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A55306 Precious faith considered in its nature, working, and growth by Edward Polhill ... Polhill, Edward, 1622-1694? 1675 (1675) Wing P2755; ESTC R9438 262,258 506

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is some great Trausgression which as an accursed thing causes the Lord to depart In such cases though there be no intercision of Justification yet there is an interruption of Consolation These Things premised I proceed to prove the Point viz. That a Believer may attain Assurance of Pardon and Salvation In the first Place the Names and Titles given unto Faith in Scripture are remarkable 'T is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 The subsistence of things hoped for Glory and Salvation are hoped for by us but Faith maks them as certain as if they were present to us The Hebrews have a Van conversivum which turns the Future into the Preter-tense such a thing is Faith which presentiates future Things to the Believer That ye may know that ye have eternal life saith John It is not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye shall have it but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ye have it in praesenti it already subsists in your Faith 'T is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the evidence of things not seen Eternal Life cannot be seen by corruptible Eyes but Faith doth so point out and demonstrate it as if it were visible or sensible We know that we have passed from Death to Life 1 John 3.14 As if the Apostle had said We are indeed in the very Borders of Heaven and we know it as it were sensibly as we do our passage from one Place to another 'T is set out by 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a strong perswasion or considence and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a liberty or holy boldness with God The Apostle mentions both In whom we have boldness and access with confidence by the Faith of him Ephes 3.12 Access to God imports that we are reconciled to him but access with boldness and confidence imports that we know it also Otherwise it would not be Faith as the Apostle stiles it but meer rashness and presumption if we should do so upon Peradventures Esther-like not knowing whether the golden Scepter would be held out to us or not Nay 't is stiled 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a full Assurance carrying out the Soul with full Sails to the good things in the Promise It is well observed by the acute Dr. Arrowsmith That in Scripture mention is made of a triple Plerophory a Plerophory of Knowledg Col. 2.2 a Plerophory of Faith Heb. 10.22 and a Plerophory of Hope Heb. 6.11 The Genius of each shews forth it self in the Believers Practical Syllogism Whosoever believeth shall be saved But I believe Ergo I shall be saved In the Major we have a Plerophory of Knowledg In the Minor a Plerophory of Faith And in the Conclusion flowing from the Premises a Plerophory of Hope In the next place some Commands in the Gospel clearly import that Assurance is attainable there God would have us To work out our Salvation Phil. 2.12 To make our calling and election sure 2 Pet. 1.10 To add to our Faith virtue one Grace upon another and one degree of Grace upon another That we may have an abundant entrance into the Kingdom of Jesus Christ 2 Pet. 1.5 11. To walk by the Rule of the New Creature that peace may be upon us Galat. 6.16 To prove our own state whether we be in the Faith whether Christ be in us or not 2 Corinth 13.5 To prove our own work that we may have rejoycing in our selves and not in another Gal. 6.4 If these things may be done Assurance is attainable if they cannot to what purpose are these Precepts how vain and impossible are they In that question Whether we may perfectly fulfil the Moral Law the Pontificians urge thus for the Affirmative If we cannot fulfil it the Law is impossible and void De Justif lib. 4. cap. 13. Si praecepta essent impossibilia neminem obligarent ac per hoc praecepta non essent praecepta saith Bellarmine If the Commands were impossible they would oblige none and so would become no Commands But in the Point of Assurance we may with much better reason say if we cannot fulfill the Commands concerning it they are then impossible and vain the Law is an exact Rule of Righteousness a Copy of the pure Law engraven on Mans Heart at first in the state of Innecency unto which it was attemperated It was not at all impossible and that it is so now is only from Mans Apostacy And withal the very 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the impossibility of the Law is admirably useful to drive us in a deep sence of our Impotence to Christ the Complement of it that through his holy Spirit we may in a way of sincere though imperfect Obedience at last arrive at perfect Sanctity in Heaven But if such Commands as are purely Evangelical be impossible what can be said to it what tolerable answer made Were these at all accommodated to a state of Innocency Was not their Original scope to raise up fallen Man to Salvation If the Commands of believing and repenting were impossible what room would there be for Salvation And if the Commands of proving and ensuring our state of Grace be impossible what room is left for the Joys of Faith or the Sealings of the holy Spirit or the Suavities of a good Conscience And there being no second Christ or Gospel to fly to whither doth this Impossibility drive but into the black gulf of Despair Wherefore as we would avoid such doleful consequences we must conclude those Precepts practicable and so Assurance possible And as a sure seal thereof we have the sweet experience of Saints in all Ages Holy Job though God multiplied his Wounds and his Friends raked in them by a very sharp charge of Hypocrisie knew his own Integrity and would not let it go Job 27.5 And which reacheth beyond his present state of Grace as sure of future Glory he breaks out I know that my Redeemer liveth and maugre all the destructive worms In my flesh and with these very eyes I shall see God Job 19.25 26. O how certain was his Faith I know How appropriative My Redeemer liveth and how sharp-sighted he could look through the dust to Immortality David knew the truth of his Grace and proved it to himself by infallible Marks I have kept the ways of the Lord I have not wickedly departed from my God I did not put away his statutes from me I kept my self from mine iniquity Psal 18.21 22 23. ver And for future Happiness he saith without scruple That at his waking in the Resurrection he should be satisfied with Gods likeness Psal 17.15 St. Paul speaks as one full sure of his present state and future hope I have fought a good sight I have finished my course I have kept the faith henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness 2 Tim. 4.7 8. The Martyr Agatha having her Breasts cruelly cut off for Religion told the Persecutor That yet she had two Breasts remaining such as he could not touch the one of Faith and the
divided Christ as this is is not the Christ of God but a Christ of his own fancy one that will save him in his sins and justifie him in his ungodliness he that believes in such a Christ doth at once miserably cheat his own soul and as much as in him lieth profanely trample on the blood of Christ as if it were shed on purpose that sinful men might have the reins laid down on their necks to riot in their cursed lusts with all impunity Moreover as to the word of God the believer is for all of it he is not only for cordials and pots of Manna and distillations of grace in the promises but for precepts also his meat and his drink is to do the will of his Father in heaven whilest his eyes are on the Land of promise his feet are in the Land of uprightness Antinomians boast themselves to be above the Law and as free as if they were in heaven and that their sins are but seeming sins sins to sense and to the world outwardly but no sins to faith and before God who seeth no sin in them But alass these are but swelling words of vanity to be above the Law is Antichrist-like to be above God himself whose Majesty and holiness break forth in it and if sins be but seeming sins the Law is but a seeming Law and God whose authority and sanctity shine forth in it is but a seeming God Promises and Precepts run together in the Scripture and must be taken together into the heart by faith Promises are effluxes out of Gods grace and faith takes them in by recumbency Precepts are effluxes out of Gods holiness and faith takes them in by obediential subjection both must continue and be owned by faith as long as there are grace and holiness in God The true believer neither with the Antinomian picks out the promises from the precepts nor yet with the Hypocrite doth he pick out only such commands as do not cross his beloved lusts as the Papists have razed out the second Commandement in some of their Catechisms because of their outward images so the Hypocrite razes out the displeasing Commandements in his practice because of the Idol-lusts in his heart but the true believer as David is for all the wills of God without any salvoes because without any indulged lusts Thirdly This resignation is made purely upon a Scriptural warrant There may be hay and stubble in the believer but there is none in his faith which so far as it is faith stands only upon holy ground All faiths assents stand upon Scripture-propositions all its affiances upon Scripture-promises and all its obedience upon Scripture-precepts What Balaam said by an over-ruling providence that saith the believer by the instinct of faith I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord to do less or more Num. 22.18 he would not as to doctrinals be wise above what is written nor as to worship be religious above what is written nor as to mercies and comforts be an expectant above what is written He would not as to doctrinals be wise above what is written when the Lutherans and Papists met at Ratisbon the Papists would first dispute about the Canon of Faith the Lutherans replyed that the Scriptures were the only rule at which the Papists cried out that it was very unequal to tye them to one kind of weapon only but faith is content with Scriptural doctrines only There is one Mediator in Scripture and faith dares not multiply them there is one Scripture purgatory in Christs blood and faith will not invent another there is one propitiatory sacrifice offered up once for all upon the Cross and faith will not seek after any more All the points in Popery are but so many additions to the word and upon that account insignificant to faith The first error in the first sin was an addition to the word the woman saying ye shall not touch it Gen. 3.3 whereas Gods word only was ye shall not eat of it Gen. 2.17 and the first and primordial error which hath ushered in all the Romish doctrines into the Church hath been the very same thing and because they are additions faith cannot own them no not faith in a Papist opinion may own them but faith cannot for it is but the souls Eccho to the voice of God in Scripture and where there is no voice there can be no return humane doctrines found not at all to faith Scripture is all Bishop Fisher a little before his suffering lighting on that one sweet passage this is life eternal to know thee and Jesus Christ Joh. 17.3 brake out into these words here 's learning enough for me the believer who hath the whole Scripture before him may well say here 's doctrine enough for me faith will not turn vagrant and lye about at humane doors for doctrines there is enough in the word Again the believer would not as to worship be religious above what is written that of the Schoolmen cultus est à naturâ modus à lege virtus à gratiâ worship is from nature the manner from the Law the power from grace is very excellent The very light of nature saith God is to be worshipped but faith goes to the word for the manner and to free-grace for the power God in the second Commandement forbids graven Images not as false objects of worship which are forbidden in the first Commadement but as false means and manner of worship and under graven Images as being the chiefest and groffest kind of false worship God doth forbid all other false worship humanely devised such as these were hence true faith looks on all humanely devised worships as so many graven Images a kind of Teraphim expressing though not as they did an humane shape yet an humane devise and invention things void of God without institution and without benediction That of the Prophet who hath required this at your hand Isa 1.12 falls like thunder on all the imagery of humane inventions dashing them to pieces in a moment Quintinus the Libertine being present at a solemn Mass with a Cardinal boasted that he saw the glory of God I suppose according to his loose principles of being under no outward Law he would have said as much if he had been among Pagans at their Idolatrous worship but the true believer looks for that glory only in the Sanctuary of Divine Institutions there and there only God records his Name and commands the blessing even life for evermore Moreover the believer as to mercies and comforts would not be an expectant above what is written 'T is said of Moses that he died according to the word of the Lord Deut. 38.5 or as the Original may be read he died upon the mouth of the Lord the believer loves to live and dye upon Gods mouth in the promises there watching for the sweet words of grace dropping from him he walks among the Promises as the Physitian among his herbs and by a divine
that it were no sin spare it not but cause it to dye as a sure Pledg that all other sins shall do so Believe it This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the path of life or of those two lines of Holiness and Comfort If ye mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live saith the Apostle Rom. 8.13 an eternal life in Heaven and a comfortable one in the way thither Who knows but that whilst thou art mortifying thy sin God may come and speak to thee much as he did to Abraham when he was offering up his Isaac Now I know that thou repentest indeed and believest indeed seeing thou hast not withheld thy Sin thy Darling Sin from the work of Mortification Surely blessing I will bless thee and multiplying I will multiply thee Thy Comforts shall be as the Stars and as the Sand. When thou hast been a-slaying thy Lusts Jesus Christ will meet thee as Melchizedek did Abraham when he came from the slaughter of the Kings Bringing forth Bread and Wine Supportations and Divine Consolations to thy Soul Melchizedek's Bread and Wine were to Abraham Pawns of Canaan the Land of Promise and Christs Supports and Comforts shall be to thee Earnests of Heaven See what pure strains of Grace flow in the precious Promises made to the Overcomer To him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden Manna and will give him a white stone and in the stone a new name written which no man knoweth saving he which receiveth it Rev. 2.17 O what things are here Comforts fall about the Overcomer and are preserved in his heart as the Manna fell about the Camp and was preserved in the Golden Pot. Pardon is the white stone and Adoption the new name and all these though secret to others are well known to himself But you 'l say These are promised to the Overcomer and who can say that he is such Is not the Canaanite still in the land Are there not reliques of Corruption in the best Doth not the flesh still lust against the spirit and the body of Death send out its stench and rottenness And who may call himself an Overcomer I answer The Canaanite is in the land but subdued Reliques of Sin are in thee but they do gravitare press and lye heavy as a thing out of its proper place and force thee to groan and cry out O wretched man The flesh lusts against the spirit but thou opposest might and main and if it be ready to prevail thou criest out as the forced Damosel under the Law for help against it as being too strong for thee If there be in thee a nolle peccatum a bent of heart against Sin and thou doest in purpose and endeavour fight against it and thou wouldst pursue it to death and if possible here to utter extirpation then assure thy self not withstanding the indwelling sin That thou art an Overcomer in Gods account who accepts the Will for the Deed and in the Gospels all whose Promises are made not to sinless perfection but sincerity To this purpose the Original in that famous place is remarkable It is not to him that overcometh but 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to him that is overcoming to him that is praying striving wrestling fighting against Sin to him that is in an overcoming posture though the enemy be not quite out of the field to him shall those great Comforts in the Promise be given This made St. Paul maugre all the reliques of Corruption sound a Triumph to Free-Grace I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord Rom. 7.25 as being sure of compleat Victory at last Again If thou wouldst have Assurance Be much in the holy use of Ordinances These are vehicula Spiritus the Chariots in which the Holy Spirit rides Circuit to do good to Souls These are