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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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ocean of reigning corruptions and these keep the heart from taking fire with the love of those excellencies which are known by nature The Gentiles knew God but they did not like to have him in their knowledge Rom. 1.28 millions of unruly lusts like the sons of Belial about Lots house beset this natural light and keep it as it were in prison thus the Apostle they withheld it in unrighteousness Rom. 1.18 and it is too weak to break out of this prison and shew it self practically I shall give some instances hereof All Nations in all climates and through all ages have conspired together to confess a Deity Conscience within bears witness to him and so do all the creatures without also one would wonder therefore that ever Idolatry should get footing in the world but what saith the Apostle they changed the truth of God into a lye and the glory of the incorruptible one into a corruptible image Rom. 1.23.25 there were store of abominable idols among them no doubt natural light gave its secret vote for God but it was but the vote of a poor prisoner altogether insignificant it was not strong enough to make them own God in his own world Again reason and nature say that God must be worshipped with the heart and that a pure heart purâ mente colendus was the old verse in suo cuique consecrandus est pectore said Seneca God hath not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a more proper place upon earth then a pure heart saith Hierocles O divine saying next door to that of our Saviour blessed are the pur● in heart for they shall see God But after all this can this natural light work a dram of true sanctity or holiness in the heart No the very Schoolmen themselves who ever give nature her due with an overplus will not say so only they say facienti quod in se est Deus revelabit Christum largietur gratiam Well if this hypothesis which I am not now to dispute were true can there be an instance given among all the Pagans from the morning of the world till this day of any one man who by the right use of ●●turals arrived at true grace If so what will become of that in the Apostle Who hath called us with an holy calling not according to our works but according to his own purpose and grace 2 Tim. 1.9 If not O what a poor weak light is this of nature and how long and universally a prisoner hath it been indeed true sanctity or holiness is never found without humility but touching that there is no footstep nor shadow of commendation in all the Pagan writers saith the learned Amyraldus it is not so much as a virtue among them on the contrary 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 greatness of soul is reckoned among Aristotles virtues Well then might Erasmus his Sancte Socrates have been spared Notable is that of St. Bernard Epist 190. some saith he whilest they go about to make Plato a Christian prove themselves heathens Again because possibly the light of reason may be weakest in the concerns of Religion I shall instance in other things Doth not nature and reason plead for all things of common honesty and humanity and yet in the Laws of Lycurgus which were of high renown and commended even by the Oracle of Apollo and which as Plutarch relates Lycurgus took singular pleasure to see put in ure even as God rejoyced to see the world move and turn about I say in these there are such obscenities and inhumanities as would put any one to the blush to see them in story what else are the dancing of maids naked and throwing weak children into a pit of water spoken of by Plutarch well might the Lacedaemonians have spared the Temple and Sacrifices to their Law-giver unless he had been truer to the Law of Nature Again is not self-preservation an intimate and natural impress in the heart of man it is not scripta sed nata Lex said the Orator and yet this ingraven Law was not strong enough no not in a grave and noble Cato to keep him from murdering himself and tearing out his own bowels and over this unnatural act Seneca sounds a triumph as being a noble and heroical contempt of death it self that that sword of his which was yet pure from the blood of others might let out his own but hear the censure of St. Austin De Civit. Dei l. 19. c. 4. Vtrum obsecro Cato ille patientiâ an impatientiâ se peremit non enim haec fecisset nisi victoriam Caesaris impatienter tulisset and in another place non erat honestas turpia praecavens L 1. c. 23. sed infirmitas adversa non sustinens it was but a proud impatience and miserable trampling upon the Law of Nature Moreover the light of reason doth really produce many moral virtues and yet in these wherein its greatest strength lyeth it is too weak to elevate any one of them to the glory of the great Creator Contra Jul. Pelag. l. 4. c. 3. therefore as St. Austin hath observed the whole body of Pagan virtues for want of a single eye at that great end is full of darkness Thus much of the weakness of reason on the other side the light of faith hath a great deal of strength in it this will not cannot be commonly imprisoned it is an holy unction and at last will be uppermost it is a mighty Engine whereby the h●ly Spirit lifts the heart up into belief and resignation a thing of high birth and great