Selected quad for the lemma: mercy_n

Word A Word B Word C Word D Occurrence Frequency Band MI MI Band Prominent
mercy_n glory_n grace_n lord_n 5,866 5 3.7353 3 true
View all documents for the selected quad

Text snippets containing the quad

ID Title Author Corrected Date of Publication (TCP Date of Publication) STC Words Pages
A13997 The high-vvay to heauen: or, the doctrine of election, effectuall vocation, iustification, santification and eternall life Grounded vpon the holy Scriptures, confirmed by the testimonies of sundry iudicious and great diuines, ancient and moderne. Compiled by Thomas Tuke.; High-way to heaven. Tuke, Thomas, d. 1657. 1609 (1609) STC 24309; ESTC S102479 78,861 226

There are 9 snippets containing the selected quad. | View lemmatised text

truely though not so firmely as the hand that is whole and sound And further this sauing faith is the onely hand whereby wee doe receiue Christ and his merites No man is iustified by the workes of the Law but by the faith of Iesus Christ Basil saith This is to glorie in the Lord when a man doth not boast of his ovvne righteousnesse but doth acknowledge that hee is destitute of true righteousnes that he is iustified by faith alone in Christ Chrisostom saith Without faith no man hath obtained life but I am able to shew that a faithfull man both liued and obtained the kingdom of heauen without workes For the thiefe did onely beleeue and was iustified It was well said by Roffensis Fides faeta bonis operibus iustificat ante partum Faith being bigge with good works doth iustifie a man before it bring them forth For as S. Augustine saith Good works doe not goe before him that is to be iustified but follow him that i● already iustified And though good workes must neuer bee seuered from faith in the person iustified yet they must be sundred in the act of iustification Though the eie bee not alone yet it sees alone and though the head consult inuent alone yet it is not alone but ioyned to the body so though faith be not alone in the faithfull man yet it alone doth iustifie And thus wee see how to esteeme of faith the Sacraments and the Ministers of God alwaies remembring to ascribe our iustification vnto God Father Sonne and Holy Ghost as the proper and principall efficient thereof as the Scriptures teach vs and confessing with Primasius that God doth iustifie the wicked per solam fidem by faith alone and not by workes The internall impulsiue cause of Iustification which mooueth God to iustifie vs is his grace and meere beneuolence and not our works past present or to come how glorious so euer Paul saith we are iustified freely by his grace And Augustine saith that it is the ineffable grace ●f God that hee which is guilty should be iustified Because all men are shut vp vnder sinne the saluation of man as Anselme saith doth not now consist in the merits of men but in the mercie of God Yea Bellarmine himselfe ingeniously confesseth that by reason of the vncertenty of our owne righteousnesse and the danger of vaine glory Iutissimum est it is the safest course to repose our fiduciam Whole confidence in solu De● misericordia in the Sole mercie and goodnesse of God Now then we must not imagine that this grace of God is procured by our workes but that it doth proceed freely from the Lord. No merit of man saith Anselme doth goe before the grace of God Thou hast done no good saith Augustine and yet remission of sinnes is giuen thee Let thy works be marked and they are found euill If God should reward those workes according to their due he should condemne them But God doth not giue thee the punishment that is due but giues thee grace which is not due And againe he saith The grace without which neither Infants nor men of yeares can be saued is not payed by deserts but giuen without desert and thereupon is called grace The externall impulsiue cause or meritorious efficient of our iustification is not our owne workes virtues or obedience First because they bee the Lords due by vertue of many bonds When we haue done all that is biddē vs we haue done but our due no more then wee were bound to due Now shall wee thinke that the discharging of one duetie can satisfie Gods iustice for the omission of many dueties and the commission of many faults Secondly all our righteousnesse is as a stained cloth Gregorie saith All m●ns righteousn●s i● found to be vnrighteousnes ●f God strictly iudge it Our very iustice being brought to the rule of Gods iustice is iniustice that stinketh in the s●uerity of the Iudge which shineth in the estimation of the Worker And albeit our good works are perfit in respect of the Spirit from whom thee first flow yet are they polluted when they passe from vs because they rū through our corrupted hearts and wils as faire water which runnes through a dirty channell Shall wee now say that our perfect righteousnesse can merit any thing of that righteous Iudge before whose iustice nothing polluted can stand vncondemned Wo vnto the laudable life of men sath A●gustine if God should examine it and lay aside his mercie Thirdly our best actions are not answerable to the benefits of iustification But in reason hee which meanes to merit any thing must bring that which is equal to that which hee seekes to merit fourthly he that wil merit of another must not thinke to merit of him vn●esse he bring some thing of his owne to merit with and not that which is his of whom hee doth intend to merit But all our vertues our Faith and good workes are Gods so farre as they bee good and not ours For what haue we which wee haue not receiued Without me saith Christ Ye can d●e nothing Of our selues we are not able to thinke one good thought When we e●ther beleeue or worke though that faith be ours and albeit the workes ●e ours yet when we haue them we haue them not of our selues but they are giu●n of God Whatsoeuer saith Augustine Cornelius wrought well Totum D●o dandam est it must all be ascribed vnto God lest any mā happily should exalt himself Therfore it is absurde to think we merit any thing by good deedes Fiftly good workes in nature follow Iu●tification Augustine saith Iustification goes before the doers of the law M●● being iustified by beleeuing begin af●erwards to liue righteously And Saint Paul saith that God doth iustifie the Vngodly By which then it is plain● that no man is iustified for his works Finally wee haue the sentence of the Scriptures with vs and the iudgement of the auncient Church Wee haue beleeued in Iesus Christ saith Paul that we might be iustified by the faith of Christ and not by the workes of the lame because that by the workes of the law no flesh shall be iustified God both saued vs not according to the workes of righteousnesse which we haue done but according to his mercie Ambrose saith Let no man glorie in works because no man is iustified by his works Augustine faith The vngodly is iustified by faith without the merits of good workes Primasius saith It is Gods purpose to iustifie the wicked by faith alone without the workes of the law or any other merits of ours whatsoeuer H●mini● iustitia indulgentia De● Gods pardon saith Bernard is mans righteousnesse My merit saith hee is Gods mercie Wee conclude therefore saying with Ambro●e Wee are not iustified by works but by faith because fleshly 〈◊〉 is an impedimēt to
