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A30855 Religion and reason adjusted and accorded, or, A discourse wherein divine revelation is made appear to be a congruous and connatural way of affording proper means for making man eternally happy through the perfecting of his rational nature with an appendix of objections from divers as well as philosophers as divines and their respective answers. Banks, R. R. (Richard R.) 1688 (1688) Wing B671; ESTC R23639 152,402 381

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to Mans Nature which is Rational and ought in all things to act according to Reason 5. To put Man therefore in the Way to glorifie God eternally and to be for ever happy in loving him with all the Heart with all the Soul and with all the Mind is to clear his Understanding by convincing it that God alone is ans Sovereign Good and to purifie his Will by affording Motives of a nature more powerful to incline it to the Love of God then all the Motives which the World can exhibit are to win it to the Love thereof 6. Wherefore since on the one side Mans Soul is sensually affected with Objects ever at hand and esteems nothing able to bring Contentment but some or other Enjoyment of this Life not only by reason of its own native and acquired corrupt Inclination but also from the Opinion of the World round about confirming it therein and that on the other side the Object of Mans Felicity is Spiritual not obvious to sense and afar off it follows that unless the Object of Felicity should become such as to be put into a Condition whereby it might be capacitated to draw Mans Affections in a way agreeable and familiar to his Nature from the Love of the World to the Love of it self Man could never be brought back again to the Path of Life but would go perpetually on in the Way which leads to Perdition 7. Seeing then the goodness of God is such that it was inconsistent therewith not to afford Means whereby Man might be recovered from his lost Condition and yet not to violate his Rational Nature 't was necessary that God being the Object of Mans Felicity should become Incarnate and be made Man to the intent he might familiarly converse with Man softly instil through his Senses his Divine Precepts and to do and suffer such things on his account and for his sake as that considering the Dignity of the Person the unmerited and unspeakable Kindness and unvaluable Worth of the Benefit it could not possibly otherwise fall out but that as many as should seriously and frequently reflect and meditate thereon would be induced to despise the World and all its alluring Enticements for the perpetual Enjoyment of so great and excellent an Object as so gracious and good a God must needs appear to be 8. It was therefore the Almighties great Kindness to condescend to Mans Frailty and be cloathed with his Flesh in the second Person of the blessed Trinity because in that he is the Wisdom of his Father and Word of God Sect. 2. 't was an Office peculiarly proper for him to manifest and declare unto the World the Love which God had to Man in reconciling or drawing him to Himself again 9. To which End Christ the Eternal Son of God did many signal Miracles to give irrefragable Testimony that he was sent from the Father was One with him and that the Design of his coming into the World was to make up the Breach and Distance between God and Man which he accordingly on his Part did by Teaching by Doing and by Suffering For by his Doctrine he infallibly shewed not only the miserable Condition which Man would eternally incur unless he forsook the World and turned to God but also that God himself was Mans Felicity and what Course he should take that he might for ever fully enjoy him And seeing it was not enough that Man should have his Understanding aright informed unless his Will were likewise inclined to do what he ought in order to the full Enjoyment of God Christ was graciously pleased to undertake the doing and suffering such beneficial and stupendious things for him that nothing but want of Consideration and due Reflexion on them could possibly frustrate their prevalent Virtue and Power over the Will effectually to incline and turn it unto God as the sovereign good thereof For since God is Man's Felicity could any thing possibly be parallel'd hereunto for the meriting of his Love consequently for inducing him to use the means available to Bliss that the omnipotent Creator of all things should become clad with human Flesh subject to Infirmities for the sole good of his Creature That he should familiarly converse with his Vassals and call them Friends and Brethren and really treat them as such That he should toil himself both night and day in travelling from place to place to preach the glad Tidings of Salvation to heal the Sick to give Sight to the Blind to make the Deaf to hear the Dumb to speak and the Lame to walk to comfort the Sorrowful to pardon the Penitent and in a word to do all manner of good Yea and as if all this had been a small Token of his Love to man that he should be willing to suffer Banishment Heat Cold Hunger Thirst That he would endure to be buffeted spit upon reviled mocked scourged That he refused not to undergo an Agony which caused his precious Body to sweat drops of Blood and to suffer a most ignominious and painful Death And that all this should be done and suffered not for the least advantage to the Deity but wholly for the benefit of man to save him thereby from intolerable endless misery and to bring him if he embraced his Kindness and followed his Instructions to everlasting unspeakable Joy and Happiness For God so loved the World that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believed on him should not perish but have everlasting life John 3. 