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A04187 Iustifying faith, or The faith by which the just do liue A treatise, containing a description of the nature, properties and conditions of Christian faith. With a discouerie of misperswasions, breeding presumption or hypocrisie, and meanes how faith may be planted in vnbeleeuers. By Thomas Iackson B. of Diuinitie and fellow of Corpus Christi Colledge in Oxford.; Commentaries upon the Apostles Creed. Book 4 Jackson, Thomas, 1579-1640. 1615 (1615) STC 14311; ESTC S107483 332,834 388

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on our parts that are patients is handled in the third section of this Booke Whether ability by nature we haue any or any cooperatiue with Gods spirit in this cure shall by the diuine assistance be disputed at large in the seauenth Booke of these Commentaries Here at length we may define the faith by which the iust doth liue to be a firme and constant assent or adherence vnto the mercies and louing kindnes of the Lord or generally to the spirituall food exhibited in his sacred word as much better then this life it selfe and all the contentments it is capable of grounded vpon a tast or relish of the sweetnesse wrought in the soule or heart of man by the Spirit of Christ The termes for the most part are the Prophet Dauids not metaphoricall as some may fancie much lesse aequiuocall but proper and homogeneall to the subiect defined For whatsoeuer internall affinity or reall identity of conceipt there is or can be betwixt life temporall and mortall which no man I thinke denies to be vniuocall the same may be found betwixt food spirituall and corporall if we consider not so much the phisicall matter or corpulency of the later as the metaphisicall quintessence which is one and the same in both saue onely that it is pure and extracted in the one but mixt and incorporated or in a sort buried in the other but of this analogy betwixt food corporall and spirituall in the treatise of Christs presence in the sacrament 5 Whether this Assent be virtuall or habituall I will not so much as question Be it whether the Reader list to make it question there can be none but that it admits many interruptions in acts or operations Nor doth this argue the meanes or pledges of saluation should be lesse euident then matters scientificall so long as this habit or constitution of mind is not eclipsed by interposition of carnall lusts or earthly thoughts wherunto our euidence of spiritual matters is more obnoxious then our speculatiue perswasions of abstract entities so is our bodily taste oftener corrupted then the sight and yet that Assent wee giue in perfect health vnto the distinct quality of wholsome food no lesse euident or certaine then that wee giue vnto the true differences of things seene The minde once thus illuminated with grace and renewed by faith whiles not darkned by exhalations from our naturall corruptions whiles free from passion or motion of bad affection actually moued and assisted by the spirit hath the same proportion to truth supernaturall of this inferiour ranke that the vnderstanding without supernaturall concourse or illumination of grace hath to Obiects meerely naturall nor can it dissent from the truth whiles this temper or constitution lasts as the Iesuite imagines Howbeit so great euidence of matters spirituall as others haue of humane sciences is not required in all Onely this I dare affirme that although it be in some as great or in some greater this doth not exempt their knowledge from the former definition of faith For who would question whether S. Iohn S. Peter and S. Paul had not as great euidence of misteries as either Aristotle had of philosophicall or Euclide of mathematicall principles or conclusions And yet what they so euidently knew they belieued and assented vnto by the supernaturall guifte or habit of faith and it was the greater euidence of things belieued which made their beliefe more firme and strong then ours is and enflamed their hearts with loue of God and zeale of his glorie more ardent then our weake faith is capable of CHAP. X. Of the generall consequences or properties of true Faith Loue Fidelity and Confidence with the manner of their resultance from it 1. THat the goodnesse of whatsoeuer we enioy is better perceiued by vicissitude of want then continuall fruition is a maxim whereof none can want experience Hence the Poeticall Philosopher hath wittily faigned penury and indigence to bee the Mother of Loue with which conceit the vulgar prouerbe Hunger of all sauces is the best hath great affinity For this first affection or prime symptome of sense being but a perception of want or indigence causeth a more quicke taste or rellish then full stomackes can haue of their meate But nature without further alteration or qualification of any other faculty immediatly teacheth vs to like that best which best we rellish and finde most good in Nor skils it whether this loue or liking of meates best relished reside in the sense of taste it selfe or from approbation of it immediatly result in some other faculty by way of sympathie both wayes this internall sense or apprehension of want or indigence of carnall nutriment is still the only Mother of loue to bodily meates Thus hath the folly of man which wilfully depriued himselfe of celestiall food set forth the loue and wisedome of God who hath made this want or indigence of spirituall meate whose apprehension is the first roote of our spirituall sense a meane to quicken our taste or relish of his mercies and louing kindnesse which is the principall obiect of that faith by which we liue But our taste once sharpned to relish his mercies aright without any peculiar reformation of the will or new infusion of other grace into any part of the humane soule then what is either included in faith or concomitant with it cannot but pierce our hearts with loue of his infinite goodnesse whence this sweetnesse distils Euen loue naturall or ciuill if vnfaigned betweene equalls brings forth vnity and consent of minde mutually to will and nill the same things betweene parties in condition of life or measure of iudgement or discretion vnequall a conformity of the inferiours will to the superiours direction Much more doth this spirituall loue of God thus conceiued from a true and liuely taste of his loue and goodnesse towards vs kindle an ardent desire of doing what he likes best whence vnto vs as to our Sauiour it becomes meate and drinke to do our fathers will and finish his vvorke For seeing man liueth not by bread only but by euery vvord that proceedeth out of the mouth of God thus to doe must needs be part of our spirituall foode 2. From faith thus working through loue ariseth that most generall property whose affinitie with faith is such as it takes the same name fidelitie or faithfulnesse in all the seruice of God without respect to the fulfilling of our owne particular resolutions or desires For once assenting vnto euery part of his will knowne as good and fit to be done by vs as if to do it were meate and drinke vnto our soules wee forthwith abandon all sloth and negligence much more deceit and fraudulencie in his imploiments Of this generall fidelity practice of charitable offices to our neighbours is but a part or branch though a principall one as hauing more immediate reference to the loue and goodnesse we apprehend in God towards vs the taste whereof is then sincere
of speech and in all kind of knowledge not destitute of any gift wherewith they might foile their aduersaries at their owne weapons as Moses had done the Egyptians in working such wonders as they most admired in their inchaunters But though all these gifts were from one and the same spirit from which nothing can proceed but good yet brought they forth such bad effects in these mens soules not purified from reliques of heathenisme as excellencie of secular learning vsually doth in the vnregenerate Euery one was giuen to magnifie the guifts wherein hee excelled whence as the oratour saith of Aristotle and Socrates each delighted in his owne faculty despised or which was worse hated and enuied his brother as appeares from the first and twelfth chapters of that epistle To men thus affected what duty more necessary to be inculcated then loue and vnity of soules and spirits which for this reason the Apostle so forcibly presseth vpon them from the vnity of that spirit whence they had receiued their seuerall graces Their faith was fruitfull enough in wonderous workes in healing in excellency of speeches diueisitie of tongues and learned displaies of diuine mysteries What was the reason Because they were desirous of fame and glory by manifestation of their skill in these and faith though of it selfe but weake works strongly when it hath coniunction with strong naturall affections or is stirred vp by vehement desires 5. But that their faith was not fitly quallified for the attainment of life and sauing health not such as could iustifie them in the sight of God though able to magnifie his name before the heathen and declare his wonderfull power is euident in that it did not commaund but rather serue their vainglorious desires or hopes of praise amongst men The stronger it was the prouder were they and more ambitious and the more such the more dissentious so as the strength of faith whiles it swaied this way did ouerbeare the naturall inclination to brotherly loue and kindnesse the vertue and praise whereof not with men only but with God had they knowne or rightly valued it would haue enflamed their hearts with greater loue of it then of that popular ostentation they sought after But what should haue taught them to haue valued it aright Onely faith for by it alone we ●ightly discerne good from euill and amongst good things which is best But by what faith should these Corinthians haue come to the knowledge of brotherly loue The same by which they wrought wonders or some other If by some other the Apostle in all congruity should first haue exhorted them to embrace it otherwise he had commended the beauty of Christian loue but vnto blinde men For this was a disposition so well resembling the nature of God and such a peculiar gift of his spirit as the naturall man could not possibly discerne the vertue of it If by the same faith that they already had then the same faith which with loue doth iustifie did really exist without loue in these Corinthians vntill this time which no protestant must grant This difficulty Bellarmine presseth out of Saint Augustines wordes vpon the forecited place of Iohn yee see how the Euangelist reprooues certaine whom not with standing hee tear●es belieuers who had they held on as they were well entred had ouercome the loue of humane glory by their proficiencie I had reason to thinke any pontifician should haue been afraid to giue vs notice of this place least we hence inferre that faith alone ouercommeth all humane glory and subiects it to the loue of God and of his praises and by this reason it was to perfect loue not loue it in these Corinthians For it was the loue of humane glory which alienated their loue from God and from their neighbour But as his manner is hee wrests this good Fathers meaning to his present purpose If proficiencie in such faith could thus ouercome the loue of humane glory it was certainely true faith euen in the Iewish rulers For faith is the same in the beginning in the progresse and in the period or perfection though not alwaies alike strong otherwise when faith increaseth it remaines not the same it was before but rather vanish and another spring vp in it place This obiection goes wide of the marke he was to aime at vnlesse we hold what we need not that faith doth iustifie by the bare essence or quality without any competent degree or measure For though we affirme That faith which iustifies cannot possibly be without charity we may interprete our selues thus faith if it be in such a degree as is required for iustification or right apprehension of Gods mercies in Christ is alwaies necessarily attended vpon with a correspondent measure of Christian loue yet so attēded not loue but it alone laies immediat hold on life eternall But howsoeuer the obiection it selfe is idle and more sophisticall then theologicall For may not hee be said to profit in learning that brings his opinions to perfect science albeit the essences of opinion and sciences be distinct Or who would denie him to be a good proficient in moralities that brings the seed of chastitie vnto continency continencie vnto the habit of temperance The matter in all is but one the progresse most direct yet not without some rests or stations by which the naturall inclination or affection remaines neither so altogether the same nor so quite different but the old distinction of materially and formaly might resolue the doubt Euery new addition of vnities to numbers or of Angles to figures alters their formes but abolisheth not the vnities or Angles prae existent So might the beliefe whereof Saint Austen speakes be materially the same in beginners and proficients but formally diuerse as getting some alteration in the quality or better consistence then before it had and become not only stronger but more liuely and actiue In beginners because not able to ouersway selfe-loue or foolish desires of humane praises it might be without Christian charity towards God or their neighbours in proficients or such as by it had conquered loue of the world or humane glory it could not be without the loue of God and of his children But most consonantly to the forme of doctrine vsed by our Sauiour in this argument wee may in my iudgement answere to the question aboue propounded concerning these Corinthians by considering faith first according to the essence or specificall quality of it as it was sowne in their soules by the spirit secondly according to the radication or taking of it in their hearts or seate of affections which was to be wrought by the spirit but necessarily required not anie infusion of new spirituall grace numerically much lesse specifically distinct from that they had The quallity or essence of faith if we consider it preciselie as the formall tearme of creation taken as the schoolemen doe it for a momentary act not as Scriptures doe for the whole worke of
regeneration may be one and the same in such as perish and those that are saued so cannot the radication or working of it be so the seed which fell by the high way side in stony ground among thornes and in good soile is supposed by our Sauiour one and the same but the radication of it was in some none in others too shallow in others it failed in the setling or taking Thus charity was to be raised in these Corinthians hearts by faith for essence and quality one and the same with that whereby they wrought miracles but by the same faith rightly set firm●lier rooted and better taken in their harts or center wherein naturall desires concurre so as it might spread it selfe vniformely with them directing them vnto obiects spirituall and good and fix them fastest vpon such as it adiudged best and most effectuall for edifying themselues and others For had these Disciples by Saint Pauls example a affected no knowledge so much as to know Iesus Christ and him crucified had they gloried in nothing saue in the crosse of the Lord Iesus Christ cructfying them vnto the world and the world vnto them both which were principall lessons of faith or had their Assent or adhaerence vnto Gods loue and mercies in Christ beene as firme and sure as their perswasions of his power to produce effects beyond the course of nature it had wrought as great miracles in themselues as it did in others euen the same minde which was in Christ Iesus such loue to all his members though their corriuals in spirituall guifts as he bare to them when they were his enemies and that was a loue truely wondrous The arguments brought by Pontificians to prooue the faith which worketh miracles and iustifies vs to be the same make in my iudgement most against themselues if we consider that these ministeriall effects wrought vpon others were but emblemes of those internall miracles which faith once rooted in the heart and set vpon it proper and more principall obiects alwaies workes in the belieuers themselues To cast out diuels was but a signe of that conquest which true faith in Christ alwaies obtained ouer hell and death to speak with new tongues but a pledge of that renouation which true faith alwaies workes in the heart and conscience to take away serpents a document of the vertue of faith in resisting or deading such temptations as made way for death into the world the drinking of deadly poison without hurt a sensible token of that soueraign antidote which true faith affords against all the infections our eares are often enforced to sucke from others pestiferous perswasions health restored to others by laying on of hands an irreuocable earnest of that eternall saluation which Faith if firme and rightly set neuer failes to take sure hold of as Gregory excellently expounds that saying of our Sauiour And these signes shall follow them that belieue In my name shall they cast out Diuels they shall speake vvith newe tongues they shal take vp serpents and if they drink any deadly thing it shall not hurt them they shal lay hands on the sick they shal recouer 6. Howsoeuer vpon these reasons the Apostle grounds that exhortation in his very entrance into that discourse couet ye earnestly the gifts and yet shew I vnto you a more excellent wa●e Loue he meant wherein they might eagerly striue to excell each other without any danger of dissention Many admirable commendations he bestowes vpon it in the words following to kindle a desire of it in their harts as well knowing their faith to be strong enough in matters they much affected but not qualified for iustification because not rightly planted no● set on such obiects as would bring forth Christian loue and true humility but rather pride and contention Far was it from his thoughts that the ardour of this sweet affection could otherwise kindle then frō a firm beliefe ful adherēce to the loue of God For we loue him because he loued vs first yea because d vve haue knowne and belieued the loue that God hath to vs for God is loue nor can we faithfully apprehend this attribute in him but it will prod●ce the like affection in vs. And yet for the right planting and radication as well of faith as loue spirituall thence springing the exercise of brotherly kindnesse or nourishing of good naturall affection is alwaies auaileable and was peculiarly necessarie vnto this people whose contentious spirits did hinder the right growth and peruert the vse of that faith which God had giuen them Generally the ordinary meanes appointed by God for the right fashioning of Christ in our hearts is the precedent practice of those duties which the doctrine of faith enioines vs as shall hereafter be shewed 7. To such as waigh the circumstances aboue expressed Saint Pauls meaning in the words late cited may best be gathered from the like speech of S. Iames He that keepes the vvhole la●e and yet faileth in one point is guilty of all seeing his failing in the one as shall appeare witnesseth he keeps none aright The ground of this inference presupposed these words If I had all faith so that I could moue Mountaines and had not loue I vvere nothing sound as if the Apostle had sayd though I had faith of force enough to produce variety of miracles and all other effects whatsoeuer and yet not effectuall to bring forth Christianloue neither I nor it were anie thing vvorth For in that it works not loue it is apparently dead in it selfe vnable to giue life to any but once firmely belieuing Christ loued vs it is impossible we should not loue him againe and for him our neighbours not belieuing this truth aright wee cannot belieue any other point as we should nor by that faith which rooted as our Sauiour speakes in an honest heart brings forth fruit with patience to saluation Is there any Iesuite that will or dare affirme that faith the Corinthians had was altogether such as Saint Paul ascribes righteousnesse vnto such as the Prophet speakes of when he sayth the iust shall liue by his faith For of that faith Paul being witnesse the performance of Gods will and patient expectation of his promises or as Romish writers confesse feare of God entire submission of our mindes vnto his will and stedfast reliance vpon his prouidence are infallible consequences 8. The Schoole-mens collections from the former place of Saint Paul that charity is as it were the soule and perfection of faith are of as little validity as if from this of Saint Iames late cited I should inferre some one Commandement to be the form or soule of all the rest because if we transgresse one that for example Thou shalt do no murther our obseruation of all the rest should profit vs nothing to saluation Or if the Reader will remember the definition or proprieties of faith last set down this conceit is as preposterous as if we
not in them much lesse doth our felicitie Now as in all mens iudgements he liues much better that is able to liue of his owne then he which hath the same supplies of life in more competent measure from his friends beneuolence so much happier is that soule which hath delight and contentment competent within it selfe then that which hath them heaped vpon it from without seeing all the delights or pleasures these can beget suppose a precedent paine or sorrow bred from desires vnnecessary in themselues but such as lay a necessity vpon vs to satisfie them whiles wee haue them It is pleasant no doubt to a woman with childe to haue what shee longs for but much more pleasant to a manlike minde neuer to be troubled with such longings Not to need honour wealth bodily pleasures or other branches of voluptuous life is a better ground of true peace and ioy then full satisfaction of our eager desires whilest they are fixed on these or other transitories The strength of our spirits by whose vnited force our vnion with the spirit of truth must be ratified is much dissipated by the distractions which their very presence or entertainment necessarily require so doth the life and rellish of all true delight internall into which the true peace of conscience must be engrafted exhale by continuall thinking on things without vs. Finally whiles we trouble our selues about manie things it is impossible we should euer intirely possesse our own soules with patience or make the best of them for purchasing that vnum necessarium that one thing which is onely necessary But these are points which require more full peculiar treatises to which many Philosophers especially Plato Aristotle Seneca Plutarch and Epictetus haue spoken much very pertinent to true diuinity as shall by Gods grace appeare in the Article of euerlasting life As in some other particular discourses framed some yeeres agoe for mine owne priuate resolution The counsell I here commend vnto the reader is no way dissonant vnto Saint Paules aduice vnto his dearest sonne Godlinesse with contentment is great gaine for we brought nothing into this world and it is certaine we can carry nothing out and hauing food and raiment let vs therewith be content But they that will be rich fall into temptation and a snare and into many foolish and hurtfull lusts which drowne men in destruction and perdition For the loue of money is the roote of all euill which while some coueted after they haue erred from the faith and pierced themselues thorough with many sorrowes But thou O man of God flie these things and follow after righteousnesse godlinesse faith loue patience meekenesse Fight the good fight of faith CHAP. VIII Of the goodnesse or honesty of heart required by our Sauiour in fruitfull hearers of the ordinary progresse from faith naturall to spirituall and the different esteeme of diuine truthes or precepts in the regenerate man and him that is not but sincerely desires to be such vacancie to attend all intimations of the spirit to be sought after by all meanes possible That alienation of our chiefe desires from their corrupt obiects is much auaileable for purchase of the inestimable pearle 1. IF riches loue of honour or voluptuous life make the soule so vnfruitfull that temper which in proportion answeares to good soile well husbanded presupposeth a vacuity of these desires The positiue qualification whereto these negatiue properties are annexed is more particularly described by our Sauiour as Saint Luke relates in his exposition of this parable Eut that which fell in good ground are they which with an honest and good heart heare the Word and keepe it and bring forth fruit with patience Vnto such honesty or goodnesse of heart apt thus to receiue and retaine the word of faith heard is required first a sincerity of intention or choice which presupposeth a distinct and vncorrupt notion of good and euill secondly a constant resolution of prosecuting the right choyce made which presupposeth a greater freedome or liberty of practique faculties then can bee found in the couetous ambitious or voluptuous For their desires as all concupiscences of the flesh preiudice the sinceritie of the intention or choice by corrupting the notions of good and euil and maime our resolutions withal to follow what is euidently best by counterswaying or resisting our inclinations vnto goodnesse The point most likely to trouble a curious inquisitor in this argument is whether vnto the bearing of fruit with patience there bee required a goodnesse or honesty of heart precedent to the infusion of sanctifying grace or that faith by which the iust doth liue as vnto a faire croppe there is a goodnesse of soile requisite besides the goodnesse of the seed sowne in it To my capacity he should much wrest our Sauiours words and offer violence to his spirit that should deny the truth or proportion of this similitude Nor can I perceiue any inconuenience not easily auoidable by application of the former distinction of a twofold goodnesse or honesty one commendable onely in it kinde or by way of meere passiue qualification in it selfe of no more worth then a field ploughed but vn●own another acceptable in the sight of God as the croppe or fruit is to the husband-man The former is ordinarily precedent the later alwaies subsequent to true and liuely faith All soiles at least in this our land are though ploughed and man●red alike vnapt to bring forth good wheat sweet grapes or other precious fruit without seeds precedent yet not all alike apt to bring forth fruit sowne or planted in them supposing their ●illage or husbandry were equall It is alike true of all the sonnes of Adam that all by nature are the sonnes of wrath all destitute of the grace of God all alike vnapt to doe any thing truely good yet the degrees or measure of their a●ersion from God and goodnesse not perhaps alike in all albeit wee consider them as they are by birth without difference of education or as they are by meere ciuill education without any naturall knowledge of Gods written Lawe That such as heare the word and are pertakers of outward Christian discipline though not inwardly sanctified are not equally indisposed to bring forth fruit is necessarily included in the difference of vnfruitfull hearers resembled by the high way side and by stony and thorny grounds The framing notwithstanding of this dispotition supposed precedent to the infusion of liuely faith may not be ascribed to our abilities but to the spirit of God directing our thoughts and enabling vs for conceiuing a kinde of preuiall faith more then naturall by some externall or inferior grace so proportioned to these effects as sanctifying grace is to the fruits of true holinesse Probable it is might we speak out of experience that as Bees first make their Cels then fill them with hony or as the formatiue vertue first like an artisicer frames the organs or instruments of life and sense and
their personages and reall imitation of their vertues It is a kinde of cunning I must confesse to be able accurately to paint God or his goodnesse but as little pertinent to true Christian knowledge as an artificiall picture of a great feast is to a poore soule almost starued for hunger vnlesse it make vs not painted images but true and liue sonnes of the euerlasting God For our light must so shine before men that they seeing our good workes may glorifie our Father which is in heauen That such a father there is and that we are his sons we must make knowne to others by imitating his perfections 7. To these or like points do sacred writers vsually extend words importing knowledge whether they speake of our knowing God or his knowing vs. The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous sayth the Psalmist And if he know it will he not reward it Yes with life for the way of the wicked because as well knowne to him shall perish Answerable hereto men are sayd to know Gods wayes when their demeanure is such as if they expected he should presently take notice of theirs either to reward or punish them It is a people that doe erre in their hearts sayth the Lord for they haue not knowne my waies As they did erre in their hearts so did they not know Gods wayes in their hearts for such a knowledge of them as is confined within the braine or such as a man that neuer trauelled may haue of a strange country by a mappe no doubt they had But as beaten wayes vulgar directions of the inhabitants are better guides in vnknowne coasts then most accurate geographicall descriptions so is it not this superficiall knowledge of Gods wayes that can conduct vs to his rest whither none come but such as can tread in the steps of holy and religious men that haue gone them and learne that by experience which others paint out and decipher This is life eternall sayth our Sauiour that they might know thee the only true God and Iesus Christ whom thou hast sent equiualent hereto is that Whosoeuer belieueth in him shall not perish but haue euer lasting life Can faith and knowledge then reach to heauen vnlesse they be lengthened by loue and other Christian vertues He that is warned to receiue a Prince or man of state will make accompt of his necessary traine albeit no mans comming besides be specified Nor is it needful sacred writers should mention loue or other attendants of those queenes of vertues Wisdome faith or knowledge if these be present the rest will certainly accompany them Hee that sayth I know Christ and keeps not his commandements is a lyar and the truth is not in him Faith or knowledge without loue is not Christian but hypocriticall for only he that hath Christs commandements and keepeth them is he that loueth him We know that the sonne of God is come and hath giuen vs an vnderstanding that we may knowe him that is true and we are in him that is true euen in his sonne Iesus Christ This is the true God and eternallife Many were the peoples sinnes in the wildernesse Yet Saint Iude comprehends all in this one that they belieued not This ye know how that the Lord hauing saued the people out of the land of Aegypt afterwards destroied them that belieued not So doth the Psaimist attribute all the disobediences and rebellions of his forefathers vnto this That their spirit was not tied by faith vnto God yea the fire was kindled in Iacob and also wrath came vpon Israell because they belieued not in God and the error of the Israelites that knew not the way vnto Gods rest was in the Apostles construction vnbeliefe The word that they heard profited not them because it was not mixed with faith for we which haue belieued do enter into that Rest. The greatest praise we read giuen to the Israelites in the wildernesse was that they belieued God and his seruant Moses As long as they thus continued they were not ouercome by temptations of the world or flesh And by what meanes do all such as are borne of God ouercome the world Is not this victory from faith Who is it that ouercommeth the vvorld but he which belieueth that IESVS is the sonne of God The same dialect was well knowne in Iewry in his time that sayd The knowledge of the commaundement of the Lord is the doctrine of life that all wisdome was contained in the feare of the Lord performance of the Lawe and knowledge of his almighty power that to belieue the Lord was to keepe his commaundements Which last testimony is very vsefull in the examination of faith further to be insisted vpon in that treatise 8. It was but an effect of such mens folly as spend the best of their daies and spirits in coyning second intentions or terms of art and after they haue gotten the skill to draw solid learning by this deuice into plaine tables mistake these types or shadowes for the bodies or substances which first did seuer beliefe and knowledge of diuine matters from practise whereunto they are as naturally linked as the nerue is to the part which it moueth Nature herselfe not stretched awry by art or misled by passion from whose attraction or impulsion she is most free in matters of ordinary and common vse alwaies frames her language fully paralell to the former rules of sacred speech Into whose heart beside the hypocrites would it sinke that affection should not increase according to the degrees of worth in the obiect though no better knowne then others are Is not the quantity or perfection of goodnesse as intelligible as the bare essence or quality Or can we in part be moued with some few degrees of goodnesse knowne and not as much more moued by equall knowledge of farre more or can we rightly value the consequence of diuine truthes in respect of our selues and not frame desires of them proportionally Doth any man not much affect him whose excellent parts he highly esteemes aib●it he expect no reall fauour or commodity from him To say wee know a man in ordinary speech imports a demeanour or respect towards him answerable to that quality wee know in him To know him for a sweete companion includes a desire of his company or acquaintance an vnwillingnesse to fall out with him or to be estranged from him To conceiue of one as an odde and vnsociable wrangling mate implies a care to eschew all occasions of intercourse dealing or familiarity with him If an inferiour should say hee knew his lawfull Magistrate to be a most vnpartiall seuere Iusticer he need not specifie his vnwillingnes to be iustly accused before him of any crime Or if wee say wee know or belieue one to be a maruellous wise honest friendly man who would not gather that whilest this perswasion lasted we would be readier to commit any