activity being born of God and overcoming the world 1 Joh. 5.4 and because the light of reason was not able to bear up the interest of God among men this supernatural light came to do it In the primitive Church whilest this shined clear there were no such things as outward Idols or Images afterwards upon the declension thereof those things crept in by degrees first into banners and then into Churches and there first for instruction only and afterwards for adoration yet nevertheless this holy spark shewed it self in some as in Epiphanius his cutting the vail and Serenus his breaking the Images and divers others abhorrency of Idolatry and what this supernatural light doth in Churches against outward Idols that it doth in hearts against inward it will allow no Idol to stand in the secret place not an Ashteroth of riches not a Venus of pleasure not a Baal a ruling lording lust in the heart every indulged lust stands upon the unilluminated and unresigned will and after Faith hath purified the heart it must give way for God to set up his Throne there that pure heart which the Philosophers talk of at random as a Geographer of a terra incognita faith plainly discovers and practically operates Those dishonesties and inhumanities which reason could not keep out of Laws faith casts away from private Christians as the common mire and dirt of a wicked world those moral virtues
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
reason with the Gospel before him arrive at so great a notion of Divinity as is before admitted I answer the key to open this is in the Text the natural man cannot know the things of God because they are spiritually discerned A man by reason and its furniture of learning may in the perusal of the holy Scriptures gather up a world of notions and so know the things of God notionally but he knows them not spiritually and by consequence not congruously to their spiritual nature For the opening of this we must consider that there is in the holy Scriptures something humane or which may be inventoried among the things of man as the letters and words made up of them and sentences made up of words not as if these were not dictated exactly by God himself but that they are common to humane and profane Authors I mean not for the divineness of the matter but for the phrases and forms of speech And there is in them something Divine or which must be computed among the things of God as the mysteries and spiritual things themselves which are represented by those words and phrases I may illustrate this distinction farther by that of our Saviour If I have told you earthly things and you believe them not how shall you believe if I tell you of heavenly things Joh. 3.12 I pray what earthly things did our Saviour tell them was not he there preaching on that divine Theme of Regeneration Very true but Christ spake to them of Regeneration under the shadow of a birth and a wind and not according to the heavenly and spiritual nature thereof in it self Thus the words and phrases in Scripture being of common use are as it were humane types and shadows but the mysteries and spiritual things themselves are altogether divine Now to apply this distinction reason improved reaching to the things of man as its proper line may know the words and sentences in Scripture and so gather up a great notion of Divinity But unless inlightned by the holy Spirit which searcheth the things of God it goeth not beyond its own line it knows not spiritual things spiritually Reason without the light of faith Take it in a Jew at a Sacrifice and it saw the type only and not Christ in it Take it in a Christian at the holy Supper and it sees only the outward elements and discerns not the Lords body Take it in the greatest Rabbi sitting with the Scriptures before him and it sees them only in the shell or letter and not in the mystery And no wonder for even in common Sciences it may be so a man may construe and know the Grammar of a principle in Euclide and yet be ignorant of the Mathematical sense of it much more in divine truths may a man be spiritually ignorant who knows a great deal literally Therefore all Scholars may do well in their studies to do as Zuinglius did who having arrived at Arts and Tongues yet in the reading of the holy Scriptures looked up to heaven As for the great Doctor the holy Spirit when he comes in supernatural illumination then we know the things of God not by our own spirit but Gods the very same spirit which breaths in the Scriptures shines in the heart Hence spiritual things are discerned spiritually by a light congruous to their nature the spirit glorifies and shews forth Christ as the expression is John 16.14 Holy truths are as it were transfigured and shewn forth in glory which before were seen but in the flesh or weakness of the Letter the Deity sparkles out in the beauty and spiritual lustre of Scripture-mysteries which before only appeared in the humanity of words and phrases Now heaven opens and free-grace passes before us the secret of the Lord is with us and we are of his Privy Councel This is the first and fundadamental difference Reason with all it s acquired notions is not a light congruous to spiritual things but the light of Faith is Out of this all the other are derived Secondly Meer Reason digging in the Letter of Scripture arrives but at notions and shadows of