Selected quad for the lemma: heart_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
heart_n believe_v faith_n power_n 4,181 5 5.2665 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
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

There are 28 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

the Perseverance of the Saints from the impossibility of finding a subject to be affected with the notion of Apostasie if true Believers be exempted frō it for Hypocrites saith he cannot fall away nor can Believers saith Mr Goodwin but they are Apostates when they fall away that is it is a dead man that dyes or after he is dead he dyes after he is an Apostate he falls away Perhaps it would be worth our serious inquiry to consider how Believers can indeed possibly come to loose the Spirit of Grace which dwells in them with their habit of Faith and Holinesse For our parts we contend that they have an infussed Habit of Grace and that wrought with a mighty Impression upon their Minds and Hearts Faith being of the opperation of God wrought by the exceding greatnesse of his Power as he wrought in Christ when he Raised him from the dead Whether such an Habit can be removed but by that hand that bestowed it and whether it may be made appeare that God will on any occasion so take it away or hath expressed himselfe that he will so deale with any of his Children is I say worthy our inquiry But 2. Secondly he denies the Major Proposition and saith that those who are kept and preserved by Christ may possibly miscarry Boldly ventured what Want is there then or defect in the keeper of Israel that his flock should so miscarry under his hand Is it of Faithfulnesse The Scripture tells us he is a faithfull High-Priest in things pertaining to God Heb. 2. 17. Faithfull to him that appointed him Heb. 3. 2. And that he did the whole will of God Is it of Tendernesse to take care of his poore wandering ones He is otherwise represented unto us Heb. 2. 18. For in that he himselfe hath suffered being tempted he is able to succour them that are tempted and ch 4. 15 16. We have not an High-Priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities but was in all poynts tempted like unto us yet without sinne Isa. 40. 11 12. It is said of him he shall feed his flock like a sheapheard he gathers the Lambs with his Armes and carries them in his bosome and shall gently lead them that are with young And he quarrells with those sheapheards who manifest not a care and tendernesse like his towards his flock Ezec 34. 4 The diseased have ye not strengthned neither have yee healed that which was sicke neither have yee bound up that which was broken neither have yee brought againe that which was driven away neither have ye sought that which was lost all which he takes upon himselfe to performe v. 15 16. Or is it want of Power All Power is given to him in Heaven and Earth Mat. 28. 8. All things are delivered to him of his Father Mat. 11. 27. He is able to save to the utmost them that come to God by him Heb. 7. 25. If he wants neither Care nor Tendernesse Wisdome nor Watchfullnesse Love nor Ability Will nor Faithfullnesse how comes it to passe that they miscarry and fall away into ruine whom he hath undertaken to keepe David durst fight with a Lyon and a Beare in the defence of his Lambs and Jacob indured Heat and Cold upon the account of Faithfullnesse And shall we think that the Shepheard of Israel from whose being so the Psalmist concludes he shall want nothing Psa 23. 1. who did not only fight for his Flock but layed downe his Life for them will be lesse carefull of his Fathers Sheepe his owne Sheepe which are required also at his hand for his Father knowes them and calles them all by name Yea but saies Mr Goodwin it may be thus §. 46. in case themselves shall not comport with Christ in his Act of Preserving them with their care and diligence in preserving themselves that is Christ will surely keepe them in case they keepe themselves Alas poore Sheepe of God! If this were the case of the Flocks of the Sonnes of men how quickly would they be utterly destroyed Doth the veriest Hierling in the World deale thus with his Sheepe keepe them in case they keepe them selves Nay to what end is his keeping if they keepe themselves● Christ compares himselfe to the Good Shepheard which seeketh out and fetcheth a wandring Sheepe from the Wildernesse laying him on his shoulders and bringing it home to his Fold How did that poore Sheepe keep it selfe when it ranne among the Ravenous Wolves in the Wildernesse Yet by the Good Shepheard it was preserved This is the Spirit and comforting Genius of this Doctrine Christ keeps us provided we keepe our selves We hoped it had been he who Saved Israel that he gave us his holy Spirit to abide with ns for ever to Seale us up to the day of Redemption that knowing himselfe and telling us that without him we can doe nothing he would not suspend his doing upon our doing so great a thing as preserving our selves For let us see now what it is that is required in us if we shall be preserved by Christ it is to comport with him in his Act of Persevering us and to be diligent to keepe our selves What is this comporting with him in his Act of preserving us Our comporting with Christ in any thing is by our Believing in him and on him that 's our radicall Comportment whence all other closings of Heart in obedience doe flow so then Christ will preserve us in Believing provided we continue to Believe But what need of his help to doe so if antecedently thereunto so we doe Is not this not only 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 but also 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 not only Unscripturall but also Unreasonable yea absurd and Ludicrous This is the flinty Fountain of all that Abundance of Consolation which Mr Goodwins doctrine doth afford Doubtlesse they must be Wise and Learned men like himselfe who can extract any such thing therefrom Let him goe with it to a poore weake tempted fainting Believer and try what a Comforter he will be thought a Physitian of what value he will be esteemed Let him tell him thou art indeed weake in Faith ready to decay and perish which thou maist doe every day there being neither Purpose nor Promise of God to the contrary great Oppositions and great Temptations hast thou to wrestle withall but yet Christ is loving tender faithfull and in case thou continuest Believing he will take care thou shalt believe That Christ will increase thy Faith and keep it alive by continuall influences as from a Head into its Members preserving thee not only against outward Enimies but the treacheries and deceits and unbeliefe of thine own heart of any such thing I can give thee no account Such Consolation a poore man may have at home at any time Further §. 47. what is that Act of Christ in Preserving them that is to be comported withall Ioh. 1. 16. Wherein doth it consist 1 Cor. 12. 13. 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
of the consistency of Effectuall Grace and Gospell Exhortations A Third Argument is proposed Sect. 18. Cap. 13. in these words §. 1. That Doctrine which representeth God as weake Incongruous and In coherent with himselfe in his applications unto men is not from God and consequently that which contradicteth it must needs be the truth but the Doctrine of Perseverance opposed by us putteth this great dishonour upon God representeth him weake Incongruous c. Ergo. For the proofe of the Minor Proposition to make good the charge in it exhibited against the Doctrine of Perseverance there is a Drammaticall scheme induced to whose framing and Application M. Goodwin contributed no more but the paines of a Translator taking it from the Anti-Synod p. 276. 277. in these words You that truly Believe in my Sonne and have beene once made partakers of my Holy Spirit and therefore are fully perswaded assured from my will and command given unto you in that behalfe yea according to the infallible word of Truth which you have from me that you cannot possibly no not by all the most horrid sinns and abominable practices that you shall or can commit fall away either totally or finally from your Faith for in the midst of your foulest actions courses there remaines a seed in you which is sufficient to make you true Believers to preserve you from falling away finally that it is impossible you should dye in your sinnes you that know are assured that I will by an irresistible hand worke Perseverance in you consequently that you are out of all danger of condemnation and that Heaven and Salvation belong unto you and are as good as yours already so that nothing but giving of thankes appertaines to you which also you know that I will do what you will in the meane time necessitate you unto you I say that are fully and throughly perswaded and possessed with the truth of all these things I earnestly charge admonish exhort and beseech that yee take heed to your selves that yee countinue in the Faith that there be not at any time an evill heart of unbeliefe in any to depart from the Living God that you fall not from your owne stedfastnesse yea I declare and professe unto you that if you shall draw back my soule shall have no pleasure in you that if you shall deny me I will deny you that if you be againe overcome of the lusts of the world and be intangled here with that your latter end shall be worse than your beginning that if you shall turne away all your former Righteousnes shall not be remembred but you shall dye in your sinnes and suffer the veugeance of Eternall fire On the other hand if you shall continue to the end my Promise is that you shall be Saved therefore strive to enter in at the straite gate quit your selves like men labour for the meat that indureth unto Everlasting Life and be not sloathfull but followers of them who through Faith and Patience inherit the Promises He that shall duly weigh and consider what a sencelesse and indeed ridiculous incongruity there is between these Exhortations Adjurations Threatnings and latter Promises and those Declarations Applications and former Promises doubtlesse will confesse that either the one or the other of them are not from God or according to the mind of God Ans. §. 2. The incongruity of this fiction with the Doctrine it is framed against is so easily manifested that it will not much concerne us to consider the incongruity that the severall parts of it have one with an other For First the whole Foundation of this fanatick Fabrick is ridiculous in it selfe and ridiculously imposed on the Doctrine of Perseverance For whereas it sayes not that all Saints have any comfortable Assurance of their Perseverance and so may by all Gospell wayes whatever by Promises and Threatnings be stirred up to the use of those meanes whereby Perseverance is wrought and Assurance obtain'd so it saies that no one Saint in the world ever had can have or was taught to expect his Perseverance or the least sence or Assurance of it under such an uncouth supposition as falling into continuing in sins Abominations the Promises they have to assure thē of their inseparable abode with God to the end are that he will write his Law in their hearts put his Feare in their inward parts that they shall never depart from him and they shall be kept up thereto by the use of meanes suitable as appointed of God for the attaining of the end proposed being kept by the power of God but throngh Faith unto Salvation God doth not call nor doth the Doct of Perseverance of the Saints or of the stability and Unchangeablenesse of his Promises in Christ to Believers assert it any to Believe that they shall never fall away from him what sinnes and Rebellions so ever they fall into neither hath he promised any such things unto thē but only that he will through his Grace preserve them in the use of meanes from such Rebellions as are inconsistent with his Love and free acceptation through Christ according to the Tenor of the Covenant of Grace so that instead of the first part of this fiction whose inconsistency with the latter is after Argued let this acording to the Analogy of our Doctrine be instituted You that truly Believe in my Sonne Jesus Christ § 3. and are made partakers of my Holy Spirit who being heirs of the Promises and so have a Right to that abundant Consolation that Joy in believing which I am willing all of you should receive I know your Feares doubts perplexityes and Temptations your failings sinnes and back-slidings and what sad thoughts on the account of the evill of your owne hearts and wayes you are exposed to as that you shall never abide nor be able to continue with me and in my Love to the end let the feeble knees be strengthned and the hands that hang downe be lifted up behold I have ordained goodworkes for you to walke in as the way wherein you are to walke for the attainement of the end of your Faith the Salvation of your soules And to quicken you and stirre you up hereunto I have provided and established Effectuall Ordinances revealed in the Word of my Grace whereunto you are to attend and in the use of them according to my mind to grow up into Holinesse in all manner of holy conversation Watching Fighting Resisting Contending with and against all the Spirituall Enemy's of your soules And as for me this is my Covenant with you that my Spirit which gives Efficacy to all the meanes Ordinances and Advantages of Gospell Obedience which I have afforded unto you by whom I will fulfill in you all the good-pleasure of my Goodnesse and the worke of Faith with Power so making you meet for the Inheritance of the Saints in Light and Preserving you to my Heavenly Kingdome shall never depart
height under their pressures that we have great cause of rejoycing in them all Yea but whence is this Do these Graces readily come forth and exert themselves with an efficacy suitable to this triumphing frame The ground spring of all is discovered v. 5. it is because the Love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost that is given to us From this fountaine do all these fresh streames flow the Spirit that is given us that sheds abroad the Love of God in our Hearts and thereby sets all our Graces on worke He oyles the wheeles of the soules obedience when we neither know what to do nor how to performe what we know 5. This indwelling Spirit § 27. gives Restraint Restraining Grace doth mainly consist in morall perswasions from the Causes Circumstances and Ends of things When a man is disswaded from sinne upon Considerations taken from any such head or place as is apt to prevaile with him that perswasion so applyed and intended of God for that end is unto him restraining Grace By this meanes doth the Lord keepe within bounds the most of the Sonnes of men notwithstanding all their violent and impetuous lusts Hell shame bitternessee disappointment on the one hand Credit Repute quietnes of Conscience the like on the other binde thē to their good Behaviour God through these things drops an awe upon their Spirits binding them up from running out unto that compasse of excesse and ryot in sinning which otherwise their lusts would carry them out unto This is not his way of dealing with the Saints Jer. 31. 34. he writes his Law in their hearts and puts his feare in their inward parts that they may not depart from him making them a willing people through his owne Power Psal. 110. 3. By his effectually remaining Grace he carryes them out kindly chearefully willingly to do his whole will working in them to will and to do of his owne good pleasure yet notwithstanding all this often times through the strength of Temptation the subtilty of Sathan and his readinesse to improve all Advantages to the utmost the treachery and deceitfulnesse of indwelling sinne and corruption they are carryed beyond the bounds and lines of that principle or Law of Life and Love whereby they are lead What now doth the Lord do They are ready to runne quite out of the pasture of Christ doth he let them goe and give them up to themselves Nay but he sets an hedge about them that they shall not find their way He leades them as the wild Asse in her month that they may be found he puts a Restraint upon their Spirits by setting home some sad considerations of the evil of their hearts and wayes whether they are going what they are doing and what shall be Issue of their walking so loosly Even in this life what shame what scandall what dishonour to themselves their profession the Gospell their Brethren it would prove and so hampers them quiets their Spirits and gently brings them againe under obedience unto that principle of Love that is in them and the Spirit of Grace whose yoake they were casting off whereby they are lead Many times then even the Saints of God are kept from sinnes especially outward actuall sinnes upon such outward motives reasonings and considerations as other men are Peter was broken loose and running downe hill apace denying and forswearing his Master Christ puts a restraint upon his Spirit by a looke toward him this mindes him of his folly unkindnesse his former rash confidence and ingagement to dye with his Master and sets him on such Considerations as stirred up the principle of Grace in him to take its place and rule againe and in obedience thereunto he not only desists from any farther denyall but Faith Repentance Love all exerting themselves he goes out and wept bitterly It is so frequently with the Saints of God though in lesser evills by neglect and omission of duty or inclination to evill and closing with temptations they breake out of the pure and perfect Rule and Guidance of the Spirit whereby they ought to be lead instantly some Considerations or other are pressed on upon their Spirits taken perhaps from outward things which recovers them to that obedientiall frame from whence through violence of Corruption and Temptation they had broken Like an Hawke sitting on a mans hand eating her meat in quietnesse is suddenly by the originall wildnesse of her nature carryed out to an attempt of flying away with speed but is checkt by the string at her heeles upon which shee returnes to her meat againe We have an innate wildnesse in us provoking and stirring us up to runne from God Were we not recovered by some clog fastned on us for our Restraint we should often runne into the most desperate paths And this Restraint I say is from the indwelling Spirit He stirrs up one thing or other to smite the Hearts Conscience when it is under the Power of any Temptation to sinne and folly So it was with David in the Attempt he made upon Saul when he cut of the lappe of his Garment Temptation opportunity had almost turned him loose frō under the power of Faith waiting and dependance on God wherein lay the generall frame of his Spirit he is recovered to it by a blow upon the heart from some dismall Consideration of the Issue and scandall of that which he was about 6. We have hereby also the Renewall §. 