canales Gratie the Conduit-pipes whereby Graces and Comforts are derived to us There God records his Name and commands the Blessing even Life for ever-more There he meets those that work righteousness and remember him in his ways David was so sensible of this that it was his one only desire to dwell in Gods house and behold 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beauties or sweet Amenities of the Lord Psal 27.4 If ever thou meetest with the Suavities and ravishing Beauties of Free-Grace it must be in the Sanctuary of Ordinances Christ when here on Earth was very ready to give a comfortable Testimony to those that came to him and brought their Graces with them Seeing upright Nathanael he said Behold an Israelite indeed Joh. 1.47 Seing their Faith he said to the poor Paralytick Son thy sins be forgiven thee Mat. 9.2 Neither now though in Heaven is he wanting therein he hath a secret way of testifying by his Spirit unto those who in an holy manner approach to him in Ordinances Seeing thy holy fear at an Ordinance he can tell thee That thy Soul thall dwell at ease in the bosom of Mercy Seeing thy Faith there he can tell thee That as a true Believer thou hast everlasting life Whatever Grace thou bringest into his presence he can make one Promise or other drop sweetness upon it Wait on him in his own ways that he may speak Peace to thee more particularly Converse much with the sacred Word In the Gospel great things are set before us there 's a Glass of Gods Glory The more thou lookest into it the more thou wilt be transformed into the Divine Likeness there 's a Mass a Treasury of rich Grace the more thou searchest into it the more thou wilt taste how gracious the Lord is till thou come to the highest gust of it in Assurance there are the Breasts of Consolation suck on and thou shalt be satisfied as with marrow and fatness there thou hast the demonstration and ministration of the Spirit get as much as thou canst of it that thou mayst be sealed by it There the Righteousness of God is revealed from Faith to Faith from a Faith of Adherence to a Faith of Assurance There is the savour of Life unto Life of a gracious Life unto a comfortable and glorious One. Be much in reading and hearing the Word but do it in an holy manner do it attentively take heed to it till the day dawn and the day-star arise in thy heart do it desiring the Word as the Babe doth the Breast that thou mayst grow into all the measures and statures of Christ do it in faith that the Word may profit and effectually work unto all Graces and Comforts do it in love to Truth and Righteousness that the oyl of gladness which is upon Christ thy Head may run down upon thee do it obedientially hearken to the Commands that thy Peace may be as a River flowing in the joys of Faith If thus thou wilt hear and open to Christ who stands and knocks at the door of thy heart He will come in to thee and sup with thee and thou with him Revel 3.20 He will come in to
which reason could not elevate to the Creators glory faith spiritualizes by a pure intention towards it Thirdly The light of reason is at a greater distance from God then that of Faith and so doth not see him so clearly in the works of creation and providence as that doth And first for creation though it be a clear glass of the eternal power and Godhead yet the Philosophers as so many Babel-builders are miserably confounded in their language about it Thales fetches all things out of water as if that were the universal fountain Anaximenes out of air as if by the rarefaction and condensation thereof all were produced Hippasus and Heraclitus held that all things came out of a primitive fire or light which by its death or extinction generated all Democritus and Epicurus affirmed that the world was made by chance a lucky concourse of atomes framed it as it is Pythagoras would have all things generated out of numbers and the harmony thereof Aristotle the Prince of Peripateticks asserted the world to be eternal Plato attributed eternity only to the matter and before him Anaxagoras was the first who added a mind to matter saying Omnia simul erant deinde accessit mens eaque composuit O dark and confused Labyrinth of opinions How or which way shall a man extricate himself without faith By faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God Heb. 11.3 If Faith do but open its eyes upon the first Chapter of Genesis the Creation which before was dark as the Chaos is all clear as the light The believer sees God in every creature not only in the great Regions of Heaven and Earth but also in the least Atoms or particles of nature I am is discovered wherever there is any thing of Being And as for Providence reason hath not been much clearer among the Philosophers touching it then touching creation Aristotle holding the world to be eternally from God by emanation● as light from the Sun must also hold its continuance to be in the same manner and without any voluntary act such as Providence is God saith he is the first Mover he moves the heavens and those other bodies subalternately so God is the universal cause and all the wheels in nature move under him only contingent things which are not within the chain of natural causality seem according to Aristotle not to be administred by God Epicurus who makes the world to consist of a fortuitous concourse of infinite petit Atoms owns no Providence at all God will not break his rest and serene tranquility with any mundane affairs and indeed in reason a world made by chance must be so governed The Stoicks in stead of Providence brought in a Fate or absolute necessity resulting out of a series or connexion of causes and binding God himself as well as other things Plutarch relating how Timoleon was strangely delivered from two murderers instead of acknowledging a Providence wonders at the artifice of Fortune Nay meer reason is apt to vilifie the great works of God thus some said that Moses in stead of dividing the Sea did but take the advantage of a low Tyde to carry the Israelites over the washes when it was low water But when the light of faith comes the hand of God is seen in every thing not only in the great moments of nature but even in the fall of sparrows and numbring of hairs Thus far of Reason with the Creature-glass before it but to go on Secondly Take reason with the Scripture-glass before it and this supernatural light is yet above it And here I must first admit what reason under the influence of a common blessing can do and then shew how much supernatural light doth transcend it Reason under the influence of a common blessing may attain a rich furniture of humane learning and so perusing the holy Scriptures may understand them by Tongues critically and by School-divinity distinctly and by Logick in the consequences and connexions and by History in some Prophetical parts and by Rhetorick in the tropes and figures and by Comments in the abstruse and difficult places and consequently it may gather in a great notion of Divinity much larger in the extent and latitude thereof then the knowledge of many true believers Yet after all this notional knowledge attained there is in the meanest true believer an higher and diviner light a thing above meer reason and notion and this I shall demonstrate several ways First The light of reason with all it s acquired notions is not a light as yet congruous to the things of God which are spiritually discerned only by a supernatural light To make out this it will be worth our while to consider that famous place 1 Cor. 2. where the Apostle clearly distinguishing two sorts of men the natural man and the spiritual and two sorts of spirits the spirit of man making the natural man and the spirit of God making the spiritual man and two sorts of objects the things of man which are the line of knowledge to the natural man endued with an humane spirit and the things of God which are the line of knowledge to the spiritual man endued with the spirit of God Positively lays down this Thesis the natural man 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the soully man or the man that hath only a rational soul receiveth not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as a full vessel is not capable of the things of the spirit of God for they are foolishness unto him neither can he know them because they are spiritually discerned ver 14. In this Thesis the Apostle by the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or soully man doth not mean a sensual man who hath defloured his reason with sensual indulgences for then he would not have distinguished between the natural man and the spiritual but between the sensual man and the rational neither would he have distinguished between the spirit of man and the spirit of God but between the spirit of man or reason drowned in sensual pleasures and the spirit of man or reason keeping its station and just authority over the sensual appetite neither doth the Apostle here mean a natural or rational man sitting in Pagan darkness without the Gospel for he saith the natural man receiveth not the things of God which imports an offer of the Gospel to him and he receiveth them not because they are foolishness to him which they could not be if altogether unknown and saith he he cannot know them why not because they are not externally propounded which is the Pagans case but because they are spiritually discerned But the Apostle here meaneth by the natural or soully man a man of reason and that never forfeited by sensual lusts and a man of reason with the Gospel set before him and so his conclusion is this A man of reason with the Gospel before him cannot receive or know the things of God But you will say if this be so how can a man of
dead letter and we must not try the living by the dead The holy Martyr Stephen long since stiled them lively oracles Act. 7.38 and if they are now but a dead letter who hath murdered them who so much as the Enthusiast who goes about to separate the spirit from them If the Law come to a man in the convincing spirit and slay him with his own guilt and set his conscience on fire with some tasts of hell he may with the Apostle call it a killing letter but he will hardly call it a dead one If the Gospel come to him in the converting spirit and open the glories of free-grace and bring in a new creation into his heart he must confess that it is the very savour of life unto life and the power and arm of God to salvation and as the first life of grace is breathed through it into the dead sinner so all the after-gales of the spirit come from it upon the new creature Wherefore whilest the spirit is in the word it cannot be a dead letter and where the spirit is in the heart it will not be called so The Enthusiast for all his swelling words of vanity by calling the Scripture a dead letter proves only the deadness of his own heart and the true believer who owns the Scripture for his rule doth not try the living by the dead but the lesser measure of the spirit in his heart by the greater measure of it in the word Again they say there is a seculum spiritus sancti an administration of all-spirit which is much above all Scriptures and Ordinances but that there should be such a Church-state on earth is a vain dream There are two manifestations of God unto men the one dark and through the glass of ordinances the other by pure and immediate vision as it were face to face There are two states of believers the one a state of weak and imperfect graces the other a state of perfect holiness and purity There are also two places the one is earth a vale of tears and death the other is heaven a region of all blessedness and life eternal The manifestation by ordinances is congruous to weak graces and such a place as earth The manifestation by pure vision is congruous to perfect holiness and such a place as heaven Thus hath the wisdom of God ordered things Methinks the Enthusiast should blush to say that he is above Scriptures and Ordinances here What above the glass and yet below the bliss-making vision above the channels and methods of grace and yet below a state of perfection above the heavenly mediums and yet on earth Oh strange imagination What saith our Saviour Go teach and baptize loe I am with you always to the end of the world Mat. 28.19 20. Ordinances run parallel with this world and the state which is above them is only in the next What saith St. Paul Apostles Prophets Teachers Pastors are all for the perfecting of the Saints for the edifying of the body of Christ Eph. 4.11 12. Ordinances must continue as long as weaknesses and imperfections and cannot be spared till the top-stone of holiness and perfection be laid in heaven What saith St. John speaking of the heavenly City And I saw no Temple therein Rev. 21.22 No Temple no Ordinances is only for heaven earth must alwaies want and have them O my soul enter not into their secret which cry up the spirit and despise prophesyings be thou where Gods honour dwelleth in the Temple of Ordinances thou mayest see his power and glory Lastly the Quakers talk altogether of the light within which being as they say common to all men can be no other then natural conscience this is the candle of the Lord and much magnified by Heathen Philosophers this is every mans Daemon saith one nay it is the God in us saith another And it is so in such a sense as Moses was a God to Pharaoh preaching the will of God to him and for non-obedience urging him with dreadful plagues For it magisterially dictates the will of God even in the Monarchs of the world and in case they rebel it hath inward stings and scorpions for them Quid aliud voces animam quàm Deum in humano corpore hospitantem saith Seneca Were a Quaker to English it he would go near to do it thus The light within is God manifest in the flesh for in plain terms he will call it Christ as if the candle could becom a Sun of Righteousness In the mean time the devil hath a fetch under the praises of inward light to explode the Scriptures But we must remember that Conscience which is above man is yet below God and though it be a light and a rule yet it must truckle under the greater light and rule in the Scriptures Take conscience before conversion it is clouded and overshadowed with the Fall dark and blind in spiritual things and shall the blind lead the blind till both fall into the ditch must it not go be new-lighted at the Scripture Take heed unto the word as unto a light shining in a dark place saith St. Peter 2 Pet. 1.19 The heart of man is but a dark place till the divine word shine into it it is intoxicated with the love of sin and by it as the devils Opium it sleeps at the top of the mast in the ocean of lowdangers and must it not be rouzed up ought not the silver trumpet of the word to be sounded in its ears to prevent an eternal sleep and awaken it unto righteousness should it not go and wash in the pure streams of free-grace and redeeming blood in the Gospel it may be it is infected with errors and by these Satan hath taken sanctuary in the intellectual tower and utters his own dictates as from God and must it be left in such a case should not Satan and all his lying wares be cast out by the word and spirit but because conscience is now at the worst take it after conversion are there then no reliques of darkness which call for more light are there no fits of spiritual drowsiness which need fresh alarums are there no dregs of corruption which want a new purgation are there no spots of error which ought to be wiped out he that presumes a freedom from these hath great reason to doubt whether there be any such thing as conversion found in him and he that confesses them hath as great reason to run to the Scripture to have them rectified But because the Quaker dreams of perfection I will go higher Suppose a man absolutely perfect every wheel in his soul in right motion and his conscience a pure Chrystal without any flaw in it yet must the man be under God and his conscience under the word for his very perfection stands in that subjection and is forfeited as soon as it departs from it Conscience is a rule but a subordinate one it binds and looses but in the power and
