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A20752 The Christian warfare wherein is first generally shewed the malice, power and politike stratagems of the spirituall ennemies of our saluation, Sathan and his assistants the world and the flesh, with the meanes also whereby the Christian may vvithstand and defeate them : and afterwards more speciallie their particvlar temptatiions, against the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation, whereby on the one side they allure vs to security and presumption, and on the other side, draw vs to doubting and desperation, are expressed and answered : written especially for their sakes who are exercised in the spirituall conflict of temptations, and are afflicted in conscience in the sight and sense of their sinnes / by I. Dovvname ... Downame, John, d. 1652. 1604 (1604) STC 7133; ESTC S1536 575,484 731

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that he is not beloued of God but subiect to his wrath and heauie displeasure And this he inforceth by two sorts of arguments the one drawne from his manifold corruptions whereby hee is vnworthie of Gods loue the other from those grieuous afflictions and crosses which the Lord in this life inflicteth on him both which he thus vrgeth against him Canst thou vild wretch conceiue the least hope that thou art beloued of God Why doe but take a view of thy selfe and thou shalt see that originall corruption hath ouerspread both thy bodie and soule like a filthy leprosie vnto which thou hast added actuall transgressions more in number than the haires of thy head or the starres of heauen for daily nay hourely thou omittest some dutie which thy God hath commanded thee and committest some sinne which hee hath forbidden Can therefore the Lord who abhorreth wickednesse loue the wicked canst thou obtaine his fauour and yet doest nothing but displease him He that loueth God keepeth his commandements but thou by transgressing them all doest shew that thou louest him not and will the Lord loue them who hate and rebell against him Can iustice it selfe loue wickednes and perfect holinesse impure corruption No verely for in his word hee hath threatned his wrath against all such notorious sinners and hee is no lesse true in his threatnings than in his promises But if all this will not perswade thee that the Lord abhorreth thee yet at least bee perswaded by thine owne experienc For hath not thy iust God begunne already to make thee taste the cuppe of his wrath of which hereafter thou shalt drinke in full measure hath hee not spoyled thee of thy goods taken away thy good name made thee an abiect amongst men afflicted thee in body with grieuous and continuall sicknesse and filled thy soule full of horror and despayre Is not thy conscience stung with sinne and hath not the poyson thereof drunke vp thy spirit Doest thou not plainely apprehend his wrath and is not thy soule as it were set vpon the racke so that there is not one part of thee either of body and soule which is not full of misery and wretchednesse Doe not therefore fondly flatter thy selfe with a vaine opinion of Gods loue but beleeue if not my words yet at least thine owne senses and seeing thou hast no hope of Gods loue if thou beest wise loue thy selfe follow thy pleasures eate and drinke and cheere vp thine heart and doe not vainely macerate and turmoyle thy selfe in labouring after impossibilities and in striuing for the assurance of Gods loue of which when thou hast done what thou canst yet shalt thou neuer be assured § Sect. 4 And thus you see the manner of Sathans temptations How we may answere the former temptation whereby he laboureth to perswade vs that we are out of the loue and fauour of God against which we must most carefully arme our selues as being most odious and iniurious vnto God and most pernicious vnto our owne soules It is most iniurious vnto God if we doubt of his loue towards vs seeing he hath giuen vs innumerable pledges and most certaine testimonies thereof and omitted nothing which might doe vs good He hath created vs after his owne image he hath continually preserued and sustained vs giuing vs our meate in due season and oft time hath succoured and defended vs before we craued his helpe but which is more he hath giuen his dearely beloued sonne to dye a bitter death to redeeme vs out of the hands of our spirituall enemies and to the end we should be made partakers of Christ and all his benefits he hath giuen vs his word and made his couenant with vs that in Christ he will be our God and we his people he our father and we his children And least yet there should be any place left to doubting he hath added to his word his sacraments which like seales may assure vs of his loue and fauour What iniurie therefore shall we offer vnto God if notwithstanding all this we doubt of his good will of which he hath assured vs by so many pledges testimonies and seales We know that a kinde friend will take it most vnkindely if after he hath heaped vpon a man innumerable benefits and shewed all testimonies of true loue hee notwithstanding doubt of his good will and suspect his friendship and so surely the Lord will take it ill at our hands and thinke himselfe much abused if after he hath bestowed such infinite benefits euen his dearely beloued sonne to dye for vs we now suspect his good will and growe iealous of his loue if we doubt of his loue who is loue it selfe as the Apostle speaketh 1. Iohn 4.8 § Sect. 5 But against this which I haue said there are two obiections That carnall men haue no assurance of Gods loue though they boast thereof the first is made by the worldling the other by Sathan The worldly man will say that the Lord hath made him also partaker of all these benefits and therefore there is no cause why he should doubt of his loue nor any reason why he should be censured or condemned for his faith I answere that he is not reprehended for his perswasion of Gods loue nor for his assurance of Gods promises in Christ but for his boasting of this faith perswasion and assurance whereas there is nothing in him in truth but a dead carcase of faith carnall security and vaine presumption For true faith purifieth the heart Acts 15.9 and worketh by loue Gal. 5.6 it is plentifull in good workes and prouoketh vs to performe all good duties to God and our neighbours and it is impossible that wee should be truely perswaded of Gods loue and not loue him againe it cannot be that we loue God if we shew no care in glorifying his name by letting our lights shine before men nor any desire to performe obedience to his will For as our Sauiour saith He that loueth me keepeth my Commaundements and he that loueth me not keepeth not my words as it is Iohn 14.23 24. If therefore we liue in our sinnes without repentance if we make no conscience of our waies and shew no zeale in glorifying Gods name if our faith be destitute of the fruites of good workes then is our perswasion but fond presumption our assurance carnall securitie our faith dead and like a carcase which breatheth not as Iames speaketh chap. 2.26 Wee doe not then reprehend any for being perswaded of Gods loue gathering his assurance out of Gods manifolde mercies and innumerable benefits bestowed on his Church nay contrariwise wee affirme that notwithstanding all our sinnes and vnworthinesse we are to be perswaded of Gods loue in Christ yea and to beleeue against beleefe and to hope against hope when as there is no ground or reason of either in our selues but this we maintaine that whosoeuer hath this assurance and faith in the least measure begunne in him doth truly loue
God againe and earnestly laboureth after mortification and newnesse of life and whosoeuer is destitute of Gods loue and liueth in his sinnes without any sorrowe for those which are past or purpose to leaue them for the time to come he may well brag of his faith and assurance of Gods loue but in very trueth there is as yet nothing in him but carnall securitie and vaine presumption § Sect. 6 Secondly That euery particular christian may assure himselfe of Gods loue the tempter will obiect that the Lord hath giuen all these testimonies and pledges of his loue vnto his Church and that it therefore may well be assured thereof but as for particular men they notwithstanding may iustly doubt of his loue seeing they haue no speciall reasons to perswade them that these testimonies and pledges were giuen vnto them But I answere that this is a fond of obiection For what is the Church but the whole company of Gods saints What is it but a body consisting of many members which are particular christians how therefore can the whole Church be perswaded of Gods loue if all the seuerall members doubt thereof How can any thing belong to the whole which belongeth not to the particular parts as though a whole citie could be assured of the Princes fauour and yet all the particular men in the citie should thinke themselues in his displeasure Saint Paul teacheth vs another lesson in his owne person saying Gal. 2.20 Gal. 2.20 Who hath loued me and giuen his life for me he saith not who hath loued and giuen his life for the Church but for himselfe Neither doth the Apostle here speake this by reuelation whereby he might extraordinarily be assured of Gods loue but he vseth for his argument a reason common to all Christians namely that God loued him because hee had giuen himselfe to death for him whosoeuer therefore beleeueth with Paul that Christ dyed for him may bee assured also with him of Gods loue § Sect. 7 Secondly if we doe not beleeue that God loueth vs That doubting of Gods loue is iniurious vnto him wee make him a lyar for he hath professed his loue and giuen vs many testimonies thereof in his word neither doth he require any condition at our hands but that we beleeue him For his mercifull promises doe not exclude any for their vnworthinesse but for their vnbeleefe according to that Iohn 3.16 So God loued the world that hee gaue his onely begotten sonne that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish Ioh. 3.16 but haue euerlasting life Seeing then there is no other condition required but faith for the assurance of Gods loue and euerlasting life surely most desperately doe we sinne against our owne soules and most blasphemously against God if we will not beleeue his word confirmed by his seale no not his oath whereby he hath ratified his couenant betweene him and vs but make him who is truth it selfe a liar a couenant breaker yea a periured person For so the Apostle speaketh 1. Iohn 5.10 He that beleeueth not God hath made him a lyar 1. Ioh. 5.10 because hee beleeued not the record that God witnessed of his Sonne Though therefore we sinne yet let vs not thus blaspheme though we be grieuous sinners and vnworthy Gods loue yet let vs not adde this to all our other sinnes and vnworthinesse to distrust Gods trueth in his gracious promises for if we put all our other sinnes into the one scole and this alone into the other yet will it weigh downe all the rest neither are we damned for our other sinnes if we doe not adde vnto them infidelitie For whereas the precious baulme of our Sauiours blood is a soueraigne salue to cure all other sores of sinne yet this it cannot helpe because it doth refuse the cure and as it were pulleth off this precious plaister when it is laid on it § Sect. 8 But as this distrusting and doubting of Gods loue is iniurious vnto him Doubting of Gods loue pernicious vnto our selues so also it is pernitious vnto our owne soules For first it tormenteth our mindes and setteth our consciences vpon the racke when as we haue no other assurance of Gods loue but onely so farre foorth as we finde our selues worthy of it for so often as wee fall and the sight of our sinnes commeth before our eyes hauing no other ground of Gods loue but our owne deserts wee doubt and stagger like a ship tossed with the billowes of the sea and in the end sinke into the gulfe of despaire being ouer balanced and too heauily laden with the vnsupportable waight of our sinnes whereas if we were throughly perswaded of Gods free loue and goodwill grounded on his owne good pleasure and not on our worthinesse if we did fall we would be grieued in deede euen at the very heart because wee had displeased our gracious God and louing Father but yet our sinnes would not make vs despaire or doubt of his loue towards vs because it hath not it ground on our worthinesse but vpon Gods owne free mercie grace and good will That we cannot loue God if we haue no assurance of his loue towards vs. Secondly if we doubt and distrust of Gods loue towards vs we shall neuer loue him from our hearts for who loueth him intirely of whose loue he is not perswaded or who can performe the dueties of loue to such an one as hateth and abhorreth him Cos amoris amor Loue is the whetstone of loue And if this be true amongst men then much more betweene God and vs 1. Ioh. 4.19 for we loue him because he loued vs first as the Apostle sayth 1. Ioh. 4.19 As therefore the cold stone can of it selfe cast foorth no heate till it be first warmed by the Sunne beames and then it reflectsth againe some of the heate which it receiued so no more can our cold hearts cast any beames of hearty loue towards God till they be warmed with the apprehension of his loue towards vs and then they begin to returne some sparkes of loue towards God after they are inflamed with the beames of his loue cleerely shining in them Vnlesse therefore wee be assured of Gods loue we cannot loue him Rom. 13.8 and consequently cannot performe any duetie of loue in obedience to his will for as loue is the fulfilling of the Law as it is Rom. 13.8 so the want of loue is the transgressing of all the commandements for all consist in the loue of God which is the fountaine of all true obedience and in the loue of our neighbour which as a spring issueth from it Nay when we dispaire of Gods loue then doe we despaire of our saluation and therefore hauing no hope of happinesse in the life to come wee are ready to seeke al the pleasures and delights which this life wil affoord vnto vs giuing our selues ouer to the satisfying of all the filthy lusts of the flesh and spending our
friends he endured tedious labours many miseries and so Dauid was persecuted whilest Saul did sit on the throne yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe was arraigned at the barre and condemned whilest Pilate and the chiefe Priests and Pharisies sate in the seate of iustice ouerswaying all at their owne pleasures and yet at the same time Iacob was beloued Esau hated Dauid chosen of God Saul reiected our Sauiour Christ the deare sonne of his heauenly father and his enemies the instruments and limmes of Sathan So that it is most true that Salomon speaketh namely no man can haue assurance of Gods loue and fauour by these outward benefits bestowed both vpon the godly and wicked neither by his aduersities and afflictions can gather that the Lord hateth him for these befall all indifferently as it pleaseth God to punish the reprobate or to chastize his owne children But though we can gather no sound argument from these outward things of Gods loue yet it followeth not that there is no other meanes to assure vs hereof for by the same reason wee may conclude that man is no better than brute beasts and that there is no immortalitie of the soule Eccles 3.19 because it is said Eccles 3.19 that the condition of the children of men and the condition of beasts is the same But as the Wiseman speaketh there of their outward mortalitie alone and not absolutely in all respects and therefore he saith that they are alike to see to that is in outward appearance vers 18. and explaineth himselfe in the words following for saith hee as one dieth so dieth the other so he doth not meane here simply that there is no assurance of Gods loue but onely in respect of these outward things and therefore he addeth that in these outward respects all things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and the wicked Though then there is no assurance of Gods loue to be gathered out of our worldly estate yet it cannot hence be concluded that therefore there is no meanes whereby we may be assured hereof for the Lord hath giuen vnto vs his word and mercifull promises he hath giuen vnto vs his holy spirit crying in our harts Abba father and witnessing to our spirits that we are the sonnes of God Rom. 8. Rom. 8. He hath manifested his loue by giuing vs his onely sonne and begetting in vs by his word and spirit a liuely faith whereby wee may apply him and all his benefits vnto vs. Whosoeuer therefore beleeueth truly in Iesus Christ he may be assured of Gods loue and euerlasting life according to that Ioh. 3.16 So God loued the world that he gaue his onely begotten sonne Ioh. 3.16 that whosoeuer beleeueth in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life If therefore we beleeue in Iesus Christ we need not to despaire no nor to doubt of Gods loue and fauour towards vs notwithstanding our vnworthinesse nor yet in regard of the manifold afflictions which God inflicteth on vs neither in respect of those manifold infirmities which we bewray whilest the hand of God is vpon vs but wee may soundly and assuredly conclude with the Apostle Paul Rom. 8.38 I am perswaded that neither death nor life Rom. 8.38 nor Angels nor principalities nor powers nor things present nor things to come 39. Nor height nor depth nor any other creature shall be able to separate vs from the loue of God which is in Christ Iesus our Lord. And so much concerning the first cause of our saluation namely Gods loue and goodwill and also the temptations of Sathan whereby hee laboureth to impugne our assurance thereof the second cause is Gods free election which proceedeth from the other for whom he loueth those hee electeth vnto euerlasting life and happinesse it being an inseparable fruite of loue to seeke the good and felicitie of the partie beloued Election therefore is that part of Gods eternal and immutable decree whereby of his free loue and vndeserued grace he hath preordained some in Christ vnto saluation and to the vse of the meanes tending thereunto for the praise of the glorie of his grace CHAP. IIII. Of Gods election the causes subiect obiect and properties thereof IN this definition is set downe first the efficient cause or author of our election namely God himselfe the Father the Sonne and the holy Ghost and this appeareth Eph. 1.4 He hath chosen vs in him before the foundation of the world that we should be holy c. And Ioh. 15.16 Ye haue not chosen me but I haue chosen you and ordained you that ye goe and bring foorth fruite c. Secondly the motiue or impulsiue cause of Gods election is expressed namely Gods free loue meere goodwill and vndeserued grace And this also is manifest Luk. 12.32 Feare not little flocke for it is your fathers pleasure to giue you a kingdome And Eph. 1.5 who hath predestinated vs to be adopted through Iesus Christ vnto himselfe according to the good pleasure of his will Here therefore are excluded all other causes wherewith diuers haue imagined God was moued to elect vs as namely our owne will the foreseeing of our workes worthinesse or faith and the merits of our Sauiour Christ And that these were not the causes which mooued the Lord to elect vs it may be prooued by manifest testimonies of scripture First our owne will is expressely excluded Rom. 9.16 It is not in him that willeth or runneth but in God that sheweth mercie Secondly not the foresight of our owne workes for the Apostle plainly affirmeth Rom. 9.11.12 that before the children were borne and when they had neither done good or euill that the purpose of God might remaine according to election not by workes but by him that calleth 12. It was said vnto her the elder shall serue the younger 13. As it is written I haue loued Iacob and hated Esau And chap. 11.5.6 he saith that Gods election is of grace and if it be of grace it is no more of workes or els were grace no more grace Thirdly not the foresight of any worthinesse in vs more than in others For there is no difference for all haue sinned and are depriued of the glorie of God as it is Rom. 3.23 And the Apostle affirmeth both of himselfe and others that they were all dead in their sinnes and by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.1.3 Fourthly the Lord respected not our faith as an impulsiue cause mouing him to elect vs but only as an effect of our election neither was the Lord mercifull vnto vs in making choise of vs to bee partakers of euerlasting happinesse because we were faithfull but that we might be faithfull as Paul professeth of himselfe 1. Cor. 7.25 And the holy Ghost affirmeth Act. 13.46 that as many of the Gentiles as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued Lastly although the merit of Christ was the onely meritorious cause of our saluation yet it was
more sure to perseuer in that grace which we haue receiued vnto euerlasting life than Adam in the state of innocencie for he stoode by his owne strength which though it were great yet it was finite but we by the almightie power of God he by the vertue of his owne free will which was mutable and subiect to alteration but we by the will of God which being immutable admitteth of no change § Sect. 3 But let vs come more specially to speake of this maine controuersie betweene the true Christian and the enemies of his saluation the state whereof standeth thus The state of the Controuersie whether hee that is elected in Gods eternall counsaile and is effectually called that is seuered from the world giuen to Christ and ingrafted into Christ by the spirit of God and a liuely faith iustified sanctified and indued with the sanctifying gifts and graces of Gods spirit may after all this fall away lose the spirit of God and the graces thereof and become as prophane and wicked as euer he was before his conuersion lose also his iustification be cut off from the bodie of Christ and finally become a reprobate This the enemies of our saluation affirme but we denie as being a thing impossible not in regard of our owne strength constancie or great measure of grace which wee haue receiued but in respect of Gods will and power who vpholdeth vs Christs intercession who prayeth for vs and Gods holy spirit alwaies dwelling in vs wherby we are so strengthened and confirmed that al the power of hell cannot preuaile against vs. § Sect. 4 This our assertion we will first confirme by vnfallible reasons The first argument grounded vpon Gods wil considered in his decree of election and afterwards answere the contrary obiections which are made against this truth by the enemies of our saluation The reasons which may be alledged for this purpose are many the first sort are taken from Gods owne nature as it is described in his word and exercised in his workes towards vs. As first we may be assured of our perseuerance because it is grounded vpon Gods will which may be considered either in his secret counsaile and decree of election or in his will reuealed in his word From the first wee may thus reason Whomsoeuer the Lord in his eternall counsaile hath elected to euerlasting life they shall most certainly be saued and perseuere in the meanes tending thereunto which are no lesse contained in Gods decree than our saluation it self But the Lord in his eternall counsaile hath elected all the faithfull vnto eternall life And therefore nothing can hinder their saluation nor yet their perseuerance without which it is impossible they should be saued The first part of this reason is cleere and manifest for not to effect that which one hath decreed and purposed argueth either impotencie and want of power or vnconstancie neither of which without blasphemie can bee ascribed vnto God Iere. 32.17 Psalm 115.3 for there is nothing hard vnto him Iere. 32.17 but he doth whatsoeuer he will Psal 115.3 Matth. 19.26 Iob. 42 2. yea euen those things which vnto men are impossible are possible vnto him Mat. 19.26 for he can doe all things Iob 42.2 Neither is the will of God mutable for this argueth a want of wisedome Psal 145.5 whereas his wisedoms is infinite and knoweth no end Psal 145.5 and hee perfectly seeth and knoweth all things in one view Heb. 4.13 past present and to come Heb. 4.13 and therfore we may conclude with the Apostle that the purpose of God in his election remaineth sure Rom. 9.11 Rom. 9.11 and the foundation of God that is his vnchangeable decree continueth firme 1. Tim. 2.19 and hath this seale The Lord knoweth who are his 2. Tim. 2.19 Whosoeuer then are elected they shall most certainly be saued neither is it possible that they should fall away as our Sauiour implieth Matth. 24.24 whereas he saith that the false Prophets should shew such great signes that if it were possible they should deceiue the very elect Noting hereby that this is altogether a thing impossible that they should be deceiued and seduced with false Christs and false Prophets The second part of this reason namely that all the faithfull are elected is also of most vndoubted trueth for whosoeuer haue a true faith they are iustified whosoeuer are iustified are also effectually called elected and shall be glorified What said I shall be nay are alreadie glorified as the Apostle affirmeth Rom. 8.30 to note the vndoubted certaintie of their saluation Rom. 8.30 Moreouer the Apostle maketh faith an inseparable fruite of our election and proper and peculiar vnto the elect Tit. 1.1 Act. 13.48 calling it the faith of Gods elect Tit. 1.1 And Act. 13.48 it is said that as many as were ordained vnto eternall life beleeued where hee maketh Gods election the cause of faith And contrariwise our Sauiour telleth vs that they beleeue not Ioh. 10.26 who are not his sheepe Ioh. 10.26 So that it is manifest that those who beleeue are elected and those who are elected shall be saued § Sect. 5 The second reason may be taken from his wil reuealed in his word for whatsoeuer God thus willeth that shall most certainly come to passe The second reason grounded on his will reuealed Ioh 6.39.40 but God willeth that all should haue euerlasting life whom he hath giuen to Christ in which number are all those who are effectually called as our Sauiour testifieth Ioh. 6.39 And this is the fathers will which hath sent me that of all which he hath giuen me I should lose nothing but should raise it vp again at the last day And he willeth likewise that he that beleeueth in the sonne should be saued as it is vers 40. And therefore those who are effectually called and beleeue in Christ cannot possibly perish but shall most certainly haue eternall life § Sect. 6 The third reason may bee taken from the constancie and immutabilitie of God both in his loue towards vs The third reason taken from Gods immutabilitie in his loue and also in his gifts In the former respect wee may thus reason Whomsoeuer the Lord loueth with a constant and immutable loue those shall most certainly be saued seeing it is the nature of loue to desire the good of the partie beloued and to seeke his welfare as much as it can but the Lord loueth his faithfull ones with a constant and perpetual loue as himselfe testifieth Iere. 31.3 Iere. 31.3 I haue loued thee with an euerlasting loue therefore with mercie haue I drawne thee So Ioh. 13.1 Forasmuch as he loued his owne which were in the world Ioh. 13.1 vnto the end he loued them And therefore all the faithfull may assure themselues that they shall be saued and being once assured of Gods loue they may with the Apostle bee vndoubtedly perswaded that nothing in the world shall
