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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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his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ Rom 3.24 The Believer is as I may say a part or portion of Christ wrapped up in his Righteousness and washed in his Blood an Object all-fair and lovely in the eyes of God and accepted in the Beloved Thirdly Justification relates to the Law which is norma judicii the rule of Judgment A Believer hath wherewithal to answer both Laws as to the law of Works he hath Christs Righteousness answering the demands of it as to the law of Grace he hath Faith answering the terms of it Do this and live is answered by Christs Righteousness Believe and be saved is answered by Faith Christus est impletio legis spiritus est impletio Evangelii Christ by his pure Obedience fulfilled the Law the Spirit by working Faith fulfils the Gospel If the Believer be charged before God that he is a finner he can plead the Righteousness of Christ as a full discharge to the Law If he be charged that he is an Unbeliever he can plead his faith as the condition of the Gospel If he be further charged that his very Faith is imperfect he can again plead the Righteousness of Christ against those imperfections His imperfect Faith intitles him to the perfect Righteousness of Christ and that perfect righteousness removes the imperfections of his saith Oh! happy Believer whom God himself may search once and again by either Law and find nothing of condemnation in him If the Law come to him it finds Christ the end and perfection of all holiness there If the Gospel come it finds Faith it s own demand and condition there wherefore less than righteous he cannot be Thus much touching the first thing that this holy fruit grows upon Faith Secondly The next thing is the manner how it grows there How we are said to be justified by Faith unto which I shall Answer first Negatively and then Affirmatively First Negatively Faith doth not justifie by its own intrinsecal value and and dignity There is nothing in it commensurate to so great a blessing nothing in it to measure with the pure Law nothing in it to pay off divine Justice nothing in it to weigh against the guilt of Sin nothing in it to purchase the favour of God nothing in it to cover a Soul withal no nor the nakedness of its own imperfections It is a poor self-emptying self-annihilating thing which lives upon Alms and goes up and down in the Gospel from one door of the Promises to another to beg a Spiritual livelyhood all that it hath is in a way of Receiving It receives the atonement receives the gift of righteousness receives the spirit of Grace receives remission of sins but gives none of them out of its own Hence it is well observed by Divines that the Scripture never saith Faith justifieth in an active sense but alwaies we are justified by Faith in a passive sense because it receives all from Christ This humble Grace whose posture is to fall down and worship before the thrones of Free-grace and of the Lamb will not turn Free-grace off the throne nor like Zimri slay its Master Jesus Christ in his merits and imputed righteousness that it may reign in his room Again Faith doth not justifie as coming in the room of that perfect righteousness which we owe unto the Law for God is true and judgeth according to truth he doth not cannot do as the unjust Steward who for an hundred measures of oil bid write fifty but he accounts of things as they are Faith which is but a piece of righteousness and that very imperfect will not go with him for a compleat universal righteousness but only for what it is neither will it salve the matter to say as the Socinians use to do That Faith though it be not in it self a perfect righteousness is yet reckoned as such per gratiosam Dei acceptilationem by the condescending grace of God for in God in whom there is perfect Unity one Attribute doth not interfere with another Free-grace will not justle out truth by accepting a partial righteousness for a total which indeed it is not neither doth a divine Attribute ever clash against its own design Free-grace will not so accept faith as to frustrate its own design in the Mediatour Jesus Christ which as appears in Scripture was that Christ should be made our righteousness 1 Cor. 1.30 that we might be the righteousness of God in him 2 Cor. 5.21 that his blood may cleanse us from all sin 1 Joh. 1.7 that his obedience might make many righteous Kom 5.19 but what need all this if Faith be accepted for a compleat righteousness what room for Christs righteousness as long as Faiths will suffice You will say perhaps that Christ by his merits hath purchased this of God that faith should be accepted for a perfect righteousness but if that be so then Christ died not properly for Persons but for Graces Christs righteousness was not to cloath poor souls in but to advance faith above it self Faith is become our immediate material righteousness and Christ only a remote cause of it The Lord Christ walks a foot as a meer servant to Faith and the servant Faith rides in his Masters robes as if it were the very matter of our righteousness all which is to subvert the Gospel True Faith will confess as John did I am not the Christ I never was crucified for you I never fulfilled all righteousnes for you I am but the Eccho to the Gospel-grace I do but prepare a way in the heart for Christ and his righteousness to receive all praise and glory there Secondly Affirmatively And here Divines generally express themselves thus That we are justified by faith as an instrument receiving Christ and his righteousness Thus Reverend Calvin calls faith Just 1.3 cap. 11. Instrumentum justitiae percipiendae The instrument of receiving the righteousness of Christ offered in the Gospel Exam. Conc. Trident 163. Chemnitius stiles it Manus nostra quâ recipimus ea quae in Evangelio offeruntur Our hand whereby we take the alms offered in the Promise Musculus calls it Loci Com. de Justificut Medium quo gratiam justificationis in Christo apprehendimus a Medium by which we lay hold on the grace of Justification in Christ Faith is the eye which looks up to the Mercy-seat the hand which puts on the robe of Christs obedience the ring which hath the Pearl of infinite price in it Hence we are said in Scripture to be justified by faith and through faith as it is the means whereby we receive Christ and his righteousness And a late Divine speaks of a double instrument in Justification on Gods part the Gospel is an instrument and on mans Faith the Gospel is manus offerentis the hand offering and Faith manus accipientis the hand receiving Christ and his righteousness And before him Calvin hath this passage Comment on Rom. ch 3. Vt
