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A03615 The soules vocation or effectual calling to Christ. By T.H. Hooker, Thomas, 1586-1647. 1638 (1638) STC 13739; ESTC S104193 379,507 911

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before ever you can bee comforted as for this temporary beleever his eyes were never opened convictingly to see his sinnes and his heart was never burthened with them nor loosned from them that so the Lord Christ and his comforts might be setled upon therefore in Hosea 2.14 I will allure her and bring her into the wildernesse and speake friendly to her and I will give her vineyards from thence and the valley of Achor for the doore of hope first in the wildernesse and then in Canaan first in sorrow then in comfort the valley of Achor is the valley of consternation and then the doore of hope this is the way toward Zion but this temporary hath invented a new way to Zion he doth as Ruffians doe they will goe in the ●oad way so farre as they finde good way but when they come into bad way they breake over hedges and finde a new way whether lawfull or unlawfull they care not so doth this man he takes his comfort as soone as ever it comes hee snatches at all the comforts of the Gospell and thinks they are all his owne and all on the sudden he is a forward professour at three or foure dayes warning and his heart snatcheth at every Sermon of mercie and he is as good a Christian by and by as many a poore soule which hath tugged hard for it many a yeare but his conscience was never awakened he never felt the burthen of his sinnes nor the wrath of God against him for his sinnes this temporary promises to himselfe nothing but ease and peace and prosperity therefore when sorrowes and troubles and miseries come he goes away with as much speed as he came like Ionahs gourd that came up suddenly and withered as suddenly so in the beginning of the yeare hee is a hot professour and before the fall of the leafe he is gone againe the wound of this man was this he wanted the worke of the law not onely that through-worke of the law which none shall have but such as have faith but also that legall worke of the law which should breake and hammer his heart this is the stonie ground-hearer he wanted depth of earth what that was wee shall dispute anon when occasion serves the meaning is thus much in the generall the plow which should have given earth and mould enough it was the sharp law which should have torne up his proud sturdy rebellious heart all in peeces but this man never had this worke and therefore his proud heart beat backe the worke of the promise that it never had roome in his heart comfort and consolation will never sticke nor abide upon a proud heart nor upon a stubborne and unbroken heart which was yet never broken for sinne plaisters may be made but they shall never finde ease and comfort by them as they desire you may goe away comforted and say God is mercifull and Christ is gracious and he came to save sinners and though our workes will not justifie us yet the Lord Jesus Christ will save us your plaister will not sticke thus he failes in the entrance to the promise Secondly he failes in his application of the promise for the ground upon which he goes or the cause and reason which carries him to roame after the promise it is onely the generall notice of mercie and of the salvation that God offers the glimpse and the shine whereof being let in upon the heart and passing by jogs the soule and so the heart snatcheth at it he comes to heare the abundance of mercie and the rich redemption and plentifull goodnesse of Christ to pardon all sinnes the sinne against the holy Ghost onely excepted and the freenesse of mercy to all sorts of sinners be they never so many for number never so vile for nature yea he heareth that there is a fountaine set open for all to wash in when he heares this hee saith that 's well then I may come to heaven too and there is some hope that I may receive mercie never considereth the condicions upon which God promiseth and bestoweth mercie whereas the man that is a true beleever hath not only a common kinde of apprehension of the mercie of God in Christ but he hath a particular application of it I will open it thus that every man may take something the temporarie hath a common hear-say of mercie and the common hear-say of mercie in the bare letter of them as that Jesus Christ came to save sinners it is in the bruit of it onely but the humbled soule hath it under the hand of the Spirit and the Spirit seales it and makes it good to him the promise of life slides and passeth by the temporary beleever but now the Spirit of God settles it and it takes a deep and a through impression in the heart of a beleever by application the Spirit of God only as it were jogs the heart of a temporarie beleever but he sets it on deeply upon the heart that