be refuted and repelled CHAP. I. Answeres to those temptations of Sathan whereby he perswadeth carnall men of Gods loue § Sect. 1 ANd so much concerning the common affections of the Christian conflict That Sathans temptations impugne all the causes and meanes of our saluation namely his manfull withstanding Sathans encounters and also his fainting and falling into sinne Now we are to speake of the speciall temptations themselues and the meanes whereby wee may be strengthened against them Where first wee are to consider that Sathans temptations are not alwaies one and the same neither impugne one or two points onely of our faith and religion but as the causes and the meanes of our saluation are manifold so also doth he gather manifold obiections against euerie one of them if they truly appertaine vnto vs that so hee may impugne and race our faith or els doth fill vs with vaine presumption perswading vs that all the causes and meanes of saluation concurre together in vs when as in truth wee are voide and destitute of them all Let vs therefore consider of the seuerall causes of our saluation and obserue what temptations Sathan suggesteth in our minds against euery one of them The first and principall cause of our saluation is Gods eternall loue and immutable goodwill wherewith he hath loued his creatures from before the foundations of the world were laid the which loue and goodwill in himselfe did moue him to elect them to saluation whom he so loued without any deserts in themselues for how could they deserue any thing at Gods hath before they were or what good could the Lord foresee in them but that which in his eternall counsaile hee purposed to bestow and impart vnto them Sathans temptation whereby he perswadeth carnall men that they are beloued of God First therefore we will speake of those temptations which concerne the loue of God toward vs which are of two sorts the first leading vs to vaine presumption and carnall securitie the other to horrour and desperation For if Sathan see men liuing in carnall securitie frozen in the dregges of their sinnes so as in truth there is no signe that they are beloued of God he will perswade them that they are highly in his fauour and loue and therefore though they runne on in their wicked courses yet they shall be saued Doest thou not perceiue will he say that God dearely loueth thee Why consider that hee hath made thee one of his chiefest creatures whereas otherwise hee would haue made thee a toade or serpent he hath also like a tender father preserued and nourished thee from thy infancie and which is more he hath sent his dearely beloued sonne to die for thee and hee hath made choise of thee amongst many others to be a member of his Church where thou inioyest the preaching of the Gospell and the vse of the Sacraments to the end thou maist be assured of thy saluation without all question or doubting Neuer therefore take care nor trouble thy selfe concerning thy saluation vse not such strictnes and precisenes of life but take thy pleasure and follow those delights which the Lord hath bestowed vpon thee as pledges of his loue for thou art not now a slaue but a sonne and therefore maist more freely follow thine owne desire and vse thy libertie cast away all seruile feare which maketh thee take such paines in vsing all meanes whereby thou maist be assured of saluation for thou art assured of the principall namely of Gods loue and therefore thou needest not to doubt of the rest nor to debarre thy selfe of thy pleasures spending thy time in feare and care to the end thou maist get the assurance of that which thou needest not to call into question The answere to the former temptation And thus doth the diuell fill men with presumption and lull them asleepe in carnal securitie to their vtter destruction and therefore it behooueth vs to arme our selues against him that we be not circumuented And to this end let vs consider that Gods loue goeth not alone neither is it idle in those whom he loueth but as the first linke of a chaine draweth all the rest of the chaine with it so the loue of God which is the first cause of our saluation is accompanied with all the other causes which are subordinate thereunto for whom God loueth them he electeth whom he electeth those in his good time he calleth whom hee effectually calleth them he iustifieth and whom he iustifieth those hee sanctifieth if therefore we be not sanctified we are not iustified if wee are not iustified we are not called if we are not called we can haue no assurance that wee are elected nor yet of Gods loue and fauour and consequently whosoeuer liue in their blind ignorance in their infidelitie and wallow themselues in the filthie puddle of their sinnes without any true sorrow for those which are past or any good purpose of heart to forsake them in the time to come they can haue no assurance of Gods loue but are rather iustly to feare least they are in the number of those whom the Lord hath eternally reiected if they continue in this their miserable and desperate estate § Sect. 2 Neither let Sathan bewitch them with that vaine opinion of Gods loue towards them Temporall benefits no infallible signes of Gods loue because of those generall benefits which like the raine and Sunne-shine are bestowed both vpon the good and bad for what in this respect can they promise more to themselues than Esau and Saul Were not they created men according to Gods own likenes were they not preseured and nourished by God and that more liberally than many Gods owne children For Esau had so much the he professed to his brother Iacob that he had enough and was attended vpon by foure hundred men And was not Saul a mightie King who had all at commaund Were not all these in the Church of God and outwardly enioyed the word and Sacraments as well as any other and yet God himself saith that he hated Esau and had reiected Saul And therefore let vs neuer bragge of our assurance of Gods loue because of these outward and common benefits which he indifferently bestoweth both vpon the elect and reprobate but if we would be assured indeed of Gods loue let vs looke into our selues and consider if he haue bestowed vpon vs his spirituall graces faith hope patience loue of him and our brethren true repentance for our sinnes and holinesse of life and the rest and then by the fruites of sanctification we may be assured that we are sanctified and consequently iustified called elected and eternally loued of God § Sect. 3 And thus doth Sathan falsely perswade the carnall man that he is highly in the loue and fauour of God How Sathan perswadeth weake christians that th●y are not belou● of God but contrariwise when he assaulteth the weake Christian hee changeth his copie and goeth about to perswade him
times in all Epicurisme and fensuality § Sect. 9 Lastly The manifold euils which accompanie our doubting of Gods loue and the benefits which follow our perswasion thereof our doubting and distrusting of Gods loue doeth ouerthrow our patience in the time of affliction and causeth vs to murmure and repine against God blaspheming him to his face it hindereth all Christian resolution in suffering any thing for the Name of Christ for how should we suffer any thing patiently for his sake of whose loue we are not assured It maketh the day of death horrible when as we are not perswaded that we shall render vp our soules into the hands of a gracious father but into the hands of a seuere iudge whereas on the other side when we are throughly perswaded of Gods loue then may we patiently yea ioyfully suffer all afflictions because wee know that they are but gentle trials and fatherly chastisements which our gracious God doth inflict on vs for our euerlasting good when we are persecuted for our profession of the Gospel we will triumph with ioy because we are thought worthy to suffer any miserie for the Name of Christ who hath laid downe his life for our sake Act. 5.14 when the day of our departing approacheth we reioice because we desire nothing more than to be dissolued Phil. 1.23 and to be with Christ who so tenderly loueth vs. In a word come prosperitie come aduersitie come affliction come persecution come fire come sword come life come death nothing can come amisse nothing can dismay or discourage vs if wee be once fully assured of Gods loue in Christ both because our loue of God which by his loue is wrought in vs will make the heauiest and most tedious burthen seeme light and momentanie which it shall please our heauenly father to lay vpon vs Rom. 8.28 and also because we know that all things euen miseries afflictions persecutions yea death it selfe worke together for the best vnto them that loue God As it is Rom. 8.28 CHAP. II. That our sinnes and vnworthinesse should not make vs doubt of Gods loue § Sect. 1 SEeing therefore that our doubting and distrusting of Gods loue towards vs is both iniurious vnto God and pernicious vnto our selues let vs in no case admit of Sathans temptations whereby he laboureth to perswade vs that the Lord hateth vs. But forasmuch as there is no perswasiō without knowledge and faith neither can we know and beleeue that we are in Gods fauour vnlesse we haue some ground and warrant out of Gods word whereupon we may cast our wauering mindes and confirme our fainting faith against the boysterous blasts of Sathans temptations therefore let vs examine Sathans reasons whereby he goeth about to perswade vs that we are not beloued of God by the touchstone of Gods word and waigh his obiections in the scoles of the sanctuarie to see if they be of any waight or substance or els but frauthie light and of no sound consequence Answere to Sathans temptations grounded vpon our vnworthines First therefore whereas Sathan obiecteth that we are miserable sinners vnworthie altogether of Gods loue and most worthie of his wrath and heauie displeasure that God is infinitly iust and therefore cannot nor will not loue vs being notoriously wicked we are to answere that indeede we are in our selues vnworthie the least dram of Gods loue by reason of our originall corruption and actuall transgression and therefore if our assurance of Gods fauour had no other foundation but our owne deserts we had great reason not onely to doubt but also vtterly to despaire of Gods loue towards vs. But the loue of God is not grounded vpon our worthines which is nothing Gods loue not grounded on our worthines but vpon his owne good will and pleasure which is infinit as himselfe is infinit and therefore though in our selues we are most miserable and wretched yet this is no reason why we should distrust or in the least degree doubt of Gods loue seeing it ariseth not from any thing in vs but from himselfe who is vnchangeable The truth hereof manifestly appeareth by the scriptures where it is said that the Lord hath loued vs not for our excellencie and worthinesse but of his free grace and louing kindnesse So Hos 14.5 I will heale their rebellion Hos 14.5 I will loue them freely c. And the Apostle Iohn telleth vs that herein Gods loue appeareth in that when we loued not him he so deerely loued vs 1. Ioh. 4.10 that he sent his sonne to be a reconciliation for our sinnes 1. Ioh. 4.10 And Paul saith that hereby God setteth out his loue towards vs seeing that whilest we were yet sinners Rom. 5.8.10 Christ died for vs and when we were enemies God reconciled vs vnto himselfe by the death of his sonne Rom. 5.8.10 If therefore the Lord loued vs when we were enemies vnto him and dead in our sinnes how much more will he loue vs now being reconciled in Christ and in some measure purged from our corruption and quickned by his spirit to newnesse of life If when we were most vnworthie he freely shewed such exceeding fauour towards vs how much more hauing by his spirit and the graces thereof made vs more worthie will he continue his loue vnto vs If he hath hetherto loued vs not for any deserts of ours but of his free mercie because he is loue it selfe as Iohn calleth him 1. Ioh. 4.8 1. Pet. 5.10 1. Ioh. 4.8 and the God of grace as Peter maketh him 1. Pet. 5.10 why should we doubt of Gods loue in respect of our vnworthinesse seeing his loue hath not his ground vpon our worthinesse but vpon his owne nature which is immutable and therefore whom he once loueth he loueth them vnto the end though in themselues they are miserable and wretched Ioh. 13.1 Ioh. 13.1 § Sect. 2 But as the Scriptures shew that God hath loued vs freely from all eternitie so also doe they as plainely declare that God hath manifested this loue in the worke of our saluation freely and without any respect of our worthines as may appeare in the seuerall causes thereof Gods election not grounded on our works and worthines Rom. 11.5 6. As first he hath elected vs of his owne free loue and good will and not for any of our deserts and therefore it is called the election not of vertue and works but of grace Rom. 11.5 Nay it is flatly opposed to workes in the verse following And if saith the Apostle it be of grace it is no more of works or els were grace no more grace but if it be of works it is no more grace or els were worke no more worke So that our election is not grounded vpon our worthinesse but on Gods grace and goodwill and therefore it cannot be ouerthrowne by our vnworthinesse so we wholy rely vpon Gods free mercie in Christ Our worthinesse is not the condition of
beleeueth indeede yea as much more certaine is this knowledge as the knowledge of faith grounded vpon Gods word which is infallible is more certaine than the knowledge of the senses which are often deceiued Furthermore if we could not be assured that we haue faith then to what purpose serues the admonition of the Apostle 2. Cor. 13.5 2. Cor. 13.5 Try your selues whether you are in the faith examine your selues know you not your owne selues how that Iesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates In which words the Apostle plainely implieth that we may know that we haue a true and liuely faith or els this triall and examination were vaine nay hee plainely saith that we may know that Christ is in vs except we be reprobates and consequently that we haue faith for this onely is the hand whereby we apply Christ vnto vs and all his benefits 1. Cor. 11.28 So 1. Cor. 11.28 the Apostle willeth vs to examine our selues before we come to the Lords table that so we be not vnworthie guests in which examination the chiefe thing which we are to respect is whether we haue a true faith for this is the mouth of the soule whereby we feede vpon the body and blood of our Sauiour Christ and therefore vnlesse we can know whether we haue faith when we are truely indued therewith this admonition of the Apostle were to no purpose neither can we haue any assurance to our owne soules that we are worthie guests of the Lords table and consequently we rest doubtfull whether we receiue the Sacrament to our spirituall good and saluation or to our iudgement and condemnation Thirdly we are assured of this by Gods word that whatsoeuer is not done of Rom. 14.23 faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 Heb. 11.6 And without faith it is impossible to please God Heb. 11.6 If therefore we cannot be assured that we haue faith we can haue no assurance that our best actions our calling vpon Gods name our hearing of his word and all other duties of pietie and iustice are any better than sinnes and odious in Gods sight whereof it must needes follow that these actions how good so euer in themselues will be done of vs in doubting because we know not whether they be done in faith and being done doubtingly they become sinnes indeede and therefore displeasing in Gods sight Lastly if I can know whether I beleeue a man vpon his word and whether I trust and rely my selfe vpon his promise or no why may I not much more know whether I beleeue Gods gracious promises made vnto all repentant sinners and amongst the rest vnto my selfe namely that for the obedience and merits of Christ I shall haue remission of my sinnes and euerlasting life seeing this faith is not out of our selues but a gift of God wrought in vs by his holy spirit which is not idle in vs for it pu●ifieth the heart and worketh by loue it mooueth vs to hate and flie from those sinnes we haue loued and to imbrace and loue that holinesse and righteousnesse of life which heretofore hath been loathsome vnto vs. As therefore the fier is knowne by his heate the sunne by the light the good tree by his fruites so when our cold hearts are inflamed with the loue of God and a feruent zeale of his glorie when our blinde vnderstandings are inlightned with the knowledge of God and of the true religion when we bring forth the fruites of our profession in a godly and christian life then may we certainely know that we are indued with a true and liuely faith § Sect. 7 But here the tempter will take occasion to perswade the weake christian and the troubled conscience A temptation grounded vpon our assurance of faith answered that he hath no faith seeing he doth not certainely know that he hath it nor discerneth these signes and fruites of faith in himselfe To this suggestion we are to answere that we doe not say that the weake christian may be assured at all times that he hath faith by his present sense for first when we are newly conuerted and the seedes of faith are sowne in our hearts we doe not presently discerne it but as the corne which is cast into the ground is for a time couered and after springeth vp the blade and then the eare so faith being sowen in our hearts which first like fallow grounds are plowed vp and as it were harrowed and broken with the threatnings of the law and apprehension of Gods anger due vnto our sinnes doth in the time of our humiliation and contrition lie couered so as we cannot discerne it till being more and more watered with the water of the spirit and the heauenly promises of the Gospell which in the preaching of the word like sweete dewes and pleasant showers distill vpon it it sendeth forth the blade namely an holy desire and earnest indeauour to serue God and afterwards the fruite euen a plentifull haruest in godlinesse and righteousnesse of life And secondly sometime after that faith is begun in vs and we haue seene the frutes thereof to our comfort it is after hid from vs againe as when either we wounde our conscience by committing some grieuous sinne against knowledge wittingly and willingly or when it pleaseth the Lord to exercise vs in the spirituall conflict of temptations for then sometimes it commeth to passe that our faith for a time lieth hid vnder the ashes of our corruptions and the cloude of our sinnes and the apprehension of Gods anger doth so ouershadow the eyes of our vnderstanding that we cannot discerne the beames of Gods loue and fauour shining vpon vs although when the conflict is ended our faith againe flameth out in the loue of God and zeale of his glorie and the louing countenance of the Lord shineth graciously vpon vs when these cloudes of temptations are ouerpast And therefore though we do not certainely know our faith by the fruites therof either soone after our conuersion or in the time of temptation yet this must not discourage vs because these are no fit times to iudge thereof onely when we want this knowledge and full assurance let vs vse all good meanes ordained of God that we may attaine thereunto if we neuer had it or recouer and againe renew it if after we haue once had it we lose the sense and feeling thereof either by falling into hainous sinnes or by the violence of Sathans temptations CHAP. VII That we may be assured of our election prooued by diuers arguments § Sect. 1 ANd thus haue I shewed by plaine testimonies of scriptures First because the Gospell manifestly sheweth that we are elected that we may infallibly be assured of our election now I will also prooue the same by strong arguments drawne from the same fountaine First therefore we may thus reason Whatsoeuer is manifestly shewed vnto vs in the Gospel that we are bound to beleeue and of that we may be assured but
the sunne first inlightneth our eyes and by this light we see the sunne it selfe And this our Sauiour Christ intimateth Ioh. 10.14 where first he saith he knoweth his sheepe Ioh. 10.14 and then he addeth that he is also knowne of them As though he should say whilest I know and acknowledge them for my sheepe hereby I bring to passe that they in like manner by the participatiō of this my light and knowledge doe acknowledge me for their true pastor If therefore we know and acknowledge God for our gracious God louing father in Christ it is a most certaine signe that he also by his foreknowledge doth know and acknowledge vs for his people and children But if we remaine in our ignorance without the knowledge of God and his sonne Christ we can gather no assurance vnto our selues of our election for if the foreknowledge of God had shined vpon vs the beames thereof would haue illuminated our hearts so as wee should by their light haue knowne God also Gods loue cause of our loue The like may be said of Gods eternall loue wherewith he hath loued vs in Christ for God louing vs hath imprinted the image of his loue in our hearts whereby wee loue him againe and when this heauenly heate of Gods loue hath descended on vs and warmeth our cold hearts frozen in the dregges of sinne then doe we reflect some of those beames of Gods loue towards him againe And this the Apostle Iohn plainely sheweth 1. Ioh. 4.19 where he saith that we loue God because he loued vs first 1. Ioh. 4.19 that is by that eternall loue wherewith God loued vs in Christ there is imprinted in our hearts the loue of God Vers 7. And hence it is that he saith vers 7. that loue commeth from God because we can neither loue God nor our neighbours aright till his loue towards vs hauing shined vpon vs hath inflamed our hearts So the Apostle Paul saith Rom 5.5 that the loue of God is shed abrode in our hearts Rom. 5.8 by the holy Ghost which is giuen vnto vs whereby loue towards God is begotten in vs. If therefore the loue of God be in our hearts we may be assured that it is but an impression which is made in vs by the seale of his loue towards vs but a little sparke kindled by this heauenly flame and a small modell or little counterfaite resembling the infinit loue of God wherewith from all eternitie he hath loued vs in Christ Thus also Gods eternall election whereby before all worlds he hath chosen vs in Christ doth make an impression and sealeth in our hearts the form or image thereof whereby we make choyse of the true God Iehouah amongst all the Gods of the nations to be our onely God whom we will serue and worship And therefore if we haue made this election and dedicated our selues wholy to Gods worship and seruice alone it is a most certaine signe of our election whereby God hath chosen vs fot our choosing of God is an effect of his choosing of vs and an impression or print wherewith by his election hee hath sealed vs. § Sect. 5 And thus it appeareth that the effects of Gods election doe not onely as signes signifie The first effect of our election is our sauiour Christ by whom we are assured that we are elected but also as seales confirme vnto vs the assurance thereof but let vs further consider the special effects of our election whereby we may be assured that we are chosen of God The first effect is our Sauiour Christ himself set apart of God to be the mediator to reconcile all Gods elect vnto him dwelling in vs by his spirit who may iustly be called the first effect of Gods election because all the other namely our vocation iustification sanctification and saluation are by him and through him alone Whosoeuer therefore are assured that Christ dwelleth in them and they in him they haue a most vndoubted signe of their election and whosoeuer haue not Christ dwelling in them by his spirit can haue no assurance that they are chosen as the Apostle plainely sheweth 2. Cor. 13.5 know you not saith he that Iesus Christ is in you except you be reprobates 2. Cor. 13.5 but how shall we know whether Christ dwelleth thus in vs and we in him the Apostle telleth vs Rom. 8.1 Rom. 8.1 that those who are in Christ Iesus walke not after the flesh but after the spirit that is those who doe not willingly submit themselues to be ruled and led by the lusts of the flesh but labour and striue to resist and subdue them studying and indeauoring to liue a spirituall life in holinesse and righteousnesse For in whomsoeuer Christ dwelleth by his spirit those he regenerateth and raiseth from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and his blood is effectuall not only to purge them from the guilt of sinne but also to cleanse them in some measure from the corruptions themselues § Sect. 6 The second effect of our election The second effect of our election is our effectuall calling is our effectuall calling whereby we are separated from the world and ingrafted into Christ and made liuely members of his body and this is done ordinarily by the diligent and attentiue hearing of the word ioyned with the inward operation of Gods spirit If therefore we haue heard Gods word preached diligently and attentiuely if thereby wee haue attained vnto the knowledge of the worke of our redemption wrought by Iesus Christ and are delighted therewith if by this meanes wee haue our hearts somewhat weaned from the world and fixed vpon our Sauiour and heauenly things and thinking it sufficient to haue spent the rest of our liues past in the lusts of the Gentiles 1. Pet. 4.2.3 doe liue hence forward after the wil of God then are we truely and effectually called for those are Christs sheepe that heare his voyce and follow him Ioh. 10.4 Those are ingrafted into his body who bring forth the fruites of godlinesse Ioh. 10.4 for as the branch can bring forth no fruite except it abide in the vine so neither can we bring forth any fruites of pietie and righteousnesse except wee abide in Christ and therefore if we doe bring forth these fruites it manifestly appeareth that we are in Christ and consequently truely called and elected for without him we could doe nothing Ioh. 15.4.5 as it is Ioh. 15.4.5 § Sect. 7 The third effect of Gods election The third effect is our iustification is our iustification consisting in the remission of our sinnes and the imputation of Christs righteousnesse and to this is required a true and liuely faith which assureth vs of the remission of our sinnes and applieth vnto vs Christs righteousnesse If therefore we beleeue that our sinnes are forgiuen if we doe by faith apply vnto vs Christ and his righteousnesse we may be assured that we are iustified
