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A93771 VindiciƦ redemptionis. In the fanning and sifting of Samuel Oates his exposition upon Mat. 13. 44. With a faithfull search after our Lords meaning in his two parables of the treasure and the pearl. Endeavoured in several sermons upon Mat. 13. 44, 45. Where in the former part, universal redemption is discovered to be a particular errour. (Something here is inserted in answer to Paulus Testardus, touching that tenet.) And in the later part, Christ the peculiar treasure and pearl of Gods elect is laid as the sole foundation; and the Christians faith and joy in him, and self-deniall for him, is raised as a sweet and sure superstructure. / By John Stalham, Pastour of the Church at Terling in Essex. Stalham, John, d. 1681. 1647 (1647) Wing S5187; Thomason E384_10; ESTC R201450 156,279 216

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and ineffectually called but as called and that effectually and according to purpose And so this Heretick is forc't being 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 convinc't and condemn'd in himself as I gather by this Use to apply his comfort to the elect alone and to that end quoted the 2. of Col. 2. The Apostles praier for them that they might have the full assurance of understanding which he interpreted to be That they might see their particular assurance of life in a generall promise and not their generall assurance in a particular promise for we desire no more then a particular and personall assurance in and from a generall promise such as Pauls 1. Tim. 1. 15. and yet this generall is not so universall as that Christ died for all the world of men But not hurting us in all this Use of Comfort hitherto at last he thought he would strike home and wound us deeply with this blow A man may preach seven years of particular Redemption and not comfort a distressed conscience to which I say two things 1. What means he by a distressed conscience a childe of light walking in darknesse or a childe of darknesse blowing up the sparks of his own fire-sticks but almost smothered and stifled with the smoke thereof 2. We preach a choice and speciall Redemption in a generall offer to what sinner soever that is distressed and will be directed As Paul Believe and thou shalt be saved and Act. 16. immediately the Jailor is comforted he staied not seven years for it His third Use was To teach us abundance of love to Examination of his third U●e Christ Answ I demand whom he means by us if the people of God and the elect and believers how is this a direct inference from Christs buying the whole world if all men be meant by us how shall they love who doe not believe but if he understood Gods peculiar people because he mention'd the Spouse afterwards no wonder her love is so carried after her espoused husband Christ let him know that the hearts of the Saints are touched and taken with the speciall love of Christ it is that which constrains them to love him in a speciall manner and that the more abundantly because they know in part and shall yet further know Christ died for them not only out of a generall love which he bears to mans nature but out of a speciall and singular love which he bears to their persons and to theirs onely Thus have we followed his Counsell to search the Scriptures and we finde them of weight for speciall Redemption and love but weighing the man and his Doctrine and Uses too of universall Redemption we have found them too light Let me but adde a few Arguments as Antidotes against the poyson which some of you may have suck't in of late and preservatives from the infection of this hereticall tenet of Christs buying the world of men and dying for them all and we have done with the Anasceuastique part of our discourse which tends to the weakning ruine and destruction Antidotes or Counter poison of so grand an errour First Gods Attributes are hereby wronged and scandalized as 1. Gods power is called into Question as if a generall benefit were merited by Christ which by reason of mans wickednesse he cannot apply 2. His wisdome is eclipsed for it puts upon him such an intention as yet by proper and direct means he attains not unto 3. His justice is rendered unjust for he receiveth a full satisfaction of his Sonne for all men and yet neither first nor last receiveth them into the favour of communion and friendship 4. His highest love is undervalued for it holds forth Gods love to give his Sonne but not so as to give them faith for whom he gave his Sonne and it speaks of Christs sweating and dying for them whom yet he lets die and perish in their sins Secondly If he died for all then he died in their stead and as their surety he discharged the whole debt and so it is not only unjust but impossible that any should perish here the Remonstrants Arminians so calling themselves at the Hague conference had a subtle distinction of Christs dying Non loco vice omnium not in the room and stead of all sed bono tantum but for their good only whereas the Scriptures which own not such a distinction hold out Christ as dying in the room and stead of sinners that they might not die eternally but live for ever so is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Rom. 5. 6. b 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 where 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 is as much as 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and so rendered Philem. v. 13 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that in t●y stead in another case and about the Question in hand the word in 1 Tim. 2. 6 is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 a ransome in the room and stead of all or pro onnis ordinis electis which compared with Mat 20 28. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 for many and but for many indivduals or in stead of many singulars chosen of God one choice-singular-Jesus suffered 1 Pet. 3. 18. and other places to be understood Christ died for the wicked that is in their stead The just in the room of the unjust The good the all or any of the benefits that comes from Christs death floweth from this that he suffered in the room of those who have that good and benefit by his death and if as themselves acknowledge he died not in the room and stead of all they weave but a spiders web to say it was for their good how can the surety do the debtour any good if he neither be bound in his stead nor paies the debt in his room Thirdly If he died for all he rose again for all ascended sits at Gods right-hand and makes intercession for all for the Scriptures joyn his death and resurrection together Rom. 4. ult and his death ascension sitting interceding with the Father all together Rom. 8. 34. and more particularly with his intercession 1 Joh. 2. 1 2. and if so that he riseth ascendeth sits and pleads for all he is either heard or not heard for all if heard for all then all must be saved if not heard for all then Christ intercedeth in vain and the Father doth not hear him alwaies crosse to Scripture Joh. 11. 42. Fourthly This loose opinion puts all that hold it upon such distinctions as have no ground from Scripture but are contrary to it as 1. That but even now named or refuted of loco and bono not in stead of all but for the good of all 2. That of impetration and application which the Gospel holds forth as inseparable acts of Christs mediation to whom Christs death is or shall be applied for them he obtained remission of sinnes and for whom he did impetrate to them he applieth Isa 53. 11. Joh. 10. 15 28. Heb. 9. 12 15. Yea the Apostle inferreth
8. 10. his soul and spirit is void of the life of God and of the sense of Gods love he is under the power and regiment of sinne and Satan disabled to all spirituall good This spirituall death is the harbinger of eternall death to him an hell upon earth it was when God arraigned him he had no other I conceive then the sentence of death and hell in his conscience till the promise comes Gen. 3. 15. but observe it before that promise is revealed God is just and patient also just in bringing the degrees and pains of death upon Adam patient in forbearing the immediate and full execution even as God was and is just to the Angels that sinned 2 Pet. 2. 4. yet patient in that he reserveth them to a further judgement and gives them not all their torment before their time Math. 8. 29. and yet this patience is exercised to devils without a purchase or death of a Mediatour so God might deferre from Adam and doth from his posterity keep off judgement though not in and for Christ quâ Mediator And what though Gods dispensations towards Angels is not a rule in all cases for us to collect his transaction about man fallen and his dispensations towards him yet in this case the Apostle b 2 Pet. 2. 4. 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 vers 9. makes a clear inference If God spared not them but reserveth them unto judgement he knoweth v. 9. how to reserve the unjust to the day of judgement the same verb being used in ver 4 and 9. for reserving in the Passive and Active voice where he speaks of Angels and men as coming from the same act of Gods just patience and patient-justice And though we know not how this should be he knoweth how to be just and patient too how to be patient in wrath and justice Rom. 9. 22. and how to be just in his patience 2. The threatning Gen. 2. 17. against Adam and all men sinning in him is not taken off by the promise Gen. 3. 15. which is only to the woman and her seed nay that is a threatning too in reference to the Serpent and his seed which are not only evil Angels but wicked reprobates amongst men and that which is threatned is irreconcilable enmity with and conquest over Satan and all his serpentine brood which necessarily infers death and damnation to them as to himself it were strange then if vertually in and for Christ patience should be afforded to Adam and all in him before the promise is actually promulged when at and in the actuall promulgation here is nothing but wrath and enmity between the woman and the serpent Christ and the devil the devils brood and the generation of the righteous true Adam stands by trembling and hears this but if he gets any peace or patience or pardon of his first sinne 't is a personall favour only for himself not to descend upon all his posterity but such as should be the womans seed from their interest in a second Adam Christ Jesus not from any relation to him as the first Adam All therefore who are yet but in the first Adam and as branches of that root are under the sentence of death for that first sinne Christ hath not obtained pardon nor patience that I know for them one moment 3. No man denieth but all was forfeited upon Adam's fall his very life and all creature-comfort and subsistence but God takes not the forfeit for when Christ the promised seed steps in for that part of mankinde who are with Christ the seed of the woman the elect of God the patience mercy and bounty of God steps in for the rest of mankinde even the seed of the serpent and reprobates with whom yet he will carry on a Covenant of works and justice the foundation of which covenant Christ cannot be as Mediatour for then he should be the foundation of two Covenants contradistinct works and grace no a Reprieve only comes forth for them yet under and ever to be under a Covenant of works and justice this is no Redemption 4. This Reprieve is but for a very short time to many not at all to some of the serpents seed who being conceived in the guilt of the first sinne are stifled at first conception ●● or being born in that guilt and the corruption of nature succeeding in the room of Gods image dead in sinnes and trespasses die corporally the day they are born or soon after in tender infancy and in their immortall souls die eternally as the children of the Sodomites then in the womb or newly crept out who with their parents or fathers of fornication an unclean diabolicall brood Jude v. 7. are suffering the vengeance of eternall fire Others live out their time allotted them in just-patience but are accursed in life and death Isa 65 20. And die as e Morte morieris Hebraismus est qua verborū reduplicatione vehementia certitudo significatur morie morieris i. c. certissimè morieris Paulus Fagius in Gen. 2. 