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

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own thoughts but what may oppose ours that is the plaine and obvious sence of the words that he is concerned to make use of It being not the sence of the place but an escaping our Argument from it that lies in his designe he cares not how many contrary and inconsistent Interpretations he gives of it haec non successit aliâ aggrediemur viâ The word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 denotes as is confessed the intention of Christ in sending the Spirit that is that he intends to send him to Believers so as that he should abide with them for ever Now besides the impossibility in generall that the intention of God or of the Lord Christ as God and man should be frustrate whence in particular should it come to passe he should faile in this his intention I will send ye the holy spirit to abide with you for ever that is I intend to send you the Holy Spirit that he may abide with you for ever what now should hinder this Why it is given them upon condition that they be true to their own interest and take care to retaine him what is that I pray Why that they continue in Faith Obedience Repentance and close walking with God but to what end is it that he is promised unto them Is it not to teach them to worke in them Faith Obedience Repentance and close walking with God to Sanctifie them throughout and preserve them blamelesse to the end making them meet for the inheritance with the Saints in Light In case they Obey Believe c. the Holy Ghost is promised unto them to abide with them to cause them to Obey Believe Repent c. 4. The Intention of Christ for the sending of the Spirit and his abiding for ever with them to whom he is sent is but one and the same And if any frustration of his intention do fall out it may most probably interpose as to his sending of the Spirit not as to the Spirits continuance with them to whom he is sent which is asserted absolutely upon the account of his sending him He sends him 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 his abode is the end of his sending which if he be sent shall be obtained Upon the whole doubtlesse it will be found that the Doctrine of Perseverance findes so much for its establishment in this place of Scripture and Promise of our Saviour that by no Art or cunning it will be prevailed withall to let goe its interest therein And though many attempts be made to turne and wrest this Testimony of our Saviour severall wayes and those contrary too and inconsistent with one another yet it abides to looke straight forwards to the proofe and confirmation of the Truth that lyes not only in the wombe and sence of it but in the very mouth and literall expression of it also I suppose it is evident to all that Mr Goodwin knowes not what to say to it nor what sence to fixe upon At first it is made to the Apostles not all Believers then when this will not serve the turne there being a Concession in that Interpretation destructive to his whole cause then it is made as a Priviledge to the Church not to any individuall Persons but yet for feare that this priviledge must be vested in some individualls it is denyed that it is made to any but only is a Promise of the Spirits abode in the world with the Word but perhaps some thoughts coming upon him that this will no way suit the scope of the place nor be suited to the intēdmēt of Christ it is lastly added that let it be made to whom it will it is conditionall though there be not the least intimation of any condition in the Text or Context and that by him assigned be coincident with the thing it selfe promised But hereof so farre And so our second Testimony the Testimony of the Sonne abides still by the Truth for the confirmation whereof it is produced and in the mouth of these two witnesses the abiding of the Spirit with Believers to the end is established Adde here unto thirdly the Testimony of the third that beares witnesse in Heaven §. 29. and who also comes neere and beares witnesse to this Truth in the hearts of Believers even of the Spirit it selfe and so I shall leave it sealed under the Testimony of the Father Sonne and Holy Ghost As the other two gave in their Testimony in a word of Promise so the Spirit doth in a reall worke of Performance wherein as he beares a distinct Testimony of his owne the Saints having a peculiar Communion and fellowship with him therein so he is as the common seale of Father and Sonne set unto that Truth which by their Testimony they have confirmed There are indeed sundry things whereby he confirmes and establisheth the Saints in the Assurance of his abode with them for ever I shall at present mention that one eminent worke of his which being given unto them he doth accomplish to this very end and purpose and that is his Sealing of them to the day of Redemption A worke it is often in the Scripture mentioned and still upon the account of assuring the Salvation of Believers 2 Cor. 1. 22. by whom also ye are sealed Having mentioned the Certainty Unchangeablenesse and efficacy of all the Promises of God in Christ and the end to be accomplished and brought about by them namely the Glory of God in Believers v. 20. all the Promises of God are yea and Amen in him to the Glory of God by us the Apostle acquaints the Saints with one Foundation of the security of their interest in those Promises whereby the end mentioned the Glory of God by them should be accomplished This he ascribes to the efficacy of the Spirit bestowed on them in sundry workes of his Grace which he reckoneth v. 21 22. Among them this is one that he seales them As to the nature of this sealing and what that Act of the Spirit of Grace is that is so called I shall not now insist upon it The end and use of Sealing is more aimed at in this expression then the nature of it what it imports then wherein it consists Being a terme forensicall and translated from the use and practice of men in their Civill Transactions the use and end of it may easily from the originall rise thereof be demonstrated Sealing amongst men hath a two fold use First to give secrecy and security in things that are under present consideration to the things sealed And this is the First use of Sealing by a seale set upon the thing sealed Of this kind of sealing chiefely have we that long Discourse of Salmasius in the vindication of his Jus Atticum against the Animadversions of Heraldus And 2 ly to give an assurance or faith for what is by them that seale to be done In the first sence are things sealed up in Baggs and in Treasuries that they may be kept safe none daring to
import any such thing as is aimed at from the Text nor the word abide but to the whole proposition the seed of God abideth in him as produced to confirme the former assertion of the not sinning of the Persons spoken of there is nothing spoken at all I shall therefore briefely confirme the Argument in hand by the strength here communicated unto it by the Holy Ghost and then consider what is answered to any part of it or objected to the interpretation insisted on That he that sinneth not neither can sinne in the sence explained shall never fall away totally or finally from God is granted That Believers sinne not nor can sinne so or in the manner mentioned besides the Testimony of the Holy Ghost worthy of all acceptation in the cleare assertion of it we have the Reason thereof manifested in the discovery of the causes of its truth The first Reason is Because the seed of God abideth in them A tacite grant seemeth to be made that fruit sometimes may not visibly appeare upon them as the case is with a Tree in winter when it casts its leaves but its seed remaineth Grace may abide in the habit in and under a winter of Temptation though it doth not exert its selfe in bearing any such actuall fruit as may be ordinarily visible The Word of God is sometimes called seed incorruptible seed causatively as being an instrument in the hand of God whereby he planteth the seed of Life and holinesse in the heart That it is not the outward word but that which is produced and effected by it through the efficacy of the Spirit of God that is by seed intended is evident from the use and nature of it And it is abiding in the Person in whom it is Whatever it is it is called seed not in respect of that from whence it cometh as is the cause and Reason of that appellation of other seed but in respect of that which it produceth which ariseth and insueth upon it and it is called the seed of God because God useth it for the Regeneration of his Being from God being the principle of the Regeneration of them in whom it is abiding in them even when it hath brought forth fruit and continuing so to doe it can be no other but the New Creature New Nature inward Man new principle of Life or habit of Grace that is bestowed upon all Believers whence they are Regenerate quickned or borne againe of which we have spoken before This seed saith the Holy Ghost abideth §. 67. or remaineth in him Whatever falling or withering He may seeme to have or hath this seed the seed of God remaineth in him The principle of his new life abideth some exceptions are made as we shall see afterwards to the signification of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 remaineth and instances given where it signifyeth for to be and denoteth the essence of a thing not its duration That to abide or remaine is the proper signification of the word I suppose will not be questioned That it may in some place be used in another sence is not dispuited All that lyeth under consideration here is whether the word in this place be used properly according to its genuine and first signification or no It supposeth indeed to be also but properly signifieth only to abide or remaine Now if nothing can be advanced from the Text ot context from the matter treated on or the paralell significancy of some expression that is in conjunction with it that should inforce us to carry it from its proper use and signification the instancing of other places if any such be wherein it is restrained to denote being and not duration is altogether impertinent to the businesse in hand When an Argument is urged from any place of Scripture to pick out any word in the Text and to manifest that it hath been used improperly in some other place and therefore must be so in that is a procedure so farre from an ingenious Answer that it will scarce passe for a tolerable shift or evasion To remaine then or to abide is the proper signification of this word nothing is in the least offered to manifest that it must necessarily in this place be diverted from its proper use According to the import of the word the seed of God remaineth in Believers now that remaining of the seed is the cause of their not sinning that sinne or in that manner as the Apostle here denyeth them to be liable to sinne For that is the Reason he giveth why they cannot sinne even because the seed of God remaineth in them Mr Goodwin granteth that this seed remaineth in Believers alwayes unlesse they sinne by a totall defection from God Of not sinning the sinne of totall de●ection from God the remaining or abiding of this seed is the cause Whilst that abideth they cannot sinne that sin for it is an unquestionable cause uncontrouleable of their not so doing This seed therefore must be utterly lost and taken away before any such sinne can be committed Now if the seed cannot be lost without the commission of the sinne which cannot be committed till it be lost neither can the seed be lost nor the sin becommited The same thing cannot be before and after its selfe He that cannot go sucha journey unlesse he have such a horse cannot have such a horse unlesse he go such a journey is like to stay at home In what sence the words cannot sin are to be taken was before declared That there are sins innumerable whereinto men may fall notwithstanding this seed is confessed Under them all this seed abideth so it would not do under that which we cannot sin because it abideth but because it abideth that sin cannot be committed The latter part of the Reason of the Apostles assertion §. 68. is for he is borne of God which is indeed a driving on the former to its head and fountaine What it is to be borne of God we need not dispute It was sufficiently discovered in the mention that was made before of the seed of God God by his Holy Spirit bestowing on us a new Spirituall Life which by nature we have not and in respect of whose want we are said to be dead is frequently said to beget us James 1. 14. And we are said to be borne of God He is the Soveraigne disposer dispenser and supreme fountaine of that Life which is so bestowed on us which we are begotten againe unto and are borne with and by And Jesus Christ the Mediatour is also said to have this Life in himselfe Joh 5. because he hath received the spirit of the father to give to his for their quickning who taketh of his and thereby begeteth them a new And this Life which Believers thus receive and whereby indeed radically they become Believers is every where in Scripture noted as Permanent and abiding In respect of the originall of it it is said to be from above
from Heaven of the will of God of God As to its principle to be not of flesh or bloud or of the will of man or of any thing done by us but of the seed of God incorruptible seed seed that abideth in respect of its duration to be eternall and that it may so be to be safeguarded being hid in God with Christ. In this place Receiving this Life from God is placed as the cause and cannot sinne as the effect He cannot sinne for or because he is borne of God The connexion that is between this cause and effect or wherein the causality of Being borne of God to a not sinning doth consist needs not be inquired into That it hath such a causality the holy Ghost hath asserted and our Argument resteth thereon If that be the nature of Regeneration or being borne of God that it doth exclude Apostacy then he that is Regenerate or borne of God as every Believer is cannot so sinne as to Apostatize or fall totally from God But that such is the nature of Regeneration whereby any one is borne of God the holy Ghost here declareth For he denyeth Apostacy upon the account of Regeneration He cannot sinne because he is borne of God which is that which we intended to demonstrate from this text of Scripture To evade the force of this Argument §. 69. M. Goodwin as hath been declared undertaketh to give an Exposition of this place of Scripture turning every stone and labouring to wrest every word in it The severall significations of the words in other places are set out and suppositions made of taking them this way or that way but in what sence the scope of the matter treated on the most usuall known common acceptations call for their Vse in this place nothing is spoken neither is any cleare Answer once attempted to be given to the words of the Text speaking out and home to the conclusion we intend or to the Argument thence deduced What I can gather up from Sect. 31. and forwards that may obstruct the thoughts of any in closing with the Interpretation given I shall consider and remove out of the way 1. Then he giveth you this Interpretation of these words sineth not or cannot sinne Every one that hath been borne of God sinneth not i. e. Whosoever hath by the Word and Spirit of God been made partaker of the Divine nature so as to resemble God in the frame and constitution of his heart and soule doth not under such a frame or change of heart as this make a trade or practice of sinning or walking in any course of inordinatenesse in the world Yea saith he in the latter Proposition every such person doth not only or simply refraine sinning in such a sence but he cannot sin i. e. He hath a strong and potent disposition in him which carryeth him an other way for he hath a strong Antipathy or aversenesse of heart and soule against all sinne especially all such kind of sinning Ans. 1. What is meant by being borne of God the way whereby any come so to be the Vniversality of the expression requiring a necessary cause of its verity with the like attendencies of the Proposition have been before declared 2. What M. Goodwin intendeth by such a frame and constitution of spirit and soule as may resemble God with his deniall of the bestowing on us from God a vitall principle of Grace wherein the Renovation in us of his image should consist hath in part also been already discovered will yet farther be so in our consideration of his rare notion of Regeneration its consisting in a mans returnall to the innocent and harmelesse estate wherein he was borne 3. That sinneth not is sinneth not that sinne or so sinneth not as to break his Relation to God as a child hath been already also manifested and the Reader is not to be burthened with Repetition 4. In the interpretation given of the latter phrase he cannot sinne I cannot so sinne against the light of the Text as to joyne with M. Goodwin in it It is not the Antipathie of his heart to sinne but the Course of his walking with God in respect of sinne that the Apostle treateth on His internall principaling against sinne he hath from being borne of God and the abiding of his seed in him of which this that he cannot sinne is asserted as the effect He cannot sinne that is he cannot so sinne upon the account of his being borne of God Thence indeed he hath not only a potent disposition another way and Antipathie to evill but a vitall principle with an everlasting enmity and repugnancy to and inconsistency with any such sin or sinning as is intimated and that he cannot sinne is the consequent and effect thereof and is so affirmed to be by the Holy Ghost Nextly §. 70. M. Goodwin giveth you the Reason of this Assertion used by the Apostle why such an one as of whom he speaketh sinneth not and cannot sinne Now the Reason saith the Apostle why such a person committeth not sinne in the sence explained is because his seed the seed of God by whom of which he was borne of him remaineth in him i. e. is or hath an actuall and present being or residence in him and that in this place it doth not signify any perpetuall abiding or any abiding in relation to the future is evident because the abiding of the seed here spoken of is given as the Reason why he that is borne of God doth not commit sinne i. e. doth not frequently walke in any course of known sinne now nothing in respect of any future permanency or continuance of being can be looked upon as the cause of an effect but only in respect of the present being or residence of it The Reason why the soule moveth to day is not because it will move or act the body to morrow or because it is in the body to day upon such termes that it will be in it to morrow also much lesse because it is an immortall substance but simply because it is now or this day in the body So the Reason why Angels at this day do the will of God is not because they have such a principle of holinesse or Obedience in them which they cannot put off or loose to eternity but because of such a principle as we speake of residing in them at present therefore when John assigneth the remaining of the seed of God in him that is borne of him for the reason why he doth not commit sinne certaine it is that by this remaining of the seed he meaneth nothing else but the present residence or abode thereof in this Person and if his intent had been either to assert or imply a perpetuall residence of this seed in him that is borne of God it had been much more proper for him to have saved it for a reason of the latter proposition he that is borne of God cannot sinne then to have subjoyned it
as can well be expressed wherefore these being exceptions expressely against the scope of the whole It is objected 3. That it cannot be proved that this promise properly or directly intendeth the collation of Spirituall or heavenly good things unto them so as of Temporall yea the situation of it betwixt Temporall Promises immediately both behind and before it perswadeth the contrary Read the Context from v. 8. to the end of the Chapter Ans. The other forts being demolished this last is very faintly defended That it cannot be proved that it doth so properly or directly but if it doth intend spiritualls properly and directly though not so properly or directly the case is cleare And that it doth properly intend Spiritualls and but secondarily and indirectly Temporalls as to sundry limitations is most evident For 1. The very Conjugall Expression of the Love of God here used manifesteth it beyond all contradiction to be a Promise of the Covenant I will Betroth thee unto mee I will take thee unto mee in a Wedlock covenant What! in Temporall mercies Is that the tenor of the Covenant of God God forbid 2. The Foundations of these Mercies and the principles from whence they flow are Loving-kindnesses and Mercy and Fathfulnesse in God which are fixed upon them and engaged unto them whom he thus taketh into Covenant and surely they are Spirituall Mercies 3. The Mercies mentioned are such as never had a literall accomplishment to the Iewes in Temporalls nor can have and when things promised exceed all accomplishment as to the outward and temporall part it is the spirituall that is principally and mainely intended And such are these v. 18. I will breake the bow and the sword and the battell out of the earth and make you to lye downe in safety How I pray was this fulfilled towards them whilest they lived under the power of the Persian Graecian and Roman Empires to their utter desolation and v. 23. he telleth them that he will sowe them unto himselfe in the Earth and have mercy on them which as I said before Paul himselfe interpreteth and applieth to the speciall Mercies of Faith and Justification in the bloud of Christ So that both the verses going before and those that follow after to the consideration whereof we are sent containe directly and properly spirituall Mercies though expressed in words and termes of things of a temporall importance Thus notwithstanding any Exception to the contrary the Context is cleare as it was at first proposed Let us then in the next place consider the intendment of God in this Promise with that influence of Demonstration which it hath upon the Truth we are in the consideration of and then free the words from that corrupting Glosse which is endeavoured to be put upon them In the first I shall consider §. 25. 1. The Persons to whom this Promise is made 2. The Nature of the Promise it selfe 3. The great undertaking and engagement of the Properties of God for the accomplishment of his Promise 1. The Persons here intimated are such as are under the power and enjoyment of the Grace and kindnesse mentioned in v. 14 16 17 18. Now because a right understanding of the Grace of those Promises addeth much to the Apprehension of the Kindnesse of these particulars insisted on the opening of those words may be thought necessary 1. V. 14. they are those whom God allureth into the Wildernesse §. 26. and speaketh comfortably unto them He allureth and perswadeth them there is an allusion in the words to the great originall Promise of the conversion of the Gentiles and the way whereby it shall be done Gen 9. 27. God perswades Iaphet to dwell in the tents of Shem. Their alluring is by the powerfull and sweet perswasion of the Gospell which here is so termed to begin the Allegory of Betrothing and Marriage which is afterwards pursued It is God's beginning to Wooe the Soule by his Embassadors God perswadeth them into the Wildernesse perswadeth them but yet with mighty power as he carried them of old out of Aegypt for thereunto he evidently alludeth as in the next verse is more fully expressed Now the Wildernesse condition whereunto they are allured or perswaded by the Gospell comprizeth two things 1. Separation 2. Intanglement 1. Separation as the Israelites in the Wildernesse were separated from the residue of the World and the pleasures thereof the people dwelling alone being not reckoned with the Nations having nothing to doe with them So God separateth them to the love of the Gospell from their carnall contentments and all the satisfactions which before they received in their Lusts untill they say to them Get you hence what have we to doe with you any more They are separated from the practice of them and made willing to bid them everlastingly farewell They see their Aegyptian Lusts ●ye slaine or dead or at least dying by the crosse of Christ and desire to see them no more 2. Intanglement as the Israelites were in the Wildernesse they knew not what to doe nor which way to take one step but only as God went before them as he took them by the hand and taught them to goe God bringeth them into a lost condition they know not what to doe nor which way to take nor what course to pitch upon and yet in this Wildernesse state God doth commonly stirre up such gracious dispositions of soule in them as himselfe is exceedingly delighted withall hence he doth peculiarly call this time a Time of Love which he remembreth with much delight All the time of the Saints walking with him he taketh not greater delight in a soule when it cometh to its highest peace and fullest assurance then when it is seeking after him in its Wildernesse Intanglement So he expresseth it Ierem 2. 2. Thus saith the Lord I remember thee the kindnesse of thy youth the Love of thine Espousals when thou wentest after mee in the Wildernesse in a land that was not sowen And what he here affirmeth holds proportion therewithall The Time of their being in the Wildernesse was the Time of their Espousals and so it is here the Time of the Lords Betrothing the Soule to himselfe the Wooing words whereby he doth it being intimated in the next verse For 1. He speaketh comfortably to them §. 27. speaketh to their hearts good words that may satisfy their spirits and give them Rest and deliverance out of that condition What it is that God speaketh when he speaketh comfortably to the very hearts of poore soules he telleth you Isai 40. 1. Comfort you comfort you my People saith your God speake you comfortably to Jerusalem and cry unto her that her warfare is accomplished that her iniquity is pardoned It is the pardon of iniquity that enwrappeth all the Consolation that a poore Wildernesse soule separated and intangled is capable of or doth desire And this is the first description of the Persons to whom this Promise is given They are such as
that Believers receive the spirit of Adoption to cry Abba Father which being a worke within them cannot be wrought and effected by Adoption it selfe which is an extrinsicall Relation Neither can Adoption and the Spirit of Adoption be conceived to be the same He also farther affirmes it 1 Cor 2. 12. we have received the spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are freely given us of God We have so received him as that he abides with us to teach us to acquaint our hearts with Gods dealing with us bearing witnesse with our spirits to the condition wherein we are in reference to our Favour from God and Acceptation with him and the same he most distinctly asserts Gal. 4. 6. God hath sent forth the spirit of his Sonne into our hearts crying Abba Father The distinct Oeconomy of the Father Sonne and Spirit in the work of Adoption is clearly discovered He is sent sent of God that is the Father That name is Personally to be appropriated when it is distinguished as here from Sonne and Spirit That is the Fathers work that work of his Love he sends him He hath sent him as the spirit of his Sonne procured by him for us promised by him to us proceeding from him as to his personall subsistence and sent by him as to his office of Adoption and Consolation Then whether the Father hath sent the spirit of his Sonne where he is to abide and make his residence is expressed it is into our Hearts saith the Apostle there he dwells and abides And lastly what there he doth is also manifested he setts them on worke in whom he is gives them priviledges for it Ability to it Incouragement in it causing them to cry Abba Father Once and againe to Timothy doth the same Apostle assert the same truth 1 Epist. 3. 14. the good thing committed unto thee keep by the Holy Spirit which dwelleth in us The Lord knowing how much of our Life and Consolation depends on this Truth redoubles his Testimony of it that wee might receive it even wee who are dull and slow of heart to believe the things that are written 3. Whereas some may say §. 3. it cannot be denyed but that the Spirit dwels in Believers but yet this is not personally but only by his Grace though I might reply that this indeed and upon the matter is not to distinguish but to deny what is positively affirmed To say the Spirit dwells in us but not the Person of the Spirit is not to distinguish de modo but to deny the thing it selfe To say the Graces indeed of the Spirit are in us not dwell in us for an Accident is not properly said to dwell in its subject but the Spirit it selfe doth not dwell in us is expressly to cast downe what the word sets up If such distinctions ought to be of force to evade so many positive and plaine Texts of Scripture as have been produced it may well be questioned whether any Truth be capable of proofe from Scripture or no. Yet I say farther to obviate such Objections and to prevent all quarrellings for the future the Scripture it selfe as to this businesse of the Spirits indwelling plainely distinguisheth between the Spirit it selfe and his Graces He is I say distinguished from them and that in respect to his indwelling Rom. 5. 5. The Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us The Holy Ghost is given to us to dwell in us as hath been abundantly declared and shall yet farther be demonstrated Here He is mentioned together with the Love of God and his shedding thereof abroad in our Hearts that is with his Graces is as clearely distinguished and differenced from them as Cause and effect Take the Love of God in either sence that is controverted about this place for our Love to God or a sence of his Love to us and it is an eminent Grace of the Holy Spirit If then by the Holy Ghost given unto us yee understand only the Grace of the Holy Ghost He being said to be given because that is given then this must be the sence of the place The Grace of the Holy Ghost is shed abroad in our Hearts by the Grace of the Holy Ghost that is given to us Farther if by the Holy Ghost be meant only his Grace I require what Grace it is hereby the expression intended Is it the same with that expressed the Love of God This were to confound the efficient cause with its effect Is it any other Grace that doth produce the great worke mentioned Let us know what that Grace is that hath this power energie in its hand of shedding abroad the Love of God in our Hearts So Rom. 8. 11. He shall quicken your mortall bodyes by the Spirit that dwelleth in you This quickning of our mortall bodies is generally confessed to be and the scope of the place inforceth that sence our Spirituall quickning in our mortall bodyes mention being made of our bodyes in Analogie to the body of Christ by his death we have life and quickning Donbtlesse then it is a Grace of the Spirit that is intended Yea the habitual principle of all Graces And this is wrought in us by the Spirit that dwelleth in us There is not any Grace of the Spirit whereby he may dwell in men antecedent to his Quickning of them Spirituall Graces have not their residence in dead soules So that this must be the Spirit himselfe dwelling in us that is here intended and that personally or the sence of the words must be The Grace of quickning our mortall bodyes is wrought in us by the Grace of Quickning our mortall bodyes that dwels in us which is plainely to confound the Cause and Effect Besides it is the same Spirit that raised up Jesus from the dead that is intended which doubtlesse was not any inherent Grace but the Spirit of God himselfe working by the exceding greatnesse of his Power Thus much is hence cleared Antecedent in order of nature to our Quickning there is a Spirit given to us to dwell in us Every efficient Cause hath at least the precedency of its effect No Grace of the Spirit is bestowed on us before our Quickning which is the preparation and fitting of the subject for the receiving of them the planting of the Roote that containes them vertually and brings them forth actually in their order Gal. 5. 22. All Graces whatsoever come under the name of the fruit of the Spirit that is which the Spirit in us brings forth as the Roote doth the fruit which in its sodoing is distinct therefrom Many oher instances might be given but these may suffice 4. There is a Personallity ascribed to the Holy Ghost in his dwelling in us and that in such a way §. 4. as cannot be ascribed to any Created Grace which is but a Quality in a subject and this the Scripture doth three wayes 1. In
