Selected quad for the lemma: love_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
love_n believe_v faith_n work_n 6,340 5 6.3714 4 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A36463 The covenant of grace, or, An exposition upon Luke I. 73, 74, 75 by George Dovvname ... Downame, George, d. 1634. 1647 (1647) Wing D2059; ESTC R17888 143,573 346

There are 8 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

Prince Ioh. 12. 31 and God of this world 2 Cor. 4. 4. under whose subjection the whole world of the wicked lyeth 1 Ioh. 5. 19. who is the powerful Prince of the aire working effectually in the children of disobedience Ephes. 2. 2. carrying them away captive to do his wil. 2 Tim. 2. 26. This servitude to sin and Sathan the mystery of our redemption doth presuppose For if we were not captives we needed not to be redeemed And he doth therefore redeem us that we might serve him and therefore before he doth actually redeem us we cannot serve him in holyness and righteousness Socondly we are by nature the children of wrath Ephes. 2. 3. and enemies yea rebels against GOD. And therefore until we be reconciled unto him by the death of Christ and justified by faith through redemption wrought by Christ we cannot do any thing which may be acceptable to God for they that are in the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8. 8. The person must be accepted before his actions can be accepted And without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11. 6. Now if this be so that we cannot serve God or do any thing that shal be accepted of him unle●s we be first redeemed justified and reconciled to him how doth it beho●e every one that hath not yet obtained these graces to labour for them above all th● things in this world For until then he doth nothing but sinn and by multiplying sinns he doth hoard up wrath against the day of wrath The means of Gods part is the preaching of the Gospel which is therefore called the ministry of reconciliation which God hath committed to the Preachers thereof by whom as his Embassadors in Christs steed he intreateth you to be reconciled unto God 2 Cor. 5. 18 20. The means on our part are faith praye● and repentance For if thou dost truly and by a lively faith effectually believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and Saviour of all that believe in him thou art bound to believe also or else thou makest God a lyar that he is thy Saviour and so believing thou art justified and being justified by faith thou shalt have peace with God Secondly if the Lord who is the party offended and needeth not thy friendship desi●eth thee to be reconciled unto him wilt not thou who art the offendor who also without his favour shalt perish eternally wilt not thou I say by hearty and earnest prayer de●i●e him to be reconciled unto thee Now if 〈◊〉 dost by the prayer of faith desire God to be reconciled unto thee what should hind●● thy reconciliation when thou destrest 〈◊〉 of God which God by his Ministers desireth of thee But unto these two we must add the duty of repentance For if we continue in sinn without repentance and please our selves in ●●●pleasing God how can we perswade our s●lv●s that we desire to be reconciled unto him And if we do not desire to be reconciled then are we the professed enemies of God for whom remaineth the fearful expectation of that judgment which shaldestroy the adversa●●●● of God Heb. 10. 27. So much of the order Now we are to speak of the concur●●nce of these two graces For when the Lord sweareth that to those whom he redeemeth and justifieth he wil give grace to worship him in holyness and righteousness from hence we do necessarily collect that sanctification is an unseparable companion of justification and that no man can have assurance that he is justified unless he be in some measure sanctified Let no man therefore deceive himself with a vain profession of an idle and dead faith 〈◊〉 2. 14. for unlesse thou doest at the least desire and endevour to worship God in holnesse and righteousnesse it is as certain as the oath of the Lord is true that as yet thou art not justified nor actually made partaker of the redemption wrought by Christ. It is true that our Saviour Christ in the dayes of his flesh did redeem us meritoriously paying a ransome sufficient for all that should beleeve in him but none are actually made partakers of this Redemption but they to whom it is applyed and it is applyed only to those that truly believe and true faith purifieth the heart Act. 15. 9. and worketh by love Gal. 5 6. and is to be demonstrated by good works 〈…〉 faith as all those are which truly believe in him in them Christ dwelleth by his Spirit for Rom. 8. 9. they are not his who have not his Spirit applying unto them not only the merit of his death to their redemption and the benefit of his resurrection to their justification Rom. 4. 25. but also the vertue and efficacie of his death to mortifie their sinnes Phil. 3. 8 9. and of his resurrection to raise them to newnesse of life so that for whose sinnes Christ died they die to their sinne and for whose justification he arose they also rise to newnesse of life The Apostle Rom. 6. 3. 4. affirmeth that those who have been bapt●zed into CHRIST were baptized into his death and resurrection that as CHRIST did die and rise againe so they also die to sinne and rise to a newnesse of life 2. CHRIST was given unto us by his Father not only to be our justification and redemption but also our Sanctification 1 Cor. 1. 30. Neither did hee come with blood alone or with water alone 1 Iohn 5. 6. But as Saint Iohn in his Gospell carefully observeth as a thing most remarkable Iohn 19. 34 35. He came both with water and with blood with the blood of redemption to expiate the guilt of our sins and with the water of ablution or sanctification to cleanse us from the corruption 1 Iohn 5. 6. And in respect of both his blood doth cleanse us from all our sins 1 Ioh. 1. 7. from the guilt perfectly in our justification from the corruption in part and by degrees in our sanctification See Hebr. 9. 14. 3. Whosoever are the sons of God by adoption as all those are Io. 1. 12 13. that truly believe they also are his sons by regeneration 4. The same is implied in the benefit of Redemption whereby Christ our blessed Saviour doth not only redeem us from the guilt of sin which bindeth men over to damnation but also from the bondage of sinne that howsoever sinne doth remaine in the faithfull yet it shall not reigne in them Rom. 6. 14. nor have dominion over them For they that practise sinne are the servants of sinne Iohn 8. 34. and of Satan 1 Ioh. 3. 8. in them sin reigneth and therefore they are not by Christ redeemed from the bondage of sinn● For whom the Sonne maketh free they are free indeed Ioh. 8. 36. 5. The same is proved by the nature and property of a true faith For faith is a grace of regeneration which the Spirit of God when he doth regenerate us ingenerateth in us wherby as we are justified alone because no other
