauty and wonder much at the excellency of Christ when they cannot get their eyes pulled off Jesus Christ. 2. There is a beauty of Christ in a communion with God which is a ravishing thing When
infirmities but was in all points tempted like as we are yet without sinne Christ cannot now sigh but he can feele sighing he cannot weepe he hath a mans heart to compassionate our weeping in such a way as is sutable to his glorr●ed condition the head is in heaven but hee hath left his heart in earth with sinners there can bee nothing dearer to Christ then the holy Spirit he hath sent us downe that comforter the Spirit to abid● with us Vse 1. O that men would come and look into this Ark and that Christ would draw the curtain Do● but hear himself crying to the Cities of Iudah Isai. 40.9 Behold your God Isai. 65.1 I said to a Nation that was not called by any Name Behold me Behold me The doubling of the word saith Christ desires to out his beauty Shall your farme and you●●ve yoak of Oxen keep you from him Men will not be drawn to him to satisfie their love Vse 2. Christ is a drawing and a uniting Spirit then all that are in Christ should be united certainly the divisions now in Britaine cannot be of God The wolfe and the good Shepherd are contrary in this the good Shepherd loves to have the flock gathered in one and to save them that they may find pasture and the flock may be saved The wolfe scatters the flock or if the wolfe would have the flock gathered together it is that they may be destroyed then it would be considered if a bloody intention of warre between two Protestant Kingdomes for carnall ends and upon forced and groundlesse jealousies be from an uniting Spirit and not rather from him who was a Murtherer from the beginning Vse 3. Jewes and Turks and civill men that are but Morall Pagans are not in Christ nor can they have any communion with God nor be drawn to Christ because no man can be in love with God except he see God as opened and made lovely to the soul in Christ Morall civility and Pharisaicall holiness is one of the most heaven-like and whitest wayes to hell that Satan can devise Many morall m●n go by theft to hell Satan by open violence pulleth the prophane and openly wicked men to perdition but he stealeth millions of civill Saints honest married men that have whereon to live in the world plen●ifully to hell in their whit●s as if they were Saints because civill and clean in the Morals of the second Table yet not being borne againe they cannot see the Kingdome of God and most men deceive themselves with countrey Religion and Moralities but such be but civill honest Antichrists and deny there is any need that Christ should come in the flesh to die for sinners for they can live honestly for sinners and save themselves and not be beholding to Christ for heaven or mortification or faith Verse 32. And I if I be lifted up from the earth I will draw all men This drawing of sinners to Christ is bottomed on Christs dying on the Crosse and his dying on the Crosse is an act of extream and highest love Joh. 3.16 Joh. 15.13 1 Joh. 4.9 10. Hence let us consider a little further what drawing and alluring power is in the love of God and what way we may come to the sweet fruit of the strongest pull of Christ Which may be consi●dered in 1. The revelation of the drawing lovelines of Christs dying 2. The fulnesse of this lovelinesse For the former Christ openeth himselfe to us we cannot discover him first and there be two Acts of this 1. Christ opens the understanding Luke 24.45 and the heart Acts 16.14 He taketh away the thick vail that is over the heart 2 Cor. 3.15 16. and rendereth the Medium the Aire as it were thin cleare visible as when the Sun expelleth night-shadowes and thick clouds so Davids key That openeth and no man shutteth Rev. 3.7 removeth the doore and the seale that the first Adams sin putteth on the heart Joh. 14.21 He that loveth me shall be loved of my Father and I will love him and will manifest my self to him And Christ can show the Father The Lord Jesus cometh out of his depth and Ocean of glory and Yvory chamber as it were and the Son of God revealeth the Son of God as Gal. 1. v. 12. compared with v. 15 16. sheweth He would not say Beh●ld me behold me Isai. 65.1 and th●n get into a thick cloud and hide himself if he had not had a mind to reveal his glory and to show himself The King in his beauty I●ai 33.17 all his lovelinesse the mysteries ●f his love the rosiness whiteness redness comliness of his face Cant 5.10 Nor would the Spouse pray for a noon-day sight of Christ Cant. 1.7 If he could not offer himselfe to be seen in his loveliness of beauty Thus Christ doth make manifest the savour of his knowledge in the Ministery of the Gospell 2 Cor. 2.14 When he letteth out to the soul the smell of Myrrhe Aloes of all the sweet ointments of his death and wounds that the soul seeth smelleth tasteth the Apples of love in the beleived mercy free grace satisfied justice peace reconciled with righteousnesse purchased redemption in his blood and he standeth behind the wall of our flesh and so is called Our w●ll Cant. 2.9 Behold ●e standeth behind our wall Or Behold that is he standing behind our wall he looketh forth at the window shewing himself 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 bewraying himselfe through the lat●esse Yet this is not a perfect vision of God attainable in this life as the Author of the Bright Star dreameth I see a man more distinctly in the field and before the Sun then when he looks out at the grates or lattesse of a window and a window behind a wall for so we but see Christ in this life The compleatnesse of the lovelinesse is 1. In that there is no spot in Christ crucified when he is seen spiritually no blemish no lamenesse no defect for an eternall and infinite Redemption and an absolute righteousnesse more cannot be required nay not by God 2. Nothing that the desiring faculty and appetite can stumble at Paul's determination the last resolved judgement of his minde and his ripest resolution and purpose was to know nothing save Jesus Christ and him crucified 1 Cor. 2.2 Christs beauty can fill all the corners and emptiness of the wide desires of the soule 3. There is an actuall fulnesse of God spoken of Ephes. 3. Paul praying that the Ephesians may comprehend the great love of God v. 19. saith That yee may know the love of God that passeth knowledge that yee may be filled with all the fulnesse of God This is a satisfying fulness and is an admirable expression To be filled with God must be a soul-delighting fill But 2. To be filled with the fuln●sse of God is more for there is unspeakable fulness in God ● The expression is yet higher That ye may be filled
