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A91998 A den of theeves discovered. Or certaine errours and false doctrines, delivered in a sermon at a visitation holden at Baldocke in the county of Hertford, Decemb. 9. 1641. By Henry Denne, curate at Pyrton in Hertfordshire. And since printed by his owne appointment. Contradicted justly by many of the auditors. And confuted by Thomas-Atvvood Rotherham, now rector of St John Zacharies, London, and sometimes vicar of Iclkeford in Hertfordshire, neare Hitchin. Here you have the point of iustification by free grace fully handled, together with many difficult places of Scriptnre [sic] (much abused) plainly expounded; and some speciall cases of conscience resolved, whereby the weakest Christian, in the greatest conflict, may gather true and solid comfort. With severall tables very necessary and usefull for the reader. Published by authority. Rotherham, Thomas Atwood, d. 1657. 1643 (1643) Wing R2000; Thomason E251_3; ESTC R212516 114,466 110

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comfort your drooping spirits against such desperate disconsolate doctrine as this meerely contrary to the doctrine of the Gospel and the true way of preaching Free Grace by Christ who will not breake a bruised Reed nor quench smoaking Flax if an an Angell from heaven preach any other doctrine beleeve him not I say againe cheere up your hearts The gates of Hell shall never prevaile against you you are rich in grace and all the pretious promises of the Gospel belong to you and all the riches of Gods mercie in Christ Jesus are yours what shall I say more I conclude God is yours Christ is yours and all is yours Now we are come to the third question laid downe in Page the 74. at the latter end Whether when Faith lies hid that wee cannot see that we beleeve by the inward Testimony of our conscience that it is possible our workes of pietie or charitie can assure us of salvation his answer is I say no and my reasons are these 1. That which makes me doubt of my Faith will make me doubt of the sinceritie of my worke 2. How is it possible I should judge my worke sincere when I cannot see I beleeve Whatsoever is not of Faith is sinne I answer there are diverse grounds which make a man doubt of his Faith different from those which make him doubt of the sincerit●e of his worke as through the want of apprehension whereby hee can say from his conscience that he is justified and at peace with God And in regard of spirituall desertions There is a twofold inward testimony of conscience The first is an immediate knowledge that a man doth beleeve which is by the prime and next efficient cause namely the Spirit of God called the (k) Id est eandem fidem ex ejusdem Spiritus afflatu dono Beza in loc Spirit of Faith 2 Cor. 4.13 and this is more fully set downe downe 1 Cor. 2.12 Now we have received not the spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that wee might know the things that are freely given to us of God The second inward testimony of conscience is the sinceritie of a mans worke whereby a Christian knowes he doth beleeve and concerning the sinceritie of the worke none can judge but a mans owne conscience whose proper office it is and this the Apostle sets downe 2 Cor. 1.12 For our rejoycing is this the testimony of our (l) Certebonam conscientiam habemus quod candide ca an misinceritate quam Dominus in nobis requiri● un sumus Luc. Ostand in loc conscience that in simplicitie and godly sinceritie not with fleshly wisedome but by the grace of God wee have had our conversation in the world Conscience being that privitie which the soule hath to things knowne to none but God and it selfe is able to judge of the intention of every action So that as a tree is knowne by the fruits in like manner Faith is certainely knowne by its fruits as the cause is knowne by the effect And the Apostle (m) Insallibile est signam vere r●natorum organm a postenori valer Arett com in loc 1 Joh. 3.14 makes love to the brethren an infallible signe of a regenerate man We know that we have passed from death to life because we love the brethren So that although we cannot immediately see that wee doe beleeve yet if we find in our conscience that wee love the brethren we know by this that wee doe beleeve for as breath is a certaine signe and evidence of present life so love to the brethren of present Faith even as wee see that when the Sunne is eclipsed though the earth wants the light of it yet not the reall influence and though men see not the Sunne in the light of it they doe see it in its reall influence and vertue So although Faith may be hid in regard of the soules immediate seeing it yet it may evidently see it doth beleeve in regard of Faiths reall influences and effects love to the brethren being one and thus though Faith lies hid Charitie doth and can assure us of our salvation Pag. 75. What workes are done in Faith sayes he that the same acts may not be done in the spirit of bondage If you say indeed that the actions are the same but they differ in the end I grant it and in the efficient also but as I cannot discerne the efficient so neither can I discerne the end of my worke To this I answer I discerne the efficient by the end he that hath a discursive intellect and can make use of that reason which God bath given him can easily tell to what end hee undertakes such and such an action The end being the first thing in the (a) Finis qui ultimus est executione primus est intentione omnis intellectus operativus incipit a fine Keckerm System lib. 1. pag. 165. intention and that which first sets the minde on worke about this or that thus in temporalls so likewise in spiritualls The Christian being able to make use of his sanctified reason can easily tell the intent of his heart and the end hee aymes at especially having the word of God as a sure rule to goe by he can tell whether he loves the brethren out of any by end he hath or onely as brethren setting all other respects aside And finding this holy affection in himselfe must needs conclude it cannot bee in a man that doth not beleeve I have heard of a very