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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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darkness and see little or no light their light may be like that in the Prophet Zach. 14.6 neither clear nor dark they may live in crepusculo in a kind of twilight in a mixture of light and darkness Secondly Faith goeth before justification but assurance followeth after it Faith goeth before justification Scripture is express in it by him all that believe are justified Acts 13.39 with the heart man believeth unto righteousness Rom. 10.10 the righteousness of God is upon all them that believe Rom. 3.22 we have believed in Jesus Christ that we might be justified Galat. 2.16 might justification go before faith it were possible that a man might be saved in his sins a child of wrath might be in the arms of divine love a captive of Satan might be a son of God a man out of Christ might be justified in him all which are impossible but assurance follows after justification justification is necessarily presupposed to assurance for to believe my sins forgiven that they may be forgiven is absurd to believe my sins forgiven before they be forgiven is false to believe my sins forgiven because I believe so is vain and foolish Remission must first he before it can be manifested to be it must first be granted out of the Court of heaven before there can be any true Copy of it in conscience unless we allow a distinction between a faith of resignation before and a faith of assurance after justification we cannot possibly deal with the Romanists Bellarmine speaking of that special faith whereby a man believes himself just before God in and through Christ puts this Quaere De notis Ecclesiae l. 4. c. 11. Cum incipio credere me esse justum vel sum justus vel injustus si justus non justificor per fidem banc quia ista fides posterior meâ justitiâ si injustus ista fides est falsa when I begin to believe my self just am I just or unjust if just I am not justified by this faith which is after my righteousness if unjust this faith is false neither is there any imaginable way to dissolve this knot regularly without such a distinction between faith as antecedent to justification and faith as consequent Thirdly Faith justifieth us in foro Dei before God assurance justifieth us in foro conscientiae in our feeling and declaratively only Faith justifies us before God all those expressions in St. Paul touching justification by faith are meant of a justification before God I shall name but one or two that no man is justified by the Law in the sight of God is evident for the just shall live by faith Gal. 3.11 the justification before God here denied to the Law is attributed to faith And again a man is not justified by the works of the Law but by the faith of Jesus Christ Gal. 2.16 He doth not say faith declares a man justified for that even the excluded works may do but saith justifies Faith uts on Christ and his righteousness assurance only bears witness that the wedding garment is on Faith waits at the footstool of free-grace to have a pardon sealed in heaven assurance copies it out and proclaims it in conscience unless we admit this distinction we open the flood-gates to Antinomianism Fourthly Faith is a permanent thing an immortal seed which never dies it is built upon the rock of ages and cannot be moved it hangs upon an infallible word the least jot or tittle thereof cannot fall to the ground it is fed with an everlasting spring the holy spirit being in the believer as a well of water springing up to eternal life but assurance is transient now the believer hath nothing but wine and honycombs of grace and a little after he hath a cup of gall and wormwood now a sheet full of celestial joys and comforts is let down to him and then all is taken up into heaven again he is much like Joseph sometimes in the coat of many colours in the visible badges of his fathers love and anon stript and cast into the pit like poor Heman free among the dead and laid in darkness he is a spiritual Heliotrope who is all day in heavenly amours wheeling and turning about to the light of Gods countenance and anon when night approaches contracts his leaves and hangs down his head till there be another Sun it the effence of faith be in assurance the believer stands as it were upon a sea of glass in a very lubricous condition 't is well with him whilest he hath the light of Gods countenance whilest Gods spirit bears witness to his that he is a child of God but what if God withdraw and retire as it were into his unapproachable light what if the crannies of the heart be all shut up so that neither the sunny beams of Gods favour nor yet the starry graces in the heart can appear what if the arch-enemy Satan come with those instruments of death the threatnings and rake in the old wounds of sin and join the darkness of temptation to the darkness of corruption in the believer to cause if it were possible utter darkness must he be an Apostate a cast-away a man fallen from grace God forbid St. Bernard speaking of the manifestation of Gods love cries out Rara hora brovis mora O si durâsset it is a rare hour but a short stay Oh that it would continue with me the believers standing is not in it but in his union with Christ this was notably exemplified to us in Christ when he cried out My God My God why hast thou forsaken me Math. 27.46 the hypostatical union was not dissolved but the present vision substracted in like manner the believer the man in Christ when in desertions and temptations hath a sure conjunction with Christ even whilest there is a suspension of comforts unless we own this distinction we cannot maintain the doctrine of perseverance against the Remonstrants Fifthly Faith is the first-born of all graces and leads the van to all the rest it is the mother-grace and as it were teems out all other graces and no wonder for it unites us to Christ out of whose fulness we receive grace for grace and into whose image we are changed from glory to glory as by the spirit of the Lord but assurance follows after faith and all other graces This will be evident if we consider the manner how assurance is produced it is not an Enthusiasm a voice an internal locution speaking to the heart some such words as these thou art in Gods favour or thy sins are forgiven or thou art a son of God no it is in another way the holy spirit doth so irradiate the heart in its reflections and all the pretious graces lodging there that it plainly appears that the grace of God is there of a truth as it was with the blind man in the Gospel when his eyes were opened he could look abroad in the world and say here 's the earth
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
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
able to drive out Corruption especially when that Grace is acted which besides its purifying strengthening nature in common with other Graces is contrary to the Sin which is to be mortified and so proper and apt to expel it as one contrary doth another Hence Daniel counsels Nebuchadnezzar to break off his sins by righteousness and mercy Dan. 4.27 his Sins being Oppression and Cruelty nothing was apter than Righteousness Mercy to break them off And our Saviour when his Disciples were fainting in the storm calls for their Faith And when aspiring after the Primacy sets a little child before them as an emblem of Humility Dying Sardis he puts upon strengthening the things which remain and Nentral Laodicea upon Zeal to give her a fresh warmth in Religion Still the advice runs upon the contrary Grace the more that is actuated the more it roots and spreads in the Soul and the less room and place is left there for the contrary Sin Which I suppose was the reason why the Presbyter Sulpitius Severus being guilty of too much Loquacity ever after kept silence Spondan Annal. Vt peccatum quod loquendo contraxerat tacendo emendaret as the Historian expresses it 'T is a Precept of the Philosophers Arist Eth. lib. 2. c. 9. To observe what Vice we are most propense to and then to bend our selves to the contrary extream that we might come to the Virtue in the middle Faith though it dares not touch upon one contrary Sin to cure another would cast them both out by acting the contrary Grace Lastly Faith mortifies Sin in a way of dependence upon the Power and Spirit of God in and through Jesus Christ In the Covenant of Works in which there was no Mediator Man stood on his own bottom and had all his stock in his own hands But in the Covenant of Grace the Believer stands in the Power of God and though he have a little Grace in himself the main stock is above in a surer hand his life is hid with Christ in God there 's the great treasure out of which Faith fetches supplies of the Spirit for every good work hence in Scripture he is said To love live pray walk mortifie in the spirit If ye through the spirit do mortifie the deeds of the body ye shall live Rom. 8.13 He saith through the Spirit because there is no other way of mortifying Sin he that goes about this work in his own Power is but in a dream he knows nothing of the life of Faith as appears by that Antithesis which the Prophet makes between the Soul lifted up and the life of Faith Hab. 2.4 Such an one holds not the head Jesus Christ no more than the worshippers of Angels spoken of Col. 2.18 19. Whatever he may do theoretically he doth it not practically whilest his fleshly mind presumes that he can move about such a work though the Head in Heaven stir not his Mortification must needs be weak and powerless because without Christ the wisdom and power of God he goes out against his lusts as Samson did against the Philistines with his hair off or as the Israelites did against the Canaanites when the Lord was not among them Numb 14.32 instead of success he meets with that curse and blast which lights upon all Christlless persons and actions The most charitable Prayer that can be made for him is that of the Psalmist Fill their faces with shame that they may seek thy name O Lord Psal 83.16 St. Austin long struggled in his own strength against his Corruptions and all in vain at last a voice told him In te stas non stas Thou fallest O Austin by standing in thy self True Faith goes about this work in the Power and Spirit of Christ as under the Old Testament when Faith subdued outward Kingdoms as the Apostle speaks Heb. 11.33 it was by the Spirit the Spirit clothed upon Gideon and he smote a mighty Host of Midianites The Spirit came upon Samson and he slew heaps upon heaps of the Philistines So under the New when Faith subdues the inward Kingdom of Sin it is by the Spirit strengthening the Believer to overcome it the reign of Sin is broken because he is under Grace Here we see how old strong customary Sins such as are a second nature in Men come to be subdued it would be an hard nay almost impossible thing for a Moralist to unravel such a Sin meerly by contrary acts and those acts done by his own power and that power emasculated by a long tract of Sin But Faith draws down an Almighty Power and Spirit to the work that hyperbole of Power which raised up Christ from the dead is towards the Believer Ephes 1.19 That Spirit of life which is in Christ makes him free from the law of sin and death Rom. 8.2 The bands of Sin can no more hold him than those of Death could Christ when the glory of the Father came to raise him up In doing this great work Faith goes by these steps first Faith lays down this as a foundation That there is Power enough in God to subdue Sin or else he should not be an Infinite God and that Sin is capable of being subdued or else it would be an Infinite Monster That Power which can dry up the Sea or shake the Earth out of her place or raise up the Dead out of the dust or annihilate the World in a moment must be able to subdue Sin In the Prophet it is but the turn of his hand I will turn my hand upon thee and purely purge away they dross saith God Isa 1.25 And which comes nearer to us Faith is sure that this Power doth not stand off at a distance in the unapproachable Deity but is made over to Christ coming in the flesh He was anointed with the Holy Ghost and Power The fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him bodily And going up to Heaven he sate down at the right hand of Power all things being put under his feet And which yet is nearer this Power is made over to Christ as trustee and treaurer for his Church his Unction is to run down upon all Believers The fulness of the Godhead dwelt in him that they might be filled with it He sits at the right hand of Power that his enemies among which Sin is a chief one may be made his footstool All things are put under him that he might be Head over all to the Church letting down his vital influences and motions to it his great design is to make an end of Sin and to dissolve the works of the Devil And now nothing remains to draw down this Power to the Believer but the acting of Faith as Faith goes up Power comes down all things are possible to the Believer he can do all through Christ strengthening him It is but to look and be saved believe and be established wait and renew strength hand upon Jesus Christ and he who was Immanuel God
for his good and hence God doth not fulfil Promises of Temporals as he doth those of Spirituals Promises of Spirituals he fulfils in specie because they cannot otherwise be made good a drop of Grace being more worth than a World but those of Temporals he fulfils disjunctively either in the Blessing it self or in that which is equivalent by inward contentation and supportation compensating the absence of the thing it self These things being so the Believer in what he hath may experience the Promise in the true proportion and meaning of it and not withstanding his wants may know That in Christ he is so far heir of all things that if he could want a world he should have it As touching Spiritual Promises these are either Promises of Grace or Promises to Grace As touching Promises of Grace Faith may know these experimentally The Believer reads in his Bible That God hath promised to give an heart of flesh to make a new heart and a new spirit to write his Law in the heart to give an heart to know him to circumcise the heart that it may love him and many more such-like and afterwards reading over his own Heart he may find these precious Graces all there and be able experimentally to say of these Promises as Joshua did of those made to Israel Not one thing hath failed of all the good things which the Lord hath spoken all are come to pass Josh 23.14 In every holy melting he finds the heart of flesh in every holy frame the new heart and spirit in every holy inclination the inward engraven Law in every holy beam the Divine Teaching in every holy affection the Spiritual Circumcision all the Promises are scaled and really exemplified in his Heart and what an admirable experiment is this To see a Work within answering to the Promise in the Word is a greater sight than if a Man could have stood by and seen the light start forth into Being upon the Almighty fiat spoken by God in the Creation unto which the Apostle alludeth in setting forth the Divine light shining into the Heart in the face of Christ 2 Cor. 4.6 The Magnalia of Grace are more wonderful than those of nature Hence St. Chrysostom upon those words of the Apostle We are his workmanship created in Christ Jesus Ephes 2.10 saith of Regeneration That it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 really a Creation and more noble than the old one as adding a benè vivere to that life which came from the old one The experienced Believer hath cause to say what hath God wrought how fearfully is the New Creature made all its Graces were written in the Promise and now are fashioned in the Heart where before there were none of them How precious are thy thoughts to me O God how great is the sum of them This Experiment was notably typed out in Isaac he was by Promise and as soon as he was born the Promise was experimented notwithstanding the dead body and dead womb The Believer the child of Promise is as Isaac was saith the Apostle Gal. 4.28 All the regenerating Graces are by Promise and when these are brought forth the Promise is made good maugre all the deadness of nature By the Promises we are made partakers of the Divine Nature saith St. Peter 2 Pet. 1.4 that is we have those Divine Graces which as the Creature-module will admit resemble the Holy One and so we have the Promises sealed up to us in Graces As touching Promises made to Grace such as are fulfilled in this life Faith also experiments them to be Divine In the Scripture the Believer meets with Promises of Pardon to such as repent and believe of comfort to the mourner of filling to the hungry and thirsty of the Divine secret to them that fear God of encrease of Grace to the improver and many more of the same nature To experiment these the Believer by perusing the Scripture and his own Heart doth two things first He clears it up to himself that the Graces in his Heart to which such Promises are made are true through the irradiating Spirit vouchsafed to him He may discover them to be such by Scriptural Marks he may find that his Faith purifies and works by Love That his Repentance and Mourning are chiefly for Sin That his Hunger and Thirst are humble and industrious in the use of means That his Fear is of God and his Goodness in a filial way That his improving of Talents is in a way of dependence and holy diligence and so certainly knows that these Graces in his Heart are real things This foundation being first laid then he proceeds to a second review of his Heart and there he may find how Pardons have sensibly broke in upon him in a way of Repenting and Believing or how the Sheaves of Joy and Comfort have followed his Tears or how Satisfactions Manna-like have dropped down on his hungry Soul or how Divine illuminations have come in and Crowned his Holy Fear or how Talents have multiplied in the faithful using and actuating of them And the Experiment thereupon will be compleat every Grace sooner or later being in some good measure answered by the Promises which let out their sweetness to it as God hath ordained them to do Thus the Believer sensibly enters the Land of Promise and eats of the Fruit thereof lifting up his Soul in The high Praises of him who gave the Promises in the Scripture and fulfils them in the Heart As touching Promises of eternal good things in Heaven where there are Plenitudes of Joy and Rivers of Pleasure in the Presence of Him who is All in All the completion of these is in another World nevertheless the Believer hath an experimental taste thereof here Whilest his Hope hangs upon them he finds strength and comfort come into his Heart whilst the weary World is tossing with troubles O what a refreshing is it to look into Eternity Hope Eatring within the vail is an Anchor to the Soul and so stablishes it that it doth not rowl about with the wheelings of this changeable World nor center its happiness in any or all the Creatures Let the World come in all its Fancies and glittering appearances of Good it cannot call off the Believers Heart from Heaven but it will be ready to point that way or let it come with storms of terror and troubles it cannot loosen the Anchor-hold the Believer will rather part with all the World and his Life too then let go his hold of Heaven Ye took with joy the spoiling of your goods knowing in your selves that ye have in Heaven a better and an enduring substance saith the Apostle Hebr. 10.34 Or as the Words are in the Original Knowing that ye have in your selves a better and abiding substance in Heaven He speaks as if they had carried Heaven in and about them and in part they did so for as Beza hath it on this place Fide possidemus quod est in