is humbled and fitted for it as the Angell said unto Gideon The Lord is with thee thou valiant man so the Lord faith to every humbled soule not onely that the Lord is gracious and mercifull for thus he saith to the temporarie beleever but he is gracious and mercifull to thee and hee will speake peace and comfort to thee which hast spoken trouble and terrour to thine owne heart as in the 1 Cor. 2.12 Wee have not received the Spirit of the world but the Spirit which is of God that we might know the things that are given to us of God God not only gives us good things but he hath given his Spirit that we may know that it is he which hath given us these good things Thirdly and lastly this temporary beleever failes and fals shott upon this ground also I told you the soule is effectually perswaded to rest upon the free grace of God and to fall into the armes of his mercie now the temporary failes also in the worke of relying that which feeds his hope and stayes his heart is nothing else but the taste and present sweetnesse which he had in the promise he relyes upon the taste and sense which hee had by the sip of the promise and hence it is that when the taste is gone the sweetnesse of the present push is gone that then there comes trouble and sorrow more heavie and more able to vex him than all the other was to comfort him then hee begins to repent him of his match and thinkes that all his profession will not quit cost now when that taste and that comfort which he had failes him and sorrow and afflictions come and overpowers his sweetnesse and comfort then hee fals away but a man that hath true saving faith rests himselfe not upon the taste and sense of this good but upon the goodnesse of God in the promise and upon the all-sufficiency of God in the promise he seeth more good in the promise than in all the
owne comfort and hopes to change himselfe and help himselfe out of misery hee conceives it is in his power to procure his safety and to satisfie all the wrong done to God he now becomes a Saviour of himselfe Where is Christ now he keeps the staffe in his owne hand now and hee will still have it in his owne power to procure his owne happinesse This is that every man is naturally given to since he must alter he will have it in his owne power to alter himselfe and save himselfe This seemes to me to bee the meaning of the young mans speech Matthew 19. when he came to trade for life and happinesse What shall I doe saith he to gaine eternall life Christ saith goe thy way and keepe the Commandements Thou shalt not commit adultery thou shalt not steale c. I have kept all these from my youth saith hee what want I yet as who should say if thou have not enough thou shalt have enough before I goe I will pay thee upon the naile I will be aforehand with thee I will not owe thee a farthing token What want I yet as though hee would not bee onely even hand but afore hand with God as who should say he could not misse Heaven if he could doe as he thought he was able to doe To have all a mans good in another to receive all spiritual good from another this is that nature is hardly brought unto and yet this must be done if ever we beleeve To make the matter plaine otu of Scripture this was the maine hindrance that kept the Jewes from imbracing Jesus Christ men thinke they are the bravest Christians in the world because they have this and can doe that because they injoy these abilities nay performe these services not that a man should now not doe these but the resting here and to thinke to helpe a mans selfe by this meanes and the taking up a mans rest in these meanes and the opinion of merit this is the bane of religion Rom. 〈◊〉 2. For I beare them record saith the text that they have zeale for God but not according to knowledge the Iewes had a zeale for God they loved religion and they were Christians and circumcised and doe not these attaine to life and salvation no for saith the text they being ignorant of Gods righteousnesse and going about to establish their owne righteousnesse have not submitted themselves to the righteousnesse of God in Christ what is the reason of this because they went about to establish their owne righteousnesse Three things there be in the third verse for our purpose First that a man cannot be saved by his owne righteousnesse but by the righteousnesse of God in and through Christ Secondly that it is a point of submission and subjection Oh marke this and it is a great point it is a point of humilitie and submission to take and receive righteousnesse from another It is a great point of submission to have all from Christ and nothing in our selves to have grace from Christ and comfort from Christ this is admirable Now what hinders this submission why thirdly the text saith They went about to establish their owne righteousnesse of their owne workes as if that could doe the deed or nothing