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A13209 Lectures vpon the eleventh chapter to the Romans. Preached by that learned and godly divine of famous memorie, Dr. Sutton, in St. Marie Overies in Southwarke. Published for the good of all Gods Church generally, and especially of those that were then his hearers Sutton, Thomas, 1585-1623.; Downame, John, d. 1652. 1632 (1632) STC 23507; ESTC S118002 306,616 538

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grace Chrysost ibid. whom God foresaw would beleeve and the Pelagians of grace that is they who have chosen grace both of them ascribing too much to mans will The meaning is that this remnant is reserued according to the election of grace not whereby men chose grace but whereby God of his meere grace hath chosen men saith Iunius Iun. in Rom. 11. and there is in them an Hebraisme 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 according to the election of grace for according to free election saith Beza and Aquinas Beza Aquin. In them I note 1. The foundation and ground of salvation and that is Gods election 2. The impulsive cause of Gods election grace not in us but in God as Pareus and Soto Pareus Soto In the handling whereof and here note 1. what it is Election is that part of Gods eternall predestination Election described whereby hee decreed before all eternity that they whom he loved in Christ should be called to the adoption of sonnes iustified by faith should doe good workes bee glorified and made conformable to the image of his Son which conformity is begun when we are justified increased daily by good workes finished in eternall glory and all this that God may shew upon them the riches of his mercy that it is of those whom hee loved in Christ it is manifest for whatsoever good we have of God it is by and through Christ 2. That they should be called So the Apostle hee hath chosen us to be adopted through Iesus Christ unto himselfe Epes 1.5 3. That they should bee justified See Rom. 8.30 whom hee called them he justified 4. To be glorified Ibid. 5. That they may bee conformable to the image of his Sonne See Paul 8.29 Out of all these arise three conclusions 1. God did elect and chose because hee looked mercifully vpon vs in Christ 2. Whomsoever hee did chose unto glory he did predestinate to be holy Homines non producit Deus ad gloriam per scelera flagitiae Peter Martyr God brings not men to glory by villanies and wickednesse saith Martyr as aboue 3. All our hope of glory depends meerely vpon our election in Christ that we are or shall be called and iustified and in the end glorified Rom. 8.29 30. This election is the first and most ancient charter that Gods children can shew for their right to their Fathers inheritance for though by vocation we be manifested to be the sonnes of God by iustification ingrafted in Iesus Christ and made partaker of all that is his and by glorification we be entred into our Fathers inheritance yet is our election the foundation of all these as 2. Tim. 2.19 Our hope that we are of his Church for onely the elect are the Church and the univocall members of Christ the head though it bee denied by Bellarmine in opposition to Wickliffe Hus and Calvin Bellarm. de Eccles mil tant lib. 3. cap. 7. Our hope that our calling is true and effectuall for they only are effectually called who are eternally elected as may appeare in the golden chaine whom hee did predestinate them hee called Rom. 8.30 Our hope that we shall never be cast off that we are preserved by Christ and shall bee raised up at the last day Iohn 6.39 That we are kept by the power of God the father through faith unto salvation prepared but showed in the last times 1. Pet. 1.5 If all depend on this let us learne whether wee belong unto it or no that we may know whether we shall ever bee glorified or no. There is no way to know it but by the fruits as 2. Pet. 1.10 The fruits are many I will note for your comfort some 1. good workes 2. a conscionable care of the meanes of salvation 3. The spirit of prayer 4. Abalienation from the world 5. Hungring and thirsting after righteousnes 6. Conflict betweene the flesh spirit 7. New obedience 8. Love to Gods ministers 9. A longing for the fulnesse and complement of Christs comming as above and so I come to the impulsive cause of election Grace Amongst men they are said to have grace Cui favet populus Who have the good will and love of the people And so with God they are said to have grace who have found grace with God But here is a manifest difference men favour none but in whom they finde something whereby they may bee allured to love them but God loved not because he saw vs to be lovely for hee loved us first and by loving us gave us that which pleaseth him So that the name of grace in Scripture is used two wayes 1. For the free love and favour of God wherewith hee imbraceth the elect Ephes 1.6 We are predestinate to the praise of the glory of his grace 2. Grace signifies the gifts freely bestowed upon us by God as Rom. 11.29 The gifts that is the graces of God are without repentance as Aquinas hath well distinguisht Quaest 110. Artic. 1. By understanding of which distinction it will appeare with what difference the Protestant and the Papist agree in this tenent that man is justified by grace as the same schooleman 2a 2ae quaest 113. Artic. 2. But the Papist by grace understands the gifts of grace conferred upon them that bee justified as the infused habit of faith good workes c. We by grace in the act of justification understand not the workes of grace which by our faults and sinnes bee made imperfect and not able to satisfie Gods justice but the good will the love which God shewes unto us out of his meere mercie Lib. 2. distinct 26. Peter Lombard hath distinguisht grace into working and co-working and fathers it upon S. Augustine Degratin lib. Arbit Cap. 7. But these bee the same grace distinguisht onely in the effects for grace doth first cure the will and so it is working 2. It caused the will being cured to doe rightly and so it is co-working In the first mans will concurs with grace passively and grace only workes but in the other when mans will is regenerate it concurres both actively and passively and so grace and mans will be co-operant I will not trouble you with those distinctions into prevenient and subsequent which are but one and by the same grace hee prevents us that wee may will hee followes us by making us to doe he prevents us by moving us to good workes hee followes us by giving perseverance nor with that of grace into grace freely given and making acceptable Grace freely given is whereby one man workes with another to salvation and is called grace freely given because it is granted to man above the facultie of nature Grace making acceptable by which man is joyned to God as Th. Aquinas Th. Aquin. quaest 12. Art 1. That which is here meant by grace is his free mercie and love from whence the point is That which moveth God to
gratian dicuntur vosa non meritorum sed misericardiae Lib. 5. de natura gratia cap 1. They are freed by grace and are called not vessels of merits but of mercie Vnto these I adde a fourth reason if you read the ninth to the Romans where the Apostle sifts and searches out the impulsive cause of predestination hee brings all to one of these foure heads 1. To the purpose or good pleasure of God that the purpose might remaine vers 11. 2. To the will of God Hee hath mercie on whom hee will and whom hee will hee hardeneth vers 18. 3. To his power Hath not the potter power c. vers 21. 4. To his mercie It is not in him that willeth but in God that sheweth mercie vers 16. But wheresoever he doth mention election he never makes mention of workes unlesse to exclude them as P. Martyr speakes as here he doth if of grace then not of workes Lastly if workes be the causes of election then in necessitie they are of justification also for that rule in Logicke is constant Whatsoever is the cause of the cause Quicq id est causa causae est causae causati is the cause of the thing caused But good workes are not the causes of justification for first that which justifies is that which can answer the extremitie of Gods justice But mans obedience cannot doe it being onely a begun conformitie as Chemnitius speakes Exam. Trident. Concil Sess 6. To them that will doe good evill is present Secondly if justified by workes then all boasting is not excluded but all boasting is excluded For wee are justified freely by grace through the redemption that is in Christ Iesus Rom. 3.24 So that that which justifies a man is the satisfaction and obedience the justice of Christ our Mediator proposed in the Word apprehended by faith and by God imputed to all that beleeve So that we dare stand before God if that Christ stand betweene God and our sinnes that is our buckler wherewith we are protected from judgement by which we are emboldened to goe and appeare at the Tribunall of God and are there pronounced just So that though in respect of Christ it be satisfaction merit and righteousnesse yet in respect of us it is grace and mercie I could muster great Iuries of Scriptures and ancient Fathers to passe verdict on our side but I need not onely remember what Possidonius reports of Ambrose a Etsi non sic vixt ut pudeat inter vos vivere tomen non t●neo mors sed quia Don inum habeo bonum In vita August cap. 27. Though I have not so lived that I may be ashamed to live amongst you b Pateor non sum dignus ego nec propriu pessum meritis reguum abtinere culorum caeterum duplic● jure illud b●inens Dominu● hae reditate patris merito pessionu attero pse contentus alter●●● ihi dorat exenjus do●o jure illud vendans non cons n●or cap 12. yet I feare not to die not because I have lived well but because I have a good Lord. And I finde in the life of Bernard that seeming to be before Gods Tribunall and Satan opposing him and when Satan had done the good man seemed thus to reply I confesse I am not worthy neither can I by mine owne deserts obtaine the kingdome of Heaven but my Lord obtaining it by a do able right by his Fathers inheritance and the merit of his passion being content with one himselfe giveth mee the other of whose gift challenging it by right I am not confounded And therefore Bellarmine out of Bernard Because of the uncertaintie of our righteousnesse and the danger of vaine glorie Propter incertitudinem propriae j●●tiae peric●lum in ●●is gl●ria tutissius ●● est fid●i am totam insole Dei misericordia ben●gnitate reponere De justif lib. 5. Cap 4. lib. 5. cap 7. propos 3. it is safest to put our whole trust in the sole mercie and goodnesse of God The Vse is to teach us first that we must not set up an Idoll in our owne hearts and thanke our selves Secondly an infinite comfort that our happinesse depends not upon our selves for then we should even be driven to despaire in regard of many sinnes and waverings which would breed not onely doubt but certaintie that wee should never be saved but seeing it depends upon God who is unchangeable Vse upon God whose promises are Yea and Amen upon God who is the same for ever wee may be sure that wee shall not misse of glorie which he hath laid up and prepared for all that love him And so I descend from the consolation of the rejected Iewes which was the first to the confirmation of their rejection which is the second maine point in the whole Chapter VERS 7. Vers 7 What then Israel hath not obtained that hee sought but the election hath obtained and the rest have been hardened IN the confirmation I note 1. The proposition to be confirmed 2. The testimonies and witnesses confirming it The proposition is aggregate and hath three branches 1. Israel hath not obtained what he sought 2. The elect have obtained what they sought for there is a taking of the abstract for the concrete 3. All the reprobates in Israel are given over to hardnesse of heart The witnesses to confirme all these are David and Isay that by the mouth of two or three witnesses everie word may be confirmed The testimony of David is in Psal 69.22 Let their table bee made a snare and a net and a stumbling blocke let their eyes be darkened that they see not which seemes to bee spoken by way of imprecation but is to be understood by way of prophecie The testimony of Isay is in Isa 6.9 God hath given them the spirit of slumber eyes that they should not see and eares that they should not heare till this day I begin with the first branch viz. Israel hath not obtained Where note 1. Who is meant by Israel not the whole number of the twelve Tribes for then had Paul beene one of them for he was of the seed of Abraham of the Tribe of Benjamine nor must wee understand by Israel those that be called Israel Rom. 9.6 viz. the elect for then the second part of the proposition were false viz. the elect have obtained But by Israel we must understand the out-casts of Israel 2. Note what this Israel sought it appeares Rom. 10.3 They being ignorant of the righteousnesse of God went about to establish their owne righteousnesse and then the meaning is that they sought life by their owne righteousnesse and therefore obtained not what they sought but for the elect who sought life by faith in Iesus Christ they found life where I would have you first note in generall the division of Israel into two parts Some elect some not some hardened some not some obtaine salvation and some doe not Doct.