godly Minister who as I take it being sicke to death was much troubled about his evidence and doubted whether he did belong to God or no at the last Well sayes he the devill shall never gull me I have one evidence will assure me without faile I am certaine I love Gods people and so gathered comfort Upon these grounds I am bold to determine the question affirmatively That although Faith lies hid for the present yet a man from workes of pietie and charitie which he findes in himselfe may have assurance that he doth beleeve and so is in the state of salvation In his conference pag. 12. he doth confesse Where unfained love to the brethren is found it may be a testimony of grace received but he objects How shall I know his answer is That unlesse we beleeve truely we cannot know we love unfainedly therefore though our love heare witnesse to our Faith before men yet our Faith beares witnesse to our love in the secrets of our heart neither can it ever appeare to bee true love that proceeds not from a heart first imbracing Christ by Faith To this I answer by my loving unfainedly I know I beleeve truely the truth of my worke being an infallible evidence of the truth of my Faith and I can trie my worke by the sure rule of the Word which will not faile and thus though I cannot see my Faith formally yet I can see it effectively I meane in
its effective energie and efficacie Againe our love doth not onely beare witnesse to our Faith before men but also to our selves that we doe beleeve our consciences telling us that it is such a love that must needs flow from Faith and be a fruit and effect of it Good (b) Opera bona tripliciter veniunt consideranda 1. Ratione materiae sive objecti circa quod versantur 2. Ratione originis ex qua procedunt 3. Ratione finis in quem fiunt Laurent com in Epist Jaceb pag. mihi 178. workes are to be considered 1. In regard of the matter or object about which they are conversant 2. In regard of the originall from which they doe proceed 3. In regard of the end for which they are done Now who can judge of the proper and formall object of a mans love to the brethren whether grace be it or no or who can tell whether it flowes from a sincere affection to grace or no or whether there be any by end or not another man cannot judge 1 Cor. 2.11 For what man knoweth the things of man save the spirit of man which is in him by the (c) Spiritus hominis significar substantialem hominis pattem animum seu intellectum conscientiam hominis quae cuique certissime dictat quid in intimis cordis recessibus lateat quisque in sinu gerat Pare com in loc spirit wee are to understand the substantiall part of man the mind or intellect and conscience which doth certainly dictate and tell to every one what lies hid in the secret passages of his heart and every thing that hee carrieth in his bosome for the mind of man doth not onely understand those things which are abroad or mans outward actions but his very inwards And by reflexion upon it selfe knowes and understands that it understands it selfe And thus its plaine that no other can judge of a mans true love to the brethren but his conscience and spirit and the spirit sanctified can by the Word judge certainly another but conjecturally And thus you see our love beares witnesse to our faith in the secrets of our heart and doth infallibly evidence to us that we doe beleeve And my conscience evidences to me that this love could not be in my heart unlesse I had Faith and our Saviour tels us Mat. 25.40 (d) Eleemosyna haec est quae Christum pascit esurientem in paupere Prosper De promis praedict Dei par 2. cap. 7. Inasmuch as we imbrace his Brethren by acts of love we imbrace him in our armes which none can doe without Faith In his conference Pag. 13. he layes downe this as a Note of love to the brethren If they be in poverty to sell the whole or halfe of our possessions and divide among them The sicke man propounds this question Can I not love them unlesse I sell my possessions and divide among them The Minister makes answer Verily no for true love binds us not onely to lay downe our goods but our lives also where need requireth The sicke man saith He hath not loved them thus The Minister tels him then he hath loved them in word not in deed in tongue not in truth And concludes that few can by this marke be assured of their salvation because they come so farre short of the precept and example of our Lord. To this I answer Cannot a man love the Brethren unlesse he actually sell the whole or halfe of his possessions and divide among them its enough if he carry a minde to sell them if need require which every good Christian doth and will in case of necessity part with his estate and life too Pag. 14. In his conference he saith I doe for the present beleeve untill I shall see ground to the contrary that Saint John doth principally speake of our assurance whereby we know (e) Nos scimus quid nos scimus quia transivimus de morte ad vitam undescimus quia diligimus fratres Nemo interroget hominem redeat unusquifque ad cor suum si ibi invenerit Charitatem sraternam securus sit quia transiit de motte ad vitam Jam in dextra est Aug. Expos in Epist Joan. tract 5. col mihi 613. in fine one another to be the children of God this shewes he understands not the meaning of this place it being chiefely to be understood of the evidence we have in our selves Pag. 15. I doe affirme saith he that he that hath no greater witnesse in himselfe than love to the brethren shall never attaine to assurance of Salvation Mark how within the compasse of three leaves he doth say and unsay for Pag. 12. He doth confesse unfained love to the brethren is a testimony of grace received Now whosoever hath a testimony that he hath received Grace hath assurance by this of his Salvation it makes no matter whether the Testimony he hath be greater or lesse so it be sound and true and a Christian in this case may argue a minore ad majus from the lesser to the greater for he that in Truth hath this witnesse is infallibly certaine of the greater and may by this know that he hath that I meane Faith if by it he understands the greater They are