17. certainly step by step as they that drop into hell out of their mothers womb And as malefactours who are but reprieved not redeemed and pardoned stay they never so long in Gaole yet they die the death or doe most surely suffer death at the day of full execution being dead men in law long before 5. What Christ the Sonne of God doth in this reprieve of the serpents seed as indeed he doth all that is done 't is as he is God and Lord of all in the Kingdom of his Power which he makes subservient to the Kingdom of his Grace for the saving benefit of the heirs of grace and glory As some great Lord intending to redeem one captive among and out of many prisoners in his fathers great house that he might marry her and make her his beloved Spouse and for whom he laies down a ransome to his father out of his generous and noble disposition common to him and his father also as a Lord and great Prince not as Husband or Bridegroom should throw away little and great summes of money with sutes of cloth upon the common prisoners and appoint them relief out of a common Almes-basket all to this end that these common prisoners might doe some service in the great family for his Spouses advantage So the Lord God and our Lord Iesus Christ so stiled Iude v. 4. being the only Lord God to all men and the Lord Iesus Christ but to a few he comes in the first promise and in the old Prophecies types and shadows and in the fulnesse of time in the substance of our nature among a world of Captives to wooe his Church his ●pouse and Bride to redeem and save her and her only by the ransome of his bloud paid down to his Fathers justice and out of his naturall pity and bounty being God and the Son of God and Lord of all like himself and his greatnesse he casts away life and health
it By the Kingdome of heaven I understand the State and Treasure of it with the affairs and dealings about it or Christ and his grace preached and set forth in the Gospel of grace and in Gospel dispensations Christ and his Gospel grace and dispensations were set out in the four fore-going Parables by their nature force and efficacy here by their worth and state of excellency with the Christians affairs and dealings for his enjoyments of all the worth and treasure of the Kingdom as his own First The worth and riches of the Kingdom resembled to hidden treasure and a precious pearl what else is it but Christ and his Gospel-grace as may appear 1. By parallel expressions and descriptions of him and his grace in Scripture Such as you read of in Col. 3. 1. Things above where Christ sitteth c. Treasure in heaven Math. 19. 21. 5. 21. This treasure 2 Cor. 4. 7. viz. of Christ and the Gospel-knowledge of him v. 6. The people of God are the children of the Kingdom Mat. 13. 38. and the subjects of the Kingdom yea heirs and co-heirs with Christ that is enough for them but they are not the treasure of the Kingdom Christ is that treasure 2. By the Characters given to this treasure of the Kingdom in the Parables of the Text as 1. We hear here of a hidden Treasure Christ is most like to a hidden Treasure as being furthest off from the knowledge of men you may know a visible Church sooner then the invisible God and Saviour 2. Hid in a field that is a field by it self and a large field yet distinctly and particularly bounded within the Word and Ordinances of grace there is Christ hid and wrapt up in precious promises the preaching and substance whereof is called vers 19. The word of the Kingdome for where the Treasure is found there it was first hidden in Gospel promises Ordinances and dispensations Christ and his grace is found 3. Here is mention of a Pearl and one of great price Christ is that Pearl with the grace of the Gospel of singular invaluable price it will impoverish every man that goeth about to buy it but when he hath sold all to his shirt and skin for it it enricheth him for ever 4. One Pearl which can agree to none but Christ and the unsearchable worth of his grace and Gospel set in opposition to all the goodly pearls in mens esteem the supposed mediums of salvation Thus you see what the state and worth of the Kingdome of heaven is and to what it is like it is Christ and all he is worth like to a Treasure and one Pearl of great price Secondly We are to consider the Kingdome of heaven in it's affairs and the Christians dealings about it like to a man that findeth c. Who is he that findeth he that seeketh and who is he that seeketh the merchant man a man of no small dealings in the world The merchant man is every elect-vessel of mercy represented here under a double notion 1 As seeking that which he findes not 2. As finding that which he seeks not 1. As seeking what he findes not and that is a 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 goodly Pearls some fair and specious commodities to make him rich and happy Every one of Gods elect while naturall is seeking his happinesse his life his heaven his God in some one thing or other here below the minde of man is active and as busie as Ants on a mole-hill about worldly contentments riches honours pleasures profits common gifts of learning knowledge c. to make a life of an heaven a God of this he seeks but if he belong to God as the Parable speaks of such he findes it not 2. As finding what he sought not for A Treasure a Pearl an only Pearl of price the only Treasure of Christ and Gospel-grace which will make a man for ever This finding is nothing but Gods preventing b Isa 65. 1. light and c Joh. 6. 44 45. love and Gods drawing of a soul to faith in Christ And of this finding there are four effects mentioned in the Text. Hiding Joying Selling. Buying 1. Hiding when he had found the treasure he hideth it which is not only emblematicall and for ornament of speech 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 abscondit est emblematicum Cor. a Lap. as some conceive but such an expression as holds forth the carriage of a true beleever at his first beleeving in the severall acts of humility of hope and love of his high esteem and holy purposes about this Treasure and Pearl to make it his own for as there is a sinfull hiding of Christ and of Gospel-grace and truths when they are not acknowledged nor others called to come and partake with us against which David and Christ too do protest Psal 40. 10. So we finde the phrase used in a good sense in Scripture As 1. Sometimes for an act of modest humility in opposition to boasting as 1 Pet. 3. 4. the hidden man of the heart is an expression of humility in women contrary to outward ostentation and shews and flant-tant dresses so d Nisi fortè dicamus id tantum pollere quantum si ●u di●as Dissimulavit non jactavit Bul. in locum Bullinger inclines to think we may safely here understand an act of a Christians modesty who when he findes Christ in the Gospel hath many a secret thought of the worth of such a Treasure and of his own unworthinesse yet cordiall and inward in his beleeving with the hidden man of his heart 2 Sometime for an act of Hope Prov. 22. 3. The prudent man fore-seeing the evil hideth himself i. e. humbly and hopefully betaketh himself to the Lord so the beleever hopefully as humbly cheweth upon the promise in his heart 3. Sometime for an act of dear love as Job 20. 12. it is an expression of a sinners love to his darling sin he is said to hide it under his tongue as a man or childe doth suggar candy in his mouth which is seemingly a good hiding to a sinner and here the reall and dear love of a Christian to Christ holds him and keeps him close 4. Sometime for an act or effect of high esteem for so the riches which Cyrus should meet with in Babylon and which he and all naturall men prize so much are called Isa 45. 3. Hidden riches of secret places that which men prize most they hide most closely 5. Sometime for an act of resolution to keep safe and make sure of any thing as Prov. 2. 1. If thou hide my commandments with thee that is resolvest to keep them and Psal 119. 11. So the man the merchant man in my Text e Lest any man beguile him of the treasure he taketh care that he be not deprived of it c. Annot. last upon the place he doth holily take up a resolution to make out for Christ and to make sure of him as his own
1. 1. not only as he is the ground and foundation of it but the further and full enjoyment of Christ is yet to come and Gal. 5. 5. We through the Spirit doe wait for the hope of righteousnesse by faith Your life is hid with Christ in God Col. 3 3. that is a Beleevers glorious life is hid in hope And therefore they are said to look for that blessed hope Tit. 2. 13. The act of hope set upon the object of hope keeps all close to a Christian as if he were really possessed of all A beleever hideth up all in hopes upon these grounds 1. The sufficiency of the treasure and worth of the Pearl affords enough for the future expences as for a present stock k Psal 31. 19. Oh how great is thy goodnesse which thou hast laid up for them that fear thee If God hath laid it up in promises the beleever will lay it up in hopes that the Lord is his shepherd his treasure and he shall not want 2. The firm faithfulnesse of the promise There are no boggs nor marishes no quick-sands nor quagmires in the field or ground of promises they are the promises l Tit. 1. 2. of God that cannot lie hence sure ground for hope and assurance of hope Heb. 6. 11. to 19. 3. The riches worth and wealth of a Christian doth not 3. By love yet appear 1 Joh. 3. 2 3. But he is an heir according to the hope of eternall life Tit. 3. 8. He is the richest man in hidden hopes of any under heaven 3. An act of love Beleeving he loveth and as that which men love they will keep close to them so from faith working by love Gal. 5. 6. Love to Christ and to his word in speciall he hideth what he loveth How sweet were the words of God to Davids palate sweeter then honey to his ●●st● therefore he hid them in his heart Psal 119. 103. with 11. sweet meats preserves of fruits c. are lockt up in boxes and closets and the beleever finding such sweetnesse in Christ cannot but hide it in the closet of his dearest love for 1. The treasure comes in love he is prevented with the Cos amoris amor magnes amoris amor love of God in the discovery of it which is both the whetstone and loadstone to love again We love him because he loved us first 1 Joh. 4. 19. 2. It is peculiar and choice love wherewith God preventeth and draweth a sinner to beleeve and finde the Pearl where one findes the Pearl God knoweth how many thousands mi●le of it which constrains the soul to set a special and peculiar affection upon it 3. Love though it is communicative yet it begins at home and looks to one though it hath no thoughts but to walk abroad and discover-Gospel-provision to others yet it will be wise for it's self as the m 2 King 7. 