p. 271 Gods promises belong to posteritie p. 273 Some of any mans seed may be cast off p. 278 Our former vilenesse should keepe us from pride p. 279 Without true grace no fruit pleaseth God p. 282 All truly called become fruitfull ibid. Sinners converted well esteemed by God p. 285 Our rising by others falls must not make us proud p. 288 We must not be proud of any gifts p. 290 The Gentiles inferiour to the Iewes in many things p. 294 Everie sinne hath some plea. p. 296 None but God discernes true branches from false p. 299 No Nation so exalted but sinne will bring them downe p. 301 Men are ready to trample on the afflicted p. 302 Men are subject to be proud of gifts and graces p. 304 Men are apt to ascribe Gods gifts to their owne merits p. 307 Infidelitie separates between God and man p. 309 Man is the cause of his owne ruine p. 312 All our good of Gods meere mercie p. 314 Faith distinguisheth men p. 315 A good Christian must live in continuall feare p. 317 The faithfull cannot fall away p. 319 No outward privileges exempt sinners from punishment p. 332 Others examples must warne us p. 335 342 God fits his punishments to mans sinne p. 341 Gods bountie should make us loth to offend him p. 343 Not sufficient to have grace but to continue in it p. 347 Threats and terrours necessarie p. 348 No sinner so great but God will receive him if hee turne p. 351 God alters the course of nature for his childrens good p. 357 The experience of Gods former favours should worke assurance p. 358 Gods greater favours should assure us of the lesse p. 359 Gods children though they sinne shall not bee cast off p. 360 Men are willing to learne of those they love p. 362 Ministers and people should live and love as brethren p. 364 Weightie points should bee heard with greater attention p. 365 God would have none proud of that they enjoy p. 366 Other sins punished with hardnesse of heart p. 367 Sinne causeth punishment where mercies have abounded p. 369 In greatest revolts God preserves a Church p. 372 The Gospell though opposed shall convert the full number p. 378 None of the Iewes within the Covenant shall be lost p. 384 Man under sin in a miserable servitude p. 386 Deliverance from all miserie depends upon Christ. p. 390 Heaven must be gotten with violence p. 397 Christ alone reconciles sinners to God p. 398 God will performe all his promises p. 401 It is proper to God alone to forgive sins p. 405 God in forgiving sin takes it quite away p. 409 Man before grace is an enemie to God p. 415 They that receive not the Gospell are enemies to God p. 417 God workes good out of evill p. 420 In regard of Gods immutabilitie the elect cannot finally fall p. 422 God the Author of everie good gift p. 424 If we considered our selves wee would not judge our brethren p. 431 The estate of unbeleefe miserable p. 432 Iewes and Gentiles alike by nature p. 433 All hope depends upon Gods mercie in Christ p. 435 Many now in the state of sin shall finde mercie ibid. All men naturally guiltie of death p. 438 Gods elect shall onely finde mercie at the last day p. 440 Against universall grace p. 443 It is proper to the godly to admire Gods counsels p. 454 Wee must not curiously search into hidden secrets p. 458 Wee must search no further than the written word p. 462 God effects great matters in a short time p. 469 God is in nothing beholding to any creature p. 470 God can doe what ever hee will without any helpe p. 471 God proposed his glorie the end of all his workes p. 473 God expecteth glorie from everie thing he hath made p. 474 Man should doe nothing whereby God may not gaine glorie p. 475 Wee should chuse callings wherein wee may glorifie God p. 476 The End of the Contents Errata PAg. 14. lin 10. read consilium pag. 17. lin 17. read played p. 21. l. 3. dele Dauid p. 23. l. 10. dele that p. 25 l. 30. a fine read that all such l. 31. read the end p. 29. l. 17. dele it p. 34. l. 18. read the seventh signe p. 40. l. 7. read is our God p. 43. l. 9. read her doores p. 56. l. 24. read crueltie p. 58. l. 20. dele his p. 63. l. 4. that he may make and l. 17. read that there p. 103. l. 3. dele of pag. 106. lin 24. read lest thou shouldest pag. 108. lin 18. dele the. pag. 117. lin 7. read sound pag. 122. lin 27. read mercie That it is lin 28. dele p. 128. l. 10. read copies They and Aphorisme p. 130. in marg l. 17. read Causa causati p. 131. in marg l. 5. read mori non quia bene vixi sed c. p. 146. l. 23. read hardens his p. 151. l. 21. read God Not. p 156 l 26. read Counsell p. 158. l. 7. read formally sin l. 8. read good will p. 160. l. 16. read withdraw p. 164. l. 16. read a confluence of sinnes p. 178. l. 17. read Theseus out of the. l. 28. read goods p. 208. l 11. read An evill man pag. 254. l. 1. read the wire-drawing p. 275. l 4 read place Hereditarie p. 278. l. 24. read I have loved p. 291. l. 9. read doing evill pag. 303. l. 14. read their favours p 311. l. 5. read Isa 56. and Isa 58.13 14. p. 316. l. 22. read Simon Peter p. 317. l. 14. read pia solicitudo p. 334. l. 12. read an asymmetrie p. 375. l. 7. read this was not the. p. 378. l. 2. read in the clouds p. 431. l. 14. read an èye p. 434. l. 5. read the Apostle propounds p. 442. l. 19. read but ●ew p. 443. l. 20. read but that it is not p. 445. in marg l. 5. read gratiam p. 448. l. 21. read for that number p. 451. l. 18. read beleeve this is p. 458. l. 1 dele both and l. 6. read even to O Father p. 462. l. 28. read things hence we learne that the course p. 466 l. 1. read first given unto him p. 468. l. 16. read made and created p. 472. l. 16. read and waste us l. 17. read cruelties D. SUTTONS usuall Prayer before his Sermons OH most gracious and most glorious God before whom the Sun and the Moone become as darknesse the blessed Angels stand amazed and the glorious Cherubims are glad that they may cover and hide their faces as not daring to behold that incomprehensible greatnesse and that infinite goodnesse which thou art with what considence shall wee forlorne sinners be ever once able to appeare before thy all-seeing providence that terrible and angry countenance that sin-revenging justice of thine which is so fierce and terrible that it will shake the heavens melt the mountaines dry up the seas and make the tallest Cedars in Lebanon to tremble Good Lord where shall we hide
7.23 In the former viz. election note 1. what it is 2. Of election and first what it is the execution 3. the knowledge of particular election 1. Election is defined thus It is a decree in which God according to the good pleasure of his will hath certainly chosen some men to life for the glorie of his grace as Ephes 1.4 5. in this one I note these points 1. The impulsive cause 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the good pleasure of his will hee will have mercie on whom hee will have mercie Rom. 9.18 2. If his decree then it is immutable he is not as man that he should repont 1 Sam. 15.29 3. There is an actuall election made in time I have chosen you out of the world Ioh. 15.19 4. The end his glorie for of the execution and the knowledge of particular election I will speake hereaster I come to speake a word of the other part of predestination viz. Reprobation which is A decree whereby God out of his pleasure purposed to refuse some men by mean●s of Adams fall and their owne corruption for manifeslation of his justice In this note only the matter or object of this decree viz. The rejection of some men in respect of mercie or the manifestation of justice upon some which howsoever men call it crueltie yet the Word tels it us Iude 4. They were of old ordained to this condemnation And Rom. 9.22 God makes vessels of wrath for destruction But this is a Doctrine that seemes to be hard and cruell for first men say it must needs bee crueltie to create a great part of the world to damne them in hell But they should know that by this decree God doth not create any to damne them but to the manifestation of his glorie in their due and deserved damnation for their sinne which is but justice and not crueltie 2. They say that by this God should hate his owne creature and that before it is whereto first I answer That God did not actually hate but purposed to hate justly and deservedly and if hee did I may say with Paul Rom. 9.20 O man what art thou that disputest against God shall the thing formed say to him that formed it why hast thou in de mee thus Num. negandum quo● as crtum q●●a intenni 〈◊〉 sotest ●●d 〈◊〉 Aug. De buno persever lib. 2. cap. 14. And with Augustine May wee deay that which is plaine and evident because that which is hidden and secret cannot bee found out It is plaine out of Scripture that so it is and therefore it must needs bee sinne to object against it But that which makes the principal question is that which in the fourth placed proposed and which now I come unto to wir The causes of predestination Of the causes of election and because the parts of predestination are two I will take them severally and first begin with election Howsoever Gods will be the reason whereinto all causes must be resolved and end in that yet some imes there may bee given a reason of Gods will yet that reason must not be called an efficient cause of Gods will The reason why God placed Adam in Paradise was that hee might dresse it and keepe it the reason why God drove not the Canaanite out of the land was because the wickednesse of the Amorites was not yet full Gen. 15.16 The reason why God brought Israel thorow the desart rather than per compendia by more compendious and neerer wayes was that they might not easily bee met by their enemies Yet then onely must a reason of his will be given when he himselfe hath given it in his Word Of the finall causes of election For the finall causes of predestination they are plainly set downe by Paul especially citing that of Pharaoh Rom. 9.17 For this same cause have I stirred thee up that I might shew my power in thee and that my name might be glorified thorowout all the earth or for this verie cause have I appointed thee as it is Exod. 9.16 And of the elect hee saith it was that God might shew the riches of his glorie upon the vessells of mercie Rom. 9.23 and as there is a finall so there may be a materiall cause Men who are predestinated and the benefits which God bestowes on the elect vocation justification sanctification glorie But the question is touching the cause impulsive whether it were his meere will or his fore-seene faith and workes That faith and workes be Of the impulsive cause of election was the Tenent of the old Pelagians renewed in latter times by some counterfeit Lutherans at the first maintaining faith simply to be the cause of election yet afterward onely the instrumentall and not the meritorious cause of election See the Rhemists In Annotat. in Rom. 9. Observe then 1. what wee hold 2. our arguments 3. the opposition of the adversarie In the decree of election there is a double act The first concernes the end The second the means I ground this proposition upon Rom. 9.11 That the purpose according to election might remaine where I see first in Gods decree an election before the purpose of damning or saving And Rom. 8.29 30. Those whom hee foreknew he did predestinate to be made like to the image of his Sonne and whom hee predestinated them c. where there is a manifest difference betweene the decree viz. predestination and the execution of his decree which consists in these three 1. Vocation 2. Iustification 3. Glorification The first act I call a part of Gods divine purpose whereby hee bringeth some men into love and favour passing by the rest and makes them vessels of honour and these are the acts of the sole will of God without all respect to either good or evill in the creature Neither doth God wrong any though he chuse not all because hee is tied to none as a man having no childe of his owne and seeing a multitude of beggers adopteth one of them and leaveth out the rest though hee shew mercie on him whom hee adopts yet doth no wrong to the rest so is it with God The second act is a purpose of saving or conferring glorie and this hath no other impulsive cause than the former viz. the good pleasure of God as Ephes 1.5 Hee hath predestinare us to bee adopted through Iesus Christ according to the good pleasure of his will where note that this purpose of saving is with regard to Christ the Mediator who was first ordained to be a Mediator between God and man as 1 Pet. 1.20 Hee was ordained before the foundation of the world Secondly promised by the mouth of the Prophets as Isa 9.6 Thirdly revealed Fourthly applyed when Christ is given unto us of God the Father by the right use of the Word and Sacraments and received of us by true faith the last is the accomplishment of the application which is glorie when God shall bee all in all by Christ
save man Doct. was nothing in man but the free mercie of God and therefore the Apostle Ephes 1.4 5 6 7. Hee hath chosen us in him Hee hath chosen us according to the good pleasure of his will Hee hath accepted us in his Beloved to the praise of the glorie of his grace wee have the forgivenesse of sinnes according to his rich grace And Ephes 2.8 By grace are yee saved not of your selves it is the gift of God Ob. Yea but the Apostle saith Yee are saved by grace through faith therefore not onely grace but our owne faith is the cause of salvation I answer Faith is not here considered as any worke of ours but as an instrument whereby we receive grace and he must needs receive grace who will be saved by grace and how is grace received but by the hand of faith therefore faith doth not properly justifie and save a man either in whole or in part but receiveth righteousnesse and salvation and therefore is said to justifie because it receiveth salvation and righteousnesse and is the hand or instrument receiving but not deserving grace and salvation And when we say that faith doth justifie it is in respect of the object apprehended viz. Christ who only effectually and properly doth justifie by his grace So that this faith is so farre from being derogatorie from grace that no man can have grace that hath not faith to receive it and the Apostle joynes them fitly together grace whereby wee are saved and faith by which we apprehend it that which saves effectually and that which saves instrumentally that is grace and faith As the Israelites stung by serpents were healed by the brazen Serpent so are wee by Christ Ioh. 3.14 15. But they did nothing but onely looke upon the brazen Serpent so are we to doe nothing for our justification but to fix the eye of faith upon Christ whence wee see who must have the glorie for our salvation namely God 2. How vile and miserable we were before grace that there was nothing in us why God should love us or looke mercifully upon us or purpose to save us Before I proceed there is yet one generall note to be collected hence viz. That though the sins of the Iewes deserved a full rejection of them all yet God did not consider what they deserved but what might stand with his owne goodnesse and mercie So he did with rebellious Ephraim I will not destroy Ephraim for I am God and not man Hos 11.9 which is a wonderfull comfort to us poore sinner who many times deserve to be cast from Gods favour to have the meanes of salvation denied unto us to bee cast for ever from Gods presence yet God will not doe it for he considers what is sit to be done in mercie and therefore deferres his judgement from us and so I come to the conclusion of the application in the sixth verse VERS 6. And if it bee of grace it is no more of workes or else were grace no more grace but if it be of workes it is no more grace or else were worke no more worke THis latter part of the verse is left out by Origen Chrysostome and the Spanish Edition as Soto hath observed and also by the vulgar Edition but is constantly read by Arias Montanus Beza Casaubonus and in all the Greek copies they containe in them a porisme or inserence upon the former proposition the argument is raised from the nature of immediate contraries whereof the Law is in Aristotle that the putting off the one necessarily implyes the removing of the other The two contrarie termes grace and workes which cannot both be causes of election The Syllogisme seemes to bee made thus Both grace and workes cannot be the causes of election but grace is that was concluded in the fifth verse The reason of the sequele because then grace were no more grace but works But these be contraries Grace gives a reward not due a worke requires it as due As Paul distinguishing betweene faith and workes To him that worketh the wages is due not by favour but by debt Rom. 4.4 I will not insist upon the Apostles reciprocall argument I draw all to an Enthymeme we are elected of grace therefore not by workes and because the antecedent was handled before there remaines now nothing but the conclusion which I comprehend in one bare proposition thus God in mans election had no respect unto mans good workes Doct. I need not stand to tell you of Bellarmine who strongly confirmes the point in hand De grat lib. arbit lib. 2. cap. 10. In Hebr. 5. Sect. 7. contrarie to the Rhemists Annotation alleaging for themselves 2 Tim. 2.20 21. In a great house there bee vessels of honour c. If any man purge himselfe where say they by purging a mans selfe he is made a vessell of honour Bellarmines answer is good that Paul sayes not hee is made but he is that is it is hence manifest that he is a vessell of honor as if he should say there be two seals of mans being a vessel of honor the first inward that knowledge of divine approbation which is knowen onely to God the second outward the purging of our hearts and the cleansing of our consciences and reforming of our wayes of which Peter 2 Pet. 1.10 But for the further cleering of it I propose two or three reasons 1. That which is the effect fruit cannot justly be called the cause impulsive of election But all good works are effects fruits of election as the Apostle witnesseth He hath chosen us before the foundation of the world that we should be holy a Vt essemus sancti non quia suturi eramus secundium veluntatem suam non nostram quae bona esse non potest nisi ipse subveniat 〈◊〉 bona That we might be holy not because we were about to be holy and according to his will not ours which cannot bee good unlesse he makes it good saith Augustine And writing against Iulian the Pelagian b Nullum Dominus elegit dignum sed eligen do efficit dignū Lib. 5. cap. 3. The Lord chose none worthy but by electing man made him worthy 2. Our election depends not upon him that willeth Rom. 9.16 but of God that sheweth mercie c Vbi nune opera ubi merita praeterita velfutura liberi arbitrii viribus impleta Aug. in huncloc Epist 105. ad Sixtum Where are workes now where are merits past or to come filled with the powers of free will saith Augustine So that I may say of those who attribute election and justification to their workes as hee doth to Valentine a Glorianter quasi non acceperint qui opera jactitant in seipsis non in Domino gloriantur Epist 46. They glorie as if they received not who boast of their workes they glorie in themselves not in the Lord. And his conclusion against them shall be mine b Liberantur per