authority of the word take away that and conscience is no more conscience the inward Eccleiastes is silenced and hath nothing to say My conscience beareth witness in the holy Ghost saith the Apostle Rom. 9.1 Observe it beareth witness in the holy Ghost Spiritu Sancto duce ac moderatore saith Beza on the place Conscience is no supream thing the holy Spirit must command and moderate in it if not in an immediate way as in Prophets and Apostles yet in and by the sacred Scriptures as in ordinary Christians To conclude with that of an ancient Scripturis non loquentibus quis loquetur the Scripture being silent none can speak no not conscience it self in a regular way wherefore our supream rule must be sought no wher else but there Thus far I have treated touching what manner of belief of Scripture this must be But to proceed on Secondly What are the consequents of this belief in order to that resignation which is the last thing in faith I answer the holy spirit having lodged such a belief of Scripture in the heart doth reflect and turn the Scriptural light inwards and manage it in order to resignation by so me such steps as these following First It strikes in the holy light in that manner as to work a clear conviction of sin and this conviction is manifold First There is a conviction of sin in its kinds Actual and Original I name Actual first as being most obvious and first in the discovery There is a conviction of Actual sin the believed Law comes home to the heart and gives it a charge as Nathan to David thou art the man these and those things are sins against the great God saith the holy Law and so and so thou hast done saith the awakened conscience God who before had sowed and sealed up his iniquities in a bag as the phrase is Job 14.17 now opens the bag and pours out a vast sum of guilts and exactly tells over all the smothered light and abused love and spirit-quenchings and sorfeited creatures and buried talents and broken promises and horrible presumptions in all amounting to wonderful arrearages and at last enforcing the poor sinner to cry out Guilty Guilty And after this follows a conviction of Original sin The sinner traces up his sins to the impure fountain and follows every lust home to the black nest in the heart there there is the root of bitterness the seed-plot and spawn of all iniquity Indeed in every actual sin we may if we have our spiritual senses about us hear the sound of its Masters feet even of the reigning corruption within in every act of rebellion we may cry out of the Pharaoh within which saith who is the Lord in every act of unbelief we may complain of the Jew in the heart which will not receive Christ we may tast Adams apple in every sensual sin and perceive his imaginary Godhead in every spiritual self-excellency in our lives we have many sins but all in our heart there is a stench in vitious actions but the filthy sink of all is within After some such way as this doth God fill our faces with shame that we may seek him and resign Secondly There is a conviction of sin in its guilt The sinner comes to see that whilest he is in his sin he is but a condemned man and sin unless pardoned will chain him to hell and eternal wrath God seems to speak to him as once to Abimelech behold thou art but a dead man thou catest and drinkest and sleepest but all the while under wrath thou art jolly abroad among the creatures but fire and brimstone and an horrible tempest hangs over thy head God makes the sinner know where he is as the Syrians when their eyes were opened saw themselves in the midst of Samaria so he when his mind is inlightned sees himself at the brink of hell and death without such a sense of wrath man is too proud to resign he is naturally a Manasseh a forgetter of God and will not turn till he be in chains Laish-like he sits quiet and secure till Dan the judgment come hell must drive him to heaven or else he will never come there the fiery Law must melt him or else he will never run into the Gospel-mould Thirdly There is a conviction of the filthiness of sin the soul in every turn from God loses its light and in every turn to the creature gathers soil and pollution the sinner will never resign up himself to be washed in the Evangelical laver unless he first seo sin as it is mire and dirt and superfluity of naughtiness and find his pretious soul lying in a sordid manner in a sink of pleasure or a cave of covetousness or some other lust which is as an unclean place miserably defiling it whilest it abides therein Fourthly There is a conviction of the power of sin sin is a Baal a Lording tyrant and the sinner a vassal to it in sensual sins he drudges in Sodom and Egypt and in spiritual he is carried away to Babylon the sinner is as a captive in his chains and which is the great wonder a willing captive the iron is entred into his soul the chain is in his very will the Principle of freedom a vassal he is and loves to be so The more freely he sins the more is his slavery the more imperiously he sins the more is his weakness thus the Prophet how weak is thy heart seeing thou doest the work of an imperiou whorish woman Ezek. 16.30 unless God make men in some measure feel the power of sin and go as David over Olivet weeping because of the Absoloms the rebellious lusts which come out of their own bowels and make war upon heaven they will not resign and take up the yoke of Christ as they ought Secondly Upon such a conviction of sin ensue great straits and humiliations of soul When the poor sinner sees things as they are an host of sins round about the soul nay and within it an hell flashing out of the guilt thereof a defiling filthiness in it such as makes him ashamed to lift up his soul to God and withall such bonds and fetters therein as he cannot break by his own power then he becomes a Magor-missabib terror round about his heart more or less bleeds in tears travels in pangs of conscience breaks under a damning Law and droops and swoons away in fits of self-confusion and self-desparation and at last is ready to cry out Oh sin Oh wrath what shall I do whither go can I fly from the Omnipresent grapple with the Almighty or stand before the holy One all 's impossible can I endure an hell abide a never-dying worm or dwell with consuming fire 't is intolerable May my time be unravelled my sins undone or my self unborn it cannot be Oh! sinful forlorn creature that I am wo wo unto me for ever Such straits as these make way for resignation all the sons of
us Rom. 10.4 and how can this be without an imputation Again if imputed righteousness be impossible what is imputed sin If that be so too how was Christ made sin or an offering for it to what purpose was his blood and sufferings what becomes of redemption all the train of blessings waiting thereon what to those Masters of Reason is but a fancy a spectrum or dream that to the believer is the very thing he would be found in before God Phil. 3.9 Apollodorus offer'd Socrates a pretious garment to dye in Imputed righteousness is the blessed robe which the believer would live and dye and rise in unto the judgment-seat at the last day Upon this he will venture his soul against all the demands of perfect obedience in the Law Moreover instead of satisfying Justice for his debts he hath just nothing of his own to pay but he leaves himself upon the blood and rich merits of Christ his sins are massie burdens too weighty for all the Angels in heaven to stand under but he unloads all upon the Lamb of God who bore away the sin of the world his debts to God amount to a vast sum but he ventures upon the great surety who paid the utmost farthing and had a total discharge in his resurrection and now is in heaven to see the scores crossed in Gods book and the bonds of guilt cancelled and thrown down into conscience If the avenging Law pursue him he slies to Christ as a City of refuge and there hides himself in the clefts of the rock in the bleeding wounds of his Redeemer here is faiths anchor-hold here he ventures his soul against all the curses of the Law Deny himself to be a sinner that he cannot for his conscience is a thousand witnesses oppose the cursing Law that he dares not for it is backed by an infinite justice but he ventures all upon the merit and satisfaction of Christ though in the night of desertion he may lye in a piteous condition as the Levites Concubine forced and as it were dead with legal terrors yet still his hand like hers will be upon the threshold upon Christ the door of salvation till free-grace dawn and break in upon him without this resignation the soul can have no peace Gardiner himself being ready to dye was willing to hear of a justification in the blood of Christ nothing else could expiate the guilt of sin Secondly In and through the Mediator this resignation is made unto God It is God that justifieth God as supream Law-giver the believer wraps up himself in the blood and righteousness of Christ and so yields up himself unto God to be pardoned and justified And in this resignation the great attribute he leans on is Gods grace God is gracious nay he hath riches of grace such as no unworthiness of ours can exhaust he hath glory of grace such as no sinfulness can eclipse he can abundantly pardon or as it is in the Original multiply to pardon Isa 55. 7. His grace can multiply pardons as his power can creatures Here is the beautiful gate where the believer lies for an alms of pardoning mercy here he ventures himself upon God speaking like Benhadads servants I hear that the God of heaven is a merciful God I will put on my ropes and sack-cloth and away to him it may be I may catch a word of grace from him and live for ever or arguing like the poor Lepers if I sit here in my sins I dye eternally if it go unto the world there is a famine of gace let me fall into the arms of a good God if he kill me I thall bat dye but if he save me I shall live for ever after such a manner doth he cast himself upon mercy This act of faith is very precious it touches God as it were in his bowels and sets them a sounding and melting into distillations of savour As soon as the prodigal son returned and cast himself on his fathers mercy his father runs and kisses him and the ring and the best robe and the satted calf are all little enough for him Luke 15. And as it is very pretious so it is very safe De Jusif●●● l. 5. c. 7. Beliarmtne himself after many disputations about justification doth yet conclude tutiss mum est ●●duciam totam in solâ Dei misericordiâ benignitate reponere it is most safe to put all our confidence in the sole mercy and bounty of God Thirdly This resignation is made to the Word as the warrant for both the former resignations Ask a believer why he resigns to Jesus Christ for pardon and justification his answer will be I find in the word that Christ hath fulsilled all righteousness hore our iniquities made an end of sin and reconciled us to God by his cross therefore I resign to him Ask him again why he resigns to God for it his answer will be I find in the word that God is decy phered in blessed titles as gracious merciful abundant in goodness and ready to forgive and that the grace in his heart slows down to us in promises of pardon blotting out iniquity and casting sin behind his back into the depth of the sea therefore I resign Parley with him further and he will tell you that over and besides Gods infallible word he hath his oath As to Christ the atoning Priest God hath sworn thou art a Priest for ever Psal 110.4 And as to his own grace and favour he hath sworn I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked but that the wicked turn from his way and live Ezek. 33.11 and in swearing God 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 interposes himself as the word is Heb. 6.17 pawns his life and essence upon it to make the thing wholly irrepealable and immutable and thereby to raise up strong and invincible consolation in us and therefore I resign Thus far of the second thing resignation for pardon and justification Thirdly Faith resigns up the soul to be sanctified Sanctification stands in two things mortification of sin and vivification of the soul and for both these faith yields up the soul And to observe the promised order First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator And first touching Mortification the believer yields his soul to Christ in a threesold respect First He yields up his soul to Christ as the grand samplar of mortification What Christ suffered in his pure flesh by way of expiation that must we suffer in our corrupt flesh by way of mortification His body was nailed to the cross till the soul separated from it the body of sin must be so nailed till the soul the will and love and delight of sin depart He was free in laying down his life and blood and so must we be in laying down the life and blood of the old Adam 'T is true the flesh relucts and says as Christs humane nature Oh! let this cup. pass from me but the spirit is
because God is love and grace free and partly by the Attribute of Almighty power sin is strong but not infinitely the Almighty who subdues all things to himself can easily subdue it The heart is a dead womb and not able to teem out the least particle of grace but the Almighty can quicken the dead and raise up a divine seed therein The fingers which made an Heaven and an Earth can make a new heart and a new spirit Faith takes hold on the power of God for the working sanctification in the heart Thirdly This resignation is made to the word and that upon a double account It is made to the word as the warrant of both the former resignations and made to the word as the engine in Gods hand for the working of sanctification it is made to the word as the warrant of both the former resignations The word is full of promises of mortifying and quickning grace and these promises stream out to us from the pure fountain of free-grace through the bleeding wounds of the Mediator and are all Yea and Amen Hence faith resigns to God and Christ for all sanctifying grace It is also made to the word as the engine in Gods hand for the working of sanctification The word is a mighty weapon able through Gods power to cast down the heights and strong holds of sin and an immortal seed able through Gods grace to quicken the heart and spring up into the new-creature Faith therefore resigns to it that the heart may be sanctified through the truth Thus far of the third thing resignation for sanctification Fourthly Faith resigns up the soul to be ruled as to its actings I say as to its actings That I may clearly distinguish it from the but now mentioned sanctification which consists in inward principles of grace And still to press in my old steps First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator Faith translates the soul into the kingdom of Christ and loves to live no where else the world in its eyes is but a house of bondage but it loves to live in Christs dominions Where holiness is there 's the King of Saints where meekness and patience there 's the throne of the Lamb where righteousness there 's his Scepter where Gods will prevaileth there he sits in Power and Majesty at the last day sense will discover this great King Jesus coming in the clouds in power and glory But faith sees him here coming in state in every holy command and riding as it were on the wings of the wind in every motion of the holy spirit The posture of faith herein is like that of the Israelies when the pillar of cloud and fire went before them then they journied otherwise they staid in their place when the spirit and word of Christ goes before the believer faith follows after else it will not stir a foot out of its place it is really in the believers heart to be ruled by Christ in all things Take him in holy ordinances these saith faith are the throne of Christ here below in these he fits at the right hand of power here the believer waits to see the power and the glory as the man with the withered hand in stretching it forth waited for a power to restore it and as the blind man in his going and washing in Siloam waited for a power to recover his sight so the believer in every ordinance waits for the power of Christ if he break the rocky heart melt it into the divine will the believer cries out the Lord reigneth here is the day of power indeed Take him in the works of his calling and there he is ruled by Christ one would think the servant were only toiling and drudging in his servile employments but if he be a believer he is serving the Lord Christ Col. 3.24 and by a divine praerogative above other mens his deeds are wrought in God such was the posture of pious Musculus in the town-ditch as well as in the Pulpit Faith is such an engine as brings down the kingdom of Christ though not of this world into the meanest trades the believer acting therein as Peter let down his net at the command of Christ and therein as in his calling abiding with God which is more then the unbeliever doth under divine ordinances nay take him even in natural actions the believer when himself cats and drinks and sees and hears and speaks and sleeps and wakes and walks after another rate then other men doing all under the Law of Christ that 's a knife at his throat a covering to his eyes a stopper to his cars a bridle on his lips when he sleepeth that keeps him when he waketh that talks with him when he walketh that leads him the kingdom of heaven which is not meat or drink or any such thing is by faith brought down into all these The genius of faith is to be ruled by Christ in all things Secondly This resignation in and through the Mediator is made to God I say in and through the Mediator because without him we can expect to be ruled by God in no other way then by the iron rod of his power and justice dashing us in pieces to all eternity but in and through him the believer may and doth yield up himself to God to be ruled And here he makes use of two Attributes Gods soveraignty and Gods holiness God is the supream Lord and must be obeyed he is the holy one and must be sanctified in each command the beams of his majesty and holiness sparkle out and these faith takes in to melt the heart into a compliance with the divine will Plato being asked by one of his Scholars how long his precepts were to be obeyed answered Donec in terris apparuerit sacratior aliquis qui sontem veritatis aperiat the believer desires to be ruled by God because an higher and holier cannot come Thirdly This resignation is made to the word Ask a believer how he knows himself to be where he would be in the dominions of God and Christ his answer will be I know it by the command in the word and in the command his faith eyes two things the truth of the command and the soveraignty his faith eyes the truth of it the command is true as coming from God himself and being the very counterpane of the holiness in his heart This is the will of God even your sanctification saith St. Paul 1 Thess 4.3 Gods will is in himself but the command is the counterpane of it thy word is true from the beginning saith the Psalmist Psal 109.160 or as the Original is the head of thy word is truth the body of the command in Scripture answers to the head of it in the holy will of God Faith looks on the command as issuing out of the very heart of God and exactly agreeing thereunto and upon this account resign to it as to the good and acceptable will of God Again
