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A01894 Aggravation of sinne and sinning against knowledge. Mercie. Delivered in severall sermons upon divers occasions. By Tho: Goodvvin B.D. Goodwin, Thomas, 1600-1680. 1637 (1637) STC 12033; ESTC S103262 74,779 150

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able to hold weight in the ballance Dan. 5. 22. what puts he into the other scale against him to weigh him up and to shew he was too light ver 21 22 he tells him how his father knew the God of heaven and how that his knowledge cost him seven yeares the learning among wild beasts and thou sayes he his sonne knewest all this and yet didst not humble thy selfe Here is the aggravation weighs downe all he knew the God of heaven against whom he sinned and that judgement on his Father for his pride and then withall he tels him that this God in whose hands is thy breath and all thy wayes thou hast not glorified I name this place among many others because it is parallel with this in the text I le name no more but give reasons and demonstrations for it First Demonstrations The greatnesse of this kind of sinning might many wayes be made appeare we will demonstrate it onely by comparing it with other kinds of sinning To sinne though out of simple ignorance when that ignorance is but the causa sine qua non of sinning that is so as if a man had knowne it a sinne he had not done it doth not yet make the fact not to be a sinne though it lesseneth it For Luke 12. 48. He that did not know his Masters will was beaten when the thing committed was worthy of stripes though he did not know so much because the thing deserves it And the reason is because the Law being once promulged as 1. to Adam it was and put into his heart as the common ark of mankinde though the tables be lost yet our ignorance doth not make the Law of none effect For the Law of nature for ever binds that is all that was written in Adams heart because it was thereby then published in him and to him for us But positive lawes as I may call them as to beleeve in Christ c. anew delivered bind not but where they are publisht Iosiah rent his clothes when the booke of the Law was found because the ordinances were not kept although they had not knowne the Law of many yeares yet because they ought to have knowne it therefore for all their ignorance he feared wrath would come upon all Israel So also Lev. 5. 17. sinnes of ignorance were to be sacrificed for yet however it lesseneth the sin therefore he shall be beaten with few stripes And sure if ignorance lesseneth them knowledge aggravates for contrariorum eadem est ratio therefore he that knowes shall be beaten with many stripes Yea such difference is there that God is said to wink at sins of ignorance Acts 17. 30. The time of this ignorance God winks at Whiles they had no knowledge God tooke no notice yea and he abates something for such sinnes because the creature hath a cloake hath something to say for its selfe as Christ sayes Iohn 15. 22. but when against knowledge they have no cloak Yea farther Christ makes a sinne of ignorance to be no sinne in comparison So there If I had not spoken and done those workes never man did they had had no sinne That is none in comparison but now they have no cloak no shelter to award the stripes or plea to abate of them And that you may see the ground of this vast difference betweene sinnes of ignorance and against knowledge consider first that if a man sin suppose the act the same out of ignorance meerly there may be a supposition that if hee had knowne it he would not have done it and that as soone as he doth know it he would or might repent of it So 1 Cor. 2. 8. If they had knowne they had not crucified the Lord of Glory The like sayes Christ of Tyre Sidon and Gomorrha that if the same things had beene done in them they would have repented But now when a man knowes it afore and also considers it in the very committing it and yet doth it then there is no roome for such a supposition and lesse hope For what is it that should reduce this man to repentance is it not his knowledge now if that had no power to keepe him from his sinne then it may be judged that it will not be of force to bring him to repentance for it for by sinning the heart is made more hard and the knowledge and the authority of it weakned and lessened as all power is when contemned and resisted Rom. 1. 21. their foolish heart becomes darker Aristotle himselfe hath a touch of this notion in the third of his Ethicks that if a man sinne out of ignorance when he knowes it he repents of it if out of passion when the passion is over he is sorry for what he hath done but when a man sinnes deliberately and out of knowledge it is a signe he is fixed and set in mischiefe and therefore it is counted wickednesse and malice And hence it is that those that have beene enlightned with the highest kind of light but that of saving grace Heb. 6. 4 5. and Heb. 10. If they sinne wilfully after such a knowledge of the truth God lookes on them as those that will never repent And therefore likewise the schoole gives this as the reason why the Devills sinne obstinately and cannot repent because of their full knowledge they sinne with they know all in the full latitude that it may be knowne and yet goe on Secondly the vast difference that in Gods account is put betweene sinnes of knowledge and of ignorance will appeare by the different respect and regard that God hath to them in the repentance he requires and accepts for them and that both in the acts of repentance and also in the state of grace and repentance upon which God accepts a man or for want of which he rejecteth him First when a man comes to performe the acts of repentance and to humble himselfe for sinne and to turne from it God exacteth not that sins of ignorance should particularly be repented of But if they be repented of but in the general in the lumpe be they never so great God accepts it This is intimated Psal 19. 12. Who can understand his errour cleanse me from my secret sinnes that was confession enough But sinnes of knowledge must be particularly repented of and confessed and that againe and againe as David was forced to doe for his murder and adultery or a man shall never have pardon Yea farther greater difference will appeare in regard of the state of grace and repentance for a man may lye in a sinne he doth not know to be a sinne and yet be in the state of Grace as the Patriarchs in Poligamie and in divorcing their wives but to lye in a sinne of knowledge is not compatible with grace but unlesse a man maintaineth a constant fight against it hateth it confesseth it forsaketh it hee cannot have mercy This cannot stand with uprightnesse of heart A friend may keepe