p. 258 Not to feare though meanes seeme contrarie p. 358 Shew our love to Christ to his members p. 53 Election is of mercie p. 62 God saveth man of free mercie p. 126 Mercie of God s●staining men even when they sin p. 160 All our good is of Gods mercie p. 314 Against the abuse of Gods mercie p. 3●9 The greatnesse of Gods mercie p. 352 Where Gods mercie most aboundeth hee punisheth sinne p ●69 Many now in state of sinne shall finde mercie p. 435 The elect onely shall have mercie p. 440 Wee should disclaime our workes in respect of merit p. 52 Man ready to ascribe the good things hee hath to his merit p. 306 Eternall life not by merit p. 426 Love to Ministers a signe of election p. 35 Few love Ministers as they ought p. ●6 Ministers their dutie p. 91 Reverence and love to Ministers p. 97 Of the labour of Ministers p. 248 258 Complaint of the ill carriage of Ministers p. 252 Duty of people to Ministers p. 259 Multitude no ro●e of the Church p. 101 The depth of Gods counsels should keepe in from murmuring p. 458 Reproofe of those that murmur against Gods works p. 464 Everie point of godlinesse a mysterie p. 366 Not to search too farre into hid mysteries p. 458 N. PApists brag only of the name of a Church p. 11 Nineveh the strength of it p. 12 Wee should most tender the salvation of those that are neare us p. 259 God will alter the course of nature for his childrens good p. 357 Iewes and Gentiles alike by nature p. 433 O. NEw obedience a signe of election p. 32 New obedience three conditions of it ibid. Assurance of glorie by obeying Gods call p. 73 Objections against the doctrine of election p. ●3 Oppose See Gospell God takes all opportunities to doe his children good p. 214 To imitate God in taking opportunities to doe good p. 215 Ordinances of God how to account of them p. 186 Wee should beware of those sinnes that wee see punisheth in others p. 342 How to keepe from censuring others p. 430 Ministers should chiefly intend the good of their owne people p. 247 Wicked men judge of their estate by outward things p. 9 Wicked men excell others in outward things p. 10 Not to judge our selves by outward things p. 13 Outward profession not to be rested in p. 113 Outward privileges exempt not from punishment p. 332 See Election P. PArentage neither furthereth nor hinders salvation p. 40 439 Meannesse of Parentage no prejudice p. 42 Paul his description of himselfe p. 18 Promises of God how made to men in particular p. 23 Good men defend Gods people from persecution p. 87 Who the wicked persecute most p. 93 New obedience perpetuall p. 32 Comfort to those that live in evill places p. 20 Everie sinne hath its plea. p. 296 Gods pleasure the impulsive cause of election p. 56 Power abused God takes away p. 194 Power of God absolute p. 407 Possesse See Satan Predestination what p. 49 Predestination and providence distinguished p. 50 Predestination defined ib. Predestination abused to sinne p. 53 Predestination the order of it p. 54 Predestination the parts of it p. 55 Predestination three effects of it p. 71 Predestination the impulsive cause of it p. 130 Prayer an effect of the Spirit p. 27 Example of Saints oft in prayer ibid. Three things make God not to heare prayer p. 106 See Weapons Forgetfulnesse the cause of pride p. 280 Pride how to abate it p. 281 Three things to keepe men from pride of gifts p. 291 Three reasons to keepe from pride p. 305 None should bee proud of that he enjoyes p. 366 Wicked men presume upon outward privileges p. 9 Not to be ●ortent with outward privileges p. 11 Sin will ruine a people notwithstanding all privileges p ●6 Privileges spirituall all by Christ p. 52 The Gentiles have the Iewes privileges p. 287 Sinne will bring downe these that have the greatest privileges p. 301 See Anger Outward Profession See Outward A miserie to heare and not profit p. 170 Meanes contemned profit not p. 175 What makes men so little profit p. 263 Promises of God assure us of salvation p. 22 Promises to the Iewes belong to us p. 275 What over God hath promised shall come to passe p. 401 See Particular When the Prophets are made away people fall from God p. 95 Good people feare the losse of their Prophets p. 243 Prudence in Ministers in denouncing judgements p. 200 Punishment three things in it p. 152 God punisheth men in their best things p. 184 Foure good effects God brings out of punishment p. 210 Like sinne brings like punishments p. 33 Punishments accompanie sinne p. 388 See Sin Outward Mercie Q. QVestions curious unnecessarie p. 466 R. MYsteries of salvation above reason p. 457 God receives great sinners p. 351 Christ reconciles man to God p. 398 The manner of Christs reconciling in five things ibid. Rejection of God twofold p. 47 Rejoycing of wicked men vaine p. ●9 Rejoycing in Gods promises p. 403 What causeth God to remove the Gospell 216 In great revolts God preserves some p. 372 The reward of holinesse 43 Reprobation what p. 56 Reprobation the causes of it p 64 67 Reprobation double p. 68 Reprobation two acts in it p. 69 Reprobation three questions concerning it ibid. The knowledge of God true riches p. 231 461 Motives to labour for the riches of the word p. 235 No man can attaine life by his owne righteousnesse p. 135 Three things in Christs righteousnesse ibid. Bellarmines objections against imputation of Christs righteousnesse p. 136 Imputation of Christs righteousnesse reconciles us p. 99 God rules all p. 92 S. THose in Christs keeping are safe p. 15 Those of all Nations that repent shall be saved p. 19 Those that doe good workes shall be saved p. 74 Three things in those that shall be saved p. 121 All men shall not be saved p. 134 Salvation offered by the Gospell p. 218 Ministers should aime at the salvation of their people p. 252 Salvation of whom to seeke it p. 400 None can satisfie for his sinnes p. 392 Popish satisfaction vaine ibid. Satans stratagems cannot cut off the elect p. 15 Satan how he holds wicked men p 45 Satan hardens the heart p. 147 186 Exhortation to read Scriptures p. 82 See Wise A judgement to have eyes and not see p. 167 Seeking two things in it p. 137 Seeking God five things in it p. 138 We must not search into secrets p. 459 Servitude under sin p. 386 A man should find the cause of judgements in himselfe p. 313 God made all things for himselfe p. 473 Sin cannot cut off the elect p. 15 Sin not the impulsive cause of reprobation p. 64 Reasons why God reprobates not for sin p. 65 The best workes of wicked men sin p. 74 Sin how God workes in it p. 152 Three things God doth concerning sin p. 158 God punisheth one sin with another p. 162 367 Foure good effects God brings out of sin p. 210 Sin the cause of peoples ruine p. 334 Sin how displeasing to God p. 337 Sin how God sits punishments to it p. 341 Sin the nature of it p. 395 Sin Christ weakneth it i● us p. 399 Sin two things in it p. 406 Sin what ever a carnall man doth p. 416 Sinne makes good things snares p. 180 Subjection See Bowing T. TO labour for tender hearts p. 143 Thanke God for preservation from idolatry p. 109 112 When Ministers must preach threatnings 349 Threatnings of God true p. 404 New obedience totall p. 32 Troubles to bee expected p. 95 Truth how the wicked dispute against it p. 99 God receives all that turne to him p. 173 God doth great things in short time p. 469 V. MAlice of wicked men against the Church vaine p. 119 Gods Church scarce visible sometimes p. 100 God hath alway a Church though not visible p 113 Heaven must be gotten by violence p. 397 Vocation an effect of election p. 72 God unchangeable p. 14 Comfort from Gods unchangeablenesse p. 93 To take heed of unthankfulnesse p. 160 How to bee ashamed of unthankfulnesse p. 225 Unbeleefe See Infidelitie Universall grace confuted p. 443 Universall grace an absurd doctrine p. 450 W. MInisters must give warnings of judgement p. 350 Weapons of the Church is prayer p. 89 Wicked men wearie of good things p. 28 Scriptures able to make wise p. 79 God most wise p. 464 The Iewes at their conversion shall be endowed with wisdome p. 239 Religion should have no winter p. 33 Will of God the impulsive cause of reprobation p. 69 Workes a fruit of election p. ●● 74 Motives to good workes p. 7● God in election had no respect to good workes p. 129. 307 Good workes justifie not p. 130 4●9 Workes of God how to bee affected with them 456 Obedience must be grounded on the Word p. 34 Word abused to maintaine sinne p. 205 Counsel of God must not be searched beyond the Word p. 462 To bee weaned from the world a signe of election p. 27 Iewes called toward the end of the world p. 218 Wicked m n overthrow the meanes of Gods worship p. 98 God wil avenge the wrongs of his p. 195 FINIS
bee made a snare the other of Isaiah Chap. 6.9 They shall see and not perceive heare but not understand from the seventh verse to the eleventh 3. The happy product and event that will follow this rejection of the Iewes and this calling of the Gentiles And this is double the one Salus Gentium i. The salvation of the Gentiles vers 11. The other in the same place Vt Iudaei conversione Gentium ad zelum provocati resipisoant i. That the Iewes being provoked to jealousie by the conversion of the Gentiles shall repent The which is enlarged by circumstances to the seventeenth 4. An exhortation to the Gentiles that they wex not proud nor insult over the Iewes First because they may bee cast off againe if they stand not constant in the faith Secondly because the Iewes shall againe be called home before the end of the world as Luke 21.24 this is from the seventeenth verse to the three and thirtieth 5. A conclusion of his disputation containing an admiration and astonishment of Paul to see the deepnesse or rather because hee cannot see the deepnesse of Gods wisdome in the ordering and effecting of mans salvation and happinesse to the end of the Chapter I begin with the consolation Consolation It consists of a question and an answer The question I say then hath God cast away his people 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 and the answer in the next God forbid Which answer is proved and made good by three arguments First his owne example I also am an Israelite vers 1. Secondly A Dei praecognitione From the prescience of God Non potest repellere quos praecognovit God hath not cast away his people whom hee fore-knew vers 2. Thirdly from the state of the Church in the time of Elias vers 4. I begin with the question Hath God cast away Quest c. which seemes to carrie this sence and meaning If it be true that God hath cast away the Iewes then God hath cast away his owne people then is God vnfaithfull in his promise made to Abraham their father Gen. 17.7 Gen. 17.7 I will establish my covenant between me and thee and thy seed for ever will God make such faire promises and then let his mercies faile forget to be gracious Psal 77.9 and shut up his loving kindnesse in displeasure Then it is to no purpose to bee in league with God neither any privilege of Gods people above others Before I come to the question it selfe you may observe that though in ten Chapters he had proved against them yet now he begins to speake on their sides and to question in their behalfe whence I gather this conclusion Be a people never so wicked and sinfull Doct. yet if the Word afford any comfort the Minister may not conceale it from them Simon Magus offering to buy the gifts of the Holy Ghost with money and purposing by them to get money committed such a sinne as made Peter denounce a heavie judgement Acts 8.22 Thy money perish with thee yet affords him that comfort which might raise him againe yet goe and pray it may bee the thoughts of thy heart may be forgiven Act. 8.22 The people of Israel after they came out of Aegypt grieved the Lord and Moses sometimes murmuring for flesh Exod. 16. Exod. 16. sometimes for water Chap. 17. sometimes by idolatrie Chap. 17. for they made a molten calfe Exod. 32.5 6. and said These be thy Gods O Israel Exod. 32.5 6. Sometimes by wantonnesse they sate downe to eat c. Exod. 32. Yet Moses must not deny them that comfort which God hath in store for them but bids them plucke up their hearts and be strong dread not nor bee affraid for the Lord God himselfe will goe before them Deut. 31.6 Deut. 31.6 Isaiah prophesieth thus unto Ezekiah Behold all that is in thine house thy sons thy children shall bee carried captives to Babylon Isa 39.6 Isay 39.6 Yet wil there be a day when he will bid his Prophets speake comfort to his people againe Comfort ye Chap. 40. 1. comfort ye c. chap. 40. 1. It is required of a dispencer that he be found faithfull 1 Cor. 4.2 1 Cor. 4.2 that if judgement belong to a man he denounce it if after judgement comfort he administer it and therein must endeuour to have alwayes a cleare conscience in keeping backe nothing that God would have spoken Acts 20.20 Acts 20.20 I adde no more but that of God unto Elijah touching Ahab Seest thou how Ahab is humbled God meaning him but so much comfort as to deferre his punishment till his sonnes dayes yet God will make the Prophet and the Prophet make Ahab acquainted with it 1 King 21.28 1 King 21.28 29. 29. The Minister must breake but hee must binde againe wound but he must heale againe cast downe but he must raise againe they must not be onely like Bonarges sonnes of thunder but like Barnabas sonnes of consolation to preach not onely captivitie but deliverance not onely judgement but mercie not onely desolation and miserie but joy and comfort Misericordia juduium sunt duo pedes Domini In Cant. Serm. 6. Mercie and judgement are the two fect of the Lord saith Bernard Therefore wee must not conceale them but tell them the people when God comes in judgement and when in mercie Therfore their course cannot be justifiable Vse 1 who doe nothing but teare the hearts of the people with judgements and will not reueale those mercies which the word affords whereas some might be won with mercie that are too much wounded with judgements sometimes a little suppling oyle may doe asmuch good as a great deale of wine Psal 101.1 Nemo sibi ad impunitatem blandietur quia est judicium nemo ad melius commutatus exhorreat judicium quia est misericordia Aug. in Psal 101.1 and milde lenitives may be as profitable as biting corrasives It is good to follow Dauids rule Psal 101. I will sing of mercie and judgement Augustine saith No man will flatteringly promise unto himselfe impunitie because there is judgement no man changed to better will tremble at judgement because there is mercie The long suffering of God leadeth to repentance Rom. 2.4 The long suffering of God is salvation 2 Pet. 3.15 God is as much to bee feared for his mercies as for his judgements Rom. 2.4 2 Pet. 3.15 For there is mercie with thee that thou mayest be feared Psal 143.4 Psal 143.4 We will not bruise a broken reed nor quench the smoking flax but like Christ himselfe Isa 42.3 Isay 42.3 Stengthen the weake knees and comfort the feeble minded and as we destroy so we will plant as we throw down by judgement so we will by mercie build you up againe to be lively temples for Christ to dwell in So I come to the question it selfe 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Of the Question c. Hath God
common to all true Christians as well as Paul As first on the death of Christ Hee that spared not his owne Son but gave him for us all c. vers 32. Secondly on Gods free justification Who can lay any thing to the charge of Gods elect it is Christ that justifieth c. Thirdly upon Christs intercession Hee is at the right hand of God making request to God for us vers 34. Vpon these grounds commonto all true Beleevers doth the Apostle ground his resolution Thirdly to all the promises of God are added the seales in the true use of the Sacraments Reason 3 that if any of the faithfull should doubt of the generall promises he might there have it sealed to his particular person Circumcision a seale of the righteousnesse of faith Rom. 4.11 So Ephes 1.13 After yee beleeved the Gospell you were sealed with the spirit of promise which is the earnest of our inheritance And 2 Cor. 1.22 Hee hath sealed us and given us the earnest of his spirit in our hearts Ephes 4.30 Grieve not the Holy Spirit whereby ye are sealed to the day of redemption 2 Tim. 2.19 I end it with the consideration of the phrase the Apostle useth 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Hee hath given us the earnest of his spirit the word signifies a pledge given or a seale annexed that wee may not doubt of the promises as men that lend a little money and take a good pawne are sure to bee no losers So hath God given us not onely his word but his covenant nor only his covenant but a seale nor only a seale but an oath nor only his word covenant seale and oath but a pawne and pledge and that no ineane one it is his holy Spirit He hath sent the spirit of his Son into our hearts Gal. 4.6 I come to let you see how a man may be sure of his salvation by infallible signs and marks 1. A conscionable care of the meanes of salvation and a desire to use them when wee doe enjoy them The signes whereby we may be assured of our election for the end and the meanes to the end are never severed in Gods purpose and decree and therefore it followes that all such as doe carefully use the meanes of salvation are sure in the end to attaine saluation For example the best means of saluation is the hearing of the Word that is the Bread of life whereof hee that eateth shall live ever Ioh. 6.27 that is the treasure hid in the field Matth. 13.44 They that seek Christ there shal not misse of him Search the Scriptures for in them ye thinke ye have eternall life Ioh. 5.39 And our Saviour allowes of this doctrine Ioh. 10.27 They are my sheepe that heare my voyce and follow me Audiunt lupi boedi sed non sequuntur Musc in Joh. Wolves and goats heare but follow him not saith Musculus upon Iohn They that seed in the greene pastures and are led forth to the waters of comfort have the Lord for their shepherd and keeper and then hee converts their soules and brings them forth into the paths of righteousnesse these men need feare no evill for with his rod and staffe the Lord comforts them they that follow the steps and the voyce of that heavenly Mercurie Qui pias laeth anlmas reponis sedibus Virgaque levem coercet anrea tur bam Hor lib. 1. Od 10. He amnica nobu incumbit sellicitudo ut audiamus vocem sequamur Aug. lib. de ovibus cap. 3. Who seateth holy soules in joyfull places and with his golden rod ruleth the unconstant multitude as Horace Lib. 1. Ode 10. need never feare what death and hell can doe against them This onely care lieth upon us that wee heare his voyce and follow him saith Augustine Therefore much too blame are they that are so slacke in this dutie that they much care not whether they heare or no and are kept from this house upon small occasion it makes mee feare they want a love of the meanes and therefore in the end must want the consummation of all comforts the salvation of their soules 2. The spirit of supplication and prayer The second signe of our Election when a man can open his heart and poure out his soule in strong cries and effectuall prayers unto God confessing his sinnes and suing for mercie and forgivenesse For this prayer is a worke and effect of the Spirit which by meanes naturall cannot be attained for we know not what to pray for as we ought Rom. 8.26 And therefore they that have a minde and love to pray they that finde a sweetnesse and comfort in it have surely the Spirit of God in them There is an holy anoynting that teacheth us what to pray 1 Ioh. 2.27 that anoynting is the Spirit and that verie Spirit witnesseth with ours that wee are the sonnes of God Rom. 8.16 a good comfort for such as love to be talking and conferring with God that are still commending their soules to him in prayer I would have you to be like Iames the Iust whereof Eusebius Booke 2. Chap. 23. Genua epu in morem Cameli obdurata sensum contaclus amiserunt His knees being hardened like to a Camels lost the sense of feeling and resolve with Ambrose Bishop of Millaine when he was to be exiled by Iustina the mother of Valentinian told them he would never run away but if they had any purpose to kill him they should at any time finde him in the Church praying for himselfe and his people as Charion remembers it Chron. Booke 3. I would have you to bee like Anna the daughter of Phanuel that never departed out of the Temple but served God in prayer night and day Luke 2.37 so might you know that Gods Spirit is in you indeed 3. To be wained and estranged from the world The third signe of our election to entertaine heavenly conference to minde heavenly things as Phil. 3.20 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Our conversation is in heaven If our hearts and that his soule is not filled O wretch that I am c. Rom. 7.24 Lastly a greedy desire of that which is able to satisfie an hungrie soule for I follow hard toward the marke Phil. 3.14 If any thus hunger and thirst blessed are they If any man thirst let him come to me and drinke c. Ioh. 7.37 what shall he drinke see Apoc. 21.6 I will give to him that is a thirst of the water of the well of life freely Yea but will that save Yes For he that drinketh of this shall never die nor be thirstie againe Ioh. 4.14 So that wee may say with Marie Hee will surely fill the hungrie with good things Luke 1.53 If any man thirst after God and his righteousnesse the Lambe that sits in the midst of the throne shall guide him and lead him to the fountaines of living waters Apoc. 7.17 If then you can say with David Psal 42.