his faith eyes the soveraignty of it naturally we would be Gods to our selves and set up our wills as supream and therefore we make war upon God and his Law But when faith comes God is God and the Law a royal Law and all the commands in Power and Majesty by them saith David is thy sorvant warned or as it is in the Hebrew illustrated Psal 19.11 the command to the believer is as if a light shone from heaven and a voice came from the excellent glory saying Do this or that Gods will rides in triumph and mans falls to the earth as not able to stand before the Lord The voice of a superior if perceived puts an awe upon the inferior nature so doth the voice of man upon beasts so doth the voice of Angels upon men and which is the greatest awe because from the highest nature so doth the voice of God upon the believer After this manner doth faith yield up the soul to the command and in it to God and Christ Thus far of the fourth thing resignation for a holy government Fifthly Faith resigns up the soul for the gracious reward of eternal life And here to keep the old Method First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator Faith cannot be satisfied with earth that 's but the Paradise of sense no nor with present graces these are but the pawns and earnest-pennies of eternal life faith aspires after heaven Oh! let me go over and see the good Land where the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Air pure holiness the Eternal light God himself saith faith and for a title thereunto faith yields up the soul to Christ who as a Priest hath merited heaven for us and as a King is able to give it out to us The Plebeian saith Epictetus looks for his gain from things without the Philosopher looks for it from himself but which is a strain higher the Believer looks for his reward from Christ Evagrius the Philosopher gave as the story goes three hundred pounds to Synesius for the poor to be repaid him by Christ in another world the believer doth all at the same rate hears and reads and prays and gives alms and all to be paid in another world Worldly men wonder at his hot pursuits after grace and holiness but he knows what these will go for in another world that 's the reason he follows hard after them but in the pursuit still his eyes are upon Christ as the great purchasor and pay-master Secondly This resignation in and through the Mediator is made to God It is he that glorifieth eternal life is Gods gift our heavenly Fathers meer pleasure faith therefore yields up the soul to him for it and herein it climbs up to him by his free-grace the pure river of life flows out of the throne of God and of the Lamb Rev. 22.1 out of the regnant grace of God and merit of Christ as out of a fountain the believer expects no eternal life but what issues out from thence Thus the Reverend Soknius on his death bed expressed himself Pendeo totus à Dei miserieordiâ I wholly depend on Gods mercy Thirdly This resignation is made to the Word There is the promise of eternal life extant and there the way to eternal life is chalked out there is the promise of eternal life mapped out a mercy above all the sphear of nature Hence the antient believers were as pilgrims here Heb. 11.13 as if the world were too little for them they were altogether for the heavenly country which faith sees at a distance in the promise There also the way to eternal life is chalked out the world passes away but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 Joh. 2.17 Riches and pleasures are but the way of time but holiness and righteousness are the way everlasting Psal 139.24 the good acts may pass but their record is in heaven the good men must dye but the holiness shall never see corruption the repentant tears which fall to the earth are bottled with God the charity which seems lost as bread cast on the waters will come to hand again Polycrates when he cast his ring into the sea little thought to have met it again in his fish but the believer doing good works expects to meet them again in another world sowing to the spirit he looks for a crop in eternal life Dorcas may leave her coats and garments behind her but the charity will follow her into another world the commandement is eternal life saith our Saviour Joh. 12.50 the very way to it The believer obeying may in some sense say as dying Pollio jam ingredior in vitam aeternam now I am entring into eternal life into that which will survive the world and live in glory Faith resigns to the word not only as it is the charter of eternal life in the promise but as it is the director to it in the command Thus far of the second thing for what things and purposes this resignation is made But to proceed to the third thing Thirdly What are the Adjuncts and Properties of this resignation Vnto which I shall answer in the following particulars First This resignation is made in the way of God Believers wait upon God for very great things Since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the ear neither hath the eye seen O God besides these what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him saith the Prophet Isa 64.4 But where do they wait for these great things where but in Gods own way Thus it follows those that remember thee in thy ways v. 5. Look in what way or method God gives out a mercy in the same way or method doth faith wait to receive it Would a man have a pardon faith waits for it in Gods way free-grace as immense a sea as it is in God doth not flow out every way upon sinners but through the bleeding wounds of Christ We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ saith the Apostle Rom. 3.24 Mark free-grace issues out through redemption and in that way faith waits for it Thus St. Peter We believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved Act. 15.11 he calls the grace of God the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ as being merited by him The believer waits for pardoning mercy but it must be the mercy of David coming through the Messiah the true David Whether God might not per potentiam suam absolutam remit sin without a satisfaction is a question may be spared Gods will is declared the Scripture is definitive there is no other name given among men but the name of Jesus no other remission but through his blood the glory of the Lord that is his free-grace comes into the Temple of the Church by the way of the East Ezek. 43.2 that
whose origine is light such ignorant ones cannot resign sin to them because unknown is no burden holiness to them because unknown is no beauty Christ and grace to them because unknown are no attractives and how can they resign resign recumbentially they cannot for they know not the promises resign obedientially they cannot for they know not the precepts resign in an humble docibleness they cannot for they know not so much as their want of knowledge Again some sins though unknown carry in the matter of them a direct repugnancy to resignation and so to faith For instance every man hath some natural Popery in his heart he would be justified by a righteousness of his own The Jews being asked whether they believed to be saved by Christs righteousness made this answer every fox must pay his own skin to the flayer every man must stand upon his own righteousness he that doth thus need not cannot resign to Christs righteousness he need not for why should he go out of doors for a righteousness which he hath within in his own heart and he cannot for justification by our own righteousness and justification by Christs are contraries and so are a dependance on our own righteousness for justification and a dependance on Christs for it Hence the Jews when they went about though ignorantly to establish their own righteousness could not believe they submitted not themselves to the righteousness of God saith the Apostle Rom. 10.3 their own unresigned righteousness kept them from believing as being in the very matter of it contrary thereunto Moreover some sins which may not be known for fins in the matter of them may yet be darlings Delilahs and as the Hebrew word imports exhausters such as drain out the very marrow of the heart I mean the prime love choice desire and supream delight thereof These in respect of their intimate conjunction with the soul are barrs to resignation and so to faith How can ye believe which receive honour one of another saith our Saviour Job 5.44 their darling vain-glory made their believing impossible After the same manner all lawful things when once they are set up as Idols in the heart and the love and the joy dance before them are obstacles to faith thus we find They would not come to the marriage-supper of the Gospel and why their darling farms and merchandise kept them away Math. 22.5 Haec vincula hae catenae quae carnales constringunt these are the bonds and the chains which keep men from resignation and the more dangerously because they lie invisible and hid among the stust of our lawful things Christ and earthly things saith a Great Divine come often in competition in every unjust gain Christ and a bribe in every oath Christ and a blasphemy in every sinful fashion Christ and a rag or excrement in every piece of vain-glory Christ and a blast in every intemperance Christ and a vomit whatever the thing be in it self lawful or sinful as soon as it becomes the Idol of the heart it proves an obstacle to faith Thirdly All known actual sins are not absolute barrs to resignation and so not to faith there are peccata quotidianae incursionis sins of meer infirmity such as are not the proper formal issues of deliberation but the inevitable effluviums of humane frailty these may be in a man and may be known to be in him and yet through grace he may resign notwithstanding these black moats slying round about him his faith may look up to the mercy-seat on the other side known actual sin issuing out of deliberation if it be but in one single act doth whilest it is acting put a barr to resignation and so to faith for that single act is rebellion and how can a man whilest he is knowingly in arms against God resign it is as the sin of witchcraft 1 Sam. 15.25 and how can a man who is virtually in covenant with the devil enter into terms with God that faith is not truly recumbential which is not also obediential neither doth it can it indeed lean upon Gods grace whilest his holiness is rejected And if such known deliberate sin in one single act put a bar to faith much more will it do so when it is in a course and series of successive rebellions Thus St. John saith whosoever sinneth that is makes a trade and runs a course of known sin hath not seen him that is Jesus Christ who was manifested to take away sin 1 Joh. 3.6 such an one though never so full of Scriptural notions never yet saw a crucified Christ by faith never yet looked upon the right mercy-seat never yet set foot on the precious promises of the Gospel Christ and Belial cannot be in concord for Christ is a holy Christ a Christ upon his throne and the trader in sin is a man of Belial a man as the Hebrew word imports absque jugo who casts off the holy yoke from his heart and life Fifthly That faith stands in resignation may appear from the act of resignation made by faith Faith in Enoch resigned up his life and in a spiritual sense every believer is by faith translated Enoch-like he is not in the lower world but so far as he believes taken up by God and conversing in heaven Faith in Abraham resigned up his only one his Isaac and every believer every child of Abraham treads in the same steps of faith going up into Moriah into the vision of God and there offering up the only one of the heart the darling love and joy there Faith in Moses resigned up Egypt and in that resigned up all the world for in doing thereof his eye was not on some other part of the visible world but on the invisible God and in every believer faith takes the world and casts it behind his back as dung and dross for the excellency of Christ regard not your stuff saith faith all the Land of promise a heaven of glory is before you wonderful are the surrenders which faith makes in the believer it surrenders up his understanding to super-rational mysteries Meer reason goes no farther then its own sphear of natural notions but the line of faith runs as far as supernatural mysteries such as the lingua lutea the clay tongue of man cannot utter such as lippus oculus the weak eye of reason cannot see Again it surrenders up his will to super-moral self-denials The Moralists self-denial is but the artifice of his reason but the believers is a very great mystery The Moralist denies only the beast the brutish lusts in his sensitive affections but the believer denies the more fine and spiritual fins in the Will it self The Moralists design is only to advance the Empire of Reason over the lower faculties but the believers is to advance God and his holy Will over himself and all that is in him Moreover it surrenders up his affections to super-sensual joyes and pleasures The Sensualist is for the Paradise of sense
on a cross for them why the word is nigh him manifesting these heavenly mysteries unto his heart still he hangs upon a word that if we make a true search lies at the very bottom of all his faith as the foundation thereof Fourthly It exalts the justice of God Many great Rabbies have been caught by the head in the Controversal thickets whilest they have disputed about Gods justice in the condemning impotent men Not to enter into the briers there seems to be much in this that God condemns none for bare impotency but for height and pride and contumacy in that estate Christs question to the impotent man is very remarkable wilt thou be made whole Joh. 5.6 O thou impoten man if thou art sensibly weak in thy impotency poor in thy poverty and low in thy low estate surely creating grace is passing upon thee but if thou art strong in thy impotency rich in thy poverty and high in thy low estate thy condemnation is just because in the pride of thy heart thou wilt not yield to be saved on the terms of the Gospel Spondand Annal. Eccles Anno 491. Zeno the Eastern Emperor being in a fit of the Falling-sickness taken for dead was buried alive and when he cried out lamentably to be taken up but into a Monastery his wife Ariadne would not suffer it If the poor sinner lying in his spiritual grave mourn and groan under his impotency CHAP. VI. Precious Faith confiuered in the fruits and glorious progresses of it and here first of the Divine Sagacities of Faith THUS far I have treated of Pretious Faith in its first and lowest measure as it is the condition of the Gospel consisting of supernatural illumination a belief of the Divine Testimony and a dependant resignation to the terms of the Gospel Now I come to consider the fruits and glorious progresses of faith Faith is like Rebecca the Mother of thousands That blessing of Abraham in blessing I will bless thee and in multiplying I will multiply thee falls down upon all the seed of believers their faith is blessed with a fair progeny of graces and comforts only these are not born all at once for though adoption and justification immediately ensue upon faith comforts and statures of graces do not do so but come forth into being gradually in some sooner in some later as grace is actuated and as God is pleased to dispense them wherefore what I shall lay down touching the fruits of faith I intend not as universally applicable to all believers at the very first and before a progress made in grace justification and adoption are found in every believer nay and some measures of sanctification but higher degrees of grace and manifestations of Divine Love are not so neither do I mean critically to time when each holy fruit buds forth but only to explain the things themselves And here I shall first begin with the sagacities of Faith There hath been a great stir in the world about wisdom Philosophers have hunted after it the Jews have vainly cried up themselves nos sapientes we are the wise men say they but in truth the only Sage under the Sun is the believer Upon Gods own survey it was found that there is none that understandeth Rom. 3.11 none