and liuely when wee feele a present benefit redounding to our selues from the good we do to others as if we actually perceiued the cooperatiue cōcurrence of diuine goodnesse in these workes of charity As well this loue of God as of our neighbours are though in different manner effects or properties of liuely faith or of that grace whereof faith it selfe is the principall stemme as it illuminates the minde or supreme faculty of the soule Our loue of God may well seeme to be an effect immanēt or residing in the same faculty with faith Loue to our neighbour an effect transient as hauing a distinct roote or originall whence it springs and takes it proper substance though quickned and moued to euery good worke by faith as the moone hath a distinct bodie of it owne more capable of light then others are but illuminated by the sunne The substance or body of loue to our neighbours is naturall humanity or kindnesse whose illumination perfection and guidance is from faith apprehending the goodnesse of God whom we immediately loue aboue all for himselfe as the onely Creator and preseruer of all the onely procurer of all good to all others in him and for him as our fellow creatures and ioint obiects with vs of his vnrecompensable loue 3. The same dependance on faith haue trust and confidence or that affection which in latine we call Fiducia Confidence in their language of whom we borrow the name implies a boldnesse or hopefull assurance of good successe in the businesse we goe about and naturally springs from a perswasion either of our owne or others sufficiencie of whose helpe or furtherance we may presume Thus the strong are vsually confident in matters of strength wise men or well experienced in matters to be tried by wit or worldly pollicie the wealthy in causes that may be swaied with bribery men well allied in businesses that may be carried best by multitude of friends But all these branches of confidence haue the cursed fig-trees hap Cursed be the man that trusteth in man and maketh flesh his arme and with-draweth his heart from the Lord. For he shall be like the heath in the wildernesse and shall not see when any good commeth but shall inhabite the parched places in the wildernesse in a salt land and not inhabited The stocke notwithstanding whence they grow being purified and seasoned by grace these lopt off and the true knowledge of God ingrafted in their steed beareth fruit vnto saluation For blessed is the man that trusteth in the Lord and whose hope the Lord is For hee shall be as a tree that is planted by the water which spreadeth out her rootes by the water and shall not feele when the heate commeth but her lease shall be greene and shall not care for the yeare of drought neither shall cease from yeelding fruit The points towards which this naturall affection whereof all participate more or lesse must be set ere it grow vp into such confidence as spreads it selfe throughout all the waies that God hath appointed vs to walke in are the articles of Gods power and wisdome ouer all the workes of his hands and his fauour towards vs. The manner how faith doth raise it the Reader may more easily perceiue if it please him call to minde or hereafter obserue that as well in the dialect of sacred writers whether Canonicall or Apochriphall as other morall Authors or common speech there is a twofold faith One passiue or obiectiue which in English we vsually call fidelitie or faithfulnesse whereunto we may safely trust another actiue or apprehensiue by which we assent vnto the former and rely vppon it as farre as our needfull occasions shall require Of this reliance or reposall confidence is but a further degree presupposing a firmer apprehension or experience of more then ordinarie sufficiency and fauour towards vs in the party to whose trust we commit our selues or our affaires Fidelity or faith passiue he well notified in part that told vs Quando fit quod dicitur tunc est fides Faithfull hee is in his sayings that hath good ground for what he speakes or called to an account is able to make such proofe of his assertions as the nature of the businesse shall require Faithfull in his doing he is that approues the truth of his promises by performance whom wee cannot better describe then the Psalmist hath done One that walketh vprightly worketh righteousnesse and speaketh the truth in his heart or as we say one whose heart goes with his mouth and changeth not his oath or promise albeit the performance of it be to his greater hinderance then he conceiued when he made it Alwaies the better opinion we retaine of this passiue fidelity or faithfulnes the greater is our actiue faith trust or reposall in it but trust or confidence in fallible or absolute wee cannot haue in any mortall man For besides that his heart or intention is vnknowne to vs such abilities as now he hath are obnoxions to change so is his purpose and resolution Not the honestest man on earth but is mutably honest at least in respect of vs and where all other conditions be equall we trust him better whose meanes are whole and sound then one of a broken or crased estate For few there be but sore pinched with pouerty will shrinke from what they promised vpon presupposed hopes of better ability And most men perhaps out of a consciousnesse of their owne mutabilitie vpon like change of fortunes or new discouery of dangers before vnknowne seeme to grant a generall pardon or dispensation to others in like cases at the least if abilities vpon such casualties be wanting ingenuous creditors doe not expect performance of promises made howsoeuer their debtors minds were affected when they made them whence as I said confidence in such men if other conditions be equall are lesse safe yet the more we trust them vpon lesse probable meanes of abilitie or vpon externall appearances of danger or suspitions cast by others of their likelihood to breake the greater eredite and honour we doe them For as loue vnlesse it proceed from a party odious and vnlouely is vsually repaid with like affection according to the olde saying V is vt ameris ama so ipsa fides habita obligat fidem Men oft times become more trusty then otherwise they would be by the trust or credence we giue vnto them God in whom only this fidelity or faith obiectiue according to the most absolute idea or perfection of it is immutable is alwaies more fauourable to such as faithfully commend themselues and their affaires vnto this care and trust And vnto faithfull reliance and reposall on his promises wee are tied by a triple bond of faith which cannot possibly breake or vntwine once surely fastened If we fully assent to his veracitie we cannot question whether he purpose whatsoeuer he promised if to his omnipotencie we cannot doubt of his allsufficiencie to performe For
Confident perswasions they had of Gods extraordinary fauour which notwithstanding because it proceeded not from faith fructifying in deeds conformable to his goodnesse made them presumptuous and open rebels against his Sonne the onely image of his glory for dooing the workes here prophecied by this Psalmist They despised him as a sinner once for raising vp a poore creature not bowed downe only but together so as she could not raise her selfe another time for giuing sight vnto the blinde vpon a Sabbaoth day Often for the like workes here ascribed to that God whose name they were to sanctifie by hallowing the Sabbaoth day all liuely documents that he which visibly wrought them was the Lord to whom this Psalme of praise and thanksgiuing was dedicated Such confidence as they whiles thus affected boasted in was the very way of the wicked which the Lord turneth vpside downe His sentence is already pronounced vpon it Euerie one that exalteth himselfe shall bee brought lowe which words he spake of the proud Pharisee and such as trusted in themselues that they vvere iust despising others Notwithstanding euen this Pharisee himselfe whom he makes the patterne of hypocrisie gaue God thankes for his conceited righteousnesse acknowledging that whatsoeuer he had he had receiued but in that hee gloried in it as if he had not receiued it the holy Ghost taxeth him for trusting in it not in the Lord whom he intended to glorifie for this gift amongst others And were we so wise that a word though from the spirits owne mouth might suffice for our admonishment this one place alone would instruct vs that he trusts not in the Lord but in his wealth or dignity that contemnes his brother for his meane giftes whether of Art or Nature or disparageth his worth onely for the lownesse of his fortunes 6. Thus much of confidence fiducia or trust so nearely allied to faith that some include it in the essence or formall signification of the word in the learned tongues which opinion may seeme to haue some countenance from the booke of Homilies But what there is said of faith to this purpose is a popular description not an accurate or artificiall definition like as also we may not think the Author of those Homilies meant formally and essentially to define faith when he saith that faith is a firme hope for so in the same place doth he describe it And to speake the truth he that puts fiducia in the essentiall definition of faith and leaues hope out had need of as much cunning as hee that should vndertake to make paiment of ten pounds and substract seauen For confidence or this trust in their form of doctrine whose authority for the right vse of such words is most authentique is the period or complement of Hope contemnenda est omnis iniuria malorum praesentium fiducia futurorum bonorum sayth Saint Cyprian And againe Laus est fides fiducia futurorum mundi aduersa tolerare It is the commendation of Faith to support our selues vnder such grieuances as the vvorld layes vpon vs with sure hope of future good In this godly fathers orthodoxall conceit of this chaine of christian vertues we may behold patience springing from faith but presupposing trust or confidence at least if perfect paralell herein to the Apostle Cast not away your confidence which hath great recompence of revvard for ye haue neede of patience whose hold-fast he supposeth confidence that after ye haue done the will of God ye might receiue the promise The ground or supporter as well of patience as confidence and fidelity in doing Gods will is faith as is before deduced Whether such confidence as we haue that there is a reward laid vp for the faithfull reach in the same strength and tenor vnto personall saluation or bring forth like assurance of our possessary right in state of grace or if so whether it be proper to all as it is doubtlesse onely to such as are endued with sauing faith or whether equall in all or at all times or rather decreasing according to the degrees of their delinquencie in such duties as this confident hope of Gods mercy and fidelity in rewarding all without respect of persons that doe his will doth impell and encourage them to cannot so fitly be disputed vntill the tenor of Gods couenant with mankind and other difficulties concerning free-will and contingencie with the articles of Christs death and resurrection from firme Assent vnto which this speciall confidence or assurance must flow be vnfolded Here I onely would commend that place of our Apostle to the religious Readers priuate meditation for rectifying and strengthening his faith in this point Hauing therfore Brethren bouldnesse to enter into the Holiest by the blood of IESVS by a new liuing way vvhich he hath consecrated for vs through the vaile that is to say his flesh And hauing an high Priest ouer the house of God Let vs draw neere with a true heart in full assurance of faith hauing our hearts sprinkled from an euill conscience and our bodies washed vvith pure water Let vs hold fast the profession of our faith without vvauering for he is faithfull that promised And let vs consider one another to prouoke vnto loue and to good workes Many other properties of faith there be and diuerse peculiar branches of these generall ones here touched to be discussed after the explication of the Articles out of which they properly spring CHAP. XI Of the diuerse acceptions of faith in Scriptures or Fathers of the Romanists pernicious error concerning the nature of it and charitie whereby his imaginarie workes of merit necessarily become either dead apish or polluted 1. FRom the seuerall degrees or differences of Assent vnto diuine truthes before assigned it will bee easie for the Reader to deriue the diuerse acceptions of beliefe whether in writings Canonicall Apochriphall or of Fathers from one head Albeit I hold it not worth the inquirie whether the name of Faith in the Hebrew Greeke and Latine were propagated from the obiect to our apprehension or Assent or from these vnto the obiect for in all three tongues faith is taken as well for that which deserues credit as for the credence we giue vnto it More pertinent to our present occasions it is that beliefe euen in scriptures is sometimes applied to the very first and lowest degree of Assent vnto truths diuine and they are sayd to belieue that acknowledge any article of faith or part of Christs doctrine as true albeit the ground of their Assent were not sincere or sound but rather humorous So it is sayd in the second of Iohn that many when they saw his Miracles belieued in him but IESVS committed not himselfe vnto their hands because hee knewe them all so did hee their humours to bee like theirs that vpon like beliefe of his power would haue made him king Others againe are sayd to belieue when they Assent perhaps to all Articles of faith
as true and good whilest considered onely in themselues without oppositions of such matters as they much value So our Sauiour telleth vs that some when they haue heard receiue the word with ioy and for a while belieue but in time of tentation depart and Saint Iohn that euen amongst the Rulers many belieued on him By true and liuely faith rooted in the heart So Bellarmine would perswade vs or otherwise wee might make the Scriptures as a nose of waxe or alter the nature of sacred phrase as wee do counters in accompts Yet if they had in heart belieued vnto righteousnesse they had confessed with their mouth vnto saluation but sayth the Euangelist because of the Pharisees they did not confesse him least they should be put out of the synagogue And was not this to be ashamed of him and of his Gospell before men And whosoeuer is so affected belieueth not in that sense the Prophet speakes whosoeuer belieueth on him shall not be ashamed for vnlesse he acknowledge them in that day they shall not only bee ashamed but confounded with vnbelieuers yea the very reason the Euangelist giues why they did not confesse him condemns the Cardinals glosse either of great folly or impietie For sayth he they loued the prayse of men more then the prayse of God vnto which latter they had assented as much better had they so belieued as our Sauiour meanes when hee demaunds of the Iewes How can ye belieue which receiue honour one of another and seeke not the honour vvhich commeth from God onely Ere our faith become such as layes sure hold on life for of such in that place he speakes wee must Assent vnto the honour that comes from God alone as so much better then that we receiue of men that the later must seem as nothing in cōparison of the former The same word beliefe oft-times is taken not only as it includes these last degrees or proper differences of Assent vnto diuine truthes but as it is accompanied with it essentiall properties or with such works as impulsiuely are from it though proper acts or exercises of other vertues faculties or affections whence they spring as from their naturall roote wherein they reside as in their natiue subiect The places are obuious to euerie one conuersant in Scriptures The like latitude of perfection whether from difference of essence or diuersitie onely in degrees knowledge or vnderstanding in the vse of sacred writers admits Nor did Saint Iohn in that speech He that sayth hee knoweth God and keepeth not his Commandements is a lyar contradict our Sauiour where he supposeth that many know their masters will and do it not For the disciple speakes of true and perfect knowledge the Lord of knowledge externall or imperfect The same analogie the Fathers retaine in the vse of beliefe or faith That the Pontificians can alledge their testimonies to proue faith may bee separated from works or charity is as little pertinent to the point in question betwixt vs and them as it would bee in the schooles to vrge the authority of late Philosophers that stones and mettals did not growe or that trees and plants had no locall motion against him that out of Aristotle did maintaine all bodies endued with life were capable of growth and diminution or all with sense of locall motion He that holds the former conclusions would account stones and mettals amongst bodies inanimate and trees and plants amongst vnsensitiue Now our question is not of euery sort or degree of faith but of that by which the Iust doe liue That no Father did affirme it should be without fruites or workes of holinesse is more then my small reading in them can secure me to affirme albeit reason I haue none to thinke otherwise but iust cause so to presume by the places our aduersaries alleadge so idle they are and impertinent Howsoeuer I dare vndertake for our assertion to bring three Fathers for one or testimonies thrice as many out of the best approued as any Iesuite shall do for his And because some of them scramble at some scattered sentences in Cyprians vvorkes or others fathered vpon him I will instance at this time in him especially the rather because he sealed the truth of his profession with his blood and had least reason to bee partiall for Faith against Charitie of whose abundance in his heart euery letter in his writings almost is a character yea so he esteemed of it that hee thought it impossible for him to prooue a true witnesse of Christ though dying in his cause if hee had liued without brotherly loue How doth hee say he belieues in Christ that doth not vvhat Christ hath giuen him in charge to doe Or how shall hee ataine to the reward of faith vvhich vvill not faithfullie keepe his Commaundements And againe Seeing to see Christ is our ioy nor can our ioy haue being vntill we see him what blindnesse of heart what mad nesse is this to loue the grieuances the paines and miseries of this world not rather to make hast vnto that ioy which neuer can be taken from vs Yet all this beloued brethren comes to passe because wee haue no faith because none belieues the truth of what God hath promised who is true whose word is eternally sure to belieuers If a graue man and of good note should promise thee any thing thou wouldst rely vpon his promise thou wouldst not belieue thou shouldst be deceiued or disappointed by him whom thou knowest to be constant in his words and deeds Behold God speaks to thee and ●ost thou perfidiously wauer through incredulity of minde God hath promised thee at thy departure out of this world immortality and eternity and dost thou doubt This is to be altogether without the knowledge of God this is to offend Christ the master of the faithfull vvith the sin of incredulity this is to haue a place in the Church and to be without faith in the house of faith The like hath Bernard who speaking of the victory that is by faith thus resolues flesh and blood moouing doubts to the contrary Perchance it may tempt some in that they see so many acknowledging Christ to bee the Sonne of God still entangled with the lusts of this world How sayth the Apostle then who is he that ouer commeth the world but he which belieues that IESVS is the Sonne of God vvhen as the world it selfe belieues this truth yea do not the very diuels belieue as much and tremble but I reioine Dost thou imagine that he reputes CHRIST for the sonne of God whosoeuer hee be that is not terrified with his threats that is not allured with his promises which obeies not his commandements and rests not satisfied with his aduise doth not such a one albeit he professe he knowes God deny him by his deeds Valentian notwithstanding would perswade vs that the Fathers when they say faith without works is dead would onely giue vs to
should make loue to our meate the soule or forme of a perfect taste For meate wholsome and pleasant we cannot perfectly relish but we must loue it howbeit we liue not by louing it but by tasting eating and digesting it No more can we rightly belieue Christs death and passion but we must loue him and his members yet liue wee not by louing them but by tasting Gods loue and fauour to vs or as I need not be afraid to speake by eating Christs flesh and drinking his blood For though by faith one and the same wee Assent vnto euery article in our creed yet this faith doth not iustifie but as it respects Christs bodie giuen for our sinnes or as it cleaues vnto Gods mercies manifested in that eternall sacrifice alwaies breathing out life to men renot neing all trust and confidence euen in such graces as wee haue receiued from him All this notwithstanding if we compare loue and faith together as parts of that righteousnesse which is in vs not considering the necessary dependance Loue hath of Faith in nature to loue is more then to belieue because it necessarily includes beliefe so is it more to loue our meate then to taste it because loue supposeth taste howbeit in respect of life to taste our meate is of more vse then to loue it So is it more to moue then to liue for all vicall motion includes in it acts of life yet is not motion simply better then life or the sensitiue sacultie whence it proceeds because it wholly depends on them not they on it 9. The second principall place of Scripture they vsually alleage doth vtterly discredit themselues but breeds no difficulty to vs in this present argument for that the faith whereof Saint Iames speakes doth differ as much from that whereto S. Paul ascribeth righteousnesse as a liue man doth from a dead or a body endued with life and motion from a statue or painted image no heathen artist that could but vnderstand the very tearmes of their seeming contradictory propositions would deny albeit some Romish writers of no meane ranke haue been giuen ouer vnto such Iewish blindnesse as to abuse Saint Iames authority not onely to hold iustification by workes as well as faith wherto his words incline as the thing it self in his sence though not in that construction they make of it is most true but to perswade the ignorant that such faith as S. Paul commends may be without works or christian loue But their folly herein will worke shame in such of their successors as shall comment vpon these two Apostles writings as in some of their predecessors it hath done if they consider that those very workes without which faith in Saint Iames construction sufficeth not vnto saluation are expresly comprehended in that faith wherby S. Paul tels vs the Iust do liue Was not Abraham our father iustified through vvorks when he offered his son Isaac vpon the altar he meant no more nor was more pertinentto his intended conclusion then if he had thus spoken If Abraham had sayd as they did whose empty faith he disapproues I haue faith but had not proued his sayings true by his deedes or readinesse to offer vp his onely Sonne vvhen God commaunded him for actually hee did not offer him he had not been iustified before God Why because he had not belieued in such sort as Saint Paul meant when he sayth by faith Abraham offered vp Isaac when he was tried But it may bee this faith was informed perfected or instigated to this act by loue of whom not of Isaac for that was the maine obstacle to worke distrust the chiefe antagonist of his faith Not of Sarah or any other friends or neighbours all which doubtlesse had disswaded him had he acquainted them with his purpose Was it then the loue of God Him indeed he loued aboue all because he firmely belieued his mercy and louing kindnesse towards him but this loue supposed it vvas his Assent vnto Gods omnipotent power which as the Apostle expresly tels vs moued him to this act For hee considered that God was able to raise him from the dead from whence also hee receiued him in a figure This consideration or inducement was a worke yet a proper act of faith no way of loue But loue perhappes did make it meritorious The loue indeede wherewith God loued him made his working faith acceptable in his sight but that it was strength of faith not the quality of loue which God imputed vnto him for righteousnesse the same Apostle for doubtlesse the same hand it was which penned the eleuenth to the Hebr●es and the fowrth vnto the Romans puts it out of doubt beeing not weake in faith he considered not his body now dead vvhen he was now a hundred yeere old neither yet the deadnesse of Sarahs wombe He staggered not at the promise of God through vnbeliefe but vvas strong in faith giuing glory to God And being fully perswaded that what he had promised he vvas also able to performe And therefore it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse One and the same faith it was and standing at the same bent vnlesse by continuance of like triall increased in strength which wrought in him a readines●● of minde to sactifice his onely sonne in hope of a ioyfull resurrection and to expect his birth from the dead wombe of Sarah The obiect likewise whereto his Assent did adhere was one and the same his fidelitie which had promised on which faithfully still relying it was impossible his other faculties or affections should not subscribe to whatsoeuer his Assent of faith should enioine them and that remaining in wonted strength it could not but bring forth perfect loue and good works which may be sayd in such a sense to perfect it as we are sayd to blesse God that is to declare his blessednesse For as Gods loue to vs was most apparent in offering his onely Sonne So Abrahams loue to God was best manifested by sacrificing his sonne Isaac vvhom he loued yet he sacrificed him by faith wherefore his loue did result from firme Assent to Gods couenant and mercie made to mankinde in him in the faithfull acceptance whereof and full acquiescence therein his righteousnesse as in due place shall be shewed did consist 10. This comment vpon the Apostles words concerning Abrahams workes giues vs the true meaning of the like concerning Rahab Likewise also was not Rahab the harlot iustified by vvorkes vvhen she recei●ed the messengers and had sent them out another way If she had said vnto these messengers only thus I belieue the God of heauen earth hath giuen you this whole land for a possession yet I dare not shew you any kindnesse in this city her belief had bin as dead as a body without breath or motion But what man or woman liuing is there of common sense which once firmly perswaded that God in iustice had giuen his natiue country vnto forreine people whom he loued