in all the elect So that our point is this God did predestinate all that shall bee saved both to grace and glorie for his good pleasures sake not for any faith that he did foresee should bee in them Faith sore-seene no causes of election nor for any workes which hee knew they would does and wee can confirme it by these reasons following First Reason 1 from Rom. 9.11 That the purpose of God might remaine according to election not of workes but of him that calleth that is of the sole good pleasure of him that calleth from whence the argument may bee collected thus If election were for fore-seene faith then not of the sole good purpose of him that calleth but that is contrarie to the words of the Apostle Secondly Reason 2 Faith is a fruit of election and therfore must come after it therefore did God chuse us not because wee were about to beleeve but that we might beleeve See Ephes 1.4 He hath chosen us in him before the foundation of the world not because wee were but that wee might bee holy So in Tit. 1.1 it is called sides electorum Dei the faith of Gods elect In Acts 13.48 As many as were ordained to eternall life beleeved Thirdly Reason 3 Faith is the gift of God by grace are ye saved through faith which is the gift of God Ephes 2.8 And Phil. 1.29 Vnto you it is given for Christs sake that you should beleeve in him Initiorum sidei incrementique lagitor Deus Ambros de vocat Gent. lib. 2. cap. 1. and suffer for his sake God is the giver of the beginnings and encrease of faith Now this being granted it followes that God was not moved by foreseene faith to elect for that which God in electing did give to man could not bee the cause that moved God to elect man I might urge the argument of Augustine De predest Sanct. lib c. 16. Workes foreseene no cause of election That grace goes before faith in the order of nature as the cause precedes the effect I come to shew that God had not respect to mens workes I will not stand to shew how Bellarmine Bellarm. de gratia libero Arbit lib. 2. cap. 10. Sect. 9. affents unto my proposition and consirmes it contrarie to the Rhemists upon the Hebrewes who bring for themselves that in Heb. 5.9 He is made the Author of salvation to all that obey Hence they say a man is not elected without condition of obedience And that in 2 Tim. 2.20 21. in a great house there are not onely vessels of gold and of silver but also of wood c. and if any man purge himselfe hee shall be a vessell of honour where say they by free will and good workes a man is made a vessell of honour whereto I will shape them no other answer than that which is given by Bellarmine Deor●●●e lib. 2. cap. 13. For answer to the second testimony the Apostle faith not That a man by purging himselfe is made a vessell of honour but is a vessell of honour that is shall by this be knowen to bee a vessell of honour as if hee should say there bee two seales of mans being a vessell of honour one inward which cannot bee seene of us in this life that is the knowledge of divine approbation The other outward the avoyding of sinne and iniquitie that is by these it appeares that wee are surely predestinate and so wee are exhorted by Peter to make our calling and election sure Now the reasons whereby I prove my proposition are these 1. That which is the effect of election cannot be the cause Reason 1 But all good workes are fruits and effects of election as appeareth Ephes 1.4 upon which words Augustine Elegit nos ut essen us sanch non quia crornus secundum voluntatem suam non nostram quae bonaesse non possit nisi isse ut siat bona sabveniat Hee chose us that wee might be holy not because we were about to be holy and according to his will not ours which cannot bee good except hee helpe it that it may bee made good And verie excellent is that of the same Father against I ulianus the Pelagian He chose no man worthy but by chusing made him worthy 2. Lib. 5. cap. 3. Reason 2 Our election is not of him that willeth nor of him that runneth Rom. 9.16 but of God shewing mercie but if it were for our fore-seene workes it were not of mercie but of him that willeth and runneth Liberautur per gratiam aicnutur non vasa suorum meritorum sedm sericor diae August dexatura gratia lib. 5. cap. 1. They are freed by grace and are said to be vessels not of their owne merits but of mercie Yea the Rhemists upon Rom. 9.14 have confessed that election is a worke of Gods meere mercie contrarie to themselves and if of meere mercie then without all respect of our workes or fore-seene faith 3. Reason 3 It may be proved from Luc. 12.32 It is the Fathers pleasure to give you the Kingdome And Ioh. 15.16 Yee have not chosen mee but I have chosen you but if God should chuse men for good workes then they had first chosen him nor doth God chuse men because hee sees that men will doe good but chuseth men that hee make them workers of good and to persevere in good as Bellar mine proves it sufficiently Degratia lib. Arbit lib. 2. cap. 10. If any man be scrupulous and doubtfull let him but looke Aug. Epist 105. to Sixtus Epist 46. to Valentinus and Bellar mine in the place before noted I come to see what the adversarie hath against this doctrine that we may soone shape them an answer and shake them off The first may be out of Rom. 8.29 Object 1 Those whom he knew before he did predestinate to be made like to the image of his Sonne therefore Gods prescience of men to be like c. is the cause of Predestination whereto I answer first that their prescience is put for the proegumenicall cause that is his free mercie and the meaning is that whom God lookt upon in mercie hee did also predestinate to be made like to the image of his Sonne by righteousnesse and holinesse So the word is used Iob. 10.14 Psal 1.6 Secondly the Apostle saith not he knew them to be like and therefore did predestinate them but did predestinate them that they might be like Secondly they dispute from Matth. 20.8 Object 2 Call the Labourers and give them their hire therefore Heaven is ordained for mens good workes Whereto I answer first that the place sheweth that good workes are the way wherein men must walke that come to Heaven but they doe not prove that God in his decree had respect unto them There is a difference betweene the decree of predestination and the execution Good workes goe before the possession of Heaven but not before the purpose
and ordination of God Lib. 1. cap. 3. And S. Ambrose Of the calling of the Gentiles frames the argument of the place quire otherwise that Christs meaning in that Parable was to shew onely that men converted at the end of their dayes shall be by Gods mercie partakers of glorie and happinesse as well as others And so I come to the second part of predestination Of reprobation and the causes of it which makes the greater doubt whether reprobation have any other impulsive cause or reason besides the pleasure and will of God that is whether their fore-seene infidelitie and impenitencie in sinne did move God to reprobate any This latter that it was for sinne was anciently maintained by the Pelagians as may appeare by S. Augustines disputations against them in latter times by Stapleton Antidot in Epist ad Rom. onely of purpose to contradict Calvin his reasons be 1. Because the Apostle calls reprobation the hatred of God citing that of Malachy chap. 1. vers 3. I have hated Esau Now God hates nothing in man but sinne therefore God must needs fore-see that Esau would sinne and therefore hated him 2. From the Apostles words whom he will he hardeneth God hardeneth none but such as have an ill will already for which hee hardeneth them 3. From those words He suffered with much patience the vessels of wrath Rom. 9. vers 22. 4. Vpon those words God being willing to shew his anger now God shewes his anger against nothing but sinne and therefore did fore-see sinne which moved him to anger 5. The Apostle makes the cause why God did cast off the Iewes to bee partly their pride and vaine boasting of the Law Rom. 9.31 Israel which followed the Law of righteousnesse could not attaine to the Law of righteousnesse partly their incredulitie through unbeleefe they are cast off Rom. 11.20 and these doe shew that the sins of everie reprobate are to God a cause lawfully moving him why he doth absolutely reprobate him On the contrarie Calvin in that excellent book of predestination confuting Pighius cites that of the hating of Esau to prove that it was not for sin 2. That in Rom. 9. He hath mercie on whom he will and whom he will he hardeneth therefore his will is the onely cause of mercie and induration 3. The potter makes one vessell to honour another to dishonour onely because hee will much more God 4. That which is common to all both elect and reprobate cannot be the cause of reprobation now sinne was fore-seene not onely in the reprobate but in the elect also For by nature wee were all the children of wrath as well as others Ephes 2.3 5. Christ attributes the cause of illumination in some to Gods good pleasure of Excaecation in others to his good pleasure Some heare and have wisdome revealed unto them that they may bee saved some heare not but wisdome is hid from them I thanke thee O Father Lord c. and it is so because thy good pleasure was such Matth. 11.25 26. Thus you see what is said on both sides heare now for resolution what is to be established for conclusion Stapleton makes a two-fold reprobation Antid pag. 567. the one comparative the other absolute The comparative whereby one man and not another and this man rather than that being in the same masse and condition is ordained to punishment and the cause of this hee makes the sole will of God without any respect at all unto sinne Quaest ad Simplicianum lib. 1. quaest 2. So Augustine hath fully resolved the question The other absolute whereby God ordained this or that man to destruction and the cause of this is their foreseene sinne But this cannot be true for God did fore see sinne in the elect as well as in others and yet did not reprobate them and therefore sinne could not be the cause of absolute reprobation any more than of the comparative Bellarmine writing of grace and free-will Lib. 2. cap. 16. comes neerer than Stapleton and resolves it thus that in reprobation there is a double act the one negative whereby God did decree not to have mercie on some whereof saith he there is no cause in man but it is only of the will of God The other act is positive whereby hee decreed to damne those upon whom hee decreed not to shew mercie and the cause of this hee makes the fore-sight of mans sinne But I thinke that Paraeus upon Rom. 9. hath gone as neere to the truth as any other whom I am content to follow till I see a sounder than he 1. We are to hold The causes of reprobation spoken of in the Scriptures two wayes that the Scriptures speak of the judgements of God and of the causes of damnation and reprobation two wayes 1. According to that absolute power which God hath over man and all creatures and then ascribes the cause of all to his good will pleasure So in Isa 45.7 I am he that for me the light and create darknesse I make peace and create evill c. So Ephes 1.11 He worketh all things according to the counsell of his will 2. According to that ordinate right that is the rule of distributive justice revealed in the Law and in the Gospell to which Law God doth as it were submit himselfe and according to that which is there revealed he would have us to thinke of his judgements and so the cause is to be referred partly to Gods will partly to mans sin As Levit. 18.5 Ye shall keepe my statutes which if a man doe he shall live in them And Ezech. 18.4 The soule that sinneth shall die They which commit such things are worthy of death Rom. 1.31 And 2 Thess 1.6 It is a righteous thing with God to recompence tribulation to them that trouble you And out of this ground arise the conclusions thus 1. If wee speake of Gods absolute justice and right the cause of both election and reprobation is the sole will of God So Rom. 9.11 Ere ever the children were borne and before they had done either good or evill that the purpose might remaine c. And vers 15. I will shew mercie on whom I will and have compassion on whom I will And vers 21. Hath not the potter power of the clay And Matth. 11.26 Even so O Father because thy good pleasure was such Neither can any reason oppose this for if the Pope should carrie many thousands to hell with him no man might say so much as what doest thou Gratian. distinct cap. 40. and shall any dare to question with God in the same 2. According to his ordinate right the Apostle speakes of it Rom. 9.22 What if God would to shew his wrath and to make his power knowen suffer with long patience the vessels of wrath prepared to destruction where there is the cause of election the good will and the cause of reprobation his will according to the rule of justice revealed
point which may bee built upon the immutabilitie of God 2. Vpon Christs keeping of the elect 3. Vpon Christs testimony Ioh. 10. 4. Vpon the sealing of Gods covenant Vnto these I may adde the authoritie of Augustine a Si quispiam eleclorum pereat tum fallitur Deus sed nemo corum perit quia non fallitur Deus Aug. de corrept gratia cap. 7. If any of the elect should perish then God is deceived but none of them perisheth because God is not deceived b Herum si quispiam peroat vitto bumano vincitur Deus sed nemo eorum perit quia xulla re vi●citur Deus If any of these should perish God is then overcome by humane vice but none of them perisheth because God is overcome by nothing And against the Romanist I oppose their owne Espencaeus on 2 Tim. pag. 51. citing that of Augustine of catechizing the simple chap. 11. out of that Ierusalem there was not any that perished And Lombard Non potest utrumque esse c. Dist●●ct lib. 1. dist 40. Both these cannot bee true that any should be predestinate and not saved And Aquinas Part. 1. quaest 23. Art 3. One predestinate may die in respect of himselfe in a mortall sinne yet not in supposition or in a compounded sense And againe Quaest 24. Art 3. They that are written in the booke of life can never be blotted out The Vse is Vse To stay the trembling and fearefull hearts of many of Gods people in the day of temptation for though they fall yet shall they rise againe The most just man falleth seven times and riseth againe Prov. 24.16 The dearest of Gods servants may sinne as Peter did and as David and yet be pardoned and received to mercie againe Yet observe a difference betweene to sinne and to make or commit a sinne They sinne that deflect never so little from the strictnesse of the Law whether it be of ignorance infirmitie or malice they doe doe and commit sinne who sinne purposely although they have not performed the worke As Christ said to Iudas knowing what was in his heart what thou doest doe quickly So that to d●e a sinne is in ones minde to purpose or devise a sinne and of this is the Apostle to be understood 1 Ioh. 3.8 9. Everie one that doth sinne is of the Devill and hee that is borne of God sinneth not So the conclusion stands good that though the elect may sinne yet they cannot finally be cast off You may bee tolerably well armed against Popish objections if you remember that there is a two-fold election 1. To the undergoing of a certaine office as of Saul to a Kingdome of Iudas to an Apostleship Ioh. 6.70 Have not I chosen you and one of you is a Devill 2. To eternall life as Luk. 10.20 Your names are written in heaven In this Gods people are to rejoyce Secondly that many seeme to have faith which indeed have not and therefore make shipwracke of a good conscience 1 Tim. 1.19 Of such Ezechiel If the righteous man fall away from his righteousnesse Chap. 18.24 which places are alleaged by Bellarmine De justifi lib. 3. cap. 12. to prove the falling from grace And thus S. Luke himselfe speakes Luke 8.18 From him that hath not that which it seemeth he hath Perdiderunt fidem quàm viderentur potiùs babuisse quàm habu sse shall bee taken away They lost their faith which they seemed rather to have than to have indeed saith Espencaeus on 1 Tim. 1.19 Thirdly that hypocrites and unbeleevers may for a while bee counted amongst the branches of Christs owne planting though they be not such Everie plant which my Father hath not planted c. Matth. 