a thing above moral virtue There is a v●st difference between moral virtues and spiritual graces the seeds of moral virtues are found in lapsed nature but of spiritual graces there are none at all in it nothing but a naked capacity Moral virtues do from those natural seeds bud and spring forth into being under the common influence of the spirit but spiritual graces not being seeded in nature are meer infusions or creations the seed of God must drop down from heaven into the heart or else these cannot exist hence the Apostle in contradistinction to the virtues of men calls them the virtues of God 1 Pet. 2.9 such a thing is faith of a nobler extraction then all the moral virtues in the world Thirdly This precious Faith advances both our natural faculties and our moral virtues It advances our natural faculties and so shews it self what it is grace is nature elevated above it self a reason with an heavenly light in it a will with an holy law in it and affections as it were upon the wings of Angels soaring into the upper world After such sort doth faith elevate the humane faculties when faith comes God shines into the heart and then the Reason which before had a cloud on it sparkles out as a pearl in the Sun-beams the day-star is up in the heart and whilest others live by candlelight the believer hath the Sun then the will which lay in its lusts as a slave in its chains is set upon the wheel and made free indeed then the affections which conversed among the tombs of the creatures are no longer here but are risen with Christ to seek the things above Moreover it advances moral virtues also it grafts them upon a nobler stock they are no longer meer blossoms of reason but fruits of the spirit Josephus relating the patience of the Maccabees under the torments of the bloody Antiochus cryes up Reason Reason as if that were the rock upon which they stood but sure he speaks below them a greater then reason was there even faith as the Apostle asserts Heb. 11.35 a higher spirit then their own acted in their patience and elevated it above meer morality Again meer moral virtues issuing meerly out of our own reason are apt to breed a moth of pride and vain self-reflection here we find the Moralist crowing after a strange rate Beatae vitae causa firmamentum est sibi sidere turpe est Deos fatigare Sence Epist 31. quid votis apus est fac te felicem exurge te dignum singe Deo as if he would have no other happiness but what was of his own making but when Faith comes off go the plumes of pride and humility is as a vail over all the moral virtues I live in temperance and justice saith the believing Moralist yet not I but Christ liveth in me Add hereunto meer moral virtues in their intention rise no higher then their own level of humanity but when faith comes there is a pearl in the head a pure intention in each of them towards the glory of God he that before was temperate to himself just to others and patient to necessity is now all these to God Feci Deo is the Motto of every moral act To conclude what sweet and strong motives Faith adds unto moral virtues may appear in the famous instance of Justus Lipsius Melch. Adam Vit. Philosoph that great humanist and admirer of Morality who in his last sickness being told by one present that he might now fetch much comfort from the Stoical Philosophers made this answer Illa sunt vana Domine Jesu da mihi patientiam Christianam those are but vain things Lord Jesus give me a Christian patience Thus much touching Faith in general CHAP. II. Of the special nature of Faith and here of Spiritual Illumination the first ingredient therein What it is with the necessity thereof unto Faith demonstrated THE next thing is to consider Faith in its special nature and here the first thing in order is supernatural illumination touching which I shall first shew what that is and then demonstrate the necessity of it to Faith And first what it is it is God shining into the heart and lighting our candle to make us discern divine things in a spiritual way It is an illumination above nature subjectively and not objectively only it is a thing above reason and all its improvements made upon external objects reason may be taken in a double posture either sitting with the glass of the creatures before it and so it is meerly the light of nature or else sitting with the glass of the Scriptures before it and so it is a notional knowledge of Divinity but this supernatural light is above reason in both these postures First take reason with the creature-glass before it and this supernatural light is much above it And here I might shew how much the Scripture-glass excells that of the creature the divine words there out-shine the Sun out-weigh the earth out-vye all the treasures and out-relish all the sweetnesses in nature God is more glorious in the Scripture-robes then in all the visible world his chariot in the word is statelier then that in the clouds Evangelical light is a richer garment upon him then meer natural in the creature there is but a print or footstep of God but in the Scripture there is his very image and resemblance Also which is a consequent on the former this supernatural light having the purer glass is of a far greater latitude then meer reason it spreads it self into many mysteries which never entred into natural reason but were hid from ages in the divine mind it takes a view of those rare Evangelical pearls which were never digged out of reasons mine but dropt down from heaven unto the sons of men But because the comparison of these two lights as to their outward glasses and latitudes is not so pertinent I shall compare them as to their inward natures and only in such things as both of them extend unto and a vast difference will appear between them First Reason is a far lower light then that of Faith in natural light Reason is the very faculty but in supernatural it is but a capacity God must shine into the heart there must be light upon light supernatural upon natural or else there is no faith David prays open or as the original hath it reveal thou mine eyes Psal 119.18 There is in faith a revelation of eyes and not of objects only the Apostle speaks of being renewed in the very spirit of the mind Eph. 4.23 the rational spirit is the candle of the Lord but unless it be new lighted it is too dim since the fall to believe the things of God Secondly Reason is a far weaker light then that of Faith It is a light shining in darkness and after all its glimmerings it leaves but a foolish heart and vain imaginations Rom. 1.21 it is as a little spark 〈◊〉 an