8. Lepers were Who came to the uttermost part of the camp and went into one tent and did eat and drink and carried thence silver and gold and raiment and went and hid it and came again and went into another tent and carried thence also and went and hid it And then they gave out the report for others supply and succour Love hath it's wise concealements as well as mercifull revealings 4. An act of high esteem it is the property of every true 4. By high estimations beleever to carry secretly in his bosome more high thoughts of Christ then he is able to utter St Paul expresseth something of these high-prizings Phil. 3. 7 8. What things were gain to me those I counted losse for Christ yea doubtlesse and I count all things but lesse for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord c. Yet when he cries out Oh the depth and when he calleth the riches of Christ unsearchable and when he praieth that the faithfull in Ephesus might be able to comprehend with all Saints what is the breadth and length and depth and height and might know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge it plainly argueth that his esteem of Christ was beyond his expression yet his expressions are as high about the Gospel-treasure as the holy Ghost ever furnisht any earthen vessel withall since Solomons song was penned And when every ordinary beleever comes short of such expressions he must needs hide Christ in many a silent admiration And why is Christ more admired and hidden in silent wonderings yea the heart filled with admiration at the knowledge of him 1. Nothing can be found worthy meet or sit to be laid in the balance with him not men not Princes he is n Psal 45. 2. fairer then the children of men not money not wealth o Rev. 3. 17 18. all riches is poverty miserable poverty without him not learning knowledge all knowledge is ignorance all learning is duncery without the knowledge of him and his heights and depths of wisdom c. 2. With worth and excellency a beleever hath a certain propriety in this hoped for possession this alwaies raiseth the price of any small matter house childe or what else 〈◊〉 below 't is thy house if but a cortage therefore pri●ed 't is my childe therefore esteemed and look't after 't is my promise thinks the Christian therefore I will lay it up Christ is mine and shall be mine if I look well to it 5. An act of holy purpose to keep the treasure safe and 5. By holy resolutions make ●●●e of it I found him saith the Spouse I hold him and would not let him goe untill I had brought him in i● my p Cant. 3. 4. mothers house and into the chamber of her that conceived 〈◊〉 None shall take away Christ or a Christians treasure from him He is resolved of that And such a secret resolution he carrieth and cherisheth in his bosome daily q Phil. 3. 12. I follow after saith Paul if that I may approhend that for which also I am approhended of Christ Iesus So the beleeves holds to his resolution as Christ hath prevented him and he hath found the Pearl he will not lose it but study the nature and vertue of it enquire more into the mystery of it this is his purpose to know and make sure of it for himself and well may it be so For 1. He never mee with the like Treasure before all other pe●i●● 〈◊〉 di●● and dogs meat to this as now he 〈◊〉 very well and can make a vaste difference 'tween this and them 2. He will never meet with the like again if he misse of this there is but one of these Pearls to be found in all the earth and the Heavens and this is that only-one 3. There are those that would beguile him of it Satan and the cheating heart and false teachers jugling sophisters and base companions therefore he taketh care that he may not be deprived of it he hideth it and holdeth it
together but with untempered morter In the next place Who is the man that found the Treasure and Pearl and sels all to buy c. Was it the Lord Christ as he affirmed What though God be said to finde his people and Christ came to seek and to save the lost sheep groat and Prodigall Those Parables Luk. 15. are of one scope these of another The man thought it may be he had been opening Luk. 15. 3 c. not Math. 13. 44 c. and so lost himself and the true sense of this present Text which holds forth as you will perceive more afterwards the joyes and priviledges of a Christian finding Christ in the Gospel not Christs priviledges and joyes finding a Christian in the rubbish of the world of man-kinde Lastly By selling all saith our new Expositour is understood Christs selling all he had his parting with his glory his riches of this world his life and the sweet beams of his Fathers love to purchase the whole world and his people therein These words are fair and specious and will take with the fancies of weak men and silly women because of some truth therein as if they were the truth of the Text but as before upon one absurdity presumed as the proper sense he swalloweth many more And though he thinks he hath found the life and marrow of this parabolicall speech yet it is but the marrow of his own fancy That Gods people are like treasure hid in the field which when Christ hath found he parted with all he had to buy this field for if it hath appeared already that 1. By the Kingdom is not meant the Church nor 2. By the Treasure here spoken of is meant the Christian nor 3. By the field the world of men nor 4. By the Pearl either the world or Church nor 5. By the man or merchant finding c. Christ Jesus then cannot the selling of all be Christs purchase of his people by the parting with all he had to that end But Secondly Let us examine his Observations and see how 2. His impertinent observations impertinent they were Were the Exposition right most of the observations would be right and proper enough but that foundation being false the building falleth to the ground As 1. The peculiar people of God are Gods treasure and jewels A truth but not here to be found 2. God is found of those that sought him not A truth but not here primarily intended only presupposed the Parables speak of mans finding of God in Christ and of Christ in the Gospel and only presupposeth that God cometh in the Gospel of the Kingdom and findes him first by the preventing light of his Spirit 3 The providence of God is a strong Tower But this tower not built upon this Text. 4. Gods love is abundantly put forth towards his elect We grant it but not as the man intended it here to obscure set by and take no notice of the abundant love of Gods elect towards Christ which he speaks to in this place 5. Christ parted with all his glory for the good of his elect The Observation is good and pious but not proper to the place but in that Christ did part with all as we finde it in other Scriptures and that only for the elect This indeed makes the Lord Jesus a Pearl and Treasure to every true believer for obtaining of which treasure the believer parteth with all his basenesse and glory too in himself or in the world 6. The Lord Christ did give himself for the world that is the whole world or number of men in the world This is the Observation which the Observatour called a Doctrine hardly born and that which I called at first a false Doctrine added to his impertinent Observation And which is the Third thing to be ex●mined by the Scriptures to which 3. His false D●ctrine touchstone assoon as it is brought we shall finde it hath neither true footing in the Text nor foundation elswhere in the written Word rightly understood 1. Not in these Parables of the Text For 1. If we cannot finde it in the Exposition or meaning of the words we cannot draw out a Conclusion where there are no premises 2. Parabolicall Texts prove nothing beyond their scope 2. Not in other Scriptures although the late Interpreters light as he said gave him that Christ did die for the whole world yet when we come to the Law and to the testimony if he or any man speaks not according to the Word in the sound sense thereof it is because there is no light in him but upon proof and triall his light will be found darknesse and how great that darknesse is we shall judge better with the Candle in our hands or the Sun beams of Truth before our eyes In the search after the falshood of this his Doctrine That the Lord did give himself for all the world of mankinde though with a principall eye to his elect We will follow the Authours method first examine his positive Scriptures as he termed them and then such as are like them and favour the Doctrine which he produced for proofs And first as touching his positive Scriptures we will not forget his Caution Take this by the way that positive Scriptures must not be overthrown by mans reason or consequence Heb. 2. 9. vindicated 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ubi annotandum partic●lam universalem non complecti singulos homines sed omnia Christi membra in unum corpas conjungere Bez. ann in loc a Caution that if himself had remembred he might then have been silent or since that have recanted his rash reasonings and collections His first Scripture was that in Heb. 2 9. where Christ is said to taste death for every man I answer This universall particle reacheth not to every individuum or singular man but to every member of Christs body not to every man as a man but as a member of Christ which appears 1. From that precedent clause by the grace of God to every man that Gods grace extends unto Christs death extends 2. That all or every man is expounded by and confined to many v. 10. 3. Those many or all are sonnes adopted and to be adopted 4. Those adopted sons shall all come to glory whom Christ is there said to taste death for 5. Christ is the Captain of their salvation for whom he died all this in verse 10. 6. They are the sanctified and to be sanctified v. 11. 7. They are his Brethren v. 11. and 12. 8. They are all the children of Gods election and regeneration v. 13 14. Besides In how many places of Scripture do we finde the particle all or every one or every man taken not for a simple and absolute universall but a meer indefinite expression or note of so many men or of so many of mankinde as are of that stamp and spirit which that Scripture speaks of as for instance in one place for many Luk. 16. 16. 't