vs mooue vs to rebellion and impietie towards him and because hee is gratious and long suffering shall we therfore the more offend him and as it were whet the edge of his wrath against vs be it farre from vs. Nay rather if God be gratious and mercifull let vs bee ashamed to offend so gratious and mercifull a God and though wee shoulde bee so hard harted as not to feare his iustice and fearefull iudgementes yet euen in common humanitie let vs blush for shame to offende him in consideration of his infinite loue and mercie If wee had a friende who by reason of the loue hee beareth vs would hardly bee displeased or mooued to anger against vs would wee make this vse of his loue and patience still to prouoke him with new iniuries Nay if their bee any good nature and ciuilitie in vs would not his loue towardes vs mooue vs to loue him againe and woulde not this loue worke in vs a care and feare not to displease him yes assuredly O let not then the Lordes loue patience and long suffering who is our friend of frindes make vs to take occasion of offending and displeasing him but rather let the consideration thereof bee a forcible and stronge motiue to mooue vs to repentance Lastly though the Lorde bee so gratious Rom. 2.4 §. Sect. 5. The last motiue because repentance in time of sicknes is often vnsound and mercifull that he is ready to receiue vs into his loue and fauour whensoeuer wee vnfainedly repent and truely turne vnto him yet forasmuch as hee extendeth his mercy to those onely who are truely penitent seing the repentance of the most is fained and hypocriticall which then onely beginneth when death or some extreame daunger approacheth this should bee a stronge motiue to perswade vs to repent and turne vnto the Lorde when wee are in our perfect health strength and prosperite that so wee may haue assurance that our conuersiō is sincere and vnfained and not forced or dissembled Wee knowe that Pharaoh himselfe when hee was vexed with Gods fearefull plagues Exod. 9.27 10.16.17 could say I haue sinned and promise amendment And Saul when God threatned to cut him off and to take the kingdome from him could acknowledge his wickednesse and pretend a desire to worship the Lord. And Ieroboam could shewe more contrition for the losse of his hand Sam. 15.14.25 then he euer shewed for the losse of his soule And wicked Achab when he heard heauie iudgments denounced against him could outwardly humble himselfe 1. King 13.6 21.27 put on sackeloth fast and goe demurely And who may not obserue in his owne experience how many there are who in the time of their sickenesse make godly shewes of repentance promising goulden mountaynes and vowing if they recouer that they will leade a newe life forsaking their sinnes and indeuouring to serue the Lorde in the duties of holinesse and righteousnesse and yet the same men being restored to their heath with the dogge returne to their vomit and with the sowe to wallowe againe in the filthie puddle of sinne becomming as prophaine wicked irreligious and negligent in all duties of christianitie as euer they were which is a most vndoubted signe that there repentance was but faigned and dissembled and that they were mooued thereunto not for any loue of God or hatred of sinne but for feare of Gods iudgmentes and eternal condemnation and therefore as soone as the cause of their feare is a little remooued their repentance also ceaseth Moreouer wee knowe that true repentance is the gifte of God and that we haue it not at our owne beck and call but when he offereth and vouchsaueth it vnto vs and therefore it is no maruaile if they who haue scorned this gratious gift all the whole course of their liues should be denied it at the time of death left so to the hardnes of their harts that though with Esau they seeke repentance with teares yet they shall neuer find it And though with the fiue foolish virgins they desire to buy oyle for their lamps yet the time of grace being past they shall be shut out of doores and excluded from the mariage Neither doth the Lord ordmarily beget faith Eph 4.11.12 repentance and other sanctifying graces in any man but by the vse of the meanes which he hath ordayned for this purpose now the meanes ordained of God are not sicknesse or the infirmities of old age but the ministerie of his word made effectuall by the inward operation of his spirit for our conuersion sanctification and therefore if the Lord hath oftentimes graūted vs this meanes and they haue not beene effectuall for our conuersion if hee haue often called vs in the preaching of the word and wee haue refused to come what hope can we haue that wee should turne vnto God John 6.44 without this meanes in the time of sickenesse who by the continuall hearing of the word haue not beene conuerted in the time of our health seeing not any come vnto Christ but whom the father draweth and the meanes whereby he draweth vs vnto him is not sickenesse or the approching of death ordinarily but the ministerie of his word for when the sheepe heare Christs voyce and thereby knowe him to bee the true sheepheard then and not before they follow him as it is Iohn 10.27 So that though we were sicke and certainely assured wee should die to morrow yet for all this wee are neuer the neerer our conuersion faith and repentance then we were before as appeareth in the example of the Epicures 1. Cor. 15.32 Let vs eate and drinke say they for to morrow we shall die a man would thinke they should rather haue sayd let vs fast and pray for to morrow we shall die but this plainly sheweth that we are neuer the neerer our conuersion vnto God and true repētance though we are certaine that death approcheth it is onely the worke of Gods spirite which ordinarily worketh not by the means of sicknesse or feare of death but by the ministerie of the word which is Gods owne ordināce Eph. 4.11.12 instituted of God for the gathering together of the Saints and for the edification of the body of Christ And therefore whilest the Lord calleth vs in the preaching of the word let vs harken vnto his voice and turne vnto him by vnfained repentance for if Gods owne ordinance is not effectuall for our conuersion assuredly there is no hope that euer we will be conuerted by sicknes or any other extraordinarie meanes whatsoeuer It is an admirable miracle wrought by the infinite wisedome and almighty power of God that a poore sinner should be conuerted vnto him by the preaching of the word for hereby we who were dead in sinne are raised vp to newnesse of life we who were borne blind are indued with sight our hearts more hard then the Adamant are made flexible and soft as waxe to receaue any impression
are not vtterly to bee discouraged nor to suffer themselues to sinke into the gulfe of desperation but as the sense and feeling of their state ought to humble them vnder Gods hand and to mooue them to enter into a due examination of themselues and to a serious repentance for their sinnes so they must take comfort vnto themselues and prop vp their declining faith by calling to mind former times wherein the Lord hath shewed his mercifull and gratious countenance vnto them and wherein they in token of thankefulnesse haue glorified God by their holinesse and righteousnesse of life An example whereof wee haue in the Prophet Dauid Psal 77. who being grieuously afflicted could not receaue in his soule any true comfort Psal 77. for howsoeuer hee did thinke vpon the Lord yet hee was still troubled and though hee prayed vnto him yet his spirit was full of anguish What help● did he then find in this his present distresse He telleth vs in the first verse Then saith he I considered the dayes of old and the yeares of ancient time I called to remembrance my song in the night namely his songs of thanksgiuing whereby he had praised God for his great benefits and vers 11. I remembred the workes of the Lord certainely I remembred thy wonders of old Iob. 31. So the holy man Iob apprehending and conceyuing of God as of his enemie in respect of his present sense and feeling and being mooued by his friends to doubt of his graces which he had receiued and to condemne himselfe for an hypocrite comforteth himselfe and strengtheneth his faith in the middest of al these grieuous tentations by calling to his remembrance his fruits of faith and workes of sanctification which he had discerned in himselfe in former times as appeareth Chap. 31. Whose example if the children of God in like distresse will follow how miserable soeuer they are in their present sense and feeling yet they may receaue vnto themselues comfort because Gods gifts and calling are without repentance § Sect. 2 But here Sathan will further obiect that we are not only without all sense and feeling of faith That true faith resteth not in our sēse and feeling but also that we doe sensibly feele the heauie burthen of Gods wrath and plainely discerne his frowning and angrie countenance against vs and therfore howsoeuer those children of God who are in his loue and fauoure may haue some faith in them although it doe not alwaies so sensibly appeare yet it is impossibly that we should haue any sparke thereof seeing wee haue not any sense of Gods loue and fauour nay doe sensibly perceaue the cleane contrary to which wee are to answeare that faith doth not relie it selfe vpon our sence and feeling for as the apostle saith faith is the ground of things not presently inioyed but which are hoped for and the euidence or demonstration of things not which are subiect to the senses and sensibly discerned but which are not seene Heb. 11.1 Heb. 11. I and we beleeue that such ioyes are prepared for vs as neither eye hath seene nor eare hath heard nor the heart of man conceiued as it is 1. Cor. 2.9 and it is a kind of infidelitie to beleeue onely those things which are subiect vnto our senses and vnderstandings 1. Cor. 2.9 and therefore when Thomas would not beleeue that Christ was risen before it was made manifest to his senses hee is reproued for infidelitie bee not saith hee faithlesse but faithfull So that when our sense and feeling cease their faith beginneth his chiefe worke the most excellent faith sheweth it selfe most clearely when wee haue no sense and feeling or when we discerne and feele the plaine contrarie for it is an easie matter to be strong in faith when God sheweth himselfe gratious and mercifull but when he appeareth vnto vs like an angrie iudge when as his wrath flameth out against vs then to behold his loue through the vizard of anger to apprehend by faith his mercie and goodnesse towards vs when our senses apprehend nothing but his wrath and displeasure Iob. 13.15 to growe to Iobs resolution in the middest of our bitter agonies and greiuous afflictions though hee kill me yet will I trust in him and when we haue receaued many repulses and bitter snubs yet with the Cananitish woman to continue our suite Mat. 15. argueth such a faith as is hardly found no not in Israell Our want of sense therefore of Gods loue and fauour doth not argue want of faith for our faith is not grounded vppon our sense and feeling but vppon Gods gratious promises immutable goodnesse and infallible truth and if euer we haue tasted of Gods loue and mercie whatsoeuer wee apprehend in our present sense and feeling faith concludeth that we are still in his loue and fauour for he is without change or shadow of change as the apostle speaketh Iam. 1.17 and whom he loueth to the ende hee loueth them Iam. 1.17 as our Sauiour hath taught vs. Ioh. 13.1 Ioh. 13.1 Though then our sense of Gods loue fayle yet may our faith continue strong as appeareth plainely in the example of Iob who though he conceiued of God in his sense and feeling that he had hiddē his face frō him took him for his enemy though he seemed to write bitter things against him and made him to possesse the sinnes of his youth yet by a liuely faith he still rested and relied vpon him protesting that though he should slay him yet hee would trust in him as appeareth Iob. 13.15 Iob 13.15 Yea our Sauiour Christ himselfe who could not sinne through infidelitie in respect of his present sense and feeling complayneth that God had forsaken him § Sect. 3 That we are rather to beleeue Gods word then our owne sense and feeling If therefore Sathan goe about to perswade vs that we are without faith because we presently apprehend not Gods loue nor feele the sweete tast of his goodnesse wee are to answeare that wee are not to build our assurance vppon our owne sense and feeling but vpon Gods vnchangable goodnesse and gratious promisses made vnto vs in Christ Iesus and if at any time our sense and feeling tell vs one thing namely that God hath withdrawne his loue from vs and will neuer againe looke gratiously vpon vs and the word of God assure vs of another thing to witt that God will neuer forsake vs but continue his loue towards vs vnto the end wee are not to giue credit vnto our owne feeling but vnto Gods worde for otherwise what doe wee els but preferre our oft deceyuinge sense before Gods infallible truth and imagine that wee can better discerne and iudge of our estate then God himselfe but the worde of God telleth vs that if wee turne vnto the Lorde by vnfained repentance sorrowing for our sinnes past hating our present corruptions and desiring and indeauouring to mortifie the flesh and the
lusts thereof and to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life and if we beleeue in Iesus Christ resting vpon him for our saluation or though presently we feele not this faith and repentance yet if euer in former time wee haue discerned it in vs that then we are receiued into Gods loue and fauour and therefore shall haue his loue continued vnto vs vnto the end be made partakers of his gratious promises heires of euerlasting life for the promises of the gospell are not restrayned to those who feele their faith but to those that haue faith not to those who feele that they doe beleeue but vnto those who doe beleeue § Sect. 4 That conclusions grounded vpon our sense are often false Neither is the not feeling of Gods loue and fauour a good argument to proue that wee are out of his loue and fauour or the apprehension of his wrath and anger in our sense and feeling a sound reason to perswade vs that wee are subiect to his wrathfull displeasure seeing the being of a thing and the sensible discerning of the thing to be are diuers and therefore howsoeuer at sometimes they concurre yet oftentimes they are seuered and disioyned so that the conclusion which is inferred negatiuely from the senses to proue the not being of their obiect is not onely commonly false but also oftentimes absurd and ridiculous for example sometimes we see not the beames of the sunne as in the night season or whē it is couered with some thicke blacke cloud but shal we herehence cōclude that the sunne shineth not nor wil euer againe appeare vnto vs So the bright beames of Gods loue and fauour are sometimes hidden from vs in the night of tentations and so shadowed with the cloud of our grieuous sinnes that we cannot sensibly discerne them but shall wee hence inferre that there is no grace and mercy to be found with God or that he will neuer againe make them shine vpon vs The one is as absurd as the other and both grosly false So sometimes the Sunne is eclipsed by the interposition of the Moone so as we cannot discerne his light or very dimly but if any man should conclude from hence that it were quite taken away or that we were depriued vtterly of his life-preseruing influence the experience of two or three howers would shew the sottish weakenesse of his sensible argumēt and so in like manner Gods fauour and loue are sometimes so ecclipsed with the interposition of some great afflictions that wee cannot discerne them for a time or but very dimly but if we shall inferre hereof that they are quite taken from vs and that they cast forth no comfortable influence on vs our present preseruation from being swallowed vp into vtter destruction and the speedy returne of woonted ioy and consolation by the apprehension of Gods loue and goodnesse towards vs will euidently shew that this argument taken from the senses is void of reason § Sect. 5 That Gods dearest children haue not at all times sensibly discerned Gods loue and the graces of his spirit in thē Lastly it appeareth by the examples of Gods children from time to time that though they haue bene indued with a great measure of faith and in a high degree of fauour and loue with almighty God yet sometimes in their owne sense they haue found in them in stead of faith nothing but doubting diffidence and infidelitie and for Gods loue and fauour they haue apprehended nothing in their present feeling but the wrathfull anger of God and his greeuous displeasure Looke vpon the holy man Iob who by Gods owne testimonie was the iustest man vpon earth and highly in Gods loue and fauour and you shal find that sometimes he sheweth in his grieuous afflictions no signe of faith but grosse doubting and in outward apparance vtter despaire of Gods mercy and loue for he curseth the day of his natiuitie and wisheth that he had neuer beene borne he complaineth that God was his enemy and had made him as a marke whereat hee shot venimed arrowes that Gods terrors did fight against him and that hee did hide his louing countenance from him So the Prophet Dauid a man according to Gods owne hart sheweth plainely that sometime he hath no sense and feeling of the graces of Gods spirit in him Psal 51.10 as when he desireth the Lord to create in him a cleane hart and to renew a right spirit within him to restore him to the ioy of his saluatiō to stablish him with his free spirit sometimes he apprehendeth in his present sense feeling in stead of Gods loue and fauour nothing but his wrath and displeasure and therefore complaineth as one reiected and forsaken of God So Psal 22.1 My God my God why hast thou forsaken mee Psal 22.1 77.7 88.14 and art so farre from my health and from the words of my roaring 2. O my God I crie by day but thou hearest not and in the night and haue no audience And Psal 77.7 he thus complaineth will the Lord absent himselfe for euer and will he shew no more fauour 8. Is his mercy cleane gone for euer doth his promisse faile for euermore 9. hath God forgotten to be merfull hath he shut vp his tender mercies in displeasure 10. And I said this is my death c. So Psal 88.14 Lord why doest thou reiect my soule and hidest thy face from me 15. I am afflicted and at the point of death from my youth I suffer thy terrors doubting of my life 16. Thine indignations goe ouer me and thy feare hath cut me off The Prophet Ieremy likewise being grieuously afflicted in body and mind Ier. 20.14.15 was for a time depriued of the sense of Gods loue and fauour apprehending nothing but present miserie and in stead of faith affiance in God peace of conscience and other sanctifying graces he bewraieth his doubting diffidence and impatiencie cursing the day of his birth and euen the man that brought first newes hereof to his father and wishing that his mother had bene his graue or her wōbe a perpetuall conception As appeareth Ierem. 20.14.15 c. The like may be said of the Apostle Peter for where I pray you was the sense feeling of his faith affiance in God zeale of his glorie loue feare and other sanctifying graces when as he shamefully denied his maister yea forswore him with bitter cursing and yet wee must eyther graunt that Peter at this time was indued with a liuely faith or els that the prayer of our Lord and Sauiour Iesus Christ was not effectuall for hee had praied for him that his faith might not faile as appeareth Luk. 22.32 Luke 22.32 But what should I insist in the examples of these the seruants of God seeing the alone example of Christ himselfe is sufficient to cleare this point for though hee were the onely begotten and best beloued Sonne of his heauenly father yet in his
professor who is weake in grace 84 How Sathan tempteth the strong Christian 86 CHAP. XIX How Sathan allureth vs into hainous sinnes by degrees and how we may withstand his temptations 87 How hee laboureth to draw men out of one extreme into another 88 CHAP. XX. How Sathan moueth vs to propound bad ends to good actions 90 How he mooueth vs to vse euill meanes for the effecting of good ends 91 How he tempteth vs to be proud of our vertues 92 CHAP. XXI Of the manner of Sathans fight And how he taketh all aduantages against vs. 93. How hee tempteth vs most dangerously when wee are most secure 94 That he is neuer wearie in assaulting vs. 94 How hee often chaungeth his temptations for his better aduantage and that this is a probable signe he doth not preuaile 95 How Sathan assaulteth vs immediately himselfe 97 How he transformeth himselfe into an angell of light ibid. That he is most to be feared when he most flattereth 98 How Sathan vseth the world as his instrument to intice vs to sinne 100 How he vseth our owne flesh as his instrument and of the manifold aduantages that he taketh hereby 101 How we may auoide danger though we cannot discerne Sathans temptations from our owne lusts 103 How Sathans suggestions may bee discerned from our owne lusts 104 CHAP. XXII Of the common affections of this spirituall conflict namely the Christians standing in temptation and manfull resistance and his falling in the time of triall 106 Of the generall meanes whereby the Christian may be enabled to withstand the temptations of his spirituall enemies 106 1. To meditate on Gods commandement encouraging him to this fight 106 2. Assured hope of victorie 106 3. To be alwaies in readinesse 107 4. To take occasion of Sathans temptations vnto sinne of doing the contrary vertue 107 5. To resist the temptation when it is first suggested 108 6. To prepare himselfe for another temptation when one is past where also such reasons are set downe as may perswade him to perseuere in this fight 109 7. Not to beleeue Sathans suggestions 112 8. Neither to despise Sathans temptations nor too deeply to apprehend them 113 9. To obiect Christ against all temptations 114 10. To leaue disputing with Sathan and to send him to our aduocate Iesus Christ 115 11. To busie our selues continually in holy honest exercises 116 12. Not to reuolue Sathans temptations but to meditate on the contrary preseruatiues 117 CHAP. XXIII Of the Christians falling in temptation and of the means whereby being foiled he may be raised againe namely faith and repentance 118 Consolations for those that bewaile their want of faith and repentance First they are to know that the desire of Gods graces is accepted for the graces which they desire 120 2. That Sathan preuaileth against vs not by his absolute power but by Gods permission who would not suffer this but onely for his owne glorie and our spirituall good 131 That horrour feare and despaire following our falles argue our diffidence in God and selfe-confidence 135 3. The last consolation taken from experience which wee haue had of the Lords assistance 135 THE CHIEFE POINTS HANDLED in the second Booke CHAP. I. Answers to those temptatiens of Sathan whereby he perswadeth carnall men of Gods loue 138 Temporall benefits no infallible signes of Gods loue 140 Sathans temptations whereby he perswadeth weake Christians that they are not beloued of God answered 141 That carnall men haue no assurance of Gods loue though they boast thereof 143 That euery particular Christiā may be assured of Gods loue 144 That doubting of Gods loue is iniurious vnto him and pernicious to our selues 145 The euils that accompanie doubting of Gods loue and the benefits which follow our perswasion thereof 147 CHAP. II. That our sinnes and vnworthinesse should not make vs doubt of Gods loue 148 That we are neither beloued of God elected redeemed called iustified sanctified nor saued for any respect of our owne worthinesse 149 That being vnworthie in our selues we are loued elected and saued in Christ 156 CHAP. III. That temporall afflictions are rather signes of Gods loue than of his hatred 157 That spirituall afflictions are no signes of Gods hatred 160 Examples of Gods dearest seruants who haue bin exercised with spirituall afflictions 162 A dangerous temptation grounded vpon our not profiting by afflictions answered 166 That it is no fit time to iudge of our spirituall graces in the conflict of temptations 167 That Gods dearest children in the time of temptation haue shewed impatiencie and vttred inconsiderate speeches 168 The obiection out of Eccles 9.1 answered and the place expounded 171 CHAP. IIII. Of Gods election the causes subiect obiect and properties thereof 175 CHAP. V. Sathans temptations where with he assaulteth worldlings answered and first that whereby he perswadeth worldlings that all in the end shall be saued 178 Sathans temptation grounded vpon the vnchangeablenesse of Gods predestination whereby he perswadeth them desperatly to goe on in sin proued to be foolish false and impious 180 CHAP. VI. Sathans temptations whereby he moueth the weake Christian to doubt of his election answered 185 The causes which moue Sathan and his instruments to perswade the weake Christian to doubt of his election 185 The state of this question between Sathan the Christian 187 That we may be certainly assured of our election proued by testimonies of scriptures 189 An obiection grounded vpon the indefinitenesse of Gods promises answered 192 That we may be assured that we are the faithfull vnto whom the promises of the Gospell are made 193 A temptation grounded vpon our want of assurance that wee haue faith answered 195 CHAP. VII That we may be assured of our election proued by many strong arguments 197 That our assurance should not be mixt with doubting and that doubting is not a commendable propertie of faith but a fruite of vnbeleefe 199 That faith is a certaine and particular perswasion and not a doubtfull opinion or generall notion 201 CHAP. VIII That we may be assured of our election by the testimonie of Gods spirit 211 How we may know that Gods spirit dwelleth in vs. 215 How we may discerne the testimonie of Gods spirit from our own presumption 217 CHAP. IX Of the meanes whereby we may be assured of our election 221 The first meanes the testimony of the holy Ghost 221 Diuers differences betweene the testimonie of the spirit and presumptuous securitie 221 The second meanes the hearing of the word 224 Thirdly by the vse of the Sacraments 225 Fourthly by the effects of our election vocation iustification sanctification 225 c. That our sanctification is the touchstone of all the rest 229 That those who will be assured of their election must begin at their sanctification 231 Of diuers kindes of counterfeit holinesse which giue no assurance of election 232 Of the fruits and properties of true sanctification 233 CHAP. X. Of tenne signes and infallible notes whereby we may
an idle oath or his Sabbaoths by following their pleasures or by doing the workes of their callings and yet the same men after they haue fallen into wicked companie who haue inticed them by their words and euil examples to taste of the world and the vanities therof will not sticke to sweare with the swearer and follow their pleasures on the Lords Sabbaoth with the most prophane so hard a thing it is to resist the world when it fauneth on vs. § Sect. 2 But how hard soeuer it seemeth to flesh and bloud How we must resist the temptations of prosperitie yet must wee oppose our selues against this enemie also for without a fight wee can neuer obtaine victorie and without victorie we shall neuer receiue the crowne of glorie And to the end that we may be prouoked to fight against the world and the vanities thereof we are to know that though it faune vpon vs yet it is our mortall enemie though it flatteringly professe it selfe our friend yet in truth it fighteth against our soules vnder Sathans banner for hee is the prince thereof Ioh. 12.31 though it haue hony in the mouth Ioh. 12.31 yet there is deadly poyson in the taile for the end thereof bringeth destruction though it offer vs many pleasing things to allure vs yet they are but baites which intice vs to come within the compasse of Sathans nets of perdition Let vs consider that though it maketh a shew and seemeth a pleasant place like the paradise of God yet it is a Sodome of sinne which one day the Lord will destroy with fire and brimstone Gen. 13.10 and therfore let vs with righteous Lot haste out of it neuer turning back with a desire to enioy the vanities thereof for the world wholy lieth in wickednesse as it is 1. Ioh. 5.19 1. Ioh. 5.19 Let vs remember that it is impossible to serue God and this Mammon Matth. 6.24 1. Ioh. 2.15 Mat. 6.24 to loue the world and God also For if any man loue the world the loue of the father is not in him 1. Ioh. 2.15 and as the Apostle Iames telleth vs The amitie of the world is enmitie with God and whosoeuer will be a friend of the world Iam. 4.4 maketh himselfe the enemie of God Iam. 4.4 Neither let vs desire the loue of the world for it loueth those onely which are her owne as for those whom Christ hath chosen out of it Ioh. 15.19 those the world hateth nay therefore hateth them because Christ hath chosen them as it is Ioh. 15.19 Let vs remember that it wil be to smal purpose to enioy these worldly pleasures of sinne for a season and in the end plunge our selues into euerlasting death that the worlds musicke is but the Syrens song which allureth vs to make shipwrack of our soules on the rockes of sinne and while it tickleth the eare it woundeth vs to the very heart that though the cup which it offereth be of gold and the drinke sweete in taste yet it is deadly poyson in operation for they that drinke thereof are so lulled asleepe in pleasures and securitie that they neuer awake out of their spirituall lethargic or if they doe yet like Sampson without strength to resist the spirituall Philistines after the world like Dalila hath lulled them a while in her lap of carnall pleasures Let vs remember that they who drinke of this cup of voluptuous vanities must afterwards drinke of that cup spoken of Psal 75.8 that is Psal 75.8 that is the cup of Gods wrath and shall be tormented in fire and brimstone for euermore Apoc. 14.10 as it is expounded Apoc. 14.10 Let vs remember that the worlds chiefe good is vncertaine in getting and momentanie and mutable in the possession it being euery day readie to leaue vs or wee to leaue it Lastly let vs remember that for this short inconstant and vaine ioy we lose an eternall waight of vnspeakable glorie and plunge our selues into grieuous and endlesse miserie What therefore will it profit vs to gaine the whole world and lose our owne soules as our Sauiour speaketh Mark 8.36 Mark 8.36 And if wee haue these meditations continually running in our mindes then shall we easily stop our eares at the first hearing of this Syrens song then shall we constantly go forward in our pilgrimage towards our heauenly home and though honours stand before vs riches on the one hand pleasures on the other alluring vs to enter into the broad way which leadeth to destruction yet shall we not forsake the straight path which leadeth vnto life euerlasting how vnpleasant soeuer it seemeth to flesh and bloud § Sect. 3 But if the world cannot thus preuaile then doth she turne her smiles into frowns How the world tempteth by aduersitie her allurements into threats her beds of pleasures into miseries and afflictions her glorious offers of honours and riches to proude menacings of pouertie and ignominie all which being terrible in the eyes of flesh and bloud so farre preuaile with some that they moue them to make shipwracke of faith and a good conscience and being wearie in trauailing through this desart and vnpleasant wildernesse vnto the land of promise they desire to returne back into the bondage of the spirituall Pharaoh that they may quietly sit by the flesh-pots of Egypt Numb 11.5 and glut themselues with the cucumbers and pepons of carnall pleasures that is they chuse rather to walke in the broad way which leadeth to destruction because it is delightfull than in the narrow way which leadeth to euerlasting life because they must passe through the briars of affliction and thornes of tribulation before they can receiue the crowne of glorie they preferre the pleasures of sin for a season before the recompence of reward which God hath promised euen the eternall ioyes of the kingdome of glorie So vnpleasant a thing it is for flesh and bloud to denie it selfe and to take vp the crosse and follow Christ But though the world be farre more terrible to looke vpon when it frowneth then when it fawneth yet is it farre lesse dangerous For oftentimes this poyson of aduersitie is so tempered and corrected with those holesome preseruatiues of faith hope patience and humilitie that in steed of killing vs it doth but purge away our corrupt humours of sinne though the world whip vs yet thereby it correcteth vs and makes vs better though it burne vs in the fire of afflictions yet it doth not consume but rather refine vs from our drosse though like a stormie winde it shaketh vs yet in steed of blowing vs downe it causeth vs to take more deepe roote in all vertue and goodnes in a word as it plaieth the schoolmaster in scourging vs so also in instructing teaching vs to know God and to know our selues to know the vanitie of the world and to labour after a more permanent felicitie § Sect. 4 Notwithstanding How we are to