Chron. 20.12 we know not but thou knowest how to deliver there is nothing but confusion below but all is clear and serene in thy wise counsels there is no one way or method of deliverance in our reason but there are insinite millions of ways and methods with thee Such a faith as this made Luther in the troubles of the Church cry out That it was far otherwise concluded in heaven then at Norimberg and in the blackest tempest inspirits the believer to do as the Mariners in the Acts cast anchor and wish for the day roll himself on the wise God and wait for the dawning of comfort from him Thirdly Faith yields up the soul for instruction unto the word And here are three things considerable First Faith resigns to the word as a warrant for both the former resignations If you ask a believer why he presumes so far as to go to Christ and God for the teachings of the spirit his answer will be this I find in the word divers promises that we shall be taught of God that the spirit shall lead us into all truth that there is an holy annointing dropping from Christ which teacheth all things And all these promises are very true the counterpanes of Gods heart and exactly congruous to the grace there God speaks in them and without complement he speaks as he means therefore I resign up my soul unto Christ and God for instruction teach me good judgment and knowledge for I have believed thy commandements saith David Psal 119.66 where by commandements some Divines understand all the word including in it Promises as well as Commands however the believer hath a warrant to pray teach me good judgment and knowledge for I have believed thy promises of instruction Secondly Faith resigns to the word as a rich mine and treasury of knowledge there are pretious ous mysteries such as have the divine wisdom flowing in them Them Hungarians have a tradition that their golden Crown dropt down from heaven to be sure the mysteries in Scripture did so they are pure Revelations come down from God to be as golden Crowns on the head of Faith The window of the Ark was as some Rabbins say a pretious stone which gave light to all the creatures and indeed the Original which we translate window Gen. 6.16 imports a splendor or clear light Understanding is our window but the Scripture mysteries make it a window of pearl Humane learning is but painted glass but these make windows of agates such as are in the taught of God Isa 54.12 13. These are riches of understanding pearls and intellectual rubies fit to be laid up in the very middle and Center of the heart There the holy precepts and precious promises beauties of holiness and glories of grace lye open to the embraces of Faith There the invisible God whose dwelling is in light unapproachable and whose pure glory our eyes cannot look on may be seen in the reflex in the Scripture image and condescension In a word so rich are the veins of knowledge there that faith as a day-labourer is ever digging therein to draw out a stock of holy understanding from it Thirdly Faith resigns to the word as the only way in which a man may be taught of God All men are ambitïous of so grand a priviledge The very Gentiles in the puddle of their filthy Idolatries thought themselves taught of God in their Oracles The Mahometans think themselves more sure of it in their Alcoran at which say they the devils themselves rejoyced and turned to God no question they rejoyed at such a bundle of lies and blasphemies but that they turned to God is a wild delusion The Jews boast themselves no less in their Oral Law which say they God delivered over to Moses and Moses to Joshua and Joshua to the Elders and they to the Prophets and they to the Sanhedrim and they at last to writing in the Talmud calling it lux illa magna that great light which yet is but a dark labyrinth of errors and horrible falsities The Papists run to their traditions and unwritten verities as Divine and so bring in a load of fopperies and vain superstitions The Enthusiasts cry up the spirit in an extra-scriptural way and so turn aside from the main principles of Religion In such false ways do men lose themselves and the Divine teaching whilest the believer knows where to sind it even in the Scriptures in reading them he sits at Christs feet and every where looks for Maschil instruction from God In them is the Oracle the Vrim and Thummim by which God answers him here he opens his heart and spreads abroad all his sails to take in the gales of the holy spirit and be filled in all the will of God Col. 4.12 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 filled with it as the sails are with the wind Whilest the Eunuch was reading the Prophet Esaias the spirit joined Philip to his chariot Act. 8.29 Whilest the believer hath his being in the Scriptures the spirit joyns himself to his heart and by the infusion of holy light makes him go on rejoycing in the way of knowledge Here and only here doth he wait to be taught of God such is and since the sealing up of the Canon ever hath been the way of knowledge And what of extraordinary dispensation hath been since hath either directly turned men to their Bibles Confess l. 8. c. 12. Melch. Adam in vità Zuinglii as the voice to St. Austin tolle lege tolle lege pointing him to the Scripture or else hath quoted or ratified some Scripture-truth Thus when it was objected to Zuinglius that the word est in Scripture-parables may be taken for significat but not in verbis coenae in the Sacramental phrases and his thoughts were busie about it an answer was suggested to him in a dream a monitor 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 telling him Quin ignare respondes ei quod in Exodo legitur est enim phase hoc est transitus Domini in which there is nothing extra-scriptural but a Scripture-instance given for that which before was a Scripture-truth the Scripture is the only place where we can look for Divine teaching To conclude that of the Father is remarkable qui sacrâ non utitur Scripturâ sed ascendit aliunde non concessâ viâ fur est he that goes not into knowledge by Scripture is a thief the believer keeps the divine road Thus far of the first thing resignation for instruction in the ways of God Secondly Faith resigns up the soul to be pardoned and justisied before God unto justification and pardon there are three things prae-required First An act of free grace in God All men are naturally sinners and as such Gods holiness cannot but hate them Gods justice cannot but punish them wherefore free-grace stepped in and found out a way how God who cannot justifie the ungodliness might yet justifie the ungodly Rom. 4.5 and that in a way of compliance both with his