interest and propriety in these for whom he gave himselfe a ransome as Luk. 22 20. for many Matth. 20.28 Matth. 26.28 So 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 doth in all Greek Authors insinuate Joh. 6.51 Joh. 10.11 Rom. 5.6 such an interest Object 1. But the reason were frivolous we are to pray for all except we know that God willeth salvation to all how can we with the certainety of faith pray for all It must bee a doubting faith and so no faith at all Answ. But seeing God will not have Nero Persecutors Apostates Rebellious unbeleevers men obstinate against the Gospel such as Paul was before his conversion to be excluded out of our prayers What certaintie of faith have Arminians to pray for all Or for the twenty or hundreth part of all mankinde This therefore is denyed Christ gave himselfe for as many as we are to pray for but we are to pray for all without exception The proposition and the assumption both are false nor doth our prayers for men depend on the certitude of Gods decree of election of men to glory which is Gods secret will not knowne to us to whom the Lambes booke of life is not opened but on the revealed will of God commanding us to pray for all that sinne not to death but conditionally and with a speciall reserve of the Lords decrees of Election and Reprobation and this in effect is to pray for the Elect only nor am I warranted by the Word of God the rule of my prayers to pray for any others Nor is there promise precept or practise in Scripture to pray for all and every one of man-kind Therefore I retort the Argument thus wee are to thinke God willeth so many to be saved and his Sonne to give himselfe a ransome for so many as wee are warranted to pray for that they may be saved but we are not warranted to pray for all and every one that they may be saved but only for the Elect. Ergo God will have them onely to be saved and his Son to give himselfe a ransome for them onely Object 2. Judgement of charity is no ground of our prayers We have no charity to beleeve all and every one shall be saved nor have wee any faith or certainety in these prayers Answ. I may have judgement of charity touching this or that man to pray for him but this judgement is a motive to my affection not a foundation to my faith My faith is bottomed on a word of precept to pray for the salvation of all conditionally but not for the salvation of any but for my owne onely absolutly Object 3. God will have as many to be saved as hee will have to come to the knowledge of the truth But he will have all to come to the knowledge of the truth Answ. The argument is strong for us the Apostle speaketh of the Gospel-truth but he will not have the Gospel preached to Samaritans Mat. 10. to Bithinians and thousands others 2. He wil not open the hearts of housands that heare the Gospel because he will Mat. 11.28 Rom. 9.17 and many he blindeth and judicially hardneth Math. 13.14 Joh. 1● 37 38. Esai 6.9 10. Acts 28.24 25 26 27. Object 4. It s uncertaine whether yee pray for Magistrats as such or for vulgar men as such and uncertaine whether yee pray for this or that ranke Answ. It is certaine we are to pray for Kings Subjects Men Women Jewes Gentiles reserving the Lords decrees to his owne Soveraigne liberty Object If we are to pray but for some because God willeth the salvation of some he should have said we are to pray for no man for the farre largest part of the world are lost Answ. This is to censure the Holy Ghosts speaking not us Upon the same ground a Physician in a Citie cannot bee called the healer of all diseased nor a Professor a teacher of Phylosophy to all in the Citie because many in the City dye of the Pest and the twentieth person remaine ignorant of Philosophie if God will have all to be saved that he predestinate to life hee is rightly said to will all men to bee saved and in that sense wee are to pray that all may bee saved 2. God by his consequent will desireth the farre greatest part of the world to be damned Ergo By the Arminian way hee should say God willeth not any man to bee saved nor any to come to the knowledge of the truth but that all may be damned and because they say there is in the Almighty an Antecedent naturall affection and desire that justice may be satifyed in Men and Angels which affection is in order of nature prior and before Gods full peremptory and deliberate will of damning all that are finally obstinate as there is a naturall antecedent will in God to call invite to repentance offer Christ to all and will the salvation of all and every one which is afore and precedent to his peremptory compleat and irrevocable decree of electing to glory all that God foreseeth shall dye in the faith of Christ. Upon the same ground it may well bee said GOD willeth the damnation of all and every one of mankind and the salvation and repentance of none at all and that Christ dyed upon no intention naturall to redeeme or save any but upon a conditionall and naturall desire that justice might be declared in the just destruction of all for sure all Gods naturall affections and desires of justice are as naturall and essentiall to him and so as universally extended toward the creature as his desires and antecedent natural affections of mercy Object 5. The sense of the word All appeares to be of Adam and all that come by propagation of him 1. The word Men is used for Adam and all his Sons Hebr. 9.27 2. Often in the fullest sense not regenerated nor wholly reprobated are called Men Job 11.11 12. Psal. 12.1 and 4.2 and 53.2 3 Beleevers are called Men Acts 1.11 1 Cor. 3.21 22. In regard of passions Acts 14.15 Of carnall walking 1 Cor. 3.3 Yet they are called something more Sonnes of God Joh. 1.12 1 Joh. 3.1 Saints 1 Cor. 1.1 Brethren faithfull Ephes. 1.1 Christians Acts 11.26 Some who have heardned their heart are called Men but something more reprobate Jer. 6.28 30. Seed of the Serpent Gen. 3.15 Children of Belial Deut. 1.3 Of the Devil Joh. 8 4● and with an Emphasis the wicked Psal. 9.17 Answ. In these Grammattications M. Moor sheweth how weake his cause is and how dubious from the word men and all for Heb. 9.27 It s said it s appointed for all men to die and the Holy Ghost insinuateth clearly that Christ died for all men that die in the very next words v. 28. So Christ was once offered to bear the sins of many he saith not all men Observe the change of words 2. We deny not but all men in Scripture signifieth all descended of the first Adam by propagation Ergo
or drawing grace therefore am I compelled as a Merchant who against his will casts his goods in the Sea to save his own life because the winds and stormes ●ver-master his desire to take a second course contrary to my naturall d●sire and g●acious and mild inclination to m●rcy to decree and ordain that all who before the acts also of my middle science free decree and just will were finally to resist my calling shall eternally perish and to will that Pharoah should not at the first or second command obey my will and let my people goe and therefore with a consequent or constrained will to suffer sinne to be to appoint death and hell and the eternall destruction of the greatest part of mankinde to be in the world for the declaration of my revenging justice because I could not hinder the entrance of sin into the world not Master free will as free if my dispensation of the first covenant made with Adam in Paradise should stand Whereupon I was compelled to take a second herbrie and a second winde like a Sea-man who is with a stronger crosse winde driven from his first wished port and to send my Sonne Iesus Christ into the world to die for sinners for that I could not better doe and out of love to save all offer him to all one way or other though I did foresee my desire and naturall kindnesse to save all should be far more thwarted and crossed by this way because force my consequent will must needs prepare a far hotter furnance in hell for the greatest part of mankinde since thousands of them must reject Christ in resisting the light of nature and the universall sufficient grace given to all