thou must count them dung in respect of the righteousnesse of Christ that is the first the whole nation of the Jewes fell short of Christ in this point the second place is Rom. 9.31 32. marke how he reasons the● What shall we say then as who should say you will thinke we speake strange things and it is a strange thing but it is a true thing that the Gentiles which followed not after righteousnesse have attained unto righteousnesse even the righteousnesse which is of faith but Israel which followed the law of righteousnesse have not attained the law of righteousnesse why because they sought it not by faith but by the workes of the law Three things againe here in the text consider First what shall we say is it possible what a Gentile saved and a Jew condemned what a Gentile that knew not God attaine mercie and the Jewes and people of God cast off from mercie what shall wee say then why marke the text a Gentile that never trusted to his owne righteousnesse that is a miserable sinfull creature he seeth himselfe nothing haply a cursed drunkard or an adulterer the Lord opens his eyes discovers his sinnes and makes him see he is a lost man and makes him see that a Christ must save him from the sinnes of his prayers and a Christ must save him from the sinnes of his performances or else he is an undone man for ever Another man now the Jew he sought after the law that is they were strict in the performance of the law they had their circumcision their washing and all services upon all occasions curiously how comes this to passe now that the one is saved and the other damned because the one will be beholding to Christ the other will not therefore the one hath mercie the other hath not Now we will explaine the point and the practice of it will you see how men procure their owne ruine in this kinde take a poore sinner that is fallen into a base course what is the course hee takes to save himselfe hee is informed what to doe and his conscience is awakened therefore he goeth aside and forceth himselfe and labours to force his heart to a melting for and hatred against his corruptions whereby God hath beene displeased now haply God breakes his heart and teares flow abundantly and the man riseth off his knees and here takes up his stand and thinkes all is well and in conclusion thus he lives and is as bad as ever he was before and the next temptation that is offered to him he is taken aside with the same sinne againe the reason is he went away and thought my heart hath beene enlarged I have confessed my sinnes and God hath humbled my soule and therefore I shall be saved and rests upon his humiliation and not upon Christ upon his confession and not upon Christ so that his humiliation and confession is his Saviour he hath made provision at home therefore will not goe to the Lord Jesus Christ another man God opens his eyes and makes him see his ignorance the Minister tels him he must humble his soule and pray in his family now hee findes himselfe marvellous blinde and unable to doe it now he bewailes his ignorance and carelesnesse and waits upon God in his ordinances and gets abilitie to performe those duties so that now he performes holy duties after an excellent manner and there he stayeth and in conclusion returnes to his old fashion againe what is the reason he establisheth his owne righteousnesse he settled upon dutie alone and there was an end he fell short of Christ and rested upon doing of duties and so went no further at all well then wee have the hindrances Then for
will make with the house of Israel I write my lawes in their hearts and they shall not need to be taught Men must know God and beleeve in the Lord. Now as the Lord requires this as the condition of the covenant so the Lord will work this in them as he requires this of them Iohn 1.12 the text saith To them that beleeve he gave them power to be the sonnes of God Now if a man will beleeve he shall be saved Now then hee makes a man beleeve that he may be a sonne This is the second passage whereby the soule of a sinner comes to be cheered or that there is not onely abundance of sufficiency in the Lord Jesus Christ but that mercy as it is able to doe him good so it will make him partaker of the good The third particular is this That as mercy hath all good and will make us partakers of what it hath so also it will dispose of us and of that it bestoweth upon us Mercy will not onely have a sinner but it will rule and order that grace it hath bestowed upon the soule For if mercy purchase a soule at so high a rate as the blood of the Lord Jesus it is right that the soule purchased by grace and supplyed with grace that mercy should dispose it for the honour of God You are not your owne saith the Apostle but bought with a price therefore you must glorifie the Lord in body and soule Nay it is not onely right that mercy should doe it but reason and