cannot do it Among all Nations Seals are great Confirmatives When Darius but a man Signed the Decree though of Iniquity it was unalterable by the Law of the Medes and Persians Dan. 6.12 And what the Great God Seals in the Sacrament in a way of Grace and Mercy must much more be so by the Law of his own Truth and Faithfulness The Jews looking on the Rainbow bless God who remembers his Covenant and is faithful in his Promises as being sure that the World shall not be drowned again Much more may the Believer looking on the Bread and Wine do so as sure of Pardon and Salvation in and through Christ But you will say Gods Seal indeed is sure but our Disposition is uncertain and how can we know that we are worthy Receivers I answer Very well The worthiness required is not that of condignity but that of congruity The least Grace if true though but a bruised reed and smoaking flax amounts to a capacity May we not know That we truly hunger and thirst after Christ when we inwardly feel a pinching and pressing necessity of him equal to or rather more than any want in Nature May we not find That our Faith in God is right when it assimilates us to his Holiness as well as rests in his Grace and puts forth Obedience to his Commands as well as Affiance towards his Promises May we not say That we love him indeed when the main stream of our hearts runs towards him when at least in endeavour we obey him in every Command seek him in every Ordinance glorifie him in every Condition and prize him in every Saint Hath he not bid us welcom to the Sacrament Hath he not anointed us with fresh Oyl of Grace and Joy whilst we have sat at his Table Have we not been clothed with Power against our Corruptions Have not our Hearts been enlarged and refreshed from the Presence of God there How many melting and ravishing Prospects of a Crucified Christ have we there enjoyed And what beams of Heaven and Eternity have broke in upon us in the very Duty These things to Believers who have the exercise of their spiritual Senses are so obvious that they may easily and surely conclude That God hath indeed welcomed them to his Table and there Sealed Pardon and Salvation to them In this rich estate a Believer may bid all Scruples be gone and in an holy manner say to his Soul Soul take thy ease thou hast much goods laid up for eternity Thou art now secure of Pardon and Salvation The Holy Spirit hath Sealed them to thy Heart and the Sacraments to thy very Sense and Conscience witnesses to both as True and Infallible and what can be more Nothing remains but to keep thy self in the Love of God till he take thee up to the pure bliss above CHAP. XIV Of the Ways in which the Assurance of Faith is attained With the Conclusion of the whole THus much touching the first thing That Assurance is attainable I now proceed to the other viz. The ways in which it is attained All which are as so many further Arguments to prove it attainable Were it not so the All-wise God would not set down ways for the attaining thereof Impossibles are not to be sought after Assurance however difficult is not impossible The Scripture hath chalked out a Method how to arrive at it which I shall endeavour to open in the ensuing Discourse In the first place He who would attain Assurance must give Grace and Christ their due All spiritual Blessings grow upon Grace as an eternal Root and hang upon Christ as the Tree of Life In particular Assurance is a Blessing proper to the Covenant of Grace In the Covenant of Works there was no Assurance or Perseverance because the whole managery was left to Mans Will But in the Covenant of Grace these are to be found in Believers because God undertakes the work This is the rather to be marked because man under the Covenant of Works was in a state of Innocency and perfect Holiness and under the Covenant of Grace is in a state of Weakness and Imperfection and yet there through Faith he arrives at Assurance and Perseverance which were never reached under the First Covenant Saint Paul in the 10th Chapter to the Romans notably distinguishes between the Righteousness of the Law and the Righteousness of Faith The Righteousness of the Law is That the man which doth those things shall live in them No Life or Peace but upon perfect Obedience which is impossible and beyond the line of man lapsed nay of man regenerate in this life Hence the Conscience of those who would enter into Peace at this Door must needs be dubious and full of trembling anxieties But the Righteousness of Faith speaketh on this wise Say not in thine heart Who shall ascend into Heaven Doubt not whether thou shalt have a part there this is to bring Christ down from above He is gone to Heaven and hath carried his Merits thither to prepare a place for thee there Such a doubt denies his Ascension and so as it were brings him down again Neither say in thine heart Who shall descend into the deep Doubt not as if thou shouldst be turned into Hell this is to bring up Christ again from the dead He is already risen and hath triumphed over Death and Hell Such a doubt denies his Death and Resurrection and doth as it were bring him again from the dead But what saith the Righteousness of Faith The Word the Promise of Pardon and Salvation is nigh thee O Believer in thy mouth and in thy heart confessing and believing on the Lord Jesus thou shalt be saved Thou in particular thy Soul shall dwell at ease thy Conscience shall enter into rest in the Covenant of Grace To doubt of it is to deny the Resurrection and Ascension of Christ He therefore who would have Assurance must give Grace and Christ their due One would think that the Papists who hold That they may by perfect Obedience reach the apex of the Law and go beyond it in works of Supererogaton and climb Heaven it self by their own Merits might arrive at Assurance much rather than Protestants who instead of exceeding the Law confess themselves much short of it and instead of meriting Heaven acknowledg all their Righteousnesses to be but a filthy rag But it is far otherwise the Papists generally do not so much as doctrinally hold it save here and there a man among them such as Antonius Marinarius who in the Council of Trent asserted it concluding his Speech thus Si Coelum ruat si Terra evanescat si orbis illabatur praeceps ego in Deum erectus ero Much-like the Prophet Habakkuk who in an universal languishment of nature would yet rejoice in the Lord the God of his Salvation much less do they practically arrive at it Bellarmine himself after his fair life died not like a Bolton or a Rivet not knowing whether
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
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
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
the unregenerate man with all his notions lies as a man in a Lethargy never feeling the weight of sin and wrath though heavier then rocks and mountains nor indeed savouring the sweetness of Christ and grace though infinitely out-relishing all the things in nature But as soon as faith comes there are all the senses of the inward man a seeing the sun of righteousness an hearing the sweet charms of Gospel-grace a smelling the odours of Christ and the holy unction a tasting how good and gracious the Lord is and a touching and handling the word of life The Learned Anatomists curiously pry into the head to find out the commune Sensorium where all the species and images of sensible things meet together In the spiritual man faith is an universal sense taking in all the species and images of heavenly things into the heart The learned Junius with all his notions coming into a poor Country mans house and hearing him discourse warmly and feelingly of Christ immediately thought that Religion was more then a notion and thereupon reflecting on himself was turned unto God and no doubt sound by experience that faith was much fuller of life and sense then meer notion Fifthly The meer notional knowledge gathered in by reason puffeth up as if some of the Serpents poison were in it it blows up the heart into proud reflexes Bonaventure to keep his mind from swelling used to sweep rooms and wash vessels I suppose it was lest his School-notions should swell and make a tumor in his heart But the light of faith is an humbling thing If it enter in within the vail and see God on his Throne it cries out as the Prophet Isaiah Wo is me I am undone If it fly up to Sinai and sense the thunders and lightnings of the fiery Law it puts the soul into a trembling sit If it go a pilgrimage to Calvary and there take a view of Christ crucified it is greatly abasive bowing the heart down under the conscience of sin If it look inwardly into the heart and there see the silthy and nasty corruptions in every corner it will far more humble then Bonaventures sweeping and washing And the reason of this difference is meer notions are but the progeny and issue of our own reason and therefore we are apt to be fond and fall a cockling of them But supernatural light comes from above and is ushered in with a kind of majesty and therefore humbles and makes us fall down and say God is in it of a truth Sixthly The meerly notional knowledge is but superficial a flash and away a light tast such as was in those Apostates Heb. 6.5 a word sown but unrooted such as that in the stony ground Mat. 13.21 But the light of faith is another thing it is truth in the hidden parts Psal 51.6 wisdom entring into the heart Prov. 2.10 and a word ingrafted or innaturalized in the mind Jam. 1.21 As an appendix to this difference I may add another meer notions being but superficial things floating in the brain do not so establish the heart in Religion as that supernatural light which intimately mixes it self with the heart Hence many Princes and Grandees of the Letter have been sick with intellectual bottles and shamefully reeled up and down in Articles of Faith Some stumbling in the mire of gross Pelagianism and others rowling in the ditch of foul Socinianism with them Christs Deity is but somnium Athanasii and original sin but Augustini sigmentum such horrid spuing from learned mouths hath been made on the glory of Religion And no wonder for the notionalist wants that love of the truth which is an antidote against errors and that pure conscience which is the Cabinet of Divine mysteries On the other hand supernatural light is a more establishing thing the Apostle calls it 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the firmament of faith Col. 2.5 all the heavenly truths are there as so many fixed stars in their Orb. Gerson relates this story A man vexed with doubts in Articles of Faith at last came to such a certainty in them that he no more doubted of them then of his own life and this he had saith he Non ex ratione aut demonstratione sed ex humiliatione ac admirabili quâdam Dei illuminatione à montibus aeternis All grace because divine hath an establishing property and among the rest so hath the light of faith because it comes from the eternal mountains Seventhly Meer notions are very apt to fume up into niceties and vain curiosities A famous instance of this we have in the School-men whose books are the spiders house made of cobwebs and fine subtleties and those spun up into the Palace of the celestial King and there fastned upon the ineffables of God and the sacred Trinity as if these might be wrapped up in the quiddities of reason and Philosophy insomuch as a learned Divine startled at this audacious vanity saith he reads the School-men about such things as he hears men swear or take Gods name in vain even seldom unwillingly and with horror And the learned Capito who professed Scholastical Divinity was soon weary thereof because there is subtilitatis multum utilitatis parum found therein But supernatural light doth not vapor upwards into niceties and curious questions but influence downwards into the will and affections It brings the day of power into the heart and makes a willing people the holy unction drops from the head to the heart and sets all on a flame with love to God and Christ and heavenly things wisdom speaks excellent things Prov. 8.6 or as the original is it speaks princes or princely things holy things are such in themselves But when they are taken in by faith they have a mighty power in the soul Gods command to Abraham entring by faith wrought down into his will and he offered up his Isaack Gods warning to Noah entring by faith wrought down into his fear and he prepared an Ark. The word works effectually in them that believe filling the inward man with holy affections and the outward with holy fruits I shall conclude this difference with an excellent simily of a worthy Divine A child and a man come into a corn field together the child falls in love with the blue and red weeds but the man is for the solid corn a man of meer notions falls in love with curiosities and fine speculations but a man of supernatural light is for the spiritual and practical truths in Scripture these are the corn his soul must live upon whilest the other are but gaieties and for a shew Thus far I have spoken what this supernatural light is I shall now proceed to shew that it is requisite to faith and this will appear in the particulars following First Unless a man know that God is he cannot believe how can he rest on the testimony of him whom he knows not to have a being This proposition Deus est is according to Aquinas the
irrationality Secondly Let us compare the fallibility of Reason with the infallibility of Scripture When the Papists lift up the Pope as supream judge in matters of Religion it is a sufficient answer to tell them the first Clement held the Platonical community of all things even of wives Marcellinus sacrificed to Idols Liberius subscribed to Arianism Innocent the first taught that little ones could not be saved without the Eucharist Vigilius was an Eutychian Honorius a Monothelite Hildebrand a brand of hell and impiously diabolical John the 23th was accused in the Council of Constance of this opinion That the souls of men dye with their bodies even as the souls of brutes and should such be judges in matters of Religion When the Socinian by subjecting articles of Faith unto Reason makes not one but as many Popes as men we need say no more to him but humanum est errare reason is a fallible thing The Philosophers were the Patriarchs of heretiques Platonical Philosophy in the Fathers and Aristotelical in the Schoolmen hath much debased the truths of God saith a great Divine All the errors and heresies which have swarmed abroad in all ages have been the progeny of corrupt Reason upon this the devil begets all the black monstrous opinions which crawl within doors in the Church or without in the Pagan world And should such a thing as this come and sit in judgment on the pure words of God which are surer then the voice of Angels and stand faster then the pillars of heaven and earth which in so many successions of Ages never contracted the least speck of falshood or shed a leaf in the fall of the least tittle or iota thereof Surely when reason thus forgets it self and its own fallibility it degrades it self and becomes unreasonable Thus far of the irrationality of the Socinian faith But Secondly The nullity of it is considerable it is a nullity in its foundation and at last it proves a nullity in the consequence It is a nullity in its foundation the Socinian believes the Scriptures not as a divine testimony but as congruous to reason and so trusts not in God but in himself and his own heart Thus Socinus expresses himself Non generalem comprobandi rationem quaerimus quod eam qui dixit ejusmodi esse appareat ut nullâ in re mentiri posset sed singularem quandam quâ id nominatim quod comprobandum est per causas effecia propria ita se babere demonstratur adeò ut non modò quia Deum ipsum dixisse appareat id verum esse constet sed etiam quia verum esse appareat id Deum dixisse nobis certò persuadeamus Qaomodo poterat clariùs prodere 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 suam saith a Learned man how could he more clearly betray his infidelity he would not have us only believe a thing true because God says so but believe also that God says so because it appears true to our own reason where this is the foundation faith is a meer nullity and that which is a nullity in the foundation at last proves a nullity in the consequence Reason corrupting it self in its own pride casts away the found principles of the Gospel and these being gone putrifies in abominable errors like Herod assuming a Deity to himself it is spiritually smitten of God and eaten up of worms I mean those errors which are but the putrefactions of reason How do the Socinians Paganize in worshipping a creature a Christ whom they deny to be God Mahometize in denying the sacred Trinity Judaize in standing for an interpreting Messiah only and not a satisfying one Manicheize in undervaluing the old Testament Arianize in denying the Deity of Christ Pelagianize in denying original sin Anabaptize in denying baptism to infants how do some of them Divelaze in horrid blasphemies calling the sacred Trinity tricipitem Cerberum and to those who assert Jesus Christ to be Gods son asking An Deus habuit uxorem Whether God had a wise and such like hellish stuff in which much of the devil appears After all this fearful shipwiack of faith what remains too too little to denominate them Christians Ignatius called the Ebionites because they denied Christs Deity men-worshippers the antiont Church styled the Samosatenians upon the same account God-killers and a great Divine passed this censure on the Socinians that they were a company of baptized Turks indeed their corrupted reason dissolves their faith into little or nothing Fifthly This belief must be such as owns the holy Scriptures for the rule of faith To the Law and to the testimony saith the Prophet If they speak not according to this word it is because here is no light in them Isa 8.20 As soon as the morning of faith breaks in the heart the word is owned as the rule Enthusiasts going oft from the Scriptures take the spirit for their rule Swenckfield was altogether for the spirit and the internal word and little or nothing at all for the external Henry Nicholas boasting of the holy anointing looked on the Scripture as a literal fleshly elementish thing John Valdesso saith that Christians may at first serve themselves with Scripture as an Alphabet but afterwards leaving it to beginners they attend to their proper Master the spirit of God Others say the Scripture is but a dead letter a thing of paper and ink and we must not try the living by the dead the holy spirit by the Scripture Such as these bragging of their own revelations call all other Christians Vocalists and Literalists because of their adherence to the Scriptures Mr. Saltmarsh makes three sphears of administration the Law or meer letter the Gospel which hath duty and grace in it and the spirit the pure spirit which is the third heaven higher then Scriptures and ordinances The Weigelians talk of a seculum Spiritus Sancti in which there shall be higher dispensations then before and we shall be wiser then Apostles The Quakers make the light within that is as I take it natural conscience the standard of all their actings All these though clothed in various words agree together to crucifie the Scriptures as if they had somewhat more noble Unto them I shall offer some considerations First The Apostles direction is Try the spirits whether they are of God 1 Joh. 4.1 in the original 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 try them as Goldsmiths try metals by the touchstone or by the fire or as Magistrates question offenders or examine those that stand for an office use all manner of ways to find out whether the spirits be right or not upon this as a sufficient warrant I shall put some interrogatories to the Enthusiast Thou sayest the spirit of God is in thy heart and is it not in the Scriptures too and where-ever it is is it not congruous and harmonious to it self And what doth it say in the Scripture doth it not say that the Scripture is the rule To the Law and to the testimony