which if free will should use well would have procured to them more grace and the benefit of the preached Gospel But a heavier plague of hardnes of heart and farre greater torments of fire then these I foresee must be the doome of such within the visible Church as resist my calling or having once obeyed may according to the liberty of independent free-will persevere if they will notwithstanding of the power of God by which they are kept to salvation the promises of the eternall covenant the efficacie of Christs perpetuall intercession of the in-dwelling of the holy Ghost that everlasting fountain of life c. may fully and finally fall away and turne Apostats and therefore all their hope of eternall life their assurance of glory their joy their consolation and comforts in any claim to life eternall and the state of adoption is not bottomed on my power to keep them my eternall covenant my Sons intercession I can do no more then I can but upon their own free will if they please and it s too pleasant to many they may all fall away and perish eternally and leave my Son a widdow without a wife a head without members a king without subjects And if Arminians will be so liberall or lavish of the comforts of God proper to the lords people Esa. 40.1 c. 49.13 the proper work of the holy Ghost the comforter Ioh. 14.16 c. 15.26 c. 16.7 the consolations of Christ Phil. 2.1 the everlasting the strong consolations 2. Thess. 2.16 Heb. 6.18 the heart comforts Col. 2.2 wherewith the Apostles and Saint● are comforted 2. Cor. 1.4.6.7 coming from the God of all comfort the Lord that comforteth Zion Esai 51.3 2. Cor. 1.3 Esai 51.12 bl●ssing promised to the mourners Matth. 5.4 We desire Mr. Moore and other Arminians to injoy them but for us we a lo●●v nei●her assurance courage hope nor comforts in Christ or h●s death but on the regenerate and beleevers and this makes the doctrine of universall redemption more suspitious to us as not coming from God that they allow to all even dogs and swine the holy Ghost and the precious priviledge of the Saints Therefore thirdly we answer that the assumption is not ours but theirs let the assump●●on be But I beleeve and he proposition be corrected thus These for whom Christ laid down his life are some few cho●en beleevers B●t I am chosen and a beleeve● Ergo c. and we grant all so the assumption be made sure But I have no assurance hope nor comfort to rest on a generall good will that God beareth to all to Iudas Pharaoh Cain and to all mankinde no lesse then to me For I am of the same very mettall and by nature am heir of wrath as well as they 2. That far-off Good will that all be saved and that all obey the Lord from eternity did bear it to the fallen devils as well as to me O cold comfort and it works nothing in order to my actu●ll salvation more then to the a●●u●ll salvation of Iudas the Traitor it 〈◊〉 on moving no wheels no c●uses no effectuall means to p●ocure the powerfull ap●lica●ion o● the purchased Redemption to m● more then to all t●a● are now spitting out blasphemie against eternall just●ce and are in fi●●e chains of wrath cursing this Lord and his generall good will to save them But the fountain good will of God to save the elect runneth in another channel of free grace that separates person fr●m person Iacob from Esau and sets the heart of God from eternitie and the tender bowels of Christ both from eve●lasti●g and as touching the execution of this good will and in time upon this man not this man without hire mon●y or price 1. because Angels or Men can never answer that of Rom. 9.13.14.15 as it is written I have loved Iacob and have hated Esau and that before the one or the other had done good or evil Then the naturall Arminian objecteth what our Arminian does this day that must be unrighteousnesse to hate men absolutely and cast them off when they are not born and have neither done good nor evill Paul answereth it followeth in no sort that there is unrighteousnesse with God because verse 15. all is resolved on the will of God because it is his will for hee saith to Moses I will have mercy on whom I will have mercy and I will have compassion on whom I will have compassi●n and upon this h●e infe●ies then the businesse of sep●●ating Iaakob from Esau ●unnes not upon such wheeles as ●unning and willing sw●ating and hunting by good endeavours Iaakob d●d here lesse and E●au more but all goes on this on Gods free goodnesse and mercy all the difference between person and person is God has mercy because he will not because men will Now because Arminians say th●s is not mean● of election and reprobation but of temporary savours bestowed on Iaakob nor on Esau he a●eadgeth the example of Pharaoh a cruell Athe●st and a Tyrant who never sought justification by the works of the Law the reason why Pharaoh obtained not the mercy that others obtained I saith the Lord verse 17. told Pharaoh to his face for this purpose I raised thee up that I might make an
in all things that concerne salvation nor doth the Lord work in us to will and to doe if we will not doe without any prior dependence on the ●nfluence of the grace of God we as much work in our selves willing and doing as the Lord doth and the Lord in his grace shall follow and not lead our will 3. Grace doth not conferre any help on the will to ●ctuate it and to strengthen it in doing good in believing ●epenting loving God hoping as Grevinchovius saith but will and grace doe both joyntly meet in one and the same effect in which 4 Free-will divideth the spoyl with Christ and what need we say worthy is the Lamb who has redeemed us if free-will in the application of redemption share equally with the Grace of Christ 3. The third way is that free-will is said to believe repent love God by a meer extrinsecall denomination● because it carieth that grace● which formally and only doth perform all these supernaturall actions so Grace doth all and free-will is a meer patient that conferreth no vitall subordinate and active influence in these acts as we say the Apothecaries glasse healeth the wound because the oyl in the glasse worketh the cure when the glasse doth actively contribute nothing to the cure or the Asse maketh rich when it carieth the gold that enricheth only this sense Antinomians hold forth and make us meer patients and blocks in the way to heaven and this sense Jesuites especially Martinez de Ripald● falsly chargeth upon Luther and Calvin and the Councell of Trent inspired with the same lying Spirit saith the same 4. The fourth sense is that Grace and free-will doth work so as Grace is the principall first inspiring and fountane cause 1. It being a new supernaturall disposition and habite in the soule Joh. 14.23 1 Joh. 2.27 1 Ioh. 3.9 Ioh. 4.14 Esai 44.3.4 Ezech. 36.26.27 Deut. 30.6 A good treasure or stock of grace Matth. 12.35 Luk. 6.45 And also actually it determineth sweetly enclineth and stirreth the will to these acts yet so as free-will moveth actively freely and confe●reth a radicall vitall subordinate influence is not a meer patient in all these as Antinomians dream Psal. 119.32 I will run the way of thy Commandements when thou shall enlarge my heart Ioh. 14.12 he that believeth in me the works that I doe he shall doe and greater then these Matth. 12.50 He that doth the will of my heavenly Father the same is my brother c. 1 Cor. 9.24 So runne that ye may obtaine Revel 2.2 I know thy works and thy labour 1 Thess. 