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
but the believer for the Paradise of God The Sensualist swills in brutish pleasures and sports himself with the volatile joyes of the flesh but the believer is upon the wing after the joyes of the spirit and the pure rivers of pleasure above In a word faith is virtually all the resignations which are in intellectual humiliations inward mortifications and outward martyrdomes In intellectual humiliations faith makes reason though a Queen in her own dominions come down and sit at the foot of revelation In inward mortifications faith makes the regnant lust come off from the throne of the heart and bids the believer as Joshua his Captains put his feet on the neck of his lust In outward martyrdomes faith hath empowred men to kiss the stake and embrace the flames and cry out as the blessed Martyr did welcome sweet cross of Christ and which is the crown of all the rest in all these resignations faith ventures all upon the bare word of God and desires no better security then that for all its expectations Sixthly That faith stands in resignation may appear from the scope of Religion It is the very center of all Divinity and grand axiom therein that the creature is to be abased and God exalted no flesh must glory in it self but in the Lord all pride must be stained and boasting cut off that God may be all in all and the creature nothing Now nothing is nor can be more accommodate to this Central Divinity then faith considered under the notion of resignation which I shall shew in the following particulars First This doth exceedingly abase the creature Resignation is the lowest posture of a creature and so the fittest to take in all those graces which the Gospel hath entailed on believers Would you have adoption from God leave thine own kindred and thy fathers house stand not upon thy birth-right or parentage which in a child of wrath such as thou art by nature is as base and low as hell it self go forth to Christ the natural son of God that thou mayest be an adopted one Would you have pardon and justification stay not at home in thine own righteousness and repentant tears these will not be habitable when God comes in the pure glory of his justice and holiness go out and put on the glorious righteousness of Christ go out and lye down at the door of the pardon-office I I am he that blotteth out thy transgressions for mine own sake saith God Isa 43.25 Would you have sanctifying graces thine own Will cannot teem them out thine own power cannot form them Albertus Magnus the Philosopher spent fifty years in making the Statue of a man so as that with Engines it could speak articulately but when all was done it was but a poor dead thing Shouldest thou live the age of Methuselah and all the while in the artifice of thy reason and power of thy will labour to forge out true holinss it would be at last but an umbra a dead shadow of grace though it might speak fairly in the way of notions and gifts yet it would be without the heavenly life and vitality thou must therefore yield up thy self to Jesus Christ that his spirit may come upon thee and form the new-creature in thee the sum of all is this put off thy ornaments that God may know what to do unto thee yield resign be in the lowest posture of a creature that all the Evangelical graces may be thine own Secondly This doth highly exalt God and that in several respects First It exalts the mercy of God Now it appears that mercy in its proposals of salvation comes down to the very lowest terms it will adopt justifie and sanctifie an yielding sinner and how can it possibly go lower should he adopt such as will not suffer him to draw his picture upon their hearts when Thomas Arundel was for his Martial merits made Earl of the Empire Queen Elizabeth said that her sheep should not be stamped alieno stigmate with another mans mark as long as men will keep the worlds and Satans mark upon them God cannot tell how to call them sons can he justifie the ungodly to justifie the ungodly repenting and resigning is his infinite grace but to justifie them hardning and rebelling is impossible to his holiness should be count them pure with the wicked balances Mic. 6.11 every unresigned sinner hath a wicked balance in his heart which makes as if a little sinful pleasure did outweigh God himself and can he justifie such wicked ones should the sanctifying spirit with all its train of graces come and dwell in the unclean stable of indulged lusts Christ the holy one of God was in his admirable humility in a stable of beasts but in a stable of indulged lusts he cannot be he dwells in the heart by faith that is in the resigning heart and it cannot be otherwise Mercy it self if it comport with the justice and holiness of God cannot make lower terms then to save the yielding sinner Secondly It exalts the wisdom of God He hath so admirably contrived the way of salvation that mercy shall stoop to the lowest terms and the creature take it in the lowest posture that so mercy might sit in majesty and save in state Princes use in their acts of mercy to give an allay of Majesty such as may stand with their honour Solomon will pardon Adonijah but he must be a worthy man or as the Original is a son of virtue 1 Kings 1.52 King Henry the fourth of France would have freely pardoned Birone but then he must make an ingenious confession of the treason which he neglecting to do in time lost his head The great God gives out mercy to poor sinners but they must take it upon the knee in a bending and resigning posture such as is congruous to so infinite a Majesty they must be put into self-emptying and self-annihilating thoughts as Moses into the clift of the rock while the glory of free-grace passes before them Thirdly It exalts the veracity of God The believer resigns up his soul himself his happiness his all upon the meer word of God giving him the glory of his truth in every tittle What Peter said to Christ when he bad him let down his net Master we have toiled all night and have taken nothing yet at thy word I will let down the net Luke 5.5 that saith the believer unto God Lord I am toiling in the dark under sin and wrath but at thy word I will cast my self upon free-grace I am labouring under spiritual wants and necessities but at thy word I will repair to the great treasures of grace in Christ still the hangs upon a word its true he resigns up himself to Christ and free-grace but his warrant for doing so is a meer word how doth he know that the infinite Ocean of mercy whose effluxes are free will flow out to sinful men how doth he know that the Son of God was incarnate and suffered