16. Object We hear nothing in all this of appeasing the fierce Wrath of an angry and incensed God nothing of satisfying Divine vindicative Justice nothing of making recompence for the Wrong done to a sovereign Power by the breach of his most righteous Laws Solut. That the Almighty neither doth nor can suffer Wrong by any Act of the Creature has been sufficiently seen before sect 8. Solut. of Object 1 3. And where no Wrong is what necessity there 's of Satisfaction and Recompence is unconceivable so that by granting Christ's Passion not to be an infinite Satisfaction for an infinite Offence committed against God by Sin in that sense as Satisfaction for an Injury done by one man to another is made there 's no danger at all of touching upon Socinianism it being plainly absurd to infer from the non-necessity of an infinite Satisfaction by the suffering of Christ that he is not God co-essential with the Father since it is through the Incapacity of God's being offended and not for want of Merit in Christ's Death that his Passion is not an infinitely satisfactory Recompence to God for Sin. But nevertheless there is ground enough for an Orator so to expatiate upon the Mystery of Man's Restauration by Christ as elegantly to use the Allegories mentioned in the Objection whilst there are two Parties God and Man a Law given by God and Man the Transgressor of it that the Father and the Son are distinct Persons and that the latter
Solut. That God is immutable has been proved Sect. 1. Par. 8. and therefore his changing the Course of Nature can truly import no Change in him that which may rightly be inferred from thence being only this that God from eternity determined the same should be done in time when occasion required which because it could never happen on God's account for any good that might redound thereby to himself when ever Miracles are wrought they are always done for the good and benefit of Men. And in regard nothing is truly good and beneficial to them but Holiness and the Fruit thereof everlasting Life Sect. 14. the intent of working Miracles is to cause Holiness in their hearts in order to the bringing them to Eternal Bliss And forasmuch as Holiness is not wrought in the heart but by Instruction and Motives Sect. 9. par 4. Miracles are intended for the confirmation of the Truth of some Doctrin requisite for directing the Understanding or for affording Motives to incline the Will to Virtue or for both at such certain times and on such occasions when the constant course of Providence and usual Series of Causes appointed by God to draw Men from the Love of worldly Vanities and sinful Lusts to the sincere Love of himself generally fail of effecting it not only in those who through perverseness of Will but in others also who by reason of the imbecility of corrupted Nature cannot be won thereby For as to the former sort neither the ordinary nor extraordinary workings of God unless in a juncture perhaps of some pressing Circumstances use to work a Reformation in them as is apparent by the Examples of Korah Dathan and Abiram opposing and reviling Moses and Aaron and of those Jews who heard Christ's Doctrin saw his holy Life and beheld his Miracles of Wonder and Mercy and yet would not receive him but barbarously and ungratefully prosecuted him to Death As Miracles we have seen are done for the benefit of Men so was it likewise out of design for their good that the Wisdom and Goodness of God ordered them to be done at the Instance of some or other holy Person or with reference to him For that Men whose holy Lives were known and observed by the People should be concerned about the working of Miracles was requisite on this account that notice might be taken of the great and special regard the Almighty had to Holiness which otherwise they would not have understood however not by far so well and by consequence the Miracles done would have had small or no influence on them more than to have caused astonishment or admiration and so have missed of their due and designed end of being instrumental Means of leading Men to the Love of Truth and Virtue for the gaining of everlasting Bliss Object 7. There is nothing said in all this Discourse of Prayer or the other mentioned means of Beatitude of the Power of the Holy Ghost without which notwithstanding all other Helps are not able to work a through Amendment of Life to Salvation Solut. It is readily granted that without the Power of the Spirit of God all Helps and Means whatsoever are ineffectual to the obtaining of Felicity but in the right use of the Means the Power of the Holy Ghost is evermore supposed to be present For since Christ's Ascension into Heaven all the Aids and means of Salvation are ordered and applied by his Holy Spirit whom he promised to send after his departure to abide with the Church But to assert that all the Means which God the Father appointed God the Son prepared and God the Holy Ghost makes application of to particular persons should really work nothing would be too absurd to suppose any rational Person guilty of For in case they work or effect nothing to what purpose is their use or wherefore did Christ undergo what he did both in Life and Death to prepare them and cause his Disciples also to publish them to the daily hazard and at length the loss of Life But if any thing be effected by them in what is their effective Virtue terminated Do they not reach the Understanding to convince it nor the Will to incline it if not whence is Man's Conversion wrought If you say that the Spirit of God comes after the Means used and causes by his own immediate operation the Conversion made in the Soul you attribute that to God which cannot be truly affirmed of him for since he is a pure essential Act and that whatever is in God is God Sect. 1. Par. 9. and 11. it is not possible that he should effect any thing save only by willing it without any physical action operation or emanation issuing from him and terminated in the Object whether the effect be to be brought about with or without means for if it be to be brought about without means it unavoidably follows from God's sole willing of it as the Creation did there being no need nor use of any thing besides to produce it But if Means be appointed by God to be used then will not the effect follow without the use of the Means appointed they immediately yet but instrumentally producing it by virtue of the principal Cause which employs and invigorates them to that End or wills that the Effect should be brought to pass by them If it be urged that Christ himself saith None can come unto me unless the Father which hath sent me draw him John 6. 