28. daily Renewall of sanctifying Grace Inherent Grace is a thing in its owne nature apt to decay and dye it is compared to things ready to dye Rev. 3. 2. strengthen the things that remaine saith Christ to the Church of Sardis that are ready to dye It is a thing that may wither and decline from its vigor and the soule may thereby be betrayed into manifold weaknesses and backslidings It is not meerely from the nature of the Trees in the Garden of God that their fruit failes not nor their leaves wither Psal. 1. 4. but from their Planting by the Rivers of water Hence are the sicknesses weaknesses and decayes of the Spirit mentioned in the Scripture Should he who had the richest stock of any living be left to spend of it without new supplies he would quickly be a Bankrupt This also is prevented by the Indwelling Spirit He is the fatnesse of the Olive that is communicated to the branches continually to keep them fruitfull and flourishing He is that golden Oyle which passes through the Branches and empties it selfe in the fruitfulnesse of the Church He continually fills our Lamps with new Oyle and puts new vigor into our spirits Psal. 92. 10. thou liftest up my horne as the horne of an Vnicorne I am anoynted with fresh oyle or renewed supplies of the Spirit And this Psal. 103. 5. is called a renewing of Youth like the Eagles a Recovery of former strength and vigor new power and ability for new duties and
new Obedience and there will be the work of that Faith in purifying the Heart and mortifying of the sinnes supposed Farther the way here prescribed and limited to the Lord Jesus how he shall intercede for his and for what viz. not for actuall Perseverance and continuance in the Faith to be wrought in them by the exceeding greatnesse of the power of God but for meanes to inable them to preserve themselves we are perswaded he walkes not in And that much upon this account that the way whereby God begins and carries on Believers in the way of Faith and Obedience is not by such a supply of meanes as leaves them to themselves to work and effect the things for which they are so supplied but he himselfe workes in them to will and to doe of his own good pleasure fulfilling in them all the good pleasure of his Goodnesse and the worke of Faith with power giving them all their sufficiency and preserving them by his power through Faith unto salvation To make Faith and Perseverance therein to follow such a supply of meanes as leaves the production of them to the power of the wills of men so that after God hath done all that on his part is to be done or performed that is quickned them being dead giving them new Hearts Spirtis shone into their mindes to give them the knowledge of his Glory in the Face of his Sonne c. it is yet uncertaine whether ●ver Faith shall be wrought in their Soules or no or rather whether men so supplied with means will Believe and Persevere or no is an Assertion that will never be proved to Eternity nor whilest Truth is Truth it is capable of proofe The granting of such meanes and such a presence of his Spirit that men may be inabled to worke for themselves is an expression exceedingly unsuited to all the Promises of the new Covenant what ever either of the Spirit of Grace or the meanes of it is given out to Believers Christ intercedes that his Father would keepe them not that they should keepe themselves he was too well acquainted with our frame and our temptations to desire we might be our own keepers God forbid we should be left to our owne preservation to the hand of our owne counsell and power though compassed with all the supposed sufficient meanes that may be not eventually effectually God creates a defence upon our Glory and doth not leave it to our owne safegarding Our salvation is not in our own custody That the Father doth not keepe us or preserve us that the Sonne doth not Intercede that we may be so preserved that the Spirit doth not make us meete for and keepe us unto the Inheritance of the Saints in Light but that in the use of meanes we are as Adam was our own keepers are some of the Principles of that new way of administring consolation to Believers which Mr Goodwin hath found out This then is the utmost which Mr Goodwin will allow to be for disputation sake not that he really believes it granted that Christ intercedes for his Saints as to their continuance and preservation in that condition viz. That God would give them such meanes as they may use or not use at their liberty which may be effectuall or not effectuall as their own wils shall choose to make use of them which he also takes for granted to be common to all the World and not to be peculiar unto Believers But it is farther argued If Christ should simply and absolutely Intercede that no sinne or wickednesse whatsoever may destroy the Faith of any true Believer and consequently deprive him of Salvation should he not hereby become that which the Apostle rejects with indignation as altogether unworthy of him I meane a Minister of sinne Is therefore Christ the Minister of sinne God forbid or whereby or wherein can it lightly be imagined that Christ should become a minister of sinne rather then by interceding with his Father that such and such men how vile and abominable soever they shall become may yet be precious in his sight and receive a Crowne of Righteousnesse from his hand Or doth not such an Intercession as some men put upon him as they who make him to Intercede simply and absolutely for the Perseverance of Believers in their Faith amount to an Intercession of every whit as vile and unworthy Import as this Ans That this is the tenor of Christs Intercession with his Father for men let them become as vile as they will how vile and abominable soever yet that they may be still precious in his sight and that he would give them a Crowne of Righteousnesse M. Goodwin knoweth full well not to be the Doctrine of them he opposeth If he shall otherwise affirme it will be incumbent on him to produce some one Author that hath wrote about this Doctrine in what language soever and so stated it If he be ignorant that this is not their Doctrine he ought not to have ingaged into an opposition thereof if he argue that it is otherwise this procedure is unworthy of him That Christ Intercedes for his Saints that they may be kept from all such sinnes as would separate them from the Love and Favour of his Father for which there is no Remedy provided in the Covenant of Grace and that their Faith may not faile or perish under such sinnes as they may through Temptation fall into is the Doctrine which he opposeth or at least ought to oppose to make good his undertaking Now if this be so then saith he is Christ the minister of sinne why so He sees and foretells that Peter should deny him thrice yet he prayes that Peters Faith may not faile under that sinne and wickednesse is he therefore a minister of sinne because he Intercedes that his Saints may not be given up to the power of sinne nor every time they are assaulted lye conquered by sinne is he therefore a minister of sinne or rather a deliverer from sinne That very thing which M. Goodwin affirmes would make him a minister of sinne he affirmes himselfe to do in the case of Peter how he will free himselfe from this charge and imputation ipse viderit 2. What it is to Intercede simply and absolutely for Believers that they may continue believing we are not so cleare in Christ Intercedes that they may be preserved by the power of his Father in and through the use of those meanes which he graciously affords them and the Powerfull presence of the Spirit of God with them therein and that not on any such absurd and foolish conditions that they may be so preserved by his Father provided they preserve themselves and continue Believers on condition they continue to believe and if this be of a vile and unworthy import the Gospell is so too and one of the most eminent Graces that is inwrapped in the New Covenant is so too What there is farther in M. Goodwin Sect. 34. Pag. 249
them did them no good at all And the reason of this sad successe in the Preaching of the Gospell and Declaration of the Promises he gives you in the same words It is that the word was not mixed with Faith in them that heard it It is the mixing of the Promises with Faith that renders them usefull and profitable Now to what ever Faith is required the more firme strong and stable it is the more effectuall and usefull it is That then which is apt to establish Faith to support and strengthen it to preserve it from staggering Rom. 4. 20. that renders the Promise most usefull and effectuall for the Accomplishment of any worke whereunto it is designed Now Faith in the Promises respects the Accomplishment of the things promised as the Apostle tells us in that commended and never enough imitated Example of the Faith of Abraham Rom 4. 19 20 21. Being not weake in Faith he considered not his own body now dead when he was about an hundred years old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe he staggered not at the Promise of God through unbeliefe but was strong in Faith giving glory to God being fully perswaded that what he had promised he was able also to performe Laying aside all considerations that might tend to the impairing of his confidence he firmely believed that it should be to him as God had promised That the Doctrine we insisted on is clearly conducing to the establishing of Faith in the Promises cannot tolerably be called into Question Whatsoever is in those Promises whatsoever Considerations or concernements of him whose they are as his Faithfulnesse Unchangeablenesse Omnipotency that are apt to strengthen Faith in them it preserves entire and exalteth It is a wild Assertion which men scarce search their own hearts if indeed men know what belongs to believing in sincerity when they make that the efficacy of the Promises unto our Obedience should arise from hence that the things promised may not be fulfilled and that the weaknesse of Faith as every such supposall doth at least weaken it yea and tends to its subversion should render the Promise usefull which hath no use at all but as it is mixed with Faith For instance those Promises that God will be an All-sufficient God unto us that he will circumcise our Hearts and write his Law in them that we shall feare him is as was manifested before an usefull Meditation for the ingenerating and quickning of Obedience and Holinesse in us That it may be such a meanes it is required that it be mixt with Faith in them that heare it as was declared According as Faith is strong or weake so will its usefulnesse be I aske then whether this be a way proper to set this Promise on worke for the end proposed namely to perswade them that should believe it that all this may be otherwise God may cease to be their God their hearts may not be circumcised nor the Law mentioned written in them Is this the way to strengthen their Faith and to keepe them from staggering Or rather to subvert and cast downe all their confidence to the ground The Doctrine we have under consideration continually sounds in the eares of Believers 1 Cor. 1. 9. that God is faithfull in all his Promises that he can that he will make them good that his own Excellencies his own Perfections require no lesse at his hands And this it doth not on any Grounds that carry any thing with them that may seeme to incline to the least neglect of God or contempt of any Property Excellency or word of his and so be apt to breed presumption and not Faith But on such only as give him the Glory of all that he hath revealed of himselfe unto us and therefore its genuine tendency must be to beget and increase precious saving Faith in the hearts of men which we conceive to lye in a more direct way of efficacy towards Holinesse and Obedience then the ingenerating of servile feares gendering unto bondage can do This then we have obtained first that the Promises peculiarly insisted on are motives to furtherances of Obedience secondly that the way whereby they become so is by being mixed with Faith and the stronger Faith is the more effectuall will the working of those Promises unto Holinesse be thirdly that the Doctrine of the Perserverance of the Saints and stability of God's Love to them giving him the Glory of all his Excellencies which in his Promises are to be considered is suited to the carrying on of Faith in its growth and increase Indeed that which makes our beliefe of the Promises of Faith divine is the rise it hath and the bottome whereinto it is resolved viz. The Excellencies of him who makes the Promises As that he is True Faithfull Alsufficient the Glory of all which is given him in Believing as the Apostle informes us Rom. 4. 20 21. Yea and all this He must be received to be in reference to the accomplishment of his Promises or we Believe them not with divine supernaturall if that terme may be allowed and saving Faith Surely they must needs think us very easie of beliefe and wholly unexperienced of any Communion with God who shall suppose that we will be perswaded that the Doctrine which eminently asserts and ascribes unto God the Glory of all his Attributes which he would have us to eye in his Promises strengthning Faith on that account doth annihilate the Promises in the Word of the Ministry as to their usefulnesse unto our Obedience Let us deale by instance God hath promised to begin and perfect a good worke in us according as this Promise is mixt with Faith so it will be usefull and profitable to us If there be no Faith it will be of no use if little of little if more of more Let a man now be supposed to be wavering about his mixing this Promise with Faith whereupon the issue of its Efficacy and Fruitfulnesse as was said doth depend And let the Doctrine we teach be called in to speake in this Case and let us trye whether what it saies be prejudiciall to establishment of Faith or whether it be not all that lookes towards its Confirmation It saies then unto the soule of a Believer why art thou so cast downe thou poore soule And why are thy thoughts perplexed within thee It is true thou art weake unstable ready to fall away and to perish thy temptations are many great and prevalent and thou hast no strength to stand against the power and multitude of them But looke a little upon him who hath promised that thou shalt never depart from him who hath promised to finish the good worke begun he is Unchangeable in his Purposes Faithfull in his Promises and will put forth the exceeding greatnesse of his power for the Accomplishment of them so that though thou failest he will cause thee to renue thy strength though thou fallest thou shalt not be cast
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