personall Appellations 2. In personall Operations 3. Personall Circumstances 1. First there are ascribed to the indwelling Spirit in his indwelling Personal Appellations He that is in you is greater then he that is in the world 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 He that is in you is a personall Denomination which cannot be used of any Grace or gratious habit whatsoever so John 14 16 17. He shall abide with you he dwelleth with you shall be in you 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 John 16. 13. But when the Spirit of Truth is come 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 His Person is as signally designed and expressed as in any place of Scripture to what intent or purpose soever mentioned Neither is it possible to apprehend that the Scripture would so often so expressly affirme the same thing in plaine proper words if they were not to be taken in the sence which they hold out The maine Emphasis of the Expression lyes upon the Termes that are of a personall designation and to evade the force of them by the fore mentioned distinction which they seeme signally to obviate and prevent is to say what we please so we may oppose what pleases us not 2. Personall Operations such acts and actings as are proper to a person only are ascribed to the Spirit in his indwelling That place mentioned before Rom. 8. 11. is cleare hereunto But if the Spirit of him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you he who raised Christ from the dead shall quicken your mortall bodyes by his Spirit which dwélteh in you or by his indwelling Spirit 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 To quicken our mortall bodyes is a Personall acting such as cannot be wrought but by an Almighty Agent And this is ascribed to the Spirit as inhabiting whch is in order of nature antecedent to his quickning of us as was manifested And the same is asserted v. 15. The Spirit beareth witnesse with our spirits that we are the Sonnes of God That Spirit that dwells in us beares witnesse in us a distinct Witnesse by himselfe distinguished from the Testimony of our owne spirit here mentioned is either an Act of our naturall Spirits or Gracious fruit of the Spirit of God in our hearts If the first what makes it in the things of God Is any Testimony of our naturall spirits of any value to assure us that we are the Children of God If the latter then is there here an immediate operation of the Spirit dwelling in our hearts in witnesse-bearing distinct from all the fruits of Grace whatever And on this account it is that whereas 1 Epistle of John 5. 7 8. the Father Sonne and Spirit are said to beare witnesse in Heaven the Spirit is moreover peculiarly said to beare witnesse in the Earth together with the Blood and Water 3. There are such Circumstances ascribed to him in his indwelling as are proper only to that which is a Person I will instance only in one his dwelling in the Saints as in a Temple 1 Cor. 3. 16. Yee are the Temple of God and his Spirit dwelleth in you that is as in a Temple so plainely chap. 6. 19. Your body is the Temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you which you have of God giving us both the distinction of the Person of the Spirit from the other Persons he is given us of God and his residence with us being so given he is in us as also the manner of his in-being as in a Temple Nothing can make a place a Temple but the Relation it hath unto a Deity Graces that are but Qualifications of and Qualities in a Subject cannot be said to dwell in a Temple This the Spirit doth and therefore as a voluntary Agent in an habitation not as a necessary or naturall principle in a subject and though every act of his be Omnipotent intensively being the act of an Omnipotent Agent yet he worketh not in the acts extensively to the utmost of his Omnipotency he exerteth and puts forth his Power and brings forth his Grace in the hearts of them with whom he dwells as he pleaseth to one he comunicates more Grace to another lesse yea he gives more strength to one and the same person at one time and in one condition 1 Cor. 12. then another dividing to every one as he will and if this peculiar manner of his personall presence with his Saints distinct from his Ubiquity or Omnipresence may not be believed because not well by reason conceived we shall lay a Foundation for the questioning principles of Faith which as yet we are not fallen out withall And this is our first manifestation of the Truth concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit in the Saints from the Scripture The second will be from the signall Issues and benefits which are asserted to arise from this indwelling of the Spirit in them of which I shall give sundry instances 1. The first signall Issue and Effect which is ascribed to this Indwelling of the Spirit §. 6. is Union not a Personall Union with himselfe which is impossible He doth not assume our natures and so prevent our Personality which would make us one Person with him but dwells in our Persons keeping his owne and leaving us our Personality infinitely distinct But it is a spirituall Union the great Union mentioned so often in the Gospell that is the sole fountain of our Blessednesse our Union with the Lord Christ which we have thereby Many thoughts of heart there have been about this Union §. 7. what it is wherein it doth consist the causes manner and Effects of it The Scripture expresses it to be very Eminent neere durable setting it out for the most part by similitudes and Metaphoricall Illustrations to lead poore weak Creatures into some usefull needfull acquaintance with that Mystery whose depths in this life they shall never fathome That many in the dayes wherein we live have miscarried in their conceptions of it is evident some to make out their Imaginary Union have destroyed the person of Christ and fancying a way of uniting man to God by him have left him to be neither God nor Man Others have destroyed the Person of Believers affirming that in their Union with Christ they loose their own Personality that is cease to be Men or at least these or these Individuall men I intend not now to handle it at large but only and that I hope without offence to give in my thoughts concerning it as farre as it receiveth light from and relateth unto what hath been before delivered concerning the Indwelling of the Spirit and that without the least contending about other wayes of Expression I say then §. 3. this is that which gives us Union with Christ and that wherein it consists even that the one and selfe-same Spirit dwells in him and us The first saving Elapse from God upon the Hearts of the Elect is the Holy Spirit Their quickning is every where ascribed to the Spirit that is
Thus then we clearely see that the former of the two Consequents mentioned cannot stand God doth not by his Spirit irresistibly draw or move the wills of the S t s to do things which are necessary for the procuring their Perseverance immediately or withont the instrumentall interposure of the said Exhortations Ans. First §. 21. the intendment of this as also of some following Sections is to prove and manifest that the use of Exhortations cannot consist with the efficacy of Internall Grace and the worke of the Spirit in producing and effecting those Graces in us which in those Exhortations we are provoked and stirred up unto A very sad undertaking truely to my apprehension for w eh the Church of God will scarce ever returne thankes to them that shall ingage in it He was of an other minde who cryed Da Domine qvod jubes jube quod vis yea the Holy Ghost hath in innumerable places of Scripture exprest himselfe of another mind promising to worke effectually in us what he requires earnestly of us by the one manifesting the efficacy of his Grace by the other the exigeney of the Duty which is incumbent upon us Nay never any Saint of God once pray'd in his life seeking any thing at the hand of God but was of another mind if he understood his owne supplications To what is here urged against this Catholicke Faith of Believers I say That Exhortations are the meanes of Perseverance in as much as by them in their place and kinde and with them the Spirit of God effectually workes this Peseverance or the matter of it in the Saints Those cloudy expressions of irresistibly and unfrustrably we owne no farther then as they denote the certainty of the event and not the manner of the Spirits operation which also they do very unhandsomely We leave out then in the proposall of our Judgement about the use of Exhortations which Mr Goodwin opposeth those tearmes and adde in their Roome by and by with those Exhortations which he omitts He saith then This cannot be proved because the Saints live and dye often times in opposition and disobedience unto these Exhortations But Obedience is twofold First as to the generall frame of the heart Obedience in the habit and so 't is false that the Saints live at any time in an ordinary course much lesse dye in opposition to those Exhortations the Law of God being written in their hearts and they delighting in it in their inward man they abide therein the fruit of Obedience for the most part being brought forth by them And this sufficeth as to their Perseverance Secondly It regardeth particular acts of Obedience and in respect of them we all say that yet they all sinne Optimus ille est qui minimis urgetur but this prejndiceth not their Perseverance nor the generall end of the Exhortations afforded them for that purpose But he adds Secondly If God by his Spirit irresistibly drawes his Saints to persevere ut supra But this is sorry Sophistry which may be felt as they say through a paire of mittins For First who saies that God workes by force immediately upon the wills of men Or who makes force and power to be tearmes equivalent Or that God cannot put forth the exceeding greatnesse of his power in them that believe but he must force or compell their wills or that he can not work in us to will and to do of his owne goodpleasure immediately working in and with our wills but he must so force them Secondly whence ariseth the disjunctive force of this Argument Either by immedate actings upon their wills or he makes use of those Exhortations As though the one way were exclusive of the other and that the Scripture did not abundantly and plentifully ascribe both these unto God both that he exhorts us to know him love him believe in him and gives us an understanding and an heart so to do working Faith and Love in us by the exceeding efficacy of his power and Spirit I say then that God workes immediately by his Spirit in and on the wills of his Saints that is he puts forth a reall Physicall power that is not contained in those exhortations though he doth it by and in and with them The impotency that is in us to do good is not amisse termed Ethico-physica both Naturall and Morall and the Applications of God to the soule in their doing good are both Really and Physically efficient and Morall also the one consisting in the efficacy of his Spirit the other lying in the exhortations of the Word yet so as that the efficacy of the Spirit is exerted by and with the Morall efficacy of the Word his workes being but Grace or the Law in the heart the Word being the Law written so that all the ensuing Reasonings are bottomed upon things Male divisa that stand in a sweet harmony and compliance with each other But Mr Goodwin tells you That if God worke by his Spirit his Grace immediately on the wills of men to cause them to persevere then are Exhortations no meanes of their Perseverance Why so I pray It seemes we must have no internall effectuall Grace from God or no outward Exhortations of the Word But he tells you it must be so because If the will be Physically and Irresistibly acted and drawne by God to do such and such things it needeth no adition of Morall meanes such are Exhortations thereunto That is if the will be effectually inclined to the wayes of God by his Grace there is then no need of the Exhortations of the Word But yet First the Spirit of God though he have an immediate efficacy of his owne by with those Exhortations yet by those Exhortations he also inclines the will as he workes on the will as Corrupt impotent by his Grace so he workes on the will as the will or as such a faculty is apt to be wrought upon by a mediation of the understanding by Exhortations Secondly to say Obedience would have been produced and wrought had there been no Exhortations is not required of us what efficacy soever we ascribe to Grace unlesse we also deny Exhortations to be appointed of God and to be used by the Spirit of God for the producing of that Obedience Neither Thirdly doth God worke upon the will as a distinct faculty alone of it selfe without suiting his operations to the other faculties of the soule Nor is Grace to be wrought or carryed on in us meerely as we have Wills but as we have Understandings also whereby the Exhortations he is pleased to use may be conveyed to the will and affect it in their kind in a word this is but repeating what was said before If there be any effectuall Grace there is no use of Exhortations If exhortations be the meanes of continuing or increaseing Grace what need the efficacy of Grace or immediate actings of the Spirit working in us to will and to do of Gods
That there is a plurality yea a contrariety of wills in the Scripture sence of the expression of the will of a man was before from the Scripture declared not a plurality of wills in a Physicall sence as the will is a naturall faculty of the soule but in a Morall and Analogicall sence as 't is taken for a habit or principle of good or evill The will is a naturall faculty one nature hath one will in every Regenerate man there are two natures the new or divine and the old or corrupted In the same sence there are in him two wills as was declared But saith he It is an impossibility of the first evidence that there should be a plurality of Acts in the same subject at the same time and these contrary one to another But 1. If you intend acts in a Morall Consideration unlesse you adde about the same Object which you do not this Assertion is so farre from any evidence of truth that it is ridiculously false May not the same person love God and hate the Divell at the same time But 2. How passe you so suddenly from a plurality of wills to a plurality of acts by the will we intend in the sence wherein we speak of it an habit not any act i.e. The will as habitually invested with a new principle not as actually willing from thence by vertue thereof Arminius from whom our Author borrowes this Discourse fell not into this Sophystry he tels you There cannot be contrary wills or volitions about the same Act But is it with M.G. or Arminius an impossibility that there should be a mixt action partly voluntary partly involuntary actions whose principles are from without by perswasion may be so a mans throwing his goods in the Sea to save his owne life Now the principles whereof we speak Flesh Grace are internall contrary shall not the actions that proceed from a faculty wherein such contrary principles have their residence be partly voluntary partly involuntary 3. But he tells you That though there might be lusting of the Spirit against the flesh before the act of sinne yet when it comes to the acting of it then it ceaseth so the act is wrought with the whole will First though this were so yet this doth not prove but that the Action is mixt and not absolutely and wholly voluntary Mixt Actions are so esteemed from the antecedent deliberation and dissent though the will be at length prevailed upon thereunto and I have shewed before that in the very action there is a vertuall dissent because of the opposite principle that is in the will But Secondly How doth it appeare that the Spirit doth not lust against the flesh though not to a prevalency even in the exertion of the acts of sinne In every good act that a man doth because evil is present with him though the prevalency be of the part of the Spirit and the principle of Grace yet the flesh also with its lustings doth alwayes in part corrupt it Thence are all the spots staines and imperfections of the holy things and dutyes of the Saints and if the flesh in its lusting will immix it selfe with our good Actions to their defilement and impairing why may not the Spirit in the ill not immix its selfe and its lustings threwith but beare off from the full influence of the will into them which otherwise it would have But saith he If the spirit doth not cease lusting before the flesh bring forth the act of sinne then is the Spirit conquered by the flesh contrary to that of the Apostle 1 John 4. 4. % Stronger is he that is in you than he that is in the world But First If from hence the flesh must be though conceived to be stronger than the Spirit because it prevailes in any act unto sin notwithstanding the contending of the Spirit how much more must it be judged to prevaile over it and to conquer it if it cause it utterly to cease and not to strive at all He that restraines an other that he shall not oppose him at all hath a greater power than he who conquers him in his resistance But why doth Mr Goodwin feare least the flesh should be asserted to be stronger in us than the Spirit Is not his whole designe to prove that it is or may be so so much stronger and more prevalent than it that whereas it is confessed on all hands that the Spirit doth never wholly conquer the flesh that it shall not remaine in the Saints in this life yet that the flesh doth wholly prevaile over the Spirit and conquer it to an utter expulsion of it out of the hearts of them in whom it is Secondly In the prevalency of the flesh it is not the Spirit himselfe that is conquered but only some motions actings of him in the heart Now though some particular actings and motions of his may not come out eventually unto successe yet if he generally beares Rule in the heart he is not to be said even as in us and acting in us not to be stronger than the flesh He is as in us on this account said to be stronger than he that is in the world because notwithstanding all the opposition that is against us he preserveth us in our state and condition of Acceptation with God and walking with him with an upright heart in good workes and dutyes for the most part though sometimes the flesh prevailes unto sinne from which yet he recovers us by Repentance Thirdly To speake a little to Mr Goodwin's sence By the Spirits insufficiency it is manifest from the Text urged and from what followes in the same place that he intends not a Spirituall vitall principle in the will having its residence there with its contrary principle the flesh perhaps he will grant no such thing but the Spirit of God himselfe How now doth this Spirit lust Not formally doubtlesse but by causing us so to do and how doth it do that in Mr Goodwin's judgement Meerely by perswading of us so to do so that to have the flesh prevaile against the Spirit is nothing in his sence but to have sinne prevaile and the motives of the flesh above the motives used by the Spirit which may be done and yet the Spirit continue unquestionably stronger than the flesh Fourthly The summe is If the Spirit and the flesh Lust and Grace may be lookt on as habituall qualityes and principles in the wills of the same persons so that though a man hath but one will yet by reason of these contrary qualityes He is to be esteemed as two diverse principles of operation it is evident that having contrary inclinations continually the will hath in its actings a Relation to both these principles so that no sinne is commited by such an one with his whole will and full consent That contrary qualityes in a Remisse degree may be in the same subject is knowne Lippis Tonsoribus These adverse
Believers hath been formerly beyond contradiction manifested and maintained That expression then they went out from us is not an Answer by concession to an Objection but a description of seducers by their Apostacy Which words also in their regard to the Persons as before by him described do manifest their utter declining and forsaking the Communion of the Saints they so going from them as also going into an opposition to the Doctrine of the Gospell Thirdly That the Apostle here insinuates an advantage these Antichrists had to seduce from their former communion with him a thing not in the least suggested as was observed in the occasion of the words as laid downe by Mr Goodwin himselfe is proved from the use of the words they went out from us Acts 15. 24. Whence this undenyable Argument may be educed Some who went out from the Apostle had repute and authority in their preaching thereby these Antichrists went out from the Apostle therefore they had repute and authorety thereby younger men than either Mr Goodwin or my selfe know well enough what to make of this Argument Besides though there be an agreement in that one Expression all the neighbouring parts of the Description manifest that in the things themselves there and here pointed at there is no affinity Those in the Acts pretended to abide still in the communion and Faith of the Apostles these here expressively departed both from the one and the other to an opposition of them both The former seemed to have pretended a commission from the Apostles these according to Mr Goodwin himselfe did so farre declare against them that it was a scandall to some fearing that all had not been well among the Apostles Fourthly That which is called an Answer by way of Exception as in it lye the expression of it so used upon the matter is as much as we urge from these words The import of them is said to be they were not of us though they were with us yet they were not such as we are didnot walke in that uprightnesse of heart as we do they were not men of the same principles and spirit with us that is they were not true thorough sincere and sound Believers at all no not while they converst with the Apostles Now evident 't is that in those words as is manifest by the assuming of them againe for the use of an inference insuing for if they had been of us they would have continued with us the Apostle yeilds a Reason and Account how they came to Apostatize and fall to the opposition of the Gospell from the profession wherein they walked 't was because they were not men of thorough and sound principles true Belivers and consequently he supposeth and implyeth that if they had been so they would not they could not have so Apostatized for if they might there had been no weight in the account given of the Reason of their revolt In what followes §. 44. that these words but they were not of us do not necessarily imply they were Believers formerly but perhaps they had been so and were before fallen away being choaked by the cares of the world an observation is insinuated directly opposite to the Apostles designe and such as makes his whole Discourse ridiculous An account he gives of mens falling away from the Faith and tells them 't is because though they have been professors yet they were never true Believers yea but perhaps they were true Believers and then fell away after that fell away that is they fell from the Faith and then fell from the Faith for that is plainely intimated in is the sence of this doubty Observation But to proceed with his exposition §. 45. he sayes It followes for if they had been of us they would no doubt have continued with us in these words the Apostle gives a reason of his Exception telling them to whom he writes that this was a signe and Argument that those Antichristian teachers were not of them in the sence declared viz. That they did not continue with them that is they quitted their former intimacy and converse with the Apostles refused to steere the same course to walke by the same principles any longer with them which saith he doubtlesse they would not have done had they been as sincerely affected towards Jesus Christ the Gospell as we by which Assertion John plainely vindicated himselfe and the Christian Churches of his communion from giving any just occasion of offence unto those men whereby they should be any wayes induced to forsake them and resolves their unworthy departure of this kind into their own carnall and corrupt hearts which lusted after some fleshly accommodations and contentments that were not to be obtained or enjoyed in a sincere profession of the Gospell with the Apostles and those who were perfect of heart with them Ans. First That no aspersion was cast on Iohn or the Churches of his Communion by the Apostasy of the Antichrists of whom he speakes from which he should need to vindicate himselfe and them was before declared There was not indeed nor possibly could be the least occasion for any surmize of evill concerning them from whom men departed in turning ungodly opposers of Christ For any thing that is here offered 't is but an obscureing of the Light that breaks forth from the words for the discerning of the Truth in hand 't is granted that the Apostle manifests that they were not of them that is true upright sound believers that walked with a right foot in the Doctrine of the Gospell because they forsooke the communion of the Saints to fall into the condition of Antichristianisme wherein they were now engaged Now if this be an Argument that a man was never a true believer in the highest profession that he makes because he falls from it and forsakes it certainly those that are true believers cannot so fall from their stedfastnesse or the Argument will be of no Evidence or conviction at all Neither is any thing here offered by M. Goodwin but what upon a through consideration doth confirme the inferences we insist upon and make to the worke in hand Truth will at one time or other lead captive those who are most skilfull in their Rebellion against it What is added Sect. 24. concerning the Righteous Judgement of God §. 46. and the gracious tendency of his dispensations to his Churches use in suffering these wretches so to discover themselves and be manifested what they were I oppose not The discovery that was made was of what they had been before that is not true Believers not what now they were yea by what they now shewed themselves to be was made manifest what before they were Words of the like import you have 1 Cor. 11. 19. % For there must be also heresies among you that they which are approved may be made manifest among you as here those who fall away are manifested to be corrupt so there are those who