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
yet now hath he reconciled Col. 1.21 All the change was in the Colossians none in God the Lord loveth the righteous saith the Psalmist Psal 146.8 as soon as a man becomes righteous the divine complacence doth embrace him which it did not could not before because there was no sutable object Secondly The second Quaere is this If justification be not an immanent eternal act what is the transient act by which God justifieth a believer in this life Unto this much is not spoken among Divines some speak of a sentence before the Angels as if God did declare before them who is righteous but this I think is altogether unscriptural others speak of a sentence in conscience but this is but the manifestation of justification Let us first distinguish of justification and then answer There is a double justification constitutive justification whereby God maketh us just in this life sentential justification whereby God pronounces us just at death and judgment Constitutive justification is the foundation of sentential for the true God will not pronounce us just unless we are such and sentential justification is the compleature of constitutive For here there is sententia judicis crowning us as righteous the Quaere then being touching constitutive justification in this life I conceive with worthy Mr. Baxter that God justifies a believer by the moral agency of the Gospel by which as by his Grand Charter and Law of grace he doth make over Christ and his righteousness to the believer neither need this seem strange every humane instrument doth moraliter agere A Princes pardon conveys an impunity a Charter an estate a Law a title or right a Testament a Legacy and shall not the Gospel do as much to believers God doth constitutivè justifie the believer by making him righteous and makes him righteous by making over to him the righteousness of Christ and that he makes over by the Gospel which is his Pardon Charter Law and Testament of grace conveying the same upon believing no sooner doth a man believe but the conditional promise becomes absolute As the old Covenant running do this and live would have justified upon perfect obedience so the New running believe and be saved doth justifie upon believing as man sinning is condemned by the Law of works so man believing is justified by the Law of grace Hence the Gospel is called the ministration of righteousness as the Law is of condemnation 2 Cor. 3.9 the power of God to salvation to the believer Rom. 1.16 quia nos per Evangelium justisicat Deus because God justifies us by the Gospel as Reverend Calvin hath it on the 17th verse Virga virtutis A rod of strength Psal 110.2 that is in the Justification of men saith the excellent Dr. Reynolds and the law of the spirit of life in Christ Jesus making us free from the law of sin and death as many Divines interpret that place Rom. 8.2 Upon which Pareus doth observe Liberatio à condemnatione legis Deo Christo Evangelio tribuitur Deo ut Authori Christo ut Mediatori Evangelio ut Organo Freedom from the coudemnation of the Law is attributed to God as the Author to Christ as the Mediatour to the Gospel as the Instrument God makes over Christ and his righteousness unto the Believer by the Gospel as by his Charter and Law of grace This is the transient act by which God doth justifie us in this life Having thus removed the Antinomian Error out of the way I shall resume my first Proposition That Justification is an holy fruit growing upon Faith in the very instant of believing a man is justified this doth appear several waies First In Justification there must be a matter or foundation a Righteousness and a perfect one such as answers the law which man is under The Law demands of us two things perfect Obedience due from us as rational Creatures and penal Suffering due from us as sinful Creatures The first Gods holiness presses for in the Command and the last Gods Justice calls for in the Threatning The Believer who hath nothing in himself hath enough in Christ to answer both Christ fulfilled all the righteousness of the Command and so satisfied Gods Holiness Christ bore the curse of the Threatning and so satisfied Gods Justice Hence he is the end of the Law to the Believer Rom. 10.4 as if the Apostle had said Whatever the Law can ask the total sum of it is in Christ and from him redounding upon the Believer as a member of his body It was a lamentable moan which Joannes Seneca made upon his Death-bed Mel. Adam in vitis Jureconsul Germanorum In vitâ nostrâ habuimus said he qui pro nobis chorum frequentarent qui pro nobis agros colerent qui pro nobis Missas celebrarent horas canonicas orarent sed ubi nunc unum reperiemus qui pro nobis in Gehennam descendat In this life we have those that will go to the Quire for us and plow for us and say Mass and pray canonically for us but where is there one that will go to Hell for us But the Believer blessed man that he is need not say who will go to Hell for me Christ was made a Curse for him neither need he ask Who will fulfil perfect obedience for me Christ hath done every jot and tittle thereof The Believer is a man in Christ and so stands in the pure robes woven all of Love and Holiness by his Saviour unless the Law can find a spot or a false thread in these he will be must be recius in Curiâ if the Law offer to hale him down to hell he will do as Tamar when brought forth to be burnt shew forth the Bracelets and the Signet the precious blood and merits of Christ which God cannot but own as the price of Redemption and Salvation Secondly In justification there must be a Justifier It is God that justifieth and whom doth he justifie but the Believer in Jesus unto him he makes over Christ and his righteousness unto him he seals an actual pardon and remission his sins are covered never to appear more in their ugly hue blotted out never to be read more in their bloody characters cast into the depths of the Sea and who can fetch them up again sought for and not found and who can charge them afresh upon the Believer St. Paul would have the debts of Onesimus put upon his account Philem. v. 18. The Believers sins do not stand as they did at first upon his score but upon Christs who came to make an end of them When the swarms of Flies were upon the Egyptians and not upon the Israelites the Text saith God made a division or as it is in the original A redemption between them Exod. 8.23 That swarms of Guilt slie about Unbelievers and none about Believers it is because the redemption is between them on the one hand neglected and on the other applied We are justified freely by