it but halfe as great as theirs was to Moses or to his apprehension as likely to be as farre misguided more lamentable then all the grieuances and afflictions they sustaine What then was the originall of their miscariage Their zeale was like the rude moderne Papists mishapen from the wombe because not conceiued by knowledge Their loue polluted in the root because it was no fruit of faith nor sprang it from hearts so qualified as their had bin on whom or rather on whose true prases and deserued ●ame it was stubbornely set Creatures sowle and most deformed are ost-times d●epliest striken with loue of externall beautie as if the more imperfect nature were in them the more greedily shee sought to satisfie or couer her wants by linking them with the aboundance of that perfection shee espies in others Thus the sorer this viperous brood was tainted with hypocrisie the more they magnified the integrity and sanctity of their forefathers as if to haue descended from them and thus to admire these graces in them which themselues wanted had set them aboue all degree of comparison in respect of any others that liued in the same age with them Now this foolish pride and inbred desire of praeeminence was the onely ground as of their loue to Gods Saints deceased so of their malice against his sonne manifested in their flesh and substance 2. The memory of Abraham they could not chuse but naturally reuerence he being the first Author of that glorious couenant God made with mankinde wherein they had the priuiledges of the first borne and in their owne opinion sole intire interest And this first Doner being now dead did not either by speech or action exasperate their enuious fretfull impatient minds whereby the strength of their imaginary loue might haue been abated Moses likewise they could not but haue in greatest honour as one that had talked face to face with God and had giuen them such a lawe from his mouth as the like was neuer heard of before or after for he that had not so gloriously dealt with any nations neither had the best amongst the heathen any knowledge of his lawes The religious respect they had of it made them abhorre all idoles yet as S. Paul intimates none more prone to robbe God of his honour then they alwaies desirous to array themselues with his glory and make his praises theirs by participation With reference though not expresly intended to this humour they honoured the memory of the Prophets adorned their sepulchers and sounded their commendations amongst the people For that their country in times past had brought foorth men to whom the Almighty had communicated his secret counsailes was the fairest euidence they had to shew for that prerogatiue they still chalenged aboue the Nations the principall rest they could relie vpon for out-vying the Gentiles in vaine boasting of their auntient worthies Besides the extraordinary gifts these Prophets had in foreshewing alterations in states or other euents to come they could not but seeme honourable in this peoples sight as being the Embassadours of the great Messiah in whose expectation the meanest of them gloried more then ordinary children could in sure hope of their fathers exaltation to the lawfull crowne of the kingdome wherein they liue Euery childe of Abraham they supposed in his dayes should be like one of Gedeons brethren in fashion like the children of Kings heires of the euerlasting kingdome To haue vp braided the softest spirit in that rebellious people with treachery or disloyalty against the Messias when he should be reuealed would as much haue moued his choller as to tell some forward professor amongst vs he would be tray his Lord were hee now in earth for halfe the mony Iudas did Notwithstanding all this great shewe of loue vnto their Auncestours or fidelitie in Gods couenant these Iewes prooued banckrupts in euery point of their accompt They brake first in their loue to Abraham which was no small part of their reckoning so our Sauiour rels them If you vvere ABRAHAMS children ye would doe the vvorkes of ABRAHAM And againe Yee shall see ABRAHAM and ISAAC and IACOB and all the Prohets in the kingdome of God and you your selues thrust out The tender and louing respect they pretended to haue of these deceased Patriarches estimation would haue seemed to them could they haue knowne it but as if a desperate quarreling ruf●ian whose dissolute and vngracious courses more grieues his vertuous fathers spirit then all the opposition of his bitterest enemies should be ready to fight with euery one that did but speak a suspicious word against him They brake againe in their accompt of their fidelity toward Moses for so our Sauiour tells them had you belieued Moses you would haue belieued me for hee vvrote of me and Moses in vvhom you trust is he that accuseth you to my Father They failed likewise most grieuously in their imaginations of extraordinary loue vnto the Prophets the very rootes and poison of that spight and enmitie their fathers bare them while they liued were propagated to posteritie still increasing their malignitie in the descent as Riuers doe their streames in their course the childrens cruelty against our Sauiour was but the fulfilling of their fathers iniquity against the Prophets his blood shed by them vpon the crosse was as the Ocean whereinto that streame of blood which had runne thorough their generations from Abels to Zacharias death and so downewards was exonerated The disposition though varying it references to seuerall persons did after so many descents no more differ then doth the humour of amad dogge running through a long lane or row of people alwaies shat●hing not at the same parties but at such as are next vnto him Thus Saint Steuen makes but one chaine of all iniquities continued from Moses vnto Christ ye stiff-necked and of vncircumcised hearts and eares yee haue alwaies resisted the holy Ghost as your fathers did so doe you which of the Prophets haue not your fathers persecuted and they haue slaine them which shewed before the comming of that iust one of whom ye are now the betraiers and murtherers which haue receiued the Law by the ordinance of Angels and haue not kept it For had they kept it or faithfully belieued Moses which wrote it they had neither distrusted ou● Sauiours doctrine nor dispised his person but their naturall disposition was most contrary to Moses meekenesse and therefore could not be agreeable to that iust ones and yet their imaginary loue to this their Law giue● or rather their ouer ●●●ning conceipt of their owne worth in that they were his Disciples imboldens them to despise his Master for they reuiled the blind man which asked them if they would be his Disciples thou art his Disciple but we are Moses Disciples we know that God spake vnto Moses as for this fellow we know not whence he is Their cruelty against him was conceiued and prosecuted vpon the same ground Caines
was against his brother Abell for they slew him because their owne workes were euill and his good as their fathers had done the Prophets to whom this vngratious seed did seeke to testifie their loue as being now out of sight and no eye-fore to their purposes no way offensiue to their eares because their speeches were not personally directed to them and what might be as fitly applied to others they had the wit not to applie to themselues But whiles vertue and pietie breath in the presence of the vngodly they are still desirous to breake the vessell wherein this treasure lies yet what was the reason or what doth the euent protend to vs that the children should still delight to build stately mansions for their dead bones whose glorious soules the fathers enuied imprisonment in these brittle cabbins of clay vntill the time of Messiahs death vnto whose memory the reliques of that vngratious seed performes no like solemnity giues no signification either of loue to him or sorrow for their fathers sinne but rather openly professe oh had we liued in the daies of our fathers wee would haue beene pertakers with them in that praier His blood bee vpon vs and vpon our children This doubtlesse beares record that Gods wrath according to their wish is come vpon them to the vtmost that the measure of the fathers iniquity and theirs was then fulfilled that vntill Christs death there were meanes left to know those things which were for their peace time for repentance but since they haue resembled the state of the damned in Hell continually blaspheming that holy name which brought saluation to the world Now seeing their conceipted swelling loue vnto his forerunners deceased did in the fulnesse of time wherein it should haue brought forth life prooue but dead and abortiue this should stirre vs vp to a more exquisite examination of our faith to make sure triall whether our loue to Christ whom they slew be not conceiued from the same grounds theirs was vnto the Prophets whom their fathers had slaine least ours also become as fruitles or rather bring forth death in that day wherin Christ shall be manifested againe after which shall be no time for repentance no meanes to amend what is then found amisse 3. Admit our affection to CHRIST IESVS the son of Mary borne in Bethlehem and crucified at Ierusalem by the Iew were more feruent then the Scribes and P●●arises loue to Abraham to Moses and the Prophets our zeale to his Gospell more ardent then theirs to the law such prouocations or allurements as flesh and blood may suggest either to beginne or continue these embracements or our imaginations of them are on our part more in number and more potent First by Nature fashions of the time education we are more prone because more ingenuous then they were to conceiue well of men deceased especially of men whose good fame hath bin propagated to vs with applause though no● of all but of some great or better part of our predecessors The praises giuen to Pompey Caesar by their followers oft times draw yong schollers into faction as the seuerall characters of those two great peeres liues and dispositions suit with the different idaeall notions they haue framed vnto themselues of braue mindes of noble generals or good patriots Amongst Critiques some canuase for one Poet or classique Author some for another as they finde them most commended by writers whose iudgements they best approoue or are most beholden to or as they apprehend their skill in that kind of learning they most affect To make comparison of any liuing with the dead especially in whose works those men haue much laboured would seeme odious and this great affection they beare vnto their writings they would haue apprehended as no meane argument of their owne like skill and iudgement though not blessed with like inuention Many scarce honestly minded themselues will esteeme of their great benefactors as of Saints ready to apologize as is fit for such actions as men in their owne times vnto whom the censure of such matters belonged might iustly haue taxed All these motiues of loue vnto men deceased may in their nature and substance be but carnall and yet all concurre as the vsuall grounds of most mens affection or loue to Christ For whilest we reade the legend of his life we cannot but approoue the peoples verdict of him he hath done all things well nothing idlely nothing vainely nothing rashly much lesse maliciously to the hurt or preiudice of any his deserts towards vs we cannot apprehend by the lowest kinde of hystoricall beliefe as true but we must conceiue them withall as infinitely greater then Abrahams were to the Iewes Abraham did but see the promise a farre off and gaue a copie of the assurance to posterity CHRIST sealeth it with his blood and insta●●s vs in the inheritance bequeathed Moses deliuered Abrahams seed out of Egypt CHRIST vs from the land of darkenesse Moses freed them from the tyrannie of Pharach and from working in the fornace CHRIST vs from the futie of those euerlasting flames for which out soules and bodies had serued for such matter as the bricke was to the other Ioshuah placed them in the land of Canaan CHRIST vs in the heauenly places the benefits already bestowed by him vpon his people are much greater then all theirs that haue gone before Abraham was ignorant of these Iewes Isaac knew them not nor could Moses heare their praiers who is like vnto the Lord our God who dwelleth on high who humbleth himselfe to behold the things that are in heauen and in the earth he that raiseth vp the poore out of the dust and lifteth the needy out of the dunghill that he may set him with Princes euen with the Princes of his people But so il doth the naturall crookednesse of mans corrupted heart and preposterousnesse of his desires paralell with the righteousnesse of his Sauiour that euen the humility wherein the first appeared which chiefely exasperated the proud Iew to contemne and despise him doth eleuate the mindes of many seely and impotent deiected creatures amongst Christians vnto a kinde of carnall glory whereunto otherwise they could hardly aspire For many such as defect of nature want of art good education or fortunes haue made altogether vncapable of comparison with others for wit strēgth of bodie wealth or other endowments in the custome of the present world vsed for measures of mens worth or serving to notifie the degrees of betterhood in any kinde will oft times glory in this comparison that they owe as good soules to God as the best and thinke themselues as great men in our Sauiours bookes as greatest kings because their estate is as his was on earth low and base in the sight of men This their reioycing were not in vaine did they vse the low esteeme that others make of them as an aduantage for more easie descent to true humility and lowly
conceipt of themselues not as a steppe to pride or stubbernenesse contrary to their Sauiours disposition who being in glory equall with God did abase himselfe lower then Moses through his whole life and conuersation framing his speech more familiar to the meanest his exhortations to all that would come vnto him more courteous more kinde more louing and comfortable then any other of his messengers euer vsed And what heart so dull so stupid or hard as not to be pierced with loue of such humility not to be stricken with awfull reuerence of that maieste whereto it is now exalted who would not here charge his persecutors with a greater blindnesse hatred malice and vncharitablenesse towards him then is incident to any professing Christian religion to anie as firmely assenting to the truth of his Gospell as the Iewes did vnto the writings of Moses and the Prophets 4 The allowance we are to make the Iewes for righting the seeming oddes betwixt vs and them must be taken from the personall offences or prouocations man nature corrupted as in them so in vs tooke at our Sauiours life his cariage conuersation and manner of preaching Imagine he were now present in our land in the forme of a seruant in which he appeared to them what entertainement could we expect most of our nobility or gentry would giue him should he openly disallow the accompt they make of their antiquity or descents drawing them such a pettig●ee of their mindes as he did of the Iewes You are of your father the Diuell and the lust of your father you will fulfill or would his miracles mooue any potentate more It was not his fathers pleasure he should worke wonders in Herods sight or such great ones as were not qualified for the kingdome of God rather more like to haue hardned their hearts with Pharaoh then become like litttle children The report or fame of such miracles as he hath wrought amongst the common people would haue moued many rulers in this our Israel to haue said as the Iewes did that he was a coniourer or one of Cornelius Agrippas consorts had he in earnest or solemne sort auouched as Cornelius doth in his satyricall suruey of vanities that Caine was the first author of nobility or such generosity as the world now magnifies which makes but a sport or recreation of shedding blood Nor would honourable persons be more like to charge him with these or the like imputations then Lawyers to accuse him or pleade against him or to indite him ouer and aboue as a sedicious fellow as a disturber of peace or diuines of all sorts to censure him for an hereticke an author of sects and factions a pestilent schismatique should hee in an open assembly say to the one sort as sometimes hee did to men of their profession amongst the Iewes Woe be vnto you the interpreters of the Law for ye lade men with burthens grieuous to be borne and ye your selues touch not the burthen with one of your fingers or proclaime as many woes against the other with the superscription of hypocrites comparing their greene affection and graue weeds to painted tombs which appeare beautifull outward but within are full of dead mens bones and all filthinesse What passions would it stirre vp in all professions in Christians of all degrees should he accuse them of such villanies and impieties as in their owne perswasions they are least obnoxious vnto yea whose practise they bitterly lament euen in their ancestors or threaten vs as he did the Iewes that the plagues of our forefathers sinnes should fall vpon this present generation as more wicked then any that went before it And yet God knowes how milde these or like speeches as they are related by our Euangelists are in respect of his intire reproofes of the Iewes were they extant as he spake them or of such as he would now vse did he conuerse with vs and daily behold the cruell oppression of many great ones the fraud and cozenage of inferiours the dissolutenesse of others and the hypocrisie of such as seeme least culpable in the sight of men 5. These are points which euery man may dilate vpon or exemplifie proportionably to his seuerall occasions mine in this treatise it sufficeth to haue set downe the bare tearmes of that golden rule of reciprocall proportions by which most men may take an accompt in what state they stand The first tearme is the extraordinary zeale the Iewes bare to Moses the Prophets and their writings the second our parallell affection towards Christ and his Cospell the third the vaine issue or empty product of Iewish imaginary zeale manifested in their destruction mraiseble estate since our Sauiours first comming in the flesh The fourth must needes be a like fruitelesse issue of our zeale to Christ at his last comming vnto iudgement vnlesse we builde our faith and loue vpon better grounds then they did and frame our liues and manners to the meane from which they swerued One most generall yet an especiall rule to try our faith must be from experience of good affections contrary to those which made the Iewes to distast our Sauiour What these were the Reader may finde noted by the Euangelist and some of them come to bee discussed in the ordinary meanes we must vse for the planting of faith The surest measure we can take from any particular duty of our loue to Christ or beliefe in his word must be from our patient sufferance of his messengers to reprooue such enormities in vs as he sharply taxed in his hearers to beate downe open and out crying sinnes with such fearefull threatnings and denuntiations of greuous woes as he vsed against hypocrisie and other predominant vices in his time as also to launce and rip their auditors consciences that they may be touched with a sense of such corruptions as they feele not scarce know to be hurtful as our not sorrowing at others miseries with whom we liue our insulting reioicing at others fals as if we did more ioy to grieue them then sorrow they haue offended God as if we could be content to purchase our myrth by crucifying Christ afresh or by persecuting them for whose sake he died But if we repine stomacke or maligne his Embassadors taxing this or like crimes though in sharpest tearmes or neglect to examine our hearts and consciences at their request or instance it is a sure token our perswasions of faith and loue vnto him are but sancies that we are still in the gall of bitternesse enemies as cruell to him as these Iewes were and would haue done to him as they did had our occasions or opportunities beene the like To what extraordinary seruice he would appoint vs were he on earth againe we cannot diuine but the dueties he hath enioyned all without exception as obedience to the word knowne and reuerent attention to the messengers of his will we certainly know Let not then hypocrisie deceip● vs by suggesting these or the
notefie the principall errors of the Ramish Church partly because method so required partly for more commodious solution of some difficulties obiected by them in the point of instification but principally for expugning their doctrine of merits by works which as it is absolutely false so it is more abhominable in them then in vs it could bee because their workes can bee but dead being ●eparated from the life of faith by which ours so we practise as ●●● teach are truely quickned The controuersie itselfe I must refer to the article of CHRISTS comming vnto iudgement The second part of this Treatise aduiseth for the directing of faith aright vnto it proper end and that wee suppose to be firme adherence vnto Gods mercies in CHRIST or inseparable vnion with this our head Of this end many that seeke saluation by CHRIST vsually faile by these meanes especially First by defectiue or misgrounded perswasions of faiths inherence before they haue it or of great loue and loyalty to their Redeemer when as they remaine in the same gall of bitternesse that the heathens did which persecuted all true professors of his Gospell or the Iewes which put him to death The first roots or generall originals of these dangerous misperswasious are handled Chap. 1. The poysonous sap or i●●ce of Gentilisme and Iudaisme thence propagated to most Protestants Papists or others professing the name of CHRIST and boasting themselues to be the onely braunches of the true and naturall oliue is discouered in the second and third Chapters The conclusion arising from these instances or inductions is that faith in CHRIST connot be truely notified but by sincere loue nor such loue to him otherwise knowne then by doing his fathers will or obseruing his commaundements and in obseruing some or many of these wee may be so zealous as to lay downe our liues and vndoe our selues and our posterity rather then leaue them vndone or transgresse them and yet proue but Pseud● Martires Ignorance of this Elench hath been the Mother of much blinde deuotion to omit the instances specified in the body of our discourse in such gallants as went to recouer the holy Land it being receiued as an vndouted maxime in the diuinity of those times that whosoeuer was slaine by the Turke or Saracen should assuredly weare a Martyres Crowne in Heauen which all that died in that warre I am perswaded did not howbe it I doe no way disparage the iust occasions of that warre onely I wish the like whensoeuer they fall out agaiue may be prosecuted with more discreet religious zeale The issue of the fourth Chap. wherein the qualification required to Martyrdome with other like points are handled at large is that the sincerity of our faith loue must be tryed by an vnpartial and vniform obseruation of all Gods commandements as is proued in the Chap. following first by the anthorities of Siracides a man well ac●●ainted with the sacred dialect one from whose writings we may best gather the force and extent of beleefe in Saint Paules disputes within whose limits is included that vniformity of works which Saint Iames requires vnto iustification or saluation by whose Apostolicall authority the former conclusion is refortified In perusing of this first Chapter recall to minde or haue recourse vnto the points set downe Chap. 8. Sect. 1. and vnto those passages of the eleauenth wherein the different value or diuerse acceptions of faith in Saint Paul and Saint Iames are discussed Others againe faile of the former end of faith i. vnion with CHRIST or reconciliation with God by his mediation either by inuerting the vse of faith or by mistaking the measure of sanctifying graces necessary to saluation The former error is peculiar to the Romanist who labours to misperswade himselfe and others that faith is giuen him as a bare foundation of other graces or as a talent for frewill to traffique with vntill he obtaine such a full measure of inherent righteousnesse as shall immediately acquite him of all reckonings betweene his Creator and him by expelling all reliques or slaine of sinne as vtterly out of his soule as the water doth the ayre out of the vessell which it filleth vp to the very brimme The dangerous consequences of this errour are handled at large Chap. 6. and 7. And vnto the vse and measure of faith and other graces inherent I reduce the controuersie of iustification here inserted contrary to my first intent least otherwise I might haue ministred some offence vnto the Church wherein I liue or left some scruple in the Readers minde how faith should iustifie without works the linke or bond betweene them being so strict and essentiall as I make it almost identicall The same doubt naturally offered it selfe from the discussion of Saint Iames his meaning partly in the Chapter precedent partly in the last Chapter of the the first Section Out of sundry other passages of this discourse it likewise apeares that the works required to iustification by Saint Iames are virtually included in the faith whereto Saint Paul ascribeth iustification whence it may seeme to imply a contradiction in the very tearmes to say we are iustified by faith alone without workes if in iustifying faith works necessarily he included As the Trent Councels doctrine which vpon penalty of damnation exacts a measure of inherent righteousnesse whereof mortality is not capable nurseth finall doubting or despaire so others in opposition to it minister occasion of carelesnesse or presumption either by not vrging such a measure of perfection as Gods word requires or by deeming that sufficient enough to saluation although it bee subsequent to iustification Whereas hee that can once fully perswade himselfe he is actually iustified will not easily bee brought to doubt whether he want ought necessarie to saluation All of vs that haue forsaken the Romish Church rightly acknowledge the end and vse of faith to consist in calling vpon the name of the Lord in the daie of euill and temptation and that all such as call vpon him faithfully shall bee saued But many of vs are either much mistaken by our hearers or else deceiue our selues in imagining faithfull inuocation of Gods name through Christ to be one of the easiest points or operations of faith being indeede the most difficult because the finall seruice whereunto all other obedience to his Lawes and daily wrestlings with flesh and blood doe but inure vs as souldiers in the time of peace and truce are trained against the day of battell All persecutions or exercise of our patience are in respect of this last conflict with hell and death wherein victory is obtained onely through faith in Christ but as playing at foiles in a fence schoole to better skill and courage in triall of masteries at sharpe These and like points are handled in the two last Chapters of this second section not so fully as these times require but large enough for hints to popular sermons The third and last Section shewes the necessity and
or properties of true Faith Loue Fidelitie and Confidence with the manner of their resultance from it p 100. CHAP. 11 Of the diuerse acceptions of faith in Scriptures or Fathers of the Romanist pernicious error concerning the nature of it and charity whereby his in aginarie workes of merit necessarily become either dead apish or polluted p 110 SECTION 2. Of immature perswasions concerning mens present estate in grace with the meanes to rectifie or preuent them of the right vse of faith and other spirituall graces Pag. 135. CHAP. 10 The generall heads or springs of hypocriticall perswasions with briefe rules for their preuention p 136 CHAP. 2 That our Assent vnto the first principles of Christianitie by profession of which the saith of auncient Christians was vsually tryed may bee to our owne apprehension exceeding strong and yet our beliefe in Christ no better then the Heathens that oppugned them that it is a matter of more difficultie to be a true Christian now then in the Primitiue Church did we rightly examine the strength ●p●r faith not by such points as theirs was tried but by resisting pop●●ar customes or resolutions of our times actully opposite to the most essentiall and vtmost as Idolatrie is to the remote or generall differences of Christian faith p 143 CHAP. 3 That we moderne Christians may hate Christ as much as wee do the memory of such Iewes as crucified him albeit readie if we were called to formall triall rather to die then openly to deny him or his Gospell what meanes are surest for iust triall whether wee be better affected towards him then these Iewes were p 163 CHAP. 4 That the fruits of righteousnesse if but of one or few kindes argue the stocke whence they spring to be either imperfect or vnsound of the danger that may come by partiality in the practise of precepts alike diuine or from difformitie of zeale that our Assent to generalities oftimes appeares greater to our selues then indeed it is from our pronenesse or eager desires to transgresse in some particulars p 174. CHAP. 5 That true faith is the soule of good workes that it equally respects all the Commandements of God and can admit no dispensation for non-performance of necessarie duties p 192 CHAP. 6 Of difficulties arising from the former discourses in the Protestants doctrine of iustification by faith without workes That faith is as immediatly a●t to doe good workes of euery kinde as to iustifie Of the diuerse accep●ions of Iustification That the iustification by workes mentioned by S. Iames is proposed as subordinate to S Pauls iustification by faith without works The true reconcilement of these two Apostles speeches contrarie only in appearance from the contrariety of their seuerall ends or intentions p 206 CHAP. 7 Of the differences betwixt vs and the Romish Church concerning Iustification or the right vse or measure of grace or righteousnesse inherent p 229 CHAP. 8 How far the Lawe must be fulfilled in this life of the regiment of grace of the permanencie of Iustification what interruptions it may admit how these must be repaired or in what sense it may be sayd to be reiterated That euerie sinne is against Gods Law though euery sinne not incompatible with the state of grace p 253 CHAP. 9 That firmly to beleeue Gods mercies in Christ is the hardest point of seruice in Christian warfare That our confidence in them can b● no greater then our fidelity in the practise of his cōmandements That meditation vpon Christs last appearance is the surest method for grounding true confidence in him p 272 SECTION 3. Of the right plantation of Faith page 278. CHAP. ● That Christian Faith although immediately infused by God without any cooperation of man doth not exclude but rather more necessarily require precedent humane endeauours for the attaining of it p 279 CHAP. 2 That circumspect following the rules of Scripture is more auaileable for attaining true faith then the practise of morall precepts for producing morall habits That there may be naturall perswasions of spirituall truths and morall desires of spirituall good both right in their kinde though nothing worth in themselues but onely capable of better because not hypocriticall p 283 CHAP. 3 Of the fundamentall rule of Christianity to forsake all and denie our selues That the sincere practise thereof is a method more admirable and compendious for the attainment of faith then any Artist could prescribe the principles of Christianity being supposed That the want partly of instruction in the duties contained in it partly of solemne and publicke personall protestation for their performance is the principall cause of hypocrisie and infidelity p 282 CHAP. 4 That the obseruance of the former rule is most easie vnto men of meaner gifts vnto whom in this respect Gods mercy is greater then if their guiftes were better and yet his mercy iustly to bee esteemed greatest towards such as haue most excellent guifts by nature p 299 CHAP. 5 Our Sauiours Parables especially those Mat 13. Mark 4. Luk 8 most soueraigne rules for the plantation and growth of faith of vnfruitfull hearers resembled by the high-way side and stonie ground with briefe caueats for altering their disposition p 306 CHAP. 6 Of that temper which in proportion answeres to thornie ground of the deceitfulnesse of riches how difficult a matter it is to haue them and not to trust in them The reason why most rich men of our times neuer mistrust themselues of putting this trust in Mammon p 310 CHAP. 7 Of the antipathy betweene true faith and ambition or selfe-exaltation That the one resembles our Sauiours the other Sathans disposition Briefe admonitions for auoiding such dangers as growe from other branches of voluptuous life p. 317. CHAP. 8 Of the goodnesse or honesty of heart required by our Sauiour in fruitfull hearers of the ordinarie progresse from faith natural to spirituall and the different esteeme of diuine truths or precepts in the regenerate man and him that is not but sincerely desires to bee such vacancy to attend all intimations of the spirit to be sought after by all meanes possible That alienation of our chiefe desires from their corrupt obiects is much auaileable for purchase of the inestimable pearle p. 331. CHAP. 9 That faith cannot excercise it soueraigntie our affections or desires vntil ●t be seated in the hart with brief admonitions for bringing it into his throne p. 346. Places of Scripture expounded or illustrated by Obseruation in the Treatise following ⸪ Out of the Olde Testament GENESIS Cha. 22 Verse 2 TAke now thine onely sonne Isaac whom thou louest c. Section 1. chap. 7. parag 5. Verse 12 Sect. 1. chap. 8. par 9. EXODVS Cha. 10 Verse 8 9 10 Goe and serue the Lord your God but who are they that shall goe c. Sect. 2. c. 8. par 5. Verse 26 Therefore our cattell also shall goe with vs c. neither do wee know how we shall serue the Lord vntill we come thither ibid.