further this knowledge my purpose is out of the Scriptures and by the helpe of sundry learned and orthodoxall Writers briefly to treat of Gods Election and the Execution of it and so we shal as in a Glasse behold what course the Lord hath in his wisedome taken to manifest his grace vnto vs and to make vs partakers of his glory Before I shew what election is I thinke it not amis●e 1. To shew the significations of the word because it is ambiguous 2. To proue that there is an Election 3. And that the doctrine thereof ought to bee learned 4. As also to shew that it ought to be preached to the people 5. and in what maner For the first this word Election or Chusing hath fiue significations First it signifies the chusing and assuming of a man to some worke or office So Saul was chosen to bee a King and Iudas to be an Apostle and of this Election is that speech of Christ to bee vnderstood Haue not I chosen you twelue and one of you is a Diuil Secondly it is taken for that Election whereby the Lorde doth make choise of a nation to bee his people vpon whom he will bestow his lawes and ordinances and more singular loue-tokens then vpon many other Thus the Israelites were Gods elect though amongst them were many reprobates For this election was temporall in part and but a Remnant in comparison were elected as touching that eternall decree of life Thirdly it signifieth the eternall decree of God for the separating and adopting of some men to euerlasting life Fourthly it sometimes signifies the execution of this decree or the separation of certaine men in time by effectuall vocation Fiftly it signifies in that speech of Paul The election hath obtained the Elect themselues as Circumcision is vsed sometimes for Circumcised Bu● we here vse it in the third signification And so much for the word Now that there is such an Election it is euident by these reasons First by expresse testimonies of holy Scripture Many are called but few are chosen I know saith Christ whom I haue chosen So many as were ordained to eternall life beleeued Endeuour to make your election sure Hee is blinde that cannot see the shining of the Sunne at Noone Secondly the Scripture sheweth that there is a Reprobation therefore vnlesse wee shall say that all are reprobates we must needs grant an electiō Thirdly the Scripture setteth forth vnto vs the cause the perpetuitie the benefits and tokens of it which were to no purpose if there were no election at all Lastly we haue the consent of the Church in all ages It is saith Augustine horrible blasphemie to deny Predestination Hauing now prooued that there is an Election I come in the third place to prooue the necessitie of learning vnderstanding this doctrine which I will do with these two reasons The first is this That doctrine ought to bee learned which serues to declare Gods glorie But the doctrine of election doth manifest the glory of God For first it sheweth that we are elected to the honour of God and to the praise of his glorious grace Secondly it argues and illustrates his essentiall properties as his omnipotencie omniscience eternity mercy Thirdly this doctrine doth both demonstrate and defend the free grace of God against all contrariant heresies and errors and will arme vs against many impetuous enemies of the truth therefore it is a doctrine worthy to be learned Secondly that Doctrine is necessarily to bee learned which is profitable to vs in the course of Christianity but the doctrine of election will auaile vs much in the running of this race For first it releiues our faith against diffidence shewing that our saluation hangs not like a Meteour in the ayre but is firmely fixed vpon the loue of God in Christ Secondly it furthereth our Spirituall ioy in that it teacheth that the loue of God is Constant and his decree concerning our welfare is Eternall Thirdly it eclipseth the pride of the heart shewing that Gods dignation and not mans dignitie his fauour not mans faith his mercie and not mans merit is the fountaine and foundation of mans felicitie Fourthly it prouokes vs to true gratitude and the practise of all good works because it teacheth to ascribe our saluation wholly to the grace of God and not to our owne goodnesse as also that wee were elected to bee holy and not to follow the swinge of the flesh and to goe a whoring after our owne lusts Fiftly this doctrine ministers comfort to vs and helpes our pacience in aduersitie For it teacheth that wee are predestinated to weare the crowne of thornes with Christ as well as the crowne of glory and that as wee are couered with the grace of God as with a Canopy whiles wee liue in this world so wee shal be honoured with immortall glory in the world to come therefore this doctrine ought to be learned and remembred Fourthly it is fit for Ministers to acquaint their people with this doctrine The reasons are these First Christ and his Apostles and some of the olde Prophets haue commended this doctrine vnto the Church and did teach it the people But it were grieuous sacriledge to depriue the poore people of that which GOD doth vouchsafe them and transcendent impietie to denie the preaching of that in the Church which God doth teach in his word for the good of the Church For whatsoeuer is written in the word it is written for our learning that through the consolation of the Scripture we might haue hope Secondly the Gospell ought to be preached vnto all both learned and vnlearned but the doctrine of Election is a principall part of the Gospel yea the whole Gospell is inclosed within the ●osome of this doctrine if we respect both the decree it selfe and the execution and accomplishment of it together therefore it ought to bee promulged and made 〈…〉 vnto all Thirdly this doctrine is very vsefull and solatious and may be applyed to many notable purposes For it shewes vs the true causes of all our happinesse Secondly it confuteth the Pelagians who ascribe saluation to mens owne strength and merits and vtterly ouerturneth the opinion of Election for works or faith foreseen Thirdly it serues to correct the course of those that hinder their owne happinesse by their presumption diffidence incredulity prophanenesse sensuality and other irregular and irreligeous courses Fourthly it proues the deity of Christ For in that hee hath elected vs vnto life we conclude that he is very God Fiftly as it testifieth the loue of God vnto vs so likewise it serues to enflame vs with loue towards him For who would not loue him of whom hee is so loued and to whom hee is so much obliged And to omit many vses which might be made of this doctrine it shewes the great power and authoritie that God hath ouer