founded in him but in the seed of the woman the Lord Jesus nor is Adams enmity with Satan and reconciliation with God there mentioned but only the womans and her seed partly exprest partly implied 3. All died as they sinned in Adam before this promise but the promise is not made of or to all mankinde who died vertually in him only of and to the woman is it spoken and her seed the principall whereof should be the redeemer and the rest of her seed the redeemed ones of the Lord between whom and the old Serpent Satan and his seed there should be irreconcilable enmity 4. If you would know who and who only and what number they are for whom if you speak of the certain individuals the Lamb was a ransome from the beginning you must wait till the Lambs book of life be opened of which we read Revel 13. 8. and 17. 8. where plainly you may learn That 1. He was not slain for any first or last but for such whose names are in his book 2. Comparing those Texts with Rev. 13. 3. there are a world of people whose names are not written in his book therefore not slain in the Arminian sense for all the world nor must this last place in Timothy nor any of the former be so understood We have now done with the Scriptures alleadged and abused by him and vindicated by us which I desire you to hold fast in the true sense not in a perverted interpretation these were his out-works which we have taken and possesse we them for the Truth Come we at length to batter down the enemies Forts and strong-holds of his carnall-reasonings and confident arguments Two Reasons and two Arguments were brought to prove his Doctrine That Christ gave himself for the whole world Now such as have studied Logick or artificiall reasoning know no difference between Reasons and Arguments for it they be Reasons and do not argue they are irrationall Reasons and if they be Arguments without reason they are unreasonable Arguments But to follow him in his own method and to deal with him at his own weapon If we have taken the Scriptures out of his mouth we shall not doubt but to take his weapon● of Reason and Argument out of his hand or leave him a bare Sceleton of reason without flesh or substance much lesse having any soul or life of faith or divine truth in his assertions And first of the two Reasons Reason 1. Reasons disproved The whole harmony of the Scriptures such as he had proved his point withall are they not enough and do they not sound all one way Answ 1. Call to minde every of those Scriptures but remember their sense as well as their sound He is a foolish man who thinkes as the bell tinks Nor yet do the Scriptures give an uncertain sound but in opening and examining of them with the context and scope and with other Scriptures you hear with one consent they speak not absolutely of Christs dying for all but of and for such an all and such a world as is the all and the whole world of believers elect Gods people his true Israel some of all sorts of people out of all Nations some 2. Search and consult with other Scriptures which neither he nor I have yet mention'd and you will be more fully convinc't that we have the truth with us and that this Doctrine of Christs dying for the whole bulk of men is another Gospel from that which Christ and his Apostles or we from them have ever preached I shall instance but in three places the first in Joh. 15. 10. Greater love hath no man then this that a man lay down his life for his friends and presently to shew whom he laid down his life for he addeth v. 11. Ye are my friends c. It is most true what the Apostle saith Rom. 5. 10. When we were enemies we were reconciled to God by the death of his Sonne But 1. What We meaneth he there Not all men but such as are justified by faith and have peace with God by faith v. 1. 2. Though the elect of God are enemies as considered in themselves and in their naturall estate yet being loved of God from eternity with the love of good pleasure they have a price laid down for them by Christs death to bring them under the love of friendship and when they do actually believe they are actually reconciled and of enemies are made friends so that Christ laid down his life for such as were in Gods choice and love his friends and by Christs death and the fruits of it brought into a state of actuall friendship A second follows John 10. 15. And I lay down my life for the sheep whom in the verse precedent he had called his sheep See here I beseech you ye that love the truth and love not to be seduced though that is a weak property of sheep to wander yet if you be Christs sheep hear the voice of the good shepherd and not of strangers for whom doth Christ himself say that he died he best knows and is only able to resolve this doubt why if you will believe him who is truth it self I lay down my life for my sheep he doth not say for goats at all but for the sheep behold and hearken after the harmony 'tween this and the fore-alleadged Scriptures certainly where Christ or his Apostles speak in larger tearms of all and world and whole world must not these tearms be limited to Christs sheep It was a subtill counsel your new Lecturer gave you that other Scriptures which he cited in the second place as but favouring his opinion should be expounded by the positive Scriptures but be you as wise as he was subtle and learn to reduce all his positive Scriptures which yet had Synecdoches in them of the whole for a part or of the generall for the speciall to and by this main Position of our Lord a fundamentall truth Let this be first laid down I lay down my life for my sheep and whosoever shall after so plain a foundation laid by Christ himself in his Word and by his Spirit in your hearts teach universall Redemption or Christs dying for the bulk of mankinde tell him he doth nothing else but build hay and stubble upon the foundation nay he doth yet more wickedly even lay another foundation with Christ or besides his purpose A third and last is in these words Ioh. 17. 19. For their sakes I sanctifie my self Christs sanctifying himself is his preparation for death setting himself apart to die for whom for their sakes his eleven Apostles not Iudas v. 12. and for those which should and shall believe on him through the Apostles doctrine this is not for the sake of all men that he so much as prepares to die much lesse that he died for them for whom he fitted not himself to die in their behalf So as you see to make up the harmony and consent
the application and that by gift of all other good things from the gift of Redemption and of the Redeemer himself Rom. 8. 32. 3. That of Christs satisfaction for all men and obtaining the pardon of all sinnes against the Covenant of works for all them and his satisfaction for and pardon of the sinnes against the Covenant of Grace only for the elect whereas all men originally and actually hanging upon a Covenant of works for life and yet continually breaking that Covenant are actually in all ages and in this present age as in the Apostles age under the curse Gal. 3. 10. And they who have any sin forgiven have all sins forgiven them Col. 2. 13. Zach. 13. 1. which are the elect only Christs peculiar people Mat. 1. 21. Tit. 2 14. 4. That of the Gospel and of the promise of life the former being as our new teacher said * After his Lecture to a brother of ours for all the promise of life for believers only Whereas at the first dawning of the Gospel the promise of life and immortality comes to light 2 Tim. 1. 10. whoever have the Gospel preached to them that they might believe have the promise of life also preached to them that they might believe and before a man doth believe he hath no more interest in the Gospel or in Christs death then in the promise of life Joh. 3. ult 5. It makes Christs death not at all the execution of Gods election or if at all but of a conditionall election producing but a conditionall Redemption for all not absolute for any hence 6. It frames Gods intention after mans fancy and Christs love to be no more to Peter then to Iudas as some have confest it 7. It imagines the grace of God to be for all or none and Christs death to be for none certainly but contingently 8. It shuts out Infants from any benefit by Christs death but what say they is common to Reprobates as freedome from originall sinne bodily life and Resurrection The first we deny that any Reprobate hath or shall have As for present life and future Resurrection if Infants have no more advantage by Christs death then have they not so much either as a benefit or not as by his death if they have more why do the Assertours of such grace deny them the seal thereof in Baptisme 9. It leads to other errours as pernitious and pestilent I 'le instance in three 1. That of free will for Christs death for all obtains but of God by their Doctrine a possibility that men may be saved converted c. If they will and that will left in their common Nature is Grace Gospel-grace they must make it or they make nothing of it a Gospel-will let it be then contributing to mans conversion what just nothing saith the Scripture Ioh. 5. 40. 6. 44. All say they in effect for let all operations of grace be put that may be put into the balance will must cast the scales and determine the case whether the man shall be converted or no saved or no. And what the vote of the will is in that case reade Psalm 81. 11 12. Jeremy 44. 17. Oh slavish will as Luther call'd thee and Oh Legall will may I call thee continually in bondage What is the pride of that opinion which would exalt thee such a bond-slave above a promise above the Spirit above God and his decrees c 2. That of falling away from Grace for if Christ died for all and that to obtain remission of sinnes for all and a will for all to be converted then all men are not only fallen in the first Adam but are and shall fall in Christ the second Adam from a pardon'd state and a state of free-will and of free-grace in their sense who are not elected yea but when the Scripture a Luk. 1. 77. Joh. 6. 44 45. attributeth remission of sinnes and a will to be regenerate or a will set at liberty for the receiving and acting of grace onely to the Elect such falling away from such grace is an imputation by Arminian Doctrine cast upon the Elect of God such Doctrine and Doctours therefore to be abandoned 3. That which issueth from both the former deniall of the Spirits efficacy first and last They that teach Christ died for all doe grant he gives his Spirit but to some here they plainly separate Christs death and the Spirit of his death and when the Spirit is given hee workes but at the courtesie of the will how farre and how long it willeth and pleaseth Can that Doctrine be for Christs honour that tends to the dishonour of his Spirit 10. And lastly It engenders unto that conceit That the damned may in time be saved b As since these Sermons were preached I have met with a Pamphlet not worthy confutation entituled Divins Light per antiphrasin it should be diabolicall darknesse manifesting it should be smoking out of the bottomlesse pit the love of God unto the whole world and to his Church wherein six times at least that place in Zach. 9. 11. As for thee also by the bloud of thy Covenant I have sent forth thy prisoners out of the pit wherein there is no water is applied beyond some of the old Doctours expolitions to Limbus patrum or of Bellarmines to Purgatory a part of hell as he dreams even to the deepest place of the damned men and devils too who shall saith the namelesse notelesse Authour by vertue of the Covenant of Generall Redemption be delivered from thence and rewarded too for all their torments and losses in grace and glory Much Atheisme and blasphemy there is in such an hereticall assertion and this contradiction in adjecto that eternity of hell-tormenting fire as is expresly threatned Math. 25 ult Mark 9 45. shall have an end doth alone call aloud to have that Pamphlet condemned to and consumed in some Cheap-side or kitchin fire or if not so yet as Arminius and Vorstius dreamed it promiseth Levamen aliquod some easement and mitigation of their pains for ever in hell I should now proceed to the true Exposition pertinent Observations and Applications of the Text but there lieth a rub and remora or two in my way which I shall endeavour to remove viz. Quest May not the former Exposition stand in some founder sense then that of this Seducer viz. Although Christ did not redeem all mens souls yet he did buy the world of creatures for the common good of all men Answ 1. Suppose he did buy the world of creatures for the common good of all men yet it is not the scope of the Parables or either of them in the Text to affirm or illustrate any such matter 2. Our late Expositour took not the Field for the structure and store of other creatures but for the whole bulk of mankinde and every singular man and woman and mothers childe as we say 3. Grant that he or any man should draw the