not in all that is written in the booke of the law to doe it Galat. 3 10. Rom. 8.8 Gal. 3.10 that they who liue according to the flesh cannot please God Rom. 8.8 that the burthen of sinne cannot be light seeing it pressed out of Christ himselfe a bloudie sweate c. On the other side if hee aggrauate the hainousnes of our sins to the end hee may draw vs into despaire of Gods mercie let vs say Ezec. 18.23.32 it is written I will not the death of a sinner saith the Lord but that he repent and liue Ezech. 18.23.32 And that Iesus Christ came into the world to saue sinners 1. Tim. 1.15 Matth. 9.13 1. Tim. 1.15 And that he came not to call the righteous but sinners to repentance Matth. 9.13 Ioh. 3.16 If he tempt vs to the loue of the world and to the seruice of this vnrighteous Mammon let vs answer him Matth. 6.24 that it is impossible to serue two masters of such contrarie disposition as it is written Matth. 6.24 That if wee loue the world 1. Ioh. 2.15 Iam. 4.4 the loue of the father abideth not in vs 1. Ioh. 2.15 That the amitie of the world is enmitie against God Iam. 4.4 Contrariwise if renouncing the world and endeuouring to serue the Lord in vprightnes and in truth hee seeke to draw vs from our integritie by threatning afflictions and persecution wee are to strengthen our selues and resist him with the sword of the spirit remembring that they are blessed which suffer persecution for righteousnes sake Matth. 5.10 1. Tim. 3.12 for theirs is the kingdō of heauen Mat. 5.10 That all that will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecutiō 1. Tim. 3.12 That whosoeuer loseth any thing for Christs sake Matth. 19.29 shall receiue in recompence an hundreth fold more and haue euerlasting life to boote Matth. 19.29 If he tempt vs to the neglect of Gods word wee are to tell him that all Christs sheepe heare his voyce and follow him Ioh. 10.27 Ioh. 8.47 Ioh. 10.27 That whosoeuer is of God heareth Gods words Ioh. 8.47 that they who know God heare his ministers whereas he that is not of God heareth them not 1. Ioh. 4.6 And if he obiect that wee cannot heare it without great labour and cost wee are to remember that whosoeuer is a wise Merchant fit for the kingdome of God will rather sell all he hath to buy this precious pearle than be without it Matth. 13.44 45 46. Mat. 13.44.45 On the other side if he tempt vs to content our selues with the bare hearing thereof neglecting obedience thereunto we are to tell him that not the hearers of the word Rom. 2.13 but the doers thereof shall be iustified Rom. 2.13 that they who are hearers of the word and not doers also doe deceiue themselues Iam. 1.22 if they thinke hereby to haue any assurance of eternall life Iam. 1.22 That not euery one who saith Lord Lord that is Matth. 7.21 maketh a goodly profession of religion shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but he that doth the will of the father who is in heauen Matth. 7.21 So when he tempteth vs to pride wee are to say vnto him Sathan I may not yeeld vnto thy temptation for it is written God resisteth the proude but giueth his grace to the humble 1. Pet. 5.5 1. Pet. 5.5 If he tempt vs to couetousnes we are to resist him saying it is written 1. Tim. 6.10 that the desire of money is the roote of all euill 1. Tim. 6.10 If to carking care wee are to tell him that the Apostle exhorteth vs to cast all our care on the Lord for he careth for vs 1. Pet. 5.7 1. Pet. 5.7 If to vnthriftie mispending of Gods gifts and carelesse consuming of our estates wee are to tell him that he that prouideth not for his familie 1. Tim. 5.8 is worse than an Infidell 1. Tim. 5.8 § Sect. 3 And thus may we repell the violence of all Sathans temptations and giue him the soyle if wee will take vnto vs the sword of the spirit That it behooueth vs to be skilfull in handling the sword of the spirit and skilfully vse the same in the fight for it is not sufficient that we haue this sword lying by vs nor to be able to shew the goodnes thereof in discourse if in the meane time we neuer draw it out to fight the spirituall combat but let it rust in the scabberd but we must alwaies haue it readie for the combat and as it were naked in our hands that wee may strike home and cut off all the temptations of Sathan and the lusts of our owne flesh when they doe assault vs. And to this end we must be skilfull in the vse thereof for though a man haue an excellent weapon yet if he know not how to vse it it will little helpe him either to defend himselfe or offend his enemie so if a man haue this two edged sword of Gods word and haue no skill to rule it he will strike flatlong and not cut and sometime wound himselfe in stead of hurting his enemie yea so politike a warriour is Sathan against whom we fight that if wee be not skilfull in the vse of this sword he will turne the edge and point thereof against our selues and so in stead of defending vs it will like the sword of Goliah be readie for the enemie to cut off our owne head And therefore it behooueth vs to come into Gods schoole continually that there we may learne how to vse and handle this sword of Gods word so cunningly that wee may resist Sathan in all his assaults and giue him no aduantage in the fight Otherwise he will vse it to our own ouerthrow for if hee durst fight against our Sauiour Christ with his owne weapon the word of God whose knowledge was exquisite and without measure saying It is written how much more busie will he be in vsing it against vs who haue not attained vnto the least part of his skill The folly of those who neglect this spirituall weapon Whereby appeareth first the carnall retchlesnesse of many men who as though there were no enemie to assault them haue not this weapon in their houses at all or if they haue yet they bestow more time in prophane exercises than in studie how to vse the sword of the spirit for their owne defence or at least trusting to their owne skill as sufficient in it selfe they seldome come to the Lords schoole where they might learne to vse the weapon of Gods word for their best aduantage Secondly hereby appeareth the wicked practise of the enemies of Gods truth who take from Gods people this sword of the spirit which the Lord hath giuen vnto all for their defence Neither doth the Apostle in this place exhort onely the Clergie to take this weapon but all Christians whatsoeuer who are assaulted with their
carefull in withstanding this dangerous assault for there is not any one temptation wherewith Sathan preuaileth more than by perswading men to content themselues with a ciuill kinde of honestie which is destitute of religion and the true feare of God And to this end let vs consider that ciuill honestie seuered from true pietie is but glorious iniquitie for when wee haue attained to as great a measure thereof as possibly we can in this age of corruption we shall come short in diuers duties of many of the Heathens who haue excelled in these morall and ciuill vertues and consequently when we are at the best we shall be but honest Infidels and good natured worldlings if wee doe not ioyne thereunto the duties of pietie And how goodly a shew soeuer our workes make in the eyes of men yet are they odious in Gods sight if they be not done in knowledge and grounded on Gods word and commandement but in ignorance and according to our own inuentions and the fond conceit of our blind vnderstanding if they proceede not from the true loue of God which is the onely fountaine of all acceptable obedience but from the loue of our selues and other carnall respects if they bee not the fruites of a liuely faith but done in ignorance and infidelitie for what soeuer is not done in faith is sinne Rom. 14.23 Heb. 11.6 as it is Rom. 14.23 and therefore cannot please God Heb. 11.6 By which we are not to vnderstand an historicall faith whereby wee know and are assured that those workes wee doe are commanded in Gods word but a true iustifying faith which doth applie vnto vs Christ Iesus and all Gods mercifull promises made in him For that our workes may be acceptable before God there is required first that our persons bee acceptable vnto him neither can any thing we doe please him so long as we remaine his enemies in which state we are by nature till wee are reconciled in Christ our Mediatour as appeareth Rom. 5.10 Rom. 5.10 Col. 1.20 Now vnlesse we haue faith we cannot apply vnto vs Christ nor his merits and righteousnes by whom onely wee are reconciled vnto God and consequently we remaine Gods enemies who can doe nothing pleasing in his sight Secondly the best of our workes are imperfect and mingled with many corruptions and therefore cannot abide the examination of Gods exact iustice till their imperfections be couered by Christs righteousnesse and their corruption washed away with his most precious bloud now Christ and his merits cannot by any other meanes be applied vnto vs but by the hand of a liuely faith Lastly if all our works and honest dealing be not done in zeale of Gods glorie referred to this end that Gods name may be magnified they are not acceptable before God for the cause why he would haue our light shine before men is that he our heauenly father may be glorified Matth. 3.16 as it is Matth 5. 16. and the maine and wherefore wee should haue our conuersation honest amongst the Gentiles and vnbeleeuers is that they which speake euill of vs as of euill doers may by our good works which they shall see glorifie God in the day of their visitation 1. Pet. 2.12 as it is 1. Pet. 2.12 And therefore let not Sathan deceiue vs in perswading vs to rest in ciuill honestie for if it be seuered from true pietie from sauing knowledge from sincere loue of God iustifying faith and a zeale of Gods glorie it will not be acceptable in Gods sight as proceeding from the loue of our selues and other carnall respects namely to obtaine praise or profit thereby § Sect. 5 And thus Sathan dealeth with ciuil worldlings But if those which he incountreth be professors of religion How Sathan dealeth with professors of religion then hee seeketh to perswade them that if they outwardly perfourme the duties of pietie as the hearing of Gods word the publike and priuate calling vpon Gods name the frequent receiuing of the Sacraments if they attaine to the knowledge and profession of religion and can tip their tongues with godlinesse then they may liue how they list amongst their brethren neglecting all the duties of the second table so they outwardly obserue the first for though they be barraine of good workes destitute of charitie filled with pride addicted to couetousnesse oppression and all deceitfull dealing yet they shall be iustified by their faith and approoued of God for their outward profession sake But let such men know that this is a notable stratagem of Sathan to cause vs to fall into his secret ambushments to our destruction That pietie and honestie are inseparable which if they would preuent and auoide let them consider that pietie and charitable honestie are two such twinnes as are borne liue and dye both together that they are the life and soule of a Christian which cannot possiblie be seuered that it is as possible for the good tree to bring foorth bad fruite for the fire to be without heate and the Sunne without light as it is for a liuely faith to be voide of good workes true profession to be seuered from holie practise and iustification before God from sanctification and holinesse of life before men that whosoeuer braggeth of his loue to God and loueth not his brethren is a liar and there is no truth in him 1. Ioh. 4.20 1. Ioh. 4.20 that though they professe themselues the children of God yet if they doe not the workes of righteousnes as well as the workes of pietie and loue their brethren they are in truth the children of the diuell 1. Ioh. 3.10 Rom. 2.13 as appeareth 1. Ioh. 3.10 that not the hearers of the word but the doers thereof are iustified Rom. 2.13 that not euery one who saith Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Matth. 7.21 but they who doe the will of the father which is in heauen Matth. 7.21 that they deceiue themselues who looke to be saued by hearing the word Iam. 1.22 if they practise not that which they heare Iam. 1.22 for in stead thereof they shall plunge themselues into deeper condemnation For the seruant that knoweth his masters will and doth it not Luk. 12.47 shall be beaten with many stripes Luk. 12.47 And it shall be more easie for Tyre and Sidon Sodome and Gomorrah Mat. 11.21 who had not the Gospell preached amongst them nor saw Christs miracles than for Corazin and Bethsaida which enioyed both Matth. 11.21 for there as he giueth great meanes of knowledge there hee expecteth great fruites in practise and as hee will be honoured in all so especially in those that come nigh vnto him as it is Leuit. 10.3 Lastly Leu. 10.3 that the sentence of saluation and damnation shall not be giuen according to our words and profession but according to our deedes and the holie practise of the workes of mercie and Christianitie which are the inseparable fruites and
Gods couenant Secondly the couenant betweene God and vs wherein he professeth himselfe our God and taketh vs for his people and heires of his promises is not the couenant of workes but the couenant of grace in which hee offereth freely in Christ his grace and mercy to all who will receiue it by the hand of a liuely faith And this the Lord himselfe expresseth Ierem. 31.31 Beholde the dayes come saith the Lord that I will make a new couenant with the house of Israel that is my Church Ierem. 31.31 32. Not according to the couenant which I made with their fathers that is the couenant of workes the which my couenant they breake c. but this shall be my couenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those daies saith the Lord I will put my law in their inward parts and write it in their hearts and will be their God and they shall be my people So the Apostle Paul saith that the promise made to Abraham and his seede was not giuen through the lawe but through the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.13 Rom. 4.13 and that it was therefore by faith that it might come by grace and the promise might be sure to all the seede For if the couenant were of workes and not of faith of deserts and not of grace we should continually disanull and make it of no effect § Sect. 3 Thirdly Our redemption not caused by our worthinesse Eph. 1.7 8. as we are elected before all times so were we in time redeemed freely and without respect of our owne worthinesse of the meere mercy and loue of God although our Sauiour Christ payed the full price of our redemption vnto God his father for vs and this appeareth Ephes 1.7 By whom we haue redemption through his blood euen the forgiuenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace 8. Whereby he hath been abundant towards vs in all wisedome and vnderstanding So that our redemption was not free vnto our Sauiour Christ for it cost him the inestimable price of his most precious bloud but it was free vnto vs without any respect of our workes and worthinesse For we were like desperate debters deeply ingaged vnto God and not able to pay the least farthing and therefore were cast into the prison of euerlasting death there to be detained till we had discharged the whole debt which being impossible vnto vs it pleased our Sauiour Christ of his meere pitie and free goodwill to become our suretie and to make full satisfaction to his father euen to the least mite that so we might be released and set free We were all of vs miserable captiues held in the thraldome of sinne Sathan and death vnable to deserue in any measure to be set at libertie for wee were the children of wrath who were not sick only but euen dead in our sinnes Eph. 2.1.5 as it is Eph. 2.1.5 But our Sauiour Christ of his vndeserued loue did pay the price of our redemption and set vs out of our captiuitie quickning and raising vs vp from sinne to newnesse of life as the Apostle setteth it downe Eph. 2.3 And you were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Eph. 2.3.4 4. But God which is rich in mercie through his great loue wherewith he loued vs 5. Euen when we were dead by sinnes hath quickened vs together in Christ by whose grace ye are saued 6. And hath raised vs vp together in heauenly places in Christ Iesus 7. That he might shew in ages to come the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse towards vs in Christ Iesus So that there is no worthinesse in our selues which the Lord respected for we were all alike the children of wrath and dead in our sinnes but onely of his free mercie and great loue he hath redeemed vs by Christ § Sect. 4 Fourthly Our worthines no cause of our calling as the Lord hath freely redeemed vs so also hee hath freely called vs to the knowledge of the mysterie of our redemption wrought by Iesus Christ and chosen vs amongst all nations to be his Church and peculiar people and that of his meere grace and free goodwill without any respect of our worthines as appeareth 2. Tim. 1.9 Who hath saued vs 2. Tim. 1.9 and called vs with an holy calling not according to our workes but according to his owne purpose of grace which was giuen vs through Christ Iesus before the world was So Moses telleth the children of Israel that the Lord had called and made choise of them aboue all other nations to bee his Church and people not for any respect of themselues or their owne worthinesse but of his free loue and vndeserued mercie Deut. 7.7.8 as it is Deut. 7.7.8 Psal 44.3 Our works and worthinesse no causes of our iustification Fiftly as the Lord hath freely called vs so being called he hath freely iustified vs not for any inherent righteousnesse in our selues but of his owne grace and goodwill through the righteousnesse and obedience of Iesus Christ which he imputeth vnto vs. And this is euident Rom. 3.24 where it is said that we are iustified freely by Gods grace Rom. 3.24 through the redemption which is in Christ Iesus And Tit. 3.7 where the Apostle saith that we are iustified by his grace Tit. 3.7 And least wee should ioyne with Gods grace our owne workes and worthines he telleth vs that Abraham himselfe though a most righteous and holy man in respect of his sinceritie and integritie of heart was notwithstanding not iustified by his workes but Abraham beleeued God Rom. 4.3.5 and that was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Rom. 4.3 ver 5. he flatly excludeth works from being any causes of our iustification To him saith he that worketh not but beleeueth in him that iustifieth the vngodly his faith is counted for righteousnesse So that wee are freely iustified of Gods grace and goodwill without any respect of our owne works and worthinesse as being any causes of our iustification although they are necessarie and inseparable fruites thereof For the same death and bloudshed of Christ whereby we are freed from the guilt and punishment of sinne and euerlasting death doth free vs also from the death of sin to newnesse of life and doth not onely iustifie but also sanctifie vs as the Apostle plainly sheweth Tit. 2.14 Who gaue himselfe for vs that he might redeeme vs from all iniquitie Tit. 2.14 that is free vs from the guilt and punishment of sinne to which we were subiect and purge vs to be a peculiar people vnto himselfe zealous of good workes Sixtly our sanctification and inherent righteousnesse it selfe what is it els but the free gift of God begun increased and finished by his gracious spirit That our sanctification is the free gift of God what are the graces in vs but Gods free and vndeserued gifts what are our best works but the fruites of his
spirit working in vs for by nature wee are dead in our sinnes and the children of wrath as well as the vnbeleeuing heathen or most prophane worldling Eph. 2.1.3 Eph. 2.1.3 By nature we are not able so much as to thinke a good thought or to will that which is good no more than those who remaine in the state of condemnation as appeareth 2. Cor. 3.5 Phil. 2.13 but it is our Sauiour Christ 2. Cor. 3.5 Phil. 2.13 Eph. 3.25.26 who so loued his Church that he gaue himselfe for it that he might sanctifie it and cleanse it by the washing of water through the word c. as it is Eph. 5.25.26 So that when we haue attained to the highest measure of sanctification that wee can possibly attaine vnto we must in all humilitie confesse with Paul 1. Cor. 15.10 that by the grace of God we are that we are as it is 1. Cor. 15.10 Neither must wee attribute any thing in the worke of our saluation vnto our sanctification and good workes but ascribe all to the free grace and vndeserued loue of God in Christ whereby we are sanctified and stirred vp to new obedience who were altogether polluted yea dead in our sinnes so that our sanctification and worthinesse is not the cause of Gods loue and mercie towards vs but his loue and free goodwill is the cause of our sanctification and maketh vs who were vnworthie in our selues worthie in Christ of his loue and fauour And therefore we must not measure Gods loue by our worthines and abundance of grace as being a cause thereof nor despaire of his fauour and mercie when wee see our vnworthines and weaknes in sanctifying graces for these are no causes of his loue but effects and consequently when wee want them altogether though there be no cause of hope whilest we remaine in this state yet wee are not vtterly to despaire for the time to come seeing the Lord in his good time may begin his good worke in vs and when it is begun and we haue receiued the least measure of sanctification euen a desire and holie endeuour to liue in holinesse and righteousnesse wee may be assured that it is Gods worke which he hauing begun will finish and accomplish Phil. 1.6 according to that Phil. 1.6 In the meane time let vs possesse our soules with patience and with a quiet and peaceable minde labour after the increase of grace vsing all good meanes ordained of God for this purpose submitting our selues in regard of the measure of grace which wee doe desire to his good will and pleasure who will dispose of all so as shall be most for his glory and our good And in any case let vs beware that wee doe not so impatiently and violently desire encrease of more grace as that in the meane time we forget to be thankfull to God for that wee haue turning our songs of praise for Gods great benefits into murmuring and repining Let vs not be like vnto rich misers who haue their mindes so intent vpon the getting of that riches they haue not as that they forget to enioy and take comfort of that they haue let vs not resemble those vnthankful men who when they haue receiued many benefits doe still desire more and when their desires are not presently satisfied vngratefully murmure against their benefactors as though they had receiued nothing but let vs make vse of those graces which we haue receiued to Gods glory our comfort let vs desire more that we may more glorifie him with his own gifts and though our desires be not presently satisfied let vs not fall into impatiencie but submit our selues vnto his goodwill and pleasure and be truly thankfull for that portion of grace which it hath pleased him of his abundant mercie to bestow vpon vs. § Sect. 6 Lastly Our owne worthinesse no cause of our saluation Rom. 6.23 Eph 2.8 Tit. 2.11 our saluation it selfe dependeth not vpon our owne worthinesse but vpon Gods free mercy and vndeserued loue for saluation is the free gift of God and not the wages of our owne worthinesse as death is the wages of sinne as appeareth Rom. 6.23 And wee are saued by grace through faith and that not of our selues it is the gift of God as it is Eph. 2.8 And the Apostle telleth vs Tit. 2.11 that the grace of God bringeth saluation and teacheth vs to denie vngodlinesse and worldly lusts and that wee should liue soberly and righteously and godly in this present world so that our forsaking sinne and imbracing holinesse and righteousnesse is not the cause of our saluation but the grace of God by which all these effects are also wrought in vs. But most plaine is that of the Apostle 2. Tim. 1.9 where he excludeth our owne workes and worthinesse 2. Tim. 1.9 to the end he might ascribe the whole worke of our saluation to Gods grace and goodwill Who hath saued vs saith he not according to our workes but according to his own purpose and grace So Tit. 3.5 Not by the works of righteousnesse which we had done Tit. 3.5 but according to his mercie he saued vs by the washing of the new birth and renuing of the holy Ghost Seeing therefore Gods loue is not grounded vpon our owne worthinesse seeing he electeth redeemeth calleth iustifieth sanctifieth and finally saueth vs of his meere mercie and free goodwill without any respect of our owne merits or good workes let vs not restraine the infinite loue of God to our deserts nor measure his vnmeasurable goodwill by the short ell of our owne merits but as the Lord hath freely loued vs so let vs acknowledge his free and vndeserued loue and relie wholy thereupon notwithstanding our vnworthinesse seeing our worthinesse is no cause of his loue but it is his loue which maketh vs and will surely make vs worthie to be beloued if we rest wholy vpon him in Christ by a true and liuely faith For so much as we despaire in respect of our own vnworthinesse so much would wee ascribe to our owne worthinesse and looke how much we attribute vnto our selues in the worke of our saluation so much wee detract from Gods free mercie and Christs merit and therefore let vs humbly acknowledge our owne vnworthinesse and become nothing in our own eyes that we may wholy rely vpon God that hee may bee all in all For well worthie are we to thirst if wee leaue the fountaine of liuing waters and dig vnto our selues broken cesternes which will hold no water Iere. 2.13 well worthie are we to fall into the gulfe of despaire if we forsake the firme pillar of our saluation Gods mercie and Christs merit relying and resting vpon the broken staffe of our owne righteousnesse well worthie are we to be damned if wee enuie the Lord the praise and glorie of our saluation desiring rather to ascribe it vnto our selues § Sect. 7 But here the tempter wil obiect that God is iust and