or Context of the place nor of any such evidence for their interest in the businesse in hand that Mr Goodwin durst take them for ingredients in the case under consideration when he himselfe proposed it so that he was inforced to foyst in this counterfeit Case to give some colour to the Interpretation of the words introduced But yet this must not be openly owned but intermixed with other Discourses to lead aside the Understanding of the Reader from bearing in minde the true State of the Case by the Apostle proposed and by himselfe ackowledged So that this Discourse desinit in piscem c. 2. The Case being supposed as above §. 41. I aske whither the Apostle intended a Removeall of the Scruple and Answer to the Objection as far at least as the one was capable of being removed and the other of being answered This I suppose will not be Scrupled or Objected against being indeed fully granted in Stating the Occasion of the words For wee must at least allow the Holy Ghost to speake pertinently to what he doth propose then 3. I further inquire whither any thing what ever be in the least suited to the Removeall of the Scruple and Objection proposed but only the giving of the Scruplers and Objectors the best Assurance that upon solid Grounds and Foundations could be given or they were in truth capeable of that what they feared should not come upon them and that notwithstanding the deviation of others themselves should be preserved and then 4. Seeing that the summe of the sence of the words given by Mr Goodwin amounts to these two Assertions 1. That the Doctrine of the Gospell is True and Permanent 2. That God approoves for the present all who for the present believe supposing that there is nothing in the Gospell teaching the Perseverance of the Saints I aske yet whither there be any thing in this Answer of the Apostle so interpreted able to give the least satisfaction imaginable to the Consciences and Hearts of men making the Objection mentioned For is it not evident notwithstanding any thing here expressed that they and every Believer in the world may Apostatise and fall away into Hell Say the poore Believers Such and such fall away from the Faith Their eminent usefulnesse in their Profession beyond perhaps what we are able to demonstrate of our selves makes us feare that this abominable defection may goe on swallow us up grow upon the Church to a further desolation The answer is however the Gospel is true God bears gracious respects to thē that cleave to him in love whilst they doe so Quaestio est de alliis responsio de cepis Methinks the Apostle might have put them upon these Considerations which Mr Goodwin proposes as of excellent use prevalency against falling away that they put men out of danger of it Cap. 9. rather then have given them an answer not in the least tending to their satisfaction nor any way suited to their fears or inquiries no not as backed with that explanation that they fall away because they degenerate into loose and sinfull courses that is because they fall away A degeneracy into loose and sinfull courses amounts surely to no lesse 5. Againe I would know whether this Foundation of God be an Act of his Will commanding or purposing declarative of our duty or his intention If the first then what Occasion is administred to make mention of it in this place Whether it were called in Question or no and whether the Assertion of it conduces to the solution of the Objection proposed Or is it in any parallell termes expressed in any other place Besides seeing this Foundation of God is in nature antecedent to the Sealing mentioned of Gods knowing them that are his and the Object of the Act of Gods Will be it what it will being the Persons concerning whom that Sealing is whether it can be any thing but some distinguishing Purpose of God concerning those persons in reference to the things spoken of Evident then it is from the words themselves the Occasion of them the designe and scope of the Apostle in the place that the Foundation of God here mentioned is his discriminating Purpose concerning some mens certain preservation unto Salvation which is manifestly confirmed by that Seale of his that he knowes them in a peculiar distinguishing manner A manner of speech and Expression suited directly to what the same Apostle useth in the same case every where as Rom. 8. 28 29 30. Cap. 9. and 11. 11. Eph. 1. 4 5 6. But saith Mr Goodwin this is no more then what the Apostle elsewhere speakes Rom 3. 3. What if some did not believe shall their unbeliefe make the Faith of God of none effect that is shall the Vnbeliefe of men be interpreted as any tolerable Argument or ground to prove that God is unfaithfull or that he hath no other Faith in him then that which sometimes miscarrieth and produceth not that for which it stands ingaged Implying that such an interpretation as this is unreasonable in the highest But truly by the way if it be so I know not who in the lowest can quit Mr Goodwin from unreasonablenesse in the highest for doth he not contend in this whole Discourse that the Faith of God in his Promises for the producing of that for which it stands ingaged as when he saith to Believers he will never leave them nor for sake them doth so depend on the Faith of men as to the Event intended that it is very frequently by their unbeliefe rendred of none Effect Is not this the spirit that animates the whole Religion of the Apostacy of Saints Is it not the great Contest between us whether any unbeliefe of men may interpose to render the Faith of God of none effect as to the producing of the thing he promiseth Tibi quia intristi exedondum est But 2. Let it be granted that these two places of the Apostle are of a parallell signification what will it advantage the Interpretation imposed on us What is the Faith of God here intended And what the unbeliefe mentioned And whereunto tends the Apostles vehement interrogation The great contest in this Epistle concerning the Jewes of whom he peculiarly speaks v. 1 2. was about the Promise of God made to them and his Faithfulnesse therein Evident it was that many of them did not Believe the Gospell as evident that the Promise of God was made peculiarly to them to Abraham and his Seed hence no small peplexity arose about the Reconciliation of these things many perplexed thoughts ensuing on this seeming Contradiction If the Gospell be indeed the way of God what is become of his faithfulnesse in his promises to Abraham and his Seed they rejecting it If the Promises be true and stable what shall we say to the Doctrine of the Gospell which they generally disbelieve and reject In this place the Apostle only rejects the inference that the faithfulnesse of God
discovering that fallacy therein by a distinction They are not saith he all Israel that are of Israel v. 7 8. As if he had said there is a twofold Israel an Israel after the flesh onely and an Israel after the flesh and Spirit also Unto these latter were the Promises made and therefore they who looke on the former only thinke it faileth whereas indeed it holdeth its full accomplishment So he disputes againe Cap. 11. 7. I say then we may be in the darke as to many Circumstances of the fulfilling of Promises when yet they have received a most exact accomplishment 3. All the Conditionall Promises of God are exactly true and shall be most faithfully made good by accomplishment as to that wherein their being as Promises doth consist as farre as they are declarative of Gods Purpose and intendment This is that which as I said before some object Many of the Promises of God are Conditionall and their truth must needs depend upon the Accomplishment of the Condition mentioned in them if that be not fulfilled then they also must faile and be of none effect I say then that even the Conditionall Promises of God are Absolutely made good The truth of any Promise consists in this that that whereof it speakes answers the Affirmation it selfe For instance He that believeth shall be saved This Promise doth not Primarily affirme that any one shall be saved and notwithstanding it no one might so be but only this it affirmes that there is an infallible connexion betweene Faith and Salvation and therein is the Promise most true whither any one believe or no. Breifely Conditionall Promises are either simply declarative of the Will of God in fixing an exact correspondency betweene a Condition mentioned and required in them and the thing promised by them in which case they have an Unchangeable infallible verity in themselves as there is in all the Promises of the Morall Law to this day for he that keeps the Commandements shall live or they are also the discoveries of the Goodwill of God his intendments and Purposes that whereof they make mention being not the Condition whereon his Purposes are suspended but the way and meanes whereby the thing promised is to be accomplished and in the latter Acceptation alone are they in the businesse in hand our concernment 4. §. 10. That the Promises concerning Perseverance as hath been often intimated are of two sorts The first of the Continuance of the Favour of God to us which respects our Justification The other of the continuance of our Obedience unto God which respects our Sanctification Let us consider both of them and begin with the latter 1. Of them I say then they are all Absolute not one of them Conditionall so as to be suspended as to their accomplishment on any Conditions nor can be The Truth of God in them hath not its efficiency and Accomplishment by establishing the relation that is between one thing and another or the connexion that is betweene duty and reward as it is in Conditionall Promises that are purely and meerely so but inforceth the exact fulfilling of the thing promised and that with respect unto and for the preservation of the Glory of that Excellency of God He cannot lye Let it be considered what that Condition or those Conditions be or may be on which Promises of this nature should be suspended and the Truth of the former Assertions will evidently appeare That God hath Promised unto Believers that they shall for ever abide with him in the Obedience of the Covenant unto the End shall afterwards be proved by a cloud of Witnesses What now is the Condition whereon this Promise doth depend It is saies Mr Goodwin That they performe their duty that they suffer not themselves to be seduced nor willingly cast of the yoake of Christ But what doth this amount unto Is it not thus much if they abide with God for if they performe their Duty and not suffer themselves to be seduced nor willingly depart from God they abide with him God hath promised that they shall abide with him Upon Condition they abide with him he hath promised they shall egregiā verò laudem Can any thing more ridiculous be invented If men abide with God what need they any Promise that they shall so do The whole virtue of the Promise depends on that condition that condition conteineth all that is promised neither is it possible that any thing can be invented to be supplyed as the condition or conditions of these Promises but it will quickly appeare upon consideration that how ever it may be differently phrased yet indeed it is coincident with the matter of the Promise it selfe That condition or those conditions must consist in some Act Acts Way or Course of acceptable Obedience in them to whom the Promises are made This the nature of the thing it selfe requireth Now every such Act way or course is the matter of the Promise even universall Obedience Now if one man should promise another that he should at such a time and place be supplyed with an hundred pounds to pay his Debts on condition that he came and brought the Monies himselfe ought he to be esteemed to have a mind to relieve the poore man or to mock him To affirme that when God promiseth to write his Law in our Hearts to put his Feare in our inward parts to Create in us a New Heart to circumcise our Hearts that we may feare him alwaies to give us his Spirit to abide with us for ever to preserve us by his Power so that we shall never leave him nor forsake him shall live to him and sinne shall not have dominion over us c. he doth it upon condition that we write his Law in our hearts Circumcise them continue to feare Him abide with Him not forsake him c. is to make him to mock and deride at their misery whose reliefe he so seriously pretendeth What ever Promises then of this kind Promises of working Obedience in us for our abiding with him shall be produced they will be found to be Absolute independent on any condition whatever their Truth no waies to be maintained but in and by their Accomplishment 2. For those of the first sort §. 10. which I shall now handle farther to cleare the foundation of their ensuing Application I shall propose only some few things unto consideration As 1. That they are not to be taken or looked upon as to their use for Argument in the present Controversy separated and divided from those other Promises formerly insisted on which assure Believers that they shall alwaies abide with God as to their Obedience all hope that any have to prevaile against them is by dividing of them It is a very vaine supposall and foundation of sand which our Adversaries build their inferences upon which they make against the Doctrine of the Saints Perseverance viz. the Impossibility that God should continue his Love
Judgement Loving-kindnesse and Mercies and Faithfulnesse whose efficacy also in reference unto their abiding with him whom he doth betroth to himselfe he mentioneth in the close of v 20. thou saith he shalt know the Lord. I shall not insist on the particular importance of the severall Expressions whereby the Lord hath set forth himselfe and his goodnesse here unto us It is plaine that they are all mentioned to the same end and purpose namely to give Assurance unto us of the Unchangeablenesse of this worke of his Grace and to prevent the objections which the fears of our unbelieving hearts from the consideration of our weaknesse wayes and walkings temptations trialls and troubles would raise upon it The Lord when he betroths us to himselfe sees and knows what we are what we will be and how we will provoke the eyes of his Glory He sees that if we should be left unto our selves we would utterly cast off all knowledge of him and obedience unto him Wherefore saith he I will betroth thee unto me in Righteousnesse and Judgment allowing full measure for all thy weaknesses that they shall not dissolve that union I intend As if a Prince should goe to take to him in Marriage a poore deformed Beggar who being amazed with his kindnesse and fearing much least he should be mistaken and account her otherwise then indeed shee is which when it is discovered will be her ruine she plainly telleth him she is poore deformed and hath nothing in the World that may answer his expectation and therefore she cannot but feare that when he knoweth her throughly indeed he will utterly cast her off But he thereupon replieth Feare no such thing what I doe I doe in Righteousnesse and Judgement knowingly of thee and thy Condition and so as that I will abide by it Perhaps as some think by this betrothing us in Righteousnesse the Lord may intimate his bestowing upon us Righteousnesse yea his becoming in Jesus Christ our Righteousnesse to supply that utter want Isa. 45. 24. which is in us of that which is acceptable unto him Now because we are not only unmeet to be at first accepted into any such termes of alliance with the Lord but also shall certainly in the carrying of it on behave our selves foolishly and frowardly unanswerable to his loving-kindnesse so that he may justly cast us off for ever he telleth us farther that he betroths us to himselfe in Loving-kindnesse and Mercies knowing that in entring into this alliance with us he maketh worke for his tenderest bowels of Compassion his pitty and pardoning mercy In his continuance in this Relation whatever his Kindnesse Patience and Pardoning mercy can be extended unto that he will accomplish and bring about But will not the Lord when he pardons once and againe at length be waried by our innumerable provocations so as to cast us off for ever No saith he this will I doe in Faithfulnesse He doubleth the expression of his Grace and addeth a Property of his nature that will carry him out to abide by his first Love to the utmost I will saith he even betroth thee unto my selfe in Faithfulnesse His firmenesse constancie and truth in all his waies and promises will he use in this work of his Grace Deut 32. 4. But perhaps notwithstanding all this the heart is not yet quiet yet it feareth it selfe and its own treachery least it should utterly fall off from this gracious Husband wherefore in the close of all God undertaketh for them also that no scruple may remaine why our soules should not be satisfied with the sincere milke that floweth from this breast of Consolation Thou shalt saith he know the Lord This indeed is required that under the Accomplishment of this gracious Promise you know the Lord that is believe and trust and obey the Lord and saith he thou shalt doe it I will by my Grace keep alive in thy heart as a fruit of that Love wherewith I have betrothed thee to my selfe that Knowledge Faith and Obedience which I require of thee This then is some part of that which in this Promise the Lord holdeth out unto us and assureth us of notwithstanding his Rejection of the carnall Jewes yet for his elect both the Jewes and Gentiles he will so take them into a Marriage Covenant with himselfe that he will continue for ever a Husband unto them undertaking also that they shall continue in Faith and Obedience knowing him all their dayes and of all this he effectually assureth them upon the account of his Righteousnesse Judgement Loving-kindnesse Mercy and Faithfulnesse I cannot but adde that if there were no other place of Scripture in the whole Book of God to confirme the Truth we have in hand but only this I should not doubt the Lord assisting to close with it upon the signall Testimony given unto it thereby notwithstanding all the specious Oppositions that are made thereunto For the Close §. 32. I shall a little consider that leane and hungry Exposition of these words which is given in the place before metioned Ch. 11. Sect 8. pag. 229. I will betroth them unto me in Righteousnesse and in Judgement and in Loving-kindnesse and Mercy so the words are expressed in a different Character as the very words of the Promise in the Text. 1. Thee that is the Church is changed into Them that is the Jewes and their Children or carnall seed as a little before was expressed and then that emphaticall expression for ever is quite thrust out of the Text as a stubborne word not to be dealt withall upon any faire termes Let us see then how that which remaineth is treated and turned off I will betroth thee that is I will engage and attempt to insure both them and their affections to mee by all variety of waies and meanes that are proper and likely to bring such a thing to passe But who knoweth not that this is wooing and not betrothing we need not goe farre to find out men learned in the Law to informe us that to try and attempt to get and assure the affections of any one is not a Betrothment This then is the first part of this Exposition I will betroth that is I will wooe and essay attempt and endeavour to get their affections which besides the forementioned absurdity is attended with another sore oversight to wit that God promiseth to doe this very thing in the last words of v. 20. which is affirmed that he doth but attempt to doe To proceed he saith I will doe this 1. By shewing my selfe Just and Righteous unto them in keeping my Promise concerning their deliverance out of captivity at the end of 70 years So then in this new Paraphrase I will Betroth thee that is the Election of Jewes and Gentiles to my selfe for ever in Righteousnesse is I will essay to get their affections by shewing my selfe Righteous in the Promise of bringing the Jewes out of captivity That this Promise is not made