C●mmandement proceeding from faith unfained It worketh in us affiance Fo● when we believe that Christ is our Saviour we rest upon him for salvation It worketh in us hope for when we believe that the promises belong unto us we expect the performance Faith having begotten affiance and hope and working by love begetteth zeale peace of conscience Rom. 5. 1. rejoycing in God and joy in the Holy Ghost thankfulnes● voluntary and cheerfull obedience patience and comfort in afflictions c. And indeed how can a man love his neighbour for Gods sake who lov●th not God much more how can a man love God as he ought who is not perswaded of Gods love towards him in Christ which perswasion is this special Faith And if he cannot love God without Faith much lesse can he have the z●al● of God fo● zeale is the servency of love How can a man have affiance in Christ and rest upon him for salvation who is not by Faith perswaded and in some measure assured that he is his Saviour How can he hope and wait for th● performance of the promises that doth not believe that they belong unto him F●ith being the substance of things ho●ed for How can a man have true peace of conscience who is not perswaded that God is reconcled t● him How can a man rejoyce in God wh● is not assured of Gods favour towards him How can a man trust in God that is not perswaded of Gods goodness towards him How can a man be thankfull unto God wh● is not perswaded of Gods love and 〈◊〉 towards him How shall th●y fear God● as sons that is fearing to offend so mercifull a Father who are not perswaded that he i● their Father in Christ Or when they have sinned how shall they be encouraged to return unto him if they be not perswaded of his fatherly respect to t●em How shall they perform vo●●ntary and che●rful ●b●dienc● who are not perswaded that their endevours are accepted of him How shall they pray who do not believe they shall be heard Or as the Apostle speaketh How shall they call ●pon him in whom they have not believed Rom. 10. 14. How shall they patiently and comfortably bear afflictions who are not perswaded they be fatherly chastisements or trials proceeding from Gods love and tending to their good● Finally with what heart 〈…〉 worship God who are not perswaded that their service is accepted of him And as it worketh all other graces in us so according to the measure of our Faith such as I said is the measure of all other graces For the more a man is perswaded of Gods love and favour towards him in Christ that is by how much the greater is a mans speciall Faith so much the more he loveth God and his neig●bour for Gods sake so much the more is he inflamed with the 〈◊〉 of God so much the more confidently doth he rest upon Christ for salvation so much the more he hopet● for and expecteth the good things promised so muc●●he more he rejoyceth and glo●ieth in God so much the more he is thankfull to God for his goodnesse so much the more he trusteth in God so much the more the feareth to offend so gracious a God and so 〈◊〉 a Father 〈◊〉 offended he will 〈…〉 return unto God so much the more 〈◊〉 comfortably he beareth afflictions saying with Iob Though he kill me 〈◊〉 will I p●t my trust in him● Iob. 13. 15. So much the more willingly and che●rfully will he obey and serve the Lord. Wherfore it is evident that they which renounce this Faith as the Papists do discover themselves to be void of all saving grace● and to have no truth nor power of religion in them But whatsoever they think or speak of speciall Faith let us know and acknowledge these three things First that it is the duty of every true Christian that doth truly assent to the doctrine of the Gospell to apply also by special Faith● the promises of the Gospell unto himself For this is most profitable most comfortable most necessary Profitable because from this application of Faith all oth●● graces do proceed as hath been said Comfortable because by this application we grow to assurance as shall be shewed Necessary first because That beliefe or assent is not lively and effectuall as you shall heare which is not joyned with ● desire to apply CHRIST to thy self and with a resolution to acknowledge him to be thy SAVIOVR and to rest upon him for salvation For although he which at the ●●rst believ●th only by a●●ent ●oth not yet actually apply the promises of the Gosp●ll to himself yet that assent if it b●liv●ly and ●ffectuall worketh both an earnest desire and setled resolution of ●pplication 2. He ●ha● knoweth himself to believ● by a true assent and refuseth to apply the promises to himself he maketh God a lyar as shall b● shewed 3. Where this application is not at least in desire resolution and endevour there is no other saving grace as I have proved The second thing which we are to take notice of is that it is the chiefest comfort and indeed happinesse of a Christian in this life by speciall faith to be assured of the ●ternall love and favour of God in Christ. For so Za●hary in this place expoundeth our blessedn●ss● to be this being redeemed by Christ to worship God without f●ar c. The third that seeing it is a thi●g so profitable so ●●cessary and so comfortable that our happiness is to be repo●ed therein it is therefore our duty to do our best endevour to attain unto the assurance of salvation and to this speciall faith or as the Apostle P●ter●xhorteth ●xhorteth in other words to give dilig●●nce to make our calling and election sure 2 P●t 1. 10. or as the Apostle Paul speaketh 1 〈◊〉 6. 1● to lay up i● st●re a good foundation against the time to come that we 〈◊〉 lay hold upon et●rnall lif● For though the Apostle in that place doth by this argument exhort them that be rich to works of charity yet his meaning is not that those works are the foundation but that we by doing of them may gather assurance to our selves of our justification and salvation as by t●stimonies and evidences of our faith which assurance of speciall faith is so sure a foundation against the day of triall as they who h●ve built thereon cannot by any temptation b● removed but like mount Sion stand fast for ever or like to three-square or triangular bodies which howsoever they be tossed and turned keep alwayes their positure which 〈◊〉 undique sursum Now you must not think that full assurance is obtained at the first or at onc● but we must attain unto it by divers degrees And first we are to know that the ordinary way to exaltation by sound comfort and assurance is Humil●tion according to that generall rule given by our Saviour after 〈◊〉 had reported the notable humiliation of th● penitent Publican which