Gods called but rejected and neglected not comparatè but absolutè 4. Habemus corfitentem reum m Quos non solet vocatorum nomine ins●gnire Scriptura The. 127. Testardus himself acknowledgeth in part that the Scripture is not wont to stile such by the name of called ones but he is wont every where to stile them so and to term that a calling unto Christ which the Scripture never so exprest not can we finde that it hath any such intention to hint it to us As touching the rare places which he and others think do Scriptures produced for the call by the creatures answered favour this opinion let us take a brief survey of them Psal 19. What read we The heavens declare the glory of God in creation the firmament sheweth his handy work the old workmanship here is nothing spoken or intended of the new workmanship of God of which Ephes 2. 10. Day unto Psal 19. 4. day vers 2. uttereth speech the continuall succession of day and night holds out something of Gods goodnesse and providence nothing of a Gospel-promise if it did then so many daies as there were before Adam fell or was created Christ was preached by those Oratours as well as since the fall and all the time from Abraham to Christ when the Gentiles had not the Covenant by n The. 112. Testardus confession yet they had this call by the creatures For there is no speech nor language no place or people that ever lived as not a day goeth over their heads where and when their the creatures voice is not heard vers 3. But for the voice of the Gospel-mystery if the Apostle may be beleeved Romans 16. 25 26. it was not heard at all all truths concerning Christ were in all ages among the Heathen kept secret and silent And if any please to compare Psal 19. 4. with Rom. 10. 18. he shall finde that the Apostle makes but an allusion to the Psalmist and that his scope is not to prove this generall call among the Gentiles by the creatures but an outward call among the Jews by the word o Ante verbum 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 audierunt non subaudio Gentes sed Iudaeos Bez. Have they the Jews not heard Yes the Gospel by the Apostles preaching like the Sunne hath cast his beams over the whole world the Sunne and the firmament doe no more generally hold out something of the knowledge of God in all ages then the Apostles in their age by preaching did familiarly and universally hold out much of the knowledge of Christ and that to the Jews which as St Paul had illustrated and but illustrated v. 18. from the Psalm he presently proves it and when he comes to the proof he first begins with Moses v. 19. and then quotes Esay v. 20. And yet albeit the Apostle did but allude to the Psalm his scope is the same with Davids to illustrate Gods teaching of Christ in the Scripture and it's ministery by his teaching in the great volume of the creatures That mainly wherein creature and Scripture-teaching are alike is the extent of their teaching all people and Nations are lesson'd by both that wherein they doe eminently differ and wherein Scripture-teaching excels the other is the subject matter end and effect of their lessons the visible creatures give out notes and characters of a deity the audible word give knowledge of God reconciled in Christ The p Recreant corpus diei noctis vicissitudines sed verbum animam dicitur instaurare Jun. l. 2. Parral 19. creatures shew how good God is to the bodies of men the Scriptures shew us how gracious he is to the souls of men The creatures Sunne and Moon c. speak the wisdome of the workman the goodnesse of a Creatour the Scripture and it's Interpreters speak the love and wisdome of a Redeemer The creatures in the common course of nature left for mens conviction and q 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 ad hoc ut sint inexcusabiles Beza inexcusablenesse who sinne against the light of nature The r Psal 19. 7. Scriptures and their preaching instituted of God to be sufficient and sole means through the Spirit of mens conversion and salvation Touching that place ſ Act. 14. 17. Pertinet hic locus ad providentiam Dei ex quâ creat gubernat conservat omnia creata Eras Sar. Act. 14. 17. I can but wonder so learned a man should interpret it of a Gospel-calling which is but a legall-naturall conviction or that which might witnes a God to a naturall conscience for so leads the context The men of Lystra would be offering Sacrifice to Paul and Barnabas as to gods they abhorring such a sacriledge vilifie and annihilate themselves in that case and hold out God as Creatour to them v. 15. and prove it by his Creation and Providence v. 16. which was a testimony that he and he only was and is God God hereby left not himself without witnesse What is this to a calling of grace or the knowledge of a Covenant of grace founded upon Christs death and satisfaction No more is that which he alledgeth Act. 17. 26 27. and interpreteth of the seeking and finding of God a Redeemer Act. 17. 26 27. 't is true that God who is a Redeemer is to be sought in his works but are these works of Creation and Providence out of a Type or a Sacrament instituted means of seeking or finding him as a Redeemer Or did God make of one bloud all Nations to that end they might seek a Redeemer before the fall Or is Christ in the execution of Gods decree of election to be brought into our consideration before the fall Yet the naturall bloud out of which all Nations doe spring was given Adam before the fall and the immortall spirit which Adam had immediately from God and all men in like manner since receive it from him the father or creatour of spirits was before the fall The Apostles scope is to raise up the superstitious Athenians who forgate the Philosophy of their naturall constitutions but so high at first and from vers 23. to 29. to that end declareth to them who is the true God he whom they ignorantly worshipped he that created the world and had given them immortall spirits as he proves out of the Poet Aratus But when he comes to preach an Article or two of the Gospel he hath laid aside his quotation from Poets sure See v. 30. 31. As for that in Rom. 2. 4. which saith Testardus speaks de poenitentia salutari of saving repentance unto which men are called universally by the goodnesse of God in creation and Rom. 2. 4. The. 119 162. providence wherein every man shareth more or lesse Admit it the goodnesse of God doth not lead any man to sinne as some thought and still are ready to think but to a contrary course Doth it follow that Christ is taught in Creation and Providence
2. Ioying which is nothing else but the joy of faith in the knowledge and apprehension of what is certainly attainable in the Gospel and precious promises 3. Selling and selling all his selling is 1. His consent to part with what he hath he goeth to that end 2. His actuall parting with what is his as and when God calleth and enableth All That is all that he hath of his own that may be truly called his what ever stands in competition with or opposition to Christ and his Gospel-grace As 1. His sins and sinfull-self the body of sinne and earthly members 2. His common gifts naturall and morall of understanding reason wit usuall competitours with and opposers of grace 3. His own righteousnesse of outward duties civil religious frames of heart 4. His worldly profits pleasures honours preferments friends c. 5. His self-ends in profession dependency or confidence of strength to mortifie a lust 6. All his externall Church-priviledges in point of dependance 7. Life it self Though skin for skin c. yet he consents to the parting with this also and doth it actually when called to lay it down for Christ and the Gospel-truth and grace 4. Buying the field and treasure and pearl this is the last effect of finding whereby he gets firm assurance and clear evidences written and sealed which is more then the first act of beleeving even a giving diligence to make his calling and election sure heaven Christ and grace sure to his person and clear to his spirit and conscience Of such a buying the Scripture speaks Isa 55. 1. Revel 3. 18. alibi Thus then take up the summe of all Christ and the Gospel-grace in the preaching and administration of it is a most rich treasure and pretious pearl hidden in a field of promises and Gospel-dispensations which when any of Gods elect at the time of their effectuall calling minding other things is prevented with by Gods light and love and drawn to beleeve it attainable for himself he doth humbly hopefully and highly esteem of it and in love and holinesse purposeth to make sure of it And from the joy that he hath and conceives to have in a further enjoyment sets upon the work of extreme self-deniall and poverty of spirit consents to part with all his sinnes all his pride of parts and gifts all his self-justifying righteousnesse all his shackles and snares in the creature his self-ends dependencies on his own strength or Church-priviledges le ts goe life and all as called to it and thereby gives diligence to get full assurance and firm evidence of Christ and all heavenly treasure as his own According to and out of which Paraphrase we shall have contract them as I can seven pertinent and usefull Doctrines 1. Christ and Gospel-grace is a precious treasure hidden in Gospel-promises and dispensations 2. Every one of Gods elect as others they wander up and down in their minds and endeavours after imaginary mediums and waies of happinesse 3. In Gods good time his elect are prevented with his light and love and drawn to beleeve the attainablenes of this treasure for themselves 4. There is in every true beleevers heart an humble hopefull loving high esteem of Christ and his grace and a holy purpose to make out for assurance of him and it 5. The Christian who findes Christ rejoyceth in him 6. The joy of a beleever worketh him to utmost self-deniall 7. Extreme poverty of spirit and thorow self-deniall will so possesse a soul of Christ and of the treasure of his Kingdome as he shall have full assurance and firm evidence that Christ is his and he is Christs that heaven is reserved for him and he for heaven Doct. 1. Christ and Gospel grace is a precious hidden Doct. 1 Treasure Which Doctrine brancheth it self out into three Christ a precious hidden treasure Propositions 1. He is a treasure 2. Precious treasure 3. Hidden treasure Branch 1. Christ and his Gospel-grace is a Christians treasure Branch 1. The f Col. 3. 1. Mat 5 21. 19 20. Scriptures quoted in the Explication and margent prove it for 1. That which a Christian must seek and set his heart upon must needs be his treasure this is Christ and his Kingdome 2. That which is brought in earthen vessels Paul and the despised frail Ministers of the Gospel that is our treasure which is Christ and his riches 2 Cor. 4. 7. I adde 3. That which hath abundance and enough to enrich and Copia sacultatum supply all that finde it with all that their hearts doe or can desire is surely our treasure In Christ there is abundance of all good of all the fulnesse of the Godhead which dwelleth in him bodily Col. 2. 9. If he gives life he gives it in abundance Joh. 10. 