correspondencie with one hee suspects not to be an enemy unto his friend and be true to his friendship notwithstanding but if hee knowes him to be an enemie he must break utterly with the one if he leanes to the other Thirdly yet farther in the third place so vast is the difference that some kind of sins committed out of and against knowledge utterly exclude from mercy for time to come which done out of ignorance remained capable of and might have obtained it as persecuting the Saints blaspheming Christ c. Pauls will was as much in those acts themselves and as hearty as those that sin against the Holy Ghost for he was made against the Church and in these sins as himselfe sayes not sinning willingly herein onely but being carried on with fury as hot and as forward as the Pharisees that sinned that sinne onely sayes hee 1 Tim. 1. 13. I did it ignorantly therefore I obtained mercie Though it was ignorantly done yet there was need of mercie but yet in that he did it but ignorantly there was a capacity and place for mercie which otherwise had not beene But thus to sin after a man hath received the knowledge of the truth shuts a man out from mercie Heb. 10. and there is no more sacrifice for sinne for such sins I say such sins as these thus directly against the Gospell when committed with knowledge For sins against the Law though against knowledge there was an atonement as appeares Levit. 6. from the 1. verse to the 8. where hee instanceth in forswearing But to persecute the Saints and Christs truth with malice after knowledge of it there is no more sacrifice not that simply the sin is so great in the act it selfe of persecution for Paul did it out of ignorance but because it is out of knowledge so vast a difference doth knowledge and ignorance put betweene the guilt of the same sinne And therefore indeed to conclude this in the last place this is the highest step of the ladder next to turning off the very highest but that of sinning against the Holy Ghost which must needs argue it the highest aggravation of sinning when it ascends so high when it brings a man to the brinck and next to falling into the bottomlesse pit irrecoverably And therefore to sinne presumptuously which is all one and to sinne against knowledge as appears Numb 15. 26 27 28 29 30. it being there opposed to sinning out of ignorance such a sinne as David did of whom it is said 2 Sam. 12. 9. that he despised the word of the Lord which phrase also is used to expresse sinnes of presumption ver 31. of that 15. of Numbers To sinne I say presumptuously is the highest step So in Davids account Psal 19. 12 13. For first he prayes Lord keepe me from secret sinnes which he maketh sinnes of ignorance and then next he prayes against presumptuous sinnes which as the opposition shewes are sinnes against knowledge For sayes he if they get dominion over me I shall not be free from that great offence That is that unpardonable sinne which shall never be forgiven so as these are neerest it of any other yet not so as that every one that fals into such a sinne commits it but he is nigh to it at the next step to it For to commit that sinne but two things are required light in the mind and malice in the heart not malice alone unlesse there be light for then that Apostle had sinned it so as knowledge is the Parent of it it is after receiving the knowledge of the truth Heb. 10. 27 28. These are the Demonstrations of it the Reasons are First because knowledge of God and his wayes is the greatest mercie next to saving grace Hee hath not dealt so with every Nation Wherein In giving the knowledge of his wayes and as it is thus so to a nation so to a man and therefore Christ speaking of the gift of knowledge and giving the reason why it so greatly condemneth Luke 12. 48. sayes For to whom much is given much is required As if hee had said To know his Masters will that is the great talent of all other There is a much in that Thus it was in the Heathens esteeme also They acknowledged their foolish wisdome in morall and naturall Philosophie their greatest excellencie and therefore Plato thank'd God for three things that he was a man an Athenian and a Philosopher And Rom. 1. 22. the Apostle mentions it as that excellencie they did professe And Soloman of all vanities sayes this is the best vanity and that it exceeds folly as light doth darknesse Eccles 2. But surely much more is the knowledge of the Law and of God as we have it revealed to us this must needs be much more excellent And so the Jewes esteemed theirs as in this second Chapter of the Romanes the Apostle shewes also of them that they made their boast of the Law and their forme of knowledge of it and approving the things that are excellent And what doe the two great books of the creatures and the word and all meanes else serve for but to increase knowledge If therefore all tend to this this is then the greatest mercie of all the rest For secondly God hath appointed knowledge as the immediate guide of men in all their wayes to bring them to salvation and repentance for to that it leads them It is that same 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 as the Philosopher call'd it and therefore the Law Rom. 7. 1 2. is compared to an Husband so farre as it is written in or revealed in the heart that as an Husband is the guide of the wife in her youth so is the Law to the heart And whereas beasts are ruled by a bit and bridle God hee rules men by knowledge And therefore if men be wicked notwithstanding this light they must needs sinne highly seeing there is no other curbe for them as they are men but this if he will deale with them as men this is the onely way and therefore if that will not doe it it is supposed nothing will It is knowledge makes men capable of sin which beasts are not therefore the more knowledge if men be wicked withall the more sinne must necessarily be reckoned to them so as God doth not simply looke what mens actions and affections are but chiefly what their knowledge is and accordingly judgeth men more or lesse wicked I may illustrate this by that comparison which I may allude unto That as in Kingdomes God measures out the wickednesse thereof and so his punishments accordingly principally by the guides the governors thereof what they are and what they doe as in the 5. of Ieremie the 4. verse it appeares where first God lookes upon the poore people but he excuseth them these are foolish and know not the way of the Lord and therefore God would have beene moved to spare the Kingdome notwithstanding their sins But from them at