1.3 Remembring without ceasing your work of faith and labour of love and patience of Hope 1. We are not dead in supernaturall works and meer blocks Rom. 6.11 Wee are alive unto God in Iesus Christ Ephes. 2.1 He hath quickned us Revel 2.3 For my names sake thou hast laboured and had not fainted 1 Cor. 15.58 Be ye steadfast unmoveable alwayes aboundant in the work of the Lord there is activity in the Spirit to lust against the flesh Gal. 5.17 Rom. 7.15 Nor is the blessednesse of the Saints only passive in receiving though to be just●fied and receive Christs righteousnesse be the fountain blessednesse Psal. 32.1 Rom. 4.6.7 Gal. 3.13 But the Scripture speaketh of a true and solide blessednesse in action Psal. 119.1 Blessed are the undefiled in the way Esai 56.2 Blessed is the man that doth this Iam. 1.12 Blessed is the man that endureth temptation Psal. 119.2 Blessed are they that keep his testimonies Psal. 106.3 Blessed are they that keep judgement Revel 22.14 Blessed are they that doe his Commandements Math. 5. Blessed are they that mourn that hunger and thirst Then there must be a part of blessednesse in sanctification as in justification though the one be the cause the other the effect Asser. 6. The Lords working in us the condition of the Covenant of Grace such as faith is by his efficacious grace doth not free us from sinne when we believe not nor involve God in the fault when he worketh not in us to believe as Crispe imagineth Here let me by the way remove the arguments of Dr Crispe by the which he imagineth that there is no condition at all in the covenant of grace Argum. 1. The Covenant should not be everlasting if it depended on a condition of faith to be performed by us for wee faile in our performances daily and the Covenant is anulled and broken so soone as the condition is broken Ans. ● We speak not so that the Covenant of grace depends on a condition in us dependency includes a causality in that of which the thing has de●endency we know nothing in us either faith or any other thing that is the cause of the covenant of grace or of the fulfilling of it a cause is one thing a condition caused by grace is an other thing for the pe●p●●uity of the covenant there is not requi●ed a condition always in act 1. If at the eleven●h or at the twelf houre you come to Chri●t the nature of this covenant promiseth you welc●me 2. Particular failings and acts of unbeleif doe well consist with the habite and stock of faith that remaineth in him that i● borne 〈◊〉 God 〈◊〉 is the act so tyed to a time But 3. There is by ●enuure of ●he Covenant a Priviledge twofold here 1. If by the Law a man step a haire-breath wide off the way the doore of Paradise is bolted on him and in againe can he never enter hee must seek another entery the man has done with heaven that way the law knoweth not such a thing as repentance but the Covenant of grace being made with a sinner a slip an act of unbeliefe doth not forfeit the mercy of this covenant But Christ saith if you fall there is place to rise againe if you sin there is an Advocate there is a blood of an eternall covenant the covenant stands still to make up roome for repeated grace for a thred and continued tract of free-grace and mercy all along that your foot never go out of the traces of renewed pardon while you be in heaven though the child of God ought not to sinne yet can he not out-sin the eternity of the new covenant nor can he sin an eternall priest out of heaven 2. The Law requireth a stinted measure of obedience even to the superlative with all the soule and the whole strength any lesse is the forfeiting of salvation But the covenant of grace stinteth no weak soule Christ racketh not nor doth he as it were play the extortioner and say either the strongest faith or none at all he maketh not Abrahams foot a measure to every poor sinner many smoaking flaxes and broken reeds on earth are now up before the throne mighty Cedars high tall green planted on the banks of the river of life if Adam bee the first in Heaven what though I be the last that enter in though I
of our own 3. Wee are to beleeve in the generall we being within the covenant the Lord will keep his promise Deut. ●0 6 And the Lord thy God will circumcise thine hea●t and the heart of thy seed to love the Lord thy God with all thy heart and with all thy soule that thou mayest live Ezech. 11.19 And I will give them one heart and I will put a new Spirit within you 20. that they may walke in my Statutes Ezech. 36.27 then are we so to set to these duties of wa●king in the Lords way as wee are to beleeve he will nor deny actuall grace necessary for our perseverance because it is his expresse promise Ier. 31.33.34.35.36 Ier. 32.39 ●0 Esai 59.19 20 21. Esai 54 10.11 Ezech. 36.26.27 1 Ioh 2.1.2 Matth. 16.18 Luk. 2● 3●.32 though in acts not fundamentall and simply n●cessary for our being in the state of grace the Lord hath reserved a latitude of independent Sov●raigntie to act the soule in these and these particular a●ts as seemeth good to him that every new breathing of the Spirit of ●esus may bee a new debt and obligation of free grace to Christ. We are absolutely to p●ay for the breathings of Christs Spirit to goe a●ong wi●h us in all the particular acts of a gracious and spirituall walking but we know the Lords absolute good pleasure is his rule hee walks by so here our desires may bee absolute in seeking where the Lord gives upon condition of ●is owne good will nor are our desi●es in prayer to bee conformable to Gods decree or free pleasure but to his revealed will Grace is the culours of the inhabitants and citiz●ns of the house of the lower and higher roomes of the new Ierusalem all the way and all the home the Sain●s walk in this white Christ keeps not his Spouse in a close chamber it is not one great act of free grace onely when all were in one day redeemed on the crosse but dayly Christ weareth his Church as a bracelet about his neck as a seal on his heart as his Royall diadem and a crowne of glory on his ●ead as his love-ring on his hand this day grace to morrow new and fresh supply of grace the next houre grace hee has strowed all the way to heaven with new grace every day new wine new Spiknard new pe●fume new ointments When will Christ grow old and gray-haired Never Will his heart ev●r grow cold of love No Will hee tyre of love will he weare out of delight in the Spouse that lyeth for eternity betweene his breasts No no The love of ●hrist is alwaies green● as young-like as fair and white today as from eternity this rose is not altered a whit Who knowes how grace and love in Christs breast solaced themselves in these infinite revolutions of ages before the creation how Christs heart was cheering it selfe and rejoycing to have the first day of the creation dawning that he might enjoy the love of the sonnes of men not then created Proverb 8 3●.31 as if grace and love had thought long to finde a channell with wide banks to flow in as if Christ having infinite love within him in that long long age to borrow that expression should say when shall time begin and sinfull men and my mysticall body and desired spouse my Church have being in the world that I may out that gr●ce on her I have love within me and lying beside me I rejoyce to have a lover as if grace in Chri●t h●d been in too na●row banks in the in●●nite acts of the infinite minde of God and the heart of Christ and longed to have Men and Angels to give a vent to his love And that long avum the ages that were before the world was brought it green to us that long long endlesse and vast duration when time shall bee no more cannot make Christs love change the colour or grow lesse or root one Saint out of his heart When God leaveth off to bee God ●r●ce will leave off to bee Grace Make Christ repent of Grace if you can as Christ has washen his Spouse and in regard of the guilt of sin has made her all fair and spotlesse so doth he dayly lick and purge and cleanse her in regard of the inherent b●ot while shee bee faire as the Sunne and all a new heaven Asser. 