neither were all the seed of Abraham elected as was Abraham It is God who makes vs meet to be partakers of the inheritance of the Saintes and not any prerogatiue or dignitie in vs. We call Christ our Sauiour because he by his dignitie and merit hath deserued our saluation of God for vs euen so wee might be called our owne Electors if we did mooue God to elect vs by our dignities or prerogatiues Finally God respects not these things in sauing vs therefore neither in electing vs. For if they did mooue God to elect vs they should also perswade him to redeeme and saue vs which is against the Scripture in many places Finally the merit of Christ is not the efficient or impulsiue cause of election though it be of saluation For the efficient cause of election which is without beginning must also bee without beginning but the merit of Christ is not frō eternitie therfore it is not the efficient cause of eternall election Secondly if Christ himselfe as Mediator was elected frō all eternity then his merit is not the cause of electing but the former is true out of Peter the latter therefore is also true Thirdly the effect of eternall election is not the cause thereof but the merit of Christ is the effect of election For God did not elect vs because Christ was to die for vs but on the contrarie Christ did therefore die for vs because God had elected vs in him Therefore the merit of Christ is not the efficient cause of Gods election Wherefore we do conclude and with Caluin we doe auerre according to the truth Hoc consilium quoad Electos in gratuita eius misericordia fundatum esse that the foundation of Gods Election is laied in his free mercie He will haue mercie on whom he will and chuseth whom he pleaseth And so much for the efficient and impulsiue cause of election The materiall cause or matter of Election is threefold first in which that is in Christ the Mediatour secondly about which that is about certaine men thirdly of which it doth consist of which last wee now entreat and that is the counsell of God For election is nothing but the counsell of GOD for the separation of some men to eternall life The formall cause is the ordination assumption and separation of certaine men from all others to the fruition of present grace and future glory The ends of Election are three The former concernes God that doth elect the 2. latter concerne those that are elected The first is the glory of God and the celebration and declaration of his mercy Rom. 9.23 That hee might declare the riches of his glorie vpon the vessels of mercie which he hath prepared vnto glorie Eph. 1.6 He hath chosen vs to the praise of his glorious grace The glory of God is the supreme end of all things therefore of election And if we be commanded to make it the scope of all our actions wee need not doubt but that God doth aime at it in all his The second end of Election is that we should bee holy and blamelesse before God Augustine saith well He chose vs not because we were then holy neither yet because wee would hereafter prooue holy but he rather chose vs to this end that in the time of grace we might be holy through good works The third end is the saluation and glory of the Elect. Therefore they are sayd to be Ordained to eternall life and prepared vnto glorie and chosen vnto saluation We may not thinke that Election is the absolute wil of God without any end It were impietie to attribute such a will to God as hath no scope or end proposed to it For if nature doe nothing in vaine or to no end and purpose much lesse doth God The effects of Election are the meditation of Christ adoption vocation sauing faith iustification and glorification which comprehendeth two things first regeneration or sanctification in which is conteined perpetuall repentance that is auersion from all euill and conuersion vnto God loue righteousnesse the hatred of sinne the study of good workes calling vpon God true humilitie a desire to see Christ constancie in professing the true faith to the last gaspe For Gods Election is the roote of all the gifts of God in vs and the foundation of all his sauing benefits Secondly glorification comprehendeth in it the complement and fruition of all glory in the life to come that is of all holines and happinesse with the Lord foreuer The Subiect of Election is double The first is the subiect in whom we are elected This subiect is Christ Hee hath chosen vs in him saith Paul Now we are not elected in Christ as hee is God or the Word simply so considered For in this respect he is our Elector as he saith himselfe I know whom I haue chosen Neither are wee elected in him as a meere man For a meere man was not fit for vs to bee elected in But we are elected in him as he is God-man our Head and eternall Mediator in whom God hath placed all spirituall blessings which hee would communicate to vs in his good time And wee are elected in Christ because we were not capable in ourselues of so great excellencie He only as Polanus truely teacheth is the fit meane in whom we were elected considering that by election there is made an vnion and coniunction of vs with God the electour Caluin alleaging that speech of Paul He hath chosen vs in Christ saith that it is all one as if he had said that God because he found nothing wor●hie of his election in all the seed of Adam did therefore turne his eies vnto his Christ that hee might elect members as it were out of his bodie whom hee would take vnto the fellowship of life It were therefore very absurd to dream of any election out of him hee being the foundation of the execution of Election in respect of the beginning meanes and end The other subiect is the Obiect of Election or the persons that are elected And these are not all the sonnes of Adam without exception of any For first hee that taketh all and refuseth none cannot properly be said to chuse For election supposeth a reiection He which makes a choice refuseth some Secondly whom God electeth hee doth also glorifie But all are not glorified therefore all are not elected Thirdly sauing faith is peculiar to the Elect and not common to all and is a true effect of Gods election Now many being destitute of true faith for euer it must needs bee that they are also out of Gods election Fourthly the Scripture shewes that some are elected and some refused Rom 11.7 The Elect haue obtained it but the rest are blinded God hath made the wicked for the day of euill Gregory saith well Deus miro mod● God being the creator of all alike hath admirablie
Yee are saith Peter a chosen generation that ye should shew foorth his vertues that hath called you And againe As hee which hath called you is holy that is God so Iude 1. But here we must beware that wee doe not separate the persons For it is a worke common to the Trinitie One saith well God the Father doth call vs in Christ by the Spirit for he is absolute Lord of all his Creatures and therefore he may call out of the kingdome of darkenesse into his owne kingdome whom he will His instruments are the Ministers of the word and therefore are called Conorkers Fathers Sauiours His ordinary outward meanes is the preaching of the Gospell Hee hath called you by our Gospell saith Paul The Law serues to prepare the heart for grace but it is the oyly drops of the Gospell that by the power of the Spirit doe soften the heart and make it supple and pliable it like Balme doeth reuiue and comfort the heart The Gospell is the power of God that is the instrument of Gods power to saluation to all that beleeue Afflictions also losses cros●es sicknesse good examples and the like are by Gods blessing good preparatiues of grace but the preaching of the Gospell is the proper instrument of the Spirit for the effecting of grace By it God speakes to the eare of the soule and by it as by a Pipe hee conueyes his graces into the cisterne of our hearts Now GOD when hee calles a man performes a double worke of grace First he doth illuminate vs by his holy Spirit infusing a new and heauenly light into our minde being so blind before as that it neither saw nor could see the things which doe belong to the spirit of God The naturall man saith Paul perceiueth not the things of the Spirit of God for they are foolishnesse vnto him neither can he know them In like manner also in the will which is altogether peruerse and wholly fallen from God he worketh an vprightnesse and in all the affections a new holinesse Hence proceeds that new man which is created