saith the Prophet Isa 8.20 the Law of the Lord is perfect converting the soul the testimony of the Lord is sure making wise the simple saith the Psalmist Psal 19.7 The Scripture is able to make us wise to salvation and perfect throughly furnished unto all good works saith the Apostle 2 Tim. 3.15 17. Nay such a rule it is that nothing must be added to it nor diminished from it Dent. 4.2 no not by an Angel If an Angel from heaven preach any other Gospel to you let him be accursed Gal. 1.8 And can the spirit in the heart contradict the spirit in the Scripture can it be contrary to it self and depart from its own oracles no surely defectible creatures may be off and on yea and nay in their words but the holy spirit cannot be so The war between Constantius and Magnentius was looked upon as very portentous because therein first cross was carried against cross and Christians engaged against fellow-Christians but that the holy spirit should make war upon it self is a portentous contradiction which if allowed would leave no being to Gods veracity nor standing unto mans faith But as portentous as it is the Enthusiast must maintain it unless he will confess that the spirit in him which denies the Scripture to be the rule is not of God Again thou saiest thou hast the revelation of the holy spirit but how or in what manner doth it reveal it self in thee I suppose thou dost not pretend to a Revelation made by visions or dreams or audible voices as it was wont to be of old but to a revelation intellectual and that is double the one extraordinary in Prophets and Apostles the other ordinary in all true believers In the first revelation made to Prophets and Apostles the holy spirit did immediately infuse the species intelligibiles into their minds and thereby did internally speak and in a proper sense reveal things unto them What we translate the beginning of the word of the Lord by Hosea Hos 1.2 is in the original the beginning of the speech of Jehovah in Hosea pointing out an internal locution to the Prophet In the second revelation made to believers there is no such thing as in the first no immediate infusion of species no internal voice or locution saying this or that is so and therefore no revelation properly so called but the holy spirit doth enlighten their minds to make them capable and then they hear what the holy spirit in the Scriptures speaks unto them thus S. Paul on the behalf of the Ephesians prays for the spirit of wisdom and revelation not that they might have extraordinary inspirations but that the eyes of their understanding might be inlightned Eph. 1.17 18. To know the witness of God in the Gospel the holy spirit doth not speak to their inlightned understandings immediately but in and by the Scripture-medium which is as it were Epistola Dei Gods letter unto man In the first revelation to the Prophets and Apostles the holy spirit did so totally and in such an extraordinary way govern them in their speaking and writing that therein there was nibil suum nothing of their own not only the matter but quaevis vocula every little word was of God hence S. Peter saith that they were 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 moved or carried upon the wings of the spirit above humane frailty 2 Pet. 1.21 In the second revelation to believers the holy spirit is as an holy anointing to their minds and thereby puts them into a capacity to hear what God speaks in the Scripture but it doth not so totally carry and rule them as to make their words purely divine and free from all mixture of their own The first revelation to the Prophets and Apostles being purely immediate and extraordinary makes authentical Scripture The second revelation to believers being but ordinary doth not make Scripture but only capacitate their minds to take in the manifestations of the spirit therein These things premised I must renew my question Say O Enthusiast what is thy revelation is it a pure immediate internal locution is it extraordinary and carried by the spirit above all humane frailty may it be added to the Canon and become Scripture I suppose thou canst not darest not say so but if thou dost read and tremble at the sealing up of the Canon Rev. 22.18 If any man shall add unto these things God shall add unto him the plagues written in this book and if any man shall take away from them God shall take away his part out of the book of life and out of the holy city These words are as a flaming sword at the end of the Bible to keep thee from presuming to put any thing thereunto Say then modestly is not thy revelation ordinary did not the holy spirit come to thee in the chariot of the Scripture and why then doest thou slight and undervalue it why doest thou call it a dead letter a fleshly elementith thing and the like God hath spoken once yea twice if I may so allude once in the Old Testament and again in the New expect not to hear his voice or spirit any where else but there if thou doest thou puttest a cheat upon thy self and instead of a revelation embracest a meer fancy Again the spirit is in thy heart and the spirit is in the Scripture but where is the greatest measure of it say in good earnest is there a greater measure of the spirit in thy heart then in the Scripture then thou canst unriddle all the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the difficult knots in Scripture thou canst dive down into that divine abyss and fetch up all the holy mysteries there thy holiness can hold measure with the length and breadth of the pure spiritual Law thy faith runs parallel with all the promises and can tell over all that infinite Mass of free-grace which is couched therein the hellish root of bitterness once in thy nature is quite eradicated and not a string of concupiscence left behind thou canst say I have no sin and which is the wonder thy heart doth not deceive thee in saying so there are no shades or dark spots in thy mind no cracks or flaws at all in thy obedience no 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nothing lacking in thy faith or other graces All in thy heart and life is as right as the rule and as pure as the Christal streams in the Gospel If there be a greater measure of the spirit in thy heart then in the Scripture thus it is with thee but I hope thou art not so utterly void of the spirit and conscience as to fall into so proud a dream of thy estate If thou saiest thou art clean that very word pollutes thee quisquis se inculpatum dixerit aut superbus aut stultus est whosoever saith so is either a fool or a proud man Say then as the truth is there is a greater incomparably greater measure of the spirit in the Scripture
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
his faith eyes the soveraignty of it naturally we would be Gods to our selves and set up our wills as supream and therefore we make war upon God and his Law But when faith comes God is God and the Law a royal Law and all the commands in Power and Majesty by them saith David is thy sorvant warned or as it is in the Hebrew illustrated Psal 19.11 the command to the believer is as if a light shone from heaven and a voice came from the excellent glory saying Do this or that Gods will rides in triumph and mans falls to the earth as not able to stand before the Lord The voice of a superior if perceived puts an awe upon the inferior nature so doth the voice of man upon beasts so doth the voice of Angels upon men and which is the greatest awe because from the highest nature so doth the voice of God upon the believer After this manner doth faith yield up the soul to the command and in it to God and Christ Thus far of the fourth thing resignation for a holy government Fifthly Faith resigns up the soul for the gracious reward of eternal life And here to keep the old Method First This resignation is made to Jesus Christ the Mediator Faith cannot be satisfied with earth that 's but the Paradise of sense no nor with present graces these are but the pawns and earnest-pennies of eternal life faith aspires after heaven Oh! let me go over and see the good Land where the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Mountains are all spices the Rivers pleasures the Air pure holiness the Eternal light God himself saith faith and for a title thereunto faith yields up the soul to Christ who as a Priest hath merited heaven for us and as a King is able to give it out to us The Plebeian saith Epictetus looks for his gain from things without the Philosopher looks for it from himself but which is a strain higher the Believer looks for his reward from Christ Evagrius the Philosopher gave as the story goes three hundred pounds to Synesius for the poor to be repaid him by Christ in another world the believer doth all at the same rate hears and reads and prays and gives alms and all to be paid in another world Worldly men wonder at his hot pursuits after grace and holiness but he knows what these will go for in another world that 's the reason he follows hard after them but in the pursuit still his eyes are upon Christ as the great purchasor and pay-master Secondly This resignation in and through the Mediator is made to God It is he that glorifieth eternal life is Gods gift our heavenly Fathers meer pleasure faith therefore yields up the soul to him for it and herein it climbs up to him by his free-grace the pure river of life flows out of the throne of God and of the Lamb Rev. 22.1 out of the regnant grace of God and merit of Christ as out of a fountain the believer expects no eternal life but what issues out from thence Thus the Reverend Soknius on his death bed expressed himself Pendeo totus à Dei miserieordiâ I wholly depend on Gods mercy Thirdly This resignation is made to the Word There is the promise of eternal life extant and there the way to eternal life is chalked out there is the promise of eternal life mapped out a mercy above all the sphear of nature Hence the antient believers were as pilgrims here Heb. 11.13 as if the world were too little for them they were altogether for the heavenly country which faith sees at a distance in the promise There also the way to eternal life is chalked out the world passes away but he that doth the will of God abideth for ever 1 Joh. 2.17 Riches and pleasures are but the way of time but holiness and righteousness are the way everlasting Psal 139.24 the good acts may pass but their record is in heaven the good men must dye but the holiness shall never see corruption the repentant tears which fall to the earth are bottled with God the charity which seems lost as bread cast on the waters will come to hand again Polycrates when he cast his ring into the sea little thought to have met it again in his fish but the believer doing good works expects to meet them again in another world sowing to the spirit he looks for a crop in eternal life Dorcas may leave her coats and garments behind her but the charity will follow her into another world the commandement is eternal life saith our Saviour Joh. 12.50 the very way to it The believer obeying may in some sense say as dying Pollio jam ingredior in vitam aeternam now I am entring into eternal life into that which will survive the world and live in glory Faith resigns to the word not only as it is the charter of eternal life in the promise but as it is the director to it in the command Thus far of the second thing for what things and purposes this resignation is made But to proceed to the third thing Thirdly What are the Adjuncts and Properties of this resignation Vnto which I shall answer in the following particulars First This resignation is made in the way of God Believers wait upon God for very great things Since the beginning of the world men have not heard nor perceived by the ear neither hath the eye seen O God besides these what he hath prepared for him that waiteth for him saith the Prophet Isa 64.4 But where do they wait for these great things where but in Gods own way Thus it follows those that remember thee in thy ways v. 5. Look in what way or method God gives out a mercy in the same way or method doth faith wait to receive it Would a man have a pardon faith waits for it in Gods way free-grace as immense a sea as it is in God doth not flow out every way upon sinners but through the bleeding wounds of Christ We are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that is in Jesus Christ saith the Apostle Rom. 3.24 Mark free-grace issues out through redemption and in that way faith waits for it Thus St. Peter We believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved Act. 15.11 he calls the grace of God the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ as being merited by him The believer waits for pardoning mercy but it must be the mercy of David coming through the Messiah the true David Whether God might not per potentiam suam absolutam remit sin without a satisfaction is a question may be spared Gods will is declared the Scripture is definitive there is no other name given among men but the name of Jesus no other remission but through his blood the glory of the Lord that is his free-grace comes into the Temple of the Church by the way of the East Ezek. 43.2 that
divided Christ as this is is not the Christ of God but a Christ of his own fancy one that will save him in his sins and justifie him in his ungodliness he that believes in such a Christ doth at once miserably cheat his own soul and as much as in him lieth profanely trample on the blood of Christ as if it were shed on purpose that sinful men might have the reins laid down on their necks to riot in their cursed lusts with all impunity Moreover as to the word of God the believer is for all of it he is not only for cordials and pots of Manna and distillations of grace in the promises but for precepts also his meat and his drink is to do the will of his Father in heaven whilest his eyes are on the Land of promise his feet are in the Land of uprightness Antinomians boast themselves to be above the Law and as free as if they were in heaven and that their sins are but seeming sins sins to sense and to the world outwardly but no sins to faith and before God who seeth no sin in them But alass these are but swelling words of vanity to be above the Law is Antichrist-like to be above God himself whose Majesty and holiness break forth in it and if sins be but seeming sins the Law is but a seeming Law and God whose authority and sanctity shine forth in it is but a seeming God Promises and Precepts run together in the Scripture and must be taken together into the heart by faith Promises are effluxes out of Gods grace and faith takes them in by recumbency Precepts are effluxes out of Gods holiness and faith takes them in by obediential subjection both must continue and be owned by faith as long as there are grace and holiness in God The true believer neither with the Antinomian picks out the promises from the precepts nor yet with the Hypocrite doth he pick out only such commands as do not cross his beloved lusts as the Papists have razed out the second Commandement in some of their Catechisms because of their outward images so the Hypocrite razes out the displeasing Commandements in his practice because of the Idol-lusts in his heart but the true believer as David is for all the wills of God without any salvoes because without any indulged lusts Thirdly This resignation is made purely upon a Scriptural warrant There may be hay and stubble in the believer but there is none in his faith which so far as it is faith stands only upon holy ground All faiths assents stand upon Scripture-propositions all its affiances upon Scripture-promises and all its obedience upon Scripture-precepts What Balaam said by an over-ruling providence that saith the believer by the instinct of faith I cannot go beyond the word of the Lord to do less or more Num. 22.18 he would not as to doctrinals be wise above what is written nor as to worship be religious above what is written nor as to mercies and comforts be an expectant above what is written He would not as to doctrinals be wise above what is written when the Lutherans and Papists met at Ratisbon the Papists would first dispute about the Canon of Faith the Lutherans replyed that the Scriptures were the only rule at which the Papists cried out that it was very unequal to tye them to one kind of weapon only but faith is content with Scriptural doctrines only There is one Mediator in Scripture and faith dares not multiply them there is one Scripture purgatory in Christs blood and faith will not invent another there is one propitiatory sacrifice offered up once for all upon the Cross and faith will not seek after any more All the points in Popery are but so many additions to the word and upon that account insignificant to faith The first error in the first sin was an addition to the word the woman saying ye shall not touch it Gen. 3.3 whereas Gods word only was ye shall not eat of it Gen. 2.17 and the first and primordial error which hath ushered in all the Romish doctrines into the Church hath been the very same thing and because they are additions faith cannot own them no not faith in a Papist opinion may own them but faith cannot for it is but the souls Eccho to the voice of God in Scripture and where there is no voice there can be no return humane doctrines found not at all to faith Scripture is all Bishop Fisher a little before his suffering lighting on that one sweet passage this is life eternal to know thee and Jesus Christ Joh. 17.3 brake out into these words here 's learning enough for me the believer who hath the whole Scripture before him may well say here 's doctrine enough for me faith will not turn vagrant and lye about at humane doors for doctrines there is enough in the word Again the believer would not as to worship be religious above what is written that of the Schoolmen cultus est à naturâ modus à lege virtus à gratiâ worship is from nature the manner from the Law the power from grace is very excellent The very light of nature saith God is to be worshipped but faith goes to the word for the manner and to free-grace for the power God in the second Commandement forbids graven Images not as false objects of worship which are forbidden in the first Commadement but as false means and manner of worship and under graven Images as being the chiefest and groffest kind of false worship God doth forbid all other false worship humanely devised such as these were hence true faith looks on all humanely devised worships as so many graven Images a kind of Teraphim expressing though not as they did an humane shape yet an humane devise and invention things void of God without institution and without benediction That of the Prophet who hath required this at your hand Isa 1.12 falls like thunder on all the imagery of humane inventions dashing them to pieces in a moment Quintinus the Libertine being present at a solemn Mass with a Cardinal boasted that he saw the glory of God I suppose according to his loose principles of being under no outward Law he would have said as much if he had been among Pagans at their Idolatrous worship but the true believer looks for that glory only in the Sanctuary of Divine Institutions there and there only God records his Name and commands the blessing even life for evermore Moreover the believer as to mercies and comforts would not be an expectant above what is written 'T is said of Moses that he died according to the word of the Lord Deut. 38.5 or as the Original may be read he died upon the mouth of the Lord the believer loves to live and dye upon Gods mouth in the promises there watching for the sweet words of grace dropping from him he walks among the Promises as the Physitian among his herbs and by a divine