of vs haue a naturall blindnesse from our birth which he alone cantake away that gaue bodily sight to such as had been shut vp in darkenesse from the wombe The first thing wee apprehend directly and euidently vpon this change is the difference betwixt the state of the sonnes of darkenesse and the sonnes of light and this appeares greater and greater as we becom more conuersant in the workes of light whence springs an eager longing after that maruellous glorie which in the life to come shall bee reuealed whose apprehension though in this present life distinct and euident it cannot possibly be yet from a cleere and certaine apprehension first of the prophets light then of the day-starre shining in our hearts it is euident vnto vs that in due time reuealed it shall be as fully as our soules could wish Beloued saith Saint Iohn now wee are the sonnes of God and yet it doth not appeare what wee shall be but wee know that when he shall appeare we shall be like him for we shall see him as he is 8. Euen vnto this great Apostle that had seene the glory of Christ as of the onely begotten Sonne of God the ioyes which hee certainely beleeued to be prepared for the godly and of which he stedfastly hoped to bee partaker were as yet vnseene But was either his beliefe or hope for this reason lesse euident then certaine Not vnlesse wee make an vnequall comparison or measure them partially referring euidence to one part or quality of the obiect belieued or hoped and certainety to another As well the manner or the specificall quality as the distinct measure of those ioyes hee belieued were vncertaine because not euident or apprehensible But that God had prepared such ioyes for his Saints as no eie had seene such as their conceipt could not enter into the heart of man whilest inuail●d with this corruptible flesh was most certaine to him because most euident from their present pledge that peace of conscience which passeth al vnderstanding yet kept his heart and minde in knowledge and loue of Christ Iesus being an infallible euidence of those ioyes which were not euident the sure ground of all his incomprehensible hopes This cleere apprehension of our present estate wee may call an euidence of spirituall welfare or internall sense directly answering to that naturall euidence or certaine knowledge men haue of their health or hearty cheerefulnesse when their spirits are liuely and their bodies strong not disturbed with bad humours their mindes not cumbred or disquieted with anxious carking thoughts Of errours incident to the intermediate state beetweene the sonnes of darkenesse and the sonnes of light if any such there be or to our first apprehensions of this change and of the meanes to auoide them the Reader shall finde somewhat in the two next Sections of this Booke but more particularly in the Treatise Of the triall of Faith or Certainety of inherent grace In this place wee onely suppose as there is no liuing creature indued with those animall spirits that quicken the organs of bodily sense but euidently feeles paine or pleasure so is there none truely partaker of the Spirit of God but hath or may haue an euident feeling of this ioy and griefe of conscience which is to other obiects of knowledge truly spirituall as is the touch to the rest of our senses yet may we not thinke this feeling to bee alike euident in all For one liuing creature excelleth another in apprehension of proper sensitiue obiects all alike euident in themselues but so are not the senses or apprehensiue faculties of seuerall creatures alike nimble quick or strong 9. But for mine owne part the opinion generally receiued amongst the schoole men and other learned Clarkes that faith in respect of speculation or discourse should bee an Assent vneuident hath made mee often to suspect my dull capacity in matters of secular knowledge Aristotles Philosophy I had read ouer and yet could I hardly call any conclusion in it to minde that might with greater euidence be resolued into cleere vnquestionable principles then most effects or experiments reuolution of times affoord may bee into the disposition of a prouidence truely diuine And considering with my selfe how grosly hee should often faile that would vndertake to set forth a comment of my inward thoughts by obseruation of my outward actions when as no alteration of times of persons or places euer swarued from the rules of Scripture I rest perswaded that the same diuine prouidence which guides the world and disposeth all the actions of men did set foorth these euerlasting comments which neuer change of his owne consultations or decrees concerning them Againe acknowledging this eternal diuine power alike able to effect his wil purpose by ordering the vnruly wils of this presentage though their pollicies be of a contrary mould to such as heretofore we haue heard hee hath defeated the former inference as it seemed more religious so more euident then our aduersaries make when from a supposition onely of some infallible authoritie in some present Church they presently assume it must reside in the visible Romish Church representatiue yet this collection they hold euident by the habit of Theologie albeit they admit no discourse in Assent of Faith which is their second fundamentall errour in the doctrine of life another maine roote of Romish witchery For thus farre at least all the Sonnes of God make faith to bee discursiue that fom euident experience of Gods fauours past or present they alwaies inferre a certainetie of the like to ensue To the most of them in their distresse it was euident deliuerance should be sent them although the deliuerance it selfe were not so although they distinctly apprehended not by what meanes or in what manner it should bee wrought The immutability of Gods decree concerning the saluation of his people whether generall or particular being as well knowne as the stability of his couenant for vicissitude of day and night or other seasons the godly euen while they were themselues beset with sorrow and euery where enuironed with calamity or sawe the Church almost ouerwhelmed with vniuersall deluges of affliction might resolue for the generall that all in the end should turne vnto their good that continued in faith and loue to the Redeemer as vndoubtedly as men at mid-night may gather that the Sunne shall arise though they know not in what manner whether vnder a cloud in a mist beeset with vapours or appearing in his naturall brightnesse Thus saith the Psalmist Heauinesse may lodge with vs for a night but ioy commeth in the morning Yea thus saith the Lord which giueth the sunne for a light to the day and the courses of the moone and of the starres a light to the night which breaketh the Sea when the waues thereof roare his name is the Lord of Hoasts If these Ordinances depart out of my sight then shall the seede of Israell cease from being a nation before
or right mixture of our sensitiue desires or affections Or lastly seeing in true Philosophy the faculties sensitiue and intellectiue are but branches of one and the same soule or at the most but two parts of that compleat forme which distinguisheth a Man from creatures inanimate and takes from him life sense and reason all at once by it departure this Assent of faith being such as we haue sayd may most commodiously be placed in the common center wherein sensitiue and intellectiue inclinations concurre whence it may easiliest commaund the motions of both and diffuse it force and vertue throughout the whole substance and euerie faculty of the humane soule 16. If the Reader be desirous to haue the definition of faith or that part of it which naturally ariseth from this discourse comprehended as the schoole fashion is in two words he shall not much mistake if he terme it a spirituall prudence which includes as much as an Assent of the inteliectiue faculty able to ouersway and moderate the sensitiue or generally all humane affections or inclinations The Romanists conceit that Christian charity should informe true liuely faith is as preposterous as if we should say the affection doth informe the vnderstanding or vertues morall the intellectuall or if we speake of the loue wee beare to God the analogie of speech is no better then if wee should say the gratefull memory of pleasant obiects informes the faculty that perceiues them In what part of the soule soeuer this Queene of vertues lodge it hath the same commaund ouer our affections or practique powers that sense or appetite hath ouer the progressiue faculty which nature hath giuen to sensitiue creatures for accomplishmēt of their necessary desires That our Christian vertue should physically informe another is a conceit altogether dunsticall and now disclaimed in the explication of the old schoole maxim wherein without Iesuiticall comments no man but would thinke it were literally and necessarily included That Faith morally informes directs and commaunds charity as a guide appointed to it by him that is the author of both neither of them consulted by him that hath them will deny Albeit if lawfull it be to enstamp matters sacred with the exact forme of scholastique speech it is perhaps but one and the same spirituall grace which animates and enables the soule as to discerne the truth so to embrace the goodnesse of reuelations diuine and constantly to practice all kindes of Christian duties bearing diuers titles from execution of seuerall offices whiles it inspires diuers faculties of the same soule as one and the same breath hath different sounds in the seuerall pipes of the same organes or other wind instrument As it illuminates the mind or soueraigne part of the rationall soule it is tearmed faith as it moderates euery particular affection or desire it takes the name of the vertue peculiarly appointed to that charge making it of meerely morall truely Christian Vnto Parents kinsfolk acquaintance benefactors or such as wel deserue of them most men naturally are wel affected vnto all as men we owe humanitie and this affection being made conformable and subordinate to the directions of liuely faith becomes christian charity But ere it become such the same grace which as it illuminates the minde to see and strengthens it to embrace diuine truths proposed is tearmed faith doth alter the quality of this affection by purging it from carnall respect of persons or priuate purposes is termed faith doth alter the quality of this affection by purging it from carnall respect of persons or priuate purposes by enapting it to be ruled by faith which fixeth it only vpon such obiects as Gods word commends and in that degree it prescribes Though before we did affect others vpon such motiues as flesh and blood suggested yet afterwards wee must know no man so but all our loue is in the Lord. And though faith teach vs to enlarge our benignity or good minde towards all as well foes as friends yet it fixeth it especially on such as we deeme neerest allied vnto our Redeemer albeit their personall deserts or references towards vs be not so great In like sort doth one and the same grace perhaps for the manner physically but faith morally informe and moderates euery affection disposition or inclination that can be matter or rudiment of vertue It perfects our notions of equity and iustice it ripens and sublimates our seeds of temperance of valour of liberality For all these or other vertues are in a higher degree in minds endued with faith then in such as are destitute of it and principally set vpon such obiects as the naturall man could not affect But because loue thus informed by grace and directed or touched by faith of all christian vertues most resembles the dispositiō of our Lord and Sauiour and if in this life it could be perfect would fulfill at least the second part of the lawe if we compare it and faith as they are parts of our imperfect righteousnesse charity within its own proper sphere is intensiuely the greater or higher in this edifice as being supported held vpby faith but because our righteousnes is in it selfe imperfect and our charity towards others vnable to withstand Sathans malice against vs without externall muniments procured not by the merits of it but by faithfull prayers and supplications therfore as Christ is Alpha and Omega so is faith the first of al christian vertues in plantation and the last we must in this life rely vpon for retaining vniō with this author and finisher of faith CHRIST IESVS Briefly as he is to all the faithfull so is faith to all other vertues in this life a transcendent foundation and complement It remaines we shew first the truth of our maine conclusion by instances of sacred writ or such practices as it ascribes to faith Secondly the philosophicall premises whence we infer it to be most consonant to the phrase of Gods spirit which often teacheth vs more true philosophy in one word then Philosophers do in large volums The conclusion is we are then said rightly to belieue matters of our owne saluation when we Assent vnto them as good as necessary and worthy to be embraced not only whilst considered in themselues or in generall or without such incumbrances or occurrents as doe often interpose or hinder their practice but euen whilst actually compared with present losse of any sensual good or infliction of any transitory euill the world diuell or flesh can oppose to raise their price 17. Such must this Assent be in the habite or constant resolution though often defectiue in the act vpon disaduantages espied by Sathan But euery such defect we must account a dangerous sinne especially if we haue any distinct notice of actuall competition between carnal and spiritual good for this preposterous choice is properly not of faith but rather directly against the very nature of it as it is now defined to be an Assent vnto the meanes of
an vnpleasāt spectacle to such as delighted in setting pruning or nourishing plants But that is but a weak resemblance of this mans torture first stript of his skin hauing afterwards all the vtmost parts of his body lopped off lastly his raw bulk broiled or carbonadoed quick Yet the second sprig of the sameroot made spectator of al this misery to cause him abhor like butchery practices vpon himselfe constantly pitching the feare of God higher then any present racke or torture could raise or improue his naturall feare of tyrants rage with his mortall life breathes out that euerlasting truth which his Redeemer afterwards gaue in charge to his disciples For when hee was at the last gaspe he sayd Thou like a fury takest vs out of this present life but the king of the world shall raise vs vp who haue dyed for his lawes vnto euer lasting life The third after like derision and torments as his brothers had suffered willingly yeelds his tongue vnto the tormentour but first consecrates therewith his other members as an acceptable sacrifice vnto his God esteeming their losse as gaine for the keeping of his lawe For stretching forth his hands with boldnesse he spake couragiously these haue I had from heauen but now for the loue of God I despise them and trust that I shall receiue them of him againe Nor could like torments wrest any other confession from the fowrth ●●r when he was ready to die he sayd thus It is better that wee should change this which wee might hope for of men and waite for our hope from God that wee may be raised vp againe by him as for thee thou shalt haue no resurrection to life The fift againe lesse feares the torments which he suffered than the scandall which might redound to Gods Church from relation of their grieuousnesse vnlesse the error were preuented Thou hast power ô king among men and though thou be a mortall man thou dost what thou wilt but thinke not that God hath for saken our nation The fixt likewise at the point of death charitably instructs the tyrant as our Sauiour afterwards did the Iewes concerning them whose blood Pilate had mingled with their owne sacrifice * Deceiue not thy selfe foolishly for wee suffer those things which are worthy to be wondred at for our owne sakes because wee haue offended our God but thinke not thou which vndertakest to fight against God that thou shalt be vnpunished But the mother sayth this Author was maruellous aboue all other and worthy of honourable memory For if by faith the Elders obtained honour and good report the weaknesse of her sexe doth witnesse the admirable strength of her faith that seeing her seauen sonnes slaine within the space of one day suffered it with a good will because of the hope that she had in the Lord. That which enspired her breast with this hope her hopes with wisdome and her womanly affections with such manly courage was her firme Assent vnto the Articles of the creation and the resurrection for with these arguments shee wisely armes them against the terrours of death or torture b I cannot tell how you came into my womb for I neither gaue my breath nor life neither was it I that formed the members of euery one of you But doubtlesse the Creator of the world vvho found the generation of man and found out the beginning of all things vvill also of his owne mercy giue you breath and life againe as you now regard not your owne selues for his lawes sake The seauenth whom Antiochus had tempted to disloialty as well by hopes of honour as threats of tortures she thus intreats in particular O my sonne haue pitty vpon me that bare thee nine moneths in my vvomb and gaue thee sucke 3 yeeres and nourished thee and brought thee vp vnto this age and endured the troubles of education I beseech thee my sonne l●oke vpon the heauen and the earth and all that is therein and consider that God made them of things th●● were not and so was mankinde made likewise Feare not this tormentor but being worthy of thy brethren take thy death that I may receiue thee againe in mercy vvith thy bretlren Nor did her words want effect for this also esteemed obedience much better then honor or preferment yea as much dearer then sacrifice though of himselfe For he sayd I as my brethren haue done offer my body and life for the lawes of our fathers beseeching God that he wil soone be merciful vnto our notton and that thou O Tyrant by torment punishment maist confesse that he is the onely God And that in me and my brethren the vvrath of the Almighty which is righteously fallen vpon our nation may cease so he also dyed holily and put his whole trust in the Lord. That a dumbe creature shall gently and quietly licke her yong ones newly ript out of herbelly euen while the Anatomists knife did lance and dissecate her liuing members seemed to me when first I read it in an Author of this profession and practise a wondrous effect of natures force euincing the truth of our Apostles saying that loue which thus excludes all sense of paine would if perfect expell all feare but doubtlesse more then naturall was this womans loue or rather great was her faith that Gods loue vnto her sonnes and her was greater then the loue of mothers to their children which could thus out of pitty and compassion expose them to such sauage cruelty patiently behold their liue Anatomy afterwards content her selfe to be a subiect of like practises For last of all after the sonnes the mother dyed 12. So consonant to the grounds of our Apostles discourse and these late mentioned resolutions is that excellent exhortation Mattathias made vnto his sons before his death that we may without presumption presume one and the same spirit did set the seuerall parts of this lesson and tune their hearts to this consort albeit hee did not pen these latter ditties Now hath pride and rebuke gotten strength and the time of destruction and the wrath of indignation now therefore my sonnes be ye zealous for the lawe and giue your liues for the couenant of your fathers Call to remembrance what our fathers did in their time so shall ye receiue great honour and an euerlasting name Was not Abraham found faithfull in temptation and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse Iosephs chastity Phineas and Eliahs zeale Iosuahs valour and Calebs fidelity Dauids mercy and Daniels innocency are all ascribed to faith by him as well as Ananias Azarias and M●saels safety or Abrahams late mentioned acts for after an enumeration of these particulars he thus concludes And this consider ye in all ages that none that put their trust in him shall be ouercome All that was commendable in these auncient Worthies was from their trust in the Lord and that from their firme Assent vnto his power his bounty
in sciences or workes of nature or of addition and substraction in Arithmetique or of laying or reducting sums in accompts As young Dauid first encountred Beares and Lions or other enemies of his flocke and afterwards ouercomes the great Goliah that had defied the whole host of Israell so true and liuely faith first begins with petty desires or such temptations as are incident to our present state or calling alwaies so much lesse grieuous in themselues as our places are meaner and hauing gotten mastery ouer them still encreaseth as difficulties or oppositions multiply vntill at length it become victorious ouer the diuell world and flesh by a sincere discharge of particulars contained in the view of Baptisme Hypocrisie acknowledgeth the same summe of Christian duties or practices and subscribes vnto it not onely in grosse but vnto most particulars therein contained yet still reducts or exonerates as much as well displeasing humours disallow vntill it finally dissolue what true faith doth build euen vnto the first foundation if the opposition betweene it and carnall feares hopes loue or hate come once to be direct eager What protestation could any true professor either conceiue in tearmes more decent or submissiue or tender in more serious and ample forme then that supplication which the remnant of Iudah and Ierusalem presented vnto the Prophet Ieremy after the captiuity of their brethren Then all the Captaines of the host and Iehonan the sonne of Kareah and Iezaniah the sonne of Hoshaiah and all the people from the least vnto the most came and sayd vnto Ieremiah the Prophet Heare our prayer we beseech thee and pray for vs vnto the Lord thy God euen for all this remnant for we are left but a few of many as thine eyes doe behold that the Lord thy God may shewe vs the way wherein we may walke and the thing that we may doe After he had vndertaken this sacred businesse and past his word for his integrity in translating it they more pathetically oblige themselues to whatsoeuer obedience God by his mouth shall enioine them Then they sayd to Ieremiah The Lord bee a witnesse of truth and faith betweene vs if we do not euen according to all things for the which the Lord thy God shall send thee vnto vs whether it bee good or be euili wee will obey the voice of the Lord God to whom wee send thee that it may be well with vs when wee obey the voice of the Lord our God A man would think the proposall of Gods commaundement by a Prophet so well knowne vnto this people one whom they had chosen for this purpose should haue enforced them to performance of their promise Yet Ieremiah foreseeing the hypocrisie of their hearts though hidden from their owne eyes returnes his message in such a forme as if hee had vsed artificiall inuention to perswade obedience Hauing called some of the parties that had late made this serious protestation he tells them Thus sayth the Lord God of Israell vntowhom ye sent me to present your prayers before him if yee will dwellin this land then I will build you and not destroy you and I will plant you and not root you out for I repent me of the euill that I haue done vnto you Feare not for the king of Babed of whom ye are afraide be not afraid of him saith the Lord For I am with you to saue you and to deliuer you from his hand And I will grant you mercy that he may haue compassion vpon you and hee shall cause you to dwellin your land But if ye say wee will not dwell in this land neither heare the voice of the Lord your God saying Nay but wee will goe into the land of Egypt where we shall see no warre nor heare the sound of the trumpet nor haue hunger of bread and there we will dwell and now therefore heare the word of the Lord yee remnant of Iudah thus sayth the Lord of hosts the God of Israell If ye set your forces to enter into Egypt and go to dvve●l there then the sword that yee feared shall take you there in the Land of Egypt and the famine for which you care shall there hang vpon you in Egypt and there shall ye die And all the men that set their forces to enter into Egypt to dwell there shall die by the sword by the famine and by the pestilence and none of them shall remaine or escape from the plague that I will bring vpon them For thus sayth the Lord of hostes the God of Israell As mine anger and my vvrath hath been poured out vpon the inhabitants of Ierusalem so shall my vvrath be poured out vpon you vvhen you enter into Egypt and ye shall be a detestation and an astonishment and a curse and a reproach and ye shall see this place no more O yee remnant of Iudah the Lord hath sayd concerning you Goe ye not into Egypt know certainly that I haue admonished you this day And as Iosuah at his last farewell vnto his people suspecting their pronenesse to idolatrie did by a seeming prouocation of them to the practice and profession of it wisely wrest from them more serious protestation to the contrary and a stricter obligement to the seruice of the onely true God then otherwise they would haue conceiued so Ieremiah instructed by his God that the hypocrisie of this peoples heart now secretly began to work giues them notice of it most desirous to be disapproued by them in the euent Surely yee dissembled in your hearts when you sent me vnto the Lord your God saying pray for vs vnto the Lord our God and according vnto all that the Lord our God shall say so declare vnto vs and we vvill doe it And now I haue this day declared it to you but ye haue not obeyed the voice of the Lord your God nor anie thing for vvhich he hath sent me vnto you Now therefore know certainly that yee shall die by the sword by famine and by the pestilence in the place whither ye desire to goe and soiourne Ierusalems ruines and the Temples ashes did witnesse the seuerity and iustice of their God against the obstinate and disobedient The Babylonians themselues knew Ieremiah for a Prophet euen this people to whom hee brings this message were well perswaded of his familiarity with their God and hee himselfe had past his word for acquainting them fully with his will Then Ieremiah the Prophet sayd vnto them I haue heard you behold I will pray vnto the Lord your God according vnto your words and it shall come to passe that whatsoeuer thing the Lord shall answere you I will declare vnto you I will keepe nothing backe from you And was it possible the same men should bee so dislike themselues as to forget their late protestations and refuse to do Gods will so fully made knowne vnto them by his Prophet To doe the will of God if so they knew it to