Believers Againe if true Believers shall live and continue to the saving of their soules in opposition to them that fall away to perdition then they shall certainly persevere in their Faith for these two are but one the same but that true Believers shall live believe to the saving of their soules in opposition to them that draw back or subduct themselves to perdition is the assertion of the Holy Ghost Ergo I presume by this time Mr Goodwin is plainly convinced that indeed he had as good yea and much better for the Advantage of his cause in hand have let his witnesse have abode in quietnesse and not entreated him so severely to denounce judgment against that Doctrine which he seekes by him to confirme Sect. 32. §. 41. the parable of the stony ground Mat. 13. 20 21. comes next to consideration the words chosen to be insisted on are in the verses mentioned but he that received the seed into stony places is he that heareth the Word anon with joy receiveth it yet hath be not root in himselfe but dureth for a while c. That by the stony ground is meant true Believers is that which Mr Goodwin undertakes to prove but how in his whole Discourse I professe I perceive not I must take leave to professe that I cannot finde any thing looking like a pr●●fe or Argument to evince it from the beginning to the end of this Discourse though something be offered to take off the arguments that are used to prove it to be otherwise doth Mr Goodwin think that men will easily Believe that Faith which hath neither root fruit nor continuance to be true and saving Faith doubtlesse they might have very low apprehensions of saving faith union with Christ justification sanctification adoption c. wherewith it is attended who can once entertaine any such imagination that which is tendered to induce us to such a perswasion may briefly be considered Saith he Sect. 32. §. 42. Now those signified by the stony ground he expressely calleth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. Persons who continue for a time or a season i.e. as Luke explaineth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 who believe for a season so that those who only for a time believe and afterward make defection from Christ and from the Gospell are neverthelesse numbred and ranked by him amongst Believers The words in Luke are very particular They on the Rock are they which when they heare receive the word with joy and those have no root which for a while Believe and in time of temptation fall away From whence it appeares that the hearers here described are not compared to the Rock or stony ground for the hardnesse of their hearts for as much as they are said to receive the word with joy which argues an ingenuity and teachablenesse of spirit in them and is elsewhere viz. Acts 2. 41. taken knowledge of by the Holy Ghost as an Index or signe of a true Believer but for such a Property Disposition or Temper as this viz. not to give or afford the word so received a radication in their hearts and soules so intimous serious and solid which should be sufficient to maintaine their beliefe of it and good affections to it against all such occurrences in the World which may oppose or attempt either the one or the other Ans. 1. The first Reason intimated is that they are said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a terme given them plainly to distinguish them from true Believers men that make a profession for a season expressly opposed to them who receive the word in good and honest hearts if the word had denoted any excellency any thing that was good in them then there had been some pretence to have insisted on it to prove them true Believers But to demonstrate the truth of their Faith from their Hypocrisy and their excellencies from that which expressely denotes their unworthinesse is a strange way of arguing They are persons saith our Saviour that make profession for a little while and then decay not like them who receive the Word in good and honest soules therefore saith M.G. they are true believers but 2. In Luke they are said to Believe for a season Mr Goodwin is not now to learne how often in the Scripture they are said to believe who only professe the Faith of the Gospell though the root of the matter be not in them that of John 2. 23 24 25. may suffice for undenyable instance or John 6. 64. may farther expound it their believing for a season is but the lifelesse worthlesse fruitlesse profession for a season as their destruction from the good ground doth manifest But 3. They are said to receive the word with joy which argues ingenuity and tractablenesse of spirit in them No more than in Herod who heard the Word gladly or in the Jewes when the preaching of Ezechiel was pleasant or desirable to them or those described Isai. 58. 2. % who sought God dayly and delighted to know his wayes in the middest of the abominable practices From the similitude it selfe He yet farther attempts this uncouth Assertion But as the blade which springs from one and the same kind of seed as suppose from Wheat or any other graine though sown in different yea or contrary soyles is yet of the same species or kind the nature of the soyle not changing the specified nature of the seed that is sowne in it and God giving to every seed it s owne body of what temper so ever the ground is where it is sown in like manner that Faith which springs from the same seed of the Gospell must needs be of one and the same nature and kind though this seed be sowne in the hearts of never so differing a constitution and frame the temper of the heart be it what it will be not being able specifically to alter either the Gospell or the naturall fruit issuing from it And as a blade or eare of Wheate though it be blasted before the Harvest is not hereby proved not to have been a true blade or eare of wheate before it was blasted in like manner the withering or decay of any mans faith by what meanes or occasion soever before his death doth not prove it to have been a false counterfeit or Hypocriticall Faith or a Faith of any other kind than that which is true reall and permanent unto the end Ans. 1. It hath been formerly observed that s●militudes are not argumentative beyond the extent of that particular wherein their nature as such doth consist The intendment of Christ in this Parable is to manifest that many heare the word in vaine and bring forth no fruit of it at all of these one sort is compared to stony ground that brings forth a blade but no fruit no fruit is no spirit though there be a blade or no blade the difference between the ones receiving of seed and the others manifested by our Saviour in this Parable is
in this that one brings forth fruit and the other doth not farther the seed of wheate or the like brings forth its fruit in a naturall way and therefore whatever it brings forth followes in some measure the nature of the seed but that seed of the Gospell brings forth its fruit in a morall way and therefore may have effects of sundry natures that which the seed of Wheat brings forth is wheat but that which the Gospell brings forth is not Gospell but Faith besides what the wheate brings forth if it come not nor ever will to be wheate in the eare it is but grasse and not of the same nature and kind with that which is wheate actually though virtually and originally there be the nature of wheate in the roote yet actually wheat is not in the blade that hath not nor ever will have eare If the seed of wheate be so corrupted in the soyle where it is sowne that it cannot bring forth fruit that which it doth bring forth what ever it be is of a different nature from that which is brought forth to perfection by the seed of wheate in good ground Againe Faith is brought forth by the seed of the Gospell when the Promises and Exhortations of the Gospell being preacht unto men do prevaile on them to give assent unto the truth of it that every such effect wrought is true justifying Faith giving union with Jesus Christ Mr Goodwin cannot prove that effects specifically different may be brought forth by the same seed of the Gospell seeing to some it is a savour of life unto life and to some a savour of death unto death needes not much proving Some receive the Word and turne it into wantonnesse some are cast into the mould of it and are tanslated into the same image if the temper of the heart as is said is not able specifically to alter the Gospell but that there may not fruit of various kinds be borne in the heart that assents to it that receives it in the upper crust and skin of it is the question Neither is it a blade occasionally withering before the Harvest but a slight receiving of the seed so as that it can never bring forth fruit that is intimated In summe this whole Discourse is a great piece of Sophistry in comparing naturall morall causes in the producing of their effects a thing not intended in the Parable and whereabout he that will busie himselfe jungat vulpes mulgeat hircos this is that which our Saviour teacheth ●●in the similitude of seed sown in the stony ground The Word is preached unto some men who are affected with it for a season assent unto it but not comming 〈◊〉 to a cordiall close with it after a while wither away and such as these we say were never true Believers a small matter will serve to make a man a true Believer if these are such What tendency this Doctrine may have to lull men asleepe in security when Christ is not in them of a truth may easily appeare be judged if men who are distinguished from other Believers by such signall differences as these here are may yet passe for true Believers Justifyed Sanctifyed Adopted ones solvi mortales curas the way to Heaven is layed open to thousands who I feare will never come to the end of the journey What remaines of M. G's Discourse on this text §. 44. is spent in answering some objections which are made against his interpretation of the place it growes now late and this taske growes so heavy on my hand that I cannot satisfye my selfe in the repetition of any thing spoken before or delivered which would necessarily enforce a particular consideration of what M. G. here insists on let him at his leisure Answer this one Argument and I shall trouble him no farther in this matter That Faith which hath neither root nor fruit neither sound heart nor good life that by and by readily and easily yeelds upon Temptation to a totall defection is not true saving justifying Faith The root of Faith taken spiritually is the habit of it in the heart a spirituall living habit which if it reside not in the heart all assent whatever wants the nature of Faith true and saving the fruits of Faith are good Workes and new Obedience that Faith which hath not Workes James tells you is dead dead and living Faith doubtlesse differ specifically Againe Faith purisieth the heart and when a heart is wholly polluted corrupted naught and false there dwelles no Faith in that heart it is impossible it should be in a heart and not at least radically and fundamentally purify it farther Mr Goodwin hath told us that true Believers are so fortified against Apostasy that they are in only a possibility in nor probability nor great danger of totall Apostasy and therefore they who presently and readily fall away cannot be of those who are scarse in any danger of so doing upon any account whatever but that the faith here mentioned hath neither root nor fruit good heart to dwell in nor good life attending it but instantly upon triall and temptation vanisheth to nothing we are taught in the text it selfe therefore the Faith here mentioned is not true no saving Faith That it hath no root is expressly affirmed v. 21. and all the rest of the qualityes mentioned are evidenced from the opposition wherein they who are these Believers are set unto true Believers they receive the Word in good and honest hearts they bring forth fruit with patience they endure in the time of tryall like the house built on the Rock when the house built on the Sand falls to the ground One word more with this witnesse before we part they who receive the Word in good and honest hearts and keepe it do bring forth fruit with patience and fall not away under temptation so saith the testimony but all true Believers recive the Word in good and honest hearts Ergo Which is the voyce of Mr Goodwin's fourth Witnesse in this cause The 2 Pet. 4. 18 19 20 21 22. §. 45. is forced to bring up the reare of the Testimonyes by M. G. produced to convince the world of the truth Righteousnesse of his Doctrine of the Saints Apostacy ending his whole Discourse in the mire Observatioas from the Text or context from the words themselves or the coherence to educe his conclusion from he insists not on Many excellent words we have concerning the clearenesse evidence of this Testimony the impossibility of avoyding what hence he concludes we want not but we have been too often inured to such a way of proceeding to be now moved at it or troubled about it were the waters deepe they would not make such a noyse The state and condition of men here described by the Apostle is so justly delineated to the eye by the practice of men in the world to whom the Gospell is preached that I do not a little wonder how any
You doe almost put an issue to the whole Controversy and at once overturne the strongest Forts of the opposers of this truth some men are truly ready to think that they never had experience of the nature of true Faith or Holinesse who can suppose it to consist in such like common gifts and Graces as are ascribed to this sort of men Yet as was said before if these may not passe for Saints if our Adversaries cannot proove these to be true Believers in the strictest notion and sence of that terme or expression actum est the very subject about which they contend is taken away such as these alone are concerned in the Arguments from Heb 6. 4 5. 2 Pet. 2. 1. c. yea all the Testimonies whch they produce for the supportment of their cause from Antiquity flow from hence that their Witnesses thought good to allow persons Baptized and professing the Gospell the name of Believers and being Regenerate that is as to the participation of the outward Symbol thereof whom yet they expressely distinguished from them whose Faith was the Fruit of their Eternall Election which they constantly maintained should never faile Of such as these M. §. 18. Goodwin tells us Cap. 9. Sect. 7. pag. 107 108. That if there be any persons under Heaven who may upon sufficient grounds and justifiable by the word of God be judged true believers many of the Apostates we speake of were to be judged such all the visible lineaments of a true faith wherein their faces Adde hos de quibus hic agimus non vulgares plebeios sed antesignanos eximios ac eminentes fuisse as farre as the eye of man is able to pierce they lived Godly righteously and soberly in this present World doth any true believer act zealously for his God So did they is any true believer fruitfull in good workes they were such yea there is found in those we now speake of not only such things upon the sight and knowledge whereof in men we ought to judge them true believers * but even such things further which we ought to reverence and honour as lovely and Majestick characters of God and holinesse Rem Ac. Syn. p. 267. therefore it is but too importune a pretence in men to deny them to have been true believers If the proofe of the first confident assertion concerning the grounds of judging such as afterwards have apostatized Ans. to be true believers were called into question I suppose it would prove one instance how much easier it is confidently to affirme any thing then soundly to confirme it And perhaps it will be found to appeare that in the most if not all of those glorious apostates of whom he speakes Psal. 78. 34 35 36. if they were throughly traced and strictly eyed even in those things which are exposed to the view of men for any season or continuance Job 27. 9 10. 2 Kings 10. 29. such warpings and flawes might be discovered in positives or negatives as are incompatible with truth of grace But if this be granted that they have all the visible lineaments of a true faith in their faces Ezek. 33. 31. Titus 1. 16. as farre as the eye of man is able to judge and therefore men were bound to esteeme them for true believers doth it therefore follow that they were such indeed This at once instates all secret hypocrites in the ancient and present Churches of Christ into a condition of sanctification and justification which the Lord knowes they were and are remote from Shall the esteeme of men translate them from death to life and really alter the state wherein they are What ever honour then and esteeme we may give to the characters of holinesse and faith instamped or rather painted on them as t is meet for us to judge well of all who professing the Lord Christ walke in our view in any measure sutable to that profession and with Jonadab to honour Jehu in his fits and hasty passions of zeale yet this alas is no evidence unto them nor discovery of the thing it selfe that they are in a state of faith and holinesse To say that we may not be bound to judge any to be believers and Godly unlesse they are so indeed and in the thing it selfe is either to exalt poore wormes into the throne of God and to make them searchers of the hearts and tryers of the reynes of others who are so often in the darke to themselves and never in this life sufficiently acquainted with their owne inward chambers or else at once to cut off and destroy all communion of Saints by rendring it impossible for us to attaine satisfaction who are so indeed so farre as to walke with them upon that account Rom. 12. 9. in Love without dissimulation Doubtlesse the Disciples of Christ were bound to receive them for Believers of whom it is said that they did beleive because of their profession so to doe that with some hazard danger loh. 2. 23 24. though he who knew what was in man would not trust himself with them because the roote of the matter was not in them I suppose I shall not need to put my selfe to the labour to proove or evince this Ground of our charitable procedure §. 19. in our thoughts of men professing the wayes of God though their hearts are not upright with him But sayes Mr Goodwin To say that whilst they stood men were indeed bound to judge them Believers but by their declining they discover themselves not to have been the men is but to begge the Question and that upon very ill termes to obtain it For my part Ans. I finde not in this Answer to that Objection But they had the lineaments of true Believers and therefore we were bound to judge them so that this did not at all proove them to be so any begging of the Question but rather a fair Answer given to their importune Request 1 Sam. 16. 7. that the appearance of the face as farre as the eyes of men can peirce must needs conclude them in the eyes of God to answer that Appearance in the inward and hidden man of the heart But Mr Goodwin further pursues his designe in hand §. 20. from the words of our Saviour Mat. 7. 20. By their fruit yee shall know them if faith he this rule be Authenticall we doe not only stand bound by the law of Charity but by the law of Righteousnesse or district Judgment it selfe to judge the persons we speake of true Believers whilst they adorne the Gospell with such fruits of Righteousnesse as were mentioned for our Saviour doth not say by their fruits yee shall have grounds to conceive or conjecture them such or such or to judge them in charity such or such but ye shall know them now what a man knowes he is not bound to conjecture or to judge in a way of Charity to be that which
they runne themselves through Was this inded the case with David Solomon Peter and others who totally Apostatized from the Faith But if it be so if they are thus secure whence is it that it doth arise what are the Fountaines Springs and causes of this generall Security Is it from the weakenesse of the Opposition and slightnesse of all Meanes of diversion from walking with God to the End that they meet withall Or is it from the nature of that Faith which they have and Grace wherewith they are indued Or is it that God hath gracionsly undertaken to safegard them and to preserve them in their abiding with him that they shall not fall away Or is it that Christ intercedeth for them that their Faith faile not but be preserved and their Soules with it by the Power of God unto the End Or from what other Principle doth this Security of theirs arise From what Fountain do the streams of their Consolation Flow Where lye the Heads of this Nilus That it is not upon the first account I suppose cannot enter into the Imagination of any person who ever had the least experience of walking with God or doth so much as assent to the letter of the Scripture How are our Enemies there discribed as to their Number Nature Power Policy Subtility Malice Restlessenes and Advantages With what inimaginable and unexpressible variety of Meanes Temptations Baites Allurements Inticements Terrors Threats doe they fight against us Such so many are the enemies that oppose the Saints of God in their abiding with him so Great Effectual the Means weapons wherewith they fight against thē so unwearied and watchfull are they for the improovement of all Advantages Opportunityes for their ruine that upon the supposall of the Rejection of those Principles and those meanes of of their Preservation which we shall finde Mr Goodwin to attempt they will be found to be so farre from a state of no danger and litle probability of Falling or only under a remote Possibility of so doing that it will appeare utterly imposible for them to hold out and abide unto the end Had the choisest Saint of God with all the Grace that he hath received but one of the many Enemies and that the weakest of all them which oppose every Saint of God even the feeblest to deale withall separated from the Strength of those Principles and Supportments which M r Goodwin seeketh to cast downe let him lye under continuall exhortations to watchfulnesse close walking with God he may as easily move Mountaines with his finger or climbe to Heaven by a Ladder as stand before the strength of that one enemy Adam in Paradise had no Lust within to intice him no World under the Curse to seduce him yet at the first assault of Sathan who then had no part in him he fell quite out of Covenant with God Psal. 30. 6 7. I shall give one instance in one of the many enemies §. 35. that fight against the welfare of our soules and ex hoc uno we may guesse at the residue of its companions This is indwelling sinne whose power and policy strength and prevalency neerenesse and trechery the Scripture exceedingly setts out and the Saints daily feele I shall only poynt at some particulars First concerning its Neerenesse to us it is indeed in us and that not as a thing different from us but it cleaveth to all the faculties of our soules it is an Enemy borne with us Psal. 51. 5. bred up●with us carried about in our bosomes by nature Math. 5. 29 30. our familiar friend our guide and councellor deare to us as our right eye usefull as our right hand our wisdome strength c. The Apostle 7. Rom. 17 20. calleth it the sinne that dwelleth in us Iam. 3. 15. 6. it hath in us in the faculties of our soules its abode and station It doth not passe by and away but there it dwelles so as that it never goes from home is never out of the way when we have any thing to doe whence v 21. he calls it the evill that is present with him When we goe about any thing that is good or have opportunity for or temptation unto any thing that is evill it is never absent but is ready to pluck us back or to put us on according as it serves its ends it is such an Inmate that we can never be quit of its company and so intimate unto us that it puts forth it selfe in every acting of the ming will or any other faculty of the soule Though men would faine shake it off yet when they would doe good this evill will be present with them Then 2. Secondly Its Vniversality and compasse Act. 26. 18. 2 Cor. 6. 14. Ephes. 5. 8. Isa. 29. 18. 35. 5. 42. 7. It is not straightned in a corner of the soule 't is spread over the whole all the faculties affections and passions of it That which is a Ioh. 5. 6. Math. 6. 23. ch 11. 79. Luk. 11. 34 35 36. borne of the flesh is flesh t is all flesh and nothing but flesh it is Darknesse in the Vnderstanding keeping us at best that we know but in part and are still dull and slow of heart to believe naturally we are all Darknesse Rom. 2. 19. nothing but Darknesse and though the Lord shine into our mind to give us in some measure the knowledge of his Glory in the face of Jesus Christ Col. 1. 13. 1 Pet. 2. 9. yet we are still very darke it is a hard work to bring in a little Light Luk. 4. 8. Eph. 4. 18. Revel 3. 17. upon the soule especially this is seen in particular practicall things though in Generall Math. 23. 16. we have very cleare light and eviction yet when we come to particular Acts of obedience Math. 4. 16. How often doth our light grow dimme and failes us causing us to judge amisse of that which is before us Ioh. 1. 5. 2 Cor. 4. 6. by the rising of that naturall darknesse which is in us It is perversenesse stubbornnesse obstinacy in the Will Luk. 4. 18. Ioh. 8. 34. that carries it with violence to disobedience and sinne It is sensuality upon the Affections Rom. 6. 16. bending them to the things of the World alienating them from God Rom. 7. 18. 8. 7 8. It is slipperinesse in the memory making us like leaking vessells lerem 6. 16. that the things that we heare of the Gospell doe suddainly slip out when as other things abide firme in the Cells and Chambers thereof Gen 6. 5. It is senselesnesse and errour in the Conscience lerem 13. 23. Heb. 2. 1. staving it off from the performance of that duty which in the Name and Authority of God it is to accomplish and in all these is dayly enticing and seducing the heart to Folly conceiving bringing forth sinne Iam. 1. 14 15. 3. Thirdly
will destroy them and separate them from God and that by Obedience they shall come to the Greatest Good Imaginable where upon it is in their Power so strongly to incline their hearts unto Obedience that they shall be in no more danger of departing from God then a Wise and Rationall man is of killing or willfully destroying himselfe The first part whereof may be performed by them who are no Saints the latter not by any Saint whatsoever And is not this noble Provision for the Security and Assurance of the Saints enough to make them cast away with speed all their interest in the unchangeable purposes Gracious and Faithfull Promises of God Intercession of Christ Sealing of the Spirit and all those Sandy and triviall supports of their Faith which hitherto they have rejoyced in And what ever experience they have or Testimony from the Word they doe recieve of the Darkenesse and Weakenesse of their Minds the stubbornesse of their Wills with the strong inclinations that are in them to sinne and falling away what ever be their Oppositions from aboue them Ephes. 6. 12. Heb. 12. 1. Rom. 7. 17. about them within them on the right Hand and on the Left that they have to wrestle withall let them give up them selves to the hand of their owne manlike Considerations and weighing of things which will secure them against all danger or Probability of falling away For if they be but capable First of seeing and knowing Secondly of pondering and considering and that rationally it matters not whether these things are Fruits of the Spirit of Grace or no nay 't is cleare they must not be so that such and such evill is to be avoided and that there is so and so Great a Good to be obtained by continuing in obedience they may raise and worke inclinations in themselves answerable in strength vigour and power to any degree of goodnesse which they apprehend in what they see and ponder The whole of the Ample sufficient Meanes §. 40. afforded by God to the Saints to inable them to Persevere branching it selfe into these two heads First The rationall considering what they have to doe Secondly Their vigorous Inclination of their Hearts to act suitably and answerable to their Considerations I shall in a word consider them apart 1. First the Considerations mentioned of Evill to be avoided and Good to be attained I meane that which may put men upon Creating those strong inclinations For such considerations may be without any such Consequence as in her that cryed video meliora proboque deteriora sequor are either Issues and products of mens owne naturall faculties and deduced out of the power of them so that as men they may put themselves upon them at any time or they are Fruits of the Spirit of his Grace who worketh in us to will and to doe of his owne good Pleasure 2 Pet. 1. 3 4. If they be the latter I aske seeing all Grace is of Promise whether hath God promised to give and continue this Grace of selfe-consideration unto Believers or noe If he hath whether absolutely or conditionally If absolutely then he hath promised absolutely to continue some Grace in them which is all we desire If Conditionally then would I know what that Condition is on which God hath promised that Believers shall so consider things mentioned And of the Condition which shall be expressed it may farther be enquired whether it be any Grace of God or only a meer Act of the Rationall Creature as such without any immediate Inworking of the Will and Deed by God Whatsoever is answered the Question will not goe to Rest untill it be granted that either it is a Grace Absolutely promised of God which is all we desire or a pure Act of the Creature contra-distinct thereunto which Answers the first inquiry Let it then be granted that the Considerations intimated are no other but such as a Rationall man who is inlightened to an assent to the Truth of God may so exert and exercise as he pleaseth then is here a Foundation layd of all the Ground of Perseverance that is allowed the Saints in their owne indeavours as men without the Assistance of any Grace of God Now these Considerations be they what they will must needs be beneath one single good thought for as for that we have no sufficiency of our selves yea Vanity and nothing for without Christ we can doe nothing yea evill and displeasing to God 2 Cor. 3. 3. Ioh. 15. 5. Gen. 8. 21. as are all the thoughts and imaginations of our Hearts that are only such I had supposed that no man in the least acquainted with what it is to serve God under Temptations and what the worke of Saving Soules is but had been sufficiently convinced of utter the insufficiency of such Rationall Considerations flowing only from Conviction to be a solid Foundation of abiding with God unto the end If mens Houses of profession are built on such Sands as these we need not wonder to see them so frequently falling to the ground 2. Secondly §. 41. suppose these Considerations to act their parts upon the stage raised for them to the Greatest Applause that can be expected or desired yet that which comes next upon the Theater will I feare foully miscarry and spoyle the whole Plot of the Play That is mens vigorous inclination of their hearts to the good things pondered on to what height they please For besides that 1. First it is liable to the same Examinations that passed upon it's Associate before or an inquiry from whence he comes whether from Heaven or Men upon which I doubt not but he may easily be discovered to be a Vagabond upon the earth to have no Passe from Heaven and so be rendred liable to the Law of God 2. Secondly it would be inquired whether it hath a Consistency with the whole designe of the Apostle Rom. 7. and therefore 3. Thirdly it is utterly denied that Men the Best of Men have in themselves and of themselves arising upon the account of any Considerations whatsoever a Power Ability or Strength vigorously or at all acceptably to God to incline their Hearts to the performance of any thing that is spiritually good or in a Gospell tendency to walking with God All the Promises of God all the Prayers of the Saints all their Experience the whole designe of God in laying up all our stores of Strength and Grace in Christ joyntly cry out against it for a counterfeit pretence In a word that men are able to plant in themselves Inclinations and Dispositions to refraine all manner of Sinne destructive to the safety of their soules fuller of Energie Vigor Life Strength Power then those that are in them to avoid things Apparantly tending to the destruction of their naturall lives is an Assertion as full of Energy Strength and Vigor Life and Poyson for the destruction and eversion of the Grace of God in Christ as any can be