therfore in his iustice cannot loue elect iustifie and saue vs who are vnworthie his loue polluted with sinne and destitute of righteousnesse I answere that God doth not loue elect iustifie and saue vs in our selues That being vnworthie in our selues we are loued elected and saued in Christ but in our sauiour Christ in whom being vnworthie of our selues wee are made worthie being vniust in our selues wee are made iust after wee are adorned with the rich robe of his righteousnesse being in our selues the children of wrath and firebrands of hell wee are made children of God and heires of heuaen For he is made vnto vs of God 1. Cor. 1.30.31 wisedome righteousnesse sanctification and redemption that he who reioyceth might reioyce in the Lord as it is 1. Cor. 1.30.31 And therefore the Apostle teacheth vs that God hath giuen his grace not simply vnto vs who were altogether vnworthie thereof but in Iesus Christ 1. Cor. 1.1.4 and that in all things we are made rich in him 1. Cor. 1.4 vers 5. Rom. 5.21 as it is vers 5. So he telleth vs that grace doth raigne by righteousnesse vnto eternall life through Iesus Christ our Lord Rom. 5.21 And that he hath shewed the exceeding riches of his grace through his kindnesse towards vs in Christ Iesus Eph. 2.7 Eph. 2.7 And as God is gracious to vs in Christ so hath he declared this his loue towards vs in Christ onely as may appeare in the seuerall causes and meanes of our saluation For in him God hath elected vs to saluation Eph. 1.5 as appeareth Eph. 1.5 In him is made the couenant of grace as being that seede of Abraham in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed Galat. 3.16 Eph. 1.9.10 2. Tim. 1.9 Rom. 5.18.19 Esa 53 5. 1. Cor. 1.30 Col. 1.20.21 Eph. 1 6. and 2.12.13 c. Gal. 4.4.5 c. Eph. 1.5 1. Cor. 1.30 1. Ioh. 5.11 and to whom all the promises were made as it is Gal. 3.16 In him are wee called and gathered together into one bodie whereof he is the head as it is Eph. 1.9.10 2. Tim. 1.9 In him are wee iustified as appeareth Rom. 5.18.19 Esa 53.5 1. Cor. 1.30 In him we are reconciled vnto God Col. 1.20.21 Eph. 1.6 and 2.12.13.14 c. In him we are adopted to be the sonnes of God Gal. 4.4.5.6.7 Eph. 1.5 In him we are sanctified 1. Cor. 1.30 In a word in him wee are saued as appeareth 1. Ioh. 5.11 God hath giuen vs eternall life and this life is in his sonne Though therefore the Lord could not in his iustice bestow vpon vs these his benefits because wee were vnworthie of the least of them and most worthie of al his iudgments and punishments yet in Christ wee haue fully satisfied his iustice performed perfect obedience and therfore euen in his iustice he could not but bestow these his mercies and graces vpon vs because in him wee deserued his loue though in our selues we haue deserued eternall shame and confusion And therefore not trusting in our owne worthinesse nor yet distrusting in Gods mercie and free loue in regard of our vnworthinesse let vs cast off all selfe-conceit and opinion of our owne righteousnesse so that wee may put on the righteousnesse of Christ and acknowledging our owne weaknesse yea our nothing let vs neuerthelesse be strong in the grace which is in Christ Iesus 2. Tim. 2.1 as the Apostle exhorteth 2. Tim. 2.1 In his name let vs goe boldly vnto the throne of grace Heb. 4.16 that we may receiue mercie and finde helpe in time of neede for though in our selues we are the childre of wrath yet are we reconciled and accepted of God as his beloued in his best beloued Eph. 1.6 as it is Eph. 1.6 CHAP. III. That temporall afflictions are rather signes of Gods loue than of his hatred § Sect. 1 THe second argument whereby Sathan seeketh to perswade vs that we are out of the fauour of God Afflictions markes rather of our adoption than of our reprobation is taken from the manifold afflictions which are laid vpon many of Gods children whilest they remaine in this vale of miserie But it is easie to answere this obiection if we be but a little cōuersant in the book of God for there we may learne that afflictions and crosses are rather signes of Gods loue than of his hatred and markes rather of our election and adoption than of reprobation and eternall damnation For the Lord hath foreshewed vs that his childrē should mourne when the world shall reioyce that they should be hated and persecuted for his name sake 2. Tim. 3.12 that all who will liue godly in Christ Iesus shall suffer persecution and affliction 2. Tim. 3.12 That they who will be conformable to him in glorie must also be conformable vnto him in his suffrings Rom. 8.29 Rom. 8.29 That this short and momentanie affliction shall cause vnto vs a farre most excellent and eternall waight of glorie 2. Cor. 4.17 2. Cor. 4.17 That if we suffer with Christ we shall also raigne with him 2. Tim. 2.12 2. Tim. 2.12 That whom the Lord loueth he chasteneth and scourgeth euery son that he receiueth Heb. 12.6.8 as it is Heb. 12.6 That those whom he doth not thus correct are bastards and no sonnes vers 8. And to these wee may adde the examples of Gods children from time to time as of Abraham Iacob Ioseph Moses Dauid Iob the Apostles but especially our Sauiour Christ himselfe who was hungrie harbourlesse despised scoffed reuiled buffeted spit vpon crowned with thorne and lastly crucified and yet euen whilest he suffered al these afflictions he was the only begotten and best beloued sonne of his heauenly father § Sect. 2 So that both by testimonies and examples it is manifest That afflictions though in their owne nature euill turne to the good of Gods children that afflictions are signes rather of Gods loue than of his hatred and markes of the children of God rather than of the children of wrath But here the tempter will demaund how this can be considering that the Lord promiseth to his children all good things whereas afflictions are euils and punishments inflicted on the wicked To this we may answere that though in their owne nature they be euill yet through the wisedome and gracious prouidence of our God they turne to the good of his children and though to the wicked they are plagues and punishments yet to the godly they are but trials and fatherly chastisements for all their sinnes are punished in Christ neither will it stand with Gods iustice to punish them againe in the faithful and therfore there is no other end of them but the manifestation of Gods glory and our spiritual good and euerlasting saluation For as they are trials they serue to shew vnto all the world and especially to our selues our faith hope patience obedience constancie and the rest of the
the takeing away of his precious life by a cruell and shamefull death but also inwardly in his soule he sustained farre more heauie crosses thē that which he outwardly carried on his shoulders though the waight thereof caused him to faint for wearines for to say nothing of Sathans temptations and the power of hell which was set against him let vs consider of that bitter agonie which he sustained in the garden where the burthen of Gods anger for our sinnes was so heauie vpon him that it pressed out of his blessed body a sweate of water and blood neither was he presently cased of this vnsupportable waight but he was faine to beare it euen vnto his crosse neither was he comforted in minde when the panges of death had taken hold of his body but euen then he was so vexed with the sense of his fathers displeasure that in bitternesse of soule he crieth out my God My God why hast thou forsaken me Not that he despaired vtterly of Gods loue and assistance or thought himselfe a reprobate and castaway for he calleth him stil his God but the deitie hauing for a time withdrawne it selfe to the end the humane nature might suffer that punishment which we had deserued euen vnto death it selfe which otherwise it could not haue been subiect vnto he vttereth this speech truely according to his present sense and apprehension Now if we consider who it is that was thus grieuously afflicted both in body and minde we shall finde that it was not one hated of God but his onely begotten and best beloued sonne in whom he professeth himselfe to be well pleased Matth. 3.17 Matth. 3.17 Seeing therefore our Sauiour Christ who was the natural sonne and heyre of God and so tenderly beloued of his heauenly father that in him hee loueth all his children did notwithstanding indure not only grieuous afflictions of body but the intollerable burthen of his fathers displeasure in his soule also Why should we imagine that either our outward or inward afflictions are any signes or argumēts that God hateth or hath reiected vs especially considering that he hath predestinated vs to be made like to the image of his sonne not only in his glory but also in his afflictiōs so that first we must suffer with him after raigne with him Rom. 8.29 2. Tim. 2.12 Obiection 1. Pet. 2.22 as it is Ro. 8.29 2. Tim. 2.12 But it may be obiected that our Sauiour Christ suffered all this not for any sinne that was in himselfe for he did no sinne neither was their guile found in his mouth 1. Pet. 2.22 but he was wounded for our transgressions he was broken for our iniquities as it is Esa 53.5 Esa 53.5 And therefore considering that the Lord did thus hate sinne euen when his dearely beloued sonne did take it vpon him how much more will he hate it in vs Answere 1. Pet. 3.18 if he so seuerely punished his deare darling when he had taken the sinnes of others vpon him how fearefull punishments are prepared for the sinners themselues I answere that indeede Christ who was iust did suffer for vs who were vniust as it is 1. Pet. 3.18 and that sinne is so odious to Gods eyes that rather then it should not be punished he would punish it in his deerely beloued sonne the consideration whereof should make vs also to hate and fly from it as the greatest euill but yet this should be so farre of from discouraging vs or from making vs doubt of Gods loue that nothing in the world doth more assure vs thereof no consolation can be imagined more comfortable for what greater testimonie of Gods loue can be imagined then that whē we were strangers yea enemies to God Rom. 5.10 he should send his deare beloued son to die for vs to the end that by this meanes his iustice might be satisfied his wrath appeased and we being receiued into grace fauour might be made heires of euerlasting life what greater assurance can we haue that our sins are forgiuen vs then that they are alreadie punished in Christ it being against the iustice of God to punish the same sinnes twice What stronger argument can be brought to proue that we shall neuer be subiect to Gods wrath nor be cast away in his heauie displeasure than that our Sauiour hath borne his fathers anger to the end hee might reconcile vs vnto him and therefore though our Sauiour suffered these outward and inward afflictions not as he was the dearely beloued sonne of God who was free from sinne but as he was our mediator who had taken vpon him our sinnes to the end he might satisfie his fathers iustice yet seeing he indured these things in our stead to the end we might be freed from them hence ariseth vnto every true christian sound comfort and certaine assurance of Gods loue and goodnes towards him ¶ Sect. 7. A daungerous temptation grounded vpon our not-profiting by affliction But the tempter will further vrge his obiection after this manner let it be graunted will he say that God doth chastise sometime his children whom he loueth both with outward and inward afflictions and that they suffer euen the same miseries which thou indurest yet seeing they are sometimes punishments also which he inflicteth vpon the wicked hence thou canst not gather that they are fatherly chastisements and signes of his loue to thee nay contrariwise thou maiest assure thy selfe that they are fearefull punishments and signes of Gods hatred which God in iustice inflicteth on thee for thy sinnes that others may bee warned by thine example For if they were chastisements and fatherly corrections then would they indeede correct thee that is reforme and amend thee for this is the end why God inflicteth them on his children and his end cannot be frustrate but in thee there is no reformation wrought nor any increase of patience whereas in the faithfull tribulation bringeth forth patience Rom. 5.3 as euen by the Scriptures it is manifest Nay contrariwise when the hand of God is vpon thee thou bewraiest great impatiencie and vtterest inconsiderate speeches which tend to Gods dishonor giue offence to the world and wounde thine owne conscience And therefore howsoeuer to other these are fatherly chastizements yet to thee they are seuere punishments which mooue thee rather to despare than assure thee of Gods loue That it is no fit time to iudge of our spirituall graces in the conslict of temptations To this we answer that it cannot be denied but that Gods corrections doe correct and amend his children and that afflictions serue to the encreasing of their patience faith and other graces but yet let vs know that Sathan playeth the false deceauer when he moueth vs to looke for the assurance of Gods loue and for our amendment increase of Gods grace in the very time when the hand of God is vpon vs whilest the conflict lasteth and the temptation grieuously shaketh and battereth vs
why dost thou reiect my soule Psal 88.14 and hidest thy face from me 16. Thine indignation is gone ouer me and thy feare hath cut me off 77.8.9 The like complaint he taketh vp Psal 77.8.9.10 Neither had the Prophet in these times alwaies the spirit of supplication and prayer but sometime the grieuousnesse of his paine did shut his mouth so as he could not confesse his sinne Psal 32.3.4 nor humble himselfe before his God though through the waight of affliction his bones were consumed and he roared for griefe all the day long as appeareth Psalm 32.3.4 So Ieremie seeing the word of God contemned Ierem. 20.14.15.18 and himselfe who was Gods ambassador despised could not beare it but bursteth out into great impaciencie cursing the day of his birth and euen the man that brought newes thereof to his father because he was borne to see labour and sorrow and that his daies should be consumed with shame Ierem. 20.14 15.18 If therefore we iudge of Iob Dauid and Ieremie acording to their outward behauiour and their owne inward feeling in the time of afflictions and in the combate of temptations we should thinke them voyde of faith impatience and destitute of all assurance and hope of Gods loue and fauour but the Scriptures teach vs otherwise propounding them vnto vs as patternes of patience and true godlinesse and themselues also at other times doe shew their singular faith patience and the rest of the graces of Gods spirit Seeing then this is not our case alone but the state of Gods dearest children let vs not beleeue the tempter telling vs that we are not Gods children because we see not Gods graces so plainely in the time of temptation and triall but contrariwise bewray our impatiencie and other corruptions but let vs be truely humbled in the sight of our infirmities laboring and striuing to reforme them and iudge of our state not as we finde it in the time of the conflict but as it was or is before or after the combate is ended § Sect. 10 Lastly the tempter obiecteth The obiection out of Eccles 9.1 answered and hath stirred vp his wicked instruments the enemies of Gods truth to defend that though wee are not wholy to despaire of Gods loue yet wee must doubt thereof and to this purpose they alleadge that saying Eccles 9.1 which they reade thus I haue handled all these things in my heart that I might curiously vnderstand Iust and wise men and their workes are in the hand of God and notwithstanding a man knoweth not whether he be worthie of loue or hatred but all things are kept vncertain for the time to come c. I answere that if Gods loue or hatred did depend vpon our owne vnworthinesse wee might well doubt nay I will say more wee might iustly despaire of his grace and goodwill and certainly assure our selues that we were hated and abhorred of God for this if any thing wee haue deserued But the truth is that as Sathan tempting our Sauiour and quoting scripture for his purpose left out that which made against him so here by his instruments assaulting his members he addeth to the scriptures that which maketh for him for neither in the Hebrew which is the originall nor in the Greeke translation is there any one word of our worthinesse or vnworthinesse but thus it is in the text as it is truly translated in our Bibles No man knoweth either loue or hatred of all that is before them and whereas they reade the words following thus But all things are kept vncertain for the time to come they most grosly depraue the text which is thus to be read as wee haue it translated All things come alike to all and the same condition is to the iust and the wicked and thus also doth Arias Montanus one of the most learned amongst themselues translate it Neither wil their corrupt translatiō stand with the sense and truth of the place for as he saith no man knoweth whether he be worthie of loue so also that no man knoweth whether he be worthie of hatred but this is vtterly false for so should wee say that wee could not know whether the Sodomites for their filthinesse the Canaanites for their idolatrie Iulian for his apostasie were worthie to be hated of God whereas the scriptures witnesse the cleane contrarie and euen they themselues doe confesse that they who desperatly giue ouer themselues into all sinne and wickednesse are not to doubt but that they are worthie of Gods anger and heauie displeasure why therefore on the other side may not those who are truly conuerted vnto God and indued with a liuely faith which worketh by loue be assured of Gods loue and fauour seeing he hath assured them hereof in his word Nay in the same chapter vers 7. their corrupt exposition is ouerthrowne for there he biddeth vs to eate our bread with ioy and to drinke our wine with a cheereful heart for God now accepteth our works Now though God did indeede accept ourworkes yet wee could not be moued to ioy and cheerefulnesse of heart hereby vnlesse also we might be assured of his acceptation But let vs examine these words and shew the true sense of them The exposition of Eccles 9.1 There are two expositions giuen which may stand with the analogie of faith and the circumstances of the text For some vnderstand these words not of Gods loue or hatred but of mans loue towards those things he desires and of his hatred towards those things he flieth and then this is the sense of the place A man knoweth not whether those things which he loueth as pleasures honours and riches or those things which hee hateth namely crosses and afflictions shall happen vnto him because they are not disposed by his owne power but by the prouidence of God who giueth these outward things indifferently to all both iust and vniust So that if the words are thus to be vnderstood there is no shew of reason in the Papists exposition Secondly let it be granted that it is to be vnderstood of Gods loue towards vs yet it will make nothing for their purpose for then this is the plaine sense of the words no man can know whether hee bee loued or hated of God by these common outward things which happen alike to al and in respect whereof there is the same condition to the iust and the wicked and to the pure and polluted to those that worship God and those that worship him not there is no iudgement that can bee giuen either of our selues or others in respect of our outward state for sometime the iust are poore the vniustrich the wicked aduanced to honour and the godly afflicted and persecuted For example Esau enioyed his delights and plentie of all things Iacob like a poore pilgrime went into a strange countrie hauing no other riches but his clothes on his backe and his staffe in his hand when he was come amongst his
from the loue of Christ vers 35. from the loue of God in him Whosoeuer therefore with Paul beleeueth that Christ died for him that God freely iustifieth him through Christs merits and that our Sauiour fitteth at the right hand of his Father to make intercession for him he may be assured of Gods loue and consequently of his election Secondly Paul speaketh this not of himselfe alone but also of all the faithfull and therefore he vseth the plurall number I am perswaded that nothing shall be able to separate vs. So Eph. 3.12 the Apostle saith that wee haue through Christ boldnesse and entrance with confidence by faith in him Eph. 3.12 Heb. 4.16 and 10.22 And Heb. 4.16 he exhorteth vs to goe boldly vnto the throne of grace that wee may receiue mercie c. And chap. 10.22 Let vs draw neere with a true heart in assurance of faith c. But I would faine know what entrance with confidence what boldnesse and assurance of faith when we draw neere vnto God and present our selues before his throne of maiestie if we remaine doubtfull of his loue and our election So Heb. 6.19 he saith that our hope is a sure and stedfast anchor of the soule Heb. 6.19 but what certaintie or stedfastnes is there in it if it wauer and stagger through doubtfulnes so often as wee looke vpon our sinnes and vnworthinesse The Apostle Peter also doth tell vs that the trust which we haue through Iesus Christ must be perfect 1. Pet. 1.13 that is entire and perpetuall till we enioy the thing which we hope for 1. Pet. 1.13 And 2. Pet. 1.10 he exhorteth vs to vse all diligence that we may make our calling and election sure which if we could not doe he should perswade vs to the vndertaking of a needelesse labour Nay he plainely assureth vs that if we doe these things to wit if we ioyne vertue with our faith and with vertue knowledge and with knowledge temperance and with temperance patience and with patience godlinesse and with godlinesse brotherly kindnesse and with brotherly kindnesse loue we shall neuer fall because these are effects and vndoubted signes of our election And the Apostle Iohn would not haue it a matter doubtfull whether we are elected and shall be saued or no but certainely knowne and vndoubtedly beleeued and therefore he aimeth principally at this marke and propoundeth this as the chiefe end of his epistle namely to shew how we might know ordinarily and be fully assured that we are beloued of God 1. Ioh. 3.14 elected and shall be saued So 1. Ioh. 3.14 We know that we are translated from death to life because we loue the brethren And therefore in the latter end of his epistle he saith that he had written it to this end that we might know that we haue eternall life chap. 5.13 and 5.13 Seeing then the Scriptures doe commend vnto vs a stedfast and assured faith whereby we particularly are assured and perswaded of our election and saluation notwithstanding our sinnes and vnworthinesse therefore let not the tempter perswade vs to cast away this certaine perswasion and to wauer in doubting but let vs say with the Apostle Paul 2. Tim. 1.12 2. Tim. 1.12 Though I am vnworthie yet I know whom I haue beleeued and I am perswaded that he is able to keepe that which I haue committed to him § Sect. 5 But against that which hath been said the tempter obiecteth An obiection grounded vpon the indefinitnesse of Gods promises answered that the promises of the Gospell are generall and indefinit and therefore no man can gather out of them any certaine assurance of his particular election I answere that this consequence is false for out of a generall and indefinit proposition we may truely and by the lawes of reason gather and inferre a particular conclusion though not contrariwise For example if I thus conclude all men are reasonable creatures but I am a man therefore I am a reasonable creature it is rightly and truely inferred Though therefore the promises of the Gospell be contained in generall propositions yet may euery faithfull man as certainely conclude that they belong vnto him as if they were particularly applied vnto him by name Ioh. 3.16 For when the Lord by his ambassadors maketh this generall proposition in the preaching of the word whosoeuer truely beleeue in Christ they are all elected vnto euerlasting life the faithfull hearer maketh this assumption in his minde but I by the grace of God and by the preaching of his word made effectuall by his spirit haue a true faith begotten in me whereby I beleeue in Christ my Sauiour and therefore Gods promise of life and saluation belongeth vnto me And thus also doth the conscience of man out of the generall curses of the law conclude that he is accursed for when the law deliuereth this proposition in generall Cursed is euery one who abideth not in all things which are written in the booke of the law to doe them Deut. 27.26 Gal. 3.10 euery particular man maketh this assumption in his owne conscience but I haue not continued in all to doe it nay in stead of doing all I haue neglected all in sted of continuing in obedience I haue been continually disobedient in sted of doing the duties commaunded I haue committed the sinnes forbidden and therefore by the sentence of the law I am accursed So that though both the threatnings of the law and the promises of the Gospell be generall and indefinit yet doth euery mans conscience truely informed by Gods word gather out of them most certaine particular conclusions § Sect. 6 But here the tempter will obiect further That we may be assured that we are the faithfull vnto whom the promises of the Gospell are made it is true indeede that euery faithfull man may apply the generall promises of the Gospell vnto himselfe but all the question is whether thou canst know that thou hast faith or no seeing many who continue in their infidelitie bragge most of their faith I answere that it cannot be denied but that many are deceiued by contenting themselues with their carnall securitie in stead of a liuely faith but hence it followeth not that because many are deceiued with an opinion of faith therefore those that beleeue indeede cannot be assured that they haue faith no more then this followeth some men dreame that they are rich and are not so indeede when they awake therefore no man knoweth whether he be rich or no for what is their secure opinion but an idle dreame of their owne braines which hath no warrant out of Gods word where as faith certainely and euidently perswadeth and like a candle doth not only manifest other things but also it selfe appeareth by his owne light So that as a man who seeth and feeleth the fier and the heate thereof doth certainly know that hee seeth and feeleth it so he that beleeueth in Christ doth know that he