is express in it The righteousness of God is upon them that believe Rom. 3.22 All that believe are justified Act. 13.39 And we have believed that we might be justified Gal. 2.16 And Justification is in order before Sanctification I suppose the Holy Spirit with its Graces will not dwell in an unreconciled Soul Under the Law in cleansing the Leper first the Priest put the blood on him and then the holy oyl upon the place where the blood was Levit. 14.14 17. The Believer first in order hath the atoning Blood put on him and then the holy Unction of the Spirit According to this order Faith is first of all But if Faith and all other Graces are infused at once and together then either they are infused before Justification and so Sanctification is before Justification or else after it and so Justification is before Faith Fifthly This way there will be a congruity between the old Creatiowand the new In the old Light was the first-born of the Creation and then the other parts of the World were made in the new the first thing is the light of Faith and then follow those Graces which make up the New Creature Beholding as in a glass the glory of God we are changed into his image 2 Cor. 3.16 First the eye of Faith is opened and then the Image of God drawn on the Soul this congruity is the rather to be minded because the Apostle speaking of the Creation of Faith doth it with an allusion to the Creation of Light God who commanded the light to shine out of darkness hath shined in our hearts to give the light of the knowledg of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 As if he had said Light in the old Creation and Faith in the new answer one to another Sixthly This way there will be a congruity between Christ formed in the womb and Christ formed in the bea rt The blessed Virgin first believed and then Christ was formed in her Womb Concetio Christi facta fuit simul ac Maria in verba Angeli consentiens dixit Ecce ancilla Domini De Incarnat lib. 2. Quest 7. siat mihi secundum verbum tuum Luk. 1.38 saith Zanchy No sooner did she say an Amen of Faith to the Promise but Christ was conceived in her therefore after her Faith the Angel immediately departed from her as having his errand already dispatched answerably the Christian first believes and then Christ is formed in him in all those sanctifying Graces which make up the holy Image of Christ The Apostles expressing those Graces under the notion of forming Christ in us Gal. 4.19 seems to hint out this Congruity Seventhly This way there will be a Congruity between the being of these Graces and the acting of them whilest both proceed from Faith depending upon Christ the head of Grace The Believers life is in Scripture called a life of Faith not as if there were not Love Meekness Obedience Patience with all the other Graces in him but because Faith is the grand principle which moves every one of them Faith worketh by love saith the Apostle Gal. 5.6 and so it worketh by Meekness Obedience Patience and all other Graces being as it were blood and spirits running in every part of the New Creature All Graces are set a working by Faith and if they also receive their being through it there is a Congruity between their being and working Upon these Congruities I take it that Faith is first in order and then other Graces As to the actual exercise of Graces It is Faith which sets them all a working To this purpose it is observable That all the worthy acts of Grace mentioned in the 11th Chapter to the Hebrews are there ascribed to Faith so is Abels excellent Sacrifice Enochs walking with God Noahs holy fear of the deluge Abrahams obedience in leaving his Country Moses 's self-denial as to the Egyptian Court The valour of some Worthies in subduing Kingdoms and the patience of others in suffering torments for the truth The reason of which is because Faith is the first mover which sets all other Graces a-moving the General under whose conduct all Graces come forth in their courses therfore the honour of all is devolved upon it Now how Faith sets other Graces a-working I shall first shew in a general way common to all of them and then more particularly with respect to some special Graces In general Faith sets other Graces in motion by such ways as these First It looks on the Command which in Scripture calls for these Graces as the very Will of God And so presses for Obedience many ways as first from the Divine Authority of it In the word of a King there is power much more in the word of a God when known to be such In the Council of Triburia a fancy touching an Episile come from Heaven made impression in some of them Had it been really known to be so indeed the impression would have been deeper At the sound of the Command Faith knows that it is the Lord that the voice is from the excellent glory and in that Authority presses to Obedience But this is not all besides Gods Authority it urges from his Love It is saith Faith the voice of thy beloved thy dear Father in Heaven who hath cast his cords and bands of Love round about thee to draw thee to himself and then the Heart must needs feel constraints and holy inflammations to Obedience and be like St. Peter who when he knew it was the Lord girt himself and made towards him Gods Love hath dropt sweetness into the Command and made all easie Moreover to make the stronger impulse on the Believer Faith demonstrates That the Command is just and right and good that holy Love and Patience and other Graces of the first Table are pure rectitudes wherein Man stands in his true posture towards God his Goodness or Providence or some other thing in him And also that Justice and Temperance and Charity are rectitudes wherein he stands in a true posture towards others or himself for Gods sake And a Command so known moves so strongly towards Obedience that a man who would pay his debts to God or his Neighbour or himself cannot must not repugn Secondly Faith looks not only upon the letter of the Command but upon the life of Christ Where all Graces are set forth in lively and orient colours really and practically exemplified to our view Precepts possibly may have more of notion in them but Examples have more of vivacity to attract the heart to imitation above all the Example of Christ must be cogent to Believers he went up and down doing of good every step one odour of Grace or other brake from him Subjection to Parents or Magistrates or Zeal towards God in purging the Temple or Humility in washing his Disciples feet or Meekness under malicious accusations and blasphemies or melting bowels upon all occasions dropping