beneficiall to the soule that mercy should doe thus Nay I say unlesse that mercy should rule a man he had not beene able to give full content to the soule If the Lord should leave any poore soule to the destiny of his owne heart and the malice of Satan hee would runne to ruine presently he is not able to supply his owne wants and to dispose of his owne spirit and employ aright his owne soule For if Adam in his innocency had a stocke in his owne hands fell and perished then if mercy should put a man into the same estate that Adam was a man should bring himselfe into the same misery that Adam was brought into but there is that fulnesse of that mercy that is in Christ that it wil bestow all good needfull for me so also it will dispose of that good in me so that Satan shall never prevaile the world shall never overcome nor my corruptions beare sway in me but the Lord shall rule me for ever and this is the fulnesse of Gods mercy Gather up the point then that we may see what wee must learne There is sufficiency in mercy to supply all wants nay there is ability in mercy to communicate that it hath and we stand in need of Nay mercy will preserve us and that it giveth to us against all oppositions that can befall thee This is the lesson that the soule must learne that it may be able in some measure to see the way and learne the path that leadeth to everlasting happinesse This is the first lesson that the soule must learne of God the Father Vset For the use of this Is this the lesson the soule must learne then looke wisely upon it and when this comes upon thee and sorrow assailes thee heavily doe not looke into the blacke booke of conscience and thinke there to finde supply neither looke into the booke of the privileges and performances and thinke to finde power out of thy owne sufficiency Looke not on thy sinnes to pore upon them whereby thou shalt be discouraged neither look into thy owne sufficiency thinking thereby to procure any thing to thy selfe These are but lessons of the lower forme It is true thou must see thy sinnes and sorrow for them but this is for the lower forme and thou must get this lesson beforehand and when thou hast gotten this lesson of contrition and humiliation looke onely to Gods mercy and the riches of his grace and be sure as you take out this lesson take it not out by halves for then you wrong mercy and your selves too if you thinke that bare workes will serve and that is all No no mercy will rule you therefore take all the lesson out and then the heart will be cheered and thy soule in some measure enabled to come on to the Lord and will see some glimpses of consolation from the Spirit Quest 2 We see the lesson what must be learned now we must see the reason why the Lord must teach this lesson Answ I answer It is not appropriated to the Father alone for the Father teaches not alone but the Sonne and the holy Ghost teach too But why then doth the Text give it to the Father Here I answer directly because the Father was directly offended with the sinne of man 1 Iohn 1.7 If wee sinne wee have an advocate with the Father namely the Lord Jesus Christ to plead for us with the Father He doth not say wee take an advocate with an advocate that doth not plead with himselfe the reason is God the Father was directly offended though all the persons in the Trinity were offended yet the Father more directly Now he that is directly offended favour and mercy must come from him to the party that doth offend and that is the reason why Christ especially cast this upon the Father Take a creditor that hath money or creditors that are bankrupts now this is no meanes to helpe and succour these men but it lyeth upon the creditor that oweth the debt for he onely it is must come to forgive the debts for it is here God the Father being directly offended by the sonne of man therefore from him in the first place must proceed the pardon and mercy to the sonne of man Hence it comes to passe that the text saith the Father must teach this lesson Quest 3 The third question is this After what manner doth the Lord teach the soule Christ speakes now of the worke of the Spirit and that you may not be mistaken know this that the worke of the Spirit doth alwayes goe with and is communicated by the word therefore if the question be After what manner doth God teach the soule to spell out this lecture of mercy and pardon Answ I answer briefl● The Lord teacheth the soule by his Spirit I told you that before that not only the Father but the Sonne and holy Ghost also teacheth the Father from himselfe the Son from the Father and the holy Ghost from both Therefore understand what I say the Spirit of the Lord doth not onely in the generall make known Gods mercy but doth in particular with strength of evidence present to the broken hearted sinner the right of the freenesse of Gods grace to the soule nay it holds those speciall considerations to the heart and prefen●eth the heart with them not onely so but in the second place the Spirit doth forcibly soke in the re●●ish of that grace