care is to cast all his care on him as on a Guardian most tenderly respecting the wel-fare of all such as with prayers vnfayned commend themselues to his tuition That these are the immediate and proper effects of Christian beliefe or Assent vnto the diuine prouidence our Sauiour enstructs vs where he attributes carking care or worldly solicitude to Gentilisme or Infidelity Take no thought saying what shall we eate or what shall we drinke or wherewithall shall we be cloathed for after all these things do the Gentiles seeke for your heauenly Father knoweth that yee haue need of all these things But seeke ye first the kingdome of God and his righteousnesse and all these things shall be added vnto you A liuely embleme of this correspondency betweene the diuine attributes and our Assent or betweene the characters of Gods will and ours the holy Ghost hath purposely set forth vnto vs in the story of Abraham The prime and fundamentall obiect of Christian beliefe was that most illustrious act of Gods mercy in offering his only sonne in whom he was vvellpleased for the sinnes of the world Now to shew what manner of Assent is on our parts required for right acceptance of this inestimable fauour he will haue the like minde in Abraham that was in himselfe ready he must bee to sacrifice his sonne his onely sonne Isaac whom hee loued ere the couenant bee concluded with him Finally seeing the man CHRIST IESVS as hath been obserued is as the abridgement or visible modell of his fathers goodnesse which is incomprehensible his heauenly disposition the idaeall patterne after whose similitude a Christians life must be framed we are then rightlie said to belieue his incarnation life death and passion when as the Apostle speakes the same minde is in vs that was in him when we are not onelie willing to lay downe our liues for the brethren as he did his for vs but when our liues and conuersations entirely expresse the true proportion of that absolute perfection which shined in his humane nature as it did in the Glory of the Godhead His fathers loue to him brought forth the like affection in him towards vs and to his lawes so must his loue to vs worke loue in vs to our brethren and to all his commaundements Herein saith he is my father glorified that ye beare much fruite and be made my Disciples As the father hath loued me so haue I loued you continue ye in my loue If ye shall keepe my Commaundements ye shall abide in my loue as I haue kept my fathers Commandements and abide in his loue Thus made conformable to him not in one or few but in all points of obedience and Christian vertues we are rightly said to be edified in faith and to haue him fashioned in vs. Nor is there any Article in this creed whose stedfast beliefe doth not in one point or other worke this conformitie as in their explications God willing shall be manifested 10. The whole platforme of diuinity or Theology we may hence gather cannot better be defined or limited then between these two lines or borders A distinct explication first of the obiects to be beleeued and their certainty secondly of the meanes whereby their image or Characters may be engrauen vpon our soules This now may suffice that vnto that assent of faith or beliefe in Christ whereby the iust must liue such a knowledge of him and his attributes is required as shall enstampe our w●● and affections with the ●iue image of his goodnesse and imitable perfections as truly as matte●s meerely speculatiue imprint their shape vpon the vnderstanding or obiects visible theirs vpon the eye For seeing all knowledge must be commensurable to the obiects knowne in such an impression of whose entire similitude as the seale leaues in the wax the perfection of it consists Our knowledge of morall obiects diuine especially which are as essentially good as true is imperfect v●lesse it include a solid impression of their goodnesse as well as a superfi●iall resemblance of their truth From this indiuisible vnion betwixt truth and goodnesse in matters diuine their names in phrase of scripture are oft times vsed promiscnously And it is a Maxime vndoubted in Diuinity That Christ Iesus must dwell in vs by the same bond and knot we dwell in him Now it is impossible that any part of him or which is all one of his liue image should be fashioned in vs by any other meanes then by knowledge or apprehension of his incarnation life death and passion with their consequences in respect of vs impossible that he should abide in vs or we in him by any other linke or bond besides firme and stedfast a●sent or adherence vnto these and other truthes concerning him reu ealed and knowne CHAP. IX What manner of knowledge it is whence the last and proper difference of that assent wherein Christian faith consists doth result the complete definition of such faith 1. SEeing the word in a generall the Lord of life in a sence more peculiar is not only the obiect of our beliefe but the true food of our soules and all food essentially includes a relation vnto tast the true nature of that faith or knowledge by which we liue cannot better be notified then by such a proportion betweene our minde and the food of life as is betweene the symbole or organicall faculty of bodily tast and the quality of the meate it relisheth As our bodily tast though the same in respect of all is not alike affected with all meates but relisheth euery one according to their seuerall qualities or degrees of proportion or disproportion with it selfe so though by one and the same faith wee assent vnto all matters reuealed in Scripture as true and good yet our soules find not the like comfort or refreshing in all but some albeit presented a farre off to their sence they apprehend with horror as the dregs of that cup which is in the hands of the Lord whereof all the vngodly must bee enforced to drinke Others though they come but within smell they entertaine with admiration yet feed not on them as we lightly essay strong waters or quintescences but vse them not as ordinary drinke such are the inscrutable mysteries of the Trinity the glory and maiesty of the Godhead Others are continually longed after as their onely food more or lesse according to the seuerall degrees of their goodnes in respect of vs. 2. No man that drinketh old wine straightway desireth new for he saith the old is better And in this case it is as easie to doe as to say because one and the same faculty enclines him to like of both and the apprehension of ones rellish or sweetnes being as proper and naturall as the others that which is so indeed will be esteemed better For where the constitution of the faculty is vniformaly e●clined to all it is alwaies most forcibly mooued by such of it proper obiects as are
vnderstand that it is not liuely and perfect such as indeed it should be He meanes they denie it not to be numerically the same without workes and with them as the body in his conceipt is one and the same without the soule and with it And it is a manner of speech in his obseruation vsuall to account that which is imperfect in any kinde not to bee true in the same kinde As for example wee vse to say ioy or griefe imperfect or little is no true ioy or griefe although it be some ioy or griefe Who vseth to say so but dunces or who but haeretickes would denie the least degree of spirituall ioy to be true ioy the least sting of conscience to be true griefe Things little in any kinde actually compared with others incomparably greater we vse to reckon as none so we might say the ioy of the godly in this life is as none in respect of that which shall be reuealed But yet the least measure of our internall ioy truely denominates vs ioyfull if we speake absolutely as the Fathers doe when they denie faith without workes to bee true faith For they denie withall that it then denominates as truely faithfull or belieuers as is euident from that obseruation of Gregory vpon those wordes of our Sauiour He that shall belieue and be baptized shall be saued It is likely euery one of you will say within himselfe I haue beleeued therefore I shall be saued He speakes the truth if he haue faith with workes For that is true faith which in manners or deedes contradicts not what it thus professeth in wordes Hence it is that Paul saith of certaine false beleeuers They confesse they know God but denie him by their workes Hence saith Iohn He that saies he beleeues God and keepes not his commandements is a liar This should teach vs to acknowledge the truth of faith in examination of our life For then we are truely faithfull or belieuers when we fulfull in deed what we promised in word For in the day of baptisme wee promised vtterly to forsake all workes and pomps of the old enemy Therefore let euery one of you turne the eies of his minde vnto the former examination and if after baptisme he haue kept his promise made before then let him reioice being thus assured that he is faithfull He ads with all that he which knowes to bewaile his offences past shal haue them couered in the day of iudgement 2. This last testimony will direct the reader to gather the like in other Fathers from their expositions of those passages wherein mention is made of that faith whereunto our Sauiour ascribes eternall life or his Apostles righteousnesse The euidence of which places is in it selfe to such as weigh the circumstances co 〈…〉 nt and praecedent or compare one place with another so forsible that it oft times extorts confessions from pontifician expositors against the most receiued Tenents of their Church first hatched by the schoolemen which neuer saw the light of heauen but through the darke painted glasses of the Cels wherein they were imprisoned and hence imagine our Sauiours forme of doctrine to be of the same hew with midnight Dunsery or grossest ignorance of sacred dialects One vpon these wordes of the Prophet The worke of righteousnesse shall bee peace and the effects of righteousnes quietnes and assurance for euer saith that faith whereto S. Paul ascribeth righteousnes includes all these branches to commit our selues and all our waies vnto God as to a most louing father to whom we haue plight our faith whom we accept for our God sincerely promising to obey him and obserue his lawes He thinks withall that the Apostle did borrow this speech Being iustified by faith wee haue peace with God through our Lord Iesus Christ from the former place of the Prophet Yet this Commentator stiffely denies iustification by such faith alone how inconsequently to this obseruation shall hereafter be examined It well fits our present purpose that the righteousnesse herespoken of by the Prophet is included in Saint Pauls faith 3. Another vpon those wordes of the same Apostle The Gospell of Christ is the power of God vnto saluation counsels vs to learne the right signification of this tearme to belieue as it is vsed in Saint Paules disputes from other places of Scripture especially from that speech of our Sauiour Hee that belieueth on me as the Scripture hath said out of his belly shall slow riuers of liuing water The scripture saith this iudicious pontifician expositor whereto our Sauiour had respect is in the sixteenth Chapter of the second of Chronicles Th●●●ies of the Lord behold the whole earth and giue strength to such as belieue on him with a perfect heart Now they belieue with a perfect heart which doe not onely giue credence to what the Scripture saith or is otherwise reuealed from aboue but further addresse all the faculties of their soules to doe what faith requires or praescribes And in this sence doth Saint Paul vse this word belieue as if it were to be moued at the hearing of the vvord and to embrace vvhat is said vvith an entire adhaerence of the soule Very fitly to this purpose doth our English translation in the booke of common praier render that place of the Psalmist whose spirit cleaueth not stedfastly vnto God Which the vulgar latine seeking to expresse the hebrew word by word hath rudely expressed non est creditus cum Deo spiritus eius 4. Two places of Scripture onely there be with whose difficultie or obscurity the Iesuite or other of the Trent Councels vassailes hope to extinguish the light and euidence of all the rest so pregnant for vs. The first is that of Saint Paul though I speake vvith the tongues of men and Angels and haue not charity I am become as sounding brasse or as a tinckling cymball He that supposeth all faith may be without charity saith Valentian excepteth none But our writers reply That the faith by which miracles of what kind soeuer are wrought is here onely mentioned and such faith though neuer so entire and perfect may be as in these Corinthians it was without true loue The truth of which answeare most probable from the circumstances of the place as it needs perhaps no further confirmation so for the fuller illustration of it impertinent it will not be for the reader to obserue that of all the Churches which Saint Paul had planted of all he wrote vnto or vouchsafed any mention this of Corinth did most abound in all those extraordinary gifts of the spirit which might set forth the glory of Christ and his gospell before heathen and vnregenerate men especially such as these Corinthians by nature and education weere earnestly addicted to humane arts and sciences wherewith that City at this time flourished most for which reason the Lord in his wisdome would haue the messengers of his truth vnto that place rich in all kind
trickes of Monckes and Friers to cousen the people by making images wagge or seeme to speake may serue as an embleme of that imposture or Gull which Satan by Gods iust iudgement hath put vpon their subtilest wits in this argument These Couseners made the people ofttimes thinke some Saint had moued or spoken when a knaue did stirre the image or vent his own vnhallowed breath through it or about it and Satan makes them beleeue they are moued by the spirit of God in such actions as are not enspired by faith but thrust vpon them by his wicked Angels Workes of charity they esteeme all such as outwardly resemble the actions of Christ or his Saints though conceiued not by faith but vpon other motiues as motion infused by art may to the eye of man exactly counterfeit motion naturall This is a maine branch of that great mistery of iniquity For by this error as their faith is neuer reuiued so their workes though faire and pompous in outward shew and such as would be most pleasant vnto their God did they spring from minds and affections renewed by liuely faith being superadded onely to this dead faith neither can perfect it nor receiue perfection from it but become like sweet flowers vsually put vpon dead corps the sent of whose corruptions hinder they may for a time but surer at length to participate thereof then communicate their fragrancieto it 10 It is a contemplation very profitable to marke what troopes of errors may issue from one place of scripture mistaken and how priuate opinions conceiued through ignorance and conceiued by negligence are oftimes established by wilfulnesse of publike authority for who but a schooleman that considers morall propositions in scriptures as if they were mathematicall definitions or indemonstrable principles no whit dependent of what went before or comes after could not at first perusall haue obserued that Saint Iames had a purpose in that Chapter to taxe his pupils as well for want of true faith as of good workes yea the workes they did to be nothing worth becouse not wrought by faith had without all respect of persons or partiality in the Law of God But the Romanist not obseruing what is a point most cleare that vniforme fidelity or faithfulnesse in all commaundements of God is the very formall effect of that faith which was in Abraham and Saint Paul so much commends First takes that dead and vaine faith Saint Iames disproues to be the same with that Saint Paul so much commends and consequently to this error denies iustification by faith but as it is informed with charity which is as much as to say we are iustified by charity and not by faith and vnto these two errors annexeth a third most pernitious concerning the nature of workes which either not conceiued by such vniformity of faith as Paul requires or not managed by a paralel vniformity become altogether Iewish and their best righteousnesse that practise them like the righteousnesse of the Scribes and Pharises Lastly to reare vp a roofe euery way answerable to the foundation they leade vs from the Gospell vnto the Law and make the eternall couenant made vnto mankinde in Christ subseruiant to the couenant made with our first parents as shall be demonstrated against them in the Article of the last iudgement And what other consequence could one expect of this error whereto noe other could be paralell which makes Charity the forme or workes the spirit of faith yet that not onely their best priuate writers but their Church representatiue is tainted with this stupide heresie this decree of the Trent Counsell will serue as a testimony vpon record If any man shall auouch that as oft as grace is lost through sinne faith is alwaies lost together with it or that faith which remaines after losse of grace to be no true faith although no liuing faith or the man that hath faith without charity to be no Christian Let him be accursed 11. If these curses could hurt any Saint Paul should haue the fulles measure of them for questionlesse he neuer thought such faith as hee commended could remaine without grace or integrity of conscience Saint Iames I thinke should hardly escape vnlesse he would subscribe to this conclusion that the Diuell was a Christian And were Scotus Ockain or Swisset now aliue they would find all the Iesuites in the world play for these hundred yeares to hold the contrary and defend the Trent Councell in this decree For such faith as the Councell requires to make a Christian may be yea is in the worst kinde of Diuels albeit Valentian hath laboured to find this difference That faith without workes or grace is in men the gift of God so is not the faith of Diuels No more was this answere of his suggested by Gods spirit or the spirit of truth For not to question whether such dead faith as Saint Iames speakes of be the gift of God or no but rather supposing it were this argues a difference onely in the cause none in the essence nature or quality That God created wants in the beginning doth not argue they were of a more excellent nature then ordinary Lions not created but propagated by nature are now of And if the quality of faith be the same in the Trent Councels Christians and in Diuels Valentian doth rather wrong the Almighty in making him the Author of it in the one then prooue either it or his owne cause to be the better by saying it is the gift of God For though it be his gift and yet may be without grace or charity and without these of necessitie as vnfruitfull as the faith of Diuels both which Valentian grants it is no more auaileable to make a Christian then the faith of Diuels is Nay in that it may be without workes theirs is more fruitfull then it for as Saint Iames tels vs theirs workes feare and trembling in them were that faith which the Trent Councell makes the forme of a Christian so operatiue in it nature it could not be as is obserued before without workes or charity For if it wrought a trembling feare of his power it would worke a reioicing loue of his mercie and impell them as to auoid the stroke of the one so to embrace the gentle strokings of the other Their owne writers obserue that to feare God in the language of Canaan is to worship him and is it lesse to beleeue in him then to feare him To conclude what ancient father is there which should not be accursed if God did not blesse where these Trent Fathers curse For though their charity would not suffer them to depriue any professing true religion of that title wherein he ioied the name of a Christian because they knew not what faith they had in their hearts yet few of them but indefinitely auouch thus much That he falsly vsurps the glorious name of a Christian or faithfull man which is not faithfull in Gods commandement
was as hatefull to him as theirs that wished his blood might bee vpon them for it was but one and the same in both onely with these mens affections mentioned in the sixth of Iohn the apprehension of his miracles had coniunction for a time but opposition with all at his passion when they saw all his workes and doctrine tend to an end quite contrary vnto that whereupon their desires were set euen to the vtter debasement of their lofty proud imaginations 6 As well those Iewes that crucified our Lord and Sauiour as the heathens that persecuted his followers vnto death we often accuse of deadly malice and indite of murther more then wilfull vnto which crimes euery Christian must by his faith acknowledge them guiltie in the highest degree But our hate to such as hated our Redeemer may as the Psalmist speaks be perfect and vnsaigned and yet not proue our loue towards him to be such albeit the only measure most men vse for notifying the fulnesse of their beliefe is this supposed loue they beare vnto their Sauiour which if in many it be but imaginary or swimme onely in the braine whilest reall hatred of his will reuealed no lesse offensiue to him then the despite of Iewes or heathens lodge in their hearts or beare rule in their affections their faith must needes be but a fancie onely seruing to leauen their naturall infidelitie with pharisaicall hypocrisie To begin with the gentile CHAP. II. That our Assent vnto the first principles of christianitie by profession of which the faith of auntient Christians was vsually tried may be to our owne apprehension exceeding strong and yet our beliefe in Christ no better then the heathens that oppugned them that it is a matter of more difficultie to be a true Christian now then in the Primitiue Church did wee rightly examine the strength of our faith not by such points as theirs was tried but by resisting popular customes or resolutions of our times as fully opposite to the most essentiall and vtmost as Idolatrie is to the remote or generall differences of Christian faith 1. TAke no thought sayth our Sauiour saying what shall we eate or what shall we drinke or wherewith shall we be cloathed for after all these things seeke the Gentiles for your heauenly father knoweth that yee haue neede of all these things To thinke the vvisdome of God should in these words Oratour-like make vse of his auditours detestable hatred towards the vncircumcised as an argument to disswade them from such heathenish resolutions as were disagreeable to their calling would be a glosse plausible perhaps to flesh and blood easie in this case to be thus far perswaded But who so is better acquainted with his Masters vsuall method will quickly obserue his further purpose to giue vs in this short instance these or the like maxims of life That profession of truth without conformable practice though in matters most difficult makes circumcision become vncircumcision That to put on the name or title of his Disciples not shaking off such resolutions as heathen that is men without knowledge of the true God or reliance on his prouidence is but to cloath our selues with the leaues and barke of the true Vine being full within of such sap as at the best can bring foorth but wilde grapes And if most of them which had been continuall auditors of Moses lawe trained vp in Iewish discipline were vntill they learned to liue according to this rule altogether as bad as the Gentiles what reason haue we to hope the carelesse education of moderne Christians should make them better Besides outward appearance which without internall integrity correspondent is meere hypocrisie ods we shall finde none at all betweene our selues and the Gentiles of whom our Sauiour speakes if we vnpartially consider The vsuall grounds and motiues whereupon we embrace his Gospel or The vnconsonant practises or resolutions wherewith wee continually match the profession of it or lastly which is the verie life and spirit of Gentilisme Our diffidence vnto Gods prouidence for redressing the disorders of his Church 2. What were the reasons may we thinke which so long with-held the auntient heathen from profession of Christianitie Was the doctrine of the Gospell lesse probale in their time then in ours No as God so his word is still the same alwaies alike true because alwaies most true Were the people of those Countries wherein it was first preached lesse docile by nature then we are Rather generally more witty and capable of anie other lore such especially as were most auerse from the truth wee now professe The consonancy of their morall precepts with the sacred rules of the lawe the Prophets and Euangelists was such that had they conuersed with our Sauiour and seene his doctrine so truely acted in his life they could not without contradiction of their owne principles but haue admired his wisedome and magnified his constant vnaffected contempt of all applause from men or of such vaine fashions or customes as the gentry of that world highly esteemed but these Philosophers vsually derided not without iust suspicion of sinister or preposterous desires of catching that glory at the rebound which they seemed to neglect whiles it naturally fell into their hands or mooued it selfe directly towards them as if they had held the stelth or vnderhand receipt of it more lawful or pleasant then the purchase of it in the open market Was his Gospell lesse powerfully preached in their dayes then now it is No his Apostles and their associates were indued with farre more excellent giufts of tongues of miracles of prophecying c. for manifesting the power of it to naturall men then any Preacher this day liuing is And what then could preiudice either them or their doctrine First and principally their lowe estate whose pouerty according to the fashion then most followed did ill beseeme any attempt of innouation or alteration especially of such rites and practises as had been first authorized by men of grauitie place and great iudgement countenanced by antiquitie confirmed by ioint consent of all and custome neuer interrupted Philosophers thought it a disparagement to their wit states-men and magistrates to their wisdome and experience inferiour professors losse of their studies corporations disaduantageable to their trades or priuate labours to receiue new lawes from forrainers of presence and estate so meane And albeit the integritie of Christians liues and conuersation was such that no penalties inflicted or statutes enacted against offendors for publique good could take hold of them yet because their sacred rites and profession were incompatible with authorized idolatrous practises and held as cases omitted by their law-giuers the great Pharohs of those times inuented new exactions and oppressions to stint the increase of Gods children and make the profession of Christianitie ignominious and odious euen to babes and sucklings who nuzzeled vp in this preiudice conceiued hatred against CHRIST ere they knew what manner of man he had been and
detested the very name of his Gospell altogether ignorant what i● meant That the cause of Christians had neuer come to indifferent hearing that their persons were condemned for their profession ere their liues were examined is too apparent in that such of the heathen as had iust reason to haue noted a manifest difference or opposition had obserued none betweene them and the Iewes but adiudged the one liable to the others faults if faults they were they so much disliked in the Iew as honest and religious men especially if poore euen all that make a conscience of their wayes haue in these daies much adoe to be absolued from disgracefull censures of Puritanisme or Anabaptisme as if because they share with the fauourers or authors of these sects in zealous profession of the truth they should therefore with losse of their estimation helpe to pay such arrerages as the Christian world may iustly exact of the other for their hypocrisie But since Kings and Queenes haue vouchsafed to be nursing fathers and nursing mothers to the Church since the titles of custos vtriusque tabulae defeusor fidei Rex christianis simus or catholicus haue beene accounted as fairest imbellishments in the inscriptions of greatest Caesars like precious pearls in their crowns or costly iewels in their diadems Gods messengers haue by publicke authority been not only permitted but enioyned to preach and the people with reuerence to heare the glad tidings of the Gospell as the royall embassage of the King of kings Pastours strictly commaunded to exhibite the flocke to receiue Christian Sacraments in honourable memory of CHRIST their Institutour and signe of loyall submission to his royall hests So haue the lawes of euery Christian nation since this change inflicted disgracefull punishments on such as shall vili●ie and contemne these or other sacred rites Whence the very name of an Atheist or Infidell is become as odious vnto Christian children as the name of a Christian was amongst the heathen or a Coward at this day amongst souldiers Hence as euery one almost is willing to perswade himselfe he is as good a man as the best because it is a fowle disgrace to be reputed a dastard so most belieue they loue Christ and rightly belieue in his name because it is so great a shame and ignominie amongst men at least of better sort in Christian states to be ranked amongst Atheists Infidels or Apostataes Thus from one and the same secret working of corrupted nature seeing to expell the poison of secular disgrace at contrarie or opposite emunctories the antient heathens were brought to hate wee loue Christ and his Gospell before we knew them and yet it is certaine that hee which either hates or loues any mans person manners or doctrine before he know them doth loue or hate hee knowes not whom nor vpon what occasions 4. Many resolute spirits there be in this kingdome who if they should in places of indifferencie heare a Turke preferre Mahomet and the Musselman before Christ and the Christian religion would swagger with him as sternly as if he had spoken against Tobacco giuen him the lie or called him Coward and yet perhappes more offend CHRIST in maintaining then the other in occasioning the quarrell To such as looke vpon the professors themselues or measure their goodnesse by their locall vicinity vnto truth there is great difference in shew none in substance to such as obserue the identitie of their motiues to embrace opposite religions He that should a farre off see three men of equall stature walking together the first in the ordinarie path the second on a bench twelue inches higher the third in an alley as much below it not acquainted with the aduantage or disaduantage of ground which one had of another would think there were great difference in their height which notwithstanding would be the same if they changed walkes or none at all if they stood all vpon one leuel If we thus compare the Turke and the Newtralist and such as professe great zeale to Christian religion considered onely in the generall negligent in performance of particular necessarie duties one seems to come much neerer Christ then the other yet the Turke though destitute of any inherent grace without any renouation of minde only brought vp according to our country laws altogether ignorant of his fathers house or profession would shew as great loue to Christian religion as the former prosesser did and he though christened in our Church brought vp in Turkey knowing nor suspecting nothing to the contrarie but that he was by descent and progeny a Turke would be as peremptory for the defence of Mahomet or both brought vp in places permitting Newtralitie or free choise of religion would be as indifferent for the one as for the other All the differences betwixt them is in the lawes or customes of their countries none in the internall constitution or qualification of their soules which though one and the same may incline the heart of the Iew the Turke the Papist and the Protestant alike firmly to embrace the religion wherein each hath beene brought vp and prosecute contrary obiects with equall strength of the same corrupt desires Nor doth the truth or excellency of the obiect iustifie but rather condemne such as prosesse it of hypocrisie vnlesse it imprint a liuely character of it goodnesse vpon his heart vnlesse the force and vertue of it be diffused through his best faculties and manifest it selfe in his life and conuersation To be brought vp in a Princes court daily conuersing with men of excellent behauiour speach and complement and still to retaine a ●lownish language rude affections and seruile conditions doth argue a nature more agrest then the same qualities would in such as had all their life time followed the plough But for a professed Christian to sixe such base or slothfull desires on these obiects of life as the Turke doth on Mahomet or worldlings on their commodities is iust as if a Husband-man should offer a Ieweller as many graines of barley as his iewell weighed This rule is generall without exception that whosoeuer loues Christ either for feare of disgrace loue of honour neighbourhood or desire of conformity with others would reuolt from him if his countrey lawes or custome should change for he loues these commodities or contentments not him From these deductions we may gather the hate which most Heathens Turkes and Infidels and the loue which vulgar Christians beare to Christ to be of value equall were both vnpartially weighed For which of vs will giue a pin to chuse betwixt this enmity that hates to day as ready to loue to morrow and his friendship that loues to day but would be as forward to ha●e to morrow if any new occasions or prouocations should be presented Seeing then generall or confused notions of great affection vnto Christ can be no argument of true faith but rather vsuall introductions to hypocrisio it remaines we ●eeke some trian 5. And for our