knowledg and though these be as the sands on the sea shore they are but a form of knowledg Rom. 2.20 but when the light of faith comes there is sound wisdom Prov. 3.21 or as the original word is essence a thing which can no more be made up of meer notions then a body can of shadows Faith is the substance or subsistence of things hoped for Heb. 11.1 Without it notions and literal knowledge have no hypostasis in the heart the spiritual world is as it were lost God and Christ and Heaven are but notions But as soon as faith comes and makes the day-break in the heart the spiritual world subsists afresh God is God and Christ is Christ and Heaven is Heaven to the soul all of them are reallized by faith there is a good treasure in the heart far more substantial then Arts and Tongues and School-notions can make Thirdly Reason with its notions arrives but at a knowledge falsly so called for it knows not the things of God as they are proposed to be known those things are proposed to be known not as meer notions but as practical things to be in the first place chosen loved embraced and practised but it knows them only notionally and not practically That knowledge whilest materially true hath a secret lye in it thus the Apostle He that saith I know him and keepeth not his commandements is a lyar and the truth is not in him 1 Joh. 2.4 'T is not in him in a practical way so as to ballance the will and affections with the excellency of the things known but as soon as faith comes those things are known as they are proposed to be known as practical things to be improved in heart and life The supernatural light digests truths into blood and spirits and turns mysteries into godliness It knows Law and Gospel in their true tendency which is holiness not to be holy is to blast and prophane the meaning of both Fourthly The meer notional knowledge acquired by reason hath no spiritual life or sense in it it hath no life in it meer notions are but a dead faith but faith is a living notion In an unbeliever the notions are all dead affording no pulse of holy affections or motion of true obedience they are all buried in a grave of corruption and covered in the dust of earthly things But as soon as faith comes there is a resurrection in the soul the notions before dead now wake out of the dust and rise in life and power every truth lives in the heart and springs up into the new-creature This supernatural knowledge is a well-spring of life Prov. 16.22 and all the vital acts of grace stream from thence Nay as our Saviour tells us it is life eternal John 17.3 heaven doth dawn and appear in it Meer notional knowledg hath no spiritual sense in it
justificemur causa efficiens est misericordia Dei Christus materia verbum cum side instrumentum In Justification the efficient cause is Gods mercy Christ the matter the Word with Faith the instrument Thus the generality of Divines conclude that we are justified by faith as an instrument nevertheless some others express themselves thus That we are justified by faith as 〈◊〉 condition of the Gospel Thus the profestors of Saumiar in France Fide justificamu non tanquam parte aliquâ justitiae Thes Salm. de Justif sed tanquam conditione foederis gratiae We are justified by faith not as it is a part of righteousness but as it is the condition of the Covenant of Grace Thus Learned Mr. Woodbridge Method of Grace 101. To believe is a formal vital act of the Soul in genere physico but the use of it in justification is to qualifie us passively that we may be morally and orderly capable of being justified by God Or though physically it be an act yet morally it is but a passive condition by which we are made capable of being justified according to the order and constitution of God Thus worthy Mr. Baxter Right to Christ and life being a moral effect Confess of faith 295. and conveyed by a moral cause and way that is by a law of Grace or conditional promise or gift therefore the formal reason of faiths interest in our justification is as it is the condition of that promise by us performed and its essence or physical act the acceptance of Christ and Life commonly called its instrumentality though it be the reason why it was chosen and preferred to this office of being the condition of the promise yet is it but its aptitude to the office and so the remote and as it were material reason of its interest in our justification and not the formal Reason Touching this matter I shall offer my thoughts in these Propositions First Faith is not strictly and properly the instrument of Justification were it so a man might justifie and forgive himself For as Dr. Ames well observes as Sacraments are properly Gods instruments Bellarm. Enter Tom. 4. lib. 5. so Faith is properly mans Deus nos baptizat pascit non nosmetipsi nos credimus in Christum non Deus God baptizes and feeds us not we our selves we believe in Christ not God If then Faith which is properly mans instrument be properly the instrument of Justification a Believer doth no less than justifie himself which is harsh doctrine to me Again When we are said to be justified by Faith I suppose the Scripture doth not intend the transient act but the permanent habit and if so I cannot conceive how that can be properly strictly an Instrument Instrumenti causalitas est in usu applicatione when it is not in use and act it ceases to be an instrument