cry out Sero te amavi Domine Lord 't was late e're I loved thee True Faith would have none but Christ loving him as St. Bernard used to say Plus quam mea meos me More than all my goods my friends my self And as another holy Man did weeping that it can love Christ no more As touching our Love to our Neighbour it is also actuated by Faith Reason and Humanity raise up a Love towards Man the Barbarians kindly received St. Paul and his Shipwracked Company Act. 28.2 Titus Vespasian was called Amor deliciae humani generis the Love and delight of Mankind Suffering none to go away sad from his Presence Nay Herod himself in a Famine turned all his Plate and rich Houshold-stuff into Money therewith to fetch Corn out of Egypt for the necessities of the People Only this Love for want of Supernatural rectitude squints at Vain-glory or moves upon some other selfish Principles or at best rises up out of a simpathy of the common nature True Love towards our Neighbour such as issues out of Faith unfeigned 1 Tim. 1.5 is propter Deum for Gods sake And as the School-men say There is but one root or habit of Love whereby we love God and our Neighbour because God as he is supream Goodness is the formal reason of Love to our Neighbour He only being to be loved for himself and others but the material Objects of Love to be loved for him hence also damned or irrational Creatures are not properly the Objects of Love because not capable of Union with God in bliss Unto this true Love Faith presses by some such Divine motives as these is not Love a Command nay the sum of the second Table and must it not be obeyed Can we wait for Promises and not observe Commands Or may we have the Love of the first Table without that of the second Hath not God loved us in an incomparable unparalleld way and shall we not love our Brother Shall infinite bowels open and finite ones be shut If any shut them how dwelleth the love of God in him saith the Apostle 1 Joh. 3.17 A touch a sense of his Love let in by Faith will make ours flow out towards our Neighbour Such a sweet pressure of it was on Mr. Fox That he never denied any that asked for Jesus sake A Believer acting as a Believer cannot be hard to his Neighbour or say Go and come again as long as the Mercy-seat is open And what is thy Neighbour is he not thine own flesh Nay doth he not in a sense bear Gods Image and is he not capable of eternal Blessedness And who that hath a hope of singing Hosanna's in Heaven would not love such an one And will not God be glorified thereby Graces shew forth more of God than Creatures and Love more than all the rest because he is Love it self The Primitive Christians told the World whose they were by their one heart and one soul Terrull Apol. Act. 4.32 And afterward their Love was pointed at by the very Pagans saying Vide ut invicem se diligant See how they love one another And do we know what and how great a thing may be in acts of Love Some entertaining strangers have entertained Angels Heb. 13.2 But possibly we may do more we may feed or cloth or visit Christ in his poor members and in the other World be repaid all again with usury From such Divine Motives as these Faith actuates Love to our Neighbour but this is not all Faith actuates it in a regular and congruous way according to relations and propinquities giving out a Love of delight to the Saints as having most of God in them a Love of mercy to the poor as being Christs Treasurers a love of reverence to Parents by whom we received our being a Love of provision to Children who are our selves multiplied and a Love of benevolence to all not excluding enemies to love enemies is as one saith inter mirabilia legis one of the wonders of the Law and yet Faith in the Gospel-grace will reach it Hence it is observable that when our Saviour bids his Disciples to forgive even such as trespass against them seven times in a day They reply in a Prayer Lord encrease our faith Luk. 17.5 because Faith will move Love into act even in the difficult duty of forgiving others Another Grace actuated by Faith is holy Fear of God the very light of Nature revealing some glimmerings of his Greatness and Justice raises up a Fear of him The Barbarians seeing the Viper on St. Pauls hand cried out of a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a revenging justice as if he had been a murderer Act. 28.4 Pythagoras begins his Golden Verses with Veneration of the Gods Among all Nations there hath been a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a fearing of God The ancient Gauls out of reverence to their gods would not touch the consecrated Gold lying in their Temples Upon the same account there were among many Ethnicks Nudipedalia sacra barefooted devotions Only this Fear was in it self but servile and further corrupted by false opinions of the Deity and hence sprung all that 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 worship or superstition which was among the Heathens The progeny of their ancient Daemons their Charms and Exorcisms their Festivals and Purifications their Lustrations and human inhuman Sacrifices and all their strange Rites and Ceremonies of Adoration whereby they endeavoured to flatter and compound with their gods and guilty Consciences This servile Fear is further advanced when to the light of Nature is superadded that of the pure Law which flashes in upon the Conscience and sets it on sire with reslections upon guilt and expectations of wrath thereupon but it is servile still and chiefly looks at punishment A man in such a state may forbear an act of Sin but he is corrupt within adbue vivit in eo peecandi voluntas the love of Sin is in him still as an Ancient hath it His heart saith to his Sin as the Emperour Bassimus did to his beautiful Mother in Law Quàm vellem si liceret Oh that there were no Law against it or punishment to follow after it He may do good but not well Intus reus est in animo non facit he is guilty within and in mind doth it not as St. Austin saith there wants that love of righteousness out of which true Obedience issues but where Faith is there is castus timor a pure filial fear of God such as reverences his Majesty as supream and sears Sin as the greatest evil and withal punishment in its due place though not principally or in a servile way and among punishments chiefly that of loss and separation from God as a greater evil than the rest And as Faith sees the invisible one more or less so this holy Fear is more or less moved into act Of old the appearances of God in outward Symbols of glory struck an a we