15.13 They are branches secundùm praesentem justitiam according to the present righteousnesse non secundùm praescientiam not according to fore-knowledge as Ambrose distinguisheth of them Fourthly Faith in Scriptures is sometimes used for the sound doctrine of godlinesse In the latter times some shall depart from the faith 1 Tim. 4.1 Sometimes for the gift of miracles If I had faith c. 1 Cor. 13.10 Fifthly the faith of the best of the elect may decay and be shaken be like fire under the ashes like the soule in the time of a swounding like the Moone under a cloud a Sed electorum fides aut non deficit aut si deficiat reparatur antequam v●ta finiatur De Corrept gratia cap. 7. But the faith of the elect either faileth not or if it faileth it is repaired before life be endèd saith Augustine I end all with that of Lombard b Sinihil à charitate Dei nos separet quid non solùm melius sed certius hoe bono esse potest Lib. 1. di●● 17. Analysis If nothing can separate from the love of God what can bee not onely better but more certaine than this good So I come to the third Argument Know yee not what the Scripture saith of Elias c. This Argument stands upon a comparison of Israel in the dayes of Elias with the present estate of the Iewes in Pauls time The estate of the Iewes in Elias his time is expressed in 1 Kin. 19.14 Elias complaineth Lord they have digged downe thine altars c. To which the Lord answereth vers 18. Yet have I left me seven thousand in Israel c. The state of the Iewes in Pauls time is Rom. 11.5 Even so at this time is there a remnant In the Argument I observe 1. Whither Paul goes for resolution to wit the Scripture 2. The resolution which containes 1. Elias his complaint vers 2 and 3. 2. Gods answer But what saith the answer of God vers 4. 3. The application that Paul makes of it to his present use Even so at this time vers 5. I begin with the first whither Paul goes for resolution that is the Scripture The Scripture is able to make us wise unto salvation Doct. through faith that is in Christ Iesus and is profitable c. 2 Tim. 3.15 That the man of God may be absolue and perfect Or as Salomon speakes Prov. 2.9 The word will make us understand righteousnesse and judgement and everie good path we must repaire to the Law and testimony Isa 8.20 and above that which is written we may not presume 1 Cor. 4.6 When one asked Christ what hee might doe to be saved hee referres him onely to the Scriptures How readest thou and What is written Luc. 10.26 So Abraham answered the rich Glutton They have Moses and the Prophets let them heare them Luk. 16.29 So the conclusion stands good That for resolution of doubts in things to be beleeved we have recourse onely to the word of God The Scripture alone is a sufficient Iudge of controversies unto this for satisfaction marke yee what Basil saith to Eustatius a Physitian Epist 80. Let the holy Scriptures be arbitrators betweene us and whosoever hold opinion consonant to
to her might seeme righteous saith Augustine Yet will the Lord gather her as a hen gathereth her chickens under his wings Matth. 23. What man so farre gone as Manasses who built altars to strange gods sacrificed his sonnes to Moloch gave himselfe to witchcraft charming and sorcerie used them that had familiar spirits and did evill in the sight of the Lord to anger him Yet being in tribulation when he prayed and humbled himselfe greatly then the Lord heard him and was intreated and he knew that the Lord was God 2 Chron. ●3 6 12 13. So true is that of the Prophet Ezek. 33.12 〈…〉 non attendi cum enim Deus ve●● 〈◊〉 qu abo●us ●●ssa quia om●●pot●s ipse contra fratrem ●d vinae 〈…〉 nam cla●dit qui Deum credit aut no● velle aut 〈…〉 The wickednesse of the wicked shall not hart him in the day that he turneth to the Lord. Be the sinne never so great I may say as S. Augustine doth O man who attendest to that multitude of thy sinnes why doest thou not attend to the omnipotencie of the heavenly Physitian 〈◊〉 for seeing God will shew mercie because he is good and can because he is omnipotent he shuts the gate of divine pietie against his brother who beleeveth that God either will not or cannot have mercie And why wilt thou shut him out of heaven whom Christ hath not shut out of it David is farre gone in a ●●lterie and murder Peter in back-●●d●ns and apostasie Paul in tyrannie and 〈…〉 and Gods Church Aug. de te●pore Serm. 58. Mali● ut pes fraupatur aut manus cum labore ad 〈◊〉 offierum revocat●● ●●●●●ium 〈…〉 non 〈…〉 ego non 〈◊〉 yet the word of a 〈…〉 Divid the crowing of a 〈…〉 a light shining and a voice sounding 〈…〉 brings Paul to Christ againe Yet 〈…〉 this to incourage thee on in sinn● 〈…〉 what Augustine saith in the cited 〈…〉 foot or hand be broken it is with 〈…〉 its first office if againe ●●t more hard 〈…〉 third time not without much paine if daily I iudge not of it But though I may not despaire of thy salvation yet it may be God will not bestow salvation though I may not judge thee yet it may be the Lord will though I may not censure thee yet it may be that the Lord will condemne thee I will hope God will shew thee mercy but thou without repentance must feele his justice Be thou never so farre gone yet returne to the Lord as thou art commanded and God wil bestow upon thee that mercy which he hath promised But I leave this and proceed to touch the instrument wherewith the Iewes are fet from death to life The Gospell In Iohn 5.25 In Iohan. tract 22. The dead shall heare the voice of the Sonne of God and they that heare it shall live which Augustine expounds of the raising of men dead and buried in infidelitie and sinne at the hearing of the word Transeunt a morte infidelitatis ad vitam side They passe from the death of infidelitie to the life of faith I am not ashamed of the Gospell for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that beleeueth Rom. 1.16 that is an effectuall instrument of power as Paraeus and Beza expound it In this God reveales his true and absolute righteousnesse with which life and salvation is alwayes joyned and by the ministerie of the word is salvation conveyed and communicated to all that obey it and is therefore called the arme of the Lord Isa 53.1 whereby he can open the graves of sinne wherein men are buried and restore them to their lives againe Man without faith is dead and faith is that which makes the soule alive Augustine upon the words of Christ to Lazarus Ioh. 11.43 Lazarus come forth saith that surgere to arise is credere to beleeve to come forth is to confesse and that which Christ said at the 44. verse Loose him and let him goe S●lvi 〈◊〉 〈…〉 is true of the Minister of the Gospell who by the word looseth the bands of sinne and iniquitie wherein they were tied I might tell you of Iames Andrew and Matthew and the rest but I will only remember you of S. Augustine Aug. Cons 〈◊〉 8 〈…〉 as hee writes of himselfe that when he sate weeping and speaking these words Quarenon●od● q●●ren●● 〈…〉 relle ●ege Why not to day why not to day he heard a voice saying Take up and read take up and read which he expounds thus that he should open the booke of God and read the first place he light upon he tooke the booke and opened it and he hit upon Rom. 13.13 14. Not in gluttonie and drunkennesse not in chambering and wantonnesse not in strife and envying but p●t on the Lord Iesus Christ and take no thought for the flesh Thus saith he was I converted and thus raised from death to life When our parents have begotten us to die the Word begets us to life The parent may say I knew I begat a mortall childe but he that begets by the Word may say I knew I begat an immortail one Hereupon it is a manifest marke that we are aliue if we beare a loue to the Word whereby wee are begotten no better signe to know that thou art a sonne than thy loue to that which begot thee and it is the Word that begets us 1 Iam. 18. 1 Pet. 1.23 Hence Vse first learne to apply this Gospell unto our owne hearts and this medicine that quick neth the dead to our owne soules The Gospell is like to a medicine excellent onely in the application Thinke that everie promise thou hearest belongeth unto thee everie precept thou hearest pertaineth to thee every word of reproofe takes hold of thee If I be convinced of any sinne I will endevour to reforme it if I heare of any judgement I will endevour to prevent it if I heare of mercie I will surely embrace it if I heare of a garland I will run for it of a crowne of glorie I will sight for it if I have formerly presumed to sinne because God is mercifull I will now tremble at his judgements if formerly despaired because of mine owne sinne and Gods justice I will now cheere up my drooping heart for mercie rejoyceth against judgement if thou bee never so sicke apply this Gospell to thy soule this will heale thee as it did the Leper Matth. 8.3 If never so blinde apply this Gospell this will cure thee as it did Bartimaeus Mark 10.52 If never so long dead apply this Gospell it will make thee alive againe as it did Lazarus Ioh. 11.43 But apply it to thy selfe not to others Bee not like gracelesse Spend-thrifts that say O there were good lessons against this greedinesse not like the Vsurer there were good lessons against prodigalitie and unthriftinesse not like the strict Pharisie O there were good lessons against libertie and licentiousnesse not like
hee reasons thus with himselfe If I should live never so strictly I could be no better if never sobadly I can be no worse why should I cut my selfe short of any thing that I like He that beleeves not the judgements will never sticke to doe any evill he that beleeves not the promises will never be forward to doe any good so that all sinnes both of omission and commission arise from this Why doth one steale but because hee beleeves not that of the Apostle 1 Cor. 6.10 No theefe shall enter into the kingdome of God What makes another bee covetous a third a wanton but because hee beleeves not that in Ephes 5.5 Why doth another turne base Vsurer but because hee beleeves not Ezek. 18.13 Why will one breake the Sabbath but because hee beleeves not the promise Isa 5.6 and Isa 5.8 Why will another see the member of Christ to starve but because hee beleeves not that in Matth. 25. that Christ shall say Come yee blessed c. Why doe so many evilly entreat the Minister and doe him little or no good but because they beleeve not that Mat. 10.40 41. Hee that receiveth you receiveth mee and so in all other sinnes Hence Gregorie Resurgit infidelis ad tormentum non ad judicium Greg. Moral lib. 26. cap. 24. The unbeleever shall rise to torment not to judgement according to that Ioh. 3.18 Hee that beleeveth not is condemned already The Vse is to make us labour for true faith to beleeve all the promises and judgements of God Vse and to this purpose to make much of the Word for by that is faith wrought Rom. 10.17 Wait at the poole till the Angell comes sit at the feet of Gamaliel wait at the posts and porches of Gods house to learne wisdome Men would tarrie too long here if it were an Exchange where they might bargaine for wealth why will they not tarrie to heare him and of him in whom are all the treasures of wisdome and knowledge Col. 2.3 Many would rise early and provide to come into this house if it were to gather jewels and pearles But why will they not doe so to learne wisdome which is better than pretious stones Prov. 8.11 Why will they not doe so ro receive instruction which is better than silver and knowledge which is better than gold Prov. 8.10 O then if you would have faith wrought in you use the word as Alexander used Homers Odysses as Saul used his speare 1 Sam. 26.7 and as God commanded Ioshua chap. 1.8 let it never depart from thee I make short with this point because I meet it at the 30. verse and come to a third conclusion from this first answer Through unbeleefe they are broken off Man is the cause of his owne ruine Doct. 3 and his destruction is from himselfe Therefore saith God O Israel one thing hath destroyed thee Nimirum iniquitas tua desectio ad idola Hos 13.9 To wit thy inquity thy falling away to Idols saith Zanchius It seemes that they were wont to lay all the blame upon God whensoever they were destroyed and here hee instructs them where they should justly lay the blame to wit upon themselves for God never leaves a man till man have first left him as S. Augustine proves purposely Aug. De Civit. Dei lib. 13. ca. 15. The Apostle 1 Thes 5.3 tels us That destruction comes on men that be secure as paine upon a woman in travaile now a woman in travaile beares the cause of her owne griefe within in her wombe so doth man If it be said that mans condemnation and destruction is of Gods will in the act of reprobation for answer observe three premises and foure conclusions out of the second verse so that still it stands that man is the cause of his condemnation Adam shuts himselfe out of Paradise the Angels shut themselves out of heaven and whosoever dieth draweth that judgement upon himselfe by his owne sinne God being as free from it as the Iudge that pronounceth deserved death upon a wilfull murtherer is free from the death of the murtherer From whence learne that whensoever any judgment is upon us Vse 1 when God sends his destroying Angell among us when he makes the heavens as brasse when he hides his face and loving countenance away in displeasure to looke with nour selves for the cause of it as those that were with Ionas in the ship in the storme said Come and let us know for whose cause this evill is upon us Ionah 1.7 Seeke not thy selfe without thy selfe N●te quaesev●ris extra and when the secret sinne which brings the trouble upon us is once found cast it out as they cast out Ionas into the sea Secondly learne that if ever God cast us off from being his people Vse 2 that wee acquit God of all hard dealing and thanke our selves if it goe ill with us Babylon is destroyed shee may thanke her pride Sodome is turned to ashes she may thanke her wantonnesse Ierusalem inhabited by Turks and Infidels shee may thanke her infidelitie and Idolatry If woe bee to Capernaum and Bethsaida they may thanke their contempt of the Gospell If Laodicea be spued out of the mouth of God she may thanke her lukewarmenesse If ever we be enforced to sit by the waters of Babylon and to remember Sion with tears if ever God make us a prey to our enemies stop the influence of the heavens take away his Gospell and suffer us to walke in darknesse we may thanke our selves for God may justly cut us off as hee did them Sodome for her wantonnesse our land is full of the sinnes of Sodome Babylon for pride our land is full of it men and women are in travaile of new and quaint devices houses are made palaces gardens made Edens womens heads and breasts like ped ers shops Seeke the religions of all Heretikes we have them the fashions of all Nations we have them the symtomes of a dying and decaying people we have them I pray God we may never see that day wherein God shall judge us but if it come we may thanke our selves And so I come to the second part of the Apostles reply in these words Thou standest by faith To prove that they were not ingrafted for their owne worthinesse By faith Whereby God hath freely given it thee saith Paraeus on Rom. Quá t● gratis donavit Deus Quia Dei● ise●icord â insiti sunt fi●e 11. Because out of Gods mercy they are engrafted by faith saith Soto on Rom. 11. Now by standing by faith is noted both our entrance and continuance in Gods favour whence the maine point to be learned is this It is Gods meere favour and mercy that ever we are Doct. or continue to be his children and no worth or merit of our owne Whatsoever good we have it is his mercy to us in his sonne In Ephes 1.3 Hee hath blessed 〈◊〉 with all stirituall blessings in heavenly things in