instant of faith is no longer in himself or the old Adam but a man in Christ hence the same royal robe of righteousness which Christ hath upon himself covers him also which renders faith exceeding precious George Prince of Anhalt was upon this account much delighted with this similitude As the ring is highly prized for the diamond in it so faith justifies us for the pearl of price the Son of God whom it apprehends the believer is found in Christ not having his own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is through the faith of Christ Phil. 3.9 Hence also the very same spirit of holiness which is upon Christ in heaven above measure falls down upon the believer according to measure a piece of bread is a poor imnimate thing in it salt but when by digestion it comes into the body and is transubstantiated into flesh there is an humane spirit in it a man before faith is an earthly carnal thing but as soon as by faith he becomes a member of Christ a piece as it were of his flesh and of his bones he hath another spirit in him even the same with Christ Christ above and he below and the same spirit in both a great mystery such as a naked assent cannot reach unto he that hath no more is but a glass eye or wooden leg in the body of Christ or rather he is not at all in it but outwardly tied to it by a name and form of knowledge without any part in the righteousness or spirit of Christ Fourthly By virtue of its union with Christ Precious faith bears many excellent fruits it ushers in a spiritual life into the soul that of the Prophet the just shall live by his faith thrice quoted by St. Paul in the New Testament is exemplisied in every believer but he that hath but a naked assent though with a goodly structure of Evangclical truths standing upon it is but a dead man and his notions like the Egyptian Pyramides are but monuments for the dead Again it brings down pardon of sin into the soul whosoever believeth in him that is in Christ shall receive remission of sins Acts 10.43 but a naked assent leaves a man as fast in the 〈◊〉 of guilt as ever before Moreover it purifies the heart and quenches the fiery darts of Satan it carries out the dust and rubbish out of the heart and makes it a sanctuary or holy place for God and if Satan come and let fly his temptations it beats them off from the soul Thus Bucer when in his sickness he was admonished to arm himself against Satan answered in Christo sum nihil habeo cum diabolo commune I am in Christ and have nothing in common with Satan but where there is only a naked assent the holy truths going no further then the Understanding the Will is left in the mire and pollution of its lusts and is ready as soon as the tempter comes to join with his seducing proffers Thus far of the first proposition that faith is more then a naked assent Secondly The second proposition is That faith is less then an assurance of love and pardon from God only we must first distinguish between faith in the root and faith in the flower between faith in the lowest stature and faith in its full-grown perfections That assurance which the infant faith cannot reach the full-grown faith may arrive at which I suppose was the reason that those prime Reformers Luther and Calvin and after them Beza and Zanchy with many others did define faith by a plerophory or full perswasion of Gods love they being themselves in the joys of faith drew its picture not according to the infant model but the perfect lineaments thereof as they found them in themselves so they held them out to the world Again we must distinguish between seminal assurance and actual an infant faith hath seminal assurance light is sown for the righteous Psal 97.11 but the crop of comfort doth not immediately spring up the weakest believer is heir to all the joys of heaven only he doth not presently know his title he hath not ordinarily actual assurance at the very first I say not ordinarily for we must not limit the holy one who by his royal prerogative may let in the sweet sense of his love in the first instant of believing These distinctions premised the meaning of the proposition is That faith in its lowest measure which is the condition of the Gospel doth not essentially include assurance And this I shall manifest by the ensuing considerations First All true believers have not assurance Scripture and experience manifest it there are Lambs which are gathered into the arms and laid in the bosome of free-grace yet know not where they are There are little ones babes in Christ which can only hang upon the breast and are not grown up into the reflections and joys of faith the poor in spirit the mourners the hungry and thirsty after righteousness mentioned in the fifth chapter of Matthew are all of them true believers blessed ones and heirs of the promises and yet all of them are without any glimpse of assurance the poor in spirit all in rags of unworthiness and self-nothingness as if he had no title to the kingdom the mourners weeping and desolate like Hagar in the wilderness with her bottle spent as if there were no Well of comfort near them the hungry and thirsty like men in a famine drooping and fainting away in fits of soul-emptiness as if there were no such thing as hidden Manna for them It is very observable in the Canticles that Christ takes notice of the tender grape just at its first appearing the very first opening or budding forth of faith is welcom to him if the wine be but in the cluster if there be but faith in desire Christ saith destroy it not the blessing of Abraham is in it out of this little grain of mustard-seed heaven will grow in this smoking slax there 's a divine spark though the smoak of doubts and temptations muffle it up in obscurity it will break out at last into slames of love and joy in the infant-believers assurance is not to be expected because of their primordial weakness and in well-grown believers it may be suspended because of Gods infinite soveraignty in the dispensing thereof as he pleaseth Cruciger on his death-bed prayed thus Invoco te Domine languidâ imbecillâ side sed side tamen Lord I call upon thee with a weak and languishing faith but yet with a faith Pious Justus Jonas who was present with Luther at his death and took as it were his last breath into his bosome was in his own sickness sainting and cold-hearted till a servant of his rubbed him up with some comforts out of the Gospel Holy Bayn saith of himself I thank God sustentation in Christ I have and some little strength suavities spiritual I tast not any even the choice servants of God may walk in
the presentiality of all these Job looks through the worms and dust upon a resurrection my Redeemer liveth saith he Job 19.25 though I dye my Redeemer liveth and will fetch me up again if there were an Engine made which could pull away all the intermediate bodies between us and the heaven of heavens we might look into Paradise faith doth the same thing spiritually it puts by the world and time and lies at the door of heaven and eternity Thus the Apostle we look not at the things temporal but at the eternal 2 Cor. 4.18 he puts by all temporal things which as the lower heavens hold back the face of Gods throne and so he looks into eternity There is a story of an Oxford Monk who by his skill in Magick conveyed himself into the Northern Regions and there took a view of the Pole the believer by the art of faith doth much more in conveying himself out of this world and taking a view of eternity in the promises he sees heaven opening and letting down some sparkles of glory in the threatnings he sees hell flaming and some of the fire unquenchable breaking out heaven and hell are no longer notions but sensations in the raptures and joyes of faith he hath been caught up into Paradise and there drunk of the wine of Angels in convictions and deep humiliations he hath been as it were at Gods barr and hanging over the bottomless pit As to seeming contradictions the believer hath a rare dexterity to enucleate them Touching which I shall give some instances God commanded Abraham offer up thy son thine only son Isaac to offer up a son was a seeming contradiction to nature to offer up an Isaac a son of promise was a seeming contradiction to Gods truth who before had said in Isaac shall thy seed be called but faith unlocks all these difficulties God is able to raise him up from the dead saith Abraham and from thence he received him in a figure Heb. 11.19 a parallel to this we may find in all true believers the children of Abraham God calls upon them mortifie the deeds of the body and ye shall live mortifie and live is a seeming contradiction to offer up our only ones our wills our loves our joys to be slain looks like a piece of unnaturalness but what saith faith it is no such matter offer up your only ones your wills your loves your joys unto God and you shall receive them again from the dead raised up in the incorruption of the new-creature that which was sown a natural will natural love and natural joy shall be raised up a spiritual will spiritual love and spiritual joy your souls before dead in sins shall have the life of God in them this is the first resurrection such things as these nature laughs at as strange paradoxes but faith embraces as rare mysteries Again Christ saith take my yoke upon you for my yoke is easie and my burden is light Math. 11.29 30. what is Christs yoke but the Commandements and are these portable by any meer man so say the Romanists from this very place but the mistake is so gross that the communis sensus of Christians runs against it faith can unriddle it another way the impossibles of the Law the sinless perfection unattainable by us were fulfilled by Christ the heavy end of the Law the dreadful curse unavoidable by us was born by Christ the Covenant of grace is satisfied with uprightness in the wayes of God which is easie to a renewed man its true while there is only the pressure of a Law without and nothing but a natural heart of enmity within the wayes of God are irksom and tedious which occasioned a Divine to say that a man might take a carnal man tye him to a table and kill him with praying and preaching but it is far otherwise with the believer who serves God not in the oldness of the letter but in the newness of the spirit who hath a Law within answering to the Law without and a spirit within prompting the same in the heart which the spirit in the command doth outwardly dictate Prayer is but the breathing of the new-creature holy desires its pulse holiness its element obedience its common walk alms but the opening of its hands contemplation but the lifting up of its eyes all natural and easie because from inward principles of life and grace My yoke is easie is durus sermo an hard saying to every man but to the believer who does all sweetly and in the easiness of the new-creature Moreover to give another instance work out your salvation with fear and trembling for it is God who worketh in you both to will and to do of his good pleasure saith the Apostle Phil. 2.12 13. what strange language is here work and yet God worketh all and all of his meer pleasure how can these things be if God work all there seems to be no place left for virtue or vice rewards or punishments because man can do nothing of himself O what sweats have Learned brains been thrown into whilest they have laboured to tune free-grace and free-will into harmony what craggy thorny Volumes of meer speculation have they put forth de concordiâ liberi arbitrii gratiae and after all is done the believer understands it best of any man his life of faith is a plain practical solution thereof for he acts and moves but under the first Agent and Mover he works but under the Master-workman he is free but under the free-making spirit he spreads his sails and withall looks up for the holy gales he labours and sows precious seed and at the same time waits for the spiritual dews and sun-beams he hath graces in him but layes all under that spirit that created them that that spirit may touch upon his charity and draw out his soul in alms and touch upon his devotion and pour out his soul in prayer and touch upon every grace and make the spices thereof flow out still he waits for the touches of the spirit Moral virtues like the fabled cymbal of St. Telian may seem to ring alone by their own self-power and self-confidence but spiritual graces like Davids harp must be awakened by divine influences as it was in Christ on earth the Humanity alwayes ministred to the Divinity so it is with the believer so far as his faith acts all his faculties and graccs are but as it were so many gardens aery rooms and working-houses for the holy spirit to walk breath and work its pleasure in Hence the believer is said in Scripture to walk in the spirit pray in the spirit live in the spirit doing all under the conduct thereof after some such sort as this doth the believer work out his salvation with fear and trembling in a way of humility and holy dependance upon God who worketh to will and to do of his own good pleasure We have an eminent instance of this in holy David see how he hangs
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
a true sense of Original Sin David senses it in primo ardore in the first warmth of Natural Conception Psal 51.5 But such among them as wanted Faith wanted a sense thereof Indeed they had the Law but the veil being on their hearts they understood it only as prohibiting manum non animum the outward act not the Will and Non concupisces Thou shalt not covet was rather taken tor a Moral sentence than a Divine precept among them This was the opinion of the Jewish Masters about our Saviours time when Rabbinical Learning was at the height in the Schools of Hillel and Shammai St. Paul a man brought up at the feet of Gamaliel whom the Jews accounted the honour of the Law while he was in his Pharifaism knew not concupiscence to be Sin Rom. 7.7 And they that understood the Law no better could understand but little of Original Sin Their Circumcision was a memento of it and so they understood it casting the Praeputium thereby cut off into the dust as a morsel to feed the old Serpent withal But alas they were uncircumcised in heart and upon that account reckoned up among Egyptians Edomites Ammonites and Moabites uncircumcised in flesh Jer. 9.29 The Jewish Rabbins speak of the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the evil figment in mans heart as an implacable enemy One man say they walks with another but one hour and they become friends but this evil figment is born with man and grows up with him all his days and yet if it find an opportunity will after 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 years precipitate and cast him down headlong But they make it a very small matter at first At first say they it is weak as a woman afterwards strong as a man at first it is as a small ahread afterwards as the cable of a Ship at first it is as a Viator at last as a Lord. And withal they made it subject to the power of mans free will Concupiscence say they would fain ruin thee but thou maist if thou wilt rule over it Gen. 4. And whosoever obeys the good figment that is his own reason shall be delivered from the evil one They cried up Reason and Will and understood little of Original Sin Hence Regeneration the necessity whereof may be naturally deduced from a right knowledg of that Sin was so unintelligible to them Nicodemus a Master in Israel and one of the Judges in the great Sanhedrin was startled at our Saviours Doctrine Except a man be born of water and of the spirit he cannot enter into the Kingdom of God Joh. 3.5 That of being born of water possibly he might understand because the Jews did imitate their Proselytes by washing or Baptism and then counted them as new-born and regenerate as Learned men have observed But that of being born of the Spirit he was totally ignorant of which he could not have been had he had a true sense of Original Sin which where it is makes the Doctrine of Regeneration obvious but looking on that Sin as no great matter and corrigible by mans own Reason and Will he stood as it were at a maze at our Saviours words as if there had been no promise at all of a new heart and a new spirit made in the Old