44. I answer by granting the infallible truth thereof but withal deny that it can be gathered from thence that whom the Father draws he draws them not by Means there being no mention made of the Manner of his drawing Yea is it not plain that the Father drew men to Christ by means of a Voice from Heaven when he said This is my beloved Son in whom I am well pleased hear ye him Matth. 17. 5. And what were the Works but Means to draw men to believe in Christ which he speaks of to the Jews saying If I do not the Works of my Father believe me not but if I do though ye believe not me believe the Works John 10. 37 38. In a word since God sent his Son into the World that whosoever believed on him should not perish but have everlasting Life it is manifest that every thing our Blessed Saviour either taught did or suffered whereby men are induced to believe and trust in him for Salvation is a Means by which the Father draws them unto Christ Object 8. If the Means of Salvation through the Power of the Spirit of God assisting them be the Cause thereof why are not all men saved to whom Salvation is tendered and the means conducible thereunto applied Solut. As a material Instrument cannot effectually work on matter not qualified to be wrought upon as for Instance a Knife cannot cut Brass or Iron asunder but a Straw or Stick it can so the means of Salvation held forth by the Gospel though being
other World will by being eternally separated from its Pleasures convert into a hopeless desire and upon that account grow more furious impatient For of all the torments of the Mind I know none that is comparable to that of an outragious desire joyn'd with despair of satisfaction which is just the case of sensual worldly-minded Souls in the other Life where they are full of sharp and unrebated desires and like starved men that are shut up between two dead Walls are tormented with a fierce but hopeless hunger which having nothing else to feed on preys and quarries on themselves and in this desolate condition they are forced to wander to and fro tormented with a restlefs Rage and Hunger and unsatisfied desire oraving Food but neither finding nor expecting any and so in unexpressible Anguish they pine away a long Eternity And though they might find Content and Satisfaction could they but diver their affections another way and reconcile them to the heavenly Enjoyments yet being irrecoverably pre-engaged to sensual Goods they have no Savour nor Relish of any thing else but are like Feverish Tongues that disgust and nauseate the most grateful Liquors by reason of their own over flowing Gall. Lastly if in any thing I have writ about Christ's meritorious Satisfaction I peradventure fully accord not with some Divines the difference when the Matter is duly weigh'd will prove I hope to be only verbal For I assert sect 11. First That Christ's death on the Cross was of infinite value and merit Secondly That by and through the same Remission of Sin Justification and every other Good whether of Grace or Glory are obtain'd Thirdly That Christ's Crucifixion was as real and proper an expiatory Sacrifice for Sin as any under the Law of Moses but of infinitely more value ever was Fourthly That God's Justice is de jure prevented thereby from being exerted agaist Sinners in their everlasting Destruction The only difference then if any remaining is in this That I cannot apprehend what some others perchance think viz. That Christ's Merits operate upon God and work an Effect of Mercy and Favour in his Will whereas I humbly conceive them to be a secondary efficient Cause subservient to God's Love to Man for conveying and applying the same unto him by being an effectual Means of converting his Affections from the Vanities of the World unto God that he may be eternally saved for which I offer to serious consideration these following Reasons inducing me thereto 1. That Christ's most gracious doings and sufferings for Man are held by all Christians to be a Meritorious Cause 2ly That a Meritorious Cause is an efficient Cause 3ly That it is the Property of an Efficient Cause to work some real Effect 4ly That it seems plainly impossible that any real Effect should be wrought in God who is impassible and immutable sect 1. par 8 9. for otherwise seeing whatsoever is in God is God sect 1. par 11. such an Effect would be God himself and so the Merits of Christ would be the efficient Cause of the Deity 5ly That Christ's Merits therefore are not an antecedent but a subsequent Cause to the merciful-lovingkindness of God to Man by which the eternal Goodness actually confers all the happy Effects of divine Favour and Grace on him whereby he is delivered from Sathan Sin and Damnation and brought to everlasting Bliss If it be replied that however plausible yea certainly true this arguing be yet there is something more in Christ's Suffering for the Sin of Man than what hath hitherto been said namely the satisfying Divine Justice I answer that strictly speaking neither Justice nor Mercy nor other Attributes of God are formally distinct either from one another or from the very Essence of the Deity Sect. 1. Par. 11. and therefore albeit I willingly grant that Christ died for all men even the Reprobate as to me seems plain from these Words of the Apostle But there were false Prophets also among the People even as there shall be false Teachers among you who privily shall bring in damnable Heresies even denying the Lord that bought them and bring upon themselves swift Damnation 2 Pet. 2. 