cursed speeches of the sicke man to say Hell gapes for him he shall be damned And cursed be the time that ever I laid a foundation upon the sands As though to affirme that unfained love to the brethren is an infallible note of true beleevers were to lay a foundation upon the sands whereas the Apostle affirmes as much Master Perkins speaking of the right way of ministring comfort to a party distressed layes this downe for one ground Namely to love any man because he is a Christian and a childe of God is a sensible and certaine note of a man that is partaker of the true love of God in Christ and he proves it by this place we are upon 1 Joh. 3.14 Having laid downe this ground saith he The way whereby the party in distresse may be brought within the compasse of the promise of Salvation stands in two things in making tryall and applying of the promise First when a man is in the fit of Tentation he will say resolutely he is sure to be damned Aske him in this fit of his love to God he will answer he hath none at all but aske him further whether he love a man because he is a Christian and a Childe of God then he will say he doth indeed In the second place the applying of the promise of life everlasting to the party distressed And that is done by a kinde of reasoning The first part whereof is taken from the Word of God The second from the testimony of the distressed conscience And the conclusion is the applying of the promise on this manner Major Minor He that loves a man because he is a Christian and a childe of God is certainely himselfe a true childe of God But thou lovest a man because he is a Christian and a childe of God Therefore thou art a childe of God Conclus and art translated from death to life as the Apostle speakes Another ground of comfort for a party distressed Master Perkins layes downe from the unfaigned desire after grace which he in his Conference Page 3. and in his Booke Page 74. doth utterly reject First saith Master Perkins let the comforter aske the party in distresse whether he beleeve and repent The distressed party answers no he cannot repent nor beleeve Then we must further aske whether he doth desire to beleeve and repent To this he will answer he doth desire it with all his heart Now for applying the promise to the distressed the Argument will run thus He that hath an unfained desire to repent and beleeve hath remission of sins and life everlasting Major Minor Conelus But thou hast an earnest desire to repent and beleeve in Christ Therefore remission of sinnes and life everlasting is thine Thus Master Perkins But that I may comfort the poore weake Christian against such Doctrine as this That such as doe desire to beleeve doe not beleeve I will conclude with an Example I have read in the workes of that famous Divine Master Greenham who tels of one Master Chambers of Leycester who in his sickenesse grievously despaired and cryed out that he was damned and after dyed yet it is not for any to note him sayes he with the blacke marke of a reprobate One thing which he spake in his extremity O that I had but one drop of Faith must move all men to conceive well of him for by this it seemeth he had an heart which desired to repent and beleeve And therefore a repentant and beleeving heart indeed Blame me not for having a second bout at such Doctrine as this so destructive to poore distressed Consciences so contrary to the Word of God and against the experience of every true broken hearted Christian What Doctrine soever tends to the vilifying of a sanctified life is a Doctrine of devils though it appeare as an Angell of light And such as labour to make the Law of God of no use not so much as a rule of life to a beleever doe deny the Kingly Office of Christ and they are Antichrist Now the Lord give us broken hearts that we may be low in our owne eyes and not be led by our owne humours but that we may be guided by the Spirit of truth according to the word of Truth I will present you with the golden chaine of Salvation and I have done 1. God hath ordained 2. Christ hath merited 3. The Word doth promise 4. The Sacraments doe seale 5. Faith doth receive 6. The mouth doth confesse 7. Workes doe testifie Now to God onely wise Father Sonne and Holy Ghost be all praise as is most due for evermore FINIS
fruit is eternal Christ at the last will welcome none with a Well said but Well done good servant enter thou into thy masters joy If any shall preach to you that because you beleeve you need no repentance neither to bee sorrowfull in confessing your sinnes nor to aske pardon Tell them you have not so learned Christ who himselfe hath taught you that as duely as you aske for your daily bread you should likewise aske for the forgivenesse of sinne let me warne you in the Apostles words 2 Pet. 3.17 Yee therefore beloved seeing yee know these things beware lest yee also being led away with the errour of the wicked fall from your owne stedfastnesse And the very God of peace sanctifie you wholly And I pray God your whole spirit and soule and body be preserved blamelesse unto the comming of our Lord Jesus Christ And so I rest Your carefull Watchman for your soules good who seekes not yours but you THO. ROTHERHAM Septemb. 1. 1643. To my Loving Friends and sometimes Parishioners of Ickleford in the County of Hertford Deare Friends I Know this Booke in Answer to Master Denne was expected a yeare agoe and it hath beene almost so long finished But I have beene hindred by the great distractions of the times And my sickly and crazy body besides other deepe sorrowes which since have befalne me As the parting with a Sonne of no small hopes And the death of my truely religious and tender-hearted Mother of whom I may say as Saint Augustin of his Mother Confess lib. 1. cap. 11. Et conturbata mater carnis meae quoniam sempiternam salutem meam charius parturiebat She suffered sorer pangs that I might be borne againe then She did at my first Birth when in sorrow she brought me forth into the world Witnesse her last dying words which at her last farewell at the point of her death she did with deare affection expresse looking upon me stedfastly and