after God in righteousnesse and true holinesse Secondly he causeth vs being enlightned and thus changed to apprehend his mercy to desire and affect our amendement and to answere vnto his call like Dauid VVhen thou saidst Seeke yee my face mixe heart answered vnto thee O Lord I will seeke thy face When God had pierced Dauids eare with the augur of his Spirit he answered Lo I come The primary cause or the foundation of this vocation is the free grace of God For this Vocation is of gift and not of merit of Grace and not of Nature God calling whom he will and againe whom he will either not calling or not calling them effectually The Apostle saith that hee hath called vs with an holy calling not according to our works b●t according to his own purpose grace The meritorious cause of this effectuall Calling is the merits of Christ For Christ hath merited in our behalfe that the Holy Ghost should bee sent into vs to illuminate and adorne our hearts with his graces The matter whereof this Vocation doth consist is a speciall powerfull and inward worke of the Spirit The forme and as it were the life and soule thereof is the illumination and information of the mind and an efficatious bending conforming and working of the heart wil whereby it becomes obedient to the voice of God and returnes as it were an audible and liuely Eccho into his eare The end is double first the glory of God and the commendation of his mercie to whom we must ascribe both grace and nature and of whom we haue receiued our soules and bodies yea and the very soule of our soules which is his Spirit The second end of this vocation is our deliuerance and translation out of ignorance infidelitie sensualitie and rebellion vnto spirituall grace and glory For we are called out of darknesse into light that we might walke in light and no longer serue the Prince of darknesse We are called out of the world vnto God to the end that wee should relinquish the lusts of the world and serue God that walking vprightly before him in this world wee may reigne like Princes with him in the world to come The effects and fruites of this Calling are a reformed iudgement a fleshy heart a yeelding vnto the Lord a s●ight from the works of darknesse an attentiue and hungry eare a spirituall relishing and receiuing of the solacious and sweete promises of the Gospel When a skilfull Musitian hath once strung tuned and strucke his instrument it sends out many pleasant and sweet soundes so when the Lord hath once breathed his Spirit of life in at the nostrils of our soules when he hath once tuned the strings of our sinfull hearts and hath toucht them with the finger of his spirit he makes them send forth many delectable and harmonious sounds wherein he takes delight When Christ had cried to Lazarus being dead and said Lazarus Come foorth He forthwith reuiued and came foorth of the graue So when Peter had said to dead Tabitha Tabitha arise She opened her eies immediatly and sate vp Euen so when he shall vouchsafe to call a man with his powerfull voice and shal effectually speake vnto the heart and say Arise thou that sleepest in thy sinne come foorth of the graue of iniquitie stand vp and walke in the wayes of righteousnes his call is so mightie and his word so powerfull and vnuanquishable that the man to whom hee doth so speake must needs awake arise come foorth and walke The voice of the Lord saith Dauid is mightie the voice of the Lord breaketh the Cedars it deuideth the flames of fire it maketh the Wildernesse to tremble and discouereth the Forrests These are the effects of that voice In like maner the voice which God speaketh to the eare of the soule in his effectuall Vocation is so mightie and so glorious as that it rendeth the heart and makes it tremble it discouereth the soule and diuides in twaine and peirceth into the most secret places of it And looke as at the sound of the seauen Trumpets the wall of Iericho fell flat downe and as at that efficatious voyce of Christ saying I am he his enemies that came to apprehend him went away back-ward and fell to the ground euen so when Gods voice shall sound in a mans eare and when Christ shall speake effectually vnto the heart the walles of hell shall reele and totter the fortresses of iniquitie shall be ruinated the castles of sinne shall be cast downe our spirituall enemies shall bee driuen backeward the strong man Satan shall bee fettered and his cursed workes dissolued These are the admirable effects of this glorious voyce these are the worthy workes of Gods effectuall Calling We may therefore iustly say The voyce of the Lord is mightie The voyce
a man hee doth so worke vpon him that hee shall willingly yeeld how vnwillingly so euer his will be by nature On vvhom God shevveth mercie saith that learned Father he doth so call him as hee knovveth conuenient for him that hee may not reiect him vvhich calleth to him The same may be said concerning sanctificatiō Fourthly our Regeneration is but once begun howsoeuer our holinesse sometimes increaseth and sometimes decreaseth The Scripture speaketh but of one new birth As there is saith Austen one fleshlie generation neither can there be made a returne into the vvombe so is there one spirituall regeneration Semel enim nascimur semel quoque renascimur We are once borne and we are once born anew We are but once brought forth by our naturall mother once begotten by our naturall father so wee are but once begotten of our heauēly father and but once brought foorth and borne of our spirituall mother which is the Church Fiftly Sanctification is an infallible argument of eternall saluation Grace is the testification of glorie and glory is the promised compensation of grace Godlinesse hath the promise of this life and of that vvhich is to come When vve haue receiued mortification and sanctification is hansels of Gods mercies thē may vvee hope for heauen for they that haue receiued grace shall also receiue glorie And as we haue behaued our selues in the kingdom of grace in this world so it shal be done vnto vs in the kingdom of glorie in the world to come Holinesse is a signe of honor and the more we haue of holinesse the more wee shall haue of honour Sixtly sanctificatiō is a very excellent commodious worke of God First because it is wrought by his own finger by his own hand engrauen vpon the tables of our harts Secondly that it is a Reformation and change according to the vvhole law of God and containes in it the seeds of all good duties Thirdly because without it our life is most vile and despicable wholly corrupt and sinfull For as Augustine saith hovv can hee liue iustly that is not iustified Hovv can he liue holily vvho is not sanctified Or hovv can hee liue at all who is not raised vp to life Seauently Sanctification is in this life imperfect Sinne is not all at once consumed but the scum thereof is almost continually boiling and walloping in vs foming out much filthy froth and stinking sauours If vve say saith Iohn that vve haue no sinne vvee deceiue our selues and trueth is not in vs. There is none so holie saith Gregorie vvhich hath not in him some corruption which hee may lament No man saith Lactantius can be vvithout sinne so long as he is burthened with the garment of his flesh Death must end the conflict betwixt the flesh and the spirit So long as we liue sinne will not die I●ie will liue till the Oke bee hewen downe Before there be an vniuersal clensing there must bee a dissolution of nature The body