Testament Leaving the Jews let us enquire among Christians for a true sense of Original Sin here we must not expect it among Pelagians or Socinians who deny the thing as if the figment of the heart were but the figment of the brain peccatum originis nullum prorsus est saith the Racovian Catechism Sine vitio nascimur saith Pelagius placing Infants in the same state as Adam was before his Fall neither must we look for it among those Popish Doctors who mince and extenuate this Sin Intensivè majus est peccatum actuale quam originale saith Aquinas It is Omnium peccatorum minimum saith another Hence many of them assert That it is not properly Sin neither may I find it among those Protestant Doctors who though they use the word Grace yet attribute much to the Reason and Will of man That famous place Joh. 3 of being born of the Spirit is taken by a learned man for an undertaking the Law of Christ an entring on a new pure Spiritual life as if Regeneration were Mans act The fallen man saith another is not wholly destitute of power but as the man in the Parable half-dead Sin is not so unruly but that Cain if he will do well may master it the desire of Sin shall be subject to him saith God When a Man came to Delphos with a live-Bird under his Cloak and asked the Oracle Whether he should bring forth a dead thing or living intending to put a trick upon it Answer was made to him In te est stulte Fool 't is in thy power to do which thou wilt So say such Doctors The Gospel is proposed to Men and to embrace it is in their own power 't is Gods part to call but Mans to be elect or not that is to be sincere Believers or not These Men to me understand little of Original Sin Pretermitting them I come to those who have a right notion of Sin and Grace but are void of true Faith These with all the Balms and sweet Odours of Truth which lie about their Heads are yet Spiritually dead at Heart and feel not their Wounds they are as yet contented with their old Heart and with case carry a sink of Sin in their bosom Oh how much unfelt unbewailed blindness hardness enmity unbelief earthiness is there in them All which fetch never a groan from them It is somewhat strange that believing Abraham when God made him so fair a promise of an Isaac should yet let out his thoughts so much upon Ishmael Oh that Ishmael might live before thee But it is very natural for unregenerate men even when the Promise of a new heart lies fair before them in the Scripture to acquiesce in the old frame as much of Hell and Death as they carry about with them All 's well and in peace but when Faith comes Original Sin is selt to the quick God shines from Sinai the Law is up in the heart in its pure Spirituality and all the foul corners there which before lay in the dark discover themselves in their ugly hue the Spirit of Life enters into the Man and the Wounds and Ulcers which whilest he was Spiritually dead broke not his rest breath out anguish in every part and make him cry out 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Oh wretched man that I am Rom. 7.24 Oh this blind rebellious unbelieving earthly Heart of mine who shall deliver me from it That corruption should be universal all over the Soul like the Plagues of Egypt all over the Land That the dead should be in every faculty the lusts every-where croaking even in the Kings Chamber in the noble faculties of Reason and Will and all the streams of the Heart the Thoughts
Soul by Faith doth by little and little work out and extirpate Sin as the day breaks upon the Heart darkness goes off as Holiness flows in Corruption departs the more of Heaven is there the less of Earth Thirdly Faith discovers the great evil of Original Sin and so raises up an hatred against it and hatred is a murderer and would if it could annihilate its opposite Faith shews it to be an All-evil a Mother of abominations Some particular Sins are such monsters in Morality that when viewed only in the light of Nature they appear very odious such was the cruelty of Nero Effeminacy of Sardanapalus and the like much more odious when inspected by the light of Faith must that appear which is All-sin in one a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or universal Seminary of iniquity Anthony holding Caesars bloody Coat up to the People moved them against the Conspirators Faith holding up the Murders Adulteries Blasphemies Villanies in the World unto the Believers eyes stirs his Heart against the venemous root of all these Faith shews it to be an universal evil all over the Soul breaking forth like the boyls of Egypt upon man and upon beast upon the intellective and sensitive faculties and all over the Believers duties lying as the locusts there upon every herb and green thing upon the verdure and glory of every good work it is a blemish in the Believers eye a plague in his Heart an ataxy in his Affections a damp on his Prayers a cooler to his Charity and Zeal and a dead fly in all the precious Oyntment of his duties and good works Faith shews it to be an utter enemy to God Antichrist-like opposing every appearance of him in the Heart quenching every good motion trampling on every holy beam slighting at the two great periods of Mankind Heaven and Hell and jeering at that holiness and iniquity which lead thither Faith shews it to be an evil always present the Believer shakes himself and it adhers flys and it encompasses mortifies and it lives prays weeps sweats and fights and yet the Canaanite is in the land like a living man chained to a dead he carries about his own loathsomness a body of death all his days this cleaves to him as the blackness to the Ethiopian and as the fretting spreading Leprofie to the house after all his washing and scraping of himself it will yet be in him till death dissolve him into dust Such representations as these made by Faith fill the Believer with shame and self-abhorrency and raise up in him an irreconcileable hatred against it Fourthly Faith so far as it is acted though it make not a total riddance of it doth yet imprison it that it cannot go at large and riot in scandalous Sins No nor steal out in an evil thought but it will be arrested in its passage to the Will for a consent as it was Gods caution beware that there be not a thought in thy Belial-heart against Charity Deut. 15.9 So it is Faiths endeavour to stop corruption even in a thought the flesh is still a lusting and would have one piece of forbidden fruit or other in its mouth but Faith opposes and would if it could leave nothing of it to breath in the Believer This is that the Scripture calls The crucifying of the old man Faith arraigns the old man as the Arch-malefactor in the World condemns him as worthy to die strips him of his veils and false coverings and by holy restraints nails him to the Cross that unless in a slumber of Faith he cannot move or stir himself but dies away by little and little As the light of Nature being imprisoned in unrighteousness as the Apostle speaks Rom. 1.18 is every day exhausted and weakned so the corruption of Nature being thus restrained by Faith gradually loses its life and vigor Martinus Polonus tels of a terrible Dragon at Rome who killed many daily with his poysonous breath but was at last shut up with Brasen gates through the Prayers of Sylvester Bishop there Were this Fable true Faith doth a nobler work in restraining the inward Serpent of corruption whose deadly poyson hath spread it self over all Men and is eternally fatal to all but Believers To conclude In all this Faith applies it self to a Crucified Christ from thence it fetches its pattern As the pure flesh of Christ upon which as an expiatory Sacrifice the Sin of the World was laid suffered on the Cross so the corrupt flesh of Man unto which as the universal Seminary the Sin of the World may be justly imputed must suffer also Hence Saint Peter 1 Pet. 4.1 From the suffering of Christ in the flesh exhorts Believers to suffer in their corrupt flesh ceasing from Sin and from thence it derives a spirit for the work Christ offered himself through the eternal Spirit on the Cross and the Believer through the Spirit of Christ offers up his corrupt self to be crucified Hence St. Paul Rom. 6.6 saith Our old man is crucified with him that is by a secret virtue drawn from his Cross Thus far of this Fundamental Mortification I now come to particular Sins which are but the foul issues of Original breaking forth in this or that as temper education place custom or other accidents give vent thereunto these also doth Faith mortifie and that in some such way as this First Faith doth restrain the outward acts of Sin there may be many restraints in which yet there is nothing of Mortification one Sin may restrain another Vitia inter se contraria pugnant in which case Satan casts out Satan a predominant lust its opposite The fiery Law with its threats may meet a man in his perverse way as the Angel with his drawn Sword did Balaam and turn him back from committing the act nevertheless the unchanged Heart hankers and inwardly mourns after it as Phaltiel did after Michal when she was forced away from him and which is a better restraint because meerly from an in ward principle Moral Virtue may hold him back from it as it did Abimelech from Sarah yet this restraint is but partial only from outward Sins of shame and withal selfish aiming at no higher thing than repute and self-excellency But Faith restrains upon higher and nobler Motives speaking to the temptation as Joseph to his Mistress How can I do this great wickedness and sin against God May I break his Law which is more than the Interdicts of all the Princes and Potentates of the World or stain his glory which is more precious than the light of the Sun Moon and Stars or trample on that precious Blood which paid my ransom from Hell and Death or grieve away that Spirit which is the life of all my Graces and Comforts or pollute this Heart which may be a Temple or Tabernacle for the Holy One to dwell in or run my self again into the pangs of the New Birth and forget the wormwood and gall of my old Sins and eclypse the light
totally perfectly evil but suffering for the Gospel is not meer suffering In temporal losses there may be eternal gain in reproaches a spirit of glory in outward racks inward joys In the Burning-bush God may dwell and death may open a door to life everlasting Hence come the famous Triumphs of Martyrs the Apostle rejoyced that they were counted worthy to suffer shame for Christ Act. 5.41 In the Original it is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 That they were honoured to be dishonoured for Christ Others have stiled their Prisons a Paradise and their Iron-Chains a goodly Neck-kercher and at last have kissed the Stake and thanked the Executioner accounting Suffering the only eligible thing in the World Thus Faith destroys all Sins eligibilities and in so doing as the Apostle speaks overcomes the World which is the purest of Victories The great ones who captivated the World outwardly and martially were themselves captivated by it in one lust or other Not unlike Amaziah who subdued the Edomites and was himself taken with their gods But Faith which overcomes inwardly and Spiritually subdues the lusts themselves Further yet Faith doth not only strike at the love of Sin by destroying its eligibilities but by surrendring the Heart to a better Object whilest the love and joy and delight is in Sin it lives as a body with a spirit in it but when these are surrendred up to God and Christ and Heavenly things it becomes inanimate as a dead Carcase This was notably deciphered in Christ crucified the grand pattern of our Mortification he was not only stript and nailed but commending his Spirit to God be gave up the Ghost Answerably in Mortification Sin is not only stript of its eligibilities and nailed by restraints but it dies away in the surrenders of Faith by which the Soul Enoch-like is translated into Heaven and its affections are not here below to animate Sin Were this surrender in perfection Sin could not so much as be as is evident in Christs Humane Nature upon which no spot could fall because it ever was in perfect surrender to his Father And proportionably where it is but in truth only Sin is a-dying because the love and joy whilest in the raptures and triumphs of Faith afford no quickning thereunto hence the Apostle exhorts Walk in the spirit in the elevations of Faith and other Graces and ye shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh Gal. 5.16 Sin shall grow heartless and be able to do little or nothing Here we see how the dear intimate lusts come to die they cease to be dear as Faith turns the stream of the Heart and give up the Ghost as the love and the joy go out to God It was Luthers method in Reformation that first the Images were to be removed out of the minds of Men and then all would suceed and it is Faiths method in Mortification by holy surrenders to sever the Heart from its lusts and so do the work Moreover Faith casts out the love of Sin by conversing in the holy Word after which the Soul becomes pure and shining like Moses face after he had been with God conversing with the Law it sees a rectitude and pure splendor and then to love Sin is to embrace crookedness and hellish darkness and withal it sees wrath and vengeance threatned against transgressors and then to love Sin is to take death and hell into our bosom Conversing with the Gospel it hath such a fair prospect of Grace and Christ as renders Sin the most ungrateful and unnatural thing in the World Shall God give up his Son his eternal joy to die upon a cross and a man a worm spare a lust a brat of his corrupt Heart Shall Christ pour out his Blood and very Soul to expiate Sin and a Believer a redeemed one fall in love with the Crucifier Shall the holy Spirit come down and dwell in Man as his Temple and he who is so honoured embrace that which is the only offence and grievance to such a guest Or shall the Kingdom of Heaven come down and offer it self and that which is the only bar and obstacle be received Surely a Believer with his eyes open will not do so the more of converse he hath with the Word the less of the love of Sin As Sense when it lies brooding on the Creature inflames the love of Sin So Faith when it dwells on the Word abates it that Concupiscence which at first crept in upon Eve in a slumber of Faith while Sense was doting on the fruit must be driven out again by Faith fixing on the Word and soating above sensible things Thus far how Faith strikes at the love of Sin Thirdly Faith mortifies Sin by watching against all the occasions and inducements thereof The Jews were not to name the Idol-gods the Nazarite was to abstain from the very husk of the grape Valentinian could not bear a little drop of Julians holy-water accidentally sprinkled on his garment without detestation The Children of Samosatane would not play with their Ball after the Ass of the Heretical Bishop Lucius had trod on it but burnt it in the Market-place as unclean Faith is nice and curious it will not go in with such a dissembler nor come nigh the door of such an Harlot as Sin is knowing that the Soul may soon be cheated and adulterated thereby Apprehensions of danger make men watch and to Faith there is no danger like that of Sin If the good man of the house had known when the thief would come he would have watched saith our Saviour Mat. 24.43 Faith knows Sin to be a thief and a murderer to the Soul and therefore sets guards within and without that it may not creep in by the ports of Sense nor rise up out of the deep of the Heart Within there is a watch over the Thoughts and without over the sensible Objects And if a snare appear Faith cries out as the suffering Martyr did when a Box with a Pardon in it was set before him Away with it as you love my Soul During this watch Sin pines and famishes away as in a Spiritual siege the common commerce between the Thoughts and the Objects fails and with it those provisions which use to be made for the flesh Hence our Saviour would have his Disciples To watch and pray that they might not enter into temptation Temptations will offer themselves but the watching Believer will not enter into them by a consent Fourthly Faith mortifies Sin by those actings of Grace which it puts forth in the Believer As Sin the more it is acted makes the fuller blot on the Soul so Grace the more it is acted leaves the purer tincture there You have purified your Souls in obeying the truth saith St. Peter 1 Epist 1.22 Every act of Grace or Obedience doth in its measure purifie from Sin The righteous holds on his way and so grows stronger and stronger Job 17.9 The exercise of Grace renders the inner man more strong and