of the particular snares wherein they are most likely to fall is aboue my capascity without my experience and ill bese●ming my place God grant I may anoid● such as are most incident to my calling it must suffice to touch the most generall or transcendent 6. The originall of most temptations in this kinde is a secret presumption which in some breeds an expresse opinion in others onely practises thereto consequent that the receiued lawes or customes of common weales aunciently Christian are rather grounded vpon the law of God then contradictorie to any part thereof or apt to vndermine it This presumption indefinitely taken is most true but vniuersally false and dangerous howbeit many vpon this implicit perswasion that as their country Lawes and ordinances so their obedience vnto them are warranted by Gods word thinke it sufficient to examine their liues and actions by the consequent not nec̄essarie to compare them immediately with particular rules of life and thus by taking an vniuersall liberty from an indefinite warrant become often nonconformitants to Christ by fashioning themselues continually to the Christian world He that will obseruantly peruse auncient records concerning the manner how profession of Christianity was first authorized or the Gospell publikely planted in these Nations in which it now especially flourisheth will quickly informe himselfe that the strength of secular powers before predominant was alwaies readier to root out heresies or quell errors in speculatiue points of Religion then to infringe any popular custome or repeale Lawes beneficiall to publike treasurers or priuate coffers albeit they sucke the blood of the poore or to abandon rites or fashions much applauded by braue spirits or in themselues pleasant to flesh and blood though deadly as poison to new men in Christ though apt to blast the fruites of faith and obstupefie all sence or motion of the spirit the religious and learned Viues out of Saint Austine hath obserued that customes permitted or authorised by the papacie did argue that religion to be but an imperfect mixture of Gentilisme and Christianity His words are Austines verdict is plaine enough that many things are permitted by the ancient ciuill Romaine Law which are contrary to the Lawes of God This notwithstanding they admit not who whilst they labour to wed Gentilisme with Christianitie both being corrupted neither able to brooke the other as consort retaine neither Gentilisme nor Christianisme 7 No commonwealth almost in Europe but more or lesse participates of this sault No kingdome wherein either lawes or customes receiued by ●acite consent aequiualent to lawes doe not either allow or not discountenance such practices and resolutions as flesh and blood are apt to follow yea to glorie in though as directly opposite to the nature and complete essence of Christian faith as it hath beene out of Scripture explicated as heathenish rites or lawes enacted by Romane Emperors against Christians were to the generall heads or articles of beliefe or to the profession of Christianity though to abandon fellowship with these vnfruitfull workes of darknes much more to reprooue the offendors or men in authority through whose negligence or conniuence these snares lie open to catch the simple would certainly procure disgrace from the one if not danger from the other as great as the first propagators of the Gospell amongst the Gentiles were exposed vnto by disswading from Idolatrie Notwithstanding if we would not content our selues with the bare name or title of Christianity either not regarding the principall duties thereto belonging or not considering how faith by reuolution of times alteration of publike constitutions and customes like epidemicall diseases praeualent by course or turnes doth change it aspect from such points as it was sometimes most immediately and directly set vpon vnto others of greater vse for keeeping our hearts vpright in the midst of the crooked generation wherein we liue a little obseruation would serue to rectifie our irregular thoughts and fully instructvs that our triall whether we beashamed of Christ and his Gospell before men doth as immediately lie vpon our approbation or reproouing such popular fashions or practices of our times whether by speech or other significations of our affection publike or priuate according as our calling is as the auncient professors did vpon their consenting or denying to burne incese to heathen Idols to adore Caesars image to reuile Christ or reuoke their calling I speake not of customes or prescriptions in cases of lands goods or worldly commodities For though these and the like vnwritten traditions bee like nets which may bee opened or drawne at some mens pleasures to others great losse and grieuances yet these if borne with pat●e●●e make a man neuer a whit the poorer but rather richer in faith Albeit hee that resolues to vse all aduantage of humane Lawes he can take in such matters against his brother might as well forsweare the Gospell But my purpose is briefly to touch some few resolutions either approoued by ioint consent of men as the world enstiles them because her children of best fashion for noble and heroicall or practises patronized by the multitude of practitioners or example of some men famous in ciuill estimation 8. To begin with Gentillitie taken according to the vulgar and most plausible notion it retaines the substance of Gentilisme with a light tincture of Christianity To omit vnnecessary cost in apparell whereby forraigners are enriched our natiue countrey impouerished and the poore in it oppressed To spend more in one feast or banquet then would relieue the necessities of many miserable pined impotent creatures daily presented to their eies for moe months then the parties entertained are in number is an ordinary practice of this profession much affected by many such as haue liued sometimes of almes but are desirous to transforme themselues into another shape by following fashions most applauded of their betters yet what resolution could be more flatly contradictorie then this is to that precept of our Sauiour When thou makest a dinner or a supper call not thy friends nor thy brethren neither thy kinsmen nor thy rich neighbours least they also bid thee againe and a recompence bee made thee But when thou makest a feast call the poore the maimed the lame the blinde And thou shalt be blessed for they cannot recompence thee for thou shalt bee recompensed at the resurrection of the iust Here then is one especiall point of trying their faith whom God hath blessed with store and plenty if they can assent to this commandement as true and good and delight in the practice of it whiles it comes in competition with the contrary custome so much followed and applanded by men of best place and reckoning in the worldes iudgement Forseeing the good wee haue done or left vndone to such seely ones as Christ here commends vnto our care must be the measure of our faith or infidelity of our loue or neglect of him in that day of finall accompts indulgent or remorcelesse
like suppositions If we should be vrged by the Turke or Iewe to deny him wee would sooner die the death he did then doe it or were he present in person to exhort vs to such dueties as his messengers enioine vs we should sure be as forward as any man liuing to doe them these or the like imaginations do but foretoken our need of that apologie and argueth our inclination to vse it though alas it cannot steede any in that day of tryall Lord when saw we thee naked or anhungred in the Pulpit or preaching in our streetes deterring vs from euill and exhorting vs vnto good if not to relieue our brothers wants be to suffer him to starue then questionlesse to dispise his messengers is to despise him to reuile them is to reuile him and he that wil not belieue them neither would he haue belieued him more then the Iewes did 6. For conclusion because this point may come elsewhere to be handled at large if respectiue or according to our seuerall vocations we be generally either as proude or as couetous as ambitious or vaine glorious in our prerogatiues as mercilesse or iealous of disparagement in our places or as impatient of iust though sharpe reproofe as these Iewes were we would haue beene altogether both as prone to take and as earnest in prosecuting any offence taken at our Sauiours doctrine person life or manner of preaching as his most malicious enemies were and are as lyable to their plagues for God iudgeth not as man iudgeth by the actuall euent but by the internall habit or constitution of the heart Nor did our Sauiors presence his conuersation or other cyrcumstances make but onely manifest the malicious enmitie of the Iew against all goodnesse to the world and their odiousnesse in the sight of God and man should teach vs to be more carefull to auoide the inward disease then the euent or outbarsting which cannot bee so apparant in vs vntill Christ appeare againe in person Or if it be as backward in performance of those positiue dueties exacted by him of his Disciples as were the ordinary or lesse harmefull sort of vnbelieuing Iewes we may not expect any better hire or reward then they had but rather a greater portion with the hypocrite for our profession of loue and loialty to him For as we may giue perfect proofe to God of our malice or spite against Christ onely by our internall corrupt desires without any positiue outward act so can we make no proofe of true loue towards him either vnto God or our selues but our deedes albeit euen in doing his commandements we are apt to deceiue our selues and without due examination to admit false witnesses of our owne sincerity amischiefe in the next place to be preuented CHAP. IIII. That the fruites of righteousnesse if but of one or few kindes argue the stocke whence they spring to be either imperfect or vnsound of the danger that may come by partiality in the practise of precepts alike diuine or from difformitie of zeale that our Assent to generalities ofttimes appeares greater to our selues then indeede it is from our pronenesse or eager desires to transgresse in some particulars 1. NOthing more naturall to our affections when they abound or swell then to seeke obiects whereon to bestow themselues and after the fashion of the world to make choise of the fairest from whole beauty they vsually receiue strength and vigor For this cause as in the last discourse was obserued that good affection which men of disposition candide and ingenuous alwaies beare vnto the memorable vertues of men deceased or farre absent well deseruing of the world or them administring no occasion of dislike doth presently seeke vpon the first sight of his legend to fasten it selfe vpon our Sauiour in whom nothing truely admirable or praise worthy but is ideally absolute and perfect And strange it is not if in practicall perswasions that error steale on most which hath ouertaken many inretired speculations that the obiect qualifies the desire as indeede it doth but not alwaies not when the will out-starts the vnderstanding or reason For where the affection or passion is violent and vnrelenting we presently belieue what we eagerly desire From the concurrence of these three decliuities or facile descents into error we often mistake carnall loue for spirituall and beliefe meerely naturall or scarce worth the title of hystoricall for supernaturall because set perhaps strongly on obiects spirituall or supernatural The remedie is to let reason worke first and take the true portrature of that spirituall beautie whereto it directs our desires or affections Nor doe faith and loue truly Christian arise from euery reference or extremission of our faculties or apprehensions vnto CHRIST but from an intromission of his image or shape into our soules The right esteeme or ponderation of his vertues and perfections must inspire our hearts with resolution and zeale to imitate him in his goodnesse to be faithfull doers not hearers onely of his precepts and that not of some one or few but of all Seeing loue as hath been obserued is the necessary consequent of liuely faith and faith it selfe a firme and constant Assent vnto diuine reuelations without indulgence or dispensation it is a sure argument the one neuer kindly takes vnlesse it equally spread it selfe as the Sun doth his beames or centers their lines to euery obiect within the sphere of diuine truth that the other neuer kindls aright vnlesse it vniformly enflame euery faculty of our soules with desire of executing that part of Gods seruice whereto it is ordained or with a delight of such practises as the Scripture proposeth to our imitation in the Law the Prophets or Euangelicall history of our Sauiours life and death 2. Not obseruing this vniformity the partiall practise of duties in themselues very necessary helpe to thrust vs headlong into the former error For the earnest prosecution of our natural desires lighting in with our feeble Assent vnto some particular diuine truths or slender liking of some duties commaunded sutable to them makes vs attribute the delight or loue we beare to the internall obiect of our corrupt desires vnto the truth or precept diuine as by the like error many looking vpon the Sunne in a foggy morning imagine that rednesse to be in the bodie of this glorious starre which is in the vapour directly lying betwixt their eyes and it Howbeit this groundlesse conceit we hence entertaine of our Assent or loue vnto any obiect of Faith increaseth the strength of our carnall desires or delights naturall and that inordinately increased in respect of some one or fewe points vrterly disenables vs for prosecuting others oft-times more necessary and much better And as els●where I haue obserued that which casts men into the fore-mentioned Iewish disease of ouerreckoning themselues in their ●●compts of faith and loialty towards God and his anointed is the sufferance of their imaginations to run too much or too long on some
brother abideth in death vnlesse out of this loue as iointly respecting our brethren we lay downe our liues in loue or testimony of the truth we doe not rightly confesse CHRIST nor die in faith for whosoeuer hateth his brother is a murtherer And as he addeth hereby perceiue we the loue of God because he laid downe his life for vs. but whereby shall we perceiue our loue to him if we doe as we ought and we ought as it followeth to lay downe our liues for the brethren Not onely to redeeme many of them if that were possible from a bodily death by dying for them but rather to encourage euery one by our examples to embrace the truth and confesse CHRIST before men whether by life or death whether by profession of truth or practise of workes commanded as occasion shall be offered He that requires vs to lay downe our liues for their soules will looke we should distribute our goods to relieue their bodies otherwise to die for them is no true testimony of our loue to CHRIST for who so hath this worlds goods and seeth his brother hath neede and shutteth vp his bowels of compassion from him how dwelleth the loue of God in him Againe though we feede the poore with all our goods and yet haue not this loue to lay downe our liues for the brethren it profiteth nothing and though we giue our bodies to be burned for them and haue not this other part of loue to feede them or those attributes of it in the same place expressed by the Apostle as long sufferance kindnesse without enuie without boasting without pride without disdaine without exaction of our owne with placide affections neither prouoking nor easie to be prouoked but reioscing in truth and detesting iniquity with viformity of faith hope and conscience it profiteth nothing For as hath beene obserued before consideration of what CHRIST hath done for vs must bring foorth in vs the same minde that was in him a minde to doe his fathers will in euery point alike sincerely but with greater intentions or alacritie as the occasions or exigence of seasons shall require Sometimes we may more faithfully confesse his name by standing for some branch of truth no generall point of saluation in opposition to men of contrary mindes with whom we liue whose proiects tending to the dishonour of Gods name and preiudice of his dearest children we may hinder then by professing all the articles of true religion vpon the enemies racke or witnessing some principall truth before the fagot 7. Besides the obhomination of the causes they maintaine great presumptions or rather strong euidences there be many of their corrupt mindes whom the Romish Church in latter yeares sets footh for Martyres to the world First the Diuifications ascribed vnto them as their enrolements in the catalogue of former Saints inuocations adorations of their reliques and the like would haue mooued most heathen Romanes or Egyptians to haue aduentured on greater dangers or indignities then they are put to for one of their foolish Gods an ape a serpent or a crocodile Yet these men not inconsequently I must confesse vnto their magicall conceipt of faith and holinesse imagined by them in dead workes thinke their blood shed in the Catholique cause shall wipe away their actuall sinnes as clearely as the water of baptisme by their doctrine doth originall And as that sweete relator of his fruitefull obseruations in matters of religion hath ascertained vs that Italians are vsually imboldned to sinne because they must haue matter to confesse so men of great place and authority in this land would not suffer vs retired students to be ignorant that some seminary priests haue purpoposely giuen the raines to fleshly lusts vpon confidence the executioners knife should worke a perfect circumcision or the fire purifie their polluted members at the day of execution Or in case they neuer felt the seuere stroake of iustice yet their constant resolution to suffer and daily expectation of being called vnto this fiery triall should serue as a cloake to couer those impuri●es which the purity of CHRISTS blood shed vpon the Crosse such is the abhomination of their hypocrisie without perfect inherent righteousnesse cannot hide So farre too many of them are from sobriety meeknes and humility those other qualifications required by Saint Cyprian in true Martyres that the gift of impudence scurrility and disdaine serues no home-bred malefactors halfe so well in the time of their durance or whilest they are brought before the face of authority or arraigned at the barre of iustice as it doth them as if they would giue vs to vnderstand that the marke of the beast spoken of by S. Iohn had some such especiall vertue as these characters traiterous Gowry brought out of Italy which stopped his blood from running out after his body was runne through as this doth theirs from appearing in their foreheads for onely to blush they are ashamed euen whilest they pierce through their owne soules and pollute their country aire with hideous forraine blasphemies but in re mala animo s●vtare bono i●uat a good face put vpon a bad matter ofttimes auaileth much yet with men not with God vnto whose mercy I leaue such as affect to bee Pseudo-martyres beseeching him of his infinite goodnesse to alighten their hearts that they may see at length the abhominable filth of that Idole to which so many parents in this land are desirous to sacrifice their dearest children and these men their very soules But oh Lord stop the infection that it spread not from the dead vnto the liuing 8. But leauing this huge lake two no small sinckes of hypocrisie I haue espied from whose noysomenesse many otherwise well affected scarce are free but into which Lord let not my soule descend for their eu●cation is into the bottomelesse pit The one an opinion there can bee no fit matter of martyrdome in a state authorising the free profession of that religion which amongst many we like best and left to our selues would make choise of The other which in part feeds this is a perswasion that meere errors in doctrine or opinion are more pernitious then affected indulgence to lewd practises or continuance in sinfull courses or open breaches of Gods commandements These are teliques of Romish sorcery which puts an abstract sanctity in the mathematicall forme or superficial draught of orthodoxal doctrine as it is in the braine though deuoide of true holinesse in life and conuersation or good affection in the heart and hence accompteth heresie that is euery opinion different from the tenents or contrary to the practises of their Church a sinne more deadly then any other and which in their iudgement doth vtterly depriue vs of such faith as they maintaine though that no better if not worse then diuels But if we recall what hath been hitherto discussed First That Christian faith is an Assent vnto diuine reuelations not only as true in themselues
but as good to vs in the practise as much better then auoiding the displeasure or gaining the fauours of any earthly powers Secondly That this Assent must be vniforme and a like sincere to euery truth a like strong to euery practise alwaies increasing according to the seuerall degrees of truth or goodnesse apprehended in the obiect or different exigence of times and place wherein wee liue these points are most cleere That Christian faith is more directly oppugned by wilfull neglect or auowed violations of morall or Euangelicall precepts then by bare errors in opinion or such heresie as directly include not blasphemie against the blessed Trinity for the chiefe euill of all others consists in reference to wicked practises whereunto they lead or incline men That the Ministers of the Gospell may deny CHRIST or manifest their ashamednesse of his Gospell as directly by not laying his Lawe as closely to the great Herods of the world as Iohn Baptist did suppose the case be as notorious and as well knowne vnto them as if they had been afraid to confesse him for feare of being put out of the synagogue or ●ayd with those other Iewes wee know that God spake with Mose and gaue authority vnto Magistrates but this man we know not whence he is nor do we care for his Counsells Yet were Iohn Baptists kinde of preaching vsed in many kingdomes though by such as professe the same Religion with the Potentates they should offend with their boldnesse I think it would proue matter of martyrdome in the end That any age since Christian Religion was first propagated hath wanted store of Martyrs is more to be attributed vnto the negligence ignorance and hypocrisie or want of courage in Christs embassadors or appointed Pastors then vnto the sincerity mildnesse or fidelity of the flock especially of the bell-weathers or chiefe ring-leaders Or if Satan had not abated the edge of primitiue zeale and resolution by that dishonorable peace concluded betweene Christianity and Gentilisme after the setling of Gothes and Vandalls in these parts of Christendome had hee not vtterly benummed mankinde by locking vp their spirituall senses in mid-night darkenesse and fettering their soules in superstition since the time he himselfe was let loose Rome Christian had seene more Martyrs euen of such as did not much dissent from her in most opinions held within sixe hundred yeeres of CHRIST in one yeere then Rome heathen at any time had knowen in ten Euen in Churches best reformed it would bee much easier I thinke to finde store of iust matter for Martyrdom than of men fit to make Martyrs And hee that hath liued any long time in these quiet mansions and seates of Muses secure from Mars his broiles or externall violence hath great cause either to magnifie the tender mercies of his gracious God or suspect himselfe for an hypocrite if hee haue not suffered some degrees of Martyrdome But vnto such as haue been exercised therein it bringeth the quiet fruite of righteousnesse and ought to encourage rather then daunt them whilest they liue in these Paradises free God bee praysed from boysterous blasts as taint other plants of the same nursery remooued abroad to vse this calme and happy season they enioy for setting their faith and loue aright that they may spread themselues equally to euery point of that compasse by which they are to direct their course in this troublesome sea of vncertainties that their strength in practise and profession may iointly increase without all respect to persons or particular duties saue what ariseth from the excesse of worth in the things themselues belieued or loued or of necessity or speciall occasions of performances that they may further as much as in them lies by word and deed the vnpartiall execution of their blessed Founders statutes of whose beneficence they daily taste albeit oft-times with opposition to them or offence taken by them in whose arbitrement their estimation in the world or a great part of the maintenance prouided for them depends If by framing our resolutions and affections by little and little to march on constantly though but slowly in this vniformity and proportion wee can come at length to repell proffers of Honour whereunto we cannot ascend but by winding and crooked steppes or of gaine not easily gotten but by vnlawfull meanes or to hold fleshly pleasures as deadly poisons to our soules then shall our deaths bee acceptable in the sight of our God and if it be his heauenly wil hereafter to call vs to resistance of iniquitie euen vnto blood wee haue these sure grounds of hope that we shall offer vp our mortall bodies in sacrifice vnto Him the onely true and euerliuing GOD not to the sactious humours of these corrupt times or vaine Idoles or our foolish fancies 9. This vniformity of growth in faith and want of partiality in our zeale I haue affected since I knew what belonged vnto either the rather because as I sincerely professe in the sight of God the first ground of my dislike vnto the chiefe sollicitors of reformation in our Church men whose excellent parts and good labours I then did and euer shall reuerence was the difformity of their zeale for had it been vniforme no question but it had moued them to lay downe their liues for redressing knowne enormities in the Common-weale as much more materiall and more neerely concerning the aduancement of the Gospell then those doubtfull controuersies for so I apprehended them of formalities about which they stroue as death it selfe is more terrible then depriuation The principall authors or abettors of which enormities notwithstanding were imboldened by these encomiasts in whose language euery Cormorant that would countenance their cause was a sanctified person a sonne of God Their partialitie herein towards others may occasion vs to obserue a blast of like temptation naturally rising from like humours which oftentimes ouerthrowes faith where it is well-nigh rightly set and ready to take By nature if not preuented by grace and a watchfull eye ouer our perswasions we seeke to make amends for our delinquency in points whose practise our affections cannot well brooke by a supererogation in some other duties wherein we either naturally delight or can inflict vpon our selues as an easie penance because not much distastfull to our sweet desires nor contrary to our principall resolutions Many gallants of dissolute and debaushed behauiour and sometimes Ministers of life scandalous and obnoxious though neither of there I vse as instances for proofe of my assertion will in their discourses bewray an affected desire of declaiming against errors in generall opinions abstract from vse or reformation of life or some antient heretiques whose heresies might oft-times sleepe with their bodies were they not wakened by loud out-cries against them What is the reason that such men as are most vnfurnished in these subtilities are vsually most forward to entertaine conflicts with the dead or men farre absent They are afraid to looke vpon themselues without