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
Christ thus brake the power of Satan that he shall not lead those alwaies captive at his pleasure nor rule in them as Children of disobedience in the behalfe of whom his power was so broken 1. First He subdues him by taking away all that Right and Title which he had by sinne to rule over them I speake of the Elect of God By the entrance of sinne the Divell entred upon a two fold rule in reference to sinners First A Rule over them with the terrour and dread of death and Hell they are in bondage by reason of death Heb. 2. 14. all their daies Heb 2. 15. And the Divell hath the power of that death upon the World whereunto they are in bondage The death that is in the Curse is put into his hand to manage it to the dread and terrour of sinners and by it he hath alwaies kept many and to this day doth keep innumerable soules in unexpressable bondage putting them upon Barbarous Inhumanities to make Attonement for their sinnes and forcing some to inflict revenge and destruction upon themselves thinking to prevent but really hastening that which they feare As of old this power of his lay at the bottome of all the Abominations Diat de Just. Divin wherewith men provoked God when they thought to Attone him as by burning their Children in the fire and the like Mic. 6. 7 8. So at present is it the principle of all that superstitious Will-worship Levit. 18. 21. and Religious drudgery which is spread over the Antichristian World Deut. 18. 10. 2 yea the inventions of men Kings 21. 6. 23. 10. ignorant of the Righteousnesse of God and convinced of their own insufficiency to performe worke out 2 Chr. 33. 6. and establish a Righteousnesse of their owne Jer. 32. 35. that shall perfectly answer the exact holy demands of the Law as far as to them is discovered to deliver themselves from under this dread of Death wherewith he that hath the power of it terrifies them all their daies are indeed the foundation and spring the summe and substance of all Religions in the World and the darling of all Religious Persons in and with whom Christ is not all and in all And herein have the Papists gon one notable step beyond all their predecessours in superstition and devotion for whereas they universally contented themselves with sacrifices purifications purgations lustrations satisfactions recompenses to be in this life performed these latter more refined sublimated mercuriall wits observing that nothing they could here invent would settle and charme the spirits of men haunted with the dread of death we speake of but that instantly they came againe with the same disquietnesse as formerly renewed mention of sinne upon the insufficiency of the Attonement fixed on for its expiation they found out that noble expedient of the future Purgatory which might maintaine the soules of men in some hopes in this life and secure themselves from the cryes complaints of men against the insufficiency of their Remedy which they doe prescribe 2. As he rules over men by death and hell that followes after so also he rules in men by sinne he ruleth in the children of disobedience Eph. 2. 2. And to this end to secure men to himselfe he being that strong man armed who hath the first possession Math. 12. 39. and labours to keepe what he hath got Mark 3. 27. in peace he sets up strong holds Luk. 11. 21. Imaginations and highthings against God 2. Cor. 4. 5. Now this twofold power of Sathan over men and in men do both arise from sinne whereby men are first cast out of Gods Love and care becoming obnoxious to death And secondly are alienated from God in willing subjection to his Enemy And both these parts and branches of his dominion are in reference unto the Elect cast downe and destroyed and taken away For First §. 17. Christ by his Death Casheires the Title and Claime that Sathan lay'd to the exercise of any such power in reference unto the Elect. When men cast downe any from Rule they may interrupt and put by their exercise of any power but they cannot take away their Title unlesse it be of their owne giving Christ by his Death takes away the very bottome foundation and occasion of the whole power of Sathan Gen. 3. 3. All the power of Sathan in the first sence Deut. 27. 29. consists in death Rom. 5. 12. and those things that either conduce to it or do attende it Heb. 2. 9 10 11 12 13 14 15. Now death entred by sinne and there withall the power of Sathan The Lord Jesus taking away sinne and puting an end thereunto as was manifested the whole Title of Sathan falls and comes to nothing And this was really done in the Crosse Col. 2. 15. its manifestation by the Gospell ensuing thereupon according to the appointment of God Tit. 1. 3. Secondly he takes away the exercise of his power §. 18. and that to the utmost For 1. He bindes him with bonds He binds the strong man Armed Math. 12. 19. And he breaks his head Gen. 3 15. Then leades him captive Psal. 68. 18. Triumphs over him Col. 1. 16. Treads him downe under the feet of his Rom. 16. 20. as the Kings of Canaan were trod downe under the feet of the Children of Israel John 10. 24. then destroyes him Heb. 2. 14. What exercise of power is left to a conquered bound wounded captived triumphed over trodden downe destroyed Caytife Think yee this wretch shall ever wholy prevaile against any one of them for whose sake all this was done to him Neither can this with any colour of reason be said to be done for them or with respect unto them towards whom the power of Sathan remaines entire all their dayes whom he leades captive and rules over at his pleasure untill death take full dominion over them 2. As he destroyes Sathan so he doth his workes For this cause was he manifested even to destroy the workes of the Divell 1 John 3. 8. He doth not only binde the strong man armed Luk. 12. 21. but also he spoiles his Goods Whatsoever is in men that followes from that corrupted principle of nature is reckoned to the worke of Sathan being the issue of his seduction Whatsoever his temptations draw men out unto the Lord Christ came to destroy it all to make an end of it and he will not faile of his end but certainely carry on his undertaking untill he hath utterly destroyed all those workes of Sathan in the hearts of all that are his He redeemes us from our vaine Conversation 2 Pet. 1. 18 19. from the power of our lusts and corruptions leading us out to a vaine Conversation The Apostle tells us Rom. 6. 6. that by his death the old man is crucified and the body of sinne destroyed The craft of sinne the old man and the strength of
Object or Truth revealed in the word This is common to all that are made partakers of the good Word of God that is to whom 't is Preached and delivered as it is to many whom it doth not profit being not mixt with Faith Heb 4. 2. 3. The way and meanes of Communicating the truth so revealed to their minds or understandings which is the Litterall Grammaticall Logicall delivery of the things contained in the Scriptures as held out to their Minds and Apprehensions in their meditation on them and this meanes of convayance of the sence of the Scripture is plaine obvious and cleare in all necessary Truths A Concurrence of these three will afford and yeild them that have it upon their diligence and enquiry a Disciplinary knowledge of the Litterall sence of Scripture as they have of other things By this meanes the Light shines 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 sends out some beames of light into their darke minds but the darknesse comprehends it not John 1. 5. receives not the Light in a spirituall manner there is notwithstanding all this still wanting the work of the Spirit before mentioned creating and implanting in and upon their understandings and minds that Light and power of discerning spirituall things which before we insisted on This the Scripture sometimes calls the opening of the understanding Luk 24. 45. sometimes the giving an understanding it selfe 2 Tim 2. 7. 1 John 5. 20 sometimes light in the Lord Ephes. 5. 8. Notwithstanding all the Advantages formerly spoken of without this men are still naturall men and darknesse not comprehending not receiving the things of God that is not spiritually for so the Apostle adds because they Spiritually discerned 1 Cor. 2. 14. Receiving Spirituall things by meere naturall mediums they become foolishnesse unto them This is the first thing that the Spirit dwelling in us doth towards Guidance and Direction he gives a new Light and Understanding whereby in generall we are inabled to discerne comprehend and receive Spirituall things 2. In particular he Guides and leades men to the embracing particular Truthes and to the walking in and up §. 20. unto them Christ promised to give him to us for this end namely to lead us into all Truth John 16. 13. He will guide us into all Truth There is more required to the receiving entertaining embracing a particular Truth rejecting of what is cōtrary unto it then an habituall Illumination This also is the work of the Spirit that dwells in us he works this also in our minds hearts therefore the Apostle secures his little Children that they shall be lead into Truth preserved frō seduction on this account 1 John 2. 20. You have au Vnction from the holy one or ye have received the Spirit from the Lord Jesus and you shall know all things why so because it is his worke to Guide and Lead you into all the things whereof I am a speaking And more fully v 27. You have received an Vnction from him that abideth in you and you have no need that any teach you but as the Vnction teacheth you of all things and is true and is no lye and as he hath taught you abide in him It is received as promised it doth abide as the Spirit is said to do and it teacheth which is the proper worke of the Spirit in an eminent manner Now this Guidance of Believers by the Spirit §. 21. as to the particular Truthes and actings consists in his putting forth of a twofold Act of Light and Power First Of Light and that also is twofold 1. Of Beauty as to the things to be received or done he represents them to the soule as Excellent Comely Desirable and Glorious leading us on in the receiving of truth from Glory to Glory 2 Cor. 2. 18. He puts upon every Truth a new Glory making and rendring it desirable to the soule without which it cannot be closed withall as not discovering either suitablenesse or proportion unto the minds and hearts of men And 2. By some actuall elevation of the minde and understanding to goe forth unto and receive into it selfe the Truth as represented to it by both of them sending forth Light and Truth Psal. 43. 3. blowing of the Cloudes and raising up the day Starre that rises in our hearts Secondly 2 Pet. 2. 19. Of Power Isa. 35. 6. The breaking forth of Streames makes not only the blind to see but the lame to leape Strength comes as well as Light by the powring out of the Spirit on us Strength for the receiving and practice of all his Gracious discoveries to us He leades us not only in Generall implanting a saving Light in the minde whereby it is disposed and enabled to discerne Spirituall things in a Spirituall manner but also as to Particular Truths rendring them Glorious and Desirable opening the mind and Understanding by new beames of Light he leades the soule irresistably into the receiving of the truths revealed which is the second thing we have by him I shall only observe for a close of this §. 22. one or two Consequences of the weight of this twofold Operation of the indwelling of Christ. 1. From the want of the first or his creating a new light in the minds of men it is that so many Labour in the fire for an acquaintance with the things of God It is I say a consequence of it as darknesse is of absence of the Sunne Many we see after sundry years spent in considerable labours and diligence reading of many bookes with a contribution of assistance from other usefull Arts and Sciences Rom. 1. 21 22 in the issue of all their indeavours do wax vaine in their imaginations having their foolish hearts darkned professing themselves wise they become fooles being so farre from any Sappe and savour that they have not the leaves of ability in things Divine Others indeed make some progresse in a disciplinary knowledge of Doctrines of the Scriptures and can accurately reason and distinguish about them according to the formes wherein they have been exercised and that to a great height of conviction in their owne spirits and permanency in the profession they have taken up But yet all this while they abide without any effectuall power of the Truth Rom. 6. 17. conforming and framing their spirits unto the likenesse and mould thereof They doe but see men walking like trees some shines of the light breake in upon them which rather amaze then guides them they comprehend it not They see Spirituall things in a Naturall Light and presently forget what manner of things they were and in the species wherein they are retained 1 Cor. 2. 12 13 14. they are foolishnesse 2. From the want of the latter it is that we our selves are so slow in receiving some partes of Truth and do find it so difficult to convince others of some other parts of it which to us are written with the beames of the Sunne Unlesse the
performances And how comes that about saith the Psalmist it is by Gods satisfying my mouth with good things he satisfyed his mouth with good things or answered his prayers What these good things are which the Saints pray for and wherewith their mouthes are satisfied our Saviour tells us your Father saith he knoweth how to give good things to them that aske them of him which expressing in another place he saith your Father will give the Holy Spirit to them that aske him of him He is given us and he renewes our strength as the Eagles making our soules which were ready to languish prompt ready cheerefull strong in the wayes of God To this purpose is that Prayer of the Spouse Cant. 4. 6. Awake O North wind and come thou South and blow upon my Garden that the savour of my spices may flow out let my beloved come into his Garden that he may eate of the fruit of his precious things Shee is sensible of the withering of her Spices the decayes of her Graces and her disability thereupon to give any suitable entertainment unto Jesus Christ Hence is her earnestnesse for new breathings and operations of the Spirit of Grace to renew and revive and set on worke againe her Graces in her which without it could not be done All Graces are the fruits of the Spirit Gal. 5. 25 26. The fruit of the Spirit is Love Joy Peace Long-suffering Kindnesse Goodnesse Faith Gentlenesse Temperance if the Root doe not communicate fresh juyce and sappe continually the fruit will quickly wither were there not a continuall communication of new life and freshnesse unto our Graces from the Indwelling Spirit we should soone be poore withered Branches this our Saviour tells us Ioh. 15. 4 5. abide in mee and I in you as the branches cannot bring forth fruit of themselves unlesse they remaine in the Vine no more can yee unlesse ye abide in mee I am the Vine yee are the Branches he who abideth in mee and I in him he bringeth forth much fruit for separate from mee ye can doe nothing Our Abiding in Christ and his in us is as was declared by the Indwelling of the same Spirit in him and us Hence saith Christ have you all your fruit-bearing vertue and unlesse that be continued to us we shall wither and consume to nothing David in his spiritually declined condition intangled under the power and guilt of sinne cries out for the continuance of the Spirit and the restoring him as to those ends and purpose● in reference whereunto he was departed from him Ps 51. 21 22. This the Apostle praies earnestly that the Ephesians may receive Ch. 3. 16 17. I bow my knees to the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ that he will give unto you according to the riches of his Glory that ye may be strengthened with might by his spirit in the inward man that Christ may dwell in your hearts by Faith that yee being rooted and grounded in Love c. The inward Man is the same with the new Creature the new principle of Grace in the Heart This is apt to be sick to faint and decay the Apostle prayes that it might be strengthened how is this to be done how is it to be renewed increased enlivened It is saith he by the mighty power of the Spirit and then gives you particular instances in the Graces which flourish and spring up effectually upon that strengthening they receive by the might and power of the Spirit as of Faith Love Knowledge and Assurance the increasing and establishing of all which is ascribed there unto him He who bestowes these Graces on us and workes them in us doth also carry them on unto perfection Were it not for our inflowings from that spring our Cisternes would quickly be dry therefore our Saviour tells us that he the Spirit is unto Believers as Rivers of living water flowing out of their bowels Ioh 7. 