7. In the third consideration from this suspension of divine influence cometh our sinne as a necessary consequent and result yet so as the Lords suspension and our transgression fall both in the bosome of divine providence The Lord knoweth why be withdraweth his grace that we m●ght know how weighty a thi●g gr●at heaven is laid upon our poor shoulders and that we would make foule wo●k out of all wee have received and the flock the second Adam has given is if we had not Christ to stirre the ship to lead the minors to heaven to keepe the inheritance to the little heirs of Christ should evanish to nothing Po●tion 9. If wee consider the Lords denyall of Christ from wicked men they c●nnot turne to God but that impotency lay in the womb of will it is not weaknesse onely but also wilfulnesse Matth. 23. verse 37. I would have gathered you saith Christ yee would not Ioh. 5.6 Christ saith to the sick man wilt thou bee made whole Then there was a stop in his will as well as in his weaknesse er 44.16 As for the word that thou hast spoken to us in the Name of the Lord we will not hea●ken to thee 2. Love and delight to do ill is from the strength and marrow of the will not from weaknes only the seruant that would not leave his master because he loved him is a slave for ever through love to slavery rather then through impotency to bee free In those that d●light to doe e●il Will hath a strong influence in the evil they doe every sinner esteemes his prison of hell a heaven hi● fetters of sinne on his legs as a gold chain about his neck 3. It is a journey of a hundreth miles to Christ it is unpossible to the naturall man to compasse it yet he may walk two of these hundreth miles though not as a part of the way he will not so much as cast a sad look after Christ the will not bestow one sigh after Christ nor know his own weaknesse nor d●spair of his own hability nor lie at the water-side and c●y Lord Iesus come carry me over he positively hates Christ were it possible that the unrenewed man had the two eyes of a renewed man to see the beauty and high excellen●y of Iesus though he had still his own lame legs he would weep out his eyes for a Chariot to carry him to Christ hee would send sad love-challenges after Christ could these that ' are scortched in hell-fire and hear the howling of their fellow prisoners and see the ugly Devils the bloody Scorpions with which
O how admirable was his love and that love was Christs last work in this life he dyed of no other sicknesse but love love love was Christs death-work Christs Testament Christs winding sheet Christs grave he took his Bride lapped in his love and hart to Paradise with him his last breath was love The myrrhe when it is withered has the same smell and a sweeter that it had while it was g●een Christ that bundle of myrrhe that lyeth all the night between the Churches breasts when withered and dead smelled of love for hee opened the graves and raised the dead and took a repenting sinner to Paradise with him which are acts of great love its considerable that hee is at one time a dying a drawing and a loving Saviou● and ask what was Christs last act on earth it s answered he dyed in the very act of loving and drawing sinners to his heart Vse We are engaged to love him and if so to keepe his commandments and to draw him after us his owne image ho●inesse in the Saint● takes Christ and causes him fall in love with us Cant. 4.9 Thou hast ravished my heart my sister my Spouse thou hast ravished my heart with one of thine eyes with a chaine of thy neck It s much love that ravishes Christ y●a it so overcomes him that hee professes its above him hee must desire his Spouse to looke away Cant. 6.5 Turne away thine eyes from me for they have overcome me Cant. 7.5 The king is held in his galleries holinesse make● our king the Lord Iesus a captive for eternitie he will delight to see the Lambs wife his bride when shee shall bee decked up with endlesse glory Bee holy and the king shall desire your beauty ingage Christ more to love you deck your selves with chains with bracelets be attired in raiment of needle work the braver in this apparell you are yee are the lovelier to Christ the wedding garment makes you fair to the king put on the crowne of grace on your head and bee highly beloved of this Prince Ver. 33. Now this he spoke signifying what death he should dye The last article in Christs draw●ng of sinners is the exposition of the Evangelist Iohn who openeth to us the sense of Christs words to wit what was meant by Christs lifting up from the earth for it is not an ordinary phrase to expresse dying on the crosse therefore saith Iohn hee meaned by his lifting up from the earth the kinde and manner of his death to wit that he should bee crucified and dye the shamefull and ignominious death of the crosse it would seeme that the exposition of Iohn may be referred to the whole verse 32. What is the sense of this If Christ be lifted up hee will draw all men up to him that is if he be crucified by that shamefull and painfull death and the merito thereof he will draw all men to him and translate them from the kingdome of darknesse to the state of saving grace which is true in it self but seemeth not to bee the sense of the words 1. Because the Evangelists use to expound what may appeare ambiguous to the hearers as Ioh. 7.8.39 But this he spoke of the Spirit ●oh 20.23 Then went this saying abroad among the Brethren that that disciple Iohn should not dye yet Iesus ●aid not to him hee sh●ll not dye So Matth. 2.16.17 18. But that Christ draweth sinners by his death was not so much controverted for to come to Christ to beleeve in Christ to bee drawen to Christ were Phrases obvious enough and known to all 2. It is most pertinent to the text that lifting up from the earth which is ambiguous and may seeme to allude to Elias his beeing carried up to heaven should bee expounded by Chri●●s manner of death to wi● by crucifying 3. Because the holy Ghost expoundeth not the connexion of the conditionall proposition If I be lifted up from the earth I will draw all men after me which he must doe if the sense goe thus but onely speaketh of the kinde and nature of Christs death which was known to the ●ewes to bee both shamefull and cursed but in his exposition hee speaks nothing of the fruit of Christs death but of the kinde and manner of death Now that the Evangelist expoundeth the sence of Christs words what he meaned by being lift up from the earth it holdeth forth to us a necessity that the Lord speak plaine language to us in scripture and that one scripture expound another In finding the meaning of scripture these considerations may give light 1. The Scripture in the plainest expressions is dark that is high and deepe