judgements for the right understanding of the nature of faith and the frame of this blessed grace in the soule and that which wee collect is this saving faith is no part of that holinesse which Adam had nor no part of that image to which we are restored by sanctification in a word faith is a worke of effectuall vocation and no part of sanctification neither of the image in which Adam was created or to which wee are renewed and this followes from the Doctrine thus If it bee so that faith is the maine especiall ●nstrument whereby the soule goes to God to fetch a principle of grace and the Image of grace whereby wee may live then it is not the image which formerly wee had in Adam nor to which we are renewed againe in sanctification But the first is true namely that it is faith that goes to fetch that spirituall power from God which wee ●ost in Adam therefore it is not that spirituall power this is the point of information Beloved ●n our Saviour Christ I am not ignorant that many learned godly judicious Divines whose parts I reverence are of another opinion yet I remember their different opinions and therefore I hope ●o man will be offended with mee though I dif●er from some for I must needs differ from some ●nd it hath ever beene my care not to trouble a ●opular congregation with any matter of dis●ute and I hold that it rather should bee the care of Ministers to winne men to faith than to trouble them with matters of this kinde and I hold it the greatest part of zeale to get them to holy hearts and to exact lives and conversations Therefore I am marvellous hardly drawne on to the least dispute in this kinde and yet at the earnest request of some and also because this is the proper place where this question falls and to cleare some doubts according to my promise and because haply some good m●n may stumble at some things therefore let mee deliver those thoughts which I have many times heretofore intended to impart and I should bee very willing to heare of better arguments if any shall be suggested these are spirituall passages and hard and difficult therefore this I would tell you First what the controversie is and wherein it lies Secondly the reasons of it Thirdly shew the order of Gods proceedings in this worke of grace in the soule and when these are done the point will be very plaine First for the first namely wherein this controversie lies It is confessed of all hands that Adam in his innocency did not beleeve in a Saviour he needed it not onely here lies the maine point of controversie that though Adam did not beleeve in a Saviour and God did not require it yet men conceive and some judicious Divines too that Adam had ability that if Christ had beene revealed he could have beleeved for they say thus a man is able having a cleere eye to see but one world because there is no more but if there were five worlds the same eye that seeth one the same eye would see them all if they were visibly made So Adam did not beleeve a Saviour because the Lord Christ was not revealed and administred to him but Adam had that spirituall power of faith if the Lord Jesus Christ had been revealed hee was able to beleeve in him and so to rest upon him as men doe now in the time of the Gospell this is the controversie which we flatly deny Secondly the reasons to confirme this point that Adam had not this grace of faith The reason is this this beleeving in the Lord Jesus Christ ●is that which doth directly crosse the estate of Adam in his innocency and the innocency of Adam wherein he was created and therefore cannot by no means agree to him and that appeares thus for a man to have a principle of life in himselfe which Adam had and to fetch a principle of life from another which wee doe by faith these are contrary the one to the other hee lives well and to bee saved by living well and to bee saved by another and to live well by the power of another these are contraries one to the other to have all in himselfe as Adam had and to have all from another and not in himselfe these are contradictions the one to the other and therefore cannot stand together and therefore observe it the manner and phrase of Scripture is this and it is very strange Phil. 3.9 That I may bee found in him not having mine owne righteousnesse as if he should say Adam in his estate of innocency was in himselfe and had his owne righteousnesse he had a power to please God and to save himselfe by it but now in the time of the Lord Christ the case is cleare wee are not nor cannot ●he found in our owne righteousnesse or in the workes of the Law but in the righteousnesse of God by faith imputed to us and of his grace bestowed on us so that these two cannot stand together So then I reason