38 39. A never failing fountaine that continually puts forth living waters of Grace in us This may a little farther be considered and insisted on being directly to our main purpose in hand It is true indeed it doth more properly belong unto that which I have assigned for the Second Part of this Treatise concerning the Ground or Principle of the Saints abiding with God for ever but falling in conveniently in this order I shall farther presse it from Ioh. 4. 14. whosoever saith our Saviour shall drink of the water which I shall give unto him shall not thirst for ever but the water which I shall give unto him shall be in him a fountain of water springing up unto eternall life The occasion of these words is known §. 29. they are part of our Saviours Colloquie with the poore Samaritan Harlot having told her that he could give her another manner of water and infinitely better then that which she drew out of Jacobs well for which the poore Creature did almost contemne him and askt him whence he had that water whereof he spake how he came by it or what he made of himselfe Did he think himselfe a better man then Iacob who dranke of that well which shee was drawing water out of to convince her of the Truth and reality of his Promise he compares the water that he would and could give with that which she drew out of the Well especially as to one eminent effect wherein the water of his Promise did infinitely surmount that which she so magnifyed for v. 13. he tells her for that water in the well though it allayed thirst for a season yet within a little while she would thirst againe and must come thither to draw but saith he whosoever drinketh of the Water I shall give him thirsts no more and this he proveth from the Condition of the Water he giveth it is a well of Water not a drought not a Pitcherfull as that thou carryest away but it is a Fountaine a Well yea perhaps in it selfe it is so a Fountaine or Well but he that drinkes of it he hath but one draught of that water Nay saith Christ it shall become a Well in him not a Well whereunto he may goe but a Well that he shall carry about in him He that hath a continuall spring of living water in him shall doubtlesse have no occasion of fainting for thirst any more This our Saviour amplifies and clears up unto her from the nature and energy of this Well of water it springeth up unto everlasting life in these last words instructing the poore sinfull Creature in the use of the Parable that he had used with her Having taken an occasion to speake to her of heavenly things from the nature of the employment that she was engaged in at present Two or three things may be observed from the words to give Light unto their tendency to the Confirmation of the Truth we have under consideration First §. 30. the Water here Promised by our Saviour is the Holy and Blessed Spirit this
are suited to the cherishing of that Principle of the new or inner man in the heart to the nourishing and strengthning of the new creature such as are apt to ingenerate Faith and Love in the heart unto God such as reveale and discover those things in his nature mind and will as are apt to endeare and draw out the heart to him in Communion discouraging perplexing Doctrines doe but ill manure the soyle from whence the fruits of Obedience are to spring and grow Look then I say whatsoever Gospell Truth is of eminent usefulnesse to warme foment stirre up and quicken the Principle of Grace in the heart to draw out increase and cherish Faith and Love that Doctrine lies in a direct immediate tendency to the promotion of Holinesse Godlinesse and Gospell Obedience Yea and whereas to the carrying on of that course of Obedience it is necessary that the contrary Principle unto it which we mentioned before be daily subdued brought under crucified and mortified there are no Doctrines whatsoever that are of such and so direct and eminent a serviceablenesse to that end and purpose as those which inwrappe such discoveries of God and his good will in Christ as are fitted for the improvement also of the principle of Grace in us Hence the worke of Mortification in the Scripture Rom. 6. 2 3 4 5 6. is every where assigned peculiarly to the Crosse and death of Christ Rom. 8. 13. his Love manifested therein and his Spirit flowing therefrom Rom. 7. 7. The Doctrine of the Law indeed humbles the soule for Christ Gal. 3. 23. but it is the Doctrine of the Gospell that humbles the soule in Christ It is the Grace of God that hath appeared 2 Cor. 5. 15. that teaches us effectually to deny all ungodlinesse and worldly lusts to live soberly and righteously and Godly in this present world Tit. 2. 12. He that will but with a little heed read Cap. 6. to the Romans will know from whence Mortification flowes which truly by the way makes me admire at the extreame darknesse and blindnesse of some poore men who have of late undertaken to give directions for Devotion and walking with God who indeed sutably to the most of the rest of their discourses all manifesting an Ignorance of the Righteousnesse of God Rom. 10. 4. and a zealous endeavour to establish their owne coming to propose waies and meanes for the mortifying of any sinne or Lust tell you stories of biting the tongue thrusting needles under the nailes with such like Trash as might have befited Popish devotions five hundred years agoe Were not men utterly ignorant what it is to know the Lord Jesus Christ Phil. 3. 10. and the power of his Resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings Gal. 6. 14. and being made conformable to his death they could never feed on such huskes themselves nor make provision of them for those whose good they pretend to seeke Unto what hath been spoken adde 4. Fourthly §. 8. who are the Persons that are to be provoked to Holinesse and Godlinesse by the Doctrine insisted on Now they are such as doe believe it and are concerned in it We say the Truth under consideration is of an excellent usefulnesse to farther Gospell Obedience in the hearts of Believers and Saints of God who are taught of God not to turne the Doctrine of Grace into wantonnesse What use or abuse rather men of corrupt mindes and carnall principles who stumble at Jesus Christ and abuse the whole Doctrine of the Gospell by their prejudices and presumptions will make of it we know not nor are sollicitous 2 Cor. 4. 3 4. If the Gospell be hid it is hid to them that perish it is sufficient that the food be good and wholsome for them for whom it is provided If some will come and steale it 2 Cor. 2. 16 27. that have no right to it and it prove through their own distempers gravell in their mouthes or poyson in their bowells they must blame themselves and their own wormewood Lusts and not the Doctrine which they doe receive It is provided for them that feare God and love the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity not for doggs swine unbelievers we shall not marvaile if they trample on this pearle and rend them that bring it To such as these then I say the Doctrine of the Perseverance of the Saints or the stability or unchangeablenesse of the Love of God unto Believers and of their continuation in Faith and Obedience is full of exceeding effectuall motives and provocations unto Holinesse in all manner of Gospell Obedience and holy conversation exceedingly advantaging the soules of men in a course thereof Now the influence it hath into the Obedience of the Saints floweth from it upon a twofold account 1. By removing all discouragements whatsoever §. 9. that are apt either to turne them aside from their Obedience or to render their Obedience servile slavish or unacceptable to God it setts them through Christ at perfect liberty thereunto 2. By putting unconquerable and indissoluble Obligations upon them to live unto God and the praise of his glorious Grace and evidently drawes them forth unto the Obedience required 1. It removeth and taketh out of the way all discouragements whatsoever all things which are apt to enterpose to the weakning of their Faith in God or their Love to God which as hath been said are at the bottome of all Obedience and Holinesse that is acceptable to God in Christ Now these may all be referred unto two heads 1. Of perplexing anxious fears §. 10. which are apt to impaire and weaken the Faith of the Saints 2. Of hard thoughts of God which assault and shake their Love That slavish perplexing troublesome feares are contrary to the free and ingenuous state of Children whereunto the Saints are admitted and however sometimes yea oftentimes they are at the bottome and the occasion of burthen some servile and superstitious Obedience Impairers of their Faith I suppose I need not labour to prove That kind of Feare whereof we speake of which more afterwards is the greatest Traytor that lurkes in the soule To feare the Lord and his Goodnesse Hos. 3. 5. is the soules Keeper but this servile perplexing feare is the Betrayer of it in all its waies and that which sowres all its duties A thing which the Lord sets himselfe against in rebukes reproofes dehortations as much as any failing and miscarriage in his Saints whatever It is the opposite of Faith hence the fearefull and unbelieving are put together in their exclusion from the new Jerusalem Rev 20. 8. it is that which is direct contrary to that which the Apostle adviseth the Saints unto Heb 10. 19 20 21 22. it is that which mixeth Faith with staggering Rom 4. 20. Prayer with wavering making it ineffectuall Iames 1. 6. 7. Let us now suppose a man to have attained some assurance of the Love of God
thing that is free noble ingenuous filiall and of an heavenly descent in the Saints of God thus 1. It strengthens their Faith in God and in Jesus Christ which is the bottome of all acceptable Obedience whatsoever All that which proceedeth from any other Roote being but a product of labouring in the fire which in the end will consume both Root and Branch That which prevailes upon and drawes out the soule to Faith and believing I meane as it is peculiar to the Gospell and Justifying that is as it is in God as a Father and in the Lord Christ as a Mediator is the discovery of the good will of God to the soule in Christ and his designe to advance his Glory thereby I speake not of the formall cause of Faith in generall but the peculiar motive to Faith and Believing in the sence before mentioned So our Saviour giving the command in generall to his Disciples Ioh. 14 1. ye believe in God believe also in mee in the whole ensuing Chapter provokes them to it with gratious discoveries of the good will of God his Fathers and his own good will towards them And indeed propose what other considerations ye will provoke the soule by all the feare and dread of Hell and the most dismall representation of the wrath to come untill it be convinced of this it will never take one steppe towards God in Christ Now our Adversaries themselves being Judges the Doctrine we have had under consideration abounds above all others with the discoveries of the good will and kindnesse of God to poore sinners yea the great crime that is laid to the charge of it is that it extends it too farre it doth not only assert that God freely beginnes the good worke in them but that he will also powerfully perfect it to the day of Jesus Christ It assures the soules of the poore Saints of God that he who lookt upon them in their bloud and said unto them Live when no eye pittied them who quickned them when they were dead in trespasses and in sinnes begetting them of his own will by the word of Truth that they should be a kind of first fruits to himselfe wasting them in the bloud of his Sonne and delivering them from the old Tyrant Satan that he will not now leave them to themselves and to the Counsell of their own hands to stand or fall according as they shall of themselves and by themselves be able to withstand opposition and seduction but that he will keep them in his own hand giving them such constant supplies of his Grace and Spirit as that in the use of meanes they shall waite upon him to the end And that howsoever or whensoever by the power of Temptation and surprisalls of corruptions they are carried aside from him he will heale their back-slidings and receive them freely and though they change every day yet he changeth not and therefore they are not consumed And hereby I say it confirmes and strengthens their Faith in God as a Father in Jesus Christ taking everlasting care of them 2. Of their Love there is the same reason Gods love to us is of his free Grace he loves us because so it seemes good to him Our Love to him is purely ingenerated by his Love to us and carried on and increased by farther Revelations of his desireablenesse and excellency to our soules Herein is Love not that we loved God but that he loved us first There is no Creature in the least guilty of sinne that can put forth any acceptable Act of Love towards God but what is purely drawn out upon the Apprehension of his Love and lovelinesse in his Grace and mercy A man I confesse may love God when he hath no sence of his Love to him in particular but it must all be built upon an apprehension of his Love to sinners though he may come short in the Application it is the terrour of the Lord that causes us to perswade others but it is the Love of Christ that constraineth us to live to him Shee loved much to whom much was forgiven Looke then the more abundant discoveries are made of the lovelinesse and desirablenesse in the riches of his Grace the more effectuall is the sole and only motive we have to love him with that fi●iall chast Holy Love that he requires For the Love of God to his Saints our Doctrine of their Perseverance sets it forth with the greatest Advantage for the indearement of their soules to draw out their streames of Love to God especially doth it give it its Glory in three things 1. In its freedome It setts forth the Love of God to his Saints as that which they have no way in the least deserved as hath been manifested from Isa. 48. 8 9 11. chap. 54. 9 10. As he first loved them not because they were better then others being by nature Children of wrath and lying in their Blood when he said to them Live quickning them when they were dead in trespasses and sinnes So he doth not continue his love to them nor purpose so to do because he fore sees that they will so so walke with him in Holinesse uprightnesse for he ●oresees no such thing in them but what he himselfe purposeth effectually to worke upon the account of his loving them but he resolves to do it meerely upon the account of his owne Grace He neither resolves to continue his Love to them on Condition that they be so and so holy at randome and with uncertainty of the Event but freely that they may and shall be so Eph. 1. 4. And this is the Glory of Love the most Orient pearl in the Crowne of it 'T is not mercenary nor selfe-ended nor deserved but as a Spring and fountaine freely vents and powers out it selfe upon its owne account And what ingenuous truly noble Heavenly descended heart can hold out against the power of this Love It is effectually constraining to all manner of sutable returnes let the soule but put it selfe in to the actuall Contemplation of the Love of God as it lyes represented in this property of it every way free undeserved the great Love of God to a poore worme a sinner a nothing and it cannot but be wrought to a serious Admiration of it delight in it and be pained and straitned untill it make some suitable Returnes of Love and Obedience unto God If not it may well doubt it never tasted of that Love or enjoyed any fruits of it 2. It gives the Love of God the Glory of its Constancy and Unchangeablenesse This is another Starre of an eminent Magnitude in the Heaven of Love It is not a fading a wavering an altering thing but abides for ever God rests in his Love Zeph. 3. 17. It is a great thing indeed to apprehend that the great God should fixe his Love upon a poore Creature But adde hereunto that he may love them one day and hate them the next embrace them