be carried on through innumerable contingencies and yet as I have seen it so have I told it and my counsell concerning it shall certainely be executed Secondly by his Power in using what Instruments he pleaseth for the executing of his Purposes and bringing about his own designes calling a ravenous Bird from the East One that at first when he went against Babylon thought of of nothing lesse then Executing the Counsell of God but was wholly bent upon satisfying his owne Rapine and Ambition not knowing then in the least by whom he was Anoynted Sanctifyed for the Accomplishment of his Will All the thoughts of this heart all his Consultations Actions all his Progresses Diversions his Successe in his great and dreadfull undertaking to breake in pieces that Hammer of the whole Earth with all the free deliberations and contingencies wherwith his long Warre was attended which were as many strong Ierem. 50. 51. and various as the nature of things is capable to receive were not only in every individuall Act Isa. 44. 25 26 27 28. with its minutest circumstances by him foreseene and much also fore told but also managed in the hand of his Power in a regular subservience to that call Phil. 45. 1 2 3 4. which he so gave that Raveinous Bird for the Accomplishment of his Purpose and Pleasure Thirdly by the Immutability of his Purposes which can never be frustrated nor altered My Counsell shall stand and I will doe all my Pleasure I have Purposed it and I will also doe it The Standing or Fixednesse and Unchangeablenesse of his Counsell he manifests by the accomplishment of the things which therein he had determined Neither is there any Salve for his Immutability in his Counsell should it otherwise fall out And if we may take his owne Testimony of himselfe what he Purposeth that he doth And in the Actuall fulfilling and the bringing about of things themselves Purposed and as Purposed without any possibility of diversion from the reall and intended is their Stability and Unchangeablenesse in them manifested An Imaginary Immutability in God's Purposes which may consist and be preserved under their utter Frustration as to the fulfilling of the things themselves under which they are the Scripture knowes not neither can Reason conceive Now this Vnchangeablenesse of his Purposes the Lord brings as one Demonstration of his Deity and those who make them lyable to Alteration upon any Account or supposition whatsoever doe depresse him what in them lyes into the number of such Dungehill Gods as he threatens to famish and destroy Psa. 33. 9 10 11. He spake and it was done §. 8. he commanded and it stood fast The Lord bringeth the Counsell of the Heathen to nought he maketh the devices of the People of none effect The Councell of the Lord stands for ever the thoughts of his Heart to all Generations The Production and Establishment of all things in that order wherein they are are by the Psalmist ascribed to the Will and power of God By his Word and Command they not only are but Stand fast Heb. 1. 3. being fixt in that Order by him appointed both the Making Fixing and Sustaining of all things Revel 4. 11. is by the VVord of his Power As the first relates to their Being Act. 17. 28. which they have from Creation so the other to the order in subsistence and Operation Act. 2. 23. 4. 28. which relates to his Actuall Providence Herein they Stand fast Gen. 50. 20. Themselves with their severall and respective relations dependencies Eccles. 3. 11. influences circumstances suited to that Nature and Being which was bestowed on them by his Word in their Creation are setled in an exact correspondency to his Purposes of which afterwards not to be shaken or removed Men have their Devices and Counsells also they are free Agents and worke by Counsell and Advice and therfore God hath not set all things so fast as to overturne and overbeare them in their Imaginations and undertakings Saith the Psalmist they Imagine and Devise indeed but their Counsell is of nought and their Devices are of none effect but the Counsell of the Lord c. The Counsell Purposes of the Lord are set in opposition to the Counsell and Purposes of men as to Alteration Change and Frustration in respect of the Actuall Accomplishment of the things about which they are Their Counsells are so and so But the Counsell of the Lord shall stand he that shall cast v. 11. into the 10. and say The Counsell of the Lord that comes to nought and the thoughts of his heart are of none effect let him make what pretences he will or flowrishes that he can or display what supposalls and conditions he pleaseth he will scarcely be able to keepe the field against him who will contend with him about his Prerogative and Glory And this Antithesis between the Counsells of men and the Purposes of God upon the Account of Vnchangeablenesse is againe confirmed Prov. 19. 21. There are many devices in a mans heart neverthelesse the Counsell of the Lord that shall stand Isa. 8. 9 10. Herein is the difference betweene the Devices of men and the Councell of God men have many Devices to try what they can doe If one way take not Iob. 8. 9. they will attempt an other hâc non successit aliâ aggrediemur viâ and are alwayes disappointed Iob. 11. 12. but only in that wherein they fall in with the Will of God Eccles. 8. 7. 9. 12. The Shallownesse of their Vnderstanding the Shortnesse of their Foresight the Weakenesse of their Power the Changeablenesse of their Minds the Vncertainty of all the meanes they use puts them upon many Devices and often to no purpose But for him who is Infinite in Wisdome and Power to whom all things are present and to whom nothing can fall out Vnexpected yea what he hath not himselfe Determined unto whom all Emergencyes are but the Issue of his owne good Pleasure who proportions out what efficacy he pleaseth unto the meanes he useth his Counsells his Purposes his Decrees shall stand being as Job telles us as Montaines of Brasse By this he differenceth himselfe from all others Isa. 44. 7. 25. 26. Idols and men as also by his certaine foreknowledge of what shall come to passe and be accomplished upon those Purposes of his Hence the Apostle Heb. 6. 17 18. acquaints us that his Promise and his Oath those two Immutable things doe but declare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Vnchangeablenesse of his Counsell which God is abundantly willing to manifest though men are abundantly unwilling to receive it Job determines this businesse in the 23. Ch. v. 13 14. He is of one minde and who can turne him What his soule desireth even that he doth for he performeth the thing that is appointed for me Desires are the least and faintest kind of Purposes in Mr Goodwin's
suppose that he shall prevaile with the Saints of God to believe it will make for their Consolation to apprehend that there is no ingagement in his Covenant assuring them of the continuance of the Favour of God unto them to the End of their Pilgrimage hath no reason to doubt or question the Issue of any thing he shall undertake to perswade men unto Doubtlesse he will find it very difficult with them who in time of Spirituall Straights pressures have closed with this ingagement of God in the Covenant have had experience of its bearing them through all perplexityes and entanglements when the Waves of temptation were ready to goe over their Soules Certainely David was in another perswasion when upon a view of all the difficulties he had passed through and his house was to meet withall he concludes 2 Sam. 23. 5. This is all my desire and all my Salvation that God hath made with me an everlasting Covenant ordered in all things sure The Covenant from whence he had his sure Mercyes not Changeable not Alterable not liable to failings as the temporall Prosperity of his House was was that he rejoyced in I shall close this with two Observations First §. 5. it may doubtlesse and on serious Consideration will seeme strange to any one acquainted in the least measure with God and his Faithfullnesse that in a Covenant established in the Blood of Christ he should freely promise to his that he would be a God unto them that is that he would abide with them in the Power Goodnesse Righteousnesse and Faithfullnesse of a God that he would be an Allsufficient God to them for ever when he might with an Almighty facility prevent it and so answer and fullfill his Ingagement to to the utmost he should yet suffer them to become such Villains and Devills in Wickednesse that it should be utterly impossible for him in the Blood of his Sonne and the riches of his Grace to Continue a God unto them this I say seemeth strange to me and not to be received without casting the greatest reproach imaginable on the Goodnesse Faithfullnesse and Righteousnesse of God Secondly if this Promise be not absolute Immutable Unchangeable Independent on any thing in us it is Impossible that any one should pleade it with the Lord but only upon the account of the sence that he hath of his own accomplishment of the Condition Psal. 73. 26. Isa. 8. 17. Isa. 50. 10. on which the Promise doth depend I can almost suppose that the whole Generation of Believers will rise up against this Assertion to remove it out of their way of walking with God This I know that most of them who any time have walked in darknesse and have had no Light will reprove it to the Faces of them that mainetaine it and professe that God hath witnessed the contrary truth to their hearts Are we in the Covenant of Grace left to our owne Hearts Wayes and Walkings Is it not differenced from that which is abolished Is it not the great distinguishing Character of it 2 Cor. 1. 20. that all the Promises of it are stable shall certainely be accomplished in Jesus Christ Heb. 7. 22. 8. 7 8 9. One place I shall adde more wherein our intendment is positively expressed § 6. beyond all possibility of any colourable evasion especially considering the Explication Enlargement and Application which in other places it hath received The place intended is Jeremy 32. v. 38 39 40. They shall be my People and I will be their God and I will give them one heart and one way that they may feare me for ever for the good of them and their Children after them and I will make an everlasting Convenant with them that I will not turne away from them to doe them good but I will put my feare in their hearts that they shall not depart from me in conjunction with those words of the same importance Ch. 31. v 31 32 33. Behold the daies come saith the Lord that I will make a new Covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah not according to the Covenant that I made with their Fathers but this shall be my Covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my Law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and I will be their God and they shall be my People and they shall teach no more every man his Neighbour and every man his Brother saying Know the Lord for they shall all know mee from the least of them to the greatest of them saith the Lord for I will forgive their iniquities and remember their sinnes no more 1. The Thesis under demonstration is directly and positively affirmed in most significant and emphaticall words by God himselfe seeing then the Testimony of his holy Prophets and Apostles concerning him are so excepted against and so lightly set by let us try if men will reverence himselfe and cease contending with him when he appeareth in judgement Saith he then to Believers those whom he taketh into covenant with him This is my Covenant with you in the performance whereof his Allsufficiency Truth and Faithfulnesse with all other his glorious Attributes are eminently engaged I will be your God what that expression intends is known and the Lord here explaines by instancing in some eminent Spirituall mercy thence flowing as Sanctification and Acceptance with him by the forgivenesse of sinnes and that for ever in an everlasting Covenant that He will not turne away from them to doe them good This plainely God saith of himselfe and this is all we say of him in the businesse and which having so good an Author we must say whether men will heare or whether they will forbeare Whether it be right in the sight of God to hearken unto men more then unto God let all judge Truly they have a sad taske in my Apprehension who are forced to sweat and labour to alleviate and take off the Testimony of God 2. Secondly That the way the Lord proposeth to secure his Love to his is upon termes of Advantage of Glory and Honour to himselfe to take away all scruple which on that hand might arise is fully also expressed Sinne is the only differencing thing between God and man and hereunto it hath a double influence First Morall in its guilt deserving that God should cast off a sinner and prevailing with him upon the account of justice so to doe Secondly Efficient by causing men through its power and deceitfulnesse to depart from God Heb. 3 1 Prov. 1. 31. 14. 14. untill as back-sliders in heart they are filled with their owne waies Take away these two provide for Security on this hand and there is no possible case imaginable of separation between God and man once brought together in Peace and Unity For both these doth God here undertake for the first saith he I will
continue in so doing to the end But saith he 2. This Promise was appropriated and fitted to the state of the Jewes in a sad captivity but the Promise of Perseverance was if our Adversaries might be Believed a standing Promise among them not appropriated to their condition Ans. 1. Non venit ex pharetris ista sagitta tuis It is Socinus's in reference to Ezechiel 36. In Prael Theol cap. 12. Sect 6. And so is the whole Interpretation of the place afterwards insisted on derived to Mr Goodwin through the hands of the Remonstrants at the Hague Conference 2. If this exception against the Testimony given in these words for the confirmation of the Thesis in hand may be allowed what will become of Mr Goodwins Argument from Ezechiel 18. for the Apostasy of the Saints It is most certaine the words from thence by him and others insisted on with the whole discourse of whose contexture they are a part are appropriated to a peculiar state of the Jewes and are brought forth as a meete vindication of the Righteousnesse of God in his dealing with them in that condition This then may be laid up in store to refresh Mr Goodwin with something of his own providing when we are gone so farre onward in our journey But 3. It is most evident to all the World that Mr Goodwin is not such a stranger in the Scriptures as not to have observed long since that Spirituall Promises are frequently given to the People of God to support their Soules under Temporall distresses and that not alwaies new Promises for the matter of them for indeed the substance of all Promises is comprized in the first promise of Christ but either such as enlarge and cleare up Grace formerly given or promised or such as have need of a solemne Renewall for the establishing of the Faith of the Saints assaulted in some particular manner in reference to them which was the state of the Saints among the Jewes at this time How often was the same promise renewed to Abraham And upon what severall occasions And yet that Promise for the matter of it was the same that had bin given from the beginning of the World That Gods solemne Renewall of the Covenant at any time is called his making of or entring into Covenant needs no labour to prove But saith he 3. This Promise is the same with that of Ezek. 11. 17 18 19 20. which Promise notwithstanding §. 12. it is said v. 21. But as for them whose heart walketh after the heart of their detestable things and their abominations I will recompense their wayes upon their heads so that notwithstanding this seeming Promise as is pretended of Perseverance in Grace they may walke after their abominable things for this threatning intends the same Persons or Nations as Calvin himselfe confesseth the Israelites 1 Grant that this is the same Promise with the other Ans. how will it appeare that this is not a Promise of such an enterposure of the Spirit and Grace of God as shall infallibly produce the effect of Perseverance Why Because some are threatned for following the Heart of their abominable things Yea but how shall it appear that they are the same Persons with them to whom the Promise is made The Context is plainely against it saith he I will give them a Heart to walke in my Statutes and Ordinances to doe them but for them that walke after their owne Hearts them I will destroy in as cleare a distinction of the Object of the Promise and threatning as is possible Saith Mr Goodwin this Threatning concernes the same Persons or Nation the same Nation but not the same Persons in that Nation but Calvin saith that it concerneth the Israelites But Paul hath told us that they are not all Israel who are of Israel not all Children of the Promise who are Children of the flesh And 2. If it doe any way concerne the Persons to whom that Promise is given it is an expression suited to the dispensation of God whereby he carrieth Believers on in the enjoyment of the good things he gives them in and by his Promises without the least prediction of any event being only declarative of what the Lord abhorreth and the connexion that is between the Antecedent and the Consequent of the axiome wherein it is contained and is farre from the nature of those Promises which hold out the Purpose or Intention of God with the engaging of a reall efficacy for their accomplishment He adds 4. If this be a Promise of absolute Perseverance no time nor season can be imagined wherein it was fulfilled Ans. At all times and seasons to them to whom it was made according to their concernement in it But saith he 1. It hath been proved that it was made to the community of the Jewish Nation toward whom it was not fulfilled Ans. 1. It hath been said indeed againe and againe but scarce once attempted to be proved nor the Reasoning of the Apostle against some pretended proofes and Answers to them at all removed 2. It was fulfilled to the Body of that Naiion as farre as it concerned the Body of that Nation in their Typicall returne from their captivity But then 2. If this be the sence it was fulfilled in the captivity as well as afterward for you say the Saints alwaies Persevere Ans. 1. The Typicall part of it was not then accomplished 2. It is granted that as to the Spirituall part of the Covenant of Grace it was at all times fulfilled to them which is now evidently promised to establish them in the Assurance thereof Wherefore it is 5. Argued Sect. 53. That these words I will give them one Heart that they shall not depart from me may be as well rendred that they may not depart from me and so it is said in the verse foregoing that they may feare me for ever Ans. 1. Suppose the words may be thus rendred what inconvenience will ensue Either way they evidently beyond exception designe out the End aimed at by God and when God intends an End or Event so as to exert a reall efficiency for the compassing of it to say that it shall not be infallibly brought about is an Assertion that many have not as yet had the boldnesse to venture on But saith he 2. The words so read doe not necessarily import the actuall event or taking place of the effect intended of God in the Promise and his performance thereof but only his intention it selfe in both these and the sufficiency of the means allowed for the producing such an effect but it is of the same nature with that that our Saviour saith Iohn 5. 34. these things I say unto you that yee might be saved And that of God to Adam Gen 3. 10 11. All which things were in like manner insisted on by the Remonstrants at the Hague Colloquie Ans. It is not amisse that our contests about the sence of this place of Scripture are at length
operâ minimè exclusâ ac si quis inquit Praeceptor discipulo solaecizanti diceret exeram tibi linguam istam barbaricam inseram Romanam Haec sunt fere ipsius Erasmi verba Quibus addex loco ipso satis appa rere nullā necessitatē Deum significare voluisse sed neque ullam vim interiorem cum non aliâ ratione ea quae ibi pollicetur se effecturum ostendat Deus quàm beneficiorum multitudine quibus affecturus erat populum ejusque cor animum emolliturus c. Soc. Prael Cap. 12. 8. 6. p. 45. Socinus Prael Theol cap 6. whose words are This place of Ezekiel is well explained by Erasmus in his Diatribe saying that there is an usuall figure of speaking contained in it whereby a care in any of working something by another is signified his endeavour being not excluded as if a Maister should say to his Scholar speaking improperly I will take away that barbarous tongue from thee and give thee the Romane these are almost the words of Erasmus to which adde that it appeareth from the place it selfe that God would not signify any necessity or any internall efficacy when he declareth that he will effect what he promiseth no other way then by the multitude of his benefits wherewith he would affect the people and mollify their hearts and mindes and thereby as it were beget and create in them a willingnesse and alacrity in obeying of him The Remonstrants received this sence in the conference at the Hague managing it in these words it is manifest that these words doe signify some great efficacy and motion which should come to passe by the many and excellent benefits of God for whose sake they ought to convert themselves c. which worthy Interpretation being at length fallen upon Mr Goodwins hand is trimmed forth as you have heard Secondly not to insist on those Assumptions which are supposed in this interpretation as that this Promise was made peculiarly to the Jewes and to the whole Nation of them properly and directly c. The G●osse it selfe will be found by no meanes to have the least consistency with either the words or intendment of the Holy Ghost in the place nor to be suited to Answer our Argument from thence nor yet to hold any good intelligence or correspondency with what hath already been delivered concerning it For 1. To beginne with the latter he affirmes this cannot be a Promise of absolute Perseverance because if it be so the Jewes enjoyed it in that Captivity as well as afterwards when that is here promised which they were not to receive untill in and upon their returne from Babylon Sect 52. Pag 220 221. But if that which is here mentioned be all that is promised to them namely dealing so graciously and bountifully with them in his Dispensations according as was intimated there is not any thing in the least held out to them in this place but what God had already himselfe being judge in as eminent and high a manner wrought in reference to them and for them as could be conceived And indeed it was such as he never after this arose to that height of outward mercy and bounty in things spirituall and temporall so as before Isai. 5.1,2,4 Neither after the Captivity unto this day did they see againe the triumphant glory of David the magnificent peace of Solomon the beauty of the Temple the perfection of Ordinances c. as before 2. Whereas he affirmed formerly that this Promise is conditionall and that the things therein promised doe depend on conditions by them to be fulfilled to whom the Promise is made Sect 54. pag. 221. in the Glosse here given us of the words there is no intimation of any such conditions as whereon the promised actings of God should be suspended but only an uncertainty of Event in reference to these actings Asserted That according to this interpretation which alone God promiseth to doe is that he would deale above measure graciously and bountifully with them as well in matters relating to their spirituall conditions as in things concerning their outward condition this is all he promiseth and this he will absolutely doe be the Event what it will It is not said nor can it with any pretence of reason that this also is conditionall nay whatever the Event and issue be that God will thus deale with them is the sence of the words in hand according to the estimate here taken of them It is true it is in the Exposition under consideration left doubtfull and ambiguous whether such or such an Event shall follow the promised actings of God or no but what God promiseth concerning his dealing with them that without supposall of any condition what ever shall be accomplished According as a sence serves the turne so it is to be embraced when men are once engaged against the Truth 3. Neither doth this Interpretation so much as take notice of much lesse doth it with any strength or evidence wave our Argument for the Saints Perseverance from this place We affirme 1. That the Promise God made unto or the Covenant he makes here with his people is distinguished from or opposed unto the Covenant that was broken upon this account that that was broken by the default of them with whom it was made but God would take care and provide that this should not faile but be Everlasting Jer 31. 32 33. Ch. 32. 40. Heb. 8. 8 9. 2. That the intendment of God in this Promise and the administration of this Covenant with meanes and power mentioned therein is the abiding of his Saints with him or rather primarily and principally his abiding with them notwithstanding all such interveniences as he will not powerfully prevent from ever interposing to the disturbance of that Communion he taketh them into I will saith he make an everlasting Covenant with them that I will not turne away from them from doing them good Now these things and such like are not once taken notice of in the exposition boasted to be full and cleare 3 ly Neither indeed hath it any affinity unto §. 15. or acquaintance in name or thing with the words or intendment of God with the Grace of the Promise or the Promise it selfe For 1. God saies he will give them one heart and one way or he will put his Law in their inward parts and write it in their Hearts which is plainely the work of his Grace in them and not the effect and fruit of his dealing with them In the Glosse in hand the work of God is limited to such dealings with them as may overcome them to such a frame The having of a new heart is either the immediate work of God or it is their yeelding unto their duty to him upon his dealing bountifully and graciously with them If the First it is what the Scripture affirmes and all that we desire If the Latter how comes it to be expressed in termes holding out an immediate Divine
to all to whom it was made if so be that God be faithfull and cannot deny himselfe 2. It was it is and shall be accomplished properly and directly to all the Elect of that Nation to whom it was so made as it hath been cleared already from Rom. 9. 10 11. Where the Apostle expresly and datâ operâ answers the very Objection that Mr Goodwin makes about the accomplishing of these Promises concerning the hardening and rejection of the greatest part of that people affirming it to consist in this that the Election obtained when the rest were hardened Wherein he did not begge the question though he digged not for it but answered by clear distinctions as you may see Rom. 9. 6 Ch. 11. 1 2 3. 3. Neither doe all the Elect after their calling know themselves to be so nor have they any other way to come acquainted with their Election but by their faith in the Promises nor is it spoken like one acquainted with the course and frame of Gods dealing with his Saints or with their Spirits in walking with God who supposeth the solemne and clear Renovation of Promises concerning the same things with Explanations and enlargements of the Grace of them to confirme and establish the communion between the one and the other to be needlesse And who make the promises of God void and of no effect we who professe the Lord to be faithfull in every one of them and that not one Title of them shall fall to the ground or come short of accomplishing or Mr Goodwin who reports the Grace mentioned in them for the most part to come short of producing the effect for which it is bestowed and the engagements of God in them to depend so upon the labricity of the wills of men that mostly they are not made good in the end aimed at the Lord will judge But it is farther Argued 3. That the Scripture many times asserts the futurity or coming to passe of things not yet in being §. 17. not only when the coming of them to passe is certainly known but when it is probable upon the account of the meanes used for the bringing them to passe for God saith in the Parable they will reverence my Sonne Mark 12. and yet the event was contrary So upon the executing an offendor he saith the People shall heare and feare and doe no more presumptuously which yet might not have its effect on all So God saith I will give them one heart not out of any certainty of knowledge or determînation in himselfe that any such heart or way should actually be given them which would infallibly produce the effect mentioned but that he would grant such meanes as were proper to create such a heart in them Ans. The neerer the bottome the more sower Lees. First Doth God foretell the coming to passe of things future upon a probable conjecture which is here assigned to him Is that the Intendment of the expression in the Parable they will reverence my Son Or was he mistaken in the Event the thing falling out contrary to his expectation Or is there any thing in this or the place mentioned Deut 17. 12 13. but only an expression of the duty of men upon the account of the meanes offered Is there any the least intimation of any Intent and purpose of God as to the Events insisted on Any Promise of his effectuall working for the accomplishing of them Any Prediction upon the account of his Purpose and Designe which are the foundation of all his Predictions Or is there any the least correspondency in name or thing between the places now instanced in and called in for reliefe with that under consideration This then is the sinew of Mr Goodwins arguing in this place sometimes when there is meanes offered men for the performance of a duty the accomplishment of it is spoken of as of what ought to have succeeded and it is the fault of men to whom that duty is prescribed and these meanes indulged if it come not to passe therefore when God proposeth and promiseth to work and bring about such and such a thing and engageth himselfe to a reall efficiency in it yet it may come to passe or it may not it may be accomplished or God may faile in his intendment 2. The sense here given to the promise of God I will give them one heart c. hath been formerly taken into consideration and it hath been made to appeare that notwithstanding all the glorious Expressions of Gods Administration of meanes to work men into the frame intimated yet upon the matter the intendment of the Exposition given amounts to this though God saith he will give us a new heart yet indeed he doth not so give it to any one in the World nor ever intended to doe so but this new Heart men must create make and worke out themselves upon the meanes afforded them which being very eminent are said to create such hearts in them though they doe it not but only perswade men thereunto A Comment this is not much unlike the first that ever was made upon the words of God Gen 4. 5. Whether God or man create the new Heart is the matter here in Question For what he lastly affirmes That if this be a Promise of Absolute Perseverance it is inconsistent with all the Prophesies of the Rejection of the Jewes which are accordingly fulfilled I must referre him to S t Paul who hath long agoe undertaken to answer this Objection from whom if he receive not satisfaction what am I that I should hope to afford the least unto him And these are the Reasonings upon the account whereof Mr Goodwin dischargeth this Text of Scripture by vertue of his Autocratoricall power in deciding Controversies of this nature from bearing Testimony in this cause any more Whether he will be attended unto herein time will shew Many Attempts to the same purpose have formerly been made and yet it endureth the tryall I have thus turned aside to the consideration of the Exceptions given in to the ordinary interpretation of this place §. 18. least any should think that they were waved upon the account of their strength and efficacy to overthrow it The Argument I intended from the words for the stability of Gods Love and Favour to Believers upon the account of his Covenant-engagement is not once touched in any of them These words then yeeld a Third Demonstration of the Stedstastnesse and Unchangeablenesse of Acceptation of Believers in Christ upon the account of the Absolute Stability of that Covenant of Grace whereof Gods ingagement to be their God and never forsake them is an eminent portion CAP. V. 1. Entrance into the Argument from the Promises of God with their stability and his Faithfulnesse in them 2. The usuall Exceptions to this Argument 3. A generall description of Gospell-Promises 4. Why and on what account called Gospell-Promises The description given generall not suited to any single Promise 5. They are