thus that which is crosse to the innocencie of Adam and contradicts the estate of Adam in his innocency that can never agree to the estate of Adam but for a man to beleeve in the Lord Jesus Christ and to have all from him if it had beene revealed this had beene crosse to the nature of Adam and therefore it is not possible that he should have this faith in him now I come to answer some objections Object .1 First if Adam had not this faith and if the Lord did not require it at his hands then it seems that not beleeving in Christ is not a sinne against the Law of God for God commanded it not i● the Law Answ 1 To this I answer that not beleeving in the Lord Christ is not a sinne against the morall law but it is a sinne against the Law of the Gospell 1 Iohn 3.23 This is his Commandement that wee should beleeve in the Name of the Lord Iesus Christ the want of this faith is a sinne not so much against the ten Commandements as against the Gospell properly as Rom. 3.28 By what Laws boasting excluded by the Law of faith so that there is a Law even of faith not onely a law morall but a law of faith Object 2 Againe they object did not Adam then trust in God and put his confidence in God Answ 2 I answer there is a kinde of confidence which Adam had but it is not that which is of faith and which we now speake of in vocation and Divines do truly say that we are bound to trust in God by the first Commandement but that trust is not this faith but it is of a marvellous farre different nature Know therefore that to trust and be●eeve in Christ savingly is thus much when the soule is wholly pluckt off from it selfe and goes wholly to another for that which it hath not of it selfe this Adam had not for
Adam could not seeke to another for a principle of life for hee had it in himselfe neither was ●t sinne in him for the Angels themselves doe not beleeve in Christ neither is it required of them Againe Adam had a kinde of trust and confidence in God but not this trust nor this faith but it was this so farre as the creature be●ng a second cause should stay and move it selfe according to the first cause and to concurre with the first cause unto any worke This Adam had ●nd the Angels have it in Heaven which beleeve not in Christ The blessed Angels have a power spirituall in themselves and they say that all power is firstly in God and that he doth governe them and all the Heavens too and stay themselves upon God firstly and so co-worke with God but this is farre different from saying thus the Angels stay themselves first upon God as being the first cause of all created substances and to goe to God to fetch a principle of life from God these are contraries Object 3 The maine objection of all is this If say they Adam never had power to beleeve and so beleeving in Christ was not in the state of his innocency then why doth God condemne 〈◊〉 for not beleeving seeing they have not this power and Adam had it not It is all the difficulty that lies upon the point The answer is plaine open and naked and therefore I answer it by distinction thus Answ 3 Infidelity and not beleeving doth imply two things thus the first is the meer want of the power of faith and the absence of ability to rest upon another and to fetch the principle of grace from another neither the Law nor the Gospell nor God himselfe doth condemne thee for this nay the Gospell doth not require this that a man should have power of himselfe to beleeve not God doth not require it but the promise breeds faith and feeds faith it begets faith and continues faith in the soules of all those that have it and this is all that God would have that the soule of a poore sinner should be contented to taked from him and bee under the Spirit that would inable him to beleeve and to goe to him for the which may make him beleeve that hee might be made strong in the power of the might of Jesus Christ as in that place of the Ephesians the Gospell saith thou art a poore miserable sinner her is mercy only be contented that I should worke upon thee for thy good and convey mercie to thee so that the bare want is not the cause why God doth condemne a man the Angels in heaven this day have not this saving faith and yet there is no sinne in them againe besides 〈◊〉 are want of this confidence there is an aversnes ●f heart and a crossenesse of soule to the meanes of grace and the Gospell and against the Spirit ●f grace that would worke faith and draw my ●●ule out of my sinne and plucke my soule to my ●aviour 〈◊〉 sinfull soule is fastned to his folly and ●ettled upon his base corruptions and hee rests here with a kinde of resolution not to goe off ●om his distempers and he will hold his corrup●ons and maintaine his lusts so that when mer●e is offered he saith I will not have mercie but ●y sinne and the Spirit of God shall not plucke ●y corruptions from mee but I will have my ●nne rather than