but the believer only his knowledge is divine all Arts and Sciences are but toyes to it which occasioned the worthy Pitiscus to say that he played in Mathematicks with his rule and compass but he sweat in Divinity his design is the wisest he seeks a crown a kingdom of glory the Primitive Christians were wont to talk so much of the kingdom the kingdom that the Pagan Emperors grew jealous of them but alass their aims were much higher in comparison whereof earthly Monarchs do but play at push-pin about Crowns of dust and spend their time like Domitian in catching flies the believer leaving the world behind his back pitches upon heaven and God the heaven of heaven in him to enjoy mirrors of truths Sabbaths of love rivers of pleasures and plenitudes of joy and bliss for ever and what wiser design can enter into mans heart surely none as the last day will demonstrate when it shall put an eternal blush on all other designs And as his end is the wisest so his way to it is the surest he goes to it by Jesus Christ whose merit as a golden key unlocks the doors of bliss to the believer and whose spirit attires him with all graces to make him fit to enter in and all this is not a fancy a fools Paradise but a truth a real thing founded on that infallible word which stands faster then the pillars of heaven and earth But to unfold the sagacities of faith more fully I shall consider them with relation to several objects As to God the believer sees the invisible one and that after another rate then meer Naturalists and Notionalists do he hath more then a bare notion he hath the mystery of God in his heart as the phrase is Col. 2.2 he that hath but the meer notion sees him afar off and knows not how to sanctifie such a Majesty in his heart no more then Cardinal Perron did who first in an excellent Oration before the French King proved there there was a God and then being much applauded by the Auditory offered the next day to prove the contrary but he that hath the mystery sees him neer at hand and so prepares a room for him in his heart a fear for his Majesty a love for his goodness a faith for his truth and mercy a joy for his salvation putting each affection into a posture suteable to some one or other of his Divine Attributes he that hath but a notion of Gods Omnipresence can sport with his sins as if there were no God in the place but he that hath the mystery of it Abraham-like walks before God on to his faces as the Original is Gen 17.1 every where there is a face of God appearing to deter him from sin and excite him to holiness he that hath but a notion of Gods grace hath no favour no relish of the sweetness thereof which I suppose makes the converse of some great Scholars as dry and sapless as Cardinal Pools Sermon about the Pall but he that hath the mystery of it tasts how gratious the Lord is and is ravished as if heaven opened and some drops from the rivers of pleasure there were let down upon his heart he that hath but a notion of Gods justice can sit in his lusts before the sparks of his own kindling and be no more afraid at the threatnings in Scripture then Jehojakim was at the burning of the roll Jer. 36.24 one lust or other consumes all the roll of Divine threatnings but he that hath the mystery of it cannot do so to him hell flames out in every threatning he trembles at the word and saith O my soul be not deceived if thou live after the flesh thou wilt dye
if thou sow unto the flesh thou must reap corruption He that hath but a notion of Gods power can despise Gods hand in small crosses just as the proud Greeks who when Callipolis was lost said the Turks had taken but a bottle of wine but he that hath the mystery of it dares not do so well knowing that the lightest afflictions come from Shaddai the Almighty and if need be he can strike harder he that hath but a notion of Gods All-sufficiency hath his affections scattered up and down the earth as the poor Israelites were over Egypt for straw to gather if it were possible a happiness from the flowers of the creature but he that hath the mystery of it knows how by a compendious wisdom to have all in God roll over all worlds the world of thoughts wishes and desires in the heart the world of riches honours and pleasures in nature the world of pardons graces and comforts in Saints the world of joy glory and beatitudes in heaven and after all this the believer can tell you all these are to be found in God habet omnia quihabet habentem omnid after this manner the secret of the Lord is with the believer As to Jesus Christ the believer hath the mystery of him in his heart A man may have a notion of God manifest in the flesh but unless he have an heart of flesh an yielding resigning heart for God to manifest his spirit and graces in that the heart may in some measure be made answerable to the spirit and graces in Christ he wants the mystery of it St. John speaking of love saith which thing is true in him and in you 1 John 2.8 Why so because saith he the darkness is past and the true light now shineth a man may tell the story of the meekness humility holiness obedience charity patience it Christ but if the true light do not shine in him by faith if these graces be not true in Christ and in him he hath not the mystery thereof the spyes coming back from Canaan brought not only a bare report of the good Land but clusters of grapes also he that hath the mystery of Christ hath not only a meer notion of the full treasures of grace in him but clusters of graces from thence as so many real proofs thereof the Apostle Paul doth notably decipher this sagacity that I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable to his death Phil 3.10 If a man hath only a notion of Christ crucified and Christ risen we may character him as Erasmus did the Monastery he was in there is nihil Christi nothing of Christ crucisied where lusts are living and reigning nothing of Christ risen where the soul is dead in trespasses and sins he only knows the fellowship of Christs sufferings who hangs up his earthly members on the cross to dye and expire the only knows the power of Christs resurrection who hath felt the same Almighty power which raised up Christ quickning his soul to a heavenly life this is the mystery the so learning of Christ as the expression is Eph. 4.20 learning him so as to put off the old man with his corrupt lusts and to put on the new man in true holiness and so as to be found in him and count all dross and dung for him It deeply concerns all Christians nay the greatest Clerks to understand this so which without faith no man doth as being void of Christ and his spirit As to inherent grace the believer knows it to be an excellent thing an accident more worth then the substance of the soul it self and yet withall he knows it to be a creature and in it self defectible he knows it to be an excellent thing excellent in its supernatural parentage a thing not born of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man but of God an holy thing formed by the overshadowing of the blessed spirit a beam of grace from the eternal grace in the heart of God excellent again as it is the souls lostre knowledge its glass humility its vail obedience its golden ear-ring love the chain of its neck righteousness its fine linnen every grace its inward glory and beauty elevating natural faculties above their own pitch into a state congruous for communion with God above all excellent as it represents God himself in every creature there is a print or footstep of God but in grace there is his very image and resemblance a believer can see more of God in an holy beam then in the great Sun in a little of heaven then in all the earth intal poor meek spirit then in all the Nimrods and mighty Potentates of the world and yet after all this the believer sees grace to be but a creature and in it self defectible without a spiritual concourse from heaven should God bid him stand alone he would be in an agony and pray as Annas Burgus did at his Martyrdome Deus mi ne me derelinquas ne ego te derelinquam my God forsake me not lest I forsake thee Should God offer him all the Angels in heaven to guard his little spark of grace in being he would tremble and say not so Lord let me be kept by thine Almighty power unto salvation that is the only keeper I desire he dares not say my mountain is strong now I am full now I am rich now I reign as a King by my self were he full of grace it would be but as a room is of light no sooner could he shut the windows and possess it in a self-subsistence but he would be in the dark and experiment every beam to hang upon the Sun of righteousness were he rich in grace it would be but as a Merchant is in his trade if the rich returns from heaven should fail he would soon spend all his stock and like a son of Adam turn bankrupt were he a spiritual King ruling over his lusts he would and must confess himself under the kingdom of Christ and to hold all his power from thence or else Mene Mene his kingdom is numbred and divided among lusts and devils St. Paul saith I live but immediately he calls it back again yet not I but Christ liveth in me Gal. 2.20 well knowing that all his grace had its being from the true Immanuel Jesus Christ and its continuance from the continual influxes of his spirit which are in a sober sense a kind of Immanuel God with us strengthening graces where they are weak quickning where they are dead upholding where they are falling and by an incessant spiration influencing Being into them that they may not vanish into nothing As to the opposite sin the believer sees more of the sinfulness of sin and yet more of the holy God about it then others do He sees more of the sinfulness of sin then others Next to Christ who weighed sin upon the cross he of all men knows best how to
the presentiality of all these Job looks through the worms and dust upon a resurrection my Redeemer liveth saith he Job 19.25 though I dye my Redeemer liveth and will fetch me up again if there were an Engine made which could pull away all the intermediate bodies between us and the heaven of heavens we might look into Paradise faith doth the same thing spiritually it puts by the world and time and lies at the door of heaven and eternity Thus the Apostle we look not at the things temporal but at the eternal 2 Cor. 4.18 he puts by all temporal things which as the lower heavens hold back the face of Gods throne and so he looks into eternity There is a story of an Oxford Monk who by his skill in Magick conveyed himself into the Northern Regions and there took a view of the Pole the believer by the art of faith doth much more in conveying himself out of this world and taking a view of eternity in the promises he sees heaven opening and letting down some sparkles of glory in the threatnings he sees hell flaming and some of the fire unquenchable breaking out heaven and hell are no longer notions but sensations in the raptures and joyes of faith he hath been caught up into Paradise and there drunk of the wine of Angels in convictions and deep humiliations he hath been as it were at Gods barr and hanging over the bottomless pit As to seeming contradictions the believer hath a rare dexterity to enucleate them Touching which I shall give some instances God commanded Abraham offer up thy son thine only son Isaac to offer up a son was a seeming contradiction to nature to offer up an Isaac a son of promise was a seeming contradiction to Gods truth who before had said in Isaac shall thy seed be called but faith unlocks all these difficulties God is able to raise him up from the dead saith Abraham and from thence he received him in a figure Heb. 11.19 a parallel to this we may find in all true believers the children of Abraham God calls upon them mortifie the deeds of the body and ye shall live mortifie and live is a seeming contradiction to offer up our only ones our wills our loves our joys to be slain looks like a piece of unnaturalness but what saith faith it is no such matter offer up your only ones your wills your loves your joys unto God and you shall receive them again from the dead raised up in the incorruption of the new-creature that which was sown a natural will natural love and natural joy shall be raised up a spiritual will spiritual love and spiritual joy your souls before dead in sins shall have the life of God in them this is the first resurrection such things as these nature laughs at as strange paradoxes but faith embraces as rare mysteries Again Christ saith take my yoke upon you for my yoke is easie and my burden is light Math. 11.29 30. what is Christs yoke but the Commandements and are these portable by any meer man so say the Romanists from this very place but the mistake is so gross that the communis sensus of Christians runs against it faith can unriddle it another way the impossibles of the Law the sinless perfection unattainable by us were fulfilled by Christ the heavy end of the Law the dreadful curse unavoidable by us was born by Christ the Covenant of grace is satisfied with uprightness in the wayes of God which is easie to a renewed man its true while there is only the pressure of a Law without and nothing but a natural heart of enmity within the wayes of God are irksom and tedious which occasioned a Divine to say that a man might take a carnal man tye him to a table and kill him with praying and preaching but it is far otherwise with the believer who serves God not in the oldness of the letter but in the newness of the spirit who hath a Law within answering to the Law without and a spirit within prompting the same in the heart which the spirit in the command doth outwardly dictate Prayer is but the breathing of the new-creature holy desires its pulse holiness its element obedience its common walk alms but the opening of its hands contemplation but the lifting up of its eyes all natural and easie because from inward principles of life and grace My yoke is easie is durus sermo an hard saying to every man but to the believer who does all sweetly and in the easiness of the new-creature Moreover to give another instance work out your salvation with fear and trembling for it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure saith the Apostle Phil. 2.12 13. what strange language is here work and yet God worketh all and all of his meer pleasure how can these things be if God work all there seems to be no place left for virtue or vice rewards or punishments because man can do nothing of himself O what sweats have Learned brains been thrown into whilest they have laboured to tune free-grace and free-will into harmony what craggy thorny Volumes of meer speculation have they put forth de concordiâ liberi arbitrii gratiae and after all is done the believer understands it best of any man his life of faith is a plain practical solution thereof for he acts and moves but under the first Agent and Mover he works but under the Master-workman he is free but under the free-making spirit he spreads his sails and withall looks up for the holy gales he labours and sows precious seed and at the same time waits for the spiritual dews and sun-beams he hath graces in him but layes all under that spirit that created them that that spirit may touch upon his charity and draw out his soul in alms and touch upon his devotion and pour out his soul in prayer and touch upon every grace and make the spices thereof flow out still he waits for the touches of the spirit Moral virtues like the fabled cymbal of St. Telian may seem to ring alone by their own self-power and self-confidence but spiritual graces like Davids harp must be awakened by divine influences as it was in Christ on earth the Humanity alwayes ministred to the Divinity so it is with the believer so far as his faith acts all his faculties and graccs are but as it were so many gardens aery rooms and working-houses for the holy spirit to walk breath and work its pleasure in Hence the believer is said in Scripture to walk in the spirit pray in the spirit live in the spirit doing all under the conduct thereof after some such sort as this doth the believer work out his salvation with fear and trembling in a way of humility and holy dependance upon God who worketh to will and to do of his own good pleasure We have an eminent instance of this in holy David see how he hangs