10. If righteousnes it is given and received too in abundance Rom. 5. 17. If grace and the Spirit he sheds it forth abundantly Tit. 3. 6. And the Gospel hath a fulnesse of blessing in it Rom. 15. 29. Branch 2. It is not abundance of dirt or drosse but all Branch 2. precious And in that respect Christ and Gospel-grace is as well set out here by a Pearl as by a Treasure a Treasure for quantity a Pearl for quality one Pearl for the single sole compleatnesse of his grace The preciousnesse is evident by two properties in the Text. 1. The value and price not ordinary but great 2. The rarity and peculiar one-nesse but one such in all the world First The value and price great and dear * Pretiosissimi praetij according to the Syriack Trem. we may take the estimate hereof in three weighty considerations 1. Of what price Christ is with the Father of highest esteem with his Father no question his elect servant in whom Gods soul delighteth Isa 42. 1. His beloved Son in whom he is well pleased Mat. 3. ult The Son of his dearest love Col. 1. 13. Amongst many demonstrations these are convincingly set before us in Scripture 1. It pleased not the Father that any or all men and Angels should be the store-house of grace but that in him all fulnesse Col. 1. 19. should dwell 2. The Father hath given all into his hands All dispensations Joh 3. 35. of the Fathers love from election to glorification are through Jesus Christ 3. The Father hath set him at his own right hand of Heb. 1. 13. Majesty and Glory till he hath made all his enemies his footstool 2. Of what price considered in himself his Person 2. Of what price considered in himself his Offices 1. In his Person The Son of God co-essentiall with the Verbum in carne margarita in concha Father and Spirit Emmanuel the Word made flesh What a pearl is here God and man united in one person of the Son of God That mystery which the Angels desire to gaze upon as men gaze upon a jewell or pearl and which they stoop to pry into as men
pry into a curious piece of workmanship 2. In his offices as he is 1. A Prophet teaching the whole will of God the Messiah teaching all things Joh. 4. 25. In whom are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge 2. A Priest 1. Making full and perfect satisfaction by his obedience and sufferings his life and the compleat obedience to all his Fathers commands how precious of more value then all the lives of the Saints His death and every drop of his bloud shed for satisfaction and atonement how precious One drop of more merit then all the blood of Martyrs 2. Making perpetuall intercession in the heavens an able Advocate and a righteous one able to prevail with a just as a mercifull God by his righteous pleadings mercifull and faithfull in all cases committed to his plea And a most free Advocate doth all for nothing in the behalf of every one who comes to God by him in formâ p●●peris 3. A King declared so to be by his glorious resurrection ascension and exaltation at Gods right hand And by his gathering and governing his Saints and the Churches of the Saints inwardly by his Spirit and outwardly by his Word and Gospel-order and Discipline unknown worth is here of great price is he in every of these respects as might be amplified and cleared at large 3. Of what price and great value is Christ to us in that Principium culmenque omnium rerum pretij margaritae tenēt Plin. lib. 9 c. 35 Gospel-grace which he communicates first and last such as it makes every choice grace flowing from him to be a pearl enriching a Christian with enough 1. To live and spend upon for the present 2. To lay up for the future 1. For the present How precious that which is given to live upon 1. The Spirit of grace and praier and purity and liberty 2. Faith the precious faith of Gods elect the g 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 1 Pet. 1. 7. triall of it more precious then gold much more in it's self most precious 3. Union with Christ there is a pearl indeed Pearls me called union●s say some because but one or two are found together and why not because they unite the heart in love and high esteem of such as finde them to themselves I am sure this is an uniting pearl the pearl of union with Christ which brings in h 1 Joh. 1. 3. fellowship with the Father and his Spirit and his Saints and i Ephes 4. 16. whole Churches of them 4. Justification in which there are four things of great price 1. The Righteousnesse of Christ imputed 2. The non-imputation or plenary remission of all sin in the guilt and punishment 3. The acceptation of our persons as righteous 4. The title to eternal life thereby 5. Reconciliation a precious fruit of our Justification and pardon whereby of enemies to God we are accepted as his friends and are in termes of peace with him 6. Redemption a precious benefit whereby of bondslaves to sinne and Satan we are accepted as Gods-Covenant servants and Christs free-men the more precious being purchased by such a price as the precious bloud of Christ 7. Adoption a precious free-enlarged act of Gods love whereby of children of wrath we are accepted as his own sonnes and daughters Behold what manner of love is this 1 Ioh. 3. 1. Declare it who can when the Apostle is at a stand about it 8. Sanctification in the parts 1. The quickning of a new divine nature and in particular the habit of love k Lyra makes charity the choice pearl among and with other vertues 2. The mortifying of an old corrupt nature how precious therestoring of Gods image and the destroying of the devils likenesse And in the first generall acts and fruits Repentance and a broken heart a precious jewell and pearl All these as they are Christs-grace and Gospel-grace may have the denomination to farre as they have the precious nature of Pearls which as Pliny l Nat. Hist l. 9. c. 35. writes are begotten of the dew of heaven which at a certain time of the year the shell-fish draws in and as they are specious to sight so for use are very medicinall to heal the palpitation or beating of the heart to comfort the vitall spirits and drive away the dizzinesse of the head of farre choicer use is Christ and this grace which floweth from his divine distilling influences but I follow not the metaphor as some doe who reading in Pliny and other Authours of what m Margaritarū omnis dos saith Pliny consistit in candore magnitudine orbe laevere pondere See Cor. à lapide in loc Dos and due proportion of whitenesse greatnesse ●o●idnesse smoothnesse and weight a pearl consisteth lay out the resemblance unto Christs being conceived of the Virgins substance by the over-shadowing dew of the Spirit coming forth most-white by his innocency little by his humility bright by his wisdome most round by his compleat perfection weighty in conscience smooth in mildenesse full of the price of blessednesse it is enough and agreeable enough to the scope of our Lords own Parables that we take notice of the great value and worth of Christ and his grace moving every one that truly understands it to make out in a purchase for the possession of it 2. For the future the full growth of grace comfortable evidences of it and of Gods love the root of it Perseverance and victory over sinne world Satan Antichrist and death a joyfull glorious resurrection and redemption of the body boldnesse at Christs coming with eternall life in the beatificall vision of God for ever and ever Here is as much as ever I heard of or knew any Christian desired and how great is the price hereof no man can tell mee Secondly The rarity and peculiar one-nesse of this Pearl all is summed up in one Iesus Christ In him you are compleat Col. 2. 9. If he be the Sonne of God he is the only jewell of the Crown of heaven if he be a King head and husband of the Church he is but one c. Act. 4. 12. 15. 11. if we take in every grace of the Gospel to be a Pearl and if we take in the Gospel too with Gospel-grace and every promise of the Gospel with the knowledge thereof n The knowledge of Christ is the pearl which ●●●re exceeds all other sciences Annot. upon the Bible Branch 3. 1 How hid yet all these are bound up in one Volume of Jesus Christ which when a Christian hath well read thorow and studied he desires to know and enjoy nothing else 1 Cor. ● 2. Phil. 3. 8. Branch 3. Christ and Gospel-grace is a hidden treasure where two things are worth our enquiry how and where this Treasure is hid In it self and it's worth it is hid thus 1. As not known to naturall men at all by any capacity or principle they have to discern Christ or the things of
Nations still differing but a little from Heathen in Gospel Baptisme and some Gospel light of Christ doe with-hold or forcibly imprison and enslave this light of the Gospel and truths of Christ in unrighteousnesse they smother and suppresse the knowledge of Christ from their Baptisme see and will not see see but are not affected at the sight of a Saviour and his riches and worth Now tell me let me put the Question to any rationall man enlightned what is it that you have and still do lay in the balance with Christ Is it a base lust or a carnal contentment Some profitable bargain in the world or pleasurable enjoyment of this earth Dare you say that Christ weigheth not down all the world Worth you see in Christ nothing but unworthinesse in sin no merit or worth in the creature why consider Christ is of more worth then all his benefits and graces conferred on us and yet any of his graces and spiritual benefits are of more worth as they have the love of God and the stamp of Christ upon them then all the world and all wordly accommodations not to be named the same day with the least of Christs graces much lesse to be weighed in the same balance with Christ himself On the great sin of those then who prefer their swinish lusts and carnal profits before this treasure and the brutishnes of those who prefer the trash on this worldly dunghill before a Pearl this Pearl of great price Thirdly Such as seem to make some account of Christ and grace but the Gospel and Gospel-ministery and the field of promises they esteem not either there are promises enough or rather there are too many for them they are clo●ed with them and with the preaching of them Nay the old Gospel the b Revel 14 6. everlasting Gospel preached and to be preached to all Nations kindreds tongues and languages at and upon Antichrists ruinous down-fall a part whereof is Gods free election but of some Christs Redemption but of some Gods Covenant with beleevers and their seed c. this will not down with many young and old professours and hearers of the Word I have thought of some reasons hereof all rotten and corrupt in the mindes of those who are swaied by them 1. Some have lately hearkned after new-teachers of a new Gospel of universall Redemption and Remission of sins for all men so farre as they have sinned against a Covenant of works Now as for faith men hope they have heard enough and beleeved enough already they shall need to hear no more but what will nourish them up in assurance of a pardon before they have any faith at all 2. Others they place all the Gospel in a new baptizing and make that act or work of baptisme the foundation of all their hopes and comforts and therefore desire but to hear more of that and they need no more Gospel 3. Some rest in the bare name of Christ and notion of a Treasure and noise of a Pearl it founds sweetly in their ears and pleaseth their fancies very much but mean while are carelesse whether they finde and possesse it for their own or no. 4. Others have been wont to make the Lords Supper only in their bodily attendance upon it their Treasure and Feast not Christ himself and because they cannot have that Sacrament they slight the Word and will not attend upon it with their wonted diligence it may be on the Lords-day they will afford their presence all or part of the day but on the week-daies they will not hear at all or will sooner hear a c Joh. 10. 