CHRIST as we doe but terminated his beliefe vnto the generall mercie and prouidence of God whereof the great mystery of the incarnation was the principall branch and CHRIST IESVS in the fulnesse of time exhibited in our flesh the visible fruit of life which that other IESVS did but hope for as yet in the roote not distinctly knowing it nor the vertue of it but ready actually to embrace it and feed vpon it whensoeuer it should be brought forth For as much as I haue obserued out of this speech is implied in the exegeticall repetition of it He that belieueth the Lord taketh h●ed to the Commaundements and hee that trusteth in him shall not be hurt there shall no euill happen vnto him that feareth the Lord but in temptation euen againe he will deliuer him 3. That wee may practice what is commaunded and yet not keepe the commandement Saint Iames hath put out of all question If yee fulfill the r●iall Law according to the Scripture thou shalt loue thy neighbour as thy selfe ye doe well But if ye haue respect to persons ye commit sinne and are conuinced of the Law as transgressors For whosoeuer shall keepe the whole Law and yet offend in one point is guilty of all This fulfilling of the Law or keeping of the commaundements which as Solomon saith is the whole man or the whole duty whereunto man was ordained the complete and perfect Christian vertue consists of two parts a bodie and a soule The bodie is the doing of what the written Law commaunds whether by acts positiue or inhibitiue the soule is the reason or internall law of the minde which impels seuerall faculties to such acts or workes For to speake properly and scholastickely all performance of good workes commaunded or forbearance of things forbidden spring not immediately out of faith as the truncke out of the roote the branches out of the truncke or the fruit out of the branches But as the fruits of righteousnesse are of seuerall kindes and qualities so haue they seuerall faculties or affections for their proper stockes out of which they grow The auoidance of adultery fornication or whatsoeuer pollutions of the flesh with the fruites of holines contrary to these vices spring immediately from the vertues of temperance and chastity Abstinence from murder with the acts of mercy opposite to the seuerall branches thereof flourish out of the affection or vertue of humanity courtesie gentlenesse or the like So haue the acts of the affirmatiue precept contained in that negatiue thou shalt not steale as of euery other Commaundement whether positiue or inhibitiue a peculiar habite or inclination out of which they bud yet as all motion is inspired from the head albeit we goe vpon our feete or moue our hands or other member to defend our selues or serue the necessities of nature So although we are truely said to walke in Gods waies to fight his battailes or doe him seruice when we vse any facultie or affection to his glory yet is our firme assent vnto his good will and pleasure reuealed vnto vs by the doctrine ●f faith as the animall faculty which impels vs to these exercises Hence as we gather the body is dead if it want spirit or motion so as Saint Iames implies the image of God and his goodnesse or to vse another Apostles words the forme or fashion of CHRIST IESVS in vs is without life vnlesse our faith and assent vnto them haue this soueraigne commaund to impell and moue euery faculty to execute that part of Gods will whereto by the doctrine of faith it is designed And yet as the exercise of outward members increaseth internall vigor and strength and refresheth the spirits by which we moue so doe the acts of euery faculty vertue or affection righly imploied perfect faith not by communication or imputation of their perfection to it as the Romanist out of his doting loue to his faithlesse charitie dreames but by stirring vp exercising or intending its owne naturall vigor or perfection Vnlesse euery practique facultie receiue this influence from liuely faith or from the image of God or Christ which it frameth in our mindes and proposeth as a visible patterne for ou● imitation in all our workes thoughts and resolutions d●cimur vt neruis al●enis mobile lignum we may be operatiue as puppets are nimble in outward shew but our seeming workes of charity or best other we can pretend will be as a pish and counterfeit as their motions neither in their kinde truely vitall But as puppets are mooued wholly at his direction and bent that extends or slackes the strings whereon they dance so are our soules carried hither and thither as the diuell the world and flesh or our owne foolish affections ●osse them vsually excessiue where they should be sparing and there most sparing where they should exceed This difformity was most apparent in their workes whose reformation Saint Iames seekes for destitute of all good workes most of them were not but onely of vniformity in working They had learned to giue honour not verball but reall where honour was due duty and good respect to whom such offices belonged The rich and men of better place and fashion they did friendly and louingly entertaine which was a worke in it nature good and commendable but their abundant kindnesse towards equals or superiours became as a wen to intercept that nutriment which should haue descended to other inferiour members of CHRISTS body and by these outward exercises of magnificence their internall bowels of compassion become colde towards their poore brethren whom principally they should haue warmed and refreshed Yet such defects or difformities in their actions these halfe Christians halfe gentiles true hypocrites hoped to couer with the mantle of faith whose nature vse and properties they quite mistooke That they were not without workes the world might witnesse and no question but these enterteinments were intended as feasts of charity and with purpose to winne the fauour of the great ones with whom they liued to their profession in which respect their kindnesses might well seeme vnto themselues exercises of religion as the like doe to many of the best sort amongst vs when there is any ground of hope for gaining furtherance and countenance to good purposes as indeed with such references they are if done in fath but that this difformity in these mens workes did proceed from a precedent defect in faith is manifestly implied in that the Apostle seekes their reformation by reducing them to such an vniformity in working as can proceed onely from such true and liuely faith as hath beene described For the rectifying of faith it selfe he expresseth vnto them the exemplary forme or patterne first of the imitable perfection of the godhead then of that which is in CHRIST of both which as hath beene obserued true faith in the minde is the liue operatiue image and must imprint the like character vpon inferior faculties or affections ere their
Of Bellarmine therefore we demaund why Saint Paul should instance in Abraham his purpose being as he and all his fellowes agree onely to shew that the first iustification is not attained by workes but by faith For inferring this conclusion the iustification of Rahab had beene more sit for in Saint Pauls dialect shee receiued the messengers by faith being as Bellarmine graunts destitute of all grace before But thus he answeres As Paul when he spake of the first iustification brought the example of Abraham which belonged to the second to prooue a maiori that no vniust man is iustified by workes without faith seeing iust Abraham was not made more iust by works without faith so Saint Iames when he spake of the second iustification where by a iust man becomes more iust brought in the example of Rahab which was per tinent to the first iustification where by an impious or vnregenerate man becomes iust to shew a maiori that a iust man is made more iust by workes and not of faith onely seeing Rahab of an harlot was made iust by workes not by faith onely For it is very probable shee was not onely an harlot but an infidell before such time as shee receiued the messengers but from that time to haue beleeued in God as being prepared to iustification by that worke of mercy yet so as that good worke done by faith was not simply meritorious of iustification but imperfectly and by way of congruity 5. Surely this Authors ill will vnto vs was greater then either the loue or reuerence he bare vnto Saint Paul vpon whose words least they should seeme to fauour our cause too much he labours to foster a meaning as ridieulous as thwart and contradictory to his purpose as the Diuell himselfe could haue deuised howbeit to acquit himselfe from suspition of partialitie or particular spleene against Saint Paul he spares not to father a sence and meaning altogether as foolish vpon Saint Iames as if the like palpable abuse offered to him had beene a satisfaction sufficient for the wrong done to his fellow Apostle The reader in the meane time cannot but hence take notice vnto what miserable plunges our aduersaries in this point are put when the sonnes are thus enforced violently to sumble against their mother fallen by dashing against the stone of offence to men Iewishly minded but the onely sure foundation of life to such as seek saluation aright as also how one absurditie suffered to passe by publicke authority imboldens inferiors to forge licences for a thousand The Trent Councell ignorant of any better hath giuen faire hints vnto her children for reconciling the former seeming contradiction betwixt S. Paul and Saint Iames as they expresly doe That S. Paul when hee affirmes we are iustified freely by faith without workes must be vnderstood of the first iustification whereby wee receiue grace without any worth or merit precedent S. Iames when he affirmes we are iustified by workes and not by faith alone implies the increment of grace or righteousnesse in the godly But what had Saint Iames to doe with this second iustification when as the parties whom he proposed to refute had altogether erred from the first Did hee intend they should accumulate iustifications as we doe degrees in schooles and be twise iustifyed at once Suppose hee did yet must the second iustifycation go in order before the first Or admitting hee spake ambiguously or indeterminately of both and authorized the Church when any controuersie should arise to dispose of his voice for either as shee pleased yet what instance could worse be fit the second iustifycation whereto the Romish Church applies his meaning then Rahab who til that time as Bellarmine grants was not onely an infidell but an harlot and therefore an impious person destitute of grace and if she were iustifyed or obtained the grace of iustifycation by this work done in faith without grace as the same writer glosses vppon this text how shal we reconcile him to the Romish church which hath peremptorily determined that the grace of iustifycation is not obtained by workes and to this purpose cites that of Paul If it bee grace then is it not of workes otherwise grace should be no grace Vnto this difficulty which thus diuides the tongs of Babell our answere is casie and consonant to the perpetuall voice of Gods spirit Rahab was iustified according to Saint Iames his minde this is presumed as iust or iustifiable as well by workes as by faith because her workes were a necessarie part of that inhere ●t righteousnesse which must be in euerie one that liues by faith for though wee liue by faith onely yet onely the Iust so liue This no way contradicts Saint Paul because she did not seeke saluation by workes but did therefore worke that shee might lay sure hold on Gods promises onely by faith which is alwaies as vnable or vnapt to iustifie to sue for grace or apprehend Gods mercies aright as it is to work when occasion is offered More repugnant is this distinction of iustification first and second to Saint Pauls minde or purpose or suppose though he did not entend or acknowledge it his discourse notwithstanding might admit of it there is lesse reason why his words should be retracted as Bellarmine doth to the first iustification then why those words of S. Iames of works a man is iustified and not of faith onely should be extended to the second or if Pauls might in part be appliable to it Dauid and Abraham which he makes the maine ground of his dispute are the most vnfit instances that could haue been chosen in all the Scriptures Abraham our aduersaries grant was iust before his beliefe of that promise which was imputed to his for righteousnes yet then reiustified not by workes though not without faith as Bellarmine minceth but by faith without workes as the Apostle strongly and peremptorily inferres For to belieue Gods promises concerning the birth of Isaac was the sole act of Faith yet by this act was Abraham iustified not the first time as Bellarmine grants Wherefore Faith without workes did iustifie him the second time vnlesse hee take iustification otherwise then S. Paul there doth And if this verie same Scripture which sayth Abraham belieued God concerning Isaacs birth and it was imputed vnto him for righteousnesse were as Saint Iames auoucheth againe fulfilled in the offering of Isaac he was iustified the third time onely by belieuing God not by his worke neuer accomplished if wee take beliefe and iustification in the same sence the holy spirit by the mouth of Paul doth in the Epistles to the Hebrewes and the Romans Though to offer vp Isaac in sacrifice were a work yet did Abraham offer him onely by faith because faith onely impelled him to this worke yea by the very same act of Faith which had beene imputed to him for righteousnesse Hee considered sayth S. Paul that God was able to raise him vp euen from
cause of iustification by which our sinnes are formally remitted is as if we should aske one of their young pupils what were Latine for manus Iustification taken as we doe it for remission of sinnes not by inherent righteousnesse or ought within vs immediatly incompetible with them but by the externall merits of Christ is a forme or entity as simple as any formall cause can be and simple or vncompounded entities can neither haue formall causes or ought in proportion answearing to them Wherefore as I said it is either the follie or knauery of our aduersaries to demaund a formall cause of their iustification that deny themselues to beformallie iust in the sight of God For so to be iust and to bee iust onely by acceptance or non-imputation of vniustice are tearmes as opposite as can bee imagined Hee alone is formallie iust which hath that forme inherent in himselfe by which he is denominated iust and so accepted with God as Philosophers deny the same to be formally hot because it hath no forme of heate inherent in it but onely produceth heat in other bodies To be formally iust we for these reasons attribute onely vnto Christ who alone hath such righteousnesse inherent in himselfe as by the interposition of it betweene Gods iustice and sinfull flesh doth stop the proceeding of his iudgements as Phinehas zeale did stay the plague otherwise ready to deuoure the host of Israell Our aduersaries in that they acknowledge inherent righteousnesse to be the sole formall cause of iustification doe by the same assertion necessarily graunt it to be the sole true immediate cause of remission of sinnes of absolution from death and admis●ion to life This is the onely point from which they cannot start at which neuerthelesse whiles they stand they may acknowledge Christ come in the flesh crucified dead and buried or perhaps ascended into heauen but denie they doe the power of his sitting at the right hand of God the vertue of his mediation or intercession and more then halfe euacuate the eternity of his Priesthood as shall be shewed after this briefe explication of our assertion 2. When we teach iustification by faith and not by workes our meaning is by the doctrine of faith wee are bound to acknowledge and confesse that CHRIST IESVS by his eternall Priesthood whose offices in their seuerall places shall bee expressed is not onelie the sole meritorious cause of all graces or righteousnesse inherent requisite to finall absolution but these supposed in the party to bee absolued hee is likewise the sole immediate cause of finall absolution or iustification The latter part of this assertion may admit this ilustration Suppose a man not destitute of other senses yet ready euery moment to droupe or fall into some deadly fit vnlesse his spirits were refreshed by pleasant musicke we might truely say one in this case did liue by the sense of hearing for deafe hee should quickly die yet were musicke the sole immediate cause of his preseruation without actuall application of whose sound euen this sense it selfe by whose meanes his spirits refreshed better enable his other senses to their proper functions would foorthwith faile him In this sort doe sinfull men drawe life from CHRIST by faith alone by which likewise and not by workes wee are sayd to abide in him as being vnited in spirit to him albeit by abiding so vnited our other faculties are strengthened and viuificated to bring forth the fruits of righteousnesse The former instance notwithstanding doth not exemplifie the first part of our Assertion for musicke only continues life naturall which is supposed to haue another originall But if we speake of life spirituall maintained by saith and of which faith it selfe is a part it was originally and wholly deriued from CHRIST on whom faith and all other graces whatsoeuer tam in fieri quam infacto as well in the first production as during the time of their continuance and preseruation depend as essentially and perpetually as the light of the moone or other participated or reflected splendor doth on the brightnesse of the Sunne Nor may wee imagine that this borrowed and variable righteousnesse in vs though thus depending on the Sonne of righteousnesse is or can be euen whiles it remaines without eclipse or in such fulnesse as in this life the best men at any time are capable of sufficient for the time being to acquit or absolue vs if God should enter into iudgement with vs. This strict dependence of such righteousnesse as we haue on CHRISTS righteousnesse presupposed faith is said to iustifie vs not by any effects in vs deriued from him but by its transeunt acts reciprocally lifting vp our hearts to the fountaine whence grace and spirituall life doth flow and reflecting the beames or raies of our mindes thus illuminated vnto our mysticall head still de●iuing vertue from his crucified body to stint the deadly issues of sinne not vtterly to expell all reliques of vnrighteousnesse For when we take the eyes of faith of him albeit the habite of faith and other graces remaine as intire in vs as euer they were the very memory of transgressions past or the sight of sinnes inherent whilest we look on them deiect vs. According to this disferent aspect euen the best men liuing whilest this brittle glasse of mortality and mutability is in running may bee subiect to the like subalternation of hopes and feare the exiled Po●t hath expressed Spes mihi magna subest dum te mitissime Caesar Spes mihi respicio dum mea facta cadit Strength to my hopes doth still accrewe whil'st Caesars mildnesse I do vie we But mine owne facts whilest I beholde my heart doth faile my hopes growe colde But though sinne may often sting vs by fits and bring vs almost to deaths dore by vicissitude of despaire or disma● yet we recouer as presently by faithfull looking on the glorious author as the Israelites did by beholding the visible signe of saluation 3. The controuersie hitherto proposed and declared in as scholasticke forme as our English tongue well can beare may be reduced in fewest tearmes and fittest for popular instruction vnto the right vse and immediate end of faith and other sanctifying graces We of reformed Churches with vnanimous consent of heart and minde belieue and teach and thou O CHRIST our Lord our life and strength giue iudgement out of thy throne of Maiestie whether not more agreeable to thy minde then shee which sits as Queene of heauen and brags as if she were thy best beloued Spouse or her children do That our Faith our Hope and Charitie or whatsoeuer pledges of thy fathers loue and fauour towards vs we through thy merits haue obtained were giuen vs not to alter but to better that plea we made before we had them Being by nature the sonnes of wrath and groning vnder the heauie burden of our sinnes with teares and sighes by thy precious blood by thy death and passion wee daily besought Him for
them and shall his goodnesse in giuing them flake the feruency of our wonted desires or supplications when as we seeke grace onely to the end we may finde and truly taste his mercie Thou hast taught vs Not euery one that sayth Lord Lord shall enter into the kingdome of heauen but such as doe the will of thy Father which is in heauen and his wil as the Apostle witnesseth they only do which obey it in all things omitting no commaundement when occasion is giuen taking no occasion to breake or violate any Shall we then enter into the kingdome of heauen because we thus farre do thy fathers will and in some measure obserue his Commaundements Rather without such obseruance we shall not we cannot enter therein yet when we haue done all this wee are still vnprofitable seruants To what vse then doth our inherent righteousnesse or obseruance of Gods Commaundements serue vs If sincere that haue been and vnfaigned though imperfect yet the faith which brought it forth will make a sincere and faithfull plea for mercy in the day of triall in which he that hath been an hearer only and no doer of the lawe or hath done in part what God would haue done but not sincerely nor faithfully because it was his will and pleasure but out of humour naturall affection or hipocrisie shall cry Lord Lord and shewe many tokens of Gods loue and fauour towards him in hope to better this present sute for mercie yet shall not be heard Why Either because he neuer had any true pledge of Gods fauour or did not vse such as hee had aright because as his workes haue been such now are his prayers presumptuous vnfaithfull or hypocriticall such as cannot obtaine any other answere of God then that depart from mee I neuer knew thee It shall not boote him to make proofe that hee hath giuen his goods to the poore or his body to the fire that he hath healed the sicke cast out diuels and wrought other wonders in CHRISTS name vnsesse his faith haue quelled all trust all pride or glory in these gracings wholly set on Gods mercies in CHRIST from whose apprehension vnlesse these other acts or exercises though of mercie sprung they are not truely done in faith but springing thence we cannot be so ready to doe them as hauing done them to renounce all trust or confidence in them For whiles we compare these slender yet sincere effects of our loue and thankfulnesse to him with his infinite loue and mercie towards vs wheron true faith alwaies lookes whiles it conceiues them the sight of them causeth greater humilitie for the present more hearty sorrow for sinnes past then we could haue conceiued if wee had not done them as the sight of Zorobabels temple finished did make the auntients of Israell weepe because the perfection and glorie of the former was more liuely represented to their senses by this visible and semblable model then by the ruines meere absence or imperfect reparations of it To be able to sound the depth of many conclusions better then others can giues stayed and setled iudgements a more distinct and compleat measure of the knowledge they wanted then fantasticke or shallow wits can haue For this cause solid learning alwaies contracts verball knowledge and superficiall skill in any facultie dilates mens estimates of thēselues puffes them vp with preiudiciall conceits of their owne worth And seeing all our knowledge in this life though of matters naturall and neere at and is euery way imperfect the increase of it is alwaies vnnaturall and monstrous vnlesse the more we know the better we know our imperfectious and be humbled with a more sensible feeling of our wants Now in as much as the fruits of life do neuer take so kindely as the fruites of knowledge in any sonne of Adam since he made that impious and crroneous choice and euery mans owne experience can teach him that his practique faculties or performances come still short of his speculatiue notions or apprehensions of what is good and fit to be done we are by this twofold reason enforced to take the vnfained acknowledgement of our imperfection in working and serious distrust both to our works and our selues as no way iustifiable or approueable in the sight of God but for the perfect and compleate righteousnesse of CHRIST IESVS for an essentiall branch of that vniformity before required in true and sauing faith The growth of these particulars is like the growth of twins the more firme and liuely faith we haue the better and more sincerely we worke the bettter and more sincerely we worke the more vnfaignedly and faithfully wee renounce all confidence in our workes and our selues the more faithfully we renounce all confidence in these the more ca●tiestly we seeke after saluation only by CHRIST of whose allsufficient sacrifice and righteousuesse fully satisfactory of Gods law and meritorious of mercy our righteousnes inherent though imperfect giues vs a truer tast then vnbelieuers can haue Thus the weaker we are in our selues the stronger we are in Him 4. The former question about the vse of grace depends vpon another betwixt the Romanist and vs about the measure of inherent righteousnesse They make the encrease and growth of grace not to perfect but vtterly to abolish the nature of it by conuerting it into righteousnes inherent as well for quantity as quality acceptable of it selfe to God without his fauour or indulgence We as the name imports make it alwaies subordinate vnto gratious acceptance and seeing we take it onely as a pledge of diuine fauour whereof wee stand perpetually in need as it is first giuen so we desire it may be increased onely to the end we may more constantly and faithfully sue for mercie and seeke diuine approbation aright Of our edification in CHRIST faith is not the foundation onely but the roofe vnto which all other graces haue the same reference that Hur and Aaron had vnto Moses The best seruice euen charitie it selfe can performe is to vnderprop the hands of faith lifted vp vnto the throne of grace from which the sentence of absolution must proceed Directly contradictory to this declaration saith the Romanist faith iustifies onely as it disposeth vs to the attainment of charity which is the formall cause of iustification the complete forme of such perfect righteousnesse inherent as is the onely immediate cause of saluation Charitie though giuen for CHRIST is to him the Crowne of faith reaching heauen by it owne perfection to vs not charity onely but faith it selfe as it is part of our imperfect righteousnesse inherent is footstoole to it selfe in the act of iustification or whiles it pleads for mercy Nor vas any sonne of Adam for the least moment of time euer so righteous but the actuall mediation of Christ or interposition of his sacrifice secluded from his triall at the tribunail of Gods iustice he might besides all his other sinnes iustly haue beene condemned for not stirring vp
the gifts and graces of the spirit or not right vsing them to his glory that gaue them Thus much euery conscience that hath tasted of Gods mercy and goodnesse in Christ will be ready to confesse and this truth now deliuered by vs was in effect the doctrine of the learned and religious Bucer in his conference at Ratisbone with our aduersaries Although he that is iustified hath righteousnesse through Christ inherent the faithfull soule notwithstanding doth not rely on it but onely on the righteousnesse of Christ wherewith wee are endowed without which there neither is nor can be any righteousnesse A more full declaration of his opinion in this controuersie vasquez * out of the same conference hath ready gathered to our hands When certaine propositions which the Author of that conference cals ambiguous were brought vnto him amongst which this was the first faith is the beginning of iustification his answer was if this speech be meant of inchoated righteousnes renouation of the mind which consists in faith hope and charitie with other vertues we admit it for such righteousnesse wee grant to bee a gift yea a new creature in Christ of which we participate by faith yea faith is the first part of it seeing we can neither loue God nor conceiue true hope in Him vnlesse we first know him by faith This righteousnesse of renouation notwithstanding is not that by which we become so righteous in the sight of God as life eternall should be due vnto vs for it seeing it is imperfect and cannot satisfie the Law of God during the time of this mortall life another righteousnesse is required to wit the rightousnesse of God through which wee haue confidence in our Lord CHRIST and are established in the assurance of saluation The like resolution or state rather of this controuersie he gathers out of Chemnitius words as they are related by his aduersary Tiletan We teach not that beleeuers are iustified without righteousnesse for such iustification God himselfe hath pronounced to bee an abhomination in his sight Prou. ●● ver 15. Isa 5. ver 23. but we thinke it necessary that in iustification righteousnesse should interceed or interpose and that not euery sort of righteousnesse but such as is sufficient in the iudgement of God such as is worthy of eternall life Now seeing that righteousnesse which consists in the internall renouation of our mindes by reason of carnall imperfection and vncleannesse adherent is not such necessary it is there should be another righteousnesse through whose interuention or intercession we are iustified in the sight of God 5. From this learned writer the Diuines of Colen and many Schoolemen acknowledged by the Romish Church for her children in other points did but a little dissent as the Iesuite grants and their words are so plaine that euery one may see might these men haue been chiefe delegates in this cause the controuersie had bin quickly ended The only difference can be picked by this curious inquisitor is but this Chemnitius and Bucer made our inherent righteousnesse as he wrongfully charges them a sin the diuines of Colen made it onely imperfect or no righteousnes without the merits of CHRIST to which it serued but as an instrument by their confession CHRIST righteousnesse was not only the efficient or meritorious cause for whose sake this righteousnesse innerent was bestowed vpon vs but the sorme which did so consummate it that is our iustification was accomplished by addition of his righteousnesse vnto ours Vnto this opinion amongst the rest euen Pighius himselfe who made so light accompt of originall sinne did subscribe not induced thereto as is pretended with the sweet discourses of his aduersaries but with the euidence of the truth they taught Indeed Pighius consequently to his error concerning the nature of originall sinne did hold our righteousnesse inherent imperfectionly for the quantity whereas Chemnitius and Bucer did hold it vnsufficient besides for the quality not that it was a sin but that it had sin so adherent as it could not make vs cleane and pure though but in imperfect measure in Gods sight We wil be content to take these Diuines mentioned with that troupe of most famous schoolemen as well antient as moderne expresly yeelded vs by Vasquez as more then fully sufficient either for worth or number to ouersway the authoritie of such later Pontificians as in the conference at Ratisbone or Auspurge or in that booke exhibited vnto Charles the fift before the Trent Councell maintained the contrarie opinion now established Vnto the Trent Councels authoritie because it hath determined for these later and obscurer against the former Schoolemen and vs we will oppose the authority of Scripture and principles of faith directly acknowledged by all but indirectly ouerthrowne by the Councels decree In examining of which it may excuse our boldnesse that so many of their writers should without censure before and some I take it sinte the promulgation of it teach the contrarie The sole formall cause of iustification is the righteousnesse of God not by which he is righteous but wherby hee makes vs righteous to wit that wherewith once endued we are renewed in the spirit of our minde and are not onely reputed iust but truely denominated iust as indeed we are by receiuing righteousnesse euery one according to that measure which the holy Spirit imparts vnto vs as he pleaseth and according to our seuerall proper dispositions or cooperations The formall cause or if that be not enough the sole formall cause of our iustification is righteousnes inherent which as the Romane Catechisme set out by the authoritie of the same Councell in plaine tearmes auoucheth must be so perfect as to leaue no staine or blot of sinne inherent in vs able to present our soules if I mistake not the meaning of it truely glorious at least splendent and beautifull in the sight of God Whatsoeuer else I haue charged their doctrine with they willingly grant to be necessarie consequences of the Councels determination and condemne vs as Heretickes for contradicting them And least we should suspect it might be a matter not altogether vnpossible for the Trent fathers to erre in that peremptory decree late Iesuties would perswade vs it were a matter altogether impossible for God almighty although he should vse his absolute power to iustifie vs by any other meanes then the Councell hath defined Some in their Chuch of no meaner note then the famous victoria and Melchior Canus with other of Aquinas followers publique professors too were not ashamed or afraid to teach that grace inherent did not make vs iust or acceptable in the sight of God by it meere entity or quallity that the value or estimate of it did depend vpon the will and pleasure of him that gaue it content to accept or pronounce vs once partakers of it as iust and holy though not such in our selues or though the inherent vertue of it as money is valuable not