dependence the Spirit comes down in auxiliary Grace and there is an effectual working in every part of the New Creature Love in the Spirit as it is called Col. 1.8 and Joy in Spirit and every other Grace in the Spirit badding and blossoming and filling the face of the life with holy fruits Only it must be remembred that this Dependence is in Gods way where Christ is experimentally Immanuel God with us to stir up all holy Graces into act Thus Faith actuates Graces in a general way common to them all I now proceed to shew how Faith actuates this or that Grace in particular And that I may not be too prolix in running over all Graces I shall single some choice ones out instead of all First I shall begin with the Grace of Love This is the great Command the sum of the Law a Divine Union with God a bond of perfection among Men a holy fire kindled by the Holy Ghost in the Heart and the sweetness and easiness of every good Duty This Grace whether it respect God or Christ or our Neighbour is actuated by Faith As touching our Love to God it is so actuated The very light of Nature reveals a God an excellent perfect Being or the Being of Beings whose Love as the Philosopher said is the principle and knot of the World and so cannot but raise up a kind of Love toward him the Will being necessarily in some sort affected with such an Excellency though seen but by a glimmering light Not that this Love is a Grace or a Love in sincerity or a Love sicut oportet as an ancient Council speaks or indeed in Scripture sense any love at all because it loves not God above all it must needs be inordinate there being the same ataxy in loving God below the Creature as in loving the Creature above God But that there is a kind of Love such as that dark light can raise up in faln man But when the light of Faith comes it raises up the Grace of Love towards God and ever after moves it into act by the pure discoveries of him which it lets into the Heart from Scripture He is saith Faith an immense infinite Goodness Creatures are but drops of Being lying in the shell of Time but he is the Ocean of all Perfections They may be good for this or that in particular according to their finite kinds and spheres but he is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the All-things as the Aposile calls him 1 Cor. 15.28 And withal he is Love it self as another Apostle hath it 1 Joh. 4.16 Not shutting up his Allness in unapproachable Glory but letting it out to Believers His Love though he ever had perfect Blessedness in himself would yet pour out it self in making a world of good Creatures and after Mans fall in giving his only Son to take hold of our nature and in it to bring us back again to himself that he might be our God and make over his Allness to us and all this in pure Grace without any Money or Merit on our part and in rich Mercy towards worms and forlorn Sinners and to assure it to us a Gospel is let down from Heaven full of great and precious Promises such as are the very counterpanes of that Grace and Mercy which flow in his Heart towards Sinners Vnder such musings of Faith Oh how the holy fire of Love kindles What high rates and estimates are set upon him How is the Heart inflamed towards Union to be one spirit with him What Complacencies and Sabbaths of rest doth it find in him What little things are Worlds and Creatures What an All is He and an Heaven his Love What tastes are there of his Goodness and surrenders to his Will and Glory Our Love goes after him as his is by Faith let in upon the Heart Moreover Faith excites the Love of him by every act which it sets about in its recumbencies it enamours the Heart that he should give us leave to lean on his Grace and in so doing bear up our weakness with Promises and sweetly answer us in Pardons and suitable Graces in its Obedience it is very ravishing that he should chalk out such pure ways for us and take us by the hand and teach us to go and at last crown our faultring Obedience with Eternal Life Ordinances which to Unbelief are but dry things are to Faith the lovely Chariots of the Spirit Creatures which are Idols to carnal sense are to Faith fair mirrors of the infinite Goodness and Beauty in the Creator Which way soever Faith turns it self it meets with something or other inflammative of our Love towards him who is every-where and all in all As touching our Love to Christ it is actuated in the same manner A meer notion of Christ raises up some Love towards him as we see in those Temporaries who receive the word with joy Mat. 13.20 which though it be but fructus horarius hints out a kind of Love Such a story as that of Codrus the Athenian King 's dying for his Country could not but affect his Subjects much more must the History of Christ dying for a World do so Only this Love to Christ raised up by meer Evangelical notion as the Love to God raised up by natural is not right nor elevated to a Divine pitch till Faith come and shew him forth by a light more congruous than all literal knowledg and then there is as the Church after an elegant description concludes Totus desideria all loves or desires Cant. 5.16 Every thing in him is attractive What a person is the Eternal Word the brightness of the Fathers glory What an Union Immanuel God and Man in one Heaven and Earth admirably blended together as a pledg that God would be at one with us What a robe is his Righteousness made as broad as the Law and woven all of Love from the top to the bottom What a Laver his Blood able to expiate a world of Sins and save a world of Sinners What a treasure is his Fulness where the Spirit is in over-measure and all its Graces in redundance running over into the vessels of Faith and filling all its capacities Who that hath eyes of Faith would not love him To ask why we should love him is as the Philosopher told him who demanded Why Beauty was so taking 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a blind mans question nothing but blind unbelief can hold us from his Embraces Whatever posture Faith be in whether contemplating him in the Mount or leaning on the bosom of his Grace or hiding in his Wounds or sitting at his feet for Wisdom or lying under his Scepter for power against Sin still it stirs up an holy Love to him It finds his Blood in every Pardon his Spirit in every Grace his Wine-cellar in every Ordinance his Seal in every Promise and his Purchase in every Creature No wonder if St. Paul count all things dung and dross for him And St. Austin
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
a Zeal doth Faith stir up for the Worship of God and no less for the Truth of God this is a precious jewel a secret out of the Fathers bosom a beam come down from Heaven to light us thither if this be subverted Zeal will stand up and vindicate it Secundus when he was commanded to deliver up his Bibles to be burnt answered Christianus sum non traditor In the first General Councils how earnest were the Fathers for the Faith they would not exchange a letter or syllable of it The Arrian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 will not pass instead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nor the Nestorian 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 applied to Christ as man instead of 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 applied to the blessed Virgin With what an heroical and gallant spirit did Luther cleave to the Evangelical Truth Pia est sancta hac in re nostra pertinacia in this ours is a pious and holy obstinacy saith he Such a Zeal for truth doth Faith ralse up In sum Faith hath a single eye at Gods Glory and so endears all things tending thereunto that upon the least violation thereof Zeal will be ready to break forth in that behalf Moreover Faith gives a further advance thereunto by looking on the unparallelled Love of God O what a Zeal hath he for our Salvation Hath he not writ our poor names in the book of Life and shall we neglect his glorious one Hath not he sent his own Son in the flesh to be the great Ordinance of our Salvation and to fill all the under-Ordinances with his Spirit and Grace and shall we not be zealous in and for his Worship Are not his holy Truths the day-star in our bearts seeds of the New Creature and Cordials of rich Comfort and shall we not earnestly contend for them Will he not glorifie us to all eternity above and shall we not glorifie him in our little span of time here below Whilest Faith is thus musing the fire of Zeal must needs kindle in our Hearts Another Grace actuated by Faith is Meekness which is as cool in our own cause as Zeal is hot in Gods This is the great Moderatrix of Anger that it breaks not out Preter squum bonum not unjustly for a light occasion as that Pope's did who raged upon the missing a cold Peacock and blasphemously added If God was so angry for an Apple he might justly be so for a Peacock Nor upon a just cause excessively as it did in that great Conqueror Stephen King of Poland who was so angry with the Rigenses about the Gregorian Calendar that he sell into Epileptical sus and died Natural Meekness is a beautiful thing and so is Moral but neither is a Grace Natural being but the result of a sweet temper of Body and Moral but the improvement of Reason neither levels so high as Gods Glory In Natural we do but comply with our Temperament and in Moral but sacrifice to our Reason But the Grace of Meekness is a portion of that Dove-like Spirit which rested upon Christ and aims at his Glory whose Goodness is resembled thereby Hence it is observable that where the Meekness is only Natural or Moral Men will be angerless and sintully meek even when Gods Glory lies at the Stake their Meekness being as opposite to holy Zeal as to rash Anger but where the Grace of Meekness is Men in their own concerns glorifie God by a cool converse and in Gods call for Zeal to vindicate his Glory To promote this Grace Faith doth many things as first it looks at the infinite Long-sufferance of God O what doth he bear from Men His Laws are violated Blessings abused Name blasphemed Glory stained and all by his own Creatures and in his own World and day after day year after year nay one age after another and yet the axle-tree of his Patience breaks not under it 〈…〉 a look at this will much meeken us Excellent Melincton under great Calumnies was still of a cool spirit and when his Enemies said That they would not leave him a footstep in Germany all hi● reply was That he should have one in Heaven And what made him so meek we may gather from his own words Nullum hominem tantum sustinere malorum quantum contumeliarum Deus No man bears so many evils as God doth contumelies And if we will be followers of God we must be meek and as a further motive hereunto Faith looks unto Christ in whom Meekness is exemplified in our own Nature that we may not say flesh and blood cannot be so under reproaches injuries contradictions bloody sufferings He was as a lamb not opening his mouth when he was reviled be reviled not again when he suffered he threatned not 1 Pet. 2.23 And the Believer must follow him and the rather because he hath a spirit of Meekness from him to do so Such a spirit shewed it self in Beza who when in a Dispute about the Eucharist the Jesuits called him and his Colleagues Foxes and Serpents only replied Nos non magis credimns quàm Transubstantiationem We believe it as much as we do Transubstantiation Again this Grace is much advanced by Reslections without Faith a man is a stranger at home and knows every thing better than his own Heart as St. Bernard faith of Petrus Abailardus He knew every thing better than himself but where Faith is there is the true 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 then a Man looks in wardly into his own Heart and there finds such a black nest of Corruptions that upon reproaches and injuries ostered he is ready to commune with himself and say Are not such Sins with me even with me at least seminally if not actually Have not I done worse to God and may I not do so to Men Aut sumus aut fuimus aut possumus esse quod hic est such Reflections wonderfully meeken us Hence St. Bernard saith That he never saw another man sin but he was jealous of his own Heart Ille heri tu hodie ego cras he did it yesterday and thou to day and I to morrow St. Paul exhorts the Gàlatians in the Plural number to restore the lapsed in the spirit of Meekness and adds the reason in the singular considering thy self Gal. 6.1 He changes the number as the Judicious Interpreter observes That every one in particular may deseend into himself and there find an Argument for Meekness towards others Moreover Faith promotes this Grace by viewing the Promises made thereunto which are as large as heart can wish Would we have the things of the World The meek shall inherit the earth and to sweeten it They shall delight themselves in the abundance of peace Psal 37.11 Would we have the things of God The meek shall be beautified with salvation Psal 149.4 And all the good tydings in the Gospel are to be preached to them Isa 61.1 For the true Way They have God to teach them and guide them
saith Non legitima Christianorum Concilia sed Tyrannica Antichristi Conventicula ad oppugnandam Evangehi veritatem instituta and thus it appears even Historically that the Authority of Scripture depends not on the Church But waving this Popish Thesis in which I have by the way made this long Digression I proceed to the matter in hand True Faith being a beam or irradiation from the holy Spirit discovers That the Scriptures in general are the Word of God and which is to the Point in hand in its holy progress it arrives at an experimental knowledg thereof Peter Martyr wishes men to read the Bible seriously and adds Male sit mihi ita enim in tantâ causâ jurare ausim nisi tandem capiantur sentient denique quantum divina haec ab humanis distent Erasmus saith Expertus sum in meipso That there is little good in cursory reading it do it duly and you shall find the Divine efficacy That a Progressive Faith may attain an Experimental knowledg that the Scriptures are of God will appear by the ensuing Considerations One noble piece of Scripture is the Moral Law upon every apex of it hangs a mountain of Sence say the Rabbins every jot or tittle of it stands faster than Heaven and Earth saith our Saviour Mat. 5.18 This is the Summary of all Duties all the Moral Precepts in Scripture are but as so many Commentaries on it That this is of God Faith experiments several ways First Faith experiments it by the impresses and holy inclinations in the Believers heart answering truly though not persectly to the Law A Progressive Believer finds by reflection That the Law is written in his heart That his Heart is the very Epistle of Christ written by the holy Spirit And withal he knows that it was not always so Time was when there were no such characters or holy inclinations there his Heart was worse than a meer empty Table And hence he surely gathers that those characters or imprinted propensities are the writing of God himself and so comes experimentally to know the Epistle of God in Scripture by that in his Heart and the outward literal Edition of the Law by the inward Spiritual one which is a counterpane thereof and answers thereunto as the stamp to the Seal or one Tally to another The mutual agreement between them once discerned is a practical proof that both are of God and written by one and the same holy hand But you will say there needs no Faith to make this experiment the very Gentiles have the Law written in their Heart their natural implanted Principles comprize both Tables the first in that they tell us that there is a God to be worshipped and reverenced The second in that they tell us That we must do as we would be done to which Alexander Severus much delighted in Unto which I answer That there is a vast disserence between the natural Writing the Law in the Heart and the gracious The first is a relique or broken fragment of the Divine Image its only or at least chief seat is in the Understanding and there it stands in the dark in an abyss of black Ignorance and in the mean while there is an hellish enmity in the carnal will against the Law of God But the other is a pure perfect thing which stands in both faculties being as an holy lamp in the Understanding and as a Divine inclination in the will to do the Commends of God Hence it appears That there is not that soundation for this experiment in the Natural Inscription of the Law as in the Gracious the Natural being to the Gracious but as a little glimmering is to splendor or as the broken pieces of a Picture are to the intire Image It is with a Believer in this case as it was with Bezalceel the Word of God came forth for making the Tabernacle but Bezaleel had a fractical proof of it in the spirit of Wisdom given him for the work Or as it was with Saul the Word came forth touching the Kingdom but Saul had a Practical proof of it in the spirit of Government vouchsafed unto him And so it is with the Believer The Divine Law is experimented in the spirit of obedience and each particular Command is proved by some inward aptness answering thereunto A notable instance of this Inscription we have in Maius the German Divine who in his extream sickness having Consolatory Scriptures recited to him bravely answered Tace tace omnia cordi meo insixa tenco hold your peace I have all in my heart Promises I suppose he meant and without dispute the Precepts were there also Secondly Faith experiments it by the Divine Presence helping and comforting the Believer in acts of Obedience The Rabbins say That if two sit together conserring of the Law the Shechimah is among them And without doubt if but one single Believer be not a talking meerly of the Law but a doing of it the Divine Presence is with him Thus the Prophet to Asa The Lord is with you whilest you be with him 2 Chron. 15.2 Thus our Saviour If a man love him and keep his words the Father and the Son will come and make their abode with such a one Joh. 14.23 Such an one hath a Temple and Shechinah in his Heart God will be there helping and comforting of him in his well-doing The Church prays for help from the Sanctuary Psal 20.2 because that was a Symbol of Gods Presence And the obeying Believer cannot want help because he hath a Sanctuary within him The way of the Lord is strength to him and waiting in it he renews strength and mounts up by Auxiliary Grace as upon Eagles-wings Whilest he is a doing the will of God strength comes in as it did to the Levites that bare the Ark 1 Chron. 15.26 and with strength holy comfort also in keeping the Commands he hath great reward inward peace and joy unspeakable some of the oyl of Joy which is upon Christ the great Doer of Gods Will drops down on the Believer in his sincere Obedience As all upright ones do he dwels in Gods Presence as if he were in the borders of Heaven already the light of Gods Countenance irradiates his Duties When therefore the Believer reflects on himself and considers what a dry Land rebellion dwells in and what rivers of Peace and Joy water Obedience how weak and foolish his heart was in doing his own will and how help and strength came upon him in doing Gods he comes experimentally to know the Command to be of God whose Presence gave him such comforts and assistances therein The good hand of God upon him is a proof that the way is right the Peace growing on his work shews the righteousness of it When in Elijahs time the question was whether God or Baal should be God the fire coming down from Heaven on the Sacrifice made the People fall down and confess The Lord he is the God the Lord he is the