aske But we are taught to pray for the remission of our sins and therefore we are certainly to beleeue that our sinnes are remitted and consequently that we are iustified called elected and shall be saued for whom he did predestinate them also he called Rom. 8.30 and whom he called them also he iustified and whom he iustified them also he glorified as it is Rom. 8.30 § Sect. 9 Sixtly The sixt argument taken from the confession of our saith whatsoeuer we professe in the Articles of our faith that we should beleeue and of that we may and ought particularly to be assured but euery man professeth that he beleeueth the remission of sinnes and life euerlasting that is that the Lord doth not onely forgiue sinne and granteth vnto some the fruition of euerlasting life for this the diuels beleeue as well as we but also that he doth particularly forgiue me my sinnes and that he will make me an heire of eternall happinesse for this is the nature of faith to assure vs certainlie and particularlie of that which wee beleeue as wee haue shewed and therefore we ought particularly to be assured of the remission of our sinnes and that wee shall attaine vnto euerlasting life and consequently that wee are elected seeing none enioy it but Gods chosen But it may be obiected that if euery one be bound to beleeue as an article of his faith that his sinnes are forgiuen and that hee is an heire of euerlasting life then some are bound to beleeue that which is false for those who liue and die in their sinnes without repentance shall neuer obtaine either the one or the other I answere that wee are not bound to beleeue being destitute of a true and a liuely faith for this were rather fondly to presume than surely to bee perswaded of the promises of the Gospell but wee are first bound to haue a true liuely and iustifying faith and so to beleeue and applie vnto our selues the promises of the Gospell but those that liue in their sinnes without repentance they are altogether destitute of true faith which wheresoeuer it is purifieth the heart and worketh by loue moouing the beleeuer to endeuour and striue to mortifie his corruptions and to rise from the death of sinne to newnesse of life and therefore well may they securely presume but it is impossible that they should truly beleeue because they are vtterly destitute of a liuely faith and where the cause is not the effect cannot follow and consequently for their infidelitie they are subiect to eternall plagues and punishments because they doe not that which they are bound to perfourme Neither must we thinke that euery kind of faith or rather euery fond perswasion of faith is enioyned vs but such a faith as is grounded vpon Gods word but the word of God doth teach vs that whosoeuer liue in the flesh cannot please God and if we liue after the flesh we shall dye Rom. 8.8.13 Rom. 8.8.13 1. Cor. 6.9 That the vnrighteous shall not inherit the kingdome of God 1. Cor. 6.9 That the workers of iniquitie shall be reiected of Christ Matth. 7.23 And that no vncleane thing Mat. 7.23 Reuel 21.27 nor whatsoeuer worketh abomination and lies shall enter into the kingdome of heauen Reuel 21.27 And therefore those who liue in the flesh those who are workers of iniquitie vnrighteous and vncleane in which ranke are all those who liue in their sins without repentance fulfilling the lusts of the flesh and falling continually into sinne with pleasure and delight are not bound simply and absolutely to beleeue so long as they resolue to continue in this state for so should they be bound to beleeue that which is false and repugnant to Gods word but they are bound to haue a true faith which being wrought in their hearts will moue them to forsake their sinnes by vnfained repentance to hunger after righteousnes to endeuour to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life and so to beleeue in Christ as their Sauiour and Redeemer which fruites if our faith bring not foorth we cannot be assured that we haue true faith or do truly beleeue For though in nature faith be before repentance yet in our sense and feeling it alwaies followeth it neither doth faith euer soundly and truly perswade vs of Gods loue till we haue sorrowed for our sinnes and at least in purpose of heart haue forsaken them So that whosoeuer liueth still in his sins with pleasure and delight and yet beleeueth that he is elected to saluation and that he is in Gods fauour and shall continuing in this state be made an heire of eternall life he is not indued with true faith but with fond presumption and carnall securitie which maketh him to beleeue that which is false and repugnant to Gods word Though then all men euen carnall worldlings and reprobates are bound to beleeue and because they doe not are subiect to condemnation as committing a great and fearefull sinne as appeareth Ioh. 3.18 and 16.8.9 where our Sauiour saith that the holy Ghost should reproue the world of sinne Ioh. 3.18 and 16.8.9 because they beleeue not in him yet they are not bound to beleeue continuing in their worldlinesse and resoluing to goe on in their sinnes for such a faith were but fond presumption but they are bound so to beleeue as that their faith may be grounded vpon Gods word which it can neuer possibly be if it be seuered from true repentance and for want of this faith they are condemned CHAP. VIII The last argument grounded vpon the testimonie of Gods spirit § Sect. 1 LAstly whatsoeuer the spirit of God doth testifie in the heart and conscience of a man and doth fully assure him thereof that he is to beleeue and of that he ought vndoubtedly to be assured but the spirit of God doth testifie to the faithfull and doth fully assure them that they are the sonnes of God by adoption and grace and consequently that they are elected for none are the sonnes of God but those who are predestinate to be adopted through Iesus Christ as it is Ephes 1.5 Eph. 1.5 and therefore the faithfull are to beleeue and ought vndoubtedly to be assured that they are the sonnes of God elected to euerlasting life The prosition is manifest for what more certaine truth can be imagined than that which the spirit of God witnesseth vnto our spirits and confirmeth vnto vs seeing all the properties required in a true witnesse doe concurre in him in the highest degree namely knowledge truth and faithfulnesse for knowledge he is infinit and knoweth all things euen the eternall councell and decree of God concerning our election as appeareth 1. Cor. 2.10 1. Cor. 2.10.12 The spirit searcheth all things euen the deepe things of God and this spirit doe we receiue that we may know the things that are giuen to vs of God As it is vers 12. What fitter witnesse therefore can be imagined in this
than the which there can bee no better assurance of performing promise and 2. King 14.14 2. King 14.14 it signifieth a hostage giuen in warres which is giuen for assurance to confirme couenants agreed vpon Whereas therefore Gods spirit in the faithfull is called arrhabo which signifieth an earnest pawne and hostage we are hereby assured that the Lord will performe his couenant betweene vs and him that he will not misse a day in the performing of his promise that howsoeuer we were enemies yet now being reconciled by the death of his sonne he hath giuen vs an hostage to assure vs of eternall peace euen his holy spirit And therefore let not Sathan nor all his assistants cause vs to doubt of Gods couenant wherein he hath assured vs of our election adoption and saluation seeing he hath sealed this couenant with his spirit and hath giuen vnto vs this earnest and pawne to assure vs that he will performe his promise and bargaine § Sect. 4 But here the tempter obiecteth That we may discerne Gods spirit by the effects thereof that we cannot know and discerne whether we haue the spirit of God vnlesse it should bring forth in vs some extraordinarie effects and though it should be granted that we were indued therewith yet we cannot discerne the testimonie thereof from our owne thoughts vnlesse it be by some speciall reuelation To the first I answere that though many lulled asleepe with carnall securitie doe vainely dreame that they haue Gods spirit and so are deluded with their owne phantasies yet this hindereth not but that he who hath the spirit of God indeede may certainely be assured that it dwelleth in him for it sealeth in vs the assurance of Gods couenant 2. Cor. 1.22 and who can receiue this seale and not feele the impression it is an earnest and who receiuing an earnest cannot know whether he hath receiued it for otherwise how can it assure vs of our bargaine if of it selfe we haue no assurance it is a pawne of Gods loue and our saluation and who hauing a pawne in his custodie cannot know that he possesseth it it is a heauenly light which doth illuminate our vnderstandings Eph. 1.17.18 which were blinde and ignorant in the knowledge of Gods truth and who cannot discerne betweene blindnesse and sight light and darknesse it is a water which purgeth vs from our corruption Esa 44.3 Ezech. 16.9 and who that is thus washed and clensed can doubt that this water hath touched him Matth. 3.11 Act. 2.3 it is a sire which inflameth our cold frosen hearts with a zeale of Gods glorie and loue of our brethren and how can fire which is caried in our brests be hidden from vs 1. Ioh. 2.20.27 it is a precious oyle which mollifieth our hard stonie hearts and maketh them flexible and pliable able to Gods will which before were so stiffe and obdurate that they would rather haue broken then bowed to obedience it suppleth also our stiffe ioynts and maketh them actiue and nimble in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse and who finding those strange alterations in himselfe may not be assured that he is annoynted with this oyle it is the Lords champion fighting in vs against the flesh Gal. 5.17 and subduing the lusts thereof and who feeling this intestine warre in his owne bowels can doubt that the combatants haue their residence in him in a word it is onely this spirit which restrained vs from the euill which naturally we loue and prouoketh vs to imbrace that good which through naturall corruption we loth and abhorre if therefore sinne growe vnpleasant vnto vs and vertue and true godlinesse delightfull we may be assured that this is the worke of Gods spirit dwelling in vs. Would we then be assured that we are indued with the spirit of God why then let vs consider if our eyes blinded with ignorance are inlightned in any good measure with the knowledge of Gods truth if our soules polluted with the filth of sinne are purged in some sort from our corruptions if our cold hearts are inflamed with the zeale of Gods glorie and the loue of our brethren if our hearts more hard than adamant and more inflexible than steele are softened and made obsequious to Gods will and if the other members of our body which were benummed and as it were taken with a dead paulsie be made nimble and actiue in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse if we feele a fight and combate betweene the flesh and the spirit the one striuing to leade vs captiue vnto sinne the other resisting and drawing vs out of this captiuitie if the sins which heretofore we haue loued be now lothsome vnto vs and the vertues which we haue abhorred be delightfull and pleasant and then we may assure our selues that it is the light of Gods spirit which hath shined vpon vs it is this heauenly water which hath washed vs it is this diuine fire which hath inflamed vs it is this precious oyle that hath mollified and foftned vs it is this champion of the Lord of hosts which maketh warre against our trayterous flesh and subdueth the lusts thereof in a word it can be nothing but Gods spirit which makes vs hate that sinne which naturally we so dearely loue and to loue vertue and godlinesse which by nature is lothsome and bitter vnto vs. § Sect. 5 And thus it is manifest that wee may be assured that we haue Gods spirit by the ordinarie fruites thereof in euery faithfull man Now let vs consider how we may know the testimonie of Gods spirit witnessing in our hearts that we are elected adopted and shall be saued How we may discerne the testimonie of Gods spirit from our owne presumption 2. Cor. 3.6 1. Cor. 3.5 from our owne phantasies caused through carnall securitie and vaine presumption And to this end we are to know that the preaching of the Gospell is the ministerie of the spirit whereby wee are sealed and confirmed in the assurance of our saluation as appeareth 2. Cor. 3.6 And hence it is that the preachers of the Gospell are called the ministers by whom the people beleeue 1. Cor. 3.5 And the words of the Gospell are called by our Sauiour Christ spirit and life because it is the ministery of the spirit which quickneth vs as it is Ioh. 6.63 And Gal. 3.2 Ioh. 6.63 Gal. 3.2 the Apostle saith that we haue receiued the spirit by the hearing of faith that is the doctrine of faith preached in the ministery of the Gospell If therefore the testimonie of saluation in the mindes of the faithfull be conceiued by the preaching of the Gospell applied vnto them by faith then is it most certainly the testimonie of Gods spirit for the inward testimonie of Gods spirit is not different from the outward testimonie of the word but if this perswasion be not grounded vpon Gods word as theirs is not who perswade themselues that they are elected adopted
Church or market place at noone day § Sect. 9 The eight signe of the childe of God The eight signe is the loue of our brethren because God hath commanded vs. is the loue of our brethren in obedience to Gods commandement when as a man loues intirely a Christian because he is a Christian and ingrafted into the same bodie of Christ whereof he is a member for as it is impossible that one member of the bodie should not loue cherish and defend another because they are quickened by the same soule and gouerned by the same head so it is not possible but that one true Christian should loue cherish and defend another because they are quickned by the same spirit and ruled by the same head Iesus Christ And this is made a marke of Gods child by the Apostle Iohn 1. Ioh. 3.14 1. Ioh. 3.14 We know that we are translated from death to life because wee loue the brethren as the want of this loue is a sure note of the childe of wrath for as it followeth in the same verse he that loueth not his brother abideth in death Now the vndoubted signes of loue and christian charitie are two giuing to those that want The signes of true loue 1. Cor. 13.4 and forgiuing those that offend for it is a propertie of true loue to bee bountifull 1. Cor. 13.4 as to all so especially to those that are of the household of faith as it is Gal. 6.10 and on the other side Gal. 6.10 He that hath this worlds good and seeth his brother haue neede and shutteth vp his compassion from him he is destitute of the loue of God 1. Ioh. 3.17 and consequently of the loue of his brethren which is but a streame issuing from this fountaine 1. Ioh. 3.17 And this Christian liberalitie as it is a signe of true loue so also of our election and saluation for our Sauiour Christ hath shewed vs that according to these fruites of charity and actions of Christian liberalitie hee will pronounce the sentence of euerlasting ioy and happinesse at the day of iudgement Matth. 25.34 35 c. Matth. 25.34 35 36. and on the other side that he will pronounce the sentence of condemnation against the neglectors of these duties of Christian charitie vers 41 42 43. The second signe of true loue is forgiuing when as wee are readie for Gods sake and in obedience to his commandement to remit and pardon those iniuries which are offered vs for loue is not prouoked to anger 1. Cor. 13.5.7 and therefore much lesse to reuenge it suffreth all things it indureth all things as it is 1. Cor. 13.5 7. Nay it doth not onely not render euill for euill but it ouercommeth euill with goodnes Rom. 12.19.21 leauing reuenge vnto God and to his deputies and vicegerents the Magistrates as we may see in the example of our Sauiour Christ and the blessed Martyr Steuen who prayed for their persecutors whose example wee are to imitate as the Apostle exhorteth Rom. 12.14 Blesse them that persecute you Rom. 12.14 blesse I say and curse not And so shall wee haue a certaine signe of true loue and an vndoubted note of Gods spirit dwelling in vs of the remission of our sinnes and consequently of our election and saluation For naturallie we are Wolues Leopards Lions yea Cockatrices who kil with their lookes Esa 11.6.8 as the Prophet speaketh Esa 11.6 8. and like bruit and sauage beasts willing to offer all iniuries but impatient of suffring any and therefore when our sauage crueltie is turned into charitie and wee become as meeke and harmelesse as the lambe calfe or little childe it is a manifest signe that our stoute courages are abated and beaten downe with the rod of Christs mouth that wee are borne anew and quickened by his spirit and that now wee are seated in the mountaine of his holinesse and shall be heires of his kingdome of glorie So also hereby we are assured of the remission of our sinnes when we find our selues readie and willing to forgiue our neighbours for our Sauiour Christ hath promised Matth. 6.14 that if we doe forgiue men their trespasses our heauenly father will also forgiue vs Matth. 6.14 and consequently wee may assuredly gather that wee are iustified called elected and shal be glorified § Sect. 10 The ninth signe of the child of God elected to saluation The ninth signe is the loue of Gods ministers is the loue of Gods true Ministers and ambassadours not onely because they are Christians but also because they are sent of God to execute these holie functions for the gathering together of Gods elect And this our Sauiour Christ declareth Matth. 10.41 Matth. 10.41 He that receiueth a Prophet in the name of a Pròphet shall haue a Prophets reward that is euerlasting ioy and vnspeakable happinesse in Gods kingdom for they that turne many vnto righteousnes Dan. 12.3 shall shine as the starres for euer and euer And because none should pretend that by reason of their pouertie they cannot shew their loue to Gods Ministers therefore the Lord encourageth euen the poorest to shew their goodwill and affection vnto them Matth. 10.43 saying Matth. 10.43 Whosoeuer shall giue to any of these little ones to drinke a cup of cold water onely in the name of a disciple verely I say vnto you he shall not lose his reward namely in Gods kingdome Moreouer those that loue Gods ambassadours doe prooue vnto themselues and shew vnto the world that they haue receiued good by their ambassage euen reconciliation with God peace of conscience and assurance of saluation which maketh them to thinke no worldly benefit sufficient to requite these spirituall graces which by their meanes and ministerie they haue receiued and therefore with the Galatians they could bee content if it were possible to doe them good hereby Gal. 4.15 to pull out their owne eyes and to giue them vnto them seeing by their means the blind eyes of their vnderstandings are inlightened with the knowledge of God and Christ their Sauiour And because they haue receiued from them to their comfort the glad tidings of peace and good things therefore their feet that is their approaching and comming vnto them seeme beautiful and delightfull as the Apostle speaketh Rom. 10.15 Rom. 10.15 If an ambassadour were sent from a mightie Prince who was our enemie in time past and able at his pleasure to destroy vs and our countrey to the end he might conclude a peace and not only so but to offer vs the free vse of al the riches and commodities of his kingdome who would not receiue him with ioy and giue him royall entertainment if they were perswaded of the truth of his ambassage But wee by our sinnes had made the glorious King of heauen and earth our enemie who is able euery minute to destroy vs with the breath of his nostrels and it hath pleased the Lord
as appeareth in the same place where this is added ' But he that hardneth his heart shall fall into euill as though hee should say that man is blessed which feareth the Lord for this will worke in him a conscionable care of auoiding sinne which is odious in the eyes of God and of imbracing holinesse and righteousnesse which being acceptable vnto God hee will reward with eternall blessednesse but hee that hardneth his heart and continueth in carnall securitie runneth headlong into the euill of sinne and consequently the euill of punishment euen euerlasting condemnation Thirdly whereas the Apostle Rom. 11.20 Rom. 11.20 exhorteth vs not to bee high minded but feare hee doth not meane that wee should doubt of our election and saluation but doth hereby beate downe our spirituall pride and opinion of our owne righteousnesse and holinesse whereby we are ready to insult ouer the Iewes as though we were chosen and preferred before them for some excellencie or worthinesse in our selues and so derogate from the free grace and goodnesse of God whereby he hath chosen vs without any respect of our deserts And that this is the meaning of these words appeareth in the eighteenth verse where he willeth the Gentiles not to boast themselues against the Iewes who were the naturall branches Neither doth the Apostle write this to the faithfull onely but to the whole Church of the Gentiles in which were many hypocrites and carnall men who contenting themselues with a bare name of Christians would insult ouer the Iewes whom God had cast off from being his Church and people whom he warneth not to be puft vp in pride as though in this respect their state were most secure and out of all danger for as saith he they were cast off for their infidelitie euen when they were naturall branches so shall you much more be reiected who being wilde branches were grafted in their places that is called to be the members of the visible Church if you continue in the like infidelity contenting your selues with vame confidence and fond presumption in stead of a liuely faith § Sect. 4 Fourthly Phil. 2.12 whereas the Apostle Phil. 2.12 doth exhort vs to worke out our saluation with feare and trembling he doth not hereby take away from vs assurance of our election and saluation but carnall securitie and selfe confidence that so despairing of our owne strength as being vnable of our selues to thinke a good thought or to will that which is good we may in all humilitie rest and rely our selues wholy vpon the Lord. And that this is his meaning appeareth by the reason which he adioyneth in the verse following for saith hee it is God which worketh in you both the will and the deede As though hee should say there is no reason why you should bee secure as though you were able to stand by your owne strength there is no cause why you should be lifted vp with fond presumption or be carried away with selfe confidence for of your selues you are not able so much as to will that which is good or to performe it though you should will it vnlesse it please the Lord of his owne good pleasure and free will to worke both in you and therefore respecting your owne infirmities and imperfections you should bee so farre from carnall securitie or selfe confidence that contrariwise you should continually feare least through your corruption you should be ouertaken of sinne and so displease the Lord which is your soueraigne King and gracious Father So that the Apostle doth not here exhort vs to doubt of our election and saluation but to a godly feare that we doe not fall into sinne he would not haue vs to doubt of Gods grace and free promises but of our own strength by which wee are altogether vnable to stand if hee leaue vs to our selues hee would not haue vs feare least wee should be reiected and damned after we are truely conuerted vnto God but least we fall into sinne and neglect that duety which we owe to our heauenly father Feare and distruct in our owne weakenesse and assurance of our election may well stand together These two therefore may well stand together for the more we distrust our owne weakenesse the more firmely we rest vpon the power and assistance of God and the more we rely vpon him the more sure we are of standing vnto the end the surer we are of Gods loue and fauour the more we loue him againe and the more we loue him the more fearefull we are to displease him the more we see our pronenesse to sinne the more we feare least we should fall into it and the more we suspect our selues the more earnestly we implore the assistance of Gods spirit whereby wee are inabled to withstand temptations And therefore Dauid ioyneth these together Psal 2.11 Serue the Lord in feare and reioyce in trembling Psal 2.11 noting thereby that Gods children feare yea euen tremble in regard of their owne infirmities and corruptions and yet at the same time they reioyce and are filled with consolation in respect of that full assurance which they haue of Gods loue and fauour and their election and saluation And as he ioyneth them in precept so also in his owne practise Psalm 5.7 Psalm 5.7 I will saith he come into thine house in the multitude of thy mercy and in thy feare will I worship towards thy holy temple so that at the same time when as hee was incouraged by the consideration of Gods great mercy to goe boldly and with a liuely faith vnto the throne of grace he was also touched with a godly feare in regard of his vnworthinesse and imperfections not that he doubted least hee should not bee accepted of God but least in worshipping of God hee should bewray his corruption and not doe it in that manner and measure which God requireth § Sect. 5 But against this it may be obiected that Iohn saith Obiection 1. Ioh. 4.18 Answere 1. Epist 4.18 There is no feare in loue but perfect loue casteth out feare c. I answere that there is a twofold feare mentioned in the scriptures the first is a seruile feare proceeding from incredulitie whereby men feare God as a scuere iudge who is ready to inflict on them those iust punishments which by their sinnes they haue deserued which feare is expelled when as we are assured of Gods loue and loue him againe The other is a sonne-like feare which is a fruite of faith whereby we doe not feare God as an enemy or an angry iudge but as a gracious Father whose displeasure we would by no meanes incurre not that we feare his wrath and vengeance as though it were ready to fall vpon vs but because we would not thus abuse his mercy and goodnesse towards vs nor doe any thing which might cause him to looke vpon vs with a frowning countenance or if we doe feare Gods iudgements it is as they are inflicted on another
enough he hath sworne it Because therefore the promise is sure and confirmed not according to our merits but according to his mercie let no man professe that with feare of which he cannot doubt Doubting proceedeth from pride and arrogancie But they further vrge that humble doubting is better than presumptuous assurance I answere first that their doubting is full of pride which maketh them looke for saluation in their owne worthinesse rather than in Gods free mercie and Christs merits secondly that our faith and certaine assurance is full of humilitie for wee freely confesse our owne vnworthinesse and dare not offer before the seate of Gods iustice any righteousnesse that is in vs as desiring in whole or in part to be iustified thereby nay rather we pray with the Prophet Psal 143.2 Enter not into iudgement with thy seruant for in thy sight shall none that liueth be iustified Psal 143.2 and though we know nothing by our selues yet doe we plain●ly affirme with the Apostle that we are not hereby iustified 1. Cor. 4.4 1. Cor. 4.4 But this humilitie doth not abate our faith and certaine assurance nay rather it doth confirme and increase it for it maketh vs to goe out of our selues as finding no hope of saluation whereupon we may rest and moueth vs to seeke for saluation in Christ who is such a sure ancorhold that whosoeuer pitch the ancor of their hope on him shall finde it sure and steadfast and whosoeuer build their faith on this foundation and corner stone the power of hell shall neuer preuaile against them § Sect. 2 Secondly they obiect that we are vnworthie of Gods loue Our vnworthinesse no cause why we should doubt of our election or to be elected and therefore we cannot be assured thereof I answere this were true if Gods election depended vpon our worthinesse and deserts but seeing the Lord respecteth not any thing in vs but elected vs freely of his vndeserued grace and meere goodwill our vnworthinesse in our selues may well stand with the assurance of our election for those who are most vnworthie neede not to doubt of Gods loue and their election and saluation so that they wholy rely vpon Gods mercie and Christs merits by a true and liuely faith forasmuch as they are not grounded vpon their worthinesse and therefore cannot be ouerthrowne by their vnworthinesse Notable is the saying of Austine to this purpose Tria inquit sunt quae sic roborant confirmant cor meum vt nulla me penuriae meritorum c. There are three things saith he which so strengthen and confirme my heart that no want of merits no consideration of mine owne vilenesse no estimation of the heauenly blessednesse can deiect me from the height of my hope vpon them my soule is surely setled Wilt thou know what they are I consider three things vpon which my hope wholy relieth to wit the loue of adoption Aug. Manual cap. 23. the truth of the promise the abilitie of performance Let now my foolish cogitation murmur as much as it will saying but who art thou or how great is that glorie or with what merits doest thou hope to obtaine it And I will boldly answere I know whom I haue beleeued and I am assured because God hath adopted me in great loue because he is true in his promise because hee is powerfull in performance for he may doe what he will § Sect. 3 Thirdly Weakenes of faith and certaintie may well stand together they obiect that our faith is weake and feeble and by reason thereof the faithfull a●…peareth by continuall experience are assaulted with doubting and grieuously shaken with Sathans temptations so as there can be no such certaintie of faith as we speake of To which I answere that weakenesse of faith is not opposed as contrarie to certaintie but to strongnesse and full perswasion and therefore weakenesse and certaintie may well stand together Neither doe we imagine such a certaintie of faith which is neuer shaken with doubting nor assaulted with temptations nay rather we teach that those whom God indueth with most faith he most exerciseth in the conflict of temptations like a wise captaine who setteth that souldier which is best armed and strongest to beare the brunt in the forefront of the battaile and the diuell is most readie to assault those who most resist him and most violently to strike where he seeth the shield of faith held vp to defend and therefore our Sauiour hath taught all his faithfull children to pray leade vs not into temptation but deliuer vs from euill But withall we affirme that though this weake faith be assaulted with Sathans temptations yet is it neuer ouercome though it bee opposed with doubting yet it neuer falleth from assurance and certaine perswasion though it bee sometimes shadowed and the shining light thereof dimmed yea though it be for a time hid and couered yet in it owne nature it remaineth firme and stedfast like the sunne which alwaies shineth though oftentimes by reason of the interposition of the cloudes or the earth we cannot discerne the beames thereof or like vnto the fire which being hid vnder the ashes doth retaine his naturall heate although we feele it not So our faith retaineth in it selfe his certaintie and assurance as it were his light and heate when as it is shadowed with the cloudes of doubting and couered vnder the ashes of Sathans temptations A weake faith doth as truely assure vs of our election as a stronger But it may be demaunded how a weake faith assaulted with Sathans temptations can cōtinue certaine seeing the strongest 0 faith can doe no more but certainely perswade I answere that our certaintie respecteth not our faith it selfe but the obiect thereof namely Gods mercie and Christs merits and therefore seeing a weake faith doth as well apply vnto vs the mercies of God merits of Christ as a stronger therefore also it certainely perswadeth vs as well truely though not so strongly and fully of our election and saluation as a stronger doth So that when we haue the least sparke of faith it doth illuminate our mindes so as we can truely discerne the louing countenance of the Lord shining vpon vs though somewhat dimly and as it were a farre of euen as he that is pore-blind doth as certainely see the sunne as he who is most sharpe sighted though not so cleerely and as he who is in a darke dungeon doth discerne the light as surely at a little hole though he be compassed about with blacke darkenesse as he who is in the open fieldes so when we are as it were pore-blind and compassed about with the darke miste of ignorance yet by the dimme sight of faith we certainely discerne Gods loue and fauour shining vpon vs though the more we encrease in knowledge and faith the more cleerely we perceiue it till at last hauing attained vnto fulnesse of faith we see him neere at hand and as it were