was no sinne in him had they beene of God they might haue knowne him to be his sonne For hee that is of God heareth Gods word but they therefore heard them not because they were not of God In this saith Saint Iohn the children of God are manifest and the children of the diuell whosoeuer doth not righteousnesse is not of God neither he that loueth not his brother As this phrase to doe righteousnesse 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 euidently imports not the bare acts but habituall practice of righteousnesse so needes must the like phrase 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 to commit sinne include an habituall practice or trade of sinne and yet to commit sinne and to sinne are vsed promiscuously as tearmes altogether equiualent in this chapter by Saint Iohn Our former conclusion therefore is most firme that the difference supposed by the same Apostle in these two places If wee say that we haue no sinne we deceiue cur selues and whosoeuer abideth in him sinneth not consists not in the act or obiect of sinne but in the habit or affection of him that sinneth The same answere fully reconciles the like speeches of Saint Iames. He that offends in one to wit habitually or indulgently is guilty of all and yet in many things we all offend actually not habitually or out of infirmity not with delight But euery offence whether actuall or habituall whether of infirmity or of purpose is directly against the Law or will of the Lawgiuer for neuer was woman I thinke so wilfull or pettish as to bee offended vnlesse her will were thwarted or contradicted onely cases altogether omitted which can haue no place in God or matters in their nature meerely indifferent can truely be said to be besides the Law or his minde that made it 7. But perhaps that passage of scripture which first instructed and since confirmed me in the truth hitherto deliuered will giue best satisfaction to the Reader Concerning that exclamation of Saint Paul O wretched man that I am who shall deliuer me from the body of this death some make question but no learned Diuine I thinke will demaund whether Dauid vttered that complaint of himselfe or of some other Who can vnderstand his errors cleanse me from my secret sinnes yet was he then borne of God for vnto him the statutes of the Lord were right euen the ioy of his heart the commaundements pare and delightfull vnto his eyes his feare able to cleanse the heart his iudgements true and righteous altogether all more to be desired then gold yea then much fine gold so liuely and quicke was the apprehension of his faith and yet vniformely enclined to practice For by the commaund ements he was warned to* beware of sinne and in keeping them he found great reward But was he enabled exactly to fulfill the perfection of the Law which had conuerted his soule or did he euer hope to attaine to such perfection as the Romanist must ere he can haue any hope of life to be altogether without any sinne deserning death No this is the height of his desire Keepe backe thy seruant from presumptuous sinnes let them not haue dominion ouer me then shall I be vpright and I shall be innocent from much transgression or as the Gospell expounds his meaning from the raigne of sinne But freed there from did he not stand in need of Gods fauour or mercy for remitting the seattered forces or vanquished reliques of the host of sinne Rather thus qualified he had sure hope his praiers for mercy should be heard yet through the mediation of the Messiah that was to come For so he concludes Let the wordes of my mouth or as the inter line ary well expresseth the propheticall dialect Then shall the words of my mouth being thus freed from the raigne of sinne and the meditation of my heart be acceptable in thy sight O Lord my Rocke and my Redeemer Thus did he of whom CHRIST according to the flesh was to come after his conuersion vnto God and long continuance in the state of habituall grace expect redemption not by infusion of inherent righteousnesse in so full measure as should make him immediately and formally iust in the sight of God but by fauourable acceptance of his praiers directed not to the throne of iustice but to the Lord his Rocke and Redeemer That such qualification as here he speakes of is a necessary condition of praiers made in faith that praiers so made whether for priuate or publike good are neuer reiected by God is elsewhere partly and shall God willing more at large bee shewed The like qualification for effectuall praiers another Psalmist hath expressed If I regard iniquity in my heart the Lord will not heare me But verily God hath heard me he hath attended to the voice of my praier In the perpetuity of praiers or meditations thus conceiued or vttered by hearts free from the raigne of sinne or guilt of indulgence to secret vnlawfull desires haue we without dissention doubtlesse from these Prophets and holy men of God placed the permanencie of iustification actuall or vertuall which are the fruites or Crowne of iustification radicall or fundamentall the onely right vse and end of all grace inherent For though faith or grace at their first infusion may assure vs our sinnes are remitted yet may we not take these or other pledges of Gods loue and fauour as a full discharge or finall acquittance of all reckonings betwixt Him and vs but rather as a stocke bestowed vpon vs to beginne the new world with for which with the increase we must still thinke our selues accomprable Though it be a truth not vnquestionable that a man once actually iustified or truely sanctified cannot finally vse Gods graces amisse yet is it very doubtfull whether one may not either abuse or not vse such gifts of God as rightly vsed or imploied to his glory might haue beene means infallible of iustification But this is a rule as vnquestionable as true that were it possible for a man to vse any extraordinary measure of inhaerent grace amisse he were to be called to a strict accompt as well for all his former sinnes as this abuse of his talent The irresiagable consequence of which vnquestionable truth is this doctrine we now maintaine The immediate qualification for remission of sinnes is not the habit or inherence but the right vse of grace or perseuerance in praiers conceiued by that faith which vnites vs vnto CHRIST If this vertuall in tention or resolution either by contrary acts or meere negligence be remitted our sinnes past whether committed before the infusion of grace or after recouer their wonted strength according to the degrees of this remission and their seuerall waight vntill we repaire our slackenesse by feruent zeale and intensiue deuotion iointly incline the minde to distrust of Gods present fauour or our sure estate in grace 8. What we haue set downe more at large
strong ones which come single might instruct vs how dangerous the conflict will be with all which our memories once throughly stirred can muster to affright our consciences Yet if wee did duely consider the vniformity of strength betweene the seuerall branches of faith or as it respects diuerse obiects the very consciousnesse of any one sinne whereunto wee haue been indulgent will be of like force to withdrawe our assent from Gods mercies as the delight or pleasure we tooke in the obiect of it was to cause vs transgresse any part of his will reuealed The same strength beautie had to allure vnto adulterie will that fowle sinne vnrepented of haue to diuorce our soules from CHRIST Nor could wee faile in practice of this or other commaundement vvithout a precedent defect of that faith which onely can firmely vnite vs vnto CHRIST whereby likewise were it firme it selfe we would assent vnto euery precept of God as much better then any incompatible good And seeing our present faith or trust in God is but commensurable to our fidelity in his commandements then which through scrupulositie of conscience or Christian modesty it may be lesse but cannot be greater without hypocrisie or presumption it must needes want strength to lay sure holde on CHRISTS merits vntill it be able to subdue those desires of the flesh to which it yeelded in the former temptations To say Lord Lord cannot suffice ere we can truely resume our woonted confidence if any we had or make a faithfull plea for mercy Gods will neglected must be executed either in the act if the obiect be present and may be prosecuted or in sincere and constant resolution if abilities or opportunities required to execution of what we resolue vpon be altogether wanting or our indeauours vpon ineuitable occasions hindred 2. For our better preparation against this last and terrible conflict with the world the diuell and flesh let vs imagine the next thunder-clap or vncouth sound we heare did summon vs to finall iugement or if our imaginations bee so quicke and liuely as to awake themselues without external noise or clamor or able as of matters secular so of diuine that certainely shall be to frame representations as if they were already present let vs contemplate CHRIST not as farre absent or soliciting our cause before his father but now appearing in maiestie and great glorie accompanied with infinite legions of holy Angels for his Assessors or attended by Satan and in his infernal troops desirous to be emploied in the execution of his sentence Were the eyes of all our faith as firmely set vpon this sight as some mens are vpon his merits and personall loue to them so as the obiects of terrors yet vnseene but which we stedfastly belieue shall be manifested might haue as full a stroake vpon our inclinations vnto dread of that last day which in this life no man can want vnlesse his righteousnes be angelically perfect as daily cogitations of Gods mercies and fauour to vs in particular haue vpon our hopefull apprehensions or desires of glory all vicissitude of feare and trembling in our soules thus equally poised by contrarie impulsions would not be taken for signes of infidelirie or hypocrisie Nay my conscience assures mee but herein I preiudice no mans perswasions in particular that a multitude of such as condemne all without exception which cannot apprehend the truth of their owne saluation though alas who is he that desires not so to doe as surely as any other article belieued would bewray tokens of feare and dread more euident to others then their former apprehensions were vnto themselues 3. Or were wee in CHRISTS presence though not so terrible as in that day it shall be but rather as amiable and familiar as his Apostles did enioy it set to compare either his precepts generall to all Christians or peculiar to our seuerall vocations with our daily practises or performances who is he that would not more shame at his owne nakednesse then ioy in his Redeemers righteousnesse who is he that would not bee more readie to conuey himselfe out of his sight then with confidence to approach his presence who is he would not wish his former seruice might passe without account or anie certaine hope of reward eternall rather then aduenture to take his finall sentence without some respite for amendment Yet thou O CHRIST my Redeemer and Iudge most righteous best knowes I propose not these scruples to diminish but rather with purpose to increase and fortifie all true confidence in thy merits and thy Fathers mercies but that I know and thou much better knowest it oft-times weakens it self by shooting vp before it time or too fast and in this forward age had much neede to be lopped that it may grow as well in breadth and thicknesse as in length seeing growth in height without soliditie correspondent is but a mounting in presumption the period of whose ascent is pronenesse to fall headlong in despaire 4. Or if any man can drawe the inference here intended from other premises more commodious I shall bee willing to relinquish mine But the best method as yet I knowe for establishing of true confidence will be this As oft as we thinke vpon that fundamentall oracle of life Whosoeuer belieues in him shall not bee ashamed to consider withall that the true crisis of such a constitution as the Prophet there speakes of will not be till the day of CHRISTS appearance Whence least wee should ouer-reach our selues in confident perswasions by suffering our mindes to runne too much vpon the former promise without a counterpoise to trie their strength let vs ballance our apprehensions of it with meditation vpon this truth Hee onely belieues aright in CHRIST that will not be ashamed at his appearance The inference hence naturally issuing is our Sauiours and not mine Watch therefore and pray alwaies that yee may bee accompted worthy to escape all these things that shall come to passe and to stand before the Sonne of man From this conclusion wee may resume our former assertion as a necessary corolary That besides iustification habituall there is a iustification vertuall which hath a permanent duration and consists in the perpetuity of watchfulnesse and prayer that the foundation of it as of our confidence is vnion with CHRIST by a faith fructifying in conuersation and workes conformable to him as the Disciple whom hee loued most diuinely hath instructed vs And now little children abide in him that vvhen he shall appeare we may haue confidence and not be ashamed before him at his comming If ye know that he is righteous know yee that vvhosoeuer doth righteousnesse is borne of him 5. Beloued Reader I am the bolder to put thee in minde of such strictnesse as the profession of Christianitie bindes thee vnto the rather because I purpose not otherwise to affright thee with any markes of reprobation Few I know so well affected but without repentance and greater constancie
gaude●● fit nec passi● esse ga●d ●● 〈◊〉 nisi cum v●a●r●mus Christum quae c●ti●as ●ni●●i 〈◊〉 m●nt●a est am●re pressuras p●na● lachrymas mundi non f●st●nare potius ad gaudium quod nunquam possit at f●ri Ho● autem fit fratres dilect ●●mi quio fides d●●st quid ●em● credit vera esse qua promi●●●t Deus 〈◊〉 est cuius sermo credentibus ●ter●us firmus est Si t●●● v●r grauis 〈◊〉 aliquid ●o●b●ne●●r haberes 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 nec te fall● aut decipi ab eo crederes quem stare in 〈◊〉 atque in act●bus suis scires Nunc Deus ●●cem loquitur tu mente incredu●a perfidus ●●●ctuas Deus tibi de●●c mundo recedenti immortalitatem atque ●●ern●ta●em pollicitur tu dubitas hoc est Deum omnino non ne●●e hoc est Christum credentium magistrum peccato incredulitatis offendere hoc est in Ecclesia constitutum fidem in domo fidei non habere Cyprian de Mortalit ●e Ver●ntamen p●test forte mouer● quid tam multos vi●emus credentes IESVM f●lium Dei esse adhuc tamen mund● 〈◊〉 cupid ●tatibus i●●e●i●os Q●i●i ergo ait quis est qui 〈◊〉 mundum nisi qui cred● quia Jes●● est filius Dei ●um ipse iam mundus id credat An non ipsi quo●●● Damon●● credunt ●ontrem●cum Sed dico Puta●ne filium Dei IESVM reputat quisquis ille est ho●o qui●●●● nec t●●retur ●●n mi●●●ienibus nec ●●●rahitur ●rom ssionibus ●●t praeceptis obtem perat nec consil●j a● quies●it Nunne ●● etiam si 〈◊〉 se n●sse● Deum ●actis tamen negat Bernard in Act Pas de 〈◊〉 Tes●●●● in C●●● e● t●● 〈◊〉 1. b Ad sextum argumentum respondeo Patres cum dicunt fidem sine operibus non esse veram fidem tantum vèlle significare quod non sit viua perfecta qualis reuera deberet esse Nam hic loqūendi modus est vsitatus vt rem quae in aliquo genere imperfecta est dicamus non esse veram in eo genere sicut gaudium aut dolore verhi gratia imperfectum aut non ita magnum dicere solemus non esse verum gaudium aut dolorem lametsi aliquod gaudium sit aut dolòr Marke 〈…〉 verse 16. * Fortasse vnusquisque apud semetipsum dicat Egoiam credidi salv●s ero verum dicit si fidem operibus tenet vera etenim fides est quae in hoc quod verbis dicit moribus non contradicit Hinc est etenim quod de quibusdā falsis fiaelibus Paulus dicit qui confitentur se nesse Deum sactis autem negant Hinc Ioannes ait Qui dicit se nosse Deum mādata eius non eustodit meadax est Quod cum ita sit fide inostrae veritatem in vitae nostrae considerationem debemus agnossere Tunc enim veraciter fideles sumus si quod verbis promittimus opev●bus complemus In die quippe Baptismatis omnibus nos antiqui hostis operibus atque omnibus pompis abrenunciare promisimus Itaque●ausquisque vestrum ad confiderationem suam mentis oculos reducat● fi seruat post Baptismum quod ante Baptismum spopon●it certus iam quia fidelis est gaudeat Sed ecce si quod promisit minime serua●it si ad excercendu prau●● opera ad concupiscendas mundi pompas dilapsus est videa●us fi●●m scit plangere quod errauit Apud miscricordem ●●mnamque iudicem nec ille fallax habetur qui ad veritatem reuerti tur etiam postquam mentiturquia omnipotens Deus dum libeter paenitentiam nostram suscipi● ipse suo iudicio hoc quod erranimus al scondit Greg. Hom 29. in Ascen Demmi c Hiac accepisse videtur Paulus illud ad Rom Iūstificati ex fide pacem habemus erga Deum nam hic sequitur Cultus Iustiuae quies siducin ●d est cul●us seruitium seu obsequium ad iustitiam consequendam est nos ●ostiaque omnia Deo committere tanquam patri am●n●issimo cui fidem dedimu● quem pro De oa●cepimus cui obtemperare cu●●●●legem exanimo s●●uare promissimus quiq●os in suam fidem suscepit quibus etiam nisi in obedientes esse ●ellemus se nunquam des●tu●um ●ic●ssim pol icitus est Haec omnia includ●t fides Paulina cui iustitiam tribuit ipsc Forer in 32. cap Iesatae verse 17. h Rom. 5 ver 1. a Quid sit credere in hac disputatione ex alijs locis scripturae discendumest praecipue cap. 7. Johann● Qui credit in me sicutdicit scriptura flumina de vētre eius fluant aequae viuae Scriptura quam co loc● respicit s●luat● habetur 2. Paralip cap. 16. vbi sic scriptum est Oculi Domim contemplantur vniuersam terram prebent fortitudinem ij● qui cord● perfecto credunt in cum Corde autem perfecto credunt qui non solu●s fidem adhibent illis quae dicuntur in scripturis vel alias diuinitus reuelantur sed praeterea omnes animae vires accomodant vt faciant quod habes fides vel quod ●a prescribit Atque hoc modo accipitur a Paulo credere videlicet vt sit edauditum verbum commoneri tota an●mi adhaesione complecti id quod dicitur Sasbout in vers 17. 1. ad Rom. i Psa 78. ver 9. c 1. Cor. ●● k 1. Cor. 1. v. 5. * Adde vltimò etiā comentarium S. Augustini vt ali●s interim pretermittam Nam tractat 53. in Iobannem Vidite inquit Augustinus quemadmodum notauerit Euangelista improbaue●it quosdam quos tamen in eum ●●●did sse dixit qui in hoc ingressu fidei si proficerent amorem quoque humanae gloriae proficiendo superarent Quod ●● fides ista proficere poterat amorem humanae gloriae proficiendo superare certe vera fide● erat ●ad●m e●im est fide● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 perf●●●● sed ●o●●●mper ●que magna 〈◊〉 ●● fid●● 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 non●●t ●adem qu● 〈◊〉 no●●●●e 〈…〉 de 〈…〉 * If the Reader well obserue the nature and properties of faith before explicated he cannot possibly bee ignorant that euery least degree of faith brings forth a correspondent degree of loue that it is as impossible loue should increase without a correspondēt increase of faith precedent as that inequality betwixt two subiects should grow greater without any variation of their quantities * Creation applied vnto this subiect more properly in Scripture phrase includes the renouation it selfe wrought in our hearts then the grace or quality infused by which it is wrought for whether that be of one and the same nature in all God onely knowes bound we are to beleeue that he is able to c●eate new hearts in diuers persons by meanes whether externall or internall and infused in nature quality much different See section 3. chap. 1. ● 1. Cor. 3. b Galas 6. ver 14. a Mark 16. 17. 18 b
vse of humane industry for attaining vnto the faith whose nature and properties are set forth in the first notwithstanding that such faith is the sole gift of God not wrought in part by vs but wholy created by him The points whereto our endeauours must bee addressed thou shalt easily perceiue by the titles of the Chapters onely let mee request thee to beare in mind Chap. 6. of Section 1. whi est thou readest the fowrth of this third as also to compare Chap. ● of Section 1. with the ● of this Order of doctrine did require that I should set down the nature properties of that faith by which the iust doth liue before I admonish for auoidance of misper swasions concerning the present cossession right vse or regiment of it and these againe were to be preuented before I direct for the right planting of it Notwithstanding he that desires to bee a doe● not a hearer onely of the truth must beginne where I end and first practise the rules giuen in the last Section and so proceed to the first and second Thus he shall finde euery Section suited to the three branches of his vowe made in Baptisme as they are set downe in the Catechisme authorised by our Church The first To for sake the Diuell and all his workes the pompes and vanities of this wicked world and all the sinfull lusts of the flesh The third Section expounds the meaning of this resolution shewing withall that serious endeauours to performe it are ordinarily precedent to the infusion of faith The second To beleeue all the articles of the Christian faith The nature and properties of this beliefe are set downe in the first Section The third to keep Gods holy will and commaundements and to walke in the same all the daies of this life How beleefe of the Creed doth enable vs to this obseruance is partly shewed in the first but more fully in the second Section wherein likewise is handled at large how far we are bound to obserue Gods commaundements How necessary prayers are eyther for attaining to this perfection or for absolution from all our sins after faith is infused which is an other principall part of that Catechisme the Reader may be informed by the later part of the same Section what it shall please any well-affected to aduise me of as eyther defectiue or amisse in this Treatise shal by Gods assistance be amended in my exposition of that Catechisme a worke vpon speciall occasions lately begun for the benefit of the vnlearned Besides these generalls euery part of this Treatise hath a peculiar vse for more commodious explication of the articles following The last Section hath speciall reference to the Article of euerlasting life The second to the articles of CHRISTS death his passion and comming vnto iudgement and containes withall an Elench of those vulgar fallacies which must be auoided before we come to search what certainety of iustification or saluation may be had in this life or of whom it may be expected The handling of these fallacies in my first intention was referred in the Articles concerning Christ and remission of sinnes The first Section hath a transcendent vse throughout all the Articles following what peculiar reference the seuerall passages of it haue to particular Articles wil better apeare in their seuer a explications wherunto my next labors are now consecrated God of his infinite mercy assist meinwardly with his grace and blesse me outwardly with that measure of health of vacancy from other businesse and whatsoeuer meanes he knowes fittest for his seruice To the Author SIr according to your request I haue perused your booke I would my occasions had beene such that I might haue ouerseene the Presse also I would haue thought no paines too much for this purpose partly for the loue I beare to the Author but specially for the liking I haue of the worke You know my nature farre from flattery and I know yours as free from ambition Yet if I should speak what mine heart thinks and as the truth would giue me leaue perhaps it might be subiect to misconstruction I will only say thus much I haue profited by reading of your booke and so I thinke will hee say whosoeuer shall reade it with deliberation and vnderstanding And so I leaue you and your labours to Gods blessing Your euer louing friend HENRY MASON A Table containing the principall arguments of the seuerall Sections and Chapters contained in this Booke SECTION 1. Of the Nature Essence and properties of that Faith by which the Iust doth liue Page 1. CHAP. 1 Rules of method for the right differencing of that Assent wherein Christian faith consists page 1. CHAP. 2 The vsuall diuision of Faith or Assent into historicall and saluificall not so form all as rightly to fit the method proposed p. 5 CHAP. 3 What Assent is whence the certaintie firmenesse and stabilitie of it properly arise p 8 CHAP. 4 What correspondencie euidence and certaintie hold in Assents or perswasions what measure of either in respect of what obiects is necessarily required to the constitution of that Assent wherein Christian faith consists p 11 CHAP. 5 The seuerall kindes of euidences whereof some are appliable vnto faith in respect of certaine Articles others in respect of other That the certaintie of faith in respect of diuine truthes not euident is grounded vpon an euident certaintie of others the propertie naturally arising from this difference of Assent as it is of obiects partly knowne and partly vnknowne p 19 CHAP. 6 The mutuall affinity betwixt truth and goodnesse the reall identity of the will and vnderstanding that the Assent of faith cannot be so appropriated to the one as to be excluded from the other that admitting such a difference betwixt them as true Philosophic may approue faith in respect of some obiects must be attributed to the will in respect of others to the vnderstanding the originall of difficulties in assenting to morall obiects or of the naturall mans back wardnesse to beleeue truths diuine what dependance other Christian vertues haue on faith that to adhere vnto diuine reuelations as good not simply considered onely but comparatiuely or with opposition to anie other good is altogether as essentiall to faith rightly Christian as to beleeue or acknowledge them for true p 32 CHAP. 7 Illustrating and confirming the conclusion last inferred by practies properly ascribed to faith in Scripture as well Canonicall as Apocryphall of hypocrisie and the contrarie progresse obserued by it and Christian faith p 54 CHAP. 8 That knowledge of morall obiects in sacred dialect includes the affections concomitant The exact conformitie or correspondencie betwixt the Assent or adherence resulting from such knowledge and the proper obiect whereto it is applied p 80 CHAP. 9 What manner of knowledge it is whence the last and proper difference of that Assent wherein Christian faith consists doth result the complete definition of such faith p 92 CHAP. 10 Of the generall consequences