must first rot before grace shall raigne without disturbance It is true indeed that the corruption of our nature is abolished in Baptisme in respect of guilt and condemnation but not in regard of existence Concupiscence saith Ambrose is taken avvay in Baptisme Non vt non sit sed ne obsit Not as touching the being of it but in that it shall bee no impediment of saluation to them that are baptised with water and the holy Ghost For it is to such no Prince but a Rebell only it neither shall damne them nor dominere within them But as a Serpent cut in diuerse peeces hath but certaine reliques of poison and remnants of fiercenes in the maimed members mangled parts thereof and is not able to exercise the like violence to a man as when it was whole and perfitlie membred so howsoeuer s●me relicks of sinnes remaine in our old but in our martired Adam yet it hath no such force or fiercenesse to preuaile against vs at vvhen it vvas in perfit age beeing then like to a mightie Monarch rather then to a poore prisoner And although those that are regenerated may bee termed iust and perfit yet it is onely in comparison of the wicked who are in bondage vnder sinne respect of Imputatiue righteousnesse and for that they are perfect because like Infants they haue all the parts of a Christian and not the perfection of those parts All the seeds of sauing graces are sowen in their harts but they haue not the ●ull groath of them in this life No man is so vvashed but he may haue dusty feete trauelling after his washing And as Ans●lme speaketh The bodie of sin is destroyed not that in bred con●upiscence should be on the suddaine consumed and quite extirped i● the very flesh that liueth but that it may be no let to him that is dead in whom it was vvhen he vvas aliue It is destroied not from hauing a beeing vvhiles vve are aliue but that vve should not be compeld to serue it Sin shall be but it shall not be to raigne but rather that the regenerate man may vex and afflict it like a most odious enemy and cut off as it were the hands and the feet thereof as Adonibezeks were by the Israelites till at length it be cleane defaced The trueth of that which hath beene spoken will euidently bee seene by this comparison Take a vessell full of vvater let a portion be taken out and an equall portion of hot vvater be put in it becomes luke-vvarme all of it partly hot and partly cold euen so euerie man is a vessel of vvater filled vvith corruption to the bri●● if a part of his corruption be taken avvay and a proportionall part of holinesse put instead of it the vvhole man becomes partly holie partly vnholie And albeit holinesse and sin be contrary yet may they be both in one subiect as light and darknes in the aire at the twilight beeing there remis●y neither of them predominant or absolute victour but remaining in continuall combat Now the reasons why the Lord doth not finish mans sanctification in this life may be these First that we might seeke after perfection more earnestly and couet it more ardently Secondly that despising this world we might the more affect our heauenly life as knowing that our perfect sanctification shall not bee wrought till wee come into heauen Thirdly that we might be humbled and exercised in faith patience prayers and skirmi●hing with the flesh might not wax proud with a conceipt of perfectiō but daily pray Enter not into iudgement vvith thy seruant O Lord Forgiue vs our trespasses Caluin saith that our reparation is not finished all at once but that God doth abolish the corruption of the flesh by degrees i● his elect That they may exercise themselues in repentance all their life and know that of this vvarfare there is no end but i● death Fourthly the
moueth by his grace And thus the will is not meerely passiue but passiue and actiue also first passiue and then actiue And herevpon it is that Prosper saith That which is repaired in vs is not repaired without vs. For when God doth call and conuert vs after that hee hath quickened vs by his Spirit hee doth make vs answere his call and desire to come and turne vnto him So then by the way let vs remember to magnifie the grace of God and to say as Austen saith That I fell it was of my selfe but that I rose it was of thee Gregorie saith that our good desires themselues are ministered vnto vs through the grace of God Anshelmus saith A te habeo defi●erare a te habeo impetrare That I doe desire I haue it of thee and that I doe obtaine it is of thee He saith Augustine worketh both to will and to worke by ministring most effectuall power vnto the will He preuenteth the vnwilling that he may be willing and pursues him that is willing that he will not in vaine And so much for the time of Vocatiō The Properties thereof are foure First it is most free For God calleth whom he pleaseth Hee vouchsafeth grace to whom he listeth We may not saith Aquinas inquire why he should conuert these and not those because this depends vpon his bare pleasure Therefore Augustine vpon Iohn saith If thou woulst not erre then doe not desire to determine wherefore he should draw this man and not that And againe he saith Of two wicked persons that are of yeeres why the one is so called as that he followeth the Caller and the other either not called at all or not so called as that hee followeth him that calles him his iudgements are vnsearchable He calleth effectally whom he will he hardens whom he wi●l And albeit he call many with an outward calling to whom he vouchsafeth not his operatiue and inward calling yet wee must not acaccuse him of crueltie or iniustice but rather admire his iudgements It was well said of that holy man Wilt thou dispute with mee Wonder with mee and exclame O the depth Let vs both consent in feare lest wee perish in errour God is our soueraigne Lord and tyed by no bond to any man Wee cannot finde him out he is excellent in power and iudgement and abundant in iustice and we know him not Secondly this vocation is an irreuocable constant and vncheangeable act of Gods Spirit Those that are once effectually called by God man continue so for euer For the gifts and Calling of God are without repentance God is faithfull saith Paul by whom y● are called Who shall also confirme you vnto the end that ye may bee blamelesse in the day of our Lord Iesus And to the Philippians he saith I am perswaded that ●e that hath begun this good worke in you vvill performe it vntill the day of Iesus Christ. Like as Zerubabel did both lay the foundation of the Temple and finish the worke so God will establish and make perfect the worke begun in vs at our vocation Therefore Augustine boldly affirmeth that those are not in this Calling which do not perseuere vnto the end Now the reason why those that are thus called do not fall away is foure-fold The first is Gods election which is vnchangeable and therefore also faith and other the fruits of election cannot be wholly lost and ruined This saith Chrysostome is the propertie of faith nunquam penitus decidit aut omnino turbatur it neuer wholly perisheth neither is it altogether troubled The second is the promise of God in the couenant of grace in which hee promiseth that hee will stand by vs and make vs also to stick to him The third is the intercession of Christ who hath prayed effectually for our cōseruation in the world And the fourth is because we are the members and subiects of Christ who is a puissant and gratious Prince and a most perfect and blessed Head and therefore we may be sure