1. yet it was not to this very intent and purpose that he should undergo those Pains and Punishments which were allotted for Sin the everlasting Torments of Hell but to put Mankind thereby into a Way State and Condition that not any one should finally perish save only such as embraced not the Mercy of God in Christ manifested to the World in his Holy Gospel for what Justice is it that the Damned should suffer the Pains of Hell in case Christ had as truly and fully satisfied for them as if they had already undergone them themselves If it be answered that the actual Benefit of Christ's Satisfaction only reaches to those who believe in him and obey his Word so as that they shall not perish but have everlasting Life I readily own that Christ's Merits and more especially his bloody Death and Passion did in this sense abundantly satisfie Divine Justice for by these he really affected that none can justly be damned to whom they are applied by a lively and efficacious Faith Sect. 11. so that at the last day it will be equally just for God to render some for and through the Merits of Christ eternally blessed as it will be to give up others for their Sins to be for ever miserably afflicted and contrariwise it would be alike unjust to save the Wicked in that day who do not believe in Christ and obey him as to destroy the Godly who believe and put their Trust and Confidence in him whose Death on the Cross was as real a propitiatory Sacrifice for Sin but of infinitely more value as the annual expiatory Sacrifice under the Law as by the explanation of the Nature and Efficacy of it will appear The Sacrifice of Expiation was never compleat and perfect nor had the designed and due Effect of its Institution by the sole slaying and offering of the Beast however rightly and solemnly performed both by the Priest and People unless they added thereto the afflicting of themselves as is plain by Levit. 16. ver 29 30 31. In the seventh Month in the tenth Day of the Month ye shall afflict your Souls and do no Work at all whether it be one of your own Country or a Stranger that sojourneth among you For on that day shall the Priest make an Atonement for you to cleanse you that ye may be clean from all your Sins before the LORD It shall be a Sabbath of Rest unto you and ye shall afflict your Souls by a Statute for ever And again Chapt. 23. ver 27 28 29 30 31 32. On the tenth Day of this seventh Month there shall be a Day of Atonement it shall be an holy Convocation unto you and ye shall afflict your Souls and offer an Offering made by Fire unto the LORD And ye shall do no work in that
Conjunction and Union with the Soul has such an Influence on it that it certainly inclines it to all manner of Affections which the animal Parts excites it to except when Reason prevails with the Will to resist the Motions of the sensitive Appetite which cannot be while the Intellect is uncapable of the Exercise of Reason 't is manifest that seeing Children in the Mothers Womb have not at all the use of Reason there will be in their Souls an Inclination or Habitude agreeable and correspondent to the Disposition of their corporeal Part which in that it is begot and conceived of Seed issuing from disordered Bodies will it self be in disorder and thereby cause an unanswerable disorderly Disposition in the sensitive Faculty inclining it to Objects of sense and that again work a proportionable inordinate Habitude in the Will which bereaving it of the due Inclination it ought to have towards the true Object of Felicity causes a Want of that Original Disposition of Soul which should and would have been in Children if so be Man had continued in the State of Integrity which Want is that Malady of the Soul Men call Original Sin or Privation of Original Righteousness and is the Consequent in the manner above explain'd of eating the forbidden Fruit. 3. By this Explication of Original Sin God is justified and cleared from all Suspicion of being cause thereof whereas if the Sin of Adam was transferred to his Posterity because their Wills are included as some say in his I see not how the Almighty could be cleared from being the Author of it For since the Wills of Children are not really and truly by Nature in the Wills of their Parents for otherwise all Children should of Right be guilty of all the Sins of their Parents the Wills of Adams Progeny could not be included in the Will of Adam unless God in whose Power the Wills of all Men are would for his Preasures sake have it so If therefore by Gods meer voluntary Constitution the Wills of Adams Posterity be included in Adams Will it follows that by the same Constitution the Sin of Adam is his Posterities Sin also in that the very Reason why the Sin of Adam becomes the Sin of his Posterity is because their Wills are voluntarily constituted by God in his Will which if it were true would make God the Author of Original Sin. Object 1. If Original Sin be derived from Adam by Propagation it cannot be a Privation of Original Righteousness because Privation is the meer want of a thing and not a Positive thing which may be propagated Solut. There are two things to be considered in Original Sin an Habitude or Proneness in the Will towards the Enjoyment of the Creature and a Want of Original Righteousness or Disposition of the Soul towards God which it had by Creation Now although the Want of Original Righteousness be truly and properly Original Sin because if there were no want of that there would be no Original Unrighteousness yet in that the native Habitude or Proneness of the Will towards the Creature Par. 2. instead of God is the reason why the Soul becomes deprived of Original Righteousness that Habitude or Proneness of the Will is also called Original Sin which that and how it proceeds by means of natural Generation was shown in Par. 1. 