saying O Sonne take heed how thou sinnest against God at any time And I may truly say of her as the same Father speaketh in the first of his Confessions An dicam vitam mortalem an mortem vitalem nescio Whether her whole life was a dying life or a living death I cannot tell but this I can tell to my hearts griefe her gray haires were brought downe with sorrow to the grave Thus you see my hinderances yet at last Post varios casus post tot discrimina rerum I have here presented my answer to the Printed Sermon And that I undertake this worke is not out of hatred to the man but love to the truth and to your soules let me advise you in our Saviours words to take heed what you heare and be not tossed to and fro with every winde of Doctrine He gives his booke this Title The Doctrine of John Baptist And yet every one may see he doth throughout his Sermon Preach downe Johns Doctrine as if of purpose he did intend to confute it Take heed of woolves in Sheepes clothing Aul. Gellius lib. 2. Noct. Attic. reports that the habit of Philosophers was once had in great esteeme and it hapned that a man infamous cloathed himselfe in the habit of a Philosopher and this man asking a gift at the hands of Herodes Atticus one of the Consuls for the Common-wealth of Athens he questioned him who he was but he with indignation answered him he was a Philosopher he might know him by his habit to whom the Consul replyed I see sayes he the face and cloathing of a Philosopher but no Philosopher I apply this to this Sermon Here is Christ pretended and Christianity but Faith and Repentance and Charity cryed downe which are the inside of a Christian And men may pretend the Preaching of Free Grace and Christ and this may make a faire shew but unlesse you see Faith working by love and repentance you cannot see a Christian but an Antichristian I am glad I have this love-token to leave with you whom I alwayes did and ever shall wish well I had while I lived with you a trembling care for your Soules good And I can speake it with a safe conscience I never willingly grieved any in the Towne If from some I had hatred for my good will I leave all to God who in time will lay every mans sinne at his owne doore I desire it may be in mercy to their Soules At my remove from you some imbittered Spirits did invenom their tongues against me and yet would appeare to the world as Angels of light at whose hands I have deserved better I may take up the Prophets complaint They said Let us smite him with the tongue and then we will regard none of his words And it is the Devils policy to raise an evill report against our persons that so he might take away the power of our Ministery from the hearts of men that are our hearers but I thank God who hath wrought otherwise in the hearts of most of my people with whom now I live whom I desire to be followers of me so far forth as I am a follower of Christ I speake not out of pride or singularity in regard of my selfe I thanke God I have learned quietly to passe by evill report but in respect of my Minstery Let my accusers be brought to my face if I cannot make a Christian answer to what any man can lay to my charge then let me be blamed I can truely say I have coveted no mans Silver Gold or Apparell And God knowes my heart my care hath beene more to inrich my selfe with inward abilities for my place than to get outward ability by my place I ever tooke more care for the state of my peoples soules than for my outward estate And now Brethren I commend you to God and to the Word of his Grace which is able to build you up and to give you an inheritance among all them which are sanctifyed And thus I rest Your true Friend and sometimes carefull Minister THO. ROTHERHAM St. John Zacharies London from my Study August 24. 1643. The Names of the Authors used in this Booke set downe Alphabetically Augustinus Ambrosius Aretius Aquinas Amesius Aristoteles Beyerlinck Bellarminus Brugensis Beza Brentius Bocanus Chrysostomus Chemnitius Concil Trident. Chamierus Cornelius a lapide Cassander Calvinus Cajetanus Durandus Dionys Carthus Davenantius Estius Espencaeus Gregor Magn. Gerhardus Gulielm Paris Gualtherus Gloss interlin Hieronymus Henricus de Urimaria Add. in lib. Sent. Jausenius Joan. Mariana Isidor Hispalens Keckermanus Lombardus Lavaterus Laurentius Lessius Lyranus Machowius Martyr Melancthon Musculus Maldonatus Melchior Adam Molineus Magdeburgensis Osiander Pelargus Polanus Pareus Pererius Pellicanus Prosper Rivetus Rollocus Septuagint Surius Theophylactus Tossanus Toletus Wollebius Zanchius A Table of the principall Contents of this Booke A A Postles How said to doe greater workes then Christ Page 4. Actual remission by legall services p. 63. What actuall remission signifies 64. Actuall and eternall
signum ab ipsius signi fine sive a virtute sejunctum quam vocat Spiritum Beza when the outward signe is considered apart from the thing signified then it is a dead thing unprofitable and of no use For what is the shadow without the body Who knowes not but that in disputation many things are laid downe under some condition which otherwise cannot be affirmed The Apostle in this chapter is in a dispute in which he layes downe the difference betweene the Ministry of the Law and of the Gospell by comparing (b) Effert suam doctrinam contra calumniatorum doctrinam Argumentum sumit a cōparatis Areti in loc the one with the other as they were by Pauls adversaries the false teachers set in opposition the one against the other who holding to the bare letter of the law did preach justification by the workes of the Law without Jesus Christ in opposition to the Gospell so that Moses is called the Minister of death (c) Abusive Abusively Because these false teachers did abuse the law of Moses in resting upon it according to the literall sense and so by excluding Christ who is the (d) Mens egis est Christus lex in lapidibus insculpta suit ideoque literal●● erat doctrina hic legis desectus corrigendus suit per Evangelium quia fragilem esse oportuit quamdiu rabulis lapideis tanrum erat consignata Calvin in loc life of the Law make it to be to themselves by their false