that hee wil protect and preserue his subiects profligate and extirp their enemies and conuay spirituall sense and motion by his spirit into all his members So that if they fall yet they shall not fall away if they sin yet they sin not with full consent of will For they hate nill in part the euill which they wil and they doe not make a trade of sinning but the spirit remaining in them causeth them to returne to God and to recouer themselues by true repentance To conclude this property God when hee calles a man hee performes these foure workes of grace First he quickens him and giues him power to answere his call Secondly hee giues an execution of this power and makes him to answere Thirdly he giues continuance of that power yea and addes a fourth which is an execution of that continuance and so it comes to passe that none of Gods Called do fall quite away but though they fall yet shall they not be cast off for God putteth vnder his hand Thirdly this vocation is a very excellent worke of God For first it is an vndoubted token of election for God by his vocation doth as Caluin teacheth manifest his election which otherwise he keepeth hidden in himselfe And therefore effectuall vocation may be properly called the Testification of Gods election Secondly Vocation is the first act of grace vpon the heart Now the first light and libertie which a close prisoner se●s and enioies is most ioyous and solacious Thirdly God as Augustine speaketh by his election did adopt his people to be as sonnes but yet we see that the● take not possession of so great a benefit vntill they be called on the contrarie we set that those which are called doe now enioy a certaine communication of their election Vocation puts vs into an actuall possession of Gods loue Fourthly God by calling his elect doth as Caluin affirmeth admit them into his familie and centoine himselfe vnto them that they may be one Fiftly this inward vocation is an infallible pledge of saluation For God denies the speciall efficacie of his spirit to the reprobate for the illustration of his soueraigntie and glorie and appropriates it vnto his Elect for the demōstration of his mercie Sixtly the excellencie of the Agent doth oftentimes cōmend the act But it is that great God who swayeth the scepter of the whole world and dwelleth in the light that no man can atteine vnto it is hee that inhabiteth eternity spanneth the heauens with his fist who calleth vs with this calling God that commanded the light to shine out of darkenesse is he which hath shined in our hearts to giue the light of the knowledge of the glorie of God in the face of Iesus Christ He and he onely is our effectuall Caller and neither man nor Angell Seuenthly this
of God for the righteousnes of an other For iustification and remission of sins are the same For to iustifie is for God not to impute sin vnto vs but to accept vs for righteous to absolue or pronounce vs iust for the righteousnesse of Christ imputed The end of Iustification in respect of God is the glory of God in an admirable composition of iustice and mercie of iustice because hee would haue his sonne to satisfie for our sins rather then that they should escape vnpunished and of mercie because it pleased him to impute and appropriate the satisfaction of his sonne vnto vs rather then we wretches should be destroyed But some will perhaps imagine that God shewed neither iustice nor mercie no iustice because he punished an innocent for the nocent set his teeth on edge whereas they had eaten the soure grapes and no mercie because hee forgaue none without a satisfaction It is true indeed that the innocent was punished but yet it was done willingly and not by constraint and he was of the same nature with the nocent and was also such a potent innocent as that he did satisfie the iustice of the Iudge to the vtmost and conquer all his punishments with facilitie Neither must we deeme the mercie of God to be withheld or not exhibited because he did not forgiue without a satisfaction For first it was of his sole benignitie and perfect mercie without the preuision of any merit that he came to satisfie who made the satisfaction for vs. Herein saith Iohn is that loue not that we loued God but that he loued vs and sent his sonne to be a reconciliation for our sins Secondly it is his grace that hee doth apply the satisfaction of his sonne vnto vs who were disposed thereunto by no gift or merit Thirdly we must consider that Gods iustice is so infinitely absolute as that we could not bee iustified without a Mediator God could not forgiue sinne without a satisfaction For otherwise what need was there that the soone of GOD should be brought as he was to such horrible miserie and to such an accursed death A kinde father would try any way rather then he would expose his owne and onely sonne to extreame terrors and miserie And lest any man should imagine that it is in Gods power to remit or to reteine sinnes like debts we must know that there are two kinds of debts For there is a debt which eclipseth and hurteth the honour of the Creditor and there is also a debt which doth not touch it If the debt do not hurt his honour it may vvith great encrease of honour be rmitted vvithout any recompence at all as vvhen a king forgiueth his seruant the debt of some thousands of c●ovvnes This debt as it did not hurt the maiestie of the king so it might be forgiuen vvithout anie hurt to his maiestie But if debts doe hurt the honour and maiestie of the Creditour and doe directlie impugne his nature and glorie vvithout doubt they cannot at his pleasure be remitted vvithout satisfaction And such debts are sins at vvhich infringe the rule of Gods eternall vvill are enemies to it so as that they cannot be purged and forgiuen vvithout a penaltie but Gods iustice and vprightnes vvill bee diminished But yet though his mercie could not shoulder out his iustice or any whit eclipse it yet his iustice did not bereaue him of his mercie For of his ovvne meere mercie hee found out the way to redeeme and saue vs when we did not so much as thinke of any such thing and therefore as we ought to admire the seueritie of his iustice so we should also magnifie his endles grace and mercie The endes of Iustification in respect of our selues are that we may be pleasing vnto God that wee may haue peace of conscience and true tranquilitie of minde that being redeemed from miserie wee might bee saued and finally that wee should striue against the streame of our owne corruptions and keepe a constant course in pietie or to vse the words of Zacharie That wee being deliuered out of the handes of our enemies should serue him without feare all the daies of our life in holinesse and righteousnesse before him For Christ gaue himselfe for vs that wee should be zealous of good vvorkes and bare our sinnes on the crosse that vve being dead to sinne should liue is righteousnesse To this end saith Bucanus are wee iustified by faith for Christ that the old man being abolished by the efficacie of Christ crucified Christ may liue in vs and wee by the study of good workes may shew our selues thankefull vnto God for so great a benefite Therefore Paul almost in all his Epistles drawes his doctrine of sanctification and good workes out of the doctrine of Faith or Iustification as the effect out of the cause or as an necessarie consequent from the Antecedent H●c ille In like maner Augustine saith Christ died for the vvicked but not that the wicked should