2. And it is so in all manner of Vice that the irregular Act or Habit is not Vice formally taken but the Privation of the opposite Virtue which ensues upon that irregular Act or Habit and yet nevertheless the irregular Act and Habit are both called Vice Metonimically because it is a necessary Result of each For instance an intemperate Act or Habit is said to be a Vice and yet the formal Reason of their Vitiousness confists in this that the one at least weakens the other destroys the Virtue of Temperance or in case a Man be intemperate before they render it more difficult for him to become Temperate by strengthening or encreasing his Intemperance for it is impossible that any thing should be morally evil but as it deprives of some moral Good or weakens it or puts a Man farther from it for if by Intemperance a Man were not a whit the less Virtuous he would not be one jot the more Vitious than if he were not Intemperate at all And the like may be as truly said of any other irregular Act or Habit of the Will. If it be urged that in case Original Sin descend in the manner before described by propagation it would rather be derived to us from our immediate Parents than from our First since another Temper of Body is communicated by them to us then what was derived from Adam to his own Children as is evident from the manifold different natural Dispositions we meet with in young Children and yet Original Sin is solely fixed to the eating of the forbidden Fruit my Answer is that though it be very true that Infants receive another Disposition from their more immediate Progenitor than what has been perpetually derived from Adam and consequently that some of them also have a greater propensity to Vice through the personal Faults of their nearer Ancestors and Parents yet in that the whole Stock of Mankind ever since Adam has had a proneness from their Conception to the Creature in room of the Creator by reason of the first Transgression Original Sin is rightly imputed to the eating of the forbidden Fruit it being certain that from that Fault alone though there had never been any other therewould have ensued a Want of Original Righteousness in all Mankind Object 2. If Original Sin proceed from a Proneness in the sensitive Appetite towards the Creature and that from the unequal Temper or male Disposition of the body unless the Body be restored to its primitive Constitution which is not to be expected no Man shall ever be quit or clear from Original Sin in this Life Solut. Although Concupiscence be never totally rooted out of the sensitive Faculty in this Life yet it doth not always as it does Infants who have not the use of Reason necessarily so influence the Will as it does the sensitive Appetites and the Will is the only proper Seat of Sin but may through a virtuous Course of Life be so far mastered and subjugated to the Power and Command of the Will that it shall be able to give but small and ineffectual disturbance to the Rational Faculties which actually falls out so often as the Soul acquires the Habit of Virtue whereby it obtains a sincere Affection to God as its Sovereign Good for such Affection or Charity as shall be shown afterward Sect. 11. not only frees the Soul from Original but all other mortal Sin likewise whilst it is thereby formally justified and put into a State of Grace and Salvation 4. The mentioned Difficulties about Original Sin removed I go forward to shew that as Original Sin proceeds from our first Parents eating of the Tree
opposition to the customs of the Nations adjoyning to the Land of Judea as we are assured from Learned men out of Maimon for I never had a sight of his Writings my self who proveth out of ancient Books that the Precepts of the Jewish Law of this kind are still with a Reflex upon the Heathen Rites and not of those only of simple Idolatry but most of all such as were complicated with magical and unreasonable Superstition and that the respect of those Laws were not so large and indistinct as to look on all the Heathens in general but in particular to the Egyptians Canaanites Chaldeans and Amorites Yea the same Author it is said hath reconciled the strangeness of the Ceremonial Precepts to any man's proportion of Reason and Belief of which I 'le produce one Instance It is forbidden that any man of Israel should eat Blood. Also it is commanded that the Blood be sprinkled on the Altar and moreover that it be covered with dust or spilt on the ground as water Some of the Zabii did use to eat the Blood some others who reckoned this to inhumanity at the killing of a Beast reserved the Blood and gathered it up into a Vessel or Trench and then sitting down in a Circle about the Blood they ate up the Flesh and satisfied themselves with an Opinion that their Daemons fed upon the Blood entertaining a strong Conceit that this manner of sitting at the same Table with their Gods would engage them to a nearer Tye of Conversation and Familiarity and promising to themselves also that the Spirits would insinuate themselves in Dreams and render them capable of Prophecy and things to come In reference to these Ways of the Amorites God expresly forbad his People to eat Blood for so some of the Zabii did and to meet with others who gathered it up into a Vessel he commanded the Blood should be spilt on the ground like Water And because they ate their Sacrifice in a Circle round about the Blood he also commanded that the Blood should be sprinkled not about but upon the Altar Mr. Gregory of Oxford in his Notes and Observations upon several Passages of Scripture Chap. 19. More Instances of the like sort may be seen in Dr. Stillingfleet's Origin Sacr. Book 2. Ch. 7. Where he writeth that the Precept against Woollen and Linnen was occasioned because the Idolatrous Priests went so cloathed That the Jews were forbidden to round the Corners of their Heads because it was the Custom of the Arabians and others of the Babylonian Priests to round them That because the Idolaters threatened all Parents that their Children would never live unless they caused them to pass through the Fire was that strict Prohibition of giving their children to Molech which was by that custom of passing through the Fire These and several other Precepts of the Law of Moses are deduced saith the Doctor by that very Learned Rabbi Maimonides from Idolatrous Customs as the Occasions of them which seems to have the more Reason says he because that God in the general forbad the Jews to walk after the Custom of the Nations about them Levit. 