10. stranger and a thief who cometh not but for to steal and to kill and to destroy then their constant Teachers who would as Pastours and faithfull Shepherds fold them in and feed them with knowledge and understanding Now woe be to such strangers as scatter sheep from the right fold and to such blind guides as lead people from the Word the diligent hearing and the right understanding of it and woe be to such blinde people who are led and carried from this Gospel field and Ministery where Gospel-treasure is hid and to be found Accursed be that Doctrine or way or person which carrieth you off from Christ and the Gospel of your salvation to any other Gospel which takes all mankinde into Covenant and yet shuts out little Infants from any one promise of grace as if they were no part of mankinde or are farre from having any part in Christ till they actually beleeve that is in the Arminian sense till they act some of their own power and till free-will doth it's part and determines all the controversies of the parties salvation The Lord strike home some arrows of conviction to the very heart of Christ our Kings enemies that people may fall under the power of his Word and all high thoughts against free grace indeed may be captivated and brought into the obedience of Christ Vse 2. This should exhort and provoke us to severall 2 Use of Exhortation duties First Beleeve we this fulnesse of Christ and Gospel-grace and beleeve in it 1. Beleeve there is such a Treasure though you have not experimentally found it The Report hereof must be bleeved or the arm of God will not be revealed to bring you in to the Treasure or the Treasure to you Consider who said The kingdome of heaven is like unto a treasure a pearl c. The Truth it self Jesus Christ who sent Paul and others according to his Gospel to preach among us Gentiles The unsearchable riches of this Treasure 2. Beleeve in it No earthly treasure is to be rested upon but this is a Treasure that you may lay your life upon your faith upon and trust unto it for all-sufficient supplies to make you happy for ever And if such riches encrease you may and must set your heart upon them Secondly Esteem we this Treasure and Pearl at it's full rate and value A Treasure it is a Kings Treasure the Kingdoms treasure an heavenly treasure an hidden treasure made up in a Pearl one Pearl all which call for our high estimation and account of it 1. As 't is a Treasure who doth not prize a treasure wherein there is abundance Joseph's abundance drew his brethren highly to prize him whom before they had slighted Solomons treasures of wisdom as of riches raised his fame in all parts brought over the Queen of Sheba to see and admire till she had no more spirit in her Behold a greater then Solomon is here to be valued for his wisdome and wealth above ten thousand Solomons 2. Here is the Kings treasure a Kings treasure is and it is fit it should be greater then that of any particular Subject and the treasure of the King of Kings to whom all earthly Kings must vale and stoop and should willingly swear homage and subjection must needs be infinitely above the wealth of any of his Subjects though they be
Christ in his preventing love and call shall come to Christ observe it in John they are given before they come as well as when they come and because given before all time they shall come in time unto him Reasons special And that faith is a fruit of election and finding this treasure a fruit of Gods speciall love appeareth by two Reasons among many 1. The treasure of and in Christ is a great secret it is for Gods friends and children that he loveth to finde it and to have the speciall grace of faith to apprehend it for theirs it is the childrens bread and portion To you it is given to know the mysteries of the Kingdom c. 2. God who elects to the end elects to the means he did not elect all to the end therefore not to the means some are left to a losing faith others chosen to salvation have a finding and a saving faith given them as the proper and choice means of getting an interest in Christ and all that they are chosen to in him before the foundation of the world Ephes 1. 1. to the 4. the faithfull in Christ Jesus are blessed with all spirituall blessings according as God hath chosen c. For Application and first to your understandings First From hence see the necessity of true faith if it be 1. Use of Instruction three waies necessary thou findest this treasure and truly that is needfull enough for thou art a merchant-bankrupt in Adam till Christ stocks thee and sets thee up by Gospel-riches and wealth and except thou beleevest thou wilt never see not understand any thing of this mystery of Christ and of Gods love Christ will never have any dealings with thee he will not trust thee nay unlesse thou beleevest sincerely he will not commit himself unto thee nor trust thee with this true treasure Secondly See what effectuall faith is that which is the ●ffect and fruit of Gods free everlastin ever-preventing love that which brings home a discovery of Christ in a promise to the soul with some certainty of apprehension for a mans self that it is the will of God Christ should be his mine thine Hast thou by the light and conviction of the Gospel been drawn to this apprehension of a possibility yea a certaincy of attaining to true treasure surely thou hast been prevented by the love of God and hast found that which thou beleevest and maist know thy faith and beleeving is no● in vain when as by the very first act of it thou hast hold of a Treasure a Pearl which will make thee for ever Thirdly See the riches of a beleever and his happinesse by faith he findes a treasure that make him what a man of this world a merchant of small wares No but a Merchant-venturer for heaven a venturer said I no a merchant finder and possessour he findes all at once by faith that ever any Saint was or shall be worth he findes the treasure of the Kingdom of heaven and all that the King and Kingdom of heaven is worth this he findes by beleeving ô that you would beleeve how great his findings are th●● you may grow great by beleeving also with him Use 2 Exhortation three waies Secondly To come to what is yet more practicall let ●● caution and counsell you about the great work of beleeving First Bewere of an evil heart of unbelief thou wilt ever be ●t ● lesse for Christ till thou beleevest thou wilt lose Christ and lose thy soul by unbelief Consid 1. Unbelief is a sin against Gospel light which brings condemnation with a witnes Ioh. 3. 19. The sinfulnes of unbelief 2. 'T is a same against gospel-Gospel-love it hinders the ex●●●tion of Gods-election in these that are chosen then maist be among the chosen of God beleeve and thou shalt below it 3. 'T is a sin against the person offices worth efficacy of Jesus Christ he will not he cannot do what he would 〈◊〉 hee in thee because of thy unbelief 4. It hath more evil in it then all the sins against the 〈…〉 called by a more eminent disparagement an p Heb. 3. 12. an 〈…〉 of unbelief a proud heart is 〈…〉 heart is an evil heart and an unclean heart an evil heart yet not 〈◊〉 in Scripture that I remember as an unbeleeving 〈◊〉 in 〈…〉 that ●ame more then all other 〈◊〉 of spirit which yet are bad enough upon these grounds 1. 〈…〉 are in this virtually and actually pride is in all unbelief and acted with it and the worst pride of all exaltings and liftings up of the heart against God pollution and uncleannesse is in and with unbelief they are never separated hypocrisie and unbelief unthankfulnesse and unbelief are linked inseparably together 2. It brings more mischief to the soul then all other sinnes more griefs cares vexations despairs and deeper damnation for ever 3. It keeps the heart under the guilt and power of all sinne whatsoever thy heart will never be better but worse and worse while unbeleeving Secondly Wouldst finde Christ get rid of this evil heart of unbelief Beleeve and thou hast found Christ righteousnesse and a treasure of all grace in him Hast found thy self empty By faith thou shalt see and share in Christs fulnesse Hast found thy self bankrupt Beleeve and thou shalt have riches and stock enough in Christ Hast found thy self foolish in Christ are treasures of wisdome and knowledge Beleeve and thou shalt finde thy self Gods by election Christs by redemption and purchase and the Spirits by his in d●velling sanctifying presence Say and conclude it if God hath discovered Christ it is that I should beleeve it is for obedience of faith I beleeve I beleeve then m●st thou say I have found I have found What The Gospel-treasure and the Gospel-pearl Thirdly Would you beleeve walke up and down the field where the Treasure is hidden and revealed reade and search the Scriptures hearken after the promises attend to the Sermons of Christ to the Word of the Kingdom and to this end 1. Give not over hearing and hearing again upon all occasions of those that preach Jesus Christ purely and sincerely 2. Meditate turn over Christ and the promises in thy thoughts oft in a day and as oft or oftener in the night season 3. Enquire and make out for knowledge more light into the mystery of the unsearchable riches of Christ And you that have beleeved and found something hear meditate pray and pray in faith for more understanding they use to dig for hid treasures Jo● 3. 21. q Prov. 2. 2 3 c. If thou encline thine ear and apply thy heart criest and liftest up thy voice for wisdome if thou seekest her as silver and searchest for her as for hid treasures then shalt thou understand and finde the knowledge of God of God in Christ of Christ in a promise and Covenant of grace Amen We have dispatcht three of the Doctrines the other four drawn from the