And that we may soundly apply the promise to our selves we must first be assured that we have the condition of the promise which is the first degree of justifying Faith whereof I have spoken that is a true lively and effectuall assent which we may know our selves to have if our belief be effectuall as before I said both to justification as it is when by it we receive CHRIST who is our Righteousnesse not only in our judgements but also in our hearts and in our willes and also to sanctification as it is when it produceth the duties of repentance Having therefore the condition of the promise and knowing that thou hast it thou art bound in conscience whatsoever the Papist faith to the contrary to apply the promise to thy self as belongeth to thee Doest thou therfore truly believe that Christ is the Saviour of all those that truly believe in him then thou art bound to believe that he is thy Saviour that he died for thy sins and rose againe for thy justification that by him thou hast remission of sins and that by him thou shalt be saved Otherwise if thou knowest thy self to have the condition of the promise and wilt not apply it to thy self that is if knowing thy self truly to believe that Christ is the Saviour thou wilt not believe that he is thy Saviour thou makest God a lyar saith S. Iohn in not believing the record which God gave of his Son And this is the record that God hath given to us that believe in Christ eternall life and that this life is in his Son He that hath the Son as every true believer hath hath life and he that hath not the Son hath not lif● These things saith he I have written to you that believe on the Name of the Son of God that you may know that you have eternall life and that you may believe on the Name of the Son of God The meaning of which last words seemeth to be this I have written to you that believe on the Name of Christ by a true and lively assent but have not perhaps as yet attained to any sound assurance that you applying the promises of the Gospell to your selves and gathering testimonies to your selves that they belong to you by such markes as I in this Epistle have set down may attain to assurance and so proceed from Faith to Faith For without absurdity the Words cannot be understood of the same degree of Faith I have written to you that already believe in Christ that you may believe in him What No otherwise then already they do believe Yes no doubt that they which believed in a lower degree without assurance might know that they have eternall life and that so attaining to a higher degree of faith might thereby be assured of salvation by Christ. Now this application is made by a practicall Syllogisme the proposition whereof which some cal 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the undoubted Word of God Whosoever truly beleeveth in Christ he shall be saved The assumption is the testimony of our own spirit which is therefore called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 But I through Gods mercy do truly believe in Christ. For the Holy Ghost having opened my heart as he did the heart of Lydia Act. 16. 14. to assent unto or to believe the Gospel I do receive Christ not only in my judgement by a firme willing and unfaned assent but also in mine heart by an earnest desire to be made partaker of him which is the desire of application and in my will by a setled resolution whatsoever the Law mine own conscience or the Devill can object to the contrary to acknowledge him to be my Saviour and to rest upon him for salvation which is the resolved purpose of application The conclusion which is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is the verdict or testimony of the Holy Spirit testifying with our spirits in the assumption according to the word in the proposition Therefore I through Gods mercy shall be saved which is the voice of speciall Faith The consequence of this and all other formall Syllogismes is such that the conclusion cannot be false if the premisses be true Otherwise a contradiction would be implied that is contradictories would be true together which is impossible For if this conclusion should be false then either the Proposition is not true that whosoever truly believeth in Christ shall be saved or the assumption that I truly believe in Christ. Of the proposition of this Syllogisme there can be no doubt it being the undoubted word of God and the main promise of the Gospel Against the assumption two things may be objected the one out of the doctrine of our Divines the other out of the doctrine of the Papists For some of our Divines define faith to be a full assurance of the love of God concerning the remission of our sins and eternall salvation by Christ or in other words to the like effect But the faith mentioned in the assumption is no such assurance I answer that our Divines defining the speciall Faith are not to be blamed for defining it according to the perfection thereof for so every vertue and grace ought to be defined that so we may learne not to content our selves with that imperfect measure whereunto we have already attayned but may aspire towards perfection But if any shall hereupon inferre that no man doth truly believe who hath not that full assurance as some vnadvisedly have done he shall give occasion to the greatest part of believers either to dispair that they have not Faith because they have not ful assurance or because they woul not be thought without Faith to presume that they have a full assurance which notwithstanding men doe not attayne unto at the first nor at once but by divers degrees after much practice of piety and long experience of Gods goodnes towards them and never is so fully obtained before the end of this life but that somewhat still may and ought to be added to it The objection of the Papists against the assumption is that a man doth not know that he doth believe and therefore not being ass●red that he doth believe he can have no assurance of salvation This is in deed the thing which they must stand unto if they will deny as they doe the certainty of salvation For if a man may be assured that he doth truly believe he may also be assured that he shall be saved But that the faithfull may know that they believe I prove 1. Because every beleever is taught to say I beleeve in God the Father I believe in God the Sonne I believe in God the Holy Ghost This profession of Faith every true Christian is bound to make with confidence therefore every true Christian is bound to know that he doth believe The father of the demoniack though indued but with a weake faith when our Saviour told him that the cure of his Sonne was possible if he could believe returned