interpretation and misapplication a dead letter and so it is so long as it is written in tables of stone onely and not in the tables of our hearts Now let us see how the Law is said to be the ministration of condemnation as the Apostle calls it 2 Cor. 3.9 It is called so accidentally (e) Accidenter Dyonys Carthus in loc as is plaine Rom. 7.7 8 9 10 11. For sinne taking (f) Non dicit occasione autem data quoniam lex non dat occasionem pecandi sed dicir occasione accepta Cajeta rom 5 in loc occasion by the Commandement deceived me and by it slew me in this chapter it is plaine that the law is the ministration of death by accident not causally but occasionally The occasion is not given by the Commandement but taken through the corruption of mans nature for the mind of man endeavouring to maintaine its owne liberty in sinning cannot endure to be kept in by the Commandement and restrained and so sinneth the more eagerly according to the Proverbe Nitimur in vetitum we are exceeding earnest to doe that which is forbidden us such is our corruption the more ready we are to run into it So likewise the Gospell may be said to be the ministration of condemnation occasionally Luk. 2.34 Behold this childe is set for the fall and rising againe of many in Israel 1 Pet. 2.8 A stone of stumbling a Rocke of offence No fault in Christ or the Gospell whose proper office is to build us up to be spirituall Temples for God to dwell in The fault is in man who through the corruption that is in him takes occasion to stumble at this stone T is accidentall (*) Quum nobis in sundamentum datus sit illiac identale esse Petram Scandali Calv. in loc to Christ to be a Rocke of offence But it being accidentall as well to the Law as to the Gospell to be the Ministery of death wherein lieth the difference There is a wide difference It is a perpetuall and inseparable accident in regard of the Law not so in regard of the Gospell But to winde up this bottome If by Moses we understand the writings of (g) Scripta M●sis sunt ipsum ve●us Testamonrum adjunctis prophetis Cajetan Moses which are the Old Testament together with the Prophets that is to say Moses and the Prophets the Prophets were extraordinary Ministers of the Old Testament ordained for the Instruction of the Church by interpreting and applying the Law and foreshewing the sufferings and glory of Christ Act. 3.24 Yea and all the Prophets from Samuel and those that follow after as many as have spoken have likewise foretold of these dayes That is of the dayes of the Messias of those things which in these dayes are fulfilled by Jesus Christ The dayes (h) Quae his temporibus per Iesū Christum impleta sunt Brentius in Act. Apost hom 15. of Christs Flesh so the Apostle cals them Heb. 5.7 Who in the dayes of his Flesh All the Prophets did declare one and the same Christ to come in the flesh And the Apostle confirmes this (i) Facit hoc ad Evangelii commendationem confirmationē quod jam olim a Deo per prophetas ab ipso inspiratos quorum oracula litetis consignata haberentur promissum esset ne videretur res nova commentitia Estius Com. in loc Rom. 1.1 2 3. Paul a servant of Jesus Christ called to be an Apostle separated unto the Gospell of God which he had promised afore by his holy Prophets in the holy Scriptures concerning his Son Jesus Christ our Lord which was made of the seed of David according to the flesh The Apostle useth these words to prove that the Doctrine of the Gospel was not a new (k) Occupatio est qua declinat invidiam novitatis nam Evangelium putabatur doctrina recens Pet. Martyr Com. in loc Ut Novitatis depelleret invidiā seque non novarum retū praedicatorem Apostolum ostenderet Evangeliumque ab antiquitate commendaret Tolet. in loc Doctrine Some of Pauls hearers reasoned thus with themselves The ancient Patriarches and Prophets were saved and had the true Church of God amongst them and yet they wanted your Gospell Therefore the Doctrine of the Gospell is not necessary but superfluous Here the Apostle confesseth those in the old Testament were saved but not without the Gospell And so convinces them that the Preaching of the Gospell was no innovation seeing it was preached throughout the whole Church of God in the old Testament And as Theophylact observes the word Gospell was used in Davids time Psalme 68. ver 11. The Lord gave the word great was the company of those that published it What did they publish Why the Gospell 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 (l) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Theophylact. Chrysost ad Roman hom 1. Evangelizantibus Hieron Preachers of the Gospell the Gospell was then preached plentifully for great was the company of Preachers and the Septuagint Chrysostom and St. Hierom agree with Theophylact And Scriptures agree First that from (m) Singulis illis temporibus Evangelicam promissionem de semine mulicris repetitam subinde clarius Expositam esse dicit Chemn lccor part 2. pag. 579. the fall of Adam to the Flood Secondly from the Flood to Moses Thirdly from Moses to the Prophets Fourthly from the Prophets to Christ The Gospell and the promises of it were made knowne And applyed by
men as though Christ in the Covenant of grace may not be set forth upon some condition and yet freely given Can a Covenant bemade without any condition is it not against the nature of a Covenant The word Covenant in the Hebrew 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 strictly taken is a league (s) Pactum est quod int●r aliquos convenit nam ut fiat pactum requiritur ut duae voluntates in idem conveniant reciproco consensu Bierlir Magn. Theatr. lib. 14. fol. 1. or agreement made betweene parties that are at variance containing in it a mutuall obligation And the Hebrew word hath the signification of friendly parting and of explaining the conditions of Agreement that a Covenant may be made it is required that two wills doe by a reciprocall consent agree in one and the same thing The Covenant of workes is a league touching the saving of some on condition of their perfect obedience Gal. 3.12 And the Law is not of faith but the man that doth them shall live in them see Levit. 