upon men the high Thrones with its train made Isaiah cry out as an undone man Isa 6. the voice out of the whirl-wind caused Job to abhor himself in dust and ashes Job 42.6 The bright thining man turned Daniel's comeliness into corruption Dan. 10.8 And what those outward appearances did in a sensible way that Faith which is an inward Vision of God doth in a Spiritual looking on him by Faith a dread falls on us from every Attribute or Work of his His glorious Majesty makes us go and hide our selves in the dust of our own vileness and nothingness His pure Holiness comparatively turns us and all our comely Graces into rottenness His dreadful Justice sounds so loud in the threatning that we cannot but tremble at every word of it Nay his very goodness and tender bowels lying all about us make us afraid to trample thereon by finning even those in Nature do so much more those richer ones in Grace His very rain calls for out fear Jer. 5.24 And what do those dews of the Spirit which are not common as the other His bounding the Sea doth so Jer. 5.22 and what doth his bounding corruption which else would drown Soul and all in perdition Oh how tremendous is our life our Bodies living on the Blood of Creatures and our Souls on the Blood of God our natural being lying in the arms of that Power which bears up the World and our Spiritual in the arms of that Grace which saves it Earth flowing round about us with Blessings and Heaven it self coming down in Promises and carrying back our Hopes thither Who in such Visions of Faith would not fear the Lord and his goodness Who would not tremble at Sins indignity and ingratitude After such mercies as these should we again transgress against him If we wax wanton under Goodness how soon may Soveraignty come down and recover all from us as forfeited Heaven may shut up it self and the dews of the Spirit cease our Graces may all droop and wither and our Hearts grow hard and stony one lust or other may carry us into captivity and our little remnant of Grace and Life may cry out as the Church doth O Lord why hast thou made us to err from thy ways and hardned our hearts from thy fear return for thy servants sake Isa 63.17 After all our wantonness we shall be glad to come to holy Fear again Soveraignty will make us fear him in every thing such a fight of him by Faith as this makes him practically to us 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the fear as he is called Psal 76.11 Moreover Faith moves this Fear into act by shewing the great evil of Sin Sense looks on penal evils which press on the outward man but Faith on Sin as the greatest of evils it being an opposite to God a blot to the Soul a blast to the World a forfeiture of Heaven and fuel for the flames of Hell a thing not to be done Pro quantiscunque bonis lucrandis aut pro quantiscunque malis pracavendis for the gaining never so great a good or for the avoiding never so great an evil as Bradwardine speaks Hence St. Austin said That a man must not tell a lie to save a world And Henry Flander being a Prisoner for the Protestant Religion would not say That his Wife was his Whore no not to save his life offered to him on those terms Now Fear being a kind of flight from evil the greater the evil is the greater is the flight and when an evil is the greatest of evils such as Sin appears to Faith the flight from it is as from Hell it self and more if possible according to the saying of Anselm That if Sin were set before him on the one band and Hell on the other he would rather leap into Hell than fall into Sin Another Grace actuated by Faith is Zeal which is an intense Love or a mixture of Love and Anger or rather the heat and boyling up of all the affections in the concerns of God and his Glory This is a coal from the Altar which warms Hearts and Lives and sparkles out in every Grace and Duty without it all is in spirituali gelicidio cold and frozen as in a Sunless World Indeed without Faith Zeal is blind as in the Jew who in his heat for the Law opposes the Gospel and true Righteousness Or it runs out upon Humane things as in the Papist who crys up Traditions as a second Oracle or it moves upon selfish Principles as in the Pharisees who did all theatrically to be seen of men But when Faith comes Zeal is according to the Word as its Rule and for Divine things as the worthiest Object and out of a pure intention to Gods Glory as the supream end Faith brings us into Communion with God and makes us one spirit with him and hence it comes to pass that those things which are dear to him are so to us and those injuries which move his jealousie above stir up our Zeal here below To Faith Gods name is nomen Majestativum holy reverend fearful glorious precious a name above every name and therefore cannot be profaned but Zeal will break forth the reproaches cast on it fall more heavily on the Believer than those on himself or his near relations Nay they press harder on him than if he should hear one railing at Princes or Angels Maris the blind Bishop of Chalcedon being brought into the presence of the blasphemous Emperour Julian fell severely on him as upon an enemy of God and when Julian told him That he was blind and his Galilean God would not cure him Maris gave thanks to God who had taken away his eyes that he might not look on so wicked a wretch as Julian Such a Zeal doth Faith put forth for Gods name In like manner the Worship of God is to Faith his Homage honour on Earth Crown of glory Sanctuary of Presence a thing too precious and pure to be allayed with Humane mixtures if this be corrupted our Zeal must needs kindle at it and so much the more because his facred jealousie hangs more over his Worship than over any thing else in all the World To the other Commandments we find this annexed I am the Lord Lev. 19 but to the second I am a jealeus God Exod. 20.5 Hence Moses at the light of the Calf forgets his Meekness and in a holy Passion brake the holy Tables In the Constantinopolitan Council held about the year of our Lord 754 how hot were the Bishops against Images as a meer Pagan custom and when they were cast down how triumphant was the Peoples Zeal crying out Hodiè salus mundo now is salvation come to the world In the fifth Council of Carthage they would have the very reliques of Idolatry totally blotted out Nay Leo Bishop of Rome when the Manichees Worshipped the Sun forbade the Christians to worship towards the East that they might have nothing common with them Such
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