for the deterring men from their impious and destructive courses I say God forbid To put it then to an issue God here promiseth that they who here trust in him shall never be remooved What I pray is the Conditiō on which this Promise doth depend It is say they who oppose us in this if they continue trusting in him that is if they be not removed for to trust in him is not to be removed if then they be not removed they shall not be removed and is this the minde of the Holy Ghost Notwithstanding all the Rhetoricke in the world this Promise will stand for the consolation of them that believe as the Mountaines about Jerusalem that shall never be removed In some it is said to be a Promise of abiding in Happinesse §. 15. not in Faith but it plainely appeares to be a Promise of abiding in trusting the Lord which comprehends both our Faith and Happinesse Ob. It is not promised that they who once trust in the Lord shall abide happy though they cease to trust in him Ans. It is a Promise that they shall not cease to trust in him Ob. It is not that they shall be necessitated to abide trusting in him Ans. No but it is that they shall be so far assisted and effectually wrought upon as certainely to do it Ob. It is no more then the Apostle sayes to the Corinthians 2 Cor. 2. 3. which frame towards them he would not continue should they be changed and turned into Idolaters and Blasphemers Ans. First the Promises of God and the affections of men are but ill compared 2. Paul loved the Corinthians whilst they were such as he mentioned God promiseth his Grace to Believers that they may continue such as he loves Ob. All the Promises are made to Qualifications not to Persons Ans. Prove that and 1. Take the case in hand and 2. Cast downe the Church to the ground it having no one Promise on that account made unto it as consisting of Abrahams Seed and so this witnesse also is freed from all exceptions put in against it and appeares with confidence to give in its Testimony to the Vnchangeablenesse of God unto Believers I shall in the next place adjoine another portion of Scripture of the same import with those foregoing §. 16. wherein the truth in hād is no lesse clearly somewhat more pathetically convincingly expressed thē in that last mentioned It is Isa. 54. 7 8 9 10. For a small moment have I forsaken thee but with great Mercies will I gather thee In a little wrath I hid my face from thee for a moment but with everlasting kindnesse will I have Mercy on thee saith the Lord thy Redeemer For this is as the waters of Noah unto me for as I have sworne that the Waters of Noah shall no more cover the Earth so have I sworne that I will not be wrath with thee nor rebuke thee for the Mountaines shall depart and the hils be removed but my Loving-kindnesse shall not depart from thee neither shall the Covenant of my Peace be removed saith the Lord that hath Mercy on thee The place I have mentioned before but only as to one speciall inference from one passage in the words I shall now use the whole for the confirmation of the generall Truth we plead for the words are full plaine suited to the businesse in hand No expressions of our finding out can so fully reach the Truth we assert much lesse so pathetically worke upon the Affections of Believers or so effectually prevaile on their understandings to receive the Truth contained in them as these words of God himselfe given us for those ends are suited to doe Goe to men whose minds in any measure are free from prejudice not forestalled with a contrary perswasion and furnished with evasions for the defence of their opinions and aske whether God doth not in these words directly and positively promise to those to whom he speaketh that he will alwaies continue his kindnesse to them to the end and that for the daies of eternity his Love shall be fixed on them and I no way doubt but they will readily answer It is so indeed it cannot be denied But seeing we have to deale as with our own unbelieving hearts so with men who have turned every stone to prejudge this Testimony of God the words must a little more narrowly be considered and the mind of the Holy Ghost inquired into V. 5. mention is made of the desertion of the Church § 17. by the eclipsing of the beames of Gods countenance and the inflicting of some great affliction for a season in opposition unto which momentary desertions in that and in the beginning of the 8. v. he giveth in Consolation from the Assurance of the great Mercies and Everlasting Kindnesse wherein he abideth to doe them good with everlasting kindnesse will I have mercy on thee I will pardon pitty and heale thee with that mercy which floweth from Love which never had beginning that never shall have ending that cannot be cut off Everlasting Kindnesse Beare with patience your present desertion your present trialls whatever they are that befall you they are but for a season but for a moment and these also consistent with that Mercy Kindnesse which is everlasting and turneth not away If this Mercy and Kindnesse dependeth on any thing in us and is resolved lastly thereunto which may alter and change every moment as our walking with God in its selfe considered not relating to the Unchangeablenesse of his Purpose the efficacy of his promised Grace is apt to doe what opposition can there be betwixt that desertion wherewith they are exercised and the kindnesse wherewith they are embraced as to their continuance As that is said to be for a little while for a moment so this also may be of no longer abode It may possibly be as Jonah's Gourd that grew up in the morning and before night was withered what then shall become of the foundation of that consolation wherewith God here refresheth the soules of his people consisting in the continuance of his kindnesse in an Antithesis to the moment arinesse of their desertion Least that any should call this into Question §. 18. as our unbelieving hearts are very apt and skilfull in putting in pleas against the truth of the Promises of God and their accomplishment towards us v. 9. the Lord farther confirmeth the Assurance formerly given and removeth those objections to which through the Sophistry of Satan and the Sottishnesse of our own hearts it may seem to be lyable This is saith he as the waters of Noah Gods dealing with thē in that mercy which floweth from his everlasting kindnesse is like his dealing with the World in the matter of the waters of Noah or the floud wherewith it was drowned and destroyed when he with his were saved in the Arke He calleth upon his Children to consider his dealings with the World in respect
which in and by themselves to a believing soule they cast upon it Now least any should think that there is the least tendency in such Promises as these as held out to Believers to turne them aside from close walking with God before I enter upon the consideration of any other this seeming of all others most exposed to Exceptions of that nature I shall give some few Observations that may a little direct Believers to whom I write and for whose sake this taske is undertaken into the right improvement of them The genuine influence which this §. 20. and the like Promises have upon the soules of the Saints is mightily to stirre them up unto and to assist them in answering what lieth in them that inexpressible Love and Kindnesse which their God and Father in Jesus Christ holdeth out unto their hearts in them This the Apostle inferreth from them 2 Cor 7. 1. Having these Promises that is those especially mentioned in the words preceding the conclusion and the inference the Apostle here maketh Ch. 6. v. 16 18. I will dwell in them and will be a Father unto them and they shall be my children therefore saith he let us cleanse our selves from all pollution of slesh and spirit perfecting holinesse in the feare of the Lord. Universall purity holinesse and close walking with God is that which these Promises doe presse unto and naturally promote in the hearts of Believers and in 2 Pet. 4. 5 6. that Apostle pursueth the same at large God hath called us to Glory and Vertue hath given us exceeding great and pretious Promises that by these you might be partakers of the Divine Nature having escaped the corruption that is in the World through lust Besides this giving all diligence c The exceeding great and pretious Promises which are given unto us in our calling are bestowed for this end that by them we may be made partakers of the Divine Nature they have no tendency to communicate to us the Nature of the Divell and to stirre us up to Rebellion Vncleannesse and hatred of the God of all that Love that is in them But lye indeed at the bottome the Root and foundation of the practice and exercise of all those Graces which he enumerates and from the receiving of those Promises exhorts us to in the following verse Some 〈◊〉 ●●●fesse doe or may turne the Grace of God into lasciviousnesse that is 〈◊〉 ●●trine of grace and of pardon of sinne in the bloud of Jesus Christ and so the mercy mentioned in such Promises as these meerely as in them it is mentioned Grace and Mercy communicated cannot be turned into Wantonnesse but what are they that doe so Vngodly men men of old ordained to condemnation Jude 4. Paul rejecteth any such thoughts from the hearts of Believers Rom. 6. 1. Shall we continue in sin that Grace may abound God forbid Nay suppose that that naturall corruption that flesh and bloud that is in Believers be apt to make such a conclusion as this Because God will certainly abide with us for ever therefore let us walke carelesly and doe him all the despight we can these Promises being not made for the use and exalting of the flesh but being given to be mixed with Faith which is carefully to watch against all abusing or corrupting of that Love and Mercy which is held out unto it flesh and bloud can have no advantage given unto it thereby as shall afterward be more fully and clearly demonstrated The Question is then what conclusion Faith doth will and ought to make of these Promises of God and not what abuse the flesh will make of them Let then the meanest and weakest Faith in all the World that is true and saving speake for it selfe whether there be any thing in the nature of it that is apt to make such conclusions as these My God and Father in Jesus Christ hath graciously promised in his infinite Love and Goodnesse to mee through him in whom he is well pleased that he will be my God and guide for ever that he will never forsake mee nor take his Kindnesse from mee to eternity And he hath done this although that he saw and knew that I would deale foolishly and treacherously that I would stand in need of all his Goodnesse Patience and Mercy to spare mee and heale mee promising also to keep me from such a wicked departure from him as should for ever alienate my soule from him therefore come on let mee continue in sinne let me doc him all the dishonour and despight that I can this is all the sence that I have of his infinite Love this is all the impression that it leaveth upon mee that I need not love him againe but study to be as vile and as abominable in his sight as can possibly be imagined certainly there is not any smoaking flax or any oruised reed there is not a soule in the World whom God in Christ hath once shined upon or dropped the least dramme of Grace into his heart but will look on such a conclusion as this as a blast of the bottomlesse pit a detestable dart of Satan which it is as proper for Faith to quench as any other Abomination whatever Let then Faith in reference unto these Promises have its perfect worke not abiding in a naked contemplation of them but mixing them with its selfe and there will be undoubtedly found the improvement before mentioned for the carrying on of Godlinesse and Gospell obedience in the hearts of Believers But this I shall have occasion to speake to more afterward Hosea 2. 19 20. §. 20. is pertinent also to the same purpose I will betroth thee unto mee for ever I will betroth thee unto mee in righteousnesse and in judgement and in loving kindnesse and in mercies I will even betroth thee unto mee in faithfulnesse and thou shalt know the Lord. The words themselves as they lye in the Text doe directly confirme our Assertion The Relation whereunto God here expresseth that he will and doth take his People is one of the most neer and eminent which he affordeth to them a conjugall Relation he is and will be their Husband which is as high an expression of the Covenant betwixt God and his Saints as any is or can be used Of all Covenants that are between sundry persons that which is between Man and Wife is the strongest and most inviolable So is this Covenant expressed Isai 54. 5. Thy maker is thine Husband the Lord of Hosts is his Name and this Relation he affirmeth shall continue for ever upon the Account of those Properties of his which are engaged in this his Gracious undertaking to take them to himselfe therein He doth it in Righteousnesse and in Judgement in Loving-kindnesse and in Mercies and in Faithfulnesse so that if there be not something in the Context or words adjoyning that shall with an high hand turne us aside from the first immediate open and full sence of these
words the case is undoubtedly concluded in them This then we shall consider and therefore must look a little back into the generall designe of the whole Chapter for the evasion of Qualifications will not here serve God betrotheth Persons not Qualifications There are two parts of the Ch 1. §. 21. That from the beginning to v. 4. containeth a most fearfull and dreadfull commination and threatning of the Judgments of the Lord against the whole Church and Common-wealth of the Jewes for their Apostasy Idolatry and Rebellion against him It is not an affliction or a triall or some lesser desolation that God here threatneth them withall but utter destruction and rejection as to all Church and Politicall State He will leave them neither substance nor ornament State nor Worship describing the condition which came upon them at their Rejection of the Lord Jesus Christ left they must be as in the day that God first looked on them poore naked in their bloud unpittied formed neither into Church State nor Commonwealth so will I make them saith the Lord And this dispensation of God the Prophet expresseth with great dread and terrour to the end of the 13. verse 2. The second part of the Chapter is taken up and spent §. 23. from the 14. verse to the end in heavenly and gracious Promises of the conversion of the true Israelites the seed according to the Promise of God of the Renovation of the Covenant with them and blessing them with all spirituall blessings in Jesus Christ unto the end And hereof there are these foure parts 1. An heavenly Promise of their Conversion by the Gospell which he demonstrateth and setteth out by comparing the Spirituall deliverance therein to the deliverance which they had by an high hand from Aegypt v. 14. and 15. 2. The delivery of them so converted from Idolatry False-worship and all those waies whereby God was provoked to cast off their Fore-fathers attended by their obedience in close walking with God for ever 3. The quietnesse and peace which they shall enjoy being called and purged from their sinnes before mentioned which the Lord expresseth by his making a Covenant with the whole Creation in their behalfe v. 18. 4. A discovery of the fountaine of the mercies before mentioned with those also which afterwards are insisted on to wit the Everlasting Covenant of Grace through which God will with all Faithfulnesse and Mercy take them to himselfe v. 19 20. to the end Before we farther open these particulars §. 24. some Objections must be removed that are laid to prevent the inference intended from these words Ch 11. Sect 8. pag. 229. It is first objected 1. The Promise of the Betrothing here specified is made unto the entire body and Nation of the Jewes as well unbelievers as Believers as appeareth by the carriage of the Chapter throughout Ans. The carriage of the Chapter throughout is a weake proofe of this Assertion no doubt fixed on for want of particular instances to give any light unto it neither doth the carriage of the Chapter throughout intimate any such thing in the least but expressely manifesteth the contrary It is universall desolation and utter Rejection that is assigned as the portion of unbelievers as such all along this Chapter This Promise is made to them whom God allureth into the Wildernesse and there speaketh comfortably to them which what it doth import shall be afterwards considered Yea and which is more the words of v. 23. which runne on in the same tenor with the Promises particularly insisted on and beyond all exception are spoken to and of the same persons are applied by the Apostle Paul not to the whole Nation of the Jews Idolaters and Unbelievers but to them that were brought in unto the Lord Christ and obtained the Righteousnesse of Faith when the rest were hardened Rom. 9. 26. From v. 24. to the 30. the Apostle by sundry instances from the Scripture of the Old Testament manifesteth that it was a Remnant of Israel according to the election of Grace to whom the Promise was made To us whom God hath called not to the Jewes only but also to the Gentiles For so saith he it is in Hosea instancing in the passage we insist on I will call them my people which were not my people and her beloved which was not beloved and it shall come to passe that in the place where it was said unto them You are not my people there shall they be called the Children of the Living God Which he farther confirmeth firmeth by a Testimony out of Isaiah 10. 22 23. manifesting that it is but a Remnant that are intended Wherefore it is objected 2. That the Promise is conditionall and the performance of it of the Mrceies mentioned in it suspended upon the repentance of that people especially of their Idolatry to the true and pure worship of God as appeareth v. 14 16 17. which plainly sheweth that it was made as well nay rather to those that were wicked and Idolatrous amongst this People then unto others as being held forth unto them chiefly for this end to wooe them away from their Idols unto God Ans. I hope the people of God will more stedfastly abide by their interest in the sweetnesse usefulnesse and consolation of this Promise then to throw it away upon such slight and Atheologicall flourishes For 1. Is there any title Iota or word in the whole Text to intimate that this Promise is conditionall and dependeth on the peoples forsaking their Idolatry The 14 16 17. verses are urged for proofe thereof God indeed in those verses doth graciously promise that from the Riches of the same Grace whence he freely saith that he will Betroth them to himselfe that he will convert them and turne them away from their Idolatry and all their sinnes but that that should be required of them as a condition whereon God will enter into Covenant with them there is nothing in the whole Context from v. 14. and downewards that intimateth it in the least or will endure to be wrested to any such sence it holding out severall distinct Acts of the same free Grace of his unto his People 2. That this is a Promise of entring into Covenant with them cannot be denied Now that God should require their Repentance as an antecedaneous previous qualification to his receiving them into Covenant and yet in the Covenant undertake to give them that Repentance as he doth in promising them to take away their hearts of stone and give them new hearts of flesh is a direct Contradiction sit only for a part of that Divinity which is in the whole an expresse contradiction to the Word and mind of God 3. Neither can it be supposed as a conditionall Promise held out to them as a motive to work them from their Idolatry when antecedentaly thereunto God hath expressely promised to doe that for them v. 16 17. with as high an hand and efficacy of Grace
8. 110. 3. 7. 45. 13 14 some wherof we shall mention afterwards concerning his Seed Isa. 49. 5 6 8. 52. 13 14. 53. 11. 59. 20. and Ofspring or those that he committed to his charge to be Redeemed from their sinnes it is incumbent on him in regard of his Righteousnesse to make out all those things in due time unto them And therefore that he might magnify that Righteousnesse Truth of his Joh. 12. 51 52. he hath cast the whole procedure of his Grace into such a way and all the Acts of it into such a dependance upon one another as that the one of them should have infallible influence into the other and the effects of every one of them be rendred indubitably certaine Thus upon the Account of the Death of Christ antecedently to all considerations of Faith Isa 53. 6 or Beliefe in them for whom he Dyed thus much is done Gal. 4. 4 5. for the extinguishing the quarrell about sinne Heb. 10. 5 6 7 8. The vindictive Justice Law and Truth of God are disingaged from pursuing the Sentence of Death and Everlasting Separation from God Rom. 8. 33 34. against them as sinners Neither have they at all any thing to lay to their charge for which they should be cast out of the presence of God Isa. 53. 11 12. Yea the Lord is moreover in his owne Faithfulnesse Righteousnesse Rom. 4. 25. with respect to the Covenant of the Mediator ingaged to doe that which is needfull Phil. 1. 29. to the bringing of them to himselfe After some previous Observations Eph. 1. 3. I shall confirme what hath been spoken by sundry Arguments I say then First that it is a most vaine supposall which some make What if any one of them for whom Christ Dyed should dye in an Unregenerate Condition Would not the Justice and condemning Power of the Law of God notwithstanding the Death of Christ lay hold upon them It is I say a supposall of that which in sensu composito is impossible so in that sence● however upon other respects it may not to be argued from Joh. 3. 16 17. 7. 33. Christ Dyed that those for whom he Dyed might Live that they might be quickned and borne againe And so they shall 2 Cor. 5. 14 15. in their due season every one undoubtedly be and not any of them dye in their sinnes Secondly that our Affirmation is not in the least lyable to that Exception which usually men insist upon in opposition unto it viz. That if Christ hath so satsfyed Justice and fulfilled the Law in reference to all them for whom he dyed that the sentence of Condemnation should not be issued out against them but they must infallibly be Saved then there is no necessity either that they doe at all Believe or if they do that they live in Holinesse and the avoidance of Sinne Isa. 53. 5 6 11 12. all that being accomplished which by these mediums is sought for Dan. 9. 24. I say our position in it selfe is no way lyable to this Exception For First Rom. 8. 32 33 though the Justice Law Gal. 3. 13. and Truth of God be satisfyed and fulfilled as to their sinnes Heb. 2. 14 15. that he hath not as on that account any thing to lay to their charge Rom 1. 16 17 3. 23 24 25. 4. 16. 9. 31 32. yet this hinders not at all but that God may assigne and ascribe such a way for their coming to him as may be suited to the exalting of his Glory the Honour of Jesus Christ who hath brought all this about and the preparing of the soule of the sinner for the full enjoyment of himselfe Joh. 5. 23. this he hath done by the Law of Faith which gives him the Glory of his Grace Rom. 3. 27. and all his other Attibutes exalts Jesus Christ whom it is his will we should Honour as we Honour himselfe Eph. 1. 6. emptyes the poore sinfull Creature of it selfe Philip. 3. 8 9 10 11. that it may be made meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light Secondly This consideration of the Death of Christ Eph. 5. 25 26 27. of his freeing us from condemnation for any Tit. 2. 14. or all of our sinnes is not to be taken apart or separated from the other Gal. 4. 4 5 6. of his procuring the Holy Spirit and Grace for us that we should not commit sinne Joh. 17. 7. being borne of God with all the dispensations of Precepts and Promises Mat. 28. 18 19 20. Exhortations and Threatnings whereby he morally carryes on the worke of his Grace Eph. 4. 12 13 14. in the hearts of his Saints setting us free from the guilt of sinne Rom. 6. 2 3 4 5 6. c. he so farre also sets us free from the Power of sinne that we should be dead to it live no longer in it that it should not raigne in us nor prevaile to turne us utterly from God Thirdly they seeme not much to be acquainted with the nature of Faith Holinesse and Communion with God who suppose the end of them is only for the escapeing of the Wrath that is to come Eph. 4. 22. they are the things 2 Cor. 5. 15. whereby we are daily renewed Rom. 12. 1 2. and changed into the Image of the Glory of God and so not only made usefull 2 Cor. 3. 18. and serviceable to him here but also prepared for the fullnesse of his Likenesse wherewith we shall be satisfyed hereafter Wherefore observe Fourthly that though this complete Attonement be made in the Death of Christ Mat. 20. 5 6. yet it remaines free in the bosome of God when he will begin our Actuall Deliverance from under that arrest of Death that was gone out against us 2 Thess. 1. 11. and how farre in this Life he will carry it towards perfection It is I say in his bosome Joh. 3. 8. when he will bestow his Spirit on us for Regeneration Faith when he will actually absolve us from under the arrest of the Law by the Application of his Mercies in Christ unto us by the Promise of the Gospell how farre he will carry on the worke of our deliverance from sinne 2 Pet. 1. 1. in this Life Only that is done upon the account whereof it is impossible that the quarrell against sinne should be carryed on to the utmost Execution of the sentence denounced towards those sinners for whom Christ dyed which I prove by these following Arguments First §. 12. it is plainely affirmed that Christ by his Death obtained everlasting redemption Heb 9. 12. he obtained everlasting Redemption before his ascending into the most holy place Heb. 1. 3. called elsewhere the purging of our sinnes Now this Redemption as was said the Apostle informes us to consist in the forgivenesse of sinnes
