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A52856 The absolute and peremptory decree of election to eternal glory reprobated in a sermon preached before the university in Great St. Maries Church in Cambridge / by Robert Neville ... Neville, Robert, 1640 or 1-1694. 1682 (1682) Wing N518; ESTC R7829 14,617 38

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Election to Evangelical Grace or Gods free and undeserved Mercy in Decreeing to bestow Christ upon all as the most Effectual meanes to engage men to Holiness of Life that is by what Christ hath done and suffered for Gentiles as well as Jews to call and bring home sinners of all sorts to Repentance and this farther appears from the ninth and tenth verses of the chapter of my Text where the Mystery of his will according to his own good pleasure which is all one with his choosing us here in the Text is specified to be the gathering of all things both Jews and Gentiles together in Christ and this is the Subject of the second chapter and of a great part of this Epistle Now that these words He hath chosen imply onely an Election to Evangelical Grace and not any Absolute Decree of Election to Eternal Glory I shall further evince and manifest to you by these following reasons and arguments First Because God hath declared in Scripture that those who believe in Christ and persevere in that Faith shall be saved and that such as will not believe in Christ nor persevere in that Faith shall be Damned Which declaration of his is inconsistent with any such Absolute Decree Now the Adequate Objects of the Divine and Peremptory Election to Eternal Glory are All and onely Such who believe in Christ and persevere and dye in that Faith and the Objects of Reprobation are such and onely such who either believe not or persevere not in their Faith John 3.36 He that believeth on the son hath everlasting life and he that believeth not the son shall not see life but the wrath of God abideth on him and John 6.40 This is the will of him that sent me that every one which believeth on the son may have everlasting life And as the objects of the Divine Election are such as believe so are they also such as persevere in that Faith Matth. 24.13 He that shall endure to the end the same shall be saved and the first Epistle of John 2.24 If that which ye have heard from the beginning shall remain in you ye also shall continue in the son and in the father i. e. you shall continue in the favour of God From which places of Scripture it is clear and eminent that when any mention is made of Gods Will and Decree either of saving or damning any no other Will or Decree of his is meant but onely that whereby he will save Believers and damn all Unbelievers Secondly No Absolute Decree can be inferr'd either from this or any other Text of Scripture because thereby we should destroy the nature of Grace and Virtue which are nothing else but an Habitual Power and ability in the rational Soul of man to bear all sensible pain and loss and forbear all sensible pleasure and profit out of love to Reason and the Divine Law this excellent power and ability of the Soul as far as 't is natural or acquir'd by our own acts and endeavours is of moral Consideration but as it is supernaturally wrought in the Soul or infused into it by the Spirit of God so far it concerns Theology and is above the sphere of morality but because Grace is confest by all to be the perfection of Nature and acquir'd and infus'd virtue are not 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or inconsistent I have thrust them into one definition in which Divines and Philosophers both agree Now if we were determin'd irresistibly either to Vice or Virtue by any peremptory Decree of the Almightie's this definition of Grace or Virtue would be a vain and useless notion and all the Divines and Philosophers that have been since the Creation would have been great Cheats and Impostors and all the excellent Discourses to incite men to Virtue or deter them from Vice which they have penn'd with such admirable Reason and Rhetoric would be but idle and unprofitable Harangues and as insignificant to the impotent race and nature of men as the practical Rules of Dancing to a Cripple or a Metaphysical Lecture to a natural Fool to which I may also superadd that Virtue and Vice would be dasht together and confounded were our Actions the result of necessity occasioned by any such Decree for as Justin Martyr saith very well (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 If it be fatally Decreed that one should be good another bad the one cannot be approved or accepted nor the other blam'd or censur'd Now if any such Absolute Decrce should be supposed to be passed in favour of any we must either Assert that God Decrees to Save them be they never so leud and dissolute which is contrary to the whole Tenour of the Gospel or else that God does irresistibly determine them to the use of such means as must necessarily bring them to heaven which would make men utterly uncapable either of Reward or Punishment for as Clemens Alexandrinus hath truely told us (b) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Neither Rewards nor Punishments are just if the Soul hath not a free Power both to embrace and refuse evil Neither is it possible any man should repent of doing what he could not but do or of omitting to do what was never in his power to effect no more than that he cannot fly like a Bird or move like an Angel I must indeed confess that it is God that worketh in us both to will and to do of his good pleasure Phil. 2.13 but this is so far from taking away our power that 't is brought as a reason by St. Paul why we should work out our Salvation spoken of in the twelfth verse God does indeed work it in us but how By giving us the knowledge of his promises by exciting and strengthening us by his Spirit He works it who supplies us with all sufficient means to work it he does it but not without us not whilst we lye like men asleep or like dead men in their graves God works the Ability to Act but not the Act it self for if he did it would be his Act not Ours much less does he work it forcibly and irresistibly And though by his primitive and natural will he would have all men happy happiness having been the very end of their Creation and though he forbids sin and detests it as contrary to his Essential Goodness yet he may justly permit it and the will of man may have in it self a power for natural and sinful actions it may resist Gods grace it may obstruct its workings and operations it may receive the grace of God in vain and Heb. 10.29 Do despite to the Spirit of Grace and Jude 4. abuse and turn the grace of God into wantonness I shall conclude this particular with those words of St. Cyril of Jerusalem (a) 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 It is Gods part to bestow Grace but it is your parts as ye are men to receive and keep it Thirdly No Absolute Decree of Election can be supposed to be