20. 23. Thus by what in the whole has been said of the Jewish Law it appears that it had a Tendency to the same great End which both the Law of Nature and the Christian Law look unto namely the Love of God as sole Sovereign Good of the Soul. SECT XIII Nothing is available to Felicity but as it contributes to Charity The nature of the two Theological Virtues Faith and Hope and how they become useful and beneficial to the obtaining and encreasing of Charity 1 SInce the ultimate End not only of Mans Creation Sect. 4. but of his Redemption also Sect. 9. is his own Eternal Felicity and that Felicity consists in the perfect Love of God clearly seen Sect. 4. 't is evidently consequent that neither Faith nor Hope nor the moral Virtues nor any Duty nor Ordinance nor Institution whatsoever is at all available to everlasting Bliss save only as in some kind or other they contribute to Charity either in helping to procure it to preserve it to augment it or to compleat it provided Charity begun here in this world and that which is Felicity in the next differ not in nature but only in degree 2. And that Felicity is the same Charity perfected in the other World which is begun in this is manifest both from Reason and Scripture For since the Love of God apprehended by Faith and the Love of God proceeding from Vision have both of them God as he is the sole Sovereign Good of the Soul for their only Object they are of the very same Nature each of them being a Complacency or Delight taken in God under the self same Notion to wit as he is the Supream Good of Man so that albeit the Love which proceeds from Vision by reason of the clearer knowledg it affords of God must needs be greater then the Love which comes by Faith yet their difference is not in essence but in degree only Neither doth Reason give Testimony to the Truth thereof alone but Scripture also which expresly tells us that Charity never faileth 1. Cor. 13. 8. Object 1. If the Love of God in this and in the World to come be both of them Charity how comes Charity here to be accounted a Theological Virtue together with Faith and Hope which are only Means and Furtherers of Bliss and Charity hereafter Bliss it self Solut. The reason is because Charity here doth not always proceed to and necessarily end in Charity hereafter and therefore is looked upon as an Help to Felicity rather than any degree thereof though in verity it be in all those who finally lose it not but depart hence habitually endued therewith Felicity really begun in them to be compleated and perfected in Heaven Paragr 2. 3. Faith is the first in order of the Theological Virtues because the Foundation of the Christian Religion quoad nos whilst by it we are ascertained of the whole Mystery of the Gospel of Christ For what is Faith in general but Knowledge grounded on Testimony to which an assent is given And what Christian Faith in particular but the Belief of Christ's Doctrine upon the account of his Divine Word relating or testifying the same unto us Hence it will certainly be that whosoever believes the Holy Scripture will believe the Incarnation Life Death Resurrection Ascension and coming to Judgment of our Saviour Jesus Christ and that either superficially and carelesly or cordially and concernedly if the former he does it not to that intent the Belief of them was proposed by God and so no wonder if he be not bettered by it but if the latter his Belief will be apt to work an answerable Love in him towards the Author and Offerer of such transcendent Kindness as in the Gospel is held forth and therefore the more firm and frequent acts of Faith he exercises the more
all the Enjoyments of this Life acquires an habitual Love of him and thence desires to be fully satisfied with the knowledge of him despising all terrestrial Pleasures in comparison of the same and in virtue of his Love to God doth heartily wish to all Mankind the like Happiness he wisheth to himself as knowing that things of the same Kind tend by Nature to the same End. This I take to be pure Moral Vertue or Honesty with which if any man depart hence he will at length through Christ be eternally happy sect 12. par 3 4. But so great is the Corruption of Man's Nature through Original and Actual Sin sect 9. that such Virtue or Honesty is attainable by very few Object 3. If the moral Virtues be therefore not good in themselves by reason they have a tendency to a farther good to be obtained by them 't will follow that nothing that has a tendency to a farther good to be obtained by it is good in it self which is very unlikely to be true Solut. When we speak of moral goodness we evermore intend something by it which is perfective of man's Rational Nature so that to enquire whether the moral Virtues be good in themselves or not is the same as to ask whether they be directly and immediately perfective of man's Rational Nature yea or no or be only useful to procure something which is directly and immediately perfective of it This latter I take to be true not the former and my Reason is because the moral Virtues in that they are not any lasting permanent good of the Soul but pass away and leave it when it becomes possessed of its everlasting good Felicity Solut. of Obj. 1. are instrumentally or so far only good