The habit of faith is an habit still even when its act ceases but when its act ceases what hath it of instrumentality Secondly Faith though not properly may yet in some sense be called an Instrument because it hath a peculiar aptitude and receptivity to accept of the free-gift made in the Gospel Hence we are said by it to receive Jesus Christ Col. 2.6 to receive the atonement Rom. 5.11 to receive the gift of righteousness Rom. 5.17 to receive forgiveness of sins Acts 26.18 It hath a choice capacity to take in Christ with all his benefits Thirdly The proper formal reason why we are justified by Faith is because it is the condition of the Gospel on which God the Great Donor gives out Christ with all his blessings We are not justified by faith as for any reason intrinsecal or in the nature of it but as it doth inright and instate us into Christ and his righteousness and how is that done the old Law-rule must be remembred Voluntas donatoris observetur the Donors Will is the best guide and what is that in this case Clearly in the Gospel Christ and his righteousness are given upon the condition of faith Bellarmine asserting that it did not please God to give justification upon the condition of faith alone Dr. Ames answers him Bell. Everum Tom. 4. lib. 5. Vel maximè placuit boc Deo It pleased him altogether We must take as God gives God in the great charter gives out Christ and his righteousness upon the condition of faith Faith therefore instates and inrights us into these as it is the condition of that grant And by consequence we are justified by it as such as when a Prince grants a pardon upon condition the Traitor take it from him with his own hands his taking it gives impunity not because of the organical apprehensiveness in the hand but because it is the modus donationis the pardon runs upon those terms So when God grants justification upon condition of believing we are justified by faith not because of its intrinsecal receptivity or apprehensiveness but because that faith which stands in the Gospel as the condition of justification is found in the heart Thus much touching the manner how this holy fruit grows upon Faith Thirdly The next thing considerable is the continuance of this holy fruit Justification is a flower of Paradice which never dies once justified and ever justified The righteousness of God which is put upon the Believer is never taken off again The pardon which is sealed in the Court of heaven is never reversed The cloud of Guiltiness once scattered never gathers together The sins cast into the depth of Sea never come up more Camb. Eliz p. 384. When the Jesuite Chreicion taken at Sea tore and threw over-board certain papers of dangerous consequence the torn pieces were by the wind blown back again into the Ship and afterwards artificially put together discovered the Popish design then on foot but when God casts our sins into the depth of the Sea all the breath of the infernal Spirits can never blow them up again they shall be remembred no more All things in Justification concur to make this good Free-grace which is the first mover in it is a fountain ever flowing and a Sun which knows no going down The Righteousness of Christ which is the matter of it is a robe which can never wear out The Gospel which is the Charter of it is a grant never out of date Faith which is the Medium to it will under the divine influences stirring up the nest of gracious principles bud and blossom forth in fresh acts and when the acts cease it abides in the root kept alive by the eternal Spirit breathed from the endless life of Merit in Christ All which make the righteous man an everlasting foundation only here is a Quaere to be resolved Do not Believers fall into sin and doth not sin make a breach upon Justification and if so how doth it continue I Answer The sins of Believers are either sins of meer infirmity and daily incursion or sins
may say as Quirinus Reuterus did on his Death-bed Ego sum vitae filius I am a child of life Thus much for the third fruit of Faith being Adoption CHAP. IX Of Sanctification the fourth fruit of Faith and here of Mortification the first part thereof the influence of Precious Faith therein THe next fruit of Faith is Sanctification which makes the Soul meet for Heaven Justification and Adoption give a title to that blessed Inheritance but Sanctification makes ready for it No sooner doth a man believe but the rivers of living water the sanctifying Spirit with its Graces slow in the heart and the reason is evident Faith is the Souls Union with Christ who hath the Spirit above measure in trust to pour it out upon every part of his Mystical Body in this day of Espousals the water is turned into wine Nature elevated into Grace There are as I have before noted two parts of Sanctification Mortification and Vivification I shall speak to both as fruits of Faith First Mortification is a fruit of Faith indeed none but a Believer is in a posture to reach it Could a man which yet never falls out improve his Reason and Will to the utmost he could not truly mortifie Sin Reason and Will improved might in some measure triumph over the gross inordinations in the lower faculties but they would ever spare the corruptions in themselves as their own flesh like politick Princes who keep down mutinies among the common People but lay the reins down to their own