ingenerate in them But however thus farre I owne it as to the maine of the Observation in hand that the Doctrine of the Apostacy of Believers is apt and suited to cut the Saints of God and heirs of the Promise short of that strong Consolation which he is so abundantly willing that they should receive and to fill their Soules and perplex their consciences with cares feares and manifold intanglements suited to weaken their Faith and Love and alienate their hearts from that delight in God which they are called and otherwise would be carried forth unto They being all of them in some measure acquainted with the strength subtility and power of indwelling Sinne the advantages of Sathan in his manifold Temptations the eminent successe which they see every day the Principalities and Powers in heavenly places which they wrestle withall to have against them and being herewithall taught that there is neither Purpose nor Promise of God for their Preservation that there is nothing to that purpose in the Covenant of Grace the Consideration of their Condition must of necessity fill them with innumerable perplexities and make them their owne tormentors all their daies thus farre I say I owne the Objection That is not properly courage or confidence but Faith Love and Reverence that are the Principles of our Actions in walking with God hath been declared But what saith Mr Goodwin to the Objection §. 18. as by himselfe laid downe Beside what he relateth of his conquest of it in other places he addeth That the Saints notwithstanding the possibility of their finall falling away have or may have such an Assurance of the perpetuity of their standing in the Grace and Favour of God as may exclude all feare at least that which is of a discouraging or enfeebling nature The Apostle as we have formerly shewed lived at a very excellent rate both of courage and confidence notwithstanding he know that it was possible for him to become a Reprobate The assurance he had that upon a diligent use of those meanes which he know assuredly God would vouchsafe unto him he should prevent his being a Reprobate was a Golden foundation unto him of that confidence and courage wherein he equalized the Holy Angels themselves Ans. 1. The grounds asserted by Mr Goodwin on which Believers may build the Assurance pretended of the perpetuity of their standing in the Grace and Favour of God notwithstanding the possibility of their defection the assertion whereof costs no lesse then the denying of all or any influence from the Purpose Promises Covenant or Oath of God or Mediation of Christ into their preservation I have formerly considered and manifested them to be so exceeding unable to beare any such building of Confidence upon as is pretended that it is almost a Miracle how any thoughts of such a structure on such quicksands could ever finde place in the minde of a man any thing seriously acquainted with the wayes of God The whole of the Saints preservation in the Love and Favour of God as it is also expressed in this Section is resolved into mens selfe-considerations and indeavours Being weary it seemeth of leaning on the Power of God to be kept thereby unto eternall Salvation men begin to trust to themselves and their owne Abilities to be their owne keepers But what will they doe in the end thereof The summe of what Mr Goodwin hath formerly said what he repeateth againe to the end of this Section is Men need not feare their falling away though it is possible seeing they may easily prevent it if they will Expressions sufficiently contemptive of the Grace of God and the Salvation that God assureth us thereby an assertion which those Ancients which Mr Goodwin laboureth to draw into communion with him would have rejected and cast out as Hereticall Mans ability thus to preserve himselfe in the Grace and Favour of God to the end is either from himselfe or from the Grace of God If from himselfe Let us know what that Ability is and wherein it doth consist and how he comes by it Christ telleth us that without him we can do nothing and the Apostle that we are not sufficient of our selves to think a good thought but that all our sufficiency is of God So that this selfe ability for preservation extendeth not to the thinking a good thought indeed is nothing Is it from the Grace of God Then the Assurance of it must be either because God promised absolutely so to worke in him to will and to do of his owne good pleasure as that he should certainely be preserved which you will not say as I suppose or because he will so afford him his Grace as that he may make use of it to the end proposed if he please But now what Assurance hath he that he shall so make use of his Grace as to make it effectuall for the end designed And is this good use of Grace of himselfe or of Grace also If of himselfe it is nothing as was shewed from that of our Saviour John 15. 5. Neither can a man promise himselfe much Assistance from the Ability of doing nothing at all If you shall say it is of Grace the same Question ariseth as formerly manifesting that there is not the least Assurance imaginable of our continuance in the Grace and Favour of God but what ariseth from his Faithfull Promises efficaciously overcoming all interveniences that we shall so do 2. He telleth us §. 19. that Paul lived at an excellent rate of Assurance and yet knew that it was possible for him to be a Reprobate I confesse indeed he lived at an excellent rate of Assurance which he manifesteth himselfe to have received upon such Principles and Foundations as were common to him with all true Believers Rom. 8. 32 33 34 35. That it was possible in respect of the Event that He might have been a Reprobate who was chosen from Eternity is not proved He saith indeed 1 Cor. 9. 27. I keepe my body in subjection least by any meanes I should be found 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 there any more is intended then not approved or accepted in that service be had in hand Mr Goodwin laboureth not to evince and if that be the sence of the words as the scope of the whole manifesteth it to be then all that Paul there expresseth is that he endeavoured alwayes to approve himselfe and by all meanes an acceptable workeman not to be rejected or disallowed in the labour of Preaching the Gospell which he had undertaken and we acknowledge that this thought and contrivance may well become him who liveth at the greatest rate of Assurance that God affordeth to any here below yea that such thoughts endeavours do naturally genuinely flow from the Assurance of the Love of God we also grant But yet supposing that being a Reprobate by a Metonymie of the effect may here signify to be damned how doth this prove
expresse himselfe against any reall efficiency of the Spirit or Grace of God in the hearts or on the wills of men Not to insist upon his darkening the Discourse in hand from his miserable confounding of those tearmes Physicall and Morall formerly discovered I shall as neare as I can close with his aime in it for the more cleare consideration thereof First he tells us That the operation of God on the will of man is in respect of its proceeding from him Physicall but in respest of its nature and substance t is properly Morall But First § 33. if a man should aske Mr Goodwin what he intends by this Operation of God on the will of man to the end intended I feare he would be very hard put to it to instance in any particular It is sufficiently evident he acknowledgeth none in this kind but what consists in the Exhortations of the VVord Secondly having told us before that Physicall is as much as Necessary and Morall as Not-necessary How comes it about that the same operation of God the same Act of his Power is become in severall regards Physicall and Morall That is Necessary and Not-necessary is Mr Goodwin reconciled to the Assertion That the same thing may be said to be Necessary and Not-necessary in sundry respects Thirdly how comes the same Act or Operation in respect of its manner of proceeding from its Agent to be Physicall and in respect of its Substance to be Morall Or is any act Morall in respect of its substance or is its Morality an Adjunct of it in respect of the regard it hath to some Rule farther End It is an easy thing for any to heape up such crude Assertions in the meane time not to know what they say nor whereof they do affirme But the reason why the Acts of God intimated are Morall is because they perswade the Will only or work perswadingly not ravishingly or necessitatingly that is in plain termes There is no operation of the Grace or Spirit of God in the working of any good in the Heart or Wills of men but only what consisteth in perswasion of them thereunto For any reall efficiency as to the communication of strength inworking in us to will and to do t is wholly excluded God only perswades men have the power in themselves and of themselves they do it let the Scripture say what it will to the contrary For those termes of Ravishingly or Necessitatingly which are opposed to this Morall perswasion whereunto the operations of God for the production of any good in us are tied up and confined wee have been now so inured to them that they do not at all startle us When M. Goodwin shall manifest That God cannot by the greatnesse of his power work in us to Will without ravishing our wills if we guesse aright at the intendment of that expression he will advance to a considerable successe in this contest not only against us but God himselfe But an objection presents its selfe to our Author §. 34. which he sees a Necessity to attempt the removall of least an Apprehension of its truth should prove prejudiciall to the receiving of his dictates And this it is That if it be so that God worketh on the will of man by the way of perswasion only he doth no more then the Ministers of the Gospell do who perswade men by the Word to that which is good To this he tells you That it indeed followes that God Ministers work on the Will of man in the same way with the same kind of efficiency but yet in respect of degrees God may perswade more effectually than a Minister That all really efficient §. 35. internall working grace of God was denied by M. Goodwin was before discovered there only t is more plainely asserted All the workings of God on the Wills of men unto good are meerely by perswasion Perswasion we know gives no strength addes no power to him that is perswaded to any thing it only provokes him and irritates him to put forth exert and exercise the power which is in himselfe unto the things whereunto he is perswaded upon the motives grounds of perswasion proposed to him and the whole effect produced on that account is in Solidum to be ascribed to the really efficient cause of it howsoever incited or stirred up whereas then men by Nature are dead blind unbelieving enemies to God he perswades them only to exert the power that is in them thereby to live see believe and be reconciled to him And this is to exalt the free grace of God by Jesus Christ We know full well who have gone before you in these paths but shall heartily pray that none of the Saints of God may follow after you into this contempt of the work of his Grace But Secondly If nothing but Perswasion be allowed to God in the work of mens Conversion § 36. in the carrying on of their obedience to the end Wherein doth the Perswasion of God consist in distinction from the Perswasion used in from the Word by Ministers which it is pretended that it may excell though t is not affirmed that it doth many degrees Let it be considered I say in what Acts of the will or power of God his perswasion so distinct as above mentioned doth consist Let us know what Arguments he useth by what Meanes he applies them how he conveyes them to the Wills of men that are not coincident with those of the Ministry I suppose at last 't will be found that there is no other operation of God in Perswading men as to the ends under consideration but only what lies or consists in the perswading of the Word by the Ministers thereof God looking on without the exerting of any efficacy whatever which is indeed that which is aimed at is really exclusive of the Grace of God from any hand in the Conversion of sinners or Preservation of Believers 3. He doth not indeed assert any such Perswading of God § 37. but only tels you that from what he hath spoken it doth not follow that God doth no more then Ministers in Perswading men And that when two perswade to one and the same Action one may be more effectuall in his perswading than another but that God is so or how he is so or wherein his peculiar perswasions do consist there is not in his discourse the least intimation Fourthly There is in men a different power as to Perswasion some having a faculty that way farre more eminent and effectuall than others according to their skill and proficiency in Oratory and Perswasive Arts this only is ascribed to God that he so excells us as one man excells another But how that Excellency of his is exerted that 's not to be understood But there is proofe tendered you of all this from 1 Cor 3. 9. Where Ministers are said to cooperate with God which they cannot do unlesse it be with the same
a man professing the Doctrine of the Gospell that inke should staine paper with such filth cast upon the Spirit and Grace of God The Feare of Hell ere-while was suited to the use of the Flesh but now it seems it serves to keep the Love of God it selfe in order that otherwise would wax wanton fleshly and foolish Foolish Love that will attempt to cast out this tormenting Feare not being able to preserve it selfe from folly without its assistance Sect 15. is spent in an Answer endeavoured to an Objection placed in the beginning of it in these words If it be farther demanded But doth it not argue servility in men to be drawn by the Iron cord of the Feare of Hell to doe what is their duty to doe Or doth any other Service or Obedience become Sonnes and Children but only that which is free and proceedeth from Love Hereunto you have a threefold Answer returned First That God requires that it should be so which is a downeright begging of the Question Secondly He puts a difference between the Obedience of Children to their Parents and of the Saints unto God The discourse whereof discovering some mysteries of the new Doctrine of Grace much pressed and insisted on take as followes There is a very different consideration of the Obedience of Children to their Naturall Parents of the obedience of the Children of God unto their Heavenly Father The Obedience of the former is but by the Inspiration of Nature and is an act not so much raised by Deliberation or flowing from the will by an interposure of judgment and conscience to produce the Election as arising from an innate propension in men accompanying the very constituting principles of their Nature and being Whereas the latter the Obedience of the Children of God is taught by Precepts and the Principle of it I mean that Rationall frame of Heart out of which they subject themselves to God is planted in the soules of men by the ingagement of Reason Judgement and Conscience to consider those grounds arguments and motives by which their Heavenly Father judgeth it meet to work and fashion them unto such a frame So that though the obedience of Naturall Children to their Naturall Parents be the more genuine and commendable when it flowes freely from the pure instinct of Nature and is not drawn from them by feare of punishment yet the Obedience of the Children of God is then most genuine and commendable and like unto it selfe when it is produced and raised in the soule by a joynt influence and contribution not of one or of some but of all those Arguments Reasons Motives Inducements whatsoever and how many soever they be by which their Heavenly Father useth to plant and work it in them for in this case and in this only it hath most of God of the Spirit of God of the Wisdome of God of the Goodnesse of God in and upon this account it is likeliest to be most free uniforme and permanent The summe of this Answer amounts to these three things First that there is an Instinct or inspiration of Nature in Children to yeild Obediedce to their Parents Secondly that there is no such Spirituall Instinct or inclination in the Saints to yeild Obedience to God Thirdly that the Obedience of the Saints ariseth meerely and solley from such Considerations of the Reason of that Obedience which they apprehend in contradiction to any such genuine principles as might incline their hearts thereunto For the first That the obedience of Children to their Parents though it be a prime dictate of the Law of Nature wherewith they are indued proceedeth from a pure Instinct any otherwise than as a principle suiting inclining them to the Acts of that Obedience so as to exclude the promoting and carrying of it on upon the Morall condsideration of Duty Piety c. it is in vaine for Mr Goodwin to goabout to perswade us unlesse he could not only corrode the Word of God where it presseth that Obedience as a Duty but also charme us into beasts of the feild which are acted by such a bruit instinct not to be improved stirred up or drawne forth into exercise by Deliberation or Consideration There is it is true in Children an impresse of the power of the Law of nature suiting them to Obedience which yet in many hath been quite cast out and obliterated being not of the constituting principles of their Nature which whilst they haue their being as such cannot be throwne out of them and carrying them out unto it with Delight Ease and Complacency as habits do to suitable actings but withall that this principle is not regulated and directed as our Obedience to God by a Rule and stirred up to exert it selfe and they in whom it is provoked by Rationall and Conscientious considerations to the performance of their duty in that Obedience is so contrary to the experience I suppose of all sharers with us in our Mortality that it will hardly be admitted into debate But Secondly the worst part of this Story lyes in the middle of it in the exclusion of any such Spirituall principle in Believers as should carry them out unto Obedience at least to any such as is not begotten in their minds by Rationall considerations What ever may be granted of acquired habites of Grace which that the first should be that a Spirituall habit should be acquired by naturall actings is a most ridiculous fiction all infused Habits of Grace that should imprint upon the soule a new naturall inclination to Obedience that should fashion and frame the hearts of men into a state and Condition suited for and carry them out unto Spirituall Obedience are here decryed All it seemes that the Scripture hath told us of our utter Insufficiency Deadnesse Disability indisposednesse to any thing that is good without a new Life and principle all that we have apprehended and Believed concerning the new Heart and Spirit given us the new Nature new Creature divine Nature inward man Grace in the Heart making the Roote good that the Fruit may be so All that the Saints have expressed concerning their Delight in God Love to God upon the account of his writing his Laws in their hearts and Spirits is a meere delusion There is no principle of any Heavenly Spirituall Life no new Nature with its bent and instinct lying towards God and Obedience to him wrought in the Saints or bestowed on them by the Holy Spirit of Grace If this be so we may even fairely shut our Bibles and go learne this new Gospell of such as are able to instruct us therein Wherefore I say Thirdly that as in Children there is an instinct an inclination of nature to induce them and carry them out to Obedience to their naturall Parents which yet is directed regulated provoked and stirred up and they thereby to that Obedince by Motives and Considerations suited to worke upon their Minds and Consciences to prevailewith them thereunto so also