in regard of the matter which is deepe high above the reach of reason and yet the language plaine obvious easie that a virgin shall be a mother the antient of dayes a young sucking infant that through one man death digged a hole in the world and sinne passed on all through a second Man life and heaven entered again are high and deepe mysteries yet is not the Gospel obscure as Papists say 2. In meer historicall narrations and prophecies foretelling the wars of the Lamb the Dragon and the Beast the Antichrist their persuing the woman in traveling in birth to bring forth a man child the matter subject is not profound nor deepe yet the expressions are dark and covered while the works of the Lord bee a key to open his word Here 's the wisdome of God that in deepe and high mysteries necessary for salvation the Lord is plaine and lower and easier stories are foretold more darkly articles of faith are not set downe in dark and enigmaticall prophesies but plainly whereas histories of things to come are more mysteriously proposed 3. The Scripture in no place is in the popish sense dark that is that we are not to take any sense for the word of life and the object of our faith but that which the Church giveth as the sense in regard the Scripture is a nose of wax with equall propension to contradictory senses except the mistris of our faith the witch of Babel expound it and then it is for such formally the word of God as she expoundeth it 4. The holy Ghost the Authour of Scripture has concreated with the words the true native sense which all the powers on earth cannot alter Then when we sweare a covenant with the Lord in plaine easie countrey language not devised of purpose to bee ambiguous or to hold forth that all sects Antinomians Socinians Arminians Prelati●all halters Anabaptists Seekers c. may salve every one his owne way and his 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 what hee thinks good to obtrude any authoritative interpretation on this covenant which it holds not forth in its owne simple words to the reader is the greatest tyranny and equivocating jugling in the world and we may easily distinguish and dispute our selves out of a good conscience or rather confesse wee had never any
punishment The ill Angels created good as the elect A●gels Ill angels saw God before their fall as did the elect The ill Angels before their fall knew nothing of the incarnation of Christ. Satan knoweth not the thoughts of the heart Satan hath no immediate power over free-will nor tempteth he to a●l sins that are committed in the in-most Court of the heart Satans knowledge naturall and acquired Satan hath a l●gall power over man It s not certain by Scripture that Beelzebub loseth the Princedome over his fellow-Angels at the last judgement How Satan keepeth still and exerciseth his power of tempting though he hath lost his Princedom by Christs death Satan a prince for his power over other Satan an en●mie not to be d●spised for his lownesse What it is to tempt and how Satans power is put forth in tempting G●l Pa●isiens t●act 〈◊〉 Cha●twright Cat●●h c. 4● Satan can not fire the wil against our will Every tempted cre●ture is a sufferer 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Perforo tento It s good to know when we are tempted and what God and Satan ayme at Every temptation cometh under the va●● of good Things are ●ligibl● rat●er because lawfull and honest then because good and pleasant How temptations te●d to sinne Satans power on the outward man It s no good argument we can d●e and all this on our selves therefore Satan can doe it We have a greater power over our owne u●d●●standi●g and will then ●i●her good or bad Angels can have Devils have power over our naturals ●●t our morals God on●ly knoweth the ●eart and thoughts and acts thereof considerable g●ounds thereof The true reason why God onely knoweth the h●art the reason of Suarez refused Suarez tom de D●o Angel●s lib 2 de potentia inte●lecti●a Angelo●um natura c●p 23. n 17. Satan hath no power over our ●ill but wh●t leaveth guiltinesse on us Satans power over the creatures Satan acteth at one time on sense and on re●son Sa●an worketh on the soul thro●gh the body and on the body thro●gh the soule A double sin and a double punishment of Satan Climbing men-like the devil Satan first mar●ed the com●ly order of creation Satan● second sin and how hee is yet in acting his first sinne Satans sin the s●nne in nature with the sin against the holy Ghost Punishments infl●cted on Satan What sadnesse is in Satan Satans naturall knowledge hurt his practicall knowledge that was found is lost The devill a foole Satan hath no infused grace What faith Satan hath Satans despair without all hope Satans obduration Christ is Satans Judge and caster out Christ Satans Iudge and how Satan foiled man as a tempter a Man destroyeth Satan as a Iudge Vi●●o●y over the D●vils by th● man Chr●st m●r● glori●us th●n ●f G●od a●so●ut●ly ha● s●bdue● h●m H●●ven not cu●●ered by a surprisall or wil●s but ●y open warr● 5. Vse 1. The Lords knowing the hearts should teach us s●ncerity Vse 2. State-wit against Christ jolly Vse 3. Theolog. Germanica chap. 2 p. 5. Vse 4. It s to j●●low the Devill to sinne against light Vse 4. O●d●ration Vse 5. The good fight The reall expressions of our obligation to the conqueror of Devils ●ix considerable points touching Christs drawing of sinners Foure considerable points touching drawing Drawing is by either violence wiles or pers●asion He drawe●● No proper violence in drawing the will How there is no violence in being drawn and yet a necessity from new principles A twofold consideration of disp●sitions going before conversion Men have reason why they will perish Hen tam dulce est perire Will the nearest cause not weaknesse only why men are not drawn to Christ. We naturally hate Christ but we see it not Men naturally hate Christ more then the Saints Men have no stirrings of desires for a life above them No similitude between the naturall mans d●sires and Christ. The place Ioh. 6.44 No m●n can come to me c. opened Will most averse to Christ. Will not weakenesse the nearest c●●se of our not comming to Christ. Free grace the strong and only cause why men are drawn Christs love can over-save and out-live the world The magnitude of free grace The way of Graces working gratious and free The place Ezech 16.8 And when I passed by thee c. Opened Articles of free love Th●t Christ is gratious for hire is an abasing of Christ. Christ superlative How like free grac● is to God The wonder of grace in heaven Wh● grace in Christ now glorified Grace the onely birth of heaven What preparations goe before conversion A fourefold consideration of preparations before conversion No preparations from nature No preparations can have effective influence in our being drawne to Christ. Preparations before conversion no formall part of conversion There be no Mo●all precepts before conversion to which any promise i● annexed No promises out of Christ. (a) Saltm●rsh ●ree-grace c. 2. pag 1● 18. (b) M Denne Co●f●ren●e ●etw●e●e the Sick man and a 〈◊〉 p 3. In what se●se a desire to pray and to b●leeve is prayer and faith Materiall 〈◊〉 so more in some 〈…〉 Dispositions 〈…〉 conversion God may use a prerogativ● Royall in co●verting without disp●s●tions or in working them most swiftly Not any Protestants ever taught that Evangelike Repentance is a previous preparation