the purpose for the question is not of epicures and worldlings who haue no faith or a dead faith but of true beleeuers who bring foorth the fruites of their faith at least in an holie desire and endeuour of seruing the Lord in holinesse and righteousnesse For they that cannot be assured that they haue faith cannot haue any certaintie of their election but none can haue any assurance of faith vnlesse they bring foorth the fruites of their faith in dying to sinne and rising againe to newnesse of life for faith purifieth the heart and worketh by loue and therefore such as liue in their sinnes without repentance hauing no faith can haue no certaintie of their election though they may delude themselues with a fond perswasion which hath no other ground but carnall securitie and fond presumption but hence it followeth not that because a dead faith affoordeth no true certaintie therefore a liuely faith doth it not because a prophane epicure or carnal worldling deceiueth himselfe with a vaine opinion therefore those that are truly conuerted mortified vnto sinne and raised vp to newnesse of life can haue no certaintie of their election and saluation For what similitude is there betweene light and darknes righteousnesse and vnrighteousnesse the children of God and the children of Belial the repentant and vnrepentant faith and no faith Lastly §. Sect. 11. That this doctrine openeth no way to securitie and presumption they obiect that if we teach this doctrine of the certaintie of election men will abuse it to nourish in them carnall securitie and presumption To which I answere that wicked men abuse the whole doctrine of the Gospell to their destruction for when they are taught that God is most gratious and mercifull that Christ hath died for vs and giuen himselfe as a sufficient price to redeeme vs out of the power of sinne Sathan death and damnation and maketh intercession for vs to God his father that the Lord is slow to wrath and ready to forgiue they take occasion hereby of continuing in their sins and deferring their repentance till God take them away and consume them in his heauie displeasure but hence it followeth not that the Gospell must not bee taught because carnall men abuse it to their iust condemnation for though to these it be the sauour of death vnto death yet to those who are saued it is the sauour of life vnto life 2. Cor. 2.16 1. Cor. 1.18 as it is 2. Cor. 2.16 Though it be foolishnes to those that perish yet it is the power of God to those whom God hath ordained to saluation and God is no lesse glorified in the one by shewing his mercie than in the other by shewing his iustice Though worldly men abuse it to carnall securitie yet the godly are the more incited thereby to serue the Lord in holinesse and newnesse of life for like louing children the more they are assured of the loue of their heauenly father and secured of his mercie and bountifull benefits the more they loue him againe the more they loue him the more zealous they are of his glorie and the greater their zeale is the greater is their care in making the light of their godly and Christian liues to shine before men that their heauenly father may bee glorified So that it is not the fault of this precious seede but the barrennesse of the ground which maketh it fruitlesse or els for good wheate sendeth tares cockle and darnell it is not any defect or ill disposition in this sweet smelling flower but the venemous nature of these spiders which turne honey into poyson and therefore the seed must be cast vpon the earth though there bee stones with the good ground which will neuer bring foorth fruite the flowers of sweete consolation must not be pulled vp by the rootes and cast away For though the spider gathereth poyson yet the profitable Bee wil gather honey out of them Secondly when wee teach the certaintie of election wee doe not teach that men must gather it out of Gods secret counsaile but from their owne sanctification by which they may be assured that they are iustified called and elected and therefore whosoeuer are not sanctified but continue in their sinnes without repentance can haue no assurance by our doctrine that they are elected or shall be saued nay contrariwise we teach out of Gods word that whosoeuer line in the flesh shal die Rom. 8.13 that they which performe the lusts thereof shall neuer inherit the kingdome of God Gal. 5.19.20 21. that none who continue in their vnrighteousnesse and vncleannesse shall enter into the heauenly Ierusalem 1. Cor. 6.9.10 Reu. 21.27 but shall haue their portion in the lake which burneth with fire and brimstone as it is vers 8. Now what stronger bridle to curbe in our vnruly flesh when it is ready to runne into sinne than to be assured that if wee liue in sinne and fulfill our carnall lusts wee are in the state of condemnation what sharper spurre to pricke vs forward when wee are readie to faint or slacke our pace in the Christian race of holinesse and righteousnesse than to consider that our sanctification and newnesse of life is the onely meanes whereby wee may come to the assurance of our election and saluation CHAP. XIII Of our Redemption § Sect. 1 ANd thus much concerning our election and the certaintie thereof The next cause of our saluation is our redemption by Iesus Christ for as the Lord hath from all eternitie elected vs to saluation of his meere mercie without any respect of our works or worthines so he hath ordained in this his eternal decree our Sauiour Christ to bee the Mediatour who should worke the worke of our saluation and as it were the conduit whereby hee would conuey his grace mercie and euerlasting saluation vnto vs and hath set him apart to be our Sauiour and Redeemer who should saue and deliuer vs out of the captiuitie and bondage of our spirituall enemies and restore vs to the glorious libertie of the sonnes of God Redemption what it is This our redemption is an effect of Gods election whereby our Sauiour Christ being set apart of his father for this purpose hath freed and deliuered all Gods elect out of the captiuitie of their spirituall enemies sinne death and the diuell by offring himselfe for the price of their redemption and a sufficient sacrifice for sinne for the appeasing of his fathers displeasure and satisfying of his iustice to the end that being deliuered they may serue him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of this life and afterwards may inherit the kingdome of glorie and the crowne of eternall happinesse which is purchased for them The definition explaned First I say that it is an effect of Gods election for whom he had chosen to euerlasting life in Christ those by Christ he hath saued and redeemed and those only as we shall see afterwards Secondly I shew who is our
the Lord hath pardoned and remitted them so as they shall neuer be imputed vnto vs nor arise vp in iudgement to our condemnation neither in this world nor the world to come secondly he doth deliuer vs from our sinnes whilest he doth giue vnto vs his holy spirit whereby our sinnes are in some measure mortified the strength of them abated so that they do not raigne and rule in vs as in former times although we cannot wholy expell them from dwelling in vs according to that Rom. 6.12 Rom. 6.12 Sinne shall not raigne in your mortall bodie that you should obey it in the lusts thereof And though we cannot vtterly subdue this Cananitish brood of our corruptions but that still whilest we continue in this life they are as thornes in our sides alwaies vexing and grieuing vs yet by the helpe of Gods spirit assisting vs we weaken their force abate their courage and make them become tributaries and if at any time they rebel we curbe them in giue them the ouerthrow yea though sometimes they gaine ground giue vs the foile yet wee rise againe by vnfained repentance and recouer our selues being assisted with the fresh supply of Gods spirit till at last by death we obtaine a finall victory § Sect. 5 Thirdly That our obedience to the Lawe proueth not that we are not redeemed Gal. 3.13 he obiecteth that we are still vnder the law and tied to the obedience thereof and therefore Christ hath not freed vs from it I answer that though Christ hath not freed vs from the obedience of the lawe yet he hath freed vs from the curse and malediction as it is Gal. 3.13 so as though we do not performe it in that exact manner and measure which God requireth yet our transgression shall not be imputed vnto vs for he hath perfectly fulfilled the law for vs that his righteousnesse might become our righteousnesse and he hath suffred death that by his blood he might wash away our sins Rom. 8.3.4 And thus when the law was impossible to be performed by reason of the weaknes and corruptions of our flesh the Lord sent his Son in the similitude of sinfull flesh and for sin condemned sin in the flesh that the righteousnesse of the lawe might be fulfilled in vs as it is Rom. 8.3 4. Moreouer we are not now tied to performe obedience to the lawe to the end that thereby we may be iustified nor yet shall we for the imperfections of this our obedience be in danger of condemnation but now onely it is a meanes before our conuersion to bring vs to Christ by shewing vnto vs our sinnes and insufficiency in our selues and after our conuersion it serueth for a rule or square according to which we are to frame our liues in holinesse and righteousnesse that so we may shew our thankfulnes vnto our heauenly father for his inestimable benefits by glorifying his name in a godly life And because this also is bitter and vnpleasant to flesh and blood therefore the Lord hath also granted and giuen vnto vs his holy spirit which mortifieth our corruptions whereby we are made lesse prone vnto sinne and quickneth vs in the inner man inabling vs to performe obedience in some measure to the law of God with alacrity and cheerefulnes so that now his commandements are not grieuous vnto vs 1. Iohn 5.3 as the Apostle speaketh 1. Ioh. 5.3 but his yoke which so much galled vs while we were rebellious and like vntamed oxen is now become easie and his burthen which heretofore was so heauy and irkesome is now become light Matth. 11.30 as our Sauiour telleth vs Matth. 11.30 § Sect. 6 Fourthly That God is not angry vvith the faithfull though he seemeth to frowne vpon them the tempter may obiect to the weake conscience which laboureth vnder the burthen of sinne that our Sauiour Christ hath not redeemed vs from the anger of God due for sin seeing we stil see his frowning countenance and apprehend the scorching heate of his wrath inflamed against vs but let all know that if they truly beleeue in Christ and onely rely themselues vpon this their mediator if their sins past grieue them and they purpose for the time to come to labor that they may forsake them then they are reconciled vnto God by Christ and in him hee is become their louing and gracious father Col. 1.20.21 as the Apostle telleth vs Col. 1.20.21 Let not such therefore be discouraged if God seeme to frowne vpon them for a time for hee will not frowne for euer nor alwaies retaine his anger as the Psalmist speaketh Psalm 103.9 Nay Psalm 103.9 in truth he is not angry with vs at all as a Iudge to punish but as a Father to correct and amend vs and if we will speake properly he alwaies loueth and delighteth in vs for as hee is well pleased with Christ our head so is he alwaies well pleased with vs in him as being members of his body notwithstanding as a tender Father when his Sonne offendeth maketh semblance as though his wrath were kindled to the ende that hee may bee carefull in the time to come to auoyde the like fault and to amend so the Lord who is our gracious Father seemeth oftentimes to bee grieuously displeased with his children when they haue sinned against him hiding from them his amiable louing countenance and shewing nothing but signes of wrath not that hee hath in truth cast them out of his loue and fauour for he neuer falleth out with those whom Christ hath reconciled vnto him neither can hee cease to loue the members of Christ nor Christs members cease to bee his members after they are once ingrafted into his bodie by his holie spirit and a liuely faith onely like a wise father he frowneth vpon them and seemeth angrie to make them in the time to come forsake their sinnes whereby they haue incurred his displeasure § Sect. 7 Fiftly the tempter will obiect that we are not freed and deliuered out of his power and iurisdiction That though Sathan tempt vs yet we may be assured that we are redeemed Heb. 2.14 seeing he doth often assault and ouercome vs with his temptations and leadeth vs captiue fast bound in the fetters of sinne To which wee must answere that our Sauiour Christ by his death hath destroyed him that had the power of death that is the diuell that he might deliuer all them which for feare of death were all their life time subiect to bondage as the Apostle sheweth Heb. 2.14.15 That God hath deliuered vs from the power of darknesse and hath translated vs into the kingdome of his deare sonne Col. 1.13 as it is Col. 1.13 That our redeemer Iesus Christ hath spoiled the principalities and powers and hath made a shew of them openly and hath triumphed ouer them vpon his crosse Col. 2.15 and that not onely for himselfe but for all his members Col. 2.15 That hee hath
it loueth vs yet in regard of our regeneration and the fruites thereof it cannot indure vs and our companie and conuersation is exceeding tedious irksome and vnpleasant So on the other side whereas Sathan obiecteth that we loue the world that is carnal worldly men we may answere that euen as we are regenerate it is lawfull to loue them in the same respects which they loue vs namely as they are men the excellent creatures of God as they are indued with excellent naturall giftes or morall vertues as they are of the same ciuill body or kinred or as they haue beene vsed of God as his instruments for the bostowing of any his benefits vpon vs in which respects louing them we may notwithstanding with a true zeale hate abhorre their vices their carnall worldlinesse prophane irreligion and wicked conuersation Neither will religion make vs to lay aside all humanitie and transforme vs into some brutish or rather diuelish Timon who was a hater of men For euen our sauiour Christ himself who was wholy exēpted from sinne notwithstanding loued the worldly yong man for some good things he saw in him though he were not religious yea though he were so carnall that hee preferred his vaine and vncertaine riches before the saluation of his soule as appeareth Mark 10.21.22 So also he vsed all humanitie and ciuill conuersation euen amongst the Publicans and sinners that he might haue the better opportunitie of conuerting all those who belonged to Gods electiō And therfore we need not feare to follow Christs example so it be with the same holy affection For we also must indeauour to gaine those vnto Christ who are without and by our holy cōuersation giue them occasion of glorifying God in the day of their visitation as the apostle exhorteth vs 1. Pet. 2.12 which we can neuer doe by hatred rough seueritie and sinicall inhumanitie but with louing curtesie vpright behauiour gentle admonitions and charitable reprehensions But if through our corruptiō we giue sathan occasion further to obiect that vnder these pretences we set our harts too much vpon the world louing worldings more then those who are of the houshould of faith and more delighting in their vaine conuersation for outward respects then in the companie of the faithfull if not alwaies yet oftentimes we are to answere that though these be sinnes in vs and notable signes of our great corruption yet are they no stronge arguments that we are not yet effectually called or truely seuered frō the world for as much as we are not wholy seperated frō the world but only so much of vs as is spirituall and regenerate so that it is no meruaile if the the flesh and vnregenerate part still loue the world be-because it is still worldly but if in the inner man wee hate this loue and striue to bridle yea to mortifie it if we are truly sory and displeased with our selues for this as for other sins and labour to refourme it wee may be assured that the spirite of God is in vs which hath seuered vs from the world ioyned vs to the body of Iesus Christ § Sect. 7 The like also may be answered concerning the loue of worldly things honours riches and pleasures How far forth we may loue worldly things we may loue them as they are the blessings of God and desire them so farr foorth as they are temporall benefitts and furtherances or at least no hinderances in the workes of holinesse and righteousnesse we may so loue them as that in the meane time our loue be subordinate to the loue of God our brethren spirituall things But if our loue passe these limitts it is corrupt and carnall yet no vndoubted argument to proue that we are not effectually called if we are displeased with it and labour against it though oftētimes we are ouercome therewith through the violence of our carnall affections and the corruptions of the flesh yet if wee hate this sinne in the inner man if wee entertaine through violence and not with affection and delight if it dwell in vs but doe not raigne in vs if but sometimes it gett the vpper hand and doe not continually ouerrule vs it is no more wee that doe it but sinne that dwelleth in vs that is the old man and corrupt flesh which whilest wee liue in this life will beare some sway in vs. That the world loueth them not whō Sathan hateth Lastly when as Sathan assaulteth the poore christian with his tentations perswading him that he is not yet called nor separated from the wicked world because it loueth him he may well suspect his argument of falshood for Sathan doth not hate those whom the world loueth but by his continuall assaulting of the weake christian and his dayly labouring to bring him through the violence of his tentations to vtter destruction it manifestly appeareth that Sathan like a mortall enimie deadly hateth him and therefore it is not likely that he is beloued of the world though it may for a time fawne vpon him that by pretending loue and friendshipp it may worke him the greater mischiefe § Sect. 8 The second part of our effectuall calling is the mutuall donation of God the father Of the second part of our effectuall calling whereby he hath giuen Christ Iesus vnto vs to be our sauiour and redeemer and vs vnto Christ to be saued and redeemed by which also wee may proue that we are effectually called For this gift is mutuall and reciprocal and therefore the one doth clearely proue the other so that if we can haue any assurance that Christ is giuen vnto vs then may we also be assured that we are giuen vnto Christ and contrariwise if we haue any assurance that we are giuen vnto Christ then may we be also assured that Christ is giuen vnto vs and consequently that wee are effectually called for this mutuall donation is one parte thereof Now wee may bee assured that Christ is giuen vnto vs if wee beleeue in him resting vppon him alone for our iustification and saluation as appeareth Ioh. 3.16 So God loued the world that hee hath giuen his onely begotten sonne that as many as beleeue in him should not perish but haue euerlasting life and so also we may be assured that wee are giuen vnto Christ if wee heare his voice and follow him as himselfe speaketh Ioh. 10.27 and submitt our selues to bee led and gouerned by his spirit for as many as are led by the spirite of God they are the sonnes of God and whosoeuer are sonnes are heires of God and heires annexed with Christ as it is Rom. 8.14.16 How those that are giuē to Christ keep his word But here Sathan will obiect that those who are giuen vnto Christ haue kept his word as himself also affirmeth Ioh. 17.6 How therefore will he say canst thou be assured that thou art one of those who are giuen vnto him seeing thou keepest it not but continually transgressest his
and reape comfort vnto themselues by these holy duties In the meane time such are to support themselues from falling into vtter desperation by calling to their remēbrance their state and condition in times past for if euer they haue had any delight in the holy exercises of religion prayer hearing the word godly conferences if euer they could discerne in themselues any faith by the true fruits of sanctification they may take comfort thereby assuring themselues that they shall againe be restored vnto their former estate for the gifts and calling of God are without repentance Rom. 11.29 Ioh. 13.1 and those whom he hath once loued he loueth vnto the end An example hereof we haue in Dauid who being troubled and full of anguish in his spirit his soule refusing all comfort and being so astonished that he could not speake yet hee considered the daies of old and the yeares of ancient time Psal 77.2.3.4 hee called to remēbrance his former songes in the night occasioned by the great benefits which the Lord had bestowed vpon him so knowing that the Lord was vnchangeable in his mercy and goodnesse he releeued his poore soule which was ready to faint vnder the heauy waight of present afflictions And thus also Iob being brought through the violence of those heauie crosses which the Lord laied vpon him euen to the brinke of desperation so that hee spared not to vtter in the bitternesse of his souie fearefull curses and most impatient speaches comming neere vnto blasphemie oftentimes comforteth himselfe by calling to minde his former integritie and righteousnesse whose example if the poore humbled soules will follow they may rayse themselues with true comfort when they are sunke downe vnder their heauie burthen of present corruptions CHAP. XLI How the weake Christian may bee assured that his repentance is true and vnfained § Sect. 1 ANd so much for answering Sathans tentations drawn from hardnesse of hart Of the signes of true repentance first of the seuerall degrees therof whereby he laboureth to perswade poore humbled sinners that they are vtterly destitute of of repentance but if hee faile of his purpose then hee will indeauour to make them beleeue that though they haue some shew of repentance yet it is not such as God requireth for either hee will affirme that it is hypocriticall and dissembled rather for feare of punishment then for hatred of sinne or true loue of God or if it bee true yet it is not sufficient as being in verie small measure and in no proportion answearable to our hainous sinnes Against both which tentations it behooueth the humbled sinner to arme himselfe that he may repell them when they are suggested and to this purpose that hee may proue his repentance true and vnfained hee is to take a true search of his owne heart and conscience and to examine his repentance according to some vndoubted signes which may serue as touchstones to discouer whether it be true and vnfained or dissembled hypocriticall The first vndoubted signe of vnfained repentance is when wee can obserue in our selues the seuerall degrees or partes thereof as they haue beene wrought in vs by Gods spirit for from the enumeration of all the parts we may conclude that wee haue the whole The first degree is that by the law we come to the knowledg and acknowledgment that we are haynous and greeuous sinners who haue broken transgressed all Gods cōmaundements Secondly from this knowledge acknowledgment of our sinnes proceedeth a true sense and feeling of them and the punishments due vnto them and an apprehension and applying to our selues the anger of God the curse of the law and eternall condemnation due vnto vs for our sinnes Thirdly from this sense of our miserable estate there ariseth in our consciences feare and horror of being ouertaken and ouerwhelmed of those iudgments of God and fearefull punishments which hang ouer our heads for our sins Fourthly from this feare and anguish of mind proceedeth sorrow and bitter greefe because wee haue thus hainously sinned and made our selues obnoxious to all these euills and also in the same respects a true hatred of sinne which still hangeth vpon vs and an earnest desire to be freed from it Fiftly Act. 2.27 this hatred of sinne and desire to be freed from it maketh vs earnestly to seeke and inquire after some meanes whereby wee may attaine vnto our desires that beeing freed from all those feareful euils which oppresse our consciences with the waight of them we may obtaine Gods loue and fauour and the assurance of our saluation Sixtly thus inquiring and searching wee finde by the preaching of the Gospell that our gratious God hath sent his sonne into the world to the end that he might saue and deliuer vs out of this miserable estate if we beleeue in him and also hath commaunded vs to beleeue Which being made effectuall by the inward operation of Gods holy spirit we haue true faith begott in vs wherby we are assured of Gods mercy in Iesus Christ and of the full remission of all our sinnes the consideration whereof doth comforte and rayse vs vp from falling into desperation and vtter destruction Seuenthly after this assurance of Gods loue and of the forgiuenesse of our sinnes there followeth first a true hatred of sinne because it is sinne an vnfained sorrow not so much in regarde of the punishment which by our sinnes wee haue iustly deserued as that because we haue offended our so gratious a God and tender louing father Secondly this sorrow will not suffer vs to hide excuse 2. Cor. 7.11 or extenuate our sins 2. Cor. 7.11 but moueth vs in all humilitie to prostrate our selues before Gods mercie seate and in greefe of soule to confesse them acknowledging that confusion and condemnation is due vnto vs which by no meanes wee can escape but by Gods mercie and the merites and righteousnesse of Iesus Christ Thirdly being assured of the pardon of our sinnes past wee labour and striue for the time to come to leaue and forsake them and to mortifie the flesh and corruptions thereof whereby we are led captiue vnto sinne also we indeauour with a feruent zeale of Gods glorie to serue the Lorde in holinesse and righteousnesse that so by our godly liues wee may glorifie him and expresse our thankfulnesse for all his inestimable benefites Fourthly if at any time besides or contrary to our purpose we be ouertaken by our corruption and fall into sinne there followeth in vs an holy anger and indignation with our selues because wee did not more carefully looke to our waies which godly anger preceedeth to the taking of a holy kind of reuenge to the end that thereby our sinnes may be subdued and our corruptions mortified For example hee that hath offended through gluttonie and drunkennesse being truly penitent and angry with himselfe for his sinne will also tame the fleshe by punishing the same through fasting and abstinence He