putting off First Here is the beleevers consent to part with what should be parted with for Christ implied in the mans going he goeth vers 44. And vers 46. in that 't is said of the merchant he went The word in v. 44. is 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 subducit sese he withdrew himself Clam discedit as Beza noteth he went away secretly which can hold forth nothing better nothing else then the tacite consent of the minde and will to be at any 〈◊〉 for the purchase of what was found he goeth he is not thrust on and forc't he went of his own accord he is not driven ● Such an expression we have at Zacheus conversion He stood forth c Luk. 19. 8. which showed his consent and willingnesse before he fell upon action And St Paul no sooner hath Christ met with him and he with Christ upon the way to Damascus but he is at that point of consent d Act. 9. 6. Lord what wilt thou have me to doe Secondly This consent is brought into act the man and the Christian Merchant here he revoketh not his consent or steps back when a going but he gooth and selleth viz. ●●●ally p●●teth with as God calleth and enableth what is to be parted with This actuall sale is actuall self-deniall and soul-impoverishing or soul-emptying and the liberty and limits or the free bounds of this mart is as God proclaims it and cals to it and strengthens in it which in some things that a Christian hath is presently done and in other things at certain times and by certain steps and degrees as opportunity is offered which better will be understood by opening Secondly The matters vendible or things here to be sold ● Matters vendible or to be sold that a man hath and all that a man hath He went and sold all that he had all that a man hath is either that which is his own from his own workings and earnings and that is sinne and the effects of it or that which is given him of God which is no part of the Treasure or Pearl or if it be it is but by way of evidence and sign which he lets go in some respe●● for the thing it self especially when that which he hath ●● but in supposition he put 's off all for Christ for whom I have suffered e Phil. 3. 8. saith Paul the losse of all things c. that is all things which stand in direct opposition to or comparative competition with the Lord Jesus Christ So the merchant here sets upon selling 1. All his sinnes he consents to let them goe would be rid of originall inherent corruption and is willing to part with all actuall iniquity whether open or secret of thought word or deed and he doth endeavour hereunto because God presently cals for it 1. By inward mortification of the old man from the power or Christs death through faith applied and by grief hatred and self-judging improved 2. By outward cestation and forsaking of those sinfull waies and courses wherein formerly he lived and traded as ●● clear in Paul who was a persecutour is no more so 1 Tim. 1. and in the Corinthians they wer● so and so f 1 Cor. 6 9 11 but are washed sanctified c. And in the Colossians who had put off the body of the sinnes of the flesh * Col. 2. 11. inward habits in their regency and strength and for outward acts they sometimes had walked g Col. 3. 7. with in fornication uncleannesse inordinate affection evil concuplscence and covetousnesse h vers ● and But now you i vers 8. and 9. also put off all these saith the Apostle anger wrath malice blasphemy filthy communication lying seeing ye have put off the old man with his deeds what they had done already in part about some sinnes more eminently he exhorts them to go on in this work of repentance as touching all sin whatsoever yea and they are resolved upon it For they have put on the new man k vers 10. which being acted and set on work will further mortifie and disable the old man In every true Christian the purpose love and practice of sinne is laid a side he trades not in it but by putting off off as last as he can he laies not in provision for the flesh to fulfill the lusts of it as his consent holds on so his endeavours hold out to be selling selling all this old lumber to his dying day 3. All his gifts of nature and morality wit and parts learning and knowledge in nature civil or humane affaires yea whatsoever is beneath the knowledge of Christ 1. From these his heart it removed in case of love confidence or high esteem he do●es not upon them affects them not confides not in them for one piece of his happinesse or that which will contribute in the least to help to Christ or his knowledge but as denied and subordinated to him and it 2. He is farre from using them against the Lord or against his Scripture and the understanding thereof nay 3. He is willing that their property and use should be ●ltered and converted from himself to the Lord and for the Lord and the best service he can doe him with such parts and gifts as he hath now receiving a new stamp by sanctifying grace St Paul is a most eminent example for us He was brought up at the feet of Gamaliel and taught according to the perfect manner of the law of the fathers emploied before his conversion as a man of parts against Christ but after he hath found that Pearl he fels all his parts and abilities to and for Christ denies his wisdome and learning where it opposeth the knowledge and spreading of the Gospel When be came to the Corinthians He came not with excellency of speech or of wisdome l 1 Cor. 2. 1. His speech and his preaching was not with the entising words of man● wisdome but in demonstration of the Spirit and power m vers 4. He preached Christ crucified in a crucified phrase he preached not to shew himself but the Spirit Although when there was some fruitfull and necessary use of it he could and did to convince the ignorant erring and gain-saying hearer or inform the teachable produce the testimonies of forraign Authours as of Aratus n Act. 17. ●8 Menander o 1 Cor. 15. 33. and Epimenid●s p Tit. 1. 12. yet he is very rare in such quotations and when any other way men would set up their humane parts and abilities in competition with the plain preaching of the Gospel he did wholly cry them down 1 Cor. 1. 19 20. Yea and as touching spirituall gifts of tongues and miracles c. when among the Corinthians some used their knowledge and gift of tongues in an unedifying way he reproveth them for it 1 Cor. 14 26. And when some with their working of miracles among the Galatians would being in
were by the works of the law 2. Christ being had in a mystery Faith is the only grace that can deal with mysteries and discover them and understand them being the x Heb. 11. 1. vers 3. evidence of things not seen and through faith we understand that the worlds were framed by the word of God c. so through faith we understand that there is a treasure in such a field c. 3. Faith is the grace which laieth a ground for interest and propriety as finding of the treasure and pearl doth He that beleeveth gets something in hand as a 1 Cor. 1. 30. to be united to the treasure to be partaker of Christs righteousnesse with friendship liberty adoption and the spirit of adoption and sanctification and the rest in hopes and * Joh. 6. 47. with Tit. 3. 7 8 hopes he could not have but by beleeving therefore the Apostle to Titus having made mention of hope presently speaks of such who have that hope of eternal life as of those who have beleeved in God 2. Where In Scripture promises Secondly Where Christ the treasure is found even where hid In the field which we have interpreted to be the holy Scripture Scripture-promises * In quibus reposita est notitia salvatoris Hier. and Evangelizing or Gospel-tidings In a word The Word of God in it's severall Gospel-dispensations is the place where the treasure and pearl is found b Rom. 16. 25 26. The mystery of Christ in whom are hid the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2. 3. kept secret from us Gentiles since the world begaen is from the Apostles times made manifest there where it was hid in the Scriptures of the Prophets and to us since the Apostles times in their Scriptures or writings and openings of the Gospel in old and new Testament promises Life and immortality c 2 Tim. 1. 10 11. saith Paul is brought to light by the Gospel whereunto he was appointed a Preacher and an Apostle and teacher of the Gentiles in and by whose preaching the Gentiles did indeed finde all Gospel-treasure For the Gospel is the Covenant and bundle of the Promises of Christ and his grace and in every promise something or other of Christ is found so as when the Gospel and Promise is beleeved Christ is beleeved and obtained for d Rom. 10 17. faith comes by hearing and hearing by the Word of God preached in the Promises When Jesus walked by John Baptist e Joh 11. 36 37 John Baptist said in the hearing of two of his Disciples Behold the lamb of God they knew him not before then when John hath by a Gospel word and finger pointed him out they finde and follow him f vers 40. Andrew being one of the two he findes his brother Peter and g vers 45. Philip found of Christ findes Nathaneel and discovers him to be the Messias out of the Scriptures We have found him of whom Moses and the Prophets did write Iesus of Nazareth the sonne of Ioseph So my beloved we tell you of this Treasure and Pearl where in this Bible in our Sermons upon Gospel-texts and that the Word of the Gospel is the field where Christ and his grace is found appears further by these three Demonstrations 1. That is the true Treasure he is the true Jesus that the Word discovers as it contains him so he is found there if any say h ●●t 24. 23 24 Loe here is Christ or there and holds him not forth in Scripture and as the Scripture describes him Beleeve him not saith Christ for there shall arise false Christs and false Prophets c. 2. When Christ and grace is lost to sense and feeling he is found in the Scripture-field again and no where else and where he is found at last he is found at first 3. Where the Gospel never was preached and the Scriptures concerning him never opened in that corner or quarter of the world Christ was never known and beleeved on i Rom. 10. 24. How shall they beleeve in him of whom they have not heard Where the Gospel comes there some or other doe finde him Thirdly The time when this treasure is found is Gods 3. When own time k Gal. 1. 15 16. When it pleased God saith Paul to reveal his Sonne in me So when it pleaseth God to call a sinner from his wanderings and fancies of finding pearls of happinesse elswhere when is that you will say still 1. Sometimes when the soul is in a full career● of sinning against Christ as Paul was called and he found the Treasure when he did ignorantly persecute all those that had found it 2. Sometimes when men are farre off from such a treasure or happy tidings and their mindes imployed only about worldly matters as Matthew at the receit of custome Chap. 9. 9. 3. Sometimes When a man hath some common or curious thoughts of seeing and knowing Christ Zaccheus but carnal in such thoughts yet carnally-curious and solicitous see he must Christs out-side or shadow as he passeth by and then is he caught l Luk. 19. 5 6. Make haste and come down saith Christ for to day I must abide at thy house c. 4. Sometimes when men hear the Word but with a common carnally-curious ear so some at Athens m Act. 17. 19. with 34. May we know what this new Doctrine whereof thou speakest is yet afterward certain clave unto Paul and beleeved that new Doctrine Various is the Lord in his cals for manner and time it is enough that he takes his own way and time to present Christ to the ●oul and to prevent the soul with light enough to finde him Reason Generall Why some finde Christ others not Fourthly Why The main reason why some finde Christ not others a man a merchant or two not many but here and there one is Gods free-love and favour to give the clear light and eye of faith for discovery of Christ the treasure and of a treasure in Christ a lively apprehension to fasten upon Christ ●s and when he is set forth in the promises it is the gift of Gods speciall love Ephes 2. 8. Which is a preventing love two waies 1. As it is everlasting in and from his free choice of such a soul I have loved thee with an everlasting love therefore have I drawn thee Jer. 31. 3. or I have extended loving kindenesse unto thee And as Gods temporall prevention comes from this eternall prevention n Rom. 9. 20. I am found of those that sought me not I was made manifest to those that asked not after me so 2. Gods prevention before and in time is the cause of mans invention or finding they so many and no more as were ordained to eternal life beleeved Act. 13. 48. And therefore Tit. 1. 1. saving faith which findeth Christ is called The faith of Gods elect And o Joh. 6. 37. all that God giveth