to conversion Antinomians salumniate us in this Antinomians yeeld preparations which is refuted a Saltmarsh Free grace cap. 2. pag. 16. b Eaton Honey-combe ●a 2. pag. 7.8 True and lively feeling of sin 〈◊〉 not goe before but must so low after conversion Objections of Antinomians especially of Saltmarsh Free grace c. ● pag. 1 20. c. removed To doe duties without relying on them is not to seeke righteousnesse in our selves They are co●mand●ed to 〈…〉 have n●t the Spiri● without which they cannot pray Dispairing of salv●tion in our selfe no part of such but w●●ught by the Law in ●●ry never converted Christ take us in our 〈◊〉 before we ●eleeve Saltmarsh Christ onely 〈…〉 to 〈…〉 Crisp Vol. ● Ser. 1 130.1●1.132.1●3.134.135 Wrath is to be preached to b●leevers and how A nam●l●sse pamphlet of Antinomian answered ●y N. Hi●de Saltmarsh Saltmarsh S●l●mar●hes owne experience Th●●zspan● pr●sumpption a●d to beleeve a lye Faith is not formally the apprehension of Gods eternall love of election A contradiction in Sal●marsh All come to Christ with foule faces that ordinarily come Not●ing in our selves can ●it●y 〈…〉 ●or 〈◊〉 No wa●t of qualifications should binder us to come to Christ. The order of redemption and of drawi●g sinners to Christ not one How many wayes we are justified Antinomians make the Saints blocks in all the good they ●oe (a) R●se reign and 〈…〉 4 pag 19. (b) Er. 6● pag. 13. (c) Er. 52. pag 10. (d) Er. 57.11 (e) Er. 59. (f) Er. 43. (g) Er. 1. Er. 2. (i) Saltmarsh Free gr●c● cap 4● p. ●79 (k) Rise reign c. er 49. pag. 9. What place we give to preparations before conversion Divers fl●s●ly
bring forth a man child to God And 2. as Satan is the mysticall head and Prince of that condemned body hee is cast out and hee hath a power in regard of the guilt and dominion of sin both over the elect and the reprobate Christs death hath broken hells barres and condemned sinne in the flesh Rom. 8.3 and dissolved the works of the devill and taken his Forts and Castles and 1 Joh. 3.8 taken many of Satans Souldiers captives Death was the Devills Fort-royall Hell is his great Prison-house and principall Jayle these hee hath taken 1 Cor. 15.55 56. Hos. 13.14 I will ransome them from the power of the grave I will redeeme them from the power of death O death I will be thy plague O grave I will be thy destruction And these captives can never be ransomed out of Christs hand again for saith hee repentance shall be hid from mine eyes When Christ spoyles hee will never restore the prey againe Hee hath overcome the world Joh. 16.33 and that was a strong Fort and hee hath delivered the Saints from the dominion of sin because they are under a new Husband Rom. 6.6 7 8 9 10. Rom. 7.1 2 3 4 5 6. All crosses have lost their salt and their sting even as when a City is taken by storming all the Commanders and Souldiers are dis-armed and when a Court is cryed down by Law all the members and Officers of the Court Judge and Scribe and Advocates that can plead Pursevants Jayles are cryed down they cannot sit nor lead a Processe nor summon a Subject So when Christ cryed down Satans Judicature and triumphed over principalities and powers and annulled all Decrees Lawes hand-writings of Ordinances that Satan could have against the Saints Col. 2.14 15. all the Officers of hell are laid aside the Devill is out of office by Law jure the Jayles and pits are broken Esay 49.9 That thou maist say to the prisoners Goe forth to them that are in darknesse Shew your selves Zech. 9.11 When a righteous King cometh to the crown hee putteth down all unjust Vsurpers If Satan be cast out wee are not debtors to the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof Rom. 8.12 Sin hath no law over us There is a law of sinne a dictate of mad reason by which the sinner thinks hee is under the Oath of Allegiance to Satan and his crown scepter and honour hee must defend but there is no reason no law in hell and in the works of hell And if hee be once cast out who is this usurping lawlesse lord if you sweep the house to him and take him in againe to a new lodging one devill will be eight devills for Satan thus cast out will returne with seven devills worse then himselfe Remember Lot's wife if yee be escaped out of Sodome Looke not over your shoulder with a wanton and lustfull eye to old forsaken lovers let repentance and mortification be constant Now is the Prince of this world cast out But yet to consider more particularly Satans Princedome and Satans Power I adde yet more of these two heads 1. The Power of Satan 2. The Punishment of Satan His Power is held forth in that hee is a Prince 1. In his might and power naturall 2. In his power acquired 3. In his power sinfull and judicially inflicted The Devil's Power hee was created in both in the mind and will and executive faculty by no Scripture or Reason can be imagined to be lesse before the fall of these miserable Spirits then the power of their fellow-Angels 1. The Angels being all created holy and according to Gods image they must have been created with their face to God and in their proper place and sphere and so with power to stand in their place Now what station can these immortall Spirits be created in rather then in a state of seeing God 2. Satan abode not in the truth saith the Lord Jesus Joh. 8.44 and the bad Angels left saith Jude vers 6. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 their proper dwelling These two places compared together seemeth to hold forth that truth and the first truth God seene and knowne though not immutably was the first element native countrey of the Angels They must then see God and his face It is a bold and groundlesse conjecture of some rotten Schoolmen to say That truth from which the Angels are said to fall was the Gospel-truth and that They envied that man was in Christ to be advanced above the Angelike nature 1. It s a dreame that the Gospel was revealed to the Devils before their fall for then their owne fall and future misery that they were to be kept eternally in chaines of darknesse on the same ground must be revealed to them What horror and sadnesse must fill Adams mind and the Angels spirit if hell and the necessity of God manifested in the flesh was revealed to them in the state of happinesse 2. The mystery of the riches of the glorious Gospel was hid from the beginning of the world and the glorious elect Angels come in time Ephes. 3.8 9 10. to learn that manifold wisdome of God and delight in Peters time to looke into it as to a great secret of God 1 Pet. 1.12 Wee have not then reason to think this secret was whispered in the eares of the Devils before they fell 2. It s true Mat. 18. The elect Angels 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alwayes now behold the face of Christs Father for now they are confirmed that they cannot look awry and turne their eyes off Gods face even when they come downe as servants to the heires of glory on earth they carry about with them their heaven and the pleasures of the Court they enjoy no reason their posting among sinners should decourt them or deprive them of the actuall vision of God But it followeth not therefore the falne Angels never saw the face of Christs Father it followes onely they saw it not immutably and in a confirmed way of grace and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 alwayes as now the elect Angels doe ● It s no Princedome in Satan to know the thoughts of the heart this is proper to God onely 1 King 8.39 Jer. 17.10 Psal. 44.21 Nor hath hee or the good Angels any immediate Princedome over the will to know what are my thoughts or to know one anothers thoughts or to act immediatly upon free will not because the thoughts of the heart are objects of themselves so abstruse and high that they are not intelligible for a mans owne spirit knowes the things in himselfe 1 Cor. 2.11 Yea 2. then they could not be known by revelation for God cannot by revelation cause a finite understanding comprehend an infinite object because the object exceedeth the faculty in proportion infinitely The thoughts of a mans heart cannot so exceed the understanding faculty of a man farre lesse of an Angel Therefore God in the depth of his wisdome by an act