upon God in the 119 Psal thou hast commanded us to keep thy precepts but O that my wayes were directed to do so ver 4 5. I will keep thy statutes but O forsake me not utterly ver 8. with my whole heart have I sought thee but O let me not wander from thy commandements ver 10. I will run the way of thy commandements but do thou enlarge my heart ver 32. I love thy precepts but quicken me O Lord according to thy loving kindness ver 159. I have chosen thy precepts O let thine hand help me ver 173. how working is David and how depending how sweetly do mans obedience and Gods influence accord together this a believer practically understands and none but he whilest others labour to fathome it by speculation the mystery is too deep for them but the believer hath it practically and in experience every day As to spiritual extractions the believer is very sagacious Chymists by racking and torturing of nature have forced her to a confession of many secrets and choice mysteries which made Paracelsus so triumph over Galen vaunting proudly that the least hair of his head had more learning then all the Vniversities besides The believer is the best of Chymists no extractions are like those of faith he extracts heaven out of earth could a man extract gold out of base metals it would be but earth out of earth purer out of grosser but the believer extracts heaven out of earth As Jacob saw more then meer Esau he saw Gods face in Esaus so the believer sees more then the meer creature-comfort he sees the goodness of God in it which is the sweetness of all Carnal men are content with the bulk and gross matter of an earthly blessing but the believer draws out the spirits and quintescence thereof that is the love of God without which oil and wine and corn and all other earthly things are but a caput mortuum a piece of dross and dead mattor in his eyes earthly things are transient and perishing in themselves but he hath an art to melt them down by charity into a fixed condition though he cannot say his house yet he can his charity shall continue for ever Silver and gold will not go in speeie in the upper world but he knows how by the poor which are Christs bankers to return them thither for everlasting habitations given in exchange by free-grace Again he extracts good out of evil Carnal men see nothing in affliction but a lump of sorrow but the believer knows that there is a blessing in it the sharpness of it may let out his corruption the suddenness of it may alarum his spiritual watch the bitterness of it may wean him from the breast of the creature the weight of it may try the back of his faith and patience it is no longer meer trouble but made out into fans to unchaff him of his vanity into furnaces to resine his golden graces into moulds to cast him into the image of a meek suffering Christ into spiritual wings to elevate the soul in devotions and heavenly affections towards the everlasting rest which is above much of the love and faithfulness of God is to be seen in it which made Munster sick of the pestilence to shew the ulcers and plague-tokens on his arm ut armillas preciosas Christi gemmas as the bracelets and rich jewels of Christ such noble extractions can faith make out of sore afflictions as if they were the only love-tokens to feal up a son of God according to that old saying Qui excipitur à numero flagellatorum excipitur à numero siliorum Again he extracts strength out of weakness Satans shocks and the fluxes of inward corruption may make him weak and ready to perish but his faith tells him that the power of God which can do all things is perfected in weakness and the weakness of man under which he groans is a capacity for that power to shew forth it self in when our power is gone there is room for Gods when there is no might he increaseth strength as it was in Christ the weakness the humane flesh was anointed with the divinity so it is in the believer the weakness the humane frailty is anointed with the power of grace when he is weak in himself then he is strong in God when weak in the flesh then strong in the spirit The Psalmist hath some Psalms upon Machalath that is upon instruments Musical say some but upon infirmity say others the believer is able to glory and make Musick over his weaknesses because his faith can fetch down the power of God upon him wait on the Lord and he shall strengthen thine heart Psal 27.14 as faith goes up so power comes down hence the believer out of weakness is made strong as the Apostle expresses it Heb. 11.34 Again he extracts grace out of unworthiness well knowing that the way of grace is to move it self into act from our unworthiness a notable instance whereof we have Hos 2.13 14. she went after her lovers and forgate me saith the Lord therefore behold I will allure her and bring her into the wilderness and speak comfortably unto her as if he had said she is idolatrous therefore behold I will be gracious Oh what a stupendious therefore is here deservedly is it followed with a behold a note of admiration So wonderful it is that some Learned men among the Papists not understanding how such a connection could possibly be have thought that it referrs not to that which immediately went before but to some precedent words about the beginning of the Chapter a parallel place to this we have Isa 57.17 18. he went on frowardly in the way of his heart I have seen his wayes and will heal him Oh! what strange grace is here one would have thought he would have said he went on frowardly I have seen his wayes and will damn him but it is I have seen his wayes and will heal him Some Jewish Commentators gloss it thus I have seen his repenting wayes and will heal him I suppose not understanding how grace should immediately follow upon perversness but the believer knows that this is the method of grace and therefore by an holy art presses for it even from his own unworthiness Our Saviour Christ calls the Canaanitish woman crying out for mercy no better then dog Math. 15.26 a word of reproach such as the proud Jews put on all the Gentiles such as made the Saracens revolt from the Emperour Heraclius his army and set up for themselves under their Captain Mahomet but see how admirably her faith gathers upon him and even from that word presses for mercy truth Lord yet the dogs eat of the crumbs that fall from their Masters table ver 27. ipsum Dominum in verbis capit she takes the Lord in his own words saith Ferus proving her title to the crumbs from her being a dog Holy David prayes O Lord pardon mine iniquity for
let down into his heart and another all is drawn up into heaven again His Evidences may be blurred Satan may hold up his pardoned Sins as it were in their old guilt the Arrows of God may stick fast in him and bring qualms and sick-fits upon his Conscience But at that day his Comforts shall be unvariable a nightless Day and a cloudless Horizon an eternal feast upon God and all things in him his Evidences all clear and after but this once shewing forth an everlasting possession of the expected Happiness The Accuser Satan shall be struck dumb at the blessed sentence of pardon and acceptance pronounced by God before Men and Angels God shall never frown or wound him any more but wrap him up in the arms of endless love and joy This will be a day of refreshing indeed Thus much of the perfection of this holy fruit Fifthly The last thing is the excellency of it God himself writes upon the Justified 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Blessed one Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven whose sin is covered Pal. 32.1 or as the original Blessednesses is he there is not one single Happiness but a cluster of Beatitudes in this estate Some of these I shall gather off from this Vine First The Justified person hath God for his God these two I will be merciful to their unrighteousness and I will be their God stand in conjunction in the Covenant of Grace Hebr. 8.10 and 12 verses God say the Jewish Rabbins hath the key of the Womb the key of the Grave the key of the Rain and the key of the Heart all that is in the Creation is at his dispose The Justified man hath as I may say a key into God himself He may unlock infinite Treasures and say These everlasting Arms which bear up the World are mine for protection These All-seeing Eyes which guide every wheel in Nature are mine for direction Those immense Bowels which cover all the Creation embrace and sold me up in special Love Those two all-comprizing words My God are in truth utterable by none but such as he is God is called the God of Abraham Isaack and Jacob. Cujus omnes gentes sunt quasi trium hominum Deus esset saith St. Austine as if the Great Lord of all things were appropriated to those three Men. Such honour have all Justified ones God is their own and to make this sure they have bonds and bills under Gods own hand they can in one Promise shew a title to his Power and in another to his Mercy and in a third to his Wisdom and in that I will be their God They can lay a just claim to all that is in him which what it amounts unto is more than the tongue of Men and Angels can express Secondly The Justified person hath Christ for his own When the covetous King of Egypt built an house for his great Treasures the cunning Architect left a loose Stone in the building that so he might have free access thereinto What entrance he had by craft into the Egyptian Treasures that Justified persons have by a fair grant into all the unsearchable riches of Christ Merit Spirit Life Death Righteousness Redemption Fulness Glory all that is in Christ is their own If his Righteousness can stand before God so will they If his Blood can wash away sin they shall be without spot or wrinckle at the Great day If his glorious over-measure of the Spirit cannot fail no more will their supplies of Grace If he ascended up into Heaven it was to prepare a place for them If he make Intercession above they must have access to the Throne of Grace If he sit at the Right-hand of Power and Majesty all their enemies must be made their foot-stool Oh! infinite enjoyment Eye hath not seen nor Ear heard neither can it enter into mans heart what the total sum of this is Thirdly The Justified man hath a rare priviledge in his Holy duties He hath assistance from access unto and acceptance with the great God in these He hath assistance from him Whilest he stands offering up holy Services fire comes down from heaven upon the Sacrifice The Holy Spirit inflames his heart towards God opening it in Hearing melting it in Alms and pouring it out in Prayer So that in some sence he offers up his Duties as Christ did himself through the eternal Spirit enlivening and impowering him thereunto His voyage to Heaven lies through a tract of various Duties but it never fares with him in these as it did with Sir Hugh Willoughby in his Voyage to Moscovy in which he was by extream Frosts frozen to death The warm influences of Grace keep him from freezing in this divine enterprize His heart which seeks the Lord in his waies shall live and to make it sure our Saviour saies expresly because I live ye shall live also Joh. 14.19 His life is hid with Christ As long as Christ the Head is alive above the Members below shall never fail of quickening grace in their addresses to God Again he hath access unto God in them A man under guilt cannot approach unto God no more than fallen Origen casting his eye upon that of the Psalmist What but thou to do to declare my Word could tell how to Preach but the Justified man may draw near unto him because his heart is sprinckled from an evil Conscience The guilt which would have made him shie of God is done away in Christs blood Whilst others are but in the outward Court in the opus operatum the work done he may enter into the Holy of Holies into communion with God the Holy Spirit conducts him thither through the vail of Christs flesh Moreover which is the crown of all he hath acceptance with God God had respect to Abel and to his offering Gen. 4.4 such a respect as to bear witness to his righteousness by some visible sign as fire from heaven consuming the Sacrifice The justified man is in his measure as Daniel a man of Desires and as the Blessed Virgin graced or highly favoured His Prayers make melody in heaven his Alms are the savour of a sweet-smell he doth not lose so much as a cup of cold water nor shut a door of sense against an approaching Temptation in vain There is a well-pleasingness in all his Services as being ushered forth from the heart into the hand of the Mediatour and there richly perfuned for the Father though as they lie in our hearts there be much smoak and mixture of weakness in them yet as they are in the hand of Christ they are glorified duties acceptable to God through Jesus Christ Fourthly The Justified man hath more of the sweetness of life and its outward Comforts than others He hath more of the sweetness of life than others The Jewish Doctours treating about the estimation of Persons mentioned Levit. 27. say That if a man be adjudged to death for his transgression he is not to be valued
with us in his Incarnation will be Immanuel God with us in such sufficient Grace as shall give us the victory over Sin the success is as sure as the Spirit and Power of God can make it When Christ was on Earth never any one came to him for bodily Cure with a Faith that he was able to do it but it was done for him Now that he is in Heaven at the right hand of Power such as go in Faith for Spiritual Cures cannot miscarry What though the bloody issue of Sin have been long a-running a touch upon Christ will heal What if thou hast lay'n rotting in thy Corruptions many years believe and thou shalt see the glory of God raising thee up a dependence on the Power and Spirit of Christ cannot fail of a victory over Sin So vast is the difference between the state of Adam in Innocency and the state of Believers in Christ in him one Sin drove out a great stock of pure immaculate Grace in a moment in them a little spark of Grace drives out a world of Sin because their Grace which Adams did not depends on the Power and Spirit of Christ for the victory This is a most noble and purely Evangelical act of Faith in which Man is abased in a continual dependence and God exalted in a continual supply of Grace However some Divines falsly so called have laughed at the dependence of Faith as an idle lolling upon Christ it is yet the only way in which the Spirit and Power of God communicates to our necessities and does far more in the Christians life than any thing else Only we must remember that this dependence is in the use of means the Believer hears reads meditates prays works and in all depends upon the Spirit to render them effectual CHAP. X. Of Spiritual Vivification the second Part. Of Sanctification the influence of Faith therein THus far of Mortification as a fruit of Faith I now proceed to Vivification being the other part of Sanctification In which the holy Spirit comes down with its Divine Graces into the Soul and quickens it to a Spiritual Life These Graces may be considered eitheir in their production into being or in their actual exercise and both ways they are fruits of Faith As to their production into being Divines differ about the order some Divines as Mr. Pemble conceive That all Graces are infused at once coming into us as light doth into the air or as the Soul did into the body of Lazarus not piece-meal or by degrees but all at once and together Other set down this order Vocation which worketh Faith and Repentance is in order of nature before Justification and Justification before Sanctification Bishop Downham distinguishes between our Spiritual conception of the incorruptible seed and our new-birth in which Christ is formed in us in all his Graces the former is done in our Vocation and the latter in our Sanctification I conceive that Faith at least in order of Nature is first and then all other Graces follow upon it The Ancient Fathers as Bishop Downham hath observed speak to the same purpose In Clemens Alexandrinus Faith is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first inclination to Salvation In the so-called Ignatius Epistles it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the beginning of life as it were the Punctum Saliens in the New Creature in which the first motion and course of Spiritual life begins Vita sancta à fide sumit initium saith Fulgentius And Fides prima datur ex quá extera impotrantur saith St. Augustine All other Graces are the fruits of Faith not as if Faith did produce them radically or fontally out of it self or its own virtue but that it unites to Christ and so derives the Spirit with its Graces unto the Believer That Faith is at least in nature before other Graces will appear very probable upon divers Congruities First It is congruous to the Majesty of God He acts like himself dispences Grace to the Creature in its lowest posture of resignation Heaven is my throne Earth my footstool saith he but as over-looking all this World To this man will I look that is poor and of a contrite spirit Isa 66.1 2 To this man there he sets a nobler creation than this outward one When Faith makes a man poor and contrite sensibly lying in his own Nothingness and Unworthiness then creating Grace comes upon him We may see this as in a glass in the Homane Nature of Christ That which had no natural Subsistence of its own but subsisted in the Eternal Word that had the Spirit poured out upon it above measure When a man hath no Moral subsistence of his own his very Hypostasis being a resignation when his subsistence is in the Word of God according to that of the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Have thy being in these things 1 Tim. 4.15 Then the holy Spirit comes down and dwells in him Secondly It is congruous to Christ the Head Union goes before Communion first Faith unites us to Christ and then all Graces flow from him hence Faith is called the Churches neck Cant. 4.4 knitting to Christ the Head and from thence deriving all Spiritual life into the body of Believers This also is set before us in Christs Humane Nature which had first at least in nature the Grace of Union and then that of Unction He that is in Christ is a new Creature 2 Cor. 5.17 made so by his being in Christ He that hath the Son hath life 1 Joh. 5.12 Hath it by having the Son Indeed Faith and Repentance go before our Union with Christ as being of necessity thereunto but all other Graces follow after it as most naturally flowing from Christ the Head of whose fulness all Believers receive Grace for Grace Thirdly It is congruous to the way of the Spirit set forth in the Gospel The Spirit moves on the Soul to bring forth Faith and Repentance but it dwells no-where but in the Believer Christ dwells in our hearts by Faith Ephes 3.17 There he hath perpetuum domicilium 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Vide Bez. Zanch. as the Greek word imports He that believeth on me saith our Saviour out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water Joh. 7.38 And what these rivers are the next verse tells us This he spake of the Spirit which they that believe on him should receive Faith brings in the very fountain of Grace with all its streams into the Heart The Holy Ghost is given to them that obey him Act. 5.32 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to them that hear him in the Gospel-command that is to them that believe so Beza and Calvin expound it and so the Syriack hath it The Holy Ghost works before to produce Faith and Repentance but it is not given to dwell in men until they believe Fourthly It is congruous to the order which is between Faith Justification and Sanctification Faith is in order before Justification the Scripture