remaine dead but that being iustified they should be conuerted from vvickednesse beleeuing in him vvhich iustifieth the vngodly For God hateth impietie And againe Grace doth iustifie or hee iustifies by grace that he which is iustified might like iustly So then one maine end of our iustificatiō is that abandoning all iniquitie we should lead our liues in sanctitie The effects and consequents of Iustification are diuers The immediate effect of Iustification is adoption by vvhich the Elect doe now actually please God as his sonnes and coheires of Christ For so soone as the Electare absolued from their sinnes they are foorthwith adopted into the right ●nd priuiledges of the children of God A second effect of Iustification is peace of conscience to wit when we perceiue our selues to be deliuered from our sins before Gods iudgemēt seat and the iudgement of our owne conscience For there is no condemnation to them that are in Christ and being iustified by faith wee haue peace vvith God euen that peace vvhich passeth all vnderstanding whereas there is no true peace to the wicked but they are like the raging sea that cannot rest vvhose waters cast vp mudde and mire or else they are structen with a spirituall Apoplexcy which hath reaued them of all true sense and are so benummed in their conscience that they can feele nothing till it be roused and awaked Thirdly our iustification makes vs haue accesse to God by prayer with confidence to be heard for Christ For sinne was the Make-bate and wall of partition betwixt God and vs now our sinnes are done away when wee are iustified and therefore with boldnesse wee may approach vnto the throne of Grace We haue now receiued the Spirit of adoption by vvhich vvee cr●e Abba Father that is by vvhich vve conceiue very good hope in him to vvhom wee pray like suppliants that hee will in fatherly affection tovvard vs giue
Lord thus doth tha● we might exercise and take notice o● our spirituall wisedome and Christian fortitude and magnanimity in defeating the wiles of sin and the plots of the Diuell and in contending like couragious Kings against all our spirituall aduersaries and finally in disdaining to giue place to the flesh that abominable and filthy wretch Fifthly the Lord doth hereby demonstrate his liberty and absolute authoritie ouer vs that he is not bound vnto vs by any bond of duetie to perfit his graces in vs in this life For then it should be iniustice in him not to do it But God is righteous in all his waies and holy in all his vvorkes and can not offer the least iniustice Sixthly God thus doth to manifest his mercie to vs to teach vs thankfulnesse to him who pardoneth our weake obedience and accepteth of our poore holinesse imperfect perfection There are with God two courts of Iustice The first is the Kings bench where there is strict iustice the other is the Chancerie where there is a mitigation of that strict course of Iustice In the first Court there is none found iust in the second court of acceptation some are accepted for iust men In this Court God accepteth our vnperfit holines our poore indeauours our weake resolutions our imperfect desires motions and meditations if they be faithfull and entire and directed to the right ends and for his Christ doth pardon all their defects Which argueth mercie on his part claimeth gratitude on ours Lastly the Lord thus doth to demonstrate his prouidence and power in protecting and conseruing vs against so many puislant pernicious enemies as we are begirt with notwithstanding our great vnworthines weaknesses and imperfections And so much for the seuenth property of Sanctification Eightly this worke of the Spirit is neuer cleane extinguished The gifts of God are without repentance The graces of God are not in his children as morning mists but as well builded tovvers to continue all assaults As he hath begū the worke of sanctification so he will make an end of it For what should hinder His good will is constant his might is ouer all Sin Sathan and all the enemies of our soules whatsoeuer are with him as chaffe before a whirlewinde or as flax before a flame of fire His eie is waking and allseing his wisedome is infinite his essence euery where and his mercie endureth for euer What then can what shall hinder his worke He hath ioyned vs to Christ who shall disioyne vs He hath wedded vs vnto himse●fe what can diuorce vs He is with vs who can be against vs Christ is our King and we are his subiects we neede not therefore doubt of his fauour and protection He is our Architect hee hath built vs vpon a rocke and hath said that hell gates shall not preuaile against vs. Wee are the Temples of Gods spirit who is no idle nor regard lesse Inhabitant Our holinesse I confesse may suffer an eclipse and be diminished but it shall neuer be fully wasted and abolished For God will confirme vs by his grace He saith Augustine who makes men good doth make men to perseuere in good And therefore out state by Christ is surer then our condition was in Adam For though he was made perfectly good yet he had not the grace of perseuerance in that good But to vs it is giuen to perseuere Beleeuers are of the bone flesh of Christ novv there is no part of the bone and flesh of Christ that dieth They that are sanctified are reserued vnto Christ and therefore they shall not fall away from Christ They beleeue in Christ but faith as Chrisostome saith is petra fixa infracta a rock fixed and inuiolable It will shine like a starre in the night of aduersitie and sauours most like Camomell when it is troden vppon Hope is the anchor of the soule it wil endure both windes and waues And loue is strong as death Charitie saith Austen vvhich may be left vvas neuer true Whosoeuer is borne of GOD sinneth not neither can he sin because he is borne of God If a sanctified man cannot sin with a full swinge of the will and if hee cannot liue long in sin without repentance then assured he cannot fall from grace and perish It is our Fathers good pleasure to giue vs the kingdome of heauen and therefore we shall not misse it It remaineth thē as an vndoubted trueth that the work of sanctification shall neuer be demolished and that a sanctified man shall neuer perish Master Bradford saith well Our blindnes and corrupt affections doe often shadovv the sight of Gods seede in Gods children as thogh they were plain Reprobates Whereof it commeth that they praying according to their sense but not according to the truth desire of God to giue them againe his Spirit as though they had lost it and he had taken it away which thing God neuer doth indeede although he make vs to thinke so for a time And so much for this eight property Ninthly sanctification may be discerned The childe of God may be sure of his new birth The Apostle saith know ye not that ye are the Temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwelleth in you know ye not that your bodie is the Temple of the Holy Ghost that is in you know ye not your owne selues how that Iesus Christ is in you except ye be reprobates It is possible then that these may be knowne Know for a certaine saith Master Bradford that as the Diuel goeth about nothing so much as to bring you in doubt whether you be Gods child so vvhatsoeuer sh●ll moue you to admit that dubitation bee assured the same to come of the Diuell This assurance of our Sanctifi●ation may be obtained not onely by the inward suggestion of the holy Ghost assuring our spirits of the same but also by certaine vndoubted testimonies and tokens of it some whereof will here annex First He that committeth sin is of the Diuel but vvhosoeuer is borne of God sinneth not Wherefore if we doe not commit sin with full consent of will if when we doe sin we doe not continue in it but recouer our selues by true repentance as Peter did then may we know that we are not the Diuels slaue but Gods childe Secondly vvhosoeuer beleeueth that Iesus is that Christ is borne of God It is then a certaine token of a mans regeneration to beleeue distinctly that Iesus the sonne of Marie is that anointe● king priest and prophet which God hath raised vp for the saluation of hi● soule and of the rest of Gods Elect. Thirdly Euerie one vvhich ●ouet● him vvhich did beget loueth him also vvhich is b●gotten of him Whosoeuer therefore doth truely loue the childe of God for his fathers sake doth loue God himselfe And euerie one that loueth is