a Christ thought I perish for it ●is resisting against the meanes of grace the pro●ise and mercie and the most blessed Spirit of ●●ace this flowes from originall corruption and ●●refore Adam never had this and comming ●om sinne and being a fruit of sinne a man shall ●nd must justly bee condemned for it though ●dam had not faith yet he would not have oppo●d the Spirit of grace it would have wrought ●pon him this is the infidelitie which the Scrip●ure so often makes mention of because the ●eart is proud and sturdy and setled upon his ●es and saith What shall Jesus Christ come to ●fer me grace and to plucke away my sinnes and ●rruptions and to give mee grace I will none 〈◊〉 this Christ not I if thou doest want grace be●use thou hast resisted grace thou art justly to ●e condemned as a sinner this is the whole ●urse of Scripture Ioh. 3.19 This is the condemnation that light is come into the world and men love darknesse better than light because their wayes are evil that is they love their sinne lusts and corruptions and chuse them and fasten to them and will have them and will not have a Christ this is the ruine of a sinner and this is the infidelity which the Lord speakes of and this is nothing else but the resisting the grace and mercie which would worke grace in him and this is properly unbeleefe to see how unbeleefe bankes the way to heaven a man that is a covetous wretch close hearted the word reveales this and condemnes this and saith hee I will not forsake the world and the adulterer saith I will not forsake my lusts and the drunkard faith I will not forsake my companions hee is staked downe to his corruptions so that all the Angels in heaven and all the promisses of the Gospell cannot perswade him to forsake his corruptions but he is staked downe to his corruptions and hugs them and saith I will hug my sinne in despire of all the world and God himselfe this is a cursed fruit of originall corruption this is sinfull and fearfull and a man is justly condemned for it so then no man is condemned for want of power to beleeve but because he resists grace and mercie and will not receive power to beleeve Thirdly now I come to show how the Lord workes upon the heart this is easie for all of you to apprehend and you may the better see the order of Gods worke if yee observe these foure rules the maine weight lies upon the third and the fourth therefore we will onely propound the two former to make way for the rest First when God comes to worke upon a poore sinner hee findes him dead in sinne and hee hath no good at all in him no saving supernaturall good and hee is not able to worke any good in himselfe by all the meanes in the world and he is not able to receive any spirituall good in the use of those meanes so the Apostle saith I know that in my flesh dwelleth no good thing and our Saviour Iohn 3.6 Whatsoever is borne of the flesh is flesh whatsoever comes from man from corrupted flesh is uncleane so Rom. 8.7 The carnall or the fleshly wisdome is not subject to the law of God so that a man not only hath no good in himselfe but he is not able to receive any good but rather oppose it Secondly hence it is cleare that all saving workes are the proper gifts of God and the peculiar operations of his good Spirit in the hearts
they have the victory and although there never was nor never can bee any such engine for temporall deliverances as this is yet certaine it is this saving faith is a spirituall engine and instrument a● I may so say that gives victory and conquest over all spirituall enemies 1 Iohn 5.4 They that are borne of God overcome the world and sinne and this is the victorie that overcommeth the world even your faith marke the phrase and it is not for the conquest of some one corruption but for the overthrowing of a world of wickednesse it quencheth all the fiery darts of the Devill be the corruptions never so strong yet faith gives the conquest to a poore sinner it is not hope alone nor love nor zeale they are all good souldiers and they may strive much and lend much helpes to a poore sinner but they will grow weake and feeble and dead except saving faith come in to rescue an● bring a supply how often doe we finde that wh●● our hope failes and our love growes cold and ou● zeale dead then at last faith goes to heaven 〈◊〉 fetches new grace even grace for grace and th●● hope is stirred and desire quickned and zeale enflamed Psal 27.13 I had fainted unlesse I had beloved to see the goodnesse of the Lord in the land of the ●●ving it was saith that did save him at a dead lift it is with the soule as it is with the body take a man that is swounding there is one friend that weeps over him another that comforts him but he that will cure him must goe to the Apothecaries shop and bring some Aqua vitae and that will fetch him againe so it is with a poore sinner being under the pressure of horrour of