in judgment Psal 25.9 And for a pure Comfort They shall have joy in the Lord and be every day increasing it Isa 29.19 Their meek and quiet spirit makes them beautiful in the eyes of God and Man so rich a jewel proves them to be the elect of God Col. 3.12 Such Promises as these are able to meeken us under any Injuries Cicero saying Justitiae primum munus est ut ne cui noceat and adding as a salvo nisi lacessitus Lactantius cried out O quam simplicem sententiam duorum verborum adjectione corrupit What a dainty sentence did he spoil with those two words A Believer fixing his eyes on the Promises will not let go his Meekness no not for all the provocations in the World the loss of such a Jewel would be more to him than all other sufferings Another Grace actuated by Faith is Obedience Two things in the Spouse did ravish the heart of Christ her single eye of Faith and the neck-chain of Obedience Cant. 4.9 Obedience as Samuel said is better than Sacrisice And as Luther More eligible than doing Miracles Faith receiving Christ the Lord is in it self Virtual Obedience to the Commands of God and as an effect it produces actual To this end it believes the Commands to be as they are looking on the stamps of Majesty Purity Equity Righteousness therein it falls down and confesses that God is there of a truth this and that is the very Will of God and must be done primo intuitu without dispute and by all persons even the greatest on Earth Princes here are Subjects Constantine and Theodosius though Emperors stiled themselves Vassals of Christ Zedekiab the King should have humbled himself before Jeremy the Prophet 2 Chron. 36.12 Nay the Kingdom of God which is in every Command must be humbly received though coming in the hand of a child or a servant as a good Divine noteth Here all men and all in men even the Princely powers of Reason and Will with all the progeny of Thoughts and Affections must bow down before God A famous instance of which we have in the Noble Andelot in France who being questioned for a Protestant by his Soveraign Henry the second bravely professed That his Body Estate and Dignity was in his Majesty's power but his Soul was only subject to God From such a Supream Authority in the Command Faith presses strongly to Obedience and for a sweet Principle thereunto it draws a free Spirit from Christ Faith translates us into the Kingdom of Christ and there by a singular Priviledg above other Kingdom all the Subjects are ready to do the Commands of their Lord. Faith converses much about the Wounds and precious Sacrifice of Christ and there the free Spirit dwells as the free bird in the Altar Ps 84.3 And being received by Faith brings forth a numerous off-spring in acts of Obedience Faith makes us parts and pieces of Christ and so we are anointed with the Holy Ghost in some measure as his Humane Nature was in a transcendent way Faith dwells in the holy Truth and that makes us free indeed Whilest Precepts give the Rule Promises afford the Power such a Promise as that I will cause you to walk in my statutes Ezek. 36.27 being mixed with Faith will impower us to all Obedience Hence the Service of God becomes a freedom and Obedience easie and natural moving upon the wheels of Love and wings of the Spirit which must needs be a very strong incentive to Obedience and the rather because Faith ensures the acceptance thereof Were we to obey under the Covenant of Works which will bate nothing of pure sinless Perfection our Obedience might be bootless and heartless because every act of it would vanish and come to nothing by the adherent Corruption which made Calvin say That if a man did cull out the most excellent work of all his life he would find some corrupt flesh or other in it And St. Austin Vae vite landabili Wo to a laudable life without mercy But we are to obey under the Covenant of Grace whence Sincerity is accepted and frailty covered God gives a Tostimonial of Righteousness to Noah not withstanding his Infirmities and of Perfectness to Asa notwithstanding the high Places Uprightness passes for absolute Perfection and the main of the Heart for all of it insomuch that it is said of Josiah That he turned to the Lord with all his heart and with all his soul and with all his might according to all the Law of Moses 2 King 23.25 his Sincerity was taken as if all had been fulfilled Retract lib. 1. c. 19. according to that of St. Austin Omnia mandata facta deputantur quando quicquid non sit ignoscitur There are Pardons ready sealed in Heaven for Believers Insirmities God forgives what is ours in a duty and accepts what is his own Our Duties are taken into the hand of Christ the Mediator and there perfumed with his sweet Merits and though as they are in our hands they have dross and soil in them yet as they are in his they are glorified Duties and as sweet Odours to God And upon such terms as these who would not obey Every act of Obedience shall be accepted and the light of Gods Countenance will irradiate our Duties And to give a further advance to this Grace Faith looks within the Veil to the great recompence in Heaven there are Crowns of Life rivers of Pleasures and plenitudes of Joy for ever there holy Souls see all Truths in their Original drink all Good out of the Fountain and have God for their All in All and all this is the reward of our poor imperfect Obedience And as such is outwardly secured in the Promises and inwardly realized by Faith and therefore must needs move the Believer strongly to Obedience no wonder if he burn in Devotions or melt in Charity or labour in other acts of Obedience all these being but a sowing to the Spirit will come up in a crop of Eternal Life his Prayers will be turned into Hallelujahs his Alms repaid in Everlasting Love and all his good Works which follow him into another World shall be woven into a Crown of Immortality And upon such an account who would not obey and live in perpetual resignation as he did who as the story goes always concluded his Prayers thus Domine quid me vis facere Lord what wilt thou have me to do And lived in such holy joys as if he had been in Heaven already Another Grace actuated by Faith is Patience This is Meekness towards God as Meekness is Patience towards Man and respecteth Gods Disposing Will as Obedience doth his Commanding This is a Subjection to God a Possession of our Selves and an Admiration to Others Hence the Constancy of Annas Burgus a Senator of Paris suffering for the Protestant Cause made many curious to know what Religion that was for which he so patiently endured death To promote this Grace Faith in
Jews at the Passeover at the end of the Celebration whereof the Father of the Family was wont to take a Cake of Bread and after the blessing thereof to break and distribute it to the Communicants and also after that a Cup of Wine in like sort unto which some refer that Cup of Salvation Psal 116.13 The Bread and Wine among the Jews were but a Customary Rite but Christ consecrated them into a Sacrament saying of the Bread This is my Body and of the Wine This Cup is the New Testament in my Blood which could not before be said of them In the Paschal Rite it was only said of the Bread This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bread of affliction and of the Cup This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cup of the Hymn But now This is my Body and this is my Blood In this great Ordinance the Body and Blood of Christ are evidently figured out and set forth before our eyes as if he were Crucified among us The seventh General Council at Constantinople who knocked down all other Images saith of this Sacrament That it is Vera Christi Imago the only true Crucifix or Image of Christ And which is much more than an Image the very Body and Blood of Christ are here truly and really though Spiritually present to our Faith being exhibited ut epulum faederale as a Covenant-feast or Love-banquet chearing the heart of God and Man The same Body and Blood which in the Sacrifice on the Cross were a sweet savour unto God and satisfied his Justice are set forth in the Sacrament as meat and drink for our Faith feeding us to Life Eternal Here is Epitome Evangelti a compend of the Gospel the whole Covenant and Contrivance of Salvation is sealed in a bit of Bread and drop of Wine Here the Believer meets with many rich Experiments he feeds and lives upon a Crucified Christ eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood and what a Feast is this 't is much that our Bodies may live upon the Body and Blood of Creatures but Oh incomparable Grace Our Souls may live on the Body and Blood of God One drop whereof saith Luther is more worth than Heaven and Earth Cruci haeremus sanguinem sugimus intra ipsa Redemptoris nostri vulnera figimus linguam saith St. Cyprian Haustu interiori in a Spiritual Mystical way we do in this Ordinance cleave to Christs Cross suck his precious Blood and as it were fasten our Tongues within his healing Wounds Whilest the Bread and Wine are Physically and Carnally united to us we are Mystically and Hyperphysically united to Christ becoming Members of his Body of his Flesh and of his Bones Spiritually dwelling in him and he in us The same holy Spirit which is upon him in Heaven falling down upon us on Earth and the Faith which is in us here below ascending up to clasp and embrace him In sinu Christi recumbimus in cor Christi introspicimus saith Luther We lie in his bosom and look into his heart In our Pardon sealed we taste the sweetness of his atoning Blood and in the effusion of the holy Spirit we drink at the sountainhead of Grace sprung up in his Humane Nature We have here the whole Covenant or Charter of Grace sealed to us and may believe not only ex promisso but ex pignore Over and above the Promise we have a pawn or pledg of the Truth thereof We saw not the inspired Prophets and Apostles penning down the Promises but Ecce Signum lo here is a visible sign and seal set thereunto and sense leads in Faith to claim and possess them for its own Hence our Saviour calls the Cup the New Testament in his Blood Luk. 22.20 The Cup saith Luther contains the Wine the Wine exhibits the Blood of Christ the Blood of Christ natifies the New Govenant and the New Covenant promises remission of Sins and with it a vast treasure of Blessings Again we have here the rich anointings of the holy Spirit Among the Oriental Nations and in particular among the Jews there was Vnctio convivalis a Feastival Vnction which they used as a token of welcome to pour on the head of their Guests Thus there came unto Christ a Woman having an Atabaster box of very precious Ointment and poured it on his head as he sate at meat Mat. 26.7 Whilest we are at the Lords-Table we are anointed with fresh Oyl the holy Spirit is poured out in richer measures of Grace and Comfort than it was at first As a Spirit of Grace and Supplication it melts the Heart into godly sorrows at the sight of a Crucisied Christ Sin being indeed the Jew and Judas the betrayer and murderer of the Son of God the Nails in his Cross and Spear in his Side the Gall and Wormwood in the Cup of Wrath which made him sweat drops of Blood and under an horrid Eclipse of Gods favour to cry out of forsaking To look upon a groaning World travelling under an universal vanity would stir up sorrow in any that had a sense of it much more to look upon a Christ a Creator bleeding and dying upon a Cross to the least drop of whose Passion the dashing down of a World is a poor inconsiderable nothing To look upon the broken Tables of a Law dearer to God than Heaven and Earth is very grievous but to stand and see God for our Sin bruising and breaking his own Son and Effential Image in our assumed Nature is matter of amazing sorrow Never was Sin set forth in such bloody Colours as in his Passion never do repentant tears flow more purely than at such a spectacle Here the Heart breaks in its closing with a broken Christ and bleeds afresh over his Wounds and turns the Sacrament of the Supper into a Baptism of Tears and out of an holy hatred and revenge would have the violence done to Christ be put upon Sin the great Crucifier of him in the true Mortification thereof As a Spirit of Faith it causes us to live upon Christ Having no Righteousness of our own to answer the Law with we feast and satisfie our selves in the Righteousness of Christ as in that which satisfied the heart of God and is here made over to satisfie ours We may surely say The Righteousness of God is upon us and as it hath no spot or wrinkle in it self so it leaves no ground of scruple or jealousie in our Hearts in the midst of our Sins which have Death and Hell virtually in them We yet live upon the atoning Sacrifice of Christ His Blood which was offered up to God through the Eternal Spirit and by him accepted as a plenary Satisfaction for Sin is now put into Promises and Sacraments as into so many Basins and from thence sprinkled on our Conscience to purge away all our guilt our Sins are pardoned and our Pardon passed under the Seal of Heaven In the midst of our Wants Faith can triumph in the