calling is an argument of admirable power in God of his infinite mercie to vs. For as he shewed his power in creation in making things to bee that before were not euen so hee manifests his power in his effectuall vocation in calling men that were dead in sin and worse then nothing by their owne deserts to liue the life of grace and in breathing into them the breath of life which was vtterly expired by their fall in Adam Yea the Lord may seeme to exhibit more power when he calles men then when he did create him for at his creation there was none to hinder him but at his vocation there were many hinderers great impedimēts though all inferiour vnto GOD There is the Diuel and his suggestions there is the World and her incantations scandals and allurements there is our owne flesh the rebellious corruption of the heart All these God must vanquish and he must perswade and incline our wils and of nillers make vs willers before he perfit and accomplish in vs this his glorious and thrice-happy worke of grace Secondly this calling is a notable testimony of his grace and mercie to vs in that it pleased him to shine vpon vs with the light of his spirit and to cast his gratious eies vpon vs who were by sin more loathsome then a carion and more stincking then any dunghil What are wee that God should bee mindful of vs and visit vs with his grace The Starres are vncleane in hi● sight how much more man a Worme euen the son of man which is but a worme As God declared his goodnes in creation by communicating a beeing vnto things that had no beeing euen so the same God doth manifest his mercy in vocation by ministring life vnto those that before were miserable and void of life And indeed there is more goodnes shewed more grace exhibited in restoring a man out of his grieuous and inextricable miserie and in curing him of his cursed blindnesse then in giuing him a beeing hauing none before in making him to see hauing no sight To raise a dead soule from the death of sin vnto a supernaturall life is a greater worke of mercy then to raise a dead body from bodily death to liue a naturall life Eightly this effectuall calling doth farre surpasse our naturall propagation or procreation For in this we are but taken as it were out of our father Adam but in the other wee are both taken out of the first Adam wholy corrupted and set also into the second Adam Christ Iesus Who of God is made vnto vs vvisedome righteousnes sanctification and redemption Lastly this calling that the excellencie thereof may yet appeare ratifies all our couenants with God Men in their Baptisme enter couenant with God but often start from it and will not stand to it so as the couenant is onely made But when as a man is effectually called the couenant is not onely made but truely accomplished and that on mans part Haec clariss● Perk The fourth and last propertie of effectuall vocation is that it may be discerned by certaine signes thereof This estimation or discerning of it is two fold infallible and coniecturall Coniecturall discerning or determining of it is especially when in our iudgement of charitie wee deeme of others as of the called of God by their outward profession and conuersation in the world And thus Paul cals the Romanes Corinthians Sancts by calling whereas notwithstanding it is not vnprobable but that there were some hypocrites among them For visible Churches are like a uet where in is taken both good fish and bad or a barne wherein is cockle and good corne or a garden in which grow both stincking weeds and pleasant flowers the nettle as well as the rose The certaine and infallible discerning and determination made of effectuall vocation is either when by a speciall and extraordinary reuelation from God one man discernes determines infallibly of the calling of another this I say is performed whē it is performed by a special work of God For he alone vnderstandeth the heart For what man knoweth the things of a man saue the spirit of a man which is in him All is not gold that glisters The heart is deceitfull wicked aboue all things who cā know it I the Lord search the heart and try the reiues Or else secondly this infallible determination and discerning is made when a man determines of and discernes his owne vocation by certaine workes of Gods spirit which are infallible testimonies and tokens of it and by which we may make our calling sure as Poter would haue vs. The signes of effectuall Calling are these First the Calling of God works in vs another call whereby wee call vpon him and seriously seeke vnto him and desire his grace Now to desire the helpe of grace is the beginning of grace To call vpon God constantly and sincerely for his grace is a worke of grace and therefore an vndoubted token of our calling vnto grace Secondly the attentiue hearing of the word is a marke of our effectuall vocation For as a man is iudged to be sicke and diseased when his stomack cannot brook nor digest wholesome meats so the soule of that man cannot be sound to whom the word of God hath no pleasant tast But when a Man can say with the Prophet Dauid Thy word is sweeter to me then the hony or hony combe by this we may gather an assured trust that wee are giuen vnto Christ if we do continue in hauing delight still For otherwise a sicke man may haue some while a relish of his meat when there is some intermission of the disease but it holdeth not long so is it with them that haue for a while some tast of the word of God and afterward fall away Haec Clariss Will. Thirdly the Sheepe of Christ are such as are called home out of the vast wildernesse of this world vnto Christ their sheepheard Therefore by what notes these Sheepe are discerned by the same a man may know his calling Christ saith that his sheep know him heare his voyce and follow him If therefore we know acknowledge and embrace Christ if wee heare and hearken vnto his voyce to doe it if we study to resemble imitate and follow him in loue meekenesse patience humilitie iustice fidelitie trueth confidence and compassion we may assure our selues that wee are his Sheep effectually called home into his fold Furthermore the Romanes are by Paul entituled the called of Iesus Christ The Corinthians are said to bee Saints by calling The Thessalonians some of them at lest were effectually called Now Paul saith of the called Romans that they obeyed from the hear● vnto the forme of the doctrine whereunto they were deliuered Of the called Corinthians hee saith that in all things they were made rich in Christ and were not destitute of any gift and that howsoeuer