made good will be of no use to M. Goodwin as to his present purpose The whole strength of this Argumentation is built on this supposall That the effectuall Grace of God in its working the will deed in Believers or the Spirits doing of it by Grace with Gods fore determination of events doth take away the Liberty of the will inducing into it a necessary manner of Operation determining it to one antecedently in order of time to its own determination of it selfe which is false nowise inferred frō the Doctrine under Consideration Yea as Gods Providentiall concurrence with men and determination of their wills to all their Actions as Actions is the Principle of all their naturall Liberty so his Gracious Concurrence with thē or operations in thē as unto Spirituall Effects working in thē to will is the Principle of all their true Spirituall Liberty when the Son makes us free then are we free indeed the Reward then is proposed to an understanding enlightned a will quickned made free by grace to stirre thē up to actions suitable to them who are in expectation of so bountifull a close of their Obedience which actions are yet wrought in them by the Spirit of God whose fruits they are and this to very good purpose in the hearts of all that know what it is to walke with God and to serve him in the midst of Temptations unlesse they are under the power of some such particular errour as turnes away their eyes from believing the Truth Secondly §. 11. The opposition here pretended between a Physicall necessitating and a Morall inducement for the producing of the same effect is in plain tearms intended between the Efficacy of Gods internall grace and the use of Externall exhortations and motives If God give an Internall Principle or Spirituall Habit fitting for inclining to spirituall actions and duties if he followes the work so begunne in us who yet of our selves can doe nothing nor are sufficient to think a good thought with continuall supplies of his Spirit and Grace working daily in us according to the exceeding greatnesse of his power the things that are well pleasing in his sight then though he worke upon us as Creatures endued with Reason Understandings Wills and Affections receiving glory from us according to the Nature he hath endued us withall all Exhortations and Incouragements to Obedience required at our hands are vaine and foolish Now because we think this to be the very Wisdome of God and the opposition made unto it to be a meere invention of Satan to magnify corrupted nature and decry all the Efficacy of the Grace of the new Covenant we must have something besides and beyond the naked Assertion of our Author to cause us once to believe it Thirdly The great Execution that is made by Morall inducements solely without any internally efficacious grace in the way of Gospell Obedience is often supposed but not once attempted to be put upon the proofe or Demonstration It shall then suffice to deny that any perswasions outward motives or inducements whatever are able of themselves to raise ingage and carry out the will unto Action so that any good spirituall Action should be brought forth on that account without the effectuall influence and Physicall operation of internall grace And M. Goodwin is left to prove it together with such other Assertions derogatory to the free Grace of God Dogmatically imposed upon his Reader in this Chapter whereof some have been already remarked and others may in due time The residue of this Section the 13 th spent to prove that Eternall Life is given as a Reward to Perseverance having already manifested the full consistency of the Proposition in a Gospell acceptation of the word Reward with whatever we teach of the Perseverance of the Saints I suppose my selfe inconcerned in And therefore passing by the triumphant conclusion of this Argument asserting an Absolute power in men to exhibite or decline from Obedience I shall goe on to that which in my apprehension is of more importance and will give occasion to a Disconrse I hope not unusefull or unprofitable to the Reader I shall therefore assigne it a peculiar place and Chapter to it selfe CAP. XV. 1. M G's fift Argument for the Apostasy of true Believers 2. The weight of this Argument taken from the sins of Believers The difference between the sins of Believers and unregenerate persons proposed to consideration 3. lames 1. 14. 15. The rise and progresse of Lust and Sinne. 4. The fountain of all sinne in all persons is Lust. Rom. 7. 7. 5. Observations clearing the difference between Begenerate and unregenerate persons in their sinning as to the common fountaine of all sinne The first 6. The second of the universality of Lust in the soule by nature 7. The Third in two inferences the first unregenerate men sinne with their whole consent 8. The Second inference concerning the raigne of sinne and raigning sinne 9. The Fourth concerning the universall possession of the Soule by renewing Grace 10. The fift that true Grace bears rule where ever it be 11. Inferences from the former considerations The first that in every regenerate person there are diverse principles of all Morall operations Rom 7. 19. 20. opened 12. The second that sinne cannot raigne in a Regenerate person 13. The third that Regenerate persons sinne not with their whole consent 14. Answer to the Argument at the entrance proposed Believers never sinne with their whole consent and willes 15. M. G's attempt to remove the Answer 16. His exceptions considered and removed Plurality of Wills in the same person in the Scripture sence of the opposition between flesh and spirit that no Regenerate person sinnes with his full consent proved 17. Of the Spirit and his Lustings in us 18. The Actings of the spirit in us free not suspended on any conditions in us 19. The same farther manifested 20. M. G's discourse of the first and second motions of the spirit considered 21. The same considerations farther carried on 22. Peter Martyrs Testimony considered 23. Rom. 7. 19. 20. considered 24. Difference between the opposition made to sin in persons Begenerate and that in persons unregenerate farther argued 25. Of the sence of Rom. 7. and in what sence Believers doe the works of the flesh 26. The close of these considerations 27. The Answer to the Argument at the entrance of the Chapter opened The Argument new formed the Major Proposition limited and granted and the Minor denied 28. The proofe of the Major considered Gal. 5. 21. Ephes. 5. 5. 6. 1 Cor 6. 9. 10. 29. Believers how concerned in comminations 30. Threatning proper to unbelievers for their sinnes 31. Farther objections proposed and removed 32. Of the progresse of Saints intempting to sinne 33. The effect of Lust in tem ptations 34. Difference between Regenerate and unregenerate persons as to the tempting of Lust 1. in respect of universality 2. of Power 35. Objections Answered 36. Whether
having proceeded thus with M. Goodwin that a foundation may be the better laid for the removall of what he farther adds proceed to consider the progresse of sinne and to remarke from thence the difference that is betweene Regenerate and Vnregenerate men in their sinning The second thing proposed in the Apostles discourse of the Rise and progresse of sinne is the generall way that Lust proceedeth in for the bringing of it forth and that is Temptation every one is tempted of his own Lust This is the generall way that Lust proceeds in for the production of actuall sinne It tempts and he in whom it is is tempted There is a Temptation unto sin only and a Temptation unto sin by sin The first is no sinne in him that is so tempted our Saviour was so tempted he was tempted of the Divell Math. 4. 1. % He was in all points tempted like as we are without sin That his temptations were unto sin is apparent from the story of them but the Prince of this world coming had nothing in him John 14. 30. Found nothing in him to Answer and close with his Temptations and therefore though he was tempted yet was he without sin Now though this sort of temptations from Sathan are not Originally our sinnes but his yet there being tinder in our soules that kindles more or lesse in and upon every injection of his fiery darts there being something in us to meet many if not all of his Temptations they prove in some measure in the issue to be ours Indeed Sathan sometimes ventures upon us in things wherein he hath doubtlesse small hope of any concurrence and so seemes rather to aime at our disquiet than our sinnes as in those whom he perplexes with hard and blasphemous thoughts of God a thing so contradictory to the very principles not of Grace only but of that whereby we are men that it is utterly impossible there should be any assent of the soule thereunto to think of God as God is to think of him every thing that is Good Pure Great Excellent incomprehensible in all perfection Now at the same time to have any Apprehensions of a direct contradictory importance the mind of man is not capable Were it not for the unbeliefe causelesse feares and discontentments that in many do insue upon Temptations of this nature which are consequents and not effects of it Sathan might keepe this dart in his owne forge for any mischeife he is like to doe with it The Apostle speakes here of Temptations by sinne as well as unto sinne and these are mens sinnes as well as their Temptations they are Temptations as tending to farther evill they are sinnes as being irregular and devious from the rule Now this tempting of Lust compriseth two things First §. 33. The generall active inclination of the Heart unto sinne though not fixed as unto any particular act or way of sinne the motus primò primi of this you have that Testimony of God concerning man in the state of nature Gen. 6. 5. % Every figment of the thought of his heart is only evill every day the figment or imagination of the thoughts is the very roote of them their generall moulding or active preparing of the mind for the exerting of them so 1 Chrou 28. 9. % God understandeth all the imaginations of the thoughts The figment of them The next disposition of the soule unto them and 2 Cron. 29. 19. Keepe this for ever in the imagination of the thoughts of their hearts or keep their hearts in a continuall framing posture and condition of such good thoughts This I say is she first way of Lusts Temptation it makes a mint of the heart to frame readily all manner of evill desires and thoughts that they may as our Saviour speakes proceed out of the heart Mat. 15. 19. Their actuall fixing on any object is their proceeding antecedent whereunto they are framed and formed in the heart Lust actually disposeth inclines bends the heart to things suitable to it selfe or the corrupt habituall principle which hath its residence in us Secondly The actuall tumultuating of Lust and working with all its power and policy in stirring up provoking to and drawing out thoughts and contrivances of sin with delight and complacency in inconeiveable variety the severall degrees of its progresse herein being afterwards described In the first of these there is no small difference between Regenerate Vnregenerate persons §. 34. and that in these two things First In its universality In Unregenerate men every figment of their heart is only evill and that every day there is an universality of actings exprest positively exclusively to any actings of another kind every figment of their heart is only evill and of time every day whatever good they seeme to do or do whatever dutyes they performe that in them all which is the proper figment of their heart is only evill On this account take any duty they do any worke they performe and weigh it in the ballance and t' will be found in respect of principles and circumstances or aimes to be wholly evill That indeed there is nothing in it that is acceptable to God their hearts are casting minting and coyning sinne all the day long With Believers 't is not so there is also a good treasure in their hearts from whence they bring out good things there is a good Root in them that beares good fruit though they are or may be overtaken with many sins yea with great sins yet lust doth not tempt thē as it doth unregenerate men with a perpetuall continuall active inclination unto evill even some way or other in all the good they do The Spirit is in them will and doth in what state so ever they are dispose their hearts to Faith Love Meekenesse and actuates those Graces at least in the elicite acts of the will for a good tree will bring forth good fruit never any Believer is or was so deserted of God or did so forsake God as that every figment of his heart should be evill only and that continually That no one act of sinne can possibly expell his habit of Grace hath been formerly shewed neither is he ever cast into such a condition but from the good principle that is in him There is a panting after God longing for his Salvation with more or lesse efficacy the sparke is warme and glowing though under ashes Secondly In respect of power Lust tempts in unregenerate men out an absolute uncontrouleable dominion and that with a morally irresistible efficacy All its dominion as hath been shewed and very much of its strength is lost in Believers this is the intendment of the Apostles discourse Rom. 6. concerning the crucifying of sinne by the death of Christ. The power strength vigour and efficacy of it is so far abated weakned mortified that it cannot so effectually impell unto sin as it doth when 't is in perfect life and strength But you 'l say then