voyce and more 3. When the axe or the saw boasteth it selfe against him that lifted it the Lord may use his liberty So to come to the second consideration when Peter proudly trusteth in himselfe I will dye with thee ere I deny thee the Lord to punish his pride must deny his assisting grace when Peter is tempred that he may know that natu●e is a s●rry undertaker that the man rideth to heaven on a whithered reed who aymeth to climbe that up-hill-city one his own fles●y and clay strength and God to show a black spot on a faire face in heaven will have it said there standeth David before the Throne who once committed adult●ry and to cover the shame of it from men killed most treacherously an innocent godly man God here out of the ashes of our sin will have a rose of free grace that filleth the foure corners of heaven with its smell to grow green up in the higher Paradise for a summer of eternity and will have no Tenants in heaven but the free-holders of grace it is a question w●ith●r there be more grace or more glory in heaven for the crown of glory is a crown of grace that va●ie sea of the redemption of grace issued from under our s●nfull falls 7. Yea upon this reasonlesse and fleshly ground if we may omit pray●ng and so believing loving repenting mortifying our lusts when the Spirit stirres us not to these acts and say if God will suffer me to sinne let him see to it then upon the same ground all the justified Saints I should think them Devils not Saints might sin mu●ther blaspheme whore oppresse commit Sodomy Incest as Lot deny J●sus Chr●st as Peter did and say as w● are not to pray nor obliged to a constant course in prayer when Christ draweth not and when the Spirit moveth us not as Antimonians say with Mr Crispe and others error 49. pag. 9.10 Rise Reign so neither are we to abstaine from murther denying of Christ blasphemy Sodomy when the spirit of Christ draweth us not and moveth stirreth not our soule to abstinency and a holy feare and circumspection that we commit not such abominations and Peter might say I am not obliged to a constant course of confessing Christ before men unlesse the Spirit stirre me thereunto and David or any Saint might say If the Lord will suffer me to murther the innocent let him see to it for the Lords drawing and the Spirits st●●●ing is as necessary in a holy eschewing of sinnes ●f commission as in sins of omission and by as great and an every way equall necessity if the Lord withdraw himself and the Spirit stirre not we must f●ll●n such abominations when tempted by Sathan and the fl●sh as in the sins of sinfull omitting of praying praysing believing when the Spirit stirres us not thereunto but the truth is this necessity can neith●r lay the blame on the holy spotlesse dispensation of God nor free us from guiltinesse because between Gods withdrawing influence and the sin there doth interveen an obliging Law that forbids sin and our free-w●ll and reason acting the sin freely But we are commanded 2 Tim. 1.6 To stirre up the grace of God in us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 it s on allusion to the Priests who were to keep in the fire that came from heaven grace is resembled to fire under ashes which with blowing of bellowes is made to revive and burn again it is the Prophets complaint Esa. 64. ● There is none that calleth upon thy name or stirres up himselfe to lay hold on thee the habit of grace may be warmed ●lown upon and kindled that as fire makes fire so grace may put forth it self in acts of grace and the seed of God in the Saints 1 Joh. 2.9 may bring forth births like it selfe motion here produceth heat Object But the actuall predetermination of grace is not in your hand and without this acts of praying and believing are unpossible to me Answ. If this were a sufficient reason then all works of nature whatever the creature doth were unpossible for the plow-man should not goe to till sow and reape because without the blessing of the common and naturall influence of the first cause he could do none of these things 2. Because the Saints know not the counsell and minde of God in his decree of joyning of his supernaturall influence or his suspending of the same to this or this act of praying beleeving hoping loving of Christ c. Therefore upon all occasions the Saints what ever be their present deadnesse and indisposition are to pray beleeve and to stirre up themselves to lay hold on God 1. Because as in naturall and morall actions men are not to neglect plowing earing journeying eating drinking sleeping buying and selling upon this ground because they are ignorant whether in the work the Lord shall be pleased to joyne his influence as the first cause without whom all inferiour causes can doe nothing So are not the Saints to neglect to pray because they are dead and indisposed upon the ground of their doubting and not knowing whether the Lord of grace will be pleased to adde his actuall assistance of grace to worke in them to will and to doe for the Lord may be pleased to adde his supernaturall influence in a moment his winde bloweth when it listeth his grace moveth swiftly when and where he pleaseth our good disposition is neither rule condition worke nor hire to move him to work 2. It is all one as if we willfully neglected to pray and resisted the predeterminating grace of God when wee know not whether the Lord shall deny his influence or no Yet we disobey the Lord commanding and so obliging us to pray for as if wee had his influence at our elbow attending us so wee are to pray and set to work yea our voluntarie refusing to pray wee onely conjecturing evil of God and of his free grace without ground must come from sinnefull wickednesse not from impotency and weaknesse for who told you that Christ would bee wanting in his influence You knew it not from any word of God and shall you fancie a jealousy against Christs love without any warrant even as a servant commanded to lift a burthen upon a sluggishnesse should say It came thither in a Cart and two horses when hee would never move an arme to take a tryall what he could doe though the burthen were above his strength when he will not doe as much as he can his disobedience is wilfull Therefore wee may say if wee speake of a voluntary willfull and groundlesse forsaking of God in order of time we first fors●ke God ere hee desert us but in order of nature God first forsaketh us that is he withdraweth his heavenly influence from us but so as before and after the act of withdrawing wee are willing that God should withdraw and be gone for we love in all the acts of sinning to hav● a world