unto it as they are necessarily helps and means to procure that good which is the eternally-during Perfection of it whence it seems plain that the Benefit of the moral Virtues and so likewise of all Gifts Graces and Ordinances as Faith Hope Prayer the Sacraments c. which cease upon the full enjoyment of God consists in their very Tendency towards the good to be obtained by them But yet if any will be so scrupulously nice as to demand Whether that which is necessarily good and useful in its very Nature though but instrumentally to the perfecting of Man be not good in it self I shall not contend but yield it is provided it will be granted me again that it is instrumentally so and no more for then in consequence thereto it must of necessity be owned that it is not desirable for its own sake but for the sake of that which it is an instrumental Cause to procure In this sense I have proved that Faith and Hope are good in themselves as without which Charity cannot be acquired sect 11. par 2 3 4. and the moral Virtues also in this Section par 2 3 4 5. are made out to be no less and so shall Prayer likewise be manifested in the next Section to be good in it self or in its own Nature necessarily useful for acquiring Man's Chief Good in the everlasting Fruition of which his Rational Being will be perfected SECT XV. Prayer offered to God for all things absolutely necessary to Salvation whether the Theological Virtues or Moral or Remission of Sins is evermore effectual if it be made aright and it is always made aright when it is unfeigned fervent and frequently performed 1. SEeing nothing is good to man as man but what either ultimately compleats and perfects him as such or something that hath a tendency and is serviceable thereto sect 14. 't is evident that nothing ought to be desired of God which may prove any the least hindrance to man's ultimate End. 2. In regard therefore Eternal Felicity or the perfect love of God is man's ultimate End and Perfection sect 4. par 12 13. 't is apparent that nothing which will obstruct the Love of God ought to be prayed for 3. And forasmuch as neither Health nor Wealth nor temporal Honour nor even the Saving of Life but may in some Circumstances prove prejudicial to Charity none of all these are absolutely to be prayed for but conditionally only and so far forth as they may be useful in respect of Charity 4. It remains therefore that nothing besides Charity it self and what always furthers it are absolutely to be begged of God. 5. Wherefore since Virtue whether Theological or Moral is a thing which always furthers Charity sect 11 13 14. 't is clear that Virtue is always to be absolutely prayed for 6. And forasmuch as God who is Goodness it self grudges no man that which is really good for him but ever grants him his desire if he ask not amiss Jam. 4. 3. 't is plain that Prayer always obtains Virtue of God whensoever it is made aright which is then done when it is unfeigned fervent and frequent 7. For since the Almighty does not by the sole force of his omnipotent Will immediately confer his gracious Gifts on Man except on some extraordinary Occasions when ordinary Means are insufficient for the designed End otherwise he should be in a still continued course of working Miracles but conveys them to us by second Causes if it be so that unfeigned fervent and frequent Prayer be an effectual Means whereby he conveys unto us the Theological and Moral Virtues then doth unfeigned fervent and frequent Prayer always obtain them of God. 8. And that such Prayer is an effectual Means or which never fails of conveying all the Virtues to us will be made appear by shewing the efficacious power it has to procure each of them in particular 9. For first He that from an unfeigned heart pours forth fervent and frequent Prayer to God that he may live temperately cannot while he doth so live intemperately but on the contrary will endeavour by frequent Acts of Temperance after a constant temperate course of Life and by frequent Acts are Habits or a facility of acting acquired 10. And whoso beggeth of God in sincerity and fervency of Devotion the Grace to deal uprightly to all men will if he be constant likewise in his Request abhor the injuring or doing wrong to any one and by often excercising Acts of Justice he will certainly obtain the habit thereof 11. Neither will he who unfeignedly ardently and constantly prays that he may overcome all such difficulties as would hinder his arriving at Bliss for fear of Temptations and Evils to be encountred with in pursuit thereof forbear to set himself stoutly to oppose and repel Temptations and to reject the Enticements of the World which would draw him from the Love of his gracious God and supream Good to the vain and transitory Delights of it self and so by frequent doing thereof he 'l contract an easiness in overcoming what would eternally destroy his Soul if yielded to 12. And forasmuch as he that is constant in sincere and fervent Prayer for the Grace of Faith will undoubtedly give himself to
therefore said to nourish the Body because being digested by the Stomach they afford Chyle which sanguified immediately refresheth and strengthens it so the Body and Blood of Christ crucified are there said to nourish the Soul because being applied to it by Faith they confirm it in Charity which is the Spiritual Nourishment and Strength thereof being that which immediately unites it to God Sect. 11. and in the Souls Union with God is the Spiritual Life Strength and Vigor thereof 6. That then the Sacrament of Baptism is the Sacrament of Initiation and introduces Charity into the Soul and the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper the Sacrament of confirming and strengthening the same is in general made manifest And how each of them in particular effects what it was instituted for shall be briefly seen 7. Baptism which is the initiating Ordinance is not to be