remission of his sins and shall be saved the conscience of every faithfull man may both safely assume but I through Gods grace doe truely believe in Christ and also certainly conclude by the testimony of the holy Ghost bearing witnes with our conscience in the assumption according to the word in the proposition therefore I through the grace of God have remission of sinnes and shall be saved When the holy Ghost hath thus taught us to apply the promises unto our selves and hath sealed us after we have believed and testified together with our spirits that we are the children of God then it appeareth that we are already born of God and that we are the sons of God not only by regeneration but also by adoption Eph 1. 15. Rom. 8. 15 16. Joh. 1. 15 16. And being sonnes God sendeth forth the spirit of his Son into our hearts crying Abba father Gal. 4. 6. By this faith first apprehending and then applying Christ unto us we become not only the sonnes of God but also members of Christ and having union with him as our head we have communion also with him both in respect of his merit unto justification first before God and then in the court of our own conscience and in respect of his graces unto sanctification receiving of his fulnes euen grace for grace Joh. 1. 16. As therefore men are first conceived before they be born and they are borne before they are said to lead a life in this world so we must first be begotten and born anew in our vocation and regeneration before wee can live unto God the spirituall life of sanctification These two therefore were not to be confounded sanctification being the end as of our election Eph. 1. 4. and of our justification Luk. 1. 75. Tit. 2. 14. 1 Pet. 2. 24. so also of our vocation 1 Thess 4. 7. By our vocation we are begotten unto God by sanctification we being both begotten and born anew do live unto GOD. In our vocation the spirit of God first draweth us unto God Joh. 6. 44. in our sanctification we being already drawn the Spirit of GOD doth lead and guide us in the way which leadeth to life Rom. 8. 14. Gal. 5. 18. Vocation produceth Faith Faith being begotten produceth sanctification both habituall for the heart is purified by Faith and actuall for Faith worketh by love producing good workes as the fruit both of Faith and Charity Act. 15. 9. I do not deny but that Faith is a part of our sanctification and of our inherent righteousnesse yet this hindereth not but that both it self doth sanctify us and is also the mother of all other inward graces wherein our habituall sanctification consisteth and of all the works of grace wherein our actuall signification is occupied For when the Holy Ghost doth regenerate us he doth ingenerate the grace of Faith in us and by it al other graces The second error That sanctification goeth before justification The second which is a consequent of the former that sanctification goeth before justification The contrary whereof I have proved in the discourse whereunto I adde 1. That sanctification is the end and fruit of our justification the cognizance also and evidence whereby it is known and therefore a consequent thereof Col. 1. 22. Rom. 6. 22. 2. As we are made siners first by imputatiō of Adams sin then being guilty of his transgression are made partakers of his corruption so we are made just first by imputation of Christs righteousnes and then being justified we are in some measure made partakers of those graces which he received without measure Again the persons of men being sinners in themselves must be accepted of GOD as righteous in Christ before either there● be qualities or their actions which when they are at the best are defiled with sinne can be acceptable unto GOD. Therefore we must be justified before either our qualities or actions can be holy and righteous before God Neither can there be any sanctification without justification and reconciliation with God going before in order of nature as there is no justification without sanctification accompanying and following the same For by the same Faith whereby we are justified we are also sanctified Christ being apprehended by faith to justification dwelleth in us by his Spirit to work in us sanctification and to whom the merits of Christ apprehended by Faith are imputed to their justification to them the vertue of his death and resurrection is applyed by the holy Ghost to the mortifying of sin and raising againe to newnes of life to which purpose the Apostle saith Col. 2. 12. by Faith we are risen with Christ in Baptisme Again faith by which we are justified in order of nature goeth before repentance wherein our sanctification consisteth It is a resolved Case by Calvin Penitentiam seu rescipiscentiam non modò fidem continuò subsequi sed ex ●a nasci extra controversiam esse debet See Calvin Instit. l. 3. c. 3. sect 1. 2 and by Ful●entius quòd vita sancta à fide sumit initium The same is testified by the ancient Fathers as Clem. Alexandr strom l. 2. Faith is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the first inclination to salvation after which follow feare hope and 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 repentance Ambros de sacram l. 1. c. 1. In Christiano prima est fides Chr. hom de ●ide spe char fidem esse originem justitia August de predest SS c. 7. fides prima datur ex qua caetera impetrantur Prosper ad Dubium 8. Genev. fides omnium virtutum fundamentum Greg. Moral l. 2. 6. c. 13. fidem primam in corde nostr● gignit If any object that the learned Chamier in his paustrat l. 10. treateth of sanctification before justification let him heare his own apology c 1 n. 2. Debueramus sanctificationi justificationem preponere si nostri arbitrij methodus esset ut tum re tum ratione priorem quod ab ea profluat altera sed quia Papist● non distinguunt cogimur de sanctificatione prius dicere The third error that justification goeth before Faith 3. The third that justification and remission of sins goe before faith which may seeme a strange assertion to be delivered by him who holdeth that sanctification whereof faith as he confesseth is a principall part goeth before justification But this absurdity he salveth with a distinction that he speaketh of justification not in foro Dei but in foro conscientiae and consequently acknowledgeth no justifying faith but that by which we are in our conscience assured of our justification But when we speak of justification as of a degree of our salvation it is evident that justification is to be censidered as an action of GOD for it is God that justifieth Rom. 8. 30 33. wherby he imputing to a believing sinner the righteousnesse of Christ apprehended by faith absolveth him from his sins and accepteth of him as righteous in Christ. As for that justification
but such as repent of their sinnes and make conscience of their wayes This learned man therefore should have distinguished between● the mer●t of redemption and actuall redemption even as well as between the merit of Salvation and the actuall possession thereof Christ merited our redemption and Salvation long since yea his merit thereof hath ever been in force since the beginning of the world Apoc. 13. 8. but yet none are actually made partakers of redemption but such as to whom it is appyed that is to those that truely believe for they only receive it and to them onely according to the Covenant of grace it was intended Otherwise he might say that all the elect are actually saved for whom Christ purchased eternall life who notwithstanding are not saved so much as in hope untill they do truely believe And if all the elect be actually justified before God because Christ did merit their justification why doth he not say in like manner that all the elect are actually sanctifyed seeing Christ was made unto us of GOD not onely righteousnesse 1 Cor. 1. 