18.5 It is plaine that perfect obedience is the condition of the Covenant of workes The Covenant of Grace is an agreement concerning men to be freely saved through faith in Christ Gal. 3.11 The just shall live by Faith May not Faith be said to be the condition required in this Covenant And is not Christ here set forth upon this condition and yet Christ and the condition too freely given to us of God as is fully made plaine (t) Fides hic consideratur non ut opus quoddam nostrum a Deo in nobis exci atum sed ut instrumentum quo recipimus amplectimur salutem ac gratiam est autem necesse ut accipias salutem ac gratiam si servari velis Itaque fides quatenus est instrumentum recipiens salutem nihil impedit quin salus tota sit gratuita Zanc. in loc qu. 2. Ephes 2.8 For by grace are ye saved through faith and that not of our selves it is the gift of God The Lord resolving to give us Christ doth require at our hands that we should receive him and to this end giveth us faith that we might be enabled thereunto and therefore faith as it is an instrument receiving Christ with all his benefits doth not at all hinder but that Christ is freely given because that in our justification and salvation Faith doth not merit or doe any thing but onely receive Christ Whereas he saith He doth here professe his ignorance and that he cannot conceive how faith should put on Christ apply Christ or make Christ ours in the sight of God I beleeve him but because he hath not as yet had experience of such a worke of grace upon his owne soule must it therefore necessarily follow that no soule else hath had it because the foole hath said in his heart there is no God and he sayes true for in his heart there is no God must it therefore follow that there is no God in any mans heart I professe my selfe saith he to leane unto them that say that Christs righteousnesse is made ours before God by Gods imputation before the act of our faith and therefore necessarily without it By the Act of faith which doth consist in beleeving and receiving Christs righteousnesse imputed we doe not understand the work of faith but the (u) Inhaeremus firmiter oppositioni Apostolicae inter fidem opera Rom. 3.28 inter credere operari Rom. 4.5 inter gratiam opera Rom. 11.6 Joh. 6.29 Fides non vocatur opus nostrum sed opus Dei Gerhard locor tom 3. col mi●i 650. worke of God for so faith is called not our work but the worke of God Joh. 6.29 This is the worke of God that yee beleeve on him whom he hath sent therefore the Act of beleeving is the worke of God which none of the godly will deny t is plaine by the Apostles words Rom. 12.3 According as God hath dealt every man the measure of faith Musculus upon this place sayes that the act of beleeving is also our worke for it is not sayd here this is the worke of God that he should beleeve but that yee beleeve in him but yet this Act of beleeving this worke of ours as he calls it stands in absolute opposition to justification by workes in the sight of God as is plaine by our Saviours intent in this place wherein he doth labour to confute those who held justification by the workes of the Law He doth not say this is the worke of God that yee should be circumcised purified keepe the Sabbath and observe legall Rites and Ceremomies Neither doth he say these are the workes of God That yee repent that yee feare and love God above all and your neighbour as your selfe not but that these workes are necessary and commanded in Scripture and are the (w) Quae omnia non nisi piorum sunt et in Scripturis magno serio praecipiuntur nisique operante deo in nobis fieti nequeunt Tacitis his omnibus unum tantum fidei opus adducit dicens Hoc est opus dei c. Non quod reliqua pietatis opera non sint opera dei sed quod soli fid●i● cibus vitae aeternae deputatur Muscul Com. in loc workes of God but to shew that faith alone is required for the justification of a sinner in the sight of God that so hee might plainely overthrow Justification by Workes which they altogether insisted upon and therefore tells them that all their workes though never so holy and good availe nothing in the matter of justification but that they must be justified by faith alone This is the worke of God that yee beleeve on him whom hee hath sent Musculus upon this place to illustrate how this work of faith is Gods worke and our worke hath this comparison As the writing of the child whose hand the Schoole-master doth guide while he is a writing this is called the Boyes worke and his Masters Now consider the Master takes his Pen and placeth it in his hand hee frameth and fashioneth every Letter the boy must not stirre his hand in the writing one jot or tittle but as his master doth stirre and move it T is true the boy hath a hand in the writing but his hand is meerely (x) Passivum opus est ut ita loquar Calvin in loc passive the master doth all To apply this consider faith as a work in regard of justification Calvin upon this place takes that libertie to call it a passive worke and that it is so is plaine John 1.12 But to as many as receiv'd him to them gave hee power to bocome the Sonnes of God even to them that beleeve on his name You see then to beleeve is to receive Christ and though Tò Credere that is to beleeve be a Verbe active in regard of Nomination yet it is passive in regard of signification for that we call the