administred to any that are capable to understand to what intent it was ordained till they give an account of their Belief of the Articles of the Christian Faith and make a serious and solemn profession of their unfeigned desire and stedfast resolution to forsake the World the Flesh and the Devil and to lead a godly righteous and sober Life in which if they be sincere and understand as they ought to do that the external washing with Water or dipping therein denotes the inward cleansing of the Soul from Sin or a dying to Sin and rising again to newness of Life and is a Seal likewise and Means thereof how can it be doubted of but that the Sacramental Action of Baptism being duly performed should to one so prepared have the Effect it was intended for and improve his holy purpose and resolution of leading a new Life into a real performance of the same For to suppose the Soul rightly prepared and immediately disposed to receive Baptism and Baptism duly administred and yet the Effect of Baptism or Res Sacramenti not to follow were to suppose an entire adequate Cause actually causing without its proper Effect ensuing or a thing actually to cause and yet nothing answering thereto actually caused which is impossible 8. And as to the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper which is an Ordinance for Confirmation and strengthening of Grace in that it represents unto us the bloody Passion of our Saviour in a more solemn sacred and venerable manner by Christ's own intendment and designation than any other divine Institution doth it must certainly to him who comes with due Reverence and Devotion to that august Mystery and stupendious Token of God's immense and endearing Love to Man be the most effectual Means possible to cause a deep impression of Charity in his Soul and even ravish and transport him with the Love of so good and gracious a God and Benefactor Object 1. If the expulsion of Sin by the accession of Charity be the Effect of the Sacrament of Baptism then can no man be justified without being actually baptized with Water although he really repent and be truly converted to God. Solut. If so be that external Baptism were the only Cause of the Remission or taking away of mortal Sin the consequence would be good but the desire of Baptism for the washing away of Sin may be so ardent and operative in some that Charity will be obtained before the actual administration of the Sacrament and whensoever and by what means soever Charity is introduced into the Soul Mortal Sin is necessarily cast out thereby sect 11. par 6. But few without the Sacramental washing with water though piously disposed have the habit of Charity compleated in them Neither is Baptism given in vain even to those whose mortal Sin is expelled out of the Soul before it be administred for since there are as many degrees of Righteousness as there are of Charity sect 11. par 8 9. the actual receiving of that Sacrament will cause in them an encrease of Charity and so of Righteousness which is never perfect till the Love of God be so ardent that it wholly burns up all the dross of carnal and earthly Affections in the Soul Sect. 11. Object 2. If the Belief of the Articles of the Christian Faith and an earnest desire and a stedfast resolution to forsake Sin and to lead a godly Life be Dispositions necessarily required in those who are to be baptized then is Infant-Baptism a fruitless and insignificant thing Solut. It is evident as well by the Office of Baptism as by the Church-Catechism that Infants through their Sureties are engaged before the Church will admit them to Baptism except in imminent danger of Death in which Case the Church enjoyning speedy Baptism becomes it self Surety thereby and therefore orders that the Child if it live be brought into the public Congregation and that the Godfathers and Godmothers undertake for it like to what is done in public Baptism to believe themselves the Articles of Christian Faith and to renounce the World the Flesh and the Devil when they come to Age no less than such as are of ripe years are obliged to declare they already do unfeignedly all those things by which it appears that the Benefit which accrues by Baptism to both has a reference to and proceeds on their part upon the account and ground of a true profession of Faith and a real endeavour after Holiness of Life So that although Baptism be administred to Children before they understand it yet the effect and benefit of it more than this that they obtain thereby the grand Privilege of becoming Members of the visible Church whence they are brought to enjoy the great Blessing of Christian Education takes not place nor is reaped till they do And thus it is easie to apprehend as to those Children that live till they have the use of Reason how Baptism becomes profitable to them whilst if they get benefit thereby they must perform what their Sureties promised for them which if they unfeignedly do by cordially believing the Christian Doctrine and by taking a firm resolution through the Grace of God to live a godly Life the Consideration of the gracious Design of Christ's instituting of Baptism to take away Sin and of the solemn Celebration of it by the Church for their sake to that end will if the Consideration be such as it should be cause a loathing of Sin and a real forsaking thereof for the Love of God. For why Baptism already past should not through a serious reflecting on it especially when Confirmation is duly according to the great importance of it administred be an effectual Means of cleansing the heart from Sin as well as it is by the earnest desire thereof before it be had will not be easily I believe resolved The main difficulty to unfold is how Baptism can profit Children that die young Those who say that Grace is immediately infused by God will be hard put to 't to give a tolerable Reason to what good purpose the Use of Means is when the Effect receives