30. and redemption but also sanctifycation and hath as well merited our sanctification for us as our justification Againe what benefits we obtaine by Christ we receive them by Faith and therefore in the Scriptures the same benefits which we receive from Christ are ascribed to Faith by which Christ and his merits are ours by which also Christ dwelleth in us Eph. 3 17. we live by Christ we live by Faith Gal 2. 20. by Christ we have remission of sinnes by Faith we obtaine remission Act. 10. 43. 26. 18. we are justified by Christ we are justified by Faith Rom. 3. 28. By Christ we are made the sonnes of God by faith we are made the sonnes of GOD Joh. 1. 12. and so in the rest and therefore to imagine that we are justified before GOD without Faith is a dreame Moreover this assertion cannot stand with the perpetuall Doctrine of the Apostle Paul who teacheth that we are justified before GOD by Faith therefore not before nor without Faith By faith saith he without workes that is by the righteousnesse of Christ apprended by Faith and not by inherent righteousnesse Neither doth he in those places speak of justification in the Court of Conscience whereby we are assured of our justification for as before men we are justified Jam. 2. ●4 that is declared and known to be just by good workes so much more by our good workes by which we are to make our election 2 Pet 1. 10. our calling our justification sure we are justified in our own Conscience that is assured of our justification And to conclude this assertion is such a 〈…〉 Protestant nor Papist did ever hold that a man who is come to yeeres is actually justified before GOD before and without faith The fifth er●our that Faith is not the mother grace 5. The fifth that faith is not the root nor the mother of other graces and that the soule is not disposed to believe sooner then to love GOD or our neighbour or to produce the act of any other grace But this I have sufficiently disproved in the discourse shewing evidently that as without faith there can be no other grace so not onely from it all other graces do spring but also according to the measure and degree of it is the measure and degree of all other graces We are not disposed to love GOD as we ought untill we be by faith perswaded of GODS love towards us we cannot hope for the performance of Gods promises to us unlesse by faith we are perswaded that they belong unto us we cannot trust in GOD nor rejoyce in him unlesse by faith we are perswaded of his goodnesse and bounty towards us and so ●n the rest and what is more plaine then that love which is the fulfilling in the whole law proceedeth from Faith unfained as being the fruit thereof 1 Tim 1. 5. Chrysostome and Theophilact call faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 seil 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the mother and fountaine of all graces and Calvin Justit l. 3. c. 2. sect 41. sect 42. c. 3. sect 1. sola est fic'es quae in nobis charitatem primum generat it is faith only which first ingendereth charity in us it begetteth also hope and newnesse of life as he saith But to omit other testimonies St. Peter seemeth to acknowledge this truth 2 Pet. 1. 2 3. where he prayeth for them to whom he w●iteth that grace and peace be multiplyed unto them by the knowledge of God and Jesus our Lord according as his divine power hath given unto us all things that pertaine to life and godlinesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 by the acknowledgement of him that hath called us c. that is by faith The sixt error that Faith is assiance 6. The sixt that faith is assiance and so to be defined and that trusting to the promise is the proper act of faith as it justifieth c. But I have proved that faith is not affiance nor affiance faith But a fruit● of faith as well as hope and that by faith we have affiance Eph. 3. 12. whereunto I adde that the trust in GODS promises to be in particular performed to us is not faith but ●ope Yea but promises faith he are both true and good therefore our assent to them is with adherence affiance and trust Answ. The promises are true the things promised are good we believe the promise we hope for the thing promised As contrarywise Gods threatnings are also true and the things threatned evill as therefore he that believeth the threatning to be true feareth if it be applyable to himselfe the thing threatned and yet this feare is not of the nature of faith but a fruit and consequent thereof so he that believeth a promise to be true and can apply it to himself trusteth hopeth for the thing promised which trust in respect of the promise is no more of the nature of faith then feare in respect of the threatning But that affiance is of the essence of justifying faith he will make good by divers reasons first from the phrases of believing Iohn 1. 12. Rom. 10. 1● ●s Rom 4. 5. Act. 16. 31. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or Eph 1. 12. 〈◊〉 that is in or upon which imply affiance A. That as I said in the discourse affiance is such an unseperable fruite of faith that sometimes it is implyed in the phrase of bli●ving in Christ. For that phrase may and sometimes doth imply three acts the first of assent that he is the Savi●●r of all that believe in him which ass 〈◊〉 it be lively and effectuall is the proper act of that faith whereby we are justified before God and in this sense the phrase of beli●ving in him is ordinarily used in the Scriptures yea sometimes it is attributed to those who have assented onely by a bare historicall and temporary Faith which is the Faith of hypocrites and all
is the Gospell which is the truth of GOD in CHRIST or his truth concerning salvation by CHRIST Now to give a willing lively and effectuall assent to his truth farre exceedeth the strength of corrupted nature John 6. 44. Matt. 16. 16. 17. These things thus premised I come to his argumentation and first to the proposition which if it were universally true as it is propounded whatsoever the understanding by the onely light of Nature judgeth to be honest that the will can desire by the onely strength of Nature then might I as lawfully assume and conclude thus to the great comfont of the Pelagians and Arminians whom in divers other points he doth worthily But by the onely light of nature the understanding judgeth it to be an honest and a good thing to believe in God and to obey him to believe in him I say not onely as true in his word but also as faithfull in his promises and consequently to trust in him for the performance thereof likewise to obey God commanding us any duety as namely to turne unto him by unfained repentance and to lay holde upon CHRIST by a true faith therefore by the onely strength of nature the will may desire or will any of these acts namely to turne unto God by unfained repentance to lay hold upon CHRIST by a true faith to 〈◊〉 unto God for the performance of his promises to us which in his conceipt is the very act of Faith as it justifieth I come to the assumption where I confesse in a confused generality the understanding by the onely light of ●ature judgeth it an honest and good thing to believe what God revealeth indefinitely but when you come to the particular object of justifying Faith viz. that IESUS CHRIST is the So●●e of GOD and Saviour of all that believe in him this either they will deny to be revealed by GOD as to the Jewes the preaching of CHRIST crucified was a stumbling block 1 Cor. 1. 