Christ In the fourth verse He hath chosen us in Christ At the fifth He hath predestinate us to be adopted through Christ At the sixth Hee accepted us in his beloved viz. in Christ At the seventh Wee have redemption through his bloud that is Christ At the eighth He hath abounded to us in all wisdome At the ninth He hath opened the mysterie of his will by him viz. Christ At the tenth Hee hath reconciled things in heaven and earth even in Christ Thus if we have any good it is from Gods mercy to us in Christ So if wee be in a happy blessed condition the beginning and whole progresse is of Gods favour as 1 Ioh. 3.1 Behold what love the father hath shewed on us that we should be called the sonnes of God If regenerate it is his mercy and courtesie Blessed bee God who of his abundant mercy hath begotten us againe unto a lively hope 1 Pet. 1.3 If a man have many good motions and desires and so be said to beginne well if hee hold out till the end of his dayes in holmesse and integrity till hee have the Crowne upon his head and the Garland in his hand and so be said to run well yet the Apostle rels us That it is not in him that willeth nor in him that runneth but of God that sheweth mercie Rom. 9.16 Therefore saith the Apostle That of our selves we cannot so much as thinke a good though but all our sufficiencie is of God 2 Cor. 3.5 so that-if it goe well with us if we please God live in his feare die in his favour say as Deut. 9.4 It was not for my sake but his love because he had a favour unto me I come to a second point Doct. It is faith whereby the branches of Christs planting are distinguisht from those that are cut off For first it makes them that have it full of good works meeknesse temperance c. 2 Pet. 1. the other are barren like the mountaines of Gilboa Act. 15.9 Secondly it cleanseth the hearts of those that have it others remaine uncleane and polluted in their owne menstruous bloud Thirdly faith makes those that have it bold and consident to come unto God Ephes 3.12 It makes them long for the approaching of the Sonne of God and to say with the Spouse Apocal. 22. Come Lord Iesus come quickly but they that want it and shall be cut off are afraid of it they cry to the hills cover us and to the mountaines fall upon us Apoc. 6.16 Fourthly it makes them to sigh and groane waiting for the redemption of their bodies Rom. 8.23 which is not but in such as have the first fruits of the spirit Fiftly it works obedience unto God It makes Abel to offer a better sacrifice than Cain and Enoch to please God Heb. 11.5 whereas they that want it cannot please God in any thing Heb. 11.6 They that have this excellent gift of God shall never be cut off nor fall away they that want it cannot escape the vengeance of eternall fire Now there is nothing else wherein they differ to looke to they are both alike Iude and Iudas Simon and Peter and Simon Magus in outward profession both alike in externall dignities both alike in riches both alike but there is one thing wherein they differ viz. faith The outside of the earth is all alike but some parts are more rich within because of the veines of gold and silver So are the outsides of men From whence learne to know Vse whether thou art one that belongest unto God or not one that shall be cut off In ipsâ distinguntur filii Dei à filiis Diaboli filii lucis à filiis tenebrarum or not that 's by thy faith In this the sonnes of God are distinguisht from the sonnes of the devill the sonnes of light from the sonnes of darknesse saith Augustine In this scrutiny and examination Aug de Tempore Serm. 53. take heed thou beguile not thy selfe with a dead and counterfeit saith and therefore for triall I commend unto thee Chrysostomes rule Faith is tried by works without works Fi●es probatur ●e●o ●a Chrys in 1 Thes 1. H●m 1. F●d●s ●lmilis e●t 〈…〉 tuto Ch●●●●n 2 〈◊〉 3 H●●●●l 8. faith is like to a faire body void of life to a golden picture or statue saith the same Author The fruits whereby thou must examine it are 1. diligent hearing 2. prayer as in Rom. 5.1 2. If you have these thou hast a true faith and art a living branch if not it is a dead faith and thou art a brand provided for the fire And so I come to the Apostles exhortation Be not high minded but feare 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 Be not pust in minde 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 This feare saith Bez● is according to the Hebrewes the religious worship of God a godly care More ●ebrae● i● reug●●●●● D●ic●l●us p●o ●●●●ludo not because they need doubt of Gods love but because they should feare to offend him that loved them so dearly Whatsoever is in the former part of the exhortation hath beene observed at the 18. verse and that which is in the second may be contained in this conclusion A good Christian must live in continuall feare to offend his God Doct. and in a continuall feare of falling into siune This is it whereto the Apostle exhorts his Philippians worke out your salvation with feare and trembling Phil. 2.12 and Peter his Iewes Pass the time of your dwilling here in feare 1 Pet. 1.17 and he whom Solomon blesseth Blessed is he that alwayes feareth Prov. 28.14 and he whom God will spare in the day of his wrath Malac. 3.16 17. It is not my purpose to explicate all the acceptions of feare being taken first for the whole worship of God according to the Hēbrewes as Beza and Marlorat so here Rom. 11.20 Secondly for obedience Give to every man his due feare to whom yee owe feare Rom. 14.7 Thirdly for true religion Is not this thy feare Iob 4.6 Fourthly for reverence and an awfull regard of God Serve the Lord with feare c. Psal 2.11 Nor to shew the divers kinds of feare some is filiall some servile and they differ thus Filiall feare proceeds from confidence and love of God The differences between filiall and servile feare servile feare from the accusation of sinne and sense of Gods wrath Secondly filiall feare shunneth the offending of God but not God himselfe servile is the shunning not of sinne but of the judgement due to sinne and consequently of God himselfe Thirdly filiall feare is joyned with the certainty of eternall salvation servile feare with the feare of eternall damnation The more curious difference of these two may be had from Thomas and Bonaventure noted by the Magdeburgenses Cent. 13. chap. 4. Nor of that other distinction of feare into naturall feare such as was in Christ Matth. 26.27 and distrustfull feare which is called the spirit of bondage
vers 25. There is no sinner so great Doct. but if he come home and returne God will receive him Wee are like unto prodigals and God like that kinde and loving father Luk. 15. We are like sheepe going astray and God like a shepherd that both seekes us and when wee are found receives us into his fold as vers 24. See Ephraim Ierusalem Manasses To this purpose saith God to Israel That though a man have defiled his neighbours wife oppressed taken by violence lift up his eyes to Idols given to usury yet if that man returne from his wickednesse that hee hath committed hee shall save his soule alive Ezek. 18.27 Nay if he returne hee shall live and not die vers 28. And Paul so beseecheth the Corinthians in Gods name Come out from these idolaters and polluted persons and I will receive you c. 2 Cor. 6.17 Therefore Peter sends Simon Magus to pray that if it were possible his sinne might bee pardoned Acts 8.22 And Daniel having interpreted the dreame to Nebuchadnezzar that hee should bee driven out amongst the beasts of the field yet puts him in hope of a restoring If he will breake off his sinnes by righteousnesse and his iniquitie by mercie to the poore Dan. 4 2● The reason i● taken from the infinite dimension of Gods mercie Reason whereof I may lay as Simonides in Tully De natur Deor. lib. 1. who being demanded what God was still ●●sired more time c. Hee alwayes delights in mercie more than in justice to bee called a God of mercie is a title wherein hee delights much but that he is called a God of judgment I finde not passing twice in Isa 30.18 and in Malac. 2.17 Marke how hee proclaimes himselfe Exod. 34.6 7. The Prophet tels us Isa 28.21 that it is a rare thing with God to execute judgement The Lord shall stand as upon mount Perazim that he may doe his worke his strange worke Hee is much like to Od●vius Vtinam nescirem literas Would I knew not my letters Much like to Cato Non memini me percussum I remember not that I was stricken Much like to Phocion Filius mens non ulciseatur injurias Let my sonne not be revenged of injuries Not like to Theodosius who put the Thessalians to the sword for the sake of few but like Caesar in Plutarch who made the men of Cnidium free Denisons because of Theopompus or like Darius that milde Persian Generall who spared Delos He is so glad of the conversion of sinners that he stands waiting and looking for them Isa 65.1 2. It pleaseth him so well that the verie Angels rejoyce at it Luk. 15.10 And it is Gods ordinarie course to watch all opportunities and seeke all occasions to shew mercie as Gen. 18. at Abrahams suit for Sodome hee would have spared the whole Citie for ten righteous persons and Ier. 5.1 If one righteous man might bee found hee promiseth to pardon all the rest for his sake Where I meet with the errour of the Donatists and Novatians who denied repentance Vse 1 and receiving again into the fellowship of the Church unto all those that shrunke from the profession of faith in time of persecution or fell into manifest offences after Baptisme whereas the word is flatly against it in many particulars as 2 Cor. 2.6 7 8. where the Apostle speaking of the incestuous man he saith It is sufficient to the same man that he was rebuked of many so that now you ought to forgive him and comfort him that hee bee not swallowed up of overmuch heavinesse Wherefore I pray you to confirme your love towards him And Matth. 18.22 The brother must bee forgiven untill seventie times seven 2. Vse 2 Let no man albeit hee have beene never so great a sinner or never so often fallen and offended despaire of Gods mercie for then hee will not bee more fearfull to commit sinne but more willing to fall into it for hee that despaires reasons thus with himselfe It can prejudice mee nothing that I am a drunkard for I am already out of all hope of Heaven That I prophane the Sabbath for I have no hope of glorie why should I serve the Lord I am none of his sonnes please him I am none of his servants run I look for no garland fight I look for no crowne strive I shall not enter in at the strait gate pray I shall nor be heard sow in teares I shall never reape in joy But let a sinner acknowledge and bewaile his offences before God labour to forsake sinne and lead a new life learne Davids rule Eschew evill and doe good Psal 34.13 the Prophet Ezekiels rule Cast away your transgressions and make you cleane hearts Ezek. 18.31 the Prophet Isay's rule Cease to doe evill and learne to doe well Chap. 1.16 17. And then comfort your selves as God comforts them vers 18. I would have all sinners to resolve with the servants of Benhadad when an hundred thousand of his armie were slaine in field and seven and twenty thousand by the falling of a wall upon them as 1 King 20.29 30. Then his servants said unto him we have heard that the Kings of the house of Israel are mercifull Kings O homo qui t●lam attendis peccatorum multitudin●● ●ar non attendis omni●oten●iam calestis Medici cum enim Deus velit quia bonus est possit quia omnspotens est c. Aug. de temp Serm. 58. wee pray thee let us put sack-cloth upon our loynes and ropes about our neckes and goe to the King of Israel it may be he will save us alive 1 King 20.31 It was a good saying of Augustine O man that considerest the multitude of thy sinnes why considerest thou not the omntipotencie of the heavenly Physitian seeing that God will because he is good and can because he is omnipotent he shuts the gate of Gods love against himselfe who beleeves that either God cannot or will not have mercie on him And an excellent meditation of Chrysostome If thou beest wicked thinke of the Publican Si impius es cogita publicanum si immundas attende meretricem si homicida prospice latronem si iniquus cogita blasphemum peccasti poenitere millies peccasti millies poenitere Chrysost hom 2. in Psal 50. if uncleane consider the harlot if a man-slayer looke upon the theefe if unjust thinke on the blasphemer hast thou sinned repent hast thou sinned a thousand times repent a thousand times Heaven gates are never shut when penitent sinners knocke Hee that for ten mens sakes would have spared Sodome will spare them Yet this is no encouragement to sinne for mercie must not make us sinne but feare to sinne as Psalm 130.4 Hee that sinnes in hope of mercie shall finde none for presumption is nothing else but a vaine hope or an high house on weake pillars He that saith I will sinne and bee sorrie and escape God will not see or not bee angrie or not punish and