my Glory manifested For the right understanding of these we must note Christ did not come only or chiefly to cure the Bodies of Men no those Miracles which in transitu cured their Bodies Miracula christi corporaliter facta Spiritaliter intelligenda snut were ultimately levelled at their Souls that by Outward Cures they might be led to seek Inward ones from Christ Neither did he do all his Miracles on Earth no being Ascended and Sitting at the Right Hand of Majesty in Heaven he works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those Spiritual Miracles on the Souls of Men which are incomparably greater than those on their Bodies How many blind Hearts and those worse than blind Eyes hath he cured by a Touch as he passed by them in the Ordinances causing them to see himself the True light and Sun of Righteousness together with all the Heavenly Mysteries which stream as so many Beams or Rayes from him How many deaf Souls have upon his Divine Ephatha been obedientially opened to the Commands of God and though lame before have Rose up walked holily and praised God what Spiritual Lepers hath he by a Touch of his Spirit and Word cleansed Quae enim immunditia quae incredulitas quae duritia quod peccatum ad hunc contactum Christi consistere poterit saith Ferus No uncleanness unbelief hardness sinfulness can stand against the Touch of Christ What Sinners of all forts dead in Sins and Trespasses hath he raised up to a Divine Life Saint Austin reciting that Christ had raised up three Persons viz. The Maid in her Fathers House the Young-Man carried out upon the Bier and Lazarus four days dead and stinking in the Grave adds Ista tria genera mortuorum sunt tria genera peccatorum quos suscitat Christus these three dead ones are three sorts of Sinners raised up by Christ As the Maid in the house so is the secret Sinner raised up intra latebras conscientiae within the doors of his own Heart As the young Man carried out upon the Bier so is the open Sinner raised up out of known Sins And as Lazarus dead and stinking in the grave so is the customary Sinner raised up out of his old putrified Sins At the voice of Christ the strongest bonds of custom are broken and the poor Sinner comes forth into an holy life These things being so it appears That the Believer may experiment the Spiritual Miracles of Christ and from thence gather a proof in his own Heart That the very same hand wrought the Corporal ones especially seeing these latter are but types and shadows of the other which he finds verified in himself Thus much touching this Fundamental Experiment of the Scriptures A Believer may experiment the Laws Promises Threatnings Supernatural Truths Sacred Ordinances and Great Works in Scripture to be Divine and so have a Practical proof that the Scripture is of God CHAP. XIII Of the top and highest stature of Faith the Believers Assurance of his good estate of Pardon and Salvation That this Assurance is attainable many ways demonstrated HAving passed over the Believers Experiment touching the Scripture I shall now proceed to another touching his own Estate He may certainly know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Dionysius speaks That it is well with him That he is in a good state of Pardon and Salvation This is apex fidei the top and highest stature of Faith a Priviledg which transcends Earth and antedates Heaven to us Here are those three things Lumen Laetitia Pax Light Joy and Peace which as the Schoolman Halensis saith render the experiment of Grace in the Soul truly certain Here are Coelestial Beams unspeakable Joys admirable Serenities Sabbaths of Rest Seas of Sweetness and Beatitudes too great for the tongue of Men and Angels to express Before the Believer walked only with the single staff of Recumbency and Resignation but now he hath bands and troops of Comfort following after him from the Promises His darling Soul is now richly provided for to all Eternity Eternal Beanty is in his Eye Infinite Goodness at hand for his Embraces the lines are fallen in a kind of Paradise his Portion is no less than God himself all his Blessings are dipt in Love The World may brand him but the Spirit seals In the midst of sweeping Judgments he is still one of Gods Jewels and as soon as Death dissolves him Heaven receives him Touching this great Experiment I shall first prove That it is attainable by a Believer and then shew in what ways it is to be attained The Romanists hold That no Man without special Revelation can be certain of his Pardon and Salvation not with a certainty of Faith Bellar. de Juslif lib. 3. which is infallible but only with a certainty of Hope which is conjectural The Promises indeed are sure say they but our Dispositions are uncertain The Promises run Conditionally If they return to thee with all their heart 2 Chron. 6.38 and who can be sure that he doth so Who can say I have made my heart clean saith the Wise-man Prov. 20.9 Who can understand his errors saith David Psal 19.12 Some Scriptures put a peradventure upon Remission Who can tell if God will turn and repent Jon. 3.9 Repent if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee Act. 8.22 And the reason is because of the uncertainty of our Dispositions Faith is not Faith unless it lean on the Divine Word and no Word saith Such or such an one hath true Faith and Repentance or is truly pardoned Happy is the man that feareth always Prov. 28.14 The heart of man is deceitful above all things who can know it Jer. 17.9 Assurance if vouchsafed would but puss up Pride and open a door to Licentiousness Thus the Pontisicians Their Divinity in this great Point is much like the Philosophy of the old Scepticks those Patrons of all Uncertainty who used to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reason against Reason puts all Propositions in aequilibrio the Balance hangs even without Declension this or that way after all debates imaginable still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perhaps it is so perhaps not It may be they do see and hear it may be not at least they doubt whether they do it distinctly or no. After the same sort the Romanists do what they can to perswade Believers out of their Spiritual sense out of which Assurance ariseth It may be will they say thou repentest and believest it may be not or if thou dost them it may be not sicut oportet in such a manner as they ought to be done Hence the Council of Trent Can. 9●● calls the certainty of Remission vain and remote from all Piety This is that Doctrine of theirs which Luther calls Monstrum dubitationis the monster of doubting and withal asserts That if they erred only in this it were a just eause for us to separate from such an Infidel-Church Learned Pareus stiles it Desperationis ossicina the shop of
not of God condemns the Mar●ionites as much as if they had been named That 1 Tim. 4.3 forbidding to marry condemns the Eustathians as much as if they had been named That Threatning Cursed is every one that continueth not in all things being general speaks Wrath to every Transgressor as soon as he is such And so that Promise Whosoever believeth shall not perish but have eternal life being general speaks Pardon and Salvation to every Believer as soon as he is such All that believe are justified Act. 13.39 No sooner doth this or that man believe but the Promise speaks to him Thy sins are forgiven thee God saith to him I am thy salvation It may be he doth not understand it at first However here is a sure ground-work for him to believe that it is so and so accordingly he doth as soon as Assurance comes in to him Moreover the Romanists urge That the Doctrine of Assurance puffs up Pride and opens a gap to Licentiousness Unto which my answer is a flat Denial If our Saviour had thought that Assurance would make men like Devils in Pride or Beasts in Licentiousness he would never have said as he did to the Paralytick Thy sins be forgiven thee Mat. 9.2 Had they told us That such a Worm as Pride would breed out of the Doctrines of Merit and Supererogatory Works it might easily have been believed but that it should drop from such an Honeycomb of Free-Grace as the Doctrine of Assurance is is not reasonably to be imagined Here 's nothing of Merit nothing of our own all is pure meer Grace the Believers Faith and Repentance is of Grace and the Assurance of Pardon and Salvation is Grace upon Grace Sealing-Grace upon Sanctifying And whatever perverse abuse may be made of these the natural tendency thereof is not to Pride for a man after such Graces to forget the great Fountain and set up an Idol of Self-excellency is extreamly unreasonable Just as if he should say Now I am in the bosom of Grace but I would be cast out and be held afar off Now I have the warm Beams of Gods Favour but I would fain be in the Dark again Who would argue thus Will it not be much more proper in an humble admiration to say as David did Who am I and what is my house that thou hast brought me hitherto 2 Sam. 7.18 Thy Love O God first made me a Vessel of Faith and then filled me with the Oyl of Holy Joy What am I to be such a Receiver All that I am is too small a return nothing of self may remain for an Idol Had they said That Licentiousness might have been fathered on the Sale of Pardons and Indulgences it had been veryright These made Germany and other parts groan with all manner of wickedness But to lay it at the door of Assurance is abominable Machiavel was out in his Politicks when he would have Princes Rule by Fear but he advised so because he knew well enough That following his Rules they could not be Loved and therefore he would perswade them that it was better to be feared The true Obedience for I look not on that which a man is haled unto as such springs out of Love for that fulfils the Law and our Love springs out of Gods for We love him because he first loved us 1 Job 4.19 And the more his Love is revealed the more ours is inflamed towards Obedience In Heaven the blessed Angels who see Gods Face in Glory are most intent upon the doing of his Will on Earth holy men who taste of his favour walk the more accurately for it The joyful sound of Pardon being in the Conscience makes the holy Walk easie and a fair prospect of Heaven sweetens every step Obedience stands no-where so sure as in the Circle of Love which from Gods Love as the first Point is drawn through ours round about into it self Gods Love coming down in Assurance and ours returning in Obedience his being inflammative to ours and ours resignative to him in such circulations of Love their is no room for Licentiousness It 's true Saints after such Pleonasmes of Love may fall foully but do they fall because assured Do they turn Enemies to God because they know themselves Friends Can the Light of Gods Countenance dispose them to Works of Darkness May the choice Influences of Heaven make them earthly and sensual Will the Prodigal once returned run away the sooner from his Fathers House because of the Kiss and Robe and Ring and Fatted Calf freely bestowed upon him Such things as these do involve many Paradoxes and Repugnancies in them and withal cast dirt upon Heaven and blaspheme the Witnessing Spirit and therefore are justly abominable to the Saints who experience the contrary in their own Hearts Having thus far gone through the Enemies Camp I come now to lay down my Thesis to be proved viz. That a Believer may be certainly and infallibly assured of his Pardon and Salvation I say a Believer may be assured an Unbeliever while such is not a subject capable of Assurance he hath Plague-Sores and Tokens of Wrath upon him but as yet never a Beam of Grace or Love the Justice and Holiness of God cannot suffer him to be shined on none of the Promises can speak kindly or comfortably to him his stony Heart cannot receive the Seal and Impress of the Holy Spirit Hence the Apostle saith After ye believed ye were sealed with the Holy Spirit of Promise Ephes 1.13 after and not before First there must be a new Creature and then a new Name First Gods Image is printed on the Heart and then his Love I say a Believer may be assured but not that all Believers are so A man may be a Babe in Christ and not know it a Child of Light and yet walking in darkness A Believer may live in crepusculo in the twilight or mixt condition of Hope and Fear and so though sure of Heaven not in his own sense assured of it I mean not that he may be assured by an Angel or Voice from Heaven or extraordinary Revelation This the Adversaries will admit but in an ordinary way in the diligent use of such Helps and Means as are common to all Believers Thus the Apostle speaks in common to them all These things have I written to you that believe that ye may know that ye have eternal Life 1 John 5.13 He doth not say some may know it in an extraordinary way but speaks of it as knowable by Believers in common I mean not that he hath this Assurance always or in every point of time perpetual Serenity is not here below Earth is not as Heaven the Sun may be eclipsed the Seal of the Spirit may be clouded Evidences may be blurred and hardly legible It may be God in Sovereignty withdraws or Satan in envy buffets or the Believer lets down his Spiritual Watch or a due estimate is not set on Heavenly Comforts or there
cloud upon it and Guilt as a wound in it Make it as lightsome as thou canst from Scripture that as a pure glass it may be fit to reflect the Gospel-Comforts on thy Soul Get a through cure of thy old Wounds or else sooner or later it will cry out against thee Joseph started up in his Brethrens mind a good while after their unnatural sale of him John the Baptist rose again in Herods Conscience upon the fame of Christs Miracles Theodorick having cruelly murdred Boethius and Symmachus was affrighted at the great head of a Fish at his own Table as if it had been one of theirs whom he unjustly put to death Apply therefore Christs Blood by Faith that thy Wounds may be healed David after his great fall prays first to be purged with hysop and then for the joy of Gods salvation Psal 51. The Hysop which was used to sprinkle the Blood under the Law figured out the office of Faith in sprinkling Christs Blood on the Conscience that 's a soveraign Balm to heal thy Wounds and able to make Conscience give thee an answer of Peace I have read a notable story of a sick Man who when Satan appeared and shewed him a long scrole of his Sins in writing saying Behold thy Virtues replied True Satan but thou hast not set down all set down also The Blood of Christ cleanseth us from all Sin Such a purifier is this that a Man may be able as is said of St. Austin to think of his former Evils without fear as having no spot of unpardoned Sin in him Thy Conscience being made pure walk after it A reciá Conscientia ne latum quidem unguem discedendum said the Orator Leave it not lest thou fall and wound thy self afresh When Conscience summons thee to this or that Duty up be doing God calls thee to it by thine own Heart when it tells thee of such a snare in thy way avoid it pass by it as thou wouldst by Hell God warns thee against it by thy self Conscience will measure out Comforts or Terrors to thee according as thou behavest thy self well or ill towards it If like Saul thou force thy self and rebel against light and give stabs to Conscience what hast thou to do with Peace Thy Heart will reproach thee Conscience will strike again and give thee wound for wound thou shalt doom thy self and like the Devils carry thy Chains and Hell about with thee Tiberius professed to the Senate That he suffered death daily he meant in the torments of his accusing Conscience On the other hand if thou turn thine eyes inward and observe Conscience and walk by the line and level of it thy Heart shall be at rest Conscience shall be a thousand witnesses for thee thou shalt be thine own Comforter and like the Angels carry an Heaven and Paradise aboat with thee Pauls joy shall be thine the testimony of Conscience that thy conversation hath been in godly sincerity and what is this but Assurance That Conscience which faith That thou art sincere tells thee also That thy Sins are pardoned These two are inseparable companions and never part the one from the other Again If thou wouldst have Assurance thou must be much in self-examination Commune with thy own Heart dive into the abyss of it reckon with thy self summon thy self to the Tribunal in thy own bosom The Philosophers espied out this Rule Pythagoras would not have us sleep till we had reviewed the day asking our selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What have I transgressed what done and what omitted This though done by the candle-light of Nature much promoted Virtue and the comfort of it Qual●s ille somnus post recognitionem sui sequitur quam tranquillus altus liber saith Sencea After a review of ones self Oh what manner of sleep is there how still deep and free is it Much more must such a search into ones own Heart conduce to the Christians Graces and Comforts if done by the pure Sun-light of Scripture Self-examination is a root which bears Self-knowledg and at the top of it grows Assurance which is the knowledg of gracious self Awake therefore O Believer down into thy own Heart rifle the labyrinths and break open the false bottoms there see what of Sin is in thee Is there any darling Sin such as cogs with thy complexion or falls in with thy calling or any way steals away thy Heart and Affections from God Be sure that this is an accursed thing a Deliah as the word imports an exhauster of thy peace and joy However fair it may look to sense it is virtually sorrow and wrath See again what of Grace is there in thee do thou repent of Sin and believe on the Lord Jesus and love God and his holy Ways Are thy Graces genuine such as act thee in the power of the Spirit and square thee to the holy Canon of the Word and level thy Thoughts and Intentions at the Glory of God If thou thus search into thy Heart and do it in truth and faithfulness to the holy Light I dare say thou art ready for the sealing of the Spirit and the very frame of thy Heart is a real prayer for it O how soon may the Spirit come and by a Divine irradiation on thy Soul tell thee That thy Repentance is a Repentance unto Life and thy Faith precious Faith and thy Love Love in Sincerity How soon may it apply and seal the Promises to thy Heart as if it should say to thee Thou repentest indeed and the Mercy in the Promise is thine Thou believest indeed and the Salvation in the Promise is thine Thou lovest indeed and thine are the supersensual superintellectual good things prepared for the lovers of God And now thou maist say much better than Seneca Qualis somnus O how sweet is the rest and repose which the self-searching Soul finds in the bosom of Christ and Grace He that comes to that sealing Ordinance of the Lords Supper must prepare himself for the S●ul by Self-examination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let a man examine himself faith the Apostle 1 Cor. 11.28 Examine as a man would do Gold or Silver by the fire or by the Touchstone in like manner must he do so that he may fit himself for the Seal of Assurance of which the Sacramental Elements are Symbols Again If thou wouldst be assured exercise thy Graces and grow therein It much conduces to Assurance to render thy Graces as visible as thou canst Grace however it always carry a Divine lustre in it is not so visible when dormant in an habit or principle as when it is put forth into act and exercise neither is it so visible in its Initials in the smoking flax or bruised reed as in its Progresses and statures in Christ In point of Comfort talents not used are as none Comforts lie dead in Believers as their Graces do the holy sire raked up affords no light to them Awake therefore O Believer to