23. and to the Greekes foolishnesse or if they doe give a kinde of assent unto it yet they neither doe or can believe it by a lively and effectuall assent His second reason That is no act of justifying faith which is f●●nd in devils hereticks hypocrites and reprobases But this assent to divine revelations because of GODS authority is to be found in devils hereticks hypocrites and repr●b●tes Therefore this assent is no act of justifying faith Answ. The proposition is not univ●●sally true for so much of faith as is found in the wicked either men or Angels is common to them with the faithfull and elect and without it there can be no faith If therefore justifying Faith doe assent to divine revelations because of GODS authority and there can be no justifying faith without this assent then it followeth that to assent is an act of justifying Faith But I answer to the assumption that this assent meaning a willing lively and effectuall assent to the truth of GOD in Christ is not to be found in divels whose assent is not so much as willing but with horrour even to that which they abhor as himselfe confesseth not in hereticks who as they are hereticks dissent from the truth For though that assertion of the Papists that any one act of infidelity bereaveth a man of faith be wicked and desperate yet this is true that howsoever the proper object of faith as it justifieth is Christ notwithstanding by the same faith by the which we are justified we believe not onely all other articles of the Christian faith but also whatsoever GOD hath revealed in his word and whosoever doth refuse to believe whatsoever GOD hath revealed in his word he hath not a true faith Nor in hypocrites and reprobates whose seeming faith is neither lively nor true but dead and counterfeit not formata but informis Indeed this distinction of faith that it is formata or informis according to the meaning of the schoole-men and Papists is to be rejected and that in two respects first because they propound it as a distinction of a true justifying faith when as it is not possible that that faith which wanteth his forme and which is dead and therefore hath not his true being should justifie neither is it possible that that Faith should be 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is effectuall by an active efficacy as namely to justifie which is called actus secundus which hath not the formall 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is called actus primus Secondly because the Papists in this distinction imply that Charity is the forme of faith and as it were the soule thereof which they seeme to ground on Iames 2. 26. For how can one habit be the forme of another especially such an habite as is the fruit and consequent of the other For Charity which is the end of the law 1 Tim. 1. 5. proceedeth from faith unfayned For when wee are by faith perswaded of GODS love towards us in Christ then are we moved to love GOD and our neighbour for GODS sake and the more we are assured of GODS love the more is our heart inflamed with fervent love towards GOD as I have shewed And if the habit of Charity cannot be the forme of faith then much lesse can good works which are the outward fruits both of Faith and Charity or as the Apostle speaketh of faith quae operatur per charitatem which worketh by love Gal. 5. 6. Neither doth the Apostle St. Iames compare workes to the soule but to the breath as the word 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 which is derived from 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 signifying to breath doth properly signify and so is used in many places where it is called the Spirit of the mouth and the Spirit of the nostrils so that the meaning of St. Iames is as the body without the breath is dead even so Faith without good workes which are as it were the breathing of a lively Faith is dead Not that ever it lived but because it is without life as many things are said to be blind which never saw and dumb which never spake But howsoever this distinction in the Popish sence is to be rejected yet it cannot be denyed but that as knowledge is either literall which is an idle knowledge swimming in the braine but not working on the heart and Conscience or Spirituall which is a powerfull and operative knowledge so faith is ●ither a true lively and effectuall or else a counterfeit and a dead Faith which some call a bare historicall Faith answerable to the literall knowledge The former is called by the Apostle 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in divers places and Gal. 5. 6. It is said to bee 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ●fficax effectuall as that prayer which availeth much is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Jam. 5. 16. or effectually working or active having in it duplicent 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a double act both the first and the second the first which is as it were the form wherby it truly is and in respect whereof it may be called formata which as Solomon speaketh of other graces Pro. 3. 21. Tushijah the very essence and entity the soundnesse and integrity of it in respect whereof it is called 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and this is the inward 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 whereby it liveth and is effectuall having efficacy in it selfe The other which is actus secundus whereby it is lively active and effectuall in bringing forth the acts and operations or the fruits and effects of Faith In respect of the former it is said to have root whereby I understand that apprehensive and attractive power of Faith in apprehending and receiving Christ in respect of the latter it is said to be fruitfull and working by love the latter which is not unfained is counterfeit having neither roote Luke 8. 13. Nor fruit and therefore is as St Iames saith dead Jam. 2. 20. 26. Now as the counterfeit of a man is not truely a man though called by his name so this counterfeit and dead Faith which is the faith of hypocrites though it have a name of faith is not faith 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 indeed and truely but aequivocè and being not a true faith is not Faith for ens verum convertuntur and in this sence it may well be called informis That faith therefore which is common to devils to hereticks to hypocrites and reprobates is not true but counterfeit not lively but dead not formata but informis And thus have I defended that necessary and as I am perswaded most comfortable truth which I delivered in the Discourse concerning the certainty of Salvation FINIS a By singular dispensation b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 in x Chrysost. in Eph. 2. 10. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 c. y Nihil vnlet nist ad peceandum De spiritu lit c. 1. z Ad ●●●facium 〈…〉 Pelag. lib. 3. cap. 8. * Bellor● Iustif. ●ib 4. tap 5. * Prov. ●9 14. The spirit of a man will sustain his infirmity but a wounded spirit who can ●ear * Being pr●pared by the Law and other legall means we must attend to the Gospel Rom 10. 8. 17 * By which the Holy Ghost worketh in us faith and that in two degrees * A g●pi 112. ad Paulin●● c. 2. Ment 〈◊〉 vides vit●m v●l●ntate● cogi●atem cogitationem memoriam cogitationem intelligentiam sientiam fidentuam * Aug. de corrept gracia c. 7. Horum sides quae per dilectionemoper●tur profect● aut omninò n● deficit aut si qi sunt quor●● deficit reparatur antequam vita ista ●iniatur deleta quae intercurrerat inique itate usque in finem perseverantia deputatur * Boeth in Top. Ci●er Re P●gnantia dicuntur contrariorum consequentia●adalterum contrariem relata vigilare dormi●e contraria ● in t stertere a item et vigilare sunt rep●gnantia
in bondage what need we a redeemer If not lost what need we a Saviour Mat. 9. 12. The whole need not the Physitian but they that are sick Christ came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentauce Mat. 9. 13. to preach redemption to the Captives Luke 4. 1● and to save that which was lost He was given unto us of his Father to be our wisdom our lustification our redemption our sanctification our life our salvation 1 Cor. 1. 30. If therefore we would be made partakers of these benefits we must acknowledg our selves to be fools in spiritual things that in him we may become wise guilty of death damnation that in and by him we may be absolved and justified defiled and polluted with sin that by him we may be sanctified dead in sin that in him we may be quickned and revived lost that in him we may be saved captives and bondmen that by him we may be redeemed 2. As touching the party by whom we are redeemed the text saith he would give us that we should be redeemed which in the beginning of this Psalm is more plainly expressed Blessed be the Lord God of Israel who hath visited and redeemed his people or as the words are hath wrought redemption to his people How By raising an horn of salvation that is a mighty saviour For us who according to the flesh was the Son of David The father therefore redeemeth us by giving his son for us the son redeemeth us by giving himself to be a price of redemption for us 1 Tim. 2. 6. The holy Ghost also redeemeth us when working in us the grace of ●aith he applieth unto us the benefit of redemption The father redeemeth as the gracious Author and Donor the Son as the meritorious worker the holy Ghost as the effectual applier The good wil and love of God the Father is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or antecedent moving cause the death and obedience of Christ is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or meritorious cause the application of the holy Ghost is the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 or effectual cause by which we are made actually partakers of redemption which is the grace wrought by Christ proceeding from the love of the father 2 Cor. 13. 14. applied unto us by the communion of the holy Ghost Now here are divers things to be observed 1. The infinite and unspeakable love of God the father in giving his only begotten Son and of God the Son in giving himself for us and of God the holy Ghost the spirit of grace in communicating unto us the mercy and love of God and the merit and vertue of all that Christ did or su●●ered for us For the first herein is love saith the beloved Apostle not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his Sonne to be the propitiation for our sinnes 1 John 4. 10. So God loved the world so infinitely so unspeakably so beyond all comparison that he gave his only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in him should not perish but have everlasting life Ioh. 3. 16. And again Ro. 8. 32. that he spared not his own son but delivered him up for us al. But her in especialy god mendeth his love towards us that whilest we were sinners and by sin enemies Christ died for us Rom. 5. 8. 10. If this love of God be shed abroad in our hearts by his holy spirit Rom. 5. 5. that is if by the Holy Ghost working in us faith we are truly perswaded and assured of it these effects wil follow 1. that we shal love God again the beams of his love inflaming our hearts and reflecting back some heat of love For therefore do we love God because he loved us first 1 Joh. 4. 19. Magnes amor is amor Love is the loadstone of love The woman in the Gospel who had many sins remitted did therefore love much Luk. 7. 47. If it be demanded why and how we should love God I answer with Bernard Lib●de dilig Deum initio Causa diligendi Deum Deus est modus sine modo diligere God is good without measure and without measure he hath loved us therefore without measure if it were possible we ought to love him But though we cannot do so yet we ought to love him with all our heart with all our soul and with all our might Lev. 6. 5. Mat. 22. 37. Or if we cannot do so by reason of the flesh yet at the least with an upright soul and a sincere heart to the uttermost of our power And this our love we must express by keeping his commandements Ioh. 14. 15. Exod. 20. 6. and that willingly For this saith Saint John is the love of God 1 Ioh. chap. 5. ver 3. that we keep his Commandments and his Commandements are not grievous 2. We shal love our neighbour for the Lords sake it is the use which S. Iohn make●h in the place even now cited 1 Ioh. 4. 10. 11. Herein is love not that we loved God but that he loved us and sent his son to be the pr●pitiation for our sins Beloved saith he if God so loved us we ought also to love 〈◊〉 another 3. The perswasion of this love of God affordeth unto us singular comfort in divers respects As first in afflictions For therefore do we glory in afflictions Rom. 5. 3 4 5. knowing that tribulation worketh patience and patience experience and experience hope and hope maketh not ashamed because the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the holy Ghost which is given 〈◊〉 us that is because by faith wrought in us by the holy Ghost we are perswaded of the love of God in Christ which love God commendeth towards us in that when we were sinners Christ died for us The second comfort If God did so love us when we were his enemies much more when by Christ we are become his friends For if when we were enemies we were reconciled unto God by the death of his Son much more being reconciled we shal be saved by his life The third comfort If God so loved us that he spared not his own Son but delivered him up for us all how shal he not then with him also freely give us all things Rom. 8. 32. all things that be expedient for us 2. The love also of God the Son exceedeth all knowledg Ephes. 3. 19. who so lo●ed the Church that he gave himself for it Eph. 5. 25. who so loved us that he washed us from our sins in his own blood Apoc. 1. 5. Greater love hath no man then this that a man lay down his life for his friends Iohn 15. 13. But Christ our sweet Saviour being not only man but God also gave himself not for his friends but for his enemies and that not to a commo●and ordinary death but to the most painful most shameful and most accursed death of the Cross and not only to fuffer a corporall death but also in his soul