personal vices It would fare with such an one as it doth with frozen waters which though broken in one place will freez in another should he break and dissolve his sensual Sins he would freez in spiritual and if his eyes were open he would see that it is desperate pride and presumption to attempt Mortification in any other way than that of Faith which brings a general thaw upon the heart melting it into a compliance with the Divine Pleasure and tracing the method of the Gospel derives a power and spirit from Christ for the work Mortification must be done through the Spirit Rom. 8.13 and none hath that but the Believer it slows from an implantation into the death of Christ and none is so but he Faith purifies the heart and without it there can be no such thing as Mortification God doth not command Mortification immediately but in its own place first Faith and then Mortification Mortifie therefore your members which are upon the earth saith the Apostle Col. 3.5 Therefore wherefore Because you are risen with Christ because your life is hid with Christ therefore mortifie None but Believers who are in Union with Christ are capable to do it When in Popery all sorts are driven to this work as the poor Indians are to Baptism they do but set up a Faithless Christless Image of Mortification in Penances and Satisfactions void of the true spirit and principle requisite thereunto In the pursuit of this Point I shall first speak to the Mortification of Original Sin this is to lay the axe to the root and cast salt into the fountain without which to go about to mortisie this or that particular lust is as great a vanity as for a man by outward applications to heal up a fore or ulcer in the body without correcting the inward somes of peccant and corrupt humours which bore those holes in the flesh and fill them with putrefaction This is one choice work of Faith Others may spend all upon Physicians and Humane remedies but the Believer gives such a touch upon a Crucified Christ as in a good measure to stanch the bloody issue running down his nature In this excellent work Faith proceeds on this wise First Faith gives a man a just sense of Original Sin Which if the World be searched with Candles can be found no-where but among the Believers To search for it in the Pagan World is to no purpose indeed Plato saith That the Soul hath broken her wings and creeps basely upon these lower things The Pythagoreans taught That Souls having offended God were turned into Bodies as into so many Prisons there to look out of the grates of Sense Trismegistus asserts That man fell from Heavenly Contemplations into the sphear of Elements and so became a bondslave to his Body Hierocles confesses That man is carried downward and fallen from the happy Region of his own motion inclined to evil and averse from good In such passages as these there seem to be some glimmerings and dark resemblances of Original Sin But alas poor Souls they were sar from a just sense thereof they did not understand the depth and venom of this wound but thought there was Medicamentum in latere enough in the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the self-power of the Soul which Justin Martyr at his Conversion brought out of Plato's School into Christianity to heal it self Aristotle makes Mans Happiness to be the Operation of the Rational Soul according to Virtue and that Virtue he ranks among the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the things in our own power Seneca tells us 'T is a foolish thing to wish for a good Soul which without lifting thy hands to Heaven thou maist have of thy self whatsoever may make thee good tecum est intus est it is with thee and in thee Hierocles saith The Will is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 mistress of it self and can make it self better or worse Or as he speaks in another place it can make the man a beast or a God In a word all the remedy they prescribe is but that which Epictetus saith made Socrates to be so virtuous as he was Obedience to Reason They never so much as dreamed of any such thing as Regeneration but thought they could do their own work themselves neither did they understand the bredth and length of this natural wound they thought it was only in the lower saculties of the Soul Reason and Will being free and pure hence they generally cry out against the Body as a Prison and the Senses as fetters and manacles to the Immortal Spirit Theophrast was wont to say That the Soul paid a dear rent for her dwelling in the Body considering how much it suffered at the Bodies hand The Stoicks declaim against the Passions as the sicknesses and languors of the Soul all the load is laid upon 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the common people of the Soul as some call the Passions as if the Princes Reason and Will were free never considering the Spiritual wickednesses which are among them Neither could it be expected that they should know the latitude of Sin seeing they had not the pure Law but only some fragments of it in their hearts by which they could no more discern the proportions of Sin than a man can understand features by the broken pieces of a Picture Leaving the Pagans let us search among the Jews a People to whom the Divine Oracles were committed there the Believers had
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