only this but all other Promises uttered by Christ to his Apostles as we had thought not for their own behoofe alone but also for the use of the Church in all ages are tyed up in their tendency and use to the men of that Generation and to the employment to which they to whom he spoke were designed But let us see whether these things are so or no. I say 2. There is not any necessary cause of that disjunctive proposition The Promise of the perpetuall residence of the Spirit is made either to the Apostles personally or to the whole body of the Church By the Rule formerly given for the Interpretation of these Promises of Christ it appears that what in this kind was made to the one was also given to the other and how Mr Goodwin will inforce any necessary conclusion from this distinction framed by himselfe for his own purpose I know not The Promise was made both to these and those the Apostles and all other Believers because to the Apostles as Believers 3. The making of the Promise to the Apostles personally doth not argue that it was made to them as Apostles but only that it was made to their Persons or to them though under another qualification viz. of Believing 'T is given to them personally as Believers and so to all Believers whatever This also sets at liberty and plainly cashiers the comparison instituted between the Apostles Infallibility as Apostles and their sanctifying grace as Believers by the Spirit of Grace given for that end The Apostles Infallibility we confesse was from the Spirit for they as other Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Spirit of God 2 Pet. 1. 21. but that this was a distinct guift bestowed on them as Apostles and not the teaching of the Spirit of Grace which is given to all Believers 1 Ioh. 2. 22. we need not contend to prove Besides to what end doth he contend that it was made to the Apostles in the sence urged and by us insisted on seeing he denies it in the close of this Section and chooseth rather to venture upon an opposition unto that common received perswasion that the Apostles of Christ the sonne of perdition only excepted had an absolute promise of Perseverance then to acknowledge that which would prove so prejudiciall and ruinous to his cause as he knowes the confession of such a Promise made to them would inevitably be He contends not I say about the sence of the Promise but would faine divert it from other Believers at the entrance of the Section by limiting it to the Apostles but considering afterward better of the matter and remembring that the concession of an absolute Promise of Perseverance to any one Saint whatever would evidently root up and cast to the ground the goodliest engine that he hath set up against the Truth he opposeth he suits it in the close of the Section to an evasion holding better Correspondency with its associates in this undertaking 4. I wonder what Chimericall Church he hath found out to which Promises are made and Priviledges granted otherwise then upon the account of the Persons whereof'tis constituted suppose I pray that Promises of the Residence of the Spirit for ever with it be made to the Church which is made up of so many members and that all these members every one should loose their interest in it what subject of that Promise would remaine What Vniversall is this that hath a reall existence of it selfe and by it selfe in abstraction from its particulars in which alone it hath its being Or what whole is that which is preserved in the destruction and dissolution of all its essentially constituent parts The Promises then that are made to the Church are of two sorts 1. Of such Grace and Mercies as whether inherent or relative have their residence in and respect unto particular persons as such of this sort are all the Promises of the Grace of Sanctification as also of Justification c. which are all things of mens personall spirituall interest The Promises made to the Church of this nature are made unto it meerely as consisting of so many and those Elected Redeemed persons whose right and interest as those individuall persons they are 2. Of all such good things as are the exurgency of the collected state of the Saints in reference to their spirituall invisible Communion or visible gathering into a Church constituted according to the mind of Christ and his Appointment in the Gospell and these also are all of them founded in the former and depend wholly upon them and are resolved into them All Promises then whatever made to the Church the Body of Christ doe not respect it primarily as a Corporation which is the second notion of it but as consisting of those particular Believers much lesse as a Chimericall universall having a subsistence in and by it selfe abstracted from its particulars This evasion then not withstanding this Promise of our Saviour doth still continue to presse its Testimony concerning the perpetuall residence of this Holy Spirit with Believers The scope of the place inforces that exception of these words §. 28. which we insist upon Our Blessed Saviour observing the trouble and disconsolation of his followers upon the apprehension of his departure from them stirres them up to a better hope and confidence by many Gracious Promises and ingagements of what would and should be the Issue of his being taken away v. 1. He bids them to free their hearts from trouble and in the next words tells them that the way whereby it was to be done was by acting Faith on the Promises of his Father and those which in his Fathers name he had made and was to make unto them Of these he mentions many in the following verses whereof the Fountaine Head and Spring is that of giving them the Comforter not to abide with them for a season as he had done with his bodily presence but to continue with them as a Comforter and consequently to the discharging of his whole dispensation towards Believers for ever He speakes to them as Believers as disconsolate dejected Believrs quickning their Faith by Exhortations and gives them this Promise as a solid Foundation of peace and composednesse of Sprit which he exhorted them unto And if our Saviour intendeth any thing but what the words import viz. that he will give his Holy Spirit as a Comforter to abide with them for ever the Promise hath not the least sutablenesse to relieve them in their distresse nor to accomplish the end for which it was given them But against this it is excepted Cap. 11. Sect. 13. Pag. 233 1. Evident it is that our Saviour doth not in this place oppose the abiding or remaining of the Holy Ghost to his owne departure from the hearts or soules of men into which he is framed or come but to his departure out of the world by death which was now at hand Ans. 1. This
whole Church be so farre from being saved to the ut most as utterly to be destroyed and consumed 2. Doubtlesse the Intercession of Christ §. 3. must answer the Representation of it which the Apostle so much insists on Heb. 7. 9. Of the Oblation of Christ there were many Types in the Aaronicall Priesthood of the Law Of his Intercession but one principally namely that solemne entrance of the high Priest with Blood and Incense into the Holyest of Holyes in the great Anniversary Sacrifice on the tenth day of the seventh month on the which day also the great Jubilee or Joyfull time of deliverance typifying our deliverance by Christ began Here unto is added the Priesthood of Melchisedec whereof there is mention neither of its beginning nor ending to secure us of the Continuance of our Mediator in the act of his Priesthood for ever Now the end of the high Priests so entring into this Holy place was to carry on the work of Expiation and Attonement to persection and compleat peace with God in the behalfe of them for whom he offered without And therefore the Holy Ghost saith that his entrance with Blood was to offer for himselfe and the Errours of the people Heb. 9. 7. It being but a continuation of his Oblation began without unto a compleat Attonement And therefore there is no reall difference between the efficacy of the death of Christ and that of his Intercession upon the actuall Accomplishment of it It being then the compleate taking away of the sinnes and Errours of the people as to the guilt of them and the Continuance of their peace with God which was intended by the high Priests entrance with blood into the Holyest of Holyes that which answers thereunto or the deliverance of Believers from the whole guilt of sinne and their preservation in the Love and Favour of God is the intendment of Christ in his Intercession Let the Effects and fruits of the Oblation of Christ be bounded and limited to the procuring of a new way of Salvation without purchasing for any one person whatever power and Grace to walke in that way and then exclude his Intercession from any influence into the preservation of them who do enter that way therein and perhaps indifferent men will scarce thinke the Glory and Honour of the Lord Jesus to be of any great regard with us 3. That this is the import of Christs Intercession for Believers §. 4. is evident by that preface which we have thereof John 17. being a manifest declaration on earth of that which Christ lives for ever in Heaven to do This was the Incense wherewith he entred into the Holy place which he now prepared and which was afterwards beaten small in his Agony that it might be ready to make a sweet perfume at his entrance into Heaven as he was sprinkled with his owne Blood That Christ Interceded and for his Elect for whom he dyed that they may believe our Adversaries deny but that he Intercedes for actuall Believers hath not hitherto been questioned What it is which he requests on their behalfe the tenor of that Power of his John 17. will manifest v. 11. saith he Holy Father keepe through thine owne name those whom thou hast given me that they may be one as we are keepe them from sinne and ruine every thing that will hinder them from union with me What is it that our Saviour here prayes for for whō is he so ingaged that it is for Believers as such for whom he puts up these supplications our Adversaryes in the cause in hand do contend That these may be kept through the Power of God unto Unity among themselves which they have by their Union with him is his dying request for them He prayes not for any such onenesse as is consistent with their separation from him and his Fathers Love Where now shall we fix the supposed failure those who effectually and eventually are kept up to Spirituall Union cannot fall out of nor fall of from totally nor finally the Love of God Either Christ is not heard in his request or the Father cannot keepe them by his Power if these thus interceeded for are not preserved Many Temptations many oppositions great Tribulations without strong Corruptions within they must needs meet withall these they have no power in themselves to overcome nor to resist Should they be left to themselves they would never be able to hold out to the end Saith Christ I should loose these poore Sheep for whom I have laid downe my life to bring them unto thee Holy Father do thou therefore keepe and preserve them from all these evills that they may not prevaile over thē And keep thē through thy Nam● thy Power for we are kept through the Power of God unto Salvation let thy Power be exerted for their preservation And what is too strong for thy Power Who can take them out of thy hand Lay that upon them for their defence shew it out in their behalfe that all their enemies may feele the weight and strength thereof Keepe them through thy Name thy Grace let that be sufficient for them let them have such supplyes of Gospell Grace and pardoning Mercy concerning which I manifested thy Name unto them v. 6. and so revealed thee a Father that they may be incouraged to trust in that Name of thine and to stay themselves upon thee where the failure is doubtlesse is not easy to manifest In the verse following our Saviour addes many motives to make his Intercession prevalent in their behalfe First v. 12. he saith that according to that Commission that he had received he had faithfully preserved them whilst that he was in the world and now being ready to leave them as to his bodily presence he urges the speciall preservation of his Father as needfull that after all the Care and Cost which he had laid out about them they might not utterly perish And then Secondly v. 13. he urges the necessity that they should have some Assurance of it in the midst of all their troubles and tryalls that they may have Consolation upon their confidence in the words which Christ had spoken to them that they should be preserved through all difficulties unto the end And he farther urges Thirdly v. 14. from the certaine Opposition that they should meet withall the world hates them and will without doubt use all wayes and meanes possible for their ruine and destruction giving also the Reason why the world hateth them and will oppose them which is such an one as must needs ingage the Heart and Goodwill of God for their preservation to wit because they receive the Word of his deare Sonne and upon that account left the world separated from it and became its enemyes and shall they now be left to the rage and fury of the world in this condition That be farre from thee Holy Father keepe them Hereupon Fourthly v. 15. he reneweth his prayer in their behalfe
them that are concerned therein And this I shall do in the Order that I have named giving the Preeminence unto their Obedience which more immediately respecting the Glory of God the honour of the Gospell is to be preferred before their Consolation yea though God should never afford his Saints any drop of that Consolation which we affirme to streame from the Truth discussed yet it is Honour unspeakable for them that he is pleased to admit them and inable them to do him Service in this life and it will be their infinite Consolation that they have done so to Eternity For the making our way cleare to the demonstration of that influence which the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints hath into their Obed●ence and close-walking with God and so to manifest what weight is to be lay'd upon it on that Consideration I shall give some previous Observations which may direct and give us light in our passage both concerning Gospell Truths Gospell Obedience and Gospell Motives thereunto I hope it will not be thought amisse if I looke a little backwards to fortify and cleare this part of our progresse there being no concernement of our Doctrine that is more clamoured by the Adversaries of it nor can any respect of it or any Truth of God more causelessly meet with such entertainement as I hope will abundantly in the progresse of our businesse be evinced to the consciences of all who know indeed what it is to walke before God in a course of Gospell Obedience and who have their communion with the Father and his Sonne Jesus Christ. For the first 1. Every Truth revealed from God is to be received not only with Faith and Love but with equall Reverence to any that is revealed though we are not able to discerne such an immediate tendency unto usefullnesse in our Communion with him as in some others we may The formall Reason whereunto our Faith Love and Reverence unto the Word of God is resolved is that it is His Now this is common to the whole for he is the Author of every part and portion a like And though perhaps we may want some part of it at a lesse fatall price then some other yet to reject any one title or jot of it as that which is revealed of God is a sufficient demonstration that no one jot or title of it is received as it ought upon whatever this Title Inscription is Verbum Jehovae there must we stoope and bow downe our soules before it and captivate our Understandings to the obedience of Faith Whatsoever then may hereafter be spoken concerning the usefulnesse of the Truth under Consideration and that comparative regard which in respect of others ought on that account to be had thereunto doth not in the least exalt it as it is in it selfe in respect of Faith and Reverence due thereunto above any other Truth whatsoever that is in Scripture revealed 2. That next to the Revelation of God his Will and his Grace the grand immediate tendency of the whole Scripture is to worke them to whom the Revelation is made into a conformity to himselfe and to mould them into his owne Image All Scripture the Apostle tells us 2 Tim 3.16 is given by inspiration of God and is profitable for Doctrine for reproofe for correction for instruction in righteousnesse that the man of God may be perfect throughly furnished unto all Good workes Hereunto all Scripture tends and is usefull profitable for this end And the Gospell is called the Truth that is according to Godlinesse Titus 1. 1. As the end of the Law is Charity out of a pure heart and a Faith unfained 1 Tim. 1. 5. That which in respect of the prime Author of it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of God 1 Thess. 2 13. and in respect of the principall matter of it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word of the Crosse 1 Cor. 1.18 in respect of its end and tendency towards us is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Word or Truth that is according to Godlinesse The Word is that revealed Will of God which is our Sanctification 1 Thess. 4. 3. and the Instrument whereby he workes our Holinesse according to that prayer of our Saviour Sanctifie them by thy Word thy Word is Truth John 17. 19. And that which when we are cast into the mould of our Obedience is in some measure wrought Rom. 6. 17 the substance also or matter being written in our hearts is the Grace and Holinesse promised unto us in the Covenant Jere. 31.33 And that this is the Improvement which ought to be made by Believers of every Gospell Truth or rather that it hath an Efficacy to this purpose the Apostle tells us 2 Cor. 3. 18. We all with open face beholding as in a glasse the Glory of the Lord are changed into the same Image from Glory to Glory even as by the Spirit of the Lord By apprehensions of the glorious Truths discovered in the glasse or mirror of the Gospell we are changed and moulded into the frame and Image therein discovered by the power of the Spirit effectually accompanying the Word in the dispensation thereof And unlesse this be done whatsoever we may pretend we have not received any Truth of the Gospell as it is in Jesus in the power of it Eph. 4. 20 21 22 23 24. Ye have not saith the Apostle so learned Christ If so be that ye have heard him and have been taught by him as the Truth is in Jesus That ye put of as concerning the former conversation the old man which is corrupt according to the deceitfull lusts And be renewed in the spirit of your mind and that ye put on the new man which after God is created in Righteousnesse and true Holinesse Whatsoever men may professe if we have learned the Truth as it is in Jesus it will have these Effects in us even universall relinquishment as to sinceritie of all ungodlinesse and a through change both as to principles and practices unto Holinesse and to Righteousnesse which the Gospell teaches us which if we have not learned we have not yet learn't it as it is in Jesus Tit. 2. 11 12. The Grace of God that bringeth Salvation hath appeared to all men teaching us that denying ungodlinesse and worldly lusts we should live Soberly Righteously and Godlily in this present evill world 3. Some Truths have a more immediate direct and effectuall tendency to the promotion of Godlinesse and Gospell Obedience then others This the Apostle emphatically ascribes as a priviledge to that Doctrine that reveales the Love of Christ unto us 2 Cor. 5. 14. the Love of Christ constraines us other things effectually perswade but the Love of Christ constraines us to live to him it hath an importunity with it not to be denied an efficacy not to be put off or avoided and what is in the things themselves as in the love of Christ that is in its manner in the
one altogether lovely As exceeding desireable in the work of his Oblation lovely and amiable in the work of his Intercession as hath been manifested 1. It imports him as one who in his death hath made an end of the Controversy between God and our soules Dan. 9. 39. Becoming our peace Eph. 2. 14. having obtained for us Eternall Redemption That he hath not suffered all that sorrow anguish paine torment dereliction whereunto for our sakes he was given up and willingly exposed himselfe for an uncertaine end not fighting in his death as one beating the ayre nor leaving his worke in the dust to be trampled on or taken up as it seemes good to us in our polluted darke dead estate of nature But hath filled it with such immortall seed that of it selfe by it selfe and its own unconquerable Efficacy it hath sprung up to the bringing forth of that whole fruit intended in it and the accomplishment of all the ends aimed at by it That is that it shall certainely and infallibly bring all those to God for whom he offered by Sanctifying Justifying and preserving them through the Communication of his owne Spirit and Grace to them for that end and purpose All his Promises being yea and Amen in him confirmed by his death 2 Cor. 1. 20. Heb. 10. 12 13 14 15 16. Some of those who indeed abuse the Truth we have insisted on pretend to grant That by his death he made satisfaction for sinne but only on condition that men believe on him and continue so doing That they shall so believe and so continue though he is said to be the Captaine of our Salvation and the Author and finisher of our Faith though it be given unto us for his sake to believe on him and we are blessed with all spirituall blessings in heavenly places in him that he takes no care about beyond the generall administration of outward meanes He neither procured any such thing by his Oblation nor doth intercede for it these things are left unto men to be educed drawne forth and exercised by virtue of sundry considerations that they may take upon themselves Never doubtlesse did men take more paines to staine the beauty and comelinesse of our dying Saviour 2. For his Intercession the Doctrine hitherto insisted on renders him therein exceeding lovely and desireable It tells you that he doth pray the Father and thereupon sends us the Comforter the Holy Spirit for all the gratious acts and works ends and purposes before mentioned with innumerable other priviledges that the Saints by him are made partakers of and that to abide with us for ever never to leave us nor forsake us That he continually appears in the presence of God for us interceding that our Faith may not faile pleading for us in and under all our decayes making out to us sutable supplies in all our Distresses Temptations Tryalls Troubles taking care that no Temptation befall us but that a way also of escape be given to us together with it It tells us his Eye even now he is in glory is still upon us seeing our wants taking notice of our weaknesse and providing for us as his only concernment in the World that we be not lost That he hath not left one jot of that kindnesse which he bare to his flock his Lambs his little ones But pursues with all his strength and all the interest he hath in Heaven the worke of their Salvation which he came from his Fathers bosome to enter on and returned to him againe to carry it on unto perfection That as the High Priest of old he beares our names in his breast and on his shoulders continually before his Father So that in all our falls and failings when wee are in our selves helpelesse and hopelesse when there is nothing in us nor about us that can doe us any good or yeeld us any help or Consolation yet on this account we may say the Lord is our Shepheard we shall lack nothing He hath undertaken for us and will beare us in his Armes untill he bring us to the bosome of his Father Now whether such cosiderations as these of the Oblation and Intercession of Christ doe not fill his Love in them with a more constraining efficacy and more draw out the hearts of the Saints unto Faith and Love then any instruction can doe informing men of the uselesnesse of the one or other of these eminent Acts of his Mediation for any of the ends and Purposes mentioned let Believers judge That which men repose upon in their greatest necessities and for the things of the greatest concernement thereof they have the greatest valuation and the thoughts of it are most fixed in their minds What is there of so great concernement in this World unto the Saints as their abiding with God unto the end How many how great urging pressing are the difficulties dangers troubles they meet withall in their so doing What then they have most frequent recourse unto and what they rest most upon under their pressures in the things of that concernement before mentioned that will deserve the name of their Treasure where their hearts will and ought to be Now if this setting aside as things of no Consideration in such a case the Purposes Covenant and Promises of God the Oblation and Intercession of the Lord Christ be mens own rationall Abilities to consider what is for their good and what will be hurtfull and destructive to them what can hinder but that men will yea and that they often should spend the flower and best of their Affections upon and about themselves and their own Wisdome in and for their preservation That doubtlesse will take up their hearts and thoughts so that there will be very little roome left for the entertainement of the Lord Jesus Christ with any regard or respect on this account If that then may passe which was formerly laid downe namely that the Doctrines and things which are Apt and suted to the ingenerating quickning increasing and building up of Faith and Love towards God and our Lord Jesus Christ are the most eminent Gospell motives to spirituall acceptable Obedience as it is an unquestionable Truth and certainty doubtlesse that Doctrine which represents the Father Sonne so rich in mercy so loving lovely to the soule as that doth which we insist upon must needs have a most effectuall influence into that Obedience 4. The Doctrine insisted on §. 18. hath an effectuall influence into the Obedience of the Saints upon the account of giving it its proper place and setting it aright upon its basis carrying it on in due order It neither puts upon it the fetters of the Law nor turnes it loose from the Holy and righteous Rule of it Let men be as industrious as can be imagined in the performance of all commanded duties yet if they doe it on legall motives and for legall ends all their performances are vitiated and all their duties rejected This the Apostle
downe He hath undertaken to worke and who shall let him The Councell of his heart as to the fulfilling of it doth not depend on any thing in us what sinne thou art overtaken withall he will pardon and will effectually supply thee with his Spirit that● thou shalt not fall into or continue in such sinnes as would cut off thy Communion with him And doth not this mixe the forementioned Promises with Faith and so render it effectuall to the carrying on of the worke of Love and Obedience as was mentioned And as this Doctrine is suited to the establishment of the soule in Believing and to the stirring of men up to mixe the the Promises with Faith so there is not any thing that is or canbe thought more effectuall to the weakening impairing and shattering of the Faith of the Saints then that which is contrary thereunto as shall afterwards be more fully manifested Tell a soule that God will write his Law in him and put his feare in his inward partes that he shall never depart from him what can ye pitch upon possibly to unsettle him as to a perswasion of the Accomplishment of this Promise and that it shall be so indeed as God hath spoken but only this according as thou behavest thy selfe which is left unto thee so shall this be made good or come short of accomplishment If thou continue to walke with God which that thou shalt do he doth not promise but upon Condition thou walke with him it shall be well and if thou turne aside which thou mayst do notwithstanding any thing here spoken or intimated then the word spoken shall be of none effect the Promise shall not be fulfilled towards thee I know not what the most malicious Devill in Hell if they have degrees of malice can invent more suitable to weaken the Faith of men as to the accomplishment of Gods Promise then by affirming that it doth not depend upon his Truth and Faithfulnesse but solely on their good behaviour which he doth not effectually provide that it shall be such as is required thereunto God himselfe hath long since determined this difference might he be attended unto What hath been spoken of the Promises of the first sort might also be manifested concerning those of the second And the like might also be cleared up in reference to those other weapons of Ministers warfare in casting downe the strong holds of sinne in the hearts of men to wit Exhortations and Threatnings But because Mr Goodwin hath taken great paines both in the generall to prove the unsuitablenesse of our Doctrine to the promotion of Obedience and an Holy Conversation and in particular its inconsistency with the Exhortations and Threatnings of the Word managed by the Ordinances of the Ministry What is needfull farther to be added to the purpose in hand will fall in with our vindication rescuing of the Truth from the false criminations wherewith it is assaulted and reproached as to this particular And therefore I shall immediately addresse myselfe to the Consideration of his long Indictment and charge against the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints as to this very thing CAP. XI 1. The Entrance into an Answer to Mr G's Arguments against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance His sixt Argument about the usefulnesse of the Doctrine under consideration to the worke of the Ministry proposed 2. His pr●ofe of the minor Proposition 3. Considered and Answered Many pretenders to promote Godlinesse by false Doctrines M. G.'s common interest in this Argument 4. His proofes of the usefulnesse of his Doctrine unto the promotion of Godlinesse 5. Considered and Answered The inconsequence of his Arguing discovered 6. The Doctrine by him opposed mistaken ignorantly or wilfully 7. Objections proposed by Mr G. to himselfe to be Answered 8. The Objection as proposed disowned Certainty of the Love of God in what sence a motive to Obedience 9. The Doctrine of Apostasy denies the unchangeablenesse of Gods Love to Believers placeth Qualifications in the Roome of persons 10. How the Doctrine of Perseverance promiseth the continuance of the Love of God to Believers 11. Certainty of Reward incouraging to regular Actions Promises made to Persons qualified not suspended upon those Qualifications Meanes appointed of God for the accomplishment of a determined end certaine 12. Meanes not alwaies conditions 13 M. G's strange inference concerning the Scripture 14. Considered The word of God by him undervalued and subjected to the judgement of vaine men as to its Truth and Authority 15. The pretended reason of the former proceeding discussed The Scripture the sole judge of what is to be ascribed to God and believed concerning him 16. The Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance falsely imposed on and vindicated 17. Mr G's next Objection made to himselfe against his Doctrine its unseasonablenesse as to the Argument in hand demonstrated 18. No Assurance of the Love of God not Peace left the Saints by the Doctrine of Apostasy The ground of Peace and Assurance by it taken away 19. Ground of Pauls Consolation 1 Cor. 9. 27. the meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 20. Another Plea against the Doctrine attempted to be proved by M. G. That attempt considered Not the weaknesse of the Flesh naturally but the strength of Lust spiritually pretended 21. The cause of Sinne in the Saints farther discussed 22. The Power ascribed by M. G. to men for the strengthning and making willing the Spirit in them considered 23. The Aptnesse of the Saints to performe what and whence The opposition they have in them thereunto 24. Gospell Obedience how easy 25. The Conclusion 26. Answer to Chap. 13. of his Book proposed THE Argument §. 1. wherein Mr Goodwin exposeth the Doctrine under contest to the triall concerning its usefulnesse as to the promotion of Godlinesse in the hearts and wayes of them by whom it is received he thus proposeth Cap. 13. Sect. 32. Pag. 333. That Doctrine which is according to Godlinesse and whose naturall and proper tendencie is to promote Godlinesse in the hearts and lives of men is Evangelicall and of unquestionable comportance with the Truth such is the Doctrine which teacheth the possibility of the Saints declining both totally and finally Ergo Of this Argument he goeth about to establish the respective propositions §. 2. so as to make them serviceable to the enforcement of the Conclusion he aimeth at for the exaltation of the Helena whereon he is enamored and for the major Proposition about which rightly understood we are remote from contesting with him or any else and will willingly and cheerefully at any time drive the cause in difference to Issue upon the singular Testimony of the Truth wrapped up in it he thus con●irmeth it The Reason of the major Proposition though the truth of it needeth no light but its owne to be seen by is because the Gospell it selfe is a Doctrine which is according unto Godlinesse a ministry of Godlinesse is a Doctrine