to undergo the wrath of God in our steed the fear whereof when he was in that grievous agony caused him to sweat great dropps of blood Luke 22. 44. and the sence thereof on the Cross being in his own sence as a man forsaken of God made him cry out My God my God why hast thou for saken me Mat. 27. 46. The acknowledgment of this wonderful love of Christ ought first to work in us a love in some measure answerable to his that as he gave himself for us an offering and sacrifice to God for a sweet smelling savour Eph. 5. 2. so we should present our bodies a living sacrifice holy and acceptable unto him which is our reasonable service Rom. 12. 1. And as he gave himself for us so should we b●willing and ready if occasion serve to lay down our lives for him the rather because he hath promised that whosoever shal lose his life for his sake and the Gospels shal save it Mar. 8. 35. We owe our selves unto Christ in a double or treble respect first for that in our creation he gave us to our selves secondly because in our redemption when we were lost he restored us to our selves thirdly when in restoring us he gave himself for us For our selves given and restored we may and ought to give and render our selves but what retribution shal we make him for himself For though we should give and render our selves to him or for him a thousand times yet what are we to him As Bernard sweetly argueth Lib. de delig Deo Secondly we are to imitate our blessed Saviour as the Apostle exhorteth us in respect of his love shewing it self in his wonderful humiliation and obedience for us Phil. 2. 5. Let the same mind be in you which was in Christ Iesus who being God coequall with his Father for our sakes abased himselfe to become man and being man humbled himself not only to all active obedience performing all righteousness as being made subject to the Law for us but also to the passive obedience being obedient to death even the death of the Crosse and all this for us men and for our salvation Thus you have heard the love of the Father in giving his Son and the love of the Son in giving himself for us whereunto we may add the love both of the Father and the Son in sending the Holy Spirit the Spirit of love to accompl●sh our redemption and also of the Holy Ghost who furnisheth with his graces and furnished sendeth forth the Embassadours and Ministers of God committing unto them the meanes of our salvation in and by which hee having united us to Christ and made us partakers of him he worketh effectually in the hearts of Gods chosen all those saving and sanctifying graces wherby they are not only enti●led unto Gods Kingdome but also fitted and prepared for the same But as in the work of our Redemption we have observ●● the 〈◊〉 love of God so in the second place we are to observe his infinite justice manifested in the same For such is the justice of God that rather then he would suffer the sins of his own elect children to go unpunished he hath punished them in the death of his only begotten Son The consideration whereof ought to strike a terror in them that do not believe nor repent For if God punished the sins of the faithful in Christ what shal become of them who have no part in Christ Undoubtedly every sin as it deserveth death so is it punished with death either with the death of Christ in the behalf of them that believe or with the death of the parties themselves who are not in Christ. And as it ministreth terror to the wicked so it affordeth singular comfort to the faithful who are in Christ. For they may from the consideration of this justice of God safely conclude that to them being in Christ there is not only no condemnation but not so much as any punishments so properly called which in order of justice is inflicted by way of vengeance to satisfie the justice of God For Christ having fully satisfied the justice of his Father in the behalf of all them that believe it cannot stand with the justice of God to punish the same sins in the party which he hath already punished in Christ. The children of God are indeed subject to manifold afflictions which are mala poenae but unto them the nature of them is changed so that they be not punishments to them but either fatherly chastisements for when we are judged 1 Cor. 11. 32. that is afflicted for our sins we are chastised of the Lord that we should not be condemned with the world or else trials for their good Thirdly we observe how heynous and how detestable our sins are in the sight of God the guilt whereof could not be expiated nor the justice of God satisfied nor his wrath for them appeased by any other means but by the most precious blood of the eternal Son of God That both in respect of our sins past we should be touched with remorse when we consider that by our sins we nayled our Saviour to the Cross to which end we are to pray that the Lord would pour upon us the spirit of grace and supplication that when we look upon him whom we have pierced we might lament and mourn as a father mourneth for his only son and also in respect of the time to come we should not be animated to commit any sin as being smal seeing there is none so smal but the price of it was the precious blood of Christ none so light but that if we be not eased from the burthen of it by the merits of Christ it is of sufficient weight to presse us down to hell The third thing to be considered in the doctrine of Redemption are the enemies from whom we are delivered which are not carnall as the Jews imagine dreaming that their Messias should be a temporal Monarch who having subdued their enemies which held them in subjection should restore the Kingdom to Israel but spirituall And these are the Law sin death and the devill the La● being the strength of sinne sinne the sting of death and death the power of the devil from the hand that is from the power of all which our Saviour Christ hath delivered us If it be demanded why among the enemies I do not reckon the world I answer if by World be meant worldly desires as 1 Ioh. 2. 15 16. they are comprehended under the title of sin if wicked worldlings they are but the feed of the Serpent and the instruments of the Devill And in both senses not only our Saviour hath overcome the world for us Ioh. 16. 33. but the faithfull also in and by him 1 Ioh. 4. 4. and 5. 4 5. The Law by reason of our transgression is an enemy unto us whether we consider the yoke of the Ceremonial Law or the bondage wherein the Morall Law did hold us