our Lord Rom. 6.23 From hence I may first approve of the conclusion of Fulgentius a Nos nec bona posse nec velle nisi Deus utrumq●elargiatur Ad Monim lib. 1. Wee neither can nor will doe good unlesse God gives us both Secondly I may approve of the doctrine of S. Augustine on Psal 118. b Solus liberi arbitrii vires non suffi ere ad divina mandata implerda The powers of the will alone suffice not to the keeping of Gods commandements and therefore must wee say without all pride Vse 2 Thou hast commanded Lord but I would it might be done for mee which thou hast commanded And therefore Augustine Give Lord what thou commandest and command what thou wilt Thirdly c Praecepisti Domine sed utinam fiat mihi quod praecepisti Da Domine quod jubes jube quod vis Aug. Confess lib. 10. cap. 29. I cannot chuse but challenge the doctrine of the Romish Church to be blasphemous Andradius saith The heavenly blessednesse which the Scripture calls the reward of the iust is not given of God gratis and freely but it is due to their works yea God hath set heaven to sale for our works Another Papist of Lovaine saith thus Vse 3 Farre be it from us to thinke Explic. Artic. Lovan tom 2. art 9. that a man should beg for heaven as a poore man doth for his almes for it is the garland which by his works he deserves Suar. in Thom. tom 1. dist 41. Suarez saith That works proceeding from grace have in themselves and of their owne nature a condignitie and proportion with the reward and a sufficient value to be worth the same and this without the merits of Christ Beggars that aske almes shew their wounds but Papists would have us to shew our merits and not begge heaven as almes due for Christs sake but challenge it as our owne and due for our works sake But what saith Origen I cannot beleeve that there is any worke which can require the reward of debt What saith Augustine Wee must understand that God brings us to life eternall not for our merits but for his owne mercie Neque enim talia sunt hominū morita ut propter ea vita aetern● debeatur ex jure aut Deus injuriam saceret nisi donaret Bern. de grat lib. Arbit Bern. in Annunt Marrae Serm. 1. pag. 123. Bern. sup Cant Serm. 61. What saith Bernard Mens merits are not such that eternall life is due to them of right or that God should doe them injurie if he did not therefore bestow it See many other places of Bernard against the merits of works The mercy of God is my merit And when Bernard hath long disputed the point of grace and free will the conclusion is this Ea quae dicimus merita nostra spei quaedam sunt seminaria charitatis incentiva occultae praedestinationis indicia futurae foelicitatis praesagia regni via non regnandi causae Nurces of hope provocations of love signes of election fore-runners of future happinesse the way to the kingdome but not the cause why wee come to the kingdome of God And I would have you to observe that howsoever our adversaries boast of their works yet their most learned at their way gate have renounced them Anselmus five hundred yeeres since taught the people to die in this faith Lord I set the death of Christ betweene mee and my bad merits I offer his merits for mine which I should have but have not betweene mee and thine anger I oppose the death of my Lord Iesus So Waldensis Waldens Sacr. tit 1. cap. 74 31. Proptèr in ertitudinem pr●priae j ●stitiae timorem in●u● gloriae tutissimum est in solo Christo omnein fiduciam reponere Bellar. de Iustis lib. 5. cap. 7. He is reputed the sounder Divine the better Catholike the more agreeable to Scripture that simply denies all merits and holds that no man can merit the kingdome of heaven but obtaines it by the grace and free will of God that gives it Bellarmine saith For the uncertaintie of ones owne righteousnesse and the feare of vaine glory it is safest to put all our trust in Christ alone Ferus saith The parable of him that hired labourers into his vineyard teacheth that whatsoever God gives Comment in Matth. 20. is of grace not of debt if therefore thou desire to hold the grace an favour of God make no mention of thy merits But I insist no longer upon the point Let us looke for life only by the merits and death of Iesus Christ and renounce our owne righteousnesse account all but dung to win Christ that wee may be found in him not having our owne righteousnesse which is of the law but that which is of God through faith Phil. 3.9 I come to the last viz. the condition and qualitie of heavenly gifts Without repentance They import the certaine fulfilling of Gods promises and words though the time be long deferred and that the Iewes shall be converted though his promise be not yet accomplished The thing aimed at is this That in regard of Gods immutabilitie Doct. wee must expect the certaine fulfilling of every part of Gods promise seeme they never so hard be they never so long delayed as vers 27. VERS 30. Vers 30 For even as yee in time past have not beleeved God yet now have obtained mercy through their unbeleefe VERS 31. Vers 31 Even so now have they not beleeved that by the mercy shewed unto you they also may obtaine mercy THese verses containe a third argument to prove the last branch and clause of the mysterie Exposition to wit that God will call home the nation of the Iewes and a perswasion to the Gentile not to despaire and doubt of it It is a topicall reason taken a comparatis from the greater to the lesse If the infidelitie of the Iewes was the occasion of shewing mercy to the Gentiles much more shall the mercy shewed to the Gentiles occasion the shewing of mercy to the Iewes for will not God take occasion to doe good from good as soone as from evill If infidelitie in the Iewes make God shew favour to the Gentile much more shall his mercy shewed formerly to the Gentile make him also now shew mercy to the Iew. The things compared are three First the infidelitie of the Gentile with the infidelitie of the Iew Secondly the mercy which the Gentile received in time past with the mercy which the Iew shall receive hereafter Thirdly the occasion of both The occasion of mercy to the Gentile infidelitie in the Iew the occasion of mercy to the Iew is mercy formerly extended to the Gentile I begin with the first branch of the comparison Yee in time past have not beleeved as if he had said Learne from your selves that yee ought not to despaire of the Iewes They are now in the verie same case wherein thou wast once They
in unbeleefe so wast thou strangers from God so wast thou Therefore seeing thou art n●w in favour despaire not of them they may 〈◊〉 favour as thou hast and be received to mercie as thou hast beene There be two things that the Apostle would have us learne The first That the consideration of what the Gentiles once were should restraine them from being proud of the happinesse wherein now they are as vers 17. The second Doct. If a man would consider himselfe he would not judge hardly nor despaire utterly of his brethren It is the rule of the Apostle If a man be fallen by occasion into any fault yee which are spirituall restore such an one with the Spirit of meeknesse considering thy selfe Gal. 6.1 Our Saviour in Matth. 7.5 bids us consider the beames that are in our owne eyes and then wee cannot doubt but the moats may be taken out of our brothers eye for as we helpe up those that be fallen we releeve the distressed we pitie the afflicted we burie the dead because wee consider our selves in them and their case may bee ours So are wee to judge meekly of those that have fallen because we may fall and be overtaken as well as they Who will doubt of quenching the fire in his neighbours house who hath seene as great a flame quencht in the thatch of his owne house or despaire of the returne of his brother who considers that hee himselfe was once a prodigall who had run away from his father and spent his portion in riotous living The same gate of mercie is open to thy brother that was opened to thee The same God stands waiting to receive him who formerly received thee If a brother bee not called to holinesse yet hee that considers that it was once his owne case will be loth to judge him If he be in a dangerous estate and course yet he that remembers that himselfe was once an heire and childe of wrath will bee loth to dispaire of him From whence we may see the ground and reason why some fall to such a rash censuring of their brethren because they consider not themselves they remember not what once they were themselves they are like those Lamiae or Witches who set their eyes into their heads when they goe abroad and put them into a box when they returne home They censure Davids adulterie because they consider not that they were once like Clodius themselves they despaire of Absalom for his conspiracie because they have forgotten that they were once as bad as Cateline themselves Let us cast eye upon our selves we have been in the snare and now we are delivered hope well of others we have beene sonnes of wrath but wee are sanctified hope the best of others overtaken with many sins but now we have shaken them off despaire not of others no man is worse now than thou wast once a childe of wrath Ephes 2.3 dead in trespasses Ephes 2.5 without Christ aliants from the Common-wealth of Israel strangers from Covenant of promise had no hope without God in the world Ephes 2.12 Consider this in thy selfe and despaire not of others And so I come to the first point of the comparison wherein wee must consider 1. The condition wherein the Gentile once was He beleeved not 2. The estate wherein now he is he hath obtained mercie 3. The occasion of mercie to the Gentile the unbeleefe of the Iew through their unbeleefe For the first When the Apostle would shew the miserable condition wherein the Gentiles were he saith no more but this they beleeved not The most miserable estate in the world is the estate of infidelitie and unbeleefe Doct. In the twentieth verse of this Chapter it is said That unbeleefe cut off this Nation from God Through unbeleefe they were broken off It is most true of all sinne Isa 59.2 Your sinne hath made a separation betweene you and your God but most true of this and therefore the Apostle Heb. 3.12 Take heed brethren that there bee not in any of you an heart of unbeleefe as vers 20. I come to the condition wherein now they are Now yee have obtained mercie There is no people so farre gone in sinne but if they come home and returne the Lord will receive them as vers 23. Thirdly the occasion of mercie to the Gentile the infidelitie of the Iew. 1. God works good out of the greatest evils that are 2. He watcheth all occasions and opportunities of shewing mercie as hath beene shewed above And so I come to the other part of the comparison to wit the application of these conditions in the Gentiles to the people of the Iewes wherein are compared three with three 1. The contumacie of the Iewes with the former contumacie of the Gentiles you were they are 2. Mercie given to the Gentiles with the mercie to be shewed the Iewes 3. The cause of the cause or the occasion of the occasion You have obtained mercie by their unbeleefe Vers 31 They by the mercie shewed to you that is they shall by the mercie shewed to you bee provoked to an holy emulation of your good life and so obtaine mercie In them observe 1. The present condition of the Iew Even so now they beleeve not 2. The future condition of them they also may obtaine mercie 3. The occasion why God will in all likely hood shew them mercie the mercie already shewed to the Gentile I begin with the present estate and condition Now they have not beleeved Who Israel the vine the garden of the Lord his chosen people There is no Nation under heaven so deere Doct. 1 but sinne will make God forsake them cast them off give them over to infidelitie and unbeleefe I list not to terrifie you with the totall ends and periods of kingdomes and people which some ascribe to Destinie and Fate as the Stoicke some to Fortune as the Epicure some to Starres as the Astrologians some to an asymmetrie in the body as Aristotle some to number as Plato Pythagoras Polit. lib. 5. Method cap. 6. and Bodin But all these have but groped in the darknesse c. But the maine point that is aimed at in the paralleling and sampling of these two people you beleeved not they beleeved not In the order of salvation and damnation Doct. 2 Iew and Gentile are alike and equall Both children of wrath and both enemies to God So the Apostle Wee were by nature the children of wrath as well as others Ephes 2.3 The nature of them both is alike sowre with the leaven of originall pollution By the offence of one the fault came on all to condemnation Rom. 5.18 There was in both a turning from God to the creature They served the creature and forsooke the Creator God blessed for ever Rom. 1.25 If any man make that question which the Apostle proves Rom. 3.1 What is then the preferment of the Iew Or what is the profit of circumcision I answer That naturally and without Christ the
preferment of the Iew is none at all Quisque nascitur ex Adamo nascitur dimnatus de damnato Augan Psa 131. Whosoever is borne of Adam is borne condemned of him that is condemned saith Augustine Let the Iew say hee hath Abraham to his father yet if hee bee not borne of God that he is descended from the Patriarkes yet if hee bee not within the Covenant of grace and mercie not borne of water and the Holy Ghost hee is no better than the Gentile that knowes not God My conclusion is that of the Apostle Rom. 3.9 Is the Iew more excellent than the Gentile no in no wise For all both Iewes and Gentiles are by nature servants of sinne First learne Vse 1 that it is no privilege to be a Iew and have Abraham to his father to bee beautified with outward privileges if a man have not the faith of Abraham and bee marked and sealed for a childe of God To say Wee have Abraham to our father Vend care praerogativam religiosi nominis superare Gothes Vandales haerericâ pravitate Salvian de provident lib. 7. Ioh. 8. to crie the temple of the Lord the temple of the Lord Ierem. 7.4 To challenge the prerogative of a religious name to goe beyond the the Goths and Vandalls in hereticall naughtinesse To use the words of Salvianus are but perizomata fig-leaves not able to cover our nakednesse Secondly they both alike stand in need of Christ Vse 2 Both be ransomed by that Lambe which they have slaine both washt with that bloud which they spilled both made alive by that Iesus whom they have killed I come to the second which is their future condition They also may obtaine mercie And first from the verie appellation and name of mercie they may finde mercie to come out of their former blindnesse I note That all the hope of any unconverted man to come from under the tyrannie of sinne Doct. depends upon the the mercie of God in Christ Iesus Who shall deliver me from this body of sinne I thanke God through Iesus Christ Rom. 7.25 as vers 26. To proceed Some have disputed of the time when this mercie shall be revealed unto this people All that I dare say of that is but probabilitie and may bee comprized in those conclusions of which I have before spoken vers 26. Some have disputed of the number whether all of this Nation which shall remaine alive at that time when the fulnesse of the Gentiles shall finde mercie shall embrace Christ and be turned unto God Pererius to prove it produceth Chrysostome on vers 12. of this Chapter and vers 26. I come to the point viz. Doct. There be many in the state of sinne and infidelitie Sunt filu Des qui nondum sunt nobis sunt nobis qui non sunt Deo Aug. de correpi grat cap. 9. who shall in the end finde mercie with the Lord and be saved It is Augustines conclusion There are sonnes of God who are not yet so to us and there are some so to us who are not to God Of the one is mention 1 Ioh. 2.19 They went ou● from us because they were not of us Of the other in Ioh. 11.52 It was the prophecie of Caiaphas It is expedient that Iesus should die not for the Nation onely but for the children that were scattered What would a man have thought of the Prodigall of Paul of Manasses of Peter of the Gentiles Many are asleepe in sinne that shall bee awakened many in a slumber that shall bee rowzed many dead in sinne that shall be started by the voyce of God in the Gospell Verily verily I say unto you the houre commeth and now is that the dead shall heare the voyce of the Sonne of God Ioh. 5.25 Many sheepe doe now run astray who shall bee brought to the sheepe-fold and returne to the Shepherd and Bishop of their soules as the Apostle speakes 1 Pet. 2.25 To this purpose saith God to Israel Though a man have oppressed by violence lift up his eyes to Idols given to usurie yet if that man turne from his wickednesse hee shall save his soule alive Ezek. 18.27 The reason of all is taken from the infinite dimension of Gods mercie De natura Deorum lib. 1. whereof