heart you wicked ones are not acquainted with this but you may be in time I have knowne the stou●●st heart to stoop the poore sinner in his extremity faints and profits and pleasures and friends weepe over him saying Oh that we could have quieted and refreshed you but the poore man is go●e till at last faith goes to heaven and brings a pardon to save him and mercy to comfort him and hath supply there and faith brings the water of life even the freenesse of this grace and that cheares comforts and revives the heart thus sinking so that the poore sinner by this time begins to looke up and to come to himselfe againe as David saith Psal 73.1 Yet God is good to Israel hee w●● even sinking but faith over came the temptation Oh saith he the world is naught and men are marvellous wicked and malicious to oppose and ●●y owne heart is malicious and bad but God is good and he will be good to me and cure this vile h●●rt of mine 1 Pet. 1.5 Wee are kept by the power 〈◊〉 God through faith unto salvation that which gets the victory is faith and next under God in Christ we owe our everlasting salvation unto faith even 〈◊〉 that blessed grace you that are acquainted with troubles and anguish of conscience and with many corruptions would it not doe you good at the heart to see all your deadly enemies laid downe at your feet would it not do you good to have all your strong lusts and masterly corruptions of pride and malice those mighty and Goliah sinnes that you have a deadly envie against and that you have stood so long against would you not see them all mastered and overcome I doubt not but you that feele these and undergoe the burden of these you would account it the best day that ever you did see if the conquest be worth the striving then get faith and then the day is yours and you shall see your lusts bleed your lusts breake and though your pride and other lusts now get ground against you yet then they shall be led captive as the text saith then Christ shall lead captivitie captive faith brings Christ into the field and so the victory is gotten Motive 3 As faith makes us glorious in all graces and gives the conquest over all enemies so in the last place it is faith that brings a blessing to all our blessings and it graces all our abilities and it blesseth us in all our occasions that concerne us the profit of all meanes and the successe of all our labours it is in faith nay there is a good which faith workes upon some and therefore it is wort● the striving it is that which blesseth all our blessings and all that doth concerne us meanes m●● bend the worke and operation but all the prof●● is in faith as Heb. 4.2 The Gospell was preached unto them as unto us but it did not profit them because it was not mixt with faith in those that heard it hadst thou the greatest parts and abilities under heaven if thou hadst not faith with them they would not profit thee men thinke to goe beyond all with their power wit and policie but I say All will not profit them without faith if thou canst receive the Sacraments with faith it will strengthen thee if thou canst heare the Word with faith the terrours of the law will humble thee and the commands thereof will direct thee and awe thee but otherwise all is nothing though an Angell should come from heaven and preach to you as it is with the meanes of the body if a man eat never so much meat and cannot digest it if the stomack bee clogged with it there is nothing but sicknesse and diseases come from it but if a man take but a little meat and digest it well it will nourish him and doe him much good so it is here that which is the stomack and liver of the soule is faith and that turnes the Word and Sacraments and ordinances into good bloud it is a lowly beleeving heart that gets good by this Secondly all our performances finde acceptance through faith the Scripture saith Without faith it is impossible to please God and I say That without faith it is impossible that thou shouldst please God though thy judgement is weake and thy parts humble and thy ability poore and feeble but yet if thou canst but sigh up to heaven by faith that sigh is accepted in heaven with faith all thy weaknesses are pardoned and all services are accepted whereas without the grace of faith hadst thou the greatest abilities under Heaven and though thou canst please thy great Patron thine owne proud heart yet thou wilt never please the great God he that heareth holy faith and walketh by faith though hee can please none else yet hee shall be sure to please his God This is that which turneth all our sinnes and curses into good to us Oh marke that not that it makes them good in themselves but it brings good out of them The cunning Apothecary and wise Physitian can make the most deadly poyson the most soveraigne cordiall because he corrects the one that is so many degrees could and puts a stronger spirit of heat