autem paenuentia seu conversio ad Deum tres partes continear con●ritionem fidem novam obedientiam Meluct part 3. pag. mihi 99. contrition and Faith two essentiall parts of that repentance Moses and the Prophets preached and new obedience a consequent What could Johns repentance be more then this how could the repentance he preached goe one step higher That had Faith to goe to Christ and higher Johns could not goe But John makes low the Mountaines did not the Prophets John cuts off legall praeregatives did not the Prophets by their preaching repentance doe so did they not drive men from resting in outward (a) Caeremoniae externaeà Deo institutae quamvis pertineant ad Dei landem honorem neque per se tamen neque in comparatione ad piam orationem laudis sunt Deo gra●ae Ames in loc docum 31. performances and in the worke done Psal 51.16 17. For thou desirest not sacrifie else would I give it thou delightest not in burnt offering The Sacrifices of God are a broken spirit a broken and a contrite heart o God thou wilt not despise John bringeth downe every high thought that exalteth it selfe against God did not the Prophets doe so Jer. 4.14 How long shall thy vaine thoughts lodge within thee Psal 139.23 24. Search me O God and know my heart try me and know my thoughts and see if there be any wicked way in me c. You see here must not be a thought left to exalt it selfe against God It is blasphemy to lay such a charge upon the Prophets Doctrine For if they did not by it labour to bring downe every high thought that did exalt it selfe against God their doctrine must needs cause them which were guided by it to come short of the glory of God which no man that understands himselfe dare affirme Pag. 48. he hath this passage I have observed some to confine repentance within the bounds of our conversation and make no difference between the repentance which was taught by the Prophets that repentance which was taught by the Son of God and his Ministers What he meanes by the bounds of our conversation he sets down himself pa. 49. li. 9. where he opposeth conversation to conscience The difference then which he makes between the repentance taught by the Prophets that which was taught by the Son of God and his Ministers is this namely that the Prophets repentance was confined within the bounds of mens conversation and did not extend it self to the conscience but only to their outward carriages behaviours This must needs be an hypocriticall repentance cleane contrary to that which the Prophets preacht which did as neerely concerne the conscience as the conversation and in preaching of it they principally aimed at the conscience and the inner man without which outward performances were as nothing and the outward conversation no whit acceptable to God who lookes at the heart I dare affirme that the repentance which the Prophets preacht was acceptable to God not bounded within the conversation but extending it selfe to the conscience witnesse (b) Loquitur primum de interiore conversione ut animum renovent si enim sons fuerit infectus paenitentia nulla crit sed hypocrisis Lavat in Ezech. 18. hom 82. Ezek. 18.30 31. Repent and turne your selves from all your transgressions and make you a new heart and a new Spirit And it is plaine that the doctrine of repentance taught by the Prophets and by the Sonne of God and his Ministers is for summe and substance one and the same And thus to charge the Prophets doctrine with hypocrisie is false doctrine in a high degree And this doth further appeare in that hee makes their repentance to be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 rather then 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for then the repentance taught by the Prophets should not differ from Judas his repentance which was without Faith which makes the difference betweene the repentance of Godly and wicked men Pag 48. at the latter end he saith It is a doctrine often heard of in your Pulpits That repentance doth wash away sinne And Pag. 49. in the latter end he hath these words To preach that teares doe wash away sinnes out of the sight of God which saith he I have heard some testifie that they have heard preached is a blaspemy against the blood of Christ It is very uncivill to charge blasphemy upon any Minister in publique and not to bring his accusers first to him in private they it may be through ignorance may mis-understand and I question not but if the Minister might be named he would maintaine what he had preached But grant it to be true that some have preached That repentance washeth away sinne And that teares doe wash away sinnes out of the sight of God it is blasphemy to say this is blasphemy for it is no other then the Scripture phrase (c) Exhortationis an em fumma est primum seria resipiscentia abslinens a malo Junius in loc Hortatur Judaeos ad paenitentiam Cal vin in loc Isa 1.16 Wash you make you cleane put away the evill of your doings from before mine eyes by washing in this place is meant serious and true repentance for the Prophet doth exhort the Jewes thereunto and by washing here is not to be understood the washing of the pollutions of the bodies of men but of their sins By make you cleane is not meant the cleannesse of their hands but of their life and conversation The Apostle James hath the like phrase Chap. 4.8 9. (d) Ipsa salutaris paenitentia ac vera refipiscentia per lotionem mundationem exprinitur ut Isa 1.16 Atque earenus hoc in loco Jacobus Mundate adhortans scil cos ad veram seriamque paenitentiam vitaeque pravae emendationem Laurentius Com. in loc Cleanse your hands you sinners and purifie your hearts you double minded By cleansing and washing is meant true repentance as in Isa 1.16 by hands we are to understand our sinfull actions and by hearts our corrupt affections Now how should our hearts and hands be cleansed and washed from sin the Apostle bids us be afflicted and mourne and weepe by weeping is meant teares of repentance So that to say teares of repentance doe wash away sinnes in the sight of God which is all one with the words of the Prophet Esay put away the evill of your doings from before mine eyes is warranted by these two places of Scripture compared together It is no blasphemy then to speake as the Scripture speaketh This saying hath been used often amongst some of the Ancient and had it beene blasphemy some Councell or other in all this time would have condemned them for it Saint (e) Flevit ergo amatissime Petrus flevit ut lachrymis suum posser lavare delictum tust veniam vis mereri dilue culpam lachrymis tuam Ambr. lib. 10. in Luc. cap 22 col mihi 216. Ambrose upon these