not so To what end is any farther dispute If the Scripture speaketh not to Mr Goodwins mind for doubtlesse he is an intelligent and considering man he seeth sufficient ground to question its Authority By what way possible any man can more advance himselfe into the Throne of God then by entertaining such thoughts and conceptions as these I know not An intelligent man is supposed to have from himselfe and his own Wisdome and Intelligence considerations of Gods nature and perfection by which he is to regulate and measure all things that are affirmed of God or his will in the Scripture If what is so delivered suit these conceptions of his that Scripture wherein it is delivered may passe for Canonicall Authentick If otherwise eâdem facilitate rejicitur quâ asseritur which was sometimes spoken of Traditionalls but it seems may now be extended to the written Word The Scriptue is supposed to hold out things contrary to what this intelligent Man hath conceived and considered and this is asserted as a just ground to question its Authority And if this be not a Progresse in the contempt of the Word of God to what ever yet Papists Socinians or Enthusiasts have attempted I am deceived To the Law and to the Testimony with all the conceptions and notions of the most intelligent man if they answer not to this Rule it is because there is no truth in them But he addeth the Reason of this bold Assertion §. 15. for saith he That a God infinitely righteous and holy should irreversibly c. Ans. Neither yet doth this at all mend the matter Neither doth the particular instance given alter at all but confirme the first generall Assertion viz. that If there be any thing in the Scriptures contrary to those thoughts of God which an intelligent man without the Scripture doth conceive of him he hath just grounds to question their Authority which wholly casts downe the Word of God from its Excellency and setteth a poore darke blind creature under the notion of an intelligent man at liberty from his subjection thereunto making him his owne rule and guide as to his Apprehensions of God and his Will And is it possible that such a thought should enter into the heart of a man fearing God reverencing his Word which God hath magnified above all his name There is scarce any one Truth in the whole Booke of God but some men passing in the world for intelligent and considering men doe looke upon it and professe it to be unworthy of an infinitly Righteous and Holy God So do the Socinians think of the Doctrine of the Satisfaction of Christ the great treasure of the Church At the rate that men passe at in this world it will be difficult to exclude many of them from the number of intelligent considering men And are they not all absolved here by Mr G. in this Principle from bowing to the Authority of God in the Scriptures having just ground to question whether they are from God or no. The case is the same with the Papists others in sundry particulats Frame the supposition how you will in things never so uncouth and strange yet if this be the position That in things which appeare so to men upon their consideration if any thing in the Scripture be held out or may be deduced from this to the contrary they are at liberty from submitting their understandings to them and may arraigne them as false and suppositions their whole divine Authority is unquestionably cast downe to the ground and trampled on by the feet of men for 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 God will take care for the vindication of the honour of his Word 2. The opposition here made by Mr Goodwin § 16. and imposed on his Adversaries is as hath been shewed wretchedly false not once spoken or owned by them with whom he hath to do nor having the least colour given unto it by the Doctrine they maintaine yea is diametrically opposite thereunto The maine of what they teach and which Mr Goodwin hath opposed in this Treatise indeavouring to answer that eminent place of the 1 John 3. 9. with many others produced and argued to that purpose is that God will according to the tenor of the Covenant of Grace so write his Law in the hearts of his and put his feare in their inward parts that they shall never depart from him so as to become desperately and outragiously profane but be preserved such to the end as that the Lord with the greatest advantage of Glory to his infinite Wisdome Righteousnesse and Holinesse may irreversibly assure the immortall Inheritance of his Love and Favour unto them So that Mr Goodwin's Discourse to the end of this Section concerning the Continuance of the Love of God to them that are wicked with an equall measure of Favour to them that are Godly according to this Doctrine is vaine and grossly sophisticall and such as he himselfe knoweth to be so To say every one that doth evill is good in the sight of the Lord and that he delighteth in him that is he approveth wicked and ungodly men we know is sufficiently dishonourable to him but yet to say that he delighted in his Church People washed and made Holy in the Blood of Christ notwithstanding their failings or their being somtime over taken with great sinnes when he pleaseth in an extraordinary way for ends best knowne to himselfe to permit them to fall into them which yet he doth seldome and rarely is that which himselfe affirmeth ascribeth to himselfe in innumerable places of Scripture if their Authority may passe unquestioned to the praise of the Glory of his Grace But it seemeth if we take any care that Mr Goodwin may not call the Authority of the Scriptures into question being fully resolved that the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance is unworthy of a Holy and Righteous God we must give over all attempts of farther deducing it from them But yet for the present we shall consider what he hath farther to object against it Sect. 34. §. 17. He father objecteth against himselfe and his Doctrine in the be halfe of that which doth oppose in these words It is possible that yet some will farther object against the Argument in hand Vnlesse the Saints be assured of the perpetuity of their standing in the Grace and Favour of God they must needs be under feares of falling away and so of perishing and feare we know is of a discouraging and infeebling nature an enemy unto such actions which men of confidence and courage are apt to undertake Ans. What this objection maketh in this place I know not it neither asserteth any eminency in the Doctrine by Mr Goodwin opposed as to the promotion of Godlinesse nor immediately challengeth that which he doth maintaine of a contrary tendency but only intimateth that the S t s Consolation and peace is weakned by unnecessary feares such as his opinion is apt to
from you so that you also having my Law written in your hearts shall never utterly and wickedly depart from me And for such sinnes and follies as you shall be overtaken withall I will graciously heale your backslidings and receive you freely This is the Language of the Doctrine we maintaine which is not we full well know obnoxious to any Exceptions or Consequences what ever but such as bold and prejudiced men for the countenance of their vaine conceits and opinions will venture at any time to impose and fasten on the most pretious Truths of the Gospell That God should say to Believers as is imposed on him fall into what sinnes they will or abominations they can yet he will have them believe that by an irresistible hand he will necessitate them to Persevere that is in and under their Apostacy which is evidently implyed in their falling into sinnes and abominations in the manner insisted on is a ridiculous fiction to the imagination whereof the least colour is not supplied by the Doctrine intended to be ●raduced thereby Secondly §. 4. for the ensuing Exhortations Promises and Threatnings as farre as they are really Evangelicall whose use and tendency is argued to be inconsistent with the Doctrine before proposed I have formerly manifested What is their proper use and efficacy in respect of Believers and their consistency with the truth we maintaine apprehended as it is indeed and not visarded with ugly and dreadfull appearances will I presume scarcely be called in question by any who having received a Kingdome that cannot he shaken doe know what it is to serve God acceptably with reverence and Godly feare It is true they are made unto and have their use in reference unto them that Believe and shall Persevere therein but they are not given unto them as men assured of their Perseverance but as men called to the use of meanes for the establishing of their soules in the wayes of obedience They are not in the method of the Gospell irrationally happed on such intimations of unchangeable Love or proposed under such wild Conditionalls and Suppositions as here by our Author but annexed to the Appointment of those wayes of Grace and Peace which God calls his Saints unto being suited to worke upon the new nature wherewith they are indued as spreading it selfe over all the facultyes of their Rationall Soules wherein are Principles fit to be excited to Operation by Exhortations and Promises Thirdly §. 5. all that is indeed Argumentative in this Discourse is built on this Foundation that a Spirituall Assurance of attaining the end by the use of meanes is discouraging and disswasive to the use of those meanes A Proposition so uncouth in it selfe so contradictory to the experience of all the Saints of God so derogatory to the Glory and Honour of Jesus Christ himselfe who in all his Obedience had doubtles an Assurance of the end of it all as any thing that can well fall into the imaginations of the Hearts of men Might not the Devill have thus replyed upon our Saviour when he tempted him to turne Stones into Bread cast himselfe from a pinacle of the Temple received Answer that man lives not by Bread alone but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God but alas thou Jesus the Sonne of the Living God that art perswaded thou art so and that God will preserve thee whether thou usest any meanes or no that thou shalt never be starved for want of Bread nor hurt thy selfe by any fall whatever thou clost the Angells having charge that no evill shall come nigh thee nor thy foot be hurt against a stone thou maist now cast thy selfe headlong from the Temple to manifest thy Assurance of the Love and Faithfullnesse of God with his Promises to thee If our Saviour thought it sufficient to stop the mouth of the Devill to manifest from Scripture that notwithstanding the Assurance from God that any one hath of the end yet he is to use the meanes tending thereunto a neglect whereof is a sinfull tempting of God we shall not need to goe farther for an Answer to the same kind of Objections in the mouth of any Adversary whatever His 19 th Section containeth his fourth Argument §. 6. in these words If there be no possibility of the Saints falling away finally then is their Persevering uncapable of reward from God But their finall Perseverance is not uncapable of reward from God Ergo The minor Proposition I presume containes nothing but what is the sence of those who deny the conclusion or how ever it containes nothing but what is the expresse sence of the Lord Christ where he saith that he that endureth to the end the same shall be saved Therefore I suppose we shall bee excused from farther proofe of this without any prejudice to the cause in hand Ans. I grant Eternall Life may be called the Reward of Perseverance in the sence that the Scripture useth that word applyed to the matter in hand It is afterward neither procured by properly and Morally as the deserving cause nor proportioned unto the obedience of them by whom it is attained a Reward it is that withall is the free gift of God and an Inheritance purchased by Jesus Christ a Reward of Bounty and not of Iustice in respect of them upon whom it is bestowed but only of faithfulnesse in reference to the promise of it A Reward by being a gratious incouragement as the end of our obedience not as the procurement or desert of it so we grant it a Reward of Perseverance though those words of our Saviour he that endureth to the end the same shall be saved expressed a consequence of things only and not a connexion of causality of the one upon the other of the foundation of this discourse concerning a possibility of declining immediate consideration shall be had He proceeds then The consequence of the Major Proposition §. 7. stands firme upon this foundation No act of the Creature whereunto it is necessitated or which it cannot possibly decline or but doe is by any Law of God or rule of Iustice rewardable therefore if the Saints be necessitated by God to Persevere finally so that he leaves unto them no possibility of declining finally their finall Perseverance is not according to any Law of God or man nor indeed to any principles of Reason or Equity capable of reward no whit more than actions meerely naturall are Nay of the two there seems be more reason why acts meerely naturall as for example Eating Drinking Breathing Sleeping should be rewarded in as much as these flow in a way of necessity yet from an inward principle and connaturall to the Agent than such actions whereunto the agent is constrain'd necessitated determined by a principle of power from without and which is not intrinsecall to it And this is the strength of the Argument which will quickly appeare to be very weakenesse For First the efficacy of
Conscience doth however it tumultuate rebuke chide perswade trouble cry and the like whatever conviction of the guilt of sinne may shew into the judgement yet sinne hath the consent of the whole soule Every thing that hath a reall influence into operation consents thereto originally and radically how ever any principle may be dared by Conscience To take off any thing from full consent there must be something of a spirituall Repugnancy in the mind and will which when Lust is thus enthroned there is not Secondly That sinne reigneth in such persons Many have been the inquiries of Learned men about reigning of sinne As What sinnes may be said to reigne §. 8. and what not Whether sinnes of ignorance may raigne as well as sinnes against knowledge What little sinnes may be said to reigne as well as great Whether frequent relapses into any sinne prove that sinne to be reigning Whether sinne may reigne in a Regenerate person Or whether a Saint may fall into reigning sinne whereabout Divines of great note and name have differed all upon a false bottome and supposall The Scripture gives no ground for any such inquiries or disputes or Cases of Conscience as some men have raised hereupon And indeed I would this were the only instance of mens creating Cases of Conscience and answering them when indeed and in truth there are no such things so insnaring the Consciences of Men and intangling more by their Cases than they deliver by their Resolutions The truth is there is no mention of any reigning sinne or the Reigning of any sinne in the whole Book of God taking sinne for this or that particular sinne But of the Reigne of this Indwelling originall Lust or fountaine of all finne there is frequent mention Whilest that holds its power and universality in the soule and is not restrained nor straitned by the Indwelling spirit of grace with a new vitall principle of no lesse extent and of more power than it be the Actuall sinnes few or more knowne or unknowne little or great all is one sinne reignes and such a person is under the power and dominion of sinne so that in plain termes to have finne reigne is to be unconverted and to have sinne not to reigne is to be converted to have received a new principle of Life from above This is evident from the 5. and 6. Chapter of the Epist. to the Romans the seate of this Doctrine of reigning sinne The opposition insisted on by the Apostle is between the Reigne of Sinne and Grace and in pursuit thereof he manifests how true Believers are tanslated from the one to the other To have sinne reigne is to be in a state of sinne to have Grace reigne is to be in a state of Grace So Chapter 5. 21. % As sinne reigned unto death so Grace reignes through Righteousnesse unto eternall Life by Jesus Christ our Lord The sinne he speakes of is that whereof he treates in all that Chapter the sinne of Nature the Lust wherof we speake this by nature reigneth unto Death but when Grace comes by Jesus Christ the soule is delivered from the power thereof so in the whole 6. Chap. It is our change of state and Condition that the Apostle insists on in our delivery from the reigne of sinne and he tells us this is that that destroyes it our being under Grace v 14. Sinne shall not have dominion over you because you are not under the Law but under Grace Plainely then there are two Lords and Rulers and these are Originall or Indwelling sinne and Grace or the Spirit of it The first Lord the Apostle discovers with his entrance upon his Rule and Dominion Chap. 5. and this all men by nature are under The second he describes Chap. 6. which sets out the Rule reigne of Grace in Believers by Jesus Christ. And then Thirdly the place that both these Lords have in this life in a Believer Cap. 7. This then is the only reigning sin in whomsoever it is in its power compas as it is in all unregenerate men in them in them only doth sin reigne every sin they commit is with full consent as was manifested before in exact willing Obedience to the soveraigne Lord that reignes in them Fourthly §. 9. observe that the Grace new Creature Principle or Spirituall Life that is Given to bestowed on and wrought in all and only Believers be it in the lowest and most remisse degree that can be imagined is yet no lesse universally spread over the whole soule than the contrary habit and principle of Lust and sinne whereof we have spoken In the Understanding it is Light in the Lord in the Will Life in the Affections Love Delight c. those being reconciled who were alienated by wicked workes Where ever there is any thing the least of grace there something of it is in every thing of the soule that is a capable seat for good or evill habits or dispositions He that is in Christ is a new creature 2 Cor 5. 17. not renewed in one or other particular he is a new Creature Fiftly that where ever true Grace is in what degree soever §. 10. there it bears Rule though sinne be in the same subject with it As sinne reignes before grace comes so Grace reignes when it doth once come And the reason is because sinne having the first Rule and Dominion in the heart abiding there there is neither Roome nor place for Grace but what is made by conquest Now who ever enters into a possession by right of Conquest what resistance soever be made if he prevaile to a Conquest he reignes In every regenerate man though Grace be never so weake and Corruption never so strong yet properly the Soveraignty belongs to Grace Having entered upon the soule and all the powers of it by Conquest so long as it abides there it doth reigne So that to say a Regenerate man may fall into reigning sinne as it is commonly exprest though as we have manifested no sinne reignes but the sinne of Nature as no good Act reigneth but the spirit and habit of Grace and yet continue Regenerate is all one as to say he may have and not have true Grace at the same time Now from these considerations §. 11. some farther inferences may be made First That in every regenerate person there are in a spirituall sence two Principles of all his actings Two Wills There is the Will of the Flesh and there is the Will of the Spirit a Regenerate man is spiritually and in Scripture expression two men a new man and an old an inward man and a body of Death and hath two Wills having two Natures not as Naturall faculties but as Morall principles of operation and this keepes all his actions as Morall from being perfect absolute or compleate in any kind He doth good with his whole heart upon the account of sincerity but he doth not good with his whole heart upon the account
condition They are no lesse obnoxious to that death from whence our Regeneration is a delivery by the bestowing of a new Spirituall life than a sinner of an hundred yeares old A returning to this condition it seemes is Regeneration Quantum est in rebus inane Thirdly The qualifications of Infants not Regenerated are meerely negative and that in respect of the acts of sinne not the habituall seed and root of them for in them dwells no good that in respect of these qualifications of Innocency that are in them by nature Antecedent to any Regeneration all which are resolved into a Naturall impotency of perpetrating sinne they are accepted in Grace and favour with God had been another new notion had not Pelagius and Socinus before you fallen upon it without Faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. And his wrath abides on them that Believe not Iohn 3. 36. That Infants have or may have Faith and not be regenerated will scarcely be granted by them who believe the Spirit of Christ to cause Regeneration where he is bestowed Tit. 3. 5. And all Faith to be the Fruit of that Spirit Gal 5. 26 27. Farther for the qualifications of Infants by Nature how are they brought cleane from that which is uncleane Are they not conceived in sinne and brought forth in iniquity Or was that Davids hard case alone If they are borne of the flesh and are flesh if they are uncleane how come they to be in that estate upon the account of their Qualifications accepted in the Love and favour of him who is of purer eyes than to behold iniquity If this be the Doctrine of Regeneration that M. G. preaches I desire the Lord to blesse them that belong unto him in a deliverance from attending thereunto Of the Effects of the death of Christ in respect of all children I shall not now treat That they should be saved by Christ not washed in his Bloud not sanctifyed by his Spirit which to be is to be Regenerate is another new notion of the new Gospell The Countenance which Mr Goodwin would begge to his Doctrine from that of our Saviour to his Disciples Except ye be turned and become as little Children ye cannot enter into the Kingdome of God reproving their ambition and worldly thoughts from which they were to be weaned that they might befit for that Gospell state imployment whereunto he called them wherein they were to serve him does no more advantage him nor the cause he hath undertaken than that other caution of our Saviour to the same persons to be wise asserpents innocent as Doves would do him that should undertake to prove that Christians ought to become pigeons or snakes Thus much then we have learned of the mind of M. G. by this digression 1. That no children are Regenerate 2. That they are all accepted with God through Christ upon the account of the good Qualifications that are in them 3. That Regeneration is a mans returing to the state wherein he is borne And having taken out this Lesson which we shall never learne by heart whilst we live we may now proceed I shall only adde to the maine of the businesse in hand §. 49. that so long as a man is a child of God he cannot he need not to repeat his Regeneration But that one who hath been the child of God should cease to be the child of God is somewhat strange How can that be done amongst men that he should cease to be such a mans sonne who was his sonne Those things that stand in Relation upon any thing that is past and therefore irrevocable cannot have their beings continued and their Relation dissolved it is impossible but that cause and effect must be related one to another such is the relation between Father and Sonne The foundation of it is an act past and irrevocable and therefore the Relation it selfe is indissoluble Is it not so with God and his Children when they once stand in that Relation it cannot be dissolved But of these things hitherto To proceed with that place of Scripture which I laid as the foundation of this discourse §. 50. The generall way of Lusts dealing with the soule the bringing forth of sinne whereof there are two acts expressed v. 14. the one of drawing away the other inticing is to be insisted on Upon the first the person tempted is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 drawn off or drawne away and upon the second he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 inticed or intangled The First stirring of sinne is to draw away the soule from what it ought to be fixed upon by its rising up irregularly to some delightfull object For a man to be drawne away by his lust is to have his Lust drawne out to some object suited to it wherein it delighteth Now this drawing away denoteth two things 1. The turning of the soule from the actuall rectitude of its frame towards God Though the soule cannot alwayes be in actuall Exercise of Grace towards God yet it ought alwayes to be in an immediate readinesse to any Spirituall duty upon the account whereof when occasion is administred it doth as naturally goe forth to God as a vessell full of water floweth forth when vent is given unto it Hence we are commanded to pray alwayes Our Saviour giveth a Parable to instruct his Disciples that they ought to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Luke 18. 1. And we are commanded to pray 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 without ceasing or intermission 1 ●hess 5. 17. Which the same Apostle in an other place calleth praying 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in every place namely as occasion is administred It is not the perpetuall exercise of this duty as the Iewes some of them have ridiculously interpreted the first Psalme of reading the Law day and night which would shut out and cut off all other dutyes not only of mens Callings and Employments as to this Life but all other dutyes of the wayes worship of God whatever But it is only the readinesse and promptitude of the heart in its constant frame to that necessary duty that is required Now he who is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by lust is drawne off from this frame that is he is interrupted in it by his lust diverting unto some sinfull object And as to this particular there is a great difference betwixt the sinning of Believers and those who arise not beyond that height which the power of Conviction beareth them oftentimes up unto For 1. The maine of a true Believers watching in his whole life § 51. and in the course of his walking with God is directed against this off-drawing from that habituall frame of his heart by lust and sinne His great businesse is as the Apostle telleth us to take the whole armour of God to him that sinne if it be possible may make no approach to his soule Eph. 6. 13. It is to keepe up their spirits to a hate of