every evill way and to delight in God continually and because they cannot attaine in this life unto perfection they cry out of the power of sin leading them captives to the Law thereof They would have their wills dead to sinne wholly dead and have trouble that they are not so as to the generall frame of of their spirits how oft so ever they be drawne off For other persons they have truly no such frame at all whatever they may be cut into the likenesse of by the sharpnesse of Scripturall convictions that come upon them and therefore they watch not as to the keeping of it The deeper you dive into them the more neere you come to their hearts the worse they are their very inward parts is wickednesse I speak now of the ordinary frame of the one and other This drawing of by sinne in Believers is by the power of sinne in opposition to their Will Their wills lye against it to the utmost thev would not as was shewed be so drawne off But as for the others as hath been shewen however their minds may be inlightned and their consciences awakned and their Affections corrected and restrained their wills are wholly dead in sinne Secondly when a man is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or drawne away there are stricken out between the lust and the pleasing object some glances of the heart with thoughts of sinne When lust hath gon thus farre if a violent temptation fall in the person to whom it doth so befall may be carryed or rather hurried out and surprized into no small advance towards the perpetration of sinne without the least delight in the sinne or consent of the will unto it if he be a godly man So was it in the case of David in the cutting of the lap of the garment of Saul Lust stirred in him drew him off from his frame of dependance on God and by the advantage of Sauls presence stirred up thoughts of selfe-security and advantage in him which carryed him almost to the very act of sinne before he recovered himselfe Then I say is a man drawn away not only in respect to the Terme from whence but also of that whereunto when the thoughts of the object presented as suitable to lust are cast in though immediately rejected This I intend by this acting of sinne Which although it be our sinne as having its rise and spring in us and is continually to be lamented yet when it is not accompaned with any delight of the Heart or consent of the Will but the thought of it is like a piece of fiery iron cast into water which maketh a sudden commotion or noise but yet is suddenly quenched it is that which regenerate men are may be subject to which also keepeth them humble all their dayes There is more in this drawing away than a single thought or apprehension of evill amounts to which may be without the least sinne To know evill is not evill but yet is short of the soules consent unto it The second way wherein lust proceedeth in tempting is by inticing the soule § 53. he who is so dealt withallby it is said to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to be inticed There is something more in this than in being only drawn away The word here used is twice mentioned in the 2 Epistle of Peter 2 chapter Once it is rendred to beguile 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 v. 14. And in the other alluring v. 18. It commeth as is commonly known from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a bait which is from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 deceit because the end of a bait is to deceive to catch by deceiving Thence 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is to intice to allure to intangle as men do fishes and birds with baits That which by this expression the Holy Ghost intendeth is the prevalency of Lust in drawing the soule unto that which is by the Casuists termed Delectatio morosa a secret delight in the evill abiding some space upon it So that it would do that which it is tempted and inticed unto were it not forbidden as the fish liketh the bait well enough but is affraid of the Hooke The soule for a season is captivd to like the sinne and so is under the power of it but is affraid of the guilt It sticketh only at this how shall it do this great thing and sinne against the Lord. Now though the mind never frame any intention of fulfilling the evill wherewith the soule is thus intangled or of committing that sinne whereunto it is allured and inticed yet the affections having been cast into the mould of sin for a season conformed unto it by delight which is the conformity of the affections to the thing delighted in This is an high degree of sin and that because it is directly contrary to that death unto sin and the crucifying of the flesh and the lusts thereof which we are continually called unto It is in a sence a making provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts thereof provision is made though the flesh be not suffered to feed thereon but only delight it selfe with beholding of it I shall not deny but this also may befall a true Believer §. 54. it being chiefely implyed in Rom. 7. But yet with wide difference from the condition of other persons in their being under the power of the deceits and beguilements of sin For first this neither doth nor can grow to be the habituall frame of their hearts because as the Apostle telleth us they are dead to sinne and cannot live any longer therein Rom. 6. 2. And their old man is crucified with Christ that the body of sinne might be destroyed v. 6. Now though a man should abst●ine from all actuall sinnes or open committing of sinne all his dayes yet if he have any habituall delight in sinne and defileth his soule with delightfull contemplations of sinne he liveth to sinne and not to God which a Believer cannot do for he is not under the Law but under Grace To abide in this state is to weare the garment spotted with the flesh But now take another Person however heightned and wrought up by convictions unlesse it be when Conscience is stirred up and some affrightment is put upon him he can as his leisure affords give his heart the swing in inordinate affections or what else pleaseth suiteth his state condition temper and the like 2. A Believer is exceedingly troubled upon the account of his being at any time led captive to the power of sinne in this kind and the review of the frame of his spirit wherein his affections were by delight conformed to any sinne is a matter of sore trouble and deep humiliation to him I am of Austins mind De Nup-Concupis Cap. 8 that it is this perpetrating of sinne and not the actuall committing of it which the Apostle complaineth of Rom. 7. Two things perswade me hereunto First That it is the
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
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
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
Its Power the Apostle calls it a Law a Law in his members a Law of sinne Rom. 7. 21 23. Such a Law as Fights makes warre and leads captive selling us under sinne not suffering us to doe the good we would forceing us to the evill we would not drawing us off from that we delight in bringing us under bondage to that which we abhorre a powerfull unmercifull cruell Tyrant it is Oh! wretched men that we are vers 24. There is no Saint of God but in the inward man doth hate sinne every sinne more then Hell it selfe knowing the world of evills that attend the least sinne yet is there not one of them but this powerfull Tyrant hath compelled and forced to so many as have made them a burthen to their own Soules 4. Fourthly It s Cunning Craft and Policy It is called in Scripture the Old Man not from the weaknesse of its strength but from the strength of its Craft Heb. 3. 13. Take heed saith the Apostle least any of you be hardened by the deceitfulnesse of sinne There is abundance of deceitfulnesse in it being ready fit and prompt to beguile lying in wayt for advantages furnished for all opportunities and ready to close with every temptation yea the wayes of it are so large various its Wiles and Methods for deceiving so innumerable its fruitfulnesse in conceiving and bringing forth of sinne so abundant its advantages and opportunities so many that it is like the way of a Serpent upon a stone there is no tracing or finding of it out A serious consideration of the opposition made unto our Perseverance by this one Enemy which hath so much ability and is so restlesse in its warfare never quiet conquering nor conquered which can be kept out of none of our Councells excluded from none of our actings is abundantly sufficient to evince that it is not want or weaknesse of Enemies which putteth Believers out of danger of falling away But all this perhaps will be granted Enemies they have enough §. 36. and those much more diligent and powerfull every one of them then all we have spoken of that now described amounteth unto but the meanes of Preservation which God affords the Saints is that which puts them almost out of Gun-shot and gives them that Golden security mentioned which cometh not in administring consolation one steppe behind that which ariseth from the Doctrine of absolute Perseverance Let then this be a little considered and perhaps it will allay this whole contest Is it then that such is the Grace that is bestowed upon them in respect of the Principle whence it is bestowed the eternall Love of God and the way whereby it is for them procured the Blood-shedding and Intercession of Christ with the nature of it being the seed of God which abideth and withereth not and that such seemes to be the nature of infused Habits that they are not removed but by the power and immediate hand of him by whom they are bestowed Is it from hence that their Assurance and security doth arise Alas all this is but a fiction there is no Faith that is the fruit of Election Christ purchased it not for any by his Death Infused Habits are not the Grace that perisheth and that that abideth are the same these things are but pretences Is it then that God hath purposed from Eternity to continue Constant in his Love towards them never to Leave them nor Forsake them Nay but of all things Imaginable this is the greatest Abomination which if the Scriptures did any where Affirme it were sufficient to make a rationall considering man to Question their Authority What then hath the Lord Promised to give themsuch continued supplyes of his Spirit Grace in Jesus Christ as that they shall be supported against all opposition and preserved from all or any such sinnes as will certainely make a separation betweene God and their Soules Nay there is not one such Promise in all the Booke of God they are Conditionall for the injoyment of the good things whereof Believers stand all their dayes upon their good behaviour Is it then that the Lord Jesus who is alwais heard of his Father intercedes for them that their Faith faile not that they may be preserved by the power of God unto Salvation that not only upon Condition of their Believing but cheefly that they may be kept and preserved in Believing Or is it that their Enemies are so conquered for them and on their behalfe in the Death and Resurrection of Christ that they shall never have dominion over them that their Security doth arise Neither the one nor the other nor any nor all of these are the Grounds and Foundations of their Establishment but they are wholy given up to the powerfull hand of some Considerations which M. Goodwin expresseth and setteth out to the life Cap. 9. Sect. 32 33 34. Pag. 174 175. Now because the Remonstrants have always told us §. 37. that God hath provided sufficiently for the Perseverance of the Saints Coll Hag. A. 5. Act. Synod Decl. sent A. 5. Thes. 2. if they be not supinely wanting to themselves in the use of them but have not hitherto either joyntly or severally that I know of taken the paines to discover in particular wherein that Sufficiency of Provision for their safety doth consist or what the meanes are that God offords them to this end and purpose Mr Goodwin who is a learned Mystes of all their Councels having exactly and fully layd them forth as a solid Foundation of his Assertion concerning only a remote Possibility of the Saints totall Defection let it not seeme Tedious or Impertinent if I Transcribe for the clearer Debate of it before the Reader that whole Discourse of his and consider it in order as it lyes If saith he it be Demanded what are the Meanes which God hath given so abundantly to the Saints to make themselves so free so strong in inclinations to avoid things so apparantly destructive to the Spirituall Peace and Salvation of their Soules as naturally men are to forbeare all such occasions which are apparantly destructive to their naturall lives so that they need not to be any more any whit more afraid of loosing their Soules through their owne actings then men are or need to be of destroying their naturall lives upon the same termes I Answer 1. First he hath given them Eyes wherewith Light whereby Clearaly evidently to see and know that it is not more rationall or manlike for men to refraine all such acts which they know they cannot performe but to the present and unavoidadle destruction of their naturall lives then 't is to forbeare all sinfull Acts whatsoever and especially such which are apparantly destructive to their Soules 2. Secondly God hath not only given them the Eyes and the Light we speake of wherewith and whereby cleerely to see vnderstand the things manifested but hath farther indued them with a faculty of
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
given unto them There is not a quickning a life-giving Power in a quality a created thing In the state of Nature besides gracious dispensations and habits in the Soule inclining it to that which is good and making it a sutable subject for spirituall Operations John 5. Eph. 2. 1 2. we want also a vitall Principle which should actuate the disposed subject unto answerable Operations this a quality cannot give He that carries on the worke of quickning doth also begin it Rom 8. 11. All Graces whatever Gal. 5. 22. as was said are the fruits of the Spirit and therefore in order of Nature are wrought in men consequentially to his being bestowed on them Now in the first bestowing of the Spirit we have Union with Christ the carrying on whereof consists in the farther manifestation and operations of the Indwelling Spirit which is called Communion To make this evident that our Union with Christ consists in this the same Spirit dwelling in him and us and that this is our Union let us take a view of it First from Scripturall Declarations of it and then Secondly from Scripture Illustrations of it both briefely being not my direct businesse in hand 1. First Peter tells us §. 9. that it is a participation of the Divine Nature 2 Pet. 1. 4. We are by the Promises made partakers of the Divine Nature that is it is promised to be given unto us which when we receive we are made partakers of by the Promises That this participation of the Divine Nature let it be interpreted how it will is the same upon the matter with our Union with Christ is not questioned that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 should be only a gracious habit quality or disposition of Soule in us I cannot easily receive that is somewhere called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 2 Cor. 5. 17. the New Crea ure but no where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Divine Nature The pretended high and spirituall but indeed grosse and carnall conceits of some from hence destructive to the Nature of God and Man I shall not turne aside to consider What that is of the Divine Nature or wherein it doth consist that we are made partakers of by the Promises I shewed before That the Person of the Holy and Blessed Spirit is promised to us whence he is called the Holy Spirit of Promise Eph. 1. 13. hath been I say by sundry evidences manifested Upon the Accomplishment of that Promise he coming to dwell in us we are said in him by the Promises to be made partakers of the Divine Nature We are 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 we have our Communion with it Our participation then of the Divine Nature being our Union with Christ consists in dwelling of the same Spirit in him and in us we receiving him by the Promise for that end 2. Christ tells us § 10. that this Union arises from the eating of his flesh and drinking of his bloud Ioh 6. 56. Hee that eateth my flesh and drinketh my bloud dwelleth in me and I in him The mutuall Indwelling of Christ and his Saints is their Union this saith Christ is from their Eating my flesh and Drinking my bloud But how may this be done Many were offended when this saying was spoken neere and close trialls of sincerity drive hypocrites into Apostasy from his Christ takes away this scruple v 63. it is saith he the spirit that quickneth the flesh profiteth nothing It is by the Indwelling of the quickning Spirit whereby we have a reall participation of Christ whereby he dwelleth in us and we in him So 3. He prayes for his Disciples Ioh. 17. 21. that they may be one §. 11. as the Father in him and he in the Father that they may be one in the Father and Sonne and v. 22. let them be one even as we are one And that yee may not think that it is only union with and among themselves that he presses for though indeed that which gives them Union with Christ gives them Union one with another also and that which constitutes them of the Body unites them to the Head there is one Body because there is one Spirit Eph. 4. 4. which even Lombard himselfe had some notion of in his Assertion that Charity which is in us is the person of the Holy Ghost from that place of the Apostle God is Love I say he farther manifests that it is Union with himselfe which he intends v. 23. I in them saith he and thou in mee This Union then with him our Saviour declares by or at least illustrates by resemblance unto his union with the Father Whether this be understood of the Union of the Divine Persons of Father and Sonne in the Blessed Trinity the Union I meane that they have with themselves in their distinct Personality and not their Unity of Essence or the Union which was between Father and Sonne as Incarnate it comes all to one as to the Declaration of that Union we have with him The Spirit is Vinculum Trinitatis the Bond of the Trinity as is commonly and not ineptly spoken proceeding from both the other Persons being the Love and Power of them both he gives that Union to the Trinity of Persons whose substratum and Ground is the inestimable unity of Essence wherein they are one Or if you take it for the Union of the Father with the Sonne Incarnate it is evident and beyond inquiry or dispute that as the Personall Union of the Divine Word and the Humane Nature was by the Assumption of that Nature into one Personall Substance with it selfe so the Person of the Father hath no other union with the Humane Nature of Christ immediatly and not by the Union of his own Nature thereunto in the Person of his Sonne but what consists in that Indwelling of his Spirit in all fulnesse in the Man Christ Jesus Now saith our Saviour this Union I desire they may have with mee by the dwelling of the same Spirit in me and them whereby I am in them and they in me as I am one with thee O Father 2. The Scripture sets forth this Union by many Illustrations §. 12. given unto it from the things of the neerest Union that are subject to our apprehension giving the very termes of the things so united unto Christ and his in their Union I shall name some few of them 1. That of Head and Members making up one Body §. 13. is often insisted on Christ is the Head of his Saints and they being many are Members of that one Body and of one another as the Apostle at large 1 Cor 12. 12. even as the Body is one and hath many members and all the members of that one body being many are one body so is Christ The body is one and the Saints are one Body yea one Christ that is mysticall They then are the Body what part is Christ He is the Head 1 Cor. 11. 3. the Head of every man