a Trap to insnare weake consciences and to handle the word deceitfully But I answer an unfained desire of salvation in a sanctified use of the meanes is an infallible note of salvation Give mee leave to explaine my selfe thus The difference and degrees of Faith are two First A weake Faith Secondly A strong Faith Concerning the first The weake Faith sheweth it selfe by this grace of God namely an unfained desire not onely of salvation for that a wicked and gracelesse man may have but of reconciliation with God in Christ This is a sure signe of Faith in every touched and humbled heart and it is peculiar to the elect and they which have this have in them also the ground and substance of true saving Faith Reason to prove this First the promise of life everlasting is made to the desire of reconciliation (d) Est autem valde cemphatica metaphora famis sitis qua non levis expetitio sed vehemens serium ardens desiderium g●atiae donorum per gratiam describitur Gerhard Harm cap. 15. col mih● 535. Matth. 5.6 Blessed are they which do hunger and thirst after righteousnesse for they shall be filled by hungring and thirsting here is meant an ardent and earnest desire after grace which our Saviour layes downe as an infallible note of salvation Psal 145.19 He will fulfill the desire of them that feare him he will also heare their cry and will save them and (e) Desiderium efficax pietati congruens certissima est nota homin●s pii Usus Consolationis erga Christianos qui infirmitatibus tentationibus nonnunquam pressi vexari nihil in semetipsis salu i affine sentire possunt praeter desideria pia Ames lect in Psalm Doctor Ames upon Psal 42.1.2 As the Hart panteth after the water brooks so panteth my soule after thee O. God my soule thirsteth for God layes down this point of doctrine Aneffectuall desire congruent to pietie is a most certaine note of a godly man from which he drawes an use of consolation to Christians who are sometimes so pressed and disquieted with infirmities and tentations that they have no evidence in themselves of their salvation but onely godly desires Secondly the hungring desire after grace is a sanctified affection where one affection is sanctified all are sanctified where all are sanctified the whole man is sanctified and he that is sanctified is justified and beleeves and shall infallibly be saved Thirdly God accepts the will and desire to beleeve for repenting and beleeving indeed wherefore this desire of reconciliation if it be soundly wrought in the heart is in acceptation with God as true faith indeed T is confessed that there bee many and sundry fleeting motions and desires to doe good things which grow to no issue or head but in time vanish as they come Now these are not true desires after salvation but rather flashing humours and sudden passions Such have no soundnesse in them and must be distinguished from the true desire of reconciliation with God that comes from a bruised heart and brings alwayes reformation of life And thus I have answered both his questions Whereas in his conference Pag. 3. he hath this comparison The poore man can tell you that to be rich and to desire to be rich are two things even so is Faith and a desire to beleeve as all that desire to bee rich are not rich so all that desire to beleeve doe not beleeve I answer non cadem est ratio his comparison holds not but is as poore as the poore man in it A man may seriously and in good earnest have a hungring desire after riches and yet bee a starke begger and have no riches at all but it is not so in the desire of grace I argue thus he that desireth grace must needs have the Spirit for this desire cannot come of (f) Voluntas est animi motus cogente nullo ad aliquid non admittendum vel adipiscendum Haec autem ut non admittat malum adipiscatur bonum praeven●tur praeparatur Dei gra●ia ipsa bona volun●as pedisse qua est granae non praevia Magist lib 2. dist 20. nature Phil. 2.13 It is God that worketh in you both to will and to doe acccrding to his good pleasure So that to will or desire good is from grace wrought in the soule by the Spirit of God yea this is a singular grace Tee have begun saith the Apostle not only to do but also to be forward or willing 2 Cor. 8.10 11. making it a greater grace to be willing and desirous to do well then it is to do the thing that is good and thereupon inferreth Vers 12. If there be first a willing mind it is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that he hath not Yea this is almost all that the faithfull have many times to comfort themselves withall that they find in themselves an unfained desire to please God This was all that Nehemiah could say of himselfe and the rest of his brethren Nehem. 1.11 That they did desire to feare Gods Name Isa 26.8 The desire of our soule is to thy Name This was Pauls comfort Rom. 7.18 To will is present with me From these places that godly reverend Divine Master (g) Hildersam John 4. pag. mihi 9. in the beginning Arthur Hildersam concludes They must needs be sure therefore of Grace that have an unfained desire of it for they have it already No man can desire Faith that hath not Faith the desire then of Grace is Grace and the desire of Faith is Faith and he that hath any one Grace in truth and soundnesse in him he may be certaine that his heart is upright and that he is truely regenerate thus Master Hildersam upon the fourth of John page in my edition 425. And the (h) Omnes virtutes sibi haerent ut qui una carn●rit omnibus careat qui ergo unam habet omnes haber Magist lib. 3 dist 36. Omnes in hoc conveniun quod qui habet unam virtutem Theologicam habet omnes Henric. de Vrimaria Add. in lib. Senten Schoole affirmes That all the graces of God are so conjoyned and together that he that wants one grace in truth wants all and he that hath any one grace in truth hath al other graces Thus then you see though his comparison holds good in things temporall that a desire to be rich is not to be rich yet it falls to the ground in things spirituall for the poore humbled soule that desires grace is rich in grace And Master (i) Perkins Cases of Conscience page mihi 24 col 1. Sect. Perkins concludes that a desire to repent and beleeve in a touched conscience and heart is Faith and repentance it selfe though not in nature yet in Gods acceptation O poore soules you that complaine of the want of Faith and Grace out of a hungering desire you have after them