God 1 King 18.39 answerably when the Believer in the doing of Gods Commands feels the illapses of the holy Spirit inflaming and comforting his Heart he sweetly experiences that God is in the Command of a truth Thirdly Faith experiments it in that the hope of Heaven is enlarged and heightned in the doing of Gods will The more a Believer doth it the livelier is his Faith the warmer his love the stronger his other Graces the meeter his Soul for Heaven and the richer his entrance thereunto 2 Pet. 1.11 He shall not go to Heaven poorly or with a seant wind but with full gales and rich Plerophories by successive acts of Obedience his Hope rises higher and higher and so gives an experimental proof That the Command is the very will of God and way to Glory otherwise Hope would not grow and flourish in it but flag and wither as it uses to do in us when we pursue our own ways The Apostle would have men diligent in good works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to the full assurance of hope Heb. 6.11 Vt plenissimè in animis vestris spes confirmetur faith Beza Immediately after the giving the Law God adds these words Where ever I record my name there will I come and bless you Exod. 20.24 a blessing attends his Service If God bless Obedience with an assurance of Hope which is a fore-taste of Heaven and presage of Glory it is a full proof that his name is recorded in the Command When a Believer walking therein comes to assurance and so to be within ken of Heaven he is sure that the way is right Another excellent part of Scripture stands in the Promises These are the Pearls of the Gospel breasts of Consolation and wells of Salvation flowing out to Believers in temporal spiritual and eternal good things each of these Faith more or less experiments to be Divine As touching Temporal Promises Faith experiments them in every blessing which the Believer hath Indeed outward things are but the nether-springs and blessings of the left hand dispensed promiscuously as if they were ludibria fortunae the sports of chance Providence is still ringing the changes here an Ishmael may have his portion and full cup even Crowns and Kingdoms which lie at the upper end of the World may come to the basest of men Dan. 4.17 All things come alike to all the Sun of Prosperity shines on the Bramble as well as on the Flower the tempest of Adversity falls on the Garden as well as on the Wilderness Love or Hatred cannot be known by these things not by them as they are in themselves or meerly issuing out of Providence But the Believer hath them by a singular Priviledg and in a way of Promise and by reflection may know that he hath them so When he doth not arrogate ought to himself or like churlish Nabal all in his Possessives say My bread my water and my flesh but really confess God to be supream Lord of all and himself but an accountable Steward of them When he can cast his goods on the waters and as it were send them to Sea in a voyage of Charity expecting no return but in the other World where these Corruptibles so used will rise in the incorruption of eternal glory When he can charge all outward things to stand without in their own station and not approach that heart which is a facred Temple or holy place for God to dwell in When he looks on all the World as forfeited by Sin and new founded by Christ the Mediator and so tasts his precious blood in every good thing and gathers all his comforts from his reconciling Cross When upon a just call to Suffering he is willing to venture all his part in this life upon the meer Promise of a better and had rather cast all his Mundane pearls over board than hazard a wrack of Faith or Conscience When the purest sweetest Comforts here below do not satisfic his Soul as smelling of the cask and chanel of Creature-vanity but in the fullest affluence of them he crys out Dul●ius ex ipso fonte a single God is insinitely sweeter than all and none but he can sill up the gaping chinks and chasmes of my Hear Deus meus omnia My God and my all Then undoubtedly he hath outward blessings not upon the common title of Providence only but in a way of Promise and by reflection on such things as these he may know that he hath them so and arrive at a sweet experience of Temporal Promises Such an experience multiplies the Loaves and wonderfully doubles and trebles the sweetness and comfort of every Blessing Some learned Men have observed a difference between Jacobs Blessing and Esaus Jacobs runs thus God give thee of the dew of Heaven and the fatness of the Earth Gen. 27.28 Esaus thus Thy dwelling shall be the fatness of the Earth and of the dew of Heaven from above ver 39. In Jacobs the name of God is mentioned not in Esaus it s true all Blessings are from God but his name is mentioned in the one not in the other The experienced Believer hath more of God and his federal Love in every Blessing than other Men. The Jews by a pious custom used to say over their Bread Blessed be God who brought Bread out of the Earth over their Wine Blessed be God who created the fruit of the Wine over their Fruits Blessed be God who created the Fruit of the Tree nay and over their Flowers Blessed be God who made the sweet smelling Herbs and in general they added this Whosoever takes ought out of this World without a benediction is as it were a robber of God But the experienced Believer as he hath a sweeter title to these things so he may raise up his Praises for them to an higher strain than other Men not only saying Blessed be God and his Providence for such and such things but blessed be God and his Promise also All good things as well those of this life as those of the other issue out of the Covenant of Grace You will say the Believer cannot yet make this experiment for though he have some of the Temporal Blessings mentioned in the Promises yet often and ordinarily he wants other of them To which I answer The Promises of Temporal Blessings are not absolute but carry a tacit limitation of expediency The main design of the Promises is Mans Salvation and to this Temporals are not as Spirituals are simply necessary but only have a remote tendency thereunto and that not of themselves but as they are over-ruled by God who makes omnia cooperari in bonum all things work together for good to them that love him And hence the Believer expects from the Promises no other measure or proportion of outward things than what may conduce to his Salvation and because he knows not what that measure or proportion is he refers himself to the Wisdom and Faithfulness of God to order all
the Soul unto God as the fountain of all Good As in every lust there is a depression of the Heart to one Creature or other so in every right Prayer there is an holy elevation of it to God This gives great Glory to God as it is humble it reveres his Majesty as upright it owns his Omniscience as believing it glorifies his condescending Grace and as importunate it overcomes the Almighty and takes the Kingdom of Heaven by violence opening a door to that infinite mass or treasure of Grace which is laid up for those that strive and wrestle with him for supplies out of it This is a Catholick Duty good in all places The Jews prayed in or towards the Temple but now the whole World is consecrated for it every where holy hands are to be lifted up fit for all times praying always saith the Apostle Ephes 6.18 Not that we are to do nothing else as the Euchitae or Messaliani of old dreamed but that there is no time wherein the Mercy-seat is shut or Christ not interceding above or the holy Spirit not ready in some measure to assist Believers Neither is there any time in which we should not carry about with us a virtual confession in our sense of Sin or a virtual Prayer in our sense of Wants or a virtual Praise in our sense of Mercies Continuum desiderium est continua oratio as St. Austin hath it Vita hominis saith Luther nibil aliud est nisi oratio gemitus desiderium suspirium ad misericordiam Dei Mans life should be a perpetual breathing after God And withal it is incumbent on all Men the first Adam in Innocency probably addressed himself to God in Prayer and Jesus Christ the second Adam was much in it the Ethnicks by the light of Nature used it It was an old gentile-Gentile-Law Ad divos adeunto go to the gods Socrates prayed that he might be Intus pulcher inwardly fair with virtue Plato saith Every one who is compos mentis will in the beginning of any work invoke the gods How much more must Christians pray who have before their eyes a Gospel a Mercy-Seat and an open way into the Holy of Holies through the Veil of Christs flesh Unregencrate persons are bound to this Duty as we see in the Command to Simon Magus being in the gall of bitterness and bond of iniquity Act. 8.22 Much more Believers Prayer is the breath of the new-creature and badg of Christians who are thus deciphered by the Apostle All that call upon the name of the Lord Jesus 1 Cor. 1.2 Such and so great is this Ordinance that the Jews who prayed standing and therefore called Prayer Gnammuda or Standing used to say Sine stationibus non staret mundus The world would not stand without Standing or Prayer That this is an Ordinance of God the Believer experiments many ways First He experiments it in the Assistances of the Holy Spirit which is as Gales to the Sails of Prayer in its Voyage to Heaven and as holy Fire to the Incense of it causing it to ascend to the Throne of Grace The Spirit helpeth our infirmities Rom. 8.26 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It lifts over against us or helps us to lift up a Prayer which else would be too heavy for us Whilst the Believer is a-praying O what heavenly meltings are there The Believer is like Ephraim bemoaning himself or as the Children of Israel at Mizpeh lamenting after the Lord and pouring out water as if their eyes were turned into Fountains of penitential tears or as the man in the Gospel crying out with tears Lord I believe help thou mine unbelief Catching at Mercy with an hand trembling at his own Infirmity Such meltings and spiritual mournings over Sin plainly shew That the Spirit of Grace and Supplication is poured out upon the Prayer making it like the bruised Incense sull of fragrancy breathing out from a broken heart dissolved into tears by the beams of Gods Love And in this Evangelical thaw What Divine enlargements are there The heart is no longer in the Straits of Sin and Earth but opened and expanded towards Heaven E're the praying Believer is a ware his Soul sets him on the wheels and his lips drop as the honey-comb if not in the very entrance of the Duty yet in the progress of it The Psalmist in the beginning of the 38th Psalm seems cold and frozen in Unbelief Gods arrows stick fast in him his hand presseth him sore the iniquities are too heavy the wounds stink and are corrupt There are nothing but bowings breaches and miserable roarings But before he hath done praying his heart recovers again In thee O Lord do I hope thou wilt hear O Lord my God ver 15. Sometimes at first there is a Cloud and dark Eclipse upon the Prayer and yet a little after Grace breaks forth with its Sunny beams and draws out the heart towards God They looked unto him and were lightned as David speaks Psal 34.5 or as the words may be read they looked unto him and flowed their hearts were as a River running out with spiritual fluency and enlargments such as are a real proof that the free Spirit is in the Prayer and withal What an heavenly ardor is there While I was musing the fire burned saith David Psal 39.3 While the Believer is a-praying the Holy Spirit is as fire upon the heart inflaming it into religious ascents towards God The Believer stirs up himself and takes hold on God by some Promise or other and Jacob-like wrestles with him for Mercy and will not let him go till there be a dawn or day-break of Grace He prays in his Prayer and urges the Attributes of God upon him and presses hard upon him with an holy immodesty or impudence as the expression is Luk. 11.8 and will not be said Nay Much like Gorgonia the pious Sister of Nazianzen who lay at the Altar with Tears and Prayers and said That she would not depart till she had her request and accordingly obtained it of God This is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 5.16 the inwrought Prayer or Prayer wrought by Gods Spirit in ours and from thence poured out in an agony or vehemence of holy Assections panting and breaking with longings after God and his Grace Luther having prayed with great fervency said Vtinam eodem ardore orare possem Would to God I could always pray with the like ardor then should I always have this answer Fiat quod velis Be it unto thee as thou wilt After this manuer doth the Holy Spirit come down on the Believers Prayer and bear witness to this Ordinance Secondly He experiments it in his Access to God The Devils who are in Chains of Darkness can make no approaches to God there is an unpassable gulf between them and him It is storied of a German Nobleman that there was acted before him a Play of the five Wise and five Foolish Virgins the Wise were St. Mary St. Catbarine St.
Jews at the Passeover at the end of the Celebration whereof the Father of the Family was wont to take a Cake of Bread and after the blessing thereof to break and distribute it to the Communicants and also after that a Cup of Wine in like sort unto which some refer that Cup of Salvation Psal 116.13 The Bread and Wine among the Jews were but a Customary Rite but Christ consecrated them into a Sacrament saying of the Bread This is my Body and of the Wine This Cup is the New Testament in my Blood which could not before be said of them In the Paschal Rite it was only said of the Bread This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the bread of affliction and of the Cup This is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Cup of the Hymn But now This is my Body and this is my Blood In this great Ordinance the Body and Blood of Christ are evidently figured out and set forth before our eyes as if he were Crucified among us The seventh General Council at Constantinople who knocked down all other Images saith of this Sacrament That it is Vera Christi Imago the only true Crucifix or Image of Christ And which is much more than an Image the very Body and Blood of Christ are here truly and really though Spiritually present to our Faith being exhibited ut epulum faederale as a Covenant-feast or Love-banquet chearing the heart of God and Man The same Body and Blood which in the Sacrifice on the Cross were a sweet savour unto God and satisfied his Justice are set forth in the Sacrament as meat and drink for our Faith feeding us to Life Eternal Here is Epitome Evangelti a compend of the Gospel the whole Covenant and Contrivance of Salvation is sealed in a bit of Bread and drop of Wine Here the Believer meets with many rich Experiments he feeds and lives upon a Crucified Christ eating his Flesh and drinking his Blood and what a Feast is this 't is much that our Bodies may live upon the Body and Blood of Creatures but Oh incomparable Grace Our Souls may live on the Body and Blood of God One drop whereof saith Luther is more worth than Heaven and Earth Cruci haeremus sanguinem sugimus intra ipsa Redemptoris nostri vulnera figimus linguam saith St. Cyprian Haustu interiori in a Spiritual Mystical way we do in this Ordinance cleave to Christs Cross suck his precious Blood and as it were fasten our Tongues within his healing Wounds Whilest the Bread and Wine are Physically and Carnally united to us we are Mystically and Hyperphysically united to Christ becoming Members of his Body of his Flesh and of his Bones Spiritually dwelling in him and he in us The same holy Spirit which is upon him in Heaven falling down upon us on Earth and the Faith which is in us here below ascending up to clasp and embrace him In sinu Christi recumbimus in cor Christi introspicimus saith Luther We lie in his bosom and look into his heart In our Pardon sealed we taste the sweetness of his atoning Blood and in the effusion of the holy Spirit we drink at the sountainhead of Grace sprung up in his Humane Nature We have here the whole Covenant or Charter of Grace sealed to us and may believe not only ex promisso but ex pignore Over and above the Promise we have a pawn or pledg of the Truth thereof We saw not the inspired Prophets and Apostles penning down the Promises but Ecce Signum lo here is a visible sign and seal set thereunto and sense leads in Faith to claim and possess them for its own Hence our Saviour calls the Cup the New Testament in his Blood Luk. 22.20 The Cup saith Luther contains the Wine the Wine exhibits the Blood of Christ the Blood of Christ natifies the New Govenant and the New Covenant promises remission of Sins and with it a vast treasure of Blessings Again we have here the rich anointings of the holy Spirit Among the Oriental Nations and in particular among the Jews there was Vnctio convivalis a Feastival Vnction which they used as a token of welcome to pour on the head of their Guests Thus there came unto Christ a Woman having an Atabaster box of very precious Ointment and poured it on his head as he sate at meat Mat. 26.7 Whilest we are at the Lords-Table we are anointed with fresh Oyl the holy Spirit is poured out in richer measures of Grace and Comfort than it was at first As a Spirit of Grace and Supplication it melts the Heart into godly sorrows at the sight of a Crucisied Christ Sin being indeed the Jew and Judas the betrayer and murderer of the Son of God the Nails in his Cross and Spear in his Side the Gall and Wormwood in the Cup of Wrath which made him sweat drops of Blood and under an horrid Eclipse of Gods favour to cry out of forsaking To look upon a groaning World travelling under an universal vanity would stir up sorrow in any that had a sense of it much more to look upon a Christ a Creator bleeding and dying upon a Cross to the least drop of whose Passion the dashing down of a World is a poor inconsiderable nothing To look upon the broken Tables of a Law dearer to God than Heaven and Earth is very grievous but to stand and see God for our Sin bruising and breaking his own Son and Effential Image in our assumed Nature is matter of amazing sorrow Never was Sin set forth in such bloody Colours as in his Passion never do repentant tears flow more purely than at such a spectacle Here the Heart breaks in its closing with a broken Christ and bleeds afresh over his Wounds and turns the Sacrament of the Supper into a Baptism of Tears and out of an holy hatred and revenge would have the violence done to Christ be put upon Sin the great Crucifier of him in the true Mortification thereof As a Spirit of Faith it causes us to live upon Christ Having no Righteousness of our own to answer the Law with we feast and satisfie our selves in the Righteousness of Christ as in that which satisfied the heart of God and is here made over to satisfie ours We may surely say The Righteousness of God is upon us and as it hath no spot or wrinkle in it self so it leaves no ground of scruple or jealousie in our Hearts in the midst of our Sins which have Death and Hell virtually in them We yet live upon the atoning Sacrifice of Christ His Blood which was offered up to God through the Eternal Spirit and by him accepted as a plenary Satisfaction for Sin is now put into Promises and Sacraments as into so many Basins and from thence sprinkled on our Conscience to purge away all our guilt our Sins are pardoned and our Pardon passed under the Seal of Heaven In the midst of our Wants Faith can triumph in the