a body of death and that they are continually exposed to a world of Temptations whereby many strong men fall down thrust through and are slaine every day and that in this condition there is no consideration of the Immutability or Vnchangeablenesse of God that may secure them of the continuance of his Love to them no eternall purpose of his that he will preserve them keepe them through his power no Promise of not leaving them or of giving them such supplyes of his Spirit and Grace that they shall never forsake nor leave him nothing in the Covenant or Oath of God whereby it is confirmed to Assure them of an Abiding and a not-to-be destroyed communion with him that Christ by his death and oblation hath not so taken away the guilt of their sins nor laid such a sure foundation for the destruction of the power of them as that they shall not arise either way to their ruine That he intercedes not for their Preservation in Faith and Holinesse upon the account of which state and condition of things many of the most eminent Saints that ever served God in this world have utterly fallen out of his Love and Favour and have been cast out of covenant from whence though perhaps some few have been recovered yet for the greatest part of them have perished everlastingly as is the state in reference unto many in every Generation only such may do well to consider what a fearefull desperate issue their Apostacy will have if they should so fall and what an eminent reward with what Glory is proposed to them if they persevere That I say the instruction of the Saints in this Doctrine is a singular meanes of promoting their Consolation and establishing their peace is that which doubtlesse with undervaluing thoughts of all with whom he hath to do he hath undertaken to prove I doubt not but that Mr Goodwin thought sometimes of the good old Rule sumite materiam vestris qui scribitis aequam viribus versare di● quid ferre recusent quid veleant humori Selfe-confidence is hereby setled and fixed with considerations though M. G. in the close of this Section tels us That sundry Godly and seriously Religious persons when they heard this Doctrine published which he now asserts with their wbole hearts blessed God for it Yet truly I cannot but question whether yea I must positively deny that ever any Saint of God received Consolation by the doctrine of the Saints Apostacy a lye exceedingly unsuited to the production of any such effect any further than that all Errour whatsoever is apt to defile and cauterise the Conscience so deceiving it with sencelessenesse for peace Perhaps some of Mr Goodwin's hearers who either were so ignorant or so negligent as not to be acquainted with this Doctrine before in the attempts made for that the propagation of it by the latter broode of Prelats and Arminians amongst us upon his delivery of it with inticing words of humane wisedome helped on by the venerable esteeme they have of his transcendent parts and abilityes through the cunning of Sathan improving the itching after new Doctrines which is fallen upon the minds and spirits of many professours in this age have rejoyced under the shadow of this bramble set up to rule in their Congregation And according as is the constant manner of all in our dayes that are insnared with any errour be it never so pernitious have blessed God for it professing they never found rest nor peace before yet I no way question for such as feare the Lord and are yet bowed downe under the weight and carryed away with the strength of Mr Goodwin's Rethoricke for a season will quickly finde a fire proceeding out of that newly enthroned Doctrine preying upon and consuming all their Joy Peace and Consolation or which I rather hope a fire proceeding out of their Faith the Faith once delivered to the Saints to the utter confusion consumption of this bramble scratching errour in the meane time if the eminent appearance of many thousands of the Saints of God in this Nation whereof many are fallen asleepe and many continue to this day testifying and bearing witnesse to the Joy Consolation they have found that upon Spirituall demonstrative grounds in being cast into the mould of the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance for many dayes be of no weight with Mr Goodwin I know not why his single Testimony which yet as to the matter of fact I no way question concerning some few Persons by himselfe seduced into a perswasion of their Apostacy blessing God for the discovery made to them the constant Practise of all persons in their first intanglement in the foulest and grossest errours whatever should sway us much to any good liking of it The influence of the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance §. 3. into their consolation hath been sufficiently already evinced when we manifested the support of their Faith and Love the conquest of their feare and troubles thereby so that I shall not need farther to insist thereon It was in my thoughts indeed to have handled the nature of Gospell Consolation that which God is so abundantly willing the heires of promise should receive at large both as to the nature and Causes of it the meanes of its preservation The oppositions that lye against it and by all the Considerations of it to have manifested That it is utterly impossible to keep it alive one moment in the heart of a Believer without the contribution of supportment it receives from the Doctrine in hand And that those who refuse to receive it as usually delivered indeed have none nor can have any drop of it but what is instilled into them from and by the power and efficacy which secretly in and upon their hearts that truth hath which in words they oppose all their peace and comfort being indeed absolutely proportioned to that which the Doctrine of the Saints perseverance tends to confirme and to nothing else But this Discourse growing under my hands beyond all thought or expectation I shall now only keep close to the removall of the Exceptions made against it and hasten to a close I must not leave this Argument §. 4. without taking notice of the Medium whereby M. Goodwin supposeth himselfe to have confirmed the truth of the assumption laid downe at the entrance or to have manifested the good complexion as he phrases it of that nurse he hath provided for the Consolation of the Saints a Nurse with breasts of flint and a heart of Iron hath this Cruell man provided for them a Nurse whom God will never admit into his family nor ever expose his childrens lives to any such Wolfe or Tygre as will certainly starve them if not devoure them Rather a curst yea an accursed step-dame than a nurse who when the children aske for bread gives them a stone and when they begge for fish gives them a Scorpion A false and treacherous hireling doing
having cast an eye on the body of the Discourse will scarcely be received by his Reader without the helpe of that vulgar Proverbe Good Wits jumpe But yet on that occasion I cannot but say however he hath dealt in that Treatise this Discourse I have under consideration is purely translated from them the condition of very much of what hath ben already considered having the same which I had there thought to have manifested by placing their Latine against his English in the margent but these things are personall not belonging to the cause in hand M. G. is sufficiently known to have Abilityes of his own such as wherewith he hath done in sundry particulars considerable service to the Truth as sometimes they have been unhappily ingaged in wayes of a contrary nature and tendency It being evident from these Considerations that our Author is not able in the least to take off this witnesse from speakeing home to the very heart of the cause in hand §. 39. that it may not seeme to be weakened and impaired by him in the least I shall farther consider that diversion which he would intice the words unto from their proper channell and Intendment and so leave the Apostacy of the Saints dead at the foote of it He gives us then Sect. 23 24. an Exposition of this place of Scripture upon the Rack whereof it seemes not to speake what formerly we received from its mouth For the occasion of the words he sayes For the true meaning of this place §. 40. 't is to be considered that the Apostles intent in the words was to prevent or heale an offence that weake Christians might take at the Doctrine which was taught and spread abroad by those Antichrists or Anticristian teachers spoken of in the former verse and they are said to have been many that especially because they had sometimes liv'd conversed with the Apostles themselves in Christian Churches and had profest the same Faith Doctrine with them by reason hereof some Christians not so considerate or judicious as others might possibly thinke or conceive that surely all things were not well with the Apostles and those Christian societyes with which they consorted There was something not as it ought to have been either in Doctrine or manners or both which ministred an occasion to these men to breake communion with them and to leave them Ans. §. 41. First The intendment of the Apostle in the Context is evidently to caution Believers against seducers acquainting them also with the sweet and gracious provision that God had made for their preservation in the abiding teaching anointing bestowed on them In the verse under present consideration he gives them a description of the persons that did seduce them in respect of their present state and condition They were Apostates who though they had sometimes made profession of the Faith yet indeed were never true Believers nor had any fellowship with Jesus Christ as he and the Saints had which also they had abundantly manifested by their open Apostacy and ensuing opposition to the Doctrine of the Gospell and the eternall Life manifested therein Secondly That any Christians whatsoever from the consideration of these seducers falling away did entertaine any suspicion that all things were not well in that society of which the Apostle speakes not with the Apostles which were all dead himselfe only excepted when John wrote this Epistle either as to Doctrine or manners so supposing them to take part with the Apostates in their departure is a surmize whereunto there is not any thing in the least contributed in the Text or Context nor any thing like to it being a meere invention of our Author found out to serve this turne and confidently without any induction looking that way or attempt of proofe imposed upon his credulous Reader if men may assume to themselves a liberty of creating occasions of words discourses or expressions in the Scripture no manner of way insinuated nor suggested therein they may wrest it to what they please and confirme whatever they have a mind unto This false foundation being laid he proceeds to build upon it §. 42. and suitably thereunto feignes the Apostle to speake what never entred into his heart and unto that whereof he had no occasion administred To this saith he the Apostle answereth partly by Concession partly by Exception First by Concession in those words they went out from us which words doe not so much import their utter declining or forsaking the Apostles communion as the advantage or opportunity which they had to gaine credit and respect both to the Doctrine and Persons among professours of Christianity in the World In as much as they came forth from the Apostles themselves as men sent and commissioned by them to teach The same phrase is used in this sence and with the same import where the Apostles write thus to the Brethren of the Gentiles Acts 15. 24. For as much as we have heard that certain that went out from us have troubled you with words subverting your soules saying you must be circumcised and keep the Law to whom we gave no such commandement So that in this clause they went out from us the Apostle grants First That those Antichristian teachers had indeed for a time held communion with them And Secondly That hereby they had the greater opportunity of doing harme in the World by their false Doctrines But Secondly He Answers farther by way of Exception but they were not of us whilest yet they conversed with us they were not men of the same spirit and principles with us we walk'd in the profession of the Gospell with single and upright hearts not aiming at any secular greatnesse or worldly accommodations in one kind or other these men loved this present World and when they found the simplicity of the Gospell would not accommodate them to their minds they brake with us and with the truth of the Gospell it selfe at once Ans. §. 43. First I suppose t is evident at the first view that this new glosse of the Apostles words is inconsistent with that which was proposed for the occasion of them in the words foregoing There an Aspersion is said to be cast upon the Churches and societyes whereof the Apostle speakes from the departure of these seducers from them as though they were not sound in Faith or manners here an insinuation quite of an other tendency is suggested as though these persons found continuance in their teachings and seductions from the society and communion which they had had with the Apostles as though they had pretended to come from them by commission and so instead of casting reproach upon them by their departure did assume Authority to themselves by their having been with them But to the thing it selfe I say Secondly That the Apostle is not answering any Objection but describing the state and condition of the Antichrists and seducers concerning whom and their seduction he cautioneth
abide to be sincere From what hath been occasionally spoken of the intendment and scope of this place of the designe which the Apostle had in hand of the direct sence of the words themselves §. 47. M. Goodwins exceptions to our Interpretation of the words and inferences from it being wholly removed and his Expofition which he advanceth in the roome of that insisted on manifested to bee as to the occasion and scope of the place assigned utterly forreigne unto it and as to Explication of the particulars of it not of any strength or consistency for the obscurenig of the true sence and meaning of the place in the eye of an intelligent Reader 't is evidently concluded beyond all colourable contradiction that those who are true Believers indeed having obtained communion with the Father and his Sonne Christ Jesus cannot fall into a totall Relinquishment of Christ or of the Faith of the Gospell so as to have no portion nor interest in the communion they formerly enjoyed To returne to M. Goodwins close of this 13. §. 48. Chap. and nine Arguments as he calls them from which he labours to Evince the Apostasy of Believers he shuts up the whole with a Declamation against and revileing of the Doctrine he opposeth with many opprobrious and reproachfull expressions calling it an Impostor and an Appearance of Satan in the likenesse of an Angell of Light with such like termes of reproach as his Rhetorick at every turne is ready to furnish him withall threatning it farther with calling it in Question before I know not how many Learned men of all sorts and to disprove it by their Testimony concerning it and so all that is required for its destruction is or shall be speedily dispatched God knows how to defend his Truth and as he hath done this in particular against as fierce assaults as any M. Goodwin hath made or is like to make against it so I no way doubt he will continue to doe 'T is not the first time that it hath been conformeable to its Author in undergoing the contradiction of men and being laden with reproaches and crucified among the theevish principles of Errour and prophanenesse Hitherunto it hath not wanted in due time its Resurrection and that continually with a new Glory and an added estimation to what before it obtained among the Saints of God and I no way doubt but that it will grow more and more untill the perfect day when those opinions and inventions of men derogatory to the Grace and Covenant of God his Truth Unchangeablenesse and Faithfulnesse which now make long their shades to eclypse the beauty and lustre of it shall consume and vanish away before its brightnesse In which perswasion I doubt not but the Reader will be confirmed with mee upon the farther consideration of what M. Goodwins endeavours are in an opposition thereto wherewith now by the grace of God contrary to my first intendment I shall proceed CAP. XVII 1. The cause of proceeding in this Chapter 2. M. G's attempt Cap. 12. of his Book 3. Of the Preface to M. G's discourse 4. Whether Doctrine renders men proud and presumptuous 5. M. G's Rule of judging of Doctrines called to the Rule 6. Doctrine pretending to promote Godlinesse how farre an Argument of the Truth 7. M. G. pretended advantages in judging of Truths examined The first of his knowledge of the generall course of the Scriptures 8. Of the experiences of his own heart And his observations of the wayes of others 9. Of his Rationall abilities 10. Eyek 18. 24 25. proposed to consideration M. G's sence of this place The words opened observations for the opening of the Text. 11. The words farther weighed an entrance into the Answer to the Argument from hence the word Hypotheticall not absolute 12. M. G. Answer proposed and considered 13. Whether the words are Hypotheticall 14. The severalls of the Text considered the righteous man spoken of who 15. M. G. proofe of his interpretation of a Righteous man considered 16. D. Prideaux his sence of the Righteous person here intended considered 17. Of the commination in the words shall dye The sence of the words what death intended 18. Close of the consideration of the Text insisted on 19. Mat. 18. 32 33. taken into a review 20. Whether the Love of God be mutable what the Love of God is 21. 1 Cor. 9. 27. 22. In what sence it was possible for Panl to become a Reprobate 23. The proper sence of the place insisted on manifested 24. Of the meaning of the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 25. The scope of the place farther cleared 25. Heb. 6. 4 5 6. Chap. 10. 26 27. proposed to consideration whether the words be conditionall 27. The genuine and true meaning of the place opened in fix observations 28. M. G's exceptions to the Exposition of the words insisted on removed The Persons intended not true Believers this evinced on sundry considerations 29. The particulars of the Texts vindicated 30. Of the illumination mentioned in the Text. 31. Of the Acknowledgement of the Truth ascribed to the Person mentioned 32. Of the sanctification mentioned in the Texts 33. Of tasting the heavenly gift 34. To be made partakers of the Holy Ghost what 35. Of tasting the good word of God and power of the world to come 36. Of the progresse made by man not really regenerate in the things of God 37. The close of our Considerations on these Texts 28. Heb. 10. 38 39. M. G's arguings from thence 39. Considered and answered of the Right Translation of the word Beza vindicated as also our English translations 40. The words of the Text effectuall to prove the Saints Perseverance 41. Of the Parable of the stony ground Math. 13. 20 21. 42. M. G. arguing from the place proposed and considered 43. The similitude in the Parable farther considered 44. An Argument from the Text to prove the Persons described not to be true Believers 45. 2 Pet. 4. 18 19 20 21 22. 46. Mr G. arguings from this place considered c. THough I could willingly be spared the labour of all that must insue to the end of this Treatise §. 1. yet it being made necessary by the endeavours of men not delighting in the Truth which hithertto we have asserted for the opposition thereof and lying I hope under the power and efficacy of that Heavenly Exhortation of contending earnestly for the Faith once delivered to the Saints I shall with all chaerfulnesse addresse my selfe thereunto yea the service and homage I owe to the Truth it selfe causing this ingagement for its rescue from under the captivity wherein by the chaines of Mr Goodwins Rhethoricke it hath been sometimes detained being increased and doubled by the pressing and violent wresting of sundry Texts of Scripture to serve in the same designe of bondaging the Truth with him is a farther incitation to adde my weake endeavours to breake open those dores and barres which he hath shut and
is sufficiently convinced by that of our Saviour John 17. 19. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 expressing his dedicating and separating himselfe to his objection and more instances may be had if we stood in any need of them Thirdly that many are said to be sanctifyed and holy in the latter sence as it signifyeth spirituall purity in respect of their profession of themselves so to be and some mens esteem of them who yet were never wholly and truly purged from their sinne nor ever had received the holy Spirit of Promise who alone is able to purge their hearts doth not now want its demonstration that work hath been some whiles since performed So that Mr G. makes not any progresse at all in the proofe of what he has undertaken viz. that they are true Believers in the sence of that denomination which we assert who in these places are described For a close 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is far more properly referred to Christ than to the persons spoken of and that sence the Remonstrants themselves do not oppose That they are said Cap. 6. 4. §. 33. to have tasted the heavenly guift is urged in the next place Sect. 22. to prove them true Believers both the object and the act are here in question what is meant by the Heavenly guift and what by tasting of it I shall not looke into the Text beyond the peculiar concernement of the cause in hand somewhat might be offered for the farther clearing of the one and other At present it sufficeth that be the Heavenly guift what it will the persons of our contest are said only to tast of it which though absolutely and in it selfe it is not an extenuating expression but denotes a matter of high aggravation of the sinne of Apostacy in that they were admitted to some tast and relish of the excellency and sweetnesse of the Heavenly guift yet comparatively to their feeding on it digesting it growing thereby it clearely denotes their coming short of such a participation of it who do but tast of it That to tast doth not in the first genuine signification in things naturall signify to eat and digest meat so as to grow by it I suppose needes no proof that in that sence it is used in the Scriptures Ioh. 2. 9 Mat. 27. 34. is by Mr Goodwin confessed This he tells you is only when the tast or relish of things is desired to be known but that our Saviour tasted of the gall and vineger out of a desire to know the relish of it he will hardly perswade those who are accustomed to give never so easie a beliefe to his assertions By the Heavenly guift M. G. in the first place intends Jesus Christ now if by tasting eating and drinking of Christ be intended as is here pleaded Christ himselfe will determine this strife telling us that whosoever eateth his flesh shall be saved John 6. 35 49 50 51 54 55 56 57. So that either to tast is not to eate or they that tast cannot perish Three things are urged by Mr Goodwin to give proofe of his interpretation of these words of the Holy Ghost saith he 1. Whatsoever is meant by this Heavenly guift certain is it that by tasting is not meant any light or superficiall impression made upon the hearts or soules of men through the sence or apprehension of it but an emphaticall inward and effectuous relish and sence of the excellent and Heavenly sweetnesse and pleasantnesse of it opposed to a bare speculation or naked apprehension thereof The reason hereof is because the tasting of this Heavenly guift here spoken of is not mentioned by the Apostle in a way of easing or extenuating the sinne of those that should fall away from Christ but by way of aggravation and exaggeration of the beinousnesse and unreasonablenesse thereof and withall more fully to declare and assert the equitablenesse of that severity in God which is here denounced against those that shall sinne the great sinne of Apostacy here spoken of It must needs be much more unworthy and provoking in the sight of God for a man to turne his backe upon and renounce those wayes that profession wherein God hath come home to him and answered the joy of his heart abundently then it would be in case he had only heard of great matters and had his head filled but had really found and felt nothing with his heart and soule truly excellent and Glorious 2. And bestdes the very word it selfe to tast ordinarily in Scripture importes a reall communion with or participation and enjoyment if the thing be good of that which was said to be tasted Oh tast see saith David that the Lord is good a Psal. 34. 8. His intent doubtlesse was not to invite men to a slight or superficiall tast of the goodnesse of God but to a reall cordiall and thorough experiment and satisfactory enjoyment of it So when he that made the great invitation in the parable expressed himselfe thus to his servants For I say unto you that none of those who were bidden shall tast of my Supper b Luk. 14. 24. His meaning clearely was that they should not partake of the Sweetnesse and benefit thereof with those who should accept of his invitation and come unto it In like manner when Peter speaketh thus to his Christian Jewes If so be ye have tasted that the Lord is gracius c 1 Pet. 2. 3. his meaning questionlesse is not to presse his exhortation directed unto them in the former verse upon a consideration of any light or vanishing tast such as hypocrites false-hearted Christians may have of the graciousnesse of the Lord but of such a tast wherein they had had a reall inward and sensible experiment thereof 3. And besides according to the sence of our adversaries in the present debate if the tast of the heavenly gift we speake of should imply no more but only a faint or weake perception of the sweetnesse and glorious excellency of it yet even this may be sufficient to evince truth of grace and Faith in men For their opinion is that a man may be a true Believer with a graine of Mustard-seed only i.e. with a very slender rellish and tast of spirituall things yea their sence is that in some cases of desertion and under the guilt of some enormous courses they may have little or no tast of them at all Ans. 1. To the first discourse considering what hath been already delivered I shall only adde that although it be no aggravation of the sinne of Apostacy that they who fall into it have but tasted of the Heavenly guift yet it is that they have tasted of it that tast of its relish preciousnes sweetnes which they haue obtained whereby they are distinguished from thē whose blindnes hardnes keeps them up to a totall disrelish and contempt of it is abundantly enough to render their sinne heinous and abominable When men by the preaching of the Word
mix the promises of it with Faith or of the powers of the world to come as to receive them in power in their hearts by believing so that farther contest about these words seemes to be altogether needlesse How farre men may proceed in the wayes of God §. 36. what progresse they may make in amendment of life what gifts and common graces they may receive what light and knowledge they may be indued withall what kind of Faith Joy Repentance Sorrow Delight Love they may have in and about spirituall things what desire of mercy and heaven what usefull gifts for the Churches edification they may receive how farre they may perswade their own soules and upon what grounds that their condition Godward is good and saving and beget an opinion in others that they are true Believers and yet come short of union with Christ building their houses on the sand c. is the daily taske of the Preachers of the Gospell to manisest in their pressing that exhortation of the Apostle unto their hearers to examine and try themselves in the middest of their profession whether Christ be in them of a truth or no. I shall not now enter upon that labour the Reader knowes where to find enough in the writings of holy and learned men of this Nation to evince that men may arrive at the utmost height of what is in this place of the Apostle by the Holy Ghost ascribed to the persons of whom he speakes and yet come short of the state of true Believers M.G. indeed tells us Sect. 27. The Premises relating to the two passages yet under debate considered §. 37. I am so farre from questioning whether the Apostle speakes of true and sound Believers in them that I verily judge that he purposely sought out severall of the most emphaticall and signall characters of Believers yea such which are hardly or rather not at all to be found in the ordinary sort of true Believers but only in those that are most eminent amongst them that so he and such who though sound yet were weake in the Faith might fall away and perish but that even such also who were lifted up nearer unto Heaven than their fellowes might through carelesnesse and carnallsecurity dash themselves in pieces against the same stone make shipwracke of their soules as well as they Ans. The House built on the sand may oftentimes be built higher have more faire perapets and battlements windowes and ornaments than that which is built upon the Rock yet all guifts and priviledges equall not one Grace in respect of light knowledge guifts and many manifestations of the Spirit such who never come up to that Faith which gives reall union and communion with Jesus Christ may farre outgoe those that do 2. That there is any thing mentioned or any characters given of Believers much lesse such as are singular and not common to all M. G hath not in any measure been able to evince There is not the meanest Believer in the world but he is a Child of God heir of the Promises brother of the LordChrist hath union with him hath his living in him is Quickned Justifyed Sanctifyed hath Christ made to him Wisedome c. hath his Righteousnesse in God and his Life hid in him in Christ is passed from death to Life brings forth fruit and is deare to God as the apple of his eye accepted with him approved of him as his temple wherein he delighteth to dwell That any thing in this place mentioned and insisted on any characters we have given of the persons whom we have considered doe excell or equall or denote any thing in the same kind with these and the like excellencyes of the meanest Believers will never be proved if we may judge of future successes from the issue of all former attempts for that end and purpose And this is the issue of Mr Goodwin's third Testimony produced to confirme the Doctrine of the Saints Apostacy but hypothetically and under such a forme of expression as may not be argued from nor of Saints and true Believers at all His 4. followeth His fourth Testimony he produceth §. 38. and indeavours to mannage for the Advantage of his cause Sect. 31. in these words The next Scripture Testimony we shall produce briefely urge in the cause now under maintainance is in the same Epistle with the former and speaketh these words Now the Just shall live by Faith But if any man draw back my soule shall have no pleasure in him Our English translators out of good will doubtlesse to a bad cause have almost defaced this Testimony by substituting any man for the just man for whereas they translate but if any man draw back the Originall readeth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 i.e. if or but if he i.e. the just man who should live by his Faith viz. if he continues in it shall draw back Beza himselfe likewise before thē had stayned the honour of his faithfulnesse with the same blot in his Translation But the mind of the Holy Ghost in the words is plaine and without Parable viz. that if the just man who lives i. e. who at present enjoyes the favour of God and thereby is supported in all his tryalls and should live allwayes by his Faith if he continues in it as Pareus well glosseth shall draw back or shall be withdrawn viz. through feare or sloth as the word properly signifyeth See Acts 20. 27. from his believing my soule shall have no pleasure in him i.e. according to the import of the Hebraisme my soule shall hate or abhorre him to death as it is also expounded in the words immediately following But we are not of those who draw back to perdition but c. From hence then evident it is that such a man who is a just or Righteous man and under promise of living for ever by his Faith and therefore also a true and sound Believer may draw back or be withdrawne to the contracting of the hatred of God and to destruction in the end The forlornehope of evading because the sentence is Hypotheticall or conditionall not positive hath been routed over and over yea and is abandoned by some of the great Masters themselves of that cause unto the defence whereof it pretendeth And however in this place it would be most preposterous For if it should be supposed that the just man who is in a way under a Promise of living by his Faith were in no danger or possibility of drawing backe and that to the losse of the favour of God and ruine of his soule God must be conceived to speake here at no better rate of wisdome or understanding than thus The Just shall live by his Faith but if he shall do that which is simply and utterly impossible for him to do my soule shall have no pleasure in him What savour of wisdome yea or of commonsence is there in admonishing or cautioning men against such evills which there