I may say as Simonides in Tully as before vers 23. So I come to the occasion The mercie shewed unto you By the mercie shewed to the Gentile God will provoke the Iew to seeke mercie and they that seeke it shall finde it The Conclusions are 1. God would have us men to bee at an holy emulation and strife which of us should be greatest in his favor and deerest in his sight 2. The good that we see in others and the mercies shewed unto others should bee strong provocations for us to follow them as vers 11. So I come to an inference that the Apostle makes upon this VERS 32. Vers 32 God hath shut up all in unbeleefe that he might have mercie upon all IN the former verse hee did equall the Iewes and the Gentiles in miserie in this verse hee doth equall them in mercie In which words note First a judgement upon man unbeleefe Secondly the generalitie and extent of it all men Thirdly the end and event of it contrarie to that which Satan intends that he might shew mercie Lastly the Author God These are the parts But I must invert them and take them as they stand And first of the Author God Blindnesse and infidelitie is most justly brought upon man by God yet say I not by God onely for there bee three efficient causes of mans induration and infidelitie Man the Devill God First the wicked brings hardnesse and infidelitie upon himselfe so did Pharaoh Exod. 7.13 as vers 8. But of this I have spoken before vers 8. And therfore I come to the generalitie all Hoc est incredulos esse ex Lege arguit demonstravit Chrysost Non injiciendo iis incedulitatem Origen Non vi sed rationc Hier. He hath shut up all c. viz. Hee hath convinced all by his Law and Word That is hee hath proved and shewed them to be unbeleevers out of the Law so Chrysostome Not by casting into them unbeleefe as Origen Not by force but by reason saith Hierome God shuts men up in unbeleefe as in a prison punishing them as a just Iudge with the gyves and fetters of their owne infidelitie Doct. Here note a difference between civill and spirituall imprisonment Civill imprisonment is for sinne but not sinne But spirituall imprisonment in blindnesse is both for sinne and is sinne The Conclusion is this God punisheth one sinne with another as above hath beene shewed and therefore he hath declared them to bee captivated and enclosed in the prison of their sinnes that so it might appeare to all men that the pardon of their sinnes and the salvation of their soules proceeds onely from Gods mercie From whence wee may learne Doct. That
perfect and absolute 2 Tim. 3.15 16 17. They that will not be content with this may seeke for farther knowledge but shall never be satisfied and perhaps they may be strucke by the hand of God as Vzzah for staying the Arke with his hand 2 Sam. 6.7 In Matth. 12.22 when our Saviour cured the possessed with a dumbe spirit so that hee both heard and saw The people were amazed but enquired not how hee did it So should wee Wicked therefore is the practice of those that by Astrologie and such indirect meanes seeke to know the day of mens death and calculate issues of particular intendments The vanitie of which is sufficiently declared by S. Augustine De civit Dei lib. 1 ca. 1. ad 10. But this point is somewhat what neere to the other I therefore proceed to another Who was his counsellour Who was his counsellour With a three-fold bridle doth he restraine mans presumption 1. In that he is most wise who hath beene his counsellour 2. He is debtor to none therefore none can complaine of any injurie done him 3. Because for him were all things made as Iunius God in the decreeing and disposing of all things in procuring mans salvation needeth no counsell useth no mans advice but doth all things according to his owne good pleasure and after the counsell of his owne will Our God which is in heaven doth whatsoever he will Psal 115.3 He predestinates according to the good pleasure of his will Ephes 1.5 Hee gives meanes of salvation where he will Matth. 11.25 Who did advise him in the creation of the world None Hee created all things for his owne will Revel 4.11 Who did advise him in the redemption of man Surely none For he gave himselfe for our sinnes because this was his Fathers will Galat. 1.4 In briefe Hee worketh all things according to the pleasure of his will Ephes 1.11 To blame therefore are all such Bellisacri lib. 5. cap. 1. S●●lle à principio creationis intersursset Dei consilio non nulla melius ordmatiue dispoluisset Magd. Cent. 6. cap 7. as finde fault with many things and thinke that they might have beene done a great deale better than they are as one Alphonsus mentioned by Herolt As the Magdeburgenses relate If hee from the beginning of the creation had beene Gods counsellour hee had disposed some things better and more orderly To blame are they that murmure at Gods worke of reprobation and thinke hardly of him for casting them off before they were borne for ordaining them to destruction before they had done any evill for appointing them to damnation before their mother conceived them in the wombe whereas God is most wise in all his counsels and most wonderfull in all his workes If God seeme to have done any thing but meanly I answer with the Apostle The foolishuesse of God is wiser than men 1 Cor. 1.25 So farre as the Potter is wiser than the clay the Carpenter wiser than the timber the most curious Carver wiser than a peece of stone so farre is the wisdome of God beyond the straine and reach of created and finite understanding Let us then learne not to finde fault with any of Gods doings but admire them not to except against his proceedings but thinke reverently of them Let us leave it to Lombard Lib. 1. dist 44. and other idle Schoolemen to dispute whether God can doe any thing better than he hath done it but let us remember all his doings with admiration and ever eccho that passion of holy David O that men would praise the Lord and magnifie all his doings among the children of men And so I come to the second argument whereby he represseth mans repining and murmuring VERS 35. Vers 35 Who hath given unto himselfe and hee shall be recompenced THis is the second argument Exposition whereby the Apostle acquits God from the false accusations of the wicked as if God were unjust in refusing one rather than another His reason goes thus God owes nothing to any man no man had done any thing for which God was bound to elect and chuse him he received nothing at any mans hand If God give any thing to this man he is most gracious in giving for he owes him nothing If hee give not to that man he is not injurious because he owes him nothing The first thing that the Apostle aimes at is to shew that election is of the meere grace of God and therefore it is not amisse to expound what is to bee understood by grace in this assertion amongst men hee is said to have grace whom the people favours as before on the fifth verse Secondly that God in mans election had no respect unto mans good workes I need not stand to shew how Bellarmine strongly confirmes the point De gratia lib. arbit lib. 2. c. 10. as vers 6. So much for the first part of the proposition who hath given unto him first There is somewhat in the sequele or inference He shall bee recompenced Though God did neither elect nor save men for their workes yet doth hee never faile to recompence and reward our good workes for enduring persecution Matt. 5.12 The loving of our enemies Matth. 5.46 Mercie to the poore Luk. 14.14 It was the speech of Paul 1 Tim. 4.7 Godlinesse is profitable to all things and hath the promises of this life and that which is to come When Peter askt the question What shall wee have Our Saviour answers Matth. 19.28 c. So I come to the last argument to represse mans repining and murmuring in the last verse VERS 36. For of him and through him Vers 36 and for him are all things to him be glorie for ever Amen THe Arrians as Theodoret saith understand all this of God the Father Exposition to confirme the heresie of making the Sonne inferiour to the Father and onely to be the instrument but not the efficient cause of creation contrarie to the Apostle who saith it of Christ By whom are all things and wee by him 1 Cor. 8.9 Basil and Ambrose meane it onely of God the Son Deside lib. 4. cap 6. as it were thus Who hath knowen the minde of the Lord and the answer were this The Son of God hath knowen it of whom and by whom are all things Some distinguish these three and appropriate them to the three persons in Trinitie Of him that is of the Father through him that is through the Sonne in him that is in the Holy Ghost So amongst the Fathers Greg. super E●gch com 16. Hilar. de Trinit lib. 8. Gregorie and Hilarie Of the moderne Expositors Gho●ran Lyranus and Tolet. Others more truly reserre them to the whole Trinitie as Augustine and Chrysostome All things are of God as of the first efficient cause by God as the conserving cause in God as in the end as Thom. Aquinas Or as Calvin All things are a seipso nullo alio movente of him no
the causes of it p. 57 Election a double act in it p. 58 Election described p. 122 Election nine fruits of it p. 124 Election six markes of it p. 422 Emulation double p. 219 Emulation how God provokes to it p. 221 End of God good in evill things p. 156 Enemies of the Church how to withstand them p. 90 Man before grace is an enemie to God p. 415 Three things proving natura● men enemies to God p. 418 Not to bee familiar with Gods enemies p. 419 Gods esteeme of sinners after conversion p. 285 Our esteeme of men after conversion p. 286 Why God punisheth sin eternally p. 183 Some thought the world eternall p. 468 Wicked men requite Gods Prophets evill p. 102 God doth not evill that good may come of it p. 199 God workes good out of evill p. 208 Example of Gods judgements should warne us p. 335 What to learne from others examples p. 337 Execution of the decree of election p. 59 Experience should encourage us p. 358 Expostulation with God double p. 84 Eye three things that hinder it p. 164 F. FAith the certaintie of it p. 23 Faith the properties of it p. 24 Faith forseene no cause of eliction p. 60 Faith a fruit of election ib. Faith exhortation to labour for it p. 311 Faith distinguisheth men p. 315 Faith five benefits from it p. 316 Faith no privilege without it will doe good p. 434 The elect cannot finally fall away p. 14 76 319 320 360 Comfort to the Saints that they cannot fall p. 16 77 Fals of Gods children p. 17 How to be armed against the doctrine of falling away p. 77 Reprobates fall finally p. 206 Saints to bee humbled by their fals p. 207 Scriptures cleered that seem to allow Saints falling away p. 329 See Prophet Familiaritie betweene God and his children p. 85 Familiaritie with God how attained p. 86 Feare to offend God p. 317 Feare filiall and servile distinguished p. 318 Three things hinder from finding God p. 139 What should provoke us to follow others p. 223 To labour to bee such that others may follow us p. 226 Readinesse to forgive a signe of love to God p. 34 God onely can forgive sins p. 405 Foure reasons why God only can forgive p. 406 Fore-knowledge taken foure wayes in Scripture p. 48 Fore-knowledge different from election p. 49 Christians have God for their friend p. 416 Outward privileges without fruit nothing p. 11 Men after they are called are fruitfull p 282 Three qualifications of our fruit p. 284 G. GEntiles the fulnesse of them when p. 379 Faith the gift of God p. 60 Heaven the gift of God p. 62 Gifts of Ministers should be great p. 257 Gifts not to be proud of any p. 290 Gifts apt to pusse up p. 304 All the good we have is of gift p. 424 Glorie of God the end of election p. 56 Glorie to God from all things p. 474 Glorie how men should aime at it p. 475 Manichees hold two Gods p. 92 Comfort to Saints they have a God p. 106 God how hee hardens men p. 146 Sinne onely against God p. 406 How all things are of God p. 467 To give God the glorie of his goodnesse p. 202 God workes out of sinne a three-fold good p. 209 God gives not way to ill but he workes good out of it p. 420 Gospell to apply it to our selves p. 267 Gospell wee should live answerable to it p. 269 Gospell not spread over the world the second time p. 377 Gospell taken away fearefull p. 378 See Death Convert Grace how taken p. 124 Grace why God withdrawes it p. 149 Grace how God withholds it p. 159 Grace onely pleaseth God p. 282 Greatnesse inferior to grace in two respects p. 43 Great favours should assure us of lesse p. 359 See Acceptance All men naturally guiltie p. 438 H. HAppinesse of beleevers wherein p. 410 Happinesse wrong placed by Philosophers p. 411 See Assurance Hardnesse what meant by it p. 140 Hardnesse a complaint of it p. 142 Hardnesse three efficient causes of it p. 146 Hardnesse three things in it p. 151 Hardnesse of heart the parts of it p. 153 See God Two things notable in an Hart. p. 30 Who are hated of God p. 417 Difference betweene good and bad in hearing p. 165 To take heed to our hearing p. 169 Of care in hearing the word p. 256 See Profit God can preserve his people without help p. 471 Holinesse above greatnesse p. 43 Holinesse a fruit of predestination p. 73 See Blessed Signes of a vessell of honour p. 61 Ministers should honour their calling p. 251 Danger of those that seeke their owne honour in preaching p. 254 Hope what it is on p. 435. Former sinnes should humble us p. 279 Hungring after righteousnesse a signe of election p. 29 Hungring after righteousnesse five things in it ib. Hunger a definition of it ibid. I. A Mercie in evill times to be kept from idolatrie p. 108 They that fall to idolatrie God acknowledgeth not p. 110 See Bowing Jehovah what it signifieth p. 91 Three conclusions from the word Jehovah p. 92 Jewes conversion hopefull p. 264 407 Five privileges of the Jewes p. 294 Jews conversion proved p. 376 Jewes conversion not yet past p. 380 Jewes comming in what hinders it p. 381 Jewes the number that shall be called p. 383 Imputation See Righteousnesse Election immutable p. 56 God immutable therefore the elect shall not fall away p. 422 God hates and punisheth infidelitie p. 193 Infidelitie separates between God and man p. 309 The foulnesse of infidelitie in six things ibid. Infidelitie makes God angrie p. 348 Infidelitie the miserie of it p. 432 Minister Gods instrument p. 256 Intercession of Christ reconciles us p. 398 Judgements onely must not be preached p. 7 Judgements how to be freed from them p. 340 None can have glorie that are not justified p 73 What it is that justifieth us p. 134 K. GOd repayes wrongs in t e same kinde p. 182 Kingdomes their raines attributed to false causes p. 46 A great judgement to neglect the meanes of the knowledge of God p. 163 L. THree things in Christ that cannot bee found in the Law p. 181 Transgression of humane Lawes when it is sinne p. 406 Two things argue life in the soule p. 262 Vpon what ground we should live to God p. 396 Love to God a signe of election p. 34 Signes of love to God ibid. Motives to love Christians p. 88 Love of God should keepe us from sinne p. 345 Men are willing to learne of those they love p. 362 How Ministers should gaine love of people ibid. Mutuall love betweene Ministers and people in three things p. 364 M. MAlice See Vaine Manichees See God Care in using the meanes a signe of salvation p. 53 Wee are predestinated to the meanes as well as to the end p. 25 God workes good for his by unlikely meanes p. 213 Ministers must neglect no meanes to save the soules of their people