my Glory manifested For the right understanding of these we must note Christ did not come only or chiefly to cure the Bodies of Men no those Miracles which in transitu cured their Bodies Miracula christi corporaliter facta Spiritaliter intelligenda snut were ultimately levelled at their Souls that by Outward Cures they might be led to seek Inward ones from Christ Neither did he do all his Miracles on Earth no being Ascended and Sitting at the Right Hand of Majesty in Heaven he works 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 those Spiritual Miracles on the Souls of Men which are incomparably greater than those on their Bodies How many blind Hearts and those worse than blind Eyes hath he cured by a Touch as he passed by them in the Ordinances causing them to see himself the True light and Sun of Righteousness together with all the Heavenly Mysteries which stream as so many Beams or Rayes from him How many deaf Souls have upon his Divine Ephatha been obedientially opened to the Commands of God and though lame before have Rose up walked holily and praised God what Spiritual Lepers hath he by a Touch of his Spirit and Word cleansed Quae enim immunditia quae incredulitas quae duritia quod peccatum ad hunc contactum Christi consistere poterit saith Ferus No uncleanness unbelief hardness sinfulness can stand against the Touch of Christ What Sinners of all forts dead in Sins and Trespasses hath he raised up to a Divine Life Saint Austin reciting that Christ had raised up three Persons viz. The Maid in her Fathers House the Young-Man carried out upon the Bier and Lazarus four days dead and stinking in the Grave adds Ista tria genera mortuorum sunt tria genera peccatorum quos suscitat Christus these three dead ones are three sorts of Sinners raised up by Christ As the Maid in the house so is the secret Sinner raised up intra latebras conscientiae within the doors of his own Heart As the young Man carried out upon the Bier so is the open Sinner raised up out of known Sins And as Lazarus dead and stinking in the grave so is the customary Sinner raised up out of his old putrified Sins At the voice of Christ the strongest bonds of custom are broken and the poor Sinner comes forth into an holy life These things being so it appears That the Believer may experiment the Spiritual Miracles of Christ and from thence gather a proof in his own Heart That the very same hand wrought the Corporal ones especially seeing these latter are but types and shadows of the other which he finds verified in himself Thus much touching this Fundamental Experiment of the Scriptures A Believer may experiment the Laws Promises Threatnings Supernatural Truths Sacred Ordinances and Great Works in Scripture to be Divine and so have a Practical proof that the Scripture is of God CHAP. XIII Of the top and highest stature of Faith the Believers Assurance of his good estate of Pardon and Salvation That this Assurance is attainable many ways demonstrated HAving passed over the Believers Experiment touching the Scripture I shall now proceed to another touching his own Estate He may certainly know 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as Dionysius speaks That it is well with him That he is in a good state of Pardon and Salvation This is apex fidei the top and highest stature of Faith a Priviledg which transcends Earth and antedates Heaven to us Here are those three things Lumen Laetitia Pax Light Joy and Peace which as the Schoolman Halensis saith render the experiment of Grace in the Soul truly certain Here are Coelestial Beams unspeakable Joys admirable Serenities Sabbaths of Rest Seas of Sweetness and Beatitudes too great for the tongue of Men and Angels to express Before the Believer walked only with the single staff of Recumbency and Resignation but now he hath bands and troops of Comfort following after him from the Promises His darling Soul is now richly provided for to all Eternity Eternal Beanty is in his Eye Infinite Goodness at hand for his Embraces the lines are fallen in a kind of Paradise his Portion is no less than God himself all his Blessings are dipt in Love The World may brand him but the Spirit seals In the midst of sweeping Judgments he is still one of Gods Jewels and as soon as Death dissolves him Heaven receives him Touching this great Experiment I shall first prove That it is attainable by a Believer and then shew in what ways it is to be attained The Romanists hold That no Man without special Revelation can be certain of his Pardon and Salvation not with a certainty of Faith Bellar. de Juslif lib. 3. which is infallible but only with a certainty of Hope which is conjectural The Promises indeed are sure say they but our Dispositions are uncertain The Promises run Conditionally If they return to thee with all their heart 2 Chron. 6.38 and who can be sure that he doth so Who can say I have made my heart clean saith the Wise-man Prov. 20.9 Who can understand his errors saith David Psal 19.12 Some Scriptures put a peradventure upon Remission Who can tell if God will turn and repent Jon. 3.9 Repent if perhaps the thought of thy heart may be forgiven thee Act. 8.22 And the reason is because of the uncertainty of our Dispositions Faith is not Faith unless it lean on the Divine Word and no Word saith Such or such an one hath true Faith and Repentance or is truly pardoned Happy is the man that feareth always Prov. 28.14 The heart of man is deceitful above all things who can know it Jer. 17.9 Assurance if vouchsafed would but puss up Pride and open a door to Licentiousness Thus the Pontisicians Their Divinity in this great Point is much like the Philosophy of the old Scepticks those Patrons of all Uncertainty who used to say 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Reason against Reason puts all Propositions in aequilibrio the Balance hangs even without Declension this or that way after all debates imaginable still 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perhaps it is so perhaps not It may be they do see and hear it may be not at least they doubt whether they do it distinctly or no. After the same sort the Romanists do what they can to perswade Believers out of their Spiritual sense out of which Assurance ariseth It may be will they say thou repentest and believest it may be not or if thou dost them it may be not sicut oportet in such a manner as they ought to be done Hence the Council of Trent Can. 9●● calls the certainty of Remission vain and remote from all Piety This is that Doctrine of theirs which Luther calls Monstrum dubitationis the monster of doubting and withal asserts That if they erred only in this it were a just eause for us to separate from such an Infidel-Church Learned Pareus stiles it Desperationis ossicina the shop of
cloud upon it and Guilt as a wound in it Make it as lightsome as thou canst from Scripture that as a pure glass it may be fit to reflect the Gospel-Comforts on thy Soul Get a through cure of thy old Wounds or else sooner or later it will cry out against thee Joseph started up in his Brethrens mind a good while after their unnatural sale of him John the Baptist rose again in Herods Conscience upon the fame of Christs Miracles Theodorick having cruelly murdred Boethius and Symmachus was affrighted at the great head of a Fish at his own Table as if it had been one of theirs whom he unjustly put to death Apply therefore Christs Blood by Faith that thy Wounds may be healed David after his great fall prays first to be purged with hysop and then for the joy of Gods salvation Psal 51. The Hysop which was used to sprinkle the Blood under the Law figured out the office of Faith in sprinkling Christs Blood on the Conscience that 's a soveraign Balm to heal thy Wounds and able to make Conscience give thee an answer of Peace I have read a notable story of a sick Man who when Satan appeared and shewed him a long scrole of his Sins in writing saying Behold thy Virtues replied True Satan but thou hast not set down all set down also The Blood of Christ cleanseth us from all Sin Such a purifier is this that a Man may be able as is said of St. Austin to think of his former Evils without fear as having no spot of unpardoned Sin in him Thy Conscience being made pure walk after it A reciá Conscientia ne latum quidem unguem discedendum said the Orator Leave it not lest thou fall and wound thy self afresh When Conscience summons thee to this or that Duty up be doing God calls thee to it by thine own Heart when it tells thee of such a snare in thy way avoid it pass by it as thou wouldst by Hell God warns thee against it by thy self Conscience will measure out Comforts or Terrors to thee according as thou behavest thy self well or ill towards it If like Saul thou force thy self and rebel against light and give stabs to Conscience what hast thou to do with Peace Thy Heart will reproach thee Conscience will strike again and give thee wound for wound thou shalt doom thy self and like the Devils carry thy Chains and Hell about with thee Tiberius professed to the Senate That he suffered death daily he meant in the torments of his accusing Conscience On the other hand if thou turn thine eyes inward and observe Conscience and walk by the line and level of it thy Heart shall be at rest Conscience shall be a thousand witnesses for thee thou shalt be thine own Comforter and like the Angels carry an Heaven and Paradise aboat with thee Pauls joy shall be thine the testimony of Conscience that thy conversation hath been in godly sincerity and what is this but Assurance That Conscience which faith That thou art sincere tells thee also That thy Sins are pardoned These two are inseparable companions and never part the one from the other Again If thou wouldst have Assurance thou must be much in self-examination Commune with thy own Heart dive into the abyss of it reckon with thy self summon thy self to the Tribunal in thy own bosom The Philosophers espied out this Rule Pythagoras would not have us sleep till we had reviewed the day asking our selves 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 What have I transgressed what done and what omitted This though done by the candle-light of Nature much promoted Virtue and the comfort of it Qual●s ille somnus post recognitionem sui sequitur quam tranquillus altus liber saith Sencea After a review of ones self Oh what manner of sleep is there how still deep and free is it Much more must such a search into ones own Heart conduce to the Christians Graces and Comforts if done by the pure Sun-light of Scripture Self-examination is a root which bears Self-knowledg and at the top of it grows Assurance which is the knowledg of gracious self Awake therefore O Believer down into thy own Heart rifle the labyrinths and break open the false bottoms there see what of Sin is in thee Is there any darling Sin such as cogs with thy complexion or falls in with thy calling or any way steals away thy Heart and Affections from God Be sure that this is an accursed thing a Deliah as the word imports an exhauster of thy peace and joy However fair it may look to sense it is virtually sorrow and wrath See again what of Grace is there in thee do thou repent of Sin and believe on the Lord Jesus and love God and his holy Ways Are thy Graces genuine such as act thee in the power of the Spirit and square thee to the holy Canon of the Word and level thy Thoughts and Intentions at the Glory of God If thou thus search into thy Heart and do it in truth and faithfulness to the holy Light I dare say thou art ready for the sealing of the Spirit and the very frame of thy Heart is a real prayer for it O how soon may the Spirit come and by a Divine irradiation on thy Soul tell thee That thy Repentance is a Repentance unto Life and thy Faith precious Faith and thy Love Love in Sincerity How soon may it apply and seal the Promises to thy Heart as if it should say to thee Thou repentest indeed and the Mercy in the Promise is thine Thou believest indeed and the Salvation in the Promise is thine Thou lovest indeed and thine are the supersensual superintellectual good things prepared for the lovers of God And now thou maist say much better than Seneca Qualis somnus O how sweet is the rest and repose which the self-searching Soul finds in the bosom of Christ and Grace He that comes to that sealing Ordinance of the Lords Supper must prepare himself for the S●ul by Self-examination 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Let a man examine himself faith the Apostle 1 Cor. 11.28 Examine as a man would do Gold or Silver by the fire or by the Touchstone in like manner must he do so that he may fit himself for the Seal of Assurance of which the Sacramental Elements are Symbols Again If thou wouldst be assured exercise thy Graces and grow therein It much conduces to Assurance to render thy Graces as visible as thou canst Grace however it always carry a Divine lustre in it is not so visible when dormant in an habit or principle as when it is put forth into act and exercise neither is it so visible in its Initials in the smoking flax or bruised reed as in its Progresses and statures in Christ In point of Comfort talents not used are as none Comforts lie dead in Believers as their Graces do the holy sire raked up affords no light to them Awake therefore O Believer to
391 Conflict the Natural Spiritual differenced Pag. 261 262 263. Conscience its testimony of great repute among Pagans 405. Witnesseth integrity 406. Believers converse with Scripture Conscience Pag. 407 Conviction of Sin manifold 70 71 72. Several things ensue thereupon to Pag. 75 Creation the Philosophers misguess about it 17 18. New Creation in the Heart Pag. 383 384. Credere Deo in Deum Pag. 131 132 Cruciger his Death-bed Prayer and Faith Pag. 138 Covenant of Grace and Works difference of Men under them Pag. 278 D Dr. Dees impostures by Spirits Pag. 326 Delilah the import of the word in Hebr. Pag. 150 Dragon poysonous shut up by Sylvester the Bishops Prayers Pag. 266 E Election though from eternity yet buds in time Pag. 413 Evagrius his gift to the poor to be paid in another world Pag. 113 Evidences confirm Assurance Pag. 394 Experiments all learned men are for them 326 Experiments of Faith of Scripture-truth 325 to 370. Where of Scripture Ordinances and great Works to Pag. 386 Examination of our selves espied by the Philosophers Pag. 433 434 Faith the several acceptions of the word in Scripture 1 2. Considered in its measures and in its lowest measure described ibid. Wherein it exceeds Moral Virtues 8 9. The difference between that and Reason alone 12 19. And Reason with Scripture 19 30. Faith explicite required in Fundamentals 41 46. It disciples the Soul to Christ 86 87. Yields to be ruled by Christ in all actings 109. Aspires after Heaven and looks for pay there 113. Where the seat of Faith is disputed between Protestants and Papists 126. Though seems dead yet may be alive 129 130. More than a waked assent 131 to 136. Less than Assurance to 149. Why former Divines desine it by a full perswasion 136. Difference between Assurance and Faith justifying us 140. Hangs on God in all its actings 191. Fruits of Faith and several Conceptions of these 270 271. It is before all other Graces 283 to 288. Sets them all on work 289. It s foundation and infusion 328. It wars against all enticement to Sin 276. Steps by which Faith goes in mortifying it Pag. 280 Fall of man total Pag. 7 Father its efficacy in Prayer Pag. 245 Fear of God to be in all actions 303. Servile and Filial shewed Pag. 304 Mr. Fox never denied any that asked for Jesus sake Pag. 301 Free-Grace its presumption in unholy persons to expect it 119 120. Free-Will hath no Harmony with it 190. Abused by Pelagians Pag. 366 G God most glorious in his Word 12. Confest by all Nations 13. Cardinal Perron one day proved a God the next would have proved the contrary 171. Discovery of God in Grace and in the Creatures how differs Pag. 175 Good 288. Sets about the chief good Pag. 4 Graces spiritual are Creations 8. All act in union with Christ 295. All rooted in Christs Mines Pag. 380 H Happiness all desire it few hit it 3 4. What Aristotle makes it to be Pag. 253 Heart it includes Vnderstanding and Will Pag. 126 127 Hungarians Tradition Pag. 92 I Jews though they reject the Sacrifice of the Messiah yet offer a real one and why 97. Their answer to the Question where believe to be saved by Christs Righteousness with their pious saying over Bread Wine Herbs 344. Their saying of the seventy Souls that went down into Egypt 449. A vulgar rule among them 450. A custom of others about Alms. Pag. 454 455 Illumination Supernatural described 11. Wherein it excels Natural Reason 12 19. It 's requisite to Faith Pag. 30 31 32. Images how at first crept in 16. When cast out the people triumphed 309. Their return again Pag. 331 332 Ingrossers of Corn sore Judgments on them Pag. 184 Instruction the true false way of finding it Pag. 118 Intercession of Christ powerful Pag. 415 Johannes Seneca his Death-bed moan Pag. 210 Israelites the Men go not into Canaan but the little ones its misery Pag. 128 129 Justification three acts required to it 94 98. Bellarmines Conclusion about it 102. How the ungodly may and may not be justified 165. It s great importance 201. It 's not from eternity 202 206. It is double 207. How by Faith 213 to 219. Not compleat till the day of Judgment Pag. 227 to 231 K Kingdom the Primitive Christians talk so much of it that the Pagan Emperours were jealous of them though without cause Pag. 176 Kohathites the derivation of the word Pag. 5 L Law of God demands of us two things 209. Enough in Christ to answer both 210. It s writing in the heart by Nature and Grace differ 338. Impossible to be fulfilled but by the fiu't of man Pag. 401 Legio fulminatrix Pag. 373 Our life how tremendous every way Pag. 305 Light natural improved to the utmost engaged not God to give Grace Pag. 14 Love to God and our Neighbour hath but one root Pag. 301 Luthers Method in Reformation 274. An example of Faith in Mortification his saying of Free-Will 368 369. His answer to the menacing Law Pag. 428 M Mahalath a title of some Psalms interpreted Pag. 194 Mahomets Heart una child cut open Pag. 193 Meris Bishop of Chalcedons Discourse with Julian Pag. 308 Martyrs refusing Pardon Pag. 276 Meekness Natural Moral Spiritual 311. Examples ib. Pag. 312 Mortification a Believer yields to Christ for it in a threefold respect 103. Resemblance between it and Christs death 104. False ways of seeking it and the true pointed at 117 118. The fruit of Faith 250. Degrees of Mortification of Original Sin 260 267. And of actual ibid. Motions holy precious to a Believer Pag. 88 Musculus's Distich in straits Pag. 248 N Nazianzens saying about the difference between begotten and proceeding Pag. 352 O Obedience actuated by Faith 314 315 316. Obedience of the Law fulfilled in Christ and of the Gospel by the Spirit in a Believer Pag. 212 Ordination used by the Jews Pag. 377 Origens saying of some Scriptures that did affect him Pag. 144 P Papists and Hypocrites how they agree 122. All points in Popery additions to the Word 123. It s sandy foundation drawn from Bellarmine himself 147. Natural Popery in every mans heart Pag. 158 Paracelsus his proud boast of himself Pag. 192 Patience its excellency acted by Faith Pag. 318 Pelagians put Free-Will for Grace 6. Place Infants in the same state as Adam Pag. 257 Perfection sinless not attainable in this life Pag. 125 126 Perseverance no condition of it self Pag. 417 Philip Lantgrave's comfort in Imprisonment Pag. 321 322 Plague-sores lookt upon by Munster as Love-tokens Pag. 193 Plerophory of three things in Scripture Pag. 400 Pollio's dying-saying Pag. 115 Polemenia her wish to be cast into a Vessel of burning-Pitch Pag. 319 Providence Reasons mistake about it Pag. 18 19 Popes blasphemous speech about the loss of a Peacock Pag. 310 Promises of Grace and to Grace Pag. 346 Prayer its continuance 383. Its returns 372. How heard and not heard Pag. 374