sinne as we ought till we haue some assurance of Gods mercy and loue in Iesus Christ for otherwise though our sorrow be neuer so great yet it is not so much for sinne as for the punishment thereof not so much because wee haue thereby displeased God as for those torments of conscience which we presently indure and the torments of hell which for the time to come we feare And therefore this desperate sorrow is it selfe to be sorrowed for as being seuered from faith and therefore sinnefull Rom. 14.23 and not proceeding from any loue of God or hatred of sinne but from the feare of punishment and condemnation Why teares are not numbred amongst the signes of vnfained repentance But it may bee demaunded why amongst the signes of true repentance I haue not numbred teares and weeping for our sinnes to which I answeare because howsoeuer it is a notable fruite of vnfained repentance vnto which euerie christian with true compūction of hart is to accustome himselfe yet notwithstanding it is not an inseparable propertie thereof for often times there is teares wheras their is no true repentance and there is true repentance whereas there is few or no teares For the first wee may plainely perceiue by continuall experience that teares proceede from diuers other causes then from true repentāce sometimes frō excessiue ioy whereby the pores and passages of the eyes are loosed and opened and sometimes from naturall and worldly sorrowe whereby the said passages are constringed and straightned Somtimes from furious anger sometims from cōpassion and pity and in spirituall things sometimes these teares flow from vnfained repentance sometimes from desperat sorrow conceiued vpon the apprehension of Gods horrible wrath or of the fearefull torments and eternall condemnation prepared for them Wherefore it commeth to passe that in the abundance of their teares they vtter from a heart full of raging malice horrible blasphemies against God And example heareof wee haue in Esau who in the middest of his weeping and howling comforted himselfe with the remembrance of his fathers death and of that most wicked murther which he intended vnto his innocent brother Gen. 27.41 Gen. 27 41. So the rebellious Israelites being discouraged with the newes which the spies brought who were sent to search the land are said to haue cried and wept yet in the middest of their lamentation to haue murmured against God his seruants Moses and Aaron num 14.1.2 So that simplie teares are not a signe of true repentance vnlesse they issue from a broken heart and contrite spirit from a true hatred of sinne and from hartie sorrowe conceiued because wee haue offended our gratious God On the other side if wee be in sinceritie of heartt ruely sorrie for our sinnes in these respects because we hate our sinnes and loue God and are displeased with our selues because we haue displeased our gratious father indeauouring to forsake our sinnes and to leade a newe life in holinesse and righteousnes then though wee can seldome or neuer shed teares which is the ease of some of Gods dearest children yet our repentance is true and vnfained for in this action the broken and contrite hart is more to be respected then the blubred eyes howsoeuer most commonly they goe togeather And so much concerning the signes of true repentāce which if after due examination wee can finde in our selues we may be assured that we are truely paenitent nay I will say more for the comfort of all humbled sinners if after diligent search they find not in their owne sense and feeling these signes of true repentance in them at al or at least in very smal measure yet if they earnestly desire and sencerely indeuour to attaine vnto true repentance vsing those good meanes ordained of God for this purpose they may assure themselues that they haue truely repented in the sight of God who accepteth of the will for the deed and of the affection for the action as before I haue shewed § Sect. 6 And thus may we repell the tentation of Sathan and receiue comfort vnto our owne soules when hee laboureth to perswade vs that our repentance is not true and vnfained That the assurance of the remission of sinnes dependeth not on the dignity of ourrepentāce but false and hypocriticall but if the tempter cannot thus preuaile in the next place hee will tel vs that our repentance though if be true yet it is not sufficient neither is there any proportion betweene our small repentance and our great sinnes as Gods iustice doth require To which we must answeare that the remission of our sinnes and reconciliation with God dependeth not vpon the dignitie or quantitie of our repentance but vpon the righteousnesse and full satisfaction of our Sauiour Iesus Christ neither doe wee repent to the end that thereby wee may in whole or in part satisfie for our sinnes for though it could bee imagined that the whole substance of our bodies should be resolued into teares yet woulde they not all of them satisfie and appease Gods wrath for one breach of any of his commandements neither is it the water of our eyes no nor yet the bloud of our harts wounded deepely with sorrow which will purge vs from our sinnes either in respect of the guilt punishment or corruptions themselues but it is the water and bloud which flowed from our crucified Lord which cleanseth our guiltie soules from the filchie spotts of sinne being applied vnto vs by a true and liuely faith And therefore let vs not with the popish rabble foolishly imagine that wee can by our repentance meritt any thing at Gods hand or satisfie his iustice for our sinnes for so shall wee rob our Sauiour Christ of the glorie due vnto him for our saluation and spoile our soules of all true comfort but let vs repent and vnfainedly turne vnto God in obedience to his commaundement and to the ende that thereby we may approue our faith before God the world our owne consciences to be true by this liuely and vndoubted fruit thereof For it cannot bee if we haue attayned to the assurance of Gods loue and the remission of our sins for the merits and satisfaction of Christ but that we will loue God againe and this loue cannot be idle but will shew it selfe in a feruent zeale of Gods glorie and this zeale will make vs abhorre sinne whereby our gratious God is dishonoured and loue righteousnesse whereby his holy name is glorified and euen sorrow with bitter greefe when as we are ouertaken with our corruptions and fall into sinne seeing our Sauiour Christ hath not spared his pretious bloud to purge vs whē as nothing els could make vs cleane Seeing therefore our repentance doth not satisfie Gods iustice nor purge away any sinne let vs not be perswaded by Sathan that reconciliation with God and the remission of our sinnes dependeth on the dignitie or quantitie of our repentance but let vs assure our selues
weakenesse in resisting sinne and inability to performe obedience to his lawe and also that Christ died not for the iust but the vniust not for the righteous but for the sinner and therefore be thy sinnes neuer so many yet applying the merits of Christ by faith neither their guilt nor punishment shall be imputed vnto thee Call to minde also the gracious promises of pardon and forgiuenesse which are made vnto thee in the Gospell for the obtaining whereof nothing is required of thee but faith and repentance now this faith thou hast already and this repentance thou maist haue hereafter when thou hast inioyed the pleasure or profit of this sinne Neither doth repentance goe before but followeth the committing of sinne so that vnlesse thou first sinne thou hast no cause of repentance nor neede to repent § Sect. 3 And these and such like are Sathans baites That the world and the flesh further the former temptation wherewith he allureth vs to intangle our selues in the snares of sinne into which wee are more readie to fall through the corruption of the flesh which naturally louing sinne doth with the euill motions and desires thereof further Sathans temptations and the instigation of the world which pricketh vs forward and draweth vs on into the steepe descending way of wickednesse into which we are readie to runne headlong of our owne accord partly alluring vs with pleasures riches and worldly glorie the desired obiects of our carnall desires and partly drawing vs with euill examples first to a liking and then to the practizing of those sinnes which we see committed by others Against all which temptations that we may be the better armed let vs in the next place propound some arguments whereby wee may bee withheld from falling into Sathans snares of sinne into which his suggestions the worlds allurements and our owne corruptions leade and draw vs and then being hereby moued to a true detestation of our sinnes and an earnest desire of hauing a diuorce sued betwixt vs and them I will afterwards set downe some meanes by the carefull vse whereof we may be inabled to stand in the day of temptation and preserued from falling into those sinnes which we alreadie condemne in our iudgements and dislike in our affections § Sect. 4 The reasons whereby wee may bee perswaded to resist sinne are of two sorts The preseruatiues to keepe vs from sinne of two sorts the first tying vs to holy obedience in the bands of loue the other binding vs from falling into sinne with the cords of feare Of the former ranke are these and such like holy considerations The first reason taken from Gaeds loue towards vs. First wee are to set before vs the infinite loue of God towards vs base and vile creatures altogether vnworthie of his least fauour by reason of our sinnes the which his loue as it plainly appeareth in all other his mercies and manifolde benefits bestowed on vs so especially in sending his onely begotten and dearely beloued sonne not onely to suffer some small miserie but euen death it selfe yea that cursed ignominious and cruell death of the crosse for vs who were not his louing friends or faithfull seruants but opposed enemies and rebellious traytors who had renounced his seruice and yeelded our selues as slaues to Sathan readie to doe his will Seeing therefore our good God hath so dearely loued vs who were altogether vnworthie his loue and most worthie of his anger and heauie iudgements O why should not this flame of his loue towards vs kindle some sparkles of loue towards him againe who is in himselfe the chief goodnesse and to vs most kinde and gratious If for our sakes who were his abiect enemies hee hath not spared his owne sonne but gaue him to die for vs should wee not for his sake who is our chiefest friend bee as willing to part with our sinnes and to kill and crucifie all our carnall corruptions Neither can wee by any other meanes so cleerely shew our loue to God as by hating sinne which aboue al things in the world is most hatefull and odious vnto him and the onely cause which maketh him abhorre euen his excellent creatures so that though hee loued them as being his owne workes yet he detested them being defiled with the filthie spots of sin yea so odious is sinne vnto our righteous God that he could not chuse but punish it in his dearely beloued sonne who bare our transgressions and sustained our persons and when there was no other way to subdue the power of sinne hee gaue it a mortall wound euen through the bodie of our blessed Sauiour and deliuered him to be crucified that by this meanes he might also kill and crucifie our corruptions Seeing therefore sinne is most odious and detestable in the eyes of God wee cannot better shew our loue towards him which his loue towards vs hath so well deserued than by hating and flying that which he so much abhorreth § Sect. 5 Secondly The second reason taken from Gods benefits Ephes 1.4 let vs call to our remembrance his innumerable benefits which are the vndoubted signes of his loue towards vs. First hee hath elected vs vnto eternall life that wee should be holy Seeing therfore he hath made special choise of vs amongst many who are reiected therfore let vs exceed others in a holy care of seruing him and auoiding those things which are displeasing in his sight hee also hath created vs to the end we should worship and serue him our Lord and Creator Act. 17.28 and therefore seeing we haue our being from him let vs in al our actions seeke his glorie and auoid sinne whereby he is dishonoured Yea hee hath not made vs the vilest of his creatures but reasonable men according to his owne image and likenes and therefore let vs not deface this glorious workmanship with the filthie spots of sinne He hath redeemed vs out of the cruell bondage of our spirituall enemies by giuing his sonne to be the price of our redemption and therefore seeing we are bought with a price so inestimable let vs not wilfully again make our selues the bondslaues of sinne and Sathan 1. Cor. 6.20 Luk. 1.74.75 2. Cor. 5.15 Rom. 6.6.8.18 but glorifie our redeemer in our bodies and in our soules seruing him in holinesse and righteousnesse all the daies of our liues He hath effectually called vs and selected vs out of the corrupt masse of mankinde and therefore let vs walke worthie our vocation 1. Thess 4.17 for God hath not called vs vnto vncleannesse but vnto holinesse He hath freely iustified vs imputing vnto vs Christs righteousnesse and pardoning all our sinnes both in respect of the guilt and punishment and therefore being made free from sinne let vs no longer liue therein but now become the seruants of righteousnesse and seeing he hath forgiuen much let vs also loue much labouring to manifest our loue by the fruites of holy obedience Luk. 7 47. He
and is readie againe to giue them the foyle and to leade them captiue into the same sinne if the Lord vphold them not so that inrespect of their owne strength they may fall againe as in former times Secondly the same causes still remaine which may moue the Lord to leaue them to themselues and suffer them to fall namely that hereby they may be more humbled and more seriously bewaile their corruptions that they may more earnestly implore his mercie and he more manifest it in pardoning their sinnes to the praise of his glorie Thirdly howsoeuer this is not vsuall with the children of God to fall diuers times into a sinne which is great and grieuous yet euery one findeth in his owne experience that he often committeth such sinnes as are not so heynous through infirmitie and weaknesse as to heare the word negligently and carelessely to be distracted with wandering thoughts in prayer to fall into vniust anger to lie and vse idle communication and such like of which notwithstanding repenting he is receiued vnto mercie So that it is not the often falling into the same sinne that excludeth vs out of the number of Gods children or debarreth vs of pardon so that we often repent lay holde vpon Christ with a liuely faith Neither do the scriptures limit and restraine Gods mereie and the vertue of Christs merits to the pardoning and taking away of diuers sinnes once committed but extend them also to the same sinne committed diuers times yea to all sinnes whatsoeuer of which we truely repent CHAP. XI Sathans temptations perswading the christian that he hath sinned against the holy Ghost answered § Sect. 1 ANd thus haue I answered Sathans temptations drawne from these sinnes which the weake christian hath fallen into Of the sinne against the holy Ghost but if he cannot so preuaile then he will falsely accuse them of those sinnes which they neuer committed and especially of that vnpardonable sinne against the holy Ghost taking aduantage of their ignorance that so he may plunge them into desperation and vtterly discourage them from going forward in the course of godlinesse The which his temptation is so vsuall and common that there is scarce any who are exercised in this spirituall warfare if they be conuerted vnto God out of their ignorance whom he doth not encounter with this weapon For as much therefore as ignorance is the chiefe ground of this temptation therefore the best meanes to strengthen our selues against it is to know what this sinne is which if we once vnderstand there is no daunger of being foyled in this assault What the sinne against the holy Ghost is The sinne against the holy Ghost is a generall deniall and oppugning of the truth and all religion of which the vnderstanding and conscience by the illumination of the spirit are perswaded and conuicted proceeding from an obstinate will and purposed malice against God and his truth The which sinne is committed of two sortes of men first of those who haue made profession of the truth and afterwards become Apostataes not from some part onely but from all religion condemning blaspheming and persecuting as hereticall and impious that truth which before they professed and of which they were perswaded And thus did Hymeneus and Alexander sinne 1. Tim. 1.20 of whom Paul speaketh 1. Tim. 1.20 Secondly of those who were neuer professors thereof Matth. 12.24.31 Steuen Gardner See his storie in the booke of Martyrs whose consciences notwithstanding are conuicted of that truth which they doe oppugne an example whereof we haue in the Scribes and Pharises Matth. 12.24.31 and in many of the learned Papists in these dayes who maliciously deny and persecute that truth which they know and are conuicted of § Sect. 2 Hereby therefore it appeareth that not euery grieuous sinne against knowledge and conscience is the sinne against the holy Ghost How to distinguish the sinne against the holy Ghost from other sinnes for thus Dauid offended who was a man according to Gods owne heart nor euery denying of the knowne truth if it proceede from feare and infirmitie and not from malice and obstinat rebellion for thus Peter sinned in denying his maister nor all kinde of opposing and persecuting of the truth if it bee not against knowledge and conscience but vpon blindnesse and ignorance for thus Paul offended before his conuersion 1. Tim. 1.13 as appeareth 1. Tim. 1.13 and many of the Iewes who crucified Christ as the Apostle Peter testifieth Act. 3.17 Act. 3.17 nor all malicious opposing against euery knowne truth but of the truth in generall and all true religion for this sinne is an vniuersall apostasie from God and his truth and not onely a defection from some particular point thereof So that though a man sinne against knowledge and conscience through infirmitie and not of malice though he deny the truth through feare and weakenesse though he persecute it through blindnesse and ignorance though he wittingly oppose against and willingly persecute some particular point thereof and yet hold and professe the generall howsoeuer he hath most hainously offended yet he hath not committed this vnpardonable sinne against the holy spirit and therefore is not excluded from repentance nor vpon his repentance from pardon and forgiuenesse Whereby it manifestly appeareth that these poore christians which labour vnder the burthen of sinne are meerely deluded by Sathans false suggestions and grosely abused through their owne ignorance when as he maketh them beleeue that they haue sinned against the holy Ghost But let such know to their comfort that so long as they would not commit this sinne or feare least they haue alreadie fallen into it they are as yet most free from it seeing it is not done of infirmitie or at vnawares but vpon a malitious will cleare knowledge and setled resolution § Sect. 3 But here the poore christian is readie to complaine that he is continually troubled with impious thoughts Of impious and blasphemous suggestions and horrible blasphemies against God and his holy spirit which he feareth to be the sinne against the holy Ghost I answere as before that seeing these thoughts are a trouble vnto him and seeing he feareth to commit this sinne thereby it is manifest that he is not fallen into it as appeareth by that which hath been said Secondly he is to know that his state is common with Gods faithfull children who are thus vexed especially in the conflict of temptations and before they haue receiued a great measure of faith and fulnesse of perswasion of Gods loue and fauour whereby they are moued intirely to loue him againe Neither needes this to seeme strange vnto any who considereth of that masse of naturall corruption which remaineth in vs euen after regeneration which continually boyleth and fometh vp the filthie scumine of wicked thoughts and blasphemous imaginations and of the malice of our spirituall enemie Sathan who is still readie to tempt vs by his suggestions to the
and consequently elected now this perswasion and liuely faith is discerned by the fruites thereof for it purifieth our hearts and worketh by loue and it worketh in vs an hatred of sinne and loue of righteousnesse which is our sanctification § Sect. 8 So that our sanctification which is the last effect of Gods election wrought in vs in this life The fourth effect is our sanctification which is the touchstone of all the rest is the true touchstone of all the rest whereby wee may certainely know whether we be effectually called that is separated from the world and ingrafted as liuely members into the body of Christ and whether we be truely iustified that is purged from the guilt and punishment of our sinnes by Christs blood and adorned with his righteousnesse imputed vnto vs. For if we be separated from the world then doe we not set our mindes vpon worldly things but haue our conuersation in heauen from whence we looke for a sauiour euen the Lord Iesus Christ Phil. 3.20 if we are ingrafted into the body of Christ who is the true vine then doe we bring forth the sweete grapes of holinesse and righteousnesse in our liues and conuersations as it is Ioh. 15.5 Ioh. 15.5 if we haue by a true faith the assurance of the remission of our sinnes then will we loue God who hath forgiuen vs so great a debt and labour to expresse our loue by glorifying his name in causing our light to shine before men and if the blood of Christ be effectuall vnto vs for the purging away of the guilt and punishment of sinne then will it also in some measure purge away the corruptions themselues For we are grasted with him into the similitude of his death and resurrection Rom. 6.56 and our olde man is crucified with him and the body of sinne destroyed that from henceforth we should not serue sinne as it is Rom. 6.5.6 And as our sanctification is the onely vndoubted signe of our vocation and iustification so also of our election for the Lord hath chosen vs that wee should bee holy Ephes 1.4 And therefore if wee be holy wee haue a manifest effect and inseparable fruite of our election Eph. 1.4 if we be not holy nor make conscience of seruing the Lord in the duties of pietie and christianitie we haue no assurance that we are elected for though the foundation of God remaineth sure on Gods part being sealed and confirmed in his eternall counsell yet it is not sealed in our hearts vntill we depart from iniquitie 2. Tim. 2.19 as it is 2. Tim. 2.19 Though then there be no place vnto our sanctification in Gods decree as being any cause thereof and therefore when the question is asked why we are elected we must answere not for any deserts or holinesse in our selues but because of Gods good pleasure and vndeserued grace and when it is demaunded in whom we are elected wee must reply in Christ Iesus only yet there is chiefe place vnto our sanctification in the assurance of our election so that when the question is asked who are elected answere is to be made those onely who are also sanctified in Gods good time by his gracious spirit Heb. 12.14 for without this holinesse no man shall euer see God as it is Heb. 12.14 § Sect. 9 Now our sanctification doth principally consist in a loue of righteousnesse Wherein our sanctification consisteth and a true hatred of sinne from whence proceedeth an earnest desire and hartie indeauour of forsaking that which is euill and of cleauing vnto that which is good and for the better effecting hereof a carefull studie of mortifying the flesh and the lusts thereof and painefull diligence in vsing all good meanes whereby the spirit may be strengthened and the gifts and graces thereof encreased that so wee may not be so prone to fall into that sinne which we hate nor so backward in imbracing and following that righteousnesse and holinesse which wee loue And this is the sanctification which is an inseparable fruite and effect of Gods election in all his children That those who will be assured of their election must begin their assurance at their sanctification which though it be the last in nature and next vnto saluation it selfe for first God electeth and those whom he hath elected in his good time he calleth and whom he calleth those he iustifieth and lastly whom he iustifieth those he sanctifieth and saueth yet when we are to gather assurance of our election we are not to obserue this order but to begin where the Lord endeth and so ascend from the lowest degree till we come to the highest For as it is a foolish thing for a man to thinke that he can leap to the top of an high ladder at the first step and therefore euery one beginneth with the lowest and so ascendeth step by step till he come to the highest so it is a foolish thing for a man to imagine that he can leape into heauen and there search the vnsearchable councels of God and so know whether he is elected or no but we must begin at the lowest step namely our sanctification which being attained vnto we may ascend a step higher in our assurance namely that we are iustified and so to the next that we are effectually called and lastly to the highest that we are elected Otherwise if we curiously diue into the bottomlesse secrets of Gods councels we shall be drowned and ouerwhelmed if we approach vnto this vnapproachable light the eye of our understanding will be dazled yea starke blinded if we presume to vnderstand beyond sobrietie we shall by the iust iudgement of God be infatuated and thrust our selues into an endlesse laborinth out of which we shall neuer finde way wanting the line of Gods word to guide vs. And therefore if we would haue any true assurance of our election we must examine our selues whether we be sanctified and if we finde in our selues sanctification by the fruites thereof wee may vndoubtedly conclude that we are iustified called elected and shall be saued If we walke not after the flesh but after the spirit we may be assured that we are in Christ Iesus and therefore there is no condemnation belonging vnto vs Rom. 8.1 Rom. 8.1 If we bring forth the fruites of righteousnesse and holinesse we may be assured that we are good trees of Gods owne planting Matth. 7.17 Matth. 7.17 If we be fruitfull braunches we may assuredly know that we are ingrafted into the true vine Iesus Christ Ioh. 15.4.5 Ioh. 15.4.5 § Sect. 10 Seeing then our sanctification assureth vs of our election and saluation and without it there is no assurance what stronger argument can be imagined to make vs flee sinne The vse of the former doctrine